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Bj-1 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2008 at 00:33
Just reviewed Present's Triskaidekaphobie:
 
 
Also posted a decent review for Gruppo D'alternativa's debut earlier today!
 
Smile
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2008 at 06:58
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

Have a look at the coming new 4 Soleil Zeuhl releases:
 
 
BBI : Same
RIALZU : U rigiru
AMYGDALA : Complex combat
SETNA : Cycle 1. (Myspace link)
 


I keep looking at their releases and I believe it's possible to purchase all of their albums over time.  There's only two bands I do not know, but they're not "Zeuhl", according to the release data.  I wonder if Amygdala will be more than just a 2-piece outfit for this album?  I did enjoy their first effort, but I would have liked it if they had employed a saxophonist/flautist to play the parts that were produced on the synth.

Edit: It seems Amygdala have indeed taken on board two further musicians: Daniel Jeand'heur (One Shot) and Kenichi Oguchi (drummer with Kenso)

That BBI release could be a good one too, featuring members of One Shot, Offering and Xaal.

Second edit: I currently have three Soleil Zeuhl releases:

Dun - Eros
Amygdala - Amygdala
Eskaton - Fiction

I would really love to get hold of those Potemkine albums too and I realise Triton will no longer be produced, which is a shame indeed.

Third edit: does anyone know where I can find a copy of 4 Visions and Ardeur?  Wayside doesn't have those two and I haven't checked with Greg Walker yet.  I'm also wondering if Arkaia's only release can be found easily?


Edited by James - February 22 2008 at 07:18
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2008 at 08:53
Originally posted by Bj-1 Bj-1 wrote:

Just reviewed Present's Triskaidekaphobie:
 
 
Also posted a decent review for Gruppo D'alternativa's debut earlier today!
 
Smile
 
 
Nice ones Clap
 
And you beat me to the GdA album. I just received the cd-reissue (mini lp) yesterday from Greg Walker.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2008 at 08:58
Originally posted by Ghandi 2 Ghandi 2 wrote:

This is kind off-topic, but the general music lounge failed me, and you guys have better taste anyway. I have been listening to a lot of Aphex Twin lately, and I want more music like Richard D James Album and the fast parts of Druqcks--complex, avant-garde, fast as possible drums. Dark and aggressive like Come to Daddy would also be a plus. I've discerned that DnB and Jungle is what I'm looking for, but I've had very little luck finding what I'm looking for, everything seems to be much more midtempo, which completely defeats my purpose of listening to electronica.

Forgot to comment on this part of your post.

I don't know much about electronica, but Squarepusher had a big impact on Aphex Twin. Heck! He was his main influence on his DnB albums!  Sadly I don't know what album to recommend because I've only heard samples of his music and not full albums. I'm still on the lookout for them so if you see some around the net, let me know.

Another great electronica artist (don't know what type of electronica he is since I'm new at this) is  Venetian Snares.  I have to thank Adam for this great recommendation. I'm pretty sure that the album "Rossz csillag alatt született" will be right down your alley. Its very aggressive, fast and with an interesting classical twist.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2008 at 09:18
Originally posted by chamberry chamberry wrote:



Another great electronica artist (don't know what type of electronica he is since I'm new at this) is  Venetian Snares.  I have to thank Adam for this great recommendation. I'm pretty sure that the album "Rossz csillag alatt született" will be right down your alley. Its very aggressive, fast and with an interesting classical twist.

 
Definitely second this recommendation!
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2008 at 15:19

Actually, I have heard Normal Love (this ruckus.com thing is really f**king great), and I liked it a bit more than most of the other stuff I've heard if at the least for the violin and the use of silence, I'll have to give it time to grow. Arguably a lot of what I like could be considered soulless, but too often it's dull for me because it feels like they're composing based on mathematical formulae or picking time signatures out of a hat. I want complexity that is there because that's how they're thinking, not because they really want to write complex, difficult to play music.

