The Bazooka crew have been graphic terrorists since the mid seventies.
Sunday 19 October 2008
Kiki et Loulou Picasso - BAZOOKA GRAPHIQUES
The Bazooka crew have been graphic terrorists since the mid seventies.
Killer Luka's Amazing Dolls!
Please check them out.
They are truly amazing.
The doll above is 'Edie as The Broken Girl'.
March 6th 1970 Fillmore East NY
(Early & late show versions.)
here.
Imagine Miles Davis as the opening act for Neil Young? But that's the deal in the '70s, especially when you wanted to play New York's Fillmore. The Davis Sextet opened for Neil Young and Crazy Horse and The Steve Miller Blues Band for two nights at the Fillmore East, March 6-7 (Friday-Saturday).
This was the Miles who had released In A Silent Way and Bitches Brew less than a year before, had put out Live-Evil the previous month and would release Jack Johnson the following month.
If playing support act bothered Miles, it didn't show in his music. Miles wrote in his autobiography of that period: "The sound of my music was changing as fast as I was changing musicians, but I was still looking for the combination that could give me the sound I wanted. Jack DeJohnette gave me a certain deep groove that I just loved to play over, but then Billy Cobham gave me a more rock-like sound. Dave Holland played the stand-up bass and I could groove behind that in a way that I couldn't when Harvey Brooks brought in his electric bass sound. The same thing with Chick (Corea), Herbie (Hancock), Joe (Zawinul), Keith (Jarrett) and Larry (Young), too. I was seeing it all as a process of recording all this music, just getting it all down while it was flowing out of my head."
There were two shows each night. Columbia recorded both nights, but this show remains unissued. This two-night gig was Wayne Shorter's last as a member of the Sextet. (He did remain with Davis for a studio date on March 17.) Columbia finally released the March 7 show as It's About Time in 2001. This series of shows at the Fillmore in the '70s was available at Miles Trees and the general consensus was that this March 6 recording sounded much better than the official March 7 release.
As an aside, between these two shows Bill Graham brought in a Sabrett hot dog vendor off the street to feed the bands, the crew, and some members of the audience.
If you like the electric Miles or the jazz-rock Miles, this one's for you.
Lineup:Miles Davis - trumpet
Wayne Shorter - tenor & soprano saxophones
Chick Corea - electric piano
Dave Holland - acoustic & electric basses
Jack DeJohnette - drums
Airto Moreira - percussion
(BigO)
Dear Red States...
In case you aren't aware, that includes Hawaii, Oregon, Washington, Minnesota , Wisconsin , Michigan, Illinois and all of the Northeast.
(thanx to smeggers)
Saturday 18 October 2008
Stormin' Normisms - Happy Birthday George Wendt (for yesterday)
There were always reports in the 80's NME that he was at this gig or that one in London.
Mostly post-punk bands.
Friday 17 October 2008
Dudu Pukwana
Dudu Pukwana & Spear
'Flute Music'
Here.
As already mentioned here I was lucky enough to live in London when Dudu was playing around town.
In fact I saw him in London, Glasgow, Liverpool & Amsterdam.
I also worked at a jazz club in London for a while (100 Club) and when he would play there we would have a few ales...
At the end of the night we often found ourselves catching the same bus and Dudu would play his sax to me and whoever else was there at the bus stop.
Wish that I had thought to record those impromptu sessions on my walkman.
This music is just perfect as the weather starts warming up.
There is a Dudu Pukwana discography to be found here.
Krzystof Penderecki
Dennis Cooper's The Weaklings blog has a very informative post today on the Polish composer
Krzystof Penderecki.
David Lynch and Stanley Kubrick both used his music in films.
Check it out.
'Matrix 5' can be got here here.
Thursday 16 October 2008
The Reigning Queen (and Kings) of Soul
Three tracks: '100 Days, 100 Nights', 'Medina' & 'Genuine'.
Recorded for the Giles Peterson show on the BBC earlier this year.
You can get it here.
A bonus 2 minutes of Mark Ronson in the studio (sort of-hopefully?) taking the piss out of himself here from the Diplo-Santogold mix 'Top Ranking'.
Simone Maynard
The power of the blogworld!
Through a comment left here (thank you) I have just discovered this young Melbourne artist.
The painting above has been selected to be in the running for a prize in portraiture at the Newcastle Region Art Gallery this November.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY BOBBY ACE!
Bob Weir is 61 today.
Here is the Grateful Dead acoustic set from the Melkweg in Amsterdam on this day in 1981.
Back in the 80's I worked in the Milky Way bookshop.
Sounds like a really cool job?
From a distance of 25 years, it seemed that the only customers were very stoned hippies wanting copies of the Kabbalah.
Pink Nasty
There is an interview at Aquarium Drunkard here.
Oh and she has a brother called Black Nasty.
Late addition.
Here is a demo for her upcoming third album.
It's a song about getting drunk and buying a dog!
Wednesday 15 October 2008
Phil Lesh & Friends / Bob Weir & RatDog New Year's Eve 2008
Glenn Kotche
What can I say about this guy? If you have heard Wilco or seen them live you will know how good he is. Here is 'Mobile parts 1 - 3' from his solo album of the same name. As a bonus there is also a version of 'Spiders (Kidsmoke)' by Wilco recorded live at 'The Palace' here in Melbourne on the 26th of March this year.
Glenn has also worked with the Kronos Quartet and details of their collaboration can be found here.
Here is an article by Glenn Kotche on Steve Reich's 'Clapping Music'
Tuesday 14 October 2008
Bruce Springsteen said...
"Hello Philly,
I am glad to be here today for this voter registration drive and for Barack Obama, the next president of the United States.
I've spent 35 years writing about America, its people, and the meaning of the American Promise. The Promise that was handed down to us, right here in this city from our founding fathers, with one instruction: Do your best to make these things real: opportunity, equality, social and economic justice, a fair shake for all of our citizens, the American idea, as a positive influence, around the world for a more just and peaceful existence. These are the things that give our lives hope, shape, and meaning. They are the ties that bind us together and give us faith in our contract with one another.
I've spent most of my creative life measuring the distance between that American promise and American reality. For many Americans, who are today losing their jobs, their homes, seeing their retirement funds disappear, who have no healthcare, or who have been abandoned in our inner cities, the distance between that promise and that reality has never been greater or more painful.
I believe Senator Obama has taken the measure of that distance in his own life and in his work. I believe he understands, in his heart, the cost of that distance, in blood and suffering, in the lives of everyday Americans. I believe as president, he would work to restore that promise to so many of our fellow citizens who have justifiably lost faith in its meaning. After the disastrous administration of the past 8 years, we need someone to lead us in an American reclamation project. In my job, I travel the world, and occasionally play big stadiums, just like Senator Obama. I've continued to find, wherever I go, America remains a repository of people's hopes, possibilities, and desires, and that despite the terrible erosion to our standing around the world, accomplished by our recent administration, we remain, for many, a house of dreams. One thousand George Bushes and one thousand Dick Cheneys will never be able to tear that house down.
They will, however, be leaving office, dropping the national tragedies of Katrina, Iraq, and our financial crisis in our laps. Our sacred house of dreams has been abused, looted, and left in a terrible state of disrepair. It needs care; it needs saving, it needs defending against those who would sell it down the river for power or a quick buck. It needs strong arms, hearts, and minds. It needs someone with Senator Obama's understanding, temperateness, deliberativeness, maturity, compassion, toughness, and faith, to help us rebuild our house once again. But most importantly, it needs us. You and me. To build that house with the generosity that is at the heart of the American spirit. A house that is truer and big enough to contain the hopes and dreams of all of our fellow citizens. That is where our future lies. We will rise or fall as a people by our ability to accomplish this task. Now I don't know about you, but I want that dream back, I want my America back, I want my country back.
So now is the time to stand with Barack Obama and Joe Biden, roll up our sleeves, and come on up for the rising."
(October 4)
John Martyn
Sounds like nothing and nobody else.
If you haven't heard John Martyn before get this.
Two tracks recorded live in Milan in 1979 ('I'd Rather Be The Devil' & 'Small Hours') with the added bonus of his version of Portishead's 'Glory Box.
Absolutely superb.
There is a 'New York Times' review here of his gig last week in NY and below is footage of Danny Thompson and him performing 'Solid Air' - a song that was written about Nick Drake.
Monday 13 October 2008
Jeff Tweedy says
Poster by Morning Breath.
Sunday 12 October 2008
Flip flop...
POTSDAM, Germany (AP) — A founder member of a left-wing terrorist group turned neo-Nazi went on trial in Germany Wednesday accused of publishing documents on the Internet denying the Holocaust.
Horst Mahler, a founding member of the Red Army Faction in 1970, is accused of regularly posting documents online between 2001 and 2004.
Denial of the Nazi Holocaust is a crime in Germany. Mahler has been charged with incitement and faces up to five years in prison if convicted.
The Potsdam state court trial is the latest case against the 72-year-old attorney, who was sentenced to 11 months in prison in July last year for giving the stiff-armed Nazi salute when he reported to prison after a conviction in a separate case.
In addition to several neo-Nazi related convictions, a court in Mainz in 2003 found Mahler guilty of condoning a crime for saying the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in the United States were justified and fined him several thousand euros (dollars).
He was also convicted in the mid-1970s for RAF related activities — including several bank robberies and for helping notorious terrorist Andreas Baader, another founding member of the group, to escape from jail.
He was sentenced to 14 years in prison but was released in 1980 after he made several public statements condemning terrorism and Red Army Faction methods.
Mahler then joined the far-right National Democratic Party, from 2000 to 2003, and acted as its attorney. The Potsdam trial is expected to last until at least mid-November.