Chalkhills, Number 361 Wednesday, 13 July 1994 Today's Topics: Andy Partridge Harold Budd XTC Pay Per View? Re: Chalkhills #359 Guitar techie question from Arlo B Leach Re: Chalkhills #360 (none) Re: Chalkhills #360 Re: Chalkhills #360 i'm dreaming now Sam Phillips, Club De Wash, Madison, WI 7/7/94 My first -hills; recent news First posting by XTC fan
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Fri, 8 Jul 1994 21:49:55 -0400 (EDT) From: "Jason C. Langley" <jlangley@nynexst.com> Subject: Andy Partridge Harold Budd I picked up _Through the Hill_ by Andy Partridge and Harold Budd today. I believe it's an American copy: Gyroscope Records (Marketed and distributed by Caroline Records) GYR 6608-2. I'm listening to it as I type this, and well it *is* ambient music so I'll hold off on any comments about the music for now. I thought I would answer a question though. James Hartman wonders: > is quite interesting; I'm wondering if it will be this elaborate for the > American release (instead of a booklet, it is a folded card held together > with a gold-colored strip. Stuffed inside the gold card is three MORE > folded cards with minimal graphics and track titles. Yes, it's exactly as you described quite elaborate indeed. Jason
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] From: m.mccormick2@genie.geis.com Date: Sat, 9 Jul 94 04:46:00 UTC Subject: XTC Pay Per View? There has been a fair amount of XTC chatter in Usenet's alt.music.alternative news group of late (John, do you still plan to post a FAQ there?). Today someone posted that he had read in a rag called the Illinois Entertainer that XTC are going to do an acoustic concert on Pay Per View cable TV this year. Someone also claimed they thought they had read something like that in Rolling Stone a couple months ago. XTC LIVE UNPLUGGED ON PPV??? I thought to myself. Too good to be true. Besides, I would've heard about it on Chalkhills by now! So I'm asking -- has anyone else heard this? Do we have any Illinoisians here who read this Illinois Entertainer? -Mike McCormick P.S. With all the contributions here from fellow Minneapolis residents, I am starting to wonder if maybe the Twin Cities (and not Madison, Wisc) is the true XTC capital of America! I've lived both here & in Madison, so either way I can't lose. Maybe the next XTC Convention should be halfway in between -- that would probably be the sleepy little town of Black River Falls, Wisconsin! P.P.S. The XTC appearance here in Mpls was indeed on KTCZ, The Cities 97 FM, and not on KABL as someone else suggested. I have a direct-from-radio tape of the boys singing "Mayor of Simpleton". And from what I've heard on the O&L radio tour bootlegs (oops, I said that "B" word!) it was among their prettiest renditions of the whole tour. I sure didn't know they stopped for dinner at Sri Lanka Curry House though! Did someone say he dined with them there??
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Sat, 09 Jul 94 14:00:36 GMT From: Steve@nifty.demon.co.uk (Steve Clarke) Subject: Re: Chalkhills #359 Guitar techie question from Arlo B Leach The solo on 'Smartest Monkeys' is almost certainly dave gregory's synth. Muso Techie bit follows **************** Assuming the synth used is Mr. Gregory's Prophet 5, the guitar like 'attack' can be acheived by locking all five oscillators into mono mode (this is usually referred to as 'oscillator sync' on roland synths). **************************************** It's unusual to hear synth solos on XTC songs, being predominantly a guitar band they tend to use technology sparingly. It's interesting to ponder that XTC pre-empted the current acoustic guitar fad by several years (love on a farm boys wages, us radio tour). -- Steve Clarke
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Sun, 10 Jul 1994 15:17:24 -0400 (EDT) From: Derek Miner <ind00163@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu> Subject: Re: Chalkhills #360 On Fri, 8 Jul 1994 Mr. Relph wrote: > > I read a listing once of something called "A Cassette of > >Unreleased XTC". Anyone seen this or know anything about it? It had some > >odd instrumentals and outtakes on it. > > I'll bet this is _Jules Verne's Sketchbook_. Actually, no. It is listed in that mega-file, XTCyclopaedia in the archives. The contents include four instrumentals, demos of songs >from "25 O'clock," the drunken XTC doing "Community Worker Breakdown" (which I have thanks to you, John), a couple answering machine messages and a couple other random inclusions. The contents listed were credited to a listing in Chalkhills, so I can go back and let everyone know when it was. Maybe that would jog some memories... Derek