Based on what I've read about Squarepusher I should like them, but I have not liked the samples I've heard so I'm wary. I would probably like Spring Heel Jack's early albums based on what I've read and the awesomeness of Live, but I haven't been able to find a single extended sample of that, and I learned long ago that I need to hear a sample, and 30 second samples don't cut it.
 
Wow, I'm listening to some Venetian Snares and it's exactly what I'm looking for, thanks!


Edited by Ghandi 2 - February 22 2008 at 15:21
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2008 at 20:04
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

Originally posted by Bj-1 Bj-1 wrote:

Just reviewed Present's Triskaidekaphobie:
 
 
Also posted a decent review for Gruppo D'alternativa's debut earlier today!
 
Smile
 
 
Nice ones Clap
 
And you beat me to the GdA album. I just received the cd-reissue (mini lp) yesterday from Greg Walker.
 
 
 
 
Thanks, Assaf. Im especially pleased over my Present review. My longest review this farSmile
 
I'll also buy a copy of Ipotesi when I get arsed to, it's a damn good albumBig%20smile
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 23 2008 at 20:01
I was just reading this and thought I would be of interest. Article 'bout Downtown Music Gallery.

" At the end of this past January, our five-year lease ran out here at
342 Bowery. Our landlord has graciously given us another 3-6 months to find another place but, with 4 to 5 times the rent we're paying being offered by bar/restaurants ['cause we know you can't get a drink anywhere around here - NOT!] for the space our stay will come to an end soon.

We have been searching for a new location for the past 6 months, but if it's anything close to the 1500 sq. ft. we now occupy and need, no matter how far east we go, the realtors are convincing the landlords to hold off renting until they get a minimum of $ 60-75 per sq ft per year - which for 1500 sq ft means a monthly base rent nut of $7500-9400 - even on Ave D, where no one ventures to!

The only people who can afford that are banks that now make a tidy new-found profit off of people taking $20 out of their account every ten minutes and national chains that take a tax loss to blanket NYC with their outlets. No merchant who deals in anything but items that have over 1000% markup [like drinks] can afford to stay in business here, not even groceries and supermarkets, which have all been closing rapidly. Just think: the overuse of debit cards has caused the price of all everyday goods and food to skyrocket - most of the increased amount just goes to the rent!

Anyone in NYC knows there are many spaces - in both prime and not prime areas - that have remained empty for YEARS due to realtors who have sold their bill of goods to landlords - when we've met those landlords, many have lamented the money they've lost due to the pressure from realtors, and were perfectly willing to talk lower prices, when beforehand the agent said they wouldn't budge [and wouldn't put us in contact directly, naturally]

We have many friends here in NYC, some 10,000 of you around the world receive our newsletter each week. What we would like is a basement, second floor or higher loft space [with elevator] with about 1,500 square feet for under $4000, hopefully in lower Manhattan - we don't really care what it looks like, or what some snobs might have to say about the neighborhood, just as long as it's secure. We'll do the rest.

We would love to stay in the Lower Manhattan, but we might have to move to mid-town or further uptown or even nearby in Brooklyn or Queens

If you know of a space for us to rent - especially where we deal with the landlord directly - please contact us immediately!

Our time here is limited. We may have to go with one overpriced
space - that otherwise meets our needs - within two weeks, so we'd like to hear from you before then

Thank You

Bruce, Manny, Mikey, Chuck, Bret & all at DMG

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Downtown Music Gallery
342 Bowery
New York, NY 10012-2408
USA

Tel: 212 473-0043 / 800 622-1387
Fax: 212-533-5059

[email protected]

Hours:
12 noon -8pm Seven days a week

Sundays we have in-store concerts from 6 to 7:30, please don't call then." 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 24 2008 at 08:31
Originally posted by Ghandi 2 Ghandi 2 wrote:

Wow, I'm listening to some Venetian Snares and it's exactly what I'm looking for, thanks!

