A-Frames- Experiment
The Fall- Bombast
Pink Faeries- I Wish I Was a Girl
Zolar X- Timeless
Simply Saucer- Here Come the Cyborgs Part II
The Rezillos- Destination Venus
Pere Ubu- The Modern Dance
No Trend- Without Me
Come- Bitten
Scrawl- 100 Car Pile-Up
Reigning Sound- I'll Cry
The Replacements- Shiftless When Idle
Cheater Slicks- Used Illusions
The Mummies- In and Out
The Damned- Plan 9 Channel 7
X- Your Phone's Off the Hook, But You're Not
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Playlist for 9-17
Operating from memory here, there may be some mistakes
Buffy Sainte-Marie- "God Is Alive, Magic is Afoot"
Cul De Sac- "Death Kit Train"
Indian Jewelry- "Dirty Hands"
Julee Cruise- "I Remember"
LSD-March- Moeru Pyramid"
Harmonia - "Dino"
Souled American- "Mar'boro Man"
Jimmie Dale Gilmore- "Outside the Lines"
Ramases- "Life Child"
Galaxie 500- "Listen, the Snow is Falling"
Public Image, Ltd- "Careering"
Karen Dalton- "Katie Cruel"
Buffy Sainte-Marie- "God Is Alive, Magic is Afoot"
Cul De Sac- "Death Kit Train"
Indian Jewelry- "Dirty Hands"
Julee Cruise- "I Remember"
LSD-March- Moeru Pyramid"
Harmonia - "Dino"
Souled American- "Mar'boro Man"
Jimmie Dale Gilmore- "Outside the Lines"
Ramases- "Life Child"
Galaxie 500- "Listen, the Snow is Falling"
Public Image, Ltd- "Careering"
Karen Dalton- "Katie Cruel"
Friday, August 5, 2011
Summer class is over. We're back.
I got to go on vacation for work this weekend. It was the best.
Finally started reading The Haunting of Hill House. Finished up A High Wind in Jamaica and read Emerson's "Nature" yesterday.
Still listening to heaps of Nikki Sudden. Also Waylon Jennings, The Dictators, Ian Hunter, and Radio Birdman.
Is there a point to this? No, but I'd like to get back to posting here, gotta start somewhere.
I got to go on vacation for work this weekend. It was the best.
Finally started reading The Haunting of Hill House. Finished up A High Wind in Jamaica and read Emerson's "Nature" yesterday.
Still listening to heaps of Nikki Sudden. Also Waylon Jennings, The Dictators, Ian Hunter, and Radio Birdman.
Is there a point to this? No, but I'd like to get back to posting here, gotta start somewhere.
Friday, June 24, 2011
Sunday, June 12, 2011
The weekend's purchases
Emily, Mike, Nora and I went up to the Twin Cities this weekend. Saw a Twins game, partied w/ old friends (Cortaz, Kenzie, Kevin, Nate, Steve), drank our fair share, and did some record shopping.
I picked up:
Rudimentary Peni, Archaic EP
Witchfinder General, Death Penalty
Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments, Bait and Switch
Vertical Slit, Under the Blood Red Lava Lamp
No Trend Tritonian Nash- Vegas Polyester Complex
Death, For the Whole World to See
I picked up:
Rudimentary Peni, Archaic EP
Witchfinder General, Death Penalty
Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments, Bait and Switch
Vertical Slit, Under the Blood Red Lava Lamp
No Trend Tritonian Nash- Vegas Polyester Complex
Death, For the Whole World to See
Monday, June 6, 2011
Kommunity FK, The Vision and the Voice (1983)- An enjoyable enough early 80's deathrock record, a bit like early Christian Death with less charisma and less Rikk Agnew. Dreary, midtempo, muscular guitars drone out gloom riff after gloom riff (the lack of squeamishness about heavy guitars and rock n roll attitude is where the American deathrock bands outdid their British goth- rock cousins.) Atmosphere is kind the point with this kind of thing. Does this bring it? More or less. It attempts the sort of unhinged, dreamy sleaziness that The Sleepers were doing so well around the same time in San Francisco. I get the sense that Mata had a more- studied pose than Ricky Williams, though, and this doesn't ever properly weird me out. Lots of knowledgeable and tasteful people rate this as a classic of its kind, so don't let my lukewarm response get in your way if you think this might be your kinda thing.
Blue Oyster Cult, Tyranny and Mutation (1973)- "The Red and the Black" crashes out instantly from this one, giving some indication of what people are talking about when they suggest that punk's raw rock ecstasy didn't take over in the US like it did in the UK because America already had heaps of unpretentious kickass bands playing stripped down rock n' roll. Of course, unpretentious and stripped down don't always apply to BOC: mystical nonsense symbolism, lyrics about SF creatures (the fuck is a Diz-Buster?), and lengthy solos abound here. Buck Dharma, though, had the sense to draw his virtuosity from Chuck Berry, Hubert Sumlin, and detroit rock instead of the self-hating genuflections that the UK prog-pomp royalty made to the classical western tradition. This gives the indulgent solos and lyrics a paradoxically anti-intellectual jaggedness which takes for granted what would be radical posturing to the Brits several years later. People always called these guys "the American Black Sabbath," but the Pink Fairies on Hawkwind are a much closer comparison. They're more interested in rock n' roll and having a good time than cosmic misery and doom.
I'm going to go read some Lovecraft. I've always loved the guy, but am on a major rediscovery kick lately.
Blue Oyster Cult, Tyranny and Mutation (1973)- "The Red and the Black" crashes out instantly from this one, giving some indication of what people are talking about when they suggest that punk's raw rock ecstasy didn't take over in the US like it did in the UK because America already had heaps of unpretentious kickass bands playing stripped down rock n' roll. Of course, unpretentious and stripped down don't always apply to BOC: mystical nonsense symbolism, lyrics about SF creatures (the fuck is a Diz-Buster?), and lengthy solos abound here. Buck Dharma, though, had the sense to draw his virtuosity from Chuck Berry, Hubert Sumlin, and detroit rock instead of the self-hating genuflections that the UK prog-pomp royalty made to the classical western tradition. This gives the indulgent solos and lyrics a paradoxically anti-intellectual jaggedness which takes for granted what would be radical posturing to the Brits several years later. People always called these guys "the American Black Sabbath," but the Pink Fairies on Hawkwind are a much closer comparison. They're more interested in rock n' roll and having a good time than cosmic misery and doom.
I'm going to go read some Lovecraft. I've always loved the guy, but am on a major rediscovery kick lately.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)