Wednesday 6 November 2024

It Just Reminds Us That All We Have, All We Have Is Here And Now

Beth Gibbons (and band), live in Paris. Bloody hell.
 
0:00     Tell Me Who You Are Today 4:05     Burden Of Life 7:42     Floating On A Moment 13:07     Rewind 18:10     For Sale 22:30    Mysteries 26:00    Lost Changes 31:32     Oceans 35:23    Beyond The Sun 39:32    Reaching Out
 
Performed for ARTE Concert at Salle Ovale, Bibliothèque Nationale De France, Paris, 8th July 2024.
 
Performed by
James Ellis Ford (Simian, uber producer)
Eoin Rooney (Oh800, ABBA Voyage)
Howard Jacobs (Homelife, 808 State)
Emma Smith (The Sumacs, JARV IS...)
Jason Hazeley-Smith (Ben & Jason, Gabrielle)
Tom Herbert (Acoustic Ladyland, Alabaster DePlume)
Richard Jones (Ligeti Quartet, The Waeve)
 
All songs from Lives Outgrown (2024), except Mysteries, originally on Out Of Season by Beth Gibbons & Rustin Man (2002).
 
Just beautiful. 

Tuesday 5 November 2024

Spirits In The Immaterial World

It's Immaterial gems, inspired by a recent catch up with the treasure trove that is the Higher Than The Sun music blog. 
 
Back in the summer, Ricky posted links (currently still live) for the two 'lost albums' recorded by Jarvis Whitehead and John Campbell, works in progress for an intended follow up to 1990 second album Song. 

Fate - and an incredible sequence of unfortunate events - meant that third album House For Sale eventually saw the light of day in 2020 and it was truly magnificent. I shared some of that story, and a couple of 'lost' versions, when my Imaginary Compilation Album featured on The Vinyl Villain on 27th October 2021.

There's something about the earlier versions that really appeals to me too, so it was a delight to be able to plug some of the gaps in the handful that I'd acquired on t'internet in previous years. 

Suitably inspired, a trawl of YT has also unearthed some shining nuggets that deserve to be shared.

Opening up the post, a performance of two songs on BBC2 magazine show Riverside in 1983. The first is called Huzah Huzah Physic Stick, the second the more familiar (to me at least) A Gigantic Raft In The Philippines. The latter was originally released as a single in 1981 and would be again, in re-recorded and remixed form, in 1984. It's a very different sounding band from the It's Immaterial that found fleeting chart fame with Driving Away From Home, but I love the energy of these early songs.

Next up is an hour long interview with John from February 2023, which encompasses his life and career to date, from growing up in Manchester, being in Yachts with Jarvis in the late 70s and four decades of trials and tribulations with It's Immaterial.
 
I'm still working my way through this one in its entirety, having only dipped in and out at various points so far. John is an affable and generous interviewee, but Zoom interviews can be a bit of a slog at the best of times and interviewer Greg makes hard work of it, though he warms up some more towards the end.

TheSoundAgents YT site contains a couple of hidden It's Immaterial treasures. In 1986, Siren Records' A&R Ross Stapleton filmed the band rehearsing for some European gigs. This is a very fine version of Rope, a single from debut album Life's Hard And Then You Die.

In 2016, as a thank you to those who had pledged for the House For Sale album, John shared a snippet of a work in progress song, then titled Manchester Mambo.

Rounding out this selection is Just North Of Here, presented here in it's earlier, 'lost' version, which was posted online in 2010Just North Of Here made it through to the 2020 release of House For Sale and the album version was the penultimate song on Side 1 of my It's Immaterial ICA. It sounds great, whichever version you listen to.

 
Last Night From Glasgow are keeping the It's Immaterial flame burning. They've already released Life's Hard And Then You Die (via the Past Night From Glasgow imprint); red or white vinyl still available. 

