Like dogs with especially cold noses, these weekend posts can really sneak up
on ya! An' why should any of ya complain since well, it's one way for your
pooch to say howdy to ya and besides they're really good at tellin' when some
female acquaintance is gonna have that special monthly visitor we all know
about and fear (that's when doggie starts running away with that high pitched
yip-like warning!). Yes, maybe we should have plenty more dogs around us to
make sure we know when to herd the missus into the special padded cell for a
few days of misery on her part but peace and quiet on ours!
Anyway, welcome to another edition of BLOG TO COMM and although I
would like to say that this is a very special entry into the canon it
obviously ain't! But as far as being fair to middling well, I won't complain
about that --- pretty pedestrian if you ask me. Spent my ever-dwindling free
time searching out old faves to play amidst the newies, having zilch luck
trying to find a few that I was interested in re-spinning such as
MESSTHETICS GREATEST HISS (having the "Greatest Hits" one nearby
does help a bit considering how the Puritan Guitars are perhaps my faverave
group of the week), but as R. Meltzer once said "wha' th' hey". At
least what I have been listening to continues to reaffirm not only my life
being but general will to go on, and if you wanna blame anyone for my will to
survive blame the music f'r once!
As usual, gotta give thanx to those who thanxed me with these goodies, most
namely Bill Shute, Bob Forward and Paul McGarry. No special thanx goes to an EX friend of
the blog who, probably in a fit of self-righteous flakeitude, disowned having
even known me he having decided to side with the eternal enemies of not only me but
what I stand for which may not be "popular" or "cool" but certainly are not destined for that ash heap of history ol Barack O used to talk about. Eh, the pickings
were slim and anyway I ain't gonna
mention this turncoat's name lest I sully up this blog QUITE A BIT.
Smarter folk out there will know who I'm referring to, obviously.
Sun Ra and his Mythic Science Arkestra-THE PARIS TAPES 2-CD-r set burn
(originally on Kindred Spirits Records)
Never could catch up with these Sun Ra releases and this live effort from '71
(although released in 2010) is but another good one to have and to hold.
I gotta say that these early-seventies Sun Ra albums seem to be some of my
favorites and this live effort is no different, what with a heavier than usual
percussive bent to it which really does get me into a particularly deep
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC mood. Not quite enough John Gilmore or
Marshall Allen for my tastes, but the early analog synth squalls and overall
tension always seemed to do this body well and continues to even thought I've
grown up since the days my cyster ruined my high stool electronic music term
paper what with the "Sien Ra" typo 'n all. As if I'll ever forget her and forget it for that matter, right Brad?
John Cale/Tony Conrad/Angus Maclise/LaMonte Young/Marian Zazeela-INSIDE THE
DREAM SYNDICATE VOLUME 1: DAY OF NIAGARA (1965) CD (Table of the
Elements Records)
Upon first spin a good decade or two back I just wasn't in the mood. But that
drone sure didn't seem so monotonal once I settled back, picked up an old
TV GUIDE to peruse, and sorta let the sounds settle into me.
Worked swell. The original Theatre of Eternal Music more or less trying to
make even John Cage come off sounding normil. Roots of everything from the
Velvet Underground and Stooges to alla those boring performance artists of the
eighties can be discerned even without tweaking your parameters in order to
"get it".
Various Artists-TOKYO FLASHBACK VOL. 5 CD (Modern Music/P.S.F. Records
Japan)
It's always good getting a dose of this Japanese neu-psychedelic hard rock
into my system, especially at a time when such music seems to be rather sparse
if not outright banned! Yeah, this collection contains even
more of that hard nova sound which,
when not heading into the pure realm of atonal cut up, always came off
like the best the closing moments of the sixties hadda offer! Some familiar
names here such as White Heaven, Overhang Party and Suisho No Fune (coulda
used some Les Rallizes Denudes but we can't have nearly everything in our
lives) are intermingled with acts that have slipped through my typically
sieve-like mind and well, if this cold steel shank of aural indulgence just
doesn't stab you in your musical psyche like it
SHOULD I guess there is no help for
you, sweetie!
Ya Ho Wa 13-PENETRATION, AN AQUARIAN SYMPHONY CD-r burn (originally on
Higher Key Records)
Didn't care for it that much back when I first heard it, but thirtysome years
later I actually got a bitta a kick outta this crazed fambly outing worthy of
Manson or at least Amon Duul I. Now it ain't
that freakazoid communal, but
PENETRATION does have its share of whacked out repeato-riff rock
that kept my attention while the third portion of this "symphony" had this
nice squeaky violin added to the hard thud beat that kinda reminded me of some
doofoid English teenbos in the late-seventies tryin' their best to ape certain
Velvets moves and press it up complete with a home-made sleeve. I'll probably
never listen to this again but will admit that my opinion has, er, changed
some o'er the years.
