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  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    ^^ Oh wow.

    "Nothing is at all completely different."
  • For once, or maybe twice, I was in my prime.
    http://soul-junk.bandcamp.com/album/1950

    Soul-Junk just put a bunch of his out-of-print stuff up on bandcamp. I've got a bit of catching up to do. Unfortunately, 1956 isn't one of those albums—well, unfortunate for everyone else, because I already have a copy of it.
  • For once, or maybe twice, I was in my prime.
    http://plug.dj/hitler-the-aids-live/

    Finally have non-sucky internet, so it's on.
  • glennmagusharveyglennmagusharvey
    just bought some music CDs o/` ~Welcome to Ritzberry Fields~ o/`
    edited 2014-04-12 01:50:26
    /me just bought some music CDs

    o/` ~Welcome to Ritzberry Fields~ o/`
  • edited 2014-04-12 01:58:48
    ...actually I didn't buy the one that's called "Ritzberry Fields", but I bought one with a track where the only lyrics are the above.  The rest is humming.  A capella humming.  It almost sounds like a church piece.

    Alt version can be heard here: youtube.com/watch?v=AftfvYHBlE0 (first track)

    Both versions are little intro songs.
  • edited 2014-04-12 19:11:30
    “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    I am listening to the new Current 93 LP right now. Weird atonal piano, twangy slide guitars and snaky bassoon figures against Tibet's usual portentous sprechstimme. I dig it.
  • I am listening to the new Current 93 LP right now. Weird atonal piano, twangy slide guitars and snaky bassoon figures against Tibet's usual portentous sprechstimme. I dig it.

    Definitely have to check this out.

    Also, I picked up the album "a" yesterday, which collaboration between John Zorn and Thurston Moore of completely improvised material. I'm only halfway through the album right now, but the best parts of the album are where both performers lay back and the hectic busy performances give way to very slow meditative moments. Of what I've listened to so far, this is a really cool album and definitely recommended if you're a fan of either musician.
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”

    This is very, very cool.
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    That is very, very clever.
  • We can do anything if we do it together.
    I was reminded tonight that Mr. Bungle's California is a pretty cool album, even if it can be a bit overwhelming on first listen.
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    I was unaware of this until now, but apparently the great, strange experimental composer Robert Ashley died early last month. He was best known for "The Wolfman", which basically predicated power electronics in the early 1960's.
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    It's weird to realise how much R.E.M. were influenced by bands like Gang of Four early on, but then you listen to really early recordings of theirs and it kind of all falls into place.

    On that note, here's the earliest known recording of "(Don't Go Back To) Rockville":

  • For some reason this is in my head right now:
  • edited 2014-04-16 11:43:09
    We can do anything if we do it together.

    It's weird to realise how much R.E.M. were influenced by bands like Gang of Four early on, but then you listen to really early recordings of theirs and it kind of all falls into place.

    It still amuses me how Michael Stipe actually sounds younger the further you go into R.E.M.'s career.

    I'd also like to say that you can still detect post-punk influences in R.E.M.'s work as late as Reckoning - think "Harborcoat".
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    Definitely. It's still there past that point, too, but it's a bit subtler.
  • (Link: Duck Sauce -- "Charlie Chaplin & Rappin' Ralph")

    image

    So Duck Sauce just dropped their debut album (which I was not aware was A Thing) and, uh, it's hella

    If you liked "Barbara Streisand" (oo-wee-oo-wee-oo-wee-oo-wee-oo) at all, take a listen, A-Trak and Armand Van Helden have struck the gold mine big with this.
  • edited 2014-04-17 01:13:43



    Speaking of A-Trak, his Dirty South Dance mixtapes are certainly worth picking up if you can find a way to acquire them legally. (And even if you can't, there's always YouTube...)
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    So, St. Vincent has apparently started playing "Your Lips Are Red" again, and...


    ...I love you, Annie Clark.
  • http://gaana.com/album/mozart-meets-india-based-on-indian-ragaas

    So I found out about the album "Mozart meets India", which mixes Indian Carnatic Ragas with Western Classical(ish) music and it's pretty interesting. The whole album is available to listen to in the link I posted. Definitely worth checking out.
  • For once, or maybe twice, I was in my prime.
    Relistening to Illinois by Sufjan.

    I've talked in the past about preferring Michigan because it's a more consistent album. I think I need to amend that. Illinois isn't as patchy, quality-wise, as I said a few years ago; but in terms of mood it's much more prone to extremes than anything else in Suf's catalogue. And that transition between the morbidity of "The Seer's Tower" to the exuberance of "The Tallest Man, the Broadest Shoulders" still gives me whiplash. All the same, the individual moments are amazing, and that song suite that dominates the second half of the album (from "Prairie Fire that Wanders About" to "The Seer's Tower" with no hard breaks in between) is just as effective as it ever was.

    To be perfectly frank, it's entirely possible that my preference for Michigan stems partially from a desire to distance myself from all those people who've listened to nothing besides Illinois.

    Oddly, I really strongly associate this album with a particular period of my life (first semester of sophomore year in college) moreso than I do with any other Sufjan. Not sure why that is.
  • is his name "soof-yahn"?

    that's always how I've said it in my mind, but I don't listen to his stuff so I've never had to say it out loud
  • edited 2014-04-18 21:59:15
    For once, or maybe twice, I was in my prime.
    Yeah, that's it. Or "Soof-hee-ahn" if you need to make it three syllables for some reason.

    As heard here:


  • edited 2014-04-18 23:00:47
    We can do anything if we do it together.
    I've been listening to a fair bit of Hüsker Dü lately. Thanks to that, I now feel that Zen Arcade is one of those double albums that deserves to be a double album. The sprawl that results from that length actually makes the album more, rather than less, powerfully resonant. Simply put, it is the greatest accidental masterpiece ever.
  • edited 2014-04-19 19:19:42
    “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    So, because of the weird recurrence of references to lowercase in Mo mentioning not getting it and a passing reference to it in a Needle Drop video thing about getting into experimental music, I have been listening to a bit of Steve Roden.

    I really, really like him. Maybe not love, but like quite a lot.

    The thing is, the idea that "lowercase" is all just rustling paper and whatnot seems to undersell the level of detail in the work of someone like Roden. His work does tend to be fairly quiet and derives a lot of its content from found sound, but it is also diversely orchestrated and intriguingly structured. It's very John Cage-y, yes, but more Imaginary Landscape than 4'33" - the point is that the low volume makes you bead in on the textures by contrast, but not ache to hear them.

    Actually, Morton Feldman is a better comparison, both in the simplicity and the low-key elemental emotions beneath the conceptualist approach.
  • edited 2014-04-20 11:01:17
    For once, or maybe twice, I was in my prime.
    Hey Mo, I picked up a 2-disc Les Baxter compilation at Half-Price Books. Pretty good stuff so far.

    I was not aware that Baxter wrote the backing music for an Yma Sumac album.

  • and then merzbow was a techno producer
  • http://boomkat.com/downloads/643262-powell-untitled-rave002

    also Powell's first EP on Death Of Rave is in digital format, it's really great and it's only 5 bucks so yeah
  • edited 2014-04-20 14:13:59
    THIS MACHINE KILLS FASCISTS
    oh god dammit wrong thread again
  • The new Cormorant is out!


    apparently (i have not listened to it yet):

    * it's more black metal than their previous albums

    * despite losing Arthur von Nagel (*who did a lot of their songwriting and was also the vocalist/bassist) they still sound rad as fuck (many, me included, were worried that they'd be kinda lost without him)

    also the cover art is MORE DOPER THAN EVER BEFORE

    image


    LIKE HOLY SHIT

    IM BUYING THIS AS SOON AS I GET BACK FROM DONATING PLASMA

    AAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
    x-post

  • one of those songs where within about 10 seconds of clicking the youtube i had closed the tab so i could put the whole album on

    it sounds like loscil did a collab with olan mill, so naturally it is so up my street it might as well be my house
  • sunn wolf said:


    one of those songs where within about 10 seconds of clicking the youtube i had closed the tab so i could put the whole album on

    it sounds like loscil did a collab with olan mill, so naturally it is so up my street it might as well be my house
    Okay, definitely gonna check these guys out. This is awesome.
  • house and garage
  • edited 2014-04-22 19:47:31
    My dreams exceed my real life
    Nm
  • See, there's a lot of great music with vocals where the vocals are basically excuses to give the music something to be sung to.


