Clever, perhaps even clever-clever - but are they Clever Dick?
replacing Hardly Baked whose feed is broken for reasons unknown. Original Hardly Baked + archive are here http://hardlybaked.blogspot.com/ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^"Really awful is more interesting to listen to than pretty good" - Eno
Clever, perhaps even clever-clever - but are they Clever Dick?
The almost obligatory ironic New Wave cover of a Sixties classic
Would you believe despite once being such an obsessive Birthday Party fan - and indeed later on doing an encyclopedia / comprehensive albums guide entry on B.Party / Cave + Bad Seeds + offshoots - I have never yet listened to The Boys Next Door?
I just took Cave at his word that it was best not listened to...
"We made the unpardonable error of playing to the thinkers rather than the drinkers" - Nick Cave on the disgusting skinny-tie start of The Birthday Party as The Boys Next Door
You can just begin to hear something special in Rowland S's shrill scrapy guitar and Cave is starting to get a little hammy in his anguished tones
But there's still that choppy, Vapors-ish element, the damped rhythm guitar chug...
This one is more like a foretaste of Nick Cave who loves "entertainment music, what some call 'corn'" - the epic ballads of Gene Pitney / Glen Campbell / Tim Rose
Like he could skipped the Shaman stage (B. Party) and just gone straight to Showman.
Transition from arty New Wave to something more primal and hacked and Ubu-Beefheart-addled is detectable in the shift across the record artwork
via Andrew Parker, a vintage interview with Boy Next Door Rowland S. Howard, wearing a classic New Wave tie
"We're much more based on ideas than other bands"
Henry Rollins confesses "I Am An Audiophile". A piece in Stereophile magazine from 2011
"I have five systems in my home. The one I spend the most time in front of is perhaps amateur hour to hi-fi heavyweights like yourselves, but I like it very much: Wilson Audio Sophia 3s, McIntosh amps and preamp, Rega Planar 3 turntable, and Rega Valve Isis CD player. At the end of 2012 that system will be moving to a different room, and Brian from Brooks Berdan Ltd., in Monrovia, California, will come in with his sturdy crew and we will start all over again."
Rega Planar 3 - we have (well, had, in my case *) the same turntable!
"Sturdy crew"!
And here's Rollins's listening room in his new place in Nashville.
Are those grey monoliths the speakers? I wonder if he used the same "sturdy crew" expensively brought in or whether he found someone as good in Tennessee...
At a blog I learn that Rollins's "main system includes Wilson Alexandria XLF speakers that go for six figures"
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In Sheeps Clothing Hi-Fi is unusual for a webzine insofar as it's both a hipster music site and - as the site name indicates - has a lot of articles about audiophile concerns, like this one about "Vintage European Turntables That Matter" and another about a 1975 issue of High Fidelity magazine's article about creating a Listening Room, and this one about the "lost language of hi-fi obsessives" (terms like tizz and boom - crisp treble, punchy bass, I'm guessing) and a primer on finding a good vintage cassette deck. And indeed they have an item about the BBC 1959 program in the previous post.
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Among my music-fiend friends I can only think of a couple who have any interest in hi-fi. Still, as obsessions go, I find this one more sympatico than say people who get into sports cars. It's in service of music, the most elevating of the arts. Soul food. Why not present it to the ears on the most optimal of plates?
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Then there's the whole phenom of the listening bar. I have been to just one, here in LA, for the premiere of a friend's album. I have to say, the sound there was not amaaaaaaaazing - I didn't feel like it was mind-blowingly superior to other listening situations. But then I was a bit distracted by conversation and also there were the mid-term election results coming in so I kept pretending to go to the bog and nipped out on the street to check on my phone how it was going.
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An earlier post on the mysteries of vinyl - how does all THAT get extracted from a narrow bumpy furrow by the scraping of a vitreous shard?!? - and on an encounter with nutty audiophile David Mancuso and his magnificent stereo
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* The Rega Planar I used to have. When we moved back to NYC in the fall of '94, after nearly a year in the UK, I put nearly everything in a storage unit in Swiss Cottage. After a few years it seemed stupid to have this good hi-fi just wasting away there, so I lent it to a dear friend, a music lover whose hi-fi was on the blink. Burhan loved it - the whole ritual of changing the speed by lifting the platter.
Then about eight years years later he died tragically young.
