View Tony Coulter's profile |
I play rhinoceros and psychedelic fork.
<-- Previous playlist | Back to Tony Coulter playlists | Next playlist -->
Artist | Track | Album | Label | Year | Approx. start time | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The In-Theme | 0:00:00 (Pop-up) | |||||||||
Luc Ferrari | Strathoven (1985) | Electronic Works | BV Haast / Acousmatrix | 1990 | 0:02:02 (Pop-up) | |||||
Mix | Kryon Imperialismus | 0:06:04 (Pop-up) | ||||||||
Camille Goudeseune | Rarae Aves (1999) | V.A.: Presence III | PeP | 2002 | 0:09:58 (Pop-up) | |||||
Jamie Philp | Lizard in the Garden (1988) | V.A.: Presence | PeP | 1997 | 0:14:39 (Pop-up) | |||||
Wolfgang Mitterer | Solo 3 | Grand Jeu | Austro Mechana | 1991 | 0:18:07 (Pop-up) | |||||
Dieter Kaufmann | Barbarenorgel | Schrott + Korn | Amadeo | 1992 | 0:23:26 (Pop-up) | |||||
Guus Janssen | Preludium | Harpsichord / Clavecimbel | Geestrgronden | 1991 | 0:28:31 (Pop-up) | |||||
Katrine Ring | The Birds | A Hand for Holmboe | Dacapo | 2012 | 0:32:33 (Pop-up) | |||||
Jacob ter Veldhuis | The Sighs of Rameau (1995) | Van Grote en Kleine Vogels / Lucebert | BV Haast | 1996 | 0:38:17 (Pop-up) | |||||
Katrine Ring | Helicopter | A Hand for Holmboe | Dacapo | 2012 | 0:55:00 (Pop-up) | |||||
Gilius van Bergeijk | A Song of Truth and Semblance (1993) | Volume One | X-OR | 199? | 0:59:13 (Pop-up) | |||||
Remy Carre | La Trace du Souffle (1996) | V.A.: Presence | PeP | 1997 | 1:11:24 (Pop-up) | |||||
Jacob ter Veldhuis | The Storm (1995) | Van Grote en Kleine Vogels / Lucebert | BV Haast | 1996 | 1:23:38 (Pop-up) | |||||
Dieter Kaufmann | Morgen | Blech + Kehle | Amadeo | 1992 | 1:30:50 (Pop-up) | |||||
Gilius van Bergeijk | Symphony of a Thousand (Alphabetically) (1992) | Volume One | X-OR | 199? | 1:35:40 (Pop-up) | |||||
Peter Eotvos | Feuermusik (1972) | V.A.: 25 Jahre Feedback | Feedback Studios | 1996 | 1:46:05 (Pop-up) | |||||
Eric Gagnon & Jocelyn Robert | Souk Souk (2001) | V.A.: Excavation Sonore: 11h | OHM/Avatar | 200? | 1:52:38 (Pop-up) | |||||
Ana-Maria Avram | Icarus (1993) | Iancu Dumitrescu / Ana-Maria Avram – ED. MN. 1006 | Edition Modern | 1994 | 2:42:35 (Pop-up) | |||||
The Out-Theme | Gelbart: My Favorite Vacation [part of] + Die Trip Computer Die: Airborn [part of] | 2:57:57 (Pop-up) |
<-- Previous playlist | Back to Tony Coulter playlists | Next playlist -->
RSS feeds for Tony Coulter's show: Playlists feed | MP3 archives feed
| E-mail Tony Coulter | Other WFMU Playlists | All artists played by Tony Coulter |Listen on the Internet | Contact Us | Music & Programs | WFMU Home Page | Support Us | FAQ
Live Audio Streams for Give the Drummer Radio: Pop-up | 128k MP3 (More streams: [+])
Listener comments!
listener james from westwood:
Tony Coulter:
DCE:
Rev. Turnip Druid:
listener james from westwood:
Doug Schulkind:
Tony Coulter:
Rich in Washington:
Hello, LJFW, DCE, RTD!
northguineahills:
Rich in Washington:
Rich in Washington:
Tony Coulter:
Doug Schulkind:
Tony Coulter:
northguineahills:
DCE:
northguineahills:
DCE:
Tony Coulter:
Rev. Turnip Druid:
we digs the electrons.
northguineahills:
Tony Coulter:
MrFab:
Tony Coulter:
TROPICAL MAN:
just checked in!
