Chalkhills, Number 362 Saturday, 16 July 1994 Today's Topics: Re: Love at first sight! Introductions XTC/Swindon anecdote next album / lyrics XTC & the Dummies (none) let me have it (splat) AP ten years gone Re: Chalkhills #361 KABL? Re: Chalkhills #361 New XTC album real Dukes influences obscure XTC sightings Nihilon, XTC Capital, New Poster, Pre-English Settlement
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Wed, 13 Jul 94 21:53:37 -0700 From: relph@presto.ig.com (John Relph) Subject: Re: Love at first sight! keeks@maroon.tc.umn.edu (Tom Keekley) fell in "Love at first sight!": >And so we were married. BBC's live disk from the Black Sea tour, Dec 22, >1980. I breezed through the Chalkhill discography and didn't see it, but >I'm sure most of you know about it. If not, and it is rare, let me know. Ah, it's there all right, in the "Collections, Retrospectives and More" section: 27. Live In Concert BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert. Life Begins At The Hop (3'55); Burning With Optimism's Flame (4'24); Love At First Sight (3'10); Respectable Street (3'51); No Language In Our Lungs (4'59); This Is Pop (2'49); Scissors (sic) Man (4'49); Towers Of London (5'23); Battery Brides (7'18); Living Through Another Cuba (3'29); Generals and Majors (4'28); Making Plans For Nigel (4'29); Are You Receiving Me? (3'18). live in London, 22 December 1980, same concert as BBC Rock Hour #212. a. CD, Windsong International (BBC) UK, WINCD 026, 15? November 1992. And no, sorry, it's not rare. (Actually, it's well done.) -- John
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Wed, 13 Jul 1994 22:49:10 -0700 (PDT) From: Chris Zinn <czinn@reed.edu> Subject: Introductions Dear XTC list: I have been enjoying this list since subscribing a couple of weeks ago, after returning from a year teaching in Turkey. I have admired the band's work for rather a long time. I vividly remember being sat down by a friend in my apartment in NYC to listen to Go 2. After finding the first [?] intriguing, "Beat Town" suddenly leaped into my room and carried me aloft. I'd never heard such wah-wah harmonies and modal playing, all of it hoisted upon a post-punk musical vocabulary. The record jcaket and liner were intriguing as well, perhaps the first deconstructive pop album I'd seen. Then Drums & Wires appeared,and the band appeared in NYC, playing every song, it seems, extra fast, really in a hurry. Black Sea soon followed, and the band toured again. I well remember seeing them at the Ritz, already so enthralled by these three albums. Andy anchored the band around him. He deliveres the songs with extraordinary vividness. Even from the back of the hall his facial expressions and physical gestures seemed to outline the songs so effectively, and every once in a while his guitar would suddenly clang out these bell like notes to conclude a song. Performances of "Scissors Man" featured a black and white film of various textured objects--sort of like visual Good'n'Plenty--dancing on Andy as he sang. At the Ritx concert they also introduced songs from English Settlement, including Towers of london and a dazzling rendition of Snow Man. These were among the most exalted concerts I've seen. Each subsequent album is always interesting, challenging, and welcomed, though English Settlement seems the culmination of a lot of things, both for the group and musical scene of the early '80s. Well, there's a lot to say about such a group. Thanks to the other writers for their comments. I understand the feelings of one of the recent posters who wrote that he was so moved by Andy's "Bye Bye" at the end of "Funk Pop a Roll"--how nice to hear from other people who listen so intently. Bearing in mind that I have only recently joined, does anyone haveinformation or opinions about CD masterings of the albums? I've hear that there are British Virgin "pressings" of English Settlement and Black Sea, for example, that were mastered differenently for CD than those Geffen releases, which sound hugely inferior to the original analogue vinyl pressings. I'd appreciate any comments about sound and recording quality regarding available CDs. If you have the British English Settlement, by the way, a glance at the run-out groove should reveal that it was mastered by someone with an insignia enclosing 'r' and 'c' in a stylized 's.' It sounds wonderful, and the CD does not. Regards, Christopher Zinn czinn@reed.edu
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Thu, 14 Jul 94 11:43:15 +0100 From: John Nicholls <nicholls@case.co.uk> Subject: XTC/Swindon anecdote XTC/Swindon anecdote 001 - Sometime in 1980, myself and a couple of friends were trying to gain entry to the Brunel Rooms, a nightclub above the shopping centre here in Swindon. 70s tack in extremis - carpetted walls, a revolving bar, bow-tied bouncers, crap beer, tables and red velvet chairs surrounding a large dance floor on which we used to mince and twirl hoping to catch the eyes of the flat-chested girl from the Art class. The club is exactly the same today. "Not tonight lad - not in that T-shirt". The bouncer with a black vampire butterfly on his neck took exception to my Slaughter and the Dogs 'Do it Dog Style' T-shirt, can't think why. Most of my friends came from Purton at the time (apologies to those who haven't read 'Chalkhills and Children' - why not? - or who are unfamiliar with the local geography of Swindon). One of my friends was the youngest of four brothers, and his second eldest sibling had just joined XTC ... "Hey my brother's just bought a house off Crombey Street, let's see if he'll lend us a shirt". So off we trooped to the unassuming house of Mr D Gregory. He let us in, my friend explained my predicament and we stood sheepishly in the living room while Mr G went upstairs and came back down with ... a hideous navy blue shirt with wing collars. For which I was very grateful, as it gained me entry to the Brunel Rooms and I was once more able to shimmy like an idiot, utterly invisible to Her Of The Paintbrushes. Looking like a fat yokel Starsky with glasses. XTC were a local band to us then, we were unaware of the global following which had been building up. I kept a piece of cotton from the shirt and sent it to a friend as a joke - "A souvenir from Swindon's favourite sons". You have to understand the English perception of Swindon to appreciate why this was amusing... I wish I could remember details - unfortunately I'd imbibed a certain quantity of Merrydown cider and was more concerned with getting into the nightclub. The house was almost identical to my own - a small terrace on a hill, front room and back room knocked through to make one large downstairs room, kitchen extension at the back, two bedrooms upstairs (90% of Swindon townhouses have a similar layout). It all seemed utterly normal then - a mate's brother helping us out, any of us would do the same now. Except that these days I'd get refused entry for wearing a navy blue shirt with collars like yacht sails, and let in free with a genuine 70s punk T-shirt ... JP Nicholls
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Thu, 14 Jul 1994 12:50:43 +0100 From: Simon Wilson <wilson@suna.sna.co.umist.ac.uk> Subject: next album / lyrics A couple of comments on Chalkhills 361 Barry Greenberg quoted an interview with Andy Partridge, where he mentioned that the new album would be similar to "Rook" and "Bungalow". I was very disappointed, as I feel that those two are among the low points on Nonsuch. Of course, that doesn't mean I won't buy it... By the way, I've just read the June issue of Q magazine, which mentioned that work on the new album was about to begin. However, I don't know how reliable the information is, since it also stated that the album would be the first` since O&L!! Chong Hyun Byun asks about the lyrics to English Settlement. I don't know if are printed on the CD booklet, but of course they are avaliable from the Chalkhills archives. Having a vinyl copy myself with no lyric sheet, I downloaded them recently. I was really impressed some of the lyrics I couldn't quite get from the record, especially "It's Nearly Africa", and "Jason and the Argonauts". They're really strong songs! With the help of the archives I'm going to rediscover Drums and Wires next!!
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] From: jfoltz@nsf.gov Subject: XTC & the Dummies Date: 14 Jul 94 08:47 EST I recently came across an old Rolling Stone article from back in May about the Crash Test Dummies. At the end of the article, they were talking about their current tour when a certain hero of ours was mentioned. It is a nice tribute so I will quote. (If you've already discussed this, I apologize.) From a May issue of Rolling Stone--- The Dummies are on a world tour until Christmas; they've toured with Bryan Adams and will open for Elvis Costello this spring. Who [Brad] Roberts (singer) would really like to play with, though - XTC's Andy Partridge - never tours. "He is the best songwriter in pop music," Roberts says, suddenly leaning in to the tape recorder to make a direct appeal. "Andy, I love you, I love you. Come to me, Andy." I think this just goes to show that no matter what you think of a person, or their music, or personality, everybody deep down has got some taste. It's good to hear A.P. get some recognition from fellow musicians. "Psycho....." "Speak for yourself......." jfoltz@nsf.gov
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Thu, 14 Jul 94 9:42:10 EDT From: Jeff Rosedale <rosedale@columbia.edu> Subject: let me have it (splat) Re. the posting from the last issue about the cassette of unreleased XTC, containing: 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... How can I get this thing? Sale, trade, pound of flesh? Help! --Jeff rosedale@columbia.edu
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Thu, 14 Jul 94 12:00:36 EST From: stacy@trc.com (Robert Stacy) Subject: AP ten years gone In the process of cleaning up around here, I came across an old copy of the _Fairfield County Advocate_ (a small-circulation, freebee alternative paper here in Connecticut), that I stashed away nearly a decade ago. Dated November 7, 1984, the issue contains a 'phone interview with the inestimable Mr. P., conducted by one Brett Milano while the band was recording _The Big Express_. For the sake of chronological perspective, it appears there was something of a lag between the interview itself, and its eventual publication; though printed around the time of _The Big Express_'s release, according to the article's author, "It was XTC's first American interview after the release of _Mummer_." And, for further historical context, on "The Advocate's Connecticut Hit List" that week, appearing on the opposite page, _Purple Rain_ was Number One on the list of Connecticut's Best Selling Albums . . . and a little tune by the name of "This World Over" was the current Best Selling Import. Enjoy. --RSt * * * XTC: Rockers in a Dangerous Time An exclusive and revealing discussion with the band's eloquent frontman By Brett Milano Every era of rock and roll has its unsung heroes, the bands that make superb music without gaining widespread recognition. And of all this era's unsung bands, XTC may be the most heroic. Over a string of seven albums, Andy Partridge and company have brought modern rock to rare peaks of creativity and intelligence. From the giddy experiments of 1978's _Go 2_ to the pastoral beauty of last year's _Mummer_, XTC have seldom sounded like anyone but themselves. And their singles--to name three, "Senses Working Overtime," "Life Begins at the Hop," and "Great Fire"--rank with the past decade's most individual pop (for the uninitiated, seek out _Waxworks_, an essential English compilation of their A-sides). But it hasn't been an easy road for the band. Two years ago, a commercial breakthrough seemed possible on the heels of their _English Settlement_ album. But Partridge suffered a nervous breakdown early in the tour, causing his decision to retire the band from live performance. The _Mummer_ album had a troubled history, nearly staying unreleased due to its more experimental sound. Still, the band remains active and optimistic, XTC--now a trio of Partridge, bassist Colin Moulding, and guitarist Dave Gregory-- have just released _The Big Express_ (Geffen), their seventh album (original working titles were _Coalface_, _Shaking Skinheads_, and _Bastard Son of Hard Blue Rayhead_). After years of struggling, they've seemingly decided that commercial success doesn't matter, that it's enough to make music with your heart and soul behind it. This new resolve speaks well for XTC's future; perhaps it will even backfire and produce the long-deserved hit. This interview with Andy Partridge was done by phone from the band's rural English hometown of Swindon, Wiltshire. It was XTC's first American interview after the release of _Mummer_. Advocate: I believe you're in the studio right now? Partridge: That's right, we're working at Crescent in Bath, a little cottage industry of a studio. We commute from Swindon every morning jump in a car and head out. We've been working on the album for three weeks, so it's really just the tip of the iceberg--or else we're brushing all the sand away from this little pointed thing, and hopefully there's a pyramid at the bottom. A: Is there a theme to the songs you're writing now? P: Right now it's difficult to say. I can only think about the songs after the album's been out for some time. Then it's cleared from your system, you've flushed it away, and you can say "well, it's that shape, but I couldn't see it while I was inside it." We've started work on about 16 tracks. Let's see, there's "Reign of Blows," about totalitarianism, trying to explain that there's not much difference between Britain's empire, America's empire, the Nazi empire. There's "I Bought Myself a Liarbird," a little song about our manager. A: You said recently that the next album would be a more r&b record after _Mummer_. Did it turn out that way? P: I think so. We're conscious of wanting to get away from the _English Settlement_/_Mummer_ sound. I think we get bored over a period of two albums, and want to move away. I don't think you'll hear any acoustic guitars this time, or any particularly multilayered things. I think it'll be quite a tough record. A: How do you spend your time, now that the band doesn't tour? Do you stay on your own and write songs? P: Mostly, yeah. I'm a hermit, really. I don't like the glare of publicity--it's a horribly corny phrase, but it's true. I get embarrassed if I get recognized in the street. Teenage girls will rush up and it's me blushing, not them! Unless I keep away from that music- biz stuff, I don't think I could write any songs. I tread a fine balance between just about liking music, and having 99 percent distaste for it. I think that if I spent any more time in the music business, I'd lose that little one percent. A: Does that make it harder for XTC to stay intact as a band? P: In a sense, we're not like three or four fellows plugging into a wall and saying "yeah! Here we go!"--the _Hard Day's Night_-ness of it, you know what I mean? It's impossible to be that anymore, because now we're just three friends and a mercenary on drums. The visual group identity has ceased to be. We're all pretty mundane-looking anyway, we don't wear makeup . . . A: No hair down to your nose . . . P: Well, maybe I'll grow the hair from inside my nose, and tape it to my chest! But really, we've got no high-level visual thing to keep up. For me, music is all--I'm not that crazy on video presentation of music, and locking it too much with visuals. I'm not happy with the videos we've done--we were just the butt of filmmakers' concepts. When you've got three minutes to make an impact, all you can do is be kooky --you start jumping around saying "love me, love me." It looks pretty crass, I must admit. I suppose we'll have to start making videos again, just to keep in touch with the public, but I'd like to redress the balance and do some good ones. A: What kept _Mummer_ from being released here for so long? P: Oh, loads of things. When we first finished it, we took it to Virgin and they said "oh dear, this is not commercial at all. There's no singles on it." We said "well, er, we did our best!" and they told us to go away and write some more tracks. So I, very despondently, came up with "Great Fire." Which they loved, they said it would be a big-selling single. So they put it out, and it flopped. After that, we remixed four songs, because we hadn't gotten along with (producer) Steve Nye. He kept trying to "produce" us, and we don't need "producing"--all we need is someone to capture it. He kept telling us "that's a lousy line, go play something else"-- and we were getting depressed about it, someone was breaking our music up right before our eyes. So we put the album back together, took it back to Virgin, and said "look, we're very happy with this--_please_ put it out." So they sat on it for another six months, and reluctantly agreed to let it escape. It came out to a flurry of non-promotion. A: Even though the first reviews were very positive . . . P: Oh yes, the critics tend to love the shit out of us. And we were so despondent, because Virgin didn't promote it at all. Meanwhile Epic in the States said, 'well, you're right Virgin, this certainly isn't an album to release in America'--and they promptly dropped the band. It took us this long to find somebody who'd release it. A tough old road! A: Does it get frustrating, to get so acclaimed and not do well on the charts? P: Incredibly frustrating. I keep thinking 'hell, what's wrong with us? They're playing the most banal stuff in the world, and yet they won't play us.' I have this suspicion that's been increasing over the years--you know, that maybe someone's got it in for us. * * * == End Part 1 of 3 ==
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Thu, 14 Jul 94 09:14:33 EDT From: Mark_Colan.LOTUS@crd.lotus.com Subject: Re: Chalkhills #361 > 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). Nah, the Grateful Dead prempted XTC by several years (American Beauty, etc).
