Chalkhills Digest, Volume 3, Number 136 Monday, 30 June 1997 Today's Topics: The Bass Boys Well....... The Wussy Album Revisited digressions Re: Colin don't invent Filmic Assistance Best 12 bucks ever spent Take Away LP Bass and players in general To each his own fan club Mingus vs. Bass-O-Matic re: Non-XTC /Jason Falkner Whoa! Back to me extremely long posts that go nowhere! I would have made this instrumental... 3 of a Perfect Pair No Ships Passing In The Night Here! Jason Falkner/XTC Shriekback Hooray for Peter's Picturesite Tony Maimone Beach Boyz Upsy/Doherty, and very little bassist discussion Administrivia: To UNSUBSCRIBE from the Chalkhills mailing list, send a message to <chalkhills-request@chalkhills.org> with the following command: unsubscribe chalkhills For all other administrative issues, send a message to: <chalkhills-request@chalkhills.org> Please remember to send your Chalkhills postings to: <chalkhills@chalkhills.org> World Wide Web: <http://chalkhills.org/> The views expressed herein are those of the individual authors. Chalkhills is digested with Digest 3.4 (John Relph <relph@sgi.com>). But he made too many enemies...
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 23:36:08 -0400 (EDT) Message-Id: <1.5.4.16.19970626232604.19fffc6c@en.com> From: Michael Kearns <mikearns@en.com> Subject: The Bass Boys >In a rock context this does not work and this would apply to the likes of >Jack Bruce whilst in cream. I have far more time for Felix Papparlardi who >played very melodic yet simple stuf and had a wonderful sound. Other great >US bass players include Chris Hillman, Jack Casady, Phil Lesh and Rick >Danko. "Bass great -- Lesh Philling". One of the greats! Check out "Attics Of My Life" just to name one. And Rick Danko, what a great bass player and singer -- I saw him with Garth, Levon and two other guys as "The Band" 2 years ago, and while it was not the same band I read about in Levon's excellent book "Wheel's On Fire" or saw (as a lad) on giant screen in the front row at the Ziegfield theatre in NYC (Scorsese's "The Last Waltz"), it was the first time I saw The Band in any live form and it was just amazing! >THE BEACH BOYS >Can we call a truce ? > >I think we have a problem here because some people find it very difficult >to accept that their heroes (XTC) could have ever listened to something as >naff as the beach boys. My first rock concert was The Beach Boys at Central Park in '78 - I was 13. What a great concert, and what a great band! 30,000 people in the dog days of summer.. I passed out from the heat during "California Girls" and rose from the dead to "Help Me Rhonda". Yeah, I can call a truce. Let's all call a truce. Shut up already. Brian was among a rare breed of true innovators in music.. and the Boys (need it be said as a reminder?) were capable of astonishing feats of vocal harmony, not painstakingly overdubbed, but done LIVE, right on the spot, after lots of Brian-directed rehearsal to get it right - and get it right they did!!! Listen to "Sloop John B." - I rest my case. And Carl Wilson was a great guitarist, and vocalist. Oh yes, watch "I Just Wasn't Made For These Times" and read "Wouldn't It Be Nice" - laugh all you want (and there are some extremely hilarious moments!) - Brian hasn't the spark he once had, but at his peak damn was he great - and what a voice!!! The day I bought Pet Sounds I listened to it 6 times in a row then recorded my own stuff for 6 hours I was so inspired! Sorry no XTC content here. Colin's one of my favorite bass players. Hi Jen G! MIKE
------------------------------ Message-Id: <199706270346.UAA01404@mail.eskimo.com> From: "Matt Keeley" <mrme@eskimo.com> Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 20:45:58 +0000 Subject: Well....... Hello! > From: mf@well.com (Mitch Friedman) > According to Andy as of today, they are not signed to V2 nor will they be > doing so (maybe). He said that someone in Billboard magazine started the > rumor. Whoo-hoo! While I want to see new XTC as much as the next guy, I'm glad they didn't go back to the hand that bleeds them, to coin a phrase (read: steal a line from Andy Partridge).... I just hope that it won't be much longer before they find a GOOD record label... especially Ryko.... Ryko is good and I think they've got worldwide distribution, but, well, you all know that and this is just beating a dead horse, ne? Ah well, that's this world over, Matt PS: The Dub Experiments have started to grow on me, since I lent my copy to my friend (who got his nephew hooked on them, BTW!)... I guess absence DOES make the heart grow fonder... -=>Matt Keeley mrme@eskimo.com<=- Living Through | Visit my home page Another | http://www.eskimo.com/~mrme Cuba -- XTC | I used to be temporarily insane! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Now I'm just stupid! -- Brak (ICQ UIN: 1455267, Name: MrMe) Yeah.
------------------------------ Message-Id: <3.0.1.16.19970626221737.1c879ade@cyber1.servtech.com> Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 22:17:37 From: Chaos Harlequin <harlequin@tmbg.org> Subject: The Wussy Album Revisited >I know you're not too keen on this cover concept, Josh, but you have no one >to blame but Andy, as he admitted to coming up with the concept in his >Rifff interview. Well, yes. Although, it's supposed to look like a box of chocolates, so maybe it's purposely cheesy! Yeah, that's it, that's the ticket! <trent reznor> >Yup-indeedy-do. The full quote is, " Also, from a songwriting point of >view, I like anybody who's writing good material. I think XTC is a great >band and writes excellent songs." Now, what we need is a split 7" where NIN cover "Dear God" and XTC cover "Heresy." :) Who'd pay good money for that? (Or we could have NIN cover Travels in Nihilon, seeing how close it is to their usual themes...) >"Goosey, Goosey" was a Nonsuch demo outtake that never made it to fruition Although it did nab a spot on "The Bull With The Golden Guts." >(but it's never too late, right?). This is what Bootleg Albums are for. :) >According to Andy as of today, they are not signed to V2 nor will they be >doing so (maybe). He said that someone in Billboard magazine started the >rumor. I thought so -- didn't Andy say a few months ago that V2 had given them the worst offer of anyone they'd talked to? >one of the reasons I bought Explode Together As an aside, how much did you pay for it? Personally, I never picked it up as an import ($25 for that? Nuh-uh) until one day, on a hunch, I made my way into the record store near my house and located a copy for $8. Not bad, eh? >including "The AP demos" I don't know who originally suggested it so long ago, but I think "Deflowered" would be a great name for the orchestral/acoustic album XTC are planning to make, on several levels... therefore, I move that these demos, to avoid the problem of them being the "new demos" for another year, be known as the "Deflowered Demos" until such a time as we have a real album title to go on. Last thing, song bridges: oddly, I had always assumed the usual rule was that Andy wrote poor bridges. While there are certainly exceptions (Miniature Sun.... ohhhhhh...) there are a lot of examples of it. "I Can't Own Her," for example, completely falls down at the bridge. And I know there are others, although I can't think of them at the moment, sadly... Josh Emptiness lies through the glass... /---------------------------Joshua Hall-Bachner---------------------------\ | harlequin@tmbg.org http://www.servtech.com/public/particle/ | | "We all have our idiosyncracies -- maybe thinning hair, or gum disease."| \---- Kowanko, "Will You Come To?" ------ Thank You, And Goodnight. ------/
------------------------------ Message-Id: <l03102800afd8fe8404c5@[146.6.72.34]> Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 23:36:34 -0600 From: jason garcia <h.h.name@mail.utexas.edu> Subject: digressions Hi there, all. I wandered into a used record store the other day and over the P.A. came the familiar strains of "Grass" (pronounced "Graahs", for those from the Motherland) from "Upsy Daisy". There was nothing particularly strange about that. What WAS strange was that I initially heard it and thought, "ah, that's pleasingly familiar! Who is that...R.E.M.?" you know, in that vague way you first hear something and aren't really expecting it so you have to make sense of what it is first. Then I heard Colin's voice and thought, "wait, that's not Michael Stipe...that's Colin! Blimey!" (I would have said were I British). And no, I wasn't _on_ the title in question! So, are Michael Penn and Aimee Mann still going out and/or living together? >From the sound of "Try", Penn's first single, seems like they're having some pretty good musical sex, if you ask me. But I digress... >Robert plant had the good sense to admit once (and once only) the >brilliance of >Om Kolthoum. You mean the Egyptian singer? I've always seen her name spelled Umm Kulthum. But I digress again... >By the way, if nobody runs a contest, THAT will be the name of the tape. >"Don't >Ring Us..." Ah, that's it. Love it. I won't try to anymore, Jason Check out the Top 40 home page at http://www.angelfire.com/tx/top40
------------------------------ From: kraig olmstead <kraigo@netcommcorp.com> Subject: Re: Colin don't invent Date: Fri, 27 Jun 97 09:35:00 PDT Message-ID: <33B3EB0E@msmail.netcommcorp.com> I have been most dispiritted lately to be reading that Colin doesn't come up with those wonderful parts that he plays. You guys almost had me going on that one! I don't believe you. The thing that has convinced me otherwise is listening to the tail end of "You're My Drug" by the Dukes. Once he breaks free of the repetative two bar phrase that goes through most of the song he shifts to some upper register stuff that is played by somebody who really knows his instrument and how to contribute to a song. Given how fast the Dukes stuff was recorded and the fluidity with which this stuff was played, there is pretty much NO WAY that this stuff could have been dictated to him. This is not a bass player who would sit idly by and have his parts spoon-fed to him for 20 years. Get a grip, Chalkers: Andy Partridge contributes more than 1/3 to the XTC pie, but Dave Gregory and Colin Moulding make extremely critical contributions to the stew and steer the music in different directions. I'm sure Andy makes suggestions and has ideas for the bass parts, but I really think that Colin takes the ball and runs with it - he's too good a player to merely perform canned parts on less than 20 albums over a 20 year period. KO
