ILX Gonna Shine in My Backdoor Someday (new post-Fahey folk for ppl posting in Takoma/Tompkins Square threads Pt II)

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absolutely!

global tetrahedron, Thursday, 4 February 2021 17:03 (three years ago) link

this untitled third track is pretty hot stuff

global tetrahedron, Thursday, 4 February 2021 17:06 (three years ago) link

yeah this 1967 stuff is GREAT. probably worthy of official release!

tylerw, Thursday, 4 February 2021 18:16 (three years ago) link

I'm trying not to think about what was on the reels that got thrown out :(

Überschadenfreude (sleeve), Thursday, 4 February 2021 18:21 (three years ago) link

haha yeah. oregon archives are delivering, though — have you guys checked this out? https://kboo.fm/media/66141-terry-riley-kboo-archives

tylerw, Thursday, 4 February 2021 18:56 (three years ago) link

I've been digging into a couple of those early pre-Sundowner solo Steve Gunn releases that I hadn't yet heard. I just really like the sort of downer quality his playing had. The two self-titled albums from 2006 and 2007 are interesting in that they came out when GHQ was still an active band. The step up in his playing from 2006 to 2007 is great in that the '07 release is very much in the same voice that he's carried up until now. The 2010 "Camel Throat" cassette is something I've eyed of a while and didn't realize the label has it up on Bandcamp. No duds on that one and it covers all the ground within 5 songs. I also found a 2005 Moongang cassette released by Not Not Fun on my hard drive. Did not know that was a solo Gunn project. Not solo guitar related at all, but more in line with what Not Not Fun was doing at that point in time.

I will continue to group GHQ alongside other top-tier groups active at the time like Pelt. One of their later releases, "Seven & Eight" was a Gunn/Bassett/Orleans line up instead of their usual Gunn/Bassett/Nolan, maybe Peter Nolan had left by that point, I'm not sure. But it's very good, had not heard it up until now.

Neal Cassady, Saturday, 6 February 2021 03:11 (three years ago) link

The Yasmin Williams album everyone's going nuts for right now is very pretty, but I'm having a hard time connecting with it. I feel like I'd like just a tad more rough edge or something. Am I alone on this?

alpine static, Saturday, 6 February 2021 07:31 (three years ago) link

you're not alone, too wyndham hill for me

global tetrahedron, Saturday, 6 February 2021 15:00 (three years ago) link

Going nuts? Not here.

Evan, Saturday, 6 February 2021 15:21 (three years ago) link

Speaking of Windham Hill, I'm really enjoying this Mason Lindahl LP on Tompkins Square, which definitely has a few WH type pieces

http://www.tompkinssquare.com/lindahl.html

Paul Ponzi, Saturday, 6 February 2021 15:42 (three years ago) link

I think that is the one pom mentioned. I really enjoyed it as well.

to party with our demons (Sund4r), Saturday, 6 February 2021 15:47 (three years ago) link

Yep, and happy to hear it. I really like the flamenco influence on that one.

pomenitul, Saturday, 6 February 2021 15:49 (three years ago) link

Enjoying the hell out of the new Rob Noyes album. I love his style, definitely hits a lot of sweet spots for me. Just love the logic and patterns/phrasing in his playing (and lots of rhythmic stuff going on that really charges it with cool energy):

https://robnoyesvdsq.bandcamp.com/

Probably my favorite straight-acoustic-guitar record I have heard in a bit.

grandavis, Saturday, 6 February 2021 18:53 (three years ago) link

oh cool, yeah I find Rob to be a singular talent, he really has his own voice as a player

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 6 February 2021 18:58 (three years ago) link

Yeah I agree. This record rips, and lots of short songs too which is kind of refreshing.

grandavis, Saturday, 6 February 2021 19:04 (three years ago) link

interesting piece of Loren Connors who I was not familiar with, but seems very interesting

https://daily.bandcamp.com/lifetime-achievement/loren-connors-lifetime-achievement

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 8 February 2021 17:35 (three years ago) link

connors is kind of his own universe — tons of good stuff (and I've probably only heard 1/10 of what he's put out over th years)

tylerw, Monday, 8 February 2021 17:46 (three years ago) link

Yeah I never got too into him but I really like Airs in particular.

