VARIOUS / Greenwich Village's Cafe Bizarre
If you chuckled at some of the more affected vocal readings on the great
Rhino Beat Generation box (see Phillipa Fallon's "High School Drag":
"We'll be coughing blood on the moon...duh-RAGG!"), this particular
document of a 1960's beatnik spot on West 3rd and MacDougal is truly
something to behold. I couldn't find any information whatsoever on this
thing, but it sure seems real. Basically, EVERY single presenter on here
is playing up the swaggering f'd up daddy-o (hear Felix Lupus boldly
introduce his piece: "The night...was like a BITCH IN HEAT", while someone
named Ellie Girl howls along with bongo accompaniment like a wounded
animal). Most impressive is a fellow named Ringo Angel, whose three tracks
swell with pseudo-artistic bravado while working out some real issues with
women, whom he obviously considers garbage ("How To Put a Broad Down"/"All
Broads Are Common") before gathering enough humility to sulkingly pass the
bowl around for monetary contributions.
SKYWAVE / Synthstatic
This DC-area trio has made no qualms about admitting their unabashed
worship of shoegaze, noisy guitar pop (especially of the Brit kind),
despite alt-rock's fashion-shift from My Bloody Valentine influence (as
seen in so many 90's indie rock bands) to edgy, angular, danceable
Brit-rock pioneered by the likes of Gang of Four (and witnessed in the
Rapture, !!! etc. today). They make a hell of a racket, especially with
guitarist Paul Baker's wall of fuzzed up, split-signal guitar; while the
bass and drums carry the extremely bubblegum-like melodies, Baker creates
a huge squall totally reminiscent of the Jesus and Mary Chain's infancy
days. Despite the fact that one of his twin amps constantly squeals
feedback, what seems like vague clouds of distortion and buried melodies
is quite controlled and complementary to the music, in a way like
Sightings without the 80's fixation (and with more understandable vocals,
though not much less buried in the mix). It all works in a great way, and
while they can be critiqued for being derivative, there's something really
affirming in their dedication to bringing to life all the notetaking they
obviously did on 120 Minutes and honing in on a distinct personal approach
to making it their own. Besides, now that Sofia Coppola's made "Just Like
Honey" a big song again, maybe the fashion shift will come back to them
and get them some exposure. I don't think they mind either way.
ARTHUR RUSSELL / Calling Out of Context
(Audika)
On the heels of the recent Soul Jazz label retrospective comes this first
of three volumes of unreleased 1980's material from the oft-cited Downtown
legend. For the uninitiated, Russell was an Iowa transplant to NYC who
brought a very Buddhist approach to his musical activities while swinging
from loft-disco scene to avant-garde circles, even reportedly being an
early participant in the Talking Heads. He quickly made a name for himself
in the NYC scene, and was quite prolific with his open minded approach of
incorporating everyday sounds and experiences into his music and lyrics
(his primary interest was the cello though by no mean his only instrument)
was visionary to say the least. Sadly, his death of AIDS in 1992 left
behind much music the world hadn't heard, but thanks to compiler Steve
Knutson, a valiant effort to condense 1000 tapes in various stages of
completion starts rolling with this disc (taken from an unreleased LP from
1985 and an abandoned mid-80s Rough Trade project). There's some great
progressions from Russell's disco-era work into an edgier, noisier terrain
(in fact "Platform On the Ocean" could easily fit in with stuff on the
latest Wire record), and quite a bit of material it's quite puzzling to
know didn't make it to the light of day. Looking forward to more of these
in the future.
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