I haven't done one of these since my Chinese Gongo quarantine playlist of a few months
back, so here's a more recent extracurricular listening pleasure you might or might not want to know about. Besides, these kinda lists sure take up a lotta
space and make these posts look jambus-packtus 'n real respectable-like the same way those playlists that would be included in a variety of early-eighties NEW YORK ROCKERs made the letter writers look oh so hip and with it. There are a few repeats
from the previous playlist, but what do you expect from a guy who is as
LOYAL to his favorite platters as I am? Unfortunately most of these are
of a Cee-Dee variety but since my vinyl has been about 99.999...% shipped into
storage well, I gotta made do with what I have on hand:
Hawkwind-LIVE 1971 WITH TWINK ON DRUMS cassette tape
Eddie and the Hot Rods-PRE-ISLAND DEMOS 1976/PARIS THEATRE LONDON 1977 cassette tape
Slapp Happy/Henry Cow-DESPERATE STRAIGHTS CD
James Blood Ulmer-ARE YOU GLAD TO BE IN AMERICA? CD
Chrome-HALF MACHINE LIP MOVES/ALIEN SOUNDTRACKS CD
15-60-75-JIMMY BELL'S STILL IN TOWN CD
Human Arts Ensemble-FUNKY DONKEY CD
Captain Beefheart & the Magic Band-LICK MY DECALS OFF, BABY CD
Lizzy Mercier-Descloux-ZULU ROCK CD
Rouge-LIVE 1976 CD
Nico-THE MARBLE INDEX CD
Ornette Coleman-THE EMPTY FOXHOLE CD
Hawkwind-LIVE 1971 WITH TWINK ON DRUMS cassette tape
Eddie and the Hot Rods-PRE-ISLAND DEMOS 1976/PARIS THEATRE LONDON 1977 cassette tape
Slapp Happy/Henry Cow-DESPERATE STRAIGHTS CD
James Blood Ulmer-ARE YOU GLAD TO BE IN AMERICA? CD
Chrome-HALF MACHINE LIP MOVES/ALIEN SOUNDTRACKS CD
15-60-75-JIMMY BELL'S STILL IN TOWN CD
Human Arts Ensemble-FUNKY DONKEY CD
Captain Beefheart & the Magic Band-LICK MY DECALS OFF, BABY CD
Lizzy Mercier-Descloux-ZULU ROCK CD
Rouge-LIVE 1976 CD
Nico-THE MARBLE INDEX CD
Ornette Coleman-THE EMPTY FOXHOLE CD
Hawkwind-BRING ME THE HEAD OF YURI GAGARIN CD
The Remains-LIVE 1969 CD
Siouxsie and the Banshees-GREYHOUND PUB CROYDON 2.12.1978 cassette tape
Arthur Doyle Plus 4-ALABAMA FEELING CD
Trad Gras Och Stenar-GARDET 12.16.1970 CD
The Shaggs-PHILOSOPHY OF THE WORLD CD
Iggy and the Stooges-ROUGH POWER CD
John Cale and Terry Riley-CHURCH OF ANTHRAX CD
Patti Smith-FREE MUSIC STORE CD
Eno-BBC SESSIONS 1973-1974 CD
Doug Snyder and Bob Thompson-DAILY DANCE CD
Kevin Ayers-John Cale-Nico-Eno-JUNE 1, 1974 CD
Smegma-MIRAGE CD
Frank Zappa-HOT RATS CD-r burn
Hawkwind-QUARK, STRANGENESS AND CHARM CD
THIRD WORLD WAR CD
International Harvester-HEMET CD
ELEPHANT'S MEMORY LP
Air-AIR RAID CD-r burn
Screamin' Jay Hawkins-I PUT A SPELL ON YOU CD
Thierry Muller-RARE AND UNRELEASED 1974-1984 CD
Thierry Muller-RARE AND UNRELEASED 1974-1984 CD
George Russell-ELECTRONIC SONATA FOR SOULS LOVED BY NATURE CD
Sadistic Mika Band-1974 ONE STEP FESTIVAL CD
John Fahey-THE YELLOW PRINCESS CD
Faust-SOMETHING DIRTY CD
Captain Beefheart-THE EARLY YEARS 1959-1969 CD
Lennon/Ono-ALTERNATIVE TORONTO & MORE CD
***
Feelin' kinda woozy and washed out as of late, which I hope doesn't reflect on
this blog too much. Don't worry all you BTC-loathers out there, my
general despair will show through despite my best efforts to keep a smirk on
my face. Things (mainly REAL LIFE) do tend to creep up on ya
and knock you for a loop especially when there aren't any loops to be seen
within miles, but over alla the years I've been living (if you can call it
that) I kinda gotten used to the dank miasma in my own masochistic way I guess. But that
doesn't mean that I have to
like it.
