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avestin View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 01:50
Which Circle is that? THere is a Finnish Circle and a German one (on this site)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 01:52
Jimbo and I plan to add the Finnish Circle sometime in the near future. THeir inclusion demands time, which both of us don't have much. (The Circle mainman was very generous in his help with providing us information since their discogrpahy is quite complex).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 01:57
I'm thinking it is the Finnish one as I doubt from the description I have heard they wouldn't be classed as symphonic prog Tongue I think I will have to try and track down some of their stuff.

If you ever need any help with those sorts of thing I'm more than happy... I unfortunatly have more than enough spare time on my hands.   
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 02:04
Ah, I really liked the last three tracks on the new Agalloch album.  The second track is a real disappoint though I feel.  It's my desired style.  I still cannot get my head around the vocals either.  Apparently their earlier albums are not only more progressive, but also less metal and vocal based?

I would be glad to help too, but I don't know enough about the genre yet to be of much help!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 02:14
Originally posted by Geck0 Geck0 wrote:

Ah, I really liked the last three tracks on the new Agalloch album.  The second track is a real disappoint though I feel.  It's my desired style.  I still cannot get my head around the vocals either.  Apparently their earlier albums are not only more progressive, but also less metal and vocal based?

I would be glad to help too, but I don't know enough about the genre yet to be of much help!


My favourite album by them is Pale Folklore which is their first full lengh album. They do use a lot more acoustic influences alongside more clean vocals in their earlier albums. I'm not having to much problem with the vocals at the moment, but I guess it is all taste. I do find Pale Folklore to be their most progressive album, but you also need to take into account I didn't like The Mantle. So I might be a little bias on this point.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 02:19
It's just the growling really... I'm not sure if I like it.  I like Opeth, but their growling is completely different.

I hear such wonderful folky-metal moments that are quiet melancholic and then the growls start and I think maybe it doesn't fit the wonderful music so well.  I am having the same issue with an unsigned banned I've heard calle Gwynbleidd, who are kind of similar.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 02:48
Getting back on topic (RIO/Avantgarde): Cerebrus Shoal
The comparisons to Circle (FIN) are correct up to some point but As Jimbo said, Circle ventured into many different styles and niches that it is hard to associate them with a certain sound or style.
 
Cerebrus Shoal is really nice, thuogh, varied as well. So far I heard about 8-9 songs and they were mostly different in mood and style.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 03:02


Thanks for that... I think I will definately be tracking down some Circle (FIN)

Another thing I love about Cerberus Shoal is their quirky sense of humour. I don't know if you have experienced it in any of the track you have listened to, but it is definately present. You will find this more apparent the further you listen to them.

BTW the other album I have is: Chaiming the Knoblessone.
    
    

Edited by Black Velvet - June 25 2006 at 03:03
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 03:26
Getting back at the labels for a minute, here are some links (taken from French sites - hence the French description). Sorry for the duplicate links, I just copy and pasted:
 

Labels français :

Vand’oeuvre    33revpermi     7threcords      Gazul   In Poly Sons    Sonore Trace
http://www.evenstilte.free.fr
http://www.potlatch.
http://www.discus-music.co.uk
http://www.intaktrec.ch

Labels étrangers :

RéR     Cuneiform       Carbon7          Ambiances magnétiques& Cie
Falçata-Galia Recordings         Staubgold       Indies    Lowlands
Megaphone      Paxrecordings Tzadik No Man’s Land
http://www.barlamuerte.com

Cuneiform Records (label de reference en matieres de musiques progressives)
Rer Recommended and others...(Les labels du Rock in Opposition, plateforme vers les sites officiels)
Rer (l'officiel)
RecRec (Frith and Cie...)
AYAA Records (sit non officiel du Recommended label en France)
Orkestra International  (distributeur francais de musiques nouvelles, incl Rer et Cuneiform)
Forced Exposure (enorme vpc )
ESD: label de rééditions CanterbuRIO (Henry Cow, National Health, The Residents, ...)
Lowlands (Musique nouvelle belge !)
Made to mesure (label Crammed discs, musique ambient)
Materiali Sonori (label italien de musiques nouvelles et ambient)
Hollow ear (reviews)
Atonal (label Art Zoyd, Elliot Sharp...)
Rotary Totem (Motor Totemist Guild, 5 UU's et U Totem)
Carbon 7 (label belge, inclus Pierre Vervloessem, Cro Magnon, Louise Avenue, etc.)
Tangram records
Silence records: label suédois de Samla Mammas Manna

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 05:03
Assaf, are you aware of a band called Charming Hostess?  They're on ReR and Tzadik I believe.  Not sure what exactly they're like, but they seem to be Avant Garde.  Led by female vocalists, they don't sound all that bad. 

Half of Charming Hostess Big Band were also in Sleepytime Gorilla Museum and Idiot Flesh.

Here is their discography:

As Charming Hostess Big Band

"Eat" (Vaccination, 1998)
"Punch" (ReR, 2005)

Charming Hostess Big Band were:

Jewlia Eisenberg (voice, direction), Carla Kihlstedt (voice, fiddle), Nina Rolle (voice, accordion), Wes Anderson (drums), Nils Frykdahl (guitar, flute, saxophone, percussion), and Dan Rathbun (bass).

