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avestin View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2008 at 11:52
Interesting and relevant additions of late:
In Lingua Mortua (if you like the idea of black metal infused with prog-rock)
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2008 at 17:27
I'm in contact with Scott Brazieal, keyboardist of Cartoon, PFS, and 5uu's, and he agreed to an interview over email with me.  So, do any of you guys have questions for him?  He's quite a nice guy and he has toured with many very prominent members of the RIO scene.  

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2008 at 17:38
Originally posted by rileydog22 rileydog22 wrote:

I'm in contact with Scott Brazieal, keyboardist of Cartoon, PFS, and 5uu's, and he agreed to an interview over email with me.  So, do any of you guys have questions for him?  He's quite a nice guy and he has toured with many very prominent members of the RIO scene.  
 
Fantastic! Clap Way to go, Jake.
 
I'll think of something later but don't let me hold you.
 
I'm sure others here will have questions for him.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2008 at 18:00
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

Interesting and relevant additions of late:
In Lingua Mortua (if you like the idea of black metal infused with prog-rock)
 
 
 
I've got to check these ones out soonBig%20smile
RIO/AVANT/ZEUHL - The best thing you can get with yer pants on!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 27 2008 at 07:14
New Zeuhl band Corima added. They're from El Paso Texas and play in the Koenjihyakkei style of Zeuhl.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 27 2008 at 08:13
Jake, excellent news about Scott!  I shall see if I can think of some suitable questions, especially as I was the one who wrote both band's biographies.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 27 2008 at 08:15
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

A message from Moon June Records:
 
MoonJune Records announces the first studio album of the funambolic Belgians
THE WRONG OBJECT
"Stories From The Shed"
http://www.moonjune.com/MJR018.htm
(check above link for audio clip and more info)

Belgian heavy avant-prog-jazz-rock combo The Wrong Object returns with a brand new studio release of their trademark instrumentation and sonic landscapes. Laden with a full load of heavy and volcanic Frippesque tinted guitar riffs, extravagant jazz themes and electronic sounds, this CD marks a return to the rockier and densely overdriven stance that characterized the band's earlier productions. The sheer sonic texture of this album is driven by a combination of tight progrock sequences alternating with more open, freely improvised material. This explosive package consists of a solid, pulsing rhythm section capable of performing with versatility in any situation, aggressive guitar riffs and solos, unusual guitar-synth soundscapes, and fuzz bass guitar laced with a fiery horn duet. With influences ranging from Zappa's whimsical complexities to Squarepusher's glitchy electronics, "Stories from the Shed" will surprise prog rock fans and modern jazz aficcionados alike with its genre-defying compositions, eclectic jam improvisations and intricate arrangements. Eclectic band for fans of Frank Zappa, Soft Machine, Primus, King Crimson, Nucleus, Praxis, Aka Moon, Universe Zero and jazz-oriented jam-band scene.

"The Wrong Object has built a reputation for its astute interpretation of the music of Frank Zappa, but its members are strong and idiosyncratic composers in their own right. They're also intrepid improvisers who combine an appreciation of the jazz vernacular with a more aggressive rock stance." � All About Jazz, USA

"An amazing band performing surprisingly cohesive set of structured Zappaesque improv-jazz-avant-prog-rock. Truly on fire!
� Expos� Magazine, USA
 
 
 

Artist Profile:

Blending psychedelic jazz with modern rock sensibilities, the music of The Wrong Object is influenced by a vast array of artists ranging from Canterbury Scene prog-jazz-rock à la Soft Machine, Nucleus and Gong to Béla Bartok, Aka Moon, Charlie Mingus and Frank Zappa. While their repertoire contains mainly original compositions, they also play a special set of Zappa covers on demand. Since its creation in early 2002, The Wrong Object has played almost eighty concerts in various venues ranging from small pubs to big festivals. Some of them were augmented by guest performances by the likes of Ed Mann (of Frank Zappa hall of fame), Elton Dean (legendary Soft Machine and British jazz icon), Harry Beckett (British jazz legend), Annie Whitehead (who often plays and records with Robert Wyatt), Alex Maguire (of Hatfield & The North), Robin Verheyen, Marc Mangen, Domguè, Marco Maurizi, Nicolas Ankoudinoff, Clementine Gasser, Frogg Café, Jaap Blonk, and pataphysician-poet-vocalist Andrew Norris, whose work with the band culminated in a show held at the Galerie 2016 in Brussels on the occasion of Serge Vandercam's 79th birthday. After a successful mini-tour of the UK, they performed at the 2004 “Zappanale” festival where they played a special gig featuring Zappa's legendary percussionist Ed Mann, with whom they also hope to play a few more dates soon. The Wrong Object have since then played in many different countries (including England, Germany, France, The Netherlands, Czech Republic, , Slovakia, Luxembourg and even in their own country Belgium) and their live recordings have been favorably reviewed and aired by radio stations across the globe. They will continue to perform in pubs, clubs and theaters next year and will play Summer festivals abroad. Their side projects “Elton Dean Meets The Wrong Object” and “The Wrong Object feat. Annie Whitehead and Harry Beckett” were documented by two CD releases issued by Moonjune Records and Voiceprint. “Storied From The Shed”, being released on MoonJune records in February 2008, is the band’s first studio album.
Band websites: www.wrongobject.com www.myspace.com/wrongobject

 
 
 


I have The Unbelieable Truth on CD and it's excellent, but I wouldn't say it was avant-jazz really, more just fusion.  It's still excellent though and I'll try and seek out this album and some of their earlier ones too.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 27 2008 at 18:29
As usual I'm a little slow pick up on the catches of last year, but this album fell into my hands on a most timely occasion; last night. The album of which I speak is Graham Lambkin's - Salmon Run.



1. Intro 2. Glinkamix 3. The Brendan Drill 4. Jungle Blending 5. Jumpskins 6. The Currency Of Dreams 7. Graham Cementspawn 8. Baby & Fox 9. Divers 10. The Bridge To Aria / Salmon Run

It was yet another night spent with my close friend 'Insomnia', so I decided to stick this on and press the repeat button in hope for an entertain night, while I sat down to work on my writing. Slowly I listened to my minds willing deconstruction, captivated by this bazaar recording straddling somewhere between lo-fi tape loops, field records and sampled classical minuets. Since my words are inept at exciting the imagination I will leave you with a review from: http://www.tinymixtapes.com/Graham-Lambkin

"

I’ve never been a fan of the concept “lo-fi.” It’s a positively bizarre idea to apply to music indiscriminately, regardless of tone or form or content. For indie rock bands to even use the concept as a descriptor does nothing other than strive for a past that they misunderstand. Aping the past is a sin egregious enough, but to mimic something prima facie, misunderstanding — or worse, and more likely, choosing to not attempt to understand — is outright disgusting. Music, in my mind, should be more than smiling fun stylizations, and the choice to consciously lower music’s fidelity is symptomatic of this endemic, falling back on this crutch instead of making something truly worthwhile. If I don’t get to hear every nook and cranny of the music, and there is no contextual reason for it, I probably don’t need to listen at all. Regardless, this is only tangentially related to the review at hand, but let’s think of it as the Greek chorus bringing us up to speed and setting the scene for what’s to follow.

Just around the time I acquired Salmon Run, I was becoming fascinated with things that sounded old, decayed, forgotten, empty. The mere act of entering a space that is, in actuality, all of those things feels at once dangerous, adventurous, and alienating. And its hard to deny that it’s the aural aspect that manifests those responses. To know you’re in a setting devoid of what was once full of life and commotion brings the silence up to the level of suffocation. You can trace most sounds back to yourself, but the outliers are outright terrifying. Environs such as these evoke a conflict in the mind, one of nearly complete comfort and safety, yet at the same time imbued with absolute unfamiliarity and danger. Our mind knows that it is only in places such as these wherein terrible fates await us.

But this sounds like our natural, "primitive" state. Everywhere was dangerous. Outside the tenuous safety of numbers, even the most familiar of haunts held potential destruction. An unseen, misunderstood predator could be lurking; a foe as unassertive as a broken leg from a misstep always threatens. And in order to have a modicum of preparedness against inscrutable adversaries, we perk up our ears for inexplicable sounds. But, for the bulk of our experience, this results only in unnecessary, extraneous alarm. In essence, in order to survive, we must make peace with the feelings of utter helplessness and loneliness. Of course, these are obstacles that we (who have CD players and listen to Graham Lambkin) have been almost completely divorced from. It is only the most deviant experiences that can rekindle that spark of absolute fear.

