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on life, music etc beyond mainstream

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Archives: Januar 2016

2016 12 Jan

Four records for Glasgow (no wall is naked)

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„Noite de hotel
E a presença satânica é a de um diabo morto
Em que não reconheço o anjo torto de Carlos
Nem o outro
Só fúria e alegria
Pra quem titia Jagger pedia simpatia“
 

2016 12 Jan

In search for this certain moment

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I never had a dog. But as I was a child the chemist´s dog was enthusiastic about every encounter with me so I was allowed to take her for walks. I crossed the playground and went to the fields. In the west, at the horizon, there were the mountains and I liked it to look at them every day, observed how the light changed them. These mountains, not too far away, part of my future. Can you feel sad without being sad? I have been searching a really good moment with my mother. I asked my uncounscious for help and suddenly appeared my father, and he looked beautiful, a picture with no background, and I knew immediately: This is a dream. Then, a pause. As if someone pressed a button on the remote-control. Just for a second, I felt the power to influence it. But I prefered not to. Loneliness is always a reliable friend and companion to stand the mysteriousness of life.

2016 12 Jan

Liebeskomödie

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If you are to fall in love
Then where should you stand to begin with?
And when the falling’s done
How bad should you plan to get injured?
And if you land on your feet
Do it count as a fall or a jump?
And do it feel like a fall
When the hands that pushed you were holding you up?
 
 
 

 

2016 12 Jan

Blood comedy

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Here is an important letter from Transylvania. The Count wishes to buy a house in our city.
It’s a good opportunity for you. The Count is rich, and free with his money.
You will have a marvelous journey.
 
And, young as you are, what matter if it costs you some pain – or even a little blood?
 
The house facing yours … that should suit him. Leave at once, my young friend. And don’t be frightened if people speak of Transylvania as the land of
 
 
 
phantoms.

2016 11 Jan

Glasgow „noir“

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At a Glasgow train station there are „knots of people looking up at the series of windows where train departures were posted. They looked as if they were trying to threaten their own destination into appearing“.

In a pub, two barmaids, one „made up as colourfully as a butterfly“, while the other, older „had been pretty“. Now, „she was better than that. She looked mid to late thirties and as if she hadn´t wasted the time“.

A drunk with „an instinct for catastrophe“, „circulating haphazardly, trying different tables“, settles for one where three men are sitting. „Two of them, Bud Lawson and Airchie Stanley, looked like trouble. The third one looked like much worse trouble“.

Detective Jack Laidlaw, describing the aggressive father of a missing girl: „One of life´s vigilantes, a retribution-monger … Laidlaw was sure his anger didn’t stop at people. He could imagine him shredding ties that wouldn´t knot properly, stamping burst tubes of toothpaste into the floor. His face looked like an argument you couldn´t win.“  

 

(The three Laidlaw-novels by William McIlvanney are all available in excellent German translations at Antje Kunstmann-Verlag) 

2016 11 Jan

David Bowie ist gestorben

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Eigentlich fasse ich es noch immer nicht, kann es nicht glauben … Vorgestern hab ich mich noch mit dem neuen Titelsong seines jüngsten, gerade erst Freitag erschienenen neuen Albums Blackstar beschäftigt, und war überrascht, sogar ein wenig überwältigt, habe mich über den Artikel von Michael gefreut, wollte gerade noch einen Kommentar dazu schreiben und höre nun vor ein paar Minuten diese unglaubliche Nachricht. Das Jahr ist noch so jung und nun: nach Paul Bley David Bowie …

2016 10 Jan

Shelfies

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What does this partial book selfie say about the literary tastes of the shelfie-taker?
 
