Chalkhills Digest, Volume 4, Number 9 Friday, 17 October 1997 Today's Topics: What I'd like / Accessibility Solo Together XTC on TheDJ A bit obvious, but I couldn't resist... More On (not moron) Guitar Solos Are we not men? We are XTC! About those solos... Hayden Bendall varia Which demos will go missing? Prince of Orange 'there she blows,' indeed. Chili beans Plunderwall Yes, I'm back, the shit has been stirred.... Stage left... One more thing.... My Oh My roches & poosies (?) Lost In Music The Post of Laughter and Forgetting 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 3.5 (John Relph <relph@sgi.com>). Yes you'll know when it's time to change gear.
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message-ID: <c=US%a=_%p=AETNA%l=HFD-EXCH003-971016172557Z-86234@aetna.aetna.com> From: "Witter, Karl F" <WitterKF@aetna.com> Subject: What I'd like / Accessibility Date: Thu, 16 Oct 1997 13:25:57 -0400 As is my habit, I'm posting on what everyone was saying a fortnight ago. "I'd Like That" grabs me with the opening line in each verse: I'd like that, if we could cycle down some lane, ... I'd like that, if we could lay before my fire, ... I'd like that, if we could float away in bed, Starts out measured and simple, giving each an equivalence in the singer's mind. (You can even call it "romantic".) The first verse is childlike--hey, let's go get wet in the rain--but the others only sound right from somebody of a certain age or experience. It'd be much different, and of lesser impact, coming from a 20-year-old. >[Ben Gott] I'm very happy...I just shelled out a measly $4.00 >to buy a used copy of Nonsuch in which was hidden the infamous "If >those dollars are burning a hole in your pocket, Andy tells you >how to rationalize the musical universe." Wow, does this make mine a collectible?! My very first! >[Maryanne] I would like some recommendations on the following >CD's: Go-2, Mummer, and Big Express..anyone recommend any others? Don't have Go 2, but I heartily recommend Mummer and TBE. My key adjectives are "reflective" and "off-kilter", respectively. As for the collections, others here know more than I. Curiously enough, I have a related experience. Sunday, after determining in about 5 secs. that all available radio stations fell short of my desire merely not to be irritated, I put on English Settlement. My fellow cat- owner started singing along to "No Thugs" as I stared in rapt amazement. Wow, she's learning the words! "This was the last thing Hugh Padgham did before producing 'Synchronicity'" I informed her, Sting fan that she is. "So is this one considered their most accessible album?" I was asked. "Well, my favorite is 'Skylarking'" I responded, then thought: Birds tweeting, buzzing bees, crackling fires, 7/4 time. All things with which a recording screams "understand me seamlessly without an iota of effort" ;-). So here's the question rephrased: XTC have made albums all over the place. What record do you put in the centermost of their map? And Harrison, I knew somebody was going to bring up Old Metal Head Pat Boone. The odds were 3-2 that you'd be it and I collected handsomely. For my money, the culprit is Oscar Hammerstein II. With Show Boat, the highbrows started writing in slang speech, leading to the downfall of da Englidge langridge. Get that lowering influence off the stage! Where are Gilbert & Sullivan when you really need them ;-)? Old Man River, that Old Man River, He must know something but doesn't say anything, Karl
------------------------------ Date: 16 Oct 97 13:44:49 +0000 Subject: Solo Together From: "David vanWert" <mcknife@xsite.net> Message-Id: <B06BCADA-712E9@206.126.254.175> On Wed, Oct 15, 1997 6:22 PM, david@connors.com (David Friel) wrote: > Don't you geeks have anything better to do than microanalyze a 20-something > second guitar solo? Is it > against some sort of pop songwriting convention to have a solo, god forbid > played by more than one person, that lasts longer than, say, 5 seconds??? An answer to question #1: This list is for people with a very focused interest so the answer is no-- just as philatelist geeks have nothing better to do than discuss stamps in great detail. If you find it bothersome, please research the many resources available on the 'net because something more to your taste is certainly out there. You may wish to check out the fun over on alt.namecalling. An answer to question #2: A solo exceeding five seconds in length is sometimes acceptable, but a solo played by more than one person is not. I'll leave it to Merriam, Webster, et al, to explain why. David vanWert mcknife@xsite.net http://www.xsite.net/~mcknife "I hate quotations." Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1849
------------------------------ Date: Thu, 16 Oct 1997 12:15:32 -0700 (PDT) From: Randy Posynick <posynick@netcom.com> Subject: XTC on TheDJ Message-ID: <Pine.3.89.9710161156.A28301-0100000@netcom21> Unlike most "xtc on the radio" reports that show up here, I'll bet the majority of you can actually check this station out. There's a web site called TheDJ (at www.thedj.com, appropriately enough) which offers 50 online radio stations. Basically, if you have a 28K+ internet connection, RealAudio 3, and a decent computer, you can receive continuous music just like a radio. (Wow, ain't that internet somethin'!) Anyway, the 50 stations they offer are categorized by genre, ranging from Showtunes to Punk. I was tuned into the Alt. Classics station this morning at work and in the span of an hour they played "Scarecrow People" and "Cynical Days"! I don't know if the (song) programming is generated randomly or actually chosen by a dj. Either way, it was cool to hear them twice in an hour.... Randy "not affiliated with _TheDJ_ " Posynick
------------------------------ From: Squidly <squidly@clara.net> Subject: A bit obvious, but I couldn't resist... Message-Id: <971016221716.n0001171.squidly@mail.clara.net> Date: Thu, 16 Oct 97 22:17:16 GMT "Wondering if Uebercalifragilistikexpialidoschlich is a Word" Hmmmm......the sound of it is something QUITE precocious! Will Poppins.......
------------------------------ Message-Id: <3.0.3.32.19971016142554.0069d274@cmsnt> Date: Thu, 16 Oct 1997 14:25:54 -0700 From: James McGowan <jmcgowan@cms.dbc.com> Subject: More On (not moron) Guitar Solos In Chalkhills Volume 4, Number 8, Mark Stevenson (mrs@ovum.com) wrote: > Hard though some of > you may find this to stomach - David Gilmour is one of my favourite > guitarists - because there is melody and beauty in his notes (for me). The > guitar solo anti-lobby are not listening to the music, they are listening to > an internal prejudice. "Oh no! A guitar solo. EVIL!". The solos on the end > of Books are Burning are quite stunningly beautiful. They are *music*. And > if XTC decided to produce a concept album with all one side made up of a > single song then I'd buy it as would all of you. Rave on, Mark. I'm a long time fan of Gilmour's myself, though I generally hated most of the Floyd's post-Dark Side material. He's a lyricist with six strings, ya know? The Books are Burning solo is similar in many ways to a Dave Gilmour solo: It's structured and *builds* throughout. As a guitar player, I've always looked at the "guitar break" as a useful compositional device: After several verses/choruses, insert a solo (OK, not necessarilly a guitar either) to give the listener a moment to chew on what's been said in the lyrics. Typical XTC example: In the bridge to Towers of London, (er, the bridge in the song, that is) after Andy belts out one of my all-time favorite lines "clear as children's chalk lines on the paving" (fits well into this group, no?), Dave follows with a simple, multi-tracked lead break that makes the song positively soar. High drama in a three minute pop song. What more do you want? ----- James McGowan jmcgowan@cms.dbc.com CMS Corporation Los Angeles, CA
------------------------------ Message-Id: <199710162139.OAA22642@mail.eskimo.com> From: "Matt Keeley" <mrme@eskimo.com> Date: Thu, 16 Oct 1997 14:34:49 +0000 Subject: Are we not men? We are XTC! Hi...(Well, actually, we're all DEVO, but this is the _XTC_ mailing list, isn't it..) > From: Cheryl <mcgregoc@regents.ac.uk> > You know I have never sniffed any of my CD's, which consist mostly of > XTC, when I have purchased them. Is that really recommended to get > the full affect of THE NEW CD? I might just give it a go come May. > Is there a special way to approach the sniff job? Any comments > appreciated. : ) I don't know... I usually just sort of smell it as I open it... break seal, take off all that blasted plastic, try to open the case, find I missed a bunch of plastic, remove that, try again, inhale and enjoy. So, what's with all the plastic? 8) > From: Jason Legacy <jlegacy@ultrix.ramapo.edu> > This will be nice and mercifully short(I hope). I stopped listening to > They Might Be Giants a few years back (something definately changed in > their music once they started using real musicians more, though I love > Tony Maimone's bass work, in particular). Therefore, could someone please > print the lyrics to this "XTC vs Adam Ant" song? They've probably been > printed here before, but one more time wouldn't hurt, would it? As a fan > of both XTC and TMBGs I've been curious for some time. Thanks. Oh yeah, Ah, at the risk of making a plug for my page, I'll make a plug for my page. You can find the lyrics to XTC V. Adam Ant, and all other released TMBG songs (and quite a few unreleased) at my lyric site: http://www.smartpatrol.net/tmbg/ XTC v. Adam Ant was on the album Factory Showroom, released in 1996... so that's where it'll be on the big list... Oh yeah, I'm really proud of the new URL! > From: PCulnane@dca.gov.au > I think somebody mentioned this in 'Hills recently: > If you consult the liner notes to "GO2", there you will find Haydn Bendall > credited as an engineer. What goes around comes around..... So, I'm just curious... did the vinyl version of Go2 have a nice colour booklet like the CD case alluded to? I haven't seen a vinyl copy around here yet, so I can't pick one up...8( I'm just curious to the packaging, other than the poster... anyway... 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.
