Once again, here's that blog which is really gonna suffer (maybe even go out of business) now that alla them USAID dollars that have been pumping it up o'er the past few years have been eliminated. Of course I won't let something as significant as that stop me from getting one of these out so soon knowing how you readers just pine away waiting for these "megaposts" to hit the screens, and since I didn't want any of you to do anything rash in the meanwhile I thought I'd hurry it up a bit. Naturally I had to tear myself away from all of those DRAGNET and RIFLEMAN reruns I repeatedly tune into (you just can't get enough drowned babies in bathtubs), and some people out there say that I just don't do enough sacrificin' for all of my dear and near readers! So like, here's one for all of you who think that I'm in this only for the fun and jamz with no care for the thoughts and needs of you people out there in etherland!
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And now, in homage to both Gale Gordon and my father, here are some 1939 Edsels!:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjG-HqV1adM2lI6t952_sKHDRFjl6kWQHUFnwtccYQ0KJvEypK43uMwv7a8rPIyaSI9k14Tu6kZN-04fbSCUuaT3sR-QS1o5a8Vg19a87Q3zUS5KnOOUoQwYraqaPT5APF4Rvegm7yhat31yDjKkXwgQHPmuo2Or0pIdeO-0fBKyNAibz62gWaPhQ/w640-h414/1939%20Edsel%20IV.png)
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Sun Ra-DISCO 3000 2-CD set (Art Yard Records)
Bought this 'un because I wanted to hear Ra in a small group setting where he and John Gilmore, Marshall Allen and a few of the other regs were more up front and glaring. No Allen here but it turns out that this expanded edition of the old DISCO 3000 release (live in Milan 1978) is just the kind of effort I was down in the trenches for!
Forget the obvious fact that the title that a title such as the one being used was merely an attempt to sucker the trendies in the same way Hitler called his movement "National Socialism" because socialism was hot potatoes at the time and well, it sounded up-to-date 'n all even if it had little to do with the actual socialist setup. But anyway, this sorta disco's got nothing to do with lighted dance floors and dagos in white suites one bit! Its just more of Ra during one of his thankfully less lucid moments along with Gilmore as well as two guys newer to the Ra-sphere, mainly Michael Ray on trumpet (he also did the neeto autobiographical booklet notes) and drummer Luqman Ali, someone who must've played exclusively on Ra's Eyetalian jaunt because I couldn't find anything else about him on the web. Not that I was exactly doing a thorough search.
Who cares, since these two disques are pretty hotcha Ra doing his old faves with some new interplanetary buzz thrown in. As far as my bean can recall Ra and Gilmore never let any of us down (gotta find some of those seshes with Gilmore as leader, not to mention his performance with Allen as well as Steve Lacy at the old CBGB 313 Gallery hinthinthint!). The new guys fit in swell enough---I guess they watched all of those films about various philosophical doo-dah and teaching statues how to sing...and understood them. But as you all could guess, this is more of that heavy duty Ra (as if there ever was light Ra), and although this might not be worth your getting if you're low on the moolah and there's so much of the guy's work out there to sample, splurging would be advised.
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Ornette Coleman & Prime Time-TONE DIALING CD (Verve Records)
I approached this later-on Prime Time album with some trepidation, or at least caution considering that it was recorded during a time when even the new jazz thing was being co-opted by influences both brilliant (punk) and feh (rap). T'would figure that the latter would be utilized on track #2 "Search For Life" which woulda made your typical rock critic of the day (1995) do some major league BVD creaming, but for me it just dates the thing to a time and place I'd prefer to get out of my mind. Eh, some of it like the Bach Prelude is very pretty (the irregular drum beat sorta keeps it from being a total tip to the classical bent) before heading into a more appropriate atonal sphere. "Miguel's Fortune", "Ying Yang", "Family Reunion" and "Badal" traipse somewhat into the punk funk realm to satisfy alla you early-eighties lower Manhattan wannabe junkies. Overall it ain't what I would call top notch, but it's good enough even if it does have some of them 80s/90s hallmarks of superslick sound and production that always irritate anti-hi-fi nuts like myself.
