ILM's Now For Something Completely Different... 70s Album Poll Results! Top 100 Countdown! (Part 2)

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Haha, oh you fool!

emil.y, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:15 (eleven years ago) link

I actually went on a "dream baby dream" covers tear earlier this year, neneh's version didn't do much for me tho

xps

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:15 (eleven years ago) link

6. TELEVISION Marquee Moon (5223 Points, 35 Votes)
RYM: #1 for 1977, #26 overall | Acclaimed: #25 | RS: #128 | Pitchfork: #3

http://threeandahalfstars.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/television-marquee-moon.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/630o1rKTDsLeIPreOY1jqP
spotify:album:630o1rKTDsLeIPreOY1jqP

I know why people complain about Tom Verlaine's angst-ridden voice, but fuck that, I haven't had such intense pleasure from a new release since I got into Layla three months after it came out, and this took about fifteen seconds. The lyrics, which are in a demotic-philosophical mode ("I was listening/listening to the rain/I was hearing/hearing something else"), would carry this record alone; so would the guitar playing, as lyrical and piercing as Clapton or Garcia but totally unlike either. Yes, you bet it rocks. And no, I didn't believe they'd be able to do it on record because I thought this band's excitement was all in the live raveups. Turns out that's about a third of it. A+ -- R. Christgau

TV signed to Elektra and released Marquee Moon, produced by Andy Johns, in 1977. A tendency to "jam" onstage caused detractors (and, paradoxically, British fans) to refer to them as the Grateful Dead of punk, but it was the distinctive two-guitar interplay (along with Verlaine's nails-on-chalkboard vocals) that set them apart. Verlaine's staccato singing in songs like "Prove It" and "Friction" is impressive, and the long workout on the title track showed a willingness to break away from the solidifying traditions of their more selfconscious contemporaries. -- Trouser Press

Along with Blondie and the Ramones, Television achieved their initial notoriety while playing in the same place (an esophagus of a bar called CBGB, in lower Manhattan), and have been lumped together with other habitués of this joint as purveyors of "punk rock." In their self-consciousness and liberal open-mindedness, these bands are as punky as Fonzie; that is, not at all.

Marquee Moon, Television's debut album, is more interesting, audacious and unsettling than either Blondie's eponymous debut album or the Ramones' Leave Home. Leader Tom Verlaine wrote all the songs, coproduced with Andy Johns, plays lead guitar in a harrowingly mesmerizing stream-of-nightmare style and sings all his verses like an intelligent chicken being strangled: clearly, he dominates this quartet. Television is his vehicle for the portrayal of an arid, despairing sensibility, musically rendered by loud, stark repetitive guitar riffs that build in every one of Marquee Moon's eight songs to nearly out-of-control climaxes. The songs often concern concepts or inanimate objects -- "Friction," "Elevation," "Venus (de Milo, that is) -- and when pressed Verlaine even opts for the mechanical over the natural: in the title song, he doesn't think that a movie marquee glows like the moon; he feels that the moon resonates with the same evocative force as a movie marquee.

When one can make out the lyrics, they often prove to be only non sequiturs, or phrases that fit metrically but express little, or puffy aphorisms or chants. (The chorus of "Prove It" repeats, to a delightful sprung-reggae beat: "Prove it/ Just the facts/ The confidential" a few times.)

All this could serve to distance or repel us, and taken with Verlaine's guitar solos, which flirt with an improvisational formlessness, cold easily bore. But he structures his compositions around these spooky, spare riffs, and they stick to the back of your skull. On Marquee Moon, Verlaine becomes all that much better for a new commercial impulse that gives his music its catchy, if slashing, hook.

Television treks across the same cluttered, hostile terrain as bands like the Velvet Underground and the New York Dolls, but the times may be on the side of Verlaine: we have been prepared for Television's harsh subway sound by a grudging, after-the-fact-of-their-careers acceptance of those older bands. -- Ken Tucker, RS

Somewhat mysteriously, Television was the most widely touted band to emerge from the New York New Wave. But Marquee Moon showed the group as the exclusive project of guitarist Tom Verlaine, an interesting Jerry Garcia-influenced guitarist who lacked melodic ideas or any emotional sensibility. -- Dave Marsh, 1983 RS Record Guide

It should be mysterious to no one why Television was so widely touted. What does mystify me is how Marsh could think Verlaine "lacked melodic ideas" or that Television was his "exclusive project" (Richard Lloyd!!). 

The second edition of the Rolling Stone Record Guide was published in 1983. Like the first edition, it was edited by Dave Marsh and John Swenson. Though Marsh, in the first lines of his introduction, purports that this second edition is "virtually a new book," in fact, there was actually quite a bit of overlap between the two guides. At least half of the entries in the second edition are more or less identical to the ones in the first, though in some cases the ratings have changed. Marsh's entry for the band Television, for example, was unchanged, but he downgraded the band's classic debut, Marquee Moon (along with Adventure), from three to two stars. 

Despite the substantial overlap between the two books, the second edition of the record guide is arguably even worse than the first one, primarily because Dave Marsh seems to have exercised even more control this time around. Marsh notes in the introduction that the new edition provides an opportunity to "revise and correct reviews that were inadequate or inaccurate in the earlier addition" by "rewriting ourselves or reassigning the material in question to another reviewer." A few of the more egregious entries in the first edition are amended - for example, Richard Hell is now proclaimed to be a "true poet" and Blank Generation a five star album, while Pere Ubu's Dave Thomas is "the funniest man in rock" and Dub Housing is upgraded from one to four stars. In most cases, though, the writer "reassigned" to an artist is Marsh himself, and almost invariably he is more negative than the previous reviewer. 

One more aside about Tom Verlaine: There was actually a separate entry for Verlaine in the 1983 guide, written by Brian Cullman. Cullman rated both of Tom Verlaine's solo albums four stars, and was about as enthusiastic about Tom Verlaine as Marsh was dismissive of Television. In other words, the takeaway from the 1983 guide is that Marquee Moon is far inferior to Verlaine's solo work, though I'm sure that no one that contributed to the guide actually held that opinion. 

Marquee Moon was #130 on RS's 500 greatest albums list. -- schmidtt, Rolling Stone's 500 Worst Reviews of All Time

Cut the crap, junior, he sez and put the hyperbole on ice.

I concur thus. Sometimes it takes but one record -- one cocksure magical statement -- to cold-cock all the crapola and all-purpose wheatchaff mix ‘n’ match, to set the whole schmear straight and get the current state of play down down down to stand or fall in one, dignified granite-hard focus.

Such statements, are precious indeed.

Marquee Moon, the first legitimate album release from Manhattan combo Television however, is one: a 24-carat inspired and totally individualist creation which calls the shots on all the glib media pigeon-holing that’s taken place predating its appearance; a work that at once makes a laughing stock of those ignorant clowns, who have filed the band’s work under the cretinous banner of “Punk-rock” or “Velvet Underground off-shoot freneticism” or even (closer to home, maybe, but still way off the bulls-eye) “teeth-grinding psychotic rock” (‘Sister Ray’ and assorted sonic in-laws). First things first.

This, Television’s first album is a record most adamantly, not fashioned merely for the N.Y. avant-garde rock cognoscenti. It is a record for everyone who boasts a taste for a new exciting music expertly executed, finely in tune, sublimely arranged with a whole new slant on dynamics, chord structures centred around a totally invigorating passionate application to the vision of centre-pin mastermind Tom Verlaine.

Two years have now elapsed since the first rave notices drifted over the hotline from down in the Bowery. Photos, principally those snapped when the mighty Richard Hell was in the band, backed up the gobbledegook but the music -- well, somehow no-one really got to grips with defining that side of things so that each report carried with it a thumbnail sketch of what the listener could divine from the maelstrom. Influences were flung at the reader, most omni-touted being guitarist mastermind Verlaine’s supposed immense debt to one Louis Reed circa White Heat/White Light which meant teeth-gnashing ostrich gee-tar glissando and whining hyena vocals. You get the picture.

Above all, one presumed Television to be the aural epitome of junk-sick boys straight off the E.S.T. funny farm -- psychotic reactions/narcotic contractions. Hell split the scene mid-75 taking his black widow spider physique and blue-print anthem for the Blank Generation, leaving ex-buddy-boy Tom Verlaine to call all dem shots, abetted by fellow guitarist and all purpose West Coast pin-up boy Richard Lloyd, a most unconventional new wave jazz-orientated drummer, name of Billy Ficca -- plus Hell’s replacement, the less visually imposing but more musically adept Fred Smith.

It’s been a good two years now since Television got those first drooling raves -- two long years which led one at times to believe that Verlaine’s musical visions would never truly find solace encased within the glinting sheen of black vinyl. The situation wasn’t helped in the slightest by Island Records sending over Brian Eno and Richard Williams to invigilate over a premature session back in ‘75, the combination of the band’s possible immaturity and Eno and Williams’ understanding of what was needed to flesh out the songs recorded, resulting in the taping of four or five horrendously flat skeletal performances which gave absolutely no indication regarding the band’s potential.

Following that snafu, Verlaine became, how you say, more than a little high-handed and downright eccentric in his dealings with other record companies and potential middle-man adversaries to the point where even those who quite desperately wished to sign him threw up their arms in despair of ever achieving such an end.