------------------------------ Message-Id: <2.2.32.19970627155231.006d94dc@popmail.dircon.co.uk> Date: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 16:52:31 +0100 From: Simon Sleightholm <nonsuch@dircon.co.uk> Subject: Filmic Assistance Thanks to those who offered correction to the title of that film Andy mentioned in the Rifff extract. That helps a lot, I couldn't find a reference to a film with the quoted title *anywhere*, I may have better luck now. I think it probably is true that the confusion came about from the structure of the Rifff set up - we typed questions, they were spoken down a phone to Andy who replied and had his replies typed back for us to see. I can see how the chamfered edges of a Wiltshire accent could curl "thousand" and "frozen" into similar shapes for the untrained ear. It's an interesting phenomenon that crops up very occasionally in printed interviews with the man where the interviewer has plainly not penetrated the folds of Andy's pronunciation. I am the wardrobe, Simon +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ http://www.users.dircon.co.uk/~nonsuch/bungalow.htm +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ "Playground, it's a playground..." - Andy Partridge
------------------------------ Message-ID: <33B3EA52.1141@gate.net> Date: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 12:29:06 -0400 From: Pandrea <pann@gate.net> Subject: Best 12 bucks ever spent Greetings XTCitizens, I recently found Chalkhills, and found it to be a great source of info on the boys. I finally have decided to de-lurk and post something. I always knew of XTC through the 80's, and their hits, but little else. I just never got into them much. About 4 years ago, I was in a used cd store, and saw Skylarking, O+L, and Nonsuch. On a total spur of the moment, impulse type thing,(plus the fact that they were each only $4 bucks)I got all three. Ladies and Gentlemen, that was the best 12 bucks I could ever have spent. It's been a fun 4 years, filling in other pieces to the puzzle. Lets hope we get our new fix soon- maybe this year if all the label stuff works out. On the subject of the new demos, how does one go about getting them? I am nowhere near having a complete XTC collection, so I don't know about all the demos and such. This may have already been discussed in earlier digests, but what does everyone think of The Sugarplastic? I had read a review of them (what it was in slipped my mind since then) but the review made favorable comparisons to XTC, Paul McCartney, and the Pixies, so I bought it. The cd is called Bang, the Earth is Round, and its on Geffen. Definte XTC influence, sometimes very much so. If they can develop their sound, they've a promising career. It's pretty enjoyable pop, heavy in some spots, sweet in others. I like it. onwards and ever upwards mateys, Perry
------------------------------ Date: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 11:13:11 -0500 (CDT) Message-Id: <199706271613.LAA24436@sky.net> From: Scott Taylor <staylor@sky.net> Subject: Take Away LP There's been a lot of talk on the list lately about this _Take Away_ disc. Coincidentally, I saw it a couple of weeks ago in one of the used vinyl shops for $16.98. As I recall it was in VG condition, and the cover artwork and captions alone might be worth that much to anybody who already has _Explode Together_. Anyone interested in it, email me and I'll see if it's still available. Me, I've got no use for vinyl. +----------------------------------------------------------------------+ | Scott M. Taylor -- staylor@sky.net -- http://www.sky.net/~staylor | | "There are still taboos, of course, but their nature has changed. | | For example, when I was in college, there were certain words you | | couldn't say in front of a girl. Now you can say them, but you | | can't say 'girl.'" -- Tom Lehrer | +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
------------------------------ Message-ID: <c=US%a=_%p=Tencor%l=MILXPR02-970627165705Z-91090@milxbh01.tencor.com> From: "Oehler, Alan" <ALAN.OEHLER@kla-tencor.com> Subject: Bass and players in general Date: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 09:57:05 -0700 In Chalkhills #3-134, Ian Dahlberg sez <Not to put down Colin's ability, he is a great player; but I don't think XTC's music lends itself to virtuostic extended bass solos. We can't really tell how good Colin can play just by listening to XTC. Jaco Pastorious' music, on the other hand, does lend itself to viruostic playing, and his ability was revealed.> Ian, I think you are equating being a great musician with being a great improviser. One can be one without necessarily being the other. Perhaps from XTC records one can say that Colin never gives us the chance to hear if he can blow over changes like Jaco, but I don't think it's fair to say "we can't really tell how good Colin can play just by listening to XTC." I think it's clear as an unmuddied lake -- as clear as an azure sky of deepest summer -- from XTC records that Colin is an absolute top-drawer musician of the category "rock/pop bass player." Maybe he wouldn't be a great improviser if thrust into playing with Weather Report (though if he was, I wouldn't be surprised). --Alan
------------------------------ Date: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 17:27:38 -0600 (CST) From: y9d62@ttacs1.ttu.edu Subject: To each his own fan club Message-id: <Pine.PMDF.3.95.970627170238.559945494A-100000@TTACS.TTU.EDU> ...and speaking of... If anyone saw that Beach Boys movie on VH1 last week, it should be clear that we're atleast fortunate to have XTC still out of the asylums and on the streets. These songwriters tend to have nervous breakdowns at the most inopportune times! I mean, really! I guess putting guys from They Might Be Giants alongside Charles Mingus and the crew is further proof of our world's increasing fragmentation. Oh, for universal concensus....on anything. What we've is more like several monoverses, and I guess I should run for cover, as I hear about a billion bells tolling for a billion nuts. Hark, there's mine now! Of course, total agreement is just as bad as total disagreement, so I'll put our differences out to dry, and perhaps I'll grow into them (or out). And Andy, if you're out there, shame on you. Dominique
------------------------------ Message-Id: <9706280302.AA09809@axtx0060.scent.mccaw.com> From: steve mcallister <steve.mcallister-next@attws.com> Date: Fri, 27 Jun 97 22:02:06 -0500 Subject: Mingus vs. Bass-O-Matic coupla things: Charles Mingus, while a great jazz bassist, is even more adored for his compositions. He was one of Miles Davis' favorite writers. Reference the records 'Mingus Ah-Um' or 'Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus' for an idea. Also, his VERY strange autobiography (told from three points of view) 'Beneath the Underdog' is very cool. Finally, the Joni Mitchell record 'Mingus' features songs the two co-wrote. A great record. As a 15 yr bass player, and one who studied/transcribe/researched Colin M as part of my senior project, I can attest that AP writes most of his own bass lines. I came to this conclusion after listening to Andy's demos as far back as Mummer. . .voila, the lines are very similar to what is on record. However, Colin's ability as a musician should not be understated. He has taste, time, and tone. He adds his own bits to Andy's initial ideas. While he is not a soloist, he is a fine, fine bassist. Lastly, Trent Reznor spoke of his affection for the songs of XTC in an interview printed in Mondo2000. Being compu-illiterate, I've no idea where it can be found via the web, but if anyone really needs to know, I'll find the issue number and date of release.
------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 Jun 97 03:59:48 UT From: "brynne and scott " <brynneandscott@msn.com> Message-Id: <UPMAIL10.199706280403010460@msn.com> Subject: re: Non-XTC /Jason Falkner >>Hi All, A few weeks ago, I bought the the New Jason Falkner LP intilted, Presents Author Unknown, I just gotta say that this guy is Brilliant!!!, the songwriting is incredible!!! and he plays eveything on it. I suggest EVERYBODY on the list pick it up, in a week or 2, it will be your favorite albumn, trust me. Thankx Rob<< I agree that this is an excellent album. For anyone that's interested, I have two extra copies of the cd for trade or sale. Scott S
------------------------------ Message-Id: <199706280447.VAA04755@mail.eskimo.com> From: "Matt Keeley" <mrme@eskimo.com> Date: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 21:46:10 +0000 Subject: Whoa! Back to me extremely long posts that go nowhere! Not to mention the extremely long subject lines that go nowhere as well... > From: n2_n@ca2.so-net.or.jp (Nishimatu) > In the 22th and 23th chapter of Japanese big title animation Evangelion, > main character Shinji wore a T-shirt with a logotype _XTC_. > Evangelion is an animation TV series, now made into 2 animation movies. > The near future SF story is a mental drama about the group using > bio-mechanic Evangelion to foe with strange aliens named Shito (means > apostles). Cool... thanks for letting me know about that... I might just have to schedule a showing in the Anime club next year... Subs are available for Evangelion, right? Probably... (Being the co-head of the Anime club has it's advantages.... you get to force your believes on everyone else through the selection of what you show! heh) > From: Matt_Kaden/CAM/Lotus@lotus.com > Who was it who asked if anyone else thought White Music was a great album? > That would be me... and all my friends. Anyone else?? For a while I thought > it was their best one. This is for the energy and Andy's incredible voice > on it. He should not feel embarrassed while hearing it (as he claims he > does). This was a brilliant peak in vocal history. And hearing the Helium > Kidz is confusing. It's like they developed their whole spastic spiel at > the last minute. That would be me... and I stand by it as one of the best albums (but aren't they all... arf arf (whatever that means... I read Andy use it once... must be a britishism I didn't come across before... anyway (ooh... back to the "anyway" streak))) ... I've never heard any of the Helium Kidz demos... I'd like to get a hold of some of the demos.... maybe I will later... anyway... > From: "Mark Strijbos" <mmello@knoware.nl> > > In the "Nonsuch" review , the writer Shigemasa Fujimoto mentioned that > > "Madam Barnum" might be AP's ex-wife Marianne. > > Until now I have been regarded she as their former record company. . . . I've been thinking of writing a parody of DMB entitled "Dear Monsieur Branson"... (might end up being Senor or even Mister, if I figure out how to pronouce "Monsieur" correctly....) Anyway, if I ever get around to it, I'll probably end up posting it... maybe even recording it. So be on the look out! It can't be stopped! Well, if it ever gets started, that is! > From: monnickj@ubk.co.uk > Subject: tony maimone > a while ago this guy was mentioned the lawyer or whatever for some band. > Could this be the same guy who held done the position as Mr bass in Pere UBU > in the mid 70's ? speaking of albums as good as sgt pepper how about Pere > Ubu's Modern Dance. OK... even though everyone's going to be answering this one, first off, Tony is the same bassist as in Pere Ubu... and as for the lawyer thing, it was an April Fool's joke concerning the song "XTC v. Adam Ant" by They Might Be Giants (who Tony happened to be the former bassist for as well, on the Album _John Henry_ )... anyway, it involved a press release about XTC suing TMBG because they didn't want to be associated with such a crappy, gimmick-artist like Adam Ant.... so they ended up settling out of court and re-recording the song as AKA v. Adam Ant, recalling all the albums and reissuing the record with AKA in place. NOTE: As said above, it was a joke... there was no lawsuit; as far as I know Tony Maimone is NOT their lawyer; AKA v. Adam Ant does not exist; XTC v. Adam Ant DOES exist; AKA Driver was the song the AKA joke was based on, as they could not print "NyQuil" on the record sleeve; AKA Driver is on _John Henry, XTC v. Adam Ant is on _Factory Showroom_; Tony did indeed play bass on _John Henry_; Graham is the new bassist, although he did work on some tracks on JH and other recordings. I hope that clears everything up.... maybe this should be a section in the FAQ.. heh. Ah well, that's this world over.... Matt -=>Matt Keeley mrme@eskimo.com<=- Living Through | Visit my home page Another | http://www.eskimo.com/~mrme Cuba -- XTC | I used to be temporarily insane! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Now I'm just stupid! -- Brak (ICQ UIN: 1455267, Name: MrMe) Yeah.
------------------------------ Message-Id: <3.0.1.16.19970628001722.2c2786fc@cyber1.servtech.com> Date: Sat, 28 Jun 1997 00:17:22 From: Chaos Harlequin <harlequin@tmbg.org> Subject: I would have made this instrumental... >After 15 years or so of listening to "No language in our lungs" I >suddenly realise that "I would have made this instrumental but the words >got in the way" can be read as "I would have made this effective but...". >I'd always thought this was one of the clumsiest lines in XTC's repertoire, >but I've suddenly gained a lot more respect for it! Huh? That line is the most important part of the song! Without it, what is the song other than a hypocritical attack? Andy is telling us that you can't communicate using words, and yet here he is using words to tell us that. That line admits that even the song in question can't get its meaning across to everyone, and really solidifies its argument. Of course, the pun helps, but it's not neccesary to appreciate the line... >Maybe the guys like Branson but hated the other Virgin bosses. Back in the Terry Chambers days, they seemed to be somewhat chummy with Richard, at least when drunk. "Hot Leathers and a Fist of Fire," anyone? >On strike... >So how come that in 1994 they were allowed to contribute 'Cherry >In Your Tree' to the album 'Carmen Sandiego Out of This World' as XTC? I think the strike really referred to putting out a new album, which is what the label was really pushing them for. >Remember "Tears Of A Clown" by Smokey Robinson ? What's the opera about a crazy clown? >Trent, you just might have some taste, ditch that Manson luser and >produce an XTC album. I am afraid. Although. Actually, that could be, um, interesting. Perhaps. /---------------------------Joshua Hall-Bachner---------------------------\ | harlequin@tmbg.org http://www.servtech.com/public/particle/ | | "We all have our idiosyncracies -- maybe thinning hair, or gum disease."| \---- Kowanko, "Will You Come To?" ------ Thank You, And Goodnight. ------/