Evan, Monday, 8 February 2021 18:35 (three years ago) link

Oh man Loren is one of my dudes (not that I have heard even near everything, there is a lot). That Bandcamp piece is good though, Grayson did a good job with it. Think I maybe heard about him first from the Harmony of the Spheres box set?

I really love this album of his, just beautifully impressionistic playing, for lack of a better descriptor:

https://lorenconnorsnyc.bandcamp.com/album/red-mars

Definitely paved the way for a whole lot of moves people are taking liberally from, including myself.

grandavis, Monday, 8 February 2021 21:40 (three years ago) link

Guys I have problem. I don’t think I remember how to play guitar and not sound like New Arrivals by Willie Lane

Evan, Thursday, 11 February 2021 23:41 (three years ago) link

good problem to have imo

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 12 February 2021 00:32 (three years ago) link

Hah playing guitar is a problem. You are always going to sound like someone for the most part .... but yeah I agree that sounding like Willie Lane sounds like a good problem to have.

grandavis, Friday, 12 February 2021 07:18 (three years ago) link

Well it just always falls into that sort of formless wandering thing complete with that kind of cool but kind of shitty electric guitar sound. Framed it as a problem because I honestly wonder if I'll ever be able to focus enough to "compose" something ever again or if I'm cursed to forever jam aimlessly in avant post-primitivism mode with wacky tunings.

Evan, Friday, 12 February 2021 16:28 (three years ago) link

Welcome, friend hah hah.

grandavis, Friday, 12 February 2021 18:31 (three years ago) link

My movement out of these waters a bit is finding myself being interested in the texture and phrasing that you can exaggerate a bit more by playing loudly. Kind of find myself almost playing "noise" at times but don't think of it that way while I am doing it. Just kind of finding some of that territory that you can to where the freeform, wandering notes start to take on a life of there own via feedback/overdrive/fuzz etc. I have been really enjoying it!

grandavis, Friday, 12 February 2021 18:35 (three years ago) link

was exploring this global radio google maps overlay, where you can click on a station anywhere in the world and stream.

http://radio.garden/

was randomly clicking around oceania, landed on what turned out to be easter island. they were playing PETER LANG. absolutely one-in-a-million chance. i took lessons with the guy! he is not particularly famous!

global tetrahedron, Monday, 15 February 2021 16:13 (three years ago) link

wow that's wild

we should put on a american primitive/psych/weirdo fest on easter island

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 15 February 2021 16:16 (three years ago) link

Neat site! Love Peter Lang... wonder how he is doing. Always confused when reminded that The Thing At The Nursery Room Window is not as sought after as one might think.

grandavis- sounds like fun! Though it also sounds a little like what someone says when they're essentially stumbling upon shoegaze? Like, the good'n messy experimental post-punk version of shoegaze not the glossy version.

Evan, Monday, 15 February 2021 16:23 (three years ago) link

Also yeah my brain ignored your actual point... easter island? WTF/cool.

Evan, Monday, 15 February 2021 16:24 (three years ago) link

Speaking of stylistic overlap and islands in the middle of the ocean I really love slack key guitar too.

Evan, Monday, 15 February 2021 16:28 (three years ago) link

that site is fucking amazing

That's not really my scene (I'm 41) (forksclovetofu), Monday, 15 February 2021 17:16 (three years ago) link

it really is

Überschadenfreude (sleeve), Monday, 15 February 2021 17:53 (three years ago) link

we might need a thread for that site, finding some great stuff. favorite so far is 'dago radio sound' in the capital of madagascar, been playing some unidentifiable rap and now some local folk music

global tetrahedron, Monday, 15 February 2021 18:51 (three years ago) link

agreed ^ i just immediately went to stations i already know are great. would love to see a running list of folks' discoveries...

