Chalkhills Digest, Volume 6, Number 169 Wednesday, 14 June 2000 Topics: six degrees of separation He sleeps with Iron Man Stupidly Happy Long words Phil/Moll/Funk/Mark & more Colin white horses ect Good Golly, Ms. Molly-contd. (no xtc) Incredible Album! - Apple Venus! modern rock debauchery Hello Stupidly Happy: simply catchy Uh, Um, Er, Eh, Ah Vee Tubeology Thunder and Duncan :) more on musicals/moron musicals (sort of a strange tails Nothing but the truth Artificiality Administrivia: I will be on vacation during the week of June 18. Chalkhills will be off the air during that week. Enjoy your time off! 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 3.7b (John Relph <relph@tmbg.org>). Lionheart, a holy land invader.
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 11:29:58 -0700 From: "Victor Rocha" <wstsidela@mediaone.net> Subject: six degrees of separation Message-ID: <018301bfd565$6ae3f240$4e568218@we.mediaone.net> Hey gang, just a little useless trivia: Jack O'Brien, the man who's directing Dave Yazbek's Full Monty also directed the original production of Stephen Sondheim's Into The Woods. BTW the Full Monty is going to Broadway after it's run at the Old Globe in San Diego Victor Rocha
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 10:32:31 -0700 (PDT) From: Brown <mb2@deltanet.com> Subject: He sleeps with Iron Man Message-ID: <200006131732.KAA14802@mail2.deltanet.com> Sushiman shared this- <<had a dream the other night starring andy ... we are in a car speeding down the crowded daytime streets of a willimantic ( home town in ct ) / london composite city attempting to escape from a giant UFO robotoid monster in the distance . this creature must have been 200 feet tall with a giant mouth all opened up sucking in everything in its path with tornado power inhalations . you could see the gears and other mechanics of the monster's mouth grinding up cars and trucks and trees , and the inside of the mouth was glowing bright yellow like the sun ...>> Great dream, John.. how come I never dream about AP (or CM, for that matter)? The last 'famous' person that showed up in one of my dreams was Yahoo Serious. Yeah, you heard right, Yahoo 'who-who?' Serious.. The dream went something like this.. Yahoo was in our back yard, pigging out on our boysenberries and drinking something green.. when I asked him what the hell he thought he was doing, he ignored me and proceeded to paint a large red ant on the door of our garden shed... then it fades into some sort of Buddy Holly riff..that's all I remember.. This sounds like a new, and possibly annoying thread.. whose well-known mug(s) have starred in your dreams, Chalkers? Remind me to tell you about the one I had, involving Raymond Burr and a can of corn... So what's Mr. Serious up to these days? Anybody? I heard he was pumping petrol at his very own service station, any truth to that? the 80's...they were the best of times, they were the worst of times.. --now for the appropriate XTC content-- Everything about the instrumental arrangement, the rhythm guitar part, and especially the crisp drum sound on We're All Light... I defy you to not shake your canteen during that number! Love to all my sugarbeets, Debora Brown Maestro.. a little exit music, please?-- Gigaaantor... Gigaaantor... Gigaaaaa-aaantor... Gigantor the space age robot, he's at.. your command.. Gigantor the space-age robot, his power is.. in your hand(s).. -- sing along, damn you!..SING
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 12:09:39 -0700 From: Rich Bunnell <richbunnell@home.com> Subject: Stupidly Happy Message-ID: <394686F3.5CB1C41A@home.com> Organization: @Home Network Hey people, stop dissing "Stupidly Happy." You're making me sad. (chorus of people: "AWWWWWWWWWWWWW...") It's a repetitive song, but....um....yeah, that's the point! The song wouldn't sound right if it had a middle eight or a chorus or anything, and Andy handles the one-chord thing a hell of a lot better than lots of other bands (the afore-bashed Depeche Mode for one, with "I Feel You"). Rich Bunnell http://members.xoom.com/taoster/
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 15:45:53 -0400 From: fheaney@erols.com Subject: Long words Message-ID: <003001bfd56f$fdf8f260$f8e17ad1@default> > Anyway... > Quick English quiz: What is the longest 4-letter word in the English > Language? I'm going to say "dude" (if it's being spoken by a college student, to wit: "duuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuude!"). -- Francis "There is no drinking after you're dead." -- Paul Weller