------------------------------ Message-Id: <v01540b00afda1066a9da@[169.132.97.47]> Date: Sat, 28 Jun 1997 02:38:24 +0100 From: pjmuck@idt.net (Peter McCulloch) Subject: 3 of a Perfect Pair >>(Betcha you'd never thought Trent Rezenor would be mentioned in the same >>sentence as Andy.) >why not? Both have worked with members of King Crimson (Andy with Pat >Mastelotto, Trent with Adrian Belew). And I am a fan of both, for that >matter (of all three if you include Crimso) And if there's any truth to the rumour that Belew and Andy are going to do something together (with David Byrne), then we'll be 1 step closer to the musical alliance we're all waiting for: a Reznor/Partridge collaboration! >Maybe this has been mentioned but wouldn't Trent do a great version of >"Complicated Game"? I could definitely hear this, or perhaps "Travels in Nihilon". Now if he could only be convinced to do "The Loving", that would be REALLY interesting. >Also, I also happened to see the _other_ bit ( Andy on that awful >breakfast show) when it was broadcast. >The Virgin press office really had a funny way of promoting our >Heroes... XTC also did a LOT of children's shows. I have a few of these appearances on video, but I have no idea what the shows were. Here's a brief synopsis of a couple of them, to the best of my memory, as I've not seen these in a while. Hopefully some kindly chalkhillian can supply further insight: One show features both Colin and Andy sitting with a panel of the most incongruous characters I've ever seen (two female punk rockers, a postman, a guy in a bear suit!) reviewing the latest music videos. Andy and Colin pretty much trash everything they review. Another clip has Andy hosting some show with a wise-cracking robot. Keyboard playing special guests abound, including Thomas Dolby, Jerry Dammers, and Barry Andrews! (who gets along surprisingly well with Andy in this rare reacquaintence). >"One of my fave bridges is the one from Wait Till Your Boat Goes Down. The >song in question is a much under-rated Partridge classic" Agreed. I just rediscovered this track recently after obtaining Fossil Fuel. (Love the bell ride boat simulation). A thought occured to me: Is this the only XTC single to date that never appeared on an album, or at least doesn't appear on a currently available CD with the exception of the singles collections CDs? I believe Science Friction was only released on the 3D EP, but it has since found it's way onto the White Music CD. It would appear that whether or not you like singles collections, you'd have to buy one of them if you wanted a copy of Wait Till Your Boat Goes Down. And some non-XTC content... >Nice to see some of you listening to Failure's Fantastic Planet, too. I first caught this band a couple of years ago at a CMJ show here in NY, and was completely blown away. They were performing songs from this album, but there previous releases were nearly impossible to find, that is, until now. they'll be playing this year's LollaPalooza on stage 2, along with another one of my favorite new bands, Skeleton Key. If you haven't heard of Skeleton Key, I urge you to check out their latest, Fantastic Spikes Through a Balloon. They are one of the most captivating live bands you'll ever see, period. regards, Peter
------------------------------ Message-Id: <1.5.4.32.19970628093535.0066317c@mail.execpc.com> Date: Sat, 28 Jun 1997 04:35:35 -0500 From: Dean Zemel <dbzemel@execpc.com> Subject: No Ships Passing In The Night Here! Chalkhills and the Net, in general, really do make this a small world, indeed! First of all, since subscribing to Chalkhills, I notice that a fellow Milwaukeean is a member of our community---Dave Franson (he of Nonsuch Coloring Book fame). I e-mail him directly about something he posted and we start a little correspondence and even meet to exchange some very cool dubs. Fast forward to several months ago. I'm wearing my Chalkhills t-shirt (again, thanks to Phil!) during one of my music browsing/buying sprees in Madison when one of the owners of a used CD store there (occasional Chalkhill poster John Hackney) comes up to me and asks about the shirt and we talk XTC for quite a while. We exchange e-mail addresses and, before long, I'm getting cool stuff from him and sending him dubs of stuff he's been wanting. Fast forward to a few weeks ago. I'm in Madison again and John and I plan to meet for coffee. Along comes once and future prolific Chalkhills poster, Adam Ostermann, to join us. While we're talking about XTC, someone comes up to us and tells us that he's visiting Madison for the weekend from Indiana and couldn't help but overhear our conversation and see my shirt. He complains about there being no one where he lives who has heard of XTC, much less be a fan he can converse with, and how it's a lonely existence out there without fellow XTC fans with whom to share in the joy. We tell him about Chalkhills, the digest, and he says he's subscribing as soon as he gets back to Indiana. (Hi there!) While having coffee, John, Adam and I talk about dub wish lists and live shows coming up. John and Adam mention that they're going to the Blur show in Milwaukee. I ask if they would like some company and enthusiastic plans for a rendezvous are made. I write to Dave Franson, who had just asked me about going to see Robyn Hitchcock (whom Dave saw but I missed), and he is excited about joining us. We meet for a cool, enthusiastic supper before the show and then have a great time watching Blur do their Britpop thing. We trade some dubs, make plans for future trades and look forward to the next show. What a small world, eh? (I have yet to meet a Chalkhillian I didn't like!) Dean
------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 Jun 1997 10:27:59 -0600 (CST) From: Mike Vancha <aa408@gpfn.sk.ca> Subject: Jason Falkner/XTC Message-ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.970628102707.8114C-100000@GPFN1.GPFN.SK.CA> > Afew weeks ago, I bought the the New Jason Falkner LP intilted, >Presents Author Unknown, I just gotta say that this guy is >Brilliant!!!, the songwriting is incredible!!! and he plays >eveything on it. >I suggest EVERYBODY on the list pick it up, in a week or 2, it >will be your favorite albumn, trust me. It's true. The songs are very XTC-like and there is good writing and playing. When Jason was in the Grays, he talked about XTC being one of the bands he liked and you can always hear that in his songs. Mike Vancha
------------------------------ Message-ID: <aSIQOeArPXtzEwOn@emdac.demon.co.uk> Date: Sat, 28 Jun 1997 21:28:27 +0100 From: Phil Hetherington <phil@emdac.demon.co.uk> Subject: Shriekback >By the way, is anyone else on this list as keen as me to see Shriekback's >"Tench" made available on CD? Yes! Though I'd say <<Jam Science>> was more important... Actually, I asked Barry about 'Tench' a couple of years ago; I get the impression he doesn't like it any more. Basically he said they had some good ideas, but were too 'off their heads' for it to actually turn into a good record. Some of the tracks off 'Tench', 'Care' and 'Jam Science' are available on various compilation CDs though. See my web site for further details: http://www.emdac.demon.co.uk/phil/shrkindx.html Which reminds me, must fix my .sig... been needing to since I switched to this account about a year ago... here goes... -- _ |_) |_ * | My web page: http://www.emdac.demon.co.uk/phil/ | | ) | | Shriekback web pages: The above + shrkindx.html ===========
------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 Jun 1997 20:18:53 -0400 (EDT) Message-Id: <1.5.4.16.19970628200830.61a7dd68@en.com> From: Michael Kearns <mikearns@en.com> Subject: Hooray for Peter's Picturesite I enjoyed Peter Fitzpatrick's scanned pictures of Andy's shed and CD autographs. My PC equipment allowed for a painfully slow download, but it was worth the wait. BTW, Peter, who is the man pictured on your shirt? As it slowly painted on my screen I saw at first only the grey-streaked white-hair and thought, "he's wearing a Jerry Garcia shirt!" But I was wrong. The URLs are in #3-133, and are well worth seeing. Thanks Peter! Looking forward to the Rifff transcript whenever it may appear. I waited to the last minute to try out an IRC program on my Windows 3.1, and could not get to the specific rooms. Ended up with a bizzare list of chat rooms (yeah! let's talk "Preteen Toilet Sex") No, let's don't!
------------------------------ From: CCooli9575@aol.com Date: Sun, 29 Jun 1997 08:09:01 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <970629080900_274279932@emout20.mail.aol.com> Subject: Tony Maimone Speaking of good bassists, as far as I know Tony Maimone's still with Pere Ubu, assuming they're still together. Their last album I know of was a few years ago. They got back together back in the late 80's(most of the original lineup; four of the seven members of the new lineup were on The Modern Dance, Maimone, drummer Scott Krausse, synth player Allen Ravenstine, and Ralph Kramden lookalike frontman David Thomas) and have recorded several albums that reminds me more of XTC circa Drums And Wires than their '70's material. Pere Ubu turned into a quirky pop band, and quite an intriguing one. David Thomas still has one of the oddest voices in the business, though, and still writes rather surreal lyrics. "Was it a dream? Nah, it was a tin can. Had I not kicked that..." David Thomas
------------------------------ From: CCooli9575@aol.com Date: Sun, 29 Jun 1997 08:09:03 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <970629080858_-925299844@emout19.mail.aol.com> Subject: Beach Boyz Man, these digests are getting humongous; AOL saves them as a text attachment and I have to use a word processing program to translate and open it. I hate AOL, but I'm stuck with it for now; the University of Vermont finally figured out I wasn't a student anymore(took them two years)and cancelled my account. Oh well, piss and moan. Regarding The Beach Boys, I agree with many(including Andy!)that Brian Wilson is a tortured genius who's shown only flashes of his brilliance since the late sixties. Actually, the words from genius on are my conjecture only. I also agree, and Brian himself would probably agree too, that lyrics are not his strongest suit. Brian's only great lyrics were on Pet Sounds; not poetic masterpieces but perfect for the songs and genuinely heartfelt. Most of the rest of his great stuff, including the bulk of the aborted Smile, was in collaboration with others, most often with either Van Dyke Parks(on Smile)or Mike Love(occasionally throughout). As for The Beach Boys as a group, they deserve points for surviving through