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Joined: September 03 2005
Location: Olympus Mons
Status: Offline
Points: 15916
Posted: June 25 2016 at 09:46
GORGUTS - Colored Sands SPOCK'S BEARD - The Kindness Of Strangers NATIONAL HEALTH - Of Queues And Cures HENRY COW - Legend WISHBONE ASH - FIirst Lights PEKKA POHJOLA - B The Magpie VDGG - A Grounding In Numbers CLUSTER - Cluster '71
GORGUTS - Colored Sands SPOCK'S BEARD - The Kindness Of Strangers NATIONAL HEALTH - Of Queues And Cures HENRY COW - Legend WISHBONE ASH - FIirst Lights PEKKA POHJOLA - B The Magpie VDGG - A Grounding In Numbers CLUSTER - Cluster '71
Great taste, Tom! Been really enjoying National Health recently, too!
Categories strain, crack and sometimes break, under their burden - step out of the space provided.
Less listening today, as I played my very first gig with a new band I'm playing with recently. It was an outdoor concert and the temperature hit, well, maybe not 1001 centigrades, but I'd say about 36. When I came back home, all I wanted to do was take an ice-cold bath and then lie on my bed to get some rest. My plan was also to get to watch the Poland-Switzerland Euro 2016 match (which we have won in the end!). Zacht Automaat - More Down Than Out. If you have read my post here from yestarday, you will know I'm really excited about discovering this band. Compared to their biggest release, Normality Bias, that I have checked out yestarday, this album is much less jazzy. However, the piquancy of the genre is still there and mixed with their electronic garage krautrock, it gives great results. A very pleasant listen! Centipede - Septober Energy. Centipede has been on my mind for the last two days. Keith Tippett in general is a very interesting figure. This two-disc album contains many different arrangements, moods, styles ranging from free-form jazz to dry up-beat rock songs. The large line-up of 56 members allows Cenitpede to go to real extremes. The music is really great and enjoyable. Supersister - To the Highest Bidder. Albeit this is considered Supersister's best work, I'd say there is nothing that really singles it out from their other releases. I think it is equally good to the band's other albums. Their music is incredibly well-written and well-performed, revealing new elements with each listen. Out Of Focus - Out Of Focus.I was not expecting much from this band and I was positively suprised. The beautiful, clear, striking melange of krautrock's post-psychedelic flavors and pure jazzy musicianship gives phenomenal results. A terrific album, will have to listen more!
Categories strain, crack and sometimes break, under their burden - step out of the space provided.
Joined: September 03 2005
Location: Olympus Mons
Status: Offline
Points: 15916
Posted: June 25 2016 at 17:55
ALotOfBottle wrote:
Tom Ozric wrote:
GORGUTS - Colored Sands SPOCK'S BEARD - The Kindness Of Strangers NATIONAL HEALTH - Of Queues And Cures HENRY COW - Legend WISHBONE ASH - FIirst Lights PEKKA POHJOLA - B The Magpie VDGG - A Grounding In Numbers CLUSTER - Cluster '71
Great taste, Tom! Been really enjoying National Health recently, too!
Thanks, Tymon ......and somehow, in between all this listening - I found the time to vaccuum the carpets, mop the floors, mow the lawns AND even visit a young lady where I work !! Such a productive day (must've been coz I kicked the day off with the Gorguts album ).
Joined: June 25 2013
Location: Portugal
Status: Offline
Points: 10232
Posted: June 25 2016 at 18:17
ALotOfBottle wrote:
Neu! - Neu! '75. Now we are talking! After my utter disappointment with Neu! 2, Neu! '75 was a very pleasant suprise. It had some really good moments. And while it's full of innovation and qualities that sound fresh even these days, the classic Neu! elements such as motorik beat passages are by no means estranged! Way ahead of its time. Zacht Automaat - Normality Bias. This band is my latest discovery and I am really glad I've found out about them. They are a rather obscure Canadian group that fuses Canterbury-style jazz with (more prominently) electronic krautrock, very much in the vein of earlier Tangerine Dream. There is something really raw about their recordings, but it's really good and original music. I highly recommend checking them out. One of these days I'll be suggesting their addition to this website, as (in my opinion) they would fit in Progressive Electronic of Jazz-Rock/Fusion quite well. Tim Blake - Crystal Machine. It was the review of Modrigue that made me want to check out Tim Blake's works, as he was responsible for my favorite shimmering sounds on albums by Gong and Hawkwind. His debut album has a great cover, but the music (in my book at least) is nothing to get really excited about. It's all spacey, electronic music, which is quite interesting, but in a long run does nothing to me really. Still, recommended!
I really like the Proto Punk vibe of it Never heard of them but that sounds interesting. I'll give it a listen later I only have his next album, I'm curious about that one though.
