Showing posts with label Daniel Miller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daniel Miller. Show all posts

Monday, 27 May 2024

East End Rise

The first and last time I posted a Renegade Soundwave selection was in November 2022, so it's well past time for a return to The Big Smoke for some sleazy beats and frayed rhymes.

Where to start? Both albums and their dub companions are essential purchases in my mind and the singles offer up a plethora of remixes, usually by RSW themseleves, that are all worth checking out.

So, here's another brief (under 45 minute) selection that dips in and out of all of them. You may need a shower after to wash the grime of the city off.
 
1) Space Gladiator (Vocal Remix) (1989)
2) Manphibian (1990)
3) On TV (Album Version) (1989)
4) Cocaine Sex (Bonus Porno Beats) (1987)
5) Probably A Robbery (7") (1990)
6) Positive I.D. (Radio Mix) (1995)
7) Thunder (Album Version) (1990)
8) The Man Who Wouldn't Let Wax Wane (Album Version) (1995)
9) Kray Twins (12" Version) (1987)
10) Brixton (Album Version) (1995)
11) Women Respond To Bass (Women Respond To The Terror Drums ft. Pascale Fuillée-Kendall) (1992)
 
1987: Cocaine Sex EP: 4 
1987: Kray Twins EP: 9
1989: Soundclash: 3
1989: Space Gladiator/The Phantom EP: 1 
1990: Probably A Robbery EP: 5 
1990: RSW In Dub: 7
1990: Thunder II EP: 2
1992: Women Respond To Bass EP: 11
1995: Howyoudoin?: 10
1995: Positive I.D. EP: 6
1995: The Next Chapter Of Dub: 8

East End Rise (43:47) (KF) (Mega)

You can find the previous RSW selection, I'm Checking Out Her Rhythms, right here.

Sunday, 11 February 2024

I Am Damo Suzuki

Celebrating Damo Suzuki, 16th January 1950 to 9th February 2024.
 
This one damn near broke me. And I don't mean on an emotional level, but physically trying to get today's selection and post up here. I like to think that in some other plane of existence, Damo is aware of my amateurish efforts and chain of mishaps this morning and is having a belly laugh at my expense, before turning his attention to things of greater cosmic import.
 
I had another post lined up for today, but I woke this morning to the news of Damo's passing and decided that I wanted to post a tribute to him instead.
 
To be honest, I didn't expect it to be a very big job: I have relatively little by Can to begin with and Damo was with them from 1970 to 1973 which narrowed the selection further. I have absolutely nothing of Damo's post-Can career. 
 
And the news that I could have seen Damo play a gig with Fuzz Against Junk in the intimate surrounds of Fiddlers Club in south Bristol in March 2004 is a non-story as I decided not to get a ticket. In retrospect, I should have gone and taken the following day off work.

I then got it into my head that, in the spirit of Damo's improvisational style, I should actually try and cut-and-paste collage of all of the entire longlist, throwing in cover versions and remixes of Damo-era Can songs to boot. So I suddenly had about 20-odd songs and about 3+ hours of material to work with. Okay, so it was going to take a big longer than usual, but I was game...

I was about 3 songs in and thinking that it had got off to a reasonably good start when the Apple Music app which holds my digital music collection starting acting weirdly, shortly followed by the on-screen announcement that the wireless mouse has 1% charge left. Closing down and re-opening the app completely wiped the working playlist that I'd created. No problem, I said through gritted teeth (okay, I did swear a bit too), I'll start over again.

I do have a 'backup' wireless mouse. Unfortunately, it's the 'original' one whose increasingly impaired performance resulted in the purchase of the 'current' one, which had less than 1% at this point and promptly lost connection. The 'backup' had 20% charge which would be fine. However, one it's quirks is unpredictable cursor action, usually resulting in you getting the complete opposite of what you're trying to achieve. Cue lots of examples in the Audacity app of highlighting, moving, editing and cutting  anything but the bit of the music that I was actually working on. 

I could see the job doubling and trebling in length. Thankfully, after an hour there was sufficient charge on the 'current' mouse to abandon the 'backup' and have some hope of completing and posting this selection before Sunday is over.

Another 'improvised' decision as a result of my tech woes, but which may be a blessing to you dear readers, is that the selection is a mere 14 songs. I decided to cut my losses after Halleluhwah and tacked the intended closing song Turtles Have Short Legs at the end. 

So you are denied/spared (delete as applicable) Future Days, Moonshake, Paperhouse, Sing Swan Song, Mighty Girl*, Vitamin C and Yoo Do Right. What you do get is two hours of music edited down to roughly 66 minutes, all giving a nod to Damo's brilliance.