 
 


 
 
 

Next to nothing: that’s what. I’ll tell you what though: The Wrecking Yard is an American classic. I think music shelfies probably say more. But what if you sold or threw/gave away 90% of your vinyl and CD collection and rely instead on 4 apps? What you have is mostly partial virtual shelfies, like this:
 
 
 


 
 
 

„Loftus and Bone headed over to the Bowl*O*Drome to take in the women’s leagues and see if they could get Loftus’s mind off of Arnette. Arnette was the readheaded woman that had run off with some college puke a couple of days before and had broken Loftus’s heart and shattered his life.“

Pinckney Benedict, Getting Over Arnette from The Wrecking Yard.
 
„Red rain coming down over me in the red red sea, over me, over me, red rain“

Peter Gabriel, Red Rain from So.
 
 

Yeah, so fuck shelfies.

And long live shelfies.

2016 10 Jan

26 years later …

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Short interruption of my one-month break. I’m a looper. And I’m looping in. Two days ago something happened. And that cannot wait to be told. Though it’s personal. Some Bowie albums were great company for me, and had their great days and weeks – and hours of return. All the first encounters happened in the golden era of vinyl between 1977 and 1980. In an old Germany. For reasons I don’t know Ziggy Stardust never crossed my way deep enough to say anything about it. Heathen (high expectations I had, David Torn was part of the play) disappeared (dunno why) within one week from my ears. So it happened with Diamond Dogs. Pale memories.

There were only a few Bowie albums that really soundtracked passages of my life. Low has been the first one, Heroes the second. Bowie with Tony Visconti, Brian Eno, Robert Fripp – and an awesome melange of masterfully executed songs and „Berlin ambient noir“ (Loop 1). The music was part of my life with my fiancee Christiana in Würzburg. Then I listened for the first time to Station To Station, an album of earlier times in his career. Brilliant. In fact I was a single then and saw Bowie playing „Warszawa“ in the Gruga-Halle, Essen. There he also performed the best version I ever heared from that „Alabama/Whisky Bar Song“-evergreen. There I saw an attractive woman and thought of sex as a cure for lost love. I got her adress. And was beaten up by her boyfriend. Then, some years later, the year of wine, roses and no happy ending – Scary Monsters, another stunner, great riffage. The songs all soundtracked love and sex with Hannah in the Bavarian Woods (Loop 2).

Decades later. No Bowie album after 1980 could stand the test of my merciless, treasure-hunting, deceivable ears. Good songs here and there, but nothing that stayed with me as something complete. Konrad Heidkamp (have always loved his writing in „Die Zeit“) was singing his praise about Thursday Child – I only discovered one good song there. And someone more lasting on the island of Borkum by the time it saw the light of day. December Days. Outside (again with Eno) was nearly pure disappointment (minus two wonderful songs that weren’t killed by the mix). Got bored with Bowie, only took mild notice of his unexpected return after years of silence, in 2013. God, only one good song there – over.

I thought I could close the case with my handful of ancient gems, and then, without any warning, I got an email from a friend: LISTEN, he wrote, LISTEN! And I answered – yep, I owe you at least one favor, but then, dude, you’ll get an opinion (adding a smile). I didn’t read anything about this new work except some short lines of Jan here on the blog. Didn’t even have a look at the video. Started listening to Blackstar in my Toyota Yaris Cool Plus, and was immediately hooked, spellbound, transported, floored, overwhelmed, sucked in – from the first note till the last.

There it was, a new record for my „shelfie“, the best Bowie since 1980. I said, it’s personal. Scary, isn’t it! And what a monster. So dark, so full of joy. „Into the impossible“ (B. E., Oblique Strategies). Two small observations: 1) When I heared track no. 5, I was reminded of the wonderful ways Ian Dury had been bending words and sometimes spitting them out. Bleak and funny. 2) The mixing and layering of saxophones inside some of the songs immediately rang a beautiful bell: Robert Wyatt’s Rock Bottom (Loop 3). In many ways, and in spite of several unique elements of Blackstar, the music is crossing decades.

Well, well, well. Imagine Norwegian jazz legend Jan Garbarek would do one other five-star-album in his lifetime (instead of never leaving the train of nostalgia, the formula of old days‘ glory), after All Those Born With Wings (1986) and Officium (1993, already a collaborative effort): that would be a similar surprise out of nowhere! This year will be exciting. Radiohead and Brian Eno are preparing their next releases. And Scott Walker? He is is still a restless and hungry mind, and will hold Blackstar in high regard, I’d bet on it.

(Days later: purely by accident, I wrote this on the day he died. I wouldn’t have written it this way if I had heared about it. News came the other day.)  

The music in question is constructed totally out of the sounds generated by a  washing machine. The album runs across  as a single, continuous thirty eight minute experience that starts with the grinding turn of the wash size selection wheel, and ends with the alert noise that signals that the wash is done.

Between these audio-verité book-ends, we experience an exploded view of the machine, hearing it in normal operation, but also as an object being rubbed and stroked and drummed upon and prodded and sampled and sequenced and processed by the duo.

Okay, it was all done with some occasional help from an ultra-local crew of guest stars (some of whom regularly do laundry with the „composers“). They all took part, either playing the machine like a drum, processing its audio, or sending MIDI data to the duo’s samplers.

The vocabulary of ths beloved washing machine, its rhythmic chugs, spin cycle drones, rinse cycle splashes, metallic clanks and electronic beeps are parsed into an eclectic syntax of diverse musical genres. The result is a suite of rhythmic, melodic and drone-based compositions that morph dramatically, but remain fanatically centered upon their single, original sound source.

The palette of genres in play reveals a hybrid musical DNA: Industrial music, vogue beats, gabber, dubber, Miami bass, free jazz, house, krautrock, drone, musique-concrete, ambient and new age music all churn up to the surface and are sucked back into the depths.

In this pattern of textures, the listener encounters elements that sound like horns, kick drums, xylophones, or sine waves, but in fact each component is meticulously crafted out of a manipulated sample of the machine.

In other hands, such relentless conceptual tightness would court claustrophobia. Happily, the willingness to transform audio and engage pop structure bypasses arid, arty thought exercises and produces instead unusual noises yielding weirdly listenable music.

In its starkest passage, we hear the rinse cycle of the machine run uninterruptedly for four minutes as a slow filter sweep combs across a kind of oceanic frequency range.

The result is a kind of “Environments” LP that never was: the Psychologically Ultimate Washing Machine. It’s a gesture that’s likely to infuriate some people and tantalize others.

Is this the conceptualist emperor’s new clothes, a wistful domestic reverie, a parody of recent moves in “object oriented” philosophy, a feminist point about alienated domestic labor, an elegy to a discontinued model that stands in for unsustainable and water-wasteful technologies generally, or simply an immersion in the beauty of the noises of everyday life?

Sucker-punching ambient pastoral, the album ends with a techno-industrial-booty bass workout that recapitulates motifs from across the entire composition before grinding to a halt, its task completed.

Funny and sad, bouncy and creepy, liquid and mechanical, this incredible music swirls with perverse paradox, but the agitation at its core offers vital evidence of faith in the musical potential of sound.

The artwork for the album is constructed entirely out of photographs of the machine in question shot in its natural habitat and then digitally manipulated.  The washing machine was not available for comment. Apart from cd and vinyl, there will be a limited edition of singles only available for ancient jukeboxes. Perfect to play it just before or after Kate Bush’s „Mrs. Bartolozzi“, you probably know the song in praise of a washing machine.

2016 9 Jan

Nine One Sixteen

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As my vinyl of three PINK FLOYD records is old and well worn I thought it might be a good idea to buy The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn, A Saucerful Of Secrets and Meddle in a „3 for 2“ (Buy 3 items, pay only for 2 items) in my local store. It’s perhaps difficult to explain as their music is obviously worlds apart from the Arvo Pärt records I listened to on New Year’s Day but they also will do for a lost-in-thought, dreamy, floating Sunday at home tomorrow I guess. The weather forecast expects snow and rain. And I would really care for a cuppa tea.


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