------------------------------ Date: Thu, 16 Oct 97 14:32:25 PST From: "MARK HEGGEN" <mark_heggen@studio.disney.com> Message-Id: <9709168770.AA877038990@ccmsmtp2.wds.disney.com> Subject: About those solos... I thought it seemed pretty obvious that the triple-guitarist interchange on "Books are Burning" was a tip of the hat to the same on "The End" on ABBEY ROAD, rather than the sort of 15-minute progressive rock wire-twanging that annoys most of us... -Mark
------------------------------ Message-ID: <01BCDA5F.84ACD9C0.monkman@coastnet.com> From: Martin & Jamie Monkman <monkman@coastnet.com> Subject: Hayden Bendall Date: Thu, 16 Oct 1997 17:52:14 -0700 After David Gershman tells us that Hayden Bendall was an engineer for Pat Metheny, Ben Gott chimes in with: >If Haydn produced a Pat Metheny album, he's alright with me. Yes, yes, >we've already had this discussion -- "As Falls Wichita, So Falls Wichita >Falls" is a masterpiece. (My brother is going to see the Group in >Houston in November...He's hoping to get backstage...) Uhhm, Bendall was an engineer on Metheny's "Secret Story" album. The bulk of the album was recorded at the Power Station studio in NYC, but the orchestral overdubs were done at Abbey Road ... and it was for the orchestral sessions that our Mr. Bendall was the engineer. The album was produced by Metheny, with a trio of co-producers and associate producers (none of whom were Bendall). The "As Falls Wichita..." album was produced by Mr. ECM Records, Manfred Eicher. Martin UeberPedant
------------------------------ Date: Fri, 17 Oct 1997 15:11:36 +1300 (NZDT) Message-Id: <v01540b08b06d312beb15@[139.80.228.174]> From: james.dignan@stonebow.otago.ac.nz (James Dignan) Subject: varia gregory <mattone@bhip.infi.net> sez: (BTW - is that your surname?) >Re: Amanda bashing: >Ooooohhhhh! YEOW! Gettin' back to the ol' Chalkhills knock-down drag-out - >YEEEEEEHAW!!!! Bash away, bash away, bash away all! I'm game!! YEAH!! >WOO-HOO!! ;) for my sake, won't you put your knuckles down, boy? hey - this list has become somewhat heated lately, no? Let's all calm down and behave like we're the smartest monkeys, huh? Amanda says she can't imagine XTC singing "I don't know how to love him". Why not? Perhaps with some tasteful accompaniment on the French trombone... ;))) James (or "tacit, I hate gas, aroma of foam, or a sage Tahiti cat!", as J Artecona might say)
------------------------------ Message-Id: <m0xM2ZS-000G7eE@mail.airmail.net> Subject: Which demos will go missing? Date: Thu, 16 Oct 97 22:02:10 -0000 From: Della & Steve Schiavo <schiavo@airmail.net> Jim asked: >Are we sure all of the demo songs we have are going to be recorderd for the >album? We can be sure that all of the demo songs *won't* be on the album(s) - that's the torture, eh? If the plan holds up, only half will be of the orchestral type (like the demos) and the rest will be guitary. And are there not more orchestral songs that are not on the tape? So that's ten orchestral songs. Eight for Andy and two for Colin? That's seven strikes off the demo tape already - and I've been thinking that Andy might be less inclined to vote for some of the songs already in circulation, just to make things more of a surprise? Anybody in the know? - Steve (If I hit the lotto this Saturday, I promise that I'll offer to underwrite the other seven songs the guys wanted to do).