January 2025 will see the release of the complete BBC Sessions on vinyl, 16 tracks covering all four sessions for John Peel between 1981 and 1985. Huzah Huzah Physic Stick, A Gigantic Raft In The Philippines and Rope all feature. 

The BBC Sessions is available to pre-order as a standalone release, or if you're looking for a Christmas gift, it's available a 4-album bundle, along with Sophisticated Boom Boom, Win and China Crisis.

Monday 4 November 2024

What Is Central To Our Survival And Wellbeing Is Meaningful Connection And Love


So says Lawrence ‘Larry’ Wilson, in the introduction to Lion Rumpus, the new single and video by Mogwai.
 
You don't have to be a dog lover - or a bucket hat wearer for that matter - to find this video a real joy. As for the music? It's a little bit more abrasive than previous single God Gets You Back, but still 'softer' and less jarring than Mogwai of old. Which is no bad thing, of course. I like the fact that it's undeniably Mogwai though not just a retread of their 90s catalogue.
 
 
Mogwai's eleventh album The Bad Fire arrives in January 2025. The flowery promo claims that Lion Rumpus "does actually sound like a lion rumpus". Even better, that God Gets You Back "sounds like Daft Punk being hunted by My Bloody Valentine". I'm not sure I agree with either of those, although the latter provokes quite a striking image in the mind's eye! 
 
However, I can get with the claim that "the music contains [...] a sense of beauty encased in the onslaught." This sums up Mogwai as well as any other description and is why I've enjoyed their music for nearly 30 years now.
 
Happy Mogwai Monday, everyone.

Sunday 3 November 2024

Sat In The Passenger Seat, Having An Out Of Body Experience


A selection of long songs for Sunday, designed to transport you...well, take your pick from Mars or Dorset and all points in between, or just head straight out of this galaxy and see what else is out there.
 
The shortest song in this selection clocks in at a few seconds under twelve minutes, the longest contribution edges over fourteen and a half. Too many beats between them all to be considered pure ambient music perhaps, but they all have enough going on to stimulate the senses.

First stop, Japan and a couple of electronic music legends. Magic Dome by Yoshihiro Sawasaki was (I think) his debut release, first appearing on the flip of the Neocrystal 12" single, then the album Perfumed Garden, both in 1994. 

Soft Ballet was formed by Ryoichi Endo, Ken Morioka and Maki Fujii in 1986, though my introduction to them was via their remix albums featuring Western artists such as LFO, Jah Wobble, Orbital, Fluke and Global Communication. The third and final in the series reworked 1995 album Form, by which time Soft Ballet had split, although they reunited for a couple of albums in the early 2000s. 

Speaking of Global Communication, Tom Middleton resurrected the GCOM alias in 2021 for a 20-track magnum opus E2-XO. Most of them are pretty short, several clocking in at a minute or less, until you get to the album closer, Beyond The Milky Way. Just ride the stellar wave and drift into the unknown.
 
The Orb and Youth transformed ambient music in the late 80s/early 90s, whether separately or together. I've plumped for the latter, with a remix of Spanish Castles In Space, one of my favourite songs by The Orb, in any incarnation. Alex Paterson and Martin Glover have continued to work together, not least last year's Orb album, Prism.
 
Back down to Earth now, more specifically Wimborne in Dorset. Al Stewart grew up there and Robert Fripp was born in Wimborne Minster, so you know the vibes are good.  MLO were/are Jon Tye and Peter Smith; Jon continues to push the ambient envelope, as one half of Seahawks.
 
Matt Gunn is the new kid on the block, relatively speaking, with a clutch of great releases on the Paisley Dark and Electric Wardrobe labels. Matt's first album Mostly Fiction is a good jumping on point, though his EPs also come recommended.
 
Youth is back for the finale, with an end of the millennium reworking of psychedelic rockers Gong. I first discovered Steve Hillage as the credited producer on the 12" single of Sweat In Bullet by Simple Minds, later as a founder of System 7, so my journey back to Gong was full of detours and diversions, but I eventually got there. A bit like this compilation, if you will.
 
