Friday, July 19, 2013

"hardcore will never die, say scientists"

(via man like jack jambie)

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Tuesday, July 09, 2013

my first record reviews

Recently came into repossession of a whole bunch of old crap of mine - parents selling the familial homestead led to the loft getting cleared out, and then just two weeks ago while in the UK I dug out more old crap from the London storage locker. In amidst all this memoradelic detritus, I came across unexpected evidence of a precocious  interest in pop music - a zygotic critical impulse, even. A modest start, admittedly, but noteworthy.

It's in this pocket diary from 1974.




Most of the entries are somewhat terse. "Played cricket, nine runs". "Dinner, fried egg". Entries about marbles. Little sense here of a rich inner life, let alone any kind of aesthetic sensibility.

But then there it is: 


Under the heading  POP RECORDS  are two assessments: "Wombling Song" by The Wombles is  described as "nice tune. jogging along beat. 24 steady beat", while a second, unidentified single is mildly reproved for being a "a bit wild. rather loud".

A very modest start then, but from such acorns...

This is the old homestead, by the way. 




That little room above the front door was my garret. Many dreams, many schemes hatched in there.


Monday, July 08, 2013

I had a very enjoyable conversation with Angus Finlayson about the new edition of Energy Flash, and the dialogue is now up at Electronic Beats.

Friday, July 05, 2013

the year rave broke America / the year New Pop conquered the U.S.A

At Resident Advisor, an extract from the new section added to Energy Flash: a visit to an EDM massive, differences between now and the Nineties, the rise of digital maximalism.

^^^^^^^^
At CBS.news, David Chiu's thirty-years-on piece on New Pop / July 1983 as peak of the Second British Invasion features quotes from me alongside Messrs Fry, Bailey, Taylor, et al, plus Ms Nina Blackwood. Check for a classic homophobic response in the comments. Heteronativist bigotry rages still!

violence goes



Flyers given out by the venue management at my second and third ever gigs -- Aylesbury Friars, winter of 1980, Adam & the Ants and Killing Joke -- that beseech the punters to keep it calm, "keep it friendly".

Don't know if they gave these out the first-ever gig, The Slits, same venue, earlier in the year, but if they did I didn't keep it.

There was a lot of tension and aggro at gigs in those days. For someone new to concert-going, they could be pretty intense experiences, even if there was no trouble as such.  Afterwards, you really knew you'd been through something, physically. The other thing was how painfully loud the music was. I don't think many venues back then knew how to do rock sound that was powerful without harshing people's ears. You did often feel damaged afterwards.  Many a time a gig would ring on in your ears for a day or several afterwards.

Do you get violence at gigs nowadays? Or even tension? I doubt it. Probably a whole range of factors here (decline of music as a source of tribal identity:  a lot of the conflict at gigs back then was between different subcultural armies of the U.K.). But in amongst those factors, fairly prominent is, I think, a fading away of music's role as a space in which people work stuff out of themselves; music as valve or vent, an outlet for antisocial impulses. (Anti-social is still a social energy, whereas asocial is anomic). We are suppressed and constrained in different ways, in an information society, and deal with it differently (imploded into the derive, the endless circulation, of online etc, with its various mechanisms for harnessing drive energy) . Perhaps it's games above all that have taken up the slack in terms of all that surplus energy / lower-cerebral-cortex impulses.

You don't seem to see as much vandalism these days either, interestingly.

Thursday, July 04, 2013

singing through the wires


Totally forgot how much I love this song... reminded, by, well, by Richard Madeley's show on Radio 2, if you must know...

The telegraph-y sounds always remind me a little of the Morse-code-y bit in this other much-loved, forgotten-about song


On the Wichita Lineman album, Glenn's version of "Dock of the Bay" is rather good, unexpectedly propulsive, and you gotta love "Ann"



So are the Jimmy Webb solo albums any cop then?