Monday, August 26, 2019

and, listen: there's no question that rabies is one of the weaker puppy discs, despite having what is probably their two most popular tracks.

but, it's not a bad record. it's like a B+. it just seems weak compared to the brilliance of the other ones.
people are so confused.

this is very much the missing link between punk rock and the post-industrial sound that developed in the late 80s.

it was al, sure. he actually did it - it's his labour, as sparse as it was. but it was jello, really, that was pushing the synthesis, and came up with the concept.

Wednesday, August 21, 2019

yeah. facebook's updated. i have eaten. and i'm staying in for the night.
yeah.

i've seen the names 'jake gyllenhaall' and 'shia labouef' in the news, although i can't place the controversies, but i don't actually know who they are in terms of being able to reference their career (that is, i know them solely through the scandal-related media), and i otherwise can't place a single one of these people.

i'd do much better with a list of musicians.

https://www.imdb.com/list/ls063045444/
really. you could send them out to talk to me at the bar, and i wouldn't have the slightest idea of who they were.
unless they were child stars when i was growing up, i probably would not recognize a single one of the top actors and actresses under 40, and would only recognize a few of them under 60.
i don't really know anything about what's happened on tv since then.

any show that's come and gone since then is a vague, distant thing to me.

and, i think the commentary here upholds that. i don't talk about tv since then, at all, do i? the truth is that i'm clueless about it.
when i say i tuned out from the medium after the x-files, i'm really not exaggerating.

there's maybe an argument that this was in some sense the climax of television, altogether. for me, it was the grand finale.

and, i remember it as clearly as i do because it's so very true. this was really the end - not just of the show, but of the idea of television, altogether.

there just wasn't anything left to watch after this.

i just have essentially no use for film as a medium. with all of the things i could be doing, i find it almost impossible to justify sitting down and wasting time trying to relate to fictional characters on a screen. i'm almost like a child, in that sense: i don't have the attention span. but, i think the kids are right, here, and the adults are stupid. the adults should go play outside...

i haven't seen a david lynch film in something like 20 years.

and, i actually don't remember the last time i sat down and watched a movie out of my own free will. i've been at bars, or parties, or emergency rooms, where there's something on, but, excluding that? it was probably around 2003 or 2004.

there's an entire generation (perhaps even two, given that i wasn't exactly a movie buff in the 90s, either) of film that i'm completely ignorant of. so, i don't have the context, and don't really have the interest to learn it.

i might still go. but, i know i'd have a better time in a room full of people that are legitimately interested in the music. and, i'm not entirely sure how long i'd last in front of a projection; i could see myself getting up and going over to phog.
i was considering hitting this as my end of the summer show tonight but, as before, i'm not the happiest about going outside today. and, i suspect i won't really like the crowd assembled there very much.

see, these are apparently written for david lynch shorts, meaning they're a kind of unauthorized rescoring, which strikes me as a pretty much debased form of art. like, he's literally touring with somebody else's backing tapes. lynch could probably sue him for everything he has, which i suspect is not much, if he wanted to.

on first contact, i just thought he was an electronic musician, and if you separate the music from the visuals, it does come off as relatively interesting on first listen - until you start to notice the heavy sampling from hit singles by van halen and seminal pieces by philip glass. so, he's not just recycling the backing tapes, he's recycling the music, too.

but, what that means is that i'm going to be walking into a room full of snobby film school grads, or film school grad wannabes which is even worse, and that's not exactly my idea of a good time. i mean, am i going to have to sit and watch the lynch shorts? is that the idea? this was more appealing to me when it was pure sound.

i'm going to eat soon and make a final choice, but as of right now i'm leaning on a skip. if i go, it's going to be more to check out the new bar than anything else.

https://buy.metavari.com/album/absurda
i've added a forum.

https://www.facebook.com/groups/394519381089546

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

i've listened to this a few times, and while it has some moments when they break out of the verse-chorus-verse monotony, it does, indeed, kind of lag. there's probably an irresolvable genre contradiction at the heart of this, in that i'm never going to actually like the alt-country or roots style that this is ultimately anchored in. but, they could increase my level of interest by taking it to the next level with the instrumental passages.

https://alluvialfans.bandcamp.com/album/lag-air

Thursday, August 15, 2019

the noise trade link for the chronologically ordered sept, 2013 archive of this blog is up here:

https://books.noisetrade.com//j/092013-deathtokoalas

unfortunately, noise trade did not work out as a hosting solution, and i never got a clear answer as to why. but, i decided in the end that the site was full of ads and unworkable, anyways.

the readable version of the september, 2013 archive for this blog is now available as a standalone in the music journal package at bandcamp:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/09-2013-music-journal

...or as a component in the half year archive at smashwords:
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1026620

...or as a component in the first reconstruction phase archive, available in the following places:
https://www.lulu.com/en/ca/shop/jessica-murray/full-first-reconstruction-phase-deathtokoalas-blog/ebook/product-zrgr94.html
https://drive.google.com/file/d/10DbwOVdqWt73rHNzWJWgEfduzREogExX/view
the third entry in the music journal series, which is the month of september, 2013 and is 138 pages long. i am not going to summarize the story, but it is available on the web over here: musicofjessicamurray.blogspot.com/2013/09/.

this is a compilation of written correspondences that occurred around me over september, 2013. it includes facebook posts, messenger chats and emails with friends and family members, in an attempt to tell the story of how i set my studio back up in windsor after relocating from ottawa. the contents of this download are the dummy track, a word doc file and a pdf file, both written in a more readable, chronological ordering. i've also added the respective files for my other three blogs, for general interest, as well as 82 separate txt documents (essays, notes, scripts and web pages) that are referenced in the journal.

the events documented in this journal occurred in september, 2013 and were compiled into a narrative in several stages over the years 2014-2019. journal completed on july 30, 2019. released and finalized in doc and pdf format on aug 15, 2019. updated on aug 24, 2019. doc0913.

credits

released October 1, 2013

j - editing, participant

esa - participant
nana - participant
the surviving uncle - participant
the initial landlord - participant
teksavvy technical support - participant
dr. robert clarke, dentist - participant

https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/09-2013-music-journal

Wednesday, August 14, 2019

i mean, i might think about paying $60 for king crimson or something.

but, bad religion?
so, this is one of the after school show punk bands. it sounds like bad religion with a dash of nofx, and that's fine, in context.

it's a 17:30 start and i think that two of the acts there seem interesting to me. so, if i get there early enough, and the time slots work out, i can see two shows there, two shows at outer limits and squeeze bat in between. that's a fest. and all for less than half the price of the bad religion show, which i'm still baffled by.

and, i could maybe catch something at ufo on the way home.

i need nights like this to make them worthwhile. and, because friday and saturday look like washes, i may be doing thursday & sunday this weekend.

https://voiceofaddiction.bandcamp.com/album/the-lost-art-of-empathy-2
nah.

it seems like a pain in the ass to get ready, cross the border, and come back for what, in the end, will probably be around twenty minutes of guitar feedback. these multiple party shows may be a little expensive, but the time factor makes going to single shows less appealing then it maybe ought to.

so, with that, i'm officially in for the night.
more interesting to me, for the night, would be this band on the other side of downtown. and, i should be able to get home for the night.

i haven't committed yet, though.

i like the moody, dark guitar improv going on behind the tracks, but i'm not so sure about the more stripped down, acoustic material.

https://stefanchristensen.bandcamp.com
this is tonight in detroit, and while i'm tempted to go to the show - there are going to be other people there that are operating in the context of traditional western music instrumentation - i kind of think that the general crux of the whole thing is not really aligned with the direction i need to network in.

it's a very "pretty" record, though, even if it mostly just spins in place.

https://concettaabbate.bandcamp.com
i'm not familiar with this band, bat, either, but it's actually startlingly close, music-wise, to the kind of punk i actually like.

