Sunday, February 25, 2007

looking for these

I'ma lookin' for these albums, also. If they float by your river or pond, pick them up and throw them to Denver. I'll dig through the trash, and play them for my neighbors. They'll love it.

Skip Spence– OAR
Jacques Berrocal– Parallèls

Thanks

AMSG

Saturday, February 10, 2007

"The man that hath no music in himself…Let no such man be trusted." –Shakespeare .

  1. Raymond Scott– Powerhouse. The Raymond Scott Project, Vol. 1
  2. Swell Maps– Collision Time Revisited or Train Out of It
  3. Lucinda Williams– Lucinda Williams
  4. Smog– Sewn to the Sky
  5. Wynonie Harris– Good Rocking Tonight
  6. A.R. Kane– Up Home! or 69
  7. The Chills– Kaleidoscope World
  8. The Embarrassment– Retrospective or LP or Heyday
  9. Halo of Flies– Four From the Bottom or Singles Going Nowhere
  10. Randy Holden– Population II
  11. Sun City Girls– Torch of the Mystics
  12. Martin Newell– The Greatest Living Englishmen
  13. Antipop Consortium– Arrhythmia
  14. Biz Markie– Goin’ Off
  15. Freestyle Fellowship– Inner City Griots
  16. Boogie Down Productions– By All Means Necessary
  17. Brand Nubian– One For All
  18. Company Flow– Funcrusher Plus
  19. The Coup– Steal This Album
  20. Das EFX– Dead Serious
  21. The D.O.C.– No One Can Do It Better
  22. Ed O.G. & The Bulldogs– Life of a Kid in the Ghetto
  23. Edan– Primitive Plus
  24. The Egyptian Lover– On The Nile
  25. The Herbaliser– Blow Your Headphones
  26. Jungle Brothers– Straight Out the Jungle
  27. Kid Koala– Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
  28. Leaders Of The New School– A Future Without the Past
  29. Main Source– Breaking Atoms
  30. Organized Konfusion– Organized Konfusion
  31. Restiform Bodies– Restiform Bodies
  32. Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth– Mecca and the Soul Brother
  33. 7L & Esoteric– Soul Purpose
  34. Stetsasonic– In Full Gear
  35. I-Roy– Ten Commandments
  36. Four Tet– Dialogue
  37. Animal Collective– Spirit They're Gone Spirit They've Vanished/Danse Manatee or Hear Comes the Indian
  38. Dangerdoom– The Mouse and the Mask
  39. Princess Superstar– My Machine
  40. Plastic Bertrand– Ça Plane Pour Moi
  41. Wolfmother– Wolfmother
  42. The Fags– Light ‘Em Up
  43. Yeah Yeah Yeahs– Show Your Bones
  44. Ratatat– Classics
  45. Teenage Fanclub– Grand Prix or Songs From Northern Britain
  46. Soup Dragons– Hang-Ten!
  47. Inspiral Carpets– Life
  48. The Goodnight Loving– Cemetery Trails
  49. Girl Talk– Night Ripper
  50. Mannequin Men– Showbiz Witch
  51. Man Man– Six Demon Bag
  52. …And You Will Know Us by the Trail of the Dead– So Divided

And on, and on, and on….


There is no particular order to this list. This is my third, known list, and probably my last one. It is in a quality notebook, it isn’t full of impossible wants, and it isn’t too, too long. As I find things, I’ll come back and cross them off.

Friday, February 9, 2007

Quick MP3

Explosions In the Sky- Catastrophe And The Cure (Four Tet Remix)

Here is an MP3 for all sixteen of you. Enjoy.

Thursday, February 1, 2007

"I got that Joy, Joy, Joy, down in my heart..."- Rod and Todd Flanders

I had some spare time (ha!) and ventured out to Jerry’s Records Exchange on Colfax. I first heard about this place from Thurston Moore, singer for Sonic Youth, when they opened for REM at Fiddler’s Green, or now known as, Coors Amphitheater. He stated quite plainly, “You should go there.” So I did and do.[1] Jerry’s was the first place I bought my Krautrock albums, my first LP bootlegs by Magazine and Robyn Hitchcock, and a place where I go when I need a lot of friends.
Record flipping, or digging, is a slower process than CD’s. When I go to Cheapo Discs, even I am amazed at how fast individuals can peruse the CD racks. I mean, what happens when they blink. There has to be a gem or two lost because of the fury they search with. With Jerry’s, I slow my roll, I glance and view. Sometimes, certain albums just have an interesting look to them. I don’t recall the author, but someone once said to, “…look for albums from the seventies with black and white members who all look to have taken acid. These albums have the best music in them…” and this is a focal factor I apply to records. I kind of have Jerry’s Records memorized, and I don’t go all through all the racks as often anymore, but I defiantly hit up the “New Music” sections without a second thought. I found two gems, even though they weren’t on my list, I still wanted them. Plus, they were inexpensive, and that is a beautiful thing.
I got L.L. Cool J’s “Going Back To Cali” single for $8. Do you remember this video? It has Martha Quinn a former VJ in it. I’ll link a YouTube video for you to view if you need further recollection here. I also got a Neal Pollack CD titled, “Never Mind The Pollacks”, for $3.50. I just got this book for Xmas and didn’t know there was an album accompaniment. But here it is, and this forced me to start reading the book. I am in love with both items, now. If you haven’t already, go and read the book and buy the album. You will feel well just supporting a fine slice of literature and music. Plus you will be as cool as me, and you can tell people that you know a guy who met Elvis, and didn’t sue Elvis when he ran over and killed his father.[2]
And since I was close by, I went to Wax Trax. The woman behind the counter was plying Bob Dylan’s Blood on the Tracks and I told her, “This is my favorite divorce album."

She looked me and asked, “What is your second favorite, then?”
Shoot out the Lights”, I said.

She laughed and rolled her eyes at me. I’m glad that I didn’t have to state another one, because I don’t know of any other’s, anyway.
At Wax I found two more LP’s, again not from my list (This list that I keep speaking of, I’ll place it here later on. It is an endless list that grows just as fast as I kill it off. It is a snake head eating the other side, but acquiring nutrition from its own body…therefore growing with each…segment…swallowed…? Yeah, that’s it.) Anyway, I got the single for “Ball of Confusion” by Love And Rockets for $4.00 and Killing Joke’s Night Time for $4.00, as well.
I love Love And Rockets cover of The Temptations song. I am surprised The Temptations only put this on a greatest hits compilation without it being the lead track on a sure to be great album. But, what the fuck do I know. To be honest, I didn’t know it was a cover until I heard the song in a Red Robin restaurant, when I was a lad. (I had a recorded version of this album, and there wasn’t any credit information on the blank cassette, except for the titles, so I couldn’t have known Daniel Ash and David J. didn’t write it.) I was fifteen, out with my parents returning from a soccer game, way the hell out in Colorado Springs, and The Temptations version came on. I told my parents, “This band is covering Love And Rockets, this is their song.” My parents laughed at my naivety, and I pleaded ignorance not stupidity. I still plead this. Killing Joke made some good albums, but if you know about Nirvana, then you may know why I got Night Time. I had only heard Killing Joke’s song once on KTCL a long, long time ago, but I can hear with certainty why Nirvana took the baseline from “Eighties” and used it for “Come As You Are”. This is also the first thing I learned to play on a guitar, the Nirvana version, that is.[3] Now, I did buy the album for the one song, originally, but I am quite pleased with how it sounds, and I will have to venture for more Killing Joke albums, adding to my stupid list, yet again.




[1] I also remember Michael Stipe telling a girl, in the front row, that she should wash the patchouli she had drenched herself in, because, “It stinks”. I laughed and laughed. It was beautiful. Mr. Stipe does have a sense of humor, be it small in reserve and scope, but there nevertheless.
[2] This is a book of “historical fiction” with true names and events, so this is an example of the fiction. Go read this book!
[3] The cartoon Daria, her best friend Jane, who’s brother Trent; he would play that opening line over and over as well. I won’t dig up the cartoon for proof, but just trust me, it is true.