Archive for category RECORDS.

Yamantaka // Sonic Titan | YT//ST

YT-ST Hm. According to…my own internet presence…I’ve gone completely insane as of a few years ago. I’ve just been looking through what is the backlog of records I should be in the process of reviewing, if I’m taking this project seriously, and uh…it’s not looking too good. But I know better. The truth is, I’ve been insane most of my life maybe until…today? I dunno, people can snap and go insane one day, not always traumatically, just a lot of little things build up sometimes. Why can’t it work the other way around? I’ve had a few good night’s sleep in a row and things have been generally ok…maybe that’s all it took. After…so many years.

So anyway, in Japan, it’s Buddha’s birthday today, or yesterday, since it’s already tomorrow there. Some people think it’s in early December. It’s not really important. But you’re supposed to spend the day in mindful reflection, I guess, which in what you’re supposed to be doing all the time, but it’s like every other religion pretty much in that most people aren’t taking it very seriously most of the time.

So here we are. I’m picking this one unrandomly out of the pile.

Hey, I’m glad I have a blog. I would not have remembered this album. I’m trying to reorganize my files and it would take years to get to this listening to this again. Goddamn mess. What the hell do you expect from a crazy person? It made my Best of 2012 (altho it came out late 2011), which should really be a best of albums I already reviewed, shouldn’t it. Well.

☸☸☸☸☸

First of all: could we just call this album “self-titled”? We could. It is. But you know what the deal with this band is? They’re fuckin’ cool. It’s a good thing. It’s a band. That’s why you start a fuckin’ band, to do something cool. Look, if you put some unicode bullshit in your name that has to be copypasted every time, you’re kind of a cock. Granted. Some would say double slashes are just as pretentious, but it ain’t. It’s just the right amount. So the name of this album just looks better in this format so I’m using it, but let’s be clear that it a self-titled album and we’re not going to say “why-tee-slash-slash-ess-tee” in conversation, if it comes up. Which it should. Also acceptable at this point would be “the album” or, in the future, “the first one”. OK.

This band has a whole live element I don’t know much about, it’s supposedly “operatic”. I only get this from the first track, Raccoon Song, which is the most forgettable. I had literally forgotten about it. This is definitely against the general common sense “rules” for new bands, which is to put your best song first. But another of those rules is to not make the cover some kind of incomprehensible artwork that does not even have the name of the band on it, but like, a picture of the band. That makes sense. But man, fuck making sense. This cover rules. There’s no way I could not listen to a record with this cover. I would be so bummed if it wasn’t great. What the fuck is that thing? Fuckin’ cool, that’s what.

Also, there’s only 7 songs that average out to average length, for a total of only about 31 minutes. Maybe that doesn’t seem like a full album, but how many songs do you need. More than 1 or 2? NO. It’s just about perfect. If you can’t say something in under 45 minutes, you don’t have anything to say.

And what are they saying? Absolutely nothing coherent or intelligible as a real message. JUST THE WAY IT SHOULD BE. (Or not, get off my back, I’m just not-crazy today.) The only words I can make out on this album are in Japanese, a language I don’t believe any of the members actually speak. They translate to “I AM STAR CAT.” YES.

This is the single I guess, Hoshi Neko. The big stand out with a with a phased intro and the catchy Japanese hook. These are Canadians, btw. I assumed at least one was J-Canadian but apparently not. The bandcamp page uses the tags “chinese” and “iroquios”, so it’s intentionally mixing things up. Seems like some of the references are Buddhist and some are Native American…maybe. Maybe they are just making some of the shit up out of thin air. You can totally do that when you work on something cool. It’s not like fucking fan fiction. There’s no canon!

The other songs are also pretty good put not as pop. “Operatic” outside of whatever the live show consists of is squarely within the concept and sound more or less of “rock opera”, altho this is usually a bad thing in my opinion. They make something that works. I think they achieve the effect by making music that is more like soundtrack music than part of a musical.

Reverse Crystal is like a more-rocking out/less Kraut Stereolab with those same kind of high-register, unintelligible, repeating vocal phrases, and even a long second-half pop drone coda but with a lot of cymbal bashing, and it’s got like an Iron Butterfly organ solo in there. Great.

