Sonic Youth Gossip

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-   -   Best new/most anticipated albums of 2019 (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=118389)

Severian 09.18.2019 07:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by guest
does that make it any more excusable to repeatedly say faggot or refer to asians as bottom feeders? because if so then by that logic it’s fine for a white person to use the n word.

people need to stop holding rap to a lower moral standard than other music, it’s reductive and condescending


No, but I think context is somewhat important, especially when discussing art.

Honestly I’m not excusing it, but I also don’t think that Lee Daniels Freestyle, which comes with a literal note saying, “I wrote this because I’m pissed about cultural stereotyping, and I want to show you how it feels when that happens,” is evidence of blanket homophobia.

Again, I do think that’s a shallow read.


Maybe people should stop pretending that rap is Un-Art and that complex messaging isn’t possible in the genre.

Ever seen, like, Kids? Or more recently mid90s? Disparaging, homophobic language abounds, but nobody’s accusing Jonah Hill of homophobia. And his movie didn’t even come with an explanation.

Anyway, whatever.


New JPEGMafia album is crazy, and honestly barely qualifies as rap music.

d.sound 09.18.2019 06:12 PM

I love and despise Dr Dre's The Chronic. It's great music... The bass line to "the night the ____ took over" is pure genius. But god damn that misogyny. It's repulsive.

guest 09.18.2019 09:47 PM

it is definitely a selective read on my part but I can’t get over the fact that making a track like that is espousing some degree of hatred, irrespective of intent. and especially when the audience for this stuff like it or not isn’t exclusively able to exercise that critical distance (considering this is very much in the lineage of ‘masc angst’ music).

no one is saying that rap isn’t art here, quite the contrary. I think art is held to certain moral standards and yeah it may be transgressive but I don’t think that excuses using a lexicon that is obscenely hurtful to certain groups. comparing it to film is something else entirely because those are character studies; jpegmafia is coming at it from a singular cis male perspective and regardless of his unarguable lack of privilege in other facets of his life for him to co-opt the difficulties of others is just a bit much.

it’s ovviously separate from Dre and his domestic violence anthems or kanye west just being a general misogynistic pig, but if we’re going to apply a critical lens to all music then rap should be subjected to the same scrutiny.

Severian 09.19.2019 07:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by guest
it is definitely a selective read on my part but I can’t get over the fact that making a track like that is espousing some degree of hatred, irrespective of intent. and especially when the audience for this stuff like it or not isn’t exclusively able to exercise that critical distance (considering this is very much in the lineage of ‘masc angst’ music).

no one is saying that rap isn’t art here, quite the contrary. I think art is held to certain moral standards and yeah it may be transgressive but I don’t think that excuses using a lexicon that is obscenely hurtful to certain groups. comparing it to film is something else entirely because those are character studies; jpegmafia is coming at it from a singular cis male perspective and regardless of his unarguable lack of privilege in other facets of his life for him to co-opt the difficulties of others is just a bit much.

it’s ovviously separate from Dre and his domestic violence anthems or kanye west just being a general misogynistic pig, but if we’re going to apply a critical lens to all music then rap should be subjected to the same scrutiny.


OK, that’s fair.

I honestly am turned off by the — what’s it called? “Incel”? — vibe and general tendency to troll like Pepe the fucking Frog in JPEG’s music. How great would it be if the endless culture-trolling and edgelord bullshit was just toned down a wee bit and the focus could be entirely on the music.
I have similar issues with Tyler the Creator and Kanye. Trolls, all of them. To their detriment.

But I guess I look past it if the music is engaging, and “Peggy” makes some pretty engaging music, so..

But yes, rap should be subject to the same scrutiny. And to be honest, looking at those lyrics again made me feel a little bleh.

Severian 09.19.2019 07:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by d.sound
I love and despise Dr Dre's The Chronic. It's great music... The bass line to "the night the ____ took over" is pure genius. But god damn that misogyny. It's repulsive.


I cannot listen to Dre.

