Listening to this now, so I can pass the definitive judgment on it.
― Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Monday, 21 May 2018 18:43 (eight years ago)
Shocked that Mary Lattimore's music could inspire such enmity. I saw her open for Parquet Courts a year ago in a church & it was beautiful, her music was obviously more suited to the venue than PC. New album is great. What's to hate?
― flappy bird, Monday, 21 May 2018 18:46 (eight years ago)
she's been heading in a more dreamy direction lately, but some of her records (like the collabs with Jeff Ziegler) go into some wilder, more out zones. i like both sides of the coin.
― tylerw, Monday, 21 May 2018 18:54 (eight years ago)
This is pleasant yet dull. I could see it being fine for when I want to be in a very chill headspace, but it isn't exactly exciting to listen to, and the harp playing is a bit too hazy lazy for my taste.
― Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Monday, 21 May 2018 18:57 (eight years ago)
well, that's settled, then
― Paul Ponzi, Monday, 21 May 2018 19:02 (eight years ago)
I loved seeing her play live last year.
― reggae mike love (polyphonic), Monday, 21 May 2018 19:10 (eight years ago)
Yep, you're welcome
xp
― Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Monday, 21 May 2018 19:10 (eight years ago)
There's an imprecision to the harp parts that makes me itchy if I focus too much on it.
― Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Monday, 21 May 2018 20:37 (eight years ago)
the guy who hears Emeralds or Oneohtrix and goes to Guitar Center and gets four pedals and an Arturia minibrute and creates sounds that to the average listener are indistinguishable from those made by the ambient 'pioneers?
hey i think you'll find that actually i own a microbrute
― lazy rascals, spending their substance, and more, in riotous living (Merdeyeux), Monday, 21 May 2018 21:55 (eight years ago)
bet I know the four pedals though
― Paul Ponzi, Monday, 21 May 2018 22:49 (eight years ago)
it was, but I thought incurious reverie was a much more astute indictment given the way the board has gone and so hoped that's what he'd meant
― ogmor, Monday, May 21, 2018 1:52 PM (eight hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
FWIW I do think "incurious reverie" works as well in terms of capturing what (I think) the original point meant, though second guessing is perhaps a dangerous game.
Conversely, though, any debate that frames ILX's "problem" around what people listen to rather than how they listen to music and talk about it is missing the point IMO - and further, the issue with trying to refract that kind of critique through a single artist or album or etc. is that it's basically impossible to move beyond the what to the how, except as part of a bad faith "people who listen to this are like that" exercise. Even if someone was listening to a piece of music as an act of "self-care" this doesn't really get very far as character diagnosis given they may well be listening to (insert your favourite difficult / challenging / politically subversive artist) next.
There's a reason why rtc tended to criticise ILX (or segments thereof) for what music people refused to engage with (and how they tended to refuse to engage) rather than the other way around - it's far more instructive. The problem with Patrick Bateman (who is the archetype for the kind of discussion we're having) is not that he was wrong about the records that he liked but that his aesthetic value system was so rigidly foreclosed.
― Tim F, Monday, 21 May 2018 23:15 (eight years ago)
1) who is rtc?2) why does he (he?) get to determine the nature of our discussion of the harp music of mary lattimore?
trying to project your thoughts onto people who enjoy a certain artist's music is a fool's errand/exercise in irrelevance imo
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Monday, 21 May 2018 23:28 (eight years ago)
I listened to this and I like it
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 21 May 2018 23:29 (eight years ago)
but I get partly was ogmor is saying, there's a lot of cultural signifiers involved in why this is this and other stuff is on those CDs they play at massage placesbut I'd suggest they opposite rather that we underrated or dismiss the latter instead of overrate the former
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 21 May 2018 23:35 (eight years ago)
yep
― Tim F, Monday, 21 May 2018 23:38 (eight years ago)
Suzanne Ciani's new age recordings are niiiiice
― Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Monday, 21 May 2018 23:43 (eight years ago)
don't underestimate negative connotations and weird cultural associations with anything vaguely "yuppie"
also I blame punk rock for a lot of these idiot rockist opinions
― Paul Ponzi, Monday, 21 May 2018 23:58 (eight years ago)
but I get partly was ogmor is saying, there's a lot of cultural signifiers involved in why this is this and other stuff is on those CDs they play at massage places
but I'd suggest they opposite rather that we underrated or dismiss the latter instead of overrate the former
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown)
can't we do both? with the work having been done to destigmatize "new age" music, is it possible that the music of, say, laraaji is more creative and interesting than this record, and express that opinion not as a cheap put-down but as a genuine aesthetic judgment?
― Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 00:15 (eight years ago)
https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=sharp%20knees
― alpine static, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 00:18 (eight years ago)
xpost - given laraaji is an all-time genius i would consider that to be neither a cheap put-down nor a particularly biting aesthetic judgment.
― Tim F, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 01:46 (eight years ago)
“maybe she should latti less” - ogmor
― flopson, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 06:36 (eight years ago)
Haven’t heard the new album yet but really liked wawa by the sea so came to this thread to read some opinions on it on oh boy. Now ogmor has made me self-conscious and I’m aftaid of listening to it and liking it. I need to revaluate my life
― ✖✖✖ (Moka), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 06:42 (eight years ago)
I’m 32 and I have to admit I’m becoming less and less curious about the world and I don’t really get too excited about almost anything but that isn’t recent... I was born wealthy and that seems to be the trade-off for comfort in life I guess.
I am now feeling anxious about wasting my life, I just wanted to listen to some music.
― ✖✖✖ (Moka), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 06:48 (eight years ago)
im pretty sure rtc still posts here
― flopson, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 06:53 (eight years ago)
I don't know. I liked the Withdrawing Room. It seemed to have the right kind of drift - expansive and measured. It also wasn't afraid of dissonance. This does seem pretty safe and wooshy in comparison. Which isn't a criticism at all; it's more that it doesn't catch on anything, just passes through. Which is fine.
Weird to single her out, though - especially given the amount of actual more rigidly obvious post-Takoma stuff that seems to get a pass.
― The shard-borne beetle with his drowsy hums (Chinaski), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 08:23 (eight years ago)
xp lay some steve mcclaren bait out
― nxd, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 09:10 (eight years ago)
I don't get the Laraaji love. Based on what I've heard his music has two modes: boring and corny.
― Paul Ponzi, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 13:13 (eight years ago)
Now ogmor has made me self-conscious and I’m aftaid of listening to it and liking it. I need to revaluate my life
this is the opposite of what is supposed to happen when healthy discussion occurs
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 14:08 (eight years ago)
ok, ok, i'm convinced, we can go ahead and declare the death of hyperbole
― Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 14:27 (eight years ago)
There's a reason why rtc tended to criticise ILX (or segments thereof) for what music people refused to engage with (and how they tended to refuse to engage) rather than the other way around - it's far more instructive.
Ppl's lack of interest in something as niche as instrumental harp music doesn't seem like a refusal until they latch onto one particular example and then you wonder why this and not that. There's been quite an upturn in interest in instrumental string music in recent years but it's largely centred around this american scene, w/ a mixture of ppl from the previous early 00s takomish boom (& those they've inspired), the usual mix of often older psych and drone fans, and increasingly ppl who have followed their bliss from other scenes which have moved into more mellow, new age territory, which has become a converging point.
I've complained abt the guitarists more specifically in ilx brigade threads (despite what chinaski may remember), but a lot of it comes down to the perennial tension between composing and performing. When ppl pull back from cutting loose to go freeform and still restrict themselves to solid compositions while they get less and less composerly, you get some real turds. a fun glimpse at a glorious alternative world here is jack rose initially thinking that fare forward voyagers was improvised, bless him. I'd argue the interest in sarod, sitar & veena players beyond Sweet Modal Dronin' is as a model for how to have expressionist performance w/ some structure. A lot of ppl talk the same game as their predecessors (even dress the same) but the attempts to thrash out some sort of coherent sound have made it more cliche, less surprising, less engaged w/ other material, less structured, less varied, and increasingly insular as it veers closer to being pure mood music. what was timeless becomes ahistorical, what was deployed w/ deft irony is cack-handedly hammered home over and over w/ blunt sincerity. there's no ambiguity, only superficial depth, no stakes, no drama. cadillac desert.
