Since it's been yet another slow and dreary week here at
BTC central I'll forgo the usual woe-is-me opening guaranteed to get most readers switching over to the
MANUAL RETRACTION OF DONKEY FORESKINS blog more'n anything. Sheesh, sometimes I wish there would be something worthy to talk about in order to give this blog a bitta class, but I don't think that gabbin' 'bout current events or how I feel is always in the best interest of you readers. Neither are the musical reviews to follow even if some of you really might wanna read about some platter that nobody in their right, or wrong mind for that matter, would even care to listen to inna first place. Just bear with me...
***
Aw chee,
one less watering hole for a good portion of my masochistic (ex) Australian readership to go to!
***
Paul and Bill again (along with the fruits of my labor, sweetie!)...sheesh, remember the good ol' days of the big promo gravy train (and all the dross
that got me?).
Remko Scha-GUITAR MURAL 1 FEATURING THE MACHINES 2-LP set (Black Truffle
Records)
Way back in '75 Lester Bangs said that music was being taken over by the
Germans and the machines. I think that Remko Scha was Dutch, but this double
LP set, originally recorded in 1981 and released on cassette a year later
really does prove that Bangs was right about the musical world comin' to a
cyborg conclusion, even if the sounds heard on this brand spanking new reissue
are way more "human" in approach and groove than some of the computerized
piddle that has been making its way outta the electrono-whatziz groove ever
since the appearance of "HPSCHD".
Cheap electric guitars mounted and strummed by poking and probing devices
might sound like the next step towards that descent into one of those 1950s
SciFi dystopian sagas that were such the rage at the time, but the music is
way more "positive" in the purest sense of the term than your average doubter
would care to think. Not only do they look nice attached to the wall in a modern art chi-chi-ish sort of homage, but the way the machines are programmed to
play these flea market finds results in sounds that probably would not have
been done that much better had they been strummed by human beings.
And not only that, but these guitar works can get into some specifically
identifiable grooves like they do on side one which as a definitive r 'n b
feel brewin' or side three with a repeato-riff accentuated by the percussion
of the operating mechanism. At other times the music comes off like a
thousand-piece koto band played by geishas who all happen to be on the rag at
the same time.
It's an artistic ('n not in the beret 'n stale doritos way either!) endeavor that you can not only look at and listen to in order
to appreciate, but one that lacks a whole lotta the self-conscious snoot and
pity that has plagued most "art forms" ever since Marcel Duchamp popped onto the scene. And not only
that, but you (really!) can dance to it!
***
The Chocolate Watchband-GET AWAY CD-r burn (originally on Not On Label Records)
This is one of those platters, usually the kind made by reformed sixties rock legends nobody other'n us music maniacs seem to remember, that gives one a sense of "deja WHA?" as if we hadn't already been through this ruckus long ago. Sometimes it does get quite confusing as if does here, this being yet another (rec'd 1999) effort from the Chocolate Watchband who most rock snobs don't even know of let along care about. GET AWAY doesn't do much if anything for the legend, but you might be able to eke some enjoyment outta it like I did with one track that reminded me of none other than Roxy Music. It does have one or two moments of worth, enough so that even the sociopolitically pious number entitled "Hope" thankfully got washed outta my system, hopefully for good!
Edgar Winter's White Trash-ROADWORK CD (Epic Records)
Got this 'un after reading Charles Shaar Murray's writeup which made this 'un seem a bit interesting even if his feelings
about this particular early-seventies effort really did come off quite tepid. But eh, given how I thought "Keep
Playin' That Rock 'N Roll" was a fairly crunchy single from these guys I
decided to give this long-time bin stuffer a go because well, even the better of rockscreeders have been wrong before.
Turns out that Murray was
quite correct as far as the fact goes that these guys shoulda been force-fed MC5
records in order to understand and appreciate just what rock 'n roll was all
about. The jams quotient just ain't what it shoulda been on this double duty live set.
