Revolt of the ILX Brigade: New Post-Fahey Folk For PPL that post in the Takoma & Tompkin's Square Threads

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that hiosis clip is great

new song i did

https://soundcloud.com/matthew-lee-helgeson/helios

sinister porpoise (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 16:05 (twelve years ago)

Hey UMS, like this one a lot. Reminds me of Chasny's early acoustic stuff a bit, some of the phrasing and pauses/motion to the tune. So yeah, cool stuff, like it more than that Hionis track to be honest with you.

grandavis, Thursday, 19 June 2014 14:48 (twelve years ago)

Very cool!

Evan, Thursday, 19 June 2014 16:28 (twelve years ago)

thanks! GD to be compared w/chasney in any way is very cool :)

sinister porpoise (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 19 June 2014 17:36 (twelve years ago)

Just got a vg(?) copy of death chants vol 2 by fahey for $40 was I a sucker?

Evan, Friday, 20 June 2014 00:05 (twelve years ago)

Is it the skeleton/lady woodcut cover, the Tom Weller psych lettering, or maybe the plain black type? I'd say you could get the woodcut style covers at pretty good prices every now and then on eBay: usually see good copies going for $15 to $25. The Tom Weller illustrated ones going for a bit more bc (I guess?) they were originally distributed overseas. $40 ain't bad, but you could've defiantly gotten one at a solid $20.

Neal Cassady, Friday, 20 June 2014 01:57 (twelve years ago)

Back in 07/08 I think $40 wasn't uncommon. But things kind of dropped off recently, though I haven't trawled eBay in a while so things might have picked up again bc of the book release/etc.

Neal Cassady, Friday, 20 June 2014 02:00 (twelve years ago)

It's the black plain type one. They seem to go for around $80 these days? Though those clearly are in better shape than mine.

Evan, Friday, 20 June 2014 03:13 (twelve years ago)

Well... despite the fact that the store owner was able to sample it without any defects, I can't get it to play without the needle sliding around the record. The warp seemed slight enough.

I guess I'll try to return it. Waste of time!

Shame cause it's the 1965 original.

Evan, Friday, 20 June 2014 03:35 (twelve years ago)

Oh damn! The og pressing. I'd always wanted a copy of that, especially Death Chants. That's a huge shame you can't get a proper play out of it though, damn! I'd be too bummed as well.

Neal Cassady, Friday, 20 June 2014 08:14 (twelve years ago)

$40 would've be a really nice price if it had worked out. :(

Neal Cassady, Friday, 20 June 2014 08:17 (twelve years ago)

Yeah! I mean, maybe I have to adjust the weight on my tonearm or something but I'm not sure if that'll be enough to get it to work. Worth a shot I guess.

Evan, Friday, 20 June 2014 11:36 (twelve years ago)

OK so I re-calibrated the tonearm and the issues I had on side 2 are fixed but track 2 on side 1 is still pretty unlistenable with all of the skips... Hmmm...

Evan, Friday, 20 June 2014 14:40 (twelve years ago)

James Blackshaw - Fantômas: Le Faux Magistrat is available for full stream over at Stereogum now.
http://www.stereogum.com/1688377/stream-james-blackshaw-fantomas-stereogum-premiere/video/
It's out on 7/7/14.

"Something we’ll surely get used to as the decade continues is the fact that we’re going to start hitting the 100-year anniversaries of some very important films. This year marked the triple-digit birthday of the Fantômas series. The serialized films followed the anti-hero thief Fantômas who would often stage sadistically elaborate ways of murdering his enemies (how can you not root for a guy who kills with the “giant room filling with sand” method?). It’s an extremely influential series, and to celebrate the occasion, several artists were commissioned to compose new film scores to be performed live with a screening of the series (which taken all together makes a nearly six-hour film). One of those artists was the virtuoso guitarist James Blackshaw, who worked with the fifth and final film in the series, Le Faux Magistrat. You can stream the entire score below and watch a clip of Blackshaw performing it live at the anniversary screening in France last Halloween."

Neal Cassady, Monday, 23 June 2014 19:33 (twelve years ago)

it's good - very far away from anything "american primitive" though. unless david shire's soundtrack to "the conversation" is considered american primitive.

tylerw, Monday, 23 June 2014 19:39 (twelve years ago)

Are there any Coloradan/Denverites on here? I'm going to be there in the early part of August and wondered if there were any particular gigs* coming up, or any record shops/good bars worth a look? It's a family trip, so not sure how much chance I'll get to have a proper look around, but want to be fully armed...

*I checked some listings, but could only find stuff with the larger venues. I'm praying for a secret Glenn Jones/Pelt gig in a loft somewhere.

