Chalkhills Digest, Volume 4, Number 38 Monday, 8 December 1997 Today's Topics: if you were waiting for an MSN prize Big Box Of Paints The Green Man, Upsy Daisy and Other Things Re: Signal Processing for The Future I was the walrus.... Old Andy P. interview unearthed - real fossil fuel? 2 musings on XTC BBC Radio 1 Live Detroit Ghoulers airplane/firework lyrics The ubiquitous a/d debate Holidays galore! this, and furthermore, that Fingerings What a co-inky-dink! Music for airports, cassettes, and the Rutles copy of demos? Album title thoughts Re: Raving and Drooling Brain Growth Cute kid story Fun on Saturday night Administrivia: To UNSUBSCRIBE from the Chalkhills mailing list, send a message to <chalkhills-request@chalkhills.org> with the following command: unsubscribe 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 3.5b (John Relph <relph@sgi.com>). And I don't know what she done wrong but I want to hurt her.
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message-ID: <711E5B56586DCF11BAF100805F38C43903381F39@DUB-03-MSG> From: Peter Fitzpatrick <peterfit@MICROSOFT.com> Subject: if you were waiting for an MSN prize Date: Wed, 3 Dec 1997 06:10:04 -0800 I know some of you won an autographed "Fossil Fuel" CD from MSN. I also know that you haven't received it. This is due to a problem involving a courier company.... Anyway. The team from MSN that worked on Rifff with Andy have contacted me and I'm going to help get this wrapped. Apparently the discs were signed by Andy but somehow never made it to the Rifff team. They're now back in the UK. So - I'm going to do my best to get these discs to you all asap. Peter
------------------------------ Message-Id: <199712032214.XAA15396@mail2.knoware.nl> From: "Mark Strijbos" <mmello@knoware.nl> Organization: The Little Lighthouse Date: Wed, 3 Dec 1997 23:22:40 +0000 Subject: Big Box Of Paints Dear Chalkers, > One question: when you were researching in Swindon, did you ever > find out about "The Famous Person's Mural". I have seen this thing > on TV (possibly on the "Play at Home" programme) Yes, Andy and Dave provide us with a guided tour of the famous mural in the Play At Home TV documentary > but when I was in Swindon a few years back > I couldn't find the damn thing. According to Andy it's not there any more... ( i have an interview on tape were he talks about this ) The building it was painted on was torn down some time ago. If i remember correctly from the interview attempts were made to rescue and / or transfer the mural but these have failed so it was destroyed with the building. Luckily it was still there when i made my pilgrimage in 1986 :) yours paintstakingly, Mark Strijbos at The Little Lighthouse the XTC website @ http://come.to/xtc and http://www.knoware.nl/users/mmello
------------------------------ From: Stroo@aol.com Date: Thu, 4 Dec 1997 00:23:46 -0500 (EST) Message-ID: <971204002345_543207138@mrin45.mail.aol.com> Subject: The Green Man, Upsy Daisy and Other Things Hello fellow Chalkhillians, It's good to finally be making my first posting. Hopefully my contribution will be at least somewhat thought-provoking... First, thanks Amanda for the demos. Green Man stands tall and MUST be on the new CD. I do like River of Orchids, even though I'm probably missing its meaning. I usually like the boys' ballads a little less than their more upbeat tunes, but I really like the potential on "I Can't Own Her", especially after a session of XTCizing in the studio. As for recent discussion listing the top ten worst songs, I have another idea. Let's consider what would happen if Geffen made Andy put out one more CD. What would be on Upsy Daisy II ? My choices would be: Reel by Real Love At First Sight Runaways (All of a Sudden)... All You Pretty Girls The..Smalltown Reign of Blows I Remember the Sun Beating of Hearts Great Fire (I always hit repeat when this track is over) Ladybird Summer's Cauldron The Meeting Place Season Cycle The Loving Scarecrow People Merely A Man (one of my faves) Dear Madam Barnum Then She Appeared Of course, I've heard the stories of Geffen "promoting" the boys with a video and boxed set. Are these rumors true? So many things separate XTC from the rest, but I personally enjoy looking for the catchy musical nuances (I have no better term to offer). Examples off the top of my head: the quick percussion before the line "But me made too many enemies" from "PP"; the first piano in "Summer's Cauldron"; the bridge between the two chorus verses on "Pretty Girls" and before the chorus on "Then She Appeared"; the bass' first appearances on "Senses" and "Seagulls"; and to me, the psuedo-foghorn on "Seagulls" and regal trumpet on "Merely A Man" exemplify sheer brilliance that the average listener misses, which to me is key to appreciating their music. One final thought: Living in the Cleveland area, the location of the R & R Hall of Fame, I don't feel it's too early to look into what can be done to give the world's most underrated band the ultimate honor they deserve. If eligibility begins 25 years after a band's first release, the time is really not that far away. Bob stroo@aol.com end