1) Magic Dome (Full Length Version): 澤崎吉広 (Yoshihiro Sawasaki) (1994)
2) No One Lives On Mars (Even Longer) (Remixed By Carl Craig): Soft Ballet (1995)
3) Beyond The Milky Way (Full Length Version): GCOM (2021)
4) Spanish Castles In Space (Extended Youth Mix By Martin Glover): The Orb (1991)
5) Wimborne (Spacetime Continuum Mix By Jonah Sharp): MLO (1994)
6) Space Drohne I & II (Album Version): Matt Gunn (2023)
7) A Sprinkling Of Clouds (Full Length Edit By Youth aka Martin Glover): Gong (1999)
 
1991: Aubrey Mixes: The Ultraworld Excursions: 4
1994: Perfumed Garden: 1
1994: Wimborne Revisited EP: 5
1995: Forms: Remix For Ordinary People: 2
1999: You Remixed: 7
2021: E2-XO: 3 
2023: Mostly Fiction: 6

Sat In The Passenger Seat, Having An Out Of Body Experience (1:30:02) (KF) (Mega)

Saturday 2 November 2024

...Everybody Listen! Something Exciting Is About To Happen!


Side 2 of a cassette compilation recorded 22nd January 1997.
 
Ditching the pumpkins and the 21st Century for some banging 90s beats. Across the 14 mixes and two sides of the original cassette, 1993 is heavily represented. I'm not quite sure why this year was resonating quite so much with me in early 1997, but it was clearly a good year for club music.

Not that any of the other selections are sloppy seconds. 

Traci Lords successfully made a career switch from the US porn industry to the UK club scene, teaming up with Juno Reactor for the 1995 album 1000 Fires and getting Paul Oakenfold in to remix her single Fallen Angel. The song was apparently inspired by her childhood journals and Kurt Cobain's suicide the previous year. 

Fluke seemed to be everywhere in 1996, including the video games market. Even to non-gamers like me, the soundtrack to Wipeout 2097 was pretty amazing and Fluke's single Atom Bomb was all over it. There were 8 versions across 2 CD singles, which was enough to push it into the UK Top 20.

The Source aka John Truelove aka John Rush hit the motherlode when he paired a 1986 Candi Station with Frankie Knuckles & Jamie Principle's Your Love to create You Got The Love. Initially a bootleg in 1989, further variations cracked the UK Top 10 in 1991, 1997 and 2006. Unfortunately, it kind of threw everything else into the shade, including 1993 single Sanctuary Of Love.
 
Sanctuary Of Love follows a simple plan, taking an underground club track by US artist Zhana Saunders and transforming into a hard house anthem. Tall Paul's remix ramps up the epic feel, but it remained one for the clubs, making no impact whatsoever on the UK singles chart.

Mark Moore had the unenviable task of following up a smash hit debut album with S'Express. Eschewing the previous rotating cast of vocalists for a single artist, Mark's pairing with Sonia Clarke aka Sonique was inspired, even if it didn't bring the same commercial success. Personally, I think the follow up album Intercourse is hugely underappreciated and lead single Nothing To Lose is as good as anything that had come before. 

Usura was an Italian combo who enjoyed a UK #7 hit in January 1993 with Open Your Mind. I don't think follow up single Tear It Up even dented the charts, which is a shame as it's an equally compelling track, with an earthy, compelling vocal. Tear It Up was a co-write with Rollo, yet to find global fame with Faithless, but renowned for his remixes and he really delivers the goods on this one.

Apollo 440 was birthed in 1990 by brothers Howard Gray and Trevor Gray, along with James Gardner and Noko aka Norman Fisher-Jones. Building a reputation though remixes and singles in the early 1990s, they released Millennium Fever, the first of five albums, in 1994. Noko was previously one half of Luxuria with Howard Devoto, who contributed lyrics to Apollo 440's debut album. The pair were reunited when Noko joined the reformed Magazine in 2009.