Reports filtering through the grapevine made Verlaine’s behaviour seem like that of a madman. Even when the ink had dried on the contract Joe Smith signed with the band for Elektra Records late last year; Verlaine was apparently still so overwhelmed with paranoia that he activated a policy of never properly enunciating the lyrics to unrecorded songs in performance for fear that plagiarists might steal his lyrics before they’d been set to wax.

The only number he dared to sing close to the microphone at this point was ‘Little Johnny Jewel’, the one-off cult single of ‘76, a bizarre morsel of highly sinister nonsense verse shaped around a quite remarkably lop-sided riff/dynamic which set off visions (at least to this listener’s ears) of an aural equivalent to the visuals used in the German impressionist cinema meisterwerk Dr Caligari’s Cabinet, spliced in half (the track took up both sides of a 45 -- labelled Parts 1 and 2) by a guitar solo which bore a distinct resemblance to, well, yes to Country Joe and The Fish. Their first album you know. The guitar pitch was exactly the same as that utilized by Barry Melton; fluid, mercury-like.

That’s the thing about Television you’ve first got to come to terms with. Forget all that “New York sound” stuff. For starters, this music is the total antithesis of the Ramones, say, and all those minimalist aggregates. To call it Punk Rock is rather like describing Dostoevsky as a short-story writer. This music itself is remarkably sophisticated, unworthy of even being paralleled to that of the original Velvet Underground whose combined instrumental finesse was practically a joke compared to what Verlaine and co. are cooking up here. Each song is tirelessly conceived and arranged for maximum impact -- the point where decent parallels really need to be made with the best West Coast groups. Early Love spring to mind, The Byrds’ cataclysmic ‘Eight Miles High’ period, a soupcon even of the Doors’ mondo predilections plus the very cream of a whole plethora of those psychedelic-punk bands that only Lenny Kaye knows about. Above all though the sound belongs most indubitably to Television, and the appearance of Marquee Moon at a time when rock is so hopelessly lost within the labyrinth of its own basic inconsequentiality that actual musical content has come to take a firm back-seat to “attitude” and all that word is supposed to signify is to these ears little short of revolutionary.

My opening gambit about the album providing a real focus for the current state of rock bears a relevance simply because here at last is a band whose vision is centred quite rigidly within their music -- not, say, in some half-baked notion of political manifesto-mongery with that trusty, thoroughly reactionary three chord back-drop to keep the whole scam buoyant. Verlaine’s appearance is simply as exciting as any other major innovator’s to the sphere of rock -- like Hendrix, Barrett, Dylan -- and, yeah, Christ knows I’m tossing up some true-blue heavies here but Goddammit I refuse to repent right now because this record just damn excites me so much.

To the facts then -- recorded in A & R Studios, New York, produced by Verlaine himself, with engineer Andy Johns keeping a watchful eye on the board and gaining co-production credits, the album lasts roughly three quarters of an hour and contains eight songs, most of which have been recorded in demo form at least twice (the Eno debacle to begin with, followed a year later by a reported superbly produced demo tape courtesy of the Blue Oyster Cult’s Alan Lanier, which, at a guess, clinched the band’s Elektra deal) and have been performed live innumerable times. The wait was been worthwhile because the refining process instigated by those hesitant years has sculpted the songs into the masterpieces that are here present for all to peruse.

Side one makes no bones about making its presence felt, kicking off with the full-bodied thrust of ‘See No Evil’. Guitars, bass and drums are strung together fitting tight as a glove clenched into a fist punching metal rivets of sound with the same manic abandon that typified the elegant ferocity of Love’s early drive. There is a real passion here -- no half-baked metal cut and thrust -- each beat reverberates to the base of the skull, with Verlaine’s voice a unique ostrich-like pitch that might just start to grate on the senses (a la his ex-sweetheart one P. Smith) were it not so perfectly mixed into the grain of the rhythm. The chorus / climax is irresistible anyway -- Verlaine crooning “I understand destructive urges / They seem so imperfect … I see … I see no e-v-i-i-l-l.”

The next song is truly something else. ‘(The arms of) Venus De Milo’ is already a classic among those who’ve heard it even though it has only now been recorded. It’s simply one of the most beautiful songs I’ve ever heard; the only other known work I can think of to parallel it with is Dylan’s ‘Mr Tambourine Man’ -- yup, it’s that exceptional. Only with Television’s twin guitar filigree weaving round the melody it sounds like some dream synthesis of Dylan himself backed by the Byrds circa ‘65. It’s really damn hard to convey just how gorgeous this song is -- the performance, -- all these incredible touches like the call-and-response Lou Reed parody. The song itself is like Dylan’s ‘Tambourine’, a vignette of a sort dealing wiih a dream-like quasi-hallucigenic state of ephiphany. “You know it’s all like some new kind of drug / My senses are hot and my hands are like gloves! … Broadway looks so medieval like a flap from so many pages … As I fell sideways laughing with a friend from many stages.”

‘Friction’ is probably the most readily accessible track from this album simply because, with its fairly anarchic, quasi-Velvets feel plus (all important) Verlaine’s most pungent methedrine guitar fret-board slaughter, here it’ll represent the kind of thing all those weaned on the hype and legend without hearing one note from Television will be expecting. It’s good, no more, no less -- bearing distinct cross-breeding with the manic slant sited on ‘Johnny Jewel’ without the latter’s insidiousness. ‘Friction’ is just that -- throwaway lyrics -- “diction/Friction” etc. -- those kind of throwaway rhymes, vicious instrumentation and a perfect climax which has Verlaine Vengefully spelling out the title “F-R-I-C-T-I-O-N” slashing his guitar for punctuation.

It’s down to the album’s title track to provide the side’s twin feat with ‘Venus De Milo’. Conceived at a time when rock tracks lasting over ten minutes are somewhere sunk deep below the subterranean depths of contempt, ‘Marquee Moon’ is as riveting a piece of music as I’ve heard since the halcyon days of… oh, God knows too many years have elapsed.

Everything about this piece is startling, from what can only be described as a kind of futuristic on-beat (i.e. reggae though you’d have to listen damn hard to catch it) built on Verlaine’s steely rhythm chopping against Lloyd’s intoxicating counterpoint. Slowly a story unfurls -- a typically surreal Verlaine ghost story -- involving Cadillacs pulling up in graveyards and disembodied arms beckoning the singer to get in while “lightning struck itself” and various twilight loony rejects from King Lear (that last bit’s my own fight of fancy, by the way) babbling crazy retorts to equally crazy questions. The lyrics mean little, I would guess by themselves, but as a scenario for the music here they become utterly compelling.

The song’s structure is practically unlike anything I’ve ever heard before. It transforms from a strident two chord construction to a breathtakingly beautiful chord progression which acts as a motif/climax for the narrative until the music takes over altogether. The band build on some weird Eastern modal scales not unlike those used in the extended improvised break of Fairport Convention’s ‘A Sailor’s Life’ on Unhalfbricking. The guitar solo -- either Lloyd or Verlaine -- even bears exactly the same tone as Richard Thompson’s. The instrumentation reaches a dazzling frenzied peak before dispersing into tiny droplets of electricity and Verlaine concludes his ghostly narrative as the song ends with that majestic minor chord motif.

‘Marquee Moon’ is the perfect place to draw attention to the band’s musical assets. Individually each player is superb -- not in the stereotyped sense of one who has spent hour upon hour over the record player dutifully apeing solo, riffs, embellishments but in that of only a precious few units -- Can is the only band that spring to mind here at the moment. Each player has striven to create his own style. Verlaine’s guitar solos take the feed-back sonic “accidents” that Lou Reed fell upon in his most fruitful period and has fashioned a whole style utilizing also, if I’m not mistaken, the staggeringly innovative Jim McGuinn staccato free-form runs spotlit on the hideously underrated Fifth Dimension album (which no one, McGuinn included, has ever bothered to develop).

He takes these potentially cataclysmic ideas and rigorously shapes them into a potential total redefinition of the electric guitar. As far as I’m concerned, as of this moment, Verlaine is probably the most exciting electric lead guitar player barring only Neil Young. As it is, Verlaine’s solo constructions are always unconventional, forever delving into new areas, never satisfied with referring back to formulas. Patti Smith once told me, by the way, that Verlaine religiously spends 12 hours a day practising his guitar playing in his room to Pablo Casals records.

Richard Lloyd is the perfect foil for Verlaine. Another fine musician, his more fluid conventional pitching and manic rhythm work is the perfect complimentary force and his contribution demands to be recognised for the power it possesses. Bassist Smith is always in there holding down the undertow of the music. He emerges only when his presence is required -- yet again, a superb player but next to Verlaine, it’s drummer Billy Ficca, visually the least impressive of all members standing -- aside the likes of cherub-faced Lloyd and super-aesthetic Verlaine, who truly astonishes. Basically a jazz drummer, Ficca’s adoption of Television’s majestic musical mutations as flesh-to-be-pulsed-out makes his pyrotechnics quite unique. Delicate but firm, he seems to be using every portion of his kit most of the time without ever being over-bearing. As one who knows little or nothing, about drumming, I can only express a quiet awe at the inventiveness behind his technique

Individual accolades apart, the band’s main clout lays in their ability to function as one and perhaps the best demonstration of this can be found in ‘Elevation’, side two’s opening gambit and, with ‘Venus’, probably this record’s most immediately suitable choice for a single. Layer upon layer of gentle boulevard guitar makes itself manifest until Lloyd holds the finger-picked melody together and Verlaine sings in that by now well accustomed hyena croon. The song again is beautiful, proudly contagious with a chorus that lodges itself in your subconscious like a bullet in the skull -- “Elevation don’t go to my head” repeated thrice until on the third line a latent ghost-like voice transmutes “Elevation” into “Television”. Guitars cascade in and out of the mix so perfectly.

‘Guiding Light’ is reflective, stridently poetic -- a hymn for aesthetes -- which, complete with piano, reminds me slightly of Procol Harum in excelsis. ‘Prove It’, the following track, is another potential single. Verlaine as an asthmatic ostrich-voice Sam Spade “This case … this case I’ve been working on so long” and of course that chorus which I still can’t hesitate quoting -- “Prove it/Just the facts/Confidential”. From Chandler, Television move to Hitchcock -- at least for the title of the last song on this album: ‘Torn Curtain’ is one of Verlaine’s most recent creations -- a most melancholy composition again reminiscent in part of a Procol Harum song although the timbre of Verlaine’s voice is the very antithesis of Gary Booker’s world weary tones. A song of grievous circumstances (as with so many of Verlaine’s lyrics); the facts -- cause and effect -- remain enigmatically sheltered from the listener. The structure is indeed strange, like some Bavarian funeral march with Verlaine’s vocals at their most yearning. The song is compelling though I couldn’t think of a single number written in the rock idiom I could possibly compare it to.

So that’s it. Marquee Moon, released mid-February in America and probably the beginning of March here. I think it’s a work of genius and had Charlie Murray not done that whole number about “first albums this good being pretty damn hard to come across” with Patti Smith’s Horses last year then I would have pulled the same stunt for this one. Suffice to say -- oh listen, it’s released on Elektra, right, and it reminded me, just how great that label used to be. I mean, this is Elektra’s best record since… Strange Days. And (apres moi, le deluge, kiddo) I reckon Tom Verlaine’s probably the single most important rock singer/songwriter/guitarist of his kind since Syd Barrett, which is my credibility probably blown for the rest of the year. But still…

If this review needs to state anything in big bold, black type it’s simply this. Marquee Moon is an album for everyone whatever their musical creeds and/or quirks. Don’t let any other critic put you off with jive turkey terms like ‘avant-garde’ or ‘New York psycho-rock’. This music is passionate, full-blooded, dazzlingly well crafted, brilliantly conceived and totally accessible to anyone who (like myself) has been yearning for a band with the vision to break on through into new dimensions of sonic overdrive and the sheer ability to back it up. Listening to this album reminds me of the ecstatic passion I received when I first heard ‘Eight Miles High’ and ‘Happenings Ten Years Ago’ -- before terms like progressive/art rock became synonymous with baulking pretensions and clumsy, crude syntheses of opposite forms.

In a year’s time, when all the current three-chord golden boys have fallen from grace right into the pit to become a parody ofPrivate Eye’s apeing of moron rock bands -- Spiggy Topes and The Turds Live at the Roxy -- Tom Verlaine and Television will be out there hanging fire, cruising meteorite-like with their fretboards pointed directly at the music of the spheres. Prove it? They’ve already done it right here with this their first album. All you’ve got to do is listen and levitate along with it. -- Nick Kent, NME

Television were the least commercially successful major band to come out of the punk scene they helped to create at CBGB's. However, their finest hour, Marquee Moon, was as good, if not better, than contemporary seminal works such as Patti Smith's Horses (both of the albums sported a Robert Mapplethorpe front cover) and Talking Heads' debut.

After being shopped around to various labels, Television signed with Elektra in 1976 for their debut. The band was operating without original bassist Richard Hell, who left the group to start the Heartbreakers with Johnny Thunder. Bassist Fred Smith was a most fitting replacement, but his greatest contribution was in introducing Tom Verlaine to Andy Johns (Glyn Johns' brother), who knew enough not to tinker with the blurry jazz-punk sound honed at CBGB's.

The result was a guitar album like no other. Turning away from the bluesy sound that had dominated rock guitar since the 1960s, Television created a work that in its own way is every bit as sweeping as Led Zeppelin's finest offerings. Starting with the churning "See No Evil," Verlaine and Richard Lloyd tangle their stinging leads into spiraling celebrations of urban grime and street culture. The 11-minute title track led some to draw comparisons with hippie bands, but there was no flower power -- just power -- to be found in "Prove It" and "Guiding Light."

Marquee Moon received a lukewarm response from the public but was hailed by critics, including New Musical Express's Nick Kent, who enthused that "the songs are some of the greatest ever." -- Jim Harrington, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die


review
[-] by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Marquee Moon is a revolutionary album, but it's a subtle, understated revolution. Without question, it is a guitar rock album -- it's astonishing to hear the interplay between Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd -- but it is a guitar rock album unlike any other. Where their predecessors in the New York punk scene, most notably the Velvet Underground, had fused blues structures with avant-garde flourishes, Television completely strip away any sense of swing or groove, even when they are playing standard three-chord changes. Marquee Moon is comprised entirely of tense garage rockers that spiral into heady intellectual territory, which is achieved through the group's long, interweaving instrumental sections, not through Verlaine's words. That alone made Marquee Moon a trailblazing album -- it's impossible to imagine post-punk soundscapes without it. Of course, it wouldn't have had such an impact if Verlaine hadn't written an excellent set of songs that conveyed a fractured urban mythology unlike any of his contemporaries. From the nervy opener, "See No Evil," to the majestic title track, there is simply not a bad song on the entire record. And what has kept Marquee Moon fresh over the years is how Television flesh out Verlaine's poetry into sweeping sonic epics.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:15 (eleven years ago) link

I love that record but thank god it's not #1

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:16 (eleven years ago) link

Agreed.

emil.y, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:17 (eleven years ago) link

which other covers did you find Edward?

stirmonster, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:17 (eleven years ago) link

A top 10 where I like everything would be an ILX first but it's en route

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:20 (eleven years ago) link

Torn Curtain is the best song IMO and FWIW

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:21 (eleven years ago) link

(and am enjoying Amboss right now! woo)

delete (imago), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:21 (eleven years ago) link

I think only black tambourine, neneh cherry, and springsteen's

but I listen to about 15 different live versions of bruce's, plus the four tet remix of cherry's

also threw in roy orbison's "dream baby" for good measure

xps

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:21 (eleven years ago) link

listened

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:22 (eleven years ago) link

Have you heard Angel Corpus Christi's version? xpost

Sir Lord Baltimora (Myonga Vön Bontee), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:23 (eleven years ago) link

(...of "Dream Baby Dream")

Sir Lord Baltimora (Myonga Vön Bontee), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:23 (eleven years ago) link

now that I hear it yeah I did listen to the angel corpus christi, there was one other I found too but c/r who did it

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:26 (eleven years ago) link

I like yeti a lot but I threw my vote at live in london to no avail

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:26 (eleven years ago) link

hadn't heard the black tambourine. will check it out. love the springsteen and angel corpus christi ones. vega's own cover on "cubist blues" with alex chilton and ben vaughn is good too. xp

stirmonster, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:26 (eleven years ago) link

c'mon ppl it's their space ritual

xp

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:27 (eleven years ago) link

haven't heard it! will check it out.

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:28 (eleven years ago) link

funnily enough..

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:29 (eleven years ago) link

5. JOY DIVISION Unknown Pleasures (5527 Points, 36 Votes, 1 #1)
RYM: #1 for 1979, #17 overall | Acclaimed: #64 | Pitchfork: #9

http://www.cvltnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Joy-Division_Unknown-Pleasures_Shes-Lost-Control-1979.jpeg
http://open.spotify.com/album/0cbpcdI4UySacPh5RCpDfo
spotify:album:0cbpcdI4UySacPh5RCpDfo

With Ian Curtis having hanged himself from the apex of a love triangle well before this 1979 U.K. debut came out in the States, it's hard to pass off his depressiveness as affectation even though critiques of his sincere feelings are definitely in order: the man is idolizing as fast as he oxidizes, a role model as dubious as Sid or Jimbo for the inner-directed set. Nevertheless, it's his passionate gravity that makes the clumsy, disquieting music so convincing--not just a songwriting stroke like "She's Lost Control" but gothic atmosphere like "Candidate" and "I Remember Nothing." Do what he does, not what he did. A- -- R. Christgau

Unknown Pleasures contrasts the message of decay and bemused acceptance of life's paradoxes with the energy and excitement of a band set loose in a studio for the first time. The tension of originality constrained by inadequate instrumental skills — simple synthesizers and guitar set against the Peter Hook/Stephen Morris rhythm section's more obvious punk roots — gives the record a powerfully immediate air; Hannett glazes the chilling, despondent music (including the classic "She's Lost Control") with a Teutonic sheen, fusing medium and message into a dark, holistic brilliance. The grim songs are punctuated by the sounds of ambulance sirens and breaking glass, picturing a world speeding towards incomprehensible chaos. Very highly recommended. -- Trouser Press

