2007/12/05

Hosokawa redux - accordion/sho


In spite of a kinda new-age title, a thick, tight, laser-focused record of ur-timbral drone-magic...maybe one of my favorite drone-oriented recordings ever. Awesome.

Toshio Hosokawa / Gagaku: DEEP SILENCE (Wergo Concept Series 68012)
http://rapidshare.com/files/74380824/Hosokawa_DeepSilence.part1.RAR
http://rapidshare.com/files/74379950/Hosokawa_DeepSilence.part2.RAR
(mp3-256)

Label description:
“Music,” says Toshio Hosokawa, “is the place where notes and silence meet.” This identifies his aesthetic concept as a genuinely Japanese one. It is found both in Japanese landscape painting and in the music, such as the courtly gagaku, in which audible sound always stands in relation to nonsound, i.e. to silence. In their rhythmic proportions Hosokawa's compositions are oriented around the breathing methods of Zen meditation, with their very slow breathing in and very slow breathing out: “Each breath contains life and death, death and life.”
Mayumi Miyata (sho – the instrument of the universe or of tradition) and Stefan Hussong (accordion – the human or contemporary instrument) are among the most important interpreters of Hosokawa's music, which here is framed by four traditional gagaku pieces.

Toshio Hosokawa:
1. Cloudscapes. Moon Night for sho and accordion
2. Sen V for accordion
3. Wie ein Atmen im Lichte for sho solo

Traditional Gagaku:
1. Banshikicho no choshi for accordion and sho
2. Oshikicho no choshi for sho solo
3. Hyojo no choshi for accordion solo
4. Ichikotsucho no choshi for accordion and sho

CHIN

history time....
As Jamaica's original music, all other Jamaican music can trace its roots to mento.
Some styles of mento would evolve into ska and reggae. (As a matter of fact, some mento songs are still being recorded "inna dancehall stylee" today.)

CHIN'S Calypso CD 1
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

1 Honeymoon
2 Monkey's Opinion
3 Look Before You Leap
4 Riddle Me This
5 Guzoo Doctor
6 Why Jamaican Man Tan So
7 No Money No Music
8 Woman's Style
9 Jamaican Bananas
10 My New Year Rules
11 Mussu And John Tom
12 A Food Wedding
13 Woman's Tenderness
14 Adam And Eve
15 Melda
16 Why Blame Calypso



Calypso/Mento recorded for Chin's Radio Service at 48 Church St. in Kingston Jamaica,in the 50s. personally recorded by the artist. A classic, vintage recording.

The Chin's Calypso Sextet Band consisted of a Rumba Box,a Bamboo Saxophone, a Bamboo Flute, a Banjo, a floor Bass Guitar with four strings, a regular Guitar, two heavy sticks called clave, which they knock together, and a pair of Maracas.
Most of the instruments were made with local materials, the Maracas was made from a fruit called Calabash, with some Jancrow beads put in as shaker.
Most of the musicians were from the country districts but lived in Kingston, Everard F. Williams was the lyrics composer and band manager, Alerth Bedasse was the musical arranger, singer and director of the band.
All the recordings were done with a recording machine that used a cutting needle to cut grooves into 10inch 78 rpm vinyl resin discs. The microphones used were the large old ribbon types, RCA and Shure, they were very good.There were no acoustic rooms for recording, the recordings were done in the store at nights, after the store was closed, the floor was concrete, the ceiling was low and made with gypsum.

The musicians in the Chin's Calypso Sextet Band were the salt of the earth Jamaicans of the old days, they played calypso/ mento music from their hearts, they put everything they had into their music.

Most of the lyrics were done in Jamaican English PAT WA (PATOIS ).


r

2007/12/04

Beautiful Beast

This is completely different than wendy/walter carlos switched on bach series. Some consider this CD as a classic in microtonal or alternate tuning compositions. It has been very hard to find for several years due to the original record label going bankrupt but has recently been re-issued
in an enhanced edition CD which you can buy at most music stores such as amazon etc.....

Wendy Carlos [aka walter carlos]
Beauty In The Beast

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Incantation (6:47)
Beauty In The Beast (3:57)
Poem For Bali (17:40)
Just Imaginings (12:07)
That's Just It (3:36)
Yusae-Aisae (3:12)
C'est Afrique (6:13)
A Woman's Song (4:09)

======================================================

About the Music

1: Incantation -- In Himalayan monasteries monks gather in solemn dignity to bestow upon God a sound so awesome that no mere mortal can be left unmoved. In this fantasy, prayer-wheels and Tibetan bells are combined with subharmonic voices and an orchestra of drums, cymbals, hand bells. shawms, and several kinds of horns, all in the tritone rich authentic scales from Bhutan and Tibet.

2: Beauty In The Beast -- The title cut of the album, this compact piece whimsically blends two quasi grotesque ideas with a romantic theme in best "Ballet Russe" style. The new scales used for all of this are quite odd the first heard called Beta, splits the perfect fourth into two equal parts (actually eight equal steps of nearly 64 cents each ), the second, Alpha, does the same to the minor third (four equal steps for 78 c. each). While both scales have nearly perfect triads two remarkable coincidences!), neither can build a standard diatonic scale, and so the melodic motion is strange and exotic. The two forces, beast and beauty, shift back and forth, and things are never quite what they seem.

3: Poem For Bali -- While in Bali in 1983 (chasing a total solar eclipse) I fell in love with this island, its culture and people and their love of the arts. (Note that the cover painting is from Bali. ) I still cannot get the sound of its music from my ears. "Poem for Bali" is an homage written to express these emotions. The ten-section continuous work is composed wholly in the Pelog and Slendro tunings of their rich gamelan tradition, but filtered through my decidedly western point of view. Section four is based on the Barong dance; I performed it on a close replica of their Gamelan ensemble. Section nine is really a mini-concerto for such an ensemble, accompanied by a western symphonic orchestra (sadly this can't be done in the acoustic world due to tuning conflicts). The rest paints an impressionistic canvas of moods amenable to this magical island.

4: Just Imaginings -- How exciting that the computer controlled digital synthesizer age has arrived. We can finally "have our cake and eat it, too!" In the past we had to choose between perfect tuning (a just intonation), or totally free modulations (an equal-step temperament), and most of us chose the latter. This composition is all perfectly tuned in a "Super-Just" scale I call the Harmonic Scale, which continues past the 5th harmonic of just, all the way to the (prime) 19th harmonic! But then, in a 144 notes per octave slight of hand, it modulates all over, including two circles of fifths, at the main climaxes to section one (Kaleidoscope) and three (Dreams). Section two (Chroma) combines polytonal clusters of "super-just" chords with a busier foreground. This contrasts with the more upbeat first, and stream of consciousness third sections, both etudes in contrast and surprise.