DMZ CD-r burn (originally on Sire Records)
This McGarry burn popped up inna pile and kinda made me feel guilty o'er not
playing either my vinyl or Cee-Dee proper version for quite some time. 's too
bad that this platter, like fellow Bostonian efforts from the Sidewinders,
Reddy Teddy and other worthies, hadda get shoved to the side during the Golden
Age of Seventies Record Bin Plunging while lesser efforts clogged up the
charts and subsequent flea market pules. Like those other Boston-area efforts
this holds up really well, enough that I can see just how these guys got a
bigtime deal at a time when it wasn't like the major labels were that eager to
bank their bucks on rock 'n roll. Interesting fact --- according to producers
Flo and Eddie, the porcine former Turtles were the ones who taught DMZ the
Wailers Classic "Out Of Our Tree", a song the duo first heard when playing a
bill with the legendary Northwest group and eventually performed during their
Reprise records day! Wow!
***
Various Artists-IN THE NAME OF THUNDERBALL CD-r burn (Bill Shute)
Mixie-moshier than usual, but still funzie-wunzie. Some big names like
Johnny Nash and 3/4ths of the Monkees in different guises pop up and we do
get some strangeties like a soppoid version of "Fools Rush In" produced by
famous shower taker Huey Meaux. And yeah, it all makes for a good diversion
from this boring thing we call life. A couple
PEBBLES/BOULDERS things in the guise of the Gentlemen and
Basooties pop up, the latter doing their version of Zappa's "You Didn't Try
To Call Me" that might make more'n a few Mother Peoples' ears pop up. And
for all you cheezoids out there, this thing ends with Billy Strange's very
own rendition of the theme from the infamous moom pitcher none of us were
allowed to see when it made it to tee-vee, namely THUNDERBALL.
***
Still have a buncha these
back issues of BLACK TO COMM to unload on you unsuspecting menials who probably think that
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY is the last word in haute spare time activity
wasting. Hey, if you wanna waste your time you can't do better'n these, so
like what is keeping you fools and your monies from being soon parted anyway?
:)
ReplyDeletethanks for giving spiritual love to my brother "Brad"...he needs all the support he can get!
ReplyDeleteI got two of the messthetics volumes that a reviewer in ugly things talked up. Some good stuff but mostly gloopy brit bands that wanted to be bauhaus. Brits havent had proper musical influences since the early 60s when they were aping u.s. blues and r and b acts. Chalk it up to bad diet and being inbred ala the royal family.
ReplyDeleteAh yes! DMZ! If The Stooges were Mad, DMZ was Cracked! (Chuckle!)
ReplyDeleteIf DMZ ever learned a third chord, they'd be too high-brow for their audience! (Chuckle!)
Anyhoo, listening to some good jazz this weekend!
Cheers!
I am having trouble processing what a ":)" from Debs means. Is it tacit approval or a dis?
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeletenow playing on the boombox: Anthony Davis- EPISTEME (Gramavision cassette, '81).As well recorded as this is it sounds like an ECM release that strayed off the path at a crucial point. Includes George Lewis. + Cream- BBC '67-'68 cassette...w/all the splices & heaviness, uh just great cuz sounds like Ginger is pounding on the walls in my kitchen!
ReplyDeleteBob --- once again I confused you with this arrogant jackoff I went to college with who shares the same last name as yours. Mistake has been corrected. As for "anon" look at :) sideways and you'll that it is not an anti-Jewish trope, Of course if you want it to be one nobody's holding you back.
ReplyDeletehighest ratings to both Anthony Davis and Cream for totally different reasons.
ReplyDeletekool
ReplyDeleteDisgusting.
ReplyDeleteTojo did nothing long.
ReplyDeleteBanzai!
So solly!
how about th troggs.
ReplyDeleteWho's in that photo at the top? Is that your girlfriend?
ReplyDeleteOh! Did I say something offensive? Sah-WEE! NOT!!!
No, it's your boyfriend with a pretty strong case of Chlamydia. if I were you I'd do my watering at some other hole for awhile.
ReplyDeleteOoooooh! Guess Ah done hits a noive!
ReplyDeleteLOL
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LS3yUwFnVGQ
ReplyDeletestiglino do yo u like th cowboy junkies
their prtty good
better than the velvt unndergroun ?
rockn roll will nevr di !