Moondog was the alias of Louis T. Hardin (May 26, 1916 – September 8, 1999). He was a New York City street musician and former beat poet who was blinded as a young adult. From the late 1940s until 1974, he was a permanent fixture, busking on 54th Street and 6th Avenue in Manhattan. He was known not only for his music and poetry, but also for the distinctive Viking garb that he wore, including a horned helmet. He routinely gave away copies of his work to anybody who would take them. In this way, he came to the attention of producer James William Guercio, who took him into the studio to record an album, released as Moondog (1969) on the CBS label. The track Stamping Ground, with its odd preamble of Moondog saying one of his epigrams, was featured on the sampler double album Fill Your Head with Rock. A brief phrase of another track on the album, Bird's Lament (In memory of Charlie Parker) was sampled by Mr. Scruff as the basis for his 7-minute track Get a Move On.
A second album produced with Guercio, and featuring both him and Moondog's daughter as vocalists, contained song compositions in the forms of canons and rounds. It did not make an impression on popular music as the first had. The two CBS albums were re-released as a single CD in 1989. via
Year of Release: 1969
Label: CBS
Genre: Classical/Experimental
Bitrate: 256kbps
Track List:
1. Theme
2. Stamping Ground
3. Symphonique #3 (Ode To Venus)
4. Symphonique #6 (Good For Goodie)
5. Cuplet
6. Minisym #1
7. Lament I, Bird's Lament
8. Witch Of Endor
9. Symphonique #1 (Portrait Of A Monarch)
...
2/28/11
moondog
Moondog was the alias of Louis T. Hardin (May 26, 1916 – September 8, 1999). He was a New York City street musician and former beat poet who was blinded as a young adult. From the late 1940s until 1974, he was a permanent fixture, busking on 54th Street and 6th Avenue in Manhattan. He was known not only for his music and poetry, but also for the distinctive Viking garb that he wore, including a horned helmet. He routinely gave away copies of his work to anybody who would take them. In this way, he came to the attention of producer James William Guercio, who took him into the studio to record an album, released as Moondog (1969) on the CBS label. The track Stamping Ground, with its odd preamble of Moondog saying one of his epigrams, was featured on the sampler double album Fill Your Head with Rock. A brief phrase of another track on the album, Bird's Lament (In memory of Charlie Parker) was sampled by Mr. Scruff as the basis for his 7-minute track Get a Move On.
A second album produced with Guercio, and featuring both him and Moondog's daughter as vocalists, contained song compositions in the forms of canons and rounds. It did not make an impression on popular music as the first had. The two CBS albums were re-released as a single CD in 1989. via
Year of Release: 1969
Label: CBS
Genre: Classical/Experimental
Bitrate: 256kbps
Track List:
1. Theme
2. Stamping Ground
3. Symphonique #3 (Ode To Venus)
4. Symphonique #6 (Good For Goodie)
5. Cuplet
6. Minisym #1
7. Lament I, Bird's Lament
8. Witch Of Endor
9. Symphonique #1 (Portrait Of A Monarch)
...
2/27/11
"Question Mark recorded this album in 1974 in Kenya, the land safari parks, of elephants & lions. 5 musicians, all English vocals, heavy fuzz guitar, 8 freakin tracks. If you think BLO and WITCH where great African albums, you will love this one. It beats most bands from Africa such as OFEGE, CHRISSY ZEBBY, RIKKI ILILONGA and MACK SIGIS PORTER, unless you are only into African rhythms and chanting. This album has mostly western style songs with great and heavy guitar sounds all over but with an strong African touch of course."
A1 Have You?
A2 Be Nice To The People
A3 Hey Hey Girl
A4 Love
B1 Oh My Girl
B2 Freaking Out
B3 Scram Out
B4 Mary Anne
Bass - Amehi Izuorah
Drums - Chyke Okafor
Guitar - Victor Egbe
Organ, Lead Vocals - Frank Izuorah
Percussion - Uzo Agulefo
Producer - Odion Iruoje
...