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 17:17:15 EDT From: WESnLES@aol.com Subject: Phil/Moll/Funk/Mark & more Message-ID: <c0.4f24f45.2677fedb@aol.com> Chickenheads: Holy shit Batman! I leave my computer for a few days and return to a deluge of Chalk-talk! (chit chat chit chat) Here's my one, two, three, four, five cents worth: Love Phil's idea for a Stupidly Happy T-shirt, now all I need is a bumper sticker with the words WE'RE ALL LIGHT plastered across it. Anyone else think this is a damn good idea? I'd put one on my car. Hmmmm, or I'd buy a few hundred and spend a couple hours in the local mall parking lot on a Saturday pasting them to the bumpers of cars which have probably never experienced the thrill of having XTC ooze like napalm from their speakers and grills. "Molly , not very happy and has the right to be that way, and don't tell her she can't" Moll, my dear. I don't usually dispense advise for free, (as if anyone would pay me for advise), but this time I'll make an exception. I think that you would benefit from a little lesson my father taught me, in between my daily beatings, at a young age. He told me that anytime I get the urge to purchase something I should wait at least a week prior to doing so. Many times over I've waited the week and found that my once insatiable craving for some particular item, usually electronics, had faded or morphed into a desire for something else, and so the week rule would again come into play. This has greatly aided me in life. Many times I've fought the impulse to chew someone's ass out over something, waited a few days and decided that I was quite happy I'd kept my mouth shut at the time because my emotions had dramatically changed in the duration. The best thing about this rule is that it will greatly diminish the amount of times you have to say "I'm sorry." Just advise Moll, no harm intended. Got nothin' but love for ya. Colin, good. Musicals, good. Tossin' smokes from cars, punishable by public thrashings bad. Thanks much to Joe Funk for the Pat Metheny quote. I've already emailed it to at least a dozen friends. Pat rules. Still, I too find it hard to picture vulgarities spewing from the same laid back man in the sleepily romantic Last Train Home vid. Perhaps this is coming from the Ornette Coleman side o Pat. Lastly: I hate to air my soiled laundry in public, but how long are we going to let this little farce go on regarding my beloved Mark Strijbos and WOMEN? Step back ladies, he's all mine. Wes "yes, I'm carrying Mark's child and he's selling his illegal homemade wares to ravers to support us, and HELL NO you can't touch my swollen belly or our love child once it is born" LONG Home of much XTC: http://members.tripod.com/~The_Last_Balloon/index.html
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 17:19:27 -0500 From: "Wiencek, Dan" <dwiencek@crateandbarrel.com> Subject: Colin Message-ID: <B697DB46B423D411BE970050DA793DE0341FFF@escorp1.crate.barrel.com> MS wrote (famously): > << 2. That SO MUCH praise is given to Colin's songs. Come on guys - his > stuff is personal, but it certainly isn't terrific music. His stuff > never gets released (maybe for a reason?) and, really now, couldn't an > amateur songwriter have written the "Standing in for Joe" lyrics (not > to mention just about every other one of his songs on the past few > discs.) I don't think it unfair to say that Colin is not as verbally gifted as Andy, nor does he have Andy's flair for startling, dramatic melodies. Who does? To say that Colin, ounce for ounce, is not quite in Andy's league is no insult. I think XTC would be much poorer without Colin: an entire album of Andy's bombastic richness, though a wonderful treat, would also be a little tiring and, maybe, a little fake-sounding too. Colin provides the same function as George Harrison did for the Fabs: he sounds like he has to work at it more, and that gives his songs a grounding in the real that Andy's more fanciful creations lack. In fact, I'm surprised to find In Another Life becoming my favorite WS track. It's sweet, smutty, and I would even say ... wise. It sounds like the work of a man who has learned from life; not in the same way Andy's stuff does (sure, who *doesn't* remember being bullied on the playground?), but in a way altogether more personal and idiosyncratic. Talking of these two songwriters' contrasting gifts makes me wish even more that they would write together. Yes, I know all the stories about how they tried to write together and it didn't work, so