Showing posts with label no wave. Show all posts
Showing posts with label no wave. Show all posts
Dec 13, 2012
One Plus One (2012)
Harry Pussy 2piece jams- new names new contexts new flows. Where we'd already done the hard work getting through the mindsplitopen abrasiveness of one jam by making sense of it in relation to the thoughtful melancholy of the next, it's that surrealistic interplay or dynamic which elevates their bullshit noise to the level I believe they sat on with almost no one else. One On One defamiliarizes it all over again, forcing its way into your head and stomach and feelings even if you've heard it before, and if you haven't then holy shit hurry up and get started
A
vinyl
try
Aug 13, 2012
Half Japanese - Loud (1981)
On Charmed Life Half Japanese went half-retarded without knowing any chords or theory, just plucking/hitting their instruments in a way they thought sounded alright to cutesy songs inspired by the wise simplicity of Jonathan Richman. I figured they thought they sounded like The Modern Lovers in the same sorta way that Daniel Johnston thought he sounded like The Beatles... I thought the Captain Beefheart-ish moments were entirely coincidental! But the earlier release, Loud, changes all that. They didn't end up cutting-edge through sheer naive passion and endearing amateurism! This shit has DNA, James Chance, Captain Beefheart, and Pere Ubu all over it! These guys know their punk rock! They know their no wave! They know their noise! What the fuck! I'll never hear Charmed Life the same way again!
But man, their dumbass no wave inspired noise rock is pretty awesome
B+
sample
Jul 19, 2012
Sonic Youth - Evol (1986)
Sonic Youth's best: Bad Moon Rising with songs. Previously their skeletal avant-tardisms couldn't really convey what they wanted to conceptually, whereas here their one-note Cure (doom-laden) instrumentation ends up saying all that (the apocalypse) while their mouths spout avant-hipster cliches. 5 stars in spite of said avant-hipster cliches and pointless no-wave leftovers
A+
buy
spotify
Jul 13, 2012
Material - Memory Serves (1981)
Material's avant-garde dance record: as fun and weird as that sounds. Laswell plays oddball funk basslines which anchor the songs as the other musicians experiment like crazy over the top. Said musicians manage to go avant-garde while maintaining a punk rock spirit, keeping Memory Serves unpretentious. I can hear the Captain Beefheart influence and also where guys like Mike Patton and Les Claypool listened excitedly. That may or may not be a bad thing to you.. I think it's awesome
A-
spotify
Jan 22, 2012
Harry Pussy - In An Emergency You Can Shit on A Puerto Rican Whore (1993)
2. 1986
3. Pussy Control
4. Riot Riot
5. I Fought the Police
6. Fuckology
7. Dream Driver
8. I Don't Care About Sleep Anymore
9. Showroom Dummies
Harry Pussy were a noise rock band who kind of pushed the noise and no wave components of their sound to their limits without ever ending up entirely unlistenable. In fact, initial listens will prove that there's something fascinating in something this chaotic, and as the sounds become less offensive, there's something beautifully cathartic in their less furious, more dramatic tracks like Fuckology, Dream Driver, and I Don't Care About Sleep Anymore.
192
Jan 18, 2012
Royal Trux - Twin Infinitives (1990)
1. Solid Gold Tooth/Ice Cream/Jet Pet/RTX-USA/Kool Down Wheels (16:19)
2. Chances Are the Comets in Our Future/Yin Jim Versus the Vomit Creature (16:46)
3. (Edge of the) Ape Oven (15:03)
4. Florida Avenue Theme/Lick MyBoots/Glitterburst/Funky Son/Ratcreeps (20:31)
Twin Infinitives is a very polarizing album. You'll either think its incredible or awful. Moreso than a lot of albums of its kind, people who are open to experimental music can hate it just as much as those who aren't
So you've got
1) pretentious avant-garde bullshit played by junkies
2) the second step in the deconstruction of rock n roll
3) Trout Mask Replica for generation x
4) unlistenable shit
which is the usual difference of opinions you get- it's either pretentious and unlistenable or intentionally unlistenable for the sake of some greater project- i.e. deconstructing music, and so it is not dissimilar to undisputed all time great album x
but then you get
5) I love Trout Mask Replica but this is unlistenable (not pretentious, just bad)
6) this is more and less than you expect: it's neither consciously deconstructing the way you listen to music, nor is it bad by any means. It just is.
Seeing how long and famously difficult it is (if these tracks were split into individual tracks I probably wouldn't have found it so taxing), I was actually nervous about listening to it for the first time at work! I thought I was undertaking a big project for some reason. The first time I listened to someone like Merzbow I got used to the noise within a few minutes and then found the experience refreshing and exciting. Twin Infinitives is not like that though. It occasionally does something relatable or recognisable and then departs on some other bizarre avant-noise-rock tangent. The fact that the tracks are grouped together in this way makes each one feel more dependent on the next, so even though you occasionally go hey, I like that!, you know it's only a temporary thing and so the whole listening process is very uneasy.
Romantic in the most gen x way, it sounds like the couple didn't leave their room for a few weeks, recording music for only themselves. I find this makes listening to the album more enjoyable than the Royal Trux are two geniuses self-consciously deconstructing the way we listen to music theory. At the same time though, Neil Michael Hagerty played for Pussy Galore who are nowhere near as strange as this, so there must be some sort of ideology or it'd just sound like bluesy noise rock. He's obviously capable of more than the excellent amateurism that I want to give him credit for. Still, I'm more happy believing that Cats and Dogs is a deconstructionist album because it emulates so much more of the sounds that it deconstructs. It's so close to being conventional but constantly undercuts itself and collapses in a noisy heap. Twin Infinitives is the noisy heaps from Cats and Dogs taken to the extreme and there's really nothing like it. So I can't tell whether it's an intellectual project for rock critics to celebrate and loathe, or a romantically amateurish mess like lo-fi don't give a fuck about music theory guys Half Japanese, just more avant-garde than Jonathan Richman. It would be corny to end this with maybe it just is... Give it time, it's not unlistenable. If you want to think it's a consciously difficult project for intellectual means, then that's cool, think that. If you want to think it's unpretentious lo-fi goodness by way of fuck I don't know there's really nothing else like it- The Dead C?, then think that! It's a disgusting mess and I love it.
A
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