------------------------------ Date: Thu, 16 Oct 1997 21:08:11 -0700 (PDT) Message-Id: <199710170408.VAA377208@mando.engr.sgi.com> From: John Relph <relph> Subject: Prince of Orange Yo. Is anybody else reminded of Roger Miller's "King of the Road" when you listen to "Prince of Orange"? Or am I the only one? -- John
------------------------------ Message-Id: <l03020900b06cab15abdb@[206.252.158.2]> Date: Fri, 17 Oct 1997 02:24:11 -0400 From: aka Louise <rmckenzi@dti.net> Subject: 'there she blows,' indeed. Amanda - *i'm* completely finished. i should think that there was nothing left to say on the subject, especially considering the fact that everyone seems to have gotten the point. whether or not it was the same point i was trying to make is another matter entirely. [from "Roger 'the masturbation agitator' (or was that just 'the masturbator'?) McDonald" <McDonaRF@prose.dpi.qld.gov.au>:] >Cor Blimey! Bring the petrol, Amanda's done it again! Didn't take long. (playful rant snipped) why, Roger, do you know what you are? a national treasure. much better than Crocodile Dundee. Australia's answer to Harrison Sherwood. Or Sherwood Harrison, for that matter. speaking of which, >P.S. Hey Sherwood Harrison, right on, right on, right on! Tell it like >it is, BABY! LOL - i couldn't agree more. as usual, John Relph's soothing subliminal messages of calm via the lyric quotes probably contributed as much as anything to the simmering down of the battle. but let's hope he doesn't get to "War Dance"! (thrown in to tease the Colin-worshippers) [From "The Kid" <david@connors.com>:] {someone great but nameless wrote:} >Anyway, you Chalkoids who wonder why some people are violently opposed >to the guitar solos in "Books Are Burning" have got to understand: There >are some of us who have deeply distressing memories of the Seventies, >who consider the extended guitar jam to be the emblem and incarnation of >lazy, time-filling, clock-punching, beer-sucking, fog-brained Seventies >POOP. > >Don't you geeks have anything better to do than microanalyze a >>20-something second guitar solo? I wasn't sure if you were talking about >>the solos in "Books are Burning" or "Freebird" from your melodramatic >>diatribe. a) no. that is why we subscribe to chalkhills. b) duh, i think that was sort of like, the point. the writer was saying that "Books Are Burning" *sounds* a lot more like "Freebird" than like "Hey Jude" (which would be an example of "Good Seventies Music," which is alarmingly small in proportion to the rest of the music of the decade, which in turn is called "Unrepentant Pathetic Garbage" [aka the Eagles]). my own thought on the matter is that XTC were aiming for late Beatles - what they got instead was ELO. >Is it against some sort of pop songwriting convention to have a solo, god >>forbid played by more than one person, that lasts longer than, say, 5 >>seconds??? Perhaps it's time to liberate yourself from the parameters of >>"the perfect 3-minute pop song." no one said anything about pop songwriting conventions - and if someone had it probably would have been pointed out that XTC in general and AP in particular have probably broken more of them than they've kept, especially since _English Settlement_. if anything what we're talking about here is _classic rock_ conventions, which are not only far cheesier to begin with but far more difficult to pay homage to without resorting to pop conventions or lame cliches. i agree with whoever said that Barry Andrews added something different when he came aboard for his brief and troubled stay, but i don't think it was necessarily the pop - certainly the first half of _Go 2_ is short and sharp enough. actually i think his contribution was to make things catchier, as if Andy needed any help in that department - "My Weapon" and "Super-Tuff", despite their lyrical belly-flops, are catchy as all hell, and even Andy's avant-garde explorations (namely "Battery Brides") are more melodic. - brookes who has a love/hate relationship with songwriting conventions ----------------------rmckenzi@dti.net------------------------------- R. Brookes McKenzie aka Louise B. Minetti "Conditions during the tea hour, the marquee having having stood all day under a blazing sun, were generally such that Shadrach, Mesach and Abednego, had they been there, could have learned something about burning fiery furnaces." - P. G. Wodehouse, _Plum's Peaches_ ------------------http://www.dti.net/rmckenzi------------------------
------------------------------ From: Whotheheck@aol.com Date: Fri, 17 Oct 1997 04:54:31 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <971016214703_135064180@emout20.mail.aol.com> Subject: Chili beans Oh my god............ I'M POSTING! Ok, got that out of my system. Here it goes.......... Me and a friend of mine where listening to Nonsuch a little while ago. We where arguing about what Dave (?) says in about the middle of Wrapped in Grey. It's right after "Drab and dragging dreams made of slate". I think he's saying something, but I don't know what it is. My friend said that he's probably just scat singing. Does anyone know what it really is? One other thing before I forget.............. The guitar solos in Books are Burning are great! I don't know how you can think they suck. What does suck is the ending to Garden of Earthly Delights. Gerardo
------------------------------ Message-Id: <l03020902b06d0984260a@[141.212.142.135]> Date: Fri, 17 Oct 1997 09:32:02 -0400 From: Natalie Jacobs <gnat@umich.edu> Subject: Plunderwall Matt John sayeth, >Almost bought English Settlement last night but opted for Beck instead. >D'oh! [snip] Anyway, if anyone wants to email me and >instruct me to kick myself for not getting that disc you can do it. Well, Beck is way cool, but "English Settlement" is utterly fucking brilliant, so you probably should be kicking yourself a bit - just go easy on yourself. :) Patrick Adamek, swinging intellectual, remarked, >I'd like to know if anyone else has shared in this frustration, or maybe >do I need to listen more closely to Oasis?! I don't like Oasis either - I find them monotonous and cliched, their lyrics are terrible, and they constantly recycle their own ideas until every song becomes a carbon copy of the previous song. It seems odd the way critics will freely admit this, yet go on to praise Oasis as utterly brilliant. As for Oasis being a "successor to the Beatles," if copping the Beatles' riffs and being super-popular means you've been handed the Beatles' torch, then I guess Oasis fit the bill. Obviously talent doesn't factor in to this equation. As for XTC, although they are not necessarily trailblazers or innovators the way the Beatles were, they are certainly closer to that high standard than Oasis are. Why haven't they been praised for this? For the same ineffable reasons they've never gotten popular - whatever those reasons may be. Duellin' guitar solos: Gotta go with Sugarhips on this one. I enjoy hearing Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd trade licks, but XTC are masters of brief, to-the-point solos (e.g. the aforementioned classy little number in "Supergirl") and I'd prefer not to hear them do extended jams, especially in "Books are Burning," a song I dislike anyway - sort of adding insult to injury. Whilst searching for Chills websites (James Dignan, are you listening?) I came across a long interview with my future husband, Chills head honcho Martin Phillipps, in which, among other things, he discusses working with Daves Gregory and Mattacks on the latest Chills album, "Sunburnt." The URL is http://www.btinternet.com/~chills/chillyweb/sourced.htm. I, too, have been trying to imagine that stunning moment when I get the new XTC album home and listen to it for the first time... the sheer bliss of hearing "River of Orchids" without a layer of tape hiss is almost inconceivable. I'm wondering what the cover art will look like - it's hard to imagine holding the CD when I can't see the cover art in my mind's eye; I have a blurred image of something very dense and elaborate and colorful (sort of like the music itself). I wonder what songs they're going to leave off? I'm gloomily certain they're going to leave off at least one song that I really like... It's not a matter of putting on the 15 Andy demos that have been circulating plus 5 Colin songs; Andy has been writing a lot of songs since then and I'm sure those will get higher priority than the older material. Man, if they leave off "The Green Man" they'd better have something damn brilliant to put in its place. I'm sure they will, but still... ObSouth Park: "Cartoons kick ass!" n. p.s. Note for the humor-impaired: Martin Phillipps is not my future husband. He is, however, a brilliant songwriter and is quite cute. Please refer to http://www.btinternet.com/~chills/chillyweb/images/martin.jpg for more details on the latter.
------------------------------ Date: Fri, 17 Oct 1997 08:34:42 -0600 (CST) From: AMANDA CARYL OWENS <ACOEA@jazz.ucc.uno.edu> Subject: Yes, I'm back, the shit has been stirred.... Message-id: <01IOWNFZFF868ZEQUN@jazz.ucc.uno.edu> and it's now simmering over low heat mixed in with a little piss and some cloves. To whoever asked: the difference in the XTC vids is that the American version is a bit more censored than the Australian one I saw. In the Australian one, we actually get to see the Marilyn-type women's butt, whereas we don't (thankfully) in the American one. Here's my $.02 on the "Books Are Burning" solos.....whenever I hear Dave's parts start up, I turn the volume as loud as it will go. Yeah, that's about it. Anyhoo, I've always quite loved them. I felt it was a great way to end the album, sort of a "As the band sinks majestically in the West....."