Sunday, October 14, 2012

John Kongos - Kongos

The Happy Mondays' Pills 'n' Thrills and Bellyaches is one of my favorite albums and never fails to put me in a good mood.  But I hadn't really gotten into other bands of the same era and feel, so I wanted to search for some of their influences instead.  The Mondays covered at least two John Kongos songs that appear on this album.  

This album sounds like some pretty talented studio / session players (essentially Elton John's band at the time) dragged their instruments out to the woods, overloaded on really fantastic drugs, and tried to find Jesus.  It's no wonder the Happy Mondays like this guy so much.  You could spend a career trying to hit the same highs Kongos does.



Yellow Magic Orchestra - Solid State Survivor

I enjoyed YMO's self-titled debut, but Allmusic recommended their second album more.  These guys are often compared to Kraftwerk, but where Kraftwerk is steely and grey, YMO is popped colors, fun.  Here they ditched some of the traditional Asian tunes they had on their debut and save their cover song for "Day Tripper". 

I don't know as I'll keep looking for more YMO albums, though.  I do have a Ryuichi Sakamoto solo album that I've hardly listened to; maybe that's where I'll go next.



Monday, August 27, 2012

time away

My devotion to this kind of thing is a pendulum and apparently that pendulum got stuck in the inactive half for, well, a few months. I generally stopped listening to new music, stopped buying albums, and forgot about this entirely. I spent a bit more time reading (Murakami's Wind-Up Bird Chronicle) and going through the backlog of podcasts (Best Show and WTF) until I was mostly caught up.

So where do I pick back up? There are the five albums in the previous post (from late April) plus these three I never got to:

Michael Rother - Flammende Herzen
Mark Hollis - Mark Hollis
Yellow Magic Orchestra - Solid State Survivor

That makes it eight. I want to get through at least four of those before adding some new wave, lovers' rock, and punk albums I want to listen to.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

on deck

David Sylvian - Secrets of the Beehive
Henry Cow - Unrest
Ivor Cutler - Life in a Scottish Sitting Room
John Kongos - Kongos
Morrissey - Your Arsenal

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

blitzkrieg blop

Subtle - A New White

Of the non-Why? Clouddead-related stuff I've tried, this might be the best so far. So I want to revisit this later when I go into my annual Why? / Clouddead / Hymie's Basement binge.

Buzzcocks - Another Music in a Different Kitchen

I enjoyed this well enough but it's no Singles Going Steady.

John Fahey - The Transfiguration of Blind Joe Death

I've been listening to another John Fahey album instead so perhaps I'll address that one.

M83 - Hurry Up, We're Dreaming

Good, not great album. If someone played tracks from the last three or four M83 albums, I doubt I'd be able to connect any track with an album other than Kim & Jessie. Still excited about seeing them live, though.

Pisces - A Lovely Sight

A Numero release I thought I'd try. Nothing special here.

Television Personalities - Privilege

And Don't the Kids Just Love It is one of my favorites, so I was hoping for something a bit more, but Privilege lacks the same charm.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Kurt Vile - Smoke Ring for My Halo

This was the best album of last year.

I like this bit from the AllMusic review:
In an age where angst is delivered with the subtlety of a laser light show, it’s nice to hear some good, old-fashioned, smokin’-and-drinkin’-cheap-beers-on-the-porch-with-your-friends-style pessimism.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Sigue Sigue Sputnik - Flaunt It

There's a scene in High Fidelity when two young punks try to shoplift from Rob's record store. One of them drops their skateboard and Rob chases after them. They eventually drop their stash, which at a glance includes the Minutemen's Double Nickles on the Dime and Brian Eno's Music for Films.
"Ryuichi Sakamoto, Sigue Sigue Sputnik, Breakbeats, Serge Gainsbourg. What are you guys, stealing for other people?"
"No, those are for us."
"You guys slamming to Joni Mitchell now?"
I should've followed up on those reference earlier, as I undoubtedly would've gotten to Yellow Magic Orchestra sooner than just last year. But here I am, just now getting to Sigue Sigue Sputnik.

Their album Flaunt It--which is essentially the extent of their career--is pretty wild. The sound is somewhere between Suicide and a glammed-up Devo with Max Headroom as the frontman. Not knowing much, I would've placed this as late 70s or early 80s, so I was surprised to find this didn't come out until 1986.

As much as I find it enjoyable, I don't think Flaunt It is really that mind-blowing. It's got a lot of energy and it's fun to listen to but man is it a handful. The song below is one of the few comedowns on the album, "Atari Baby."

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Ellen Foley - Spirit of St Louis and Poly Styrene - Translucence

I rarely make blind buys but both these albums fall into that category. I knew Ellen Foley's Spirit of St Louis was considered like a spin-off Clash album, and I was also familiar with X-Ray Spex's Germ-Free Adolescents, so I suppose they weren't entirely blind. Both are pretty good albums but not superb enough to make me feel more adventurous about not trying before buying.