The music of Joy Division -- an art-minded English postpunk band that initially struck reviewers as a tuneful version of PiL -- sets forth an even more indelible vision of gloom. In fact, it's a vision so steeped in deathly fixations that it proved fatal: on May 18th, 1980, the group's lead singer and lyricist, Ian Curtis -- a shy, reticent man who'd written some of the most powerfully authentic accounts of dissolution and despair since Lou Reed -- hung himself at his home in Macclesfield, England, at the age of twenty-three. According to journalistic accounts, he'd been depressed over failed love. According to his songs, he'd looked upon the horror of mortal futility and understood the gravity of what he saw: "Heart and soul -- one will burn." In the U.K., Curtis' suicide conferred Joy Division with mythical status. The band's second and last album, Closer (recorded just prior to Curtis' death and released shortly afterward by Factory), became one of the fastest-selling independent-label LPs in British New Wave history. By year's end, it had topped several critics' and readers' polls as best album. More significant, an entire legion of Joy Division emulators -- most notably Section Twenty-Five, Crispy Ambulance, Mass, Sort Sol and the Names -- has since cropped up around England, each professing the same icy passion for sepulchral rhythms, minor-mode melodies and mordant truths.
The danger in all of this grim-faced, wide-eyed hagiography, of course, is that it serves to idealize Curtis' death and ignore the fact that he contributed and submitted to the wretchedness he reviled by committing the act of self-murder. Why bother then with music so seemingly dead-end and depressing? Maybe because, in the midst of a movement overrun by studied nihilism and faddish despair, it's somehow affecting to hear someone whose conviction ranged beyond mere truisms. Maybe because Ian Curtis' descent into despair leaves us with a deeper feeling of our own frailty. Or maybe even because it's fascinating to hear a man's life and desire fading away, little by little, bit by bit. Yet none of that really says much about how obsessing Joy Division's music can be, how it can draw you into its desolate, chiaroscuro atmosphere and fearful, irretrievable circuits. Draw you in and threaten to leave you there.

Actually, Joy Division didn't make all that much music. The group's earliest work -- demo tapes recorded under the name Warsaw and a debut EP, Ideal for Living (some of which will appear in a forthcoming import album) -- was a worthy but hardly exceptional example of a band attempting to forge art-rock influences (mostly David Bowie, Brian Eno and Roxy Music) and primitivist archetypes (some Sex Pistols, a little Who) into a frenetic counterpoise. By the time of their first LP, Unknown Pleasures, Joy Division had tempered their style, planishing it down to a doleful, deep-toned sound that often suggested an elaborate version of the Velvet Underground or an orderly Public Image Ltd. In its most pervading moments -- in numbers like "Day of the Lords," "Insight" and "New Dawn Fades," with their disoriented melodies and punishing rhythms -- it was music that could purvey Curtis' alienated and fatalistic sensibility. But it was also music that could rush and jump and push, and a composition like "Disorder" -- or better still, the later single "Transmission," with its driving tempo and roiling guitars -- seemed almost spirited enough to dispel the gloom it so doggedly invoked.

Yet Joy Division never really aspired toward transcendence. In fact, their most obsessive, most melodic piece of music, "Love Will Tear Us Apart," raises the possibility and then sadly shuts the door on it. A flurry of thrashing guitars and drums -- crashing out the same insistent backbeat that impels the Clash's "Safe European Home" -- launches the song, then surrenders to the plaint of a solitary synthesizer and Ian Curtis' frayed singing. "When routine bites hard," he murmurs, "And ambitions are low/And resentment rides high/But emotions won't grow . . . / Then love -- love will tear us apart -- again." By tune's end, Curtis has run out of will, but the music hasn't. Thick, surging synthesizer lines -- mimicking the hook from Phil Spector's "Then He Kissed Me" -- surround and batter the singer as he half talks, half croons the most critical verse of his career: "And there's a taste in my mouth/As desperation takes hold/Yeah, that something so good/Just can't function no more.

Closer seems resigned to fatality from the start. It descends, with a gravity and logic all its own, from the petrifying scenario of "Atrocity Exhibition" (a story about a world that proffers degradation of the flesh as sport) to the raw, raging "Twenty Four Hours," in which Curtis allows himself a last, longing glance at the fading vista of existence: "Just for one moment/Thought I found my way/Destiny unfolded/I watched it slip away."
But Closer doesn't stop there. Instead, it takes us through the numbing ritual of a funeral procession ("The Eternal") and then, in the mellifluent "Decades," into the very heart of paradise lost:

We knocked on the doors of hell's darker chambers
Pushed to the limits, we dragged ourselves in
Watched from the wings as the scenes were replaying
We saw ourselves now as we never have seen
Portrayal of the trauma and degeneration
The sorrows we suffered and never were free.

The unknown now appears known, maybe even comforting. "We're inside now, our hearts lost forever," sings Curtis in a voice as rueful as Frank Sinatra's. Somehow, it's the album's most beguiling moment.

In the end, Closer accedes to horror, settles into frozen straits of inviolable damnation. The music turns leaden, gray and steady because it means to fulfill a vision of a world where suffering is unremitting and nothingness is quiescent. Joy Division's art is remarkably eloquent and effective, yet it lacks the jolting tone of revolt that PiL's work, even at its most indulgent, boasts: that desire to attack and disarm the world, to make it eat its own hopelessness. Ian Curtis died for reasons that are probably none of our business, but it would seem, at least in part, that he killed himself to slay that portion of the world that so hurt and appalled him. John Lydon lives because he's figured out a way (more than once) to knock off the world and live beyond it.

Guitarist Bernie Albrecht, bassist Peter Hooke and drummer Stephen Morris (the three surviving members of Joy Division) have, with a guitarist named Gillian, formed a group called New Order. This band faces not only the task of living up to its own mythic past, but of getting by the pain of that past and the shadow of Ian Curtis. New Order's initial single, "Ceremony" (reportedly written while Curtis was still alive), says that they probably can. It's a transfixing, vehement, big-sounding piece of music, brimming with the taut cross lines of blaring guitars and an indomitable, bottom-heavy rhythm section. Behind it all, mixed somewhere along with the hi-hat so that his singing sibilates in pulsing waves, Bernie Albrecht makes a chancy vocal debut, telling an impassioned tale about bitter memories, ineradicable losses and unbeaten determination.

Ironically, these images of resolve and recovery seem to suggest the same conviction that Joy Division -- who, after all, took their name from the euphemism used to describe the prostitute section of German concentration camps -- intended to convey in the first place: that no horror, no matter how terrible, is unendurable. Maybe that sounds as joyless and morose as everything else about Joy Division's music, but it shouldn't. In this case, it's nothing less than a surpassing testament to the life force itself. -- Mikal Gilmore, RS

Following their appearance on 1978's noted Factory Sample EP, financed by local television personality Tom Wilson, Joy Division opted to release their landmark debut album on tiny independent Factory too, despite interest from major labels.

Recorded in a week at Stockport's Strawberry Studios, sonic visionary Martin Hannett took the sheet metal guitar of Bernard Dicken (aka Sumner), Peter Hook's unique bass melodies, and Stephen Morris' innovative combination of acoustic and electronic drums and created a muted, unnerving ambience through pioneering use of digital effects, muffled screams, and crashing glass.

Lyricist Ian Curtis documents his experiences as an epileptic in the mutant disco of "She's Lost Control," whilst the sodium-lit "Shadowplay" conjures images of the urban decay and paranoia of late-1970s Manchester. The sparseness of the music perfectly complements his cold baritone, particularly on the majestic death anthem "New Dawn Fades" and the haunting "I Remember Nothing," while the energetic "Interzone" and "Disorder" remind listeners of the band's fierce live reputation.

In the immediate post-punk period of "busy design" and primary colors, the stark textured black sleeve, featuring the radio waves emitted from a dying star, was as groundbreaking as the music contained within, and ushered in a minimalist design revolution.

Unknown Pleasures was a commercial and critical success -- though one journalist paid the backhanded compliment of describing the record as perfect listening prior to committing suicide. Twenty-five years later, Unknown Pleasures is still compelling listening. -- Claire Stuchbery, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die

It even looks like something classic, beyond its time or place of origin even as it was a clear product of both -- one of Peter Saville's earliest and best designs, a transcription of a signal showing a star going nova, on a black embossed sleeve. If that were all Unknown Pleasures was, it wouldn't be discussed so much, but the ten songs inside, quite simply, are stone-cold landmarks, the whole album a monument to passion, energy, and cathartic despair. The quantum leap from the earliest thrashy singles to Unknown Pleasures can be heard through every note, with Martin Hannett's deservedly famous production -- emphasizing space in the most revelatory way since the dawn of dub -- as much a hallmark as the music itself. Songs fade in behind furtive noises of motion and activity, glass breaks with the force and clarity of doom, minimal keyboard lines add to an air of looming disaster -- something, somehow, seems to wait or lurk beyond the edge of hearing. But even though this is Hannett's album as much as anyone's, the songs and performances are the true key. Bernard Sumner redefined heavy metal sludge as chilling feedback fear and explosive energy, Peter Hook's instantly recognizable bass work at once warm and forbidding, Stephen Morris' drumming smacking through the speakers above all else. Ian Curtis synthesizes and purifies every last impulse, his voice shot through with the desire first and foremost to connect, only connect -- as "Candidate" plaintively states, "I tried to get to you/You treat me like this." Pick any song: the nervous death dance of "She's Lost Control"; the harrowing call for release "New Dawn Fades," all four members in perfect sync; the romance in hell of "Shadowplay"; "Insight" and its nervous drive toward some sort of apocalypse. All visceral, all emotional, all theatrical, all perfect -- one of the best albums ever.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:30 (eleven years ago) link

for the record this is my favorite bruce rendition of "dream baby dream"

http://youtu.be/i4EzcBL1yDY

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:30 (eleven years ago) link

sounds like it's the one that was put out as a 10". so good!

stirmonster, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:32 (eleven years ago) link

the amg review was by ned

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:34 (eleven years ago) link

actually it's not the 10" version, wish it was the one they used!

