Electrogazer band from Houston (as opposed to Houston, who are from East Rutherford, NJ, as opposed to Eastern Europe, which is where the Slovak Republic is).
just learned -- to a degree -- to play whore on guitar this morning. it's the drop-D part that scares me. i figure i'll never be able to tune the low string back to "e." the song is dark and gorgeous (even if the darkness is lightened by that lightly-strummed D7).
just learned -- to a degree -- to play whore on guitar this morning. it's the drop-D part that scares me. i figure i'll never be able to tune the low string back to "e." the song is dark and gorgeous (even if the darkness is lightened by that lightly-strummed D7).
I assume you've never played mandolin before. Keeping them in tune after dropping one or more strings is simply impossible, probably because of the combined tension of the eight strings. Even the octave mandolin get wonky if I try something too fancy or if I don't put the capo on nice and flush with the fretboard.
i've only played guitar, bass and piano (all very -- very -- poorly). drop D on the guitar is common, stretching all the way back to classical pieces; iirc, much of bach's pieces require drop D on guitar.
A new projected series of releases on Chinstrap is music & sound-design of interest extracted from public-domain films. Not claiming to be the definitive packaging of the music and sound enclosed, we rather present the work for the possibility of further investigation into the composers and sound-designers featured.
Albert Zugsmith's "Confessions of an Opium Eater" is a strange, flawed, but ultimately fascinating film, a truly weird adventure story which sees Vincent Price attempting to free trafficked women in Chinatown, smoking a healthy dose of opium along the way. The score, by incredibly prolific B-movie composer Albert Glasser, combines classically-tinged orchestral music with elements of jazz & rock'n'roll, traditional chinese music, electronic polyrhythmic pulses, and theremins. We are also served up some delightfully strange monologues from the dulcet tones of Vincent Price, in the midst of a very, very bad opium trip. The sound design is equally peculiar and disorientating, awash with ear piercing screams of smuggled Chinese ladies, squawking parrots, a myriad crashes and bashes, running water, and creaking ships.
Ok, I won't post the exact same cover right after Brighternow, however, after reading that description I queued it up immediately. I see great promise in this series. My dogs get so excited by the gal screaming I've had to turn it down.
Soundtrack fans might be interested in Morricone Youth on EVR The show's on Sunday 2-4 pm. I usually download the 'streaming', archive for iPod listening.
@BN
A few of those emusic samples put me in mind of The Bonzo Dog Do Dah Band.
You're prompting me to get my vinyl out and fire up the turntable again, which I haven't done for many a year.
I'll be grabbing that one for sure, thanks for the rec.
I stumbled across an unusual combination, a mandolin quartet--mandolin, violin, viola and cello--called the Luna Nova Quartet. The samples on their site are mainly classical compositions (and a Godfather medley) and are very good. The videos on their YouTube channel, though, are more country/bluegrass/folk, with the same instruments but also with some singing, and they're just wonderful.
An Aural Symboitic Mystery by Charlemange Palestine and Tony Conrad--52 minutes of minimalist piano, distorted pianos, screeching strings, and chanting. It doesn't really get going for 23 minutes, still enough time for some great music. Moreover, it's 89 cents at Amazon--the best buck I've spent on a single track of music since Spring Heel Jack.
A worthy candidate for a top ten list of my eMu downloads:
- Includes a wonderful rendition of Pink Floyd's "Set the controls for the heart of the sun" (Sunset - For The Control Of The Heart) Rusted Sorrow Of The Old Crane @ Youtube
Comments
- Grandisimo !
Electrogazer band from Houston (as opposed to Houston, who are from East Rutherford, NJ, as opposed to Eastern Europe, which is where the Slovak Republic is).
This is starting to grow on me a little bit....
low -- things we lost in the fire
just learned -- to a degree -- to play whore on guitar this morning. it's the drop-D part that scares me. i figure i'll never be able to tune the low string back to "e." the song is dark and gorgeous (even if the darkness is lightened by that lightly-strummed D7).
Soundtrack fans might be interested in Morricone Youth on EVR The show's on Sunday 2-4 pm. I usually download the 'streaming', archive for iPod listening.
- This one is very good and very funny:
BTW: the Chinstrap Netlabel curator Ergo Phizmiz has some pretty strange stuff on Emusic.
A few of those emusic samples put me in mind of The Bonzo Dog Do Dah Band.
You're prompting me to get my vinyl out and fire up the turntable again, which I haven't done for many a year.
I'll be grabbing that one for sure, thanks for the rec.
Casper Bangs - I Woke Up NYOP
Rec from the Bandcamp thread. Thanks ScissorMan.
192 free tracks from Ergo Phizmiz at Free Music Archive.
Nigel Ayers & Randy Greif - Build A Poison Fire Soleilmoon Recordings 1999
"Almost glittering dreamscapes...organic electronics, scrambling cold toeholds into some of the more vertiginous areas of non-linear music."
--Vital.
Thanks, BT.
Then I saw the words "in the same vein as" and "Alva Noto", so now:
Thanks, BN.
"Clouds Forever Watching" is out of this world !
- The free daily download from Innova Records:
My daughter calls this, "The best robot album ever" and I am inclined to agree. Thanks to everyone rec'ing it.
An Aural Symboitic Mystery by Charlemange Palestine and Tony Conrad--52 minutes of minimalist piano, distorted pianos, screeching strings, and chanting. It doesn't really get going for 23 minutes, still enough time for some great music. Moreover, it's 89 cents at Amazon--the best buck I've spent on a single track of music since Spring Heel Jack.
Interesting...
Thanks to Bad Thoughts for finding this, very enjoyable.
-The Replacements
Really enjoying these, RIYL James Blackshaw.
- Includes a wonderful rendition of Pink Floyd's "Set the controls for the heart of the sun" (Sunset - For The Control Of The Heart)
Rusted Sorrow Of The Old Crane @ Youtube