    now stop trying to find the true meaning of songs in the lyrics; the true meaning is in the music and the lyrics are window-dressing
  • For once, or maybe twice, I was in my prime.
    "Singing is a trick to get people to listen to songs for longer than they otherwise would." — David Byrne (paraphrased)
  • edited 2014-04-23 10:52:24
    Touch the cow. Do it now.
    kinda reminds me of what Robert Plant said about "Whole Lotta Love," which got them sued: "Page's riff was Page's riff. It was there before anything else. I just thought, 'well, what am I going to sing?' That was it, a nick. Now happily paid for."

    I think lyrics are kinda overrated, personally. If you really want deep, thought-provoking stuff, you don't go to pop singers. Or you shouldn't, anyway.
  • THIS MACHINE KILLS FASCISTS
    I was looking at the Billboard year-end charts last night (?), and it's amazing just how many pop hits are Silly Love Songs. I guess there's a new crop of teenagers and bored, middle-aged housewives every year, huh?
  • Isn't David Byrne the "Like Humans Do" guy?
  • For once, or maybe twice, I was in my prime.
    Yes, that's him. Song was originally from his album Look Into the Eyeball.

    In non-computer circles, he's better known for being the frontman of Talking Heads and for his collaboration with Brian Eno, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts.
  • edited 2014-04-24 00:43:37
    We can do anything if we do it together.
  • Touch the cow. Do it now.
    This month is the 40th anniversary of one of my favorite albums.



    YNTKT
  • For once, or maybe twice, I was in my prime.
    MetaFour said:

    https://soundcloud.com/deathwishinc/wovenhand-good-shepherd/s-erQy0

    If the previews are indicative of Wovenhand's upcoming album, then it's going to go even farther in the heavy post-punk direction that Ten Stones and The Laughing Stalk started, and it's going to be crazy awesome.

    Copy of the album came in the mail today. At the risk of speaking prematurely, I think Refractory Obdurate might be the best album in David Eugene Edwards' entire career.

  • Chris Miller from Amebix is working on some solo stuff apparently.

    apocalyptic, centered around an acoustic guitar, hoarse, growly vox

    seems pretty fun
  • For once, or maybe twice, I was in my prime.
    http://deathwishinc.bandcamp.com/album/refractory-obdurate

    Unexpected benefit of Wovenhand moving to a new label is that the latest album is on bandcamp this time. Everyone needs to hear this.
  • on Deathwish Inc?

    raaaaaad
  • Game Music Bundle 7 is currently going

    http://www.gamemusicbundle.com/

    contents:
    The Banner Saga (soundtrack)
    DEVICE 6 Original Soundtrack
    Broken Age: Act 1 Soundtrack
    The Floor is Jelly OST
    LUFTRAUSERS OST
    Transfiguration
    Starbound: the Orchestral OST
    The Yawhg EP
    Magnetic By Nature (soundtrack)
    Escape Goat 2 Original Soundtrack
    Curious Merchandise
    Winnose: Original Soundtrack
    Eldritch Original Soundtrack
    Bardbarian – OST
    Tribes: Ascend (Original Soundtrack)
    Into The Box Soundtrack
    Soul Fjord (soundtrack)
    Dragon Fantasy Book II Original Soundtrack
    Ether One Original Soundtrack
    The Music of Junk Jack X

    (everything from Transfiguration on downward is for $10; the first five are for $1 if you don' want to pay $10)

  • so it seems that john frusciante became a seriously fun musician at some point
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