The brass doesn't help any and just leaden things like they did in just about every other horn band of the day (they certainly don't accentuate the sound like they did in 15-60-75) while the entire performance is about as down pat rehearsed as anything
you coulda gotten outta Guy Lombardo at the time. Their take on "Tobacco Road"
drags on in a way 180-degrees from the Nashville Teens/Blues Magoos versions
ultimately sounding like something that woulda been more fitting for the June
Taylor Dancers to spread their gams to. That is, before it gets into a buncha
pointless piano soloing and jiveass musings that remind me of the theme to a
bad Norman Lear sitcom, as if there were many good ones inna first place 'cept for FERNWOOD TONIGHT.
Even the live rendition of "Rock and Roll Hoochie Koo" has a telegraphed-in
feeling lacking any crunch the single mighta tingled outta ya. And if ya can
believe it, elpee closer "Turn On Your Lovelight" featurin' Jerry LaCroix up
front actually makes one long for the sturdy and clear-minded version sung by
--- Pigpen???
Unfortunately this ain't the punk rock masterpiece that I thought coulda been
lurkin' about. There's gotta be a whole load of good and forgotten efforts
recorded around the time and of course I'll be searchin' out some of these
long-gone players, if only to deaden some of the pain that they call music
2021. I think most alla you readers know what I'm sayin', but if you too are
looking for half-century old thrills that have been tossed by the wayside this
is one you'd best let slip your grip.
Fushitsusha-LIVE 1 DISC 2 CD-r burn
Dunno where disc 1 of this double doody ended up but if it's as any good as
this 'un well, you can guess the rest!
At first I thought this was a mislabeled Les Rallizes Denudes recording but
track two got into some rather definitely non-Denudes territory that evoked
more of a Stockhausian groove that Mizutani and company never really got into.
Still there is a heavy Rallizian feel to these numbers complete with the same
lilting vocals, this time sung by the group's legendary leader Keiji Haino who
has had more written about these past umpteen years than you ever will.
In other words, perfect music to absorb into whatever's left of your soul, especially during that ever-dwindling free time that seems to go right past
you before it's back to the old drudge. Really would be worthy my while to
try'n dig up the first 'un, that is if the guy who gave me this 'un (I'm now
on his irreversible no-go list) even sent it in the first place.
Mondo Topless-GET READY FOR ACTION CD-r burn (originally on Dionysus
Records)
By the time 1989 rolled around a lotta this what we used to call "six-oh"
revivalist music seemed to go the way of the Hare Krishnas, but there were
still some fairly reliable efforts from the genre that were bein' pumped out. Well,
actually a lotta these revival bands did hold up pretty well but I could only
take so much at a time, these Mondo Topless guys included. Thirteen
hard-pounding rockers with roots set in that portion of the past that people
who still sing "Imagine" don't want to remember. Not bad at all, in fact
Mondo Topless is the tits!
The Ray Charles Singers-FOREVER YOURS LP (Longines Symphonette Society
Records)
Didja know that when I was a kid I thought that the Ray Charles who was
involved with the Ray Charles Singers was
THEE Ray
Charles? Come to think of it, when I was an adult I thought the exact same
thing! Doesn't surprise me a bit because when I was wallowing about in the earlier teenbo portion of my life I thought that Al Kooper WAS Alice Cooper, only he altered his name to get another recording contract sorta like Buddy Holly had two different labels, one for a solo career and another with the Crickets or George Clinton recording the same group as Parliament or Funkadelic with different companies as well! Didn't matter that Kooper and Cooper looked quite different because at the time alla them longhairs looked alike to me!
Anyway, here's a collection featuring the group's 1962 big hit, a
pretty good single as that it evokes a lotta the early-sixties
teenage LEAVE IT TO BEAVER cum
77 SUNSET STRIP sorta idea of where the young 'n budding adult
stood at the dawn of the space age. Nice striking neo-rock 'n roll melody
merged with plenty of suckems-squeezin' slush that typifies the times as
well. It goes to shows just how boffo those times were when compared with
the crass sounds that were comin' out later in the decade.
Too bad the rest of this platter's nothin' but sordid slop that couldn't
raise an eyebrow let alone anything else when played alone with your gal
inna den when the folks were away. Total blandoid music that I couldn't even
qualify as that catch-all "pop", and if anyone could be emotionally aroused
by these sounds then I'm sure they're the same kinda guys who blush when
they walk past the casabas at the fruit stand. Lotsa pants-tightening action
there, just ask Brad.
