Whether it's Hip Hop, it's face pointed reverentially to the Old School, or House stealing Disco riffs by the truck load, people are increasingly intrigued by back-in-the-day. And common to both the aforementioned scenes and much more is one person, Arthur Russell, a man some regard as the best songwriter of the 20th century. In 1981 Arthur set up Sleeping Bag Records with Will Socolov. The first release was the album "24-24 Music" as Dinosaur L. If you're wondering about the name it would appear Arthur would often use the names of extinct or near-extinct animals. On one production credit he's "Killer Whale", whilst the logo for Sleeping Bag is a Koala bear! Will remembers how they came up with the name for their label. "We were joking about names, and James Brown was on with "Papa's Got A Brand New Bag" and I was sleeping in a sleeping bag in my apartment and I kind of made a joke about that, and Arthur said that was a great idea for the name of the company!" The line up was pretty much the same as the Loose Joints sessions, (which boasted the Ingram Brothers rhythm section) and a similar stream-of-conscience approach was taken with the recording itself. Russell arranged the beats so there'd be a change every 24 bars (hence the title) and the band would have to improvise the songs over the top. He also made sure he went into the studio when there was a full moon! The album is again very experimental, and makes occasional uneasy listening but the same magic is very much in evidence. Arthur would continue to be involved in production and mixing duties for the label, but parted company with Socolov in 1985. Arthur sadly died of AIDS in 1992 leaving behind many songs; as one obituary put it, it was though he simply vanished into his music.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Wow, this is good!!
Monday, March 30, 2009
for the post-dinner chill out...
...the missus and I put on:
Sly And Robbie dubs
Sun Ra - Lanquidity
Cal Tjader - Sounds Out Burt Bacharach
Sly And Robbie dubs
Sun Ra - Lanquidity
Cal Tjader - Sounds Out Burt Bacharach
April by Sun Kil Moon
I don't know what I can say about this - if you've ever heard this guy you know it's uber mellowness. This has been my top jam for two weeks now....
Swervedriver - Raise
This is my absolute Jam, far and away my favorite band of the 90's. This and it's successor Mezcal Head were re-issued this past January. Sort of like how Alice is DC's favorite Coltrane I prefer this to Sonic Youth, Pixies, Soundgarden, Mudhoney, Nirvana, Dinosaur Jr (alright Bug is close), and all those other guitar bands the rest of the world gets a big boner over. Pardon the Dreads and check this out:
If someone can hip me to how to get a video to show in the blog I'd appreciate it, thanks.
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Sunday Jazz Stacks Vol. 2
Bobby Hutcherson, "Cirrus", great LP. There is a digital version of this floating around so some of you guys probably have it.
Dizzy LP. This is beautiful record from first piano chords to final drum beat. Mellow and jazzy but with a groove on some jams. Totally hitting the spot on a rainy Sunday morning.
Ahmad Jamal, "Outer Time Inner Space", live album from Montreaux, lots of Fender Rhodes, super live set.
Need more coffee now.
dc
Friday, March 27, 2009
Numbers Game
I've been thinking about JT's post, and I agree. Back in the day when i bought CD's... back through high school, when i bought cassettes... I'd get a new album and listen to it back and forth and learn it until i knew the songs and could pretty much sing along to the whole thing.
Not so much when you get back to back 4GB kick downs from friends. I still try to absorb new music vs. filing it away. I clear out my iPhone and add just the new stuff to force me to sift through it.
So i thought i would do a little exercise and now on the close of Q1 2009 WWALT Blog fiscal quarter, i went back through my iTunes to do some analytics (god, I've been working too much...)
Since January 1st I've added 21GB to my iTunes. Granted, unlike Rootless and maybe some of you other guys, i make knee jerk reactions and delete a lot of stuff when i first get it... "Decemberists? I don't like them. Dept of Eagles? That's the guy from Grizzly Bear? OK, i'll keep it. 5 second sound test of something else... nope. Delete." So technically i've gotten more than that. This also includes 8GB of avant electronic music that blurs into one big bug out.
But of those 21GB, there are only really a little under 1GB that I have fully proceesed, like listened to and i can identify the songs and sing along (or hum along). About 14 CD's.
So, that's .5%? I'm ok with that. I like those .5% an awful lot.
The more music you get the higher probability of finding something new and dope you have never heard of before.
Not so much when you get back to back 4GB kick downs from friends. I still try to absorb new music vs. filing it away. I clear out my iPhone and add just the new stuff to force me to sift through it.
So i thought i would do a little exercise and now on the close of Q1 2009 WWALT Blog fiscal quarter, i went back through my iTunes to do some analytics (god, I've been working too much...)