spare me the recitation. I don't think they should (or could) sit down across from each other and write eyeball-to-eyeball, but I would love to see them attempt something in the later Lennon-McCartney mold, where one writer provides the verse and chorus and the other writer offers the middle, or the outro or what have you. (An "I've Got a Feeling"-style collaboration as opposed to an "I Want to Hold Your Hand.") Is this so unreasonable? Like Lennon and McCartney, Andy and Colin's styles complement each other perfectly: Andy provides the confident, dramatic quality (Macca) whereas Colin provides the less polished, human undercurrent (Lennon). I think a union along these lines would be the perfect inauguration to the "new" era of XTC, now that all the old strike-era material is out of the way. Oh, I wish I wish I wish I wish .... And while we're sort of on the topic, has anyone else noticed that Andy really isn't audible on any of Colin's AV songs, either from Volume 1 or 2? Colin provides a strong backing vocal presence on many if not most of Andy's tracks, yet Andy doesn't seem to return the favor, whether by accident or design. Come to think of it, Andy wasn't really audible on any of Colin's Nonsuch tracks either, not like the great contributions he made to all of his O&L songs. (I love the way Andy barks out "we're liv-IN'!" on King for a Day.) Tell me I'm not mad ... Dan W.
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 23:28:45 +0000 From: Jayne Myrone <myrone@tesco.net> Subject: white horses ect Message-ID: <3946C395.32C04E6E@tesco.net> greetings Chalkhillers from the frozen North - well this bit is. Anyone who might be looking for a book on chalkhill figures including the Uffington White Horse should try looking at this: http://www.bibliophilebooks.com/cgi-bin/Biblio.storefront /3946ad380025c33e2740c29901120621/Product/View/33946 It includes this fascinating but probably useless fact: "The Cerne {Abbas} Giant is one of the few pornographic images sent regularly through the post without censorship." Still happily stupid Jayne the Worrier Queen please take a minute & visit the site below. By clicking on the donate button money is given to the UN's World Food Programme. http://www.thehungersite.com/index.html "Nothing is meaningless if one likes to do it" Gertrude Stein
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 16:09:38 -0700 (PDT) From: Brown <mb2@deltanet.com> Subject: Good Golly, Ms. Molly-contd. (no xtc) Message-ID: <200006132309.QAA10026@mail2.deltanet.com> Hi-ho again, Take a moment and consider this.. wouldn't Chalkhills be a dreary place without Molly's voice? Damn right it would. I still mean what I said, Moll.. don't feel sorry for yourself, just keep slinging the sh*t back.. there you go... it feels good, doesn't it? this is just por vou, Molly :) your fellow slinger, Debora Brown --now back to the beheadings!--
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 20:58:59 -0400 From: "Todd E. Jones" <toddjones@mindspring.com> Subject: Incredible Album! - Apple Venus! Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.20000613205859.01941854@pop.mindspring.com> Imagine if you will, squabbling Chalksters, the following less-than-74-minute CD: 1) Playground 2) You and the Clouds 3) Greenman 4) Wheel and the Maypole 5) Easter Theatre 6) We're All Light 7) I Can't Own Her 8) Harvest Festival 9) Church of Women 10) Knights in Shining Kharma 11) The Last Balloon Would this (or some slight variation on it) not have been a truly brilliant XTC album in the vein of Skylarking or Nonesuch? I just found too much filler (see My Dictionary, Wounded Horse or Colin's falling star) in the AV series to compete with their finer work. Sure, it's XTC, so even on a sub-par album they are phenomenal, but let's hope they shake off Dave's loss and refocus for AV3 (or whatever it'll be called). I think Andy is a fine guitar player (I always knew he was), but he seems to be looking for an appropriate role for himself on WS and can't quite find it. Whatever? Todd Jones Manager, Producer, Insect Massage Therapist, Janitor HUGE sound generation and capture facility Cape Fear River Basin, NC http://www.mindspring.com/~toddjones
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 19:17:46 -0700 (PDT) From: James Reimer <halo_sugar@yahoo.com> Subject: modern rock debauchery Message-ID: <20000614021746.19545.qmail@web1605.mail.yahoo.com> in a shameless move of self-promotion: I am an accountant by day, but by the weekend and nights I am a music junkie. On saturdays from 12-4 central time I pretend I am college again and do my old radio show. And for further self-promotion as well as paying homage to my favorite band, at 3 o'clock central time, I will play an entire hour of XTC. you can listen to this worldwide at www.ktcu.edu.edu and email me directly to vote for the tracks you wish for me (and the world that's listening) to hear. James
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 22:28:56 -0500 From: "Larry Stevens" <lstevens@fgi.net> Subject: Hello Message-ID: <002e01bfd5b0$b46f0bc0$2bc6d4cc@oldbessie> Greetings Chalkhills and list members, I've just joined this list and would like to introduce myself as an XTC fan since 1982, when a roommate played English Settlement for me. I remember an acquaintance had tickets for an XTC concert on the cancelled tour (I'll bet he's still got those tickets). XTC continues to be the soundtrack of my life and I sing Playground to my baby daughter (isn't it great to hear Holly singing with her dad?). Perhaps a few people on this list met me at the XTC Music and Friends Convention in Princeton, Illinois back in 1993. I was graciously allowed to do a short solo set of XTC material and another set with my band, The Spoonbenders. I think we did Ten Feet Tall, Optimism's Flames and Funk-Pop-A-Roll. What an honor for us! I dutifully checked the FAQs to see if my burning question had already been asked and found a couple of things. First, Dave Gregory seems to have tipped everyone off to the backmasked message at the end of "Mole From the Ministry" that I fancied I was the only one who had decoded ("Go F... Yourself With Your Atom Bomb"). Another musician friend of mine and I were suspicious so we sampled the sound and reversed it and slowed it down to discover the message. Second, FAQ #38 states that no XTC sheet music exists besides Eleven Different Animals and some charts in The Little Express, but I have in my possession published sheet music for Mayor of Simpleton. I found it in the sheet music section of a local music shop back when Oranges and Lemons was released. It's quite a bright and beautiful product. In addition to the extremely rare Mayor of Simpleton sheet music, I have a promo maxi-single of the Mayor of Simpleton with Ella Guru on Side 2, an authentic Jules Verne Sketchbook and a copy of Chris Twomey's definitive biography signed in gold pen by Andy, Colin and Dave (convention souvenir). Priceless treasures! I'm looking forward to hearing from the list. Cheers, Larry
------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 20:51:49 -0700 (PDT) From: Bill Douglas <ccosmos_64@yahoo.com> Subject: Stupidly Happy: simply catchy Message-ID: <20000614035149.25070.qmail@web3807.mail.yahoo.com> Chauncy14@aol.com wrote: > Subject: Stupidly Happy > > Stupidly Happy > > Linear boredom. After maybe 16 measures, I had my > elbows on my snare, and my chin in my palms, > looking up at a photo of Buddy Rich, wrapped in a > tuba, quoting "If I couldn't play Zildjians, I'd > switch instruments!" > > If I was playing drums on this tune, I would have > to say, "Andy, this song needs a middle eight and a > bridge or two!" > > It just didn't *go* anywhere, and was too > repetitive. I got the sense that Colin was really > bored playing bass on this tune, b/c he too had no > where to go. He kept sliding up and down the > scale, but only within one chord's framework. It's > like playing drums too loud, once you do, you can't > get any louder, and your dynamics within the song > are f*cked. And, if that happens, the band gets > drowned out. > > It's just not happening for me, despite the catchy > and jangly phrasing of the lyrics. Sorry folks. > This is the only tune on this record which doesn't > click for me. > > J. Gardner, Hey, I'll admit the song didn't affect me immediately, but after repeated listenings, I'm firmly convinced that 'Stupidly Happy' is the most accessible song Mr. Partridge has ever written...for the American audience, at least. TVT (are you receiving me?) should seriously consider releasing this track as a single, and service it to modern rock radio as best they can. This is a summer single, pure and simple. No other song on 'Wasp Star' has as great a potential to make an impact in the States. In other developments, I also think TVT or some other label should release an XTC video compilation on VHS and DVD. Who would buy that? Sign me up. Haven't run across any retailer in the Midwest who's offered the bonus free single yet...anyone know of any major chain retailers doing this?