Mother Sky switches between the Can original and the Pilooski edit. On Mushroom, you'll hear Damo duetting with Jim Reid for the first and last time. Mark E. Smith inevitably gets in on the act with The Fall's own tribute from 1985. 
 
Oh Yeah appears in three increasingly shorter sections, courtesy of Can, Kris Needs and Mute label maestro Daniel Miller. There's the wonderfully titled Tape Kebab from a John Peel session* and three versions of Can's masterwork Halleluhwah.
 
First up is the 1995 version by Spirit Feel, featuring Claudia Brücken and Susanne Freytag formerly of Propaganda. This is followed by Damo fronting the original album version. Both of these push beyond 18 minutes; you get much less here, but the addition of a third, closing section from - who else? - The Orb, released a couple of years after the Spirit Feel cover version.

The closer, Turtles Have Short Leg, is incredibly short by Can standards, but one of many examples of their lighter, poppier moments. Well, relatively speaking.

Neither the words nor the selection really do justice to Damo the man, the musician, the uniquely talented individual and front person, be it Can, Damo Suzuki's Network or the numerous collaborations and improvisations that he's been responsible for. 
 
But in reading about my amateurish efforts and chain of mishaps to get this out here today, I hope you'll join Damo in a chuckle, a laugh or a full-on belly laugh. And then go and play some more of his music, long and loud.

See you, Damo.
 
1) I'm So Green: Can (1973)
2) Mother Sky (Album Version): Can (1970)
3) Mother Sky (Pilooski Edit By Cédric Marszewski): Can (2007)
4) Mushroom (Album Version): Can (1971)
5) Mushroom (Live In Nuremburg): The Jesus & Mary Chain (1986)
6) I Am Damo Suzuki: The Fall (1985)
7) Oh Yeah (Album Version): Can (1971)
8) Oh Yeah (Secret Knowledge Mix By Kris Needs & Henry Cullen ft. Jah Wobble): Can (1997)
9) Oh Yeah (Sunroof! Mix By Daniel Miller & Gareth Jones): Can (1997)
10) Tape Kebab (John Peel Session): Can (1974) 
11) Halleluhwah: Spirit Feel ft. Claudia Brücken & Susanne Freytag (1995)
12) Halleluhwah (Album Version): (1971)
13) Halleluhwah (Halleluwa Orbus II) (Remix By The Orb aka Alex Paterson & Andy Hughes) (1997)
14) Turtles Have Short Legs: Can (1971)
 
I Am Damo Suzuki (1:06:16) (KF) (Mega)

Tuesday, 16 May 2023

Devotional

Side 2 of a Depeche Mode mixtape, recorded sometime around September or October 1998.

The triumphant return of the boys from Basildon with this selection focusing on a decade of mixes from 1988 (not 1989 as advertised above) to 1998, bridging live compilation 101 through to their second singles collection, the rather functionally titled The Singles 86>98.
 
Headstar is a good example of Mode's stock-in-trade B-side, an instrumental that could easily have wound up on a US TV drama soundtrack. World In My Eyes is remixed by The Beloved's Jon Marsh, tucked away on a limited edition single back in 1990.  
 
In Your Room wasn't a particular favourite of mine as a single/album track but the remixes were better, including the one here by Jonny Dollar and featuring my first encounter with Geoff Barrow working under the Portishead moniker. 
 
Wrapping up Side 2 - and the compilation - a rare occasion when I used an alternative to the definitive single version of Enjoy The Silence on a mixtape. Poor old Dave Gahan doesn't get a look in until the closing minute or so, but it's a good mix nevertheless. 
 
I haven't yet got around to buying the latest Depeche Mode album, more a reflection on the ton of great albums that have already landed in 2023 so far. 
 
1) Headstar (Single Mix By Tim Simenon & Robin Hancock) (1998)
2) Nothing (Zip-Hop Mix By Justin Strauss & Eric Kupper) (1988)
3) World In My Eyes (Mayhem Mode) (Remix By Jon Marsh) (1990)
4) I Feel You (Babylon Mix By Supereal aka John Crossley) (1993)
5) Barrel Of A Gun (United Mix By Paul Freegard & Marc Waterman ft. Vanessa) (1997) 
6) Home (LFO Meant To Be) (Remix By Mark Bell) (1997)
7) In Your Room (The Jeep Rock Mix By Jonny Dollar & Portishead) (Edit) (1994)
8) Enjoy The Silence (Ricki Tik Tik Mix By Daniel Miller & Phil Legg) (1990)

Side Two (46:22) (KF) (Mega)
 
If that's left you hungry for more Mode, here are the previous selections I posted in August 2021 and May 2022.
 

