Chalkhills Digest, Volume 5, Number 166 Friday, 9 April 1999 Today's Topics: More stuff and a real Fruit Nut. Horrors Tinkie's winkie OOR update Re: Ridiculous Song Andy's Sgt. Pepper? MFSL? There Ain't Half Been Some Clever Bastards dAVe Spacehog! My sister is my clock All so ridiculous... guilty sonic pleasures Re: 25 O'Clock Power pop/TMBG/Testimonial Dinner Wouldn't It Be Nice ... If you like XTC you might like... 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 compiled with Digest 3.7 (John Relph <relph@sgi.com>). In a milk bar and feeling lost.
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message-Id: <s70cb750.049@plextek.co.uk> Date: Thu, 08 Apr 1999 14:03:52 +0100 From: Philip Lawes <PJL@plextek.co.uk> Subject: More stuff and a real Fruit Nut. Apologies for this overextended blurt of stuff, but there's so many ideas in Chalkhills that it takes me a few readings to think to the bottom of it all (a bit like an XTC album really) Dunks wrote: >Gee, those Christian saints were top blokes, weren't they? So >tolerant, so accommodating of divergent religious practices ... I was >watching something about the Incas on Discovery channel last night, >and they showed a sacred site in Peru, which dated back to pre-Inca >times. There were niches carved into a large rocky outcrop; according >to the voice-over, these had once held statues of various deities, >which the Spanish missionaries had obligingly toppled over and >pounded into dust.(Not to mention the thousands of priceless Mayan >codices, which they found to contain only "heresies and lies of the >Devil" and therefore consigned to the flames, thus destroying almost >every written record the Maya ever made). Well, to be fair to Boniface he did most of his stuff pretty much on his own and, unlike the conquistadors, without the support of several hundred armed men. When he was hacked to death a few years later by the members of one of those divergent religious practices the only thing that Boniface had to defend himself with was a thick book that he happened to be carrying. In much of South America the Spanish came across a largely settled, peacefully integrated society (and destroyed it), whereas Northern Europe in the seventh and eighth century was a turmoil of warring factions and invasions (much like any other century come to think of it). In all of this Rome was one of the only unifying forces - very different from the instrument of imperial expansion that it became five or six centuries later. Mark Fisher wrote >You need it (a car) to travel a greater distance to reach the out-of->town supermarkets that wouldn't have existed were it not for the car. >You need it to live further and further from your neighbours, and then >wonder why there's no sense of community any more. Were once you >would have sent 15 minutes walking to the shops, you now send 30 >minutes driving there. And you call it freedom. Too right. The British Government recently merged the Countryside Commission and the Rural Development Commission to hopefully get them pulling in the same direction. The first report of this new body makes sobering reading, depicting the English countryside as being deprived of resources and jobs and having a rapidly failing infrastructure. The report says: 1. Most parishes have no GP(doctor), no school and no daily bus service 2. Nearly half have no shop 3. Traffic has increased four times as fast as in urban areas 4. Since 1985 nearly half of all new houses have been built in the countryside. Given points 1, 2 and 4 then point 3 is no surprise. More worryingly the more point 3 increases the worse 1,2 & 4 will get - this seems to be developing into an accelerating cycle with no brake. I think I remember Andy saying in an interview somewhere that he thought cars were responsible for the ruination of the countryside. Well, he's right and the statistics prove it. >The voices in "Knights in Shining Karma" are pure, strong, and airy. I >like that. The lyric, "Jealous winter sun/ cold like vichyssoise"-->arresting, but what does it mean? Jealous sun (?) like a cold potato >soup? This is a great lyric. Try imagining pale, cold soup in a round bowl on a blue tablecloth. Andy also uses the image of a boiling egg, both deftly linking the sun with food/sustenance and the seasons (more Joseph Campbell?). >I do have a really sad story. <G> I met a local guy who loved the >band, and who even made me a pre-Skylarking tape, mailed with a >love note, but I blew him off. Man, I feel bad about that....please, >anyone, flame me for blowing off an XTC fan! I didn't know what I was >doing. That's been 10 years ago, and the self-flagellation continues to >this day. While reading this I lost control of the English language and embedded myself firmly in the central reservation of the transatlantic linguistic highway. Finally, read this and then listen to 'Fruit Nut' +++++++++++ From The (London) Independent 8 April 99 Mardi Gra bombings plotted in greenhouse By Jason Bennetto ELDERLY and balding, Edgar Pearce seems an unlikely looking master criminal. But in many ways Pearce, 61, fitted the stereotype of the deranged but intelligent recluse who spends years trying to beat the system and devise the perfect crime. He was motivated by money, obsession, a desire for notoriety and the satisfaction of outwitting Scotland Yard's finest while terrorising large sections of London. As always in these cases, the unmasking of Pearce as the man behind the Mardi Gra came as a shock to neighbours and relatives. Pearce was described as an unfriendly, reclusive man who drank heavily and quarrelled about the parking space in front of his home. He was nasty to children, had bizarre eating habits, but was considered "intelligent and frustrated". Unemployed, at one point he worked for his younger brother, Philip, who runs an advertising firm in south-east London, although the brothers have not seen each other for more than nine