Still I soldier on, though I do get the big heaping feeling that I'm going to
be stepping on a huge landmine any time now. And to the few who know how I feel
thanks, but your calls of "jump! jump!" were completely uncalled for
***
Better not let my weltschmerz or whatever those stodgy New York types call it
get to me, but I do hope you really go for this particularly halfway-there
post. Thanks to Bill, Paul and even Feeding Tube recs who slipped a few my way
thus saving this 'un from being a total exercise in retro-rock-revisionism.
You guys helped make this 'un a li'l better than had I just stuck to reviewing those old Homestead Records promos that keep popping up in the pile.
Because nobody asked, another photo of Mitsuko Aoyama if
only to prove that the reason Japanese women were put on this earth was to drive white men wild. |
Mako Sica/Hamid Drake-OURANIA LP (Feeding Tube Records)
I believe this is the second collaboration twixt the two, and it sure is a pretty snat "takes control of
your cranial capacities" effort if I do say so myself. Thought the side-long
"Rain" did teeter off into some new age-y images of worlds unexplored and nasty body odor but it worked its way into a pretty cool neo-rockin' new jazz romp as the
side progressed. Flipster's even better as a more Oliver Lake-BAG-ish tone
seems to intermix with the aethereal tendencies making for a here and now
effort that I think really does stand against the usual mulch being passed off
as not only jazz, but music as a whole these days. Remember when you
used to listen to music because it made you happy?
The Good Rats-FROM RATS TO RICHES LP (Radar Records, England)
Not nearly as good as the debut, but still VERY SNAZZ as far as
these late-seventies outta-nowhere recs you usedta see all over the place go.
The specter of ghastly bar band glop had yet to take over the Maraschino
brothers so's you get a hefty slice of good hard pop here, somewhere between
2nd LP Dictators and those post Orchestra Luna "New Luna Band" recordings
which showed a whole lotta passion even with the commercial pap mixed in.
(This was back when pap was still back-boney enough to produce bubblegum and
AM pop that caught your ears in ways no twelve-year-old gal woulda even
thunk, I think!)
Produced by Flo and Eddie who were by then headin' on the train to oldies
circuit giggage, and wonder of wonders released on Radar Records who were doing their
best to prove (like Stiff) the obvious correlations twixt late-sixties wired
teen listening pleasures and late-seventies under-the-woodwork punk unto new
unto
GNU-wave.
I thought I had this '06 collection in my possession but can't for the death
of me find any hide nor hair of any mention or reference to it. Heh, it's a
good'un anyway and one of the many great efforts that emanated from the Boston
area that serves to show modern-day aficionados of "rock" just how wrong
they've been about everything these past fortysome years. Interesting
note...track #13 "Spymaster"'s got lyrics that were written by the group's
former manager, none other than famed Aquarian Wayne McGuire.
***
Another late-seventies Radar Records wonder, this time one of their sixties
punk rock reissues that existed to prove to nimnuls and other rock "experts"
that the whole seventies underground wasn't just kaboomed outta thin cloth. (I
also bought the Radar reissue of the Thirteenth Floor Elevators'
EASTER EVERYWHERE if only because well, I sure wanted not only
that'un but the Shadows of Knight platters that were being sold at the ol'
Drome but man were they EXPENSIVE...not
as expensive as they were to me today but let's just say that now I have about as much closure in life as I'm ever gonna get.)
Pretty neat effort with the cream from both Dunwich albums crammed onto each
side respectively making for one pretty packed effort that'll remind ya of
what was so exciting about being a teenbo and experiencing these nuggets a
good ten years after everyone else had and still turned out to be hippies.
Sure the elpee version of "Oh Yeah" sounds pretty restrained next to the
single side but that whole extra-energy pounce will have you wishing that time
would drag on and we were still wild-eyed kids in a world we for once created
for ourselves. And hey, hearing that proto-"Black to Comm" "Gospel Zone"
should have you wondering just why the Shadows of Knight weren't sued outta existence for
their blatant forgery!
