06.19.2009, 07:59 PM | #1181 |
the end of the ugly
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Belfast
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Thanks for the beefheart stuff, atsonicpark
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07.04.2009, 10:08 AM | #1182 |
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Various - The Gift Of Noise
The Gift Of Noise subtitled Compilation Of Five New Underground American Bands is an album ranging from synth-punk to noise punk-rock. Psyclones is a long standing band with a diverse sound ranging from punk / post-rock / synth-pop to electronic industrial / ambient. Psyclones are Brian Ladd and Julie Frith of the well known label Ladd-Frith. Senseless Hate anyone any info? F/i are From Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and has been around since 1981, releasing half a dozen LP's on RRRecords. The band started out as a unit elaborating on noise structures in the tradition of Throbbing Gristle or Nurse With Wound. They are also influenced by Hawkwind and Spacemen 3. No Trend surfaced in the Washington, DC area in the early 1980's. They were associated with the underground hardcore punk scene of the time, but were not accepted by the cliques that existed. They didn't care, either. No Trend viewed all cliques, even the ones that supposedly consisted of rebels, as conformist and ridiculous. The insert for their first 7", which contains numerous clippings from teen magazines about how to dress "punk," is all the clue one needs as to how they felt about the "scene." Rumor has it that they used to invite members of the DC hardcore scene to their shows, and then place airport runway lights on stage facing the audience. There excellent first album "Too Many Humans..." and the lp with Lydia Lunch " A Dozen Dead Roses" can be found on Phoenix Hairpins. Smersh was Mike Mangino and Chris Shepard. And from 1981 until 1994 they released far too many cassette tapes. They also contributed to far too many compilations throughout the known world. In the early eighties they established a unique sound that is known and loved, combining cheap electronics and wild guitar sounds with distorted vocals. They were in fact a bit The Ramones of the industrial scene. But were they industrial? The Smersh sound had so many faces that it is next to impossible to categorize their music. Smersh recorded on most Monday evenings for a couple of hours. Each song was improvised over the course of the evening and then recorded. Once it was finished they never played it again. They never rehearsed, they couldn't read music, and they never played live. The Gift Of Noise was released on vinyl by L'Invitation au Suicide (ID 5) in 1983. Tracks: 1. Psyclones - The Gift Of Noise 2. Psyclones - Rockin' The Cong 3. Senseless Hate - Vengeance Of God 4. Senseless Hate - In My Chair 5. F/i - Stepping Stone 6. F/i - Frat Boy 7. No Trend - Mass Sterilization Caused By Venereal Disease 8. No Trend - Cancer 9. No Trend - Teen Love 10. Smersh - She Is Nervous 11. Smersh - The Exorcissy http://thethingonthedoorstep.blogspo...-of-noise.html The Gift Of Noise |
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07.04.2009, 10:40 AM | #1183 |
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Yoshimi – “Speaker/Tuna Power” 7″
http://sector2814.files.wordpress.co...pg?w=495&h=371 Boredoms/Free Kitten/Ooioo drummer does vanity record for Thurston Moore’s vanity label, back in 1993. that about sumsthis one up http://sector2814.wordpress.com/ |
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07.04.2009, 10:41 AM | #1184 |
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Mev – “Live 94″ 7″
http://sector2814.files.wordpress.co...pg?w=495&h=371 about 12 minutes of live improv from the 1994 incarnation of this well-known and long-standing improv ensemble. Musica Elettronica Viva! |
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07.04.2009, 04:52 PM | #1185 | |
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Quote:
have you heard his 4th symphony? its one of my favorites. i am in an arabic music faze so i found a few really good blogs today. http://www.passionate-music.com/sear...Arabic%20Oldie (unfortunatly all the farid al atrach links are broken) but this site has a few albums of this guy called - omar khorshid who play arabic guitar and is a direct influence apparently on sir richard bishop and especially the freak of araby album which features a cover of one of omar's songs from the first album. they SRBFOA is also in his top friends on myspace as well http://www.passionate-music.com/2008...ic-guitar.html there is also a ton of oum kalthoum and whatnot there this has more classic arabic pop but like warda but also a really good oum kalthoum album and a realy good asmahan album http://tabbouchemusic.blogspot.com/s...label/Classics and this site i ddnt get much other than a nice george michel solo oud album http://folkmusicsmb.blogspot.com/sea...eorge%20Michel thats it for now. i do have a request though, if anybody has any farid al atrach, or knows aof a site where i can download his stuff, especially the album addi errabi, that would be great. i couldnt even find it for sale on the internet. my friend, whos an arab said that shell take me to the arab marketplace in the old city sometime this week, to look for farid al atrache cds. so i hope i can find something there.
