Monday, 28 December 2009

White Noise - An Electric Storm (1969) (@256)












This one is part of the tribute to Island records that started some months ago. We are still in the various/uncategorised part of the tribute. This latest upload truly explores uncharted territories. A genre of its own, a totally adventurous recording, I assure you that it will fry your brain cells. Handle with care.

review link: here (allmusic) and here (pitchfork)

download link: here (link removed due to a relevant request)

Sunday, 27 December 2009

Sparklehorse - Good Morning Spider (1998) (@256)












One of the best albums of 2009 hasn't been officially released! It's of course Dark Night of the Soul, a collaboration of Danger Mouse with Sparklehorse (or Mark Linkous). Their cd was supposed to accompany a limited edition book featuring photographs by David Lynch. Unfortunately, because of a copyright dispute between Danger Mouse and his label, the book was released with a blank CD-R. The album quickly leaked to the web and proved to be a great collection of songs featuring guest appearances from Iggy Pop, the Flaming Lips, James Mercer of the Shins, Black Francis of the Pixies, Jason Lytle of Grandaddy, Julian Casablancas of the Strokes, Nina Persson of the Cardigans, Gruff Rhys of Super Furry Animals, Vic Chesnutt, Suzanne Vega and David Lynch himself. My perception is that Mark Linkous's style is more obvious than that of Danger Mouse, so I thought that a relevant upload would be appropriate. Another remark is that each song could easily fit to a release of the singer (or the group of the singer) who sings it.

Here are the introduction notes that Danger Mouse wrote for the book:
"Back in 2004, I was at SXSW, walking down the street with a group of people. Some musicians, a producer or two, and a few I didn't know. We were talking about music, bands we liked, bands we didn't like, and we stopped in a couple of different bars to check out the music. When one of the musicians asked me what I’d been listening to (a question I usually draw an instant blank on), I remember being able to answer pretty quickly. Sparklehorse was my current favorite. As I was going on and on about the "Static King" (Mark Linkous), one of the members of the group finally spoke up and said she managed Sparklehorse. I told her to pass along my love, and she helped me sneak into a Raveonettes show.
One year later I returned to SXSW to play people the new Gorillaz album I'd helped with. I got a surprise phone call. It was Mark Linkous. His manager has sent him the Grey Album, and he was calling to tell me how much he liked it. I asked him what he was up to, and he said he was trying to finish his next album but was in a rut. By the end of the conversation, I'd somehow been invited to North Carolina to see if I could help in some way.
Soon after that, I found myself driving my father's old van from Atlanta into the mountains of southern
North Carolina. Once there, I stayed with Mark, his wife, and his dog Smokey. Every day, we drove the hour-long trek down the mountain to his studio in a little one-stoplight town. He'd already been working on his album for over three years, and most of what he played was
working, things clicked.
As we got more comfortable, Mark played me "Revolution," an idea he'd had in his head that he had yet to record. Right away, we started messing with it. As we worked on it, it grew up into a pretty special piece of music. But Mark didn’t want to sing the song himself. I thought he could pull it off, but he decided not to even attempt it. After a few more visits, the album was finished, but “Revolution” remained incomplete. I asked him if he ever had other ideas that he never attempted because of not wanting to sing them simply, "Sure."
Later, Mark came out to work with me in Los Angeles. We didn't really have a set goal – we just wanted to make a bunch of music together and see what happened. I played him some ideas I had, and he played me some more of his. I could tell he was a bit more comfortable now that he didn't have to sing. Each day, we’d record music and then go to a movie, or watch one at my house. It was a routine we repeated many times over the next year. During that time, we created the music for what would eventually become Dark Night of the Soul.
As we recorded the music, we assembled a wish-list of singers: people we knew in some way, people we thought would sound great over certain songs. We started making phone calls and sending out the music. Over the next year, we recorded with our friends all over the U.S., and one in the U.K.
We worked with Jason Lytle of Grandaddy, Wayne Coyne and Steven Drozd of the Flaming Lips, Julian Casablancas of the Strokes, James Mercer of the Shins, Iggy Pop, Black Francis, Vic Chesnutt, Suzanne Vega, Nina Persson of the Cardigans, and Gruff Rhys from the Super Furry Animals (who helped turn "Revolution" into the song "Just War"). Mark eventually gave in and sang a song, too.
The album was taking shape. As we finished the songs with the various artists, we started to notice some interesting patterns. We'd never given specific direction to any of the singers involved, nor had we played them any of the other songs on the album. Yet, there seemed to be common themes in the lyrics and feel of the songs. There was pain, revenge, war, twisted dreams, and other beautifully haunting visual aspects to it all.
While taking a break from mixing the last Gnarls Barkley album, I watched David Lynch's film Inland Empire. I was already a fan of Lynch's other work, and I knew Mark was, too. I thought he would be perfect to give a visual representation to this album. I'd considered a visual dimension while record­ing, but never anything too specific. I didn't revisit the idea until I'd finished watching the film. I got together the latest mixes of all the songs on the album and wrote a letter to Mr. Lynch. In the first draft, I begged and begged him to do it and threatened to scrap the whole visual thing if he didn't agree" to do it. Then I thought better; I just asked him to listen to it and let me know if he had time to talk about an idea I had about it. A few days later, he wrote back.
I went to visit David. He was enthusiastic about the project. He even wanted to sing on the album. After we talked, I realized he'd sung some of the amazing songs on the Inland Empire soundtrack. (Check out "Ghost of Love.") Initially, I was there to discuss the visual element - he said that he'd give that some thought, too. Not long afterward, we met again. He said he'd listened to the music quite a bit and had come up with some visual ideas, and that he wanted to shoot them as stills. I called Mark to let him know about it, and at first he didn't believe me. Obviously, we were both pretty excited about it.
We gave David some instrumental ideas. He sat with them and eventually came up with some songs. It was ideal. Aside from Mark and me, he was the only musician who had listened to the entire album. His contributions turned out to be "Star Eyes (I Can't Catch It)" and the final song, "Dark Night of the Soul."
David Lynch's visuals of Dark Night of the Soul are presented here to accom­pany the album."