2/26/11
Anthologie de la Musique Angolaise 1965-1975
via
a sound and a movement... music and a state of mind. It's the joyous awakening of a continent from a colonial nightmare and the crushing realization that the nightmare isn't over yet. anguish and happiness whipped together with traditional drums, cheap guitars, and even cheaper amps.
this is soul music.
CLIK PHOTO then move on ...
01-Luiz Visconde-Chofer De Praça
02-Artur Nunes-Mana
03-Artur Nunes-Zinha
04-Artur Nunes-Tia
05-Artur Nunes-Dito Zè
06-Artur Nunes-Kisua Ki Ngui Fua
07-Os Kiezos-Princeza Rita
08-Os Kiezos-Saudades De Luanda
09-Os Kiezos-Kughinguengambá
10-Os Kiezos-Muxima
11-Os Kiezos-Memorias De Lamartine
12-Urbano De Castro-Kia Lumingo
13-Urbano De Castro-Maria Da Horta
14-Urbano De Castro-N'vula
15-Tanga-Eme N'gongo Iami
16-Tony Von-N'hoca
17-Tony De Fumo-N'ginda
18-Oscar Neves-Tia Sessa
19-Oscar Neves-Mundanda
20-Oscar Neves-Mabelé
21-Oscar Neves-N'zambi
...
01-Paulino Pinheiro-Pachanga De Juventade
02-Paulo 9-Genro Ciumento
03- Paulo 9-Fazer Bem
04-Avozinho-Máma Divua Diame
05-Avozinho-Sakeça Mukongo
06-Os Bongos-Lena
07-Jovens Do Prendo-Solista Praguejado
08-Jovens Do Prendo-Semba Da Ilha
09-Jovens Do Prendo-Coio
10-Jovens Do Prendo-África Merengue
11-Jovens Do Prendo-Palace
12-Minguito-N'Gandala Ku Uganhala O Fuma
13-David Zé-Mona Ku Jimbe Manheno
14-Tony Gaetano-Pangui Yami Uafua
15-Antonio Paulino-Kamba Ba Laumba
16-Quim Dos Santos-Ambula N'Gui Zeka
17-Adolfo Coelho-Socana N'gam
18-Tino Dia Kimuezo-Tino Mungo Yo Dimba Diobe
19-Tino Dia Kimuezo-Kibela Kiame
...
2/25/11
#1 and the amputees friend
Mert Lawwill's 1969 Harley-Davidson KR750
After a career-ending crash in 1967 that cost him his arm, Factory Harley-Davidson team racer Chris Draayer called on his teammate, the legendary Mert Lawwill, to build him an adequate prosthetic hand for riding his motorcycle. mh
Lawwill built a single prototype prosthetic as a favor for his friend Draayer that carried him through eight years of riding and racing without incident. More recently, articles featuring Chris Draayer and his “one and only of it’s kind” handlebar attachment had fellow one-armed cyclists calling on Lawwill to head back to the machine shop. Mert fine-tuned his original design and prepared for quantity production with the collaboration of DKG machine shop owner Dave Garoutte.
Well known for fabricating products for the bicycle and motorcycle industries, DKG has been in the business since 1978. The result is the updated Mert Lawwill Quick Release Handlebar Attachment for both above and below elbow amputees. Visit http://www.mertshands.org
Mint Frye (ish)
good and bad moments
ecause Dylan wrote such dense and distinctive songs, covering his work necessarily involves as much impersonation as interpretation. In fact, the best songs on I'm Not There are the ones where the artists seem to be having a great time being Bob. Chan Marshall mimics his cadences on "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again", and her pronunciation of the world "mama" is one of the album's best moments. Craig Finn sings "Won't You Please Crawl Out Your Window?" with a chuckle in his voice, as the Hold Steady relocate the song to the Minneapolis streets of Separation Sunday. And Stephen Malkmus, who gets a whopping three tracks, gives some of his best and weirdest performances since going solo.