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07.06.2009, 04:32 PM | #1186 |
100%
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 785
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Kluster & Friends 1969-1973 - 6xLP Boxset
Kluster and Friends - 1969-1973 6xLP Boxset Qbico Records (Italy 2009) Wow, a seriously amazing unearthed holy grail of early germany experimental proto-industrial/noise... 6 Lps of early Kluster shows pre and post Rodelius and Mobius. Conrad Schnitzler unearthed all these live recordings as a gift to Qbico Records for their supposed final release by the label. And what a gift it is! As far as we know many online sellers have some copies still available. I seriously recommend if you love Kluster to pick this before its gone and selling on ebay for much more than the retail price. All the Lp's in the box are in Black Sleeves with no information on the Black Labels. I've titled the Lp's by the unique name on the hub of each Lp. (ASA, Beta, CVS, DAV, EX, & Fungi!) The audio fidelity of these live recordings is really incredible. Especially when you consider what time period these shows where recorded! Highly Recommended!!!! Vinyl Rip by your truly. Qbico Label Notes: Here is a big one for you Qbico is going out with a BIG!!! BIG!!! BANG!!! When i mailed the news about the closure of qbico in 2010, some friends and musicians wrote me back... one was Conrad Schnitzler wondering if i wanna close with THE BOMB ! i said "yes, why not !?". so Con sent me 6 CD-R of UNRELEASED Kluster music, rec. in 1969-73 (along with Klaus Freudigmann and Wolfgang Seidel) ! he said to choose yr favourite 40 (+/-) from the 1 hour lenght of each CD-R, so to adjust to vinyl format... well, that's was one of the most joyful experience of my life ! this 6LP box collect that music which it's simply some of the most outstanding and revolutionary music that i ever heard !!! One of the most legendary release on Qbico ?! YES (screaming)! Conrad Schnitzlerl about Kluster: "Kluster was never over. There is KLUSTER until today. If we friends met, we didn't think about, under which name we met. It is the style of the music which comes out. No other group made such music. This is Kluster-music,it is a style. It is an invention of Konrad Schnitzler 1969 Schnitzler / Freudigmann / Seidel & Friends, was before Achim Roedelius came to the band and after. I founded the music group Kluster after my exit 1969 from the group GERÄUSCHE (Zodiak with A.Roedelius and Boris Schak). Between 1969 to 1972 I worked with different friends, with Tangerine Dreams among others. With them I tried to perform the music of my imagination. Finally Klaus Freudigmann and Wolfgang Seidel remained at the work continuously over the years. In addition there were several actions with A.Roedelius and D.Möbius where the LPs KLUSTER Klopfzeichen,Osterei and Eruption were made. Instruments, amplifier and effects I gave D. Moebius because he had had no own equipment. I didn't want the music to remind of the normal. My criterias were not folk music, not rock music, not pop songs and not dance music. The idea for "Cluster" later "Kluster"(I wanted to avoid Americanisms) is not only a name for a group but a form of music. I had amplifier, instruments, contact mikes and effects, that could used by the others, too. Klaus had tape machines and microphones. In addition he constructed instruments and electronical sound generators, which made the most undescribable sounds. Wolfgang had everything connected with drum and base and in addition amplifier and effects. Klaus had rooms where we could work out our music performances. The tapes "Electric Meditation" with TD were made in one of those spaces. Most of the performances happened with friends who took part in the actions; therefore Conrad, Klaus,Wolfgang and friends. For special activities we used the name ERUPTION. The idea was to make sounds without melodies, sounds comparing to industrial noises. I had different friends with me to play. No money was to be earned with this music. No fame, to attain with it. By the way I'm not a musician; I'm an intermedial artist and composer. With the different Kluster groups we did some live concerts. 'Eruption' (Ausbruch) is the title of the LP. Of that I had produced an edition of 100 LPs. Later the Gallery Block had made another edition of 100 LPS of it for the 'Block Box' with a label without Moebius' and Roedelius' names though. Later in 1996 Joe (Marginal Talent) produced a CD of it. I The group `Kluster- was a conglomerate of total different players and artists over several years. But all those years Klaus Freudigmann was involved sometimes as player, or as sound engineer or even as inventor of instruments. It was him, who taped the last Kluster Concert. Therefore he was named equally to the others on the label. After and previously off the splitting from R+M. I still did a lot of activities with the group Kluster there was Kluster befor and after Achim Roedelius+Dieter Moebius It was not popular music Kluster did. Not many people were interested. Therefore, No photos of Kluster, or posters, or tickets, or newspaper cuttings, or anything related left. It is about 35 years ago." Wolfgang Seidel about Kluster: "Summer of Love? Kluster was formed in West-Berlin - much closer to Siberia than to San Francisco, Haight Ashbury and Golden Gate Park. What came to Berlin with a two years delay were only the outer fringes of the "Summer of Love". Its blossom would have died soon in the Cold War breeze. And 1970 a lot of the optimism of the mid 60ies had already ceased. It became obvious that creating a better world needs more than flowers in your hair. But the political movements of the late sixties were a child of the same optimism that fuelled the rapid developments changing not only the material side of life but also arts, music and the way people interacted. The new left and the hippie movement where all these ideas concentrated wasn't the result of poverty but build on the belief that with modern technology there is enough for everybody. It's only a