review link: here

download link: here (mirrorcreator) and here (rapidshare)

Saturday, 26 December 2009

Musictraveler disguises in Santa and gives away a cd

Since Santa visits the Greek children on the new year's eve (he's probably too busy serving the other countries), my annual present to the readers of this blog will be given away on January, 1. Last year there was a restriction that the participants should be from Greece; the shipping costs prevented me to send it worldwide. But since my compatriot readers have been limited down to only 6-7% of the total visitors, and since the number of the participants last year were only two, I thought that it would be fair to send globally this year. So, everyone of you can send me an eponymous comment along with your e-mail address. If you do not want to show your e-mail address, then leave a comment and send me also an email to music.traveler@hotmail.com. Last year it was the latest Clash live album, this year it will be the brilliant latest release of Unthanks (Here's the Tender Coming), which was awarded Folk Album of the Year by Mojo magazine. After a draw, one of the participants will be informed through the comments of this post on Jan. 1, to be sent the aforementioned original sealed cd. The shipping costs will also burden the musictraveler. For the time being you can download this excellent version of the Greek new year's carols as performed by Bruce Haack.
Bruce Haack - Saint Basil (Κάλαντα Πρωτοχρονιάς) (and in rapidshare) (both in wav format)

Thursday, 24 December 2009

Lou Reed - The Raven (2003) (@256)












It's for sure that we'll have more opportunities to deal with Edgar Allan Poe in the future, so I'll keep a number of related albums for a future tribute. For the time being, enjoy this Lou Reed tribute release to Poe to whom he seems to have found a kindred spirit. There are numerous famous participants here among which are Laurie Anderson, Antony, the Blind Boys Of Alabama, Ornette Coleman, Steve Buscemi and Willem Dafoe and Hal Willner as the producer, who was also responsible for the brilliand compilation of Closed on Account of Rabies: Poems and Tales of Edgar Allan Poe uploaded earlier in this blog. Finally, these are the liner notes Reed wrote for this album:
"THE RAVEN
For sure Edgar Allan Poe is that most classical of American writers—a writer more peculiarly attuned to our new century's heartbeat than he ever was to his own. Obsessions, paranoia, will­ful acts of self-destruction surround us constantly. Though we age we still hear the cries of those for whom the attraction to mournful chaos is monumental. I have reread and rewritten Poe to ask the very same questions again. Who am I? Why am I drawn to do what I should not? I have wrestled with this thought innumerable times: the impulse of destructive desire—the desire for self-mortification. To my mind Poe is father to William Burroughs and Hubert Selby. I am forever fitting their blood to my melodies. Why do we do what we should not? Why do we love what we cannot have? Why do we have a passion for exactly the wrong thing? What do we mean by "wrong"? I became enamored of Poe—once again—and when given the opportunity to bring him to life through words and music, text and dance, why I leapt at it. I surged towards it like a Rottweiler chasing a bloody bone. I read and then recited him out loud and for the first time understood "The Tell-Tale Heart." I dreamt and imagined and then saw the early performance come to life in the Thalia Theatre in Germany (who commissioned me to write this) where the thrill of its existence only made me hunger even more ardently for its American counterpart, its final rewrite, the yearning finally fulfilled by the mad presence of Willem Dafoe, Steve Buscemi, Fisher Stevens, the magnificent Elizabeth Ashley, the transcendental Amanda Plummer and castigating Katy Valk of [the Wooster Group, musicians magnificent galore—D. Bowie, the gospel glory of the Blind Boys of Alabama, the mind-tearing heart-rending sax playing of the incredible Ornette Coleman, the ethereal vocals of Antony, a descendent perhaps of Little Jimmy Scott, Jane Scarpantoni's passionate cello-loving arrangement by her of my guitar solo—strings, real strings—Rob Mathes taking my guitar line and building a universe with it, Steve Bernstein's power-melodic horns—all these pieces together forming for me a universe of sound I'd only dreamed of. My fellow artists...I thank them all from the bottom of my heart and reel with happiness at the CD's existence. My band—Mike, Tony and Fernando, the magnificent production of Hal Willner. I owe them all the greatest thanks.
This is a record made of love, - Lou Reed/NYC 2003"

review link: here

download link: here (cd1) and here (cd2 with liner notes & credits)