------------------------------ Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2000 01:12:30 EDT From: KINGSTUNES@aol.com Subject: Uh, Um, Er, Eh, Ah Message-ID: <24.64d76cc.26786e3e@aol.com> >For the record...The really cool stuff from the 80's was made by XTC, the > dB's, NRBQ, Kate Bush, Tom Waits, The Jazz Butcher, Frank Zappa, and a few > others that I can't think of right now. Uh, excuse me. Joe Jackson? The Pretenders? Los Lobos? and a few others that I can't think of right now. >What's next, a South Park musical?! Um, the movie was a musical. Blame Canada was up for an oscar. Schweeet. >I've always rated the video to "Life Begins at the Hop" >because it's funny Er, it's funny in spots. But it's a complete knockoff in production. The part where they look mortified is the awful sequences where they're behind the cadillac cutout with the spinning city scene behind them. Of course, Andy comes to our rescue and grabs the stupid thing at the end and sneaks off with it. Nigel is much better! I like when Andy jumps backwards on the white squares of the floor in time with the drum clap. And the repeating shots of Colin going, "He must be happy, he must be happy, he must be happy..." I also think the early ones with Barry are great. They capture their spirit at the time perfectly. Some of the editing work on Are You Receiving Me? is well ahead of the abuses of the eighties and nineties. And Andy, well, poor shy Andy.....I just like Senses and AOAS so much because to me it's like a private XTC performance. The slow mo stuff doesn't bug me at all; I find it tastefully done. As is the soundstage backdrop (with the Uffington horse) and the lighting. The shadow work in All Of A Sudden is splendid. And best of all - there they are, folks! Playing and signing some of the greatest pop music your mortal ears will ever behold! Pure eye and soul candy. But, to each his own. Haven't seen You're A Good Man Albert Brown yet. Eh, I read somwhere here on an interview reprint (I can't find it) that Andy derided making videos because it required acting. In relation to the above reply; after watching that hambone in those videos, I think he should put Act Naturally on the player and get off his arse and give us something to look at. *Just a thought*. What's next? Chalkhills, the musical? Ah, Tom K
------------------------------ Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2000 06:17:06 -0400 (EDT) From: Radios In Motion <radiosinmotion@iwon.com> Subject: Vee Tubeology Message-ID: <383407121.960977826703.JavaMail.root@web186-iw> Vee Tube, man, you have bigger balls than La La from Telletubbies (I have no choice, my 9month old loves the show!). I vote VeeTube for president!