***
Various Artists-MY 45'S VOL. 6 FROM ROCKIN-HOOD.BLOGSPOT.COM CD-r burn
(Bill Shute)
Never heard of this particular blog 'til recently, and now that I have
I've linked it up it's that good a source for those rare sixties local
records that continue to spark and incite even a good fiftysome years
down the line. Exemplary selection here courtesy Bill Shute featuring
some familiar tuneage like the Wig Wags' "I'm On My Way Down The Road" as
well as its crazed flipster "The Goofy Google" who was some crazy "gay"
feller who lived in a cave. Funny, there was a guy like him around here
when I was a kid, and I heard he used to give out candy!
Some of these rarities don't grab ya but you might just listen to 'em
for "historical value" sorta like way back during the days when you sat through biology class hoping to
learn something about the female anatomy. And yeah, you can do without
some of the later-sixties things as if you'd ever need to hear another
cover version of either "For What It's Worth" or "Hey Jude" (both done
by Harry Zonk on his Thomas organ complete with some tap-dancing
straight outta
THE LAWRENCE WELK SHOW --- wooh!). But it's here maybe as a
reminder as to just how dull those years coulda gotten...if you didn't
know where to look for the really good rock 'n roll that is.
Thankfully this 'un does end on a good note with two sides of folky
downer rock courtesy the Reefers, a group who I guess could get away
with their name because hey, who within a good fifty miles of where they
lived even knew what reefers were!
***
I dunno if I've mentioned this before, but there are back issues of my old fanzine entitled BLACK TO COMM still available. You might have heard about it, the thing was a
sure darn good read that was miles ahead of the slog that passed for
rockscreeding in the eighties and nineties and well, these things hold
up just as well as Jayne Mansfield's bra did even these many years after the
fact. C'mon, buy a few and if you tell me they're just pulsating with
subpar sputum passing as intelligent and cohesive rock journalism well,
you just might be right in your own above-it-all snobbish sorta way.
The June Taylor Dancers? (Chuckle!)
ReplyDeleteCheers!
“Manual retraction of donkey foreskins”?
ReplyDeleteCome on, Stigs, the rumor is that you use yer mouth.
ReplyDeleteRe...the ray charles singers...i thought the same thing. John cale has stated he used to get royalty checks meant for j.j. cale.
re: Edgar great on Johnny's SECOND WINTER (Columbia 3-sided dbl lp). Johnny Winter And= J-Man w/the remnants of the McCoys= Rick + Johnny= great duel gtr combo= played heavily on WMMS back in those days...
ReplyDeleteedgr winter was fag rock
ReplyDeletethe choclit washband was beter than the sTones. riot on sunset strip
oh, yeah: i've attempted to play the "blank" 4th side of SECOND WINTER...best avant garde vinyl ever (fr. Texas)
ReplyDeleteI could never get into the sTones. Ska doesn't do much for me.
ReplyDeleteI like today's rock scene. Tommy James & The Hondells, Brown James, and Jay's Americans. Good stuff to pat my foot to.
ReplyDeletefist off your not bob marley hes ded
ReplyDeletesecondy you are the retart not me ! i have a colege degre ! from hofstra!
Hofstra is a safety school for 'retarts.'
ReplyDeletelol you our the one who is totaly retarted
ReplyDeletehofstra rules !
#1!
hofstra fotball teem is grate!
ReplyDeleteso their fagit! your the retart
lol
lol
lol
lol hofstra is thee best
ReplyDeleteif you diagree yo are 100 % mentily retarted
1000 men of Hofstra
ReplyDelete800 are queer
100 are bisexual
The rest won't last a year
- Hofstra school song
thats totil b s !
ReplyDeleteyou our the fagit!
go to hell ! fagit!
hosftra rules!
you droools!
lol lol lol loo
You can't spell Hofstra without s-h-a-t. Go push in your buddy's stool, fool.
ReplyDeleteHofstra is so totally gay that their football team name... ready?
The Hofstra Pride!
Hahahahahahaha. Didja go to their games dressed as a buttplug?
youu can go to hel!!!
ReplyDeletelol!!!
lol!!!
hostra is th best! colege! evrrrrrRRR!!!
retart!!!
LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!