------------------------------ From: "Dr. Foulger" <spxdlf@carina.astro.cf.ac.uk> Organization: Cutting Edge Optronics, Inc. Date: Thu, 4 Dec 1997 09:30:01 -0600 Subject: Re: Signal Processing for The Future Message-Id: <19971204093255.287d06a0.in@ceo.ceolasers.com> Wood Robert MMUk <robert.wood@micromass.co.uk> wrote: > The difference is quite simply enourmous! But I suspect that's not what ... > The long and short of all this is that analogue sounds far better than > digital for the reproduction of music. If anyone doubts this they should > listen to a good hifi system set up with something like a Linn Sondek > LP12 record deck and a set of Naim amps. Then compare it to a CD system; > the difference will blow you away. ... > "Analogue is for music, digital is for satellite." To back this up with what I remember of a signal processing course I took and a quasi-scientific argument, analogue (as it stands) is better than CD/DAT techonology (as it stands). It goes something like this... Human ears can hear frequencies somewhere up to 15KHz-20KHz depending on the age and damage of the ears. Digital theory says that the CD/DAT techonology (all things being perfect) will reproduce frequencies upto 22KHz without signal loss. This should be more than enough, even for those with great hearing, right? Wrong. Digital techonology has to chose what type of alternating signal it samples. Will it be a square wave or a sinewave? Or some other more exotic wave? This is where digital techonology falls down, if one is using sine-waves to reconstruct a 10KHz square-wave then we need a 10KHz sine-wave, a 20KHz sine-wave, a 40KHz sine-wave, a 80KHz sine-wave, ad-infinitum. so, you can see the problem, CD/DAT cannot reproduce a 40KHz sine-wave and hence the square-wave at 10KHz ( a really metallic sound ) sounds more like a sine-wave ( a really smooth and soft sound ). I have pointed out the failings of digital techology, but what of analogue? Is it perfect? Well, the answer is no, but it is less imperfect that digital. Analogue as a limited bandwidth (e.g. it also cannot reproduce some high frequencies ) and the 'cut-off' on a good system is somewhere round-about 20KHz, but the 'cut-off' isn't actually a cut-off, its a roll-off. So an analogue system will reproduce high-frequency sounds, but with ever decreasing volumes. So, although it isn't perfect, the roll-off instead of a cut-off is enough to make it sound better than CD/DAT. That said, quadruple the sampling rate of digital techology and you'd probably have a better medium than analogue. Sorry that this went on for so long, and even though I beleive what I wrote my turntable (Rega Planar 2 (not even a 3!) is sitting in it's box as I have just moved from UK to USA and a it plays 20% faster due to the 60Hz mains electricity. Anyone know how to fix this? Dames tWd * -------------------------------------------------- Please note new EMAIL address: damian@ceolasers.com Old one will work for the indefinite future. * -------------------------------------------------- Dr. Damian Foulger 20 Point West Boulevard, St. Charles, MO 63301 Tel. (314) 916-5599 #323, Fax. (314) 916-4994
------------------------------ Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 10:21:11 -0600 (CST) From: lady cornelius plum <ACOEA@jazz.ucc.uno.edu> Subject: I was the walrus.... Message-id: <01IQRTA6X6SO9095L0@jazz.ucc.uno.edu> Now I am she as you are she as you are me and we are all together.... Anyhoo, enough of that. Anyone catch those planets in alignment? It's a looker. (Drum roll please....) RESPONSE TIME! Mandy-Well, looks to me like Terry tried to jump on Dave's back at the end of the video (who wouldn't? ;), causing the thing to tumble and the band to all fall on top of each other. JW-You left out a few useless bands-Spice Girls, Hanson, and No Doubt. (Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale's relationship is so manufactured it's pathetic. Two people who look like they never wash their hair yet everyone thinks they are "SO FINE". Perfect!) XTC can't name their new album "Firework." It's too close to the title of Lisa Loeb's latest, "Firecracker." Everyone's asking questions about "What XTC song would be best to do ________ to?", but nobody's asked the provocative one yet...do I have to? ;) Someone made a good point about Pancho's armpit post. (Sorry to dredge it up.) I'll admit, it might have been in bad taste for me to make the initial comment, but dude, that was sick. (I can't believe I just said "dude." South Park is really rubbing off on me. People are incorporating it into Rocky Horror for Chrissake!!!!!) What if I said I love guys with really long nosehairs? (It's a JOKE! I DON'T!) Lunchtime, I must be going now. Chowing down on some good ole fashioned corn dogs soaked in mustard. Ciao, LCP XTC song of the day-I'm the Man Who Murdered Love non XTC song of the day-Cover of a Rolling Stone-Dr. Hook XTC moment of the week-(Sorry to copy....)-Another manager picking up a copy of my LE and telling all the workers "This is the weird magazine she brings in every day." This was followed by hearing "King For a Day" again.
------------------------------ Message-Id: <199712041748.JAA07509@ glenn.electric.net> From: "Steve Clarke" <clarke@vanlab.paprican.ca> Date: Thu, 4 Dec 1997 09:49:25 +0000 Subject: Old Andy P. interview unearthed - real fossil fuel? Chalk dwellers: While clearing old boxes of junk out in preparation for a move, I discovered a treasure which I thought I'd lost years ago. An old interview with Andy, recorded by University of Bath student radio in 1981. The guys were playing there that night and Andy obliged with an interview. I got a copy of it because the station did'nt have their own copy of Black Sea. I did so we exchanged album loan for interview tape. Andy talks about the very early days of XTC and "Dukes of Stratosphere" is mentioned as an early conceptual band name. I went to the gig...best one ever (for me). My cloudy memory tells me that they were last minute stand-ins for someone who had been booked but made it big in the meantime and decided that a provincial university was too small potatoes. If anyone is interested in a copy, let me know and I'll make a few cassette copies. I'll probably say OK to the first five or so people. Steve Clarke B.C. Canada
------------------------------ Message-ID: <c=US%a=_%p=AETNA%l=HFD-EXCH003-971204185041Z-88551@aetna.aetna.com> From: "Witter, Karl F" <WitterKF@aetna.com> Subject: 2 musings on XTC BBC Radio 1 Live Date: Thu, 4 Dec 1997 13:50:41 -0500 One: Andy now dismisses much of his early stuff from before Drums and Wires. However, in late 1980 on the Black Sea tour (circa XTC BBC Radio 1 Live in concert CD) there were only Battery Brides, This is Pop and Are You Receiving Me left from that era. Coincidence? I wouldn't be surprised if Andy's was a heady influence when it came to cobbling together playlists. Two: I heard some people post about XTC's not being a very good and "accessible" live band. I read that Black Sea was their first top-50 US album thanks to the accrueing (sp?) of fans via touring. Not having any first-hand experience or opinion, I can only realize that these statements cannot both be true at once. Can someone please explain a bit of this? >>Eric Rosen, bravo for knowing your animation history. I've been through at least one bio of Uncle Walt that'll frighten children more than Bambi's mother dying. >>Pancho hasn't "had a good pit in quite awhile mind you, so [he] will have to wait until [he runs] into a more progressive lass with a hairy underneath." At first I said "There's a song in there somewhere" but now I know better. But still not well enough, so I post: "The Hairy Underneath" First it's the shedding that spills all over the bedding and there's no denying that it's getting hairy underneeeeeeath. Then comes berating from your mum suggesting braiding or perhaps the silver plating of the hairy underneeeeeath. Did you ever want to scrape away the hair, go ahead, grab a Schick and try. I can promise it's beyond the point of Nair, lather up, have a shave, and dry. What you're combing through's the truth and that's the hardest thing to hack at with a disposable blade. (I don't know what came over me since I have no real preference, and don't even know what Paula Cole looks like!) Now reading Walt Disney's "I drew Goofy for the FBI", Karl
------------------------------ Message-Id: <199712041922.MAA00759@access.tucson.org> From: "J. D. SMX" <jsmelser@access.tucson.org> Organization: Access Tucson Date: Thu, 4 Dec 1997 12:41:58 -0700 Subject: Detroit Ghoulers Hi Chalkazoids- Just to chime in and say I know of the Ghoul and Froggy, being a dislicated Detroiter, myself. This thread is definately, "pre-XTC," their time, and my knowledge of them. I think the Ghoul used chroma key to get Froggy into some of the cheezy films he used to run. But, all I remember of the show was the Ghoul (from Parma, Ohio) squirting cheeze-whiz into the Froggy and then beating the crap out of him, and the Mickey Mouse Club theme playing while the zombies (in the film) walked around looking for victims. Hiya, hiya, hiya! Meanwhile back in Tucson..... J. D. SMX Engineering Services Manager Access Tucson jsmelser@access.tucson.org
------------------------------ From: candlabra@lewiston.com Message-Id: <l03010d01b0acc6098fc0@[209.37.93.135]> Date: Thu, 4 Dec 1997 12:53:45 -0800 Subject: airplane/firework lyrics MARKROCKS@aol.com wrote >Also, while listening to O&L the other day, I noticed the word >FIREWORK firmly implanted in the lyrics. So, if you ignore the >release of Nonsvch, as I would sometimes like to, the trend of >the LP title coming from a previous record continues. "Like a >FIREWORK to which we're tied, be prepared to go through >your ceiling" when the new record comes out! You dont have to ignore Nonsuch - the lyric to "My Bird Performs" contains the lyric "the brightest firework is lighting up my sky" : p Cudos to Colin. Gordon Wood r <11gwood@mach1.wlu.ca> wrote >What a weird coincidence. When I flew over to Britain for the first >time last winter, "Roads Girdle The Globe" came ringing through my >brains as we descended through the clouds to land at Manchester >International. Just got back from a trip to Ketchikan Alaska. Brought the camcorder along, and you know the song "Rocket From a Bottle" fits perfectly over the shots I took out the plane window (yes, I'm dubbing a soundtrack onto the video so it doesnt absolutely BORE people whom I might force to sit down and watch). Also used a snatch of "Yacht Dance" later in the video for the boating scenes. BTW, Ketchikan is in the rainforest area of Alaska. Anybody guess which XTC CD (which I brought along) was the perfect CD for your average Ketchikan day? take care, all Charles F. candlabra@lewiston.com
------------------------------ Message-Id: <l03102800b0acbfc63bab@[207.104.109.137]> Date: Thu, 4 Dec 1997 12:54:45 -0800 From: Dave Blackburn <dblack@access1.net> Subject: The ubiquitous a/d debate Evening All, Just to add to the thread on analog/digital recording in general, and Robert Wood's knowledgeable post in particular, I have these musings. Digital recording is blamed for sonic sterility, but it is not because of inherent coldness in the electronics (whatever that means) but because of the poor resolution of the 16-bit 44.1kHz medium, which was the format settled on by Philips, the inventors of the CD. Twelve years have now elapsed since CDs emerged and in that time digital converters have become smoother and warmer sounding, yes, even on CD. Listen to anything on the ECM label if you want to hear buttery smooth top end and lush depth. The new crop of digital recording systems are in the 24-bit 96kHz domain which capture about ten times the detail of their 16-bit forbears. If DVD audio can gain a foothold as a consumer medium in the next couple of years, I expect to see the analog/digital debate become almost moot, as the beauty of high resolution digital becomes available. Everyone can tell a low resolution photo side by side with a higher resolution version. Why would audio be different? As a producer and engineer I have worked with analog and digital media for several years, and it is not at all true that analog automatically sounds better; but, you do have to relearn some recording and mixing techniques with digital; it is not forgiving. It reproduces what you send it. Most engineers used to analog tape got accustomed to the magnetic tape giving you back a pleasing version of what you put in, due to saturation and a natural rounding of the tone. A good digital system will not do that; you have to send it the smooth, rounded sound first, using tubes, room sound or whatever. Rock music, such as XTC, suffers more than other styles when going digital because rock recordings are supposed to be larger than life; the analog bottom end boost and smoothing of wailing cymbals really suit a typical rock mix. What I'm saying is, analog devotees have a good case, but don't assume that you've really heard what digital recording can do yet, because we're just getting past phase one of its growth. Analog recordings in their first 12 years (ie in the 50s) sounded pretty bad next to today's machines with DolbySR. Once we are past the 16-bit CD and once recordists master the art of getting the " butter" to happen before hitting the A/D converters, I think digital sound will get a better rep. And boy I'd like to hear a properly remastered version of O&L, which as it stands, epitomizes what is wrong with late 80's digital sound. Happy Holidays out there; what a fun list this is... Dave Blackburn dblack@access1.net
------------------------------ Message-ID: <31790FAD9CB8D011BD6A0000F877207D26C65B@tu-server2.micromass.co.uk> From: Wood Robert MMUk <robert.wood@micromass.co.uk> Subject: Holidays galore! Date: Fri, 5 Dec 1997 09:05:53 -0000 After my question about Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays in 4-37, I've had a couple of private responses. Please, please don't feel this was a jibe! The more holidays you can get the better! I was just intrigued, if you had 300 days a year off in the States I'd be delighted for you!
------------------------------ Message-ID: <19971205134504.19027.qmail@hotmail.com> From: "Rick Mealey" <rickmealey@hotmail.com> Subject: this, and furthermore, that Date: Fri, 05 Dec 1997 05:45:03 PST Helllll-LOOOOOWWWWW! First, I too have knelt at the shrine that is the Roundabout, which URL is reproduced here for the convenience and edification of those who haven't seen it the first fifty times it was posted here: http://www.znet.com/~bobestus/index.htm What a welcoming site. It begs to be explored, and rewards the explorer. I can't say enough about it. Jolly good. Into the breach with Gene_Yoon@brown.edu: >>From: SLEDZNH@aol.com > > > >Everytime I get into a plane and look out the window, the song "Roads Girdle > >The Globe" comes streaming into my brain. > >Actually, the song I always think of at airports and in planes is the >Dukes' "You're My Drug". It's the jumbo jet blast followed by the >infectious bass line. I love it and it makes me want to MOVE! Yes! Yes! Yes! Flying into Heathrow, or better, Gatwick, at sunrise... Does anyone else hear The Byrds' Eight Miles High reverberating in that song anyplace? Anyway I trust this answers the question of Gordon Wood r <11gwood@mach1.wlu.ca>, who seems to have an "r" dangling: >Any other non-Brit XTC'ers have similar observations upon visiting >the U.K.? Just out of curiosity, can I get a consensus from the group on Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin's cover of Roads Girdle The Globe? I still like this version somewhat, Dave Stewart being one of my own personal keyboard heroes, but these days I wonder if their version has maybe just a little too much politeness. Non-XTC content coming right up, sir: Wood Robert MMUk <robert.wood@micromass.co.uk> offers a precis about mastering technique and adds: >You'll find that many recording engineers prefer to mix to 1/2" >rather than DAT. And contrary to what you may think, analogue tape, >especially with Dolby SR noise reduction, is technically superior in >many ways to digital, for example in dynamic range. FWIW, my big problem with analog is the noise floor. When I master my own stuff, I'd prefer to poot digitally (when the cost is justified!) rather than use reel-by-real, er, reel-to-reel and have to doctor it after the fact with noise reduction, which necessarily has to color the sound. Your mileage may vary on this issue. But it's an interesting thread. Simon of Slightholm began yet another thread thusly: << If "Wayne's World" had been a movie about XTC fans, what tune << would they have used in the head-banging scene instead of << "Bohemian Rhapsody"? Has no one else explored the comic potential in setting that scene to Wake Up? Imagine: the boys turn the radio on, Andy and Dave begin their cross-pollinated skank/clave, someone yells "Most excellent!", and all four begin banging their heads-- on *different beats*, looking at each other, searching desperately for the downbeat, their glances conveying "Am I right?" "You're definitely wrong, doood" etc. The drums barge in and the scene plays out.... Hey, it even has the pseudo-operatic vocals on the fade-out... Oh boy, off to another topic. The often-imitated but never quite duplicated Amanda touched off a firestorm a few digests ago with her comments on Sarah McLachlan, Paula Cole, and Beck.... I haven't really heard much of either McLachlan or Beck to have an opinion either way about their staying power, but I do know Cole's first album rocked and the second was just too karkin' histrionic. Jay-zus, could she lighten up a little? She's turning into another Melissa Etheridge, with her overly melodramatic delivery of poetry you might have written for your high school literary supplement.... Hey, wasn't it Lady Plum in the conservatory with the candlestick? Lead pipe? Damn.... And someone else (I don't have the original in front of me, apologies to writer of original post) reminds us of The Rutles: >"After Nasty's 'Bigger than God' comment, people started to burn >their records. In fact, they were buying them just to burn them. >Record sales skyrocketed..." Didn't it turn out that Nasty was really talking about being bigger than Rod? I think we're agreed that if life were just, XTC would indeed be bigger than Rod Stupid, who should just hang it up. Whatever "it" is. Finally, Stroo@aol.com joins the fray with a comment: >Living in the Cleveland area, the location of the R & R >Hall of Fame, I don't feel it's too early to look what can be done to give >the world's most underrated band the ultimate honor they deserve. If >eligibility begins 25 years after a band's first release, the time is really >not that far away. Way I see it, in spite of a lot of fan support, the yokels on the board of the "Rock'n'Roll" Hall o' Fame looked the other way when it came time for Steely Dan to take their rightful place of prominence-- what chance does XTC have? Where's that confounded bridge, Rick
------------------------------ Message-ID: <c=US%a=_%p=BTG._Inc.%l=EXCH_HQ-971205163805Z-30056@exchserver.btg.com> From: "Sherwood, Harrison" <hsherwood@btg.com> Subject: Fingerings Date: Fri, 5 Dec 1997 11:38:05 -0500 >From: Ryan Walsh <factory@bu.edu> >Organization: Boston University >Subject: more of my questions? > >1. anyone know the fingerings for the chords Cm and G/F# ? Sample of the tablature available at the FTP site, entered as second-class matter: "The little finger goes over to the left..._your_ left...right...no, I mean correct--the little finger presses the B string down _there_...no, _there_..._that's_ it. Now, the ring finger on the fourth fret, next string up...no _up_...the _thicker_ string...Thaaaat's it. Now you've got to do a barre on the third fret with your index finger...." (Try http://www.candisc.com/candisc/melchord/index.html--Mel Wilson's Chord Dictionary. Or, if you're not afraid of Java, check http://www.emedia.org/chord.html, a neat-o little chord-dictionary applet. Safe as milk, baby.) >Does anyone know anything about the 2nd XTC supposed to be coming out on >the Hyperion publishing company? Yes, the rumors you have heard are true! Just got this off the web: The original can be found at http://www.realdoll.com/private/realdoll.html +++ URGENT--FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Hyperion Publishing Company, New York & London, November 19, 1997 HYPERION ANNOUNCES NEW BUSINESS VENTURE: "SECOND XTC" Bandy de Hoaks, Hyperion President and Publisher-in-Chief, today announced an exciting new business initiative that will "endow Hyperion with greater opportunities for reaching our target demographic, the aging 'Blank Generation' which came of age in the late seventies and early eighties and now commands a substantial amount of the Western Hemisphere's disposable income, not to mention its cynicism and apathy." According to de Hoaks, the new product is unique in the history of the publishing and entertainment industries: Intended as a piece of deconstructionist "profit-art," the venture is a fully functioning and performing rock group that completely co-opts the identity of an already existing rock group--but that "rectifies the suicidal commercial blunders the 'original' group has made over the years." As the subject of the "post-semiotic Saussurian profit-reification project," Hyperion chose XTC, a little-known combo from the U.K. Largely supported by a pathetically small but rabid international cult following, XTC had some minor radio hits in the late Seventies and Eighties, but has largely dropped off the map for the duration of the Nineties. "If you're looking for a basically competent act that made some memorably thick-skulled commercial decisions over the duration of its career--decisions that just _beg_ for a good, solid second-guessing, you need look no farther than these guys," says de Hoaks. "The Second XTC, for example, won't forsake public performances right at the point of commercial breakthrough. They won't follow up a 'Making Plans for Nigel' with a 'Wait Till Your Boat Goes Down,' that's for damned sure. And the first time a journalist refers to them as 'quirky," I will personally take them all outside and shoot them. "Down the line I envision a possible television series coming out of this venture, perhaps in a half-hour format with two new songs per weekly episode, a regular love interest, fart jokes, and so on. We have a treatment now in the development stage that has the lads traveling around the countryside solving mysteries and unmasking malevolent, ghost-impersonating criminals through their special combination of pluck and moxie, despite having no visible means of support and being encumbered by a cretinous Great Dane." De Hoaks, a longtime associate of international playboy and unconvicted non-felon Richard Branson, says that he auditioned nearly 3,000 actor/musicians to become members of the Second XTC, and has now settled on the final four members. The band's spiritual center and lead singer is de Hoaks's own son, Bruiten, a preternaturally handsome, lantern-jawed young man of twenty-two who has spectacularly long, blond, television-friendly hair, which he has been known to whip around in large, sexually provocative circles during instrumental passages. The brooding, craggy bass player and second lead role will be taken by Nigel Festring, an erstwhile curtain salesman from Hull. Taking the part of the guitar whiz, and expected to be the butt of the other lads' humorous pranks, will be Airain Vent, a delicate young Parisian who gave up a promising career in the horn section of the jazz-tinged Maison du Biere in order to join the Second XTC. As drummer and comic relief, de Hoaks chose T.B.D. Layter, a crusty, balding homunculus with a filthy raincoat and nothing underneath, who nevertheless "just hits 'em" with authority. "If a concert goes by without Layter dry-humping his kick drum and waggling his pecker at the audience, I'm gonna want to know the reason why!" enthuses de Hoaks. De Hoaks says the band's first musical release will be a reverent cover of Bob Dylan's "All Along the Watchtower." "In light of Mr. Dylan's recent health problems and all the joy that he has given us through the years, we thought it most appropriate to show our appreciation and love with our gospel-tinged take on this deathless classic, with our special guests Sweet Honey in the Rock," says de Hoaks. "The 'first' XTC, of course, made a typically horrible cacophonous bosh of the thing, establishing themselves as punk postmodernists with a disrespectful attitude toward the established rock order. And look where it got them." Direct inquiries to: Bad Idea Management, 345 5th Avenue, New York, NY, 12345 +++ >Sorry for all the silly questions. >Ryan Not at all, Ryan. Glad I could help. Remember, here in Chalkhills the only silly question is the one that gets inadvertently asked owing to failure to proofread. Harrison "Zip it, Neville" Sherwood