I can’t listen to Eminem. Don’t care if he’s reformed. I’m a little shocked at my high-school self for listening to him at all, and letting shit slide.

Dr. Dre’s not just a misogynist either. Busted up his ex’s face until it needed to be fitted back into place. Fucking disgusting.

guest 09.19.2019 05:51 PM

to be honest when I first heard jpegmafia I did think there was something interesting going on musically but you’re right, there’s something about that troll aesthetic that seems really popular at the moment that’s super off-putting. and for some reason I can’t look past that a good 90% of the time now, and I wouldn’t even attribute it solely to hip hop, the vast majority of noise repulses me at this point for being so far up its own arse too and falling into that trap of being perhaps performatively vitriolic? but as is well established here I’m a cynical cunt so grain of salt obviously

Kuhb 09.19.2019 06:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by guest
to be honest when I first heard jpegmafia I did think there was something interesting going on musically but you’re right, there’s something about that troll aesthetic that seems really popular at the moment that’s super off-putting. and for some reason I can’t look past that a good 90% of the time now, and I wouldn’t even attribute it solely to hip hop, the vast majority of noise repulses me at this point for being so far up its own arse too and falling into that trap of being perhaps performatively vitriolic? but as is well established here I’m a cynical cunt so grain of salt obviously



A great deal of today's culture is either performatively woke or performatively vitriolic. It's quite hard to escape

guest 09.19.2019 10:56 PM

totally, I think it’s just a very cynical era we’re living in and it’s super pervasive, honestly I’m not sure that there’s all that many ways to get away from it

_tunic_ 09.20.2019 03:09 AM

maybe you're just getting old, and can't keep up with the hipsters of today anymore :D
Quote:

A great deal of today's culture is either performatively woke or performatively vitriolic. It's quite hard to escape
that's more or less what people said about Elvis Presley in the fifties and the Beatles and Stones in the early sixties, or punk in the seventies.


Look at this:
Elvis P. in 1957
Cardi B. in 2019


(this is not a personal attack to anyone of you, just saying, it's more or less my personal viewpoint on rap/hiphop/any other music of today that I don't like)

Kuhb 09.20.2019 06:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by _tunic_
maybe you're just getting old, and can't keep up with the hipsters of today anymore :D
that's more or less what people said about Elvis Presley in the fifties and the Beatles and Stones in the early sixties, or punk in the seventies.


Look at this:
Elvis P. in 1957
Cardi B. in 2019


(this is not a personal attack to anyone of you, just saying, it's more or less my personal viewpoint on rap/hiphop/any other music of today that I don't like)


That isn't what people said

Severian 09.20.2019 07:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by guest
totally, I think it’s just a very cynical era we’re living in and it’s super pervasive, honestly I’m not sure that there’s all that many ways to get away from it


Yeah, I feel this.
And it’s not just hip-hop. There’s culture trolling in whatever passes for passable rock music in the mainstream, too (The 1975 for some reason?) and it’s all a bit much.
I mean, I’m a pretty cynical motherfucker too, and all my musical favorites have some degree of iconoclasm permanently lodged in their identities (Lou Reed to RDJ to SY to whoever), but being provocative and iconoclastic seems to, in the late 2010s, mean essentially being an edgelord button-pusher with no portion of authenticity to their “act.”

Like JPEG or Tyler or Lana Del Rey or whatever. So much of it is just “let me see how much I can fuck with people and how many horrible things I can get away with saying before people call me out”
And if you call them out, watch out, because “kids today” will eat your fucking face. Because it is now socially unacceptable in a lot of circles to take anything seriously.

I mean, it’s hard for an older fuck like me to reconcile my dislike of this stuff with my appreciation and respect for punk and the punk spirit. But this is different terrain, really.

Kuhb 09.20.2019 08:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Severian

. Because it is now socially unacceptable in a lot of circles to take anything seriously.
.


Yep.

The Soup Nazi 09.20.2019 11:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by d.sound
Winky face means you are aware I'm referring to the Charli XCX song?


