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http://sharebee.com/46ef581f
PETER LANG - AMERICAN STOCK by far his best album, this has some old songs and new songs re-recorded. Un-fucking-believable. |
I have it B-)
Peter Lang rules so does Fahey and any other minimal acoustic player. |
Am d-l'ing Peter Lang (hurry up, computer!). Anyone here a fan of Sir Richard Bishop?
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Me me me!
Salvador Kali rules! |
yeah of course
I have every sun city girls album, every alvarius b album, every sir richard bishop.. I wish I had some of the charles gocher solo stuff... But anyway, yeah, sir richard is awesome... If you like lang, kotke, fahey, I'd definitely reccomend Basho... |
Basho rules also!
I need more of this type of music. |
I've seen Sir Richard B solo 3 times now in London - amazing. I was also incredibly lucky to see the last Sun City Girls performance at ATP "Nightmare Before Xmas" in 2006 (I have pics which I'll upload within the next week, once I find the CD-R of them at Melly Towers).
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I was supposed to see him with Earth but I never got in.
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yeah "american primitive guitar" or whatever is probably my favorite type of music definitely.
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I saw the double-header in London in January - a great night all round. |
I was looking forward to it but it was STRICTLY 18 PLUS AND OVER
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18 plus? Good God, what's wrong with the authorities these days? (The Converge gig last Sunday was 14+, for crying out loud).
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sir richard bishop is probably now my favorite guitarist after fahey.
his stuff is mindblowingly beautiful. i think i like while my guitar violently... and improvika the best. i think im still missing a bit iof his solo stuff. i think its about time that we opened up a thread dedicated to SRC. and maybe one to solo acoustic music. i agree with mr cooley, american primitive guitar is probably my favorite kind of music at the moment |
^^^And our Jerusalem correspondent signs in. Shalom, senor :)
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http://www.johnfahey.com/Blood.htm
Best article on john fahey ever. Featuring the best John Fahey quote ever... "I like merzbow." |
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just read it, fucking great |
Why does WIRE write all the best articles...
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Say, has anybody heard the John Fahey Trio album? I'm very curious what it sounds like.
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No, that and memphis swamp jam are the only fahey releases I haven't heard.
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best and worst. but they were a perfect mag from 95-01. ive been ordering lots of back issues. theyve gone downhill but you can still get great articles in there. the last issue was great, a cover story with mark stewart that covered his entire career; the pop group, mafffia, and his solo stuff. the guy is brilliant. |
since my best friend works at tower records, i often borrow cds to copy to my laptop. today i took a few more fahey.
i am listening to old fashoined love. it is amazing. the old ragtime-ish tunes make me so happy. its way too happy of an album to be fahey... one might be mistaken that he was content in the 70's and not a depressed alchoholic. i guess thats what makes him so brilliant. i also took railroad I. i have yet to hear it EDIT: on a unrelated note. since im listening to old fashoined love and it has on it the song that gastr del sol covered, i was thinking about how amazing a band GDS are. i then oopened up allmusic and camaflour was their album of the day |
See, Gastr Del Sol covered the last song on "Old-Fashioned Love"; that's why I even bothered checking out Fahey. And I'm glad I did, he's fucking brilliant!
And his favorite food was popcorn. |
with lots of butter
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i checked out fahey because i worked at a record store and we had lots of his albms and i was intrigued but never heard them. till i saw on allmusic a few years ago that they put him as one of jim orourkes influences, so then i heard his stuff...
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There's nothing quite like the sound of a finger picked acoustic guitar.
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i know... even if its picked with a pick (ala sir richard bishop) its still about the best sound in the world
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quite possibly the greatest photo ever taken
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Starting work in 2007, Washington D.C. filmmaker Marc Minsker has completed a 30 minute documentary feature on the life of John Fahey entitled "John Fahey: The Legacy of Blind Joe Death." It chronicles his humble beginnings in Takoma Park, Maryland, through his success as a guitarist and record producer in California, and follows him through his dark days in Salem, Oregon. The film has been submitted to the Takoma Park Film Festival. A trailer for the film is currently posted on YouTube. It is due for release in February, 2009.
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Think I missed this thread take off!