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Sun, 10 Jul 1994 14:39:20 -0700 From: mallard@uclink.berkeley.edu (Chong Hyun Byun) Hello Everyone! Well, here goes with my very first posting to Chalkhills. I've been a lurker for about a year now, but there's a bunch of stuff I want to mention (and ask) that I decided to break down and post something. Okay, introductory stuff--I've only been listening to XTC for about a year and a half now, but they blow me away. My best friend sent me a tape of Oranges and Lemons and it took me a while to get into it. At first, all i listened to was "Mayor of Simpleton", but then I started getting into "Garden of Earthly Delights". Then I asked my friend to recommend some of their other stuff. She suggested English Settlement and Skylarking and after that, it just sort of snowballed and I ran out and bought almost all their other albums (except for White Music and Go 2, which I just got recently) within the span of a month. A few XTC mentions...I work in the Music Library at UC Berkeley and recently they've been buying more pop and mainstream music, like Peter Gabriel, Talking Heads, Police (this is all because of a new American Cultures music class being offered here). Anyway, on the off chance, I checked to see if they had anything by XTC and it turns out that they're getting Skylarking! Well, I was impressed, I didn't think anyone here had even heard of XTC. And here's another little bit--I was going through my back issues of Stereo Review, deciding which to recycle and I happened upon their choice of the top 10 recordings of the year (this is in the Feb. 1993). Anyhow, Nonsuch made honorable mention. Neat, huh? Well, these are just minor little things that no one but an XTC fanatic would notice anyway... Now for a couple of questions, if anyone out there could enlighten me. Are there any (CD) editions of English Settlement and Go 2 which have the lyrics printed in the CD booklet? Was the "Dear Madam Barnum" demo released on anything other than the Gribouillage EP? (I've been looking forever for that one!) And can anyone tell me what's on these two albums: This is Live (from the Hammersmith Odeon 1981) and Making Plans for Andy (Live '78 and '82)? Someone I vaguely know is selling them and I wonder if I should get them. Anyway, thanks to everyone for listening (or in this case, reading) this far! Christie mallard@uclink.berkeley.edu P.S. Does anyone have ANY idea of when the new album is coming out? I was at my local record store, standing in a puddle of drool, looking up at the 45s they had for sale ("No Thugs...", "Towers of London", "Statue of Liberty") when I struck up a conversation with a guy who was in a similar pose. He said he was from Seattle and had heard on a local alternative radio station that the new album was coming out in late summer. Now I've heard all the rumors, but does anyone have a concrete idea? Thanks!
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Mon, 11 Jul 1994 09:34:18 +0800 From: barry@rex75.west.sun.com (Barry Greenberg) Subject: Re: Chalkhills #360 In the current issue of the LosAngelesReader (a local weekly rag) there is an interview with Andy Partridge. Much of the interview (and it's rather short) focuses on his collaboration with Harold Budd. Here are the Q/A's that I found most interesting: Q: What about the next XTC album? AP: I'm really behind on getting our new album going. I'm just going through a divorce. A lot of people say, "I'm sorry," and I'm the first to correct them. It's really necessary. Divorces are horrible for bunging your creative brain up. I'm so easily sidetracked -- I have a "magazine in doctor's waiting room" mentality. I'm working on material for our next album. It comes off the branch line of "Rook," "Wrapped in Grey," and "Bungalow" [from Nonesuch]. We're moving away from standard rock 'n' roll -- it's nowhere near the "Peter Pumpkinhead"-"Crocodile" line. Colin is writing and I have six demos and three or four in the head. Q: Any drummer in mind? AP: I don't plan to have drums on the new album. The propulsion would come >from the feel of the instruments. At the moment -- I hate to say it -- it's mostly orchestral.
