Chalkhills Digest, Volume 4, Number 89 Thursday, 4 June 1998 Today's Topics: Soapbox or Boxed Soap? Play Your Cards, Right? chapel hill chalkies? The Peter Pumpkinhead mystery chord... NIN and the Blondie/Gregory connection The Meeting Place.... Superstars, Rumors and Dom Partridge-Lennon / La's Without Dave... The Downsizing Years Chalkhills statistics coffee and Pumpkin chords My thoughts Dispelling The Myth of Fuzzy Warbles Pumpkinhead chord a question The La's Second Outpouring Don't Mention It Andy's interview Weird Guitar tunings & Ian Dahlberg 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/> or: <http://come.to/chalkhills/> The views expressed herein are those of the individual authors. Chalkhills is compiled using Digest 3.6 (John Relph <relph@sgi.com>). Let it die / So it'll all break down to rotten.
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message-ID: <3574721D.7BFCD1@intermetrics.com> Date: Tue, 02 Jun 1998 17:45:28 -0400 From: Harrison Sherwood <sherwood@intermetrics.com> Subject: Soapbox or Boxed Soap? >> From: Dominic Lawson <LAWSOND@parliament.uk> >> Subject: Re:'White" Backlash Dom, you're shadowboxing, bud. You have some nice moves: Your hook is indistinguishable from greased lightning, and your footwork is like unto a Nijinski. But the sight of you out there in the ring, dancing and jabbing, only serves to emphasize a fact that's rather comically obvious--to me, at any rate: there's nobody in the other corner. Well now, actually I tell a lie, there _is_ somebody in the other corner, an entity known to us students of rhetoric as a: Straw man (n) 1: a weak or imaginary opposition (as an argument or adversary) set up to be easily confuted. While your major premise ("Chalkhills doesn't much mention HM and hip-hop") is true, your minor premises ("People who don't talk about hip-hop and HM dislike these musics" and "People who dislike hip-hop and HM are narrowminded, provincial, and possibly racist") are respectively unprovable and argumentative, and your conclusion ("Chalkhills people are provincial, narrowminded and possibly racist") seems geared mainly to show what a studmuffin of catholic taste you are. Are you going to try to tell us you _really_ expected a hotbed of rabid support for hip-hop and tortured pentatonics in an XTC digest? Without being too condescending (and it is hard in the circumstances), my pal Erik Satie and I would like to invite you to go ram your "cardigans and Cliff Richard" comment up your sinovial cavity. But I am grateful that you have provided us with the subject matter for a little digression on a topic dear to my heart: the Tyranny of the Hip. >> From: Dominic Lawson <LAWSOND@parliament.uk> >> Subject: My Second Outpouring [Snip] >> It's sad enough that as people get older they lose the ability to listen to >> anything remotely challenging or imaginative Just got off the phone with Charles "Jolly Cholly" Mingus--hey, he's so old he's *dead!*--and he told me to pass along a book recommendation for you. (He's got some other recommendations, too, but we'll let that pass. For the moment.) Got a pencil? Good! Here it goes: _Commodify Your Dissent: The Business of Culture in the New Gilded Age--Salvos from the Baffler_, Ed. Thomas Frank and Matt Weiland, Norton & Company, 1997. (Excellent summary and review at http://www.physics.wisc.edu/~shalizi/reviews/commodify-your-dissent/) I really can't overstate my admiration for this book. Too busy compiling the necessary that'll finance another crop of the latest hip, colorful, angsty, edgy trendoid sludge from Sony and Time Warner to read anything other than excruciatingly pure 'zines that clue you in about the latest hip, colorful, angsty, edgy trendoid sludge from Sony and Time Warner? OK, let's provide an Executive Summary, shall we? There is no youth culture--only masks they let you rent. You pointed the song out yourself, Dom, in your ungracious putdown of jim d deuchars's perfectly inoffensive expression of liking for "Jesus Christ Superstar": "Listen to Travels in Nihilon, for fuck's sake," were your words. (Hey, way to strike a blow for divergent viewpoints and openmindedness! Let a hundred flowers bloom, eh, Chairman Dom?) Well, I did listen, back in about 1980, and that line from "Nihilon" (along with the early and not unforeseen realization