A few days after posting this album by Majida El Roumi, where I wrote a bit about the early days of CDs, I received an email from a regular visitor in Japan, Bill Sakovich, who writes about his life in the archipelagos at Ampontan. My off-the-cuff musings prompted Bill to remember his own early experiences with music burned into discs of polycarbonate plastic:
"Your recent post on the advent of CDs made me think of my first purchases. It was in '86, here in Japan. Bought a player and two discs. One was a Thelonius Monk trio disc, and the other was The Law of the Green by Suzuki Saeko.
"Suzuki was trained as a pianist, got involved with all the keyboards (including the Fairlight when that was big in the 80s) and also played drums. In fact, she was the drummer in the first band that Sakamoto Ryuichi formed, before he became famous in YMO and as a solo artist. She composed all her music, also sang.
"In this video, she starts on the marimba and switches to the drums at 4:30. The Zappa influence is apparent. I saw this tour, and this was the opening number:
"The Law of the Green was released to coincide with the tour, though this song was not on the disc. This one was, however:
"I still have The Law of the Green. It is long out of print (though another one or two of her discs have been reissued). Considering its unavailability either in Japan or overseas, and the amount of music you've uploaded that I've taken advantage of, if you're interested ..."
I wrote Bill back and said that I'd be interested, but would mostly be interested if he'd allow me to publish his back story. Bill agreed and sent along a bit more information as well:
"She started out on classical piano when young and got interested in the drums in her second year of high school. Went to a junior college for the arts. Started playing around Tokyo in other people's bands or backing singers, began attracting attention, and then started working as a studio musician.
"From the late 70s to the late 80s in Tokyo there was a group of musicians making some unique music, of whom the three members of YMO were the most prominent. (Sakamoto and Hosono Haruomi of those three in particular.) They were not garage bands, but people with musical training, often classical, who worked in the general territory of modern pop music, but got experimental. Another one in that circle was Tachibana Hajime, who did some unique things of his own. Suzuki played in both Sakamoto's band and Tachibana's band roughly at the same time.
"She went solo and released her first disc in 83. That was where Philadelphia appeared. The second was in 84, which I had on cassette, but now can't seem to find. It was called Science and Mystery, but the official title was in some Scandinavian language. This was rereleased on CD five years ago and is still available on Amazon Japan. The Law of the Green was the third, and that came out in 85. In 86 she released a four tune 12" vinyl record, which I bought and taped. I still have the tape. In 87 she released her last solo album, which I didn't know about and never heard, but I got married that year and was otherwise occupied.
"She continued to work in support of other people's projects but tapered off in the early 90s because she had children (She's married to a guy in a band called the Moonriders, which are not as interesting.) She started getting back into things in the early 2000s, probably because her children were getting older, and is still semi-active.
"Reading her Japanese Wikipedia entry, she also did a movie soundtrack long ago that won an award, and three soundtracks in a manga series in the 2000s. She has also had her own radio shows as a DJ on two or three occasions, and wrote a column for a movie magazine.
"Her 55th birthday was Wednesday March 14th.
"Here is the instant ramen commercial I told you about.
"That's her singing, and she also did the music. (She did a few commercial jingles, too.) She's saying Sugu Oishii, Sugoku Oishii (Delicious right away, really delicious)."
I originally posted this CD in June 2010, soon after having found it at a used CD place in Tokyo. I'm reposting now because I hadn't previously put the whole thing together in a single zip file (or rar, as the case is now), meaning anyone wanting it had to grab each song individually.
Obviously, such a finding is outside the purported parameters of this blog; but I posted it because I had earlier found Kojima Mayumi's Ai No Poltergeist at P-Tunes and Video, the much-alluded-to mom and pop Chinese media store on Chrystie Street in Manhattan's Chinatown pictured in the header image of this blog.
From her LastFM entry:
"Kojima Mayumi’s maturation over the years has been exciting to watch, as she evolved from the cutesy, almost childlike persona of the nascent years of her career to the confident, sultry diva we’ve seen this side of the millennium.
"That it was this cute playfulness that contributed greatly to the charm of her early material cannot be doubted, but gradually she moved away from that as her musical appetite increased in its avidity. It wasn’t just the strengthened influence of jazz, an important element of her repertoire from the very beginning, but also a newfound enthusiasm to incorporate styles as wide-ranging as rockabilly, reggae, Americana, and cha-cha to her own music.
"The girlish elements never disappeared completely of course, and traces can still be heard in albums as recent as 2003’s Ai no Poltergeist (“Koi wa Psychedelic”) or the following year’s Pablo no Koibito (“Chairo no Kobin”). But at the same time it would’ve been senseless to characterize that as her musical centerpiece."
[I posted this a week or two ago but am reposting it, given that there's only two days left of the year. I'm going to start off 2012 by reposting albums from the first month or two of this blog, back before I was putting everything into a single zip file, making downloading infuriating-to-impossible. So, watch out for that.]
I've provided links to get this music, all for free, and all from others' uploads. (I was surprised to find each of these online somewhere; I didn't have to upload anything.) I encourage you in every case to seek out original CDs and actually buy them, whenever possible. Also, I can't guarantee that everything will still be there in month or so--or even in a week or two ...
Marshmallow Kisses
Ciao!Baby Released January 25, 2011
This is one of my top two CDs of the year, and possibly the album I listened to most after discovering it online a couple of months ago while sleuthing around about Hong Kong underground music. While the MKs are somewhat late to the Hong Kong twee party, their first two albums (their first being I Wonder Why My Favorite Boy Leaves Me an EP) have delivered far beyond my own expectations for the genre ... and I'm a huge fan of HK twee pioneers My Little Airport, Ketchup and the Pancakes.
I have no idea what sort of legs this terrific ray of sunshine would have outside of the Special Administrative Region, but it seems criminal that not even Pitchfork seems to know about it. Get it here.
Listen to "Jazz for Lovers; Solitude for Me"
* * *
Deerhoof
Deerhoof vs. Evil Released January 25, 2011 I'm just as shocked as you are to see a U.S. band among my top 10, but along with Ciao!Baby, this was my most listened to CD all year. (My two top faves of the year were both released on January 25.) In another 2011 top 10 I read online, someone else described the album as "utilitarian," noting the lukewarm response it received from critics, who generally like the album but complain about it being unfocused, or even ADD. That actually makes it the perfect record for the kind of listener I am: completely bored with the simplicity of most western popular music but not terribly thrilled by most jazz or classical, either. It's what's driven me to track down every Albanian, Bangladeshi, Brazilian, Burmese, etc., etc. bodega in NYC, where I can get music I can really respond to on a visceral level. (Most western critics write about pop as if they respond to it on a purely socio-semiotic level; reading music more than than listening to it.)
Personally, I think this is the best album Deerhoof has ever made: sonically rich, forward-looking, utterly brilliant pop that sounds like it couldn't possibly have been made in this country. Get it here.
Listen to "Qui Dorm, Només Somia"
* * *
Najwa Karam Hal Leile ... Ma Fi Noum Released June 28, 2011
Holy crap, but I love Najwa Karam. I have--I'll admit it--zero objectivity when it comes to this woman; she could release an album sitting on the toilet reading Jewel poems translated into Arabic and I'm sure I'd buy it, listen to it and profess my undying love for it. That said, trust me when I tell you that this record totally and unimpeachably fucking rocks. Other than her voice getting consistently deeper and more powerful, little has changed since the Lebanese superstar began recording in the late 80s: nearly every record she puts out is either the dabke or the baladi equivalent of AC/DC, Rolling Stones or, closer to home, Hakim. And this one, quite honestly, is the most rockin' she's put out in a few years--it's like the Some Girls of her career.
Did I mention how hard she rocks? Or how hard this record rocks? If this wasn't such a recent purchase for me, it would probably be right up there with Deerhoof and Marshmallow Kisses in the "most-listened-to" category. I'm sure it'll earn that status soon enough. Get it here.
Listen to "Ya Baie"
* * *
Sōtaisei Riron
Correct Theory of Relativity Released April 27, 2011 Sōtaisei Riron means "theory of relativity," so the title is kind of a play on the idea of a correct theory and the fact that most of this album is made up of remixes of the band's earlier work by Yoshihide Otomo, Spank Happy, Buffalo Daughter, Arto Lindsay, Cornelius and others. These aren't, however, remixes that sound like remixes--this album is completely unique, beautiful and totally perplexing. (Track three, for instance, is NOT a mistake; although it took me several tries before I was able to listen all the way through to the end and realize what, exactly, it is.) Perhaps appropriately, the first song, "Q/P," one of the two non-remixes on the album, opens with the words: "I. Don't know. Wha. Choowhachoo want ..."
The band has come a long way from its kind of Smiths-soundalike-with-female-lead-singer, and this album, though I bet it throws some fans off, is another great surge forward. Get it here.
Listen to "Q/P"
* * *
Pairs Summer Sweat Released September 30, 2011
I know next to nothing about this band, which I "discovered" via Music Has the Right to People a couple of weeks ago. From what I've been able to suss out, it's a male-female duo based in Shanghai; this is their second album; and this one was produced by Yanghai Song of Beijing punk superstars PK14. When my absolute favorite Chinese punk band, Subs, released the deeply disappointing Queen of Fucking Everything last year, followed this year by a less-than-thrilling Honeyed and Killed from the once fabulous Hedgehog, I just assumed that punk in China had shot its wad. Apparently, it's just moved south to Shanghai.
This record is stripped down, extremely raw and in some ways every bit as surprising as Wire's Pink Flag (songs range in length from the 52 second "Christmas" to the nearly five-minute long "My body is not a wonderland"). I suspect it'll convince at least a few of the more cynical of you out there that, in fact, "punk's not dead." Get it here.
Listen to "Cloud Nine"
* * *
Zee Avi Ghostbird Released August 23, 2011 This is the only record (other than the Deerhoof) that actually, so far as I know, has legs here in the U.S. In fact, you're more likely to know more about her than I do, as I only recently stumbled onto this record, wholly by accident, while scrolling through the music blog Chinese Music Collection. (Yes, I know she's Malaysian; thanks.) I don't know what her record was doing on that blog, but there it was, and I'm rather happy to have it, although I have no idea if I'll still be listening to it in another week or two; it's already starting to feel ickily like any number of earnest American or British neo-folkers whose work I have strenuously attempted to avoid for the last several years.
That said, I do love "Siboh Kitak Nangis" and "The Book of Morris Johnson," neither of which I can imagine getting tired of any time soon. Get it here.
Listen to "The Book of Morris Johnson"
* * *
Guitar Wolf Spacebattleshiplove Released, golly ... sometime in 2011
This is a self-released album, recorded in Tokyo in 2010 and intended to be sold during Guitar Wolf's 2011 Hoochie Coochie Space Men North American tour. It is so ear-shreddingly raw, so super em effin' rockin', words simply can't describe how much I love it. How is it that, while 80s Japan rockers Shonen Knife have gotten increasingly self-consciously cute, Guitar Wolf has just gotten more fucked-up and awesome? Don't get me wrong; I love both bands. But GW has no right to be this full of energy, this rockin', this far into their career. For one thing, it isn't fair to everyone else. For another, it's just confusing.
I'm seriously running out of steam here, so don't expect a lot of vivid description at this point. And, honestly, we're starting to get into "uneven" territory now. But the "end of year" convention demands 10 albums so, so help me god, that's what I'll deliver. I don't love everything on this record, but I love the stuff that sounds like super-jacked up 80s synth pop, especially "No-Hero-Days," which is as good as anything Big Sea Queen Shark has recorded, and "冰心" (which I'm assuming is about the famous Chinese writer of the same name).
Juusho Futei Mushoku JAKAJAAAAAN!!!!! Released sometime in 2011
I love this band so much it hurts. That said, their follow-up to their 2010 debut isn't quite as mind-blowing, though it certainly has its moments. I really, really, really, really, really, really wish I could find the video they shot for "One Two Three"; it was insane. Alas, it appears to longer be on YouTube, perhaps owing to the fact that it wasn't, to be perfectly honest, exactly P.C. Or maybe I just lack the skills to find it again. (If you find it, for god's sake, please let me know.)
10cm 1.0 Released February 10, 2011 In truth? I don't love this album, but I think this band, which I'm pretty sure is a duo, from Korea, has potential. They can either go one of two ways: Slicker and less interesting, or more Jonathan Richman/Crowd Lu-like and awesome. Time, I suppose, will tell. I wouldn't have included it here except that (a) it does seem promising and (b) fairly different from most K-pop.
So, what do you think? And, more to the point, what are your own favorite albums of 2011? Post your list in the comments below, or, better yet, include a URL to your own blog, if you have one. (But, seriously, if your list includes Wilco or PJ Harvey, don't bother.)
I've provided links to get most this music, all for free, and all from others' uploads. I encourage you in every case to seek out original CDs and actually buy them, whenever possible.
Marshmallow Kisses
Ciao!Baby Released January 25, 2011
This is one of my top two CDs of the year, and possibly the album I listened to most after discovering it online a couple of months ago while sleuthing around about Hong Kong underground music. While the MKs are somewhat late to the Hong Kong twee party, their first two albums (their first being I Wonder Why My Favorite Boy Leaves Me an EP) have delivered far beyond my own expectations for the genre ... and I'm a huge fan of HK twee pioneers My Little Airport, Ketchup and the Pancakes.
I have no idea what sort of legs this terrific ray of sunshine would have outside of the Special Administrative Region, but it seems criminal that not even Pitchfork seems to know about it. Get it here.
Listen to "Jazz for Lovers; Solitude for Me"
* * *
Deerhoof
Deerhoof vs. Evil Released January 25, 2011 I'm just as shocked as you are to see a U.S. band among my top 10, but along with Ciao!Baby, this was my most listened to CD all year. (My two top faves of the year were both released on January 25.) In another 2011 top 10 I read online, someone else described the album as "utilitarian," noting the lukewarm response it received from critics, who generally like the album but complain about it being unfocused, or even ADD. That actually makes it the perfect record for the kind of listener I am: completely bored with the simplicity of most western popular music but not terribly thrilled by most jazz or classical, either. It's what's driven me to track down every Albanian, Bangladeshi, Brazilian, Burmese, etc., etc. bodega in NYC, where I can get music I can really respond to on a visceral level. (Most western critics write about pop as if they respond to it on a purely socio-semiotic level; reading music more than than listening to it.)
Personally, I think this is the best album Deerhoof has ever made: sonically rich, forward-looking, utterly brilliant pop that sounds like it couldn't possibly have been made in this country. (File removed from link; sorry.)
Listen to "Qui Dorm, Només Somia"
* * *
Najwa Karam Hal Leile ... Ma Fi Noum Released June 28, 2011
Holy crap, but I love Najwa Karam. I have--I'll admit it--zero objectivity when it comes to this woman; she could release an album sitting on the toilet reading Jewel poems translated into Arabic and I'm sure I'd buy it, listen to it and profess my undying love for it. That said, trust me when I tell you that this record totally and unimpeachably fucking rocks. Other than her voice getting consistently deeper and more powerful, little has changed since the Lebanese superstar began recording in the late 80s: nearly every record she puts out is either the dabke or the baladi equivalent of AC/DC, Rolling Stones or, closer to home, Hakim. And this one, quite honestly, is the most rockin' she's put out in a few years--it's like the Some Girls of her career.
Did I mention how hard she rocks? Or how hard this record rocks? If this wasn't such a recent purchase for me, it would probably be right up there with Deerhoof and Marshmallow Kisses in the "most-listened-to" category. I'm sure it'll earn that status soon enough. Get it here.
Listen to "Ya Baie"
* * *
Sōtaisei Riron
Correct Theory of Relativity Released April 27, 2011 Sōtaisei Riron means "theory of relativity," so the title is kind of a play on the idea of a correct theory and the fact that most of this album is made up of remixes of the band's earlier work by Yoshihide Otomo, Spank Happy, Buffalo Daughter, Arto Lindsay, Cornelius and others. These aren't, however, remixes that sound like remixes--this album is completely unique, beautiful and totally perplexing. (Track three, for instance, is NOT a mistake; although it took me several tries before I was able to listen all the way through to the end and realize what, exactly, it is.) Perhaps appropriately, the first song, "Q/P," one of the two non-remixes on the album, opens with the words: "I. Don't know. Wha. Choowhachoo want ..."
The band has come a long way from its kind of Smiths-soundalike-with-female-lead-singer, and this album, though I bet it throws some fans off, is another great surge forward. Get it here.
Listen to "Q/P"
* * *
Pairs Summer Sweat Released September 30, 2011
I know next to nothing about this band, which I "discovered" via Music Has the Right to People a couple of weeks ago. From what I've been able to suss out, it's a male-female duo based in Shanghai; this is their second album; and this one was produced by Yanghai Song of Beijing punk superstars PK14. When my absolute favorite Chinese punk band, Subs, released the deeply disappointing Queen of Fucking Everything last year, followed this year by a less-than-thrilling Honeyed and Killed from the once fabulous Hedgehog, I just assumed that punk in China had shot its wad. Apparently, it's just moved south to Shanghai.
This record is stripped down, extremely raw and in some ways every bit as surprising as Wire's Pink Flag (songs range in length from the 52 second "Christmas" to the nearly five-minute long "My body is not a wonderland"). I suspect it'll convince at least a few of the more cynical of you out there that, in fact, "punk's not dead." Get it here.
Listen to "Cloud Nine"
* * *
Zee Avi Ghostbird Released August 23, 2011 This is the only record (other than the Deerhoof) that actually, so far as I know, has legs here in the U.S. In fact, you're more likely to know more about her than I do, as I only recently stumbled onto this record, wholly by accident, while scrolling through the music blog Chinese Music Collection. (Yes, I know she's Malaysian; thanks.) I don't know what her record was doing on that blog, but there it was, and I'm rather happy to have it, although I have no idea if I'll still be listening to it in another week or two; it's already starting to feel ickily like any number of earnest American or British neo-folkers whose work I have strenuously attempted to avoid for the last several years.
That said, I do love "Siboh Kitak Nangis" and "The Book of Morris Johnson," neither of which I can imagine getting tired of any time soon. Get it here.
Listen to "The Book of Morris Johnson"
* * *
Guitar Wolf Spacebattleshiplove Released, golly ... sometime in 2011
This is a self-released album, recorded in Tokyo in 2010 and intended to be sold during Guitar Wolf's 2011 Hoochie Coochie Space Men North American tour. It is so ear-shreddingly raw, so super em effin' rockin', words simply can't describe how much I love it. How is it that, while 80s Japan rockers Shonen Knife have gotten increasingly self-consciously cute, Guitar Wolf has just gotten more fucked-up and awesome? Don't get me wrong; I love both bands. But GW has no right to be this full of energy, this rockin', this far into their career. For one thing, it isn't fair to everyone else. For another, it's just confusing.
I'm seriously running out of steam here, so don't expect a lot of vivid description at this point. And, honestly, we're starting to get into "uneven" territory now. But the "end of year" convention demands 10 albums so, so help me god, that's what I'll deliver. I don't love everything on this record, but I love the stuff that sounds like super-jacked up 80s synth pop, especially "No-Hero-Days," which is as good as anything Big Sea Queen Shark has recorded, and "冰心" (which I'm assuming is about the famous Chinese writer of the same name).
Juusho Futei Mushoku JAKAJAAAAAN!!!!! Released sometime in 2011
I love this band so much it hurts. That said, their follow-up to their 2010 debut isn't quite as mind-blowing, though it certainly has its moments. I really, really, really, really, really, really wish I could find the video they shot for "One Two Three"; it was insane. Alas, it appears to longer be on YouTube, perhaps owing to the fact that it wasn't, to be perfectly honest, exactly P.C. Or maybe I just lack the skills to find it again. (If you find it, for god's sake, please let me know.)
10cm 1.0 Released February 10, 2011 In truth? I don't love this album, but I think this band, which I'm pretty sure is a duo, from Korea, has potential. They can either go one of two ways: Slicker and less interesting, or more Jonathan Richman/Crowd Lu-like and awesome. Time, I suppose, will tell. I wouldn't have included it here except that (a) it does seem promising and (b) fairly different from most K-pop.
So, what do you think? And, more to the point, what are your own favorite albums of 2011? Post your list in the comments below, or, better yet, include a URL to your own blog, if you have one. (But, seriously, if your list includes Wilco or PJ Harvey, don't bother.)
A collection of Japanese covers, remixes, pastiche, breakcore, retro and beyond, culled after reading Simon Reynolds' Retromania.
I was a huge fan of Simon Reynolds' Rip It Up And Start Again, a terrific critical and social history of British and American 80s post-punk. So when Retromania was published, I descended on a copy like the admitted culture vulture that I am.
It's a brilliant book. I think anyone interested in pop music, or more generally, in pop culture, should read it. But I didn't agree with all of it. And I definitely wasn't sympathetic to the book's almost non-existent coverage of non-Western pop. If you've read the book yourself, you can probably guess what chapter raised most of my hackles. That's right, Chapter 5: Turning Japanese: The Empire of Retro and the Hipster International. The one chapter that even acknowledges that other cultures produce pop--in this case, Japanese Shibuya-kei artists.
I'm hardly an expert on Japanese pop music. I've been there twice for very limited visits. I do have, however, a rather fabulous collection of CDs and MP3s of Japanese alt pop that, if nothing else, proves that this music is about something more than mere "consumer affluence." Also, it isn't particularly "Japanese" to mimic others in the creation of one's "own" pop culture. This is something the entire First World is adept at/reliant upon, especially the British, and especially 60s British pop artists.
I'm not going to launch a critique of the book--which you can (and should) read for yourself. Instead, I've put together a sonic riposte that, whether or not you've read Reynold's book, I'm pretty sure you'll love.
A nice shout out about Bodega Pop from WFMU's "Beware of the Blog" reminds me that, in fact, my initial plan was not to do a blog at all, but a CD label. Talking with conceptual poet and WFMU DJ Kenneth Goldsmith, who encouraged me to consider doing a blog instead, ultimately led me (and now you) here.
Kenny was right, of course; I've probably posted more music to this blog in the first year than I'd have been able to publish in CD form, even if I lived to be 100. But a boy can still dream, can't he?
Were I to seriously consider a label, I think the very first project would be to compile a couple dozen of the most thrilling contemporary tracks from Japan, focusing on indy rock and some of the more accessible experimental stuff--from noodles and Seagull Screaming Kiss Her Kiss Her to Melt Banana and OOIOO.
And that is, more or less, what I've done here. Some of this was found in Japan, but most of it was discovered online, a good portion of it at Rebel Japan Music, one of my all-time favorite music blogs.
If you like what you hear, I encourage you to seek out other music by the bands that intrigue you; many of whom, again, can be found on Rebel Japan.
And don't be too harsh on my imaginary CD cover--it's the first I've ever "designed."
Get the mix CD, including 38 rockin' tracks, here.
While hanging out with friends in Brooklyn last weekend, someone began to mourn the demise of rock. I countered that rock wasn't dead; it just moved east. I promised to make my friend a mix CD of some of the best rock and hip hop recorded in Japan, Korea, China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, etc., with a few tracks recorded in the U.S. thrown in for good measure. This is that CD.
Found in a suburb somewhere in Gunma Prefecture, Japan. This was in the Japanese equivalent of a Wal*Mart, in the 300-yen bin. (About three bucks.)
Founded in 1995, Snail Ramp is one of many Japanese ska bands. And when I say many, I mean many-many! There was actually a whole wall in Shibuya's Tower Records filled with nothing but Japanese ska that rivaled the rap/hip-hop section at the old Kim's Video on St. Mark's. No exaggeration. When the Japanese decide to cover a genre, they totally cover it.
And cover it well. This is a freaking great record, ersatz tho it may be. But, then, since when has authenticity or purity, especially in the realm of pop music, necessarily led to anything more than earnest forgettable crap?
TOPPENK GROUP
-
Here's an album from the Toppenk Group who were known as Orkes Melodi Ria
before they became the Toppenk Group, Rachmat Kartolo was one of the
members.....
♫ Listen: Lisa Lerkenfeldt - 29°
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Field recordings of storms at an abandoned beach are understood through
tape loops, piano, and cello. Like her contemporary Ulla Straus, Lisa
Lerkenfeld...
Sleeping in chainsaw beds
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(*HIDE *is a Chicago based industrial/darkwave/experimental duo, comprised
of electronic musician Seth Sher and vocalist and visual artist *Heather
Gabel*...
HISTORY OF MICHIGAN ROCK vol.2
-
I suggest starting this series with *Volume 1* here, and then sink into
this hour of sounds that you know and a story that is ultimately
fascinating for fa...
PART 4: THE MISANTHROPE "Dj MAFT SAI"
-
IN THAILAND:
THE BIGGEST SCAM
IN THE HISTORY OF MUSIC!
If during the last 10 years the word “molam” seems to have spread all
around the world, helped by th...
-
*AUSTRALIA*
*Australie – Vogue EXTP 1056**, recorded in Central Australia by Jacques
Villeminot, 1950s (7 in, 45 RPM)*
[image: #Australia #Aborigenes #Centr...
The Mighty Diamonds – Right Time Virgin 1976
-
Another classic 1976 reggae album is this one. The Mighty Diamonds’ first
release on Virgin. Originally on the Jamaican Well Charge label. It
contains hits...
Laura Maes - Czela
-
As a format, the business card CDR is one of my very favorites. For
starters, biz-card CDRs are *adorable*. And also, you don't get very much
time on them...
a familiar bell rings from the other side.
-
don't think of this as a come back, this is just an album i've really been
enjoying & i wanted to share it with y'all. jack kevorkian (yeah dr death)
mad...
Décimas autobiográficas / Violeta Parra (2010)
-
descargar / download
Re edición del disco editado originalmente de forma póstuma en 1976 por el
sello Alerce, que recogía grabaciones inéditas de Violeta...
Ambiance Congo: August 18, 2019
-
WELCOME!
Today we start with a great live track from Luambo Makiadi "Franco" and his
O.K. Jazz from the double LP of the Afro-European tour. Next is a cut f...
ghost from the present (Tumuc Humac)
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This picture is taken in the jungle in Brazil. The young lady is a
nature-loving tourist originating from the lowland swamps here and
traveling with het ...
Celestino Fogu – Ballo Sardo Tradizionale
-
In the years since I last posted a Sardinian disc, I’ve been lucky to
acquire quite a few 78s featuring the masterful and sometimes brash cantu e
chiterra ...
Satyajit Ray: Shakespeare Wallah (1966)
-
[image: Shakespeare Wallah]
'Shakespeare Wallah' [review] belongs on MFT3F mostly by association, as it
technically isn't a product of Bollywood. Yet it ma...
Batma & Larfag باطما ولرفاك
-
Many groups were born following the wave of renewal of the Moroccan music
scene during the 1970s. As has been written several times, the pioneers of
...
A Rare Pairing: Jnan Prakash Ghosh and V.G. Jog
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The obiquitous harmonium or hand pump organ, were it to be classified
within the caste structure of Hindu society, would definitely not be
considered a Bra...
The Tony King Sound (1975)
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Great mid-70s album from Tony King, an arranger who had a hand in quite a
few chart hits here in the UK.
This album has it all, some ...
Resonance FM 16/7/19
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Tunes from Pakistan, Ethiopia and the Soviet Union as well as a very
special cover of 'God Only Knows'.
*Dig That Treasure (16/7/19)*
Middle Georgia Sin...
The Smoking Mirror- EP 12”
-
Keep forgetting about this record, which I originally borrowed from Goutroy
for a rip and then picked up my own copy shortly thereafter. Thanks to Saul
for...
THE NEXT MUTANT SOUNDS RARE LP AUCTION IS LIVE NOW
-
Some major monsters this time, including four LP's on Futura Records, The
V/A-Music box on Vanity Records, The First Decayes LP and NDW LP's pressed
in edi...
LYSERGIC LEGEND
-
GABOR SZABO - 1969
....but, but...but I've already listen this track ..... Yes, "Stormy" was
sampled by John Legend for his track : "SAVE ME"
...
Ripoff Alert!
-
For some time now, a dubious operation called "Kipepeo Publishing,"
apparently based in Kenya, has been peddling on Amazon CDs made from MP3s
downloaded,...
Bagaimana cara menjadi pemain Dewa poker online?
-
Untuk game God of Poker Online, banyak yang dicintai dan menjadi game
favorit pemain. Karena gaya permainan untuk pemain cukup rumit dan
menuntut, itu meng...
-
this blog is now officially dead. i think i set out what i wanted to
accomplish, which was to expose people out there to music that i found
around the dust...
The Moonstrucks
-
The Moonstrucks were fondly styled as the original Pinoy “Campus Darlings”
from Manila, Philippines. The lineup variedly consisted of Alfredo Lozano
Jr – f...
Music Lover's Announcement
-
Hi there,
If you here because you're looking for old files/links to great music you
may be disappointed. This blog is now officially 'deceased', though m...
Le Poète
-
Only a year ago we celebrated his 80th birthday with a selection of his work,
today we mourn his death.
There are no words for the sadness, the loss, felt ...
Africolombia needs your help
-
For 12 years, Africolombia has dedicated to sharing with the world the
incredible picotero culture of Colombia’s Caribbean. From exposing a vast
inventory ...
Top 25 Releases of 2018: Extra
-
In addition to the albums and EPs covered by my, admittedly selective and
only vaguely ranked, top 25 list, there were of course plenty of other
releases I...
Microtonal Youth
-
In the late 70s I worked briefly for Europadisk, a small Manhattan company
that brought German stamper technology to record manufacture in the US.
Since ...
Cratedigger’s Lung - catch it
-
Don’t miss the debut of “The Cratedigger’s Lung Adventue Hour,” tomorrow,
Nov. 30 at 7pm, EST.
*A one-hour exploration of excavations from the farthest re...
We Won't Forget You...
-
Dengbej Gazin Dengbej Gazin was a singer from Van in eastern Anatolia, she
belongs to a tradition of storytelling through chanting. Consider for
example...
Nusasonic — Crossing Aural Geographies
-
Goethe Institut Asia Tenggara bekerjasama dengan CTM Festival, Yes No
Klub, Playfreely/BlackKaji dan WSK Festival menggelar festival musik
eksperimental ...
Jazz vs. Rock and Roll
-
My baby and I, had a fight last night/ She said I´m wrong, but I know I´m
right/ Now, I love that gal – heart and soul/ But I dig Jazz! … and she
loves Roc...
Sofaüberwürfe
-
Hussen u0026 Sofaüberwürfe für mehr Abwechslung von bonprix. Sofahusse,
Gaico, »Verona«, mit Melange-Effekt | OTTO. Beschreibung. Mit diesen
Stretch...
Original Beach Scorpions
-
Well, this band is certainly one of my favourites: The Original Beach
Scorpions, led by Anthony Scorpion. Fine guitarwork, remarkable voices,
truly origin...
Tip For Choosing a Good Driving School
-
Once you sit behind the wheels ready to start a car, you must be ready for
the tremendous responsibility that you are about to take over. The
knowledge o...
My Top 5 for Superfly Records
-
I picked some of my favorite Congolese 78s and wrote a few lines for Paris
Superfly Records =>
http://blog.superflyrecords.com/guests-top-5/ceints-de-bakel...
Sohnay da Sohna Rauza
-
As the month of Ramzan approaches many of us like to listen to Naatiya
kalam to help put us in the right mood of devotion. This is the lovely new
Friday r...
Phono Mundial Toutes Etoiles – 12 Mai
-
On investit les 700m2 en extérieur du Chapiteau Belle de Mai ce samedi, et
pour une fois on commence dès 14h avec nos invités : –L’Espadrille
(Phocéephone)...
Rest in Peace Ndikho Xaba
-
June 18, 2019
Durban, South Africa
Legendary South African Musician Ndikho Xaba has made his transition at age
85.
After a long battle with Parkinson’s di...
A Secret History of a Musick Yet To Be (Readable)
-
In July, a bulletin on the myspace page of a group of Moroccan musicians
sent my mind wandering down some strange paths, got me thinking about music
as a t...
Membasmi Kutu Kucing Dengan Minyak Telon
-
Jika kucing Anda membenci air, coba gunakan sisir kutu agar membasmi kutu
kucing dengan minyak telon merasa tidak nyaman. Anda perlu memastikan sisir
turun...
Penpals - 2nd Coming
-
Penpals - 2nd Coming
321 Records Limited TOCT-24648
2001.10.24
Today I have decided to hack and slash all my prices on discogs. deep
discounts abound in ...
Camelia Jordana
-
Camelia Jordana - Non non non
Camelia Jordana - Comment lui dire (Mathieu Boogaerts)
Camelia Jordana et Alex Beaupain - Avant la Haine
JET FM Fundraising Marathon
-
Jet FM is a local independant radio in Nantes, France, which hosts my Cosmogol999
Radioshow and close friends Hashtag & Tête de bois's broadcast.
This rad...
No i było tak:
-
Na wakacje po ósmej klasie w Trzech Kwadransach Jazzu Jan Borkowski puścił
kilka nagrań Free Cooperation. Po dwóch minutach pierwszego utworu mi się
to spo...
Field Report: Richmond Folk Festival
-
Feature image above: Victor “Bitori” Tavares. Photos by Charles “DJ
Graybeard” Williams. The Richmond Folk Festival might not get a lot of hype
outside of ...