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:37 (eleven years ago) link

does anyone have anything to say about unknown pleasures? didn't think so

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:38 (eleven years ago) link

its awesome but ilxors deem it too corny indie fuxxor to discuss but still voted it

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:40 (eleven years ago) link

i recently met a woman who was called stacia ..

i was drunk .. so all i could say was : 'hang on ... the only stacia i have ever heard of before was .. '

to which she interrupted me and said : 'yeah, my parents are hawkwind fans .. '

mark e, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:41 (eleven years ago) link

kinda bummed to realize that through some misguided excel futzing I've lost my ballot rankings

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:42 (eleven years ago) link

Hey TONTO voters, what do you think of their second album 'It's About Time'? Was looking at an okayishly priced vinyl copy today and was wondering. Found an original Industrial Records' Third and Final Report of Throbbing Gristle for £3 too. But it turned out it was scratched to shit when I pull it out of the sleeve, boo hiss!

acid in the style of tenpole tudor (NickB), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:42 (eleven years ago) link

sounds quite similar. at the end of the 10" there is quite a bit of crowd noise when he finishes the song. i was totally confused as to why the crowd were booing until i realised they were shouting "broooooce". xp

ha ha! that's great mark e!

stirmonster, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:42 (eleven years ago) link

Unknown Pleasures is an amazing record, but like Marquee Moon it's been talked to death. Not my enjoyment of listening to either of them, just talking about them, really.

emil.y, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:43 (eleven years ago) link

does anyone have anything to say about unknown pleasures? didn't think so
Yeah this is kind of how I feel about both Unknown Pleasures and Marquee Moon - both obv great albums but hard to think of anything to say about them that hasn't been said better by others a million times before.
ha xp

Eamon Dool Two (Mr Andy M), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:44 (eleven years ago) link

4. FUNKADELIC Maggot Brain (5765 Points, 39 Votes, 3 #1s)
RYM: #16 for 1971, #233 overall | Acclaimed: #425 | RS: #486 | Pitchfork: #17

http://www.silverdisc.com/images/64/646315116113.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/4P5bvMUWhoYILjMf2fhKxZ
spotify:album:4P5bvMUWhoYILjMf2fhKxZ

Children, this is a funkadelic. The title piece is ten minutes of classic Hendrix-gone-heavy guitar by one Eddie Hazel--time-warped, druggy superschlock that may falter momentarily but never lapses into meaningless showoff runs. After which comes 2:45 of post-classic soul-group harmonizing--two altos against a bass man, all three driven by the funk, a rhythm so pronounced and eccentric it could make Berry Gordy twitch to death. The funk pervades the rest of the album, but not to the detriment of other peculiarities. Additional highlight: "Super Stupid." B+ -- R. Christgau

Who needs this shit?

That said, we can progress to a more balanced appreciation of the third Funkadelic album. In it, the group continues their rather limited exploration of the dark side of psychedelia -- a shattered, desolate landscape with few pleasures.

At its most mindless, we are given about nine and a half minutes of "Wars of Armageddon" -- steady bongos and drums and repeated nudges from an organ, collaged with an arbitrary mix of angry yells, airport departure announcements, cuckoo clocks, garbled conversation and lame variations of popular slogans ("More people to the power; More power to the pussy")--which ends with: 1) several rumbling heart and 3) a three-second disinteresting snatch of music. Far out. Balancing this is the ten-minute title cut which layers stark electric guitars over a simple, repeated "beautiful" pattern on what at first sounds like acoustic guitar but at times swells to harp-like vibrancy. With this patterns unfolding like a cool breeze in the background, the electric guitars pursue independent courses out front like dragonflies dipping and sweeping; abrasive and fuzzy, then pure, lovely and shimmering.

In between "Maggot Brain" and "Armageddon," the opening and closing cuts, is an uneven group of shorter, more precise funk songs. One of these, "Can You Get To That," is a reworking of an old Parliaments single, "What You Been Growing," written by the producer here, George Clinton. The changes the song has been put through are indicative of Clinton's declining inspiration as a songwriter. The first verse in both versions ends with the lines, "But I read an old quotation in a book just yesterday:/Said, 'You gonna reap what you slow/The less you make you'll have to pay.'" But instead of the original chorus--"You been growing just what you been sowing," a nicely succinct message to an errant lover--the Funkadelic substitute soul cliche: "Can you get to that/I wanna know if you can get to that." In spite of this tell-tale change for the worse (and the other material displays an even more pronounced lyric thinness), "Get to That" is bright and enjoyable, making use of a female chorus and a tight but deliberately slowed-down pace.

Funkadelic is primarily an instrumental group, performing as the band for Clinton's funked-up Parliament, and the LP is marked as a "Parliafunkadeliic Thang," although the Parliament's aren't on the record. With the exception of the two long showcase cuts--one awfully muddy and jumbled, the other a fine sweet-and-sour dish--the music on the whole is more competent than exciting. AT best, Side two, culminating in (or descending to) "Armageddon," is a horrible mush. Such dead-end stuff.

Funk for funk's sake becomes merely garbage. Maggot Brain begins with a few echoed introductory lines ". . . I have tasted the maggots in the mind of the universe. I was not offended; for I knew I had to rise above it all--or drown in my own shit." Don't look now, bro' but it's up around your knees. -- Vince Aletti, RS

Well, I imagine this was the first and last time someone described Funkadelic as "more competent than exciting"! 

George Clinton was quite prolific in the early Seventies: from 1970 to 1973, Parliament and Funkadelic released six LPs. All of these records are worth hearing; none, other than Maggot Brain, received any notice in Rolling Stone. In fact, after Vince Aletti's dismissive review, George Clinton's name would not appear in the magazine again for another three years. 

In 1974, a reconstituted Parliament released Up for the Down Stroke. Mark Vining panned this album in the 10/10/74 issue. "Parliament satisfies both the seeker of obscure truths and the diehard soul fan only sporadically and holds an even keel which ignores vocal and track-to-track variation and climax," Vining complained. "The group seems to want to see the listener tripping on irrelevancies while the clear white light of R&B dynamics would furnish a more potent natural high."  -- schmidtt, Rolling Stone's 500 Worst Reviews of All Time

Their drug abuse reached critical mass in 1971, and the band was on the verge of falling apart. Nevertheless, Clinton was able to take a potentially disastrous recording session and squeezed out yet another Funkadelic classic, with the sorrowful guitar solo on “Maggot Brain” as the centerpiece. Eddie Hazel was proving himself to be a funk-rock guitarist second only to the recently deceased Hendrix. “I had four baby junkies; they settled to go to sleep right there on the session. So I had to make a record out of whatever I got…” Clinton instructed Hazel to play as if his mother had just died. And play he did. “Maggot Brain” was an excruciating, beautiful piece of guitar work. “But the rest of the band sounded like shit! So I faded they ass right the fuck out and just let [Eddie Hazel] play by hisself the whole fuckin’ track.” Aside from The Meters, their instrumental contemporaries located in Memphis, their rhythmic superioriity was undisputible in syncopated masterpieces like “Hit It And Quit It.” 1971′s Maggot Brain was the third and last album of the original Funkadelic lineup and sound. -- Fastnbulbous

Their first two albums -- the blues-influenced warped acid rock of 1970's eponymous debut and the psych-tinged sophomore, Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow -- introduced The Funk as a way of life, a religion. Their third outing captured the group at the height of their creative and imaginative powers.

First came the packaging; a shrieking woman's head erupts from the soil on the cover, while the sleevenotes quote the Process Church Of The Final Judgement. Then the music -- brave and bold, it meshes spine-tingling lyrics ("I have tasted the maggots in the mind of the universe") with an eerie, demented, transcendental score. "Back then people said, 'You just can't do that sorta thing on a record," explained frontman George Clinton. "And I was sayin' right back, 'You bet yo' ass I can.'"

Recorded at Universal Studios, Detroit, in the latter parts of 1970 and the beginning of 1971, Maggot Brain excelled at gospel-infused, call-and-response ebullience ("Can't You Get To That") and pulsating funk rock stomps ("Super Stupid"). It also hit hard with penetrating social commentary -- "You And Your Folks, Me And My Folks" overtly attacks racism, "War Of Armageddon" tackles the traumatic fallout of the Vietnam War.

