his hipness christopher gordon wrote:Just a few observations: the surviving members of This Heat have formed a new label specifically to distribute their seminal recordings(huzzah for me cuz I've only ever gotten my hands on bits here and there).
Queijo wrote:his hipness christopher gordon wrote:Just a few observations: the surviving members of This Heat have formed a new label specifically to distribute their seminal recordings(huzzah for me cuz I've only ever gotten my hands on bits here and there).
what is the label called?
Totally agree with the Feldman "for Bunita Marcus" pick. YUM.
why is it unshocking that many of us here are also music obsessive?
Christopher Gordon wrote:Ever play out?
Queijo wrote:if I wanted to read the wire i'd poke my eyes out and have the true under-25 hipsters read it to me. Or maybe I'd just steal their copy.
I think you are referring to This Is! distributed by ReR Megacorp, as mentioned in my first post?
tapler wrote:Christopher Gordon wrote:Ever play out?
No plans right now. I'm much more of a hermetic producer-type than a performer. Thanks for the kind words; it means a lot.
JimInLoganSquare wrote:I've tried and failed to get in tune with Morton Feldman; but I want to get him. I have a couple of "played once" Feldman recordings in my collection (e.g., "For Samuel Beckett" performed by Klangforum Wien on Kairos). Erik, where do you think I should start to develop my taste?
Queijo wrote:haven't tried pandora but listen to launchcast (yahoo) uk at work - my personalized station rocks! The one problem is that everything is major label, and as you might surmise, for those of us with 'ahtsy-fahtsy' taste might find some of our favorites not included on the play list. But my taste in music is like my taste in food -- I enjoy things across the spectrum (I've become more open minded as I've aged) and so there is always something good to hear.
Mike G opened his mouth and drooled the following onto the keyboard wrote:Although it's disappointing that she doesn't do Keith Moon's drum part in "I Can See For Miles," which is pretty much the only thing justifying the existence of the drum in human history.
hungryrabbi wrote:Mike G opened his mouth and drooled the following onto the keyboard wrote:Although it's disappointing that she doesn't do Keith Moon's drum part in "I Can See For Miles," which is pretty much the only thing justifying the existence of the drum in human history.
Hey, what's this...? Getting a psychic response from... yes! Carnak! He says, "May Art Blakey show your wife his paradiddle..." HEYYY-OHH!!!
I guess this is one of those Wichita-style jokes that my stupid East Coast sensibility just doesn't get, like Pizza Hut or Kansans. As far as the Who, I always thought they were overblown, pretentious, pseudo-rock at its worst - hearing Sell Out (points for being sampled by Tortoise included) did nothing to change this opinion. I'll lay 6-5 that Daltrey will be the next one to go to Armenia, City in the Sky (let's hope).
Listening to: Nurse With Wound, Rock N Roll Station; Tocotronic, Es ist Egal, Aber; Howlin Wolf, Cadillac Daddy: the 1952 Sessions; Dana Gould, Funhouse ("Milk: Enjoy it, or, try suckin' my ass!"); Silvio Rodriguez, Mujeres.
"Those kids at the park today were FIFTY times better than you guys on the bandstand tonight. ASSHOLES!!!" - Bernard "Buddy" Rich
JoelF wrote:Has anyone tried http://www.pandora.com ? It creates a 'radio station' based on a few choices of yours, and, TiVo-like, starts finding other music it thinks fits your mood. It's best to set up different 'channels' for different styles of music you like: otherwise you get a generic mystery meat average, if you say you like both Black Sabbath and Fiona Apple.
Mike G wrote:I once walked into the Rose Records on Broadway, only to hear one of the clerks shout at another in a voice of bottomless disgust, "Telarc isn't a record label, it's a device for extracting money from the uneducated!"
Since then, I've never worried that I, as a customer, might be more of a pretentious pseud about music than the staff from whom I'm buying it.
Mike G wrote:I think it's time to read Harry V's disquisition on how to find hipness again. It can never be read too often.
Christopher Gordon wrote:In Chicago, I've had decent luck at the Milwaukee Reckless. It's rare that I've perceived any "record store employee" attitude.
tapler wrote:Chicago Digital in Oak Park has some kinda strange folks behind the counter, but definitely not snobbish or judgmental. Any fan of classical or jazz should set aside (literally) an hour or two to check out their massive quantities of used CDs.