The cast of I'm Not There is admirably diverse, mixing relative newcomers like Karen O and Mason Jennings with veterans like Willie Nelson, whose despairing "Senor (Tales of Yankee Power)", from 1978's Street Legal, is a good argument for a full-length collaboration with Calexico. Roger McGuinn's voice has aged considerably over the years, but he sounds both surefooted and surprisingly tender on "One More Cup of Coffee", another perfect match with Calexico. And Richie Havens' uniquely jumpy energy jolts "Tombstone Blues", surpassing mere imitation and ratcheting up its wordy tension.
Perhaps it's a testament to the potency of his peculiarities-- rather than to the strength of his convictions-- that Dylan's songs are so successfully coverable in so many different styles. They're challenging undertakings, but possible, inspiring varying degrees adventurousness in some artists and reverence in others. Despite a stellar backing band (including members of Sonic Youth and Television), Eddie Vedder's "All Along the Watchtower" sounds just like every other version of the song and Mason Jennings can't do anything with the iconic "The Times They Are a'Changin'" other than render it faithfully. It's a crazy, mixed-up world, though, when Jack Johnson's medley of "Mama, You've Been on My Mind/A Fraction of Last Thoughts on Woody Guthrie" has more smarts and soul than Sufjan Stevens' "Ring Them Bells", which begins as a fairly uninspired cover but sails off into a tediously overwritten coda that strains patience and good will. But that's really the only truly objectionable track on this long album, which sounds much better on your stereo than it did on paper. With so many different types of musicians contributing to these 34 songs, I'm Not There could have turned out like so many inconsistent and forgettable tribute soundtracks-- listened to once or twice, then shelved for eternity-- but instead it plays like a real album, focused on the music and leaving the myth to the movie.
— Stephen M. Deusner, October 30, 2007
DISC 1:
1. All Along the Watchtower - Eddie Vedder & The Million Dollar Bashers
2. I’m Not There - Sonic Youth
3. Goin’ To Acapulco - Jim James & Calexico
4. Tombstone Blues - Richie Havens
5. Ballad Of a Thin Man - Stephen Malkmus & The Million Dollar Bashers
6. Stuck Inside Of Mobile With the Memphis Blues Again - Cat Power
7. Pressing On - John Doe
8. Fourth Time Around - Yo La Tango
9. Dark Eyes - Iron & Wine & Calexico
10. Highway 61 Revisited - Karon O & the Million Dollar Bashers
11. One More Cup Of Coffee - Roger McGuinn & Calexico
12. Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll, The - Mason Jennings
13. Billy 1 - Los Lobos
14. Simple Twist Of Fate - Jeff Tweedy
15. Man In the Long Black Coat - Mark Lanegan
16. Senor (Tales Of Yankee Power) - Willie Nelson & Calexico
DISC 2:
1. As I Went Out One Morning - Mira Billotte
2. Can’t Leave Her Behind - Stephen Malkmus & The Bashers
3. Ring Them Bells - Sufjan Stevens
4. Just Like a Woman - Charlotte Gainsbourg & Calexico
5. Mama, You’ve Been On My Mind - Jack Johnson
6. I Wanna Be Your Lover - Yo La Tango
7. You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere - Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova
8. Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window? - The Hold Steady
9. Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues - Ramblin’ Jack Elliott
10. Wicked Messenger, The - The Black Keys
11. Cold Irons Bound - Tom Verlaine & the Millions Dollar Bashers
12. Times They Are a Changin’, The - Mason Jennings
13. Maggie’s Farm - Stephen Malkmus & The Million Dollar Bashers
14. When the Ship Comes In - Marcus Carl Franklin
15. Moonshiner - Bob Forrest
16. I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine - John Doe
17. Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door - Antony & The Johnsons
18. I’m Not There - Bob Dylan with The Band
part 1...
2...
these are a few highlights;
Who are The Million Dollar Bashers? The super backup group was assembled by Sonic Youth's Lee Ranaldo and has Steve Shelley on drums, Television guitarist Tom Verlaine, Wilco guitarist Nels Cline, guitarist Smokey Hormel, keyboardist John Medeski and Dylan bassist Tony Garnier.