Closing side 2 and the mixtape is a remix of Culture Club's Miss Me Blind by Ramp aka Shem McCauley and Simon Rogers. Originally released on the Colour By Numbers album in 1983, and as a single outside of the UK, this remix first appeared on US editions of Boy George's single Everything I Own in 1993. I got my mitts on it via The Devil In Sister George EP, which featured updated versions of 5 old songs, aimed squarely at the dancefloor. This one knocks the Culture Club original out of the park.
 
1) Fallen Angel (Perfecto Mix By Paul Oakenfold) (Single Edit): Traci Lords (1995)
2) Atom Bomb (Atomix 6): Fluke (1996)
3) Sanctuary Of Love (Tall Paul's Jiant Revamp) (Remix By Paul Newman): The Source ft. Zhana Saunders (1993)
4) Nothing To Lose (Original Mix By Mark Moore): S'Express ft. Sonique (1990)
5) Tear It Up (Big, Bold And Sassy Mix By Rollo): Usura (1993)
6) Rumble (12” Version): Apollo 440 (1993)
7) Miss Me Blind (Return To Gender Mix By Ramp): Culture Club (1993)

Side Two (46:19) (KF) (Mega)

Friday 1 November 2024

Not Quite Noughtie Enough

I'm going to spend a large chunk of this post talking about someone else's blog and posts, but bear with me, there's a brand new Dubhed selection waiting for you at the end.

SWC at the ever-excellent No Badger Required has just concluded The Noughty Forty, a countdown of the greatest albums of the 2000s. All voted for by a Musical Jury, assembled from music blog creators and commenters from around the globe. 
 
NBR is an essential read anyway, not a single one feeling like it's been dashed off in the seconds that the idea itself is forming (yes, I'm looking at myself here). There's something even more impressive about series like this though, not least the sheer amount of effort that goes into planning, coordinating and curating the posts. And of course it sparks debate, anticipation and - let's be honest - a degree of feverish excitement as it reaches the Top Ten. 

I was privileged once again to be a Musical Jury Member for this series. SWC assigns aliases to all and I won't reveal mine here, though my arch or overly earnest comments may be a giveaway. 

I was pleased with the #1 choice, an artist and album I voted for though not my top scorer (which made the Top 10, but not the Top 5). Back in the summer, when this was just a plan taking shape in SWC's mind, he invited potential Musical Jury Members to submit their own nominations. 

Over 300 nominations were submitted. Of these, SWC presented us with a longlist of 74, from which to pick our Top 20. After totting up the scores, The Noughty Forty was finalised, with a few surprises and an eleventh hour vote tipping the balance between the top two.

SWC not only delivered The Noughty Forty, but preceded it with ten of Not Quite The Greatest Albums Of The 00s, also sharing the albums that made #41 & #42 in the final list. The series was then bookended with four Honorable Mentions, meaning that NBR readers were treated to 56 albums in total. 
 
I won't spoil things by posting the various lists here. If you haven't already followed the countdown on No Badger Required, go and check it out. You'll get to experience some great music, some controversial voting decisions and best of all, some top notch writing that brings the whole thing to life. 

No Badger Required is 3 years old this month and November will see another series, this time focusing on the number 3. Not in the way that you might expect, of course, but naturally it's going to be required reading for the next 30 days. SWC sets the bar high, so much so that I'm on the Dubhed ladder, head tilted as far back as it will go, straining to see the bar up above me. 

A constant inspiration and pace setter. Here's to you, SWC, and many more years of NBR to come.

So... what of today's selection?

Well, back at the beginning, when I was invited to submit nominations for the best albums of the 2000s, I applied some rules of my own. The most obvious one being that I had to own the albums, either physically or digitally, in their entirety. 
 