Since January 1st I've added 21GB to my iTunes. Granted, unlike Rootless and maybe some of you other guys, i make knee jerk reactions and delete a lot of stuff when i first get it... "Decemberists? I don't like them. Dept of Eagles? That's the guy from Grizzly Bear? OK, i'll keep it. 5 second sound test of something else... nope. Delete." So technically i've gotten more than that. This also includes 8GB of avant electronic music that blurs into one big bug out.
But of those 21GB, there are only really a little under 1GB that I have fully proceesed, like listened to and i can identify the songs and sing along (or hum along). About 14 CD's.
So, that's .5%? I'm ok with that. I like those .5% an awful lot.
The more music you get the higher probability of finding something new and dope you have never heard of before.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
A Certain Village?
To continue on the recent theme of music overload: madness, I've gotten so much new music lately. But it's a glorious thing.
Checking out this band Quiet Village, a duo from the UK. This album is all over the place, one track it's deep funk, next one is schmaltzy strings and seagulls and humming vocals, then they sound like a Prefuse 73 record. I dig it.
If you like that kind of Prefuse 73 or Tortoise all instrumental/electronic vibe check out Errors.
If you're into Gorillaz and Damon Albarn check out Monkey, his album of all Chinese-style remixes and songs (DC_EJ).
Props to Gabino for hooking me up with some good stuff. Juana Molina is on the Savath & Savalas tip, and Esbjorn Svensson was a really cool swedish pianist who died tragically in a scuba-diving accident, if you like Brad Mehldau doing Radiohead or the acoustic Madeski, Martin & Wood you'll be into this.
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Hi, I'd like to take this space to so say a few things.
1) I think I have a problem. I'm going to take a cue from the slow listening article that Gabino posted a few days back. Since the dawn of 2009, I've come across (in one way or another) LOTS of albums. I have gotten intimate with maybe two of them, and I haven't listened to almost all of them. I vow to stop frequenting music blogs and sampling anything that looks interesting to me for a period of one month. I've removed all the music from my iphone, and I created a playlist consisting only of stuff that I got this year. Now i'm going to listen to all of it. Take that!
2) I was in the home goods store the other day with Marleen, and I heard a song that reminded me of Don's post about "Chopped and Screwed." The song didn't sound the same, but it had the same "what the fuck" factor. It was an Usher song with the lyrics "I want to make love in this club." I'm totally blown away that this guy has had such a long career. It's just bad. Shit is crazy. Sometimes I'm impressed by the production techniques of guys like this, but I cannot say that in this instance. Also, I don't believe that people make love in clubs. I think it's called something else. Am I off base here? Is there something I'm missing about the finer points of Usher?
3) I listened to "Atlantic Sisters of Soul" during a long Sunday breakfast last weekend. I found some of the orchestral production to be a bit much, but besides that, it was a swell listen.
4) I'm amazed at the number of records that Don buys.
I'll post about some music soon. For real.
Chopping and screwing my way to the top,
Jim
1) I think I have a problem. I'm going to take a cue from the slow listening article that Gabino posted a few days back. Since the dawn of 2009, I've come across (in one way or another) LOTS of albums. I have gotten intimate with maybe two of them, and I haven't listened to almost all of them. I vow to stop frequenting music blogs and sampling anything that looks interesting to me for a period of one month. I've removed all the music from my iphone, and I created a playlist consisting only of stuff that I got this year. Now i'm going to listen to all of it. Take that!
2) I was in the home goods store the other day with Marleen, and I heard a song that reminded me of Don's post about "Chopped and Screwed." The song didn't sound the same, but it had the same "what the fuck" factor. It was an Usher song with the lyrics "I want to make love in this club." I'm totally blown away that this guy has had such a long career. It's just bad. Shit is crazy. Sometimes I'm impressed by the production techniques of guys like this, but I cannot say that in this instance. Also, I don't believe that people make love in clubs. I think it's called something else. Am I off base here? Is there something I'm missing about the finer points of Usher?
3) I listened to "Atlantic Sisters of Soul" during a long Sunday breakfast last weekend. I found some of the orchestral production to be a bit much, but besides that, it was a swell listen.
4) I'm amazed at the number of records that Don buys.
I'll post about some music soon. For real.
Chopping and screwing my way to the top,
Jim
Monday, March 23, 2009
RANT!
I really don't understand the indy pop whatever you call it going on. I checked out a bunch of this stuff: Vampire Weekend, Ra Ra Riot, et al.
To me it's just preppy faux-ethnic whiny middle-of-the-road wankery.
Don't get me wrong...I like pop. I could go into a whole tirade (like the misnomer of "pop," considering it's short for "popular" and back in the day jazz, swing, and all that good shit was pop music) but instead I will just keep wondering what the big deal is with this stuff.
