Saturday, February 27, 2010
Been a while...
Gotta say that I feel intimidated to contribute, as much of the music being discussed I know nothing about. It almost seems like you guys are trying to "out-cool" each other by finding rare and kitschy subculture bands. Don't get me wrong, I think it's great and I have to admit I am a little jealous. But, alas, I will always be a sucker for music with a "hook" and therefore relegated to the barbaric and mundane art-form of pop influenced rock/punk music. When I say pop, I don't mean The Jonas Brothers. I mean bands like The Replacements, The Pixies, etc.
Forgive me my over-zealous music lovers for I am a sinner of the "give me instant pleasure" music. Rarely do I find a band that I like that I have had to search for the genius in it. I knew the first second I heard a Ramones album that I would love them forever. I didn't have to listen to Ramones Ramones 25 times to "get it".
With that said, I suggest you put a dose of Surferosa (Pixies), Tim (The Replacements) and Too Tough to Die (The Ramones) on your vinyl record players and wax poetic about how esoteric and ground breaking each of them were in their ownright. To me some bands simply play songs that remind me of times past and captured those times for me so vividly I can't turn away when I hear them.
-40-
Friday, February 26, 2010
MJQ
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
New Tobacco record features Beck
Sure, Beck's a scientologist, but he's a funky scientologist.
Besides, this photo of Tobacco makes up for any uneasy scientological feelings:
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Oh. (guitars, etc . . .)
Roger Miller (Mission of Burma Roger Miller, not the do-wacka-do Roger Miller, though I am a fan of him as well) tossed off this minor gem on Forced Exposure in 1988. Constructed on a four track, Miller plays all the instruments himself, save an appearance by Peter Prescott on bass.
Miller always had a rocker's heart to go with his avant garde head. Clint Conley had the rep as Burma's hook guy, but for me, Miller's "Forget" is one of the best rock songs of all time. Here as well, the obviously experimental nature of the project is unified by a pop-like structural undercurrent. Though there are the straight up experimental moments (the original recording of Burma's "Fun World" played over and over again, each time sped up beyond recognition and overlaid with record surface noise, seems to be an overt nod to Fluxus), there is a skeleton here often lacking in noise records.
There are voices here, though not a lot of recognizable lyrics per se. Miller applied randomization techniques to Burma lyrics for one song, and sang another in a made up language vaguely resembling Russian or German.
Front and center is Miller's fascination with guitar textures. On all the tracks he stacks up guitars electric and acoustic, tuned and detuned, picked, strummed, and feeding back. This approach matures on side two with a version of Sun Ra's "Space is the Place" followed by a feedback meditation called "The Forrest".
Being a huge Mission of Burma and Birdsongs of the Mesozoic fan, I kept an eye on Miller's output, but most of it was somewhat uneven. This record, though considered by Miller to be more of a sketchbook (from the liner notes: "I consider this record to be a collection of ideas, which hopefully will be felt as unified."), still to me is the best non-Burma or Birdsongs record that Miller recorded. I also had a chance to see him live around the time this record appeared, and it was a fantastic show . . . better than the No Man show I saw a few years later (a show that remains the only show I've seen where I thought a band I liked was actually too loud). I'm not sure if this record is still available through Forced Exposure, or if it is anywhere on the internets, but if you can find it, snatch it up. It's a pearl.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Recent Finds
Laughing Hyenas, absolutely ferocious stuff. This is a twofer of their best albums, I guess there is other stuff on Touch and Go that some might prefer but I think these hold up remarkably well and are worth checking out. You can hear the home town (Ann Arbor) influences and a little Birthday Party flavor. They were killer live.
Also came across this Flying Nun Records box set, most things I've heard from NZ(The Clean, Chills) I thought were pretty great so I grabbed it and so far it's a blast. A zillion bands I've never heard of playing thoughtful and well executed Garage/ Pop/Indie type stuff. A really good set, and it must be some limited edition package or something because it goes for $200 on Amazon. Grab it here.
Snakes For the Divine
If you are feeling a lack of double bass drums and sick metal rhythm sections in your life, try the new High on Fire record. I listened to it early this morning, and it inspired me to clean the house. That is powerful shit. I suggest headphones if you have a cat.
I've also been listening to Moon Duo a bit.
I got this link on pitchfork - DON'T CALL THE WEB SHERIFF -
Moon Duo is one or two people from Wooden Shjips. See>>>
Most of the other stuff I've been listening to lately is old/classic/inappropriate for the blog. That said, I must comment on Moby Grape. Yes, they are classic, but I had never listened to them before. One of you guys posted about phrockblog awhile ago. It seems that they no longer exist, but recently they had posted a ton of Moby Grape, so it inspired me to check them out. I don't know why I never listened to them before. They are so bandly. I imagine them playing live, and I get all excited. Shit is dope.
After a quick Wikipedia search, I learned that one of them was Alexander "Skip" Spence. A few years ago, a friend of mine lent me his record "Oar" because he thought I would like it. He was right. I did like it, but I never bothered to find out more about his background. It turns out that Mr. Spence suffered a mental breakdown like others from that era. Immediately before recording "Oar" he had been commited to a mental hospital. Sad indeed. The Moby Grape albums and Skip Spence's "Oar" are fine recordings.
