Monday 20 April 2009

New Wilco album tracklist


Wilco The Song
Deeper Down
One Wing
Bull Black Nova
You And I
You Never Know
Country Disappeared
Solitaire
I'll Fight
Sunny Feeling
Everlasting

Sunday 19 April 2009

IMPORTANT MESSAGE:


VALE
THERE IS AN EMAIL IN YR INFORESEARCH INBOX OR COULD YOU PLEASE GET IN TOUCH THRU COMMENTS
THANX
M

The truth?

create animated gif

Saturday 18 April 2009

Unfortunate comic book sound effects

Via 'this isn't happiness' here.

Smoking

Then & now

Pirate Bay founders found guilty

Peter Sunde, Fredrik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm and Carl Lundström were found guilty and sentenced to one year in prison despite doing a public service and payment of a fine of 30 million SEK (app. $3,620,000 USD), after a trial of 9 days. The defendants will appeal against the verdict.
Story at 'The Guardian' here.
More at 'Torrent Freak' here.

Ian Tomlinson death due to internal bleeding

Ian Tomlinson, 47, was struck and pushed over by a police officer during G20 protests on 1 April in Londom. Now a fresh post-mortem examination has found he died of abdominal bleeding, not a heart attack, as first thought.
Full story from the 'BBC' here.

Teabagger's manifesto

Via 'The New Disease' here.

Friday 17 April 2009

David Sylvian - Red Guitar

New David Sylvian album 'Manafon' due soon

From David Sylvian’s label Samadhi Sound we hear about an upcoming release from David Sylvian titled Manafon. According to the release, this album is a “powerfully bold, uncompromising work.” The sessions for this album were apparently recorded in December, 2007 and included Evan Parker, John Tilbury, Keith Rowe, Christian Fennesz, Otomo Yoshihide, and others.
This is now my most eagerly awaited new release.
Well that and Sunn O)))'s 'Monoliths & Dimensions'.

Rock Magic: William S. Burroughs & Jimmy Page (Crawdaddy June 1975)

"...I felt that these considerations could form the basis of my talk with Jimmy Page, which I hoped would not take the form of an interview. There is something just basically wrong about the whole interview format. Someone sticks a mike in your face and says, "Mr. Page, would you care to talk about your interest in occult practices? Would you describe yourself as a believer in this sort of thing?" Even an intelligent mike-in-the-face question tends to evoke a guarded mike-in-the-face answer. As soon as Jimmy Page walked into my loft downtown, I saw that it wasn't going to be that way.
We started talking over a cup of tea and found we have friends in common: the real estate agent who negotiated Jimmy Page's purchase of the Aleister Crowley house on Loch Ness, John Michel, the flying saucer and pyramid expert. Donald Camel, who worked on Performance; Kenneth Anger, and the Jaggers, Mick and Chris. The subject of magic came up in connection with Aleister Crowley and Kenneth Anger' film Lucifer Rising, for which Jimmy Page did the sound track.
Since the word "magic" tends to cause confused thinking, I would like to say exactly what I mean by "magic" and the magical interpretation of so - called reality. The underlying assumption of magic is the assertion of will as the primary moving force in this universe -- the deep conviction that nothing happens unless somebody or some being wills it to happen. To me this has always seemed self -- evident. A chair does not move unless someone moves it. Neither does your physical body, which is composed of much the same materials, move unless you will it to move. Walking across the room is a magical operation. From the viewpoint of magic, no death, no illness, no misfortune, accident, war, or riot is accidental. There are no accidents in the world of magic. And will is another word for animate energy. Rock stars are juggling fissionable material that could blow up at any time . . . "The soccer scores are coming in from the Capital ... one must pretend an interest," drawled the dandified Commandante, safe in the pages of my book, and as another rock star said to me, " You sit on your ass writing -- I could be torn to pieces by my fans, like Orpheus."

Full article here.

I (heart) you all

Thursday 16 April 2009

Patriot

"Thanks for a nation of finks. Yes, thanks for all the memories-- all right let's see your arms!"

William S. Burroughs & David Bowie: (The Rolling Stone Interview February 1974)


Beat Godfather Meets Glitter Mainman
Rolling Stone
February 28, 1974
by Craig Copetas

"....Burroughs: Politics of sound.

Bowie: Yes. We have kind of got that now. It has very loosely shaped itself into the politics of sound. The fact that you can now subdivide rock into different categories was something that you couldn't do ten years ago. But now I can reel off at least ten sounds that represent a kind of person rather than a type of music. The critics like being critics, and most of them wish they were rock-and-roll stars. But when they classify they are talking about people not music. It's a whole political thing.

Burroughs: Like infrasound, the sound below the level of hearing. Below 16 MHz. Turned up full blast it can knock down walls for 30 miles. You can walk into the French patent office and buy the patent for 40p. The machine itself can be made very cheaply from things you could find in a junk yard.

Bowie: Like black noise. I wonder if there is a sound that can put things back together? There was a band experimenting with stuff like that; they reckon they could make a whole audience shake.

Burroughs: They have riot-control noise based on these soundwaves now. But you could have music with infrasound, you wouldn't necessarily have to kill the audience.

Bowie: Just maim them.

Burroughs: The weapon of the Wild Boys is a Bowie knife, an 18-inch bowie knife, did you know that?

Bowie: An 18-inch bowie knife.... you don't do things by halves, do you? No, I didn't know that was their weapon. The name Bowie just appealed to me when I was younger. I was into a kind of heavy philosophy thing when I was 16 years old, and I wanted a truism about cutting through the lies and all that.

Burroughs: Well, it cuts both ways, you know, double-edged on the end.

Bowie: I didn't see it cutting both ways till now."

The full interview via 'Teenage Wildlife'
here.