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on life, music etc beyond mainstream

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Archives: August 2014

2014 23 Aug.

At short

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Da schaut man nichtsahnend einmal nach, ob es schon einen VÖ fuer das neue neue Leonard Cohen Album gibt … – und was findet „man“ heraus ? Den VÖ gibt es noch nicht, aber ein deutsches Tribut-Album erscheint demnaechst ! –

Habe noch keinen einzigen Ton der Neuschoepfungen aus diesem Album gehoert, aber trotzdem: lehne mich einmal weit aus dem Fenster und postuliere den groben grossen Teil der Neufassungen als komplett ueberfluessig; einzig dass Interpretationen von den Fehlfarben („Gerechtigkeit“), Reinhard Mey („Sternblauer Trenchcoat“) und Manfred Maurenbrecher („Hymne“) mit dabei sind klingt halbwegs interessant. –

Beschliesse gerade mir das Geld fuer dieses Tributalbum zu sparen und auf the real thing zu warten: das neue Album vom Meister selbst. .-D

 

 
 
 

Die dritte Stunde drehte sich allein um 12k, Taylors Label, meine „kleinen“ Slapstick-Einlagen liefen davor ab, ich mutiere ja selbst zum versunkenen Zuhörer, wenn mich die Musik gefangen nimmmt, und wer den recht wilden Anfang der „Neuland“-Stunde mochte, kann vielleicht meine Freude an Emanuele de Raymondis „Ultimo Domicilio“ und Graham Edward Lewis‘ Anknüpfung an alte Wire-Zeiten verstehen. To Rococo Rot werden bei jedem Hören besser. Gegen Ende der ersten Stunde fehlte mir die Zeit, das kleine Powerstück von Space Monkey zu spielen, daher wirkte der Übergang von den Flaming Lips zu Louis Sclavis alles andere als zwingend. Aber sei´s drum. Die angesprochenen Gags gab es dann während der „Zeitreise“ – und als gegen Ende Dieter Moebius mich wider Erwarten im Jahr 2014 landen liess, bekam ich auf einmal grosse Lust, David Stubbs‘ Buch über die deutsche Krautrock-Ära zu lesen. Ich habe gerade das erste Kapitel angefangen, Unna 1970, Can spielen ihre wahnwitzige Musik, ich war 15 Jahre jung, keine 20 Kilometer entfernt, leider, leider nicht vor Ort. All die Patchouli-Girls, ach, ach! Zuvor hauten meine Lippen den wohl absurdesten Satz meiner 25-jährigen Radiozeit raus (hören Sie selbst! :)) – aber das passiert wohl nur, wenn man Ausserirdische, Afrika und Krautrock kurzschliesst. P.S. Vielleicht kennt einer von euch den Ort, den Taylor Deupree ganz am Schluss beschrieben hat, als es um die „stillen Orte“ von New York ging: „The Promenade“. Übrigens kann ich Taylors endlose Faszination für Brian Enos Ambient-Album „Thursday Afternoon“ gut verstehen. Damals regten sich renommierte Musikkritiker wie Frank Schöler und D.D. Diederichsen künstlich auf: Schöler war entsetzt, dass ein Klangbesessener wie Eno beträchtliches Grundrauschen zugelassen habe, und D.D. (der das Ambient-Konzept von vorne bis hinten komplett falsch verstanden hat), liess sich Jahre später, als er Enos hinreissende CD „The Shutov Assembly“ hörte, zu einer Fäkalienfantasie im Hause eines Modepapstes aus. Jeder bamiert sich, so gut er kann, aber das tue ich sicher auch manchmal. Heute ist mein Schwebetag und ich hoffe, die neue Cd von James Yorkston liegt in der Post. Viel mehr als Hängematte und James lauschen ist heute nicht mehr drin. P.P.S.: am 19. August wurde Michael Naura 80 Jahre alt. Ich sprach darüber – nicht viele von euch werden die beiden Rühmkorff-Naura-Platten haben, die einst bei ECM erschienen sind. Immer noch meine liebsten Lyrik-meets-Jazz-Alben aus der alten Bundesrepublik. Vielleicht bringt Manfred Eicher sie ja mal neu heraus …