For instance, when listening to Vampire Weekend, I hear a lot of stuff going on there that ultimately ends up being a lot of mediocrity. How they can be labeled anything close to "African" is baffling. How lame to have a band trying to be "African" via the Upper West Side. I'm all for the cross-fertilization (so to speak) and mutual sharing between cultures, but not when the end result is some really limp-dick watered down jive ass bullshit. (Nah, I don't hate it that much...but it needs some backlash from all of the over-hyping surrounding it.)
It sounds like preppy college kids who listened to a couple African pop CDs and are now trying to emulate some of those sounds. But come on, compared to somebody like Paul Simon, that Vampire Weekend stuff is just kids' play. Paul Simon, whether or not you think raped and exploited African music, at least has a deep knowledge and respect for the music he's emulating.
And his band? Lots of Africans. Lots of heavy, heavy dudes who have that music deep in their bloodstream.
In the end, though, if I want to hear preppy indy pop, I'll listen to the Ruby Suns's new one...or if I want to be nostalgic, Luna. They keeps it real. Real poppy, real solid songwriting, real musicianship.
And if I want to listen to something "Africany," or with an African tinge, I will just listen to, I don't know, some MUSIC FROM AFRICA. Because you can buy that shit nowadays! Straight from Africa, no kidding!
To me it's just preppy faux-ethnic whiny middle-of-the-road wankery.
Don't get me wrong...I like pop. I could go into a whole tirade (like the misnomer of "pop," considering it's short for "popular" and back in the day jazz, swing, and all that good shit was pop music) but instead I will just keep wondering what the big deal is with this stuff.
For instance, when listening to Vampire Weekend, I hear a lot of stuff going on there that ultimately ends up being a lot of mediocrity. How they can be labeled anything close to "African" is baffling. How lame to have a band trying to be "African" via the Upper West Side. I'm all for the cross-fertilization (so to speak) and mutual sharing between cultures, but not when the end result is some really limp-dick watered down jive ass bullshit. (Nah, I don't hate it that much...but it needs some backlash from all of the over-hyping surrounding it.)
It sounds like preppy college kids who listened to a couple African pop CDs and are now trying to emulate some of those sounds. But come on, compared to somebody like Paul Simon, that Vampire Weekend stuff is just kids' play. Paul Simon, whether or not you think raped and exploited African music, at least has a deep knowledge and respect for the music he's emulating.
And his band? Lots of Africans. Lots of heavy, heavy dudes who have that music deep in their bloodstream.
In the end, though, if I want to hear preppy indy pop, I'll listen to the Ruby Suns's new one...or if I want to be nostalgic, Luna. They keeps it real. Real poppy, real solid songwriting, real musicianship.
And if I want to listen to something "Africany," or with an African tinge, I will just listen to, I don't know, some MUSIC FROM AFRICA. Because you can buy that shit nowadays! Straight from Africa, no kidding!
Sunday, March 22, 2009
listenin...
....to lots of stuff lately. But for some reason I keep coming back to Boards Of Canada.
Music Has The Right To Children is definitely in my all-time top ten.
Ok, time for some more Black Moth Super Rainbow...
Music Has The Right To Children is definitely in my all-time top ten.
Ok, time for some more Black Moth Super Rainbow...
Pearl Jam Vs.
Before you say "wick-wick-wack" hear me out on this one.
When I was in 11th grade I lived in southern VT. We drove down to UMass, Amherst on a Thursday night and saw Pearl Jam in a gymnasium--before "10" came out. I still have the set list I peeled off the stage afterwards. This experience was the sole reason I decided to go to college at UMass. They had good shows there.
Then I found Herbie Hancock Headhunters and kissed the distortion guitars goodbye for 15 years.
During this time I listened to nothing but groove-based stuff. Groove jazz, funk, hip hop, old school soul, neosoul, DJs, electronic groove, mash-ups with 80s tunes and fat beats. Herbie, Stevie, Prince, Aretha, Marvin, Tribe, De La, Jurassic, everything. Boom clack boom clack in my cheerios.
I'm at the point where I'm just sick of it.
So I got my iTunes together and Ka-POW: Pearl Jam Vs.
Still good. Raw, mean, a little bit of pocket here and there, some nice maxed out vocals, great for 20 minutes at 7 mph on the treadmill.
So, yeah, Pearl Jam Vs. Cause that's how we do it.
When I was in 11th grade I lived in southern VT. We drove down to UMass, Amherst on a Thursday night and saw Pearl Jam in a gymnasium--before "10" came out. I still have the set list I peeled off the stage afterwards. This experience was the sole reason I decided to go to college at UMass. They had good shows there.
Then I found Herbie Hancock Headhunters and kissed the distortion guitars goodbye for 15 years.
During this time I listened to nothing but groove-based stuff. Groove jazz, funk, hip hop, old school soul, neosoul, DJs, electronic groove, mash-ups with 80s tunes and fat beats. Herbie, Stevie, Prince, Aretha, Marvin, Tribe, De La, Jurassic, everything. Boom clack boom clack in my cheerios.