Monday, 21 December 2009

Rage Against The Machine IS Christmas Number One!!!

Celebrating Christmas with Rage Against The Machine at number one of the UK singles chart. Hats off to these guys.
Oh... and I stand opposed to those grumbling "You pay Sony either way" or "the Fuck You I Won't Do What You Tell Me is not what all those people that bought RATM did". RATM already told that part of the proceeds will go to charity. I don't think that it would be the same with the X-Factor shit, would it? As for the second argue, I'll quote a part of the lyrics of Which Side Are You On: "Poor folks ain’t got a chance, unless they organize"; all those people that bought RATM didn't go with the flow, but they organised to oppose it. After all, it's a victory of the music I love over the kind of music that nobody will remember next Christmas.
You can also check here for the same issue.

Now that the campaign has ended you can download a live clip (in avi format) of Killing In The Name performed live at Mexico City here.

Sunday, 20 December 2009

The Alan Parsons Project - Tales Of Mystery And Imagination + bonus material (1975/2007) (@256)












I was about to upload Tales of Mystery and Imagination, as a part of the Edgar Allan Poe tribute, when I read that Eric Woolfson, one of the two members of the Alan Parsons Project passed away on December, 2. Unfortunately, there are now two reasons for this upload. APP was the result of the collaboration of a talented songwriter (Woolfson) with a studio wizard (Parsons). Their first release, a concept album that retells horror stories and poetry of Poe, was an old idea of Woolfson which was abandoned since he realised that it would be impossible to materialise. He changed his mind when he met Parsons and realised the latter's mastery in production. The duo also hired some hundreds (!) of musicians among which were Terry Sylvester (singer of the Hollies after Graham Nash), John Miles and Arthur Brown. The result is a characteristic 70's grandiose concept album which gave "a pulsing beat of life into the body of Poe's work" as Orson Welles described in a relevant radio advertising spot.

Tracklisting:
A. Original album
01-A Dream Within A Dream (Instrumental)
02-The Raven
03-The Tell-Tale Heart
04-The Cask Of Amontillado
05-(The System Of) Dr. Tarr and Professor Fether
06-The Fall Of The House Of Usher (Instrumental) - Prelude
07-The Fall Of The House Of Usher (Instrumental) - Arrival
08-The Fall Of The House Of Usher (Instrumental) - Intermezzo
09-The Fall Of The House Of Usher (Instrumental) - Pavane
10-The Fall Of The House Of Usher (Instrumental) - Fall
11-To One In Paradise
B. Bonus material
A12-The Raven (original demo) - bonus material
A13-Edgar (demo of an unreleased track)
A14-Orson Welles Radio Spot
A15-Interview with Alan Parsons and Eric Woolfson (1976)
B12-Eric's Guide Vocal Medley
B13-Orson Welles Dialogue
B14-Sea Lions In The Departure Lounge - Sound Effects And Experiments
B15-GBH Mix - Unreleased Experiments

review link: here

download link: here (original album) and here (bonus material with info, lyrics, credits etc.) (in mirrorcreator) or here (in rapidshare)

Sunday, 13 December 2009

Flowered Up - Weekender (12'') (1992) (@256)












Sometimes when you hear about an artist's death you feel that you've lost a close person of yours. It's when this artist's music has been utterly connected with a certain period of your life...

That's the way I felt when I heard about Liam Maher's death, at the age of 41. At the beginning of the 90's, with his group Flowered Up gave us some sparkling singles, a decent album (were Joe Strummer had participated) and... Weekender. A 13-minute single which, along with its video clip, marked the soundtrack of a whole generation by giving a precise documentation of the club culture. Suddenly, all the kids that were just spending their whole week through tedious, low-wage jobs just to become the heroes of themselves from Saturday 6pm to Sunday 6am had found their anthem. It's unbelievable that this masterpiece was the last moment in group's history (they didn't even manage to put it in an album), rather than the beginning of more such glorious moments. But, after all, such hedonistic culture was not meant to last for long. As Heavenly (their first and last label - London records was in between) boss Jeff Barrett said: "Liam and Flowered Up burned beautifully and brightly at exactly the right time. They had their moment and seized it by the bollocks"
RIP Liam. Go out, have a good time...









Weekender (amazingly its lyrics cannot be found anywhere in the web)
I see you everyday, you walk the same way
Weekender
You go to work, Friday is payday
Weekender
Give it up, give your wife up
Weekender

(Chorus)
Weekender – weekender
Go out, have a good time
Weekender – weekender
Go out have a good, good – good, good time

What you say weekender, we can work it out
We’ll work it all out
Don’t you hate, hate what you are
I’ll give it up, I’ll give it to you, you
Come on weekender, we’ll go out,
We’ll have a good, the best times

(chorus)

Right weekender, hows about we work it out
Weekender we could have such a good time
Show you, help you, a better way, a better day
A better way
A better life – weekender
Right, weekender we’re going out
You wash, blow dry your hair
New shoes, new suit
Oh, I say you look so super
Weekender you’re looking good

(chorus)

Don’t you hate, don’t you hate what you are
Weekender
Don’t you hate what you are I ask, I ask you
Weekender
Look around, don’t you feel a clown
Weekender, fuck off
Fuck off and die – I’m hating you
I hate you – goodbye
I’m slipping, weekender – weekender
Slipping down – down
Weekender weekender
Go out have a good time – the best time
Go away – away away away – sit back
Let it flow
Just like a little (have a good time)
Have a good time, have a good – good time
No work just party – party!
You got a new skirt, you got a new suit
Saved your life for a two day flirt boy
You pay the price coz Monday sure does hurt
Tell at work your weekend tale
Still need the pleasure of dirty sale
Monday’s back – what can you do?

(chorus)

Been away. Been away. You’ve seen a lot wow, wow
Weekender whatever you do - just make sure what
ya doing makes you happy

check also:
Liam Maher remembered by W.I.Z., the director of Weekender (NME)
"How Liam Maher from Flowered Up changed my life" by Robin Turner (Guardian)

download link: here (mirrorcreator) and here (rapidshare)

Monday, 7 December 2009

Muddy Waters - At Newport (1960) (@256)












It's a little bit dated, but I saw the film Cadillac Records during the weekend. It's a biopic that deals with Chess records, a Chicago-based label that established what is now considered as Chicago blues. Colossal artists such as Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley built their careers in the studios of Chess. It's a pity that such a great subject was not developed in a satisfactory way. As Lois Wilson writes in Mojo (issue 190, Sep. 09) "this Chess-inspired romp takes too many liberties with the truth". One could argue that such "liberties" could be justified in a film loosely based in real-life events, where the real names are not used; the film Dreamgirls is I guess a good example. Here is the whole review:
"JUST OVER half way through Cadillac Records, a very-worse-for-wear Etta James played by Beyonce Knowles, kisses her label boss, Chess records co-founder Leonard Chess, played by Adrien Brody. It's implied that they are about to embark on an affair, the action taking place some time in the '60s.
After he saw the film Leonard's son, Marshall Chess — who was consultant on this Darnell Martin-written and directed film based on the Chess label story — rang up Etta James (the real one). "Did you really have an affair with my father?" he asked her, hoping that Leonard hadn't copped off with his leading lady. Of course not, was Etta's reply and therein lies the main problem with Cadillac Records. Not content to just tell the story of the label founded in 1947 by Polish emigre brothers Leonard and Phil Chess (the latter is airbrushed out, presumably to keep the plot simpler), it feels a need to tell great big lies. Like the one wherein blues harpist Little Walter (Columbus Short) shoots a man who is using his name. Perhaps Martin got him muddled up with Sonny Boy Williamson, another important Chess recording artist, who doesn't appear in the film, didn't kill anyone, but did steal his name from a different bluesman called Sonny Boy Williamson after he was murdered. Another player missing from the tale astonishingly is Bo Diddley, who signed to the label in 1955 and whose guitar playing caused a musical revolution. Even those with just a fleeting interest in Chess would recognise how integral Bo is to the label's evolution. And, of course, Leonard Chess didn't really discover Etta James: that was Johnny Otis, who conceived and recorded Etta's 1955 debut The Wallflower, a Number 1 US R&B hit five years before she joined Chess.
So either Martin didn't do, or has ignored, her research to come up with a script so inaccurate
that there's little point running the tag, "based on a true story". Sadly, her bending of the truth hasn't made the screenplay any more enticing.
And yet, when Cadillac Records sticks to the making of the music it delivers some great moments: Eamonn Walker as Howlin' Wolf turns in a mighty fine rendition of Smokestack Lightnin', Jeffrey Wright as Muddy Waters, a convincing I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man, and Mos Def as the wild child Chuck Berry is compelling throughout.
The same can't be said for Adrien Brody, who is expressionless as the elder Chess brother, or Beyonce, who remakes every Etta James song into a hysterical modern R&B number. As such, there's very little to celebrate here. But should you want more, also included is a documentary on the making of the film, another one on the design and a director's commentary."

In any case, the film was a great opportunity to upload this Chess release, which is one of the greatest live recordings ever. And in order to cover the unreasonable absence of Bo Diddley from the film, I urge to discover another Chess release, uploaded earlier in this blog.

review link: here

download link: here

Saturday, 28 November 2009

Broadcast - The Noise Made By People (2000) (@256)












It's been quite long since the last upload about Warp's 20th birthday. So, the tribute continues with an album quite different from the largest part of Warp discography. It's, as Heather Phares describes in allmusic, "a collection of more shimmering, weightless pop that is nostalgic for yesterday's visions of the future but remains on the cutting edge of contemporary music." Brilliant.

review link: here

download link: here

Friday, 27 November 2009

Peter, Paul and Mary - Ten Years Together: The Best of Peter, Paul and Mary (1970) (@256)












Mary Travers, one of the most beautiful voices of the 60's left us recently. Along with Peter Yarrow and Paul Stookey, are a large (and delightful) chapter of the 60's folk revival, also responsible for popularising Dylan's music.
What I have to notice here, is that a woman of such physical beauty chose to follow a difficult music and social path, unlike hundreds of contemporary female artists who prefer to be spent in lighter than thin air careers.

Rolling Stone obituary

review link: here

download link: here

Thursday, 26 November 2009

Primal Scream - XTRMNTR (2000) (@256)












Probably my no1 in the list of 2009's best albums is Kasabian's West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum. A feverish album, full of excellent ideas and hidden layers of complexity that blend to serve the whole substantial result. It seems that this time they reached very near to the perfection of the album they used (again) as blueprint (minus the heavy political agenda).

review link: here

download link: here (link removed)

Wednesday, 25 November 2009

Tartit - Ichichila (2000) (@256)












I'm not the only one that I consider Tinariwen's "Imidiwan: Companions" one of the best albums of the year. Their impressive blues version is evidently a sound that could be created only by these former desert warriors that replaced their riffles with electric guitars.

Tartit is a group that, as with Tinariwen, are Tuaregs (or Tamasheks as they prefer to be called). The former's melodic, meditative and rural style and the latter's raw, intense and powerful one, are simply the two sides of the same coin.

review link: here

download link (with booklet info): here

Friday, 13 November 2009

Watersons - For Pence and Spicy Ale (1975) (@256)













It could be a tricky question in a music quiz: "Which is Britain's oldest indie label that is still active?" Answers such as "Beggars Banquet", "Rough Trade", "4AD", "Cherry Red " etc. are all wrong! The correct answer is Topic, a legendary label that was founded in 1939. For a company that its stated mission is "Music should be used as a tool of revolution, in a cultural and educational sense" one shouldn't be surprised that Topic had always a strong sense in social issues. But a sense that was only seldom presented in a form of dry rhetoric and largely by observing and commenting the daily life of ordinary people. Topic is (thus) responsible for reserving and spreading British folk throughout the years (one could argue that it is the equivalent to Smithsonian or Folkways), while its contribution to the British folk revival of the late 60's is immense. Recently, in order to celebrate the label's 70th birthday, they released a solid compilation of seven (!) cds, named "Three Score and Ten: A Voice to the People" that travels us from pre-WWII recordings up to recent ones. If you bother to spend your quids on it, it's for sure that you'll not regret it. And if you think that releasing a 7-cd compilation is not a business-wise decision, you'll have to know that they celebrated their 60-th birthday by releasing a series of 20-cds!

So, here is a cornerstone of Topic's catalogue, from a "royal family" of British folk, backed by Martin Carthy. As Richard Meyer notes in allmusic: "For Pence and Spicy Ale sounds like the back room of an old pub in its charming immediacy; listeners really get a sense of the fun it is to sing these old songs with affection and respect. "

Further reading:
Topic's selective discography
Guardian for Topic's anniversary
topicrecords.co.uk

review link: here

download link: here

P.S. For those interested, another brilliant Topic release has been posted earlier in this blog and can be found here.

Monday, 9 November 2009

Lou Reed - Berlin (1973) (@256)













For the city of Berlin obviously, which celebrates its 20th reunification anniversary today. Lou Reed explained (to Ed Pilkingon from Guardian while interviewed on his 2007 tour that brought Berlin on stage) that his idea was to use the divided city of Berlin - which he had then never visited - as a metaphor for human discord. Or as prefixmag puts it: "Berlin (...) is a rock opera about a strung out couple who are divided, much like Berlin was by the wall. Reed uses the city as a narrative device on the album, placing his central character, Caroline, in the city as she indulges in various addictions and love affairs. Berlin itself doesn’t figure much in Reed’s lyrics, but the druggy words and occasional mentions of the Wall help conjure up images of the city."

review link: here

download link: here (link removed due to a relevant request)



Wings of Desire

Saturday, 31 October 2009

Various - Closed on Account of Rabies - Poems and Tales of Edgar Allan Poe (1997) (@256)












Well, try the following (for those not afraid of the dark). Lie down on your beds, switch off the lights, close your eyes and put your headphones on to listen to The Black Cat as read by Diamanda Galas. Shivers down your spine will definitely attack you during this totally evocative recording.
The tribute to Edgar Allan Poe continues. Hal Willner gathers a tour-de-force of artists to read works of Poe. It is as attractive as it sounds.