 
 
 
Neuland (erste Stunde)
 


 
 

Zeitreise (zweite Stunde)
 


 
 

Nahaufnahme (dritte Stunde)
 


 

As stereogum reports, they have recently received some actual details about Scott Walker and Sunn O)))’s upcoming album Soused, but there hasn’t been any actual music from the release. That changed yesterday with a new trailer that teases about two minutes of music. At first it sounds exactly how you’d expect. There’s Sunn-style guitar drone rumbling to introduce Walker’s baritone murmuring in what sounds like Latin, but may just be some warped appropriation of it. There’s strange imagery that reminds me of the black muck in Under The Skin before settling on the blurry image of an open hand. Then gradually you realize the hand is making a fist, and after that moment all hell breaks loose. Drums explode into the picture, guitars start riffing, and Walker shouting and screaming with an immediacy that you got in the fiercest moments of his 2012 album Bish Bosch. It doesn’t exactly sound like Sunn O))) or what we’ve heard yet from Walker, but it does sound incredible. The bad news is the album’s release date has been pushed back from 9/23 to 10/21.  And the really bad news is that the dull politics of GEMA (a highly dubious corporation representing a totally wrong dichotomy of „serious“ and „light, entertaining“ music (jazz, pop, folk, gosh, bullshit thinking relying on old academic traditions and hierarchies that belong in the garbage can – and you now know in which areas the big money flows!) prevents German listeners from being able to look at the youtube-trailer. Thank you, GEMA, for such counter-productive activities!

Is there anybody who knows how we can post the trailer without being blocked by these enemies of decent promotion?  (source: stereogum & manafonistas

2014 20 Aug.

„Little Queenie“

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Chuck Berry konnte sie nicht in Zusammenhang mit Shakespeare bringen, auf Patti Smith konnte sie sich besser einlassen, wenn sie Nietzsche gelesen hatte. Ich hatte sie ueberall in Paris gesucht, als sie gestorben war. Erst auf dem dritten Friedhof, dem Montparnasse, fand ich meine Queen „She is too cute to be a minute over seventeen.“ Ich wollte nicht, dass sie stirbt. Ihr Sohn hatte ihre Asche aus New York an den Ort gebracht, an dem sie jung war und Vogue las. Nun ist ein letztes Buch von Susan Sontag erschienen: „The DOORS und DOSTOJEWSKI“. Bei meinem naechsten Besuch an ihrem Grab werde ich ihr sagen, dass ich Eric Burdon: „It’s my Life“ besser verstehen kann, wenn ich davor, ja was gelesen haben koennte? Mir faellt nichts dazu ein. Aber ein anderer Song von Tom Waits: „Cold Water“ koennte verwebend sein.

… it still defines Mirel Wagner’s music perfectly. It certainly applied to her self-titled debut, which brought folk and blues back to their eldritch roots with songs that fell somewhere between nursery rhymes, fairy tales, and murder ballads. It’s an even more apt description of her intensely beautiful and unsettling second album, When the Cellar Children See the Light of Day.

 
 
 

 
 
 

Wagner collaborated with Finnish producer Sasu Ripatti, best known for his work as Luomo and Vladislav Delay; not an obvious choice, considering that his music is largely electronic. However, Ripatti honors her songs by giving them the cleanest, clearest surroundings possible, highlighting her hypnotic fingerpicking on „Dreamt of a Wave“ and „The Devil’s Tongue.“

Perhaps even more so than on her debut, When the Cellar Children’s spaces are as eloquent as the music, while subtle effects and slightly fuller instrumentation hover between real and surreal as needed. When the spectral backing vocals float up on „Oak Tree,“ a song about an abandoned child who ends up „dreaming underneath,“ it’s spine-tingling. Aptly, the motif of buried children runs through the album, but When the Cellar Children See the Light of Day is more about revealing than rescuing. Freedom usually means death, as on „The Dirt,“ where a child is ready to „close my eyes and wake up to a new life.“