-type thing. I can see them all gathered round a bonfire, watching people toss books into it, books like "The Catcher In the Rye" and "Go Ask Alice", with grim expressions on their faces. (Damn this song could've had a great video to it.) I Can't Own Her-It's still a favorite of mine from the new demos. Honestly, I LIKE the contradictions betweens SONGS, this one and "Your Dictionary". In ICOH, he's so wistfull, sort of wishing on a star, and in YD, he's vindictive. But that's our Andy, a contradiction in terms. I'm still marvelling over my Little Expresses. I've put pen to paper and wrote my own little captions on pictures that I felt were particularly funny. (And blacked out a certain bottled blond's face in the Winter 1994 issue.) I will say this though....where the hell di Harry and Holly Partridge get the blond hair from??????? Seeing pictures of Barry Andrews was a bit scary, however. That man looks like an elf on acid! It was rather nice to see some faces to match up with names that have become familiar to me (Jerry Kaelin, Jim Zittel, Mark Fisher, and so forth and so on.) On another note, I FINALLY got to hear some of the sound files up on Mark Mello's Little Lighthouse site. I loved Andy's Happy Birthday. If you haven't heard it yet, get thee to the Little Lighthouse with all due haste! Ramblingly yours, Amanda Daemon est deus inversus XTC songs of the day-Difficult Age non XTC-Fly Like An Eagle-Steve Miller
------------------------------ From: TBERNHA@columbiaenergy.com Subject: Stage left... Message-ID: <0017110000573770000002L102*@MHS> Date: Fri, 17 Oct 1997 10:46:47 -0400 Stage right... Haven't found much to comment about lately, so I figured I'd just wait in the wings. But a couple of things in the latest issues piqued my interest. Mike Myers noted, about the new producer: > Also, he probably will play a big role in preproduction activities which concentrate on several levels including orchestration and arrangement. What I will be looking for is his involvement in song selection and track order which a strong producer takes a big role in. If we hear that he is not a player during this phase, then I think that Andy's really in charge and Bendall is just a producer in name only.< Well, from what I know, English Settlement is a result of an arrangement like that -- Hugh P. as co-producer/engineer -- so we can't go too far wrong if that is indeed the case, eh? About the solos -- I think some people have misinterpreted Master Sherwood's post about Skynyrd and Books are Burning. His tongue-in-cheek point was, I think, that people might be afraid that the band could descend into that kind of self-indulgence, which we all know will of course never happen but presents an amusing image nonetheless. Can you imagine Dave with his guitar thrust out phallically, flicking his tongue at a rapid-fire pace at the teenage groupies and french trombonists in the audience as he and Andy trade, um, licks in a 20-minute guitar battle? Of course not! (Calm DOWN, Amanda! ;^) That's not to say that I wouldn't love to hear both Andy and Dave play more and longer solos (and we can thank Becki for one recent example of Dave's brilliance), but I think that we can trust them to know when to stop. Joshua mentioned Steve Howe and Starship Trooper as an example of a long yet relevant solo. Also check out Perpetual Change (also on Yessongs) for a brilliant Howe solo and Bill Bruford drum solo, and the full-length version of America, the last song they did with BB. Too bad Yes sucks so bad now. :^) And Harrison, if you think Skynyrd is scary, try these two words on for size: MOLLY HATCHET *shudder* And the YazMan spake: > We're playing Arlene Grocery in NYC on Oct. 20th at 9 p.m. Say Hi you Chalkhill bastards!!! Don't be shy!< Well, play the DeeCee area, ya Big Apple Bastid, and I will!! ;^) Mark Stevenson emphatically said: >All music is good.< Mark, I gotta agree with your other points -- including Gilmore's brilliance despite his lack of pyrotechnics -- but I think you've gone a little too far here. I think there are exceptions to this rule: William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy have both recorded albums, remember? ;^) But it *is* true, IMO, that the more you love music, the more music you love. And finally, though our editor-in-chief, Mr. John Relph rarely directly weighs in on the content of this digest, I suggest you look at the last couple of "quotes of the issue" to see what he thinks of all this bickering... ByeBye!
------------------------------ From: TBERNHA@columbiaenergy.com Subject: One more thing.... Message-ID: <0017110000574014000002L142*@MHS> Date: Fri, 17 Oct 1997 11:09:51 -0400 All this talk about Bumper Cars got me wondering: If everyone agrees it doesn't belong on the new album, how come every time I read about it I can't get its melody out of my head for the next hour or so? Huh? Well? ByeBye!
------------------------------ Message-Id: <2.2.32.19971017153427.006c6b28@popmail.dircon.co.uk> Date: Fri, 17 Oct 1997 16:34:27 +0100 From: Simon Sleightholm <nonsuch@dircon.co.uk> Subject: My Oh My Like many of you I have quite a selection of out-take and demo tapes lying about the house. Most don't bear repeated listening - those that do, like the fairly recent demos - Easter Theatre, Prince Of Orange, etc. - are stowed away for fear of spoiling the taste of the album when it arrives. But as I've been going through my tapes, cataloguing them and sifting out the duplicates, a number of the early demos have stood out. Prime among these for me at the moment is "Young Cleopatra". As far as I know there are two versions of this doing the rounds, the home demo Andy recorded and made available on Jules Verne's Sketchbook and another which sounds like a full band workout. The latter version is pure gold. Touching a slightly taboo area - it seems to be about a guy noticing the burgeoning sexuality of his friend's school-age daughter - the song sparkles with sporadically great lyrics and the pure essence of skewed-pop that's marked much of the band's better work. The guitar work is the scritchy-scratchy duelling-Martian-maestros style that can be found on tracks like "Sgt. Rock" and "Wake Up", strange little stabs of mutant chords owing more to percussive value than melodic accompaniment. A short phrase of pseudo-Eastern synth nods at the Egyptian motif, but it's not over-egged - a touch of Barry Andrews-style organ, a la "Are You Receiving Me" pops up in the middle eight, too. Much of my joy in this song comes from remembrance of my time at school and all the beautiful girls I _adored_ while I was there. So many of the lines ring true: "Your school uniform looks grey on others, but silver on you" (Carol Buchanan, where are you now, you slinky beast? And Lynn Straker...*sigh*). And, in a marvellous bit of serendipity or synchronicity, call it what you will, the song makes a tiny but unmistakable nod to Adam And The Ants' "Stand And Deliver" a song that was very much current when I was but a schoolboy, and a song we all tried to do the wildest dance to in an effort to impress the girls (it doesn't bear thinking about, does it?). I don't know whether the "steal" was deliberate, but the chorus is punctuated by a multi-vocal "Hoh!" in exactly the same way as the Ants' song. That tiny phrase is just enough to send me back to my school days and _live_ the song; those youth-club discos, "my mate fancies your mate", getting fettled in the bus queue for wearing the wrong T-shirt, walking a girl home and sharing a bag of terrible chips in the rain. It's a real lost-gem of a track, this. A selection of prize lyrics would include the school uniform reference above, and room would have to be found for "Don't ever give your love for free, but then again don't ever let it be sold." Okay, so some of the lines _do_ jar a little; "You have your teachers in a trap, there's no age limit or no gap for who you set alight with fire consuming," but on the whole it's a singalong bounce-fest, with a chorus which begs to be bellowed throatily in a concert hall (*sigh* If only...) The middle-eight does, to me, seem fairly reminiscent of the middle-eight in "When You're Near Me I Have Difficulty", but that doesn't diminish the urge I have to play air-guitar over the scale of chords which bring us back to a version of the verse twisted slightly out of shape by some vintage Andy-ranting. The vocal tricksiness continues to the fade, a quick-fire repetition of "my oh my" that ceases to be words and becomes just noise before ripping the word "Cleopatra" into its component syllables and delivering them in near "muezzin" style (I'm guessing this "mantra" style delivery is what Andy's referring to when he yells "Ok Krishna, light the wick!" as the song closes), again slightly reminiscent of "When You're Near Me." I don't know if this is scheduled for the "Bootleg" album or not. I kind of hope not, the ragged glory of the tape I have is just perfect and I suspect the scratchiness and the looping gulps of vocal would get ironed out in the studio. Andy did tell me that another of my favourites, "Obscene Procession" is due to be recorded for the project, but again I have my worries about this. It's so chaotic and the vocal is so different to the smoother sound Andy is giving us these days. Will the mad edge be lost? Are there any other favourites from the "likely to remain un-recorded" pile out there? My name is Simon, and I have a slight flaw in my character. PS: See you soon, Cheryl my friend, and remember to bring your boots and something waterproof ;) -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- http://www.users.dircon.co.uk/~nonsuch/bungalow.htm (http://come.to./bungalow) -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- An XTC resource - "Saving it all up for you..."
------------------------------ From: monnickj@ubk.co.uk Message-Id: <199710171727.SAA24007@sys4.cambridge.uk.psi.net> Date: Fri, 17 Oct 1997 18:11:20 +0000 Subject: roches & poosies (?) A while back we were discussing the roches et al. I enjoyed their first one and have sought without success the other Lp recorded with Robert Fripp ; is it still available (starting in London , if not the UK) ? The first LP is great ; thanks for recommendations The poosies I know nothing about them but if the singing is what was discussed a few months back ; I would appreciate recommendations 67 - through the looking glass I was listening to Colin's Hermits track on this release with Pierre Menard who mentioned a long forgotten classic oeuvre of this genre, the Hybrid Kids' a classic bunch of mutants which come out on Cherry Red and contains the definitive versions of many songs including Wuthering Heights by one Jah Wurzel. He said he was thinking of revisiting La Monte Young and Tony Conrad. enjoy the week jon *---------------------------------------------------------------- The views expressed are of the individual, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The United Bank of Kuwait PLC. *----------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------ From: philip.castledine4@virgin.net Message-ID: <3448342B.1AD8@virgin.net> Date: Fri, 17 Oct 1997 20:59:39 -0700 Subject: Lost In Music I have been lurking on this list for a while, but I am stepping out of the shadows to ask two questions :- 1. Have any of you read a very funny book by Giles Smith -"Lost In Music" ? It`s the story of one man`s record collection and has a number of interesting XTC and Martin Newell related stories. Giles Smith is a fellow XTC fanatic and a friend of Newell - does anyone know him ? 2. Who is the pratt who keeps shouting "Beatown!" in between the songs on the BBC Radio One concert CD ? He really bugs me ! Cheers Philip.