I wasn't aware at all! I've never heard this Charli person, ever. I thought you meant I was fixating on a reissue instead of a new album.

The Soup Nazi 09.21.2019 12:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Severian
Definitely fuck yeah to 1999 reissue, but I will really lose my shit when Sign O gets such a treatment. Salivating at the thought


Quote:

Originally Posted by _tunic_
No it's Prince 1999 album reissue. I wouldn't mind hearing the bonuses and demos etc of this era, but I am with Sev here, would be more looking forward to a Sign O The Times reissue



As I mentioned here once, a truly comprehensive Sign O The Times reissue would be such a sprawling thing you'd need to sell a fucking kidney to afford it. The original double album. The singles. The 12" mixes. The outtakes. The demos. The crazy experiments "unvaulted" (oh, you know they're there - this is Prince we're talking about). The Sign O The Times concert film, which has never seen the light of the laser in the U.S. More live stuff. And THEN, be careful what you ask for, because the set would be fundamentally incomplete without the THREE finished but shelved albums that spawned SOTT: Dream Factory, Camille and Crystal Ball, which amount to twelve (!) sides of vinyl right there. So cancel your silly iPhone orders and start saving NOW.

d.sound 09.21.2019 12:47 AM

I don't know if JPEGMAFIA is intolerant or whatever because like 20 seconds in it just sounded like boring hip hop. I didn't get what was supposed to be special about it.

Severian 09.21.2019 08:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by d.sound
I don't know if JPEGMAFIA is intolerant or whatever because like 20 seconds in it just sounded like boring hip hop. I didn't get what was supposed to be special about it.


Did you listen last that 20 second mark?

Because honestly, whatever the guy is, boring hip-hop is not what he’s doing. He’s on some crazy sound collage shit, and the beat and style changes are almost non-stop.

Sure you’re listening to the right album?

The Soup Nazi 09.21.2019 09:10 PM

 


Quote:

TRAVELIN' THRU, 1967-1969: THE BOOTLEG SERIES VOL. 15
Available November 1

1967 saw a profound transformation in Bob Dylan's musical evolution. Withdrawing from public view following his July 1966 motorcyle accident, he re-emerged in 1967 with John Wesley Harding, recorded in Nashville with a core trio featuring bassist Charlie McCoy and drummer Kenneth Buttrey, the resulting album had a sublime, minimal sound. Follow-up Nashville Skyline, also recorded in Nashville, featured the stirring "Girl From The North Country," a duet with Johnny Cash. The album would reach number 1 in the U.S. and the U.K.

Now, Travelin' Thru, 1967-1969: The Bootleg Series Vol. 15 revisits Dylan's pivotal journey to Nashville. This 3CD or 3LP set features outtakes from both albums, including the first release of Dylan and Cash's joint studio sessions. The package also features Dylan and Cash's performance on The Johnny Cash Show, two Nashville outtakes from the Self Portrait sessions and tracks recorded in 1970 with Grammy Award-winning bluegrass banjo legend Earl Scruggs for a PBS television special.

https://bobdylan.lnk.to/travelinthruAN!0919

All I can say is I've had the Dylan/Cash sessions boot for... let's just say AGES now, and it's one of my very favorite unofficial numbers. (How could it not be; it's fuckin' awesome. Their take on "Big River" alone will floor you.) About time it got the treatment it deserves.

d.sound 09.21.2019 11:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Severian
Did you listen last that 20 second mark?

Because honestly, whatever the guy is, boring hip-hop is not what he’s doing. He’s on some crazy sound collage shit, and the beat and style changes are almost non-stop.

Sure you’re listening to the right album?

Heroes cornballs, first track is like jesus forgive me I'm a thot?

I skipped around through several tracks. I just heard 90s style hip hop. I didn't hear any sound collages.

The Soup Nazi 09.22.2019 12:31 AM

Out now (virtual-only unless you find one of the 75 copies which sold out in nanoseconds): No Age - Score For The Day Before.

