1-Count Lasher with Lynn Taitt - Hooligans
2-Bob Marley & The Wailers - Hooligan
3-Hepcat - The Secret Dub
4-Hepcat - Live On Dub
5-Joe Strummer & The Mescaleros - At The Border,Guy
6-Bad Brains - Natty Dredlocks Pon The Mountain Top
7-Jo Jo Zep & The Falcons - I'm In Dancin Mood (Espiando en los 80's)
8-The Fools - It's A Night For Beautiful Girls (Espiando en los 80's)
9-Gangsters - Cardboard City
10-Sinead O' Connors - 4th and Vine
11-UB40- The Key (Live From Hammersmith 83')
12-The Starlites - Rocksteady Train
13-Blundetto - Treat me Like That
14-Easy Star AllStars - Pretty Young Thing
15-Ann Reid - Remember When
16-Natty King - No Guns To Town
17-Barrington Levy - Shine Eye Girl
18-Sugar Minott - Nah Follow Nuh Fashion
via
Saturday, 22 September 2012
Friday, 21 September 2012
'I don't really give a damn whether it disturbs you or not. You can take [your concerns] and go straight to hell and take Obama with you. I don't give a shit. If you don't like it, don't come down my street.'
- Bud Johnson
Henson returns to the most provocative landscape of all
Bill Henson @ Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 8 Soudan Lane, Paddington, New South Wales 2021Mitt Romney loses Tim Pawlenty as campaign co-chair 45 days before election
It truly is the insane GOP clown posse!!!Throbbing Gristle - 'Desertshore / The Final Report' (Teasers)
Available from 26th November 2012.
Details at industrial-records.com
Say Chris Carter and Cosey Fanni Tutti of Desertshore / The Final Report:
The ‘Desertshore’ project is a 're-imagined' cover version of Nico’s seminal 1970 album first conceived by the late Peter 'Sleazy' Christopherson in Berlin 2006. In 2010 at his home in Bangkok, he refocussed his approach readying to record guest vocalists while Chris and Cosey prepared material in their UK studio for his return there in December. Sadly, Sleazy unexpectedly died in his sleep on the 25th November in Bangkok.MORE
Meeting On The Desertshore: Sleazy Remembered At AV Festival
Photo: Paul HeartfieldWould E lahk ah nahce coop o' tea Gen? Looks like the bitter travesty you have beCOUM has been whitewashed out of the TG endgame...
Annie Clark Explains the Origins of St. Vincent and David Byrne's Collaborative Partnership
Got to be honest and say that I haven't really had much time for David Byrne since the magnificence of the first four Talking Heads albums and the first collaboration with Eno. Got a LOT of time for Annie Clark. This strikes me as a move by Byrne to expand his fan base out of the cerebral middle aged post-punk/art wank brigade whose waistlines are often bigger than their IQ if the truth be told and a move by Miss St. Vincent into the realms of total world domination.
Thursday, 20 September 2012
Primal Scream's Andrew Innes on working with David Holmes
"We've been working with David Holmes, out in
LA", Innes reveals. "How does it sound? All weird! This sounds like it’s
a catch-all but... 'strange psychedelia'.
He
continues, "We went over to David’s house in Belfast. He’d play us some
old records and say, 'Listen to this vibe’. He’s very good at getting a
‘vibe’. Then you try and make some records from that and it seems to
have worked.”
Holmes has produced a whopping
13 film soundtracks to date, so it's not surprising that Innes notes the
grand depth of the Belfast man's production - "Obviously working with
him it’s quite – to use another terrible term – ‘filmic’, he notes.
"Quite big, there’s a lot of soundtrack references. I think it’s good,
you’ll be hearing it soon.”
We can't wait...
'Til then, Irish fans can look forward to Arthur's Day (September 27),
where Primal Scream will perform at one of the 500 venues taking part in
the festivities. And it sounds like fans lucky enough to catch the
band's set will hear some of these new tunes...
“It’s
always better playing new songs", Innes tells us. "I know crowds just
want to hear hits and it’s good fun playing hits but, if you’re a
musician, you want to get some new stuff to make it interesting for
yourself. Seeing which new songs get the best reaction, what works live
and things like that. It’s exciting.”
Via
New 'sophisticated' album early next year and I am looking forward to seeing them again in December.
New 'sophisticated' album early next year and I am looking forward to seeing them again in December.
Adrian Sherwood: Dub Without Borders
Adrian Sherwood was born in London in 1958. As a kid he fell in love with Jamaican music.
"If you were listening outside a reggae club the optics were shaking off the wall and you thought the building was being demolished," Sherwood says. "This was 1970, 1971. I was 12 or something."
The music that knocked him over is called dub, a mostly instrumental form of reggae that came out of Jamaica in the 1960s. It's a bassy, muted, pared-down version of its ancestor, often recorded on low-fidelity equipment. Sherwood says that dub's production techniques shaped the way he approaches his own work.
"It wasn't particularly just the dub but the techniques of it and the fact that the production was so exciting and uncluttered," he says. "So whatever I've applied my production to, whether it be funk, industrial, anything ... I've made sure they have the same space as in those great Jamaican productions."
Over a career that spans 30 years, Sherwood has fused the sounds of post-industrial music from the U.K. with Jamaican bass and rhythms. He built his name working with his idols, reggae artists like Lee "Scratch" Perry, Bim Sherman and Prince Far I. He's also produced for the industrial band Nine Inch Nails and the rock group Living Colour and remixed the electropop act Depeche Mode.
But Sherwood has put out only three albums of his own. The latest, out this year on his own label On-U Sound, is called Survival and Resistance.
Since Sherwood started On-U Sound in 1979 the label has released over 100 albums and singles, and it's where the producer brought together a family of artists that includes Dub Syndicate, New Age Steppers and African Head Charge.
"I find myself become like a brother to him," says Bonjo Iyabinghe Noah, leader of the group African Head Charge. On-U Sound put out African Head Charge's first album, My Life in a Hole in the Ground, in 1981. Noah says its not just Sherwood's skills on a mixing board that make him a favorite with musicians.
"The good thing about Adrian is that he was able to socialize especially with Jamaican people. Somehow they just like him," he says.
Noah has worked with Sherwood for most of his career. Together they've influenced another generation of British dub makers that includes Kevin Martin, who records as The Bug. Martin says he first heard a record from On-U Sound at a friend's house.
"He put on African Head Charge, who I'd never heard of before, but he also asked me to participate in a very large bong," he recalls. "I remember hearing chain saws, jet planes, voodoo chants, the most insane percussion sounds and mad dub effects. Literally, I had to run out of the guy's flat because it all seemed so out of control."
Martin returned to the album a month later to make sure he hadn't hallucinated the sounds. He hadn't.
"It's the chaos and madness that he navigated that was really interesting to me," says Martin. "His combination of taking very London-based post-punk sounds and mixing them with the heaviest dub definitely had a huge impact on me."
On the new album, Survival and Resistance, high-pitched electronic swells scatter across rumbling piles of low end. Delicately keyed piano melodies drift atop echoed dub effects. It's a little dub, a little industrial, some bossa and some blues roots. A whole lot of Sherwood. His sound is something he could pursue because owning his own label gave him complete control, and responsibility.
"You create your own destiny. You rise and fall on your own decisions," Sherwood says. "I'm very proud, although my label probably cost me a fortune over the years, it is my calling card, and that's what I'm very proud of."
Sami Yenigun @'npr'
Listen
Download
Starship Bahia
"If you were listening outside a reggae club the optics were shaking off the wall and you thought the building was being demolished," Sherwood says. "This was 1970, 1971. I was 12 or something."
The music that knocked him over is called dub, a mostly instrumental form of reggae that came out of Jamaica in the 1960s. It's a bassy, muted, pared-down version of its ancestor, often recorded on low-fidelity equipment. Sherwood says that dub's production techniques shaped the way he approaches his own work.
"It wasn't particularly just the dub but the techniques of it and the fact that the production was so exciting and uncluttered," he says. "So whatever I've applied my production to, whether it be funk, industrial, anything ... I've made sure they have the same space as in those great Jamaican productions."
Over a career that spans 30 years, Sherwood has fused the sounds of post-industrial music from the U.K. with Jamaican bass and rhythms. He built his name working with his idols, reggae artists like Lee "Scratch" Perry, Bim Sherman and Prince Far I. He's also produced for the industrial band Nine Inch Nails and the rock group Living Colour and remixed the electropop act Depeche Mode.
But Sherwood has put out only three albums of his own. The latest, out this year on his own label On-U Sound, is called Survival and Resistance.
Since Sherwood started On-U Sound in 1979 the label has released over 100 albums and singles, and it's where the producer brought together a family of artists that includes Dub Syndicate, New Age Steppers and African Head Charge.
"I find myself become like a brother to him," says Bonjo Iyabinghe Noah, leader of the group African Head Charge. On-U Sound put out African Head Charge's first album, My Life in a Hole in the Ground, in 1981. Noah says its not just Sherwood's skills on a mixing board that make him a favorite with musicians.
"The good thing about Adrian is that he was able to socialize especially with Jamaican people. Somehow they just like him," he says.
Noah has worked with Sherwood for most of his career. Together they've influenced another generation of British dub makers that includes Kevin Martin, who records as The Bug. Martin says he first heard a record from On-U Sound at a friend's house.
"He put on African Head Charge, who I'd never heard of before, but he also asked me to participate in a very large bong," he recalls. "I remember hearing chain saws, jet planes, voodoo chants, the most insane percussion sounds and mad dub effects. Literally, I had to run out of the guy's flat because it all seemed so out of control."
Martin returned to the album a month later to make sure he hadn't hallucinated the sounds. He hadn't.
"It's the chaos and madness that he navigated that was really interesting to me," says Martin. "His combination of taking very London-based post-punk sounds and mixing them with the heaviest dub definitely had a huge impact on me."
On the new album, Survival and Resistance, high-pitched electronic swells scatter across rumbling piles of low end. Delicately keyed piano melodies drift atop echoed dub effects. It's a little dub, a little industrial, some bossa and some blues roots. A whole lot of Sherwood. His sound is something he could pursue because owning his own label gave him complete control, and responsibility.
"You create your own destiny. You rise and fall on your own decisions," Sherwood says. "I'm very proud, although my label probably cost me a fortune over the years, it is my calling card, and that's what I'm very proud of."
Sami Yenigun @'npr'
Listen
Download
Starship Bahia
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