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oliverstoned View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 06:28

Here's some real vintage!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 06:53
AH 60's UFO, I think a little before my time incidentally

I was just wondering what people though of this band?:

Hat Shoes-Differently Desperate

I have been listening to this album over the last week or so; boasting players such as Charles Hayward and Tom Cora you cannot really do wrong.


Here is a link; within you should find what you are looking for. I would love to know others opinion on this band.

http://mendedrecords.blogspot.com/2006/09/hat-shoes-differently-desperate.html


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 07:00
Originally posted by Black Velvet Black Velvet wrote:


I was just wondering what people though of this band?:

Hat Shoes-Differently Desperate

I have been listening to this album over the last week or so; boasting players such as Charles Hayward and Tom Cora you cannot really do wrong.


Here is a link; within you should find what you are looking for. I would love to know others opinion on this band.

http://mendedrecords.blogspot.com/2006/09/hat-shoes-differently-desperate.html


 
I have the vinyl - I absolutely adore it! Their latter CD also ["Home"] is wondrous too

Ratings of Lady Gnosis: http://www.gnosis2000.net/raterclaire.shtml
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 07:40
Originally posted by listennow801 listennow801 wrote:

Originally posted by Black Velvet Black Velvet wrote:


I was just wondering what people though of this band?:

Hat Shoes-Differently Desperate

I have been listening to this album over the last week or so; boasting players such as Charles Hayward and Tom Cora you cannot really do wrong.


Here is a link; within you should find what you are looking for. I would love to know others opinion on this band.

http://mendedrecords.blogspot.com/2006/09/hat-shoes-differently-desperate.html


 
I have the vinyl - I absolutely adore it! Their latter CD also ["Home"] is wondrous too


I glad someone else is having the same passion for this band. Also this is good news, I was under the impression this was their only release, so I am very pleased there is more material for me to hunt down.

Have you listen to much of Tom Cora's solo work? I'm keen on check out some of his material, as he has seemingly had a large impact in this area of music.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 07:45
Originally posted by Black Velvet Black Velvet wrote:



Hat Shoes-Differently Desperate

I have been listening to this album over the last week or so; boasting players such as Charles Hayward and Tom Cora you cannot really do wrong.


 
have you heard "Fluvial"? :
Jauniaux, Catherine With Hodgkinson, Tim: Fluvial Jauniaux, Catherine With Hodgkinson, Tim: Fluvial

This is the first digital issue of Belgian songsmith Catherine Jauniaux's classic recording from 1983. Her main co-conspirator is Tim Hodgkinson (Henry Cow, The Work, God, K-Space), himself a mainstay in the world of modern, experimental music.Together they perform a work which defies both categorization and genre labeling, offering up almost as many different styles of music as the instruments that played them. Besides capturing what could arguably be Catherine's most unique and auspicious vocal work, this disk also displays an amazing amount of baffling, scored percussion by Tim H. and some timeless and perfectly intonated performances by the late, great master cellist, Tom Cora. Other guests include Georgie Born (Henry Cow, I.O.U), Charles Bullen (This Heat), Lindsay Cooper (Henry Cow, Comus), Bill Gilonis (The Work, The Lowest Note) and Dominic Weeks (Het).
 
yet another, related, wonder...

Ratings of Lady Gnosis: http://www.gnosis2000.net/raterclaire.shtml
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 07:55
Originally posted by Black Velvet Black Velvet wrote:


Have you listen to much of Tom Cora's solo work? I'm keen on check out some of his material, as he has seemingly had a large impact in this area of music.
 