 


Quote:

"Score For The Day Before" performed live at The McEvoy Foundation for the Arts, San Francisco, CA, on 9/7/2019, to accompany the film Score For The Day Before by Randy Randall and Dean Spunt. Recorded directly to a Tascam 424 Portastudio 4 track. A side is the score. B side is the score in reverse. Dubbed and die cut the same day by No Age and friends. Edition of 75. Design by Brian Roettinger.

https://noage.bandcamp.com/album/sco...the-day-before

As you can see on that link, the cassette's artwork is considerably cooler than the picture above... Anyway, I also noticed there are at least two more No Age tapes that I hadn't paid attention to, both released last year:

Aquarium Behavior:

 


Spree Snare Cuts - Live in Germany 2018:

 

The Soup Nazi 09.22.2019 01:03 AM

Out now: Patty Waters - Live

 


Quote:

Patty Waters is a visionary avant-garde vocalist and composer, best known for her groundbreaking 1960s recordings for the legendary free jazz label ESP-Disk. Captivated by the music of Billie Holiday, she sang with Bill Evans, Charlie Mingus, Chick Corea, and Herbie Hancock before coming to the attention of Albert Ayler, who introduced her to ESP-Disk's Bernard Stollman. The rest is history. Recorded with pianist Burton Greene, Waters' haunting 1966 debut Sings juxtaposes a side of hushed self-composed jazz ballad miniatures with an iconoclastic take on the standard "Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair." Sharing Ayler's affinity for the deconstruction of folk idioms, Waters dismantles the tune through a series of anguished wails, moans, whispers, and screams that cemented her reputation as a vocal innovator, predating the extended techniques of Yoko Ono, Joan La Barbara, and Linda Sharrock, and cited as a direct influence to Diamanda Galás and Patti Smith's own freeform vocal excursions. The mythic side-long exposition stands as one of the 20th century's most harrowing expressions of madness and grief, its incantatory mutilation of the word "black" into a full-spectrum monochrome resounding with a particular potency at a time when battles for civil rights were erupting across the country.

After recording a second ESP-Disk album Waters disappeared from the music scene, moving from New York to California to raise her son. It wasn't until 1996 that she returned with a new recording of jazz standards associated with Billie Holiday and began performing sporadically. Her Blank Forms concert—with original pianist Burton Greene as well as bassist Mario Pavone and percussionist Barry Altschul, both veterans of Paul Bley's ensembles—was Waters' first New York appearance since 2003. Dedicated to Cecil Taylor, who had passed away moments before she took the stage, Patty Waters Live preserves the mournful tension that was in the air that night. Her first new release on vinyl since 1966's College Tour, the record divides the session in the spirit of her debut. Side A features a set of desolate ballads, including Waters' own classic "Moon, Don't Come Up Tonight," while the B-side puts into stark relief the fact that the fight for civil rights that Waters invoked over 50 years ago is far from over. Beginning with her rendition of "Strange Fruit," a 1937 song written in protest of black lynching and American racism, the suite's form-bending contortions also features the second-ever recording of Waters' original, exceptional lyrical take on Ornette Coleman's "Lonely Woman." Equally adept at channeling the heartbroken intimacy of Lady Day and the catharsis of The New Thing, on April 5th, 2018 Waters proved that she has lost none of her fire, remaining one of the greatest living jazz singers.

https://blankformseditions.bandcamp.com/album/live

Preview "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry", "Lonely Woman" and "Wild Is The Wind" on The Wire's website.

guest 09.22.2019 05:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Severian
Yeah, I feel this.
And it’s not just hip-hop. There’s culture trolling in whatever passes for passable rock music in the mainstream, too (The 1975 for some reason?) and it’s all a bit much.
I mean, I’m a pretty cynical motherfucker too, and all my musical favorites have some degree of iconoclasm permanently lodged in their identities (Lou Reed to RDJ to SY to whoever), but being provocative and iconoclastic seems to, in the late 2010s, mean essentially being an edgelord button-pusher with no portion of authenticity to their “act.”