Poacher (Chinaski), Tuesday, 24 June 2014 09:09 (twelve years ago)

"I'm praying for a secret Glenn Jones/Pelt gig in a loft somewhere"

Hah me too, would be just about the perfect show for me these days.

grandavis, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 13:16 (twelve years ago)

cool excited to check out blackshaw

sinister porpoise (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 24 June 2014 13:52 (twelve years ago)

tyler to thread! xxp

polyamanita (sleeve), Tuesday, 24 June 2014 14:27 (twelve years ago)

Bumping this so Tyler sees that Colorado/Denver request up above.

grandavis, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 17:33 (twelve years ago)

yesss, i live here in colorado. record stores ... twist and shout is sorta the big one, maybe amoeba-lite. there's wax trax, too, which is OK, though maybe past its prime. best one is a little bit out of the way, but might be worth it: www.blackandread.net
as for shows, yeah, i'm probably on record in this thread complaining that we don't get a lot of these guys out here for whatever reason. don't think UMS, global tetrahedron or grandavis have played here once! lame.

tylerw, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 17:37 (twelve years ago)

Holding out for that Tyler-curated Aquarium Drunkard/Revolt of the ILX Brigade showcase.

grandavis, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 17:44 (twelve years ago)

seems like a no-brainer -- i wish i knew how to do stuff like that!

tylerw, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 17:50 (twelve years ago)

Worth figuring it out so you can get all the actual touring folks to come to you.

grandavis, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 17:56 (twelve years ago)

yes agree
get someone in the mayor's office to lend a hand -- it's good for tourism! just ask knoxville.

in other news, my drumming has improved a lot! just here to remind y'all in case you're feeling beat-starved.

La Lechera, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:03 (twelve years ago)

i even work for the tourism bureau.
send me a beat LL! i could do something with it probably. tywilc AT gmail

tylerw, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:13 (twelve years ago)

Man Colorado is so beautiful, I would think folks would be into a festival kinda thing there, it is just a question of where else they would play along the way. I mean, a bunch of folks are hitting up this festival in Asheville, and it is just being put on by a record store. I have no idea how things like this get organized, but this is a good line-up to model a small-ish festival after:

http://harvest-records.com/transfigurations/

grandavis, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:20 (twelve years ago)

i'm on it!

La Lechera, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:21 (twelve years ago)

Note The Clean at the top of the list Tyler. You gotta get Aquarium Drunkard to sponsor you covering these kinda things.

grandavis, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:21 (twelve years ago)

yeah seems like doing something like that in Boulder would be great.
here's where I'd do it
http://www.genealogybug.net/Postcards/chautauqua.JPG

tylerw, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:26 (twelve years ago)

Whoa, that looks great. Sign me up.

grandavis, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:28 (twelve years ago)

that harvest fest looks great

though

it's kinda weird to start a record label 10 years ago and call it Harvest, given like there was a p iconic Harvest Records and they seem like ppl who would know that

sinister porpoise (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:28 (twelve years ago)

ha, i know! i was confused when i heard about that fest -- like "harvest records still exists ... in Asheville?" i guess the OG harvest still exists -- they just put out a death grips record of all things.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvest_Records

tylerw, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:33 (twelve years ago)

but the asheville harvest can call themselves whatever they want if they can get a lineup like that together

tylerw, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:35 (twelve years ago)

ha, i was just in denver not long ago! i recommend drinking beers in fishman park. other than that, i don't know much!

there is a cool 'folklore center' which is really just a great old-timey instrument shop, lots of mandolins and resonators and such, pretty cool to check out. when i was there, there were a great crew of older dudes, probably mid 70s, just jamming out... was kinda jealous that that's how they got to spend their time

global tetrahedron, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:38 (twelve years ago)

yeahhh, that place is very cool. http://www.denverfolklore.com

tylerw, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:40 (twelve years ago)

Definitely weird in re the name of the label (Harvest), but I don't think putting records out is a big priority for them, I think the store is much more the focus of the business. Still, I have no idea how a record store in a small-ish town in the mountains of North Carolina gets all of those folks to come to this kind of thing, but that would be a cool place for it to happen. If I ever hit the road, I am definitely going to play Asheville.

grandavis, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 18:40 (twelve years ago)

I think Transfigurations is big enough to bring people down from Maryland/DC/Virginia and bring people up from further south or a bit futher West. Morgantown, WV is where Decoder Mag is based and there's a pretty decent group out there. Though I wouldn't put it past Asheville to stock most of the shows at Harvest, Asheville is huge with weirdo jam dudes and I think it's growing with the weirdo experimental crowd. Went to Transfigurations in 09 I think and it was amazing. Espers played, Brightblack Morning Light didn't show so Meg Baird did a solo set with Gunn backing her, Gunn did a solo set, Bonnie Prince Billy, I dunno what else but I loved it, it was pretty packed with people too.

That Inner Mountain Fest back in 2012 was fucking amazing though, MV+EE curated it as sort of a follow up to their Brattleboro free folk meet ups from the early 00's.

Neal Cassady, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 19:30 (twelve years ago)

Yeah, Asheville was cool when I visited. Tashi Dorji is based there, and the Bathetic label amongst other cool shit. Transfigurations I lineup looks cool too, wonder how a 5 year old store got all those folks to come! Must be well-connected folks. Tempted to go to this, it is only a little over 5 hours away, but probably not going to work for me.

grandavis, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 19:38 (twelve years ago)

Harvest's roots run pretty deep - a lot of these folks were invited to play the fest because many of them played the first instores the store hosted when they were a much smaller deal (they're one of the lucky record stores that has been able to actually expand - see also Grimeys in Nashville). Grandavis correct in that the label has never seemed like too high a priority - the store was first, and I think naming the label after the store just seemed like an obvious thing to do at that point. I think their first release was a Hush Arbors record? One of his best ones, too.

I do wish Tashi was playing - conspicuous in his absence. May have said this upthread, but his was the best show I've seen in 2014, hands down. That quibble aside though, I'm pretty psyched about this lineup.

Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 19:48 (twelve years ago)

Maybe Tashi will be on the road slinging that Hermit Hut record about to come out ....

grandavis, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 19:55 (twelve years ago)

Cheers for the heads up on all the Denver stuff - looks brilliant. My sister lives out near City Park and used to live out near Arvada so will definitely go check out Black and Read. And that Folklore Center looks ace.

I live down in the south of England and no bastard comes down this way, so I feel you pain. Though, admittedly, London is only an hour and a half away, so I should stop whining.

Poacher (Chinaski), Tuesday, 24 June 2014 21:44 (twelve years ago)

Are there record shops in Boulder, btw? I've been a couple of times, but only ever come across (great) bookshops.

Poacher (Chinaski), Tuesday, 24 June 2014 21:46 (twelve years ago)

there used to be a couple on College Hill... in 1989

polyamanita (sleeve), Tuesday, 24 June 2014 21:48 (twelve years ago)

haha, well albums on the hill is still there. i've never been that amazed with them though at least in the last 10 years.
absolute vinyl is OK, not a huge selection, but pretty nice. there's a place called bart's too, but i haven't been to their new location... a record store just opened in my town actually, which is about 20 minutes from Boulder, but i thought everything was pretty overpriced. black and read is probably the one you want if you can make - great books, good selection, decent prices.
and yeah, if i lived near a city like london i would probably be constantly wracked with guilt for *not* going to shows. i can just complain from afar out here.

tylerw, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 21:58 (twelve years ago)

I found such amazing stuff on my 1989 trip, one of my most fondly remembered score sessions... OG 7" singles on Industrial records for like $3, Pop Group, This Heat, Poison Girls, Delta 5, so much good stuff.

polyamanita (sleeve), Tuesday, 24 June 2014 22:08 (twelve years ago)

/derail

polyamanita (sleeve), Tuesday, 24 June 2014 22:08 (twelve years ago)

crazy how different boulder must've been at that point. it's all fancy restaurants and start up companies now.

tylerw, Tuesday, 24 June 2014 23:02 (twelve years ago)

My Boulder memory: going into a second hand bookshop that was playing Charlambides; finding a copy of Ian Carr's book on Miles; walking through the town and up into the hills; reading under the dome of the sky listening to Sketches of Spain. I think I left part of myself up there.

Poacher (Chinaski), Wednesday, 25 June 2014 10:26 (twelve years ago)

Hah hah that is amazing Chinaski. I spent a really formative summer in Boulder when I was in college. I wanted to get out of the Northeast for a bit and thought Colorado would be a nice geographic change (plus I had some friends there), but got pretty disappointed at first cause everyone I met seemed to be a Northeastern boarding school transplant type. I had just turned 19, gotten really into Sonic Youth/Dinosaur Jr./Butthole Surfers/Pavement and other popular weird-ish bands (summer of '94) and so didn't really want to be meeting exclusively folks whose musical interests ended at The Dead/Allmans/Phish/Bob Marley. I mean, I should have seen it coming, but still.

After about a month of disappointment, in one week I saw Allen Ginsberg hanging out in a bar mutliple times, found the good record store in town that had a ton of great stuff and folks working who were cool sharing knowledge, and saw Drive Like Jehu live for the first and only time, which was definitely a life-changing event for me. I had never seen anything like that live before. So, despite all the weird angsty stuff I went through that summer, mission accomplished in some fundamental ways. Plus the scenery is amazing, so I just ended up ditching the idea of meeting people and instead hiked around with my walkman listening to "Yank Crime" over and over and over.

grandavis, Wednesday, 25 June 2014 13:00 (twelve years ago)


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