Posts Tagged ‘guitars’

grapes from the estate

The craziest thing I ever heard about Oren Ambarchi is that apparently someone from the Red Hot Chili Peppers is a big fan of this dude, and that apparently he jammed with them during an encore of theirs in New Zealand, and it bummed out an stadium full of their fans. That sounds like internet apocrypha, but I believe it anyway.

I think Grapes from the Estate is probably the most perfect record I have ever heard. It is mostly sparsely arranged tones and sine waves and such. But at times it gets impossibly complicated even if it still sounds sparse to someone who isn’t paying any attention. It all comes together for me on “Girl With the Silver Eyes”, which is the second track, but I have the double LP with one track per side, so I have maximum flexibility with my listening experience of this album, and I usually let that track serve as a conclusion.

You can’t really listen to this album on a computer; there is nothing to hear on a computer speaker. I heard an anecdote once that the key to selling expensive cars was a great stereo system. So how come no one tries the same thing with computers? Or homes? You could plug your computer or record player directly into your house, and the walls would be speakers. Or why even plug anything in? We have wireless internet connections, and wireless guitars, how come nothing like that for our audio sources? Everyone I talk to seems to agree that you can’t make money anymore from music. There was never much money to be made in the first place, and now there isn’t anything really. They are probably right, but it could also be that people are just waiting for a new way of experiencing music to buy into. I see lots of arguments about the ethics of downloading music. I won’t get into that because I don’t find it that interesting. I like talking economics – like in the Wire, the forces beyond any one actor’s control. The economics are that music is a surplus commodity, and that the fiction of intellectual property that made it profitable has become impossible to rigorously enforce. Ultimately I think people are going to need not new things to listen to, but new ways to listen to music if anyone is going to make money again.

ulyssean addendum

Right after I fired off that last post I came across this interview with Ian Svenonious which is definitely worth a read. He has a reputation for being ironic and tongue-in-cheek, but I think this is earnest, and either way I pretty much agree with everything he is saying here.

Excerpt —>>

I think we’ve grown up in this era where rock bands, the rockists, they weren’t really proponents of music as they had kind of subsumed all expression, all art. They became poets, play actors, their records were art, and I think that was all based on the record cover, it was this extra dimension, it made this music physical but it also had to be filled with something. You had this big picture which lent itself this kind of importance, and then you had liner notes, and those inevitably became propaganda, just marketing.

So groups and musicians became more like cult leaders, more ritualistic, trying to recruit people into their cults. That’s really what’s interesting about rock, the people aren’t just content to play music, they have to be remembered, they demand all this kind of fealty from their subjects. To really be a fan you have to show your fandom, you have to own the t-shirt, you have to know the songs, what songs are on what record…

Follow them on tour…

You have to support them. It becomes a religious cult or a political party or whatever it is. As the record has diminished versus CD’s and now the MP3, the whole aspect of a group really diminishes. Groups are becoming much less powerful as cults, in fact I don’t think groups demand that kind of fealty anymore, people don’t really expect to give that kind of power to them

. . .

With all the Dischord groups, it’s almost like you grew up with this sense of urgency in your live shows. Every Dischord band had this incredible dynamic and it seems like it was pretty important to them. Is that maybe where that came from, just the DC scene in general, encouraging you to act out like that?

It’s all the Bad Brains. Every band in DC knew the Bad Brains were the most dynamic live band. Rites of Spring, obviously Fugazi, Minor Threat, Void. And it’s all really gnarly, physical, exciting. It’s meant to be exciting. And I think a lot of times it really was. That’s definitely the context we all came up in. And it’s interesting because it’s all like a process of unlearning to perform in another way. That’s just second nature to people from that generation in DC, to be very physical. But like British people are continental, being cool, like there’s this idea like why would I try too hard, it’s not very cool.

Just strike a pose and leave it at that…

Right, like Jesus and Mary Chain, or Oasis, any of those groups that just kind of stand there. And that’s cool too, that’s just a whole other approach…because they’re just much more focused on the record. That’s the thing, Dischord and DC, punk, hardcore, it all came out of a context where there was a feeling that there was no access, and there was all this anger and just like “how do we get across?” We had to do it physically with our bodies. In England, they’ve always had access. Now bands in America feel like they have access. There’s no longer any anger, no sense of a need to exert yourself because you can do it through YouTube or you can do it through the blogs, do you know what I mean?

the nation of ulysses must prevail

In high school when I heard the Nation of Ulysses’ crazy guitar feedback, horn riffs from the aggressive side of jazz, and the crazy recording style on Plays Pretty for Baby I was a changed man. I wanted to hear more like that. Of course, there is nothing else that sounds like that album. As a result, I ended up drifting away from listening to a lot of punk rock, and got more into things like free jazz, dub, and house music. In other words, a great development. This video footage is from 1992, so it was towards the end of the band’s life, and they were just a four piece.

the primitives

The Primitives – The Ostrich

Before Lou Reed was in the Velvet Underground he was a hack songwriter at Pickwick Records. John Cale & Tony Conrad were shocked to discover that Reed got his guitar sound by tuning all the strings to the same note, a technique they felt created a drone sound similar to what they were doing with La Monte Young. Pretty crazy stuff for a throwaway pop song.

merry ex-mas

This is footage from the Ex’s second show as a band. They’ve been all over the place since then. On their first U.S. tour instead of renting a van they just bought a completely broke down used one that they constantly had to work on, maybe they thought it would be good for their morale? Stranger things have happened, I’ve even heard of American bands touring Europe without hiring a driver. Luc injured his leg at some point, and so he had to perform while sitting on a stool. By twists and turns this stool ended up in Barrington, IL somehow. The first time I ever saw them play they were opening up for Fugazi at the 9:30 Club in Washington, DC. At one point Terrie was playing his guitar with a spoon, and it sounded like a violin and that blew my mind, and was probably the start of my obsession with people playing instruments in a way that sounded like some other instrument. The Ex are a band that are at their best when they are playing with other people though. I wish I could have seen them play with Tom Cora, their records with him are my favorite, and Mississippi Records recently reissued the Scrabbling at the Lock on vinyl.

The last time I saw the Ex was at Millennium Park in Chicago. They were performing with Getatchew Mekuria, and a couple of other Dutch dudes with a dude on bass playing in the Dog Faced Hermans style, and then the rest of the dudes were playing horns. I was on my lunch break so I didn’t get to see the whole set. I was grumpy the rest of the day from not having eaten, and not having been able to watch their entire set. A week later I was driving a car across the country to go live in San Francisco.

That last picture is them playing something no doubt crazy & intense sounding to a bunch of Ethiopians. The great thing about the Ex is they have no ideology, they just do what they want, and collaborate with all kinds of awesome musicians. That’s how it should be.

R.I.P. Jack Rose

Yesterday I was too devastated by the news of Jack Rose’s passing to finish working on my podcast. No one else in our era has done as much to preserve the spirit and style of John Fahey’s “American Primitive” guitar style as this man. He will be missed. Here are videos of him performing at Reckless Records in Chicago from two years ago.

okay, i lied

Podcast will not be ready this weekend either. Sorry, y’all.

It’s not all bad though. One of the few rock bands that I still care about in this day & age is the Psychic Paramount. Two of the dudes in that band were also in the excellent Laddio Bolocko, who had a sort of This Heat vibe, except noisier and more insane.

Recently I stumbled upon this bootleg of Laddio Bolocko at Emo’s, a club in Austin, Texas. If that doesn’t prove that I don’t love you, dear reader, than all is lost. The meta-data for this file has a date of 2009, which like most things on the internet, is a lie. What is real is that the sax playing on this recording is serious.