It seemed unseemly to approach my friend's flat mate under the circumstances, about retrieving my turntable and amp... So I kept putting it off and eventually shelved the thought for good. I hope somebody out there is getting good use of that Rega. Fiddling with the fiddly belt, trying to stop the glass platter sliding out of their grip, and cursing under their breath...
I still have the speakers and the tape deck, though. He didn't need them and eventually, after a couple of decades, I moved all the storage unit's contents - a huge number of records, a lot of books, much misc. - to LA. The records, almost all unplayed, sit in a room upstairs; the UK hi-fi components languish in the cellar. Can you even use them in the USA?
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It is ultimately a bit of a world of madness, audiophilia - "stylus rake"!
Oh yeah and there's that whole thing about your power supply - fluctuations in what comes out of the wall supposedly causing noise in your system, which can be expensively rectified with devices that regulate and regularize the current. A whole other subworld of doctrinal dispute opened up....
Hi-Fi-Fo-Fum, originally broadcast on BBC Television, 12 April, 1959, as part of the program Monitor.
Directed by John Schlesinger. Narrated by Robert Robinson.
Jump ahead to 12.43 for an amusing scene of an audiophile soirée.
"Do they like music - or are they in love with equipment?" asks presenter Robert Robinson
(Alan Parsons's version of the same idea - "“Audiophiles don't use their equipment to listen to music. They use music to listen to their equipment”)
Well, well, well - I had no idea that audiophilia started so early....
I shouldn't imagine it was even a possibility during the era of shellac '78s, given the clunkiness of the technology. But I could be wrong there - maybe there were pre-WW2 hi-fi buffs
I do find the world of audiophile fiends distantly fascinating
I remember being at a wedding and the guy next to me at the table was an obsessive 'phile, he had a whole system set up in a converted barn. The cost of the system was equivalent to a BMW or a Mercedes.
But this chap was only at the shallow end of the A-phile spectrum.
Here's the story of a guy who ruined his life in the expensive, family-alienating quest for Perfect Sound.
There are some music blogs I check out - here's one, here's another, and there's a third who wouldn't want any attention drawn to his activities - that specialize in sharing optimized recordings, sourced in vinyl, but circulated as data-dense files - 96 kHz / 24 bit - usually in FLAC. They list all the stages of the process ("the ripping lineage"*) and itemize the high-end, expensive technology involved, from needle to cartridge to turntable to cables.... and all the other bits and bobs, like pre-amps and digital-to-analogue converters and what have you.
And then sometimes they also go deep into the vinyl source itself. About whether it's an original pressing (cut in particular territories that are said to be better quality than others). About the whole mono versus stereo dilemma. And then if it's not an original pressing but one of these high-end, deluxe reissues, they get into the nitty gritty of the various 'name' figures of high reputation who did the mastering and cutting from the original master tapes (which is a whole other level of obsession - the superiority of various masters). In some cases, the reissued LP is mastered at half-speed to extract more data and then deluxely spread across four sides of deep-grooved vinyl. And then you get into the whole thing of 180 gram vinyl. Much talk about noise floors being reduced, and the correcting of master tape blemishes... pops and skips cleaned-up if it's vintage original pressing. Oh and there's also the dilemma of discrepancies between different original pressings - in some territories, there'll be songs with a few extra seconds, or a different, slightly muffled mix.
And blimey, I nearly forgot - there's that whole extra dimension to do with cleaning the vinyl. Expensive mechanical devices and brushes... fluids and clothes. A lot of doctrinal dispute on this question of how best to dislodge the sedimented gunk out of your grooves.
Now I must admit I don't fully understand the rationale of taking this beautifully transferred pristine and optimized analogue source and then digitizing it and circulating it as FLAC, which even at the high level of 96 kHz / 24 bit is still compressing it down a bit. It seems a bit counter-intuitive - so despite being the analogue believer, you are turning back it in digital?
But I take it on faith that for all that, it's still superior - or interestingly different - to what I would hear at Tidal even at MAX quality, or what I'd get from playing a CD or a WAV through my computer.
Of course, with these shared audiophile offerings, I am playing it back on a less-than-ideal system, of the sort that would make these audiophile bloggers blanch and scowl, I should imagine. I can't be arsed to burn it to a blank compact disc and put it through my proper hi-fi - that would seem like one stage of transfer too many - so I play it on the computer, through pretty modest speakers, albeit boosted with a big black block of a woofer unit that sits balefully near my feet, like the monolith in 2001, A Space Odyssey.