A Star over Pureland is the only explicit Buddhist reference I can find apart from the name, which most people(?) will people recognize from the Boredoms’ Eye Yamantaka (it’s not his real name). Altho if you want to get into it, these are reference to competing schools of Buddhism. Yamantaka is mostly a Tibetan thing. Pure Land is a like a Buddhist afterlife which not all Buddhists believe in. No, there’s no way to prove I am not looking this up as I go along. Oh wait, there is Pure Land in Tibet. I did just look that up. Well, there you go. There’s some Tibetan cymbals and horns in there. I knew that. I know stuff. Guitar freak-out on this track is cool, but it’s clear the keys are more their thing. It’s definitely the climax of the show, but as far as songs and general moods go, they are best and building up the tension than actually exploding. Or resolving. But it all seems worth it for the parts that work.

You know what, Crystal Fortress Over a Sea of Trees could also totally be a Tibetan thing. I don’t know that much about the Tibetan stuff. But I do know it has another killer organ solo. The particular synth rhythm track they use sounds a little out of place. It’s like we’ve been in something like a 70s horror movie and now it’s like Knight Rider all of sudden. Doesn’t quite mesh. Ends with some vague chants. Maybe that is in Tibetan. Usually done by dudes of course so it doesn’t sound anything like the standard stuff, or maybe it’s not that at all. Questions, with answers, that I am not going to try to find out. It just doesn’t matter. %

buy it on bandcamp [cd/digital]

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V/A | Beat Xmas

Like many internet mixtapes I review, since I listened to it the original link has gone down. But this one has been reposted to WFMU’s Rock ‘n’ Soul Ichiban blog. Seems I can’t be bothered to get around to things in a reasonably timely manner. It’s a personal problem I’m working on. How are you doing?

That’s great, I mean, too bad. Sorry about that. I’m a little distracted. Look, I know this might not be a great time, but I need to talk about this thing I listened to. It’s not important. Well, it’s important to me. Alright, maybe this specific internet mixtape is not that “important” to me even…I enjoyed it. Can’t I…share my enjoyment? It’s better than posting pictures of everything I stuff in my stupid face. Oh stop. No one told you to post those pictures. They did? For real? Well, those people are no friends. Forget about them.

What’s Beat? Is this mix “Beat”? I think it’s “Beat”…but but not Beat. Dig? It’s a fun time, but don’t get any big ideas. There’s maybe a dozen people who were The Beats, then there’s the Jazz guys, then there’s the beatniks (the fans), then there’s not-beatniks, then there’s the not-really-having-anything-to-do-with-anything-just-happened-to-be-theres. And the in-betweeners.

I was not there. I’m 34. But I used to really be obsessed with ‘The Beat Generation’. Still am somewhat, but now I think it’s a mistake to think of it like that. It’s like calling the 90s ‘The Grunge Generation’. It’s just not accurate. This mix is just some holiday-themed fun, but why not completely tear it apart into non-fun atoms? Because there’s better stuff to do, relax. I’m not going that far with it. But we can separate who’s who here.

  • Jack Kerouc – ultimate Beat, obvs.
  • Lloyd Glenn – legit jazz guy
  • Tony Rodelle Larson – Gettin’ suspect. No info on this guy, seems to be a one-off novelty record, but there’s not really jokes in it. Maybe a failed attempt at a crossover career. We get both sides of his only single.
  • Lowell Fulson – More of a Blues guy than a Jazz guy
  • Jim Backus & Daws Butler – Mr. Magoo vs. Fake Beat, sort of. Funny, sort of.
  • Pony Poindexder – Jazz, man. Altho, this is on the far edge of the Beat Era, well into the 60s.
  • Jimmy Bowman – Beat version of Night Before Christmas. Another one-off, could have been a minor jazz guy.
  • The Mello Moods – Borderline. The Christmas Song is pretty square, but they do their best to jazz it up. It’s not really a Jazz group, it’s transitional into into R&B/Rock.
  • Miles Davis & Bob Dorough – I imagine Miles Davis smacking the shit out of anyone calling him a beatnik. Hard to imagine him sharing breathing space with this vocalist, but it happened.
  • Hank Crawford – Jazz dude, transitioning into Soul.
  • Oscar McLollie – Pretty much early Rock with some Beat lingo.
  • Johnny Guarnieri with Slam Stewart – Real jazzbos, joke song. Fun times.
  • The Charlie Parker Quintet – Bird, man.
  • Babs Gonzales – This guy was a full-time jazz vocalist, no joke. But his style sometimes crosses into of self-parody. Easy to confuse where the line is. Also he apparently considered legit as a poet.
  • Marlowe Morris – Jazz-soul…this has to be way into the 60s. Kerouac never heard this stuff.
  • Patsy Raye & the Beatniks – This is one knocked out crazy chick. The musicians sound more like part of the lounge scene, a one-off group trying to cash in towards the end of the era. Kinda cool tho.
  • The Ronnie Kole Trio – Standard jazz group.
  • William S. Burroughs – Burroughs, man. Possibly at his least nihilistic.
  • Manfred Mann – Huh?
  • The Phil Moore Four – legit jazz dude, kinda pushin’ it.
  • Lord Buckley – legit non-jazz non-beatnik, his take on Scrooge is more enjoyable before you realize it’s straight-up minstrelsy. So hopefully you’ve listened to the whole thing before reading this. Pretty great.
  • Edd “Kookie” Byrnes – Man, was he beat. NOPE. It’s cool tho, man. Is it? Cool it man, it’s the past.