On Salmon Run, we are subjected to a carefully constructed array of sounds that evoke in the same way an abandoned site does. Greeting us on this psychological journey is a haunting contralto aria and accompaniment, a loose thread of which is immediately and uncannily picked up by a mélange of tinny, disturbing sounds in the middle distance, only to be replaced by the same accompaniment, absent our diva. Was it her breakdown we heard but clearly should not have? Has she been replaced by a castrato, with a chorus of mourners to usher him/it into the horror? From here, we are treated to peaceful, reassuring noises, lulling us into a lazy sense of safety until they are deftly juxtaposed with indefinite but jarring sounds of human misfortune. The splash of a soothingly warm bath, but just outside we can hear a nemesis with steely implements. Chirping birds and wind chimes, but deeper we find a growling terror. A library of classical music codified to foreshadow horror. Unintelligible mutterings and screams. A (relatively) small set of sounds such as these are the currency of Salmon Run. In this seemingly simple way, with this mostly pedestrian vocabulary, we are witness to a sum much greater than its parts, one unlike anything you’ve heard."

-------------------------------------------


For those interested in more info, or maybe just a good time, just pop me a PM.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 28 2008 at 01:52
Another album I have been playing recently. I have had this one for while now, but had criminally forgotten 'bout it. I will hardly call myself an expert on Mr Stangl, but this piece digresses from his normal avenues, though not in a bad way.

burkhard stangl/oswald egger venusmond (the first section also features Kevin Drumm and Jim O'Rourke)

The piece is what one could called an avant-opera; usually not a fan of opera but this jelled nicely with my tastes. You could probably guess by now this is not your ordinary classical opera. It was "Originally conceived as a puppet (or extra planetary) opera, the project has developed into a multi-part piece of music and theater, whose parts are to be joined after some years to create a formally concluded opera." The mood is sombre and haunting, making it perfect for late nights. The first section leans toward an acoustic instrumentation, a lot of guitar picking and plucking. While the second half is more intention on vocals and an electronic backing.

To my knowledge this is long out of production, so there is little harm in this short sample for everyone to listen to. http://www.mediafire.com/?fdtjx1yibgb

Finally if anyone can direct me toward similar sounding pieces I would grateful.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2008 at 09:36
hi guys longtime no see:Smile
 

Massacre plays Friday 22/02/08 during a festival "Sons D'Hiver" [wordgame it's either "Sons D'Hiver"(wintersounds) ou Sons divers (Different Sounds)] it's an interesting double feature with songwriter Joe Henry opening. It's quite cheap 20Euros and still in the Parisian metro range. Line 8 Ballard/Creteil.

 

MASSACRE. BILL LASWELL / FRED FRITH / CHARLES HAYWARD

BILL LASWELL basse
FRED FRITH guitare électronique
CHARLES HAYWARD batterie, mélodica, voix
Massacre a été créé à New York au tournant des années 80, en pleine période no wave par le guitariste Fred Frith, figure clef de la scène prog rock expérimentale britannique et deux jeunes musiciens américains à l’orée de leur carrière, Bill Laswell à la basse et Fred Maher à la batterie. Le trio est longtemps demeuré le groupe culte d’un seul disque Killing Times, une sorte de comète ayant eu à peine le temps de poser les bases d’une fusion avant-gardiste entre musique noise, grooves funk, punk rock et free music, avant d’imploser inexorablement.

En 1998 Fred Frith et Bill Laswell, rejoints par le batteur Charles Hayward, décident d’écrire quelques nouveaux chapitres à cette histoire passionnante. Cette musique expérimentale, ramassée sur elle-même comme une boule d’énergie brute a une force vitale toujours aussi irrésistible. D’avant-garde il y a 25 ans, Massacre est devenu aujourd’hui l’un des groupes les plus en phase avec son temps.


http://www.fredfrith.com
http://www.myspace.com/fredfrithmusic


  
© Didier Adam

© Didier Adam

© Didier Adam
 
 
PS I am just watching a hilarious Robert Crumb biopic by Tery Zwigoff, great film!
 