Tracklisting:
A1-Marrianne Faithfull - Alone
A2-Christopher Walken - The Raven
A3-Iggy Pop - The Tell-Tale Heart
A4-Ken Nordine - The Conqueror Worm
A5-Diamanda Galas - The Black Cat
A6-Gavin Friday - For Annie
A7-Ed Sanders - To Helen
B1-Ed Sanders - The Haunted Palace
B2-Jeff Buckley - Ulalume
B3-Dr. John - Berenice
B4-Deborah Harry & the Jazz Passengers -The City An The Sea
B5-Marianne Faithfull - Annabel Lee
B6-Gabriel Byrne - The Masque of the Red Death
B7-Abel Ferrara - The Raven

review link: here

download link

Tuesday, 27 October 2009

Tell-Tale Hearts - The Tell-Tale Hearts (1984) (@256)













We read from Guardian (October, 8): "By the standards of any age, it was a miserable way to go. Edgar Allan Poe, dark romantic writer and poet credited with inventing the genre of detective fiction, enjoyed a death far more Gothic and gloomy than any of his stories.
It began badly when he was found, aged 40, wandering the streets of Baltimore, penniless, raving unintelligibly, dressed in someone else's clothes, possibly having been beaten up. He died four days later, on October 7 1849, in hospital, having uttered the final words: "Lord, help my poor soul."
From there it only got worse. Although he was at the time probably the most famous writer in America, his cousin Neilson Poe omitted to tell anyone he had died, and so fewer than 10 people turned up for the funeral. The priest couldn't be bothered to give a sermon, and the entire ceremony lasted three minutes.
This Sunday, 160 years almost to the day since his sorry passing, Poe will finally be given the send off that his multitude of fans passionately believe he deserved. At 11.30am, a life-size recreation of his body will be carried in a horse-drawn carriage from his Baltimore home in Amity Street, to the Westminster Burying Ground where not one, but two full-length ceremonies will be held in front of up to 700 admirers, some of whom will have travelled from as far away as Vietnam.
The ceremony is being held as part of a year-long series of events to mark the 200th year of Poe's birth. To the amusement of Poe experts, the double anniversary of the start and end of his life has led to an unseemly scramble between several US cities - notably Baltimore, Richmond, Philadelphia, New York and Boston - to claim ownership of the writer."

Celebrating the aforementioned event as well as the 200th year from his birth, I'll start a series of uploads that will, with one way or another, deal with Poe. After all, as you'll realise/ have already realised, far too many musicians have been heavy influenced by him.
The first related upload is an 80's garage group, which seems to have taken its name from Poe's short story. Their album is easily within the top-5 of its genre. Do not miss it!

download link: here

Sunday, 25 October 2009

Various - A Manchester Collection: Bands of the Manchester Musicians Collective (1979) (@256)













I've promised some time ago that I'll have an upload about Band on the Wall. The reason is the Manchester legendary venue's reopening on September, 25, after a serious renovation that lasted four years.
This upload features bands of the Manchester Musicians Collective. The members of these bands are posing for the cover art of the album in front of the Band on the Wall, which hosted them for quite a while on Sunday nights. Although these bands are unknown, the overall result of this release is pretty good, giving a nice glimpse of how post-punk was perceived by local musicians. It should be also stressed out that members of the Collective were, for short or long, the Fall, Warsaw/Joy Division, Spherical Objects and A Certain Ratio.
Finally, the trivia here is that the label Object Music who is responsible for this release was founded by Steve Solamar, founding member of the Spherical Objects and deejay in the Electric Circus.

Band on the Wall website

download link: here

Sunday, 11 October 2009

Booker T. & the M.G.'s - McLemore Avenue (1970) (@256)













I couldn't miss to have a post about the recent reissues of fourteen Beatles albums. Although I avoid buying cds from albums that were released prior to 1985 (or even later), I think that I'll make an exception with these. The reason is that the current editions have been remastered by expert studio engineers at the Abbey Road studios to offer the recordings of the band that has raised the bar to unreachable levels, in its highest fidelity ever.
The related upload is an album that was recorded as a tribute to Abbey Road. All the songs of McLemore Avenue are covers of Abbey Road tracks; the track order was rearranged to form long medleys, while other tracks (Maxwell's Silver Hammer, Oh! Darling and Octopus's Garden) are absent. Finally, as you can see, the cover art is reminiscent of the famous Beatles album, while McLemore Avenue is the location of the equally legendary Stax studios in Memphis, where Booker T. & the M.G.'s triumphed as it's main house band.

review link: here

download link: here (mirrorcreator) and here (rapidshare)

P.S. For those interested a cover version of Sgt. Pepper's can be found, in an older post, here

Various - Ellie Greenwich songs (@256)


















(1) Ellie circa 1968 (2)The Raindrops (Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich along with Ellie's sister Laura who did not participate in the couple's recordings!)