alpine static, Monday, 15 February 2021 19:17 (three years ago) link

Hah yeah Evan you are correct that this "move" is not new either, which goes back to the original premise that "playing guitar is a problem" hah hah. I was more suggesting as someone who has played for a long time and finds myself in patterns that aren't always easy to break out of, this shift has been interesting as it has taken phrases and habits of mine that were feeling pretty set in stone at times and put them in a new light. Hopefully it does not sound like shitty shoegaze without the rest of the band hah hah, but I mean it might.

grandavis, Tuesday, 16 February 2021 19:30 (three years ago) link

Yeah for sure! It's a good tip. I'm so very much not a gear head though so I am shy about playing with knobs since I don't have good luck getting the sounds I want. Someday I'll "find" some cool new-to-me effects and have a blast and it'll jostle me out of my typical mode. In the meantime my Canyon pedal is my favorite to fool around with.

Evan, Wednesday, 17 February 2021 21:24 (three years ago) link

here's my big roundup of recent guitar things ... not sure if any of it will be new to y'all, but maybe!
https://aquariumdrunkard.com/2021/02/16/transfigurations-2021-recent-recommended-21st-century-guitar/

tylerw, Wednesday, 17 February 2021 21:40 (three years ago) link

Nice roundup Tyler, definitely a couple of things in there I have not checked out yet. Also just lots of good stuff, I am into more than a few of these.

The Canyon pedal looks cool. I keep thinking about getting a real reverb pedal, as seeing Jon Collin live (electric version), and being a fan of Loren Connors, makes me want to have way more options there than I do (my amp has reverb and is OK but nothing like the depths you can get with a good pedal or other options). Probably will at some point.

grandavis, Thursday, 18 February 2021 16:44 (three years ago) link

cool primer on Takoma that highlights a couple obscure releases I was unfamiliar with

https://insheepsclothinghifi.com/takoma-records-retrospective/

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 28 February 2021 19:00 (three years ago) link

Nice! I love that Homegas record nice to see it highlighted.

Evan, Monday, 1 March 2021 03:30 (three years ago) link

I re-listened to that Homegas record earlier this year and I think I came away with a wider appreciation of it. I probably last listened to it like 10 years ago and the fast songs (like Bumblebee) were the ones that appealed to me. I was pretty surprised how nice the songwriting is on the more traditionally "folky" tracks; now that I've come more around to that kind of stuff.

Also, was just cruising through the Takoma discogs page to jog my memories and came across a release page for a mispress that combined the B side of Blind Joe Death with the A side of The Alan Parsons Project's I Robot, lol.

https://www.discogs.com/The-Alan-Parsons-Project-John-Fahey-I-Robot-Volume-1-Blind-Joe-Death/release/16058078

Neal Cassady, Tuesday, 2 March 2021 01:23 (three years ago) link

three weeks pass...

out now, really good, I think FE might have vinyl copies

https://feedingtuberecords.bandcamp.com/album/matthew-j-rolin

I like signing up to dead sites (sleeve), Tuesday, 23 March 2021 23:48 (three years ago) link

oh FFS wrong link, sorry, this is the new one:

https://www.forcedexposure.com/Catalog/matthew-j-rolin-the-dreaming-bridge-2lp/FTR.586LP.html

I like signing up to dead sites (sleeve), Tuesday, 23 March 2021 23:49 (three years ago) link

super psyched for this one, rolin has been on a rol lately

the powers/rolin on trouble in mind and the powers/rolin/gercyz on garden portal are both really good

adam, Wednesday, 24 March 2021 14:30 (three years ago) link

two weeks pass...

sorry to jump back to the previous convo, Dinsdale ... i opened that link and will listen, but:

Many here know this world *much* better than I do (and have listened to it much more than I have), so I'm curious: Rolin (at times) gives me stronger Jack Rose vibes/feels than maybe anyone else. Agree/disagree?

alpine static, Monday, 12 April 2021 22:34 (three years ago) link

Daniel Bachman
Axacan
Three Lobed
7 May 2021

There has never been an album quite like Axacan, guitarist Daniel Bachman’s latest double LP. By defiantly playing against type and creating an album that, sonically and compositionally speaking, has more in common with Pierre Schaeffer or Edgard Varèse than John Fahey or even Jack Rose, Bachman has crafted one of the most introspective and deeply personal albums of instrumental music released in recent memory.