Friday: The Astroboy - Flow My Tears Cake - Prolonging the Magic Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats - Mind Control Klaus Schulze & Pete Namlook - The Dark Side of the Moog IV
Satuday: Pond - Man It Feels Like Space Again Franz Ferdinand - Right Thoughts, Right Words, Right Action Psycho Praxis - Echoes From the Deep Anaquim - Um Dia Destes Cake - Comfort Eagle Iron Maiden - Killers Electric Moon - Lunatics
Joined: September 03 2005
Location: Olympus Mons
Status: Offline
Points: 15916
Posted: June 25 2016 at 18:52
I once had Neu! 2 - white vinyl issue in the late-90's - spun it 2 or 3 times - ditched it. WTF were they thinking ?? I'm sure it has its fans, but not me. Years later, I saw a vinyl re-issue of Neu! '75 - I umm'd and aaah'd about it, and decided this is their last chance (ha ha) - so glad I whipped it up. Definitely more like it !! Similar thing with Faust - I bought Faust IV when I saw a copy for cheap - it had its moments but I didn't really fall for it. Years later, I decided on a more modern release that Greg Walker had available on vinyl - You Know FaUSt - again, awesome album, then I came across the clear cover X-Ray debut whilst on hols in the States (New Orleans leg of the journey) and wasn't gonna pass it up for 20 bucks. It is excellent - especially side 1. Out Of Focus are WICKED !! Especially 'Wake Up'.
Joined: October 12 2011
Location: Melb, Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 7951
Posted: June 26 2016 at 06:28
TeleStrat wrote:
Red Spektor - Red Spektor
I was initially quite impressed with that one, Gary, but I realised after a few tracks in I was finding it very `been there, done that', with way too much emphasis on the vocals. I got bored very quickly. Apparently there's quite a lot of buzz around it though.
Joined: October 12 2011
Location: Melb, Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 7951
Posted: June 26 2016 at 06:30
Sagi, Sam, Tom, I wonder if you might have heard this one before. It was new to me, I just saw a post of a vendor's stock from a record fair that I attended today and looked into it. It's a lovely reissue of a super-rare Australian instrumental jazz-fusion album from the Seventies, a one-shot band called Arena (no, not that one!). Similar to If, Zzebra, etc, Soft Machine, you name it, with a dash of King Crimson to some of the guitar parts:
Joined: December 27 2014
Location: Norwalk, CA
Status: Offline
Points: 9319
Posted: June 26 2016 at 11:36
Aussie-Byrd-Brother wrote:
TeleStrat wrote:
Red Spektor - Red Spektor
I was initially quite impressed with that one, Gary, but I realised after a few tracks in I was finding it very `been there, done that', with way too much emphasis on the vocals. I got bored very quickly. Apparently there's quite a lot of buzz around it though.
I hear what you're saying, Michael. I prefer no vocals or minimal vocals when it comes to this style of rock.
The music on this album is great and the guitar is hot so that was enough for me to place an order.
It's their debut so we'll see what they do on the next album.
Keith Tippett Group - Dedicated To You, But You Weren't Listening.Probably a mistake to listen to this album to start my day just after walking the dog, taking a shower and eating my breakfast. I don't feel like at that point I was able to fully comprehend such a sophisticated work. However, I really enjoyed it and while some free-jazz work outs might be a bit tiring, Keith Tippett's squad comprises the finest musicians for playing the type of music he is dealing with. Mythos - Mythos. Mythos' self-titled album is a perfect melange of oriental music and so-called "kosmische musik". This is an incredible cosmic record with a really calming, relaxing feel. I especially liked the haunting flute and the application of the exotic-sounding sitar. Out Of Focus - Wake Up!. Although (in my opinion) not as good as the follow-up of this one, this is a very good album that seems to flow very naturally. The fusion of simple jazz-rock and wilder krautrock gives really great results. The interplay of organ, guitar, and saxophone is really where it's all at for this album. Robert Wyatt - Rock Bottom. With every listen, this album strikes me differently. It was because of The Wire interview I've read with Wyatt that I wanted to listen to Rock Bottom. Great record, but I am yet to find something that brings a tear to one's eye (as many say it does). Gong - Camembert Electrique. I listened to it to make sure if my 5-star review of the album is appropriate. It is! Really love this record! Moving Gelatine Plates - Moving Gelatine Plates. I really like to revisit this album once in a while. Although MGP were from France, their sound is incredibly authentic and is more Canterbury than some of the Canterburian bands, if you will. Great album! Harmonia - Musik Von Harmonia. This is a natural extension of my Neu! listenings. I was very positively suprised with this album and its smooth, calming sound. I am very positively suprised with this band!
Categories strain, crack and sometimes break, under their burden - step out of the space provided.
Joined: October 20 2014
Location: not here
Status: Offline
Points: 2360
Posted: June 26 2016 at 22:54
The Velvet Underground - "Peel Slowly and See" discs 2 and 3 The Modern Lovers - s/t Iggy and The Stooges - "Raw Power" Jonathan Richman - "I, Jonathan" The Velvet Underground - "Peel Slowly and See" disc 4
Joined: June 25 2013
Location: Portugal
Status: Offline
Points: 10232
Posted: June 27 2016 at 04:24
Aussie-Byrd-Brother wrote:
Sagi, Sam, Tom, I wonder if you might have heard this one before. It was new to me, I just saw a post of a vendor's stock from a record fair that I attended today and looked into it. It's a lovely reissue of a super-rare Australian instrumental jazz-fusion album from the Seventies, a one-shot band called Arena (no, not that one!). Similar to If, Zzebra, etc, Soft Machine, you name it, with a dash of King Crimson to some of the guitar parts:
Groovy! Looks like they are on JMA but not on PA.
ALotOfBottle wrote:
Harmonia - Musik Von Harmonia. This is a natural extension of my Neu! listenings. I was very positively suprised with this album and its smooth, calming sound. I am very positively suprised with this band!
I really need to get this one, especially since it seems impossible to stream now.
TeleStrat wrote:
Samsara Blues Experiment - Waiting For The Flood
What do you think of it? I always have the impression it really lacks diversity, compared to the previous two.
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