This - and the subsequent Noughty Forty - immediately highlighted how many contenders where I had a few songs, but not the entire album. Examples being The Streets, Radiohead, The Strokes and Grandaddy.

The other dawning realisation when following the final run down was how many albums from the 2000s I'd never even heard in full at all. Arctic Monkeys, Art Brut, The Horrors, Queens Of The Stone Age, The Long Blondes. I'm working on it now.

The other rule which I mostly followed was to exclude nominations for an album which I thought would receive multiple votes from the MJMs and would therefore be a shoo in for the longlist, if not the final 40. Therefore, I left out LCD Soundsystem, Radiohead, PJ Harvey, Franz Ferdinand and The White Stripes, to name a few. 

Not that my 20 nominations were by any means albums that I didn't consider to be anything other than essential listens. Or, so obscure that mine would be the only nomination. I mean, White Bread Black Beer by Scritti Politti had to be Top 30, if not higher, surely?

Of my 20 suggestions, 1 made the Not Quite The Greatest Albums Of The 00s list, 1 featured in the Honorable Mentions and 1 in The Noughty Forty...the Top 30 in fact, though it's no spoiler to say that it wasn't Scritti Poliiti.

So, 17 of my 20 nominations didn't get even a whiff of fame. One other artist did make the lower reaches of the countdown, though not with the album that I nominated!

However, all of this of course inspired today's selection. Without fear or favour, I've randomly selected 12 to create a snappy compilation to entertain for the next three quarters of an hour. 
 
Hopefully, a few of them will provoke an "Oh, yeah!" response. Others may be unfamiliar, but inspire a search to check out the rest of the album, which will undoubtedly be worth your time and effort.

It's an eclectic mix, as always. Back in 2000, it was hard to imagine that it would be 2024 before The The's next full band, non-soundtrack album would appear. Sadly, we're still waiting for Green Gartside's follow up to White Bread Black Beer, and each year hope diminishes. A couple of artists - Mark Linkous and Mark Lanegan - have passed on, leaving us with a rich musical legacy, these collaborative albums included.

Mark Lanegan's association with electronic artists Soulsavers was perhaps no surprise, given his voracious appetite for working with others across multiple musical genres. What was unexpected was N.A.S.A.'s 2009 album The Spirit Of Apollo, not least from it's dizzying spread of guest artists, but that their number included Tom Waits, here 'duetting' with rapper Kool Keith.

There are a few albums that didn't make my nominations list, partly because I thought that no-one else would submit them, partly because I will deliver on my promise to SWC a seeming eternity ago to submit a Nearly Perfect Albums guest post for his consideration. I need to get on with it!

In the meantime, enjoy this companion piece/celebration of an inspirational blog, as it's likely back to the usual nonsense on Saturday.
 
1) The Whisperers: The The (2000)
2) Paris Is Burning: Ladyhawke (2008)
3) Superstylin': Groove Armada (2001)
4) It's A Funny Thing: Edwyn Collins (2002)
5) Road To No Regret: Scritti Politti (2006)
6) Pain: Danger Mouse & Sparklehorse ft. Iggy Pop (2009)
7) Ghosts Of You And Me: Soulsavers ft. Mark Lanegan (2007)
8) The Moss: Daníel Ágúst (2005)
9) Something Inside Of Me: The Coral (2005)
10) Huddle Formation: The Go! Team (2004)
11) Young Bride: Midlake (2006)
12) Spacious Thoughts: N.A.S.A. ft. Tom Waits & Kool Keith (2009)

2000: Naked Self: 1
2001: Goodbye Country (Hello Nightclub): 3
2002: Doctor Syntax: 4
2004: Thunder, Lightning, Strike: 10
2005: Swallowed A Star: 8
2005: The Invisible Invasion: 9 
2006: The Trials Of Van Occupanther: 11
2006: White Bread Black Beer: 5 
2007: It's Not How Far You Fall, It's The Way You Land: 7
2008: Ladyhawke: 2
2009: Dark Night Of The Soul: 6
2009: The Spirit Of Apollo: 12

Not Quite Noughtie Enough (46:09) (KF) (Mega)

Thursday 31 October 2024

#SpookyTunesSeason, Volume Two

Clinging onto the Hallowe'en bandwagon, here's the second half of a month-long Twitter challenge, covering the past fortnight and up to today's final tweet.
 