I'm at the point where I'm just sick of it.
So I got my iTunes together and Ka-POW: Pearl Jam Vs.
Still good. Raw, mean, a little bit of pocket here and there, some nice maxed out vocals, great for 20 minutes at 7 mph on the treadmill.
So, yeah, Pearl Jam Vs. Cause that's how we do it.
Jazz Recs
"butterfly searchin for a relax
pullin from the jazz stacks cause it’s sunday
on the air is incense
sounds to the ceiling
tryin to get this feelin since monday"
-Digable Planets, "Pacifics"
I'm going to start the new WWALT weekly feature "Pullin' From The Jazz Stacks Cause It's Sunday" record check.
For me, Sundays are all about the Jazz brunch. Good food, good jazz records. I, like most of you guys, have pretty eclectic and varied tastes in music, but Sunday morning I'm going for "Jazz", and not "Out Jazz" or "Funky Boogaloo Jazz", but jazz jazz.
First up is Duke Ellington's "The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse". You may know the tune off of this "Chinoiserie" which Medeski, Martin and Wood covered. Jazz with a groove throughout, with gongs and "Oriental" elements (his words, not mine) adding a twist. Really great LP. I think I digitized this bitch so maybe some of you have it.
Also, these dudes play on this album: Cootie Williams, Money Johnson, and Booty Wood. Ha ha ha, no joke. "Booty Wood" went on to be a porn star...
Another great jazz LP is Les McCann Ltd "Beaux J. Poo Boo". This is one of the first records I ever bought, actually. Great, just straight up piano jazz, but with a few funky joints like "Bat Man" and the funky pop jam with vocals, "Green Green Rocky Road".
Also for you design nerdus out there, this is beautiful matte gatefold cover with 3-D pop-up book inside with little booklet attached. These "Limelight" joints from the 60's are all really deluxe packaging.
Lastly, as the morning moves to afternoon I get into some funkier "jazz", and this "Hold On I'm Coming" live album by Herbie Mann fits the bill. It's easy to forget that Herbie had free jazz guitar legend Sonny Sharrock as his guitarist in the late 60's-early 70's. His playing is restrained within Herbie's funky flute jazz, but blasts of his signature style creep out, especially on a live date like this one from Montreaux '72. Great LP. Also on some next level design steez with this crazy, double opening, reverse side record slot, die cut cover shit:
There. I definitely feel "jazzy" now. I am officially on radio silence for a minute until some other dudes post. Stay cool.
D-Nice
pullin from the jazz stacks cause it’s sunday
on the air is incense
sounds to the ceiling
tryin to get this feelin since monday"
-Digable Planets, "Pacifics"
I'm going to start the new WWALT weekly feature "Pullin' From The Jazz Stacks Cause It's Sunday" record check.
For me, Sundays are all about the Jazz brunch. Good food, good jazz records. I, like most of you guys, have pretty eclectic and varied tastes in music, but Sunday morning I'm going for "Jazz", and not "Out Jazz" or "Funky Boogaloo Jazz", but jazz jazz.
First up is Duke Ellington's "The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse". You may know the tune off of this "Chinoiserie" which Medeski, Martin and Wood covered. Jazz with a groove throughout, with gongs and "Oriental" elements (his words, not mine) adding a twist. Really great LP. I think I digitized this bitch so maybe some of you have it.
Also, these dudes play on this album: Cootie Williams, Money Johnson, and Booty Wood. Ha ha ha, no joke. "Booty Wood" went on to be a porn star...
Another great jazz LP is Les McCann Ltd "Beaux J. Poo Boo". This is one of the first records I ever bought, actually. Great, just straight up piano jazz, but with a few funky joints like "Bat Man" and the funky pop jam with vocals, "Green Green Rocky Road".
Also for you design nerdus out there, this is beautiful matte gatefold cover with 3-D pop-up book inside with little booklet attached. These "Limelight" joints from the 60's are all really deluxe packaging.
Lastly, as the morning moves to afternoon I get into some funkier "jazz", and this "Hold On I'm Coming" live album by Herbie Mann fits the bill. It's easy to forget that Herbie had free jazz guitar legend Sonny Sharrock as his guitarist in the late 60's-early 70's. His playing is restrained within Herbie's funky flute jazz, but blasts of his signature style creep out, especially on a live date like this one from Montreaux '72. Great LP. Also on some next level design steez with this crazy, double opening, reverse side record slot, die cut cover shit:
There. I definitely feel "jazzy" now. I am officially on radio silence for a minute until some other dudes post. Stay cool.
D-Nice
Saturday, March 21, 2009
new records
I think I'll blog every record I ever buy from now on...
