11.16.2006, 08:01 AM | #1 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Plaza de Toros
Posts: 6,731
|
The Jukebox Shuffle Outtakes compiled here are live recordings from the post-punk years. Some of them still sound remarkably well and some of them have been very special to me once. I’ve always been a huge fan of Wire (I think the best band of the whole post-punk era) and I consider Television’s Little Johnny Jewel as one the best compositions of the seventies. The original track already appeared in the Jukebox Shuffle Series and here’s a wonderful live version, “recorded somewhere in the seventies”, according to the sleeve notes. The last three tracks are special to me since I was present at these shows in the Netherlands. John Cale’s Heartbreak Hotel (forget Elvis) still gives me the shivers. O yeah, like so many of us, I too had that (short) Flipper moment.
1 Wire: Lowdown (Roxy, London, 1977) 2 Tom Robinson Band: Martin (UK, 1977) 3 John Cale: Mercenaries (CBGB’s, NYC, 1979) 4 Talking Heads: Take Me To The River (USA-Tour 1979) 5 Sham 69: What have We Got (UK, 1979) 6 UK Subs: Telephone Numbers (Rainbow, London, 1980) 7 UK Subs: Organised Crime (Rainbow, London, 1980) 8 Television: Little Johnny Jewel (NYC, 1976) 9 Wire: Piano Tuner (Electric Ballroom, London, 1979) 10 Wire: Revealing Trade Secrets (Electric Ballroom, London, 1979) 11 Flipper: We Don’t Understand (USA, 1983) 12 Dead Kennedys: Holiday in Cambodia (Paradiso, Amsterdam, 1984) 13 Sonic Youth: Brother James (Emma, Amsterdam, 1983) 14 John Cale: Heartbreak Hotel (Vredenburg, Utrecht, 1983) Download here |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
11.16.2006, 08:05 AM | #2 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 8,212
|
Nice comp; I'm downloading.
I 've got both whole Cale shows that are cited. Nico was a special guest at the '79 CBGB one. I also have the Sonic Youth & Talking Heads (if it's from "Live on Tour 1979") shows too. Yes, Cale's "Heartbreak Hotel" is a different reading that I enjoy as well, but in no way does it top Mr. Presley. |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
11.16.2006, 08:30 AM | #3 |
little trouble girl
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Bath- UK
Posts: 39
|
Since when are UK Subs and Sham 69 post-punk bands?
__________________
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
11.16.2006, 11:59 AM | #4 | |
Banned
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: NYC
Posts: 4,055
|
Quote:
You actually saw SY in 83? Is that a board record? I know there are some posters here who saw them in 85 (I saw'm in 86). Tell us more mate! |
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
11.16.2006, 12:05 PM | #5 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 11,110
|
hey can you tell me how to download this thing? i click on the links and nothing happens
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
11.16.2006, 12:37 PM | #6 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 8,212
|
index of downloads:
(they are all track-at-once .mp3s) http://www.siebethissen.net/Dr_Aurat...inge/index.htm Jukebox Shuffle Outtakes (1): New York Avant-Garde 1980-1982 http://www.siebethissen.net/Dr_Auratheft/Up_Fringe/index.htm 1 Robin Crutchfield’s Dark Day: Trapped (1981) 2 Glenn Branca: Bad Smells (1982) 3 Jill Kroesen: You’ve Really Got A Hold On Me (1982) 4 Bohack: The Rock Of Joe The Dog Crowd Noticed (1982) 5 John Cale: Chinese Envoy (1982) 6 Glenn Branca: Structure (1981) 7 David van Tieghem: And Now This (1982) 8 Robert Ashley: Buddy (1981) 9 “Blue” Gene Tyranny: The World’s Greatest Piano Player (1982) 10 Laurie Anderson: Born, Never Asked (1982) 11 Meredith Monk: Gotham Lullaby (1981) 12 John Giorno: Stretching It Wider (1982) 13 Glenn Branca: Lesson No. 1 (1980) When I produced the Jukebox Shuffle Series (1975-1986) I had to leave out a lot of tracks. I still have them in a file, so every now and then I will do another compilation. Here’s a bunch of tracks that have a lot in common: they were all produced and recorded in New York City in the first years of the eighties and all artists were more or less part of an artistic, post-no-wave movement – or better: environment. Going through my records I was surprised to notice how many of these ‘difficult’ records I bought back then. I guess they also show how the punk rock movement created an interest in art. The climate broadened our musical taste. I never play these records anymore. Perhaps they sound too pretentious today. I especially liked Glenn Branca and have seen the guy perform many times. Without the Branca band there would be no Sonic Youth (Lee Ranaldo and later Thurston Moore were members of his band). Anyway, here’s the first issue in a new series of Jukebox Shuffle Outtakes.
__________________
Robert Rauschenberg, Canyon, 1959. Combine on canvas 81 3/4 x 70 x 24 inches. |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
11.16.2006, 01:05 PM | #7 |
the end of the ugly
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 791
|
dude, this is awesome. I love all the bands on the post-punk comp, that i know of (esp wire and television), and the ones i don't (sham 69, flipper) i've wanted to hear for a while. Thanks mayn!
__________________
Duran Duran's 1995 covers album Thank You was recently voted the worst album of all time by a Q magazine poll. Although we respectfully disagree (Sonic Youth's NYC Ghosts & Flowers is clearly the worst album of all time) -Pitchfork (hahahah!) Here's a myspace of my music and 4-track ramblings the electric kites--the jamz of me n my friends |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
11.18.2006, 11:53 PM | #8 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 8,212
|
Of course John Cale's Heartbreak Hotel is based on Judy Nylon's version. She even sang it at some of his shows.
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |