Ever since I bought Spiritualized's Medication EP some time in the early 90s, I've been, if not quite obsessed, then certainly very enthusiastic about big build-ups in songs. I didn't realise at the time I first heard Angel Sigh and Feel So Sad that I was discovering post-rock (even if Spiritualized aren't really a post-rock band, what are genres for if not bending?), but they were songs that changed my tastes in music.
Monday, 27 May 2013
Wednesday, 8 May 2013
0017 - A Produce
A Produce is the name under which southern Californian trance pioneer Barry Craig, er, produced his music. Active for nearly 30 years since the early 80s, he was fairly prolific, releasing nine albums, an EP and a couple of compilations between 1988 and 2011.
Naturally, given this substantial back-catalogue, I have exactly one A Produce track.
Naturally, given this substantial back-catalogue, I have exactly one A Produce track.
Monday, 6 May 2013
0016 - A Noise Agency
So what was it I said in my post about 20/20 - "whenever I hear or read of something as being post-punk, I expect it to either sound like Dead Kennedys or Wire." So it's a big hurrah to A Noise Agency for reinforcing my preconceptions.
0015 - A Flock Of Seagulls
Mention A Flock Of Seagulls to anyone old enough to remember the 80s (and a lot of people who aren't) and they'll think of hair. Frontman Mike Score's ridiculous barnet is perhaps the most mocked, parodied and generally laughed at hairstyle of all time, although, in fairness, at least it means we remember him and his band.
The Numbers
So that's the numerically named bands out of the way. One thing that's interesting to me is that had you played me each of these before I started the blog, even had I recognised the songs you were playing, I think I'd have been able to identify only 4 Non Blondes and 50 Foot Wave out of the fourteen (and 50 Foot Wave were the only band by whom I actually had a full album, rather than a few songs from a compilation).
There's nothing here that I hate so far, which is nice, and that's despite prog-rock - a genre I have no love for - rearing its head in the shape of 5uu's. I thought they were pretty good though, although not good enough for me to re-evaluate my feelings on prog, admittedly.
On the positive side, I liked 17 Pygmies and 3D Picnic enough to buy an album by each and I'll probably pick up some sort of best-of 10CC at some point. It would be great if I can keep up that sort of strike rate throughout the alphabet (although my wallet might disagree).
On we go to A...
There's nothing here that I hate so far, which is nice, and that's despite prog-rock - a genre I have no love for - rearing its head in the shape of 5uu's. I thought they were pretty good though, although not good enough for me to re-evaluate my feelings on prog, admittedly.
On the positive side, I liked 17 Pygmies and 3D Picnic enough to buy an album by each and I'll probably pick up some sort of best-of 10CC at some point. It would be great if I can keep up that sort of strike rate throughout the alphabet (although my wallet might disagree).
On we go to A...
0014 - 8088
I was commenting recently on the lack of information online about 3D Picnic. Relative to 8088 though, the interwebs hold a veritable 30-volume encyclopaedia of 3D Picnic knowledge. The only certain info I can find are the listening stats on Last.fm for the one 8088 song I have, which are, I think (and this is part of the problem), credited to a different, more recent, 8088 (I think, in fact, that there might be three 8088s - this one from the mid-80s, another from the late 90s and yet another from the early 2010s, as well as a DJ 8088).
Labels:
8088,
80s,
Electronica,
Howard Jones,
Pop,
Thomas Dolby,
USofA
0013 - The 6ths
Another band of whom I have only the one song [actually, I have two - see update below]. The song is As You Turn To Go and it's not, as I thought before today, by the Magnetic Fields, but by the 6ths.
Labels:
00s,
90s,
Lloyd Cole,
Momus,
Stephen Merritt,
The 6ths,
The Human League,
Twee,
USofA
0012 - 5uu's
It's almost too easy to mock prog-rock/avant-rock/experimental-rock/whatever you want to call it, so I'm going to try not to. However, if we have a look at the track listing from 5uu's first album, Bel Marduk & Tiamat:
- Theme From Marduk & Tiamat
- Birth Of The Scale Of Life
- Birth Of The Compromisation
- Birth Of The Loyalty To Creation
- The Birth Of Ancient Internationalism
- Birth Of The Fear Of Life
- Birth Of Contemporary Global Friction
- Birth Of Sporting
- Birth Of Magic, Dogma And Faith
0011 - 5000 Volts
5000 Volts are another one-song-wonder from my collection, the one song being 1976 UK top-10 hit, Doctor Kiss Kiss.
0010 - 50 Foot Wave
Around 8 or 9 years ago, I worked as a freelance IT guy. I'm not sure I was particularly well cut out for the life of a freelancer - I didn't put enough time into finding new work, so while I was happy with having lots of time to do "my own thing", I also never really had quite enough money to be comfortable.
Part of my problem was one specific website: epitonic.com. It looked a bit different back then - a lot less web 2.0 (god, how I hate that term) than it does today. On days when I wasn't working, and a lot of days when I ought to have been, I'd go to Epitonic, pick a band I liked and then just spend the day clicking on links they suggested to similar bands and downloading whatever mp3s were offered for free, to burn them to CD and listen to them at my leisure. It was a great way to find new music and all legal and above board, which was nice.