 


Edited by Alucard - January 29 2008 at 09:39
Tadpoles keep screaming in my ear
"Hey there! Rotter's Club!
Explain the meaning of this song and share it"

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2008 at 19:45
Originally posted by rileydog22 rileydog22 wrote:

I'm in contact with Scott Brazieal, keyboardist of Cartoon, PFS, and 5uu's, and he agreed to an interview over email with me.  So, do any of you guys have questions for him?  He's quite a nice guy and he has toured with many very prominent members of the RIO scene.  


I still need things to ask him. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2008 at 22:14
Do you have 'til the weekend, Jake?  I'm busy until then unfortunately.

Is it possible to PM me your current questions too?

Also, if you have anything to ask Jarno Sarkula of Hoyry-kone and Alamaailman Vasarat, let me know, as I am still in the process of interviewing him.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2008 at 22:18
I've got plenty of time, I'm probably gonna email him the questions sometime next week.  So far I'm going to ask him about:
His current project(s)
What it was like to work with Drake and Kerman
The differences/transition between PFS and Cartoon
Influences on him and his bands

Other than that, I'm still open to suggestions. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2008 at 22:28
Although it was a sore subject at the time, maybe you could ask about Cartoon's equipment being stolen in France during their tour and thus ending their great yet short career?

Remember also, they toured with some wonderful bands that are/were a major part of the RIO scene at the time.

Oh, I know something you can ask.

JY: What was it like touring with the likes of Univers Zero, Christian Vander, John Greaves, Cassiber, Skeleton Crew, The Camberwell Now and Von Zamla and how much did you learn musically from the many wonderful musicians you met?  Also did yourself and the rest of the band accept being classed as a part of the Rock in Opposition movement?

This would be a good lead-on question to ask about working with Kerman and Drake in 5uu's, because Drake was in Skeleton Crew at the time, so that is probably where the band met him.

Do you have the booklet that came with Sortie?

Jake, an unofficial question for Scott: there is one track missing from Sortie that was originally on Music from Left Field and I am desperate to hear it, is there any chance of him perhaps sending me it?

I did ask Steve Feigenbaum personally about getting a vinyl copy of Music from Left Field, but he didn't have any, but he said he would try and find a copy for me.


Edited by Geck0 - January 30 2008 at 22:34
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2008 at 22:43
I'll be sure to include your question about the classic RIO boys, credited to you of course. 

BTW, are you sure Drake was in Skeleton Crew?  I could have sworn it was just Frith and Cora, then Frith, Cora, and Parkins, and then they broke up. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2008 at 22:49
Erm... no I'm not sure, let me check. LOL

My bad.

That then leads to another question... how did Scott become acquainted with Dave Kerman and Bob Drake?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2008 at 22:52
By the way, have you read this?

http://www.expose.org/brazieal.html


It may give you avenues to look into.

Oh, it appears Dave Kerman and Bob Drake (in 1995 anyhow), lived in Southern France, so I suspect they were lurking about that festival they played in the 1985. Wink

Oh and thanks by the way, I don't mind full credit for that question.  Just take my full name from the Cartoon/PFS bios. Wink


Edited by Geck0 - January 30 2008 at 23:03
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2008 at 20:22
Originally posted by Geck0 Geck0 wrote:


http://www.expose.org/brazieal.html



That helps a lot, thank you very much.  And I will be sure to use your full name. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 01 2008 at 07:21
Not a problem, Jake, I'm always happy to help.

I used that interview to write the Cartoon and PFS biographies, as well as the booklet from the Sortie CD, so some of it you maybe aware of.

If I can think of any further questions, I will let you know.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 01 2008 at 15:43
I'll be quite busy in the times to come, so I'll only have some random posts here in PA.
One such post will be this about an article in The NY Sun about Tim Berne's Bloodcount:

Berne Introduces Some Fresh Bloodcount
Jazz  -

BY STEVE DOLLAR
February 1, 2008
URL: http://www.nysun.com/article/70618

 
Other than that, I have received many interesting new albums lately and I'll hopefully have reviews for some. One such interesting album is the new Wrong Object album, Stories From The Shed and many other interesting albums.
 
 
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