the late 60's and 70's with minimal output from Brian, and until the mid-70's, while not making great music, not making anything too embarassing either. Unfortunately, the last interesting album they did was The Beach Boys Love You in '77(which Brian fully participated in, writing or cowriting everything on the album), which, while no masterpiece, is quite listenable and even downright goofy in places(check "Johnny Carson," for example). Since then it seems like Mike Love has taken over the band and turned it into an embarassing oldies band. Somebody should put the guy out of his misery. The death of Dennis Wilson, IMHO the soul of The Beach Boys, even though he only sang occasionally and otherwise just played drums and drank and drugged a lot(his solo album Pacific Ocean Blue is a minor masterpiece from a band member who could easily have contributed more to the band creatively if he wanted to), hurt them even worse. They still could be worth something if Brian stood up to Mike Love and got them back into the studio to record Brian's originals instead of pop-factory readymades like "Kokomo." Of the rest, Carl Wilson had his moments but doesn't seem to write anymore, Al Jardine never was much of a songwriter(and hardly performs with the band anymore), and Bruce Johnston, well, blame him for writing "I Write The Songs" for Barry Manilow(which The Beach Boys supposedly recorded but never released, thank god). Sorry to be so longwinded, but I'm sure Andy would be sympathetic. To close, speaking of Amanda's forwarded letter, I've heard "Mayor Of Simpleton" muzak style in the local Grand Union a couple of times. Seems a lot of the Muzak employees are people in their 20's and 30's who are rearranging the music they grew up on, so often the song sequence resembles a typical AAA station's playlist.
------------------------------ From: StereoPuff@aol.com Date: Sun, 29 Jun 1997 23:04:45 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <970629230444_2056705322@emout12.mail.aol.com> Subject: Upsy/Doherty, and very little bassist discussion regarding Upsy Daisy Assortment, Derek Miner wrote: >On the plus side, the packaging idea is clever. And they packed the disc to >the limit (in fact, "Peter Pumpkinhead" is barely over before the disc >forces itself to "off"). The best thing, I thought, was that the sound of >the mid-period stuff was much better than I've come to I'm surprised that they hadn't added Rook or Wrapped In Grey onto the end... they could've sqeezed in one more track if they really wanted to. When the compilation was originally announced, I was somehow given the impression that Andy himself was to determine the tracklisting... however, I am grateful that they chose to include non-seguay versions of Seagulls & Chalkhills, which have always been two of my favorites. If only they had also chosen Smalltown & Yacht Dance... David McGuinness wrote: >OK, so I've never seen him live, but I can't understand the fuss about >Graham Maby - his playing for TMBG has made no impression on me whatsoever. it's his stage presence... be it with TMBG or Joe Jackson, Graham seems to present an essence of simultaneous calm & experience. One wouldn't dare take their eyes off him, since he always has a coy look on his face that seems to say "keep watching, i'm gonna switch to rock-out mode any second now!" David McGuinness also wrote: >Have we discussed possible drummers for the lads' next album recently? It >just struck me as a dug out my copy of 'John Henry' over the weekend (on >which Mr Maby features a little), that Brian Doherty's drumming on that >album is quite staggering. [snip] >It strikes me that Doherty actually plays the kit >like a real musical instrument, whereas Mastelotto just assembles >collections of killer sounds and hopes they'll work. plus, add the fact that Brian Doherty is currently unemployed - having left TMBG in January after feeling burnt-out by the rigours of touring - and you have the absolute perfect canditate for XTC's next drummer! =) I recently found a copy of three-3" CD version of O&L, packaged in that tiny little rectangular box... it's so cute! It looks like a pack of XTC cigarettes. The track-indexing is also changed in-between Miniature Sun & Chalkhills... track 15 starts right at opening keyboard riff of Chalkhills. I think I prefer it that way... and, since it's the first track on disc 2, Poor Skeleton does NOT have the tail-end of The Loving seguaying into it. it's a clean stand-alone version. Now THERE'S something for the obsessive-collectors! =) While in New York, I picked up a copy of the Ernest Noyes Bookings tribute album with "XTC: Rocket" on it, only to find that it was simply Andy's demo. =p oh well... still nice to have on CD though. I also (finally!) found a copy of Martin Newell's "Greatest Living Englishman" album, and it is simply fantastic stuff. A store-clerk had put a sticker on it, under Andy's name, which read: "that guy from INXS or XTC or somethin'". Mike Wood... ... who may have mis-spelled "seguay" throughout this entire posting.
------------------------------ End of Chalkhills Digest #3-136 *******************************
Go back to Volume 3.
30 June 1997 / Feedback