But the real power lies with the title track. Myth has it that Clinton disovered his brother's rotting body and cracked the skull, sprawled in a Chicago apartment -- hence the "maggot brain." Locking guitarist Eddie Hazel in the studio he demanded, "Play like your mother just died." Hazel did just that providing a spectral, plaintive nine-minute guitar solo that eclipsed everything he and the group did, before or after. -- Lois Wilson, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die


review
[-] by Ned Raggett

It starts with a crackle of feedback shooting from speaker to speaker and a voice intoning, "Mother Earth is pregnant for the third time, for y'all have knocked her up" and talking about rising "above it all or drown in my own sh*t." This could only have been utterly bizarre back in 1971 and it's no less so decades later; though the Mothership was well on its way already, Maggot Brain really helped it take off. The instrumental title track is the key reason to listen, specifically for Eddie Hazel's lengthy, mind-melting solo. George Clinton famously told Hazel to play "like your momma had just died," and the resulting evocation of melancholy and sorrow doesn't merely rival Jimi Hendrix's work, but arguably bests a lot of it. Accompanied by another softer guitar figure providing gentle rhythm for the piece, the end result is simply fantastic, an emotional apocalypse of sound. Maggot Brain is bookended by another long number, "Wars of Armageddon," a full-on jam from the band looping in freedom chants and airport-departure announcements to the freak-out. In between are a number of short pieces, finding the collective merrily cooking up some funky stew of the slow and smoky variety. There are folky blues and gospel testifying on "Can You Get to That" (one listen and a lot of Primal Scream's mid-'90s career is instantly explained) and wry but warm reflections on interracial love on "You and Your Folks, Me and My Folks," its drum hits distorted to give a weird electronic edge to the results. "Super Stupid" is a particular killer, pounding drums and snarling guitar laying down the boogie hard and hot, while "Hit It and Quit It" has a great chorus and Bernie Worrell getting in a fun keyboard solo to boot.

Track Listing:

Maggot Brain
{Eddie Hazel, G Clinton} 10:18 lyrics
Can You Get To That
{G Clinton, Ernie Harris} 2:49 lyrics
Hit It And Quit It
{G Clinton, Billy Nelson, Garry Shider} 3:48 lyrics
You And Your Folks, Me And My Folks
{G Clinton, B Worrell, Judie Jones} 3:35 lyrics
Super Stupid
{E Hazel, B Nelson, Tawl Ross, G Clinton} 3:56 lyrics
Back In Our Minds
{Clarence Haskins} 2:37 lyrics
Wars Of Armageddon
{B Worrell, G Clinton, T Ross, Ramon Fulwood} 9:42 lyrics

Personnel:

Lead Guitar: Eddie Hazel
Rhythm Guitar: Tawl Ross
Keyboards: Bernie Worrell
Bass: Billy Nelson
Drums: Tiki Fulwood
Vocals: Parliament, Gary Shider, Bernie Worrell, Tawl Ross

Song-Specific Personnel:

"Can You Get to That"
Lead Vocals: Garry Shider
Backup Vocals: Pat & Diane Lewis, Rose Williams, Ray Davis,
Bernie Worrell, George Clinton
Drums: Fuzzy Haskins

"Hit it and Quit It"
Lead Vocals: Bernie Worrell

"You And Your Folks"
Lead Vocals: Bill Nelson

"Super Stupid"
Lead Vocals: Eddie Hazel/Bill Nelson?

"Back In Our Minds"
Lead Vocals: George Clinton, Tawl Ross
Trombone: McKinley Jackson
Bongos: Eddie Bongo
Jew's Harp: James W. Jackson

Rating: GZ ***** RC ***** MM *****

Comments:

RC: What can I say, everyone should own this album. "Maggot Brain" may be Eddie's finest moment ever. The lyrics are particulary poignant and clever, especially "Can You Get To That" and "You And Your Folks...". Bernie really becomes a dominant force on this album, with his organ adding texture to the acid/R&B guitar stew. Did I mention the beautiful singing? No Funkadelic album would be complete without a freakout song, and "Wars of Armageddon" fits the bill here. It sounds like they pulled out a sound effects album and got funky with it. "Maggot Brain" was written when George asked Eddie to think of the saddest thing he could, to imagine his mother dying. George faded out the rest of the band when Eddie played this, because they weren't playing as well as Eddie, and the result was excellent. The album is Funkadelic at its best in that it's impossible to predict. It starts with a psychedelic solo guitar piece, moves on to a gospel-inflected soul-stirrer, continues with a hard-rock organ-driven tune, swings toward a politically charged soul-gospel piece, soars with one of the first heavy metal tunes in history, moves back into the political realm with a touch of taste and a horn influence, and concludes with a freakout as bizarre as anything ever recorded. This kind of heavy eclecticism would be seen on several of the next Funkadelic albums, but this one is my favorite.

"Maggot Brain" is the greatest instrumental the band ever recorded, owing everything to the genius of Eddie Hazel, who makes listening to the piece an exhausting, terryifying and exhilarating experience. "Can You Get To That", yet another rewrite of a Parliaments song, starts off with acoustic guitars, giving more of an emphasis to Bernie and his organ, with some of the best singing and lyrics on the album. "Hit It & Quit It" is a Worrell showpiece, featuring his vocals and dominated by that heavy organ sound. Hazel's solo at the end is excellent. "You And Your Folks..." is a sequel of sorts to "I Got A Thing...", with impassioned lyrics about the poor and the irresistable 'yeah, yeah, yeah' chant. "Super Stupid" is a high-powered Hazel metal tune, with a still-tasteful if over-the-edge swooping solo. "Back In Our Minds" settles the whole angry stew down, with Environmedian J.W. Jackson playing jew's harp. He would open for Funkadelic on many occasions, doing a stand-up routine. Just when everything has settled down, they finish it with the utterly bizarre "Wars of...", a song that has a great Hazel jam, a ton of sound effects, commentary on urban society, lyrics that include 'more power to the peter, more power to the pussy, more pussy to the peter', and much, much more. Buy this album now if you don't own it!

Judie Jones, later known as Judie Worrell, Bernie's wife, said that she was given credit for "You And Your Folks" by mistake. She claims that she should have gotten credit for "Red Hot Mama" instead. Bernie says that Billy Nelson should have gotten credit on "You And Your Folks".

TT: "Maggot Brain" was recorded in one take.

http://people.duke.edu/~tmc/motherpage/albums_funkadelic/alb-mbrain.html

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:45 (eleven years ago) link

Too low, AG?

emil.y, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:47 (eleven years ago) link

ha so that's where xgau gets on board w/ funkadelic (though i think he still preferred parliament overall), he had george clinton his artist of the 70s (along w/ al green and neil young) so i knew he got on board hard at some point. love it to death but kinda relieved it's not #1, spread the love some.

balls, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:49 (eleven years ago) link

lol @ RS

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:49 (eleven years ago) link

haha i can get where aletti was coming from, i can imagine alot of r&b heads not being esp enthusiastic about funk getting psych rock in their soul.

balls, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:51 (eleven years ago) link

Aletti can go get fucked.

My #1 obviously.

xp

good placing and after winning the trax poll it mighta been a bit predictable if it won it

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:53 (eleven years ago) link

lol aletti did go get fucked quite a bit i suspect

balls, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:55 (eleven years ago) link

is the top 3 obvious to everyone or expecting any surprises...?

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:58 (eleven years ago) link

Make your predictions!

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:58 (eleven years ago) link

radiohead

Mordy, Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:59 (eleven years ago) link

Maggot Brain the first Funkadelic album I heard and still easily my favorite (though I like Cosmic Slop a lot too). Like the way the shorter, catchier songs like Back In Our Minds, Hit It & Quit It, Can You Get To That etc sort of glue together the more 'woah!' moments like the title track and Wars of Armageddon.

Eamon Dool Two (Mr Andy M), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:59 (eleven years ago) link

just go ahead and post it, johnny moped band #1

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:59 (eleven years ago) link

notekillers and link wray's three track shack #2 and 3 obv

unprepared guitar (Edward III), Thursday, 28 March 2013 21:00 (eleven years ago) link

i think standing on the verge is my fave though free yr mind made a strong case the last time i listened to it

balls, Thursday, 28 March 2013 21:02 (eleven years ago) link

3. CAN Tago Mago (5852 Points, 38 Votes, 1 #1)
RYM: #6 for 1971, #74 overall | Acclaimed: #220 | Pitchfork: #29

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-2iAr3DEPuok/TqpLoRImwGI/AAAAAAAAACQ/dsWDagPoTAU/s1600/CAN_TagoMago_Cover.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/0IkWMIlonw1Nq7PNERYa0x
spotify:album:0IkWMIlonw1Nq7PNERYa0x

Can burst free of its formalism on the double-album Tago Mago, kicking out the jams on the nearly structureless "Aumgn," seventeen minutes of texture and eerie mood. Other tracks feature long improvisations built around hypnotic rhythm patterns, backwards vocals, tape effects and other innovations. (Ironically, the LP's shortest track, the four-minute "Mushroom," has become something of a post-punk staple.) At this point, Can began making the albums that would wield enormous influence on '80s groups as diverse as the Fall, Einstürzende Neubauten and Zoviet France. -- Trouser Press

Next was the greatest of Can albums, the monumental double album TAGO MAGO, which, although starting on safe ground, draws the listener in with a succession of even greater weirdness and invention, not least "Aumgn" with Jaki's manic drums and "Peking O." where Damo lets out some of the most agonising vocal sounds amidst a plethora of electronic and percussive effects. Weird and radical innovation, that still sounds bizarre twenty odd years on!  -- Cosmic Egg

Krautrock, innit. The Mothership. Sometimes I think Ege Bamyasi may have the edge on this, other days the rolling power of the drums on "Hallelulwah" utterly seduces me. I remember Julian Cope taking a very purist line that by "Tago Mago" Can had burnt out, that the Malcom Mooney-era was the shit and that "Soundtracks" was their last great record, but really, what twaddle. -- Woebot, #2

As a young high school student growing up in Texas, I became aware of a group simply called Can. I was blown away by the sound, the guitar experimentations, and the avant-garde days of early hip-hop meets New Wave of the 21st century. That and their third album with their first collaboration with japanese singer they found in the streets of Hamburg, Damo Suzuki who made his first appearance on the Soundtracks album and then the first time singing with the band on here, it remains the perfect teamwork they pulled together to create a fucking masterpiece that would have made Johnny Rotten so goddamn happy. Tago Mago remains a favorite of mine in my taste of experimental music on my iPod and it still is to this day. It's not just an album, its an experimental ride that you can't get off and it goes off like a machine gun that bleeds for blood.