there's an after-school skate punk matinee before it, too, so this might make more sense than going all the way to ann arbor, if i decide i'm actually going anywhere at all.

https://bewareofthebat.bandcamp.com/album/axestasy
this is a slow week, so i'm going to take note of a few things and get back to work. but, just when it looked like the oceans had given way to the sun, we got a major system in the pacific, and that's going to give us one more weekend, maybe even two. so, if i can find a late saturday party, i could start there and do a saturday/sunday, but i may actually stay in this week altogether. i'm having difficulty justifying dragging myself to the crystal method...

these bands are playing a show together in ann arbor tomorrow (thursday), and while it's the kind of thing i'd be likely to check out if it was within walking or biking distance, getting to ann arbor is a pretty difficult process. i could maybe bicycle all the way back, if i was planning on going down there to drink, and that may even work out relatively well, in a sense; if i left the bar at 2:00 am sharp, i'd be lucky to get back to the tunnel by 6:00 am, as it's a 4 hr+ bike ride. even if i take the detroit bus to the end of the route it's still another two hours by bicycle, there. you're even looking at nearly an hour by car on the freeway, if i really wanted to take the greyhound. it's a journey....

so, i've reserved this trip for the most exciting shows, and i've only ever made it there once, as a result. tortoise. 2016. i do hope i'll get out there again, it just hasn't made sense, quite yet.

this is my first contact with both of these acts, and they're not exciting me enough to drag me out quite that far, although, in both cases, if they broke the repetition and introduced a little bit more process then they might be. they both have that generic, boxy kind of sound; your town has at least three bands that sound exactly like this, so it's difficult to justify the journey.

there's also an act called metempsychosis that i reviewed here a little while back on the bill and that's where there's a little more uncertainty around attendance. if i want to do this all on my bike, i'd have to leave around 2:00 or 3:00, and i'd be looking at eight hours of biking altogether. the thing is that that might actually sound like fun, tomorrow....if i find myself face-to-face with an otherwise completely clear slate this week and moving into next.

so, that's something i'll be doing over the next few hours. if this ends up being the last show this month, i might do it....

otherwise, if your path there is a little less difficult, it seems to be worth a beer, at least.

https://oftwomindsband.bandcamp.com
https://chinook.bandcamp.com

+

https://metempsychosis.bandcamp.com

Monday, August 12, 2019

so, i got through the two day bender and while i'll say i didn't have any problems, exactly, it was also maybe not the best way to get through certain parts of it. i was a little fadey for saajtak, after 30 or so hours of drinking and smoking leading up to it. i smoked through more than four packs of cigarettes. it's an issue to balance - i seem to be able to do around 25 hours or so, and i'll get a second wind after, but i don't want to put myself in a situation where i'm seeing a headliner in that state.

the highlight of the weekend had to be a completely ridiculous cover of taylor swift's shake it off, by a local band that you've never heard of called the sunburns. i hope somebody caught a good part of that.

briefly, here's the update on what i did and didn't do:

17:00-19:15 - trey priest @ detroit shipping company.

i'm usually late for most things.

20:00-21:15 - my brightest diamond @ dso courtyard.

it's interesting that she's putting such an emphasis on detroit, because she sounds more like late 80s chicago. the new record might have been a strong wax trax! release in the late 80s, and in that sense it's kind of more of a retro thing. but, it's only retro if you know it, right? if jamie stewart & annie lennox did a collaboration...