These audiophile vinyl-sourced offerings do often sound great. And they sound different to what you can hear on streamers or the particular CD version of an album you might have. Certain details are brought out more clearly. (That's not always great - there can be a tendency to wispy separation. What was it Mike Skinner used to say? "Subtle" - a synonym in his private lexicon for "boring"!).
That's what I find interesting about audiophilia - not so much the fact that there is no end to how much more detail that can be extracted from a recording if you are prepared and financially able to keep upgrading, but more the idea there is no definitive 'version' of a recording, in terms of the differentials of the extraction process. The variabilities of format, the playback set up, the room it's played in.... this means that everyone is hearing something slightly different.
The Prof Stoned dude goes a step further and remixes 1960s records he feels could benefit from it. Indeed he has gotten into using demixing technology, that (AI?) process that enables you to separate sound-strands originally smushed together in a bounced-down 2-track or 4-track mono mix.
Over the years I've noticed that most music critics I've known tend to have fairly low-level hi-fi equipment. Presumably the priority was buying records, as many as possible, leaving little money left over for the mechanism of playback. Two rival definitions of richness there.
Conversely, the people I've known who were obsessed with hi-fidelity often had really small record collections - and distinctly square taste. I remember my Streatham landlady Beverley - a rare example of a female audiophile - telling me contemptuously "I don't even call what you listen to music" Not because of the music itself but because of the sad little music center I then had. This is around 1986-87 when I was starting out as music journalist. She actually guided me through the process of buying my first proper stereo - Rega Planar turntable *, Cambridge Audio amp I think it was, good speakers, decent tape deck.... Beverley even got her brother to drill holes in the wall so my speakers could be properly mounted! The kind of thing that a landlady would generally not encourage a tenant to do. A testament to her vicarious commitment to Good Sound!
But she only had a few records as far as I could see, and seldom played them. She wasn't having to grapple very often with the annoying glass platter of the Rega, where you have to pick it up and move a little rubber band underneath to switch speeds between 33 rpm and 45rpm. (This became the bane of my life when I had to do the singles overnight).
I don't agree with Bev, by the way: the soul and essence of music is not depleted by the medium of its playback. If it's in there, it'll cut through on the fuzziest of transistor radios, the crappiest of kiddy record players and boomboxes, through a came-with-the-vehicle in-car stereo competing with the noise of the traffic.... a speed-dubbed cassette.... even the lowest-grade MP3.
Still I do wonder, if I was wealthy, would I be tempted to go down this path?
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Examples of rippling lineages:
Equipment:
Hardware:
- Technics 1210mk2
- Jelco SA-750D Tonearm
- Audio Technica AT33PTG
- Pro-Ject Tube Box SE-II
(Genalex Gold Lion tubes)
- RME ADI-2 A/D Interface
- Universal Audio UAD-2 Satellite Quad-Core (incl. various extra plugins I purchased over the years)
- Neumann KH150 & iLoud Micro monitors
Software:
- Spectralayers Pro
- DeMix Pro
- Cubase
- Izotope RX10
- Adobe Audition
- Click Repair
Most Important:
- My Ears
and
Equipment
Hardware:
- VMN40ML stylus on AT150MLx dual MM cartridge
- AT-LP1240-USB Turntable (internal preamp removed)
- Pro-Ject Phono Box S2 Ultra (dedicated Zero-Zone PS)
- Focusrite Scarlett 6i6 MkII
Software:
- Adobe Audition CC 2024
- iZotope RX 11 Advanced
- Audacity 3.x.x
- foobar2000 2.x.x
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Resuming an early, barely-started series
Angela Conway achieves her own unexpected collision of New Wave and Old Wave with a cover of a Canned Heat song
Penetration presumably got the band name from the Iggy and the Stooges song.
Or perhaps they were just trying to come up with a slightly more clinical take on the Sex Pistols idea.
Well lookee here - a decidedly Old Wave zine from Manchester called Penetration
Magazine's creator Paul Welsh writes on the Amazon page for the compendium of Penetration zine:
I began writing in the early 70's and produced my own 'arts' magazine entitled 'Purple Smoke'.
When that folded I created a rock magazine entitled 'Penetration' featuring many bands of the day, Motorhead, Hawkwind, AC/DC, Sex Pistols to name just a few.