Like JPEG or Tyler or Lana Del Rey or whatever. So much of it is just “let me see how much I can fuck with people and how many horrible things I can get away with saying before people call me out”
And if you call them out, watch out, because “kids today” will eat your fucking face. Because it is now socially unacceptable in a lot of circles to take anything seriously.

I mean, it’s hard for an older fuck like me to reconcile my dislike of this stuff with my appreciation and respect for punk and the punk spirit. But this is different terrain, really.

pretty much this, loathe to use the term virtue signalling but it seems like that for so many artists. not sure why I'm not as reticent to engage with it as applies to older stuff (reed is a good example, a lot of industrial has a similar tendency) but I suppose it's a perceived authenticity on my end? like an implicit understanding that they were more genuine in their identity -- iconoclastic as you say -- but now it's simply a ploy.

Severian 09.22.2019 08:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by d.sound
Heroes cornballs, first track is like jesus forgive me I'm a thot?

I skipped around through several tracks. I just heard 90s style hip hop. I didn't hear any sound collages.


I honestly think there’s a misunderstanding here somewhere.
There are only fleeting rap flows on the album, and few that last more than a few seconds. It’s all over the place. I think one of the last things I would associate it with is ‘90s hip-hop — like, Wu-Tang? Tupac? Tribe? — because none of it sounds anything like that to me.

It’s a bit like Death Grips meets Aphex Twin’s compositional habits circa “Ventolin” remixes, with a little R&B and boyband-type shit tossed in at random intervals and an awful lot of just disparate sounds chucked in here and there.

I mean honestly it’s an interesting listen. This is a guy who named a song after voting for Donald Trump after all, and he’s a massive troll, but sonically it’s pure insanity. The fact that it’s immensely popular is ... either incredible or suspect, I can’t quite decide which.

Veteran is more straight forward, and better as an album, but even that record sounds nothing like ‘90s hip-hop to me. *shrug*

Kuhb 09.22.2019 08:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Severian
I honestly think there’s a misunderstanding here somewhere.
There are only fleeting rap flows on the album, and few that last more than a few seconds. It’s all over the place. I think one of the last things I would associate it with is ‘90s hip-hop — like, Wu-Tang? Tupac? Tribe? — because none of it sounds anything like that to me.

It’s a bit like Death Grips meets Aphex Twin’s compositional habits circa “Ventolin” remixes, with a little R&B and boyband-type shit tossed in at random intervals and an awful lot of just disparate sounds chucked in here and there.

I mean honestly it’s an interesting listen. This is a guy who named a song after voting for Donald Trump after all, and he’s a massive troll, but sonically it’s pure insanity. The fact that it’s immensely popular is ... either incredible or suspect, I can’t quite decide which.

Veteran is more straight forward, and better as an album, but even that record sounds nothing like ‘90s hip-hop to me. *shrug*


You can attribute a lot of that popularity to The Needle Drop I suspect

d.sound 09.22.2019 10:38 AM

I gave the first two tracks another listen straight through. I hear it now, it does have some interesting change ups. Still, it doesn't do anything for me. I don't like a lot of hip hop in general. I LOVE Tierra Whack and Themselves. The Yugen Blackrock album this year was interesting for its heady lyrics, but I only listened to it a few times. The Dis Fantasy EP this year is pretty good. Then I like some classics. Public Enemy's It Takes... is one of the best albums ever by any standard.

Severian 09.22.2019 09:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kuhb
You can attribute a lot of that popularity to The Needle Drop I suspect


Heh?

I’ve honestly never seen the two mentioned together, but I know TND gave it an 8 after kind of talking a bunch of shit about it.

Veteran is better. Haven’t seen TND vid on that one.