Axacan weaves together acoustic guitar and harmonium alongside raw material from various locations, events, and natural phenomena to create a conceptual three-dimensional collage. Using everything from field recordings of church bells, frogs, and birds to treated radio broadcasts, dead pine trees, and tuned fishing wire, Bachman has both honed and mastered the compositional technique hinted at on 2018’s The Morning Star. As on that album, the guitarist’s approach on Axacan is both documentary and authorial, utilizing electroacoustic techniques, organic drones, and environmental sounds to enrich his exhilarating music. These sounds are deployed reverently; there is very little superficial “sound for sound’s sake” here. Each creak, clatter, or bang colors Bachman’s aural Polaroids with deep and personal significance.

The keening and spooky “Blues In The Anthropocene” is a prime example of Bachman’s compositional framework: sounding at first like a lost, ethereal Guitar Roberts side, the piece’s accompaniment by the sound events of rusted tools being throw into a dumpster, high pitched feedback from a radio broadcast, and a storm on Bachman’s familial homestead Ferry Farm—a reputedly haunted plantation and Civil War battlefield once occupied by George Washington—provide a kind of orchestral menace. The piece ends abruptly, as if the room from which these sounds were emanating was suddenly struck by lightning, leaving only the lonesome sound of rain. “Year of the Rat” begins with a plaintive, unhurried exploration of a guitar tuning, hearkening back to Bachman’s earlier LPs; soon, the playing begins increasing in tempo like a person hurtling deeper and deeper into anxiety recounting a traumatic event before settling down, as if tranquilized.

The epic and ominous “Blue Ocean 0” mixes lapping waves, polysynth, fiddle, and tape machine, as well as the sound of wind blowing through fishing line and tuned to a harmonium drone, to convey the grim scientific epoch theorized in its title. “Big Summer,” too, masterfully integrates Bachman’s indisputable guitar prowess with a sense of calamitous menace: the sound of an unaccompanied acoustic slide guitar is heard emanating from what sounds like a waterlogged, malfunctioning cassette, the tremulous vibrato supplied by the limitations of the warbling tape. The effect is like hearing some lost country blues literally unearthed from the soil.

On “WBRP 47.5,” we can make out, amidst radio dial surfing, a brief snippet of dialogue:

“…it might be some time before things can…”

The voice abruptly cuts off before we can hear more, though we hear this same sample repeated a few minutes later, suggesting that this is less a mere exercise in knob-turning than the evocation of a time loop. The chilly ambiguity of the message, and the accompanying rustling of a dead pine tree slowed to match the pitch of the drone and fiddle, only reinforces the dread. As the radio sounds fade, pained roars evoke immolation, turbulence, the death of a bellowing beast. Bachman follows this with album highlight “Coronach,” a probing 12-string rumination that stands as Bachman’s most accomplished and beautiful guitar piece in years.

By carefully selecting and meticulously editing the album’s many extra-and-non-musical sounds, Bachman imbues the music with both a sense of place and a sense of purpose, chronicling a search for meaning, hope, and truth in haystacks both figurative and literal. It is no mean feat to produce a largely instrumental album that somehow deals directly with the crises of our time—climate change, the COVID-19 pandemic, the lingering effects of colonialism and genocide—and make it intimate and personal, but Axacan is such an album, a spiritual cousin of equally apocalyptic masterpieces like Penderecki’s “Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima,” William Basinski’s Disintegration Loops, and Lou Reed’s Berlin. Great works of art such as these can often leave you breathless, but they do something else, too: they can leave you changed.

-James Toth
If you have any questions, contact nathan at riotactmedia.com.

dow, Wednesday, 14 April 2021 21:19 (three years ago) link

he powers/rolin/gercyz on garden portal

I got this LP for my birthday. I hadn't heard of it before but it's really nice acoustic drone.

Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Sunday, 18 April 2021 14:48 (three years ago) link

I didn't know there was an LP version! that's cool. I have the tape.

"Gaspar? No way." (sleeve), Sunday, 18 April 2021 16:52 (three years ago) link


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