------------------------------ Date: Fri, 5 Dec 1997 12:20:49 -0600 (CST) Message-Id: <199712051820.MAA19173@thor.inlink.com> From: jims@inlink.com (Jim S) Subject: What a co-inky-dink! >From: adamette@juno.com (Patrick M Adamek) >In #4-35, Jim S. mentioned a few experiences with XTC that I share. One >was the Rolling Stone review of O&L. I'd been following XTC by then, but >that article inspired me to subscribe to Rolling Stone, and I have ever >since. I did enjoy the comments about Skylarking is to Pepper's what O&L >is to the White Album. Also: paying $24.99 for an import Mummer. I >actually paid $29.99 for mine at West End Wax in St. Louis, Mo. Hey! I live in St. Louis, too! I got my Mummer at Now Hear This in Crestwood. Damn, I coulda SWORN I was the lone XTC fan in the midwest. Glad to know I am not alone! BTW, am I the only one (I somehow doubt it) that LOVES the song Ladybird? I honestly think if I were forced to name my favorite XTC song, Ladybird would be an appropriate answer. Of course if someone really asked me that I'd tell them to piss off... Jim S. <jims@inlink.com> Serious fan of: *St. Louis Rams *Michigan Wolverines *"JAWS" *St. Louis Cardinals *XTC *MST3K Owner/GM of the Amity White Sharks, 1998 Polanski Division Champions Weaver League International internet baseball league http://www.silicus.com/weaver/
------------------------------ Message-Id: <v01540b04b0ae781160e7@[139.80.100.85]> Date: Sat, 6 Dec 1997 15:34:26 +1200 From: james.dignan@stonebow.otago.ac.nz (James Dignan) Subject: Music for airports, cassettes, and the Rutles Re: "Roads Girdle The Globe" & aeroplanes observation by "the other James" Hmmm. Does that make me the original James, or yet another one? I tend to get "Chalkhills and Children" running through my head on planes, plus several non-XTC songs. Suppose it depends where your flying from and to - here in NZ the view out the plane windows is more often countryside than city, which probably helps. Other air-related songs that tend to celerambulate jarringly across my anabatic psyche include Eno's "Burning airlines", the Byrds' "8 miles high", and Joni Mitchell's "Amelia" (a forgotten classic!). >First off, to the recent outbreak of vinyllaphiles, I understand why vinyl >would sound preferrable to CDs, since digital is awfully sterile--but >what's the sonic difference between vinyl and analog cassette? After all, >the albums (except Nonsuch I believe) were originally recorded on analog, >then transferred to vinyl. two things: one, the analogue tape that the original recording is on is much, much higher quality - wider, faster travel, and top quality - than your cassette. Two, tapes hiss. Every time you add an extra iterative tape step, you get more hiss. Try making a tape copy of a tape copy of a tape copy of a tape copy, then listen to how much crap is drowning out the music. Vinyl only has one tape step in the process, from original recording tape to vinyl master. Even if your cassette is recorded directly from the original recording tape (ludicrously unlikely), you have one more tape step in the process, and therefore more hiss. >>"After Nasty's 'Bigger than God' comment, people started to burn their >>records. In fact, they were buying them just to burn them. Record sales >>skyrocketed..." >Heheheh I havn't heard him referes to Nasty for so long it has really >improved my day (along with receiving The Bull with the Golden Guts & >Jules Vernes Sketchbook this weekend). I was delighted to find a Rutles sample in a track from British(?) Trancey outfit Dreadzone the other day. The track is called "Heat the pot" and the sample is part of the narration about how the Rutles were introduced to that 'certain substance' called tea. James (not that one!) James Dignan___________________________________ You talk to me Deptmt of Psychology, Otago University As if from a distance ya zhivu v' 50 Norfolk Street And I reply. . . . . . . . . . Dunedin, New Zealand with impressions chosen from another time steam megaphone (03) 455-7807 (Brian Eno - "By this River")
------------------------------ Message-ID: <3489BFAE.27F2@tc.umn.edu> Date: Sat, 06 Dec 1997 15:12:14 -0600 From: Ralf D Wiedemann <wied0022@tc.umn.edu> Subject: copy of demos? Hello all! I've just recently subscribed to Chalkhills, and I've heard mentioned quite a few times now references to a CD of demos that are being recorded for the new album. I'm wondering if a kind soul among you would be willing to make a copy of these demos for me. Please e-mail me if you would be. Thanks for any replies. Peace, Ralf Wiedemann wied0022@tc.umn.edu
------------------------------ Message-ID: <3489C24E.425A@tc.umn.edu> Date: Sat, 06 Dec 1997 15:23:26 -0600 From: Ralf D Wiedemann <wied0022@tc.umn.edu> Subject: Album title thoughts Possible new album titles: 1) Planets Parading (That Wave) 2) Parrots and Lemurs (Wrapped In Grey - sort of a sequel to Oranges and Lemons) 3) Fairy Tale Shredding (Ugly Underneath) 4) What You've Trodden In's the Truth (same) 5) Phoenix Up From the Flames (Books Are Burning)