The uncritical positivity around the scene belies its narrowed interest and, indeed, 'foreclosed value system'. why does ML get so many more ilx ears than, say, toumani & sidiki diabate's gorgeously fluid, shimmering, spacious, limber & fantastically pretty 2014 album? toumani's much more famous, he's worked with loads of accomplished performers, represents ~70 generations of kora playing tradition and plays this beautiful, expansive, lucid, tender music that you can v happily zone out to or focus on as you see fit. people will occasionally spend an afternoon Vibing To The World Tip but are consistently excited to check out the last person who opened for thurston moore, are ready to pay for a boutique reissue of some californian who recorded two pretty ok songs in 1973, or suddenly pay attention to some mediocrity who's been plugging away in rightful obscurity for decades who Looks The Part.
idk quite what to make of it. do foreign rhythms harsh the buzz? do ML fans turn their nose up at lost of other instrumental harp music? is it more generous to assume ppl just want something as simple as possible or that they just pay more attention to white americans in plaid? anyway this thread has reminded me to order this, am stoked:
https://img.discogs.com/N2-OH_VqHkEnYgNJzAft5dA2exc=/fit-in/600x592/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-9596328-1483387259-4446.jpeg.jpg
― ogmor, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 14:37 (eight years ago)
lol ogmor william tyler really gets your aesthetic goat don't he?
again i'm not discounting some of your points, though i think certain players (sarah louise and ryley walker's new albums, chuck johnson's pedal steel stuff and what i expect from the next daniel bachman album based on his 1000 incarnations of the rose set) are breaking through to voices that are very distinctive...
also can i just say i love jack rose but the constant holding up as him and fahey as the "real deal" that can't be topped is its own form of blinkered that plagues the scene as much as the chumminess you're talking about
since we're basically rehashing mild brigade beefs here and it's getting attention outside of the regulars i'll repost Wu Fei, which you might dig?
Wu Fei is a native of Beijing & a current Nashville resident, is a master of the guzheng, the ancient 21-string Chinese zither. She was trained as a Western classical composer, a vocalist, & plays beautifully in the guzheng's vernacular–a musical language which is at least 2,000 years old. She mixes Western & Chinese traditional sensibilities with a contemporary idiosyncratic, experimental dialect
https://wufeimusic.bandcamp.com/
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 15:05 (eight years ago)
― The shard-borne beetle with his drowsy hums (Chinaski), Tuesday, May 22, 2018 3:23 AM (six hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
but yeah ogmor is right he's def critical of many nu-post-takoma players in his defense
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 15:06 (eight years ago)
haha, i think ogmor's making interesting/valid points, but I also think that accusing people who are listening to and enjoying an obscure instrumental harpist of being musically incurious and self-absorbed (and maybe racist?) is a weird way to go about it. i own and love several diabate records fwiw.
― tylerw, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 15:12 (eight years ago)
thing about this record though is that it doesn't really feel like part of that that whole post-takoma thing (even though that might be part of mary's background? i don't know tbh). i can't really hear any connection with american primitivism or any other kind of quasi-rootsy authenticity. it's more that meeting point between new age and the gauzy ambientish indie of juliana barwick, colleen, benoit pioulard etc. would totally encourage people to go listen to toumani diabate though - 'new ancient strings' with ballake sissoko was a real game changer for me
― chant down basildon (NickB), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 15:17 (eight years ago)
― tylerw
it seems a bit strawmanny to be honest, i'm not entirely convinced that there are loads of people who go ape over lattimore to the _detriment_ of diabate. ilx spending more time discussing a record that came out this year (and most of that discussion centering around ogmor's post, if not for it this thread would've died at ten posts) than a record that came out in 2014 should be a surprise to nobody.
that wu fei record is great, sorry i missed it when it came out but in my defense i had a lot going on in 2007
― Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 15:31 (eight years ago)
I meant in 2014 obv. I will check the wu fei. I quite like sarah louise but those other three are the worst offenders imo, but anyway, I'll leave you to yr healthy discussion, but tbh this biz is not what i'm about: constant holding up (of rose) and fahey as the "real deal" that can't be topped - something can be a v desperate copy without the thing it's copying being untoppable, but obv that wld require understanding exactly what it is that yr trying to top (for example: his curiosity). fahey is the real deal in that he's what everyone's copying; rose is a different, transitional figure. it all went wrong with james blackshaw, who was at least ahead of the curve, and some of you wld probably like a lot
― ogmor, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 15:45 (eight years ago)
can't abide by james blackshaw tbh
― global tetrahedron, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 16:00 (eight years ago)
blackshaw isn't the worst point of comparison tbh - there's a latent medievalism in both their work rather than anything blues based
― chant down basildon (NickB), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 16:12 (eight years ago)
or blues derived rather
― chant down basildon (NickB), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 16:13 (eight years ago)
fahey is the real deal in that he's what everyone's copying
You accuse the ML fans / Diabete ignorers of engaging in (I guess hype-centered?) myopia and then you say this.
To say "everyone" is copying Fahey is so completely and demonstrably false, as you well know. I'd love to hear what exactly Nathan Salsburg, Cian Nugent, Paul Metzger, or Rick Bishop have to do with Fahey, to name four completely different acoustic guitarists we've mentioned on this thread and others. The frustrating thing for me about the so-called post-Takoma stuff (and things like the Thousand Incarnations festival) is that it shoves a lot of very distinctive players into this "American Primitive" box, which is imo probably the least musically interesting music being made by solo guitar players in 2018. Fahey / Rose copycats are everywhere because it's the easiest style to passably imitate. No one is "doing" Bert Jansch, to say nothing of Debashish Bhuttacharya, because that shit is way more difficult than figuring out how to play Mississippi John Hurt tunes for audiences raised on At The Drive In and Built To Spill.
This is not at all to discount the talent (and in many cases genius) of players like Fahey and Rose (and Bachman, who I think is a pretty huge cut above a lot of his contemporaries). I just think those guys should be the final word on "Sunflower River Blues" and sidelong slide guitar ragas because enough already.
― Paul Ponzi, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 16:15 (eight years ago)
yah i feel like blackshaw is way more descended from UK folk by way of Philip Glass than Am Priv
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 16:16 (eight years ago)
UK folk by way of Philip Glass
What is the best Blackshaw album to listen to for this sound? I've only listened to Apologia, which I like a lot but seems Ampriv/country blues-rooted to me. That description sounds awesome, though.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 16:33 (eight years ago)
because that shit is way more difficult than figuring out how to play Mississippi John Hurt tunes for audiences raised on At The Drive In and Built To Spill.
this cuts deep
― global tetrahedron, Tuesday, 22 May 2018 16:37 (eight years ago)
Sund4r - try The Glass Bead Game
― chant down basildon (NickB), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 16:39 (eight years ago)
Oh, 4m in, Glass Bead Game is definitely up my alley.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 17:10 (eight years ago)
way more difficult than figuring out how to play Mississippi John Hurt tunes for audiences raised on At The Drive In and Built To Spill.
actually takes some practice champ try it sometime
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 17:15 (eight years ago)
sorry harp threads make me aggro
#side2mywar
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 17:20 (eight years ago)
At The Drive In and Built To Spill
would attend this co-headlining tour, mary lattimore opening ofc
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 17:23 (eight years ago)
hope mary lattimore doesn't start dating elon musk or shit is gonna get ugly itt
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 17:29 (eight years ago)
how soon ye forget the wars of the newsom
― chant down basildon (NickB), Tuesday, 22 May 2018 17:34 (eight years ago)
Enjoying this, thanks.