------------------------------ Message-ID: <c=US%a=_%p=BTG._Inc.%l=EXCH_HQ-971017221415Z-39482@exchserver.btg.com> From: "Sherwood, Harrison" <hsherwood@btg.com> Subject: The Post of Laughter and Forgetting Date: Fri, 17 Oct 1997 18:14:15 -0400 >From: gregory <mattone@bhip.infi.net> > >I don't think it's fair for you to belittle these 'geeks' >because they found something to talk about. Yes.... Happy talk, that's the ticket... Keep it cheerful, keep it chirpy, words of less than one syllable, please... The Unbearable Lightness of Chalkhills... Which leads us neatly to... > >From: Mark Stevenson <MRS@OVUM.MHS.compuserve.com> >Subject: Inflammatory Posting > >I have been lurking on this list for a year now. Ah. Have you. > But more than XTC, I love music - in all it's forms. Music is my >career, my one true love and it *annoys me* (hence this posting) Say, Mark, I tell you what. Apply to the Chalkhills management, return the unused portion of the digest, and I'm sure they'll be happy to refund your purchase price in full. We employees of Chalkhills humbly apologize to those audience members who feel that they have not received full value for moneys tendered, and solemnly pledge that in future we will do everything in our power to make sure that your entertainment dollar gets you everything that was promised in the brochure. Or, to put it a bit more bluntly: You want a better signal-to-noise ratio, then post some signal, don't whine about noise. You want content, then post some. You don't like the way an argument is going, then argue back. This is a collective effort. We are not here performing for your amusement, Mark. > All music is good. I'm sure you can't actually mean this. This must be some sort of oversight; perhaps in the course of spreading the cleansing odor of sanctimony and exorcising the demons of Chalkhills, your censer has blown smoke into your eyes, temporarily blinding you. Music is nothing but wiggling air molecules ((c) F. Zappa, 1990). Nothing is inherently good or bad about wiggling air molecules. Any value judgment about music is an artificial construct erected by the listener and informed by tastes acquired through the interplay between accumulated experiences and learned cultural values.The listener and composer enter into an agreement whereby the composer is given temporary permission to manipulate the listener's emotions, through invoking and commenting on their shared culture and humanity. Without this agreement, there can be no artistic dialog. If the composer's emotional manipulation is coarse, or cynical, or unoriginal, or done in bad faith or is dishonest or dissembling in some way, then the music is _bad_. If the manipulation cuts off the dialog between the listener and the composer, then the music is _bad_. If the manipulation is done not for humanistic reasons but rather for the glorification of the composer, then the music is _bad_. The amount of pleasure a piece of music brings any particular individual is irrelevant. The proposition that "That which brings pleasure is necessarily good" is rejected by every culture (not to mention every responsible adult) in the world. It doesn't take Socrates to see through that dodge: Gimme some candy, Mom.All bad guitar solos belong to one or another of the above categories. The Lynyrd Skynyrd guitar soloing style I've been happily trashing would fall into the "self-glorification" category, along with a healthy dollop of "unoriginality." I think the "Books Are Burning" solos, while not self-aggrandizing in that way, are a cheaply manipulative and cliched attempt to end the album on a valedictory note, along with a "la-la-la" singalong that attempts to invoke a communal spirit that the weakness of the song's subject matter doesn't deserve. And worst of all, they're not even faintly original--I mean, come on: squeals and Floyd Rose dive-bombing--on an XTC record? It's not a guitar passage, it's a mid-life crisis. We expect better from XTC, and we have _heard_ better. I'd pit Dave Gregory's 14 bars in "No Language in Our Lungs" against any guitar solo you'd care to name for emotional power, technical rigor, and inventiveness. The solo in "That Wave" is harmonically adventurous, unpredictable, and affecting. The quality both solos share is that they comment and expand on the melody of the song: they _serve_ the song, they're organic, they exist for a good reason. I think the BAB solos are tacked on, artificially, for no good reason except to have something to fade out with. > And >if XTC decided to produce a concept album with all one side made up of a >single song then I'd buy it as would all of you. Oh, I'd buy it, too! Hey, everybody! The Dukes are back! Doin' Jethro Tull! Where's my chillum and headband? When are they gonna get to "The Story of the Hare Who Lost His Spectacles"? >From: Melsta@aol.com >-Melissa "Wondering if Uebercalifragilistikexpialidoschlich is a Word" Reaves It is now! Harrison "But I think Doschlichexpialifragilisticalirebue is going a bit too far, don't you?" Sherwood
------------------------------ End of Chalkhills Digest #4-9 *****************************
Go back to Volume 4.
18 October 1997 / Feedback