That's all for now.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Eternity
I got this Alice Coltrane Record at Mercer Street Books. That used to be my SPOT when I worked in SoHo.
It's really really good. It was touch and go... 1976 on Warner Brothers, with that cover, and you are on shaky ground. I wasn't sure if I should drop on it. She got into some wacky shit. Did I ever blog about the tape she made for some yoga retreat in 1986? That's actually pretty good. But I don't know, wasn't sure if this would be worth record store prices...
But it's a winner all the way through. The first side has that kind of cheesy organ sound she gets, but fuck it, i like it. The third track is a long funky jam with Charlie Haden on bass, Ben Riley on drums, and "a friend" on timbales.
The real jam/gem is Track 1, Side B, "Om Supreme", it's just a solo rhodes workout all the way throughout, half way through a group of voices join in, and when they build up to the refrain "CA-LI-FORN-IA!! CA-LI-FORN-IA!!", I get goose bumps. I fell asleep to this jam on my couch last night and it was the best. I had to pull myself out of a dream to start the record over and do it again.
Lucky for you jerks I Captain Crawled it and here it is on this dude's blog. Now you can just set that song to infinite repeat and fall asleep to it every night like me.
dc
P.S. What else is good? What's the new shit I'm missing out on? Yeasayer? More like Gay-sayer! OH DAMN! HE SAID IT! That is a band I really really want to like but just not into their music. And Vampire Weekend? Dude, I can't even think of a snap witty enough to properly address their gayness. I like the new Spoon joint, though.
Monday, February 15, 2010
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Juju by Gass
I guess Fleetwood Mac was a band before Stevie Nicks was a member, I just recently learned this. One of the founding members guitarist Peter Green later worked with a band called Gass. Found one of their albums Juju, on this musicology blog.
The entire album is enjoyable and it's not overly long, there's not really any songs that do not fit. For me, the album picks up at the title track and continues with some very nice songs. "House For Sale" starts out iffy, but 60 seconds in, I'm glad I'm there.
The second half of the last song "Cool Me Down" goes into this marching-band-esque percussion jam complete with some dude trying to keep up on a whistle. Give it a listen.
Here's the link to the dl.
Here are two songs "House For Sale" and "Cool Me Down":
Gass - Juju - 06 - House For Sale from WWALT on Vimeo.
Gass - Juju - 08 - Cool Me Down from WWALT on Vimeo.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Mountains
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Monday, February 8, 2010
Empty The Sun
Here's one I've been meaning to blog about for a minute. I stumbled on this at Academy Records in East Village, never heard of it. "Empty The Sun", music by Six Organs of Admittance, including a novel by Joseph Mattson. Not bad for $15 bucks.
Meh, "novel" might be laying it on a bit thick, but it is a substantial story with blurb from Jery Stahl and James Greer on the back. Haven't read it yet, but the LP is nice, good Six Organs acoustic guitar stuff, a little more mellow/mainstream than their (his?) other stuff, although a couple songs have that weird pseudo satanic weird spooky voodoo vibe. Seriously, sometimes when I'm listening to Six Organs of Admittance I feel like there is some satanic mojo in the air, like it would be perfect music to do a OUIJA board to. But this one is pretty listener friendly and has been getting a lot of play in my house.
D-Nice
P.S. I hate Vampire Weekend 10 times more than EJ hates Dirty Projectors, but the new Spoon is a'ight.
The 'Mats
I think my reaction to these records is profoundly personal. These were the days sans internet. Luckily, mpls., was rather lax in terms of ID'ing, so catching them live was rarely an issue, even for a 9th grader. But, and I hope this isn't too saccharine, music was such a process of discovery then. It took so much work (two bus rides on any given winter night... brutal).
Obviously at that time I was in their demographic sweet spot ("stupid hat and gloves," "on the bus," etc. ad infinitum described my existence). This only comes along once for music fans and I'm guessing we all are bonded to those bands. I've always been jealous of the few Brits I've met who had a similar experience with the Clash.
I very much doubt, at 43, one can re-obtain the same sense of feeling from music (especially good old rock music). It's this catch-22: if some fuck wrote a record about living in suburban jersey in their 40s I'd immediately hate--trust me, I'm trying to write that record--but when I try to like records by the youngsters, I feel a little smarmy.
Shit, this post is sounding maudlin (but I suppose that's one of Westerberg's song writing gifts).
Saturday, February 6, 2010
UNSOUND festival, NY
Thursday, February 4, 2010
RJD2: The Colossus
This 2010 release bounces from instrumental hip hop jams, R&B pop stylings, layered beat driven sampling. Games You Can Win borders on r&b pop. I actually heard this track on KCRW. A Sons Cycle is one of my favorites. It features a hip hop beat, synth, and 3 rappers. Let There Be Horns sounds like it could have been on a Shadow release. I'm not really sold on the D2 vocals, and he plays drums on a few tracks. There are 5-6 really solid tracks out of 14 for me. 3 out of 5 guitars for the rating.