Anime4chan – Live Stream Anime Community
-
That’s it for the update. I hope you enjoy these city pop and various other
artists posted. I want to take this time to invite anyone interested in
anime t...
goodbye, 8tracks
-
I've started a project of daily music selections on Twitter at
*#hearsaysongoftheday*.
I hope you check those out. Let's see how this goes.
The post goo...
Current Events
-
1
Bemoaned deranged
Weeds grow
All the same
An orchestra climbing to
Crescendo's windows
Flowering in jagged
Perfumes
Rotten
Breaths of
An imperial brigade
...
CDer Idol Club
-
Here is the CDer Idol Club album.
1. 100% Danjou Kousai (Koizumi Kyoko)
2. Suki ni Narazu ni Irarenai (Iwasaki Hiromi)
3. Last Kiss wa Hoho ni Shite (Mats...
Livro "Lindo Sonho Delirante" saiu do forno
-
BUY IT!
E finalmente já está a venda o fundamental *Lindo Sonho Delirante: 100
discos psicodélicos do Brasil (1968-1975)*, livro de Bento Araújo, que...
Jual ORP Meter | Lutron NI 214
-
[image: alat ukur bod, harga bod, harga bod meter, beli bod meter dimana,
bod cod tss, dissolved oksigen, beli alat mengukur bod, cod meter portable,
cod m...
The Bottom of the Page
-
Hi everyone! As 2016 draws to a close, I’ve decided to commit to something
that has been slowly happening of its own accord – the shuttering of Paper
for t...
Danialou Sagbohan: Live in Brussels (10/22/2016)
-
Sagbohan is on small tour in Europe. He was in Brussels saturday for The
Vodoun Festival. He should play in Amsterdam and Berlin at the beginning of
Nove...
Dhafer Youssef – 2016 – Diwan of Beauty and Odd
-
Dhafer Youssef‘s album “Diwan of Beauty and Odd” carries all the
trademarks this exceptional artist is known for: beautiful melodies,
heartfelt chanting ...
new blog
-
Decided to abandon the expetc ship and start a new blog: Slowdive's Corner.
Expect awesome, (semi)obscure albums at least once a week, perhaps with
some wo...
Pretty - Neo Damaging Noise III - 2006
-
Pretty - Neo Damaging Noise III Cd
Fuck The System Records - FSR-003 - 2006
http://ulozto.net/xRBX1bcu/pretty-neo-damaging-noise-lll-2006-zip
More Interesting Records for Sale on eBay!
-
* Rare LPs, 45RPMs from Egypt, Tunis, Jordan, Egypt, Iraq, Saudi Arabia,
and Yemen!*
RARE EGYPTIAN 70'S LP! AHMAD ADAWWIYAH | SAHRAH MA' (LIVE) - MORIPHON
...
► Steve Beresford - The Bath of Surprise (1977-80)
-
[CD: Amoebic/Valve, Japan, Dec. 1999; #AMO-VA-03
- LP originally released by Piano, UK, 1980; #PIANO 003]
Steve Beresford: all instruments
01. Punctuati...
LIBEREZ - "ALL TENSE NOW LAX" (2015)
-
Θυμόμουνα το όνομα αυτής της μπάντας, θυμόμουν ότι είχα ακούσει κάτι από
αυτούς που ήταν της προκοπής αλλά τι και γιατί ιδέα δεν είχα – τόσο πολύ
αχταρμάς...
You No Longer Need to Beware of the Blog
-
After ten fun-filled years, we're packing up shop here at WFMU's Beware of
the Blog. Many thanks to the dozens of volunteer authors who put in so much
time...
THE END
-
Sorry keeping some of you on tenterhooks wondering whether Boot Sale Sounds
is still a going concern. I was hoping to get back into uploading some gems
fr...
Uncover Valuable and Semi Jewels
-
Semi Jewels - Any mineral substance that's listed at its charm and/or its
strength may just like a gems. You'll find several kinds of gems for
instance rub...
Hiroshi Sato - Super Market (1976)
-
Some readers may know the late Japanese pianist Hiroshi Sato from his
excellent *Awakening* record with Wendy Matthews, or his work with f...
Faktor Penyebab Kanker Payudara
-
*Penyebab kanker payudara* belum sepenuhnya dipahami, sehingga sulit untuk
mengatakan mengapa seorang wanita dapat mengembangkan kanker payudara dan
wanita...
GRAMMY TIME!
-
I’ll be heading down to LA this weekend to attend the Grammy Awards.
“Longing for the Past” has been nominated in the Historical category along
with four o...
A Chinese Ghost Story Soundtrack (倩女幽魂) [REPOST]
-
*As I've posted several times before, I am a huge Hong Kong movie fan and
"A Chinese Ghost Story" is definitely on my favorites list. While Tsui
Hark's "Z...
Subway - Subway (1972)
-
*Subway - Subway (1972)*
A beautiful and very rare album from the annals of European
psychedelic/folk/prog circa 1972. Subway were a half American, half...
Age Factory
-
*手を振る*
Посмотрев, несколько раз подряд, клип на песню 真空から - стал долго и упорно
ждать их мини альбом. Ждать пришлось чуть больше двух недель. Оправдал ли ...
Prophétie - L'Eternel
-
*Prophétie*
*L'Eternel*
*2004-2006? *(Cd rip@256)
*From Reunion Island, some perfect reggae. When I arrived on the island in
2006, we could still hear the...
-
Hopefully all the links have now finally been refreshed and replaced with
working ones at a new service. If you still find missing or malfunctioning
one...