I picked up this Melvin Jackson LP, "Funky Skull":
Melvin was the bassist for Eddie Harris, and being around Eddie's experimentations with playing sax through effects every night must have worn off on him. Check the cover, he's playing bass through an Echoplex and all kinds of other old school effects. Great LP. This is the german reissue.
Also picked this up:
Shout out to my man Bla Blazo. Smell you later, bros.
DC
I picked up this Melvin Jackson LP, "Funky Skull":
Melvin was the bassist for Eddie Harris, and being around Eddie's experimentations with playing sax through effects every night must have worn off on him. Check the cover, he's playing bass through an Echoplex and all kinds of other old school effects. Great LP. This is the german reissue.
Also picked this up:
Shout out to my man Bla Blazo. Smell you later, bros.
DC
Friday, March 20, 2009
American Primitive Guitar
I thought I would post this mini-essay on American Primitive Guitar. This is totally where I'm at with the Monastics with EJ and DC and I think a really cool philosophical approach to making music.
BASIS OF THE FORM
American Primitive Guitar is grounded in our complex melting-pot American musical traditions. Hymns, rags, folk songs, jazz, classical, opera, eastern rhythms, contemporary tunes, and a galaxy of other musical sources contribute to this diverse form.
Technique is based on using the multiple strings of the guitar to present the melody or theme supported by harmony and bass tones played simultaneously. Alternating bass is a regular feature, used in many forms to create a synchopation to support or contrast with other elements of the pieces. Varied tunings of the guitar enhance the instrument's tone, the playing of open strings reinforcing root tones and making multi-string techniques more accessible.
John Fahey's music has been a major influence on the creation of my own style and technique. It's combination of historic references in many styles and tunes, unusual syncopations and application of "primitive" techniques create stark and beautiful textures for the guitar. I highly recommend his many early recordings on Takoma as a unique source for inspiration in this form.
GUITAR DISCOVERY
The following passage is quoted from a John Fahey essay on guitar composition and arranging:
"During practice sessions - I usually would sit from four to six hours, and I still do - strange things would happen, and suddenly I would have an entire song or a significant fragment.... If you make yourself play the guitar except for breaks - cigarette, bathroom, whatever - for four to six hours, I can guarantee that you will come out of these sessions with something new: a composition, an arrangement, a fragment. This is the way the mind works. In order to conquer boredom and chaos, you cannot avoid coming up with something new."(1)
In my own sessions I've often found this wondrous miracle occurring, where following the known paths in extended repetition finds something completely new and unforseen, snatches of serendipity which can often be manipulated into something completely new and rewarding. Recording of these extended sessions helps keep the wily phrases from escaping back to the ether and allows you to bask in the glow of discovery as you continue to flow with the musical spirit.
TECHNIQUE AND COMPOSITION Again in the words of Mr. Fahey:
"While technique is important, it is only part of the story. Music is a language - a language of emotions. The worst possible way to play these songs - and I am not only talking about my own compositions - is in metronome time at a uniform volume. Another terrible thing would be to play any composition the same way every time, or to feel that you have to play it exactly the way someone else, such as myself, played it or said to play it. A good technician must also be creative. Even if a person is not a composer, he can interpret and and arrange, and these skills are as important as technique in making a performance interesting. I rely heavily on both technique and interpretation, and I think of myself as a very good composer, arranger, and plagiarest for the solo acoustic guitar" (1)
The great challenge in playing the guitar is the creation of flowing and ethereal entities from the complex mechanics of the instrument. As our guru notes above, our goal should be to make each piece of music our own personal moment, shaping it with our own unique abilities and experiences. A unique path to enlightenment and harmony evolves from our strong emotional involvement in the performance of music as the mysterious connection between our ear and mind stimulates primeval and exotic vistas while the strings vibrate beneath our fingers and the soundbox resonates against our ribs.
BASIS OF THE FORM
American Primitive Guitar is grounded in our complex melting-pot American musical traditions. Hymns, rags, folk songs, jazz, classical, opera, eastern rhythms, contemporary tunes, and a galaxy of other musical sources contribute to this diverse form.
Technique is based on using the multiple strings of the guitar to present the melody or theme supported by harmony and bass tones played simultaneously. Alternating bass is a regular feature, used in many forms to create a synchopation to support or contrast with other elements of the pieces. Varied tunings of the guitar enhance the instrument's tone, the playing of open strings reinforcing root tones and making multi-string techniques more accessible.
John Fahey's music has been a major influence on the creation of my own style and technique. It's combination of historic references in many styles and tunes, unusual syncopations and application of "primitive" techniques create stark and beautiful textures for the guitar. I highly recommend his many early recordings on Takoma as a unique source for inspiration in this form.
GUITAR DISCOVERY
The following passage is quoted from a John Fahey essay on guitar composition and arranging:
"During practice sessions - I usually would sit from four to six hours, and I still do - strange things would happen, and suddenly I would have an entire song or a significant fragment.... If you make yourself play the guitar except for breaks - cigarette, bathroom, whatever - for four to six hours, I can guarantee that you will come out of these sessions with something new: a composition, an arrangement, a fragment. This is the way the mind works. In order to conquer boredom and chaos, you cannot avoid coming up with something new."(1)
In my own sessions I've often found this wondrous miracle occurring, where following the known paths in extended repetition finds something completely new and unforseen, snatches of serendipity which can often be manipulated into something completely new and rewarding. Recording of these extended sessions helps keep the wily phrases from escaping back to the ether and allows you to bask in the glow of discovery as you continue to flow with the musical spirit.
TECHNIQUE AND COMPOSITION Again in the words of Mr. Fahey:
"While technique is important, it is only part of the story. Music is a language - a language of emotions. The worst possible way to play these songs - and I am not only talking about my own compositions - is in metronome time at a uniform volume. Another terrible thing would be to play any composition the same way every time, or to feel that you have to play it exactly the way someone else, such as myself, played it or said to play it. A good technician must also be creative. Even if a person is not a composer, he can interpret and and arrange, and these skills are as important as technique in making a performance interesting. I rely heavily on both technique and interpretation, and I think of myself as a very good composer, arranger, and plagiarest for the solo acoustic guitar" (1)
The great challenge in playing the guitar is the creation of flowing and ethereal entities from the complex mechanics of the instrument. As our guru notes above, our goal should be to make each piece of music our own personal moment, shaping it with our own unique abilities and experiences. A unique path to enlightenment and harmony evolves from our strong emotional involvement in the performance of music as the mysterious connection between our ear and mind stimulates primeval and exotic vistas while the strings vibrate beneath our fingers and the soundbox resonates against our ribs.
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Rites of Spring: End on End
If you need some hardcore in your rotation check this out. I needed to take a break from my mega dub/dnb listening session. I was ready for the rock again. 1985, Dischord, half the dudes later started Fugazi. The "emo" label is rumored to have started with these guys, but I'm not really sure what bands are "emo". This disc has 17 tracks from their first release and an EP. Lots of good guitar riffage, rhythm section can get sloppy, production ragged, but damn it's punk rock! They have a more melodic take on punk than some of the faster thrash stuff of the time.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Journey in Satchidananda
I have a good amount of Alice Coltrane on vinyl. I dig it, she is my favorite Coltrane. but I don't listen to it at home too much... at some point it gets too abrasive, skronky and out and scares my wife and kids.
My main man, blog code name K.Lastima, just hit me with the care package with the dope shit, including "Journey in Satchidananda"... I swear I had this one on vinyl, but maybe I sold it? Anyway, good to have this for the headphones, but ironically this is the one AC album I would play for mass consumption. Never gets too out... just out enough. Deep bass lines and sitar create cool atmosphere. This CD has been perfect for the commute into work, putting me in a contemplative mood.
Top notch. Good looking out, K.Lastima!
dc
Saturday, March 14, 2009
Reggae
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Jaga Jazzist's What We Must
This got some (qualified) props in Pitchfork's review of the New Lars Horntveth thing. It was probably my favorite album of 2005 and I'm wondering if any of you have checked it out. I take exception to the whole Smooth jazz/Kenny G thing in the review, it's the kind of easy dismissal made by someone who probably doesn't listen to a lot of jazz. It has some nice blissed/ verging on too pretty out moments like Ulrich Schnauss might have (if anybody is smooth jazz these days...) but the instrumentation & craft of it all is fantastic and totally worth your time.
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Monday, March 9, 2009
Art Jackson?
Anyone hip to this? there was a small blurb in the new Mojo that sent me googling, saw this cover and immediately started downloading. Don't know what to think of it all but they are a couple of fun albums (so far), especially Gout...
Fever Ray
I heard this shit in a coffee shop in the West Village and liked it enough to ask what it was. Fever Ray.
It’s pretty rad. It’s like a cooler, spookier Bjork. She’s half of a band called The Knife (?) that are supposedly pretty hot shit. I checked out the Fever Ray myspace page and ended up picking it up on iTunes.
That first song on the myspace page, "If I had a Heart" got stuck in my head so bad. It is such a good jam, but it is so spooky. The first remix is real good, the beats take the edge off the spookiness… there is also a remix by the Fuck Buttons. But that spooky jam got stuck in my head and really started to mess with me. I pictured being in a death cult sacrifice ritual in a cave in Iceland or something. I’m serious, it really started to make me feel weird and satanic. Then I checked the video (below)… OH DAMN! That shit is spooky, yo. Watch that alone in your place with no lights on except a candle with a mirror next to your laptop and you will see the Candyman. The rest of the album isn’t that spooky at all… some of it is downright gay borderline 80’s, but it's all right. But that spooky video and song below will fuck you up. I dare any of you to take the spooky Fever Ray candlelight only video challenge.
