"Love to make music to"

Friday, September 18, 2009

all mine / all mine / all mine

The Triffids

David McComb

come ride / come ride / this pleasure slide

In the first half of this I'll be throwing you in the deep end of the swimming pool that is Australian post-punk, indulging in a lot of Triffids, before trying to balance that metaphor with the circus-style, literal balancing act of Canadian husband-wife italo-disco. And if you think focussing on Australian music is bad, be thankful I'm not including any Essendon Airport...this time.

The Triffids' lead singer, David McComb, died in 1999. Even if the complications from a car-crash injury that eventually killed him, he had spent many years gradually tipping himself over the edge through alcohol and heroin abuse, to the point where he needed a heart transplant at the age of 34.

It's so easy to overlook this branch of Australian music and its influence across the world, even while bands like The Saints are far more acknowledged. It's a strange fate suffered by post-punk bands like the Triffids but overwhelmingly like Gang of Four, to be immensely influential, loved by today's most famous artists (U2 and Chilli Peppers for Gang of Four, Leonard Cohen and Nick Cave for the Triffids) but now largely ignored, and also telling that the Triffids record label, Domino, is now host to artists like Franz Ferdinand. Incidentally, as a hypocritically responsible digital citizen I've started including links to places where you can buy albums that songs featured are taken from. But either way:

This first song was recorded by the legendary John Peel for the Field of Glass EP; its certainly longer than many of the band's other works but is easily one of their best. McComb shows here why he was held in the highest regard by artists like Leonard Cohen and Nick Cave, and established himself alongside Cohen, Dylan, and Morrissey as one of the best lyricists of the 20th century.

The Triffids - Field of Glass

Domino Records - Beautiful Waste and Other Songs

The following don't do the same justice to the singer's voice or even to the band itself, but are of interest in terms of watching the band's development throughout their early years. The tracks are all ripped from cassette tapes released by the band and as such the quality leaves much to be desired, but they're still great even if you're unfamiliar with the Triffid's work. Instead of giving you a link to somewhere you can buy them all, because there isn't one (unless you count here), go and check out Vagabond Holes and Beautiful Waste, two books recently published, the first a collection of essays and other writings about McComb and the other a collection of his poetry.

And bless whoever was obsessively kind enough to put all the pictures of the tapes themselves alongside track listings on Wikipedia.

Tape #2

you're such an authority / and all

Tape #4

she thinks she's a natural / but i think she needs tuition

there's a six-car pile up / on memory lane

The Triffids - Pile Up

Tape #6

now the orderlies / take your elbow

Lime
a moment / like forever

This should be what you need if you've been driven into a state of high maudlin by West Australian melancholy. I could really go for one of those lime spiders right now...

Lime - The Party's Over

Lime - Greatest Hits

Panda Bear

tried to tell me / how to do it

Hopefully the shark won't get him before Meredith and AC will play Comfy in Nautica as part of their set...

Panda Bear - Search for Delicious

Panda Bear - Person Pitch

Television


i remember / how the darkness doubled

Ten minutes of brilliance from 1977.

Television - Marquee Moon

Television - Marquee Moon

i cannot say for sure the reasons for his decline
- David McComb, "Tender is the Night"

Thursday, September 3, 2009

i'll be your mirror / reflect what you are


The Flaming Lips


she keeps wishing / for a secret society to call

The Flaming Lips are releasing their album Embryonic in the near future (already tipped by some as their White Album equivalent, slightly sad we had to wait for their 12th until this happened), and if the three songs they've released are any musical litmus test then it should be very good indeed. Here's one of them, getting a lot of airtime on JJJ at the moment.



Moby


don't speak to me that way / don't ever let me say
Moby is headlining this year's Falls Festival alongside the Yeah Yeah Yeahs (I would love to see them both, but bearing that in mind I'd even rather see both Animal Collective and Why? at Meredith, but that's another saga in a sentence...), and I include two songs of his latest album below, as well as Alice from Last Night, which I have a tendency to overplay on my earphones while wandering around, absently tapping the rim of my coffee cup, before performing.





J Dilla

anyone could see / you're the one for me

There are a lot of very dedicated J Dilla fans out there who would happily devote their entire lives to reconstructing his immense back catalogue. I'm a bit different: I hate his pure hip-hop. What a heretic! But hear me out.

His sample-driven work - most notably the album Donuts - is sheer brilliance, and the extent to which it is immensely, superlative-most-heavily good, just emphasises how shallow a grave his other work digs in the disco-topography. These very short song snippets below are by no means well-known, as I had to get them from the musical-acquiring equivalent of "the back of a truck": short (all a minute or less) sample-heavy songs from tape recordings which showcase his immense talent. Track 27 from 3 Beat Tapes in particular is quite special: enjoy!

J Dilla:







Hot Chip ft. Robert Wyatt and Geese


what is it i don't remember / made my being so much better

I spoke about touching coffee cups earlier, Rob took it to heart...Hot Chip re-imagined several of the more quiet songs from Made in the Dark with the aid of Robert Wyatt and the interspersed remixing talents of Geese on a four-song EP. According to their Twitter their newest and keenly awaited album is "in a brown paper bag on two USB sticks"; yet another reason to love the interweb.

Hot Chip ft. Robert Wyatt - One Pure Thought (Geese remix)


i really want to watch diva again