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 Post subject: NP: Sometimes It should be more than pictures
PostPosted: Tue Apr 19, 2005 7:12 pm 
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Don't get me wrong I like the NP thread and all. I like seeing what folks are listening to but sometimes just a picture doesn't do it justice.

I'm currently listening to Eddie Gale's Ghetto Music.

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Its pretty f'n great and has been improving with each listen.

Here's what AMG says in their review:

The aesthetic and cultural merits of Ghetto Music cannot be overstated, especially at this juncture in American history. That it is one of the most obscure recordings in Blue Note's catalog — paid for out of label co-founder Francis Wolff's own pocket — should tell us something. This is an apocryphal album, one that seamlessly blends the new jazz of the '60s — Gale was a member of the Sun Ra Arkestra before and after these sides, and played on Cecil Taylor's Blue Note debut, Unit Structures — with gospel, soul, and the blues. Gale's sextet included two bass players and two drummers — in 1968 — as well as a chorus of 11 voices, male and female. Sound like a mess? Far from it. This is some of the most spiritually engaged, forward-thinking, and finely wrought music of 1968. What's more is that, unlike lots of post-Coltrane free jazz, it's ultimately very listenable. Soloists come and go, but modes, melodies, and harmonies remain firmly intact. The beautiful strains of African folk music and Latin jazz sounds in "Fulton Street," for example, create a veritable chromatic rainbow. "A Walk With Thee" is a spiritual written to a march tempo with drummers playing counterpoint to one another and the front line creating elongated melodic lines via an Eastern harmonic sensibility. Does it swing? Hell yeah! The final cut, "The Coming of Gwilu," moves from the tribal to the urban and everywhere in between using Jamaican thumb piano's, soaring vocals à la the Arkestra, polyrhythmic invention, and good, old-fashioned groove jazz, making something entirely new in the process. While Albert Ayler's New Grass was a failure for all its adventurousness, Ghetto Music, while a bit narrower in scope, succeeds because it concentrates on creating a space for the myriad voices of an emerging African-American cultural force to be heard in a single architecture. This is militant music, and it scared the hell out of people back in the day since it took an independent to get this music back into the populace; it probably still does — and it should. Hipsters will be beating down the door to get this and tell people they've been into it since they were kids. Whatever, this music will endure long after they've passed into the next senior citizenry. The Water label deserves major credit for revealing Eddie Gale's visionary brilliance to a new generation and bringing this work out on CD. Oh, yeah, the sound kicks thanks to a fine mastering job by Gary Hobish!

Anyone else a fan of this? Post yours if you're listening to something you think most of us aren't familiar with.


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PostPosted: Tue Apr 19, 2005 7:24 pm 
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send me 2 copies, pls.

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 19, 2005 7:49 pm 
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i'm a pretty big fan of Black Rhythm Happening but i haven't heard this one.


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PostPosted: Tue Apr 19, 2005 8:11 pm 
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chase Wrote:
i'm a pretty big fan of Black Rhythm Happening but i haven't heard this one.


Ghetto Music was his debut with Black Rhythm Happening the followup. I haven't heard that one yet but will be picking it up based on the strength of this one.

np: Yankees v drays


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PostPosted: Thu Jun 02, 2005 4:25 pm 
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Bump because:

(1) Billy_R is listening to the Eddie Gale;
(2) I was hoping more people would add to this with more obscure favorites they're listening to; and
(3) I wanted to find the thread so I could add to it later today.

np: V/A "Dakar Sound vol. 5"


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PostPosted: Thu Jun 02, 2005 4:29 pm 
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billy g Wrote:
Bump because:

(1) Billy_R is listening to the Eddie Gale

I'll definitely have something to say about this. Shit is HOT.


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PostPosted: Thu Jun 02, 2005 7:58 pm 
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I think alot of folks here would really dig this.

From Pitchfork's Found sound:

Quote:
Bill Fay: From The Bottom Of An Old Grandfather Clock [recorded: 1966-70; Wooden Hill; 2004]
Best known for Wilco's recurring cover of his stately fight song, "Be Not So Fearful", the English singer-songwriter Bill Fay ought to be a musical giant. When mentioned at all, he's grouped with J.D. Salinger due to his disappearance from the music business in 1972; but unlike Holden's daddy, he's still very much a productive, albeit outside participant. (Durtro/Jnana are releasing a collection of Fay's unreleased studio recordings from the 1970s and 80s at the end of this month.) Fay recorded two proper albums for Decca in the early 70s (reissued in the 90s by now defunct See For Miles), but I prefer these 25 stripped-down demos from 1966-1970, accompanied by one whispery millennial take on the mid-60s "Jack Laughter & Mademoiselle Sigh".

Though he'd later focus on the end-times metaphors, here Fay enchants with earthly fragility, proclaiming on "Garden Song," "I'm planting myself in the garden/ Believe me/ Between the potatoes and parsley/ Believe Me / And I wait for the rain to anoint me" and then conjuring frost, greenflies, spiders, and maggots on the way to unpacking lasting relations. Throughout countless absolutely stunning pieces, Fay's gloribund voice, pristine piano, and brilliant melodies transcend tape crackle with a lonesome joyousness as magical as the best sun-drenched work of Vashti Bunyan or Big Star. Musically, he moves between Baroque formalism, moody folksiness, Lennon/McCartneyisms, sugary hooks, and spiraling dark psych wanderings without sacrificing his charmed, tender lyricism. --Brandon Stosuy


He gets compared a lot to Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, and Duncan Browne but I think pitchfork's Lennon & McCartney comparison is most appropriate at least on this album. On the strength of this, I've ordered both of his proper albums which were just reissued and have received generally stronger reviews. This collection of demos and unreleased songs is pretty strong though.

If anyone is interested, the album is available in mp3 form somewhere in the archives on that blog Dalen posted about a week ago which is where I found it.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 03, 2005 9:14 am 
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I dont think the Bill Fay album is available in the archives anymore..(at least I cant seem to find it)

also I am interested in Ghetto Music, any thoughts about hookin a brotha up?


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 03, 2005 9:22 am 
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Tides - Resurface - 2005

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If you're into Isis, Pelican, Jesu, Neurosis, Cult Of Luna or even Mouth Of The Architect, you'll love this. Long sprawling soundscapes with heaps of distortion, all joined together to make truly harmonic sound. They’re dense, epic compositions with a high level of emotive playing.

The band is an instrumental three-piece from Plattsburgh, New York, who draw inspiration ranging from Burning Witch, to Neil Young, to Neurosis to Led Zeppelin. On their new CD, the six tracks are as dynamic as they are well thought out. The contrast of tones is almost cinimatic, if you imagine dramatic storys unwinding to music.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 03, 2005 12:55 pm 
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f4df Wrote:
I dont think the Bill Fay album is available in the archives anymore..(at least I cant seem to find it)

also I am interested in Ghetto Music, any thoughts about hookin a brotha up?


There are links to archives by date near the bottom on the right hand side. Click on the May 15th one, which actually takes you to the updates beginning on May 21st. The Bill Fay is midway down in the May 19th updates.

I'll PM you re: Ghetto Music.


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PostPosted: Sat Jun 04, 2005 2:16 am 
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Dalen Wrote:
Tides - Resurface - 2005
...
Puts it on wishlist.

Do you like Shape Of Despair?

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