------------------------------ Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2000 04:56:10 -0700 (PDT) From: Molly Fanton <mfanton99@yahoo.com> Subject: Thunder and Duncan :) Message-ID: <20000614115610.28522.qmail@web1302.mail.yahoo.com> I'm not sure if I'll be at the White Music Listening Party tonight at 10pm EST, because there's supposed to be severe weather in my area tonight. I'll try to make it, but I'm not sure. With all the rain I've got in my area I should listen to 1,000 Umbrellas. :P Duncan Watt wrote: <<Mollllllyyyyyy don't get all pissed off 'cos of a few nitwits. What would Andy do?>> Well, he'd probably make some clever comment, but I'm not sure what. :) Molly ===== Molly's Pages: http://www.angelfire.com/mn/mollyfa99/index.html My Tribute to Talk Talk & .O.Rang: http://www.angelfire.com/mn/mollyfa99/talktalkorang.html
------------------------------ Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2000 05:21:44 -0700 From: David van Wert <mcknife@earthlink.net> Subject: more on musicals/moron musicals (sort of a strange tails thing, Message-ID: <p04310101b56d0251bb9d@[216.249.72.107]> that's my XTC tie in) At 12:30 AM -0700 6/14/00, <dunks58@hotmail.com> wrote: >If you can't say something nice ... then say it about practically EVERYthing except Colin, if we are to follow the examples set forth in your post... >a bunch of Good Songs stitched together together to create a musical still >comprises a stupid form of expression. "West Side Story" is a near as I will >go to admitting that the concept has any legs whatsoever. Maybe it's a >cultural thing, but as soon as the talking stops and the singing starts I >reach for the remote. It just doesn't make sense. Why WOULD anyone start >singing? Same here! It means a hell of a lot of half-watched episodes of The Simpsons and South Park but hey, I've got my principles. How dare anyone use song to convey story?! What in God's name was Mozart thinking with that Magic Flute thing? Why would anyone ever sing what they could just say? Why does anyone ever sing, period? And while we're on the subject, what's up with Shakespeare and that iambic pentameter contrivance? People don't talk like that! And hey, Moliere, people don't rhyme in everyday life. Okay, honestly, I don't care whether anybody likes musicals. Not a connoisseur myself, frankly. I could count the musicals I truly enjoy on the fingers of one hand (and I have standard, regulation issue hands with no additional digits), but it strikes me as odd to hear an entire form utterly, viciously, and repeatedly dismissed for being unrealistic, only to have the same writer mere sentences later convey admiration for other works that abandon reality just as fully. We can accept that characters are blue, composed of smoke from the waist down, and magical wish granters, but if they sing, that's unrealistic, eh? And in the case of the Arabian Nights piece so highly praised, the work doesn't even bother to attempt an internally consistent fantasy. Why is John Leguizamo praised for shattering reality with an anachronistic joke about airplanes while Gene Kelly is cursed for singing and dancing in the rain (or milk, in reality, not rain-- and not that anyone directly cursed Gene Kelly specifically, but the implication remains since it's not "West Side Story")? C'mon, Dunks, this argument of yours holds less water than a Calvin Klein model with dysentery. What's the real story behind your intense hatred of the form? Andy, Randy, Yazbek, and I want to know! Okay, maybe it's just me, but dammit, I want to know! Did Julie Andrews touch you "there"? Did she make you climb every mountain, ford every stream? Eagerly awaiting your reply (quick, before Relph goes on vacation! And don't spare the gratuitous details! If there aren't any gratuitous details, feel free to make some up. Julie probably doesn't read this list so it's not like you'll get in any real trouble. If you spill about this, I'll spill about why I despise the band Journey. Deal?) <mcknife@earthlink.net> http://www.davidvanwert.com/
------------------------------ Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2000 09:51:05 -0300 From: "=?iso-8859-1?B?U2ViYXN0aeFuIEFk+nJpeg==?=" <sebasaduriz@movi.com.ar> Subject: Nothing but the truth Message-ID: <000c01bfd5ff$bddcbc80$51750ac8@sebasaduriz> Joel wrote, 3) I'm interested to hear people's thoughts on this one. Does anyone else find Andy's laments in songs such as "Your Dictionary," "Playground," "Dear Madam Barnum," "Wounded Horse," et cetera much less pitiable after reading Song Stories and knowing that Andy, too, had been "riding another [wo]man"? I'm not calling Andy out for having an affair: relationships are complex, and it's none of our business anyway. But all the same, since the information is now out there, I find Andy's complaints that come off as declaring himself a victim whose wife left him for "the boy with the bigger bike" ridiculous: maybe, just maybe, one of the reasons Marianne left was because of his longtime mistress? You think? Anyway. ---------- Well, I think there are some interesting issues going round here. Among many others: Does art comes separately from the artist? How much does