I was the only person taking photos of the legendary Sex Pistols gig at the Manchester Lesser Free Trade Hall which have since sold worldwide featuring in Books, magazines, TV and Movie documentaries.
... All that and more has been documented in my book 'May Contain Flashing Images-Manchester, Music and Me!'
I wonder if Penetration the zine ever covered Penetration the band.....
I suppose it's a pointer to the average age of people commenting at this blog that in the Inspirals-inpired thread about artists who take the name in vain of their heroes or heroes's work (as the Carpets did, ach, with "Bitches Brew" - the effrontery! the gall!), that nobody mentioned MGMT, who on a single album, 2010's Congratulations, have a song titled "Brian Eno" and another titled "Song for Dan Treacy".
Eno and Television Personalities are are quite good pointers to their aesthetic, if you also factored in Todd Rundgren, Ariel Pink, Flaming Lips...
So they are Anglophiles but also Anglophile-philes, if you get me.
And maybe some Hot Chip is in there.
Here's the Eno tribute.
So tired, soul searching
I followed the sounds to a cathedral
Imagine my surprise to find that
They were produced by Brian Eno
Past the gates, quite stark
The roses trimmed and the windows dark
I see the walls through a limestone crack
Not red, not blue, not yellow but black
And all the spaces left for you
If the sky was synthesized you'd probably know
He taught me many things
The wisdom of oblique stratagems
The prophet of a sapphire soul
Presented through creative freedoms
And everything I say is true
'Cause if I was telling lies it'd probably show
I can tell that he's kind of smiling
But what does he know?
We're always one step behind him
He's Brian Eno, Brian Eno
When I was stuck he'd make me memorize elaborate curses
Tinctures and formulas to ditch the chorus and flip the verses
My whole foundation came unglued
When I tried to humanize by ambient light
Dipping swords in metaphors, yeah
But what does he know?
We're always one step behind him
He's Brian Eno, Brian Eno
He promised pretty worlds
And all the silence I could dream of
Brian Peter, George St. John
Le Baptiste De La Salle Eno
Well, all alone by the oldest stone
Where the shade trees grow
The creature by the water
Feature with a ghostly glow
Yeah, he's making sure that time's preserved well
We reap what we sow
We're always one step behind him
He's Brian Eno
Yeah, I can tell that he's doing well, yeah
But what does he know?
I'm always one step behind him
He's Brian Eno
Yeah, dipping swords in metaphors, yeah
But what does he know?
I'd like to see him plant a forest 'cause I don't know
Brian Eno
I can tell that he's kind of smiling
But what does he know?
I will always be a step behind him
He's Brian Eno
Yeah, he's making sure that time's preserved well
We reap what we sow
I'm always one step behind him
'Cause I don't know Brian Eno
And here's the Dan Treacy one
He spends his time or maybe half of his time
Or part of the time wandering
'Round the creeks and cobble stones
Of Hackney lanes
With a tear in his eye
As the children walk by, he's thinking of a song
Then stops to paint a picture of a frown
Walking around
Dan Treacy's smile, leaves you trying
To decide who's the victim, what's the crime?
No rest for the mind
That's seen it all before
And I don't know where he lives
But he's a myth of a man
And Texas Bob the cameraman
Is off to fix his seat before the show
Yeah, but where did he go?
To know when your time's up
You flip the glass and watch the hours quickening
Oh, oh, oh
In the back of the station
Fluorescent lights about to quit their flickering
Well, he speaks his mind
He says, "What is crime?"
Dan Treacy's eyes
Stop in the middle of the park
When the underground is dark
He's a poet, he's a lark
He starts thinking about a place that no one knows
And when the creeks run dry, he stays frozen in time
Strange lights in the sky start blinking
I can see the car outside but he's listening
Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh
He's listening
Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh
He's listening
Ah, ah, ah, ah
And he's making up his mind
He made his mind up
To get things done and overcome
He made his mind up
Yeah, he's gonna let it go
He made his mind up
In the park and at the station
He made his mind up
Yeah, he's gonna get it done
He made his mind up
Yeah, he's gonna get it done
He made his mind up
Yeah, he's gonna let it go
No matter the time, oh no
When the creeps run by, oh, no
He's making his mind up, oh, oh, oh
Yeah, he's gonna get it done, oh, oh
Yeah, when the creeks run dry, oh, oh
Said yeah, he's gonna listen to his soul
Said yeah, when the creeps walk by
"Come here, boy, look me in the eye"
Bow to the heart, back to the beat of Dan Treacy
I suppose it is the next logical extension of the TVP's own efforts like "I Know Where Syd Barrett Lives"
But it also reminds me of the Mighty Boosh...