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Mon, 11 Jul 94 11:14:24 PDT From: pchuss@corp.megatest.com (William Pat Chuss) Subject: Re: Chalkhills #360 > From: Tim Szeliga <tim@snow.nohrsc.nws.gov> > don't much care for Nonesvch, not one lickle bit. Owned Skylarking > for a year or so on cassette, but it never worked for me as car > music, so it got purged as a trade-in to the used record store. > Maybe I should give it another try. You most definitely should. Skylarking is most probably my favorite. It didn't grab me at first either, but after a few more listens the songs I like the least became my favorites ("Summer's Cauldron/Grass", "Man Who Sailed Around His Soul"). Excellent production by Mr. Rundgren if you ask me. Oh by the way. Hello all. I'm a newbie and a huge fan. I'm not as well versed as many of you seem to be and really look forward to learning about one of my favorite bands for all of you. Pat
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Mon, 11 Jul 1994 20:18:01 -0500 (cdt) From: "my world is spinning..." <LEACH@ac.grin.edu> (Arlo B Leach) Subject: i'm dreaming now hi there- i've enjoyed, with some astonishment, the XTC dreams that have been reported here, but i never thought i'd have my own. well, it happened last night: i dreamt that my clock radio went off in the morning, and in the brief time it took for me to hit the snooze button, i heard andy partridge's voice. i fell back asleep, but when the alarm went off again 9 minutes later, there he was again -- playing an acoustic guitar this time and talking. but, automatically, i hit the snooze again. 9 minutes later, the alarm went off again and andy was introducing a song -- and while i was dozing off, after hitting the snooze button, it occurred to me that andy was doing a live interview at the radio station -- right there at the des moines, iowa top-40 station, the only one that comes in reliably on my clock radio. he was there with a guitar, talking, telling stories, playing snippets of songs! well, i desperately wanted to get up, turn the radio on and listen. in fact, i wanted to tape record the show, so that i could finally have something to bargain with when all of you offer great bootlegs and things for trade. but all i could do was listen for a few seconds every 9 minutes, then hit snooze and fall asleep again. hmm...i hope that didn't really happen! -arlo
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] From: Dave Franson <exe02298@char2.vnet.net> Subject: Sam Phillips, Club De Wash, Madison, WI 7/7/94 Date: Mon, 11 Jul 1994 23:36:43 -0400 (EDT) Sam Phillips, Club De Wash, Madison, WI, 7/7/94 Thanks to a fellow Chalkhillian, who posted of his disappointment that he would miss this concert, thereby bringing news of the concert to me for the first time, I was able to journey 70 miles westward last Thursday and see Sam Phillips live. My wife and I braved a couple squall lines, not to mention the perils of fast food, before we arrived at the Club De Wash at 6:45 or so for an anticipated 7:30 concert start. The Club De Wash should probably be redubbed the Pub De Wash, since the capacity of the place has got to be 150 or so tops. We arrived just in time to snatch up two of the remaining tickets for sale, and quickly staked out our territory for the evening. A local act began at about 7:45 and played for 45 minutes. They were fine in a nondescript acoustic sort of way, and I probably would have enjoyed them much more if the Club De Wash wasn't rapidly approaching conditions ripe for SPONTANEOUS HUMAN COMBUSTION ("Whoops, there goes another one" -- The Bobs). It was hot. Really hot. Pass-out hot. Like 110 and climbing. Like drink a pitcher in two minutes and not even feel it, because your body's crying "slake me, slake me, slake me." (Or was that "Slake Me to the River"?) Sam Phillips et al took the stage at about 9:45. Et al included T-Bone Burnett, Jerry Scheff on bass, and a drummer and lead guitarist whose names I didn't catch. The first two numbers were spent doing an impromptu sound check. (Although I wasn't able to confirm, Sam alluded to a redirected flight due to bad weather in the area.) The first two numbers and the sound check concluded, the mix was sounding mighty fine and here are the tunes that I remember the band performing (in no particular order): Signposts Same Rain Baby I Can't Please You Circle of Fire When I Fall I Need Love Wheel of the Broken Voice Lying Raised On Promises Go Down Holding On To the Earth Turnings (?) <unheard song> acoustic solo encore <unheard song> "I Need Love" was dedicated to Rush Limbaugh, but not with a straight face. The band required three tries to launch into "Signposts"-- T-Bone began with the slashing guitar strum (sturm?), and Sam came in a little out of synch on the vocals before stopping the song and pleading for another chance. Second time 'round, Sam came in nicely on the vocals but the rest of the band faltered until T-Bone stopped the song. This was accompanied by much laughter, 'natch. Sam briefly explained the hazards of touring with your producer, with his autocratic authority to stop the song if he feels it's amiss, and, worst of all, the fear that he'll fine the band members for screwing up. Anyway, the third try was the charm and the song came off wonderfully live. Oh, hell, the whole concert was spectacular, 'though it's not like I'm capable of impartial observance or anything. Sam's voice was incredible, the lyrics were intelligible, and the tunes that you'd expect would kick ass did so. And the audience was clearly full of true believers, among whom I'll number myself. And about that stage presence thang -- Sam does have stage presence and an undeniable ability to captivate, but it's more to be found in her knowing nods and stares then any choreography, which is basically nonexistent. She had an explanation for that, by the way -- she laid it at the doorstep of a popular fellow performer, saying something along the lines of "Some of you may have realized that I don't do a lot of complex dance routines up here. I used to give it my best shot, but I was pretty well traumatized by a Paula Abdul video I saw seven or eight years ago. So this is about all you're gonna see me do." Well, that paraphrase didn't do her justice, but trust me when I say that she was utterly charming. Thanks for letting me post this to the XTC list. Hopefully, it'll be worth some of y'all's time to read it. I just had to write it. Dave BTW, two of Sam's earlier efforts, "Cruel Inventions." ('91) and "The Indescribable Wow" ('88) have apparently been rereleased to tie in to the release of "Martinis." At least they seem to be newly available in Milwaukee, WI. "Cruel Inventions" is particularly notable -- it may be even stronger than "Martinis &." "The Indescribable Wow" finds Sam still searching for her voice, 'though it does have several notable songs. All are produced by T-Bone, and all feature the same group of core musicians.
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] From: KB305@aol.com Date: Tue, 12 Jul 94 19:59:00 EDT Subject: My first -hills; recent news I just read my first Chalkhills, #360; thanks a lot! I read about this in one of those Guide-to-the-Internet books that a friend got me. It's the first thing I've subscribed to in this way. I'm the Dir. of Purchasing for a very large CD & tape distributor here, so I hear a lot of stuff. My Geffen regional rep told me recently that as Geffen lost a lot of $ on Nonsvch, that in all likelyhood they are no longer signed to the label in the US. "..Peter Pumpkinhead" was the worst-testing video in the history of MTV. (I think it's cool.) On the other hand, I've heard two conflicting rumors: (1) that XTC are no more, and (2) that they are in fact beginning work on their next record. I can't back up either one of them yet, but if I can, I'll let you all know. In the event that you can't find the Partridge/Budd CD or even the Live BBC CD, let me know. We wholesale those items, and I can probably steer you to a store that has them. Or I might trade you for something really interesting... many thanks... Kevin Brunkhorst reply: KB305@aol.com
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] From: Xtc456@aol.com Date: Wed, 13 Jul 94 20:40:12 EDT Subject: First posting by XTC fan Hello everybody. I'm Jim Williams. I'm still new at all of this. I only became aware recently. Got hooked up to AOL about a month ago and I've been riding the Internet speedway in kind of a blur since then. It's so vast! Big,too. I'm still trying to figure out what's out there and I was Xtatic when I gopher'd XTC and the chalkhills group came through. You all know what a special surge of excitement it is when you find out that you're not alone. It's a much craved, often dashed sense of *belonging*. I, like many of you, have been manically following XTC for so very long. In my case, it's been FOURTEEN YEARS. I'll say that again,if you don't mind. Fourteen years. Hmmm. Doesn't seem like it. And yet, on a much deeper level (the soul?) it seems like more. It all started with Black Sea. I had heard Life Begins at the Hop as a single and thought it was catchy but I was too young or too busy to take any more notice than that. A local radio station (remember when they used to be good?) would play a new album in it's entirety every night at 11. I would tape