21:30-02:00 -  another dimension @ tangent gallery.

i was hoping for a lot of guitar theatrics, but it didn't really happen. i'm not sure if it was the same guy or not, but there were two guitar + dj type performances, both more in the realm of "guitarist jams over techno song he likes" rather than any kind of meaningful integration of the guitar into the set. it actually came off as a gimmick, mostly for show; it was less about integrating the instrument into the sound and more about the idea that a guitarist standing beside a dj just looks kickass and cool.

so, i spent the night composing, and if anybody saw me lost in my head outside tangent friday night, that's what i was doing. i tend to avoid composing when i'm dancing for a number of reasons, and it's actually been a while, but the guitars just completely triggered me. and, trust me: the imaginary guitar solos, as imagined in the mind of the imaginer, were far more intense than what i saw in front of me. there was also some dubstep (they call it 'bass music' now), and it was tedious and boring like it always is, but the fact that i was spending the night composing in my head kind of took the grind out. it's funny that all they really needed to do was put a picture of a guitar on the wall to save the vibe, and that trick won't work if it gets overdone, but i did enjoy the night well enough.

chirp came on exceedingly late and was more interested in playing it safe on this night. i caught parts of their set, but not all of it. i will say that whatever kind of guitar synth he's using is exceptionally good sounding, which is to say that it seems as though the technology has really come up in the last few years, and i should take a closer look into that. the last i checked, they had tracking systems through computer sound cards, but the latency wasn't there yet. i guess that all they'd need to do is put that technology in a phone and ramp it up, which is easy enough to convert into a pedal. so, i'm less surprised on a technological level than i am...i'd just never heard anything that realistic from something on the floor, before.

02:30-6:30 - late party @ unknown location. i was at a secret party with mostly gay men, and it was very secret, so secret that i'm not really going to talk much about it. even if you could find the place, they won't let you in without a password. or if you look too straight. but i'll say that it was more like a house party, so the cops would really have minimal powers in actually doing much. and i did have some fun there.

i got a little lost after that, but after going around in circles for a bit (which included smoking a large joint and figuring out a way to take cash out of the machine in detroit, something i'd never done before), i ended up back in hamtramck for a little before 8:00. i locked up at ant hall and took a walk down the street to find a coffee, which took me half way up campeau to a diner not far from the cvs. it was almost 8:30 before i got back. sometimes, it's things like this that eat away at your time; sometimes, it's a good way to eat away at it.

9:00-12:00 - dsa meeting @ ant hall.

the head organizers ("leadership") were there an hour early, and you could tell right away that these people were running a political party. indeed, it became clear enough fairly quickly that the actual purpose of the meeting was to present some bourgeois politicians to a crowd that is going to act as campaign volunteers. further, while it's not entirely clear where the platform was written, nobody made any effort in trying to conceal that it was being pushed down from somewhere else. so, this meeting would not be accurately described as an organizing meeting of the political grassroots in the community, but rather as an opportunity for an outside organization to find recruits to carry through with it's cause. it felt less like an organizing meeting (and, it's been a while, but i've been to quite a few.) and more like a ponzi scheme sign-up (which i've been to quite a few of, as well. hey, i was looking for a job. that's the hook.). they passed a collection plate at one point.

i didn't really want to address anybody at the meeting, and i wasn't intending to sign up. i was merely an observer from the temporary autonomous zone; a friendly anarchist that was between parties and really just hanging out for general interest.

but, this group is clearly much more focused and almost career-oriented than anything i'd want to involve myself with. we're talking about strictly vertical organizing with a completely pre-written platform, almost more like it's a franchised extension of a fast food restaurant. so, this is a political party, whether it's calling itself one or not. worse, there is clearly a centralized bureaucracy behind this, and you clearly need to get promoted to a higher position in the hierarchy before you're allowed to meaningfully participate in the process. everything i saw was just textbook bourgeois politics that is directly antithetical to any concept of socialism that is worth discussing. there was even one point where one of the "leaders" stated to the crowd that the candidates didn't have any ideas of their own, to the point that it wasn't even worthwhile to ask them questions because everything they know about the party is in the platform; she really wanted to make it clear that all of their positions are defined perfectly in the platform, and if they win then they owe everything to the party, who would be in complete control.

it was at least well attended for what it was, i'll give them that. the crowd was a mix of people that is hard to define in any specific way, as you usually get at these events. that said, it was noticeably white for an area with a majority muslim population (in fact, many of the people were from ferndale), and they seemed cognizant of how unusually white they were for their region, too. i guess all the brown people were too busy working to show up.

