Chalkhills, Number 212 Saturday, 18 April 1992 Today's Topics: long s Pat Mastellato (sp?) i know more than dave Oh boy! A fight! Merchandise, Images, Melodies, a big castle 2 questions Interview: the End Re: xtc on mtv minor addition to the scuffle.. XTC Video? Still Not On Tour
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Thu, 16 Apr 92 18:17:34 EDT From: justin@crim.ca (Justin Bur) Subject: long s not an f, not an f used as an s, not an `old English' s. a long s. Standard printing practice in most European languages for a rather long time. In italics it looks like an integral sign. in roman type it does resemble an f - but look at it, it isn't, the horizontal stroke doesn't cross the vertical stem. The practice tended to be to use the long s everywhere except as the last letter of a word, in which case one would use a small curly s. The german `scharfes s' is a ligature of long s and ordinary s, which arose originally in fraktur (German blackletter) type and was retained for setting German in roman type. (It has nothing whatever to do with z and its alternate name `esszet' is a misnomer and the street-name signs in west berlin are a travesty.) my barely-relevant contribution for this year. bye for now. justin
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Thu, 16 Apr 92 16:03:05 PDT From: "Dan Weir" <dweir@us.oracle.com> Subject: Pat Mastellato (sp?) Lookee here, so what that Pat Mastellato (sp?) was in Mister Mister? Perhaps they suck, but he's a great drummer. He's also a longtime XTC fan. And I'm willing to bet he had something to do with writing the cool signature changes on that album (for instance, "Chalkhills and Children, "King for a Day"). Furthermore, on what do you base the opinion that the composition on O&L is (poor)? I'll go half as far out on a limb to say you don't know what the fuck you're talking about. Rgdz, Dan Weir
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Subject: i know more than dave From: Desi The Three-Armed Wonder Comic <jondr@sco.com> Date: Thu, 16 Apr 92 16:19:52 PDT William Carroll <wcarroll@encore.com> says: >From: Desi The Three-Armed Wonder Comic <jondr@sco.com> >>in the latest little express, dave gregory says he's seen printouts of >>chalkhills and finds it odd that we slag off O&L while praising The >>Big Express even though both are "very produced." well, i think what >>dave is missing is that while both _are_ elaborate productions, > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >I love this! Desi The Three-Armed Wonder Comic knows more about XTC's >music than one of the members of the group! Oh, please. I think it's clear what was meant by the above. If you say "this hyundai and this rolls royce are both cars" it is perfectly valid for me to point out that there are substantive differences between the two and whether or not you built one doesn't have any bearing on my comment. Jon Drukman (finely honed machine) uunet!sco!jondr jondr@sco.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Why kill time when you can kill yourself?
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] From: "waves at Ernst" <stewarte@sco.com> Subject: Oh boy! A fight! Date: Thu, 16 Apr 1992 17:36:44 -0700 (PDT) Hey, great, this is just like the old days! Jon Drukman and Karl MacRae duking it out before our very eyes... Well, courtesy of my esteemed colleague Mr. Drukman, I am even now listening to the single, and my first reaction is to agree with him: the production is fine (and I was one of those nasty folks complaining about Paul Fox's work). There are tons of backing vocals, true, and no shortage of strings -- but they make sense in context, and the important stuff is all up front where it belongs. "Humble Daisy" is very Dukesy, musically speaking (the lyrics aren't nearly over-the-top enough to pass for the Dukes). "Smartest Monkeys" has quite an edge for one of Colin's songs, I like it. I like "The Disappointed" too, the weird drum riff adds a nice rhythmic tension. All in all, I am encouraged. But heck, it's only my first listen... -- Stewart ****************************************************************************** "baseball's not *really* a sport--more like Zen ritual infotainment..." -- Tim Ruckle (timr@sco.COM) DNS: stewarte@sco.COM UUCP: ...!uunet!sco!stewarte
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Fri, 17 Apr 92 01:40:05 -0700 From: will kreth <kreth@well.sf.ca.us> Subject: Merchandise, Images, Melodies, a big castle (Ouch! So many flames to wade through - so little online time!) "Then She Appeared" with the goods!!! My friend at Geffen _finally_ came though! Sent me away with a XTC trove: -New unreleased video of "Ballad of Peter Pumpkinhead" -complete "Nonsuch" on a pre-release cassette -A new 8-song CD for radio station promotion with -a radio edit of "Peter Pumpkinhead" and all their best-selling singles: ("Nigel" "Senses" "Farmboy's $" "God" "Grass" "King" and "Mayor") -A new 4-song CD called "XTC NAC" - NAC standing for "Nonsuch Adult Contemporary" (yuck - I know we _hate_ that term). The songs are the ballads, of course: My Bird Performs, Wrapped in Grey, Rook and Books Are Burning. Geffen must be in marketing heaven. Finally, a known target audience! : ( bleh! - But, the music is good. : ) And the obligatory promo shot -Andy in Pakistani wool hat - (but no "Nonsuch" bio - yet) The video is a very clever, yet somewhat heavy-handed JFK/Dealy Plaza assassination recreation (isn't that vogue of them?) that Oliver Stone would love. Somehow, I always knew Partridge was a conspiracy theorist. It's obviously shot in 35mm or 70mm film and is letterboxed for television. There are some funny moments in it; Colin and Dave are disguised as extremely dorky tourists - cameras and Hawaiian shirts. Paul Mattacks doesn't look like the drummer - perhaps he couldn't make it for the shoot. The word is that it was done in London on about $19,500 or so - which in my friend's words, is the cheapest (and most entertaining) video Geffen has done this year. Don't know who directed it - would be curious to find out. My vote for the next video candidate is "Wrapped In Grey" - cuz the words are _so_ cool. (You hate the strings (ok?), but the chords are so fucking Disneyesque (with a touch of Donald Fagen and Todd on keys) - "...unconscious grotesque" gives me wonderful chills. Two cents- A two words to those who've been bitching and moaning about the production- GROW UP!! Did they really have a choice? Hell, both Padgham and Lillywhite either wanted too much $, or - insisted on being control freaks (like Dudgeon) and locking the band out of the final mix. Great bands can overcome crappy production (Alex Chilton's Big Star comes to mind) - and XTC has done it before. Even with the clutter and tinny treble of some of the songs (Omnibus- geez!) - the group sounds more intelligent and intelligible than ever. And beyond that, this is MOODY album. Do YOU have only one mood to show to the world? Get real - what people wanted was another "psychedelic chrome dragster" (as Andy called "O&L") and instead we got a 3am cab ride in the rain. No producer was going to change the mood the band wanted to give the album. Some of you act as if it's going to be the last album - so shrill is your tone. >We were ready two years ago, but our English record company refused >all our songs. Then, we were unlucky with the approached producers. >I am very annoyed with it, because I would like to release an album >every six months, I feel I am gagged. The ideal solution would be two >albums every year, but the situation is for the most part beyond my >control. I would like to release a huge amount of albums: "Nonsuch" is better than 95% of the dreck that passes for pop today. Period. (P.S. -for someone who says he doesn't take drugs -any more at least- "That Wave" sounds deliciously druggy ; ) Krethead
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] From: J Ross MacKay <ross@ray.grdl.noaa.gov> Subject: 2 questions Date: Fri, 17 Apr 92 7:53:44 EDT Is the REFLEX _Rip Van Reuben_ the same version as on WINDOW BOX? Re: silk-screened cover. Can anyone confirm that Geffen will not have it, and Virgin will? Any news on another import single? [OH NO, THAT WAS THREE QUESTIONS! AAAAAAIIIIIIAAAAAAHHHHH...] PS - I ain't Difapointed one little bit. But my wife's beginnig to climb the walls. I've been playing it every night for a week, sometimes on the repeat cycle for an hour or more. -- Internet: ross@ray.grdl.noaa.gov
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Wed, 15 Apr 92 23:49:22 EDT From: Emmanuel Marin <MARINP92@frecp12.bitnet> Subject: Interview: the End Les Inrockuptibles, March 1992 Interview by Christian Fevret Translated by Emmanuel Marin Part Five of Five THE VERDURE AND THE DAIRY PRODUCE Andy Partridge: England belongs to another century, it's one hundred years behind the times. The only other country which I could imagine living in is Holland. I like the verdure and the dairy produce. England has been sacrificed to cars. They have devoured everything. This country is a huge salad bowl progressively devoured by cars which proliferate like worms. Les Inrockuptibles: Do you like the cultural insularity of England? A: We are terribly arrogant, we need to believe that what we have invented is the best thing ever done, even if it may last only one week. England is a highly productive cattle-breading area, but we never know what to do with the Frankenstein's creatures once we have created them. We have the terrible habit of bringing out something new, and saying it is the best thing ever, just to see it fall off its pedestal two weeks later, because it had no substance. Saying that in fact it was awful, that we had never really liked it. We do not have an ear critical enough to really listen to it at the beginning, we always make up our minds in a rush. LI: Your influences are strictly English, nothing American. A: I like the Beach Boys' music, when it begins to sound like Handel's or Bach's. The best of the Beach Boys did not sound American, it was rather in the tradition of European classical music. America has nothing to offer to me. I feel jammed in England, for better or for worse, standing stock-still in English history. I know that a great part of English history is very far from brilliant, but I feel I cannot get out. And there is something satisfying in my imprisonment. I like history. It is very enjoyable to search it, to exhibit all its atrocities and to cover yourself with it. Now that I am old and decrepit, I am interested in older and more decrepit stuff. LI: American people like Phil Spector seem to have a musical spirit close to yours, in the sense of melody, the arrangements, the combination of simplicity and complexity. Do you like these eccentricities of American music? A: "Americanism"? It's true it is fascinating, but I do not completely understand the language spoken by Americanism, people like Spil Factor [laughs] . . . I like, but I do not really understand, I remain an external listener, I cannot participate because I do not understand the wheels of it. You must come from there to really participate. It remains a mystery for me. I never had any particular admiration for Spector, whom I took for rather trigger-happy [laughs]. . . Captain Beefheart is in my opinion the greatest American poet, he had a way of filtering, concentrating the Americana, old and modern, into some little pieces of music, three minutes long; I admire him enormously for that. His music is a never ending bomb, surprising one from the first to the last noise. I do need elements of rigour in order to understand music, but I like to lift the lid and find surprises. Some people do not appreciate uncertainty, do not like to look under a stone to find something marvellous. I like to put it in music. I know we have been criticized for that, but I cannot help being myself, so love it or hate it! [laughs] I am easily bored, so my favourite music is the one that takes you by the ear to bring you to another horizon. You lift up the lid and suddenly there is something marvellous in the box, something you did not expect. LI: You could not live in America? A: I would feel too much like a stranger there. England, with all its flaws, is now entirely part of my own system. I realize that it is a weird place, where everything seems to work under different rules from the rules of the rest of the world. Each time I come back here after a journey, it is as if someone threw a bucket full of sweet water at my face. "Humm. . . the taste of England!" It is a sickly drink but with a subtle flavour. The English race is now the only one which does not understand us. Americans do not understand the way we act, but that is what seduces them. These Americans like to feed themselves with anglicism, with fancy England: the tea towels, the beefeaters, the HP sauce, the London cabs. . . I am sure they like all this comic book anglicism in our music. That is the language we talk. They must see England like a negative of Hollywood, the theater of ultimate decadence. LI: In France, the Monty Python symbolize the spirit of English imagination. Do they too, in your opinion? A: English are this way: the Monty Python put the English under a microscope and reveal the stupidity of all these mannerisms. David Lean's movies and Dickens' novels are the quintessence of distilled anglicism. David Lean's version of "Great Expectations" or "Oliver Twist" is dreamt anglicism in a deadly dose. Throw it and anglicism splashes all over the place. Nitroglycerin of English. I need to watch his "Great Expectations" every two months to reaffirm my vision of the world. Among the contemporaries, there is also Mike Leigh, very embarrassing, who puts his finger exactly where he has to. LI: Your main influence is the rock of the 60's. Yet one can think that the original rock of the 60's was American, that the English just adapted it. A: The best music of the 50's was American, but by dint of copying it clumsily, we finally ended with something much more exciting and innovative in the middle of the 60's in England. Then, during the 70's and the 80's, it was musical ping-pong. But we won the 60's play. Even Jimi Hendrix had to leave the United States to settle in England. I did not like Dylan a lot, I found he copied too much Donovan [laughs]. . . That is what I say to Dylan fans to annoy them. Ray Davies has always been an extraordinary songwriter, I have a relationship of love and hate with the Kinks, marvellous and sometimes awful. Yet, I believe in musicians who get better with the age, in good artisans. I am still feeling I am learning and progressively coming near to songwriters like Burt Bacharach, a marvellous guy. I would like to write music that, as his own does, would follow the meanders of the most beautiful melodic landscapes. The song is dying, yet everything is here. You now hear only sung grooves, which are not songs. My conception of a song is very much out of fashion. LI: You seem to be obsessed by growing old. Are you anxious? A: Without a doubt, but I try to get rid of it by thinking one can get better with the age. Nothing is worst than rotten fruit, but nothing is better than an old wine bottle, at least until it is completely emptied. I hope I will not become a rotten fruit, I want to improve. I hope that is what happens to our music. I am paralyzed at the idea of not having exorcized the ghosts of all of the people who I admire, of not having been better than them. Paralyzed at the idea I could not defeat them in a song duel, like knights in armour. I am about to equal some of them, but I want to defeat all of them [laughs]. . . The task is long, so I sharpen my weapons, I want to defeat Ray Davies, Lennon and McCartney, Burt Bacharach and Brian Wilson. . . I want all these people dead at my feet. THE END. Hope you enjoyed it.