that the then-new MTV was being run by pod-people) set me free. Literally. In one quick, explosively insightful line, Andy Partridge Clued Me In. He gave me the intellectual ammunition I needed to free myself from the nightmarish morass of endless mindless consumption of whatever crappy Latest Thing the evil, skull-faced marketeers of fashion have thought up this week to separate me from my species being and (not coincidentally) my wallet. You see, what happened with Punk (and _Commodify Your Dissent_ explores the ramifications of this in great detail) was that the Powers That Were noticed some shots coming across their bow, shots emanating from a genuine, grass-roots anarchist, pan-racial, hard-left political and cultural movement, with the deeply subversive potential to upset quite a few very profitable apple carts. But rather than billy-club it to death in a Prague Spring clampdown, in a move as brilliant as it was nefarious they BOUGHT IT UP, lock, stock, and Les Pauls, started a 24/7 TV station whose ENTIRE PURPOSE was to market Punk back to the Punks (or *their* carefully demographically-segmented, vertically-skewed, sanitized and ideologically diluted version of Punks), a place where we could check to make sure our hairstyles were right, that we had the right shoes, that we'd paid our dues to Sony, to Nike, to Seagram, to Paramount, to the folks who were upping the bux for the entertainment. Shiny! New! Attractively packaged! Ever since then we've been renting those masks like there was no tomorrow. It was about the beginning of the second Reagan Administration before I finally figured all this out, to the point where I realized that the most meaningful act of subversion open to me would be to stop trying to buy in (literally) to officially sanctioned subversiveness--in other words, to act on the realization that the entire _idea_ of the rock-n-roller as lone Dionysian iconoclast railing in the wilderness against corruption, was in fact a media invention that only perpetuated the very things the Rebel is supposed to oppose. Look around you--when the image of Jack Kerouac is used to hock us pants, when The Beatles' "Revolution" is used as a soundtrack for an ad for overpriced footwear made in Third World sweatshops, when the VW Beetle is revived and marketed on the premise that we can somehow *buy back* our humanity (hey: find a need and fill it!), Rock and Roll is DEAD, man. The game is over, and we LOST. Now I can hear the heckling in the back of the room: You're a copout! Sellout! Fight da Power! To which I reply, with a beatific smile, No. Because now that I am free from the Tyranny of the Hip, now that I no longer feel the need to consume the New merely because of the fact of its newness, now that I have the tools to resist the relentless low-level anxiety that television and Korporate Kulture tries to instill in me so I'll be a Good German in my patterns of consumption, I am free to express the sorts of *truly* rebellious thoughts that have been percolating in my cranium for 37 years. Thoughts like, "Hip-hop's forced rhymes and mangled scansion and metallic sledgehammer clanking make me feel as if I have inside my head a death-camp orchestra conducted by a very angry robot, using manhole covers for crash cymbals." (I think of this as an undesirable state of affairs. YMMV.) Thoughts like, "Heavy metal reminds me of what it might be like to be stuck in an industrial trash compactor set on "Slow Puree" with a profoundly drunk Ohio State football jock who wants to use our last moments on this planet to point out that he has a really big dick." (Above parenthetical comment also applies.) I can, in short, be true to myself--to my own perceptions, and not those of some desperate greedhead marketeer with a line of bad faith and crappy values and nowhere to peddle them except my face. It's deeply, deeply satisfying to know just how many emperors out there are walking around stark raving nude. Moreover, my liberation from the Tyranny of the Hip has freed me to pursue directions that lead me to places *other* than Right Here, Right Now (with My Visa Card Ready). Nothing in life, I find, gives me greater satisfaction deep in my soul (nothing, that is, besides the people I love) than making a connection with someone from the distant past, or discovering some historical oddity--musical, literary, philosophical, what have you--that gives me some sense that being human might not be such a bad thing after all. (I revel that Andy Partridge passionately collects antique toy soldiers. How wonderfully unhip! One of us! Gooble-gobble, we accept him!) Don't you find, you dedicated followers of fashion, that your pursuit of the consumerist wet dream of the Perfect Score, the Total Immersion in the Now, strongly discourages you from exhibiting reflective curiosity about the past--in fact from exhibiting any curiosity _at all_ except "what's Murdock/Geffen/Eisner/Turner/Gates got for me now?"