5: That's Just It and 6: Yusae-Aisae -- These two closely-related pieces, written immediately before "Just Imaginings," are also in the Harmonic Scale. They are my studies in learning how to control the Harmonic Scale, before I began to modulate with it. Both also explore some of the more unusual melodic intervals of this scale, which while more acoustically satisfying to the human ear than the arbitrary intervals of equal temperament, have remained difficult to obtain up until now, and so are seldom heard. That's too bad, because we've really been deprived of all the gorgeous exotic modes and harmonies of tuning in the natural way, instead of the mathematical way we've been tied to these past 300 years, since Papa Bach adopted it as the best available compromise.

The point of departure for "That's Just It" is an imaginary jazz sextet, with solo trumpet and tenor sax. "Yusae-Aisae" conjures a Hollywoodesque Mid-Eastern marketplace. While both pieces use exactly the same tuning, to western ears the slithery arabesques of "That's Just It" may sound peculiar, but the latter quite authentic. I suspect that an arab musician would hold the opposite opinion: the Harmonic Scale is no more an arabic tuning than Chow Mein is from China!

7: C'est Afrique -- I've lucky to visit Africa several times, and find the many cultures and musics of the African people every bit as captivating as those of Bali. This piece is my first attempt to suggest a (tiny) portion of their art. It has four short sections, all in the authentic tunings, which are not too different from our own. There can't be any more rhythmically sophisticated music than African, and that's what these four sections, with their quasi-realistic timbres and extrapolations, are about. (As with the Gamelan sections of "Poem For Bali," they were surprisingly tricky, but also a lot of fun to play!)

8: A Woman's Song -- By combining ideas from several regions we arrive at the elegant final work of BitB. The melody, based on a song by a Bulgarian Shepherdess (the woman of the title), is titled: "Izel je Delyo Hajdutin." To that long-flowing melisma I've added the tambura and dilruba from India (replacing the Bulgarian bagpipes), and an appropriate raga tuning. Western horns and crotales, plus several hybrid timbres round out the orchestration. While no synthesizer is yet any match for Valya Balkanska's electric mezzo soprano (whose performance was included on the Voyager records), the instrumental version here forms an appropriately haunting conclusion for all of our beastly beauties.

--Wendy Carlos

m

enjoy.....

2007/12/02

NGOMA 02 / 03

several parties during the winter of 2007/8. christmas and new years bashment, and an art happening where we played the after party. sadly only a few PHOTOS from them...

2007/11/13

NGOMA

this was our very first official event at Fire Club. that place was kinda fun... maybe there will be another NGOMA there... PHOTOS

2007/11/07

electric medicine

I cross the streams. All the time. That is how I've ended up here (wherever this is).

Electric Company is a solo project of Brad Laner, who most notably played guitar and noise for the excellent early 90s alternative rock/shoegazery-ish band Medicine. Electric Company was also a children's television program in the US, but that is immaterial to this post. I came upon these records as various interests of mine converged many years back - being innovative rock, noise music, and general laptoppery. While these two albums are quite different in style and technique, they each handle the creation of artsy-noise-music-that-is-almost-catchy in a playful manner.


a pert cyclic omen

this is noisy, hazy, crazy. a musician having fun in the studio. there are hints of shoegazeryness, but full of loops running on their own power - collisions, elisions.


exitos

exitos was released on tigerbeat6 - and in many obvious ways differs a pert cyclic omen, very electronic, glitchy and spare. but the sense of noise, contrast and collision is still present, along with some serious hooks. this is definitely what makes Electric Company one of my favorite "lost" acts of turn of the century laptopping - so idiosyncratic, yet at ease with hints of genre, equal parts challenge and ease.

I go through my collection, looking for something to put on the stereo, and can't believe I have these records (among all the other records I can't believe I have). This makes me happy.

------------------------------

also, a boozy toast to aporia6 joining the crew here.

bb

2007/11/01

Jonathan Coleclough 2: Collaborations

So among these, I hands-down recommend the one with Lethe (Kuwayama Kiyoharu, perhaps best known as half of the duo Kuwayama-Kijima with Rina Kijima, responsible for some really dramatic and mysterious site-specific improvisation released by the likes of Trente Oiseaux and Alluvial), which is really, really amazing, in my own contingent but triple-tested opinion. That's the dark stuff, and heady heady heady. Also recommended is the collaboration with Murmur. The one with Liles is not quite so much my cup of tea but is sure to appeal to others in a way I can't quite manage. The Low Ground recording with Colin Potter is exemplary and might be the most essential document after the one with Lethe (and lots of fans of Coleclough and/or Potter would probably place it first).


Jonathan Coleclough & Lethe: LONG HEAT
2005 - Standard edition: Digipak CD, edition of 700, ICR43 (UK)
2005 - Special edition - Digipak CD & bonus CD - edition of 250 - ICR43/44 (UK)
http://rapidshare.com/files/62667230/JCL_LH.part1.RAR
http://rapidshare.com/files/62649100/JCL_LH.part2.RAR

This is the special edition of 250 copies, consisting of 2 CD's with each one track:
CD 1 Long Heat (54:37)
CD 2 Long Heat Second Part (38:14)

Long Heat is the result of a collaboration between Jonathan Coleclough and Lethe (Kuwayama Kiyoharu) which started when the two performed together in 2002.

Lethe website: http://www.lethe-voice.com/kk/
Available directly from ICR at http://www.icrdistribution.com/


Jonathan Coleclough & murmer: HUSK (ICR, 2006)
http://rapidshare.com/files/63075614/JC_M_Husk.part1.RAR
http://rapidshare.com/files/63073445/JC_M_Husk.part2.RAR
http://rapidshare.com/files/63072852/JC_M_Husk.part3.RAR

Husk is released in three versions:
Standard edition: ICR57 (edition of 700)
Special edition 1: ICR57 + ICR58 (edition of 200)
Special edition 2: ICR57 + ICR58 + ICR59 (edition of 47, only 25 for sale)

Husk is the first product of an ongoing collaboration between Jonathan Coleclough and murmer (US born composer Patrick McGinley.) They first met in 2002 after appearing on the compilation LP Chaleur, and soon began work on the material that would become Husk Sharing a fascination with using found sound in their music, Husk includes recordings of refrigerators, thunderstorms, sheep, car horns, ferryboats, windblown sand, crackling charcoal, as well as more conventional instrumental sounds including a variety of percussion instruments. Much of the music started as live improvisation, in one case during a radio broadcast on McGinleyís regular Framework slot on the London-based radioart station Resonance FM. These live recordings have been carefully edited and mixed over several years.

Husk is packaged in a 6-panel Digisleeve featuring photographs by Patrick McGinley.

The first 200 copies of Husk include a second CD of pieces recorded over the same period. A further 47 copies (only 25 of them for sale) include both CDs plus an additional uniquely packaged CDR, each one containing a unique composition. The music for these CDRs is based entirely on recordings made in McGinley's home in London during April 2006, his final month there before moving to France.

murmer's website: http://www.murmerings.com

Jonathan Coleclough & Andrew Liles: TORCH SONGS
http://rapidshare.com/files/63380898/JC_AL_TC.part1.RAR
http://rapidshare.com/files/63373295/JC_AL_TC.part2.RAR

'Torch Songs' is released in two versions:
Standard Edition: Double L.P · DS93 (edition of 300)
Special Edition: Double L.P + CD· DS93/DS93X (Edition of 300)

'Torch Songs' is a collaboration between Jonathan Coleclough and Andrew Liles.
Coleclough and Liles met in October 2004 when they both performed at Intergration 3 in Preston, UK. Liles subsequently reworked the recording of Coleclough's solo performance from that evening. He went on to add, subtract, multiply and divide further live recordings supplied by Coleclough, and the eventual result was this double LP.
'Torch Songs' is packaged in a gatefold sleeve featuring 'I Dreamt I was a River,' a poem composed and painted by Geoff Sawers during a performance with Coleclough in Geneva in March 2005. The sound of Geoff's brush painting this lettering can be heard on side B of 'Torch Songs.'
There is a special edition of 'Torch Songs' which includes an additional CD of Coleclough's solo performance at Intergration 3, the basis for some of the music on 'Torch Songs.'



Jonathan Coleclough & Tim Hill: BEECH FOR JOHN AND MIHO
http://rapidshare.com/files/64236604/JC_TH_BJM.part1.RAR
http://rapidshare.com/files/64235322/JC_TH_BJM.part2.RAR

2003 · CD · Spool 01 · Seal Pool · Japan
Standard edition: CD · edition of 450
Special edition: CD + ‘art edition’ 3" CDR in hand-decorated envelope · edition of 50

This is a regular CD release of the piece first released as a CDR in 2002.



Jonathan Coleclough & Colin Potter: LOW GROUND
http://rapidshare.com/files/64804423/JC_CP_LG.part1.RAR
http://rapidshare.com/files/64789173/JC_CP_LG.part2.RAR

2003 · CD · ICR33 · ICR · UK · edition of 300
2002 · CD · ICR33 · ICR · UK · edition of 500
‘Tunnel’ previously appeared on the Murray one | Tunnel CDR.

2007/10/30

Different kinds of mourning: Bass Communion, Coleclough, Liles

I have my own hesitations about a lot of "ambient" music, because the manner so often pulls the rug out from under the matter. I mean, synth-pads/presets and drones are not enough. "Evocative" (depending on what you mean by that, and how you go for it) is not enough. If "ambient" is to mean anything more than "advertising", which is to say, easy-listening, then it would seem that attention to, well, attention is well-nigh crucial. Someone who hasn't put the proper attention into the material and the form of the field that they're working with, is simply slopping givens at me. I will know the difference, and I will accordingly reject such laziness as cynicism, not ambience.

That said, the Bass Communion project of neo-prog-sensations Porcupine Tree's svengali, Steve Wilson, rather took me by surprise. At least this one hallowed record, Ghosts on Magnetic Tape. It's elegiac. Nuff said. I am several listens through it and it holds me.


Bass Communion: Ghosts on Magnetic Tape
(Headphone Dust CD - HDBCCD9, released February 2004)
http://rapidshare.com/files/66426414/BC_GMT.zip

In vinyl replica gatefold card sleeve. Also 300 copies available as a double CD including Andrew Liles reconstruction disc [please see below].

A little hype for you: This is the third full length album by SW's Bass Communion project and is a one hour work divided into 5 distinct sections. The album is inspired by alleged tape recordings of the dead communicating with the living world, paranormal research most famously practised by scientist Konstantine Raudive in the 1970's. This is a spectral and brooding album, rich with dark clouds of sound, beautiful textures, creepy drones and eerie crackling. SW considers this to be one of the finest recordings he has ever made.

Also here, perhaps of interest not least because of its rarity, is the version of the entire Ghosts album done by Andrew Liles, whose work usually bores the shit out of me, but seems to be someone respected by many whose taste I respect. It's actually not too bad. It was included as a bonus disc in a very short-run reissue of Ghosts on Magnetic Tape.


Bass Communion/Andrew Liles: Ghosts on Magnetic Tape - A Liles Reconstruction (Headphone Dust CD - HDBCCD9X, June 2004)
http://rapidshare.com/files/66432961/BC_GMT_Liles.zip

500 copies in plain white wallet for inserting into sleeve of HDBCCD9, 200 copy special art edition, and 300 copies pre-packed into 2CD version of HDBCCD9 (1,000 copies total).

Yet another collaboration brings Bass Communion together with Nurse With Wound studio-svengali Colin Potter and Potter's frequent collaborator Jonathan Coleclough, whose work I'm featuring prominently on the blog, as it's often strong and to my own taste. Of note for those with not-much interest in Bass Communion is the fact that over this lengthy 2cd set, the vast majority of final-cuts are given to Potter/Coleclough, including the entire second disc, a 70+ minute behemoth with Coleclough on the goddamn masterfade. Right! Good thick ambient goop and not-bad throughout.


Jonathan Coleclough · Bass Communion · Colin Potter
(2003 · double CD · ICR 39 · ICR · UK)
http://rapidshare.com/files/63481413/JC_BC_CP_2cd.part1.RAR
http://rapidshare.com/files/63473910/JC_BC_CP_2cd.part2.RAR
http://rapidshare.com/files/63472237/JC_BC_CP_2cd.part3.RAR

The extra artist(s) listed for each track were the sound sources, which the listed artist "mixed" to form the finished piece.
The sound sources are not identified by original track title or album, or whether the source material has originally seen prior release or has been constructed especially for this project.
Therefore, the sound sources are treated as collaborators, with the "remixer" being the artist.
Track details, as listed on the cd:
1-1 Sources: Bass Communion | Mix: Potter
1-2 Sources: Potter & Coleclough | Mix: Bass Communion
1-3 Sources: Bass Communion | Mix: Potter
1-4 Sources: Bass Communion & Coleclough | Mix: Coleclough
2-1 Sources: Bass Communion | Mix: Coleclough

Coleclough and Potter’s remix ‘Drugged IV’ appeared on the Bass Communion remix CD in early 2003. But they recorded far more material. This release includes much of that music, along with a Bass Communion mix of some of Coleclough and Potter’s material.
Saxophone on ‘Pethidine’ and ‘Epidural’ played by Theo Travis.

Jonathan Coleclough 1

A favorite drone-based tape composer o' mine. Rhetoric to a minimum now. If your time is limited, I think I recommend the 2002 ("Alternate") version of Cake above all, followed by Halant-Heat-Beech. If your tastes are a bit less toward the grit/grind of konkret, and you prefere a little less tooth in your grain, I certainly recommend the more "ambient" Windlass, which is smooth but also strong.



Jonathan Coleclough: CAKE (two versions)
(Siren03/Robot14 · Siren/Robot · Japan/USA)
http://rapidshare.com/files/63076508/JC_Cake1998.zip
http://rapidshare.com/files/64081132/JC_Cake2002.zip

First release: 1998 · edition of 500
Second release: 2002 · (alternate version in same packaging) · edition of 300

Tracklist:
First release (1998)
1. Cake (35.22)

Second release (2002)
1. Cake (41.05)

Although they are packaged identically, the two releases of this CD have different versions of the music.
Recorded in Cornwall, Ballymakenny and Wired. Thanks to Chris Britton, Colin Blakey and Áine Dunne. Colin Blakey can be found at The Shipbuilders website, which hosts the interactive and evolving Dronezone.



Jonathan Coleclough: Halant | Heat | Beech

2002 · CDR · self-released · UK · edition of 150
http://rapidshare.com/files/63462497/JC_HHB.zip

This CDR was made for a trip to Japan.

Tracklist:
1. Halant · Jonathan Coleclough (15.08)
2. Heat · Jonathan Coleclough (5.01)
3. Beech · Jonathan Coleclough & Tim Hill (19.44)

‘Halant’ uses wire recordings made by Alan Lamb.
‘Heat’ is a different version from the one on the Chaleur compilation.
‘Beech’ was recorded live in Edinburgh on 7 March 2002.



Jonathan Coleclough: Makruna/Minya
2004 - CD - ICR40/Siren 12 - ICR/Siren - UK/Japan - edition of 500
http://rapidshare.com/files/63407691/JC_MM.part1.RAR
http://rapidshare.com/files/63401749/JC_MM.part2.RAR

Tracklist:
1. Makruna (38.20)
2. Minya (29.37)
3. Makruna coda (1.53)

An earlier version of "Minya" was released as a limited edition CDR.


Jonathan Coleclough: WINDLASS
1999 · CD · KIP016 · KIP · Netherlands · edition of 500
http://rapidshare.com/files/63469282/JC_Windlass.zip

From the sleevenotes:
I first met Jonathan Coleclough at one of Lady Blacksell’s impromptu but lighthearted garden parties. He cowered on the lawn and spoke about films. He went on to study Snipe in ditches with me for many a year and moved easily in the most fashionable salons before his sudden relocation to the Free State of Eldonia. There he shuns polite society and builds some sort of machinery, I forget what, whilst issuing to the world increasingly peremptory and imperious manifestos at which the world, of course, merely snuffles. He refused to see me upon my last visit, but I will always respect him for his sybaritic swish. He has few friends, no hobbies, and moves with the grace of a sloth.
Don Coyote


Cheers to my friends zhao and bills, and thanks to them for patience in not taking extended and fitfull silences as any kinda fuck-you or whatnot. Also cheers to tom and welcome to this little endeavor. Krewe!

2007/10/17

dj Zhao - DOWN SOUTH BANGIN VOL.1 MURDA MUSICK

1 in 3 African American males between ages 15 and 25 is rotting in a prison cell. every year, the CIA pumps 60 BILLION dollars worth of narcotics, mainly crack and heroin, into the ghettos (source Mike Rupert, political commentator, ex-CIA, ex-LAPD). education and pulling-up-by-bootstraps for a people systematically marginalised, disempowered, and disenfranchised for multiple generations is much, much easier said then done.

gangsterism is a grave and serious problem in the black community. drug dealing, prostitution, and petty violence breaks up families, leaves lives ruined (or very prematurely over), and perpetuates a culture of despair.

but there is a reason young people the world over (and millions of older folks too, like me ha) love gangsta-rap. and there is a reason why i hear Dirty-South Hiphop in high-end shopping centers in unlikely parts of Europe. and the reason is this -- there is something in the ghettos, in the projects, in the concrete-cotton-fields, that the rest of the world is missing, that the rest of us envy, want, and need:

a raw vitality, a life-or-death urgency, and a visceral in-the-moment experience of life.

this mix is a collection of some of my personal all time favorite contemporary Rap from Houston, Memphis, Atlanta, etc. --- what is known as the Dirty South sound. in addition to some of the fiercest flows since invention of the microphone, there are lots of new production ideas, wicked electronic sounds and textures, and other formal innovations in terms of the hiphop cannon -- Maceo's Nextel Chirp (track 06) for example: East-Coast snobs need to take some notes (and get your game out of the coma it's been in). steering clear of the likes of 50 Cent and Outkast (not because they too "mainstream" but because i don't like their music), most of the big names in the underground are represented, including the illest tracks from the biggest mixtape series on the circuit. i wanted to keep it fresh, in the 2000s, so lots and lots of amazing shit from the past, such as early 90s Triple Six, Ghetto Boys, UGK, or joints from the early No Limit / Cash Money days, are not included. and instead of focusing on tripped out songs about weed and drank, or nasty songs about fucking and sucking, this mix is all about the meanest, darkest, bleakest, most brutal, thugged out and straight BANGIN' tunes i could get my grubby hands on in the summer of 2006. an hour long white-knuckled, blood-shot adrenaline rush, like an eightball to the brain.

to be sure, these are songs about drugs, guns, hos, and money. but if you look beyond the lyrics at face value, this music is about more than that. from the hopeless frustrations and beyond-desperate situations of life in dog-eat-dog abject poverty there arises a fearless and un-stoppable expression of rage and deep seated resentment toward pervasive, pandemic oppression, toward a state which continually sanctions and perpetrates the murder and torture of its own (second class) citizens.

i sometimes fantasize about all these rappers putting political messages directly, upfront in their songs, instead of as (largely) unacknowledged subtext. what if they directed their anger at the system, instead of at eachother... (and instead of shooting up the neighborhood, burning down Beverly Hills) but this is largely impossible for mainly 2 reasons: 1. it would not be allowed, radio plays will stop for artists that decide to do this, and other ignorant thugs will take their place. and 2. this music is BORN of thug-life, and it will, sure as the earth is round or we all die some day, continue to be what it has been. it really is a sad, sad situation with no end in sight. and we must all remember that, even as we get hype and bounce to this mix.

the majority of visitors to this blog will be at best not into this kind of music, and at worst harbor unshakable prejudices against it. but that is why i decided to post this -- the polar opposite of most of the music presented on Different Waters. just like my love for the music of Morton Feldman or Steve Lacy, i love this music for what it is. and i hope that some of you who would never normally go there, maybe after a bad day at work or just feeling punchy, might do up a few rails or sip on some syrup, turn up the bass and just get BUCK to this -- your life will only be richer because of it.

note: haven't done a proper cover for this one but that picture of Young Buck just about says it all...

tracklist from memory:

01 Intro
02 Young Jeezy - Gangster Music
03 Bun-B - Dripped Up and Draped Out
04 Paul Wall with Rapid Ric - Tall Tee [from Whut it Dew mixtape series vol. 1]
05 Lil Wayne - How you Ride
06 Maceo - Nextel Chirp
07 Project Pat (i think?) with DJ Smallz [from Southern Smoke mixtape series]
08 Project Pat and Frasier Boy [from Ghetty Green album]
09 Swisha House f/ ??? Mystery MC
10 Three Six Mafia - Got It For Sale
11 Bun-B, ??? Mystery MC, and DJ Drama [from Gangsta Grillz mixtape series]
12 Swisha House f/Mike Jones and Mz. Trinity - Rulez
13 Disturbing Tha Peace f/ Shawnna - Posted
14 DJ Smallz - Dirty South Instrumentals
15 Lil Wayne
16 ??? Mystery Femcee [from Southern Smoke mixtape series]
17 Lil Jon [from Crunk Juice album]
18 Trillville - No Problem
19 DJ Drama with Killer Mike, Bubba Sparxxx, Three-6-Mafia - Get 'Em Shawty [from Got That Purp mixtape]
20 T.I. - You Don't Know Me
21 David Banner (I think)
22 Akon with Young Jeezy - Soul Survivor Alternate Version Remix
23 Lil' Wayne - Get Real Gangsta
24 Outro

bigup kid slizzard for filling in 4 important blanks in the tracklist.
(they is just a couple left and i ain't gon sweat it)

resta y'all stay true to tha game.

2007/10/12

requests.......

here are some recent requests-please enjoy..........


Bang on a Can
Terry Riley -- In C
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Released: March 1, 2001
Label: Cantaloupe Music

Performers

* Maya Beiser cello
* David Cossin glockenspiel, vibraphone
* Steve Gilewski bass
* Michael Lowenstern soprano saxophone
* Wu Man pipa
* Danny Tunick chimes, marimba
* Lisa Moore piano
* Todd Reynolds violin
* Mark Stewart electric guitar
* Evan Ziporyn clarinet
* Bang on a Can

r

(Damn that adams- his link has been delagated to the comment section for shakin' the boat and nauseating the crew and cap'n)

Alan Sondheim, "T'other Little Tune"
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01 Beautiful
02 Varje
03 Messier
04 Rock
05 Day's Eve
06 Bludgeon
07 Think Synk
08 For Planck
09 Breath
10 Slang
11 Steven Crain
12 T'Other Little Tune

Alan Sondheim (Guitar), Alan Sondheim (Piano), Alan Sondheim (Trombone), Alan Sondheim (Marimba), Alan Sondheim (Mellophonium), Alan Sondheim (Recorder), Alan Sondheim (Sax (Soprano)), Alan Sondheim (Moog Synthesizer), Alan Sondheim (Recorder (Bass)), Alan Sondheim (Guitar (Classical)), Alan Sondheim (Main Performer), Alan Sondheim (Hawaiian Guitar), Alan Sondheim (Coordination), Alan Sondheim (Dilruba), Alan Sondheim (Bass Programming), Alan Sondheim (Melodeon), Alan Sondheim (Prepared Piano), Alan Sondheim (Jaltarang), John Emigh (Sax (Tenor)), Gregert Johnson (Flute), Gregert Johnson (Piccolo), Gregert Johnson (Moog Synthesizer), Paul Philips (Trumpet), June Sondheim (Piano), June Sondheim (Vocals), June Sondheim (Voices), Joel Zabor (Drums), Joel Zabor (Tabla), Joel Zabor (Moog Synthesizer), Joel Zabor, John B. Litweiler (Liner Notes), Bernard Stollman (Liner Notes), Tom "Tornado" Klatt (Liner Notes)

r

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First ever reissue of "The Songs", the debut recording by Alan Sondheim
& Ritual All 770, originally released on Riverboat Records (later
recordings appeared on ESP Disk). Recorded in March 1967 and included
on the legendary Nurse With Wound list of experimental recordings, on
this album Alan Sondheim played Electric Guitar, Violin, Flute, Suling,
Xylophone, Alto Saxophone, Classical Guitar, Clarinet, Shenai, Bass
Recorder, Mandolin, So-na, Hawaiian Guitar, Koto, Sopranino Recorder,
Chimta, Cor Anglais, Sitar and Bansari.

Joined by Barry Sugarman (Tabla, Dholak & Naquerra), Chris Mattheson
(Bass), Robert Poholek (Trumpet & Cornet), Ruth Ann Hutchinson (Vocals),
June Fellows (Vocals) and J.Z. (Jazz Drums); Ritual All 770 were a group
of improvisors living in Providence, Rhode Island. (Perhaps they could
be considered the sonic forebearers of the Fort Thunder scene...)
Rejecting the notion that avant garde music was solely the realm of
isolated academia, they delved fearlessly and joyously into their
music, creating a work that sounds fresh nearly 40 years later.

r


ALAN WATTS' "THIS IS IT" (1962)
THE FIRST PSYCHEDELIC LP
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Original release: MEA 1007, Sausalito, California 1962

No production or engineering credits

Participants listed as:

Alan Watts - incantations
Roger Somers - drums and chanting
Leah Ananda - conga drum
Joel Andrews - falsetto and evocations
Henry Jacobs - piano and French horn
William Loughborough - bass marimba and lujon

The LP begins with "an explosive dialogue" wherein Watts and associate Roger Somers rap and ramble over a crude piano and percussion backdrop; an extraordinary intensity rapidly builds and culminates in voices screaming and chanting "loveyouloveyouloveyou", abrutply cut off with a state of the art (for 1962) psychedelic echo effect. It's too tribal to be avantgarde art, too crude to be free jazz, too freaky to be rock'n'roll - it just is "IT", and that's all you can say about IT.

We are then greeted by Watts' delightful voice introducing the "Onion Chant". The confident mid-Atlantic lecturer tone that was such a hit with Bay Area radio listeners briefly recaps a theme from the acid visions of "The Joyous Cosmology", namely that the spiritual student finds himself in an infinite regress of self-realization, where he steps out of his phony egos over and over, like peeling the skin of an onion, until he reaches a point wherein there is almost nothing "genuine" left -- and the subsequent realization isn't moksha, but rather the insight that one is a fake. "He is artifice and insincerity, through and through and through...". This rather harsh message of liberation gives way to an extraordinary uptempo chant with conga drums supporting Watts' seemingly ad libbed trip into an aboriginal tribesman past. You can pick up the word "LSD" early in the chant, but this may be coincidental.

Watts was, among many other things, a great admirer of Japanese culture and tradition, which is echoed in the brief third track of instrumental music. This is followed by an obviously improvised "floating soliloquy" wherein Watts rambles like a true freak about whatever comes through his mind, sounding more like a Shakespeare stage actor zonked on acid than his eloquent lecturer self. "I am so strange in this... queer dark old stewpot..." is just the beginning of the trip, which leads way to some heavy metaphysical poetry about the human body and a rendezvous of friends "high in the sky like the moon". These "Fingernail pairings", supported by feeble avant-jazz snips, is as psychedelic as anything you're ever likely to hear.

Side 1 closes with "Umdagumsubudu", a "controlled accident" with frantic drumming and incomprehensible chanting back and forth, exploring in full the African/Caribbean tribal voodoo feel present throughout the album. It's spooky like an old Nonesuch field recording, except that this is a bunch of white beatnik heads aboard a Sausalito house-boat in 1962, rather than some age-old initiation rite. Uncontrolled laughter and an outburst of Watts coughing puts the listener right inside their freak scene.

Another strand in the colorful ball of "This Is IT" is the influence from religious music of the ecstatic, devotional type. Some of the rants have a tongue-speaking quality, while there is a clear presence of liturgical wailing at the beginning of side 2. This is the "Metamatic Ritual", a 14-minute "contemplative ritual mounting slowly to ecstasy". The whole gang joins in with various percussion instruments and chanting voices half-buried in the soundscape, the total impression being very effective and enchanting. Although improvised, it seems obvious that there was a clear group-mind at play here, much like you can find on tribal acidrock albums such as Beat Of The Earth, Yahowha 13 or Furekaaben; some call-response passages also recall the Merry Pranksters recordings from 1965-66. "Metamatic Ritual" is also the track which best displays the quality of the musicians, with some excellent drum/conga interplay.

"The End" naturally takes us back to the beginning, as it is partly the same track that opened the LP. There is some atmospheric, low-key wailing from Watts and Roger Somers, before the craziness creeps back in, with eerie piano excursions, percussion and incomprehensible ramblings in invented languages; an excellent use of stereo is demonstrated with the chanting voices taking up one channel each (side 1 is mono).

"This Is IT" is an extraordinary album on every level; it must be taken into account in any serious chronicle of psychedelia. Even in 2003 the album appears highly advanced and challenging, its intensity certain to surprise those expecting some bongo-beating beatniks mumbling about nirvana. Timelessness, courage and a sense of absolute freedom makes it a truly essential experience. The fact that it was created by one of the portal figures of the mid-century's spiritual revolution is just one aspect of its importance and appeal.

it

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enjoy.............tom7865

rarities....

some treats for you today..... a couple of rare LP's....

first off is one that was recently reissued on the excellent creel pone record label.
(creel pone reissues rare electronic works in sets on 100 CD-R's only). This is however a rip from the vinyl LP I picked up many years ago....

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucketthorkell sigurbjörnsson “la jolla good friday i - ii”

* la jolla good friday i (17’10”)
* la jolla good friday ii (21’15”)

creelpone press release:
reproduction of this 1981 lp featuring two wasted / buzzing / side-long / go-nowhere early computer pieces recorded on march 28th, 1975 that sound not unlike an airplane landing/taking off as realized by the programmers of an atari 2600 console video game...

this one’s kind of a tough nut to crack actually (mainly due to its’ inherent “nothingness”) but what i do find appealing is that despite being birthed from well within an “academic” environ (the hallowed halls of ucsd) this is probably more zonked/“automatic”-sounding than most private/bedroom-electronic lps of the same era (or of any time between 1975 and now.)

one thing’s for certain; this does a bang-up job of capturing a certain digital-age claustrophobia (think: wargames) than any other record i’ve heard... and yes, that “one man against the world” spirit i’m often referencing is here in droves...

r


this next album has never been re-issued as a CD and has been out of print for years....

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket(not the real cover which I could not find on web but very similar....)

Standing ; Sight rhythmics : for piano ; Under the umbrella
by Jō Kondō; Aki Takahashi; Sound Space "Ark" (Musical group); Nexus (Musical group)

Jo Kondo ( b. Tokyo, Japan, 1947) is a Japanese composer of contemporary classical music. He graduated from the composition department of Tokyo University of Arts in 1972. He serves as Professor of Music at Ochanomizu University in Tokyo and also teaches at Tokyo University of Arts and Elisabeth University of Music in Hiroshima.

Kondo's works are often structured mathematically, using minimal principles of composition. However, the repetitions are very rarely literal and operating across the entire ensemble; rather, they are structural, adhering to the "20% redundancy" principle of evolutionary aesthetics. His interests include hocket, the music of Ancient Greece, and strong differences in instrumental timbre, all of which are reflected in his compositions. A similar stylistic point of reference would be the Italian composer Franco Donatoni. The chamber version of his 1975 composition Sight Rhythmics reflects the latter in its unusual instrumentation of violin, banjo, steel drum, electric piano, and tuba.

1 sound disc : 33 1/3 rpm, stereo. ; 12 in.
Note CP2/11.
The 1st work for flute, marimba, and piano, the 2nd for piano, the 3rd for 5 cowbells (5 players).
Sound Space "Ark" (1st work) ; Aki Takahashi, piano (2nd work) ; Nexus (3rd work).
Recorded 1973-1980, in Tokyo and Norland, Ont.
Durations: 7 min., 52 sec. ; 13 min., 13 sec. ; 23 min., 34 sec.
Program notes by Joaquim M. Benitez on container.

r

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j Kondo


enjoy.....tom7865

2007/10/03

love, love, love

yeah it sounds like sunshine, rainbows, flowers, and unicorns in the post subject. I'd say that it's in the eye of the beholder or that, but where it is actually is the hands and feet of Paal Nilssen-Love. He's a fucking jazz drummer. If you haven't seen him play, I say you're missing one of this era's great drummers. Not "percussionist" - drummer.



Here's three limited and long gone releases from Mr. Nilssen-Love in solo concert, and duos with fellow Norwegians Lasse Marhaug (noise) and Anders Hana (guitar). Yeah, it's from Norway w/Nilssen-Love or something like that. These will hit, split, and twist you (and your ears will have it thorough), nothing less than intense.



27 Years Later



AMFM



Personal Hygiene

------------------------

expect some updated links for my old posts in the next week or so.

full crew manning this vessel now. I expect weather.

bb

2007/10/01

tune that piano..........

here is a repost of sorts.... Cap'n Zhao mentions this way back in the archives with a link to it on the once wonderful but now non-functional site classicalconnection, so here is seminal minimalist La Monte Young's The Well-Tuned Piano, the 1988 Gramavision recording.

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketLA MONTE YOUNG: At the world premiere of The Well-Tuned Piano, the live world premiere in Rome in 1974, Pandit Pran Nath was there. And he said, "You literally transformed the traditional instrument of Europe before their eyes." Somehow, by tuning the piano in just intonation, it takes it back to the lyre of Orpheus and the harp of David which had to be tuned in a much simpler way, and it brings out some of those characteristics. The piano just depends on what you do with it. It's like everything else. Remember when electronic instruments came out and the Musician's Union said, "This is going to be a problem. Musicians are going to be out of work" and so forth. They weren't really. It just became another instrument. And what you do with electronics is what's important.

http://rapidshare.com/files/59473767/La_Monte_Young_-_The_Well-Tuned_Piano.part1.rar.html
http://rapidshare.com/files/59481805/La_Monte_Young_-_The_Well-Tuned_Piano.part2.rar.html
http://rapidshare.com/files/59490518/La_Monte_Young_-_The_Well-Tuned_Piano.part3.rar.html
http://rapidshare.com/files/59493787/La_Monte_Young_-_The_Well-Tuned_Piano.part4.rar.html

(need to download all to get the 5 cd's)


enjoy..........tom7865

2007/09/26

nautical matters

1: a big welcome to new crew member Tom7865. a seasoned navigator, since coming aboard he has already taken us to some strange and wonderful places. look forward to imminent new directions.

2: GraspRelease was released for getting (way) too drunk on shift but we had to grasp him back because his knowledge and wit (not to mention tolerence level) is rare and irreplaceable.

3. Team: i think we should sign our posts from now on. because for some reason people still think i'm the only one here, and a lot of stuff upped by you guys gets attributed to me. so please just write your name at the end of a post -- nobody reads the small print below.

4: think it's high time for a complete renovation and I'm going to go on a mission of re-upping all dead links on this boat. what y'all tink? might take some weeks. if anyone can help, crew member or passenger, please drop a line of what you intend to do. i will work from the beginning.

i think that's it. cheers to everyone.

- zhao

2007/09/22

Reich early works.........

Steve Reich
Early Works (1987) [Compilation]

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketIn 1965 in San Francisco, partly inspired by the phase experiments of Terry Riley's In C, Steve Reich was playing around with two identical tape loops he had recorded of a black Pentecostal preacher. Letting the loops go slightly out of phase, he became mesmerized by the complex sub-rhythms set up by the interference, the voice morphing into a pulsing Minimalist music. It's Gonna Rain lifts those three words out of the sermon, turning them into a rhythm -a flickering repeat that shears into depersonalized cyber tones. In a longer sequence, about people beseeching Noah to let them into the ark, the tape subdivides into eight loops of garbled counterpoint. In 1966 he pushed the voice of Daniel Hamm, arrested in the Harlem riots of 1964, even further towards a morass of hypnotic vibrations around the phrase "Come out to show them". A Techno prophecy

(FYI- this was #10 on The Wire's 100 works that set the world on fire while no one was listening)

http://rapidshare.com/files/54865292/10-_Steve_Reich__early_works.rar


enjoy.............

Obscure tape.............

Obscure Tape Music of Japan vol.3
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★★Music Drama "Akai Mayu" (A Red Cocoon)

Edition Omega Point Archive Series OPA-003.
Limited edition of 500 copies.

1- makoto moroi (music) - koubou abe (text) _akai mayu/1960
2-6 kuniharu akiyama _arcana 19/1960

Notes: Akai Mayu (A Red Cocoon) is based on the short fiction by Koubou Abe (1924-1993). Performed at Sogetsu Art Center, Tokyo, Japan. Akai Mayu & Arcana 19 composed in 1960 and broadcast live by the Japan Broadcasting System NHK the same year.

http://rapidshare.com/files/44152991/obscure_tape_music_of_japan_vol_3.rar.html

enjoy........

Oliveros.....

Electronic Works
Pauline Oliveros
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1. I of IV (1966)
2. Big Mother Is Watching You (1966)
3. Bye Bye Butterfly (1965)

from boomkat-

Another crucial collection of early electronics, this comes from American female electronic pioneer Pauline Oliveros. Oliveros was a composer and accordion player who sculpted experimental electronic music in a totally unique manner - as meditations on a certain subject or other. Developing her own techniques of recording and processing electronic instruments and also building her own synthesizers, Oliveros managed to come up with a sound which was way ahead of her time. Indeed listening to these three pieces (recorded in 1965 and 1966) makes me think that they could have been recorded yesterday - the ideas and concepts are still being explored now and are totally relevant. The first piece on the disc 'I of IV' is played in real-time using oscillating tones and tape loops to create the epic world of noise and ambience we, the listener, get to hear. It's a captivating world of echoing astral sounds, something like early Radiophonic Workshop but without the reliance on 'themes' or repetition... the improvisational aspect of this track is key, and it builds and grows in a way that would only occasionally be mirrored. The second piece 'Big Mother is Watching You' is even longer at over half an hour, but is no less compelling as tape loops of decomposed noise and concrete sounds make up a sludge of devilish audio. This is proto noise music at its finest, music that could still stand its own ground against modern noise acts such as Hair Police (who this piece sounds closest to I think...). The best however is saved until last with the 1965 piece 'Bye Bye Butterfly', a detailed composition made from electronic sounds, reel-to-reel tape and samples from Madame Butterfly. This might sound like a peculiar mix, but the end result is something close to Philip Jeck or Janek Schaeffer, with the pitched 'plunderphonic' sound reverberating underneath squealing electronic noise. An incredible portrait of one of electronic music's great figures, this will be enjoyed with a desire to hear more early electronic goodness in the same realm as Delia Derbyshire et al. Huge recommendation!


http://rapidshare.com/files/38001152/pauline_oliveros__Electronic_Works.rar.html

enjoy....

piero umiliani -Musica Dell'era Tecnologica (NEW LINK)

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketULTRA RARE experimental lp by the genius Piero Umiliani .... Very special and rare material...... Recorded at the soundworkshop studio de Roma.

Impulsi
Catene Di Montaggio
Omini
Fruitori
Computer Nevrotico
Virus in Amore
Blues Machine
Lultimo Pastorello
Finalissimo Atomico
Antiquariato
Requiem Per Un Autotreno
Danza Dei Rocchetti
Marcia Dei Robots
Consumismo

(this is a vinyl rip, lots of pops etc) REUPPED THANKS TO ANONYMOUS! enjoy......

2007/09/13

Pure Torture2....or....Objekt2

this was requested................
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Objekt 2: Electronic & Concrète Music (1962-1988)
Rune Lindblad

1 Objekt 2 (Op. 25) (9:28)
2 Plasibenpius (Op. 30) (8:15)
3 Hälften Av Någonting (Op. 38) (6:39)
4 Frage (Op. 59) (6:25)
5 Tora (Op. 67) (5:43)
6 Maskinlandskap (Op. 122) (7:30)
7 Innan Konsert (Op. 190) (11:49)
8 Lagun I Uppror (Op. 197) (9:02)
9 Dimstråk (Op. 203) (3:23)

Second stellar CD of stark, mesmerizing & historical electronic and concrète. "Volume 2 of the music of Rune Lindblad (1923-1991). This CD consists of the remainder of the long out of print Radium double LP. These works cover the years 1962-1988. Lindblad, a Swede, began composing in 1953. Ignored by the musical establishment of Stockholm, Rune went his own merry way, composing over 200 works of electronic music. Limited in the early years to often primitive equipment, he carved out his own musical niche. The sounds were often raw, occasionally scary."

http://rapidshare.com/files/55328526/Rune_Lindblad.rar.html


enjoy..........

2007/09/10

Pure Torture.... or......Death of the Moon....

Rune Lindblad - Death of the Moon
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This disc is a reissue of lps on Pogus and Radium. Rune Lindblad (1923-1991) was an early pioneer in electronic and concrète music. Lindblad did not see these genres as mutually exclusive. Important and wonderful works by a composer who represented no institutionalized school of thought. At a concert in 1957, the critics called his music "pure torture." That's why I like him........

1 Party (9:33)
2 Månens Död (8:30)
3 Fragment 0 (9:10)
4 Fragment 1 (11:33)
5 Fragment 2 (9:56)
6 Evening (8:11)
7 Nocturne (6:19)
8 Optica (10:13)

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Profile: Rune Lindblad (1923-1991) was born in Gothenburg, Sweden and after extensive art studies started teaching painting and graphic arts. He also graduated in chemical engineering. He first began composing in 1953. Lindblad was the first composer in Sweden to work only with electroacoustic sound material. This was a time when Cologne and Paris were fighting over the aesthetical differences between oscillator tone music and musique concrete on tape. Lindblad however did not see those genres as mutually exclusive. In fact he extended his work to incorporate other media besides music. In 1957 at Folket Hus in Gothenburg, he gave a public performance of his earlier works. Critics slated him brutally and described his concrete music as a "fad" and "pure torture." Rejecting the concert hall, Lindblad began experimenting with optics and sound. The following three years, he produced five works on 6000 feet of film. The last of these was Optica 2. Until the original release of these recordings on the Radium and Pogus labels there had been only two recordings of Rune Lindblad's compositions ever available. One was the single side of a 7" record released in 1957. Rune Lindblad taught at Gothenburg University, and numbered among his students Rolf Enstrom, Ake Pamerud, and Ulf Bilting.

http://rapidshare.com/files/54859355/Rune_Lindblad.rar.html

enjoy..................

time for Tape Play......

Tape Play
Kenneth Gaburo
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"Over his career, Kenneth Gaburo (1926-1993) produced a lot of electronic music. However, works for tape alone are fairly rare in his output. Over about a thirty-year period, ten works for solo tape were produced. Of the ten tape pieces, five were created in the mid-1960s at the University of Illinois, one was created in 1974-5 in his home studio in La Jolla, and four were made in the studio at the University of Iowa, Iowa City, which he directed during the 1980s and early 1990s. Not surprisingly for a composer whose stated aim was to blur the distinctions between language and music, six of the ten pieces feature an overt use of the voice, while two of the 'purely electronic' pieces use timbres that are so vocal in character that one is constantly thrown back onto a consideration of Kenneth's main obsession, the voice. Only two of the pieces, both from the Illinois period, seem to not deal with the voice in any way."

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

http://rapidshare.com/files/54853105/Kenneth_Gaburo.rar.html

enjoy..................

I like it, that's why I post it.

here's a slice of forgotten americana that's just beginning to filter back in from the outer regions of the internet universe. Please enjoy.


Attilio Mineo Conducts
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Man in Space
with Sounds

Attilio 'Art' Mineo
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Label: Subliminal Sounds
Date Recorded: Early 50s,
Released: 1962

1. Welcome to Tomorrow

2. Gayway to Heaven

3. Soaring Science

4. Mile-A-Minute Monorail

5. Around the World

6. Century 21

7. Man in Art

8. The Queen City

9. Man Seeks the Future

10. Boeing Spacearium

11. Science of Tomorrow

12. Space Age World's Fair

13-24. All tracks as above, but without the spoken word introductions



Origin : 1962 Seattle World's Fair / 1997 Subliminal Sounds
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The music on 'Man In Space With Sounds' was played in the Bubbleator. "The bubbleator was Washington State's official exhibit in the Coliseum which housed a "World of Tomorrow" exhibit. The Bubbleator, a 150 passenger spherical clear plastic elevator moved 2.5 million people through displays that promised an easier life ahead. The operator wore a silver shiny space suit right out of a Buck Rogers comic strip and is veeery, very cool indeed and the music to "Man in Space with Sounds" was being played through the sound system. Totally outer space man, totally. "Visitors ascend to the exhibit in a globe-shaped elevator for a 21 minute tour of the future." Visitors to the Seattle World's Fair loved the Bubbleator ride, which was eventually purchased for $5,100 and relocated after the fair's end to the Center House/Food Circus/Armory. In the early 80's the Center House was remodeled and the Bubbleator was auctioned off (amount unknown). The unknown buyers moved it to their home in North Seattle and turned it into a terrarium and that's where it sits today."


http://rapidshare.com/files/54837499/Attilio_Mineo_-_Man_In_Space.part1.rar.html
http://rapidshare.com/files/54841028/Attilio_Mineo_-_Man_In_Space.part2.rar.html



as always, enjoy......

2007/09/04

a particular time or instance of event (lens blur)

over ten years ago when I got this album, I guess I didn't know what to expect. that's good, right? about 70 minutes of blasted and delicate sheets of guitar, vocal and noise. I guess we can all go on about "shoegaze" as it seems popular w/the kids these days, but this is an album for the seekers, it's blissed but harsh - pedals and a 4-track - it can explode if you stop staring at the light. another sadly OOP...




lovesliescrushing

xuvetyn

2007/09/03

djzhao ghost dub



a mix from around 2003. if i was to make it today some of the tunes would be different on a couple of sections, but the mix still mroe than holds up. there are some goosebump or just simply bump moments like an ill beat dropping after the long jazz passage. no matter how slick or diverse my digital mixes in the (near) future will be, this thing i made with turntables will always be special.

sorry no tracklist - there are 36 tunes and it would be impossible, 5 years on.

file under:

bleep bass, digidub, electric boogaloo, darkhop, cabbage beats, alien jazz, triphop (?!?!), bionic reggae, mutants rap, call to arms, psycho drum'n'bass.

first 30 tracks
last 6 tracks