question of a fair distribution. That optimism had a soundtrack that was based on the same technology. From the electric guitar, reverb and echo units to the first synthesizers, everything was welcome that sounded as if it came from the future. Future meant space travel - so it's quite natural that the first effects wildly used where those who send you to a space you've never been before: artificial reverb and echo. A lot of people had their first encounter with this new music at the movies - watching scifi-film like Forbidden Planet with the electronic tonalities of Louis and Bebe Barron (1956 - and their work wasn't called music to avoid paying royalties and having to quarrel with the conservative musicians trade unions). For a few years rock music was the most popular of new sounds and for a lot of people the door opener. It was one of the rare moments when you could be at the same time avant-garde and mainstream. But this did not last long. Pop music quickly became old music with new instruments when it turned into highly standardized entertainment. And the use of the electric guitar developed rules like any other traditional instrument. Amongst that people that met to form Kluster were Klaus Freudigmann and Wolfgang Seidel, who both grew disenchanted with pop music and Conrad Schnitzler who came from a complete different direction as sculptor. While the others discovered the new territories of sound via psychedelic music Schnitzler was a fan of Stockhausen, Cage etc. but was distracted by the highbrowed elite attitude with which this music surrounded itself in Germany. What met was the self empowerment of early rock music with the search for new sounds and structures of 20th century avant-garde music. |
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07.06.2009, 04:33 PM | #1187 |
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That Kluster made simple music on DIY instruments, droning and banging on one note for half an hour, did not mean we were into any kind of primitivism. We hated the bongo playing hippie and his backward dreams of tribal 'healthy' societies (forgetting that hunger, war and oppression were not invented this year). To us the longing for sweet melodies was a regressive refuge from a world that isn't sweet. We did not want to go back. If the future was inevitable, we wanted to shape it - at least sonically. That we preferred slow tempos sometimes gets mistaken as 'dark'. We just gave every sound enough time to be listened to. And we wanted to draw a line between us and the 'look I am the fastest' guitar heroes that began to rule the stages. What we did was getting rid of the schemes of pop and popular classic and find out, what else we can do with our tools, polishing and lubricating them for a future music.
But no matter how far your mind is in the future - your stomach is still on earth and demands feeding. When things got tougher in the 70ies, the people that met under the labels Kluster and Eruption had to look for ways to earn their living. Conrad Schnitzler started his long solo voyage, Klaus Freudigmann took part in the squatter’s movement, and others took ordinary jobs and surfaced now and then with some new piece of music. What's left are some tapes and a few minutes of film documenting an installation Conrad Schnitzler sat up at Galerie Block (1970) reflecting the ideas behind Kluster. Violins that had bought cheap from the flea market were equipped with contact microphones and plugged into radios that had been mounted to the wall as amplifiers. The visitors (hopefully no musicians) experimented collective with the sounds from the violins hearing themselves in the radio." Download all zip files and put in a folder together, Kluster.pt 1.zip Kluster.pt 2.zip Kluster.pt 3.zip Kluster.pt 4.zip Kluster.pt 5.zip Kluster.pt 6.zip |
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07.06.2009, 04:35 PM | #1188 |
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w h o a.
THANK YOU. |
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07.08.2009, 04:51 AM | #1189 |
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nice one, jico. many thanx.
fugazifan - i haven't heard that. |
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07.08.2009, 05:36 AM | #1190 |
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thanks verme. first thing i've downloaded in a while.
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07.08.2009, 03:39 PM | #1191 |
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ASP you should really DL the omar khorshid albums
sir richard bishop but authentic.... youd really like it
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07.08.2009, 05:09 PM | #1192 |
expwy. to yr skull
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: a little world, all of my own.
Posts: 1,668
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Many thanks verme!
Fantastic post!
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07.08.2009, 08:31 PM | #1193 | |
the destroyed room
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 572
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TWINK - Think Pink
http://rapidshare.com/files/14207208...Think_Pink.rar A landmark of English 60's psychedelia. The guitar work is great- thick and sprawling and almost Sonic Youth-y on certain tracks (Tiptoe, Fluid). Truly an underexposed gem, unless you're a total record nerd. Sounds nothing like The Pretty Things or yr average Steve Peregrin Took track (who wrote 2 of the songs on this album to Marc Bolan's chagrin. Took gave them to Twink after Bolan rejected them from Tyrannosaurus Rex). http://wcpaebelectricflower.blogspot...ychedelic.html Quote:
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07.09.2009, 02:44 PM | #1194 | |
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Quote:
http://rapidshare.com/files/14160792..._Spiegelei.rar |
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07.09.2009, 03:26 PM | #1195 |
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I sold an original pressing of that Twink LP for a pretty good sum once.