Another major loss... Ellie Greenwich, one of the most prominent composers of the Brill Building left us on August 26. This upload reminds us some of the songs that Ellie Greenwich co-written; most of them are of course with Jeff Barry. It is amazing how outrageously infectious these songs are.

Tracklisting:
01-Bob B. Soxx and The Blue Jeans - Why Do Lovers Break Each Others Hearts (Spector-Powers-Greenwich) (1962)
02-Crystals - Da Doo Ron Ron (Spector-Barry-Greenwich) (1963)
03-Darlene Love - (Today I Met) The Boy I'm Gonna Marry (Spector-Powers-Greenwich) (1963)
04-Exciters - He's Got The Power (Powers-Greenwich) (1963)
05-Crystals - Then He Kissed Me (Spector-Barry-Greenwich) (1963)
06-Ronettes - Be My Baby (Spector-Barry-Greenwich) (1963)
07-Raindrops - The Kind Of Boy You Can't Forget (Barry-Greenwich) (1963)
08-Darlene Love - Christmas (Baby Please Come Home) (Spector-Barry-Greenwich) (1963)
09-Ronettes - Baby, I Love You (Spector-Barry-Greenwich) (1963)
10-Tommy James & the Shondells - Hanky Panky (Barry-Greenwich) (1964)
11-Dixie Cups - Chapel Of Love (Barry-Greenwich-Spector) (1964)
12-Manfred Mann - Do Wah Diddy Diddy (original single version) (Barry-Greenwich) (1964)
13-Dixie Cups - People Say (Barry-Greenwich) (1964)
14-Jelly Beans - I Wanna Love Him So Bad (Barry-Greenwich) (1964)
15-Shangri-Las - Leader Of The Pack (Morton-Barry-Greenwich) (1964)
16-Ellie Greenwich - You Don't Know (Barry-Greenwich-Morton) (1965)
17-Ike & Tina Turner - River Deep - Mountain High (Spector-Barry-Greenwich) (1966)

check also:
elliegreenwich.com
Ellie Greenwich interviewed

download link: here

Monday, 28 September 2009

Various Artists - Live At CBGB's (1976) (@256)












Every September I strive to be present to the maximum possible number of movies shown at the Athens International Film Festival of Cinema magazine. Of all its sections, Music & Films is my favourite one. Although I missed the movie that was awarded (Until The Light Takes Us), my personal award went to the movie Burning Down the House: The Story of CBGB.



The trailer

I guess there is no meaning in trying to explain what CBGB means for music. Its closure is just another major loss in NY's cultural heritage. As we've seen in the film, many musicians rallied to prevent the club's closure, but once more some financial aspects and some paperwork proved to be much stronger. Apart from that, as Jonathan Demme correctly stated in the film, CBGB was a venue where many unsigned bands could play; now that it doesn't exist, it'll be far more difficult for them to find a place to present their music. It was more or less the same situation with the Ramones, Talking Heads, Patti Smith, Television, Suicide, Blonde, Heartbreakers and Richard Hell to name just a few. It's for sure that without CBGB all these outcasts would have faced much more difficulties to find their way. The result would be that music would be totally different, and definitely much poorer from what it is now. Finally, I felt a little bit uneasy when I saw CBGB's original facade in a sterilised art gallery. I could propose this gallery to take the notoriously dirty toilets of the club as well.













This upload is a compilation of live recordings from CBGB during June 4, 5, 6, 1976. As Joe Viglione explains in allmusic: "This is it, the classic double LP from CBGB's that was instrumental in putting national focus on the "new wave," a brilliant handle comparing the next generation of garage and underground rockers to French cinema (...) It was a historic moment in rock & roll, and this document is a time capsule treasure of the musical movement as it was evolving."
Tracklisting:
A1-Tuff Darts - All For The Love Of Rock 'N' Roll
A2-Shirts - Operetico
A3-Mink DeVille - Cadillac Moon
A4-Laughing Dogs - I Need A Million
B1-Shirts - Poe
B2-Mink DeVille - Let Me Dream If I Want To
B3-Tuff Darts - Head Over Heels
B4-Manster - Over, Under, Sideways, Down
C1-Manster - I'm Really Not This Way
C2-Sun - Romance
C3-Stuart's Hammer - Everybody's Depraved
C4-Miamis - We Deliver
D1-Mink DeVille - Change It Comes
D2-Shirts - A.V.M.
D3-Laughing Dogs - It Feels Alright Tonight
D4-Tuff Darts - Slash