? I'm convinced that this feature was designed in, a cleverly disguised emergency device to cattle-prod us back into submission if our attention strays too far from Ally McBeal. To the rejoinder that there is some sort of healthy "indie" culture that exists outside and separate from the corporate megalopolies and that purveys cultural product that is somehow more pure and unsullied and "real" than "mainstream" culture, I simply say, Sure. You just keep on believing that. Just don't ask yourself too many uncomfortable questions. So go ahead, accuse me of insufficient attention to _tempora_ and _mores_, call me an out-of-touch old fart, tell me I'm resistant to change and mired hopelessly in the past--you can even call me a narrow-minded racist if it makes you feel better about yourself. Water off a duck's back. But it _is_ fascinating how the Culture Trust gets you to do its policing _for_ it, isn't it, Dom? Think about it. If I've opted out of Hipness because I know in my heart it makes us tools of the Man, and you're standing there ridiculing me because I'm not Hip, who's the outlaw and who's the cop, eh? I'm not interested in proving to you that I read the Right magazines, listen to the product of the Right record labels--each more clangorous, thickwitted and coarse than the last--surf the Right websites, watch the Right teevee shows. Thanks, but I won't be bending over for anybody's purity test any time soon. Harrison "'There are few spectacles the Culture Trust enjoys more than a good counter-culture, complete with hairdos of defiance, dark complaints about the stifling "mainstream," and expensive accessories of all kinds'--The Baffler" Sherwood
------------------------------ Message-Id: <199806022218.AAA28400@mail.knoware.nl> From: "Mark Strijbos" <mmello@knoware.nl> Organization: The Little Lighthouse Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 00:20:02 +0000 Subject: Play Your Cards, Right? Dear Chalkers, Last issue Shawn "just the facts" Rusaw commented: >> spotlight of an all-girl band called the Donnas listed XTC as >> an influence, along with Motley Crue, Metallica and L7. > > Never heard 'em... don't want to hear 'em... Heheh, that's the spirit! Me, i try to play nothing but XTC (honest!) and this euh... diverse (hah!) list of influences makes me fear the worst. They probably can't play but look dead gorgeous & alternative and use lots of rude words... please tell me i'm wrong. Currently on very high rotation in my CD players is the Drums & Wireless BBC radio sessions cd. Anybody out there who hasn't got this one should get a copy right now; it's elementary! Now here's a shameless plug for my site The Little Lighthouse: The rare Nonsvch promotional cardgame is now showing at the Treasure Trove @ http://www.knoware.nl/users/mmello/trove.html yours in xtc, Mark "my name is Strijbos. I carry a badge" Strijbos Mark Strijbos at The Little Lighthouse the XTC website @ http://come.to/xtc and http://www.knoware.nl/users/mmello
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 02 Jun 1998 17:19:43 -0600 From: "Eric L. Muller" <EMuller@uwyo.edu> Subject: chapel hill chalkies? Message-id: <92684B9D01E8D111847E00AA00DD8FA51D8A8E@telegraph.uwyo.edu> I, a several-year lurker and exceedingly rare poster to Chalkhills, will be moving from the hinterlands of Laramie, Wyoming, this summer to a bit of civilization known as Chapel Hill, North Carolina. I'd be curious to know whether there are any other Chalkhillers in the Triangle area. If so, please send me an e-mail. Thanks! Eric Muller emuller@uwyo.edu PS--Does anyone else find it sad, as I do, that Dave Gregory has agreed to do the REO Speedwagon/Styx summer tour?