Great album! |
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07.27.2009, 02:29 PM | #1196 |
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People - Ceremony / Buddha Meet Rock (1971)
Ceremony / Buddha Meet Rock Style: Psych-Rock Label: Lover Creation Psychedelic rock from Japan. Vinyl release from 1971, from what I hear it's extremely hard to find, but has been reissued. This is the original vinyl rip. I’m not sure if these guys actually existed as a performing band, or if they were only a studio super-session project. Guitarist Kimio Mizutani had previously [or simultaneously, or shortly after?] played with Love Live Life + One and Masahiko Satoh’s Sound Brakers . At any rate, their sole album, the concept piece ‘Ceremony – Buddha Meet Rock’ [Teichiku, 1971], is an absolute classic. The album came with extensive liner notes elaborating on the intended meaning for each track – the whole album flowing more or less as a conceptual whole. As the title would suggest, it was an attempt to fuse a Buddhist-influenced spiritual vibe into an innovative oriental form of hypnotic psychedelic progressive rock. It’s all quite unique and doesn’t sound like any preceding groups that I’m aware of, though some bits are like a much less-heavy Flower Travellin’ Band circa ‘Satori’. It’s a bit jazzy in places, hinting at some of Stomu Yamash’ta’s work with Come to the Edge. There’s lots of nice fuzz guitar leads and overall, a very sanctified vibe that makes this a deep but groovy experience. Following this , Mizutani recorded his equally great solo album. - Aural Assault One of the gems I discovered after reading Julian Cope's Japrocksampler, this is up there with Satori in the canon of 1970's Japanese psychedelia. Original vinyl copies of this go for $5,000. http://www.mediafire.com/?5u1tkokhrom |
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07.27.2009, 03:08 PM | #1197 | |
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Thanks! |
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07.28.2009, 07:24 AM | #1198 |
little trouble girl
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Between thought and expression
Posts: 71
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Wow. What a coincidence. Just got Satoh's Amalgamation a couple of days ago. Stuff's pretty hard to track down at times. Thanks.
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08.23.2009, 11:39 AM | #1199 |
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http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_y35XeAsqK6...1600/cover.jpg
V/A - Another Damned Seattle Compilation (1991, Dashboard Hula Girl) Back in 1991 when this disk saw the light of day, I would have bought damn near anything adorned with the Mudhoney moniker affixed to it. They were my primary motivation for obtaining this long out of print location-specific Damned tribute album, and as often is the case with compilations, I got a lot more than I bargained for including a greater appreciation of the band it was dedicated too. Mudhoney's lightning fast redo of "Stab Your Back," satisfied as much as I had anticipated, but I was even more floored when Flop's rendition of "Disco Man" came blasting out two songs later. Skin Yard's tackling of "Machine Gun Etiquette" erupts with whiplash fury from second one and doesn't relent one iota thereafter. Killer. Nirvana and Soundgarden may be absent here, but much of Seattle's indie creme de la creme is present and accounted for - The Posies, Fastbacks, Love Battery, Gas Huffer, and Young Fresh Fellows (the latter appearing twice, including their choice of "Life Goes On," an obscurity from the Damned's not oft heard Strawberries album). Virtual unknowns lost to the mists of time like Freak, Big Satan Inc, and Whitey do fine takes of "Antipope," "Melody Lee," and "Wait for the Blackout," respectively. Lots of Damned, Damned, Damned and Machine Gun Etiquette material is covered here, but lesser known albums (like the aforementioned Strawberries) are represented too. Most amazingly, who would have guessed in '91 that the Damned would still be cranking out records and touring? 01. The Purdins - 1 of the 2 02. Young Fresh Fellows - Fan Club 03. Coffin Break - Love Song 04. Skin Yard - Machine Gun Etiquette 05. Gas Huffer - Suicide 06. The Accused - Neat, Neat, Neat 07. Love Battery - I Just Can't Be Happy Today 08. Motorhoney - Psychomania 09. Freak - Antipope 10. Flop - Disco Man 11. Hammerbox - New Rose 12. Derelicts - Born to Kill 13. Gruntruck - Nasty 14. Mudhoney - Stab Your Back 15. The Posies - Smash It Up 16. Big Satan, Inc - Melody Lee 17. Whitey - Wait For The Blackout 18. Fastbacks - Hit Or Miss 19. Young Fresh Fellows - Life Goes On http://rapidshare.com/files/26859003...ed_seattle.rar |
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08.23.2009, 12:01 PM | #1200 |
expwy. to yr skull
Join Date: May 2009
Location: The Dutch suburbs
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Many many thanks
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