Part of my problem was one specific website: epitonic.com. It looked a bit different back then - a lot less web 2.0 (god, how I hate that term) than it does today. On days when I wasn't working, and a lot of days when I ought to have been, I'd go to Epitonic, pick a band I liked and then just spend the day clicking on links they suggested to similar bands and downloading whatever mp3s were offered for free, to burn them to CD and listen to them at my leisure. It was a great way to find new music and all legal and above board, which was nice.
Labels:
00s,
10s,
50 Foot Wave,
Kristin Hersh,
Rock,
USofA
0009 - 45 Grave
Another band I have only the one track by are 45 Grave. Riboflavin Flavored, Non-Carbonated, Poly-Unsaturated Blood is the first song the band released, on the compilation album Darker Skratcher, released by the Los Angeles Free Music Society in 1980.
0008 - 4 Non Blondes
The one-hit wonder is a funny thing. If I asked you to name three off the top of your head, I bet I could argue that at least two of them weren't, in fact, one-hit wonders. Just have a look at the ludicrously convoluted Questions of Definition section on Wikipedia's One-Hit Wonder page and you'll see where I'm coming from here.
In short, Carl Douglas had two hits besides Kung Fu Fighting, the Buggles had a second top-20 hit, Edison Lighthouse are no more one-hit wonders than The Timelords and if you honestly think that the Boomtown Rats, Dexys Midnight Runners or a-ha count, you need to look up 'parochialism' in a dictionary. I'm tempted to argue, though, that in 4 Non Blondes, we may have a winner*.
In short, Carl Douglas had two hits besides Kung Fu Fighting, the Buggles had a second top-20 hit, Edison Lighthouse are no more one-hit wonders than The Timelords and if you honestly think that the Boomtown Rats, Dexys Midnight Runners or a-ha count, you need to look up 'parochialism' in a dictionary. I'm tempted to argue, though, that in 4 Non Blondes, we may have a winner*.
0007 - 3D Picnic
3D Picnic (also known as 3-D Picnic and Three D. Picnic) aren't the first band I've written about that I didn't know anything about beforehand, but they are the first about whom there seems to be very little information readily available. What I believe I know is this:
They were active in LA in the late 80s and early 90s and released 3 albums, Dirt, Sunshine & Cockroaches and covers collection New Wave Party;
They were fronted by Dallas Don Burnet, who at some point was also a member of the rather better known (albeit still obscure) Thelonius Monster.
They were active in LA in the late 80s and early 90s and released 3 albums, Dirt, Sunshine & Cockroaches and covers collection New Wave Party;
They were fronted by Dallas Don Burnet, who at some point was also a member of the rather better known (albeit still obscure) Thelonius Monster.
0006 - 20/20
I know that post-punk isn't exactly a genre and I do like a lot of music from that immediate post-punk era - in fact, I think that the period from the late-70s to mid-80s represents the pinnacle of pop music in my lifetime. So it's a bit odd that whenever I hear or read of something as being post-punk, I expect it to either sound like Dead Kennedys or Wire. Of my recent post-punk-pop-postings, 100 Flowers fit that mould reasonably well, but 17 Pygmies' jazz and synth-pop couldn't be much further removed. 20/20 are something else again - classic 80s power-pop.
0005 - 1910 Fruitgum Company
The first victim here of my hard-drive wiping disaster; a single mp3 file, shorn of any ID tags - goodygoodygumdrops.mp3 - it's the one song I have by the 1910 Fruitgum Company. Presumably it was at some point part of a larger 60s compilation, but it now lies orphaned and lonely, friendless amongst hundreds of gigabytes of cold, hard drive platters that just don't care!
On the other hand, there can be no better way to illustrate my (lack of?) purpose here and it allows me to establish my dull music geek credentials early on, by referring to early-90s Teenage Fanclub b-sides.
On the other hand, there can be no better way to illustrate my (lack of?) purpose here and it allows me to establish my dull music geek credentials early on, by referring to early-90s Teenage Fanclub b-sides.
0004 - 17 Pygmies
More post-punk from LA, but a pretty stark contrast from the last lot - where 100 Flowers were fairly straightforward punk, 17 Pygmies are much more of a mixed bag.
0003 - 10CC
I found just the one 10CC song squirreled away in a hidden corner of my laptop, their biggest hit (I'm so mainstream), I'm Not In Love.
0002 - 100 Flowers
100 Flowers are a post-punk three piece from Los Angeles who started life in 1978 as The Urinals, changed their name to 100 Flowers in 1981, disbanded in 1983, reformed (after some members spent time in Trotsky Icepick), again as The Urinals, in 1996, changed their name to Chairs Of Perception (which is a great name) some time after 2003 and then back to The Urinals in 2008. Awesome.
0001 - Mystery Artist...
I suppose I knew when I decided to start this musical odyssey that I was taking on a fairly herculean task. If you'd asked me at the time, though, how many different artists I had in my music collection, I'd probably have guessed at about three or four hundred, which is only about one thousand short of the actual total...
What's all this then?
A while back, I was attempting to reformat a flash drive and I accidentally wiped the external hard drive containing all my digital music files.I
was able to recover most of the files, but some are incomplete, some
are corrupted, some are simply not there. The only way I can find out
what needs replacing is to listen to it all, so that's what I'm going to
do, in alphabetical order, artist by artist, and I'm going to blog about it.
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