Shred the Tenth: The Lodge of Elysium |
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:13 | ||
Great album too. |
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The Quiet One
Prog Reviewer Joined: January 16 2008 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 15745 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:13 | ||
It's an awesome album, but that you must already know.
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The Quiet One
Prog Reviewer Joined: January 16 2008 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 15745 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:14 | ||
Hey James, I was just messing with ya', I know you're BIG Rock Bottom fan, read your review
Anyways, how's your reading going on? Finally bought 1984? Edited by The Quiet One - January 18 2010 at 21:15 |
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A Person
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 10 2008 Location: __ Status: Offline Points: 65760 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:15 | ||
Probably true, but if I ever get a physical version I'd get it. |
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:16 | ||
It's cool Pablo. It's not for everyone.
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A Person
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 10 2008 Location: __ Status: Offline Points: 65760 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:17 | ||
New Century Classics is some really good post rock.
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:17 | ||
Not had a chance to do much reading, to be fair. Fahrenheit 451 is still yet to be read.
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Tsevir Leirbag
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 03 2009 Location: Montréal Status: Offline Points: 8321 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:17 | ||
Goodbye to you all!
See you.
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Les mains, les pieds balancés
Sur tant de mers, tant de planchers, Un marin mort, Il dormira - Paul Éluard |
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progkidjoel
Prog Reviewer Joined: March 02 2009 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 19643 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:18 | ||
The download link wouldn't work for me; it wanted to take 40 hours and wasn't loading |
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A Person
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 10 2008 Location: __ Status: Offline Points: 65760 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:18 | ||
See ya Gabriel. |
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:18 | ||
Best review ever:
Oh, for Pete's sake, Mr. Davis. Opening this strange but useful classic, "Pharaoh's Dance" is an ambiguogroove like a whirlpool or sinking sand pit where you can bob your head at a selection of speeds and still remain on target; fly on the wall jamming. It's a loose song that can eliminate silence in a highbrow white dinner party. Just the sort of sh*t Davis is turning over in his grave because of. But on a good summer evening it's shattering the iconic photograph on the front of Kind of Blue. (Check out the background*) "Bitches Brew" is even more valid for questioning, when all you get in response are disrespectful, inharmonious evening rockets sending echos off the plastic sidings in the suburb with elongated report (it's not the fourth of July, son. Where's your home? South side of town? Just what I thought. Get in the back. Watch your head.) Title track isn't exactly going to win a presidential race, but at least it's not making any concessions. If I were to ask Miles Davis: "Mr. Davis, why am I always so hungry?" He would probably say: "It's because all you eat is a bunch of calorie-less vegetation, white boy." If you were really paying attention to Davis' methods in 1969 and into the 70's, it's no secret he became intensely interested in women around that time, as though he was just hitting puberty and there was no looking back on those infant times. After all, there was so much to be embarrassed about when it came to hard bop; don't nobody want to be categorized in 1970. So... women. That mid-high school obsession isn't something that is contrived in order to fit in. It is purely natural and just sort of flows out in bursts. My own attraction to women truly started in high school. In one moment. I won't be reserved enough to withhold that I was lusting over a certain 'Brinny,' when it suddenly became inconceivable to stand up for any reason or another due to a sudden tightness in the pants. It was coincidentally at the same moment that the classroom t.v. was turned on and we witnessed the world trade centers hit by the second airplane. I only saw a phallic symbol being pierced and then utterly demolished. Now, because of this diametric juxtaposition and sucking sensation inside my brain, an S&M worm entered my subconscious and the rest is history. I am particularly into being a bottom or making a cuckold of another man. You see, it doesn't matter which phallus is being destroyed, just as long as one is. And that's a transcendence, simply because it's so bizarre and I'm not exactly sure why fetish happens. Anyway it feels good simply to be a little different here and there. I'm not sure if Davis was trying to infuse jazz with a new-found sexuality or a new-found sexuality with jazz, but whatever it is, it's not any kind of bop, post- or otherwise. Both Bitches Brew and Filles de Kilimanjaro represent Davis suddenly struggling to make sense of his own nu world (or was he just letting it be/floating his arms around himself? Maybe he was straight up exploring all along). This was something he hadn't quite done since he picked up his horn because he didn't need to. In Bitches Brew, Miles Davis sets up a premise that bands like Talking Heads acted upon; African-inspired music would subsequently revert to a missing space of popular music history and Stop Making Sense, because there was an aversion to complacency as 1969 rolled over. It's the same every new decade. Every musical movement. It's like: With the turning of the decade the human culture collectively turns in a more drastic angle than usual; we can define each decade since the 1950's with a particular sound-image-scent-feel-spice. If this holds any truth to it, it's about time for another shift. Hold on Many have commented on the immaturity of the album's title. And it is. It's immature and angst filled. It's a deploring of the very cocktail society and civilities that dog us all. And so when "Pharoah's Dance' begins and it sounds dissonant - beginning to trail off close to a diminished edge - yet never bringing it back in like we're used to - it leaves a lot of open space - a gap twenty minutes in length - in which to fall. But it's like a fall from an airplane. It's exilirating and when it's done you only want it again. Thankfully, there's the title track and it's even longer. If the prospect of falling from such great heights frightens you, you've long since 23 skidoo anywho. John McLaughlin begins the second Bitches set in a direction that continues more tunefully than the calc experiments in -G- that started this whole thing. "Miles Runs the Voodoo Down" coolly, using sedative-tipped darts from his handmade blowgun. "Sanctuary" it isn't. Davis won't be caught again milking the androgynous spectra of more consonant forms of jazz; this modal jazz-rock fusion was muscular, brazen. He's headed to the nouveau riche standing On the Corner of a dozing decade in America. Vietnam was over the hill. Bell-bottoms seemed to make sense and the kids thought dollars, not flowers, were cool again. Welcome, baby! |
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The Quiet One
Prog Reviewer Joined: January 16 2008 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 15745 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:19 | ||
Oh come on, I've been swallowing books like chocolates lately.
Reading J.D. Salinger right now.
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A Person
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 10 2008 Location: __ Status: Offline Points: 65760 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:20 | ||
Try it now... |
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:25 | ||
I'm trying to do one book at a time. I've almost finished a Dungeons and Dragons novel that I was taking to work with me. Once I'm done with that, I'll try something else. I also started reading some D.H. Lawrence novellas over Christmas but got distracted. |
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progkidjoel
Prog Reviewer Joined: March 02 2009 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 19643 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:28 | ||
It wants to take 5 hours this time I'll just leave it to download I guess. 5.6 KBPS Edit: And I'm off. I probably won't be back again today. BAI FWENDS :D Edited by progkidjoel - January 18 2010 at 21:28 |
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A Person
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 10 2008 Location: __ Status: Offline Points: 65760 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:29 | ||
Goo'bye Joel.
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:29 | ||
Oh and I'm getting a new stereo fitted to my car. Finally!
It means I'll be able to put lots of music on my USB stick. I shall likely go on long journeys just for the sake of listening to my music. |
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A Person
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 10 2008 Location: __ Status: Offline Points: 65760 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:31 | ||
Are there any other samples of Rock Bottom besides Sea Song?
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:33 | ||
Sea Song is wonderful but it's all about the last four tracks.
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A Person
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 10 2008 Location: __ Status: Offline Points: 65760 |
Posted: January 18 2010 at 21:37 | ||
Me want.
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