2/24/11
I'm sure that many of you are already tuned in to what Exotica Music is and is all about. For those who are not, however, allow me to introduce The King.
Martin Denny invented the genre and he did it all by himself. People like to point out that Les Baxter wrote the song "Quiet Village" in 1951, but it was Denny who recorded the Quintessential "Quiet Village" in 1957. And he did it on his own terms, with his own band and with his own bird calls.
This record came out four years into the Exotica craze in 1961. Percussion was a big thing about that time, so Exotic Percussion was just natural. The instruments listed as having been used on this record include: Tuned Burmese Gongs, Wood Chimes, Steel Chimes, Samisen, Magna Harp, Celeste, Celestette, Ipo, Marimba, Bongos, Wind Chimes, Vibes, Piccolo Xylophones, Marimbula and Everyone's Favorites, of course, BOO BAMS!!!
via
1. My Tane (My Man)
2. Cumana
3. Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise
4. Day Delight
5. Moonlight on the Ganges
6. Cherokee (Indian Love Song)
7. Misirlou
8. Anna
9. Song of the Bayou
10. Moonlight and Shadows
11. My Shawl
12. The Girl Friend of the Whirling Dervish
...
at this time, it feels necessary to say that there is no obsession with exotica in the
way of the trend that flooded lp stores with selling this vinyl for too much $ as well
as why certain folks listen to it.
this is music plain and simple. not a kitschy movement of hipsters with clever wit.
if you can't see 'Moonlight on the Ganges' on a mix tape next to 'Pale Blue Eyes' etc.
then, well... sorry.
2/23/11
Zaireeka for Mobile Phones?
Last month, Flaming Lips leader Wayne Coyne announced that the band planned to release a free new song every month in 2011. Now, Coyne tells Spin that the band has plenty of other cool stuff in the works this year.
First: A collaboration with chillwave don Neon Indian. Coyne tells Spin that the band is going to New York to work on tracks with Neon Indian and longtime producer Dave Fridmann, and they want to release the music as quickly as possible: "We're going to do two or three songs with him, and that shit should be ready to go pretty quickly. I have a couple of tunes that he's heard, and we'll just do that shit and fix that up and fuck around together." Coyne recently posted a demo of a track that may become a Neon Indian collab. Coyne also tells Spin that he'd like to record similar collaborations with bands like Deerhoof and Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffitti.
The band is also getting together a big vinyl box set, Heady Nuggs: The First 5 Warner Bros. Records, 1992-2002, hopefully out in time for Record Store Day. (The Flaming Lips Tweeted a photo of the cover earlier this week.) And even more excitingly, the band is working on a phone-based reissue of Zaireeka, the 1997 album that many fans have still never properly heard. Zaireeka was originally released on four CDs, intended to be played simultaneously on four different CD players. (Pitchfork's own Mark Richardson wrote a book about the record.) For the reissue, the album will play simultaneously on four different cell phones. Coyne tells Spin that the phone version of Zaireeka will be out in the next 10 days.
Below, Coyne and bandmate Steven Drozd demonstrate how the reissue will work, proving in the process that it could be even more difficult to cue the record up on cell phones as it was to get all four CD players playing at the same time:
more..
Quite stoned.
2/22/11
cover volume
liner notes:
A visitor to a plush New York cafe commented wonderingly upon leaving: "I always thought I'd forgotten how to dance. But it wasn't me -- it was the music. I couldn't follow it. Now the things those three people play -- well, I can dance to that, all right."
"Those three people" were The Three Suns, and the compliment wasn't unusual. For twenty years the trio has been turning out bright, bouncy music with a strong rhythmic beat that is perfect for dancing and/or just plain pleasant listening.
This album is, in fact, by way of being a 20th anniversary package -- it contains an even dozen of the trio's most popular tunes of the past two decades. But something new has been added: they have all been freshly recorded in "Living Stereo" to keep pace with the current era of faithful sound reproduction.
