Showing posts with label experimental rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label experimental rock. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 6, 2019

Swans - leaving meaning.



2019 has been a year of disappointments with regard to albums I've been expecting: Earth's successor to Primitive & Deadly was completely unimaginative, Martyrdod's Hexhammaren was a shit turn to metal, a predictable development since they signed to Century Media, and of course Mayhem's Daemon proves once more why we should all spill blood to Satan so that Blasphemer returns. So, all these months I've been thinking that I will be disappointed by the return of Swans, or to be more precise of Gira and friends. The guest list is extremely impressive and promises an amazing listening experience: The Necks, von Hausswolff sisters, all members of the 2010-2016 run, as well as Ben Frost (who I don't really like but anyway). Plus I really liked the demos of What Is This. However, the album is quite calm if we compare it to the sonic onslaught of the previous years, and reminds more of Angels Of Light with a more psychedelic feeling. OK, objectively the songs are amazing, but I don't feel the vibes of the previous ones, of if I should be more precise it reminds me kinda strongly of To Be Kind, the most boring of the four albums, and the one with the weakest production, an element the new album shares, especially in the more rocking and drum-filled tracks. But then, with the things that are happening in my life the time to devote completely to demanding albums is very limited so perhaps this is the problem. 2019 2 X cd on Mute/Young God Records.

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Saturday, September 8, 2018

Swans - Filth/Body To Body/EP #1/Live Recordings 3-cd reissue



Of course theres nothing to be said about Swans' first monstrous album of cacophonic oppressive filth. I'm just posting this because I recently finished the Sacrifice And Transcendence: The Oral History book with interviews of various people close to Michael Gira and Swans compiled by Nick Soulsby. It's a fun book documenting Gira's oppressive personality and regimental discipline imposed on the band, plus the many crazy reactions to the band's loudness. Jarboe comes off as an extremely likeable person by most interviewees, Bill Laswell is mostly berated for the production he imposed on The Burning World album. What I found lacking was discussion on the reunion line-up and experience of Swans which was kinda short and didn't care to make any mention of the decision to disband it and Gira's enigmatic plans about how Swans will continue; plus, since the book is as much a Swans biography as an account of Gira's life and his life post-Swans (with some really negative comments by his Angels of Light collaborators), I would definitely have liked it had the book delved into the rape allegations made by Larkin Grimm, given that she hasn't pressed charges against him and that Gira has made a too vague response as far as I'm concerned. I hope that the truth will come out one day; whether Gira has done it or not, there must be some form of financial help for women who have been raped so that they can legally go forward, and so that Larkin Grimm can do what she deems best to prove if Gira is scum or not.

So, the three-cd reissue of Filth includes the album remastered plus a live recording from 1982-3 on the first cd, the amazing Body To Body Job To Job live cd comprising of recordings from 1982-85 in all their brutality - damn that LOUD version of 'Raping a Slave' (and includes the only live recording I've heard of Sue Hanel with Swans), and the third cd includes the first EP, and other early live recordings. Enjoy. 2015 3-cd set on Young God Records/Mute.

CD1: Filth
CD2: Body To Body
CD3: EP/Live Recordings

Monday, August 20, 2018

Can ‎– WDR Funkhaus, Größer Sendesaal, Köln, 1972



A bootlegged recording of a 1972 gig Can did in Köln straight from a radio broadcast, as can be understood at the end of "Mushroom," where there's a speaker talking in German. The sound quality is acceptable, albeit a little distant and with focus on drums. You get Michael Karoli doing some nice long jams on "Mushroom," and an aggressive, drum-frantic 13-minute rendition of "Spoon," combined with an unknown (for me) track called "Love Me Tonight," while "Bring Me Coffee or Tea," and "Halleluhwah" get an additional heavy jazz funk vibe. Bootleg tape released by Anökumena.

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Friday, April 6, 2018

Anna Von Hausswolff - Dead Magic cd



The new cd of Anna Von Hausswolff is her best yet, solidifying the "drone rock"/"funeral pop" style she expounded on Ceremony and The Miraculous. Fortunately she has toned down on the ethereal aspects of her work and adopted a rawer and heavier style, possibly the outcome of her association and touring with Swans. Her vocals have also become absolutely amazing, as shown in the t-e-r-r-i-f-i-c second track "The Mysterious Vanishing of Electra," which is an early contender for best song of the year. Congratulations. 2018 cd on City Slang.

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Monday, April 2, 2018

Katerina Gogou & Kyriakos Sfetsas - Sto Dromo (On The Road)






"Loneliness
does not have the saddened colour
of the cloudy bimbo in her eyes.
She does not stroll abstractly and self-content
Shaking her hips in concert halls
And in frozen museums.
She is not the yellow picture frames of “good” old times
And naphthalene in granny’s chests
Rosy ribbons and straw hats.
She does not open her legs faking her giggles
A cow’s gaze rhythmic sighs
And assorted underwear.
Loneliness
Has the colour of Pakistanis, this loneliness
And she is counted inch by inch
Along with their pieces
In the bottom of the light-shaft.
She stands patiently queuing
Bournazi – Santa Barbara – Kokkinia
Touba –Stavroupoli – Kalamaria

Under all weathers
With a sweaty head.
She ejaculates screaming and smashes the front windows with chains
She occupies the means of production
She blows up private property
She is a Sunday visit in prison
Same step in the yard revolutionaries and penal prisoners
She is sold and bought minute by minute, breath by breath
In the slave markets of the earth – Kotzia  is near here
Wake up early.
Wake up to see it.
She is a whore in the rotten-houses
The German drill for conscripts
And the last
Endless miles of the national highway towards the center
Suspended like meat imported from Bulgaria.
And when her blood clots and she can take no more
Of her kind being sold so cheaply
She dances barefoot on the tables a zeibekiko
Holding in her bruised blue hands
A well sharpened axe.
Loneliness,
Our loneliness I say. Its our loneliness I am speaking about,
Is an axe in our hands
That over your heads is swirling swirling swirling swirling"