Tuesday, 29 November 2022

I'm Checking Out Her Rhythms

Time for some Renegade Soundwave, their first selection and only fifth appearance on this blog in total (six if you count their remix of Pop Will Eat Itself).

This selection draws from various singles and album tracks from 1987 to 1995, most of the remixes by RSW themselves. Inevitably, there's an epic remix by Andrew Weatherall, Jagz Kooner and Gary Burns aka the mighty Sabres Of Paradise.

1) Renegade Soundwave (Basstube Shakin') (Remix By Renegade Soundwave & Mark 'Spike' Stent) (1994)
2) Last Freedom Fighter (Album Version By Renegade Soundwave, Steve Osborne & Ben Hillier) (1994)
3) Probably A Robbery (Extended Mix By Daniel Miller & Rico Conning) (1990)
4) Brixton (Sabres Of Paradise Mix By Andrew Weatherall, Jagz Kooner & Gary Burns) (1995)
5) Deadly (Album Version By Renegade Soundwave & Tim Davies) (1990)
6) Kray Twins (Dragon Bass Sound System Mix By Renegade Soundwave, Karl Bonnie & Paul Kendall) (1987)
7) Positive I.D. (Book Of Isaiah Mix By Gary Asquith & Julian Briottet) (1995)
8) Cocaine Sex (Sub-Aqua Overdrive) (Remix By Renegade Soundwave, Karl Bonnie, Paul Kendall & Rico Conning) (Original Version) (1987)
9) Biting My Nails (Bassnumb Chapter) (Remix By Renegade Soundwave & Flood) (1990)

1987: Cocaine Sex EP: 8
1987: Kray Twins EP: 6
1990: Biting My Nails EP: 9
1990: Probably A Robbery EP: 3
1990: RSW In Dub: 5
1994: Howyoudoin?: 2
1994: Renegade Soundwave EP: 1
1995: Brixton EP: 4
1995: Positive Dub Mixes EP: 7

I'm Checking Out Her Rhythms (48:23) (KF) (Mega)

Saturday, 26 November 2022

Your Cassette Pet!

Side 2 of a cassette compilation, recorded September 1991. 
 
Essentially, this is a trawl through my brother's collection of albums on tape, cherry picking favourite songs to stick on two sides of a C90. The title is nod to 1980's cassette-only album by Bow Wow Wow, which my brother didn't own and therefore isn't featured here, but I had a copy of a copy which my friend had given me.

It's an eclectic mix albeit firmly in 'alternative' territory, with Flesh For Lulu, Marc Almond (here with The Mambas), Bauhaus and Howard Devoto. I was arguably the bigger Depeche Mode fan as a teen but I bought only the singles, whilst my brother had their first three albums, all on cassette. 

Part of the appeal of cassettes was the 'double play' format, where you'd either get two albums for the price of one or a slew of bonus tracks on Side 2. Quite a few examples here: Fashion's Fabrique contained a whole side of remixes, whist Laibach paired Opus Dei with their cover of The Beatles' Let It Be album. 
 
The The's Soul Mining was perhaps the strangest of the lot. The original album on Side 1, the flip side containing 6 songs purportedly planned for The The's aborted album The Pornography Of Despair. Things get off to a reasonably normal start with the re-recorded version of Perfect. And then Three Orange Kisses From Kazan, a real WTF? moment. Initially, I was both shit-scared and morbidly fascinated by the song, but it's long since become a highlight of The The's back catalogue for me. 
 
Many of the artists have 2 or 3 songs on this compilation. This Mortal Coil is no exception, though the late inclusion of a 1:30 edit of Waves Become Wings was clearly to pad out Side 2's running time. With apologies to Lisa Gerrard, who is just getting into her stride when she's unceremoniously faded out, I've retained the edit for this recreated selection.
 
Last but not least, a brace of cover versions by Laibach (a third from Let It be is on Side 1). In both cases, they take songs - by Queen and Opus - that I didn't particularly care for and create bruising, industrial marching songs that take the clichéd phrase "...and make it their own" to a whole other place. 
 
Side 1 may take a while to come, as it features a track from Bristol-band Renegade Flight, who I saw live several times in the late 1980s and picked up a couple of their DIY cassettes from their merch stall. I think I've still got them - and a tape deck - somewhere in a box in the attic, so hopefully I can find and convert to MP3 format in the next 12 months. Just don't hold your breath!
 
1) The Sun And The Rainfall (Album Version): Depeche Mode (1982)
2) Rainy Season (Album Version): Howard Devoto (1983)
3) Subterraneans (Album Version): Flesh For Lulu (1984)
4) Something In Your Picture (Alternative Playback) (Half Frame) (Remix By Zeus B. Held): Fashion (1982)
5) Shame (Album Version): Depeche Mode (1983)
6) Geburt Einer Nation (Album Version) (Cover of 'One Vision' by Queen): Laibach (1987)
7) Who Killed Mr. Moonlight?: Bauhaus (1983)
8) Three Orange Kisses From Kazan: The The (1982)
9) Caroline Says II (Cover of Lou Reed): Marc & The Mambas (1982)
10) Waves Become Wings (Edit): This Mortal Coil ft. Lisa Gerrard (1984)
11) Opus Dei (Album Version) (Cover of 'Live Is Life' by Opus): Laibach (1987)

1982: A Broken Frame: 1
1982: Something In Your Picture EP / Fabrique (Special Edition Double Play Cassette): 4
1982: Untitled: 9
1983: Burning From The Inside: 7
1983: Construction Time Again: 5
1983: Jerky Versions Of The Dream: 2
1983: Uncertain Smile EP / Soul Mining (Special Edition Double Play Cassette): 8
1984: Flesh For Lulu: 3
1984: It'll End In Tears: 10
1987: Geburt Einer Nation EP / Opus Dei: 6, 11

Side Two (45:55) (KF) (Mega)

Saturday, 28 May 2022

Moving Violations

Celebrating Andy 'Fletch' Fletcher of Depeche Mode, 8th July 1961 to 26th May 2022.
 
Without this blog becoming a musical obituary, I couldn't let more sad news this week pass with no comment or tribute. Last August, I wrote about seeing Depeche Mode live in concert at the age of 15, the first gig I'd ever been to. 

I'm going to let the music pretty much speak for itself today. This selection features both sides of a mixtape that I compiled 20th October 1990. By no means the first Depeche Mode compilation cassette I did, this one features a slew of remixes by François Kevorkian, Flood, Daniel Miller, The Beatmasters, Phil Harding, Tim Simenon, The Beloved, as well as relatively rarer (at the time) US mixes by Joseph Watt, Bert Bevans and Robert Margouleff.
 
A number of these are vinyl rips, so apologies for the variable audio quality.
 
Thanks, Fletch, you did good.
 
Side One
1) Route 66 (Remixed By The Beatmasters) (Cover of Nat King Cole & The King Cole Trio) (1987)
2) Sea Of Sin (Sensoria) (Remix By François Kevorkian & Alan Friedman) (1990)
3) A Question Of Lust (Remix By Flood) (1986)
4) World In My Eyes (Mode To Joy) (Remix By The Beloved) (1990)
5) Fly On The Windscreen (Death Mix By Gareth Jones) (1985)
6) Enjoy The Silence (The Quad: Final Edit By Tim Simenon) (1990)
7) The Things You Said (Album Version) (1987)
8) Nothing (Album Version) (1987)
9) A Question Of Time (Remix By Phil Harding) (1986)
 
Side Two
1) Behind The Wheel (Beatmasters Mix) (1987)
2) But Not Tonight (U.S. Extended Mix By Robert Margouleff) (1986)
3) Pleasure, Little Treasure (Glitter Mix By Depeche Mode & Dave Bascombe) (1987)
4) Get The Balance Right! (Combination Mix By Daniel Miller & Depeche Mode) (Cold End) (1983)
5) Flexible (Pre-Deportation Mix By Bert Bevans) (1985)
6) (Set Me Free) Remotivate Me (12" Mix) (Edited By Joseph Watt) (1984)
7) Dangerous (Sensual Mix By Flood) (1989)
 
Side One (46:02) (KF) (Mega)
Side Two (45:38) (KF) (Mega)

Sunday, 22 May 2022

No Colours Or Shapes, No Sound In My Head

A return to my very infrequent selections based on past gigs I've attended. Today it's the turn of Goldfrapp.
 
Mrs. K loves Duran Duran* so when the original line-up, including errant guitar player Andy Taylor, reformed in 2004, then it was a no-brainer that we'd get tickets to see them live in concert. I'm not particularly a fan of Duran Duran or arena concerts, but the fact that the "special guests" were Goldfrapp was greatly appealing.
 