Severian 09.22.2019 09:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by d.sound
I gave the first two tracks another listen straight through. I hear it now, it does have some interesting change ups. Still, it doesn't do anything for me. I don't like a lot of hip hop in general. I LOVE Tierra Whack and Themselves. The Yugen Blackrock album this year was interesting for its heady lyrics, but I only listened to it a few times. The Dis Fantasy EP this year is pretty good. Then I like some classics. Public Enemy's It Takes... is one of the best albums ever by any standard.


Check out the Billy Woods album “Hiding Places” from this year. Sharp, good songwriting, intense — that one really is reminiscent of some NYC ‘90s hip-hop styles.

Little SIMZ has a surprisingly good debut. Tyler the Creator made a really strong dark-synth heavy soul-rap-dance hybrid album that is his first actual great release. Freddie Gibbs & Madlib released Bandana, which is good, though not great.

Other good shit too. Slauson Malone’s “A Quiet Farwell (sic): Twenty sixteen to twenty eighteen” is one of the best albums of the year. ... Made by Winston Marsalis’ son, who happens to be a really good abstract hip-hop producer with jazz fragments floating all over the place. Dreamy and spooky and surreal.

d.sound 09.23.2019 01:36 PM

Thanks, I'll add it to the never-ending list.

One of my favorite albums of all time is Tha Fly Girlz - Da Brats From Da Ville. The story behind it is awesome. A member of Zs started an afterschool program for poor areas of Brooklyn. The first year was Zebrablood teaching rap to middle school kids. Only 5 girls were left by the end and they cut an LP.

Middle school girls rapping positive lyrics over Excepter beats. Do I really need to say more?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5Fq9rA6E4I

_tunic_ 09.24.2019 01:14 AM


 



oh yeah!! The moment you've all been waiting for!!!


Quote:

David Hasselhoff Covers the Jesus and Mary Chain’s “Head On”: Listen

The Hoff goes shoegaze with the help of Cars guitarist Elliot Easton


 

David Hasselhoff, the Jesus and Mary Chain (Photos via Getty Images).


Actor, singer, and apparent shoegaze fan David Hasselhoff has released a cover of the Jesus and Mary Chain’s 1989 single “Head On” from the group’s Automatic LP. The Hoff enlisted the Cars guitarist Elliot Easton for his revved-up version of the track (complete with handclaps). Give it a listen below.


Hasselhoff’s cover of “Head On” is the second single from his forthcoming album Open Your Eyes, which arrives September 27 via Cleopatra Records. The record features contributions from Todd Rundgren, country singer Charlie Daniels, the Stooges’ guitarist James Williamson, and more.
The Jesus and Mary Chain’s last studio album was 2017’s Damage and Joy, which featured previously-released singles “Amputation” and “Always Sad.”


here it is: Head On (on first listen it is quite good, but don't listen to it another time :D )

and here's another song: Open Your Eyes (feat. James Williamson) (which is quite terrible)

_tunic_ 09.24.2019 03:48 AM

ok, I'm sorry, the above post was a joke that I couldn't resit.


But this is no joke!!


Quote:

Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds Announce New Album Ghosteen, Out Next Week

“The songs on the first album are the children. The songs on the second album are their parents.”




 

Nick Cave (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)


Nick Cave announced a new album with The Bad Seeds via his Red Hand Files newsletter today. It’s called Ghosteen, and it’s out next week, he says.


Cave told a fan that Ghosteen is a double album. “The songs on the first album are the children,” he wrote. “The songs on the second album are their parents.” Cave also said, “Ghosteen is a migrating spirit.” Find the tracklist and cover art below. The band’s last album of new material was 2016’s Skeleton Tree.

Ghosteen:
Part 1:
01 The Spinning Song
02 Bright Horses
03 Waiting For You
04 Night Raid
05 Sun Forest
06 Galleon Ship
07 Ghosteen Speaks
08 Leviathan


Part 2:
01 Ghosteen
02 Fireflies
03 Hollywood





 







Also no joke. I'm not really interested in this one myself, but possibly some of you are. Historically it is an important edition:


Quote:

SUB ROSA INFO #143


NEW


INSTITUTE OF SONOLOGY
1959-1969


2LP SRV164 Black vinyl + insert
CD SR164 digipack


Early electronic music from 1959 to 1969 produced
by the Institute of Sonology / Instituut voor
sonologie, in Utrecht, Holland.
These electronic works were composed by Dick
Raaymakers, Frits Weiland, Ton Bruynel, Konrad
Boehmer, Gottfried Michael Koenig and Rainer Riehn.
Raw material - we need to reflect on this period -
a real revolution: music produced by machines
designed to construct a new era.
From the Philips pavillion to the Instituut voor
sonologie.

Officially founded on September 1, 1960, at the instigation of several
people representing cultural institutions, the Institute for Sonology
had already taken initiatives in the field of electroacoustic music since
1954. A large complex of studios (initially under the name STEM =
STudio voor Electronische Muziek) was set up under the patronage
of Utrecht University in an old house on Plompetorengracht in Utrecht. Instruments, machines and tapes (among them, that of Varèse's
'Electronic Poem') comin' from Philips laboratories.


6 radical composers
Ton Bruyneel (1934-1999)
Gottfried Michael Koenig (1926- )
Dick Raaijmakers (1930-2013)
Rainer Riehn (1941-2015)
Frits Weiland (1933- )
Konrad Boehmer (1941-2014)


Track Listing
Dick Raaijmakers
Piano-forte / 1959-60 / 4'57
Frits Weiland
Studie in lagen impulsen / 1961 / 4'50
Ton Bruynel
Reflexen / 1961 / 4'36
Konrad Boehmer
Aspekt / 1965-67 / 15'14
Gottfried Michael Koenig
Funktion orange / 1968 / 17'21
Rainer Riehn
Chants de Maldoror first / 1965-69 / 26'24


Listen
https://www.subrosa.net/en/catalogue...-sonology.html


[and on bandcamp: https://subrosalabel.bandcamp.com/al...-music-1959-69 ]



h8kurdt 09.24.2019 05:19 AM

New Nick Cave album cover looks like something you see on Jehovah's witness pamphlets.

Savage Clone 09.24.2019 07:26 AM

Looking forward to the vinyl of the new Blut Aus Nord album "Hallucinogen."

d.sound 09.25.2019 01:18 PM

Mount Eerie and Julie Doiron - Lost Wisdom pt 2 on 11/8

John Chantler next month.

I highly recommend the new Jan St Werner for noise heads and those interested in automatic process music. Each track it's announced which frequencies are being used and they are left to feedback. Glorious harmonies and dissonance unfolds.

The Soup Nazi 09.25.2019 11:51 PM

Out November 1: Cate Le Bon & Bradford Cox - Myths 004 EP

 


Quote:

As sure as if it had been mapped in the stars, or written in a prophecy buried deep beneath the sands of the Marfa desert, a collaboration between Cate Le Bon and Bradford Cox was always something of an inevitability. After years of admiring each other's work from afar, the two finally converged on Marfa, Texas in 2018, at Mexican Summer's annual Marfa Myths festival. Gaps puttied by a band of frequent Cate Le Bon co-conspirators on drums, saxophone, percussion, keys and additional guitar (Stella Mozgawa of Warpaint, Stephen Black of Sweet Baboo, Tim Presley of White Fence, and Samur Khouja); the EP –fourth in Mexican Summer's Myths series– was written and recorded in just one week.

For both Le Bon and Cox, Myths 004 signals a change of tack: meticulousness thrown to the wind as spontaneous, jammy tales of firemen and 5p plastic bags, unbrushed hair and shoelessness and makeup-daubed landscapes—roll effortlessly off their cuffs. "We committed ourselves to embracing the chaos, surrendering to all moments and moods that travelled through," says Le Bon. "It's a crude holiday scrapbook shared by all involved, an amalgamation of the changes in mood and light that shaped the days."