so, i don't know exactly who's "steering" this, but it was clear pretty quickly that it's just some "progressive" democrats that are co-opting socialism as a marketing term rather than any kind of meaningful grassroots movement. a better name for the organization as it exists today should probably be "socialist democrats of america" rather than "democratic socialists of america". and, i'd consequently advise avoiding them.

i was torn between waiting for the bbq and eating early, but by around 12:30 the choice had been made by my stomach. i didn't want to show up at the bbq and eat all the food. so, i grabbed a very thick six-inch at subway (bmt + mozz + bacon) before going to the bbq....

13:00-21:30 - punk rock bbq @ kelly's.

i came in super early to grab a beer and basically just hung out all day. i had one hamburger and one chicken burger, which for me was part of the reason i went there.

the bands were just kind of there and that's sort of what you expect from something like this, which is really just a bunch of people, most of whom knew each other, and most of which were over 40, having a beer on a patio. people were kind of only vaguely paying attention.

there was an opener that i can't find the name of - i think his name was steve - that did an atonal singer/songwriter thing. i don't grasp this style of music or understand what it's appeal actually is, but people keep doing it because people like it. i didn't understand a word he said, but his vocal tone was like bob dylan with a bad cold in the middle of allergy season. if he knew a fourth chord, he didn't show it off.

womb worm were on next and they did a mildly interesting no-wavy or weeny math-y sort of thing. this appears to be trendy right now. but, what i'd actually like to hear is somebody make it more complicated and that much weirder (the problem is that it's a 40 year old schtick, and it's actually a highly predictable style), rather than a little bit catchier, which is what they actually did.

there was then an all-girl ramones cover band called the whoremones. i'd doubt any of them were born before 1990, and they were kind of more josie and the pussycats, to be entirely frank about it. they did some newer songs by acts they actually like (colleen green was one of them, and that made more sense) as well. i'll admit i digged watching somebody play the classics like i wanna be sedated at that particular point, but it was actually kind of contrived and, while i recognize that this gig may be profitable for them, i do hope they're able to start a band of their own some time soon.

pet psychic kind of just floated by. i may have been a little too stoned at the time. but, i think it was pretty stripped down - like, early beatles stripped down.

and, i only vaguely recall bourbon squirrel, which i think was also pretty stripped back and kind of slow moving. 

the person that organized this show plays out a lot in detroit under the pseudonym of "lady darkness" and seems to perform in a bunch of different styles. she remembered me from the last two day party, as she did an acoustic set at the dequindre cut midway through it (and i interjected into a conversation she was having about joseph conrad). as i've checked out sound samples previously, i was actually expecting something in the realm of glam rock or even hair metal, as that was what the samples had implied, but this was a different animal - more of an art-rock band (with a violin player), which opened up space for the vocals, which were actually a little reminiscent of a mid-90s jarboe, or maybe a pj harvey. i don't think they got across what they wanted to, and they seemed visibly irritated that people weren't really paying attention, but it was a good proof of concept, at least. what i'll say is this: burgers were maybe not the best way to bribe interested parties to see a band of that sort; she might have got a more interested crowd by bribing them with ramen noodles.

the last band appear to have been a punk band at one point, then grown out of it, then rejoined for the hell of it. that's a guess based on the musicianship, the age of the band and the length of time since their last bandcamp release (7 years). it was skate-y, but full of jazzy fills that were designed simply to show off, kind of thing. so, i enjoyed this. and, near the end of the set they did that cover of shake it off that was just absolutely brilliantly absurd.

so, it's around 20:00 and i'm trying to figure out if i give the next band - jimmy ohio and the ultimate overs - a fair chance or not, knowing i won't be staying for the later acts, which i know well and am not really into. the saajtak show just seems more interesting to me. first, i decided i'd finish my beer and go because the band will be on before i finish my beer. nope. so, i decide i'l have one more smoke, and then they'll be on. nope. they started playing right after i bought another beer, and while i didn't end up missing anything at the other show (in fact, i could have stayed at the barbeque a little longer....), i did spend much of the set outside. it had that angular television vibe to it, but as seems to be normal nowadays, was kind of bombarded with glossy pop. so, i didn't get much out of this. and, i left when they were done....


21:45-02:00 - saajtak record release @ ghost light.

there was a burlesque show and a comedy club event in the same venue, so the place was busier than it ought to have been and the first act didn't come on until like 22:30. i think i impressed some of the improv people in the smoking section with a good run on human sacrifice being theoretically permissible. see, if there was any actual empirical evidence of it's efficacy, it would be hard to argue against it under certain scenarios like drought or climate change. however, because i am aware of no evidence that causally links human sacrifice to any sort of measurable outcome, i can't, in good conscience, stand in favour of it. i actually don't really know why i've never done any stand-up, other than it just never really coming up. i know i'd be good at it because i seem to be able to make people laugh more or less effortlessly. the problem i'd come up with is the crowd being too stupid to get half of the jokes. i guess it's an inversion of how people see it, which is a function of market theory: capitalism insists that it's the clown that needs to adjust to the market in terms of being properly entertaining, but i'd insist that it's rather that the educated clown, at least, shouldn't have it's jokes corrupted by the interference of the audience, that the educated clown must persevere until a sufficiently educated audience that can understand the jokes can be found. so, a really talented comedian should spend at least five years playing to empty clubs, because people are invariably going to be too stupid to get the joke the first time through. and, then i'm just running into the same problems i have with my other art projects. one day, though, somebody will get me drunk enough at ghost light to drag me to the comedy club in the back, and i will slay the one person in the room that took courses on the intersectionality of byzantine history and quantum physics. that is how they got the greek fire.

i think i do enough stand-up sitting down here at home, thanks. these posts are 95% stream of consciousness; the difference is solely in the latency problems that exist between my brain and my (one) typing hand. it's less like a bobbing parrot, and more like an anthropomorphized arthropod at the end of my arm that is connected to my brain via a 14.4 baud modem, even though i'm well aware that the wiring in my body is operating at speeds and on levels that we don't truly understand. for example, did you know that your brain can register an impulse for suicide before you are exposed to fall out boy for the first time?

i think we got the point across.

the first band had a guitarist that i've seen pop up in a number of other projects around town that are a little more....sophisticated than the one i saw on saturday night. if somebody were to notate the parts and print them on to a piece of music, the result may be challenging to perform, i'd have to grant the point. but, the presentation, which sounded like a very young kim gordon fronting some kind of john zorn project, was just simply not very compelling. the impression that i got was that they seemed to sort of be playing down to the audience. now, i'm a fan of certain kinds of noise rock that have more structured components to them, but this just wasn't that. if you've seen something like vampire belt, you get the general point, but the truth is that they were really just literally fucking around for a little while and it just came off like they were wasting their talent. let's hope that it doesn't take them too long to grow out of this particular phase because these musicians should be doing something better than this.

i didn't have a lot of interest in the second or third acts.

when saajtak finally came on - and i don't remember what time it was - i was literally having a hard time standing up. i was less drunk and just more tired; i wasn't in danger of blacking out so much as i was just in danger of falling asleep. and, i may have nodded off for a few seconds, while standing in the audience. but, what i remember of the show is that (1) the sound problems they had at mocad were gone. they sounded good, here. (2) they're actually moving in a more abstract direction that is perhaps making lesser use of the singer's ridiculously high level of technical talent. saajtak has always reminded me a lot of a band from the 70s called yes (that i don't actually like that much), but taken to a modern level of technological wizardry. so, the keys/drums duo often has a very wakeman/bruford feel in it's dichotomy between diddly arpeggiation and weird atonality, but the technology in the synthesizer work is updated to feel a lot more contemporary. legitimate advances in prog rock are rare, nowadays, and they're getting close to their maximum shelf date. so, i think you want to get this while you still can.

2:30-07:00 - late party II @ other unknown location. the second show was not as secret, and it may be unnecessary to hide it's location. there were also less people than there were at the secret show, which is curious, but it was more of a mixed crowd. so, there was some dancing and some smoking (and some drinking) and then i left and went home...

even if i could have stayed awake past that point, i was out of cash and didn't want to spend more. and, the eight hour wait for the book club was simply too daunting.

15:00-17:00 - socialist book club meeting @ 2283 holbrook. $0 + coffee.
19:00-00:00 - cherubs + child bite @ small's. $13 + beer costs.

i'm not a substantive cherubs fan, but would have liked to see them. tell them to come back. and, i still haven't seen child bite because it just hasn't yet made sense.

i was back at the tunnel a little before 8:00, hit the renaissance for a large bowel movement, caught the 8:25 bus, picked up some fruit when i got back over and made it home to some spaghetti at about 9:30, and a shower and some good sleep after that.

i need to finish the cleaning that i put on hold last week, do some groceries and get back to finishing up the last journal compilation.

Friday, August 2, 2019

so, i've made it clear that i'm not very excited by the kinds of rock music that are popular right now, as there's not really a middle point where technicality intersects with raw emotion to create an oppressive attack on the aural sense - the thing i crave. if i'm a masochist, i deny it. what we have is a choice between boring, sterile man rock from the viking period, or equally boring emo by the nice guys and metrosexuals. we need a dialectic, here. why can't we rock without being stupid, nowadays?

this doesn't quite get there, nor is it trying to, but it manages to almost accidentally stumble upon something interesting by combining that overdone 60s jangle pop sound with a late 90s math feel, thereby sprucing the sound up just enough to make it almost compelling. almost? they need to start here and drive deep into psych rock territory to really take it to the next level.

in the mean time, if you think a mash-up of american football and the byrds sounds like fun, then this is for you.

https://mygirlfriendberu.bandcamp.com/album/fugitives
it's a little uneventful, a little slow.

i'm curious about the suzy cream cheese cameo, though.

https://ziibiwan.bandcamp.com/album/time-limits-ep

Thursday, August 1, 2019

so, it took me a few listens to realize this wasn't interesting, after all.

it's just that it initially comes at you as something experimental, and it takes a little bit of effort to realize it's more like an existentialist, post-modern evolution of motown than it is something legitimately new. it's quirky, i'll give it that, and if the idea of extrapolating coil's cover of tainted love to an actual, demented motown record intrigues you then you may be all over it, but it's coming at me more as a gimmick once i've worked it out.

if they were to make it a little more abstract, like a testosterone-stripped death grips, i'd probably really like it, though.

https://lalforest.bandcamp.com
this is maybe pointless at this stage, but i like the manic energy and hope they do something with it.

https://parliamentowls.bandcamp.com/album/parliament-owls
in all fairness, the record i previously posted was a compilation of old material, so my analysis is somewhat anachronistic.

this is a newer recording and is indeed a lot more carefully developed, almost entirely dropping the thrash aesthetic for a heavy influence from traditional celtic music. i don't want to walk down that path too far, as she doesn't stray particularly far from petrucci-via-abasi in the playing, but it has a kind of almost canterbury feel to it, at least. she's also pulling in a lot of vocal jazz, in the style of something like billie holliday.

i still think she needs to slow down and feel the instrument a little more often, that is, it still doesn't quite do it for me, but it's certainly an evolution in her style, and reason to suggest checking out what she's up to in the future.

https://sarahshreds.bandcamp.com/album/disparity
so, i've listened to this a bunch of times, and while it seems like it's true that sarah can certainly play very fast, it's less clear that she's interested in composing compelling music.

i want more focus on things like dynamics, time signatures, key signatures, intervals, instrumentation, tone, feel, etc.

but, if you just want to hear somebody play really fast, this should do it for you.

https://sarahshreds.bandcamp.com/album/sum