------------------------------ Message-ID: <002401bd8e7e$5ea161a0$22bafed0@joshuacrime.earthlink.net> From: "James Schreiber" <joshuacrime@earthlink.net> Subject: The Peter Pumpkinhead mystery chord... Date: Tue, 2 Jun 1998 17:30:02 -0600 This post is in response to "andy&shell" <andy.shell@virgin.net>, who asked about the second chord in the intro to Peter Pumpkinhead. Well, the chord is properly called G6add9, and is layed out like so (from bass string to high string): G-B-E-A-D-G It's like a regular open G chord in standard tuning, but you fret the B-E-A combination with your second finger on the 2nd fret of the neck. It's a pretty common chord in jazz music and is really cool that Gregory threw that kind of stuff in. Shame about losing him. Wonder who they'll get (if anyone) that's that cool. He contributed so much to the XTC sound. Probably one of the most creative guys I have heard in years. Hope this helps you out, Andy and Shell...
------------------------------ Message-Id: <199806022333.QAA11012@access.tucson.org> From: "J. D. SMX" <jsmelser@access.tucson.org> Organization: Access Tucson Date: Tue, 2 Jun 1998 16:39:21 -0700 Subject: NIN and the Blondie/Gregory connection Hi Chalkfolk, > I enjoy NIN in small doses, but frankly their fans scare the >daylights out of me. I recognise Trent's genius, but from a safe >distance these days. Same here, but this humorous take reminds me that on my trip to LA to witness the Bauhaus reunion this July, I hope I don't get bitten by any of those scary vampires. Oooooooohh. >Not all comebacks are as successful as the B-52's. XTC has been in >the studio working on their first album of new material since 1992, >but guitarist Dave Gregory recently left the band, leaving just Andy >Partridge and Colin Moulding. >Gregory, meanwhile, is rumored to join the reunited Blondie. Even though we heard he was not in time to make the invitation, maybe they did pick him up afterall. If so, that would be reason enough for me to get a ticket, even if Clem Burke isn't with them this time. (But I, of course, hope he is.) And the addition of Cindy Wilson back to the B52's is enough to get me interested in them again. The Reunion Thing Can Be Good, JD SMX
------------------------------ From: SLEDZNH@aol.com Message-ID: <447e268b.3574be71@aol.com> Date: Tue, 2 Jun 1998 23:09:36 EDT Subject: The Meeting Place.... Greetings Fellow Chalkhilians, Just a note to let all know that I expect to be seeing Squeeze at Avalon in Boston on June 11th (my birthday) and will, of course, proudly be wearing my Chalkhills t-shirt (Thanks, Phil) for Chris Difford to see (not to resurrect that thread mind you..). I envy the folks at who went to London gathering, sounds like a great time. I have noticed in my years lurking that there seems to be quite a few people from around New England on this list.....someday we should all get together in Boston (I know...I shouldn't bring it up unless I am willing to take on the responsibility...). Also, I saw a headline in the local newspaper a while back that read something like "New Hampshire Chooses to Melt the Guns" or some such thing. This was about some program where all the guns people turn in to the police are melted down for scrap metal (which is referenced in the song..isn't it?). Pretty cool, Andy, considering the song is about 16 years old or so.....(that doesn't actually surprise any of us...) Just some rambling thoughts..thanks everybody....xtc. ~James W
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 2 Jun 1998 20:33:23 -0700 Subject: Superstars, Rumors and Dom Message-ID: <19980602.203324.14022.0.deuchars@juno.com> From: deuchars@juno.com (jim d deuchars) HEY CHALKFOLK! Well, I see my reference to Jesus Christ Superstar (during the double album thread) is getting some reaction. Dom, Don P. and I had a nice, private e-mail exchange. Now that I've seen the reference to JCS a coupla more times, I guess I need to ask for Mr. Relph's forgiveness and violate his instructions to end the double album thread. Here's the deal: I hate Webber stuff as much as Dom. What's special about JCS are the lyrics of Tim Rice. He's a top notch lyricists. Good words were what placed Cole Porter at the top of the heap in his era. It's the biggest advantage (IMHO) Andy P. has over the rest of the songwriters of today. HEY LOOK, XTC-RELATED CONTENT! And Don P. observed that lyrics made Talking Heads a stonger band than their "competition". Hey, Dom, you're fast becoming the most quoted Chalkfolk out there! Many of us have been beating up on Dom lately. Just remember, he's one of us (the cool, the in, the heppest cats in this here litter box) in that he/we are a bit "proud" of our unusual musical tastes. Sometimes it make us a bit abrasive. I'll get to the point soon! The point: another Don P. observation: We're having fun here, Right? Finally (hooray for Jim!) can someone with a connection to Dave Gregory please confirm: D.G. is set to take Linda McCartney's spot in the 1999 Wings Reunion Tour. luv, deuchars