MC Swat - We Don't Want
-
*MC Swat - We Don't Want*
*مانبوش - ام سي سوات*
*Libya*
Released May 2, 2012
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v_TOS1ubAG4
Click here to download the m...
Akendengue – Sarraounia (1986)
-
Reflecting on the nearly thirty years that have passed since this record
was issued, it is shocking to realize how profoundly the world has changed.
While...
Sounds of the Streets: Istanbul
-
In September 2013 I visited Istanbul for the first time with the hopes of
recording street musicians and any other interesting sounds I could find
along t...
New Latin But Cool Vinyl Coming Out
-
*ANA TIJOUX-Vengo (Nacional Records, 2014)*: For a while, after her
departure from *Makiza*, I remember *Ana Tijoux* was trying to detach
herself from the...
The Soap: "My God, That Feels So Good!"
-
1.- Discotic
2.- We go
3.- Wait a bit
4.- 24
5.- Cheese Boy
6.- Las Vegas
7.- Street
8.- What’t up your ass?
No sé para que escribo nada si solo os vais a...
Seven Years in Fluville
-
Today would have been Elvis's birthday, but he's dead.
Today is also the Boogie Woogie Flu's birthday and it's nearly dead.
I am...
Radio Show 12-12-13
-
In this episode, we celebrate the life and legacy of Nelson Mandela through
the music of South Africa from the late 1950s through the dismantling of
aparth...
And We Danced
-
*Celia Cruz con la Sonora Matancera*
*La Tierna, Conmovedera, Bamboleadora*
Seeco, SCLP 9246, made in New York
Hope you all had a good Thanksgiving weekend....
"Cries for Help" original art | SOLD
-
*THIS COMIC HAS SOLD*
India ink on Bristol board, 11"w x 14"h
*$60 includes postage/handling*
Published in *Brooklyn Rail* September 2012
Check or Paypal...
Ok Motherfuckers! Let's Go!!
-
I've posted a few Ultra Bide related things before and have always gotten a
number of emails and inquiries about Hide and his band. So you'll be glad
to ...
Happy Solstice & Abbots Bromley Horn Dance
-
*On Darkness:*
The child is born in the darkness of the womb; the chicken hatched after
incubation. Birth begins in darkness, as dawn follows the long nig...
Ravi Shankar - Sound of the Sitar
-
*ravi shankar*
sound of the sitar
(sitar)
1. raga malkauns - alap
2. raga malkauns - jor
3. tala sawari
4. pahari dhun
listen
rest in peace ravi, you wi...
Technical difficulties....
-
Sorry folks, I thought I was going to be able to post a 45 today but
various pieces of equipment have been acting-up ever since we experienced
damp conditi...
Sundaram Sai Bhajan Vol. 27
-
*Download*:
FLAC: Side A Side B
320kbps MP3
*Side A*
01. Mangala Dayaka Hey
02. Sadguru Om
03. Mukunda Madhava
04. Allah Ho Akbar
05. Prema Mayi Sai M...
LAGOS DISCO INFERNO IS BACK AGAIN!!!
-
Hello, blog fam... I've had some trouble with my Blogger account so I
haven't been able to make any new entries for a while, but if you're
connected to me ...
野路由紀子 - 北信濃絶唱
-
野路由紀子 was an enka singer from the 1970s. enka is forever a genre that i
will find to be particularly spooky. something about it just sends chills
up and d...
SOLVA SAAL | MANZIL
-
*Get it here.*
*Solva Saal (1958)*
Music: S.D. Burman
Lyrics: Majrooh
1. Hai Apna Dil To Awara | Hemant Kumar
2. Yehi To Hai Woh | Mohammad Rafi
3. Nazar K...
Au revoir
-
Hi readers!
Thank you so much for all the support you've given this blog. It's amazing
the amount of traffic I still get, even when the blog has been inact...
Andrew Chen Shi An / 陈势安
-
*Andrew Chen Shi An - Love Again. Stardom*
*Singer/band: *Andrew Chen Shi An / 陈势安
*Title: *Love Again. Stardom / 再爱一遍.天后陈势安
*Release date: *2011/11/11
*Yes...
QMix
-
So here is a little sampler I compiled, reavealing my love for fancy pop
music + some other stuff - inconsistent and random as this blog is. Hope
you lik...
QotD - Sleazy on CDs
-
I would have thought that CDs were things that homeless people hang on
their super market shopping carts to make them look less depressing but
apparently s...
S. D. Burman: Taxi Driver (1954/1977) Pakistan
-
Ok, ok. I actually enjoyed the *Taxi Driver* soundtrack more than* Chalti
Ka Naam Gaadi*. And I have to admit that I am finding some S. D. Burman
songs wh...
Introduction
-
Misora Hibari
"Everything absolutely has a tiny and flaring point which makes a person or
a thing different from others, like the incalculable stars in th...
Look at it as a Hiatus.
-
First of all, Merry Christmas to all those who actually read this on a
regular basis. I hope you all have a great 2010.
I sadly however am going to be putt...
Inquiries
-
Hip Hop in China is no longer an active blog. It will remain up as an
archive for people around the world to access information on Hip Hop in
China.
Plea...
Lord Astor e Seu Conjunto - E Danca (1961)
-
Hello, good evening! I am very close to finish an important work to Loronix
and also a key effort to bring some relief to the financial problems I'm
facing...
Repi Multimedia - Fishing With Dynamite (2008)
-
From my favourite Albanian DJ team and/or band Repi Multimedia we get this
new collection of "can i get a w00t w00t"-remixes.
From last.fm:
...
Disparition d'Orlando "Puntilla" Ríos 3/3
-
Un autre album de Puntilla:
Autre volet de notre hommage, voici un album introuvable et méconnu en
France d'Orlando Puntilla, en fait son premier disque a...