Great! I'm glad you like it.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2008 at 14:32
Two interesting albums I recently got:
 
The Wrong Object - Stories From The Shed
Another album from this Belgian ensemble playing a varied and exciting jazz-rock.
 
Evangelista - Hello Voyger
Another release by the fabulous Carla Bozulich
Let me quite from the label, Constellation:
"We can call this a debut record of sorts, as it is the first album to be released under Carla Bozulich's new band moniker, Evangelista. Bozulich's first record for Constellation, issued in 2006, was released under her own name, and bore the album title Evangelista. That album title has now migrated to become the band name. So...this is the new album, titled Hello, Voyager, by the newly named band Evangelista, featuring Carla Bozulich. You follow? No worries, there will not be a quiz.

Carla's 2006 Constellation release was widely celebrated as her strongest, most fearless and compelling record in years, and ended up on many year end lists, including The Wire (UK), Blow Up (Italy) and WMFU (Brian Turner's blog) to name a few. Carla toured Evangelista all over Europe and North America, with core bandmate Tara Barnes at her side, and a rotating cast of other musicians, including Shahzad Ismaily and members of Thee Silver Mt. Zion (all of whom contributed to the original recording as well).

The Evangelista band continues to comprise Carla and Tara as its nucleus, and continues to build on its relationship with Montreal (where the last album was also made). Hello, Voyager was recorded in Montreal at the Hotel2Tango by Efrim Menuck in late summer 2007, with an even larger cast of Montreal musicians joining Carla, Tara and Shahzad this time around, to work up a more stylistically diverse batch of songs. Raw, beautifully ravaged, semi-improvised soundscapes still underpin Carla's incantatory sung and spoken lyrics on the album's opening and closing tracks, but much of the rest of the record is more overtly composed. Blistering nuggets like the snarling "Smooth Jazz" and the desperate "Truth Is Dark Like Outer Space" are the most rocking tunes Carla has put to tape since the demise of The Geraldine Fibbers, while "The Blue Room" (one of Carla's finest songs, and one she has been carrying around for many years) is finally captured in a stunning studio arrangement that includes organ, violin, cello and contrebasse. "Lucky Lucky Luck" is a playful, sassy, fractured take on the misfit narrative and "Paper Kitten Claw" is its methodical, reflective, poetic foil. Carla's voice perfectly sets and channels the prevailing mood on each song, and is strong as ever.

The new album includes contributions from over a dozen Montreal players, including most of Thee Silver Mt. Zion (chiefly on string arrangements), as well as Nadia Moss (organ) and a corps of local drummers who bang out the thunderous rhythm track on "Smooth Jazz" and drive the epic sprawl of the album's closing title track.

Constellation is thrilled to be releasing Carla's second album for the label on CD and 180gLP. Both formats come in our custom cardstock packaging, with artwork featuring paintings by Montreal artist (and Evangelista player) Nadia Moss, and include a fold-out lyric sheet insert."
 
 
 
 
 
"
Carla Bozulich is best known as the singer from LA-based band Gerladine Fibbers and as the woman who re-made Willie Nelson’s Red Headed Stranger - with Willie Nelson as a special guest. Carla has one of the most unique voices in any genre. Her work is at once brutally raw and weirdly visionary.

Born in New York City, she grew up a tomboy and girl protector in San Pedro, CA. Carla's first appearance on record is Gary Kail's album from 1982 called Zurich 1916, on which she does dada-inspired worldplay, "you know, telephone and vacuum cleaner stuff". She sang in a couple of groups – the Neon Veins and Invisible Chains, the latter of which recorded an album for The Minutemen's New Alliance label when Carla was 18 years old.

Carla disappeared from daylight for a few years, re-emerged, and was soon causing traffic jams as the gamine howler in the confrontational sex/sound assault outfit Ethyl Meatplow. In 1993, before Ethyl's last gasp, Carla founded The Geraldine Fibbers, going on to record and tour incessantly with that band until 1998. Scarnella followed, a duo formed with Nels Cline, and a decidedly uncommercial, open, experimental project.

In 2001 she scored a Los Angeles production of Jean Genet's The Maids and the award-winning feature film By Hook Or By Crook, which she scored and for which she compiled the soundtrack, went to Sundance in 2003. That same year saw the release of Carla's new rendition of Willie Nelson's Red Headed Stranger. She has also explored mixed media and performance art, including a commission for The Getty Museum in Los Angeles.

In 2005 Carla rekindled a decade-old connection with Montreal-based musicians affiliated with the Constellation label, leading to a recording at that city's legendary Hotel2Tango studio, and the release of her Evangelista album on Constellation. Received with high critical praise, the record would find its way onto many year-end best lists, and lead to extensive touring around Europe and North America, including performances at the Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville (Canada) and Bad Bonn Kilbi (Swizterland) among others.

In 2007, Evangelista became the official band name of Carla's project, and her follow-up record for Constellation was once again recorded at the Hotel2Tango in Montreal, with core co-conpirators Tara Barnes and Shahzad Ismaily, and contributions from a large cast of Montreal-based musicians. The new record, entitled Hello, Voyager, releases in February/March 2008.

FULL BIOGRAPHY AND LOTS OF OTHER INFO AT:

www.carlabozulich.com
"
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2008 at 21:11
I received yesterday from Bob Drake, the 6 solo albums he release.
Brilliant song-writing, splendid compositions and playing. This is superb, creative and refreshing music.
 
 
 


Edited by avestin - March 02 2008 at 21:11
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 03 2008 at 19:42
I posted the interview with Trond Gjellum (Panzerpappa):
 
The interview with Xhohx will come soon.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 03 2008 at 20:57
Originally posted by James James wrote:


Third edit: does anyone know where I can find a copy of 4 Visions and Ardeur?

To my knowledge, 4 Visions is out of print, and your only bet at finding it is on eBay. But that also makes it legal to download...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 04 2008 at 10:13
I've managed to find a copy, Shakes, but it's a Japanese version.

Ardeur is also now out of print, but again, I've found a copy to purchase.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 04 2008 at 19:08
Michael Anselmi, the drummer from NeBeLNeST, has agreed to do an interview over email, so if you have anything you want me to ask him, just post it here or PM me or something and I'll ask it to him.  

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 04 2008 at 20:39
Do I have to be nice to him? LOL

It's just I think NeBeLNeST need to put more soul into their compositions as they occasionally seem uninspired and bland on occasion.  The same can be said for Far Corner.

Don't question him about the above though. Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 04 2008 at 20:42
Personally, I just can't get NeBeLNeST.  Different strokes I guess.  

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 05 2008 at 17:36
Originally posted by rileydog22 rileydog22 wrote:

Michael Anselmi, the drummer from NeBeLNeST, has agreed to do an interview over email, so if you have anything you want me to ask him, just post it here or PM me or something and I'll ask it to him.  


Actually, make that ALL of NeBeLNeST.  Not just the drummer.  My bad. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 05 2008 at 19:01
Originally posted by rileydog22 rileydog22 wrote:

Originally posted by rileydog22 rileydog22 wrote:

Michael Anselmi, the drummer from NeBeLNeST, has agreed to do an interview over email, so if you have anything you want me to ask him, just post it here or PM me or something and I'll ask it to him.  


Actually, make that ALL of NeBeLNeST.  Not just the drummer.  My bad. 
 
 
Silly question here - What's with the band name, album titles and song names? Is there anything behind them or just whatever comes to their mind?
 
Also, given what I heard in their two last albums, how much of their songs are created in improvisation, if at all? Cause at times it sounds like it.
 
Oh, and ask them what are current bands/musicians they appreciate/like/think highly of etc.
 
that's about it... I think...
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 05 2008 at 20:07
I was thinking of questions along those lines.  Nova Express is the name of a William Burroughs novel (same dude who wrote The Soft Machine), but I'm not sure about the other names.  

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