------------------------------ Message-Id: <199806030511.WAA00731@mail.rapidnet.net> From: "J & J Greaves" <jgreaves@rapidnet.net> Subject: Partridge-Lennon / La's Date: Tue, 2 Jun 1998 22:01:21 -0700 Anyone know if any of the Andy co-writing done with Julian Lennon appears on Lennon's new release? I haven't seen a new release but it's said that it was released the same day as Sean Lennon's CD! To Kirt in Vermont: The La's never released anything else to date. The bass player left to form a band called Cast, which I think did well in the UK, but hasn't been heard as much in most of N.America. Frontman Lee Mavers had a updated version of the La's a year or two ago doing some live dates but since then there's not a lot to talk about. Their only CD is a great release, and I bought it because Dave and Andy talked about how much they liked it in various interviews etc. Another link here is that Chris "Good Things" Sharrock played drums in the La's at one point. Until later John
------------------------------ Message-ID: <357501AF.2F79@sirius.com> Date: Wed, 03 Jun 1998 00:56:31 -0700 From: Eric Rosen <elr@sirius.com> Subject: Without Dave... The Downsizing Years Greetings, Fellow Keepers of Multiple Torches... Does that make us dangerous? :) !: :! (: ? or just an En-dan-ger-ed Spe-cies ? Now that much dust has seemingly settled about the future of the duo group formerly thought of as a trio, I ponder what the reel by real dynamic must have been that was leading up to this parting of the ways so many years later. Where intuition and common sense meet, I'm inclined to think that this must be the culmination of something that has never been "aired" by the media thanks in no small part to Virgin's enemic promotional efforts not to mention all the other setbacks and unfortunate encounters that always seem to dog our musical heroes over the years. I tell ya, it hasn't been easy being an XTC fan since English Settlement! It's always felt like XTC are on the brink of either fame or oblivion. There were many people posting from every frequency of the emotional - logical spectrum and I feel as if I have done time in every room with everyone. Looking back, I think one can examine the albums and how they progress from one to the next and with 20-20 hindsight, naturally; see this coming. ;) I can't recall the interviews in '86 but I remember there being some talk (I don't recall which member said it) about how they weren't all that satisfied with those instruments on Skylarking that were non-traditional rock instruments (woodwinds, strings, etc). I think there was some sense that they felt the illusion of the synthetic versions being real was not real enough. With Oranges & Lemons, I think it's the same dynamic at work. Every time out, they create so MANY songs and they've always too broke to afford MORE studio time so that they could "get each one just right" --- that's just counting the ones that make it to final release!! With Nonsuch, the sleeve insert gives a bit more detail about who played what than was customary on previous XTC releases... at least, I remember thinking this to myself at the time. That, along with their portraits, names and ages struck me as "the most Virigin could do" to make XTC suitable for tabloid content?! Somehow, over the years, each musician on his own, gained more and more skills in the skillsets of the other members (by virtue of their highly complementary interplay and willingness to try new things). There had to have been a tension that pushed them for the better but at the same time was building this inevitable outcome. Between the mad drive for "getting it just right," "each member becoming a completely self-dependent 'expressional machine'," and the perceived shortfall of the "synthetic solution" for non-traditional instruments, it seems to me as if it's no coincidence that Dave would leave at just the time they begin using the "expensive solution" of a real orchestra. Technology and its deft use was as much Dave's forte in XTC as was his guitar. I think that no longer being "the icing chef" had rightfully got him bummed and that maybe nothing in XTC was any longer its own reward for him such that putting up with no touring and the general XTC reclusiveness was what had to give. With Skylarking, XTC made its break from "quirkiness." Each release was either more subdued or found ways to "cage" the quirkiness whereas before, it seemed to pull them around as opposed to them pointing to left field and hitting a homerun there. Still, even with "more venues for XTC - related material" out there, all I can say for me is that I still feel an emptiness, an unease. If all things must pass, so shall this, I suppose I hope. Eric