years. Later, he described himself as a property developer. Pearce's three-bedroomed house in Chiswick, west London, is split into three bedsits. He lived in the downstairs front room and rented out the three upstairs bedrooms. One lodger, Graham Hunt, described him as "well educated and very knowledgeable about world events and the news". Mr Hunt said: "He drinks heavily. He has some strange habits. Every morning he gets up early, about six o'clock, and cooks a roast joint of beef or lamb with roast potatoes and vegetables. It's like a normal person's Sunday lunch, but he has it for breakfast with a glass or two of red wine." Much of Pearce's plotting took place in the greenhouse at the end of his garden where he would work until 1am. Ten years ago, after 30 years of marriage, he separated from his wife, Maureen, 57, who lives in Welling, Kent. His daughter, Nicola, 26, refused to believe her father was the Mardi Gra bomber. "My dad shops at Sainsbury's because he likes their food. He doesn't go there to bomb them," she said. "He's a gentle man," she added. "He's not screwed up in the head at all." +++++++++ Back to the shed. Phil (A language is a dialect that has an army and a navy. - Max Weinreich)
------------------------------ Message-ID: <000701be8133$15b12a40$82fdabc3@vucqprlj> From: "David Seddon" <D.Seddon@btinternet.com> Subject: Horrors Date: Wed, 7 Apr 1999 21:12:18 +0100 All of this talk about best and worst records has got me thinking. Here's some fun categories to ponder (with my own personal answers) : Least favourite moment on Apple Venus1: The hand claps at the end of ILT Least Fav XTC song: Here comes President Kill Again Artist most people seem to think is pretty naff, but you actually quite enjoy: John Denver Worst Beatles song: Kansas City Songs that should have been strangled at birth: A tie between Lucky Stars, by Dean Friedman and Seasons in the Sun by Terry Jacks Extremely popular artists that you can't see what all the fuss is about: Meatloaf and Bruce Springsteen Musician you'd like to kick hard: Andrew Lloyd Weber Whackiest Title for a song: All I want for Christmas is a Dukla Prague Away Kit (Half Man Half Biscuit) Most Unpleasant Musical Experience: Bat Out of Hell. I was stuck at a crap party miles from anywhere and the only thing the hostess would play (over and over) was this.
------------------------------ Message-ID: <19990408133339.4851.rocketmail@attach1.rocketmail.com> Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 06:33:39 -0700 (PDT) From: nross <phoenixyellowrose@rocketmail.com> Subject: Tinkie's winkie Todd asked why I, Nicole, thought Andy Partridge would be the teletubby to carry the purse... Oh... so many things I'd want to write... I'll get reamed by anyone who calls themselves a feminist! For example: he sounds like he throws tantrums and holds grudges like a woman; or, he obviously doesn't like his car... he must drive like a woman, etc. BUT SERIOUSLY: The man seems to hold the bag with the band, doesn't he? He does most of the interviews... he writes most of the songs. I imagine this scenario: Colin brings in this beautiful purple velvet magic-bag Andy admires it so... doesn't stop talking about how he would desire such a magnificent purple velvet magic-bag... Dave sort of sits there admiring the bag, wanting the bag, but doesn't get aggressive about it, Colin graciously gives the bag to Andy... because Colin doesn't really need it as much as Andy does... and Dave storms out 20-some years after the incident because he really REALLY wanted the damn bag. Now I will undoubtably incur the wrath of Amanda! :-). YES AND RIVER OF ORCHIDS: Actually, I didn't hear it for the longest time... until driving the long tortuous drive during rush hour home... with the purpose of finding the similarity: I though, no... I don't think so (but I had been limiting myself to older YES) It does! It does! It actually sounds sort of like "Leave It"! -Nicole
------------------------------ From: a.de.koning@bpa.vnu.com Message-ID: <C125674D.004E159E.00@bpa.vnu.com> Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 16:22:38 +0200 Subject: OOR update Hi Chalkfriends, Here's my bi-weekly OOR update you've been waiting for (yeah, right :) AV1 went down from 6 last week to 12 this week in their Moordlijst :( OOR also does a pop-history countdown to 2000. This week's issue was about 'britpop'. XTC is not mentioned anywhere... except for the top-10 lists! I was pleasantly surprised to see that XTC is number 7 as most infuential (Kinks at no 1, Beatles 2) and also at no 7 as best band according to the readers (Oasis at no 1, Smiths at no 2). That's all for now. I'm having a kinda busy time at the moment: at work we're implementing Oracle Financials and at home we're implementing a new kitchen! Andre
------------------------------ From: CCooli9575@aol.com Message-ID: <88c22bc7.243de625@aol.com> Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 06:59:49 EDT Subject: Re: Ridiculous Song >For the second time in 5 days driving in to work... I heard >the song "Mandy" by Barry Manillow (please don't shoot me >for incorrect spelling). I BLAST that song. I LOVE that song. >My question to you all is... What is the MOST RIDICULOUS song >you LOVE? My submission, obviously, is Mandy. Come on... embarrass >yourselves! >-Nicole This week it's The Beach Boys- "Johnny Carson." Can be found on the otherwise rather uneven 1977 album The Beach Boys Love You. Chris
------------------------------ Message-ID: <19990408174830.17357.rocketmail@web120.yahoomail.com> Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 10:48:30 -0700 (PDT) From: Tyler Hewitt <tahewitt@yahoo.com> Subject: Andy's Sgt. Pepper? Andy Partridge, from an interview in Contrast Magazine, Spring 1990: "I thought, at one point in my philosophy, that the Residents were as big as the Beatles. I thought 'Duck Stab/Buster and Glen' was like their Sgt. Pepper. Wonderful stuff."
------------------------------ From: "john gray" <jt.gray@btinternet.com> Subject: MFSL? Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 21:58:11 +0100 Message-Id: <E10VMhM-0002Du-00@rhenium> > From: "Eddie O'Hare" <EddieO@PrivatePilot.com> > Of course, I ran out to the car and gave my therapist my old > non-MFSL copy sorry - what's MFSL? JG
------------------------------ From: "Michael Versaci" <stormymonday@sprintmail.com> Subject: There Ain't Half Been Some Clever Bastards Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 18:09:09 -0400 Message-ID: <000001be820c$6def99b0$8e6b0a26@laptop-mversaci.mtwconsulting.com> Folxtc, (If you've had enough of the "Sgt. Pepper's", "Pet Sounds" and "Tape as canvas" threads-) Ben had this to say: >So what I meant in my post was that "Wouldn't It Be Nice?" and "God Only Knows" are, in my >opinion, better *songs* than "She's Leaving Home", "Good Morning Good Morning", "Being For The >Benefit of Mr. Kite!", "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds", "Lovely Rita", "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely >Hearts Club Band", and its reprise. Lennon & McCartney are great, but even the great aren't >infallible, and Brian Wilson is great too. And once we get to Lennon & McCartney's solo work, >well.. Obviously, I don't agree. I think that the bulk of John and Paul's work with The Beatles is perfect, and I love a certain amount of their solo songs as well ("Maybe I'm Amazed", "Every Night", "Imagine" and all of "Plastic Ono Band" to name but a few). Regarding the rest: In a way, it all started with Dylan and The Beatles. You see, Jim "Roger" McGuinn and David Crosby went to see "A Hard Day's Night" and decided to form The Byrds. David wanted to be chased down the street by lots and lots of screaming girls, and Roger wanted to play a form of pop music that would feel like The Beatles coupled with meaningful lyrics like those of his personal hero, Bob Dylan. So much so, that The Byrds covered "Mr. Tambourine Man", with Roger playing the electric 12 string guitar that he heard in "A Hard Day's Night". In the meantime, Phil Spector was working his own pop-music-magic in the studio, creating and refining his now-famous "Wall of Sound" production. I would say that he beat George Martin (and The Beatles) and Brian Wilson to the punch when it comes down to the "tape-as-canvas" concept. Recording studio technology was still in its infancy back then, but if you listen to the original Spector-produced Righteous Brothers' version of "You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling", which pre-dates "Pet Sounds" by about 2 years, you'll hear what I mean. The Beatles heard what Dylan, The Byrds and Phil Spector (among others) were up to, and quite frankly, had a knack for taking what they heard and spinning it into something better. I think John's first attempt at a pop song that actually was about something besides love was "Nowhere Man". Some might argue that he had already accomplished this 2 years earlier with the marvelously introspective "There's A Place" from the "Please Please Me" album, but with "Nowhere Man" there is no room for debate. Brian Wilson admitted that he was knocked out by "Rubber Soul", and this is what inspired him to conceive of and record the critically acclaimed and very influential "Pet Sounds". Paul McCartney has said that when he heard "Pet Sounds" he thought, "Oh no, now what are WE gonna do?". He also has acknowledged that "God Only Knows" may be the best pop song ever written. (Even the not-so-humble Paul McCartney wouldn't pick one of his own songs, would he?) What The Beatles did decide to do was to pretend that they were another band. They went into the studio in late 1966 with the idea of doing something new and different. First to emerge from these sessions was perhaps one of the most important and beautiful singles to ever have been released in the rock era, "Penny Lane" & "Strawberry Fields Forever", a true "double 'A' sided" single. It was released in March of 1967. This was a marketing decision, not a creative one. Had these two songs been included on the album, even the most die-hard-Brian-Wilson-is-God fans would have had trouble keeping a straight face if they had tried to convince anyone that "Wouldn't It Be Nice" and "God Only Knows" are superior to "much, if not all of" the songs on "Sgt. Pepper." That particular sentiment seems way off-the-mark to me even without the inclusion of those two songs, but after all, it is in fact, just my opinion. Paul McCartney may think that "God Only Knows" is the best pop song ever, but I think that "Yesterday" is a better song, not to mention most of the songs that were recorded during the "Sgt. Pepper" sessions. Better records. Better songs. Better lyrics. Categorically better. In June of 1967, "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" hit the record stores and the F.M. radio stations and the face of pop music was changed forever. Is it their best album? I don't think so. Is it a great album? Absolutely. Is it "better" than "Pet Sounds"? I believe that it is. * * * Mike Love, on a number of occasions during the 60's could be heard saying that The Beach Boys were "better" than The Beatles. Never mind that he was little more than a hired hand. Everyone knew that Brian was the talent and the brains. (I'd like to point out here that publicly, Brian has always been very respectful of The Beatles and vice-versa.) In response to that, Paul wrote the excellent "Back In The USSR" and recorded it (with John and George only, as Ringo had walked out of the sessions for a few days in a fit of frustration) proving (to my ears at least) that The Beatles could - on a whim - recreate a textbook "Beach Boys" song. The fact that Paul's tongue was planted firmly in his cheek and also that they rocked out in a way that the Beach Boys never could, (not even if you stuck them smack-dab-in-the-middle of The Who in 1969!), demonstrates the difference between one of the better pop bands of the 60's and The Beatles. Michael Versaci "Van Gogh did some eyeball pleasers He must have been a pencil squeezer He didn't do the Mona Lisa That was an Italian geezer" From Ian Dury's "There Ain't Half Been Some Clever Bastards"
------------------------------ Message-ID: <19990408224713.19562.qmail@hotmail.com> From: "Jason Garcia" <hhname@hotmail.com> Subject: dAVe Date: Thu, 08 Apr 1999 15:47:12 PDT >This question goes out to those who know and to those who think that >they know. What did Dave play on AV1? Well, according to the "liner notes", he plays quite a bit. I would imagine he plays piano on "Frivolous", "I Can't Own Her", "Harvest Festival", and perhaps "Your Dictionary". Of course, there were "extra keyboards" that were played by Nick Davis and Haydn Bendall. But my guess is anywhere you hear a main piano part, it's Dave playing. And he plays guitar on "Fruit Nut"; I remember that from some account of the sessions. And I could swear that's him singing with Andy at the end of "I Can't Own Her". And he probably sings on "Easter Theatre", "I'd Like That", hell, I don't know. Funny quote from the UT Austin college paper today- some guy decided to review AV1. Here's what he said (I'm paraphrasing): "XTC have written some of the most beautiful songs ever, tunes like 'Dear God', 'Chalkhills and Children', and 'Making Plans for Nigel'..." Yeah, 'Nigel' could easily slip in next to 'Easter Theatre' on this album... He also decided to do little research to support his review, claiming that the only reason XTC hadn't put out an album in 7 years was because "let's face it, their sound didn't fit in with the 90s". He portrayed XTC as just another defunct 80's supergroup, sitting around reveling in past glory, and then deciding to get back together and do a "reunion" album. Moron. But he did give it ****, so he's got some sense. Well, back to allergy wonderland. Jason
------------------------------ Message-Id: <199904082311.QAA02536@access.tucson.org> From: "Jeff Smelser" <jsmelser@access.tucson.org> Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 16:21:42 -0700 Subject: Spacehog! Hi Chalkmembers, > and Spacehog's version of Senses Working Overtime, what ever > happened to them (Spacehog I mean)? They toured with Aerosmith last year to support the album they put out, The Chinese Album. http://spacehog.hive.net/music/ That should get you there, JD SMX
------------------------------ Date: Fri, 09 Apr 1999 10:34:34 +0930 From: "Van Abbe, Dominic" <dominic.vanabbe@au.faulding.com> Subject: My sister is my clock Message-id: <45C458C0C9C7D2119F790000F87A42A406EB54@s-mulgrave6.faulding.com.au> For those who enjoyed XtC circa English Settlement, especially the (dareisayit) quirkier moments, there is a new album which may appeal- "The Ideal Crash" by a Belgian band called dEUS. In the past their albums veered all over the shop, mixing wonderful tense pop with almost unlistenable Tom Waits-ish swamp songs. Beautifully produced by Dave Bottrill, this album harnesses 10 songs of the former, almost completely cutting out the latter. Songs roll dreamily along, sometimes changing course midway through, all driven by Tom Barman's reedy, bruised, Lennon-like voice. Sounding somewhat like a collision between Radiohead, Lennon, James, Peter Gabriel and mid-period XtC, it is truly IMO a stupendous album. Put it this way- it is the only album that has managed to supplant AV1 in my CD player. In a fair world, bands like XtC and dEUS would be huge.... The other Dom (not to be confused with....)
------------------------------ From: OMBEAN1@aol.com Message-ID: <6d11e325.243ead40@aol.com> Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 21:09:20 EDT Subject: All so ridiculous... Chalkies, Howza bout these ridiculous songs I still have on 45's----- "Gimme dat ding" from The Pipkins & "Chick-a-boom" from Daddy Dewdrop. AND I LOVE "EM!! Dontcha ya love it,Dontcha ya love it, oh yea,dontcha love it? Gotta go,the smallmouths are biting, Roger
------------------------------ Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 22:14:41 -0700 (PDT) From: Benjamin Lukoff <blukoff@alvord.com> Subject: guilty sonic pleasures Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.3.96.990408221135.23350C-100000@locutus.alvord.com> I really disliked the Spice Girls when they first came out with "Wannabe", but I gotta say "Stop" is a great song! I am the proud owner of the CD single. What else...The Monkees, for sure, and solo Paul McCartney! "Listen to What the Man Said", "With A Little Luck" and "No More Lonely Nights" don't get much respect, but I wouldn't want to do without them!
------------------------------ Message-ID: <370D8E68.17AB@ix.netcom.com> Date: Thu, 08 Apr 1999 22:21:44 -0700 From: Rich Bunnell <cbunnell@ix.netcom.com> Subject: Re: 25 O'Clock > >A minor point, I'll grant you, but since The Dukes' material is pure >pastiche and a pastiche of psychedelia at that, it's not exactly surprising >that they would sound more "inherently psychadelic" (sic) than They Might Be >Canadians. Well, one would think that in covering a psychadelic pastiche, TMBC...er...TMBG (yeesh, your alterations on their name just get weirder and weirder) would retain the psychadelic qualities. That was the one part of the song that they changed. >And what are "sly" vocals? No, I know, don't be horrid - but I'm >just curious!!! To me the way that the vocals sound like in the 25 O'Clock cover is that while John Flansburgh's singing them, he's grinning in a sly manner. Yes, yes, that sounded incredibly retarded, but that's the best way for someone who did horribly in a speech & debate class last year to put it. Andy's...well...Sir John John's vocals in the original are more fragmented. Not in a bad way, of course. -- * ---------------------------------------------- Rich Bunnell or "Taoster Man"--No, it's not a typo http://members.xoom.com/taoster/
------------------------------ Message-Id: <4.1.19990409013115.0092f210@mail.clemson.edu> Date: Fri, 09 Apr 1999 01:36:05 -0400 From: Adam Tyner <ctyner@CLEMSON.EDU> Subject: Power pop/TMBG/Testimonial Dinner >Forgive my English senses of humour, but what the lightly-poached arse is >"power pop"? Is that the same as "new wave" (English meaning) or "new wave" >(bizarre US interpretation) or "post punk"? Sounds like one of those >meaningless, vapid examples of journo-speak to me! I want examples, and I >want them now!!! Here's the description of power pop from the All Music Guide: "Power pop is a cross between the crunching hard rock of the Who and the sweet melodicism of the Beatles and Beach Boys, with the ringing guitars of the Byrds thrown in for good measure. Although several bands of the early '70s -- most notably the Raspberries, Big Star, and Badfinger -- established the sound of power-pop, it wasn't until the late '70s that a whole group of like-minded bands emerged. Most of these groups modeled themselves on the Raspberries (which isn't entirely surprising, since they were the only power-pop band of their era to have hit singles), or they went directly back to the source and based their sound on stacks of British Invasion records. What tied all of these bands together was their love of the three-minute pop single. Power-pop bands happened to emerge around the same time of punk, so they were swept along with the new wave, because their brief, catchy songs fit into the post-punk aesthetic. Out of these bands, Cheap Trick, the Knack, the Romantics and Dwight Twilley had the biggest hits, but Shoes, the Records, the Nerves, and 20/20, among many others, became cult favorites. During the early '80s, power-pop died away as a hip movement, and nearly all of the bands broke up. However, in the late '80s, a new breed of power-pop began to form. The new bands, who were primarily influenced by Big Star, blended traditional power-pop with alternative rock sensibilities and sounds; in the process, groups like Teenage Fanclub, Material Issue and the Posies became critical and cult favorites. While these bands gained the attention of hip circles, many of the original power-pop groups began recording new material and releasing it on independent labels. In the early '90s, the =Yellow Pills= compilation series gathered together highlights from these re-activated power-poppers, as well as new artists that worked in a traditional power-pop vein. Throughout the early and mid-'90s, this group of independent, grassroots power pop bands gained a small, but dedicated, cult following in the United States." >A minor point, I'll grant you, but since The Dukes' material is pure >pastiche and a pastiche of psychedelia at that, it's not exactly surprising >that they would sound more "inherently psychadelic" (sic) than They Might Be >Canadians. And what are "sly" vocals? No, I know, don't be horrid - but I'm >just curious!!! They Might Be Canadians? I've heard that used to describe at least 2 Canadian bands in the past, but never to actually describe They Might Be Giants. Maybe I just don't get the joke. >Well, you got that right. I've said it before, and I'll say it again, >Testimonial Dinner sucks the poop from a badger's arse. And an ugly badger >at that. Does anyone like Testimonial Dinner? I don't dislike it, really, although I don't think it's good by any means. Thoroughly alright would be the best way to describe my feelings, I suppose. -Adam -- /=---------------- http://www.he-man.org/ctyner/ ----------------=\ http://www.crystal-night.com/~ctyner/tuscadero.html http://www.awod.com/gallery/rwav/ctyner/ He-Man, Tuscadero, "Weird Al", Yoo-hoo, Killer Tomatoes, & more!
------------------------------ Message-ID: <19990409081707.98896.qmail@hotmail.com> From: "Duncan Kimball" <dunks58@hotmail.com> Subject: Wouldn't It Be Nice ... Date: Fri, 09 Apr 1999 01:17:05 PDT ... if people stopped arguing about "Beatles vs. Beach Boys" ... especially when they probably havent heard half the stuff that matters ... First, let me deal with the spray from the mysterious "RF": >From: music@telisphere.com >Subject: The Beatles/Brian Wilson/Guilty Sonic Pleasures.. > > On the Beatles vs Brian Wilson controversy (i.e. who is more of a > >genius): > I think BW's reaction to hearing Sgt Pepper speaks volumes. > He became a musical recluse, and almost destroyed his mind with > the large amounts of LSD he took trying to "compete" musically > with the Beatles. Funny how Brian could hear the musical genius > that so many Beach Boy fan/Beatle-detractors cannot. > btw, I am a Beach Boy fan myself, and Pet Sounds was great, > but they werent' the Beatles by a long shot. > > - RF OK "RF" - here's how it is: BW's 'reaction' to Sgt Peppers - i.e. his supposed withdrawal in defeat - may or may not had something directly to do with Sgt Peppers. It's debatable. It's a conventional, easy explanation for the many and complex causes which led him to abandon the Smile project and withdraw from the music scene. Personally I think he saw Sgt Pepper as a signal that he could not hope to reclaim the lead he had already lost, before Peppers was released and that the cards were all stacked against him. Peppers was a symptom rather than a cause. He knew that however brilliant Smile might be, it couldn't "beat" Peppers - it had arrived at exactly the right time and place and had won the laurel both critically and commercially. Smile couldn't help coming off second best, so Brian cut his losses and dropped it. Addressing your other assertions: Point 1: As we now know, by the time Pepper came out, Brian was seriously ill; it ran in the family. That his breakdown happened at the time of Sgt Pepper was largely coincidence - he was already cracking under the pressure and had more or less given up before Sgt Peppers was released. Point 2: Brian did not take "large amounts" of LSD. By his own account he only took it on a few occasions, although it did have a profound affect. He was, however, smoking VERY large amounts of dope, which can have a very strong affect on the psyche, and was undoubtedly also taking a lot of speed. The main difference between him and Lennon was that Lennon was still more or less able to function - although arguably Sgt Peppers shows Lennon at his least functional. (It is well known that during this period Lennon was deeply depressed, withdrawn and taking large amounts of drugs - by his own admission, he took hundreds of acid trips over that time.) POINT 3: Lennon may have had some hassles, but he did not have the underlying mental problems, or the incredible 'structural' difficulties that sabotaged Brian. Nor were Lennon's 'problems' such a crisis for the Beatles - after all, there were two other strong writers in the band, and a separate producer, to keep things running. Aside from the collaboration with his lyricists, Brian was the sole writer, arranger, chief engineer *and* producer for all the Beach Boys projects. IN addition, throughout 1966/67 he was working under the added pressure having a record company who had NO idea how of what he was doing, merely wanted more hits and were effectively bleeding the band dry, and undermining his work, doing things like releasing a "Greatest Hits" package immediately after the release of Pet Sounds, further undercutting its poor sales. What's more, he was simultaneously facing off against members of the group such as Mike Love who were exterting intense pressure on him to abandon this experimental approach - Love on one occasion literally ordering him: "Don't fuck with the formula" POINT 4: Of course Brian could hear the genius in the Beatles. He said on many occasions that "Pet Sounds" was a direct result his hearing "Rubber Soul". But likewise, Paul has always acknowledged the enormous influence Pet Sounds had on Sgt Pepper. POINT 5: Of course Brian regarded the Fabs as competition. But there were many others - Burt Bacharach, Dylan, The Byrds - and as is well known, he regarded Phil Spector as by far his greatest "threat" - so much so in fact that his illness eventually caused him to have delusions that Spector was bugging his house, probing his mind, trying to kill him etc etc. I love both bands, but you have to see the situation in perspective. Sgt Peppers has a proud place in music history; happily time has begun to restore "Pet Sounds" to the place of honour that it truly deserves and should have always occupied. Paul has lauded the album again and again, and has been quoted as saying that no musical education would be complete without having heard it. The fact is that Pet Sounds preceded and inspired Sgt Peppers. Ask Paul - he'll tell you. I think the whole idea of trying to determine who is more of a genius is spurious, and demeans the subjects. They are all geniuses. What is to be gained by trying to rank them? Its all great music. Enjoy it. In closing - let me address the points raised by Chris Vreeland: >From: chris vreeland <vreecave@realtime.com> >Subject: Beachless >However (of course there's a however- Male Answer Syndrome has me in >its grips) There are two things I see in Sgt. Peppers that I have >never detected in the Beach Boys material that I've heard. One is the >surrealism of the lyrics, and the other is the downright abstract >nature of the noises the Beatles used to color the songs. I think it >was a major leap from the world of 20th century visual art into the >auditory world. It was only the flood gates swinging open, though, as >the tide had been rising for a while. I think the crucial phrase there, Chris, is: "...in the Beach Boys material that I've heard." Unavoidably, we see history from the perspective of the victor. The fact is that Sgt Pepper got there first. Smile was never finished and never released, and most of the incredible music Brian made lay on a shelf unheard until 1990. Even now, as we know from this list, Pet Sounds is something of a well-kept secret, and Smile is virtually unknown. What most people know about the Beach Boys is surf songs and "Good Vibrations" Almost all of us know the lyrics for "Lucy" or "Day In the Life". Regrettably, comparitively few people have experienced the sublime surrealism of Van Dyke Parks' amazing lyrics for Smile. Frankly, I consider "Surf's Up" or "Cabinessence" to be the equal of anything the Beatles did. And how innovative musically were the Fabs really? What they were doing was groundbreaking of course - for pop music. But backwards tapes were old news for avant-garde musicians, and if you want abstract noises, I suggest you get hold of Zappa's "Freak Out" - which came out almost a full year before Pepper - and have a listen to "Who Are The Brain Police" or "The Return of the Son of Monster Magnet". Relevant? Well I recently read a quote from Paul which dates from early '67 - when questioned about the nature of the forthcoming album, one of his responses was that it was going to be "our Freak Out". And let's not forget, while we are talking influences, that Paul visited America just before they started work on Pepper, while Brian was in the middle of working on Smile. Indeed he is rumoured to have appeared on a version of the Smile track "Vega-tables". Did Macca come away empty handed? I think not. Is it any coincidence that he had the idea for the concept of Sgt Peppers on the plane home from America? I doubt it. Musically, sonically, Smile would have been on a whole different plane from Sgt Peppers. I love Peppers, but you have to admit that what you are hearing there is still, basically, the Beatles - a rock band - with overdubs. Smile was to have been a totally different affair, and Pet Sounds had already shown that in terms of songwriting, arrangements, production, instrumentation, Brian was working on a totally different level to the Beatles. Look at the instrumatation on Good Vibrations alone: drums, Fender bass, string bass, percussion, organ, pianos, flutes, cellos, Theremin ... and above all that, Brian's killer advantage - six of the most superb voices ever to grace a microphone. The Beatles were *great* singers, but, frankly, the Beach Boys were better. Of course Pepper was an is an amazing record, but I believe that Smile would have been even more amazing. If you can get hold of a copy of the "Good Vibrations" box set, listen the Smile outtakes on Disc 2, and you'll see what I mean. The nearest the Beatles got to what Brian was doing was on "Day in the Life". The other incredible thing is (as I alluded to above) that all the Beach Boys music - the writing, the arrangments, the production, the engineering - was virtually ALL Brian. And he did it in the face of intense pressure from an unsypathetic record company and a band who were split down the middle in their support for him - with half for and half vehemently against. (PLUS they were all brothers and cousins, with all the added angst that comes from that). The Fabs were a tight, unified group, close friends, with a common background and years of gigging behind them. They had three strong writers, one of the best producers in the business, the best engineers, unlimited use of one of the world's best studios, unqualified support from their record company. Full colour gatefold sleeve with inserts? No problem. Symphony orchestra? Sure, here you go. It's easy to say that Peppers is *the* record, and in one sense that is true, if only because Smile isnt around to challenge it. But what if it was Lennon who had a the nervous breakdown? What if Peppers, and not Smile, had never been released? Dunks