------------------------------ From: CCooli9575 <CCooli9575@aol.com> Message-ID: <2fc64937.348ab903@aol.com> Date: Sun, 7 Dec 1997 09:56:01 EST Subject: Re: Raving and Drooling Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com) >Sorry for the apparent incoherence of this post...I'm tired and >raving...Anyone else think of any other useless bands? I can think of at >least 20 right now offhand...Responses?!? >Best, >jw Yes, all those new modern rock bands that sound interchangeable from one another. The contemporary music scene depresses me, everything's so fragmented. As much as I liked Nirvana, they opened the floodgates to a host of bands with a sound and no ideas and no soul. Bush is only the worst culprit, taking the most cliched aspects of Nirvana's sound and having the gall to say they didn't steal from Nirvana. Of course they're going to say that, regardless of whether they did or not. The rest of them, I might remember parts of one of their songs after a few listens (Third Eye Blind: "Doo doo doo, doo doo doo, doo doo doo doo doo"), but I'm not about to rush out and buy one of their albums. The new releases this year that interest me are all by bands and songwriters that have been knocking around for years and to one degree or another are finally getting noticed (Chumbawamba, Steve Earle, Supersuckers, John Hiatt to name a few off the top of my head). I'm getting depressed. Hurry up XTC, get that new album out. Chris
------------------------------ From: jason.phelan@mcmail.vanderbilt.edu Date: Mon, 08 Dec 97 08:34:51 CST Message-Id: <9711088815.AA881599697@in2.mcmail.vanderbilt.edu> Subject: Brain Growth Merry Crumble, I think the line in the demo "I'd like that" is Say a Sunflower I became I'd be growing in your RAIN ( or REIGN but NOT BRAIN) I mean I know he is poetic, but I think a sunflower sprouting roots, and wrapping around someone's Medula Oblangata or cerebral cortex is a little freaky, Kinda cool, but a little freaky. That's all. Jason
------------------------------ Message-ID: <348C305C.57871D9A@edenbio.com> Date: Mon, 08 Dec 1997 09:37:32 -0800 From: Peter Mullin <mullinp@edenbio.com> Subject: Cute kid story Watchers of the hills, Normally, I wouldn't embarass myself relaying cloying anecdotes of insufferably saccharine exploits of the product of my loins, but this one I had to pass along: My son is now a little past two years of age, and is developing his language skills (no lack thereof in _his_ lungs). Naturally, many different types of music get played in our home, and I've taken pains to expose the tyke to as wide a variety as possible, taking into account my own personal biases (which lean heavily toward the Fab Four-Minus One-Plus One-Minus One-Plus [Occasionally] One, those lovable Mop-tops from Swindon). Imagine my pride when this past Saturday, as aforementioned P.o.L. was busily manipulating some truck-like object, I distinctly heard him singing, "This is pop, yeah, yeah. This is pop, yeah, yeah, This is POP!, ba-dum, ba-dum..." [repeat frequently]. What a kid! We'll be learning to count to five this week! Peter Mullin (Long past expiry date)
------------------------------ Message-ID: <348C6715.3EF7@erols.com> Date: Mon, 08 Dec 1997 13:31:01 -0800 From: Todd Bernhardt <editorsp@erols.com> Organization: sellingpower Subject: Fun on Saturday night Heyaay: I had a dream where the car was reduced to a fossil... Wait, that's not it -- oh, yeah, I had a lot of fun Saturday night, when I went down to the Iota club in Northern Va. to see a certified FoA (friend of Andy): our own list member David Yazbek, who, with drummer Dean and bassist Chris, rocked the joint and then some. Met a couple other Chalkies (no names, but you know who you are, James and Craig ;^) , drank a coupla beers and got a chance to ask Yazbek what Andy is really like. The truth will shock you! No, I'm not going to say a thing -- you HAVE to go see them play if you want a chance at ferreting out the truth about our favorite bald-headed, round-spectacled English-eccentric genius. But seriously, ladies and germs, you really should go see these guys play their unique brand of progressive pop -- they did some really great versions of songs off The Laughing Man ("666" especially rocked) and the new stuff from Tock (which is going to be released in February) sounds really good as well, esp. an upbeat shuffle called "I Want It." They even did a version of Dave Brubeck's "Unsquare Dance," in which Dean played a very righteous solo in 7/8. In fact, all the players know their way around their instruments (it's worth the price of admission just to watch Yazbek abuse his clavinet) and the songs are catchy as hell. Go see them in a small club while you can -- if there's any fairness at all in the world (and yes, I know it's in short supply -- just look at XTC), they'll be rich, famous and unapproachable soon. As it is, all of the band members are funny and nice, and, as an added bonus, you don't have to explain what kind of animal that is on the front of your Chalkhills shirt. Just like a mad dog you're chasing your tail in a circle... ByeBye! --Todd Bernhardt toddjenn@erols.com
------------------------------ End of Chalkhills Digest #4-38 ******************************
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