------------------------------ From: "Suzanne Cerquone" <Suzanne_Cerquone@stercomm.com> Message-Id: <85256618.0050D64E.00@stercomm.com> Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 10:48:42 -0400 Subject: Chalkhills statistics Kirt in Vermont bared his soul: >>Religion: raised Baptist, now agnostic Political party: Democrat (I'm betting that most XTC fans are either Democrat, Labour, or independent. Any Republicans or Tories out there?) Drugs: not as often as the old days, but sometimes Job: public relations Dream: best-selling novelist or ski bum<< And so shall I: Religion: raised Episcopalian (kind of like Catholicism but with condoms), now a regular of St. Mattress Political Party: Democrat until something better comes along Drugs: see above Job: project manager, electronic commerce Dream: travel the world; win the next Powerball lottery and fund XTC's future
------------------------------ Message-Id: <TFSHCHWM@gilead.com> From: Christopher Westland <christopher_westland@gilead.com> Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 8:59:53 -0800 Subject: coffee and Pumpkin chords Hi All (more specifically "Andy&Shell"): Regarding chord voicings for Peter Pumpkinhead - the first chord is a D, voiced with the open D string ( NOT barred as I'm sure you probably knew) and it moves to what could be best called a G 6th (from the lowest string, 3rd fret: GBDGDE, with the D, middle G and top E being played on open strings). No wierd tunings here either. And I suspect Andy plays this bit, not Dave. Any other opinions? Chris P.S. It takes coffee for me to respond this early in the morning....
------------------------------ Message-Id: <1BB242B4C823D1118E300000C0B800007F8DB8@MSXUS03> From: "Addiego, MIchael" <Michael.Addiego@us.schroders.com> Subject: My thoughts Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 12:34:37 -0400 Hi All, I haven't pulled out my XTC records in some time but here are some of my favorites: Red Brick Dreams In Loving Memory Deliver Us From The Elements Knuckle Down Traffic Light Rock Yacht Dance Lady Bird No Thugs In Our House Omnibus Madame Barnum I could go on and on. I do not like Funk Poppa Roll. This is the one band which has, up to this point put out a whole lot of remarkable music. Andy strikes me as a bit of a pain in the ass and I think Dave will be missed. Colin must be a saint (he writes great tunes as well). Hey, here's a great band for you "Pizzicato Five". Is anyone familiar with this band. Hey, here's some personal history. I am remarkably hip at almost 40. I am married with a two year old daughter (sorry ladies). I am American (do not, I repeat do not...hold this against me). I will not listen to rap except for "Bring Da Noise" I think it's a tragedy that XTC doesn't tour. I would love to visit Swindon and just might sometime soon. I have bored everyone by now, so I will move along. Ta... Mike Addiego
------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 12:52:40 -0400 (EDT) Message-Id: <v03007800b19aefdb20e4@[209.86.131.129]> From: Mitch Friedman <mitchf@mindspring.com> Subject: Dispelling The Myth of Fuzzy Warbles Hi I'm back. So yesterday I spoke with former XTC guitarist Dave Gregory for a while. He was busy practicing guitar like he does for a few hours every day. He tells me that for the month of June his project will be to paint the inside and outside of his house. Two coats. And then some gardening after that. He's trying to give the creative seeds some time to reincarnate and sow. He sounds fine in case you were wondering. A friend of his in England printed out the first 3 or 4 digests after 'the announcement' and gave them to Dave. (No it was not me!) He said he was touched by all the nice things people said and was surprised by how much everyone really cared. So there. Dave tells me that Andy and Colin are about to release what will be a 4 CD set consisting of all the BBC sessions that were ever done (like the Drums and Wireless CD) as well as the live in 1980 thing that has already come out but also a live in '78 post GO2 show with Barry. This set will be called "Fuzzy Warbles" which is a term that originates from the milkbar scene in "A Clockwork Orange". About two weeks ago when I last spoke with Andy, he mentioned that Cooking Vinyl approached him with the Idea of putting out CDs of 'every single demo we've ever done'. He was busy starting to go through all the tapes in his house to see what he had. No word if this is definite or not but the concept of these releases is to 1) get some of the older XTC material out on Idea Records and 2) to raise some cash which will help to fund the recording sessions for the new album(s). Now back to the double album debate . . .
------------------------------ Message-Id: <l03102800b19b465fb7bc@[207.104.109.147]> Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 11:34:53 -0700 From: Dave Blackburn <dblack@access1.net> Subject: Pumpkinhead chord Dear All, Shell wrote:<I had been paying more attention than usual to the guitar parts, for example the intro to "Peter Pumpkinhead". By the way, what do you reckon the second chord is? It seems to go from D major to "G-add9-with-some-other-notes", but WHAT notes?!? I can't quite get it right. Do you know whether or not Gregory uses any weird tunings> That chord is G6/9. The notes are bottom to top: GBEADG although the top G is not always sounded. Use your first finger to bar across the 3rd, 4th and 5th strings (second fret), middle finger plays the root, 4th finger gets the 3rd fret 2nd string, little finger gets the top string 3rd fret. As for weird tunings I think Andy is the one who uses them more than Dave. He used an open E tuning quite a bit on The Big Express (Train Running Low... etc) All the best, Dave Dave Blackburn Fallbrook, Ca dblack@access1.net
------------------------------ From: "David McGuinness" <dmcg@btinternet.com> Subject: a question Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 20:45:17 +0100 Message-ID: <01bd8f28$2248c4a0$LocalHost@default> Is this the first mention of the Dixie Dregs on this list? -David
------------------------------ From: JStrole@aol.com Message-ID: <4ebbab1e.3575b10d@aol.com> Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 16:24:44 EDT Subject: The La's <does anyone know what ever happend to the La's?> One of the members of The La's is joined the group Cast after The La's disbanded. I believe it was the main songwriter (I very well could be wrong). Shell writes: <Do you know whether ir not Gregory uses any wierd tunings?> In all the interviews I've read the "weird" tunings seem to be of Andy's input and yes there are some strange ones, especially after XTC came off the road. This is probably the reason I can't figure out any of their songs. Kudos to those that do for the web site. Cheers Harry "Hail mother motor, Hail piston - rotor, Hail wheel"
------------------------------ From: stewart@bigmon.boulder.co.us (Stewart Evans) Subject: Second Outpouring Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 15:52:46 -0600 (MDT) Message-ID: <9806031554.aa10510@bigmon.boulder.co.us> Dom spews on (somebody get this guy a chew-toy!): ->It's always nice to be proved right. Having expressed concerns about the ->often terrifyingly safe and predictable tastes of Chalkhills contributors, ->what do I read in the latest digest, as part of the "double LP" debate? ->Sting, Bob Dylan, Genesis and Jesus H. Christ Superstar!!! It's easy to be proved right when you only pay attention to the facts that suit you. I saw mention of double-LPs from folks like the Minutemen, Prince, Captain Beefheart, the Beastie Boys, and John Coltrane among others. But hey, don't let us interrupt your littler hipper-than-thou trip... In fact, a lot of folks here do have pretty far-ranging tastes, and I'm not talking about "a Marvin Gaye or Bob Marley album" as Dom snipes. But I don't see any particular reason to talk about most of it here. What we have in common here is XTC, so other music that gets discussed is, big surprise, XTC-related or that sounds similar to XTC. I would recommend, for instance, Yazbek to somebody knowing only that they liked XTC. I wouldn't necessarily recommend KRS-ONE, or Charles Brackeen, or Blue Highway or Khaled to that same person. So the picture of our tastes that shows up on Chalkhills isn't entirely accurate. (Tastes in mirror are broader than they appear?) I should've thought that would be fairly obvious. Tangentially, the only genre of music I can think of that could really be called "white" is classical. Even country music has taken its share of influence from blues and jazz over the years, as a listen to Jimmie Rodgers, Bob Wills or Hank Williams will demonstrate. -- Stewart * ---------------------------------------------------------- "You start 'im, we thrash 'im out." -- Joseph Spence Stewart Evans - stewart@bigmon.boulder.co.us - Boulder, CO