Ellen Foley was dating Clash guitarist Mick Jones, which apparently also meant not only would Mick produce the album but he'd get some of his bandmates to play on the album and even write a few songs for it, too. Any gaps left by the Clash were filled in by members of Ian Dury's band the Blockheads, so there's pretty good pedigree here. But Ellen's singing isn't too grand and these songs end up sounding like Sandinista! B-sides (if you can imagine what B-sides of a triple album would sound like). So even though Sandinista! is probably my favorite album, the association doesn't quite help boost Foley's album as much as she probably hoped.



As for Poly Styrene's album Translucence, I expected something like the awesomeness of X-Ray Spex but this is quite different. Instead of X-Ray's bombast, Translucence is muted and often unexpectedly pretty. There's the kind of instrumentation (mainly the use of horns) that I associate with Sandinista!-era punk copping Lovers' Rock, so that's all good. A few songs suffer from the 'repeat the title way too often' curse but otherwise this is an interesting enough album.


Sunday, February 5, 2012

movin' on up

I don't think about albums in this way as much as I used to, but if I were to list my favorite albums Of All Time and compare that to what the list might've been a year or two ago, two albums would've moved up into the top tier: Nilsson's Schmilsson and Robert Wyatt's Rock Bottom.

Nilsson was someone I only discovered this year, but I've been listening to Wyatt / Soft Machine for over a decade. I'd be doing pretty well if each year I found one or two more top-tier albums.

remnants from 2011

So after taking the month of January off, you'd think I'd be able to clear some of this out:

Subtle - A New White
Buzzcocks - Another Music in a Different Kitchen
Michael Rother - Flammende Herzen
Why / Odd Nosdam - Split EP
John Fahey - The Transfiguration of Blind Joe Death
Mark Hollis - Mark Hollis
Sigue Sigue Sputnik - Flaunt It
Kurt Vile - Smoke Ring for My Halo
Yellow Magic Orchestra - Solid State Survivor
Gas - Pop
M83 - Hurry Up, We're Dreaming
Pisces - A Lovely Sight
Polystyrene - Translucence
Television Personalities - Privilege

I'll at least single out a couple of dead ends: Gas's Pop is something I may never find interesting, ever. The Why / Odd Nosdam Split EP is the definition of throwaway.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

on deck

Gas - Pop
M83 - Hurry Up, We're Dreaming
Pisces - A Lovely Sight
Polystyrene - Translucence
Television Personalities - Privilege

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Colin Stetson - New History Warfare Volume 2: Judges

Admittedly I didn't really get this the first few times around. I had it on in the background and thought it was just another dude making some abstract noises electronically. There were some spoken word bits that sounded an awful lot like Laurie Anderson. It sounded interesting, kinda Aphex Twin-y, but with all the tools available to musicians today, it didn't sound like anything mind-blowing.

Which is why it's a good idea to read a bit about stuff sometimes. What's going on here is mind-blowing on both the inhale and exhale. It turns out these songs are done by Colin alone with no overdubs or loops. It's just him, his saxophone, and about 20 well-placed mics. So in a sense the only manipulation here is in the mixing.

So now knowing that, I wish I could go back to ignorance and try to listen to the music just for what it is. Now when I hear it I have difficulty getting past the question, "how in the hell..."

I'm not too familiar with the sax but what he's doing must destroy the reeds. So witness the music of destruction:



Tuesday, December 13, 2011

on deck

John Fahey - The Transfiguration of Blind Joe Death
Mark Hollis - Mark Hollis
Sigue Sigue Sputnik - Flaunt It
Kurt Vile - Smoke Ring for My Halo
Yellow Magic Orchestra - Solid State Survivor

Sunday, December 11, 2011

to revisit

It's not really fair to call these dead ends, but they've been in the rotation for a while and I wanted to get them out. So, temporary dead ends, perhaps to be revisited.

Right now I am initially dismissing Robert Fripp and Brian Eno's No Pussyfooting as an album that never risks dabbling in the world of the interesting. Apparently it's better known for the way it was recorded rather than, you know, how the music actually sounds. And Ash Ra Temple's debut album I'm thinking is too cosmic, not enough rock. I need more Gottsching, less Schultze.

I'm having trouble with finding a good version of the Ellen Foley / Clash album to listen to so I'm pausing on it, too.

Friday, December 9, 2011

New York Dolls

The Ramones' first album came out in 1976. "God Save the Queen" was released in 1977. So sometimes it blows my mind that, the Stooges' Fun House came out in 1970 or T. Rex did Electric Warrior in 1971. In a similar feat that makes me double-check the chronology, the New York Dolls' first album came out in 1973. It was produced by Todd Rundgren in the same year he did A Wizard, A True Star, an album that seems the polar opposite of punk's straightforwardness.

I can't really say I like this better than the Stooges or T. Rex or whatever but it's still pretty amazing for what it is. I'll check out their second album as well. In the meantime, here's some trash: