Posts Tagged ‘music’

Sleepytime Gorilla Museum

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

This is a band I’ve like for a while. I’ve listed them as a favorite. I’ve made it a point to look for tour dates or new releases on their web site. I drove up to Boston on a Sunday night to see them. I did all that because I was sure I liked this music but I wasn’t sure that I loved it. I needed to settle that. It’s settled – I love this band. I love this music. It’s thunderous and lovely, whimsical and absurd, and frequently disturbing. It’s also very smart, very technical, and funny.

The Donkey Headed Adversary of Humanity Opens the Discussion

I make it a point to buy CDs when attending shows. The bands actually get some money when you’re buying it from them directly. In this case it was SGM’s second album “Of Natural History” that I picked up. I already owned the first “Grand Opening and Closing” and the most recent “In Glorious Times” which I’ve listened to many times. “Of Natural History” is likely the strongest of the three. The album art and text is a mythologizing blend of fictional characters, events, and ideas (I can’t prove the non-existence of the Sleepytime Gorilla Press in 1934 or Ikk Ygg) and some real ones – there’s a marvelous insert in the CD which pits the Italian Futurists (violently pro-machine) against Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber (violently anti-technology). The striking thing is the anti-humanism in the credos of both. SGM explores this in several songs on “Of Natural History” and elsewhere. Their first film, now in post-production according to their web site (although it may be another hoax) is titled “The Last Human Being”. 

But I don’t find anything misanthropic about SGM. Nils Frykdahl, the band’s musical and visual center, may be a scary looking dude  but I suspect he’s really a sweetheart. Between songs he verbalized a fondness for wooded areas (driving through Connecticut) and babies (there is an actual live baby on their tour bus but I’m not sure which band member is responsible). The songs are unflinchingly dark though, and you can almost imagine a world without humans. But not one without music.

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Dagmar Krause sings Hanns Eisler

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

This is really something. Dagmar Krause from Art Bears and Slappy Happy sings the songs of Hanns Eisler. The fact that it was never released in the US is of no consequence now – get it from Amazon or Emusic. YouTube Preview Image

Two records

Friday, April 18th, 2008

The first of these two fine albums, I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight by Richard and Linda Thompson, has been a favorite of mine since I was eighteen years old (I’m forty-two at the moment). It’s hardly obscure – it’s famous, really. Yet aside from its cult following it seems to be just barely in view. I still have my vinyl copy but when I purchased the CD a few years ago I had to buy an import.

Richard Thompson has been more successful as a solo artist than he ever was when married to and collaborating with Linda Thompson, (nee Linda Peters). Linda, as his muse, (she’s not credited for writing any of the songs) added a kind of gravitas to his work that has since dissipated. By the time of 1991′s Rumor And Sigh, his most popular album, he was writing clownish ditties like Psycho Street. It’s dark but it’ll make you laugh. I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight by comparison is a lot more likely to make you hurt. These songs have never seemed exactly sad to me. They aren’t desperate and pleading either. I guess they are resigned, really – the characters in these songs are trapped within their circumstances without a suggestion of redemption or escape.

The title track is like a weekend escape from all this despair. But it’s the final track, The Great Valerio, that is my favorite. I’m your friend until you use me and then be sure I won’t be there.

 

The Sweetness of the Water is the fourth tenth album by the duo of John Coxon and Ashley Wales known collectively as Spring Heel Jack. Their various collaborators bear as much mention. Evan Parker, Matthew Shipp, Wadada Leo Smith, William Parker, and several others have contributed to their recordings and live shows. This one is particularly lovely. Contemplative and exploring, it’s improvisational but tight. John Coxon’s guitar is compelling and unconventional. The electronics on Lata and Autumn and the repetitive keyboard on Track One, the fifth track, nudge free jazz beyond its normal conventions. And who knew it had any?

The Florentine Pogen…

Monday, April 14th, 2008

…is a cookie. And, of course, a Frank Zappa song.

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Only You

Saturday, April 5th, 2008

I did not know that a fellow named David Lynch was a member of The Platters, famous for their hits “Only You” and “The Great Pretender”. I mention this because I had a hunch that “Only You” was on the soundtrack to a movie by the other David Lynch, the film director. Apparently not so. But the song fits that particular brand of discomfiting irony that “Blue Velvet” fooled around with. I’m thinking of the Roy Orbison songs in that film, and the Bobby Vinton title track. There’s nothing creepier than nostalgia mixed with horrific violence. At least there wasn’t until it became a cliche.

Step Across the Border

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

I found this documentary on Fred Frith at Netflix after downloading the soundtrack on Emusic. It’s very good. No narration, no interviews, just imagery, bits of conversation, and a lot of music.YouTube Preview Image YouTube Preview Image 

Birds and drummers

Friday, March 28th, 2008

I quite like Fred Frith’s list of birds that he viewed on a single day in 2007 and the list of drummers he’s played with in the past 42 years. It’s easy to believe that he’s performed with (more than) 80 drummers. But 52 bird species in one day? No mention of ornithology at his wikipedia page.