Chalkhills, Number 253 Sunday, 13 December 1992 Today's Topics: rook Re: Bill Nelson's Red Noise 10 Years whining.... those were the days.... Re: Bill Nelson explode together More XTC Then and Now Red Noise & Rebuttal
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Subject: rook From: Desi The Three-Armed Wonder Comic <jondr@sco.com> Date: Tue, 8 Dec 92 13:29:57 PST Ray Sherrod <rsherrod@ecst.csuchico.edu> opines: >Andy sings, "If I die and I find I have a soul inside > Promise me you'll take it up on it's final ride" > > I would conjecture that these are fairly soft words for a devout athiest. what does belief in a soul have to do with belief in a god? Jon Drukman (God's personal DJ) uunet!sco!jondr jondr@sco.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Your head will become a crazy bulbous punchbag of sound.
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Subject: Re: Bill Nelson's Red Noise From: buzzsaw@bluemoon.use.com (Patrick Buzby) Date: Tue, 08 Dec 92 21:41:53 EST Organization: Blue Moon BBS ((614) 868-998[024]) I have Bill Nelson's "Quit Dreaming And Get On The Beam," the album right after the Red Noise album. One song, "False Alarms," sounds a lot like early XTC, but@ most of the rest doesn't. Perhaps the Red Noise album is entirJely in that vein, but I suspect that most of the later Nelson albums don't have much in common with XTC. This is from buzzsaw@bluemoon.use.com who doesn't have his (or her) own obnoxious signature yet
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Wed, 9 Dec 92 06:55:51 PST From: driver8@night.corp.sun.com (Albert Handa) Subject: 10 Years whining.... In regards to Melinda (I assume :-) challenge to the critics to send her a tape of anything as good as NONSUCH....If the record is offered for sale, and people are expected to pay real money for it, then the artist is defin- itely subject to opinion. I know about artistic merit and all that, but in a perfect world, XTC would have stopped release of any music they thought a producer had screwed up. Frankly, I like the band enough that I would cut them some slack, even on a recording like NONSUCH, which I consider to be slightly mannerist and overly baroque. I'd certainly buy their next record when it comes. But come on...asking people to send their own music as an argument? Does one have to be a peer of XTC to criticise? Bill Nelson Red Noise Section: I don't think Bill did a lot of stuff that one could consider XTC-like. His guitar style, as a rule, had a sort of a very fat, jazzy distortion. If one wants to hear jerky rhythms, atonalities, quick odd guitar riffs and mannered vocals, then check out some of the early and middle James Blood Ulmer records (er..tapes or CDs). That's definitely more in the harmelodic jazz world, though.... New Ten Year Plan: I don't think XTC has reached it's ten year cycle and is in decline. I think they've just stayed too long in a particular phase. That late 60's pop-intricacy stuff is sort of getting old. The key record- ing from this late period will not be SkyLarking or even Big Express, but 25 O'Clock (so it will be written by press-release hacks who will some day be dependent on me for a paycheck and to stay involved in the glamor of the music business). The Dukes were the 60's XTC they really wanted to be. Most major artists like Dylan, Kinks, Lou Reed, Tom Verlaine (er...fan's choice there I admit) tend to change from record to record. It might be time for XTC to make a radical style change. There's been enough personel changes that there's no point in arguing that it's the same XTC as ten years ago. So, a radical change is possible. Also, a truly great artist will take a chance and do something that might piss off their cult (the rest will buy the stuff in the rarities compilations later, so a cutting of losses is possible). -Al "I haven't traded NONSUCH in at the local used-record store so I must still like them" Handa.
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Wed, 9 Dec 92 15:17:03 CST From: tmeyer@il.us.swissbank.com (Tom Meyer) Subject: those were the days.... Ok, there seems to be another debate brewing about the '10 Years' theory advanced recently by a couple of subscribers. I think it is dangerous, though, to apply it universally (with a -R for all us UNIX geeks) to all bands that manage to hang around long enough to fall into this situation. I think each band has to be looked at on its own (de)merits and not with a blind gee-I-wish-they-were-still-making-music-like-in-1977 attitude. In that XTC were in the legendary "Class of '77", I do think it is fair to compare them to bands of that era. The Boys are among the last survivors (still then same band, more the most part) of this period and it is only natural for them to want to make more mature music. Would anyone still take them seriously if they still sang about 'Radios in Motion' and dancing like a 'Spinning Top' ?? Take a look at other members of this class did/are doing: Sex Pistols - Didn't even last a year, PiL made one classic album (Metal Box) and had one semi-hit ('Rise'), but have remained somewhat of an enigma to most. Talking Heads - Byrne *did* seem to mellow with age, with their last LP being release in 1988. The band is kaput now, though. Their last real big effort was probably "Speaking in Tongues". After their first 4 ('77, More Songs About Buildings and Food, Fear of Music, and Remain in Light ) everything else seemed to pale in comparison. Now let's here everyone chime in "XTC are the same way, blah blah blah..." In actuality, they're not. The Heads initial sound was much closer to where they ended up that is/was XTC's. While Black Sea and English Settlement may be great records, Andy has said time and time again that he did not like making that type of music (moreso with Black Sea, I think). XTC still had a lot of room to develop after these records, while the Heads' crowning achievement was probably "Remain in Light". Elvis Costello - He isn't making any more "This Year's Model"'s or "My Aim is True"'s. While "Spike" was one of the best of '89, his last was somewhat disappointing. His development, I think, closely mirrors that of AP and both have shown the same type of maturity in their recent work. Wire - Pretty much impossible to pin down, since the music they make now is soooo different than the art-punk of their first 3. They went from a weird punk band to a weird dance band(that you can't really dance to, either). But, they have shown considerable development/influence throughout their career Robyn Hitchcock - Still makes relatively the same stuff, although somewhat smoothed over. He too was tamed by Paul Fox. Once in a while still lets you reminisce the good old days of songs about fish and disembodied heads with LPs like 'Eye'. I think he suffered on 'Globe of Frogs' and to a lesser degree 'Queen Elvis' by trying to force the weirdness that characterized his earlier work. I think the bottom line is this: Everyone gets older, wiser, etc, etc... To expect a group to keep making the same music album after album. Few bands can get away with it, although many try. Look at the Beatles. They lasted less than 8 years and probably changed their style more times than any band in history. We should al be thankful for the fact that Andy, Colin and Dave have persevered this long. Just my (little more than) $.02 worth. -tom tmeyer@il.us.swissbank.com
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Thu, 10 Dec 92 08:49:40 -0500 From: lee@quincy.cs.umass.edu (Peter Lee) Subject: Re: Bill Nelson John Relf writes: >A friend I met through Guitar Craft sent me a tape a few years back, and >it included a couple of tracks from "Bill Nelson's Red Noise", "Revolt >Into Style" and "Don't Touch Me (I'm Electric)". I was listening to >them the other day and I was struck by the similarities between those >two songs and XTC's "White Music". Has anybody else noticed this? The >jerky rhythms, atonalities, quick odd guitar riffs, and mannered vocals? >Is the remainder of "Red Noise" similar to those two songs? Or perhaps >my friend, also an XTC fan, taped those two songs with XTC in mind... Yes, both the remainder of "Red Noise" and some of Nelson's other early work (check out "Atom Man Loves Radium Girl" or "Mr. Magnetism Himself" from the "Two-Fold Aspect Of Everything" compilation, or several of the tracks from his first solo CD, "Quit Dreaming And Get On The Beam") has a remarkably similar sound to early XTC (say, the first three albums). He's gone through several stylistic changes since, though, and his more recent stuff bears little resemblance to his early material (he's put out several atmospheric, mostly electronic instrumental albums, a couple of very lush studio "pop" albums, and six CDs of 4 track demos (mostly featuring vocals) that rival the quality of many fully produced albums). It's all quite good, IMHO. -Peter Lee /-------------------- Peter E. Lee, Software Conductor ----------------------\ | Specular International, Inc. | | lee@cs.umass.edu or (413) 256-1329 (H) or (413) 549-7600 (W) | \-------- Beauty is 24 bits deep, plus eight bits of alpha channel ----------/
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] From: melinda@world.std.com (Melinda M Hale) Subject: explode together Date: Thu, 10 Dec 92 22:53:21 EST Jim, I'm sure you'll get a million replies to this, but... If memory serves, EXPLODE TOGETHER is a compilation of two earlier recordings, GO+, and TAKE AWAY/THE LURE OF SALVAGE. GO+ was a freebie with the original (UK only?) release of XTC's second album, GO2, and TAKE AWAY/THE LURE OF SALVAGE is a solo album Andy did. They mostly consist of new songs constructed from riffs/melodic motifs from XTC songs, and TAKE AWAY has some original songs by Andy. These are not XTC-sounding songs, though -- they are late 70s/early 80s experimental synth stuff. It's fun as far as "spot the song", but if, like you say, you're not a fanatic, you probably won't find it very interesting. I think it's marginally interesting, but I *am* a fanatic. :-) Melinda melinda@world.std.com "They taught me how to work, but they can't teach me how to shirk correctly..."