But yes I'm guessing nobody here listens to MGMT.... I only noticed these songs because a student did a presentation on the group and it reminded me how much I liked the radio hits and had always meant to check out the albums properly.
Nick S in comments points to the original EP version of "Time To Pretend" - more DIY fuzzy
Looking at the presentation, which includes these videos I'd never seen for the hits off the debut, the sort of DIY retro phantasmagoria look of the promos and the sound and the Maus-y / mousy Angloid vocals did remind me of Ariel Pink. None of the students could see the connection but then I found that another favorite tune, "When You Die" was actually a (pre-disgrace) collab with AP, which would explain the dark lyrics maybe. It's another cool video involving trippy animation and Alex Karpovsky, the actor who plays Ray in Girls.
Tempting to shove MGMT into the category of Clever Dick Pop just for the production obsession and the retro synth penchant, but I think there is some real feeling in there hiding behind the layered-ness.
They do seem unAmerican - I sort of imagined them being much more popular in France. In fact, Switzerland seems to have a thing for them judging by their chart placings - it was the only place "When You Die" was a proper hit.
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An earlier post on "bands from nowhere" aka faceless rockno bollocks
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update
Here's clever sod Momus with a newish song called "Life With Eno" off an album called Quietism
Off the map
Insofar as there is one
A film soundtrack by Eno
Plays in my ears
Events in Thick Fog
Is what it’s called
No singing
Just a pleasant sense of being lost
As the fog of the real world
Starts to swirl
And Eno, I imagine him
As friendly
Like a guide for the blind
Showing the dead
The catacombs beneath the Panama Canal
At the airport
There’s a Chinese supermarket
And a briefcase synthesiser
Eno now unfolds
To play us sounds he’s made
From birds
I believe
He just wants his music
To sound like animals and birds
Fair enough
Every day is a good day
When nothing’s planned
I sink into my bath
In our hotel
And drown in these events
In thick fog
Glimpsed this (which used to get quite a bit of evening-radio airplay in the UK - kind of thing Radio One deejays liked) in the below, which is quite entertaining (the New Wave / punk / postpunk section of a long series on the story of Aussie rock)
Talking of Aussie things that are New Wavey as Anything
Surely there is none more Noo - unless it's some videos of The Plastics - than various scenes in this film (but also the entirety of the film)
STARSTRUCK (1982 – directed Gillian Armstrong)
A riot of primary colors and man-made fabrics, Starstruck
might be the most New Wave looking movie ever. Focal figure Jackie Mullens, an
aspiring singer in early Eighties Australia, has bright orange hair and carotene
lipstick; her 14-year old cousin/manager Angus sports a skinny tie and a purple
rinse. The pair live with Jackie’s
pub-owner mum, a mash-up of Margaret Thatcher and Edna Everage sluiced through
the color-palette of a Split Enz record cover. The barroom and the domestic
spaces adjoining seem plucked from the video for Cyndi Lauper’s “Girls Just
Wanna Have Fun” and the dance formation
scenes in the Lizard Lounge nightclub are as jaggedly robotic as SNL’s sketch
Sprockets. Jackie has no voice to speak off,
but sheer chutzpah makes her ascent to stardom seem irresistible. When
the presenter of a TV show beguiles her into showbizzing up her act to win a
talent show, her spunky spirit crumples – but only for a moment. She and her
band smuggle themselves onto the soundstage and wow the audience with their true
sound and style, which triggers the audience to synch up to Jackie’s
herky-jerky dance like the teenyboppers in Devo’s “Girl U Want” video. Victory
and a 25 thousand dollar check are hers. Spirited young women is a Gillian Armstrong
specialty: see also My Brilliant Career, Little Women, and her
documentary series that began with some teenage girls in Adelaide and followed
them at intervals through their lives. Starstruck is a trifle in
comparison but – atrocious tunes aside – is a charmer from start to finish.
Well when it comes to Aussie New Wave there's this of course -
The damped-strings rhythm-gtr chug, the sub-Sting vocal, the kooky video, the fact that underneath the style strictures they can clearly really play - it's all archetypally Noo
In the tradition of the Mr Jones song about worker drones commuting, having heart attacks, wasting away in an office cubicle etc ("Ec...