Oh! A lot! I'm rather a Cora fanatic since I 1st saw Skeleton Crew. Check out Third Person, and Tom Cora & the Ex [two of my fave musical forays lately]. Tzadik put out a great comp not long after his passing to celebrate his work [he was phenomenally prolific] called "Hallelujah, Anyway: Remembering Tom Cora"
 
oh, there's so much...! like the great stuff he did with Curlew, [etc etc etc

Ratings of Lady Gnosis: http://www.gnosis2000.net/raterclaire.shtml
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 15:04
Originally posted by listennow801 listennow801 wrote:

Originally posted by Black Velvet Black Velvet wrote:



Hat Shoes-Differently Desperate

I have been listening to this album over the last week or so; boasting players such as Charles Hayward and Tom Cora you cannot really do wrong.


 
have you heard "Fluvial"? :
Jauniaux, Catherine With Hodgkinson, Tim: Fluvial Jauniaux, Catherine With Hodgkinson, Tim: Fluvial

This is the first digital issue of Belgian songsmith Catherine Jauniaux's classic recording from 1983. Her main co-conspirator is Tim Hodgkinson (Henry Cow, The Work, God, K-Space), himself a mainstay in the world of modern, experimental music.Together they perform a work which defies both categorization and genre labeling, offering up almost as many different styles of music as the instruments that played them. Besides capturing what could arguably be Catherine's most unique and auspicious vocal work, this disk also displays an amazing amount of baffling, scored percussion by Tim H. and some timeless and perfectly intonated performances by the late, great master cellist, Tom Cora. Other guests include Georgie Born (Henry Cow, I.O.U), Charles Bullen (This Heat), Lindsay Cooper (Henry Cow, Comus), Bill Gilonis (The Work, The Lowest Note) and Dominic Weeks (Het).
 
yet another, related, wonder...


Shocked that is one amazing line-up. Just had a listen to the sample song on site you suggestion. Beautiful, I have a little bit of a soft spot for the female singers. I actually have been listening to another related band. La 1919 - Ars srA, I only have listen through it once, though not paying full attention, but it seemed like interesting listening. I think I remember seen that band also on your Last fm list.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 15:07
Originally posted by listennow801 listennow801 wrote:

Originally posted by Black Velvet Black Velvet wrote:


Have you listen to much of Tom Cora's solo work? I'm keen on check out some of his material, as he has seemingly had a large impact in this area of music.
 
Oh! A lot! I'm rather a Cora fanatic since I 1st saw Skeleton Crew. Check out Third Person, and Tom Cora & the Ex [two of my fave musical forays lately]. Tzadik put out a great comp not long after his passing to celebrate his work [he was phenomenally prolific] called "Hallelujah, Anyway: Remembering Tom Cora"
 
oh, there's so much...! like the great stuff he did with Curlew, [etc etc etc


hehe it is always nice to see someone getting excited about a musician Smile

I will check these out, I'm starting to see we have quite similar tastes. I'm thinking I really should be taking more notice of the interconnected web of these musicians. I have one Skeleton Crew album, yet had no idea Tom Cora was one of the culprits behind this fantastic band.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 15:12
Recently bought the 2 album reissue of Skeleton Crew. Great art work and packaging and of course two very good albums. Even though the apparent simplicity of the music, I realised after repeasted listening the complexity of what two musicians on Learn TO Talk can do and the same goes for Country of Blinds in which they are joined by Zeena Parkins.
What a great song is It's Fine!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 15:47
Originally posted by Yukorin Yukorin wrote:

Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

I FINALLY received Pataphonie - Le Matin Blanc
 
 


Oh! Joyous day!




Assaf, I had forgotten what a beautiful album this is, it is make my day just that little bit better. This one is definitely going on the Christmas list Smile

We really need to get some others to vote on the band! Hopefully this will get them as excited as I



Edited by Black Velvet - November 20 2006 at 15:49
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 18:16
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

I FINALLY received Pataphonie - Le Matin Blanc
 
 


Yes indeed it is a wonder...one of the 1st yuko recommended to me upon my venture into the immense & beautiful labyrinth that is Zeuhl... [ever-thanks for yr wisdom & sublime taste Yuko!]

Ratings of Lady Gnosis: http://www.gnosis2000.net/raterclaire.shtml
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 21:00
This sounded rather cool

Fille Qui Mousse: Se taire pour une femme trop belle

Written by Amblongus
Published August 14, 2002

In 1979 an album was released by a bunch of postpunk weirdoes who had never owned music instruments before they went into the studio one weekend to record it. Only five hundred copies of this record were made.

