Sunday, November 22, 2009
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Friday, July 10, 2009
Watch This! The new Blitzen Trapper Video! Black River Killer!
I stumbled upon this as well which I found kinda interesting:
Support Blitzen Trapper, a bunch of swell dudes they are.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
IM BACK + New Mix! YAY!
Old Black Camaro Mixtape by sledgbrainerd
1. Midnight Cowboy – John Barry
2. Rye Whiskey – Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
3. Cigarettes, Whiskey & Wild Wild Women – Homer & Jethro
4. Waitin’ Around to Die – Townes Van Zandt
5. Heat Full of Soul – Yardbirds
6. Inat – Erkin Koray
7. Me and My Arrow – Harry Nilsson
8. I’m Gonna Make Her Love Me – Jim Ford
9. O Me-O, My-O – Lee Dorsey
10. Big Eyed Beans from Venus – Captain Beefheart
11. Creepy – Link Wray and his Ray Men
12. Big River – Bob Dylan & Johnny Cash
13. What Did the Deep Sea Say? – Woody Guthrie
14. My Grandfather’s Clock – John Fahey
15. What Have You Done – William Shatner/Kpiele – Lucien Monbuttou
16. Daddy Walked In Darkness – Hoyt Axton
17. ??? – Charles Manson
18. C F – Jandek
19. Rosemary Rose – The Kinks
20. Summer Wine – Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazelwood
21. Se Sei Qualcuno E’ Colpa Mia – Ennio Morricone
22. Slow Blues – Thin Lizzy
23. Giant Footprints in the Sand – Louis + Bebe Barron
24. Telephone Line – Electric Light Orchestra
25. Don’t Kill the Whale – Yes
26. Hausmann: Fmsbw – Raoul Hausmann
27. Any Way the Wind Blows – The Mothers of Invention
Sunday, May 3, 2009
Friday, April 10, 2009
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Monday, February 23, 2009
Sunday, February 15, 2009
RAY SARGE Issue #2
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Childhood is a piece of ground bathed in water, with little paper boats floating on it. Sometimes, the boats turn into scorpions. Then life dies, poisoned, from one moment to the next.
The poison is in each corolla, as the earth, is in the sun. At night, the earth is left to itself, but, happily, