Wednesday, February 28, 2007
 
SICK
Giddy Motors
Do Easy
Fat Cat : 2006
[Buy It]

SICK WORLD
Sway
This is My Demo
All City : 2006
[Buy It]

FEVERED
The Stills
Logic Will Break Your Heart
Vice : 2003
[Buy It]

Chapel Hill is being ravaged by a terrible late-winter flu, and Moistworks' Chapel Hill liason has not been spared. I'm sorry for this wan post, and promise to make it up to you next time, when my body is no longer emitting blast-furnace levels of heat. If I type for any longer than this my keyboard is going to melt.

**********

*ATTENTION JOANNA NEWSOM FANS*

Ever since I posted a few songs from Joanna Newsom's live performance in Greensboro, NC, last November, Moistworks readers have been clamoring for an unscratched version of "Emily." It took some doing, but I finally got my hands on the clean version, and I'm crawling out of my fever-coma just long enough to post it here.

Labels:



posted by Brian
LINK |


Tuesday, February 27, 2007
 
CRASH
The Primitives
Lovely
RCA : 1988
[Buy It]

HEY HEY HELEN
Lush
Gala
4 A.D.: 1989
[Buy It]

SUEISFINE
My Bloody Valentine
Isn't Anything
Relativity: 1988
[Buy It]

EVERYDAY IS LIKE SUNDAY
Morrissey
Viva Hate
Warner : 1988
[Buy It]

PROVIDENCE
Sonic Youth
Daydream Nation
Enigma : 1988
[Buy It]

I moved recently, and this past weekend started unpacking my music. A friend came over in the middle of the mess-making and demanded "Everyday Is Like Sunday." Which, he somehow knew, I would only have on tape. I started tearing apart boxes, desperate to find Viva Hate, but instead unearthed my semi-precious collection of mix tapes. Each one with it's own clever collage cover (typically cut out from Interview, Sassy, and flyers for all-ages shows); serial killer-like titles made up of cut-out letters; and personal messages I can no longer remember the meaning of.

The oldest I could find is from 1988 (and, as luck would have it, features the Morrissey song in the middle of side B). The blurry blue-and-white snow-like pattern on the front and the brown cardboard-colored inside are distinctly reminiscent of a late-eighties Esprit ad. The tape itself says (in pencil; when was the last time you used a pencil?) "Jo's Tape (pretty mellow stuff) 11/88." The real coup would be to find those old mixes I made by holding my tape recorder next to the radio, which date, much, much earlier, as do the fake radio shows my brother and I would record, one of which bore the following call letters and tagline: "WJYJ, WJYJ, the station that repeats itself."

For now, I give you selections from this mix that are actually from 1988 (except the Abba cover "Hey, Hey Helen," but I couldn't help it). In my bedroom in Framingham, Massachusetts, it was the year REM signed to Warner, regular kids started knowing who Siouxsie was, Mike Boddicker joined the Red Sox (minor interest in baseball, major crush on him), Surfer Rosa came out, and my big brother left me alone with my parents by going off to college. Though on the day I made this mix, I was probably much more focused on the person for whom it was intended. Sadly, it's clear that I never gave it to him.

1988? You?

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posted by Joanna
LINK |


Friday, February 23, 2007
 
IF THE PAPES COME
A Tribe Called Quest
Mi Vida Loca (Soundtrack)
Mercury : 1994

GLAMOUR AND GLITZ
A Tribe Called Quest
The Show (Soundtrack)
Def Jam : 1995
[Buy it]

PEACE, PROSPERITY AND PAPER
A Tribe Called Quest
High School High (Soundtrack)

Atlantic : 1996

SAME OL THING
A Tribe Called Quest
The Jam EP
Jive : 1997

THE REMEDY
Q-Tip ft. Common
KC The Funkaholic Presents Bassline Laidback Sound Sensation
Rhythm Distribution : 1998

Growing up in DC I was exposed to a lot of rap's early sounds. Grandmaster Flash, Whodini, Doug E Fresh were sibling staples. When I was shipped off to college in Australia, I was suddenly on my own in terms of nurturing my hip-hop tastes. My peers listened to big rock sounds from the UK and US, or preferred the local indie bands to my "jungle music." Occasionally alternative radio would play some gangsta rap just to prove they had the stones. (JJJ national radio got flak once from the suits for playing "Fuck Tha Police" uncut, and in protest, programmed NWA's "Express Yourself" on a loop for 12 straight hours.) I snatched up anything I could afford from the local record store. I recall buying 3 Feet High And Rising based entirely on the album art. It was very hit and miss: Booyah Tribe, Sex Packets, MC Brains (that was a miss.) Anything and everything Public Enemy.

I spent my first 2 years at University studying towards a degree in genetics, but began to get existential chills when I looked around at my lab partners: social cripples, the lot. I started taking humanities courses, beginning with an Intro to Feminist Studies. I pulled consecutive all-nighters completing my first essay, on Simone De Beauvoir. I got through it by playing It Takes a Nation of Millions... over and over and over again. With Millett, Gilligan, Dworkin on the prowl, it felt good to have the S1Ws in the room, watching my back. But it was also the first time I had harnessed music purely for energy. The Bomb Squad powered me like a combustion engine. On the downside: I would commit the frequent freshman sin of incorporating rap lyrics into my essays. I think I may have worked a Tribe Called Quest verse into a paper on Pan-Syrianism.

I got into TCQ via the "Native Tongues" fraternity of De La Soul, Jungle Bros, Queen Latifah, Monie Love. I loved their first record, though mostly on the strength of the great old material it looped in long greedy lengths. The Low End Theory, on the other hand, was a brand new sound. This post-gangsta jazz rap was so proudly bare, like a bonsai tree. White people LOVED this record. White college girls loved this record. All you white girls out there who were in college in the early 90s, was this the first hip-hop record you ever bought? Sure you danced to Cheeba Cheeba and Bust a Move like you were Kate Beckinsdale in The Last Days of Disco, but first album? Ladies, let us know your first rap CD in the comments box.

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posted by James
LINK |


Wednesday, February 21, 2007
 
AND I WON'T CAUSE ANYTHING AT ALL
Loney, Dear
Loney Noir
Sub Pop : 2007
[Buy It]

COLLECTION OF STAMPS
I'm From Barcelona
Let Me Introduce My Friends
EMI Int'l : 2006
[Buy It]

LUCKY STAR
The Legends
Facts and Figures
Labrador : 2006
[Buy It]

YOUNG FOLKS
Peter Bjorn and John
Writer's Block
Witchita : 2006
[Buy It]

THE QUIZ
Hello Saferide
Would You Let Me Play this EP Ten Times a Day?
Razzia : 2006
[Buy It]


In the end, I think people end up busting Brian's balls because his writing can be, well, precious. - "Avery"


And then she asked for a job. She's got me dead to rights though. Whenever people ask me about my influences, I'm like, Hummel figurines, baby photos, certain gems, cute kitten calendars. "Hang In There Baby!" It's probably my preciousness that causes my enduring affection for the recent bumper crop of Swedish indie pop, which is uniformly whimsical and fey (the Knife, while incredible, is obviously excluded from this taxonomy), that has flooded the States over the past couple of years. We could start by talking about Abba, but on his deathbed, my esteemed mentor in preciousness (a certain gray eminance called Chauncy Wigglesbottom), clutching my ruffled sleeve with a daintily manicured hand, said to me, "Brian, never write about Abba!" And I gave him my oath. We could talk about Camera Obscura, but they aren't really Swede-poppers due to the minor technicality of being Scottish. We could talk about Jens Lekman or Pelle Carlberg, but their mannered affectations leave me a little cold. We could also start with Acid House Kings or the Cardigans, who laid a lot of the groundwork for this new wave of Swede pop - actually, we could definitely talk about AHK's frankly terrifying cover photo (notice how the eyes just follow you. Do they have Olan Mills in Sweden? Is it haunted?) but we've only got so much bandwidth here and I'd rather share the newer stuff with you.

The Concretes' Victoria Bergsman makes a terrific cameo in Peter Bjorn and John's conversation song "Young Folks", which is pretty perfect comfort pop - the whistled melody tattoos itself on your brain immediately, and the song does a great job of capturing the bubble-like quality of burgeoning romance (it makes me think of getting-to-know-you montages in movies: Throwing a medicine ball, chasing pigeons in the park, eating ice cream in front of a boardwalk arcade...). There's a really adorable video for "Young Folks" here, sort of like Linklater without the drugs and paranoia.

In my Pitchfork review of Loney, Dear's Sub Pop debut, I speculated that Death Cab for Cutie's Ben Gibbard and Belle & Sebastian's Stuart Murdoch collaboratively authored Sweden's English curriculum, explaining why so many Swedes get starry eyed when they sing in English. As one savvy reader pointed out, this isn't actually true - the jig is up, and I salute this reader's fine-tuned bullshit detector. At any rate, Loney Dear is an utterly likeable musician with a voice that seems to be composed of some sort of chilled liquid, and his record is my current go-to record for frazzled moments.

I wonder if this same reader wrote to I'm From Barcelona to inform them that they aren't, in fact, from Barcelona, and I wonder if they replied that it just sounds better than I'm From Jonkoping (umlauts sold seperately). IFB is a bouncy, jangly behemoth-- there are like 67 people in the band ("hey, I've got a kazoo and a neckbeard" - it's that kind of party), a utopian society where cute girls sing rapturous 20-voice harmonies with heinous boys and every day is school picture day. From personal research I've discovered that taking any "ba-ba-ba" section from an I'm From Barcelona song and using digital editing software to crank the speed and pitch way down turns it into a monkish chant. You should try it - it's fun, and Audacity is free! Sorry to say that I've run out of posting time before getting to The Legends and Hello Saferide (except to those of you who become personally offended when I write things, to whom I say, you're welcome), but if people want to hear more modern Swede pop or discuss it with greater depth, we could do that in the future - there's plenty of this stuff I haven't even touched on. You know your way to the comments box. Moistworks is nothing if not interactive. Until then, have a precious day!

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posted by Brian
LINK |


Monday, February 19, 2007
 
EVERYTHING'S IMPOSSIBLE
Thinking Fellers Union Local 282
Bob Dinners and Larry Noodles
Communion : 2001
[Buy It]

HALLELUJAH
Jeff Buckley
Grace
Sony : 1994
[Buy It]

GIRLFRIEND
The Modern Lovers
The Modern Lovers
Berserkely : 1975
[Buy It]

TRY A LITTLE TENDERNESS
Otis Redding
Stax : 1967
Available on: The Very Best of Otis Redding
[Buy It]

YOU MADE A BELIEVER (OUT OF ME)
Ruby Andrews
Zodiac : 1972
Available on: Just Loving You
[Buy It]


MW stands accused of becoming a creative writing class rather than a venue for free mp3s. Unfortunately, this post will do nothing to clear our collective name.

A bad thing happened in our culture when depression became equated with moral clarity. On the one hand, it's heartening to think that hundreds of untreated mental patients found a market niche for themselves as SERIOUS THINKERS. How American is that? On the other, it means that some of our best creative and analytical minds work through the prism of misanthropy and self-loathing. (Leonard Cohen, anyone? Who's written songs like Hallelujah, which I love best in others' versions.)

I was thinking about this as I rediscovered one of the most glorious Internet artifacts of all time, one which, for me, justifies the entire existence of the medium: this riff on Jonathan Franzen's author photo.

I feel bad busting on JF. I haven't read any of his stuff. Then, I wasn't very motivated. It seems perverse to read someone's work just so you can make fun of him in an authoritative manner. Still, I'd checked out How to Be Alone from my local library. I'd leaf through it, reading a line or two of Franzen's plaints about not being read, or not being read correctly, and replacing it on my nightstand. After three renewals, I returned it to the public trust, leaving Franzen the gloomy satisfaction of being validated in his loneliness.

****
In my youth, I had a weakness for moody boys and manifestos. I was a smart chick, with glasses and everything, and as many other smart women do I cultivated a protective severity. Serious thinkers, i.e. men, like having us around: they need access to women, for purposes of sex, competition, and status display. Becasue we are basically ornamental, we are assumed to be lightweights-inadequately serious, mere creatures of the flesh. Having a sense of humor makes you particularly vulnerable to criticism. This was the case in every realm I inhabited: the musicians, the music geeks, the theory boys, the writers, the politicos. In every case, this jockeying over ideas; in every case, the collecting of women as decorative objects. I saw one guy beam proudly as his normally reserved wife leaped into an intellectual fray, "Now, that's the way!" And aside to his mates, "It takes her a while to get going, but she's got the right ideas." Thank goodness!

So, imagine my amusement at reading this, in a recent article on terrorism:
Perhaps his most unexpected conclusion was that ideology and political grievances played a minimal role during the initial stages of enlistment. "The only significant finding was that the future terrorists felt isolated, lonely, and emotionally alienated."
And this:
He has called his model [of terrorism]...the "bunch of guys" theory. The bunch of guys constituted a closed society that provided a sense of meaning that did not exist in the larger world.
And this:
Within the "bunch of guys,"...men often became radicalized through a process akin to one-upmanship, in which members try to outdo one another in demonstrations of religious zeal.
Am I the only one who sees the family resemblance between this and certain recent debates on MW? Let alone all of graduate school and most of the arts?

****
I keep thinking about the kinds of knowledge that we value and privilege and wondering what it is we find comforting about ideology. In his memoir Fugitive Days, recovering ideologue Bill Ayers puts it well:
"Ideology became an appealing alternative in so many ways. Practice was uncertain and inexact; ideology cloaked itself in confidence. Practice was slow and ideology a smooth and efficient shortcut. Mostly, ideology was serious-people with ideology meant business. I didn't know yet how domesticating and cruel and stupid ideology could become, or the inevitable dependency it would foster in all of us."
Ideology, of one sort or another, keeps us locked up in cliques. The fact is, few people, mainstream or otherwise, know how to interact comfortably with people who are not mostly similar to them. For a long time after I moved to the suburbs, the only people I talked to were service personnel: the lady at the dry cleaners, the barristas at Starbucks, the janitors at the school. Everyone else was frozen into their upper middle class nuclear family world and they failed to perceive my many cultural refinements. My daughter had her first experience of social exclusion in first grade, when a friend of hers, who'd been to our home for play dates, wasn't allowed to invite her to a birthday party. "My mom said she wasn't sure what kind of person your mom was." Because I'm a single parent? Because we lived in a slum apartment? Because I dress like a hoochie? Because my kid was in day care? Even now, I walk into back-to-school nights and see women I've volunteered with on parent committees turn their heads away and fail to greet me. They cluster into mom cliques and fear the unknown.

Enough of high school, already. Lately I feel like the most subversive force in culture is friendliness or the willingness to say, "I don't know about that" and ask a question. When serious thinkers have exhausted themselves with complexity, with much more interesting views of the world, it's these sorts of hokey, simple things they come back to. I guess there is no workaround to the messy business of living.

Labels:



posted by Megan
LINK |


Wednesday, February 14, 2007
 
SEA OF LOVE
Phil Phillips with the Twilights
Single
Mercury : 1959
[Buy It]

ALWAYS ON MY MIND
The Pet Shop Boys
Discography
Capitol : 1991
[Buy It]

HALAH
Mazzy Star
Rough Trade : 1990
[Buy It]

MAMA, YOU BEEN ON MY MIND
Bob Dylan
The Bootleg Series, Volumes 1-3
Columbia : 1991
[Buy It]

KATH
Sebadoh
Sebadoh III
Homestead : 1991
[Buy It]

Last week I sent an email to about twenty friends, relatives, ex-boyfriends, new friends, old friends, and people I hardly know but thought would have good answers, asking "I'm making a list for my Moistworks Valentine's Day post...what are your favorite love and anti-love songs...?"

My main reason for asking was that I was curious to see how certain people would respond. Who would ignore it, thinking "What a stupid question." Or, who would ask "Don't all songs fit into one category or the other?" Who would respond immediately with a long, rambling list, or who would write, also immediately, with "I need to think."

My people did not disappoint; I got all of the above. Al Green (obviously) and Ween (awesomely) showed up on several lists. Bob Dylan, yes (and even I, with vast ambivalence about him, am torn apart by the last line of this song). Nancy Sinatra, Frank Sinatra, Throbbing Gristle, Monochrome Set, Judas Priest, Orange Juice, Sebadoh, Van Halen, and the Buzzcocks, yes, yes, yes. But the best answers, which I did not anticipate, were those songs that would make absolutely no sense to anyone but me, due only to the nature of my relationship with the responder.

"Sea of Love" fits squarely into the last sentence. "That was the day I knew you were my pet," does not typically ring the bell of today's modern woman, yet the man who named that song has sent me so far to the brink of sanity and submissive lust that I could do nothing but nod and drool and wonder which version to use here. (Of course I opted for the one he had specified.) The Pet Shop Boys version of "Always on My Mind," could only be on the list of the man who held my hand at a concert in an airplane hangar in Berlin, as both of our jaws dropped at the odd and scary sight of a thousand German fists banging the air to the rhythm. "Halah" by Mazzy Star would be merely a pretty, dreamy whine were it not for the fact that the record was played over and over again to mask the sounds of the first great sex I ever had. "Kath" was mentioned by both a close friend who knows I wrote a poem after it in college and a man who has no idea how much my heart aches for him whenever I hear it.

All this to say: Love is such a specific, alchemical thing, that to merely hear someone else sing about his/her love for yet someone else doesn't quite register. To me, a love song is all about association. But anti-love, that's another story. Gut-tearing, nauseating rejection and loss, now that is indeed universal. Here, though, is where my friends did disappoint, and where I, for fear of breaking down into a quivering wreck before finishing this post, have failed. This is what I leave to you, dear readers. Tell me the saddest (or angriest) love songs you know, and by sunset (just in time for the east coasters to burn a mix for their dinnertime sweetie), I'll post a handful here.

Thank you! Here are some highlights. I wish I could post them all...

FARE THEE WELL, MISS CAROUSEL
Townes Van Zandt
Townes Van Zandt
Sunspots : 1969
[Buy It]

ALL THE LOVE I EVER HAD
Hank Williams
Single, 1951
Available on The Original Singles Collection
Mercury : 1991
[Buy It]

GIN HOUSE BLUES
Nina Simone
Nuff Said!
RCA : 1968
[Buy It]

THE CHAIN
Fleetwood Mac
Rumours
Warner : 1977
[Buy It]

HOW CAN YOU MEND A BROKEN HEART?
Al Green
Let's Stay Together
Hi Records : 1972
[Buy It]

And a late-stage addition, for a friend and reader who knows who he is (and whose own version I prefer but don't have a recording of):

EVERY TIME IT RAINS
Randy Newman
Bad Love
Dreamworks : 1999
[Buy It]

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posted by Joanna
LINK |


Monday, February 12, 2007
 
ONLY THE GOOD DIE YOUNG
Billy Joel
The Stranger
Columbia : 1977
[Buy It]

BAD SCENE, EVERYONE'S FAULT
Jawbreaker
Dear You
DCG : 1995
[Buy It]

THIS IS JUST A MODERN ROCK SONG
Belle & Sebastian
This is Just a Modern Rock Song single
Jeepster : 1998
[Buy It]

THIS FUNNY WORLD
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett Sings the Rodgers and Hart Songbook
Concord : 2005
[Buy It]

I was embarassed because I'd been caught listening to Billy Joel. This is not something I am prone to do, but we all indulge secret passions sometimes and I am no exception. Even worse was that I'd tried to cover it up.

By the time my relatively new friend Carla and I were buckling our seatbelts after the rock show, I had completely forgotten I'd been listening to Billy Joel's Greatest Hits Vol. 1 on the way to the club. Carla and I were sweaty; our ears were ringing, and we basked in the post-show, pre-bar glow. The dark windshield glimmered furtively in the light rain. Carla was in the passenger seat saying something I couldn't hear through my teal foam earplugs, which I proceeded to plop greasily into an empty coffee cup. I rememeber she wore a navy blue denim jacket with a lot of brightly-colored buttons, a lot of mascara and silver glitter. I turned the key in the ignition and the car woke up sputtering, gouting light everywhere.

I like to relish the moment, right after starting the car, when the CD player resumes its work, especially when I can't immediately place the music. Sometimes I wait for an appropriately anonymous section of whatever I'm listening to before I turn off my car so I might get to experience the mysterious instant of not recognizing the familiar when I return, setting up a little wonder pit-stop for myself in the future. It doesn't always work.

Then I try to prevent myself from identifying the music that's playing, delaying the jolt of recognition for as long as possible by shutting down mental file-searching and concentrating on the sound of the music. It feels great to hear something so good and unencumbered, if only for a moment. But when I started the car on my pseudo-date with Carla, something about the texture of the music, which I couldn't identify at first, bothered me. Something about its jittery piano and deep-throated vocals gave me pause. With dawning horror, I realized - Oh my god it's the freaking Billy Joel CD - and I stabbed the off button. The silence of the ocean floor flooded the car.

Carla and I had known each other for about a month - we met through a series of events that has nothing to do with this story. We definitely had a spark, but we were also co-workers and were involved in vague relationships and would probably wind up being too good of friends for anything to come of it.

My real mistake wasn't listening to Billy Joel; it was trying to hide it. It's one thing to get caught doing something embarrassing, but it's much worse to actually appear embarrassed by it, which implies that you meant it. Had I just smiled rakishly, started belting out the lyrics ironically, or made a wisecrack instead of quickly turning off the CD player as if she wouldn't notice... I can't help but wonder what might be today.

We both stared straight ahead. I affected a studious aspect; her gaze was more searching. The silence was enormous. No cars passed through the gravel lot to make a munching sound. We were almost the last to leave the club, because we always stay until the bands are heading to the afterbars.

"What was that?" Carla asked, not unreasonably or without sympathy. Still, her voice sounded like a parody of casual curiousity. Her reflection looked slightly baffled in the windshield, brushed in broad dim strokes on the dark.

"Huh? Nothing," I said, in way I hoped would register as absently, feigning surprise at her question as if she'd jarred me from a pleasant reverie. I might have even yawned and stetched my arms. I suddenly developed an intense fascination with the web of cracks I had put right above the inspection sticker on my windshield. I'd been moving large furniture. Running my finger along the bright water trapped in the black glass, I furrowed my brow as if to say, These fissures are no longer acceptable; how might I bring my ingenuity to bear on a solution?

"That was Billy Joel," Carla said defiantly.

"No, it wasn't." My god, what did I mean?

"Yes it was!" Carla said in a scandalized tone. "That was 'Only the Good Die Young.'" She was smiling, but in an astonished, kind of affonted way.

Fucking "Only the Good Die Young." It was. It really was. It wasn't exactly "We Didn't Start the Fire" bad, but still, it was bad. My jaw lolled like something with a busted hinge. I felt like maybe my eyes did something that might be construed as goggling.

She said my name plaintively, taken aback by the sudden disappearance of my usual bravado. I had to think in terms of damage control. I needed a ripping bon mot, something witty and cutting and dismissive.

"No it wasn't."

Oh dear. Like Peter in the Garden, I had opted for a third denial. I could see where it was heading. Like Peter, I was going to get called out.

Carla must have enjoyed the pliant, come-hither resistance of the stereo's knob as she purposefully depressed it with a stiffened finger. The song began right at the titular chorus. "Only the good die young," Joel proclaimed, with what seemed to me a smug satisfaction. He would not be denied. I peered intently through the windshield as if trying to discern portents in the confusion of orange street lights refracting through the irregular rain. The part of the song right after the chorus that sounds like a used car commercial accused me from the air. Carla's gaze burned into the side of my head like a brand. Defeated, I turned down the volume a little, but let the song continue to play. Carla smirked at the floorboard as we drove off into the weeping night. At last call, she left the bar with some guy wearing earlobe expanders and a neckerchief. I went home alone. Although we remained friends, the tenor of our relationship was markedly different from then on, we never spoke of that night again.

[A friend of mine told me recently that she sometimes just had to listen to the Arcade Fire even though she "felt guilty about it," and it reminded me of Joanna's recent Shins-anxiety post. Around the same time I discovered a cache of old writing, stuff from my late teens to early twenties, that I'd thought long destroyed. This little Billy Joel thing was among that writing, and it seemed of a piece with this concept of taste-based guilt that keeps popping up for me recently. I barely recall writing this and certainly don't remember living it (my late teens and early twenties being a particularly blurry period in my life), so I'm not sure how much of it is autobiographical and how much is character sketch. I still don't wear earplugs, for instance, and I never knew anyone named Carla. But I did find a burned copy of Billy Joel's Greatest Hits in an old Case Logic CD binder, and I was terribly indie at that time in my life, so...who knows? It was probably a spot of both.]

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posted by Brian
LINK |


Friday, February 09, 2007
 
WILD CHILD
LASER SHOW
WHAT'S GONE WRONG

The Untouchables
Wild Child
Stiff Records : 1985
Re-issue Cherry Red UK : 2002
[Buy it]
MySpace

The Untouchables were a Californian Mod/Ska band that passed into my airspace sometime during high school at a time when kids were popping up and down in Fishbone shirts. They are the first band I ever saw live. I was at a UB40 show at the Lisner Auditorium in DC, and the show started and I remember thinking "I didn't know UB40 had so many black people in it" and then after three songs I didn't recognize: "Geez when are they going to play 'Red Red Wine'?" It wasn't during one of my cooler periods. I really don't remember anything else about that night. I'm not sure why, although the Lisner has a way of sucking detail out of the air.

I didn't see a whole lot of live music in High School. I passed up a number of chances to see IRS-period REM. $8 seemed kinda steep. Ditto Prince's Purple Rain and Talking Heads' Stop Making Sense tours.
I did see Go-Go legends Trouble Funk play at Sidwell Friends, a small, private Quaker High School in Northwest Washington. I think Megan was there, though I wouldn't meet her until 2 decades later. And one of the first things we talked about when we did meet, was what the fuck was Trouble Funk always doing at Sidwell Friends High School?

The title track Wild Child was the clear hit off the Untouchables debut LP. When it comes to the 2-Tone species, I really can't think of a more wonderful specimen. The bands popular tide soon flagged, and drew back to the West Coast. I stopped listening to UB40 for good soon after and haven't even considered them for 20 years, though I did make a bet with my girlfriend a couple weeks ago: she claimed Neil Diamond wrote Red Red Wine, I insisted it had roots in an old rocksteady song. She won: the Jewish Elvis dropped that hot pocket almost FORTY years ago.

But I hung on to Wild Child in the form of a dusty gold Maxell cassette, and the song that I always returned to was Laser Show. There is something so perfectly and deftly spare about it. I was happy to discover recently that Wild Child had been re-mastered for CD in 2002 with bonus action (including this extended version of What's Gone Wrong), and recently took up residence in iTunes.

I don't really have anything more to say, so I'll ask you, MW faithful, to answer me one or more of these questions:

1. What was your first concert? Discuss.

2. Name a T-shirt that out-sold the band it advertised more so than the Fishbone T-shirt.

3. The comments below were left on a youtube video. WITHOUT cheating, tell me the name of the artist and song they apply to.
(The answer has nothing really to do with anything in this post)

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


I'M NOT CRYING, THERE'S SOMETHING IN MY EYE!!!!!!!!!!!!

JUst a beautiful piece of musicianship. It's a shame that songs like this aren't big hits anymore..

If there was ever a song where the picture was painted before the artist ever said a word, it was THIS one. The scene, the mood, the picture...everything is set before he sings his first line.

sob sob sob (reminds me of my cousin who died of cancer a year ago)

Gangsta rap is all bad. Anyone who thinks it's cool to glorify criminal activity, prison life and raping girls is nothing but sick!!! This stuff is great! Good wholesome values here.

Man this song takes me back to the essence of my being, freakin amazing.

I actually saw him perform this song in the living room of a friend of mine. Excellent! He's a good guy too.

excellent i really like this song and im only 19

I was conceived to this song..thanks mom!

I remember puking up having the flu listening to this as a kid and it would make me feel better.

This song's so beautiful it makes me want to do smack.

great song, no good music now; rap sucks

i love this song!! i dreamt that i was flying and it was the best dream i ever had coz it felt so real..;'b

Reminds me of my vacation at Lake George, NY....circa 1972...

If you play close attention... this song is actually about espionage... Nothing is what it seems. Scope the lyrics reeeeeeeallll close...

rap is not REAL music. It is borrowed, homogenized, artificial crap that rots the brains of its creator and listener as well. This is an actually song with real instruments, thoughtful lyrics, melody, and emotion. Today's music doesn't just pale in comparison; THERE IS NO COMPARISON!

I just love this song because it reminds me of the best brothers ever, Kenny & Kevin, that night at the karaoke was AMAZING!!

love this song..
really makes fall in love again
and again
again...
and
really makes me feel free...

Classic. Rap should die a painful death!!!

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

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posted by James
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Thursday, February 08, 2007
 
FIRE (SHE NEED WATER)
Wayne McGhie
Wayne McGhie & The Sounds of Joy
Birchmont : 1970/Light in The Attic : 2006
[Download Here]

WADE IN THE WATER
THE GRAHAM BOND ORGANization
Ascot : 1965
Available on: Sound of 65/There's a Bond Between Us
Beat Goes On : 1999
[Buy It]

Hey, baby. Would you like to make a deal?

Last week we looked at Jamaicans playing soul music in Toronto, and different variants on "Wade In the Water". This week, two late additions. Wayne McGhie is the singer you'll hear on the songs by Jo-Jo & The Fugitives, below. Please scroll down and download those songs right now; they will surprise you by being so very excellent and exciting.

Welcome back. "Fire" is a McGhie original and, what a song. It's a bit incoherent until you realize that you, too, know exactly what that kind of relationship is like. But then, the fact that it is a relationship song sounds like the least of McGhie's worries. Download this song, too - it's at least as good as "Chips, Chicken, Banana Split," and that's praise from a deep place. Moistworks would like to thank the good folks at Light in The Attic records for bringing these songs to our enthusiastic attention.

THE GRAHAM BOND ORGANization was one of the earlier, bluesier Brit bands - they broke up when Graham Bond's RHYTHMsection up and formed Cream. Not so very well known these days, Bond was once voted "Britain's New Jazz Star" (that, according to this website). But here's Bond's take on the blues of today: "We are playing the blues of today," he said. "I can get away with playing practically anything." Somewhat coincidentally, Bond threw himself under a train the year b/f Eric Clapton (I kid you not, he really did) release/d an epic reworking of "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot."

So much for the past, and on to the soul covers of Bob Dylan tunes:

SHE BELONGS TO ME
Billy Preston
That's The Way God Planned It
EMI : 1969
[Buy It]

MAGGIE'S FARM
Solomon Burke
Atlantic : 1965
Available on: The Beat Goes On: Atlantic Dance Through the 50s, 60s, and 70s
Ace/Kent : 2000
[Buy It]

and Rolling Stone Magazine's award-winning song-of-all-time, as interpreted by Jimi Hendrix, the Wailers, and Phil Flowers & The Flower People. There's a four-minute version of the latter, but our best guess is that, whoever you are, the full nine minutes might be worth your time:

LIKE A ROLLING STONE
Jimi Hendrix
San Francisco : October 10, 1968
[Unreleased]

ROLLING STONE
The Wailers
Studio One : 1966
Available on: Bob Marley & The Wailers: One Love at Studio One 1964 - 1966
[Buy It]

LIKE A ROLLING STONE
Phil Flowers & The Flower People
A&M : 1970
Available on: Git Down: Funk Rarities 1967-1961
[Buy It]

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posted by Alex
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Tuesday, February 06, 2007
 
FAMILY REUNION
The O'Jays
Family Reunion
Philadelphia Int'l : 1975
[Buy It]

HE'S MY SON (JUST THE SAME)
O.V. Wright
Memphis Unlimited
Back Beat : 1973
Available on: The Soul of O.V. Wright
MCA : 1992
[Buy It]

FAMILY AFFAIR
Sly and the Family Stone
There's a Riot Goin' On
Epic : 1971
[Buy It]

"Traditions and rituals can be the glue that holds a family together....Traditions give security to young people, providing a sense of continuity, predictability and identity. Traditions are the way families hand down information, beliefs and customs from one generation to the next. They give participants an opportunity to share important family values together."
-"Encourage Good Health Through Family Traditions," Amy Griswold and Rachel Schwarzendruber

"We asked parents about the family rituals they love best. Here are some of their time-tested favorites:
'Before I had kids, my husband and I planted a tree in our front yard and had our photo taken in front of it. Every year since, we've had a family photo taken in front of the same tree. It's so neat to look at the series of photos and see how much the tree - and our family (we now have a daughter, two dogs, and a bird) - has grown over the years!""
-Babycenter.com

Christmas 2004

It was time for one of those Matthews family photos. My mom wasn't enthused. "I'm not going. What the hell am I going to go for? Who's going to be in the picture anyway? Your father's not in the picture. I'll bet you half the people don't even show up."

We had one brother missing, disappeared five years ago. We had one sister dead from cancer, a brother living in California. But I was in town for the holidays, which boosted our totals. The picture would be dad's Christmas present.

We met at one of those franchise photo places, out at Prince George's Plaza. Prince George's County was named for Prince George of Denmark. It's where Len Bias's brother Jay and George Wallace got shot. However, there were few Danes at PG Plaza, locally known as Black Flint Mall. (This is White Flint Mall. This is Black Flint Mall.)

Things were disorganized as usual. Siblings spread out with cell phones to meet other siblings at other entrances. A group of us huddled in the discouraging line at the Picture People, filled with members of other families waiting to make memories. My younger sis and I were rolling our eyes and gossiping with our sister-in-law. Our feet started to get tired. It was noisy and hot. I started feeling hostile toward the people in front of us. My daughter was hungry and crabby, so I took her to the food court. A woman from the group in front of us had a young daughter and the same thought; we exchanged wry smiles at the Taco Bell.

Back in line, the woman approached me. "Are you Megan?" I was. "Do you know that man over there?" A guy waved at me. He seemed familiar. "Megan, it's Kevin." Kevin is my half-sister's mother's son. Or my father's first wife's son, not by my dad. The people in front of us were his family, his wife and their five kids. I hadn't seen him in years. We started introducing ourselves and making small talk. Then another woman came over. "Are you here for the Matthews family photo?" She was my brother Adrin's baby momma, there with his daughter Adriana. "Nice to meet you," I said.

I have the picture. I've forgotten the names of Kevin's kids. Three sisters that could have come didn't; only two of five brothers made it. There are twenty-five people in the photo.

August 2006

We'd lost another sister. Like my sister Renee, she'd died in her 40s from some sort of cancer. My younger sis emailed me about it and neither of us was sure how to spell her name. My sis remembered meeting her; I could only remember a photo. It had sat in a built-in hutch in the hallway of my childhood home, perched in its oval frame on a pile of National Geographics we bought at the AmVets, next to a copy of Mao's Little Red Book.

We'd lost another sister and dad's dementia was getting worse. It was time to take another picture.

My younger sis didn't come. "I'm sick of these family photos." The whole thing was scheduled around my being in town; I didn't feel I had the option to refuse. Plus there was a party and my dad was going to be there.

We met at my sister Marilyn's house, the house where my dad's mother had lived when she first came to the city. That part of DC, Shaw, had been the first stop for black migrants from southern Maryland; it was destroyed and left for dead in the '68 riots. Today, it's all Whole Foods and condos and martini bars. We were posing on the front steps for the photo, with my brother Greg yelling at curious passers-by, "Look! It's a black family, with white people in it" and "That's right, we own this property. We've been here 60 years, how bout you?"

A guy came up to me. He looked about my age. He said, "Hi Aunty. You remember me?" What could I say? "Of course I do." I gave him an especially warm hug, my mind racing. Aunty? Whose kid was he? I figured he had to be my dead sister's son. He was definitely one of us; he looked just like my oldest brother Michael. He introduced me to his 12-year-old son, who was being chased flirtatiously by my 9-year-old daughter. "You know, I felt weird about coming today, having been away so long. But then I told myself, that's your family, man. Even if they don't know you, they love you, because that's what family is all about."

I smiled idiotically. He said, "I had a lot of time to think about what's important in life while I was away." I suddenly understood that he'd been in prison. "I missed a lot of my son's life. I've got to set that right." And then, "My mother talked a lot about you. She was always proud of you. I have her memory book, where she wrote her thoughts while she was dying, and she wrote a lot about you. You really meant a lot to her."

As soon as we were done talking, I asked one of my brothers to tell me his name. He smiled. "It took me a while to figure it out. That's Anthony, Demetrice's son. Doesn't he look just like Michael?" He and his baby momma and his son are in the photo, right next to my dad.

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posted by Megan
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Saturday, February 03, 2007
 
IT'S THE TALK OF THE TOWN
Lester Young
Available on: The Complete Lester Young Studio Sessions on Verve
Polygram : 1999
[Buy It]

The New Yorker was my first job out of college. I'd read a shelf's worth of books about the place. When I got there a few ghosts were still around: Joe Mitchell came in every day, but died a few months after I arrived; I never caught a glimpse of him. Brendan Gill darted in and out of the office now and then - a tall, twinkly man in a pink baseball cap - and I'd run the occasional errand for him. One of the writers I wanted to meet most was the magazine's jazz critic, Whitney Balliett, who was not yet a ghost, but passed away the other day, at the age of eighty. The closest I got was sneaking away into the library to read another of his articles. This is the first paragraph of a justly-celebrated profile of Lester Young, which you can read in full in American Musicians: Fifty-six Portraits in Jazz:


Pres

Very little about the tenor saxophonist Lester Young was unoriginal. He had protruding, heavy-lidded eyes, a square, slightly oriental face, a tiny mustache, and a snaggletoothed smile. His walk was light and pigeon-toed, and his voice was soft. He was something of a dandy. He wore suits, knit ties, and collar pins. He wore ankle-length coats, and pork-pie hats - on the back of his head, when he was young, and pulled down low and evenly when he was older. He kept to himself, often speaking only when spoken to. When he played, he held his saxophone in front of him at a forty-five degree angle, like a canoeist about to plunge his paddle into the water. He had an airy, lissome tone and an elusive, lyrical way of phrasing that had never been heard before. Other saxophonists followed Coleman Hawkins, but Young's models were two white musicians: the C-melody saxophonist Frank Trumbauer and the alto sacophonist Jimmy Dorsey - neither of them a first-rate jazz player. When Young died, in 1959, he had become the model for countless saxophonists, white and black. He was a gentle, kind man who never disparaged anyone. He spoke a coded language, about which the pianist Jimmy Rowles has said, "You had to break that code to understand him. It was like memorizing a dictionary, and I think it took me about three months." Much of Young's language has vanished, but here is a sampling: "Bing and Bob" were the police. A "hat" was a woman," and a "homburg" and a "Mexican hat" were types of women. An attractive young girl was a "poundcake." A "gray boy" was a white man, and Young himself, who was light-skinned, was an "oxford gray." "I've got bulging eyes" for this or that meant he approved of something, and "Catalina eyes" and "Watts eyes" expressed high admiration. "Left people" were the fingers of a pianist's left hand. "I feel a draft" meant he sensed a bigot nearby. "Have another helping," said to a colleague on the bandstand, meant "Take another chorus," and "one long" or "two long" meant one chorus or two choruses. People "whispering on" or "buzzing on" him were talking behind his back. Getting his "little claps" meant being applauded. A "zoomer" was a sponger, and a "needle dancer" was a heroin addict. "To be bruised" was to fail. A "tribe" was a band, and a "molly trolley" was a rehearsal. "Cam Madam burn?" meant "Can your wife cook?" "These people will be here in December" meant that his second child was due in December. (He drifted in and out of three marriages, and had two children.) "Startled doe, two o'clock" meant that a pretty giirl was in the right side of the audience.

* * *

Also an interview, and NPR asks Balliett to pick his desert island disks, Balliett's obituary of Thelonious Monk, an index of Balliet's articles in the New York Review of Books, and a profile of Bobby Short.

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posted by Alex
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In entirely unrelated news, MW's Astoria Bureau is going to Amsterdam for a few days next week. Hard to find Time Out Amsterdam in Astoria, so if there's anything we should see or do, let us know in the comments, below?


posted by Alex
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Friday, February 02, 2007
 
THE SNIPER
DRUM SONG
CHAMPION OF THE ARENA
Jackie Mittoo
Champion in the Arena 1976-1977
Blood and Fire : 2003
[Buy It]

My friend BJ came over the other night; we sat around listening to Jackie Mittoo. BJ and I both love Jamaican music, but while I'm heavily into the sixties stuff - Toots, Prince Buster, the Skatellites - and think that, say, the stuff Bob Marley's best-known for pales in comparison to the tracks he recorded at Studio One - and am more or less an idiot when it comes to the seventies stuff, BJ's the other way around.

So anyway, we played some Toots, but kept coming back to Jackie Mittoo.

"It's like when he sets the rhythm with his left hand, eveyone else is so deeply in that groove," BJ said.

"To me, it sounds more like Mittoo's just dancing, swirling around it," I said.

"So, I'm saying that Mittoo's the canal, or the lock, and everything else you hear is the ships passing through it," BJ said. "And you're saying the band is the ship and Mittoo is dolphins circling it."

"It's swirl," I said.

"But it's got to do with shipping," BJ said. "And dolphins."

Then we listened to another album - a compilation of songs Jamaican expats recorded in Toronto in the sixties and seventies:

THE FUGITIVE SONG
Jo-Jo and the Fugitive
Cobra : 1968
GRAND FUNK
Jackie Mittoo
Summus : 1971
I WISH IT WOULD RAIN
The Cougars
Previously Unreleased
All available on: Jamaica to Toronto 1967-1974
Light in The Attic : 2006
[Buy It]

"It's not even reggae," BJ said.

"It's like they came to Toronto and were like, oh this is what they're playing up here? Let's play the fuck out of that! And so they did and blew everyone else away."

"In Toronto, anyway."

I'm not sure why, but I punched BJ just then, and when BJ punched me back he broke my nose. There was a lot of blood. But we weren't really getting to the bottom of things, anyway.

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posted by Alex
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Thursday, February 01, 2007
 
LITTLE WALTER
Tony, Toni, Tone!
Wing : 1988
[Buy It]

Thanks to Douglas Wolk for sending TT&T's take on the subject of yesterday's post (am I wrong to think that "Little Walter" also has a touch of "If I Were a Rich Man" to it?). Today, a quick question from the editor-in-chief:

I've got an old Harman/Kardon amplifier - bought it factory refurbished over eBay a few years ago - and it's the kind of amp that all sorts of things are wrong with it, including, most annoyingly, a buzz I can't get rid of. Before I go out and buy a new one, which I'm really loath to do given my expenses right now, I wanted to find out if you, dear readers, have a bunch of stereo equipment just a-sittin' in your closets. I'd ask my friends, but my friends are using amps I gave them when I, myself, had a closet full of stereo equipment. So, on the off chance that anyone's got one they're not using, and feel like thanking me (but not James, Joanna, Brian, or Megan) for the fine service we're providing here.... Thanks, J!!


posted by Alex
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