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Various Artists-BROWN ACID - THE SEVENTEENTH TRIP CD-r burn (originally on Riding Easy Records)
Here's some brown acid you should take! A collection of what a few of us just might call authentic late-sixties and beyond hard psych that reminds me a whole lot of Cold Sun without the autoharp or those noisy guys from down the street your mother always sneered at wond'rin why Mrs. Fafoofnik didn't march her son straight to the barber shop. You get everything from downright organ-dominated garage band romp to an ode to Smokey the Bear and (as if it would be any surprise) some lightweight pandering to the occult. This might come off a little too "get down" for my own and perhaps your tastes, but gosh-it-all if I find these tracks a whole lot more getcha down the esophagus than some of the sounds that were supposed to replace this type of music. If your idea of a local group singles compilation is more in line with the BACK FROM THE GRAVE series its best you steer clear.
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Phuong Tam-MAGICAL NIGHTS CD-r burn (originally on Subliminal Frequencies Records)
No "Hey Joe, you got chew gum" jokes here! Mid-sixties Viet sensation doin' the pop slop for local tastes and perhaps even a few restaurants. Good sexy slush that recalls a whole load of early memories of short wave radio dial spinning, only without the static. Somehow I could just see Tam singing for a bunch of drunk and rambunctious Amerigan soldiers at some seedy dive, wond'rin why she ever decided to lower herself like this in the first place. If "Sukiyaki" had only opened the floodgates of far eastern pop maybe some of these would have made the top ten. But do be careful...listen to enough of this and you might feel like committing an atrocity!
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THE AMERICAN DREAM LP (Ampex Records)
This late-sixties Todd Rundgren-produced platter never did snuggle itself into some nice 'n comfy place in the annals of obscurer-than-thou lost rockist efforts. Sad to say, but the American Dream just weren't as high energy as I and perhaps even you would have hoped from an obscure act of the distant past, one that had all of the hallmarks of punk promise but ended up like just any other close but no cigar group that cluttered up a flea market bin for years on end. These Dreamers really don't hit the same heights of 60s/70s cusp cataclysm music the same way their equally obscure compatriots like Black Pearl and Hackamore Brick did---quite a shame given how they seemed as if they'd come off as a nice, straight ahead rock group at least judging from the tiny bit of prior hearsay that has been goin' on 'round 'em. At times the Dream remind me of a gutsier Nazz and they had the potential to perform some outright scream-out trackage, but for some reason it seems as if someone's holding them back. Gee, I wonder who...
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Borbetomagus-SAUTER, DIRTRICH, MILLER, DOHERTY CD; SAUTER, DIETRICH, MILLER CD (Agaric Records)
There've been so many of these Borbetomagus spinners comin' out during the group's lifespan (and after I s'pose) for me to keep up with, so when I pick what's best for me boy do I pick carefully given the sparsity of cool cash comin' my way! Decided to settle with these two which just happen to be the first two Borbetomagus albums, here re-released in digitized form. There ain't much on these v. late-seventies/early-eighties recordings that differentiate these Borbetomagus platters from most of the later ones I've heard other'n the presence of electronics player Brian Doherty on the first (and one track on #2) and well, if you are the type of he-man who likes your avgarde on the atonal free-side of things boy are these disques just right for you. Free play jazz teetering into the 'classical" with a rage that reminds me of some of the early AMM thingies I've heard in the past magnified about a thousand-fold. If you're serious about this stuff these just might be but one starting, or ending for that matter, place to go.
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Y'know, I coulda written the Great Amerigan Novel, cured hemorrhoids and bought out the candy store and given it to the poor and STILL nobody would give me my honest to goodness just dues (as if I really could give a hoot)! But I did create a fanzine called BLACK TO COMM and although I should have gotten some notoriety for that (not that I was particularly looking for any --- having fun was the first and foremost reason I did the thing) let's just say that I got NEGATIVE dues ifyaknowaddamean. If you're curious as to why, well why not click on the highlighted link above and see what all the ruckus is about, Bucky!
1 comment:
easy on the car culture. it brings back memories of high school toughs who would flick cigarette butts at me after they fiinished varnishing their black sabbath lamp bases in wood shop.
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