Though Myths 004's seven tracks are wondrous in their variety, they sit perfectly alongside one another–the gently melancholic cutlery drawer percussion of sole single "Secretary," and the lippy cynicism and wit of final hurrah "What Is She Wearing" united; along with every other shape, character, prang, plod and playful bite, by a feeling of sheer joy. ¡Viva la colaboración!

https://mexicansummer.bandcamp.com/album/myths-004

"Secretary": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g5Y58JmlBpQ

From Under The Radar: "Le Bon had a furniture building residency during Marfa Myths 2019 and Mexican Summer has also released a new short documentary about this titled Have a Seat. Eli Welbourne directed the documentary, which also features Cox".

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J8o6pFynkYc

The Soup Nazi 09.28.2019 12:52 AM

 


https://folkways.si.edu/news-and-pre...from-the-bardo

https://folkways.si.edu/songs-from-the-bardo

https://www.allmusic.com/album/songs...08416/releases

greenlight 09.28.2019 02:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by _tunic_
no joke. I'm not really interested in this one myself, but possibly some of you are. Historically it is an important edition:


institute of sonology? deifinitely. I was checking out that record already in record store and I was tempted as fuck to get it. I will get on my next visit to record store.

d.sound 09.30.2019 10:51 PM

Pop is the new punk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qcNt-sNB4_s

_tunic_ 10.05.2019 03:50 AM


 



https://monoofjapan.bandcamp.com/alb...ectrical-audio


Quote:

MONO formed in Tokyo, Japan in the closing winter weeks of December, 1999. They played their first live shows at the top of the new millennium, and released their first album, Under The Pipal Tree, in 2001. Recorded live in one day on a razor-thin budget, Pipal Tree was an earnest introduction to the curious magic of a band that would eventually become synonymous with monstrously dynamic, contemporary classical rock music.

To commemorate those austere beginnings – and celebrate their remarkable longevity – MONO revisit three of their earliest songs, and retrofit them with speaker-destroying upgrades. Anchored by the towering 16-minute noise opus, “Com(?)”, Before The Past • Live From Electrical Audio shows the evolution of MONO’s execution, stripping away the strings and layers of guitar overdubs to show just how massive this band can be at their most instrumentally austere.

Newly recorded in one day in 2019 with longtime collaborator, Steve Albini – and mixed by Albini with Temporary Residence founder, Jeremy deVine – Before The Past is as much a declaration of the present as it is a document of the past. These songs, which are now 20 years old, feel more powerful and profound than ever – a testament to MONO’s enduring dedication to their craft, and their dogged exploration of maximum minimalism.

releases November 8, 2019


1. Com(?) (Live From Electrical Audio)
2. L’America (Live From Electrical Audio)
3. Halo (Live From Electrical Audio)


unfortunately this EP only has three tracks, wouldn't have minded at all to hear a couple more oldies from their first two albums getting a rework job, A Speeding Car for instance ...

choc e-Claire 10.14.2019 10:36 PM

The new Lightning Bolt album is really good, it's definitely more 'pop' than a lot of their past records have been. That said, it's still forty-five minutes of super heavy, lightning-quick bass riffs with apeshit drums, so...if you like them, you'll like it.

Severian 10.16.2019 07:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by choc e-Claire
The new Lightning Bolt album is really good, it's definitely more 'pop' than a lot of their past records have been. That said, it's still forty-five minutes of super heavy, lightning-quick bass riffs with apeshit drums, so...if you like them, you'll like it.


Yeah, it’s decent. I like it.

Not the kind of thing I’m likely to put on in 5 years when I want to hear Lightning Bolt, but definitely blazing.

The Soup Nazi 10.22.2019 05:31 AM

Weyes Blood - Rough Trade Session

 


Quote:

The digital EP features Titanic Rising standout "Wild Time" along with alternate takes of singles "Everyday" and "Something To Believe," and album opener "A Lot Has Changed" (titled "A Lot's Gonna Change" on the album). These versions were recorded with Ariel Rechtshaid and originally available as a bonus CD with the Rough Trade release of Titanic Rising.
https://weyesblood.bandcamp.com/albu...-trade-session


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