it. I got turned on to some very good music that way. One night they featured Black Sea and I was transfixed. From Respectable to Travels I sat there and knew. I just knew. At that time, having very little money and no access to more, I had to content myself with wearing down that tape. Each listen brought me closer to the truth. Though, that could be age romanticizing it. I believe I may have known instantaneously. By the time English Settlement came out, I'd already found a way to make money(working in a record shop) so I'd already picked up all the albums plus quite a few of the EP's and singles. Andy Partridge had become more than just a musician to me by now;he was bordering on kindredship. His musical style, coupled with his anger, passion and humor made me care more deeply about his "message" than any of the so-called "voices" of my generation. This was something new. This was truly *important*. The fact that no one was paying any attention to it should not surprise anyone here. True genius shines too bright for the masses. Sooooo anyway, ES was the first album I'd bought that was actually current with it's release. But, just as I'd come to understand XTC's language, they changed their lexicon! It was difficult at first( as any adaptation for the better should be) to hear this music as part of the same band's collection. It was so much more 'mature'( though I hate to use that word, it really fits). And not just sonically. Compositionally, too. These songs were tremendous departures from form. Jason,Yacht,Africa Melt- HELL! ALL OF THEM! They were all new. And while Senses was the height of this new maturity's accomplishment (still one of the greatest examples of drum fills as dramatic punctuation I have ever heard),others, like the endearing Snowman and All of a Sudden,showed the lengths to which XTC had yet to go. I wore out the vinyl and broke my eyes staring at the sleeves. I continued to acquire the odd single from their early years( some very odd indeed) and tried my best not to let any new product escape my grasp. Basically I was successful. But of course, you can't have everything ( where would you put it?) When Mummer arrived I was, I must admit, disappointed. I felt they had gone too far in one direction, forsaking the true potential of their talent. They are, by and large, the most unforgettable of XTC's catalogue. With the glaring exception of Funk Pop a Roll, Human Alchemy and Frost Circus, of course. I do remember crying at the end of Funk pop a Roll when Andy says Bye ByE. I really was sure this was the end. When The Big Express arrived it was with no small amount of shaking and sweating that I unwrapped that plastic and placed it tremblingly on my turntable(remember those?) The sonic blast still bowls me over. Many songs on that album remain in my top 20 or 25 of all time. Obviously Reign of Blows but also Blue Overall and Train running low. I've heard some XTC fans call this album one of their worst but I am strictly of the opposite view. I loved the aural battlefield I walked upon. Shake you Donkey Up is a close runner up to the above mentioned. I realize that I have used up about 21 jigabytes of space on an introductory letter so I'll stop now(even though I'm far from finished- I really could talk about XTC for days). If anyone's made it down this far into the letter, Andy bless you and thanks. Please feel free to respond to this letter in the regular postings [ hate it? Love it? Think I'm crazy? ] or email me direct. I must let everyone know that I have been genetically altered in such a way that it is impossible for me to be brief when writing. I just kind of get lost in my own words. It's not pomposity that makes me do this. I have no control. Oh well. Gotta go. Time for my meds. Jim XTC456@aol.com
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Subject lines should be used very carefully. Try to make sure the subject of your message reflects the content. If you are replying to a posting in the digest, try not to use the default subject, which seems to be "Re: Chalkhills #360". Rather, change the subject of your posting to refer to the original subject, for example, "Re: Curry in MPLS". To unsubscribe from the list, send a message to: <chalkhills-request@chalkhills.org> For all other administrative issues, send a message to: <chalkhills-request@chalkhills.org> The Chalkhills archives were once available using FTP from "net.bio.net". The Chalkhills home page is available at "http://chalkhills.org/". The views expressed herein are those of the individual authors. coyote and priest beckon from / disc to disc in erect carnival
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