D-Styles
It’s pretty rad. It’s like a cooler, spookier Bjork. She’s half of a band called The Knife (?) that are supposedly pretty hot shit. I checked out the Fever Ray myspace page and ended up picking it up on iTunes.
That first song on the myspace page, "If I had a Heart" got stuck in my head so bad. It is such a good jam, but it is so spooky. The first remix is real good, the beats take the edge off the spookiness… there is also a remix by the Fuck Buttons. But that spooky jam got stuck in my head and really started to mess with me. I pictured being in a death cult sacrifice ritual in a cave in Iceland or something. I’m serious, it really started to make me feel weird and satanic. Then I checked the video (below)… OH DAMN! That shit is spooky, yo. Watch that alone in your place with no lights on except a candle with a mirror next to your laptop and you will see the Candyman. The rest of the album isn’t that spooky at all… some of it is downright gay borderline 80’s, but it's all right. But that spooky video and song below will fuck you up. I dare any of you to take the spooky Fever Ray candlelight only video challenge.
D-Styles
Love Power Peace in Paris
Like tequila in your coffee, this live James Brown recording is a nitrous boost for the morning rituals. Clear, finely remastered recording, solid white noise coming from the venue and crowd, and the performance is one of the few (if only) live recording featuring Bootsy Collins (19 yrs old at the time), two drummers thundering in unison, and the original JB's lineup backing James through the show.
While the Revolution of the Mind: Live at the Apollo Vol. III is my favorite of the live James Brown recordings, the Love Power Peace show from Olympia, Paris 1971 rips your face off and then asks which garbage pail to toss it into.
Sunday, March 8, 2009
The Dark Stuff by Nick Kent
Warning: this is a book. It's by this guy who started writing for NME in the early 70's and this collection contains the some of the nastiest rocknroll stories I've ever read. His list of subjects spans the pantheon of rock genius + depravity: Brian Wilson, Brian Jones, Syd Barrett, Jerry Lee Lewis, Sid Vicious, Lou Reed, Iggy Pop, New York Dolls, Shane McGowan, Izzy Stradlin, Prince, Serge Gainsbourg; even Neil Young gets his less-sordid but totally tragic story told.
It's great first-person reporting mixed with a lot of historical hindsight from the people he's reporting on - the author was on the scene and writing about it for decades, and along with being a great read it totally makes you want to listen to the music while reading about the fucked up who created it all.
Mark Lanegan
I've been on a kick listening to a lot of singer/song-writers with deep, rough voices and dark lyrics. First it was Johnny Cash's "American Recordings" for a while, then I got into Nick Cave's new one, and, spending the weekend in Vermont, I've been listening to Mark Lanegan. He used to be the lead singer in the '90s grunge band, The Screaming Trees, and I'm not sure, but I don't think he's gotten enough props on his solo career. I like "Field Songs" a lot, and "Scraps at Midnight" almost as much. Really good, deep voice, sets the mood, the music never tries to do too much. I'll probably get on a Tom Waits kick next. Anyone else think of musicians along these lines?
The Parliaments
Just to further expand on Parliament/Funkadelic week, check this post at Funky16Corners featuring a 45 by "The Parliaments". That's your boy George G-Funk Clinton on the far right, back when he was sporting a pompadour instead of a shaved head or multi-colored dreads.
dc
dc
Saturday, March 7, 2009
Friday, March 6, 2009
Lettuce
Hanging out on the Mothership yesterday left me hungry for more funk, and this time I wanted more of a mixed salad to feast on (extreme apologies for the horrible pun), so I turned to hard mutherfunkers Lettuce, and their 2002 effort: Outta Here.
Preface: the album was a reunion of sorts, as the members originally met in 1992 at the Berkeley summer music program as spry lil' lads, and with an average age of 15, the only way to take over a stage or play a succession of shows was to borrow gear, instruments, more stage time, etc. Hence "Lettuce" (as in "let us borrow your kit, let us play tomorrow night..") was born. They all went their separate ways, each finding success in various forms: Eric Krasnow and Sam Kininger are members of Soulive; Adam Deitch, born with sticks in his hand, has held the beat for Average White Band, John Scofield, The Squad, and his own side gig The Adam Deitch project whose hip hop beats backed rapper The Game; Ryan Zoidis was a founding member of the Rustic Overtones; Erick Coomes found a successful producing career in LA; Jeff Bhasker the keyboardist for drum-n-bass/soul/electronica Brooklyn outfit Kudu.
Outta Here is straight up, dead on heavy funk featuring additional work from John Scofield, trombone legend Fred Wesley, and Neil Evens from Soulive humps his B-3 for added sonic texture. The total result is tip-top, and all the talent under this tent signaled that the Book of Funk had found new prophets to spread the Gospel. Deitch, born to drumming parents, is a tight, mean little bastard on the drums. His career in funk, R+B, jazz, and hip hop drumming makes his gravy extra thick here, saturating the whole album with deep, smokey grooves while at the same time making you get up for the downstroke. Even the one cover track on the album, Herbie's "Hang up your hang-ups" from his 1975 release Man-Child, is given a fresh infusion and ripping sound.
This 10 years after the fact reunion recording was followed by a successful US and Japan tour, a live album, and the 2008 release Rage! which I've (sadly) yet to get to, but will no doubt discuss once I've become completely exhausted with Outta Here. Hasn't happened yet.
Funkadelic
Growing up I always lumped Parliament/Funkadelic into one bucket and knew it as the disco, late-70's funkified shizzz the Dr. Dre sampled. I checked it out a few times but it was (and for the most part, still is) a little too discotheque for me. I'll get my funky groove on with Parliament on the headphones, but the whole Sir Nose, weird mythology and fantasy angle turns me off as well.
At some point I realized that Funkadelic was a different animal and decided to check it out. Upon listening to the eponymous Funkadelic LP, my mind was blowed. Starts with a funky overly reverbed voice telling you that "If you lick my soul, I will suck your funky emotion", and then the drums! Thick drums in that good groove that can work with a funk jam or a grunge riff.
It was like a funkier, more bugged out Band of Gypsies. A ten minute groove on one funky rock riff but that never grows old. Head nodding music. More rock than disco.
There is a time and place for Parliament, but Funkadelic is my jam.
If you want more info, Issue 18 of the stellar magazine Wax Poetics was entirely dedicated to the Funkadelic/Parliament crew, explains their history and lineage.
Thursday, March 5, 2009
I gotta git som'mo
The crazed energy that seeps out of your speakers when listening to Parliament's Live P-Funk Earth Tour, the double-album documentation of two performances in January 1977 on the West Coast (Oakland and Los Angeles), is an album I return to at least once a month, many times when faced with some task appearing far too involved to attempt while nursing a hangover.
The opening track alone, with its slightly sloppy trumpet solo paving the way for the signature sax intro for P-Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up), wafts up to your ears slowly and then slaps you upside the head like the fat side of a rowing oar when the crowd explodes in song. Gets you juiced, even when you still reek like a bar mat at the end of a double-shift in an Irish Pub.
One of the choice moments early on is when Bootsy, in the middle of "Dr. Funkenstein's Supergroovalisticprosifunkstication Medley", treats the crowd to an impromtu spoken-word performance while the band holds the line behind him:
There once was a man from Peru,
who went to sleep in his canoe.
He was stringin' up fish,
took out his penis,
woke up with a hand full of goo.
The whole recording is as nasty, in the pocket, bizzare and jarbled as the few remaining brain cells scrambling in the dark to find one another in George Clinton's brain, which at this point probably more closely resembles the inside of your college-days bong, or even a burnt match.
The Yellow Shark - Frank Zappa and the Ensemble Modern
Ahoy - new voice in the choir here. An apt way to put it, as I woke this morning with a fierce craving for some latter-day Zappa and found it with the often overlooked but excellent 1992 recording of Zappa's serious orchestral work, of many of his compositions which appear to have been composed on the Next Plane.
Reworkings of classic Zappa offerings like "Uncle Meat" and live arrangements of such outer-space nastiness like "G-Spot Tornado" - all with performance support from the Ensemble Moderne during several sold-out performances in Germany.
After a boozy night of cigarettes and dark, insidious dreams - a fine way to greet the morning during your coffee enema.
Sunday, March 1, 2009
MMW Zaebos anyone?
Anybody get the MMW disc that was released on Tzadik (John Zorn's label)??
I think it's called Zaebos.
I think I need it.
Check this shit out.
Give a shout if you have this and want to trade....
I think it's called Zaebos.
I think I need it.
Check this shit out.
Give a shout if you have this and want to trade....
Prefuse 73 - T5 Soul Sesions Volume 1
This is a few years old, but is hitting the spot big time. This is one of my fave CD's... this was a promo giveaway (limited copies) from NYC clothing store/line Triple Five Soul. Diplo did a mix as well, I think...
This is light years away from Prefuse 73 glitch hop weirdness. Just a straight up mix tap of 60's pop psych, Brazilian folk music, spiritual jazz, etc... I found this quote by the man on the internet "(It's) a small sample of what I go home and listen to. More than a traditional mixtape, I preferred to let the introspective side in and share the sounds that I play when I’m cooking dinner, just thinking, or not sitting behind an MPC and various instruments for 12 hours!"
Such a consistent vibe throughout. Mellow. Great CD to throw on and listen to all the way through when you are just cooling out.
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