I went over this a few times (totally Un-Beat), like, “yeah, this guy’s a beatnik, that guy is, real beatnik here, fake beatnik there”, whatever. But NONE of these cats (can I say “cats”?) are beatninks. It’s just another word for hipster. Despite how anyone else uses those words I think there’s a clear and non-necessarily derogatory definition: it’s the type of person that lives the lifestyle of an artist without actually creating anything. Anybody that is creating art, whatever you call them…they made something. (And I don’t think fashion counts as a thing, unless you’re making the clothes from scratch.) Oh, but I’ve gone off on a thing. I’ll let you get back to whatever. Hippy Holidays and such.

Feels good! %

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Tricky | Pre-Millennium Tension

DSC_3837

I thought I’d do a list for 1999 before the Mayan “apocalypse”. Isn’t a fake end of the world the ultimate in 90’s nostalgia? This was the first record I thought of including, but I soon realized (not soon enough, I spent at least an hour on the thing) two things: 1). This record came out in 19-fucking-96. It was in heavy rotation for like 3 years. Or was it? When did I buy it? I don’t remember. 2.) This list fills in way too many blanks. It fills in all of the blanks. There’s the question of why I’m doing it or if it should be done, and there’s the question of if I have the correct answers for the questions. Right?

I think I got it through Columbia House. It might have been after seeing the Christiansands video (which, for real is not on youtube?), but I also just bought a lot stuff back then because I liked the cover or the name. I know I got it before Maxinquaye, I was not hip to that. Everybody seems to like that one best, but this is the one for me. It might not be as good musically—lyrics that are barely lyrics, songs that are barely songs—but it’s a solid statement. Half of the booklet is literally pictures of nothing. That’s so cool. C’mon. That’s a statement. You make that into a pdf, it’s bullshit. You gotta get fingerprints you can’t wipe off onto your frantic search for answers, more information. Why was this record made like this? You can just look it up now. I like that he’s fighting his own nature here and his intention fails completely. “Trip-hop” fits this guy perfectly.

This CD could be on repeat for days in those years. Really set a mood. Seems hard to recreate now. Of course, I was really depressed in those days. Clinically; there was no reason for it. And I was on a lot of drugs that kept me generally fuzzy. Thus the futility of specific details of this era. I was into a lot of music that was heavily weed-influenced because it fit with my general demeanor tho I hardly touched the stuff.

I dunno how much you can talk about this music. I remember around this time getting disgusted with music writing, at least the way people had started writing about this kind of music. It’s just a mood, you kinda kill it but talking it to death. I still don’t know what the guy in Ghetto Youth is talking about and it just does not matter. It’s just like a slice of reality you can relive.

New Year’s 2000 wasn’t any kind of Armageddon, but that whole year was a turning point.

There’s a before and after, no going back.

Buy it on CD. %

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The Damage Manual | Limited Edition

If my life had any kind of continuity that made sense, I would have known about The Damage Manual before a couple years ago. I was into industrial music in the 90s but there was a period when I associated it with bad memories and I didn’t just stop listening to those old records, but stopped following all those bands completely. Unfortunately, this period spanned the entire length of Damage Manual’s career. This is hardly the most tragic event of the last however many years, but they were a pretty good group to totally miss.

I bought this one at one of Martin AtkinsTour:Smart events—which had a small merch table for Invisible Records, naturally—with the intention of writing a rambling review that got into my feeeelings about his whole thing now. If you were trying very hard to seem clever, you could say the concept of Tour:Smart* is ideologically ‘post-punk’, because it seems, at first glance, to some people look like a “how to sell out” manual. But those people think “punk” is about glorifying being a fucked-up failure. Which…it’s not. I don’t think I just won an argument there but, who cares? I don’t want those kind of people in my band or life in general. Anymore I mean. It can be a lot of fun for a while. I had this idea for a long time you had to be fucked up to be an artist, man. On some level it’s the inspiration but it’s terrible way of thinking to be trapped in. Also, it’s over. Now I see you have to have your shit together to be an artist anymore. Whatever it takes! So that’s what I’ve been up to. But if I’ve got my shit together, I can just get a real job, right? Yep, that book changed my life.

Anyway, Atkins is mostly known for industrial supergroup Pigface. Damage Manual is also kind of a supergroup on a much smaller scale. But it isn’t strictly an industrial band; unlike Ministry and Nine Inch Nails who hired live drummers to play or play along with drum machine parts, Atkins is a full member of the group and the live drums are integral to the band’s sound. Atkins is credited with “drums and low end tweaks and blips” and Lee Fraser does “additional programming”. I always think of “programming” on a record as just the drum machine but there’s melodic or at least very non-drum electronic sounds that I like to imaging someone performing live somehow, but I guess they were added later or part of a backing track laid down with the drums. There’s clearly a keyboard on several tracks but there’s no keyboard player credited, it’s all Atkins just augmenting the drum tracks in pre or post-production. I’ve been slow to warm up to this concept of a middle ground between a totally organic rock band setup and something that’s explicitly electronically-driven, but like anything, it’s good when it’s done right.

The band is more Atkins-era Killing Joke than anything else. Which is a good thing. I’ve had it on repeat all day now because I keep getting interrupted and this album is not gonna blow anyone’s mind but it’s solid. Unlike, say, most Pigface albums, which tend to have a lot of experiments, like long spoken word pieces or tracks that are just noise or samples. That’s cool, but you get sick of it after a few spins. DM are not exactly a pop band, but they have straight-forward songs for the most part.

Chris Connelly should get some credit here, as he is the frontman. He played keys in Ministry live. (I’d like to know what was going on there technically because that mostly seemed like backing tracks and samples but that’s another story.) Here he just sings and plays some incidental guitar. He’s credited with lyrics, but the full group gets co-writing credit for the music. I like the dynamic of the group. He’s a good frontman but it’s not all about him, unlike these other groups that are really just solo projects with add-ons.

I like his accent. It only comes through sometimes, like on the appropriately named Mad Dialect which has a great 3 note elliptical keyboard (programmed loop) part throughout that moves around the beat and the words. The gang vocals are perfect on that track too.

Steven Seibold rounds out the group on this record, doubling on bass and guitar, replacing both Jah Wobble and Geordie Walker from the first record. Despite being much less famous he does a pretty good job. Seriously, it all sounds great. He’s from the Hate Dept. a band I never heard of before I just looked them up. Seems he plays keyboard in that band. That’s all I know. He was also in Pigface but everyone was in Pigface. (I was not in Pigface. A lot of people were.)

I’m not sure it’s the best song, but if there was a single, it would be Quiet Life. It’s catchy and the lyrics seem to be about something normal people can relate to rather than whatever South Pole Fighters or any of these other songs are about other than vague menace and weird angst. I’m a fan of vague weirdness myself, but Quiet Life delivers straight up angsty menace anyone can get. Unless you live on a farm or in the forest or something. Even then, do those cows ever shut up with the goddamn mooing? And owls, fuck it, the crickets at night—it just never stops does it? Give it a rest, nature! All you can do is yell at it I guess.

So, on an album driven by menace, to call a song Driven Menace might already be a little on the nose but the chorus spells it right out: M-E-N-A-C-E. Might be my favorite. It’s the most bleepy industrialish song with a danceable hihat-busy beat and a mopey pre-chorus (yesss) that crosses over into Goth territory. This also happens on Laugh Track to some extent, and throughout the album. It’s a mood that comes and goes. Goth is not a real genre, right? It’s just industrial that’s sad instead of angry. Unless it’s like, The Cure. I don’t remember ever hearing anyone say the Cure was ‘post-punk’ back in the day. We just thought of them as “The Cure”, cause there were so many fewer bands then, you could actually do that. When people started calling ‘post-punk’ ‘alternative’ it was partly because major labels wanted to pretend a 10-year-old movement was brand new and they just discovered it, and partly because kids just discovering punk rock of the 70s were not ready to accept it was already over (which, conceptually, it’s still not, just commercially and artistically. But I’ve gone too far. There’s still Punk, kids. But the Sid Vicious bullshit is done, no record company is ever going to pay you just to destroy yourself. I know, I’m sorry.) Point is, overall this is a general purpose post-punk band. I mean, they’re wearing suits on this lovely fold-out poster. You can’t get more post-punk than a clean suit.

There’s no reason to cover every track, it all meshes together really well. The album ends with the “Can Remix” of Expand, a song from the first album. I didn’t think it had anything to do with the band Can at first. It doesn’t sound anything like Can (or like the original song). It’s gotta be like a “DJ Can” or “(Can Remix)” is just part of the title as some kind of meta joke, I thought. Well, I was wrong, but it’s a little misleading. It’s actually by Irmin Schmidt and
Kumo
, it’s more like a Kumo remix, since Kumo isn’t a member of Can and Schmidt has appeared on Kumo records. But it’s a good way to end things I guess. It’s not like the other tracks but it still fits with the whole, doesn’t feel tacked on. Or maybe it does, what the hell do you want from me? I like it.

The cover of the record is a 3 dimensional piece of plastic. (At least the first pressing which seems to still in print. There is a later import version that’s just a photograph of the material.) There’s not really anything justifying this beyond it being kind of cool. I heard Atkins tell the story of how they just had a bunch of this material in huge sheets for a stage set or something, so they just cut it up into squares for the cover. If I was still really into keeping my CDs in alphabetical order on a uniform set of shelves, this is the kind of thing that would really bug me, but as things are, it really helps me find the CD (or at least the case) in The Pile which is currently my life. My digital files are not much better if I try to look through the folders. They’re even worse, nothing tangible makes any of them stand out from the others. But what can you do but yell at it? That’s how I get through the day. %

*Japan has no monopoly on meaningless punctuation, just saying.

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V/A | Dennis Dread’s Halloween Mix

Happy Halloween Aah, I sure am enjoying this mix from Cosmic Hearse…what, the download link is down? Sorry, you should have thought of that when I posted it 2 years ago. That was already a full year after the original Hearse post! Huh! Looks like yoooou’re a little behind.

But wait, now that I check the post turns out I’ve been listening to Part 2. The mp3 folder is simply labeled “Happy Halloween”, etc. Well…they’re both great. Haha. The absurdity of this blog is…terrifying? Yes! MwahahahHAHAHAHA!

But seriously, I’ve got the other one. Let’s pretend it’s one Frankenstein’s monster of a mix, pretending that Frankenstein’s monster was two Frankenstein’s monsters put together… Well try and stop me!

Great mix of old Metal, Horror Rock, Scary Punk, Spooky Synth, Occultish Psyche Folk, Fun Festering Rockabilly, movie soundtracks and straight up novelty songs. Both volumes are eerily excellent but I’m partial to volume 2 for the Hitchcock intro/outro and the Lovecraft spoken piece and the other interludes are pretty cool.

Ultra-rare Japanese Black Metal! Early demo-like Ghost! The dudes from Von gone Goth! Entombed covering Roky Erickson! Saturnalia Temple! Clara Rockmore! The Munsters Theme!

The mind reels. Also, it sounds like this is an actual tape. Like he made a real mixtape and transferred it to separate mp3s. A lot of these bands are pretty lo-fi, but there’s an overall analog feel to it. I salute this effort. It gives it a perfect feel of old spookiness. It’s like a tape you find in the attic of an abandoned house.

‡‡‡‡‡

Ok. So, I am an asshole for reviewing mixtapes that are not even publicly available anymore.

I am not posting direct download links on this blog ever, like ever. But maybe I know a guy. And maybe this guy says what you’re looking for is already staring you right in the face, buddy. You might feel dumb about this but maybe you can save face. I mean, it would be great is there were an extension to the downloading…period. Get me?

Ahh, forget it. It’s not for you.

Along with Cosmic Hearse you should also already be following Dennis Dread’s blog The Battle For Art!

Unless you’re…afraaaaid….

Happy Halloween. rar %

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