This poetic simplicity makes Wagner’s storytelling all the more poignant and often horrifying; as with her playing, she implies a wealth of nuances in seemingly direct phrases. „In My Father’s House“ paints a portrait of deceptive serenity as Wagner details a household so full of suppressed terror that even „the pictures on the wall never look into your eyes“ over velvety strumming. On „Taller Than Tall Trees,“ she distills an ambivalent love story filled with an album’s worth of emotional twists and turns in its opening words: „See a girl dressed as a woman/Here’s a man who lies.“

Wagner (and Ripatti)’s technical prowess only enhances the album’s emotional impact. Where Mirel Wagner was a collection of vignettes, these songs revolve around the terrible things people do in the name of love, whether it’s „What Love Looks Like“’s bitter recriminations, „Goodnight“’s murder lullaby, or the eerily matter-of-fact opener „1 2 3 4,“ where a child killer professes to have „a big big heart and lots of love.“ As accomplished as it is disturbing, When the Cellar Children See the Light of Day is a riveting album from a formidable and yes, haunting, talent.

– Heather Phares, allmusic

 

„I’ve had a quiet day, I’ve listened to this album over and over. The stories never reach out for false consolation, the things told are nearly as bitter as the the things not told. The calmness of the voice is an exercise not to lose the voice at all. The slow motion simply suggests that some day the terror is over. Luck is a luxury. And victims everywhere. Your comfort zone is samsara. Naked music.“  (m.e.)

 
 
https://vimeo.com/86298750
 
 

2014 20 Aug.

Almost Like The Blues

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I saw some people starving
There was murder, there was rape
Their villages were burning
They were trying to escape
I couldn’t meet their glances
I was staring at my shoes
It was acid, it was tragic
It was almost like the blues
 
I have to die a little
Between each murderous thought
And when I’m finished thinking
I have to die a lot
There’s torture and there’s killing
And there’s all my bad reviews
The war, the children missing
Lord, it’s almost like the blues
 
So I let my heart get frozen
To keep away the rot
My father said I’m chosen
My mother said I’m not
I listened to their story
Of the Gypsies and the Jews
It was good, it wasn’t boring
It was almost like the blues
 
There is no G-d in Heaven
And there is no Hell below
So says the great professor
Of all there is to know
But I’ve had the invitation
That a sinner can’t refuse
And it’s almost like salvation
It’s almost like the blues

 

 
 

 
 

This has been a day full of surprises. First of all, I tried at least to like that record everybody seems to fall in love with, from FKA Twigs, but it left me strangely cold. Maybe someone can offer me a key. The opposite thing has happened with a record I thought, it would just earn my respect, but then I was stunned by its simple and twisted beauty: David Friedman’s solo vibraphone and marimba record, Weaving Through Motion (out on Traumton, middle of September). Then there were two song albums (I had a lot of time today) that, let’s say it simple, totally impressed me with their simplicity, intricacy and, in parts, double bottoms: Mirel Wagner’s sparsely instrumented song cycle „When The Cellar Children See the Light of Day“, and, okay, an old favourite of mine, James Yorkston’s „The Cellardyke Recording and Wassailing Society“ (ups, long titles!) The song (with spoken words) called „Guy Fawkes‘ Signature“ will belong to my top ten song charts of 2014. The ice on the cake was Arve Henriksen’s The Nature of Connections (out on Rune Grammofon): a textural melange of trumpet with strings, soft pulses, no ego – brilliant. You could make a mixtape of all of these albums, just take your two favourites of everyone, and discover your personal sequence. Ah, yes, and the last track on that tape should be a down-load from Kevin Coyne’s „Millionaires and Teddybears“, the song „People“. Let „People“ be the closer, and I’ll bet it’ll make your day (on the quiet side of sounds). But, off course, what do I know? P.S. Ups, just forgotten, the fabulous duo of Anja Lechner and Francois Couturier (ECM New Series) would intensify this imaginary mix tape for a rainy day. It’s a soft killer from start to end, with the spirits of Komitas, Gurdjieff and Mompou drifting through open spaces.


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