As with Volume One, this has been done on the fly, so you will find zig zags from lo-fi indie to lush alt. country to German disco to reggae to revisionist pop history.

Once more, the 'sleevenotes' are a direct lift from my tweets, which provide little insight other than I clearly need more caffeine in the morning!
 
Spider To The Fly: Isobel Campbell
From Isobel's current album Bow To Love, which is so good that she also recorded and released the entire album in French as Place à l'Amour. Fantasmagorique!
 
Frankenstein Conquers The World: Jad Fair & Daniel Johnston
...or Frankenstein vs. The World, if you got the expanded UK/Europe reissue in 1993, renaming the original self-titled album as - what else? - It's Spooky.
 
Pretty Little Graves: Baby Bird
Tucked away on the B-side of the Cornershop single, uptempo rhythms belying Stephen Jones' downbeat lyrics.
 
Where The Creepyboyz Sing: John Cale
This turned up as a Japan-only bonus track on the Hobo Sapiens album, less than 1k views on You Tube. Deserves to be heard!
 
The New Cobweb Summer (Album Version): Lambchop
Hard to believe that this song is over 20 years old. Here's a more recent, but equally lovely, live version from Pickathon 2019.
 
(Do Not) Stand In The Shadows (Moby Remix): Billy Idol
Moby takes Billy's 1983 album track, chews it up, spits it out 35 years later for a remix album project. Vital Idol Revitalised? Regurgitated, more like! I love it.
 
Spooky Rhodes: Laika
From the Sounds Of The Satellites album, which I was lucky enough to catch them touring in the UK. Here's a fan-made video, which seems to have no relation to the song...Not spooky, but odd.
 
Soul Dracula: Hot Blood
Ready for some German disco on Dutch TV? There was a follow up LP in 1977 called Dracula And Co, including Baby Frankie Stein, Dracula Goes Dreamy and, er, Sex Me.
 
Because You're Frightened (Album Version): Magazine
Magazine's reformation in 2009 for an album and tour was something I'd previously thought impossible. I was lucky enough to see them in Birmingham. An astonishing show.
 
My Boy Builds Coffins (Album Version): Florence + The Machine
A lovely interview & performance from 2008, when Flo' was 'one to watch'. She's done alright since, hasn't she?
 
As I Washed The Blood Off: The Fatima Mansions
From the much missed Cathal Coughlan. I'm endlessly fascinated by the songs that people choose to make DIY videos for and post on You Tube...
 
Nightmare: Bim Sherman
Nightmares? Here's the remedy.
 
Killer Inside Me (Killer Long Version): MC 900 Ft. Jesus
Mark Griffin deftly mixed rap, jazz and unsettling narratives in the early 90s before retiring from the biz. And his full name is supposed to be '900 foot' not 'featuring'...!
 
Trick Or Treat: Otis Redding
A co-write with Isaac Hayes, it's hard to believe that this remained unreleased until 1992. A monster tune!
 
Thriller (The Reflex 'Halloween Disco' Edit): Michael Jackson
An obvious pick, but possibly a version that some may not have heard before. Nicolas Laugier works his magic yet again.  
 