Did that doc get released? I remember watching the trailer on youtube. I was thinking about starting a thread about Basho because I've really gotten into him lately but I'll just dump it here. I think his first few albums are the best but Twilight Peaks is a really beautiful, chilled record. Not really keen on stuff like Voice of the Eagle where he sings all the time but its pretty interesting... he has such a strange voice sometimes! Babs and Redwood Ramble are 2 of my most loved songs ever. I figured out most of Redwood Ramble if anybody wants a tab. I'm def gonna work out babs this summer; everybody needs to hear that song. Quote:
haha I bought 2 of those dvds where john teaches you his songs just for moments like that Teaching Auld Lang Syne http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QrJQystmyl8 |
Another musician, that I am ashamed I did not get into before... Im just really starting to LISTEN to Fahey and love him. Fav album that I have heard so far is Death Chants, Breakdowns and Military Waltzes. I have a lot more to hear though, he has like 40+ releases, right? Next on my list is prob Blind Joe Death.
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Yeah, he has around exactly 40 releases. I'd say they're all pretty essential.
The Lung, I LOVE Basho as well!!! There's an "american primitive guitar" thread or two around the board later if you search where we try to discuss all this stuff but almost no one replied. Go figure. Thanks for starting this amazing thread so long ago. |
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This is the musically weakest of all fahey albums by far. going for avant/improv/experimental, but falling on face. other dudes in Trio not so good. Fahey tells some funny stories on it though. i want to hear Three Day Band soon (latest fahey release). ALL fahey albums are good, i've got almost all of 'em. Double 78 does have some familiar pieces but i forget where they're from, city of refuge maybe, or hard time empty bottle blues? Jack Rose has inherited the fahey throne in my mind. Check out: John Fahey: Great Santa Barbara Oil Slick & Sandy Bull: 1969 Still Valenitnes Day. Both Cds on Water Records, both recorded at the same gig! i'd kill... www.johnfahey.com has tone of cool stuff to read, especially liner notes for each album. original LP w/ intact booklets are hard to find and much coveted by me. On my living room wall hangs a grave rubbing I made at Fahey's grave in Salem, Oregon check out some Indian slide guitarists: Debashish Battacharya, Dr. Kamala Shankar, Vishwa Mohan Bhatt, Sublime Frequencies' "Hindustani Slide Guitar", etc... The Voice of the Turtle is Heard in Our Land |
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Now that is hardcore! Seen as u mentioned jack rose, wat should I listen to first? I've got most of Fahey's albums now apart from some compliations, live albums and X-mas albums. I still haven't heard Hitomi yet... is this good? I really like how chilled out Red Cross is and I recently got the Mill Pond re-issue which is awesome. I've spent alot of time on the fahey website reading the booklets and stuff; its a really good resource. I just bought Vampires and Vultures, but too busy with exams at the moment to read it. I've been meaning to buy how bluegrass destroyed my life for ages. ASP, cool i'll have a search later but its more your thread than mine! Also thanks for that Peter Lang upload earlier in the thread, I'll give it a listen soon. Do you like Leo Kottke? I only have 6 and 12 string but theres some really nice songs on it |
I'd get kensington blues by rose. That's my favorite AND the most fahey-like.. he often covers fahey, too.
Anyone have fahey's "memphis swamp jam"? I personally love Hitomi. That's the first album I ever listened to ecstasy. Haha. But uh... of course, you know, it's not the typical "Drive around the countryside with the wind blowing in your face in the summer time" Fahey album... it's ... sitting, depressed, in a cold room.. delayed guitar sounds.. but I love it. How Bluegrass Destroyed mY Life is an amazing book! Just amazing. And yeah, I like some Kotke, I like his guitar-solo albums (many of his albums feature vocals or other instruments). He's got some amazing stuff, but I grew bored of him. |
So is hitomi in a style similar to red cross? I don't have the swamp jam either, whats that like?
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yes.
and swamp jam is a collab with someone else. I heard one song of it from a various artists comp but -- and i've been looking for a LONG time -- the rest of the songs have never been ripped. |
Wanted to post this John Hurt song cos it's amazing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvRxA8gR7bw Fahey did a cover of it on voice of the turtle which is also amazing especially if its him singing on it |
the greatest and the best...thanks board for telling me about this fellow...listening to "america" right now with a full blown boner
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at the end of every semester the musicology dept has a student concert (me and a friend are now in charge of organizing them).
last semester i played cement factory in portland this semster im doing a strange mixture of blind willie johnson's dark was the night cold was the ground with fahey's dalhart texas 1967 lets hope it goes well |
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