Tony Coulter:
TROPICAL MAN:
Rich in Washington:
Tony Coulter:
Tony Coulter:
Rich in Washington:
MrFab:
There's free lengthy lecture (some apparently w/music) mp3s on the site. Not sure how much I want to wade thru...
Tony Coulter:
listener james from westwood:
Tony Coulter:
DCE:
Uncle Michael:
Tony Coulter:
MrFab:
Rev. Turnip Druid:
The few. The proud. The etc.
Rev. Turnip Druid:
Uncle Michael:
Tony Coulter:
Tony Coulter:
Rich in Washington:
Tony Coulter:
Rich in Washington:
Rich in Washington:
Now we're just pacing ourselves.
Tony Coulter:
Rich in Washington:
TROPICAL MAN:
- I find myself really only listening to TC and DO on the GTDS stream. Of the WFMU I hardly listen to anything at all. It may be only 5 minutes of a show.
For me the major problem is you all playing music that is too well known and feely available in other places such as You Tube.
Only those DJs that have original ideas about their playlists, and are not scatterbrained - i.e. one minute its 60s the next some house thing from 93.
John Tabacco:
Uncle Michael:
Tony Coulter:
DCE:
TROPICAL MAN:
talking about listener drop off to sharp experimental music - I think its like an endurance test - who can last the course -
Like a line in the Lenny Bruce movie I saw last week -
"Youre such a lovely audience - I wish I could piss on you all!"
Ike:
Tony Coulter:
MrFab:
Rich in Washington:
I don't think there are very many GTDR or even WFMU programmers that play well-known or otherwise ubiquitous artists, at least not to these ears.
To each his or her own. I am more into 'difficult listening'. It's just something I dig. I get kind of bored with shows when they go into and stay with pop music formats.
TROPICAL MAN:
Its just I don't think you can listen to one show all the way through without getting bored and wanting to hear something else.
Now it maybe that each DJ wants to be eclectic rather than sticking to one theme but then you cannot complain when listeners drop off during a show not wanting to hear something to them that is quite average.
Tony Coulter:
Rich in Washington:
I've found that being my own DJ (via iPod, etc) is no where near as satisfactory as having a tasteful programmer serve up a show. It's the difference between the sandwich you made vs the sandwich someone made for you.
I used to be really into listening to a gigantic library on my iPod and eventually found myself jabbing the 'next' button like a monkey hitting a button for a treat. It got old, eventually.
TROPICAL MAN:
I am from the second school and was brought up to listening to John Martyn, the Grateful Dead and Pink Floyd rather than John Cage, Stockhausen and Throbbing Gristle.
I do however enjoy it every so often when TC plays some mild experimental stuff.
Its when he plays the sink gurgling sounds for 45 minutes that does my head in!
DCE:
northguineahills:
northguineahills:
MrFab:
Tony Coulter:
TROPICAL MAN:
you are right our use of the internet, You Tube, blogs and ipods have given us access to a huge library of stuff that say 15 years ago was only known to those with vast record collections.
As a result we have become spoilt for choice and I find myself running aound the internet downloading every wild and weird thing that appears.
Jump back 15 years we only had the limited stuff that was available in record shops and what radio shows would play.
northguineahills:
northguineahills:
DCE:
Tony Coulter:
Stanley:
Rich in Washington:
Unfortunately, my work duties have changed to the point where I can no longer expect to listen to them uninterrupted as I used to (many meetings and/or people coming into my office).
But it's still a lot.
Tony Coulter:
Stanley:
Great to be in 'the booth' once again.
listener james from westwood:
Tony Coulter:
Tony Coulter:
DCE:
Rich in Washington:
Rich in Washington:
Really peculiar stuff.
Rich in Washington:
Have you gone to Fred's Sound of Music?
DCE:
Stanley:
Looking forward to 'who-knows-what' next week.
Take care Tony and everyone.
Tony Coulter:
Uncle Michael:
Tony Coulter: