Sunday, 15 October 2017

Thee Conductor (ft Bonnie Prince Billy) - Face Crinkle

Nothing To Hide Mix


Tracklist:
Rainforest Spiritual Enslavement - Nocturnal Anatomy
Nurse With Wound - Mothering Tongue
Moor Mother - Valley of Dry Bones
Sevdaliza - Hero
Kikuri - That Place Into Which You Fell Was Lined With A Cushion of Pain And Is No Proof of Your Continuing Existence
Jah Wobble - Just Me And Phil
Kelela - Hallucinogen
Hospital Ships - Nothing To Hide
Lone Taxidermist - Dribble Wizard
L.A.N.D. - Nothing Is Happening Everywhere
Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith - Existence In The Unfurling
KiKu & Blixa Bargeld & Black Cracker - Like This
Burial - Rodent (Kode9 Remix)

Wednesday, 11 October 2017

Eminem VS Trump

John Cipollina's rig with Quicksilver Messenger Service

Saturday, 7 October 2017

The Icarus Line/Holy War's Joe Cardamone's heartbreaking read on the death of Alvin DeGuzman (1978 - 2017)

My closest friend and musical partner died last night. He had been sick with cancer for the past few years but in the last six weeks the illness really took its toll. I tried to visit him as much as possible in this time because I didn't want him to feel alone. When we are up against the ropes alone is the default way to feel. Especially in illness, no one else can feel from your perspective no matter how bad they might want to take your place. Alvin and I first met on a little league baseball team in 3rd grade. We didn't talk a whole lot; I didn't really know how to make friends back then. A year later we ended up at the same grade school. I was unceremoniously removed from my previous institution of lower learning and ended up at the same Catholic that he went to. Again, I didn't really take to people very quickly so I was kinda on my own. At some point we got randomly grouped to do a paper mache' puppet show project and that was where it all started. He made an alien puppet and I made a mini Axl Rose. We had to write and perform a story about Axl being abducted by an extraterrestrial. I'm pretty sure we had the room going during our performance. The next year I told Alvin I had bought a guitar and that I was going to start a band, 5th grade I think. I remember he looked at me and said "why?". I knew he liked to draw so I employed him to do an album cover of my yet to be created first album. Shit I couldn't even hold a chord yet. Two weeks later I asked him "hows it going with that cover drawing?" and he told me he wasn't going to do it. He did however buy a bass and had learned a bunch of Led Zeppelin songs. I knew the guy was sharp as a tack but in two weeks? Ok, yeah of course Alvin. We got to jam at his folks house because his mom worked nights and no one could tell if his dad was around. I remember seeing him play for the first time and wondering how the fuck he learned songs I could only day dream of reciting. This was one month in to his career as a musician. It was on. From there on out we were inseparable, a unit designed to figure out how to hit a target that seemed a million lightyears away from our realities. Where we came from no one's parents were in the music industry. No one had a direct connection to getting up on a stage, forget even trying to record in a studio. We grew up in LA but not the LA that held inroads for sons and daughters of the connected. East Los Angeles might as well be a million miles from Hollywood. That didn't stop us none though, for all we knew everyone had to start from zero. It was a dream and for us that's all we needed to be something other than what we were constantly told we were. The rest of it you could read about somewhere else. We slowly saved, sacrificed and scraped our way out of East LA on to stages. Our parents had meetings about us because they were worried about how serious we took this music shit. We fell in love with records and we fell in love with art. We became men together. It was never easy for us. There was not a day off. A lot of people came and went but no matter what I knew Alvin had my back. He had my back even when I didn't. He had my back when the entire world had turned theirs on me. He never wavered. Playing music with someone for 20 years, fuck, 1 month, creates a bond that nothing quite else can generate. You become the survivors of the mission. Like POW's. Especially the conditions we had been subjected to over the years. I think it might be hard to explain and for others to relate. Its not just that you slept on a gas station parking lot floor together. Its that you all did it willingly with smiles on your faces. When Alvin went to jail for copping to someone else's dope and the van had been taken back by the rental company, Alvin rode in the blackness of a U-Haul box truck with me back to Cali in the dead Texas heat. That happened more than once. Nothing was ever going to stop this train. My group had always been vetted in cruel and unusual ways, new people had to slowly be broken in because everyone else (members) had been in the shit together. Suffered together. Beat the slim odds together. I can say with no degree of uncertainty that without Alvin, I would not have had the strength to press forward for so long. The new guy, no matter where he came from, whatever band, was applesauce compared to the pack of criminals that I ran with. Alvin being the saint, the moral compass, the exception. Success didn't make a scratch of difference to him. When we had it all in front of 15k people at Reading Festival or when we had nothing a week later at bar to no one in Arizona. Doing music was the same to him, fuck the circumstances. For 20 years Alvin turned up, played and knew my songs better than I did. On more than one night, I saw the smallest guy in a tribe of small warriors pack the van entirely by himself. I would be out of breath on the curb next to him, he didn't phase. Alvin slept on the dirty motel floor for 20 years so that I could sleep in a dirty motel bed. For years he taught the band to play my music. It's completely impossible overstate what kind of sacrifice that is. There was no money involved, there was very little in the way of recognition, it was just what he did with his life. Alvin was a musician capable of playing at any station in the group (he played guitar both left and right handed, bass and keys). He manned all these stations according to who had left the band for greener or more vanilla pastures. It was his music too and he understood that. I have spent my entire life writing about those close to me and he knew that we were telling the stories of our friends. He knew exactly why it was important and never questioned its nobility. Alvin showed up. Always. If I was getting thrown out of my house because of some messy split; I knew he was on his way over so that I could throw whatever belongings that were still intact in the back of his car. He got me the fuck out of dodge so many times it's obscene. His character as a human was unparalleled. His moral compass didn't waver, which wasn't always easy around a bunch of nihilistic thugs who'd just as soon burn the venue to the ground as do a soundcheck. If someone would get hurt Alvin was out. That was the only time he would ever back away, if it was going to seriously be at someone else's expense. He kept me from going over the edge. I know he did that for other people too. Once you learned to speak Alvin's language you could count on an honest point of view. As long as you were smart enough to decode what the guy was saying to you. Even though he was shy and quiet those who took the minimal effort to get to know him understood what this dude was about. He was all love, even when he was being a hater it was out of love. In the end he didn't ever talk about how sick he was. There were no updates on his condition. Only third hand info that we obtained however we could. He didn't want to talk about it. Not because he was scared to but because he didn't want us to carry that shit with us all day. Like usual he was gonna carry this one, the last one. Less than two days ago I held his hand and told him he could go, I know he was looking at me for permission even though he didn't need it. It's fucked up how life works, the strange Asian kid I met in class making paper mache puppets became my life long protector. Girls, managers, members, friends, enemies...they all come and go. Alvin never went anywhere. He was ride or die every day, all day. Before I met Alvin I never really had a best friend or really even knew that existed and after I met him I was never alone again. With tears in my eyes I say goodbye to my friend, I love you homie, I hope we meet again.

Friday, 8 September 2017

Gute Nacht Herr Czukay 2 Mix


Tracklist:
In-Between
Late Night Radio
Boat Woman Song (Technical Space Composer's Crew with Rolf Dammers)
Premonition (Giant Empty Iron Vessel) (with David Sylvian)
On The Way To The Peak of Normal
Animal Waves (with CAN)
My Can-Axis

Gute Nacht Herr Czukay Mix


Tracklist:
Voice of Bulgaria
Witches' Multipication Table
Atlantis
Mapping (with Phew)
Hey Baba Reebop
Collage
Floatspace
Biomutanten (Les Vampyrettes)
Echogirl
Sleazy (with Jah Wobble & The Edge)
Do The Fleischwurst (with S.Y.P.H.)
Full Circle R.P.S. (No 7) (with Jah Wobble & Jaki Liebezeit)
Mutability (A New Beginning Is In The Offing) (Detail) (with David Sylvian)
Persian Love

Wednesday, 6 September 2017

R.I.P. Holger Czukay

Friday, 1 September 2017

'Public Enemy Door is always open not for Bulsht'





Flav will be ok. @tmz Drama is beneath me considering our Age. It's low entertainment but I definitely like to find those 50 songs he wrote
Quite a lot more from Chuck D on this subject 
HERE

Neil Young - Hitchhiker (NPR Albumstream)

(...) Sometimes you grab whatever is close at hand and just get busy. The hours go by like minutes, and the next thing you know, the bucket is full.
So it was for Neil Young on August 11, 1976, at Indigo Studios in Malibu.
The Canadian singer and songwriter had material he'd been developing, including three songs that became part of his landmark Rust Never Sleeps with Crazy Horse – "Pocahontas," "Powderfinger" and "Ride My Llama."
He showed up with acoustic guitar and harmonica (moving to piano for the final track, "The Old Country Waltz"), and after a shaky-voiced check-in with the control room – the first utterance is Young on the talkback microphone, asking longtime collaborator David Briggs "You ready, Briggs?" – he put down stark, blueprint-like solo renditions of songs that he'd develop into fervent anthems on later albums. There's no affectation, no studio agony – just the songs, served straight up...
Listen
HERE

Don Letts and Turtle Bay present REGGAE 45 Mixes









Via Turtle Bay

Then & Now

Via MAD Magazine

Thursday, 31 August 2017

The Hippies Who Hated the Summer of Love