As Charming Hostess

"Trilectic" (Tzadik Records, 2002)
"Sarajevo Blues" (Tzadik, 2004)

Charming Hostess are:

Jewlia Eisenberg, Marika Hughes, Cynthia Taylor and often Ganda Suthivarakom and Pameliya Kursten (all vocals).

They've been described as a "Klezmer-Punk/Balkan-Funk" band.

Is anyone familiar with them and how Avant Garde are they?


Edited by Geck0 - June 25 2006 at 05:04
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 05:12
A band described as Klezmer-Punk/Balkan-Funk immediately raises my curiosity nad sets me on a "must listen to" mode.
Don't know them (yet). Under current investigation.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 05:16
I think their first incarnation as Charming Hostess Big Band is likely to be the more appreciable of the two.  I heard a 30 second sample of something earlier and it certainly sounded klezmer!

Here is their biography:

Everybody's favorite Nerdy-Sexy-Commie-Girly band.

As Wikipedia says:

"Current Work
Today, the music primarily springs from three women with an emphasis in the body--voices and vocal percussion, handclaps and heartbeats, sex-breath and silence. The work grows from diaspora conciousness: both Jewish and African. Sylistically, Charming Hostess incorporats doo-wop, Pygmy counterpoint, Balkan harmony and Andalusian melody. Contemporary influences on the band include Meredith Monk and Reinette l'Oranaise. The music often explores existing text and overlays the composer's (Jewlia Eisenberg) own questions of authenticity, montage, and the effect of music on non-verbal languages.
The 2002 CD (Trilectic, Tzadik Records) explored the political/erotic nexus of Walter Benjamin and his Marxist muse, Asja Lacis. The 2004 CD (Sarajevo Blues, Tzadik) sets Bosnian poetry by Semezdin Mehmedinović as a form of love and resistance to the brutalization of war.
Their self-described genre is "Nerdy-Sexy-Commie-Girly". Charming Hostess is Jewlia Eisenberg, Marika Hughes, Cynthia Taylor and often Ganda Suthivarakom and Pameliya Kursten (all vocals).

Early Work
The pre-2002 Charming Hostess (also known as Charming Hostess Big Band) was a rock band that embraced a genderf**k sensibility (the women often wore mustaches while the men wore dresses). Early Charming Hostess music drew on women's vocal traditions (primarily from Eastern Europe and North Africa), and integrated them with American folk forms both white and black. Charming Hostess was founded in the fertile anarchy of Barrington Co-op (aka Barrington Hall), and nurtured by the West Oakland arts community, along with other coeval bands such as Fibulator and Eskimo. Half of Charming Hostess was also in Idiot Flesh/Sleepytime Gorilla Museum. The final effect was of a hoedown where bodacious babes belted the blues in Bulgarian while a punk-klezmer band rocked out in accompaniment.

The genre of this incarnation of ChoHo is described by the band as "Klezmer-Punk/Balkan-Funk". Recordings of Charming Hostess Big Band include "Eat" (Vaccination, 1998) and the new "Punch" (ReR, 2005) Charming Hostess Big Band was: Jewlia Eisenberg (voice, direction), Carla Kihlstedt (voice, fiddle), Nina Rolle (voice, accordion), Wes Anderson (drums), Nils Frykdahl (guitar, flute, saxophone, percussion), and Dan Rathbun (bass)."
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 06:20
This ounds very interesting stuff.
I love her name: Jewlia LOL
 
I wonder what the experts (Syzygy, TP, Joren, Brandon and the rest of the gang) think of her.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 06:22
I'm not sure, but Carla Kihlstedt has a solo album out as well, I gather.  I'm not sure if this is just a jazz violin album, or whether she also covers avant garde aspects within her music.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 06:30
Hmmm... Not a big fan of what I have heard. I don't think it really is my thing.

If people are wanting a little more of a listen there are four songs to listen to on their MySpace page:

http://www.myspace.com/charminghostess
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 06:32
Have you heard their earler Band orientated music, Black Velvet?  I'm just curious, as I believe that maybe the better of the two styles.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 06:37
I'm afraid not, after hearing some of their later material it sort of turned me off the band so I never really looked deeper into the bands roots. I would be interesting to see if there older stuff is better, hopefully with more Avant-Garde influence. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 06:47
I believe it is, as it incorporates a band (I believe the latter is just three (occasionally 4 or 5) female singers?).

Unfortunately I do not have any tracks to hear.  There are some 30 second samples on last.fm, but I don't think they tell me what I want to hear.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 07:18
Ah... this is a bit more refreshing and not to say a little more interesing. They were a lot better as a band.

Following a few links from there page I was able to come up with this.

http://www.charminghostess.us/weed.html#eat

Down the bottom of the page you will able to listen to there album "Eat" as a whole just download each track. They are using the new concept of Weed, which means you can listen to each file 3 time and then you are expected to buy. I hope this is of some help.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2006 at 09:12
Originally posted by Geck0 Geck0 wrote:

 
blah blah Charming Hostess blah...

Is anyone familiar with them and how Avant Garde are they?
 
I have "Eat". It's really very very good and quite unlike anything else you'll ever hear.
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