Well, this isn't that record. This is even more obscure and strange. For years Fille Qui Mousse was known only as a name on the checklist of influential "electronic experimental music" that graced the aforementioned record, Nurse with Wound's Chance Meeting on a Dissecting Table of a Sewing Machine and an Umbrella". Fille Qui Mousse never released an album - they recording one for the little known French Futura label in 1971 but its release was shelved and only ten test copies were ever made and the last known copy was sold for $3,000. Of such things are legends made, amongst obsessive record geeks, at least.

After two dubious appearances on different labels under the title Trixie Stapelton 231 and with incorrect track titles, the album finally has a fully authorized release, 31 years after it was recorded. I'm not sure who they expect to buy it, however The sort of person who feels a need for this sort of arcane, esoteric and willfully obscure racket will no doubt have already grabbed the earlier reissues and you'd need to be an obsessive of a very special genus to want to buy it again just for the definitive track listing - and a new cover showing a cat and a glass of beer.

But what about the actual music on this thing? Do the playful, experimental squeaks and clatter of 1971 have anything going for them today, beyond a quaint, nostalgic charm or mere curiosity value? Is it just another cacophonous diversion for those of us who get our kicks from disdaining everything contemporary, reasonable or popular, to play once or twice and then file away amongst all those other supposedly important classics of collectible avant-rock? Obviously it's not easy listening. It's not recognizable as rock music, not even if you stretch your parameters to include the wackiest stuff around today or yesterday. And unlike many of the German bands of the early 70s who were chasing their own freaky vision of hard (American) electronic rock out into space or deep into their own acid-tweaked heads, the almost unknown pioneers of avant guard 70s French rock - like Mahogany Brain, whose determination not to be able to play their instruments somehow gave them (in hindsight at least) a pristine, darkly poetic insouciance that made the Velvet Underground seem like Herman's Hermits - aspired to something that wasn't just anti-rock but flagrantly anti-music/non-music. Whether this was born of a genuine revolutionary spirit or just to épater les bourgeois probably no longer matters. Se taire pour une femme trop belle, is, ultimately, even after trying to place it in historical, cultural or goddamn psychogeographical context, just too detached from anything recognizable for me to be able to venture an opinion as to whether it's good or bad. It just is - slabs of sounds out of context, springs twanging, two-fingered piano abuse, detuned guitars, a few moments of gibberish chanting, dogs barking, some lackadaisical folksy jamming that opens and closes the album - and at its heart a single, unplaceable, inhuman shriek that goes on for at least six minutes and feels like it'll never end and probably causes brain damage no matter how quietly you play it. How does that sound to you?

Album of the year, undoubtable.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 21:01
A little more information:

FILLE QUI MOUSSE

< name="SPA14919" ="/bin/basket.pl" method="post"> < name="SPA 14919 FILLE QUI MOUSSE Trixie Stapleton 291 -- Se Taire Pour Une Femme Trop Belle CD $17.00" ="">
Artist: FILLE QUI MOUSSE
Title: Trixie Stapleton 291 -- Se Taire Pour Une Femme Trop Belle
Label: SPALAX (FRANCE)
Format: CD
Price: $17.00
Catalog #: SPA 14919
"Spalax in strict collaboration with Henry-Jean Enu, finally releases the first official issue of this extraordinary album, revealing a world class band which can compare with his contemporary bands such as Can, Faust or Gong." Fille Qui Mousse ("Girl With Froth"??) is one the most mythical albums to be released(?) from France. Recorded in 1972, it was issued in '73 (evidently only as a test pressing in an edition of maybe 50) by the legendary Futura label. Often referred to as the French Faust, FQM's album mixed collage, psychedelic rock, surreal poetry, and organically tapped noise purity with the absolute best of experimental 70s rock-and-beyond. Was bootlegged a few years ago by the Italian Mellow label, but still very difficult to get ahold of. One of the essential reissues of the 70s rock underground. "Straight off, we plunge into that Faust structure...riffing with a psychedelic bent, hints of Gong too...we move into bizarrely constructed patterns of percussive sound and chopped-up rock music, and just as a musical focus takes shape it disappears. A poem, recited by a girl, over an urban landscape populated by numerous barking dogs then gives way to an intensely strange mangled web of sound that's almost brain numbing. And, yet more in the way of strangeness is a piano based piece that recalls some of Roger Doyle's early experiments. The only actual song has the most bizarre lyrics (in English) and is followed by an excursion in distorted and processed guitar. Next is where the folk music comes in, but even with gypsy violin FQM's interpretation of folk is strange and twisted. Finally, we return to the psychedelic jamming that opened the album, but with a jazzier edge, ending the album perfectly." --Audion. More recent version on Fractal is deleted.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 21:06