― jmm, Tuesday, 13 November 2018 15:05 (seven years ago)
Mary Lattimore on the PBS @NewsHour just now! Very cool 👏 pic.twitter.com/vkbeFymeVX— Nicky Smith (@nickyotissmith) April 20, 2019
― flappy bird, Saturday, 20 April 2019 21:45 (seven years ago)
I just came to say her new album is rather lovely and then I re-read the thread...
― Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Saturday, 14 November 2020 09:54 (five years ago)
I will state ftr that I'm in the upper reaches of the 30-50 bracket and have very much given up.
― Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Saturday, 14 November 2020 09:57 (five years ago)
She is fantastic and I love the new one
― change display name (Jordan), Saturday, 14 November 2020 13:36 (five years ago)
I think this album is her strongest yet & ogmor can suck it
― real muthaphuckkin jeez (crüt), Saturday, 14 November 2020 14:42 (five years ago)
https://bfplny.com/event/electric-appalachia/
Jan 25 at 7:30pmSILENT FILMS / LIVE MUSIC:ELECTRIC APPALACHIAElectric Appalachia is scored and performed by Mary Lattimore and William Tyler.Experience the first evening of the Silent Films/Live Music series with the New York premiere of “Electric Appalachia.” Using found archival footage, the film offers a meditation on electricity and modernity in East Tennessee. Compiled by Eric Dawson (director at the Tennessee Archive of Moving Image and Sound – TAMIS) with score written and performed by guitarist William Tyler and harpist Mary Lattimore.No RSVP is required. Seating is first come, first served. Free popcorn while supplies last.
Experience the first evening of the Silent Films/Live Music series with the New York premiere of “Electric Appalachia.” Using found archival footage, the film offers a meditation on electricity and modernity in East Tennessee. Compiled by Eric Dawson (director at the Tennessee Archive of Moving Image and Sound – TAMIS) with score written and performed by guitarist William Tyler and harpist Mary Lattimore.No RSVP is required. Seating is first come, first served. Free popcorn while supplies last.
― POLIZISTEN VERSINKEN IM SCHLAMM (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 18 January 2023 20:45 (three years ago)
New album today https://marylattimoreharpist.bandcamp.com/album/goodbye-hotel-arkada
― giraffe, Friday, 6 October 2023 09:55 (two years ago)
Listening now, it's fantastic.
― Chris L, Saturday, 7 October 2023 16:03 (two years ago)
Was about to make the exact same post, lol
― Jordan s/t (Jordan), Saturday, 7 October 2023 16:05 (two years ago)
Great stuff
― nxd, Saturday, 7 October 2023 19:20 (two years ago)
https://marylattimoreharpist.bandcamp.com/album/tragic-magic
Julianna Barwick collab!
― etc, Sunday, 18 January 2026 09:21 (four months ago)
had it on repeat Friday, beautiful record
― nxd, Sunday, 18 January 2026 12:22 (four months ago)
nice bladerunner remix, lol.
― LocalGarda, Sunday, 18 January 2026 12:39 (four months ago)
oh no shit that cover made the album? They performed it live when I saw them open for Floating Points last year and it was gorgeous, immediately recognized it and had to contain myself as the room was wonderfully quiet for their set.
― octobeard, Tuesday, 20 January 2026 05:23 (four months ago)
Been looking forward to this. Debating whether to attend their live show. It'll no doubt be spellbinding but dragging my out of the house in the winter on a weeknight is a hard sell these days. Anyone else going to catch them on this tour?
― Indexed, Tuesday, 20 January 2026 18:01 (four months ago)
weather is beautiful today so went for a walk round the parks with the new(ish) one playing and it was perfection :)
― nxd, Friday, 24 April 2026 16:09 (one month ago)