------------------------------ Message-Id: <199806032220.AAA02888@mail.knoware.nl> From: "Mark Strijbos" <mmello@knoware.nl> Organization: The Little Lighthouse Date: Thu, 4 Jun 1998 00:22:11 +0000 Subject: Don't Mention It Daer Chalkers, > Surely someone MUST have already mentioned "English Settlement" ? Yes, you are right. I did mention it before but for your sake I'll just mention it once more: English Settlement. And what about Nonsuch? Also released as a double and also mentioned before if I'm not mistaken... yours in anorak, Mark Strijbos at The Little Lighthouse the XTC website @ http://come.to/xtc and http://www.knoware.nl/users/mmello
------------------------------ From: MFa2707621@aol.com Message-ID: <9a9128a6.3576a445@aol.com> Date: Thu, 4 Jun 1998 09:42:28 EDT Subject: Andy's interview Chalkers, I just watched a great interview with Andy on the video I got. Boy, he seems so down to earth. He was very honest, and he didn't mince words, and he was very witty. I swear he could be a stand up comic. He seems like a guy I would like to sit down with and have a conversation with. I know I've read he's a perfectionist, and he can be very overbearing. That means he's human. I can't stand it when people think that people put celebrities up on a pedestal. They think celebrities are superhuman, and they don't have problems or feelings of their own. I'm glad to have someone to admire that's human. Bye for now. Molly
------------------------------ Message-ID: <3576CBAC.D316D28@a.crl.com> Date: Thu, 04 Jun 1998 08:30:42 -0800 From: Ed <ednpam@a.crl.com> Subject: Weird Guitar tunings & Ian Dahlberg Andy said he hasn't used many weird guitar tunings, other than on "The Big Express"; he just likes to use chords with "a little pepper to them". Like most guitar players out there, I also started learning by trying to figure out the obligatory "Smoke On The Water/Day Tripper/Stairway to Heaven" riffs, but those XTC guitar parts always ended with a lot of head-scratching. I would quickly give up after reaching frustration, figuring "ah, they must be using some obscure tunings", but I found this isn't the case. Long, long, time ago I corresponded with someone named "Ian Dahlberg" who used to post on Chalkhills, who sent me some great XTC guitar tablature. I finally got around recently to returning the favor somewhat by doing the MIDI transposition for Scissors Man. Alas, I don't see Ian posting much to this list much, and his old e-mail address doesn't work. So Ian, if you're out there lurking, the Scissors Man MIDI file can be downloaded (then unzipped) from the Chalkhills Archive's "Sounds" section (which contains a lot of cool stuff). You can easily play it with Media Player in Win95's Accessories folder. For those with Macs, there are a few more steps, but here's how to hear General MIDI files: - Launch MoviePlayer, which is a standard feature on the more recent Mac OS's (sys 7.1 and above, me thinks) ... it's in your hard drive somewhere; use the always-handy Find File). - Go to File, then Open..., and navigate to the ScisMan2.mid file which should be found on your desktop (after your browser's unzipping utility has decompressed it -- I use ZipIt). When it's selected, choose Convert... ; you'll see a dialog window ask: Save converted file as: ScisMan2.mid Movie ; - click Save (an "Importing movie" window will do its converting thing). Finally, a MoviePlayer window will appear; start it up and enjoy!! I've found most MIDI files sound great using the Mac's Quicktime Musical Instruments extension. How it sounds on a PC depends entirely on your computer's soundcard. The drums sound less-than-sonic with a SoundBlaster card. So Ian, if you're out there still (or anybody who gets a chance to listen to the ScisMan.mid), let me know what you think. Ed in S.F.
------------------------------ End of Chalkhills Digest #4-89 ******************************
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