Originally the group consisted of a Hammond organ, guitar and accordion, but for some numbers the threesome has added to the instrumentation. Peg O' My Heart, for instance, has a celeste and a vibraphone in this arrangement; you'll hear twin pianos in The Petite Waltz and Jet. And the addition of bass and drum is new to the group for these numbers.
But the basic personality of The Three Suns' music remains unchanged. It's still the same mellow, non-jangling style that has resisted -- and outlived -- all the freak music fads over the years. The trio hit the big time at the Piccadilly Circus lounge in New York. They were virtually unknown when they began a two week engagement. They stayed for seven years, and finally left to answer the tremendous demand for their services from hotels, theaters and night clubs across the country.
Their theme song, Twilight Time -- written by the Suns themselves -- became their first million-record seller.
A knowledgeable man in the music industry pays them this tribute: "They make more music than any other three men in the business. More important, they helped popularize the small groups in hotel dining rooms, and it's now a common thing."
And, if you'd like a further testimonial you might ask Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower, who once named them her favorite recording group.
But it's purely non-political listening pleasure you'll get from this album.
MARTIN BURDEN
The New York Post
The Three Suns - Twilight Memories (1960)
1. Twilight Time (3:12)
2. Don't Take Your Love from Me (2:27)
3. Jalousie (2:36)
4. Under Paris Skies (3:05)
5. The Petite Waltz (2:38)
6. Delicado (2:51)
7. Peg o' My Heart (2:27)
8. Moonlight and Roses (2:38)
9. Arrivederci Roma (3:10)
10. Anna (3:01)
11. Jet (3:08)
12. Twilight Memories (2:42)
...
cover art and the LP's content can be deceiving at times. not so here. melancholy beauty encased in a tear. a bit oblique? yes...
and...no.
not for words to say...
thank you mr. sweet
2/21/11
ignore the hipster factor /embrace true psychedelics
the three suns must've been pretty big in south africa to warrant this local pressing from the fifties. i know little about them, apart from that "moving and grooving" is a space age milestone. this lp has their soothing accordians, and mostly has a feel of the islands. i associate it with "the versatile mancini." Of course the theme is around the world so we are also treated to arabic moments and full on space age hifi action.
via
01 - come back to sorrento
02 - in a persian market
03 - lady of shangri-la
04 - a song of old hawaii
05 - blue bells of scotland
06 - the sheik of araby
07 - galway bay
08 - in a little spanish town
09 - on a little street in singapore
10 - mexican hat dance
11 - far away places
12 - song of india
13 - alouette
14 - londonderry air
15 - hindustan
16 - bali ha'i
17 - april in portugal
18 - viennese refrain
...
i am still searching for the KING of all suns LP's online. (Twighlight Memories)
but this is still GREAT!
ENTER the Three Suns universe.
2/20/11
2/19/11
kirwan/ green
1969. Tercer disco ya con Danny Kirwan a la guitarra completando la mejor formación que jamás tuvo Fleetwood Mac.
Incluye Stop Messin' Round, Albatross, Black Magic Woman... uno de los mejores álbumes de su carrera. Disfruten!
Peter Green, Danny Kirwan, Jeremy Spencer, John McVie, Mick Fleetwood.
...
1. "Stop Messin' Round" (Clifford Adams, Peter Green) – 2:22
2. "Jigsaw Puzzle Blues" (Danny Kirwan) – 1:36
3. "Doctor Brown" (J. T. Brown, W. Glasco) – 3:46
4. "Something Inside of Me" (Kirwan) – 3:57
5. "Evenin' Boogie" (Jeremy Spencer) – 2:42
6. "Love That Burns" (Adams, Green) – 5:05
7. "Black Magic Woman" (Green) – 2:48
8. "I've Lost My Baby" (Spencer) – 4:17
9. "One Sunny Day" (Kirwan) – 3:12
10. "Without You" (Kirwan) – 4:40
11. "Coming Home" (Elmore James) – 2:40
12. "Albatross" (Green) – 3:09
2/18/11
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