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rileydog22 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 26 2007 at 21:32
Thanks guys!  I'm gonna check these bands out.  

Edited by rileydog22 - November 26 2007 at 21:32

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 26 2007 at 17:17
An article about avantgarde and underground music in China
 
 


Edited by avestin - November 26 2007 at 17:17
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2007 at 23:12
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

Posted a review of the Time Of Orchids show at The Stone if anyone's interested
  
 
Very nice Assaf, and vivid - it gave me an experiential sensibility even though..Thanks for sharing..[sorry I never got back to you re The Stone - I tried my friend twice, but both times he was on the run & couldn't talk..]


Edited by listennow801 - November 25 2007 at 23:12

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2007 at 19:53
A new release on Soleil Zeuhl - the band Setna will release the album Cycle I by the end of 2007, mastered by Udi Koomran.
Listen to some excerpts here:
 


Edited by avestin - November 25 2007 at 19:54
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2007 at 19:34
Posted a review of the Time Of Orchids show at The Stone if anyone's interested
 
And not Avant-rock related (though their next album might be as they tell me), this is an interview with the Spanish band Senogul that Erik and I made:
Senogul Interview, November 2007
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2007 at 18:47
re Absolute Zero - you know, there's something very zeuhl here..that operatic largess..a totality..

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2007 at 17:49
Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

 
Agreed on both counts: Pochakiate Malko's debut is a bit stodgy and indigestible IMO. Non Credo's Happy Wretched Family is a remarkable piece of work - it's as though Slapp Happy had mutated into Art Bears between their first and second albums. To be fair, I haven't listened to Impropera that much and it may grow on me, but so far I think they peaked with HWF. 
 
Here hear! [great description btw syz..I wish I could articulate about music that way, but when I love it, it generally leaves me rather speechless, as it were..I can write about/critique literature, philosophy and [visual] art, but not music for some [obscure..] reason..Maybe the feelings it can evoke are just too ephemeral, ineffable..? ; )
 
Oh - listening to Bablicon now..They're truly exceptional in my book. This is avant to a 'T.' I would say that the listener should be open to experimental forays, and def. like their avant-garde [classical, not avant prog..hmm, guess that's rather silly as the former is a large element of a lot of avant prog..be that as it may..]. If one is up for a rather brilliant artistic journey, Bablicon will take you there, without fear.. They just never fail pour moi; never cease to amaze and enthrall my aural appendages..] [I second Avestin here too: Orange Tapered Moon is my fave, then A Flat Inside A Fog.. second.


Edited by listennow801 - November 25 2007 at 17:57

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2007 at 17:24
Originally posted by listennow801 listennow801 wrote:

re:Non Credo: Happy Wretched Family is their best imo, then Reluctant Hosts. Impropera is their latest and it's good, but the 1st 2 far outshine it [I may even be tempted to put the 1st two, esp HWF, on the pinnacle list..Oh, closer to the RIO than avant category [also imo of course...]
click on the sep. album titles on that page to hear samples
 
re: Pochakaite Malko - I wld def. second avestin and say Laya is the best
 
Agreed on both counts: Pochakiate Malko's debut is a bit stodgy and indigestible IMO. Non Credo's Happy Wretched Family is a remarkable piece of work - it's as though Slapp Happy had mutated into Art Bears between their first and second albums. To be fair, I haven't listened to Impropera that much and it may grow on me, but so far I think they peaked with HWF. 
'Like so many of you
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to the already rich among us...'

Robert Wyatt, Gloria Gloom


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2007 at 17:05
re:Non Credo: Happy Wretched Family is their best imo, then Reluctant Hosts. Impropera is their latest and it's good, but the 1st 2 far outshine it [I may even be tempted to put the 1st two, esp HWF, on the pinnacle list..Oh, closer to the RIO than avant category [also imo of course...]
click on the sep. album titles on that page to hear samples
 
re: Pochakaite Malko - I wld def. second avestin and say Laya is the best


Edited by listennow801 - November 25 2007 at 17:13

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2007 at 12:21
My answers are inside your post.
 
Originally posted by rileydog22 rileydog22 wrote:

Non Credo - Impropera
Pocket Orchestra - Knebnagäuje
Bablicon - The Orange Tapered Moon or A Flat Inside a Fog / The Cat that was a Dog (and go here - http://www.pickled-egg.co.uk/bablicon.htm) I will add them as well to PA at some point.
Akinetón Retard - Their first two (I didn't hear their last one yet, but I read several very good reviews about it)
Förträngt Hushållsarbete - Offret Om Att Älska (I will soon add them to PA)
Pochakaite Malko  - both are great but very different albums. The first one is a bit "pompous" with great flashy ELPesque keybords but great music. The second much more experimental, interesting and overall a fantastic album! If you were to get only one from them, that is the one (Laya).

I couldn't find many reviews pertaining to the bands I put in bold.  Could any of you guys help me out with which albums I should seek by these bands? 
 
 


Edited by avestin - November 25 2007 at 15:11
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2007 at 11:57
Just a comment...
 