Gotta scour the auction sites for more of these Radar sixties reissues which,
come to think of it, were probably way more exciting than the original
material that label was releasing back during those sure wanna live 'em over
if only MY way days.
Wanda's by-now decade-old return which should make the hardcore fans 'n
followers happy enough but it just sounds like a cash-in before it's
too late to me! Not bad though, at least as far as a fifties remnant trying to
do good (and pretty good too I will say) this comes off way better'n some of
the iffy reshapes and updates various olde tyme rock 'n rollers came up with.
Great covers and a few maybe originals combined and if this was only an elpee
you'd be finding it at flea markets for the next fiftysome years.
***
Can't believe that I didn't review this rarity awlready. Oh well, I
gotta say that this ain't Lowe at his early "overblowing" best --- y'know, the
kinda music that really sandblasted a whole load of your soul the same way
Lowe sandblasted his own tenor sax. Still some smart moves here mostly thanks
to his backing group consisting of Butch Morris and a coupla guys I'm not that
familiar with. If I were you I'd let those great sides like
BLACK BEINGS, THE FLAM and DUO EXCHANGE ruminate a whole lot before giving these later-on efforts the attention
they sure require.
***
This ol' tyme country just ain't my cup o' moonshine as anyone whose read
those Bill burns I've reviewed for the past umpteen years can yell you,
but dagnabbit if this particular slice of Grande Ole Somethingorother didn't
just help ease me (somewhat) outta my terminal gloom 'n doomness. Naw, it
ain't gona save me from my longtime Alan Watts "consider yourself dead so when
you do die you have nothing to lose"
credo but it was pretty nerve-gangling listening to these rather spry doo-dahs
which romp on at a particularly good pace. I find the later-on ones even
better when, with the introduction of drums, the tracks take on a pretty
steady rock 'n roll pace that has the same rush that one would have
gotten from any sixties effort oft praised on this site. Sorta like the
early-seventies Flamin' Groovies returning to their inspirations and getting
the whole mess tossed right back at 'em! One you might just wanna beg someone
to burn for you too!
***
We're comin' down the wire with these Bill burns which is kinda sad, but these
platters do keep up the spirit if even for a short while. Nice 'un (if short)
featuring a number of stead sixties garage band ruminations from the likes of
the Trips and Shyres to Odell Brown doin' some organ jazz that always seems to
brighten up the room. Even's got a nice extended avgarde piece from "Chairs"
which sounds like what alla those dorm room experimental musician types back
inna eighties THOUGHT they were doin'!
Even the song-poems courtesy Cara Stewart had a nice tingle to 'em that'll make you snoots forget about laughin' at the rubes like you usually do with these things. Made for
perfect Sunday morning sunny day enjoyment and come to think of it this might
even work on an imperfect Sunday morning rainy day as well.
***
PRICES ARE REDUCED!!!! Well, the prices of aged bananas have been
reduced at the local supermarket but the prices of back issues of BLACK TO COMM have remained the same. Well, feel grateful that they haven't gone up
because you know, someday they most surely will. Take advantage of some carpe
diem and get 'em while I'm still practically givin' the things away! Yeah I
know, you can't make banana bread with these!
The expanded release of Quark, Strangeness and Charm is a corker.
ReplyDeletelol always with the captain bee fart lol :)
ReplyDeleteNice list. I have the radar reissue of the first red crayola lp and the pere ubu datapanik in the year zero e.p. with the song heart of darkness truncated so it would fit on the side. It was many years before i heard the song in its entirety!any other examples of songs faded from their original length to fit time stipulations on another release?
ReplyDeletewhat abut grys-grys.
ReplyDeletethere the new strokes.
Metheny marathon here, Chris! Every album played in chronological order! Begins as perfect -- and improves from there! (Chuckle!)
ReplyDeleteCheers!
does hawkwind break wind? are they like bee fart? lol :)
ReplyDeleteWayne McGuire was the real Nazi!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.trussel.com/lyman/velvet.htm
Not that it's a BAAAAAD thing!
Or maybe he was the real Earl Wilson?!
what abut chuk barry .
ReplyDeletehe invetid rock n roll
wanda jakson was a nobody
try the drug store ramones.
ReplyDeletethere good .