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] From: Ray Sherrod <rsherrod@ecst.csuchico.edu> Subject: Re: xtc on mtv Date: Fri, 17 Apr 92 12:50:44 PDT I was in Los Angeles last week and along with my Sunday morning cup of mud and toast I had the pleasure of reading in the Calender section of the L.A. Times(April 12) that XTC will be performing an MTV concert in July or August. It didn't say, but I have a hunch this could be one of those "unplugged" deals which has become popular with the metal folks. I contacted several record stores in the L.A. area to locate advance copies of Nonsuch, and spoke with a couple clerks who actually had promo copies of the cassette and CD, but had sold them already. Crap! After I finished the coffee and toast, I went to church. it's no secret that the stars are falling from the sky
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Fri, 17 Apr 92 13:58:36 -0700 From: poldy <ukevc@mcl.mcl.ucsb.edu> Subject: minor addition to the scuffle.. Not being a flamewar kind of person, I want to throw my 2 cents in: I don't think Skylarking is badly recorded. I am in the minority of Skylarking addicts (and I've said this before, probably) but I find the chilling content of Skylarking to be potent, along with some of their other apocalyptic/paradise-y songs. But hey, experience is 100% subjective, so maybe my head is just wired to Skylarking's recording... but before I ever discovered Chalkhills, I had no opinions about the recording one way or the other, indicating that it is low-key enough not to stand in the way of the songs. Back to Nonesuch,... of course I'm only writing about skylarking in the interim of anticipation... back to the Dukes Demos tape I go... --- I've seen someone in a Skylarking t-shirt and someone in a Drums&Wires t-shirt both this week, but when I raved at them, they didn't consider it as much of a revelation as i did, :) and so we both kept on walking... Kevin
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Sat, 18 Apr 92 16:28:50 +1000 From: Graeme Wong See <graeme@research.canon.oz.au> Subject: XTC Video? Yo XTC people, With the release of the new XTC single and album does anyone know if XTC made any video clips to go with any of the songs? Anyone seen anything on MTV? Graeme ps. please cut the crap about the relative merits of ablum A vs, album B, producer A vs. producer B. State your opinion by all means but we don't have to get personal in doing so. If you really want to flame each other do it via email not Chalkhills.
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Sat, 18 Apr 92 11:45:17 PDT From: Chalkhills Administration <chalkhills-request@chalkhills.org> Subject: Still Not On Tour Organisation: Chalkhills Anonymous (Cheer up, there is a new album) XTC NONSVCH Following up their No. 1 Alternative album, _Oranges & Lemons_, XTC return with an all- new album of unequalled musical marvels. Featuring: "The Ballad of Peter Pumpkinhead" "My Bird Performs" "Wrapped in Grey" "Pop music's quirkiest, smartest band" returns. -- Rolling Stone Produced by Gus Dudgeon Engineered by Barry Hammond Mixed by Nick Davis [ The above is the text of a full-page advertisement on the back cover of the May issue of _Tower Records' Pulse!_ magazine. ]
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] For all administrative issues, such as change of address, withdrawal from the list, fan club addresses, discography requests (last update 31 March), back issues, etc., send a message to the following address: <chalkhills-request@chalkhills.org> The Chalkhills archives are available at "http://chalkhills.org/". All views expressed in Chalkhills are those of the individual contributors only. The printed word is more than sacred.
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