It starts off with the ambient spacey ballad jam session 7-minute suite, Paperhouse. It begins as a dance tune from the sounds of the late Michael Karoli's virtuoso guitar work while Jaki Liebezeit's drum pattern follows the guitar and Irmin Schmidt's electric piano styling and in 4/4 and 3/4. Then all of a sudden it becomes psychedelic freak-out that almost comes out of the Velvet Underground's first album as Damo sings quietly like an evil psychopath that hunts for its prey. Holger Czukay's bass line just goes up and down as he and Karoli's guitar work goes off the wall. And then goes back to the ballad again in the same time signature as it segues into the sinister proto sinister nuclear war hip-hop rocker Mushroom, which deals with a total annihilation. This time the band go evil as any Krautrock band could get into pasaging trouble than Faust. Jaki's drums starts off like a war-like gun that won't go off while Damo sings 'When I saw Mushroom head, I was born and I was dead' and then screaming 'I'm Gonna Get My Despair!' four times, it sounds so powerful and it gave me goosebumps hearing this song to set the scenery of a post-apocalyptic land of hell as it goes into Oh Yeah with a bomb going off and then becoming a free-for-all composition. With Holger's bass lines that become funky while Damo singing japanese backwards and Irmin's keyboards sounding like a horror soundtrack from the 1930's while Irmin is pounding the drums like a motherfucker with the bass, hi-hat, and snare as they do a jam session that would have made the Grateful Dead bow down on their knees over to the new masters of gods. 

The next track which almost sounded very Bitches Brew meets A Tribute to Jack Johnson in an avant-garde way with the 18-minute composition Halleluhwah as Holger takes over with fusion bass line which almost could have been on any Funkadelic album that would have make Bootsy Collins proud over and sounding like a James Brown record that had gone awkward and strange as the synths come in to make it more bizarre as the drums go electronic while they go into the boxing ring to duke it out like big macho instruments battling to the death of drums vs. synths over who would win and who would be crowned champions. Aumgn which starts off as a reprise from Paperhouse left off as the 17-minute synth music of Tangerine Dream going wrong in an omish andy warhol homage that would have the Monks run like motherfuckers from Jaan's keyboards and Damo's screeching voice filling up the album that would be perfect for Ridley Scott's Alien. And then the last 5-minutes it becomes an African samba gone haywire as Irmin takes over to close it up to a dramatic climax that makes you jump in fear. And then it becomes an Atmospheric funeral arrangment turned into a darker rock technique of Kraftwerk's debut album in a mystrious cave for once again the Avant-Garde of 11-minutes that would get Stravinsky and Edgard Varese happy for joy on Peking O.

The acoustic jazz fusion crooner Bring Me Coffee or Tea closes it up as Damo sings very stonish as he and the band go off like masterminds as it ends with a T. All in all, Tago Mago remains strange, mysterious, whatever you want to call it, this is a must have for anyone who wants to get into the music of CAN.  -- Zmnathanson, Head Heritage

In his seminal work on Kosmische, Krautrocksampler, Julian Cope writes that Can's Tago Mago "sounds only like itself, like no-one before or after". 40 years on from the album's initial release, it's an observation that still holds true. There have been many bands who have attempted to recreate the heady, woozy, dark whirl of rhythms invoked on Tago Mago -- from Public Image Limited to The Horrors -- yet none of them have ever managed to truly capture the combination of the sinister and the sublime that have made it such a modern classic.

I discovered Tago Mago in 2002 at a friend's house party, when I heard the strains of 'Mushroom' emanating in waves through the miasma of marijuana smoke and stale beer fumes. I was 19, just about to enter my second year of University, and had a spent a year in a tiny room in Camden wearing a duffle coat and listening to weedy, poorly-recorded C86 records on an old Dansette I'd purchased with my student loan. To say that it came as a bit of a revelation to my cloth ears would be an understatement.

There is this brilliant, creeping sense of unease that permeates 'Mushroom', from Damo Suzuki's overwraught vocals to Jaki Liebezeit's unrelenting, driving beat (a drumbeat which, over the years, I have played to many people -- usually while drunk -- demanding that they listen to it, just listen to it). The next day, I went into a record shop, bought the album on vinyl and played it over and over again, drinking in each of the rhythms and cursing the fact that my larger than average chest size meant that I'd never be able to become a drummer. To drum like Jaki would have meant investing in a bra that was more a minor feat of engineering that a piece of underwear.

It's not just the music that makes Tago Mago so exciting as much as who Can were when they recorded it; a bunch of experimental West German hippies who delighted in the strange. The album was recorded in Schloss Nörvenich, a castle near Cologne owned by an eccentric art collector. Can spent a year living and recording there, and would spend their days playing long, disorganised jams (more streams of musical consciousness than actual songs) that their bassist, Holger Czukay, would then splice into songs.

It's this recording process that has provided Tago Mago with its signature sound - long, uninterrupted series of rhythms, all punctuated with tape-loops, analogue synths, and primitive drum machines, providing it with an intensely stoned, woozy feel. Even the more 'difficult' tracks on Tago Mago, such as the echoed drone of 'Aumgm' (which, to modern ears, sounds like a precursor to some of the material later recorded by bands like Sunn 0))) and Boris) and the Hari Krishna-esque 'Peking O' show a band who thrilled in experimentation and playing with the limits of noise and technology.

Tago Mago shows Can at the height of their powers. Whilst their sound became more polished and poppy as they progressed through the 1970s (even earning them a minor UK chart hit with 1976's 'I Want More'), it still remains arguably their finest work. Over the years, it has become an album I've carted around with me everywhere I go -- and have been forced to replace numerous times after lending it to ex-partners and leaving copies of it at house parties. I've yet to find another album that makes me wish I could turn back time and live in its world -- in this case jamming with four German blokes for long days in a castle. And I've yet to find another album which contains drum patterns that make my bones shiver in delight. When it comes to Kosmische classics, this is an essential. If you don't have this in your record collection, you're doing yourself a massive disservice. -- Cay McDermott, The Quietus

Can have long been one of those bands that are more talked about than heard. They were enormously influential on certain kinds of forward-thinking rock artists (their fingerprints are all over Radiohead and the Flaming Lips, not to mention more more recent underground acts like Woods and Implodes); their records have never been out of print for long. But they've got a big, disorderly discography, and they don't really have any signature songs (the Can tracks that pass for pop-- "Spoon", "I Want More", and not many others-- are alarmingly unlike the rest of their work). They're also tougher to "get" than a lot of their contemporaries: They specialized in long, jam-heavy rock grooves, and they had (two different) aggressively difficult vocalists, as well as a guitarist (the late Michael Karoli) who liked to noodle way up in the treble range. So where do you start?

You couldn't do much better than beginning with 1971's Tago Mago, freshly reissued in a "40th Anniversary Edition" (whose main difference from previous editions is the addition of a live disc from the following year). It's a colossus of an album, the product of a band that was thinking huge, pushing itself to its limits, and devoted to breaking open its own understanding of what rock music could be. The core of Can was four German musicians from wildly different backgrounds-- when they initially came together in 1968, two of them had studied with composer Karlheinz Stockhausen, one had played jazz, and one was a teenage guitar whiz. They recorded soundtrack music and a few straightforward rock songs early on, but what they were really interested in doing was going beyond kinds of music for which they had language.

For some musicians of that time, that meant replacing (or augmenting) composition with improvisation: letting the unconscious mind take over in the instant, and recording the results. Can's insight was that jamming alone wasn't going to do the trick. One of their solutions to that problem was that, like Miles Davis' electric group at the time, they were not a jam band but a jam-and-edit band. Their working method involved collectively improvising on little riffs and grooves at enormous length, but that's not quite what you hear on Tago Mago. Bassist Holger Czukay chopped up, layered and extensively reorganized pieces of their recordings (including recordings they made when they didn't think the tape was rolling), imposing afterthought on instinct to create something as densely packed as composition but distinctly different.

Their other solution was smashing the crutch of language. After Can's original singer Malcolm Mooney had left the band in 1970, they'd encountered a Japanese street artist named Damo Suzuki "singing or 'praying' in the streets of Munich" (as Czukay put it) and immediately installed him as their new frontman. Suzuki is ostensibly vocalizing in English-- the lingua franca of rock-- but English that's either seriously mangled or almost totally faked.

Tago Mago is seven songs in 73 minutes; the first half is big-beat floor-fillers, the second half yanks the floor away. For those first four songs, drummer Jaki Liebezeit is the star of the band, setting up rhythmic patterns of his own devising (isolate his part of almost any Can song, and you'd immediately know what you were listening to) and repeating them like mantras. His drumming is actually the lead instrument on "Mushroom", which could very easily pass for a post-punk classic from 10 years later; everything else just adds a little tone color. (The song might be about a psychedelic mushroom, or a mushroom cloud, or maybe just the kind that comes in a can.) And his deliberate, crisply articulated marching-band-of-the-unconscious beat is the spine of the overwhelming "Halleluwah", possibly the only 18-minute song that would be too short at twice its length.

Then the trip turns sour and trembly. "Aumgn" is almost as long as "Halleluwah" but clammy, deliberately disjointed, and nearly rhythmless; its central sound is keyboardist Irmin Schmidt's repeatedly intoning elongated, mangled variations on the meditative "om." Both "Aumgn" and its follow-up "Peking O" mess with their listeners' perception of time-- everything in them happens much more quickly or slowly than it's supposed to, and as soon as any pattern of sound has stuck around long enough to grab onto, it shudders and evaporates. By the time the dreamy, softly throbbing one-chord piece "Bring Me Coffee or Tea" arrives to conclude the album, it's almost hard to trust it not to be a mirage.
The bonus for the new edition (aside from a reproduction of the original sleeve, with four variations on a semi-abstract image concerning the mouth and the mind) is a three-song 1972 live recording: something identified as "Mushroom" that shares nothing but a couple of lines with the Tago Mago version, a "Halleluwah" that fades out after nine minutes without generating the studio recording's heat, and a half-hour workout on the band's three-minute German hit "Spoon". It's okay-- they were a solid jam band, and Liebezeit could pull off those remarkable rhythms on stage, too-- but it's mostly interesting for its perspective on how much less a band Can might have been without Czukay's keen razor blade slashing away their excesses and preserving their flashes of revelation. -- Douglas Wolk, Pitchfork

“The castle discovered with the excavation rectangular four bay window towers was 25 metres about 11 times and had a kennel offshore to the north.” (Make allowances: it’s a German-English translation website.) “Werner von Vlatten, a clerk between 1366 and 1394, might have inhabited them. His son Wilhelm, after a division, owned the castle.” (Here comes the relevant bit.) “In 1968--9 the rock group Can furnished their studio here.” (The quintet based themselves at the castle for three years, before relocating to a disused cinema at Weilerswist.)

The castle -- Schloss Nörvenich in North Rhine-Westphalia -- was where Tago Mago, surely Krautrock’s greatest double album, was recorded over several months in 1971. It’s a record with a powerful reputation, and not just because it inspired bands like Radiohead and PiL. Links with Satanism and witchcraft have been suggested over the years; we’ve read of Can learning “forbidden rhythms” from West Africa, and having a fascination with Aleister Crowley. Irmin Schmidt’s grim bellow on “Aumgn”, as he intones as if from a coffin, is as chilling as rock vocals get, akin to an encounter with a cloven-hoofed goat-creature. The word ‘aumgn’ is derived from Om (or Aum), the sacred incantation in Hinduism and Buddhism, but it was also, according to his disciples, “Crowley’s ultimate word of power” -- the word he believed would enable him to rule the planet by magick. Schmidt stretches out the two syllables (‘aum-gn’) for 20 or 30 seconds at a time, while a violin saws away and a double bass circles menacingly like the Jaws theme. The music loses all inhibition, building orgiastically to a frenzy.

The rhythms on Tago Mago; they get into your eyeballs. When drummer Jaki Liebezeit first invented the hypnotic beat that became the foundation for “Halleluhwah”, it caused such a strong reaction in guitarist Michael Karoli that he began hallucinating. He begged Liebezeit to keep playing it, and we can empathise; it’s a groove that seems to suck our minds into its sorcerous clutches. Liebezeit, one of the acknowledged masters of the drums, could create these mesmerising patterns at will. On “Mushroom” we hear him judging the weight of his foot-pedal like a chemist measuring drops of liquid from a beaker to a flask. On “Paperhouse”, he sensually tickles the drowsy 6/8 beat in the opening bars, only to beat his drums and cymbals viciously when Karoli leads the charge into squealing acid-rock. At times, Can reveal a technical expertise on a par with prog-rockers like King Crimson, but Can always placed technique second to the communal responsibilities of improvisation. Schmidt, for example, would take his hands off his keyboards if he felt he had nothing to add. The music on Tago Mago was derived not from songwriting but from extensive jamming at the castle, which bassist Holger Czukay edited down into shorter pieces. Not too short, though. Even abridged, “Aumgn” lasts more than 17 minutes, and “Halleluhwah” runs to 18-and-a-half.

It’s a fool’s errand to try to describe the styles and genres that Can touch on here; suffice to say that if there were an HMV category called Shockingly Beautiful And Pulsatingly Thunderous Space-Jazz-Concrète, Tago Mago would be at the front of the racks every time. Invoking and evoking just about all the spontaneity and scariness that you’d want from rock’n’roll, Tago Mago can offer experiences as spellbinding as the sequence that originally comprised side one (“Paperhouse”, “Mushroom”, “Oh Yeah”), or can be so extreme that you feel yourself under attack by maniacs. Not everyone, certainly, will carry a torch for “Peking O”, an 11-minute detour into drum-machine lunacy and babbling nonsense. Then again, “Peking O” is followed by its polar opposite, “Bring Me Coffee Or Tea”, a weird folky lullaby in the same ballpark as “Willow’s Song” in The Wicker Man. You learn to expect the unexpected with Tago Mago. Just as you think you’ve got a handle on “Mushroom” -- singer Damo Suzuki must be describing a psilocybin trip when he speaks of being “born” and “dead” when he sees the “mushroom head” -- something about his odd phrase “my despair” nags at you. Mushrooms? Despair? Then you remember that Suzuki was a child of 1950s Japan, when the country was rebuilding itself after the mushroom clouds of 1945. Dark riddles, occult practices, atom bombs. Perhaps, as some have suggested, this was the preferred reality -- the only reality -- for four Germans and one Japanese born either side of World War II.

To mark its 40th anniversary, Tago Mago (which, like all Can’s early albums, was remastered in 2004), is being reissued with a bonus CD of live material from a Cologne gig in June 1972. Previously available on the bootleg, Free Concert, the tracks are “Mushroom”, “Spoon”, “Bring Me Coffee Or Tea” and “Halleluhwah”. The recording is in mono and the sound quality is passable, but not great. “Spoon”, all 20 minutes of it, has a dramatic performance from Suzuki as it nears its climax: first he starts urging “you gotta love me”, then he starts screaming it, at which point the momentum is halted by Karoli’s feedback and the music is hesitantly reshaped into “… Coffee Or Tea”. “Halleluhwah” is surprisingly laid back to begin with, but as funky as The Meters, with Liebezeit in mind-boggling octopoid form as usual. Schmidt organ-solos like a man demented as the track fades.

In 1989, I got a chance to ask Can about Tago Mago. Karoli, a lovely man, sat next to me in the restaurant, enthusing about Liebezeit and explaining that Suzuki sings “searching for my black dope” in “Halleluhwah” -- “because he’d lost it, you know”. Schmidt, a grumpy intellectual, told me that Can had revealed their ‘secrets’ only once, to a journalist in 1975, and she’d phoned up in a panic because that part of her cassette was inexplicably blank. We went back to a house in Notting Hill where Schmidt groped his wife on the settee all night, and Karoli bopped to Chic records. An unassuming guitar hero, he died in 2001. -- David Cavanagh, Uncut


review
[-] by Ned Raggett

With the band in full artistic flower and Suzuki's sometimes moody, sometimes frenetic speak/sing/shrieking in full effect, Can released not merely one of the best Krautrock albums of all time, but one of the best albums ever, period. Tago Mago is that rarity of the early '70s, a double album without a wasted note, ranging from sweetly gentle float to full-on monster grooves. "Paperhouse" starts things brilliantly, beginning with a low-key chime and beat, before amping up into a rumbling roll in the midsection, then calming down again before one last blast. Both "Mushroom" and "Oh Yeah," the latter with Schmidt filling out the quicker pace with nicely spooky keyboards, continue the fine vibe. After that, though, come the huge highlights -- three long examples of Can at its absolute best. "Halleluwah" -- featuring the Liebezeit/Czukay rhythm section pounding out a monster trance/funk beat; Karoli's and Schmidt's always impressive fills and leads; and Suzuki's slow-building ranting above everything -- is 19 minutes of pure genius. The near-rhythmless flow of "Aumgn" is equally mind-blowing, with swaths of sound from all the members floating from speaker to speaker in an ever-evolving wash, leading up to a final jam. "Peking O" continues that same sort of feeling, but with a touch more focus, throwing in everything from Chinese-inspired melodies and jazzy piano breaks to cheap organ rhythm boxes and near babbling from Suzuki along the way. "Bring Me Coffee or Tea" wraps things up as a fine, fun little coda to a landmark record.

Algerian Goalkeeper, Thursday, 28 March 2013 21:05 (eleven years ago) link

has sabbath's vol 4 popped up yet?

balls, Thursday, 28 March 2013 21:06 (eleven years ago) link

Nope

today's tom soy yum, mean mean thai (Spectrist), Thursday, 28 March 2013 21:07 (eleven years ago) link

75 #1?

beau 'daedaly (wins), Thursday, 28 March 2013 21:07 (eleven years ago) link


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