This is probably the best hidden treasure I discovered in Greece. It's the soundtrack of a 1980 Greek film called Paragelia (The Order), which portrays the story of Nikos Koemtzis, a habitual petty offender who was constantly harassed by the police in the 1970s. The film revolved around his killing some police officers who had insulted him and his brother at a nightclub. Koemtzis's brother had asked the club orchestra to play a song for him so that he would dance the zeibekiko dance, which is a Greek dancing style highlighting masculinity. When he started dancing some pigs who were following them started dancing as well, which is considered a highly disrespectful act of dishonor towards the manliness of the one who the song is being played for. Infuriated, Koemtzis stands up and stabs to death the pigs and goes into hiding. In real life, Koemtzis was put on death row by the court during the dictatorship in Greece, but he wasn't executed since his death sentence was nullified after the restoration of democracy. He lived out his final years in Monastiraki, one of the crowded tourist spots in the center of Athens selling his autobiography.

The film was directed by Pavlos Tasios and garnered awards and enjoys great fame in the Greek underground and anarchist scene, for its depiction of defiance to the police and authority. Another reason for the film's popularity is the participation of Katerina Gogou, wife of the director and a famed anarchist poet. She took part in many films during the 1960s, playing stereotypical roles of naive girls and housemaids, but when she resurfaced in the late 1970s she had become a strong actress playing in neo-realist political films. She is however better known for her poems, which portray scenes of urban anxiety, of the lowlife lumpenproletariat that is ignored and marginalized by the left-wing orthodoxy's adoration of an idealized working class, of frustration and anger at the legalization and pacifism of the official communist movement on its reintegration into the political system after the end of the dictatorship, of the left's repeated denunciation of the violent riots made by anarchist youth in the center of the Athens, a very frequent feature of Greek politics of the last four decades. Gogou doesn't play a character in the film, she's like a phantom narrator at the backstage of the nightclub spewing curses at a world excluding the lumpens, the immigrants, the gays and the transgenders (her poems frequently negotiated such topics) and praising self-control, faux morality and moderation. Katerina Gogou never became an actress of the limelight. She increasingly battled depression and drug addiction, before taking her life in the early 1990s.

“Our life is knife stabs
at dirty blind alleys
rotten teeth faded out slogans
bass clothes cabinet
smell of piss antiseptics
and moulded sperm. Torn down posters.
Up and down. Up and down Patission Street

Our life is Patission Street.
Washing powder which does not pollute the sea
And Mitropanos have entered our lives
Dexameni has taken him from us too
Like those high ass ladies.
But we are still there.
All our lives hungry we travel
The same course.
Ridicule-loneliness-despair. And backwards.
OK. We don’t cry. We grew up.
Only when it rains
We suck secretly on our thumb. And we smoke.
Our life is
Pointless panting
In set-up strikes
Snitches and patrol cars.
That’s why I'm telling you.
The next time they shoot us
Don’t run away. Count our strength.
Let's not sell our skin so cheap, damn it!
Don’t. Its raining. Give me a cigarette”


The music soundtrack of the film is awesome. Written and orchestrated by an avant-garde composer called Kyriakos Sfetsas, it is a score adequately reflecting the film's mood and themes. Combining dizzying cocktail jazz noir with dark post-punkish/new wave riffs and influences from Greek traditional music styles such as zeibekiko, rebetiko, tsifteteli with melancholy rock, and performed by ensemble consisting of reeds, horns, rock instruments, strings, Fender Rhodes and santur, it creates a feeling of constant anxiety and being on the run, which is increased by Gogou reciting her poems on top either screaming or mourning. A very interesting aspect of this album is the censorship on some curse words Gogou uses, which are marked by a hilarious alarm sound on some songs. This album is gold, definitely worth checking out. Originally released in 1981 on Columbia, this has been ripped from the 1995 EMI reissue.

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As a bonus I'm including two more albums by Kyriakos Sfetsas. One is the 1980 album Horis Synora (Without Boundaries) which is a full-fledged exploration of the crossroads between modern jazz and traditional Greek music, and more particularly from the Epiros region, creating a perfect and a very unique brand of jazz fusion. The other is called Silent Days and was released in 1991, featuring Keith Jarrett- and ECM-styled jazz.

Download Horis Synora (Without Boundaries)
Download Silent Days

Check out two scenes from the Paragelia film. The first one is the scene in which Koemtzis kills the cops, with Gogou reciting the album's first poem "Our life is knife stabs" (the second poem I'm pasting here)



and the other one is "Loneliness," the first one I'm pasting.

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Anna Von Hausswolff - Ceremony & The Miraculous

Uh oh, doesn't Anna Von Hausswolff like what the music would have been in a medieval Pull & Bear clothes store? The base for her sound is gothic, church-organ heavy drony rock, but her high-tone vocals, the production and the pop sensibilities bring out a much more lush sound, like what Lana Del Rey would sound like if she listened to mid-1990s Swans, were Scandinavian, and didn't address her music to teen girls shopping at Forever 21, but to Vikings looking for a new shield at a Hanseatic city mall while on a break from attacking Christian monks. Lawl. OK, a more serious description could "Dead Can Dance covering Black Sabbath." Well, I hope that the references to Lana Del Rey and clothes big stores don't put off people from listening, she is fun, and the live videos I've seen on Youtube are more passionate and war-like.



Ceremony: 2012 cd on Kning Disk.

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The Miraculous: 2015 cd on City Slang/Pomperipossa.

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