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Thu, 14 Jul 1994 13:11:17 -0700 (PDT) From: Wendi Dunlap <litlnemo@connected.com> Subject: KABL? Mike McCormick said: > 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?? I believe they appeared at both stations, as someone else stated in here. Cities 97 would seem to be appropriate, as well as KABL (which was the only alternative station in Mpls at the time, though it was cable-only). I still have a bunch of tapes of my radio shows at KABL; I miss working there. <sigh> Wendi A. Dunlap * litlnemo@connected.com * Seattle, Washington Sysop, Slumberland BBS * (206)547-2629 * 24 hours a day * 3/12/24/96 Currently listening to: "This Is The Modern World" -- The Jam *^*^ Finger litlnemo@goshen.connected.com for my current resume *^*^
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: 14 Jul 1994 17:32:16 -0800 From: "Steve Krause" <Steve_Krause@qm.sri.com> Subject: Re: Chalkhills #361 Andy is quoted in Chalkhills #361 as saying: > 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....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. If the record company doesn't strangle this in the cradle, it could well be very interesting. --Steve _____________________________________________________________________ Steve Krause, Media Futures Program phone: +1 415 859 4746 SRI International, Menlo Park, CA http://www.sri.com/mfp/mfp.html
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Thu, 14 Jul 1994 17:30:42 -0700 From: flexnet@netcom.com (Brad Waddell) Subject: New XTC album Hi XTC fans. Although this does not match what others have been saying about the next XTC release, I thought it was interesting anyway: ZON Fax update (radio station fax news) Phoenix AZ: "XTC will complete their contract with Virgin with a forthcoming double singles compilation featuring much previously un-released material. Leader Andy Partridge says that the album may only appear in the US on geffen, and that the band are writing for a new studio set. The release of some XTC radio sessions is also planned on Strange Fruit" Any confirmations here? Brad Waddell - FLEXquarters | "I used to work in the factory where Software Developer | they make hydrants. You couldn't park Commodity Trader | anywhere NEAR the place." - Wright
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: 14 Jul 94 22:31:26 EDT From: Steve Levenstein <70750.1117@compuserve.com> Subject: real Dukes influences Hi All; now continuing with The Little Express's interview with XTC about 25 o'Clock... ANDY: Flipping the disc right over, we have side 2, track 1, "What In The World", and would you like to tell your captive audience about this, Colin? COLIN: What is there to tell, really? I had this track hanging about, didn't know what to do with it, so we just altered it slightly and I don't know...how would you describe it? DAVE: It's a good song, it should have been a single 'cause it's probably the most instantly hummable of all the tracks. COLIN: We psychedelicised it. DAVE: Yes, it's a bit long actually in it's present form, but we thought we've got to fit up a side somehow! COLIN: It's really a 2-minute pop song that we enlarged; it got out of hand and went to about six minutes full of backwards sounds. ANDY: I did like the tape effects and it's probably got the most sensible lyric on the whole record as opposed to the others which were written for a "silly" effect! COLIN: It was hanging about on tape for a long time. ANDY: In fact it was sort of an XTC potential, wasn't it? "Cause you brought up another one called "Big Day" which I thought was far too good and not "67 period" enough to use on 25 O'Clock, so I think it's going to be one of the main songs on the next XTC record. ...and so it was! ---> Steve
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Fri, 15 Jul 94 12:00:36 EST From: stacy@trc.com (Robert Stacy) Subject: obscure XTC sightings Okay, I'm probably overstating the case a little in the subject line -- obscure reference would probably be more apropos. At any rate, in the current issue of _Asimov's Science Fiction_ magazine (September '94), there's a novelette by R. V. Branham titled "Apocolypse's Children." It's set in a near-future LA, and at one point, on pg. 81, the title protagonists visit a laboratory just off the Cal Tech campus that's in two sealed-off lower floors of an underground parking garage. Branham then offers a list of the "ancient graffiti on the cinderblock walls," and I'll give you one guess what band name is at the top of the list. A nice touch, I thought. --RSt
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] From: Dave Franson <exe02298@char2.vnet.net> Subject: Nihilon, XTC Capital, New Poster, Pre-English Settlement Date: Sat, 16 Jul 1994 10:38:46 -0400 (EDT) The Banjo of Doom <MELINDA@delphi.com> writes re: Travels in Nihilon: I finally, after years of stubbornness, bought _Black_Sea_ on disc, and I realized that the sound at the end of "Nihilon" which I always took to be rain, actually sounds more like a faucet, or rather a spigot on concrete or something. That sort of changes things, doesn't it? I mean, rain is traditionally a positive symbol, cleansing and rebirth and all that, but a spigot on concrete is a pretty spare and solitary image. I always thought of the rain like gray and cold coming out of this bleak song, but with an overtone of hope, which is a good note to end an album with, almost like a surprise. Then John Relph responds: Yeah, it's actually the sound of water on a shower curtain in a bathroom at The Manor. There's a segment from _XTC At The Manor_ (I believe) where they talk about that sound. It was supposed to sound like rain, a rain that pours around you, grey, dismal, without hope. But some people thought it sounded like a man using a urinal. Especially since it has that bathroom ambiance. ... and I respond that I'm a little confused as to where Melinda now stands (I think she has given up on the rain as redemption theory), but what I really want to say is that this dandy bit of vitriol should be taken for what it is-- an unambiguous slam against knawing on the bone of pop culture for sustenance. I listened to "Nihilon" again tonight on CD, having subscribed myself to the urinal intrepretation, but I can't say that I can quite hear that. A shower springs much more to mind, a perpetual shower that doesn't cleanse the grime and dirt. ghanley <ghanley@novalink.com> writes: But as far as underexposed albums goes... What I really wanted to mention was Richard Thompson's _Mirror Blue_. This disk is incredible, and I just can't seem to get tired of it. It's been on my CD players for almost three months straight, and I'm still loving it. Please, if you buy anything this year, do yourself a favor and buy this disk. You won't be difappointed! :) Yes, "Mirror Blue" is a wonderful album. In particular, the stark "Mingus Eyes" gets me every time. Dean Zemel posted a great review of Thompson's Milwaukee show several months back-- you may want to check out Dean's comments in the archives in case you missed that particular digest. Also, Thompson appeared on Terry Gross' "Fresh Air" NPR talk show to promote the "Mirror Blue" CD. He performed several songs from it and "Rumor and Sigh" live in the studio. m.mccormick2@genie.geis.com writes: ... 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! Hey, wait a minute! The XTC capital of America is Milwaukee, and it also lies between Madison and Chicago! (Come to think of it, Black River Falls would lend a certain rustic charm!) Xtc456@aol.com (Jim) writes: Subject: First posting by XTC fan 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. Wow, great introductory post, Jim! Your "how I found XTC" story is very similar to my own. I have this tremendous fear that one of these days I'm going to meet my complete doppelganger on the net! Anyway, the reason I quoted the above passage is that it is interesting to remember back to those days when one wondered "Hey! I don't know if I really like this stuff as much as the earlier albums" when listening to what are now regarded as XTC classics, particularly "English Settlement." I mean, is it just me, or is the beloved "Senses Working Overtime" simply a reworking of "Respecable Street" musically? The pre-"ES" period was interesting-- you had two albums of intelligent pop in "White Noise" and "Go2," and two albums of some sort of strange mutation in "Drums & Wires" and "Black Sea." Some days the earlier two were dead on, some days the latter two sounded like the future of rock 'n roll. (And before I forget, THANK YOU to the chalkhillian who posted that wonderful defense of "White Music" a couple months ago-- it was heartfelt and dead on!) But in the end, XTC's changes in direction have certainly borne ample fruit. But the "real" XTC didn't start with "English Settlement." Or even "Drums & Wires." It's all been there from "White Music" on. 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. This seems to be a major epidemic on the net. Dave
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] If you are replying to a message in the digest, please try to edit it down to the minimum necessary to convey the gist of what you wish to reply to. The full message can always be retrieved from an earlier digest, and all digests are archived. 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. The blood is running down the gutter / While you're yawning, nothing's said
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