Artist: FLAMEN DIALIS
Title: Symptome-Dei
Label: MIO RECORDS (ISRAEL)
Format: CD
Price: $15.00
Catalog #: MIO 014CD
"After releasing a 45 in England in 1971 as the Yecta Plus Band (a trio, with guitars, vocals, and keyboards) Didier Le Gallic formed Flamen Dialis in 1976. They recorded a 7" that was released in 1978. The basic components for their following masterpiece are evident on this short release. For their 1979 LP Symptome Dei, a number of players, vocalists, and instruments were added, and the band's sound became much richer and dense. The music developed an otherworldly atmosphere combined with child-like melodies composed around sequences of unearthly themes and solemn chanting, whispers, and injections of flute, bombarde (a twin-reed precursor of the oboe) and vibraphone to weave a sound that is both disquieting and dreamy. Yet with the next breath, the atmosphere can turn both heavy and strangely familiar. Layers of Mellotron and airy keyboard sonorities further underscore the music's dramatic tensions. Elements of this recording call to mind Franco Battiato's Fetus and Pollution and the vocal exercises share similarities with the French group Magma, although Flamen Dialis are certainly unique for their impressionist cosmic music and a powerful dramatic intensity. Completely unavailable for decades, this reissue includes the group's first 45 as bonus tracks. These two releases represent the group's entire body of work."
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 21:07
I was reading over some of the reviews on the site about the band Archaia and someone liked those two bands to their solo s/t album. Just thought they would be of interest to people.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 21:26
I've heard of Fille... and tried in vain to look for samples/songs (all were expired...).

But since Forced Exposure has this, so I might just try it there...


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 20 2006 at 22:24
Assaf I think we both searched in vain on the same sites. I notice Flamen Dialis was on MIO records and remember you being quite fond of them, and was hoping a some stage you might have picked this one up.

I also noticed Ezhevika Fields is going to be closed for a while, which is a shame, it seems people are getting to greedy for their worth. A lot of blogs seem to be following the same suit.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 21 2006 at 16:20
Originally posted by Black Velvet Black Velvet wrote:

Originally posted by Yukorin Yukorin wrote:

Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

I FINALLY received Pataphonie - Le Matin Blanc
 
 


Oh! Joyous day!




Assaf, I had forgotten what a beautiful album this is, it is make my day just that little bit better. This one is definitely going on the Christmas list Smile

We really need to get some others to vote on the band! Hopefully this will get them as excited as I



I don't know why or where it needs a vote, but I'm ready to vote for it anytime/anywhere, if its any help.
Over land and under ashes
In the sunlight, see - it flashes
Find a fly and eat his eye
But don't believe in me
Don't believe in me
Don't believe in me
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 21 2006 at 19:44
Originally posted by listennow801 listennow801 wrote:

Yes indeed it is a wonder...one of the 1st yuko recommended to me upon my venture into the immense & beautiful labyrinth that is Zeuhl... [ever-thanks for yr wisdom & sublime taste Yuko!]
 
Thank you mon Cherie! I'm still awaiting your reply regards me marriage proposal...
 
 
 
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