The Ramones - Blitzkrieg Bop Live at CBGB 1977



The last song ever played at CBGB - Patti Smith "Elegie" October 15, 2006

See also:
Sonic Youth's video clip of Do You Believe In Rapture which is filmed inside the CBGB
CBGB virtual tour
The History of CBGB written by Hilly Kristal, the man that ran the club for all these years
Richard Hell's article about CBGB in the NY Times

review link: here

download link: here

Sunday, 20 September 2009

OST - The Wizard of Oz - The Deluxe Edition (1939/1995) (@256)



















I was thinking to have an upload about the 40th anniversary of Woodstock, but there isn't much to upload after the recent glorious 6-cd release from Rhino. And although Woodstock's anniversary had all the tributes it deserved, I think that the 70th anniversary (on August 12) of the first screening of the Wizard of Oz has somehow been neglected. Someone could argue that both the movie and the soundtrack are a little bit dated, but then I don't think that there are many movies with such enormous impact on pop culture. The same applies to the soundtrack. The music of Harold Arlen (a mysteriously underrated composer as compared to Gershwin, Berlin, Rodgers/Hammerstein-Hart or Hoagy Carmichael) and the lyrics of E.Y. Harburg, offered not only the legendary Over The Rainbow for which they won the Academy Award for Best Original Song, but also a bunch of great songs such as Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead, You're Off To See The Wizard, If I Only Had A Brain, among others.
The merits of (again) Rhino's deluxe edition of 1995, which is uploaded here, are explained by Bruce Eder in allmusic: "There were at least two versions of The Wizard of Oz on compact disc before Rhino issued this double-CD deluxe version. Those earlier CDs had been mastered, respectively, from the original LP master created by MGM Records in the mid-'50s, or used a restored version of the finished film as the source for most of its content. But this set represents the first occasion on which the original unedited studio recordings of the score — derived from the "angles" captured by various microphones used in the recording process — have been assembled for commercial release; and, indeed, the first time these uncut recordings, of the music as it was conceived and written, before being edited to fit the final release cut of the movie, have been heard since 1939. The results are astounding, to say the least — in addition to giving us a full account of the underscore for the movie in all of its finest nuances so that one can appreciate the action on the instruments and the fine details of the orchestration, it also reveals a wealth of subliminal detail in the music writing, a match in its depth and range for the finest operas of Verdi and Puccini. In fact, hearing the complete first disc and the first half of the second, which together comprise the soundtrack of the movie, is the equivalent of finding a new way to absorb the movie, regardless of how well one has known it up to this point: on that basis alone, fans of the movie will find this set essential. Additionally, the second CD contains alternate versions of portions of the score, and unused portions of the score that will be a revelation to anyone who enjoys the movie."

download link (part1 - the soundtrack): here
download link (part2 - supplemental material): here

P.S.1 For those seeking for more Judy Garland, an older post with her legendary 1961 performance at Carnegie Hall can be found here.
P.S.2 Thers is also the original cast of The Wiz here.

Friday, 18 September 2009

Ravi Shankar & Ali Akbar Khan - In Concert 1972 (1972) (@256)













Ali Akbar Khan sadly passed away recently. He was a true master in sarod (a smaller relative of the sitar) and one of the musicians that introduced Indian classical music to western audiences. He first played in the US in 1955, while he was the first Indian musician to appear on an American TV broadcast.
This upload finds him performing live along with his brother-in-law Ravi Shankar at the Philarmonic Hall of New York, on 8 October 1972. The result is absolutely mesmerising.

download link: here

Saturday, 12 September 2009

London Sinfonietta - Warp Works (2006) (@256)












Let's put another one in the series of the Warp tribute. This time, a very interesting project: Between 2003 and 2005, the London Sinfonietta gave a number of performances where they presented their own version on a number of compositions of Warp label artists (Aphex Twin and Squarepusher) and of some of the most important avant-garde artists of the 20th century. Their aim was to explore the connection between these two sides since the former are considered the developers of what the latter had started. Here, since the tribute is for Warp, I've chosen to separate the two sides and to upload only the Warp related part of this release. Even under this case, the classical perspective on top-rated electronic music is definitely intriguing.

Tracklisting:
Clive Williamson - Jynweythek (Prepared Piano Piece 1) (Aphex Twin)
Clive Williamson - Hy A Scullyas Lyf Adhagrow (Prepared Piano Piece 2) (Aphex Twin)
London Sinfonietta (arr. David Horne) - The Tide (Squarepusher)
London Sinfonietta (arr. Fraser Trainer & Sound Intermedia) - Conc 2 Symmetriac (Squarepusher)
London Sinfonietta (arr. David Horne) - AFX237 V7 (Aphex Twin)
London Sinfonietta (arr. Kenneth Hesketh) - Polygon Window (Aphex Twin)

album info link: here

download link: here (mirrorcreator) or here (rapidshare)