Whether you're celebrating or battening down the hatches this evening, you could do worse than give this a spin. Though possibly not much worse ;-)

1) Spider To The Fly: Isobel Campbell (2024)
2) Frankenstein vs. The World (Video Version): Jad Fair & Daniel Johnston (1989)
3) Pretty Little Graves: Baby Bird (1997)
4) Where The Creepyboyz Sing: John Cale (2003)
5) The New Cobweb Summer (Album Version): Lambchop (2002)
6) (Do Not) Stand In The Shadows (Moby Remix): Billy Idol (2018)
7) Spooky Rhodes: Laika (1997)
8) Soul Dracula: Hot Blood (1975)
9) Because You're Frightened (Album Version): Magazine (1980)
10) My Boy Builds Coffins (Album Version): Florence + The Machine (2009)
11) As I Washed The Blood Off: The Fatima Mansions (1994)
12) Nightmare: Bim Sherman (1990)
13) Killer Inside Me (Killer Long Version): MC 900 Ft. Jesus (1991)
14) Trick Or Treat: Otis Redding (1966)
15) Thriller (The Reflex 'Halloween Disco' Edit): Michael Jackson (2013)

Volume Two (1:06:16) (KF) (Mega)

Wednesday 30 October 2024

#SpookyTunesSeason, Volume One

Jumping on the Hallowe'en bandwagon, this is the first half of a month-long bit of fun over on Twitter. I've literally been making it up as I go along, so it's a surprisingly coherent Dubhed selection, all things considered.

Expect some wild swerves from indie to reggae to rap to disco to bubblegum pop to contemporary breakbeats. I've copied and pasted my 'sleevenotes' directly from Musk's manky bird. 

I Walked With A Zombie: R.E.M.
I was going to ‘rest’ for a month, but there’s clearly no rest for the undead… Starting big with this great cover from R.E.M.
 
Ghouls: Wooden Shjips
Ripley Johnson, Dusty Jermier, Nash Whalen & Omar Ahsanuddin R.O.C.K. out!
 
My Beloved Monster: Eels
I suspect this song may have been posted lots already, so here’s a lovely version from the 2 Meter Sessions in 1997.
 
Vampire: Sinéad O'Connor
Cover of the Devon Irons & Dr. Alimantado/Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry classic from 1977. Sinéad produced by Sly & Robbie and absolutely smashing it.  
 
Devil Is A Liar: Kode9 & The Spaceape
Astonishing music and video, sadly released posthumously as The Space Ape aka Stephen Gordon passed far too soon on 2nd Oct 2014.  
 
Horrorworld: Momus
I nearly picked The Hairstyle Of The Devil, but this more recent offering from Mr. Currie also has a suitably creepy video.

Werewolves On Wheels: Don Gere
Forget the "first ever motorcycle horror film", it's the soundtrack & especially the main theme that you need to hunt down. Just remember to bring the silver bullets.

Terror In The Canyons (The Wounded Master): Phosphorescent
Lots of great live performances out there, including this one atop the Studio Brussel tower in Belgium, on 26 May 2013 (like today, also a Tuesday)

I Don't Want To Be A Freak (But I Can't Help Myself): Dynasty
 
Garghouls (Richard Sen Remix): Funboys
Head straight for the Sen. Old school video, new school vibes courtesy of this Norwegian-Australian-Belgian-Anglo collab.
 
Munster Creep: The Munsters
A cash-in single and album on the classic TV show that's actually pretty good. The real musicians apparently include Glen Campbell on guitar and Leon Russell on keys. Spooky! (#1)
 
These Are The Ghosts: The Bees
Their harmonies are the bees' knees, as this 2011 live version amply demonstrates.
 
Plastic Man, You're The Devil: Pink Mountaintops
From The Bees to McBean. Stephen McBean, that is, with a lovely live version from Vienna in 2009. 
 
She's Got A New Spell: Billy Bragg
I'd already chosen the song before fact checking and I have just discovered this was released as a single in the UK on 14th November 1988. Spooky! (#2)
 
Dirty Creature: Split Enz
The video is online but I've gone for this performance on short-lived Australian daytime music show WROK. Health warning: hairy chests from the start.