Förträngt Hushållsarbete is Repressed Householdwork in english Smile


Edited by Rottenhat - November 25 2007 at 12:10
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 24 2007 at 23:40
Originally posted by listennow801 listennow801 wrote:

Welcome Hamfari, hope you find some stuff you enjoy..
Some of fave rio & related avant bands off the top of my head [hefty list hmm? ;).. though some may just be too off for an intro..?]:
Art Bears
News from Babel
Cassiber
5uu's
Non Credo
Slapp Happy / Henry Cow [Desperate Straights]
Skeleton Crew
Stormy Six
Pocket Orchestra
Unrest, Work & Play
Motor Totemist Guild
U Totem
Ahvak
Absolute Zero
Doctor Nerve
Bablicon
This Heat
Larval/Bill Brovold
Pak [ron anderson] - if yr into sleepytime/mr bungle/patton, this should be rgt up yr ally..
La STPO
ZU
Lindsay Cooper
Andre Duchesne - Les Tempes des Bombes
Heiner Goebbels & Alfred Harth - Indianer Für Morgen
Plastic People of the Universe
Tipographica [if you like a jazz slant, but if you like Zappa I imagine..]
Akinetón Retard
Förträngt Hushållsarbete
Yugen
Hoyry-Kone
Ne Zhdali
Uz Jsme Doma
Magma [zeuhl]
Eskaton [zeuhl]
ZAO [zeuhl]
Dun [zeuhl]
Pochakaite Malko [zeuhl]
Shub-Niggurath [zeuhl]
Bondage Fruit [zeuhl]
 
 


I couldn't find many reviews pertaining to the bands I put in bold.  Could any of you guys help me out with which albums I should seek by these bands? 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2007 at 21:51

ZS? really? Not sure how I missed that..must have been away or before i joined..

Well, I def. agree they should be added!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2007 at 20:59

^^^

Yeah, we talked about them here before, pretty intesnse. Should be added.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2007 at 20:54
Holy F---! Check out this band [ZS]*! A friend gave me the s/t 10" for my b-day, and I'm quite sent...
 
 
[once again, I think you will esp dig it szy]


Edited by listennow801 - November 22 2007 at 20:55

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2007 at 19:45
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

Sounds interesting, I'll have a look as well.
  
To all others, this will interest you all:
 
 
 
will have to check it out, thanks -
 
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

 
(there's so much more stuff I want from there... but I have reached the limit of purchases... I think I've reached a new record... somewhere between 100-120 cd's in a few months....).
 
Lord! You're even worse than I am! I try to limit myself to between 12-25 a month..but when I have a little extra moola, watch out! lol - it's an addiction indeed! In a few months I'm moving in w/ my beau who's a vinyl maniac and has thousands and thousands of lps, among other things [legit CDs & CDRs]. my lps only run at around at about 500 or 600, cds though, well into the thousands..along with my 6, 6 ft bookshelves, we may have to re- enforce our floors :)..O materialism...well, at least they're all pretty damned high relics of creative culture, oui? ; )

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2007 at 19:23

^^^

Sounds interesting, I'll have a look as well.
 
 
 
To all others, this will interest you all:
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2007 at 18:26

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2007 at 18:00
a note:
"
Mike McLatchey    24-April-2001 En Regardant Passer Le Temps

Carpe Diem - En Regardant Passer Le Temps
(Musea FGBG 4122.AR, 1975/1994, CD)

This may be one of the longest anticipated CD reissues of all time for progressive rock, the great Carpe Diem's debut album. Hailing from Nice (where Shylock, Step Ahead and Visitors are from), this quintet produced two albums of very high quality before being lost in the turn of the decade. En Regardant Passer Le Temps is a supremely excellent example of progressive rock, especially of the French scene, on par with the greats - Atoll, Shylock's Ile De Fievre, Pulsar Halloween, Arachnoid, Terpandre, and Artcane Odyssee. It took hints from the past and combined them to express something new and unique.

Carpe Diem had their roots in the early English symphonic rock style - King Crimson, a little Van Der Graaf Generator, East of Eden and to a lesser extent Marsupilami, yet their music incoporated that distinctly French filter, an approach that occasionally sounds similar to Gong or Moving Gelatine Plates. Their music was spacey and atmospheric with that rare sense of professional restraint that only the classic symphonic groups had like PFM, Banco, or Ezra Winston. The result was a slightly jazzy and very spacious music of a fragile and delicate nature, yet with a sense of power that grows behind the complex musical structures. Throughout the four tracks, their melodies are very harmonically rich and refined, often with three parts from keys, sax, and guitar. This album is an essential, a classic that has surely stood the test of time.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2007 at 17:24
Originally posted by listennow801 listennow801 wrote:

Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

I'm currently listening to the latest release on AltRock (the people what brung us Rational Diet and Yugen). It's Kinesis, the debut album by an Italian band called Accordo dei Contrari. They're already listed here under jazz/rock fusion, which is perfectly appropriate, but there's a definite hint of RIO lurking in there as well, with a touch of Canterbury for good measure; there's something of Samla Mammas Manna or the Muffins about them. Well worth checking out.
 
Sounds very interesting..just might have to do that..thanks for the info!
 
You were spot on about Noodband, by the way - if Etron Fou Leloublan had been a double trio they'd have sounded exactly like that. Yet another gem which deserves a decent CD reissue! 
'Like so many of you
I've got my doubts about how much to contribute
to the already rich among us...'

Robert Wyatt, Gloria Gloom


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