Being in Block G, Row H, I'll admit that the view of Alison Goldfrapp, Will Gregory and band was a tad distant and the nuances of the costumes and set pieces were a little lost on us. Aurally, the band were in great form and Alison inevitably in stunning voice. It was a relatively short support slot of just seven songs, heavily focused on second album, Black Cherry, with a couple of Felt Mountain tracks to open and their cover of Yes Sir I Can Boogie by Baccara thrown in for good measure. It's fair to say that for Mrs. K, like the PJ Harvey gig later the same year, Goldfrapp fell into the category of 'didn't like' but Duran Duran were great that night, so that's all that really mattered.
 
For today's selection, I'll dusted off some little-played remixes, the promo-only extended mix of Yes Sir and a nice new Italian bootleg re-edit of Lovely Head that I stumbled across recently.
 
1) Utopia (Sunroof Mix By Daniel Miller & Gareth Jones) (2000)
2) Lovely Head (Mix 2022 By Gianluca Avagliano) (2022)
3) Tiptoe (Album Version) (2003)
4) Twist (Single Mix) (2003)
5) Train (Ewan Pearson 6/8 Vocal) (2003)
6) Yes Sir (Extended Mix) (Cover of 'Yes Sir I Can Boogie' by Baccara) (2003)
7) Strict Machine (Paris Loaded) (Remix By Dave Bascombe & Tom Elmhirst) (2004) 
 
2000: Utopia EP: 1
2003: Black Cherry: 3 
2003: Train EP: 5
2003: Twist EP: 4
2003: Yes Sir EP: 6
2004: Strict Machine EP: 7 (aka Guitar Mix)
2022: Lovely Head EP: 1
 
 
* Unlike my unconditional, arguably obsessive, love for certain acts, Mrs. K is a bit more discerning with Duran Duran. It's the original line-up only: little or no interest in their albums once Andy Taylor had slung his hook (both times).

Saturday, 28 August 2021

Wise Up!

Side 2 of a mixtape, recorded December 1991 to January 1992. I'd clearly recently bought Keeping The Faith: A Creation Dance Compilation, as it features heavily on both sides. I'd also taken delivery of a box of stuff that I'd picked up during my short time living and working in Perth, which I'd packaged and shipped home via sea- and land-mail services at the end of my year in Australia. I think it took about three months to reach me but it was like an early Christmas, especially the small selection of vinyl that I'd bought over there. The Soft Cell and Cabaret Voltaire tracks definitely came from that shipment. The Julian Cope track was the third of a trilogy of Hugo Nicolson remixes, this one in a lovely picture disc in yellow packaging. A bastard to store without damaging, especially with the number of short-term rents and constant moves I had in the 1990s, it has to be said. Very few of these songs could be found on the college jukebox or were being played out in the clubs that I was going to at the time. I was probably going to the wrong clubs...
 
1) Philly (Jamorphous Mix): Fluke (1990)
2) Time Beats (Album Version): Cabaret Voltaire ft. Lorita Grahame (1990)
3) Acid Love (Original Mix By Adam & Eve): The Beloved (1988) 
4) Memorabilia (12" Version By Daniel Miller): Soft Cell (1981)
5) Hypnotonic (Promo 12" Version): Hypnotone ft. Carlos (2 Supreme) (1991)
6) Heed: Of Penetration And The City Dweller (Head Remix By Hugo Nicolson): Julian Cope (1991)
7) Repetition (Dub): Tackhead (1990)
8) W.F.L. (The Vince Clarke Mix): Happy Mondays (1989)
 


 

Friday, 28 May 2021

Fever (Still) Needs A Cure

Side 1 of a 1996 mixtape, rescued from the loft. 
 
1) The Storm (12" Edit By Cliff Bridgen & Hugo Nicholson): World Of Twist (1990)
2) Infected (12" Mix): The The (1986)
3) They're Here (Cenobite Mix): EMF (1992)
4) Oolaa (Meat Beat Manifesto Mutation): Orbital (1992)
5) Lightning Man (The Industry vs The Ebb Mix By Daniel Miller): NItzer Ebb (1990)
6) Hollywood Boulevard (Club Mix By Sam Sever): BIg Audio Dynamite (1986)
7) Make It Mine (V2.2 Evil Ed) (Remix By "Evil" Eddie Richards): The Shamen ft. Rhyme & Reason (1990)
8) Don't Lose Your Dreams (The Cabaret Voltaire Freak Mix): Pete Wylie & Wah! The Mongrel... (1991)
 
Find Side Two here