an artist's biography enlighten his work? Shouldn't we care only for the final product? I personally don't have much problems with Andy's case because I always felt his "divorce songs" were more the true expression of his sentiments over his broken marriage than an attempt to manipulate the facts of it. In other words, I never felt, for example, he was intending to put his listeners against his ex-wife, but just singing his anger and his pain. I also have to say that having gone myself through a controversial divorce some years ago, this songs express beautifully -and hurtingly - a lot of the things I went through. And I'm really grateful that this guy from Swindon put such great music and accurate words for them. Finally, in honor to objective judgment - which I believe is completely irrelevant here - I think, Joel, you failed to put ITMWML on your list, where he doesn't blame other than himself for his failure. But to be fair, I must confess I do have some problems with other cases, like Woody Allen's " I'm a miserable man but a great artist " statement or with the Stones, who occasionally deliver some good songs - I like "You'll N ever Make A Saint Of Me" - on their pathetic millionaire's charade. Maybe I don't have problems with unfaithful divorcees but I do with others. So, as you can guess I tend to believe that art has a lot to do with truth, no matter how sad or uncomfortable it turns out to be. So answering your question, Joel, I think the truth here lies not in determining how much Andy deserved to be sacked of his matrimony - let's leave that to lawyers and accountants - but in how deeply and precisely he managed to express his pain. This is what should count when it comes to art, I think. Saludos a todos, Sebastian. P.S: Imanol, muchas gracias por responder a mi solicitud. Si no es demasiado pedir y en honor a mis antepasados vascos, me encantaria leer tus proximas oraciones pobladas de consonantes, acompanadas de sus equivalentes en castellano ( quisiera en contrapartida agasajarte con un frase en Euskera pero no tengo ni una ).
------------------------------ Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2000 09:32:48 -0400 From: David Gershman <dagersh@pobox.com> Subject: Artificiality Message-ID: <3.0.5.32.20000614093248.0095c100@chelmsford.com> Like Joel Reamer, I've recently resubscribed to the list, and I can see that there are just as many loonies on this list as there were when I unsubscribed last year. But hey, I guess that's one of the things that keeps it interesting? Anyway, Joel's not one of the aforementioned loonies -- but I did want to comment on one of his comments: >1) Short Review: I'm finding that I just really don't like Wasp Star that >much. In an odd way, it's almost as if all the reasons I loved an album like >Oranges and Lemons are the same reasons I am not enjoying WS. Whereas I find >O&L's slick, detailed production vibrant, lush, and invigorating, I listen >to WS and most of it feels plastic and turgid to me (not all). It just seems >to me that much of the organic "feel" of past XTC records have been >sacrificed at the altar of studio perfection. And why do the fellows insist >on using live drummers if they're going to meld them until they sound as >false as they do on, say, "Stupidly Happy" or "We're All Light"? This kind >of programmed sound really ruined much of The Big Express for me, and I >think maybe it's done it for WS, too. I don't know, maybe I've just reached >critical mass with this kind of sheen. I hope not. I feel similarly -- although I think Wasp Star is full of many truly great *songs*, it would have been a much better *album* if it hadn't sounded all "artificial-y." I'm having particular trouble with "ITMWML" -- the way it's recorded, it comes off sounding like the sequel to "Peter Pumpkinhead," a song that I never really took to either. It's not bad, just too familiar, which is not something you expect from an XTC song. I think what XTC needs is an acoustic revelation along the lines of Elvis Costello's when he went from the overproduced blandness of the pretty lame "Goodbye Cruel World" (of course, "Wasp Star" is far superior to that album) to the organic, stripped-down sound of the fantastic "King of America." I've been pushing for a matchup of T-Bone Burnett and XTC for quite a while now, and I think Elvis Costello example is precisely what I've had in mind. That said, I'm still enjoying Wasp Star very much. Has anyone noticed how much the "Maypole" portion of TW&TM (my preferred acronym) sounds like an all-out Dukes song? It reminds me particularly of "Little Lighthouse"... By the way, if Wes Hanks is reading this, could you contact me? I've been trying to send you a message at your new address, but it's been getting bounced back. Well, that's it for now. But if I may be so bold as to suggest it, maybe everyone could just drop the Molly attacks? She certainly makes herself an easy target, but are you (and you know who "you" are) really feeling that good about yourself for taking advantage of that? And how much is it really adding to the enjoyment of reading Chalkhills? Just a thought. Dave Gershman
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