------------------------------ From: "Don Rogalski" <tonikuo@ms10.hinet.net> Subject: If you like XTC you might like... Date: Fri, 9 Apr 1999 16:22:52 +0800 Message-ID: <000001be8262$297211e0$e2fd20a3@user> Chalk-listers: I always feel a bit of nervous apprehension whenever inspired to "de-lurk" on Chalkhills, and with good reason - XTC's internet-enabled appreciators are an erudite bunch, and not just in the discussion of our favourite musicians. With that in mind, allow me a few centimetres of bandwidth to propose the following: If you like XTC, you might like the novelist Anthony Burgess. He was born in Manchester in 1917, and died in Monaco in 1993, but in between he managed to become the most prolific published writer in the English language (some would argue in any language), writing some forty plus novels, hundreds of book reviews, various plays, film and TV scripts, academically-oriented books including studies of English literature as a whole, Shakespeare, James Joyce and even as study of phonology, which was one of his passions. Or, more correctly, language in all its varied expressions was one of his principal passions, the other being music. He wrote symphonies, operas, pieces for string and wind quartets, film scores, and even was able to accompany the whole uncut version of Fritz Lang's "Metropolis" on piano, a four hour opus performed at the University of Iowa in the 1970's. Unfortunately, none of his music was recorded outside of stave paper. Though he's best known for "A Clockwork Orange" (or rather, relatively unknown as the author of the novel that Kubrick's film was based on), a slightly dogmatic morality play ("Alex is more of a man as an evil man than as a good zombie") that is saved only by the genius of his invented language "nadsat", a slang dialect composed of Russian and demotic English spoken by the teenaged hoodlums of the story ("nadsat" is actually Russian for the suffix "-teen", as in sevenTEEN"), the book is not the best of his oeuvre. My vote would go to 1981's "Earthly Powers", his grand romp in the guise of a homosexual writer of popular fiction through the artistic and religious vagaries of the 20th century. Number two on the list would be 1976's "The End of the World News", one of the first novels to successfully employ the technique of zapping in and out of three separate stories being told at the same time, namely: Freud's last days in Vienna before being herded out by the Nazis; Trotsky's time in New York, presented as a musical (must be read to be believed!); and his only science fiction piece, the apocalypse as delivered by a rogue planet colliding into the earth. It's a mammoth novel, if only because it deals with the 20th century's three major discoveries, those being the unconscious, outer space, and the possiblity of the "salvation of the human race through world socialism" (which in the 1920's and 1930's was still a very sincere concept in the west - faith, Burgess is far too canny to even remotely resemble a Marxist-Leninist-Stalinist stooge, yet not so, dare I say American, that he paints the philosophy of economics as a bare communist-capitalist dichotomy). But then, any book by Burgess is worth picking up, if only for it's sheer entertainment value. What's the link between Burgess and Andy Partridge then? It's not so tenuous as you might think. Certainly, where Andy is a highly emotive singer and writer of song lyrics, Burgess is rightly accused of a lack thereof. He admits as much, and puts it down to being raised by an emotionally distant father and stepmother, his birth mother having been killed by the Spanish influenza epidemic that swept Europe right after WWI ("There was no doubt of the existence of a God: only the supreme being could contrive so brilliant an afterpiece to four years of unprecedented suffering and devastation"). And where Andy lauds the merits of the "mayor of Simpleton", Burgess sometimes delves into the pedagogic for such long stretches that it makes you want to come up for air. But beyond that, there is the uncanny whiff of genius in the both of them that's exhilarating and humbling at the same time. They are two singular English artists who, in their respective fields, command critical respect (though not from the more zeitgeist-oriented critics - they're wankers anyhow), yet are virtually unknown beyond the communities of their acolytes. They have at times flirted unsuccessfully with mainstream popularity (Burgess wrote a script treatment for the Bond film "The Spy Who Loved Me", unused - Andy was on the verge during the Black Sea tour, but we all know what happened then), but have ultimately remained true to their muses in a very stubborn fashion, commercial considerations be damned. Even more, and here is the clincher - they are both in love with language. They manipulate it to such a degree that oft times you are astonished that something could be said (or sung) in such a way, and why couldn't I think of that? If, in the critic Harold Bloom's words, the main aim of literature (and by extension, any art, including music) is "to enlarge a solitary existence", then one could do worse than read Anthony Burgess and listen to the music of XTC. There. I've said my piece. Forgive the length, will you? Don R.
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