Skeletons: Yeah Yeah Yeahs
Lots of YYY contenders, but I don't think this has made an appearance so far. Great song from a great album.  
 
With Volume Two landing tomorrow, I'll leave it to you to decide if this is 'trick' or 'treat'...!

1) I Walked With A Zombie (Cover of Roky Erickson & The Aliens): R.E.M. (1990)
2) Ghouls: Wooden Shjips (2013)
3) My Beloved Monster (Album Version): Eels (1996)
4) Vampire (Album Version) (Cover of Lee Perry ft. Devon Irons & Dr. Alimantado): Sinéad O'Connor (2005)
5) Devil Is A Liar: Kode9 & The Spaceape (2014)
6) Horrorworld: Momus (2021)
7) Werewolves On Wheels: Don Gere (1971)
8) Terror In The Canyons (The Wounded Master): Phosphorescent (2013)
9) I Don't Want To Be A Freak (But I Can't Help Myself) (Album Version): Dynasty (1979)
10) Garghouls (Richard Sen Remix): Funboys (2021)
11) Munster Creep: The Munsters (1964)
12) These Are The Ghosts (Undead Version): The Bees (2004)
13) Plastic Man, You're The Devil: Pink Mountaintops (2006)
14) She's Got A New Spell: Billy Bragg (1988)
15) Dirty Creature: Split Enz (1982)
16) Skeletons (Album Version): Yeah Yeah Yeahs (2009)

Volume One (1:08:26) (KF) (Mega)

Tuesday 29 October 2024

Waking Up From A Dreamin'


Today's selection is forty six minutes of Low
 
In just over a week from now (6th November), it'll be two years since Mimi Parker passed and Low effectively came to an end.
 
As a celebration of the music that Mimi and husband Alan Sparhawk created, I've curated a 10-song selection gleaned entirely from Uncut and Mojo magazine promo CDs, which were effectively my introduction to Low's music. I've since caught up with all of their studio albums, and it's an incredible body of work to say the least.
 
Low were regular features in both magazine's end of year Best Of countdowns and it's little surprise. The music was by turns abrasive and challenging yet also heartrendingly beautiful in it's complexity, especially when Mimi sang solo or harmonised with Alan. 
 
Most of these are lifted straight from the albums, with a few exceptions. Disarray appears on 2018 album Double Negative, here receiving a slight edit to the intro for the version given away with Uncut. 
 
Uncut magazine also presented cover version compilation CDs in 2019 and 2021, focusing on Wilco and Bob Dylan, so I think Low's contributions to both may be exclusive to those releases. Not wanting to be left out, Neil Young also gets a tribute, also an Uncut magazine freebie, this time with Dirty Three. It's an astonishing version, Mimi once again to the fore.
 
Given the disjointed way that the song choices for today's selection arrived, I'm pleased with the sequencing, which I think makes for a coherent and satisfying listening experience. Let me know what you think.
 
1) What Part Of Me (2015)
2) Witches (2011)
3) Just Make It Stop (2013)
4) Breaker (2007)
5) Down By The River (Cover of Neil Young): Low + Dirty Three (2001)
6) War On War (Cover of Wilco) (2019)
7) Disarray (Edit) (2018)
8) Everybody's Song (2005)
9) Hey (2021)
10) Knockin' On Heaven's Door (Cover of Bob Dylan) (2021)
 
2001: In The Fishtank, Volume 7 EP: 5 
2005: The Great Destroyer: 8
2007: Drums And Guns: 4
2011: C'mon: 2
2013: The Invisible Way: 3
2015: Ones And Sixes: 1 
2018: Electric Wonderland (Uncut magazine promo CD): 7
2019: Wilco Covered (Uncut magazine promo CD): 6
2021: Dylan Revisited (Uncut magazine promo CD): 10
2021: Hey What: 9

Waking Up From A Dreamin' (46:46) (KF) (Mega)