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] From: Jim_McGowan@qad.com Date: Fri, 11 Dec 92 15:38:07 -0800 Subject: More XTC Then and Now As far as the old versus new XTC debate goes, I'd suggest that there's also something to be said for the way production values have changed in recent years. Black Sea/English Settlement-era XTC albums had the best "sound" in my opinion. They used a big, live-room ambience that sounded great when played really loud. Compare the mix and ambience of "Jason and the Argonauts" to a recent hit like "Mayor of Simpleton" and you'll see what I mean (and make sure to play both of them loud enough to annoy your neighbors!). Plus, I think they were more experimental with their choice of instruments and tones in the early days. Both of these factors suggest to me that the producer/engineer/studio has a lot to do with the difference. While I thought he was highly overrated in most cases, Steve Lillywhite did wonders for the XTC "big sound". He liked drowning everything in reverb, but he liked to mix the drums way up front, which I think was a good thing since I still feel that Terry Chambers was an exceptional musician. I miss the old sound of their records. Today, every pop album seems to use the same "King-Kong-In-A-Beatbox" midi-drum sounds, the same clear, crystalline and processed-to-death guitar tones, etc. Makes you wonder what the boys would sound like if they recorded the next album in a funky, low-end 16 track studio and had all the time in the world to do it and be creative. Also makes you wonder how they'd sound (here comes that word) live, don't it? Seasons greetings all! - Jim McGowan qad.inc 6450 Via Real Carpinteria, CA 93013 (805) 684-6614 jjm@qcohp01.qad.com
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: 12 Dec 92 15:21:37 EST From: Steve Levenstein <70750.1117@compuserve.com> Subject: Red Noise & Rebuttal Our Fearless Leader, John Relph, mentioned Bill Nelson's "Red Noise" in the last Chalkhills, and commented on their real similarity to early XTC. I recently bought the CD, and all of the tracks are in the same style. The CD also includes a couple of live bonus tracks. Bill Nelson is an acknowledged AP fan, at least he said so in an interview from "Spiral Scratch" magazine. I believe "Red Noise" only put out the one album, in 1979. Pity! In reply to the person (was it Melissa Hale?) who objected to what she terms "whining" about XTC not being what they used to be, I say Whoa!! (or should that be Woe!!). Hey, I wasn't whining, only expressing my feelings about XTC recent "inconsistantcy" IMHO. I never said that I didn't like XTC anymore, (I do!), only that (again IMHO) they have lost the sense of finger-on-the-pulse urgency & relevance that they once had. I remember buying Black Sea, listening to it a few times, and thinking that they've lost it, that there's nothing appealing on this album. Over the next year, I gradually came around to loving every song on the album (well, except "Travels In Nihilon", which I still don't get). I've listened to Oranges & Lemons and Nonsuch a LOT, and I feel that these two efforts gave up all their musical secrets to me too soon. XTC is still my favourite band, and I love them enough to feel personally disappointed by their shortcomings. One thing is certain, their next album/CD will be bought at first sight! ---> Steve "Help me get through these cynical days!" Distribution: Chalkhills >INTERNET:CHALKHILLS@PRESTO.IG.COM
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Thanks to Ira Rosenblatt. For all administrative issues, such as change of address, withdrawal from the list, fan club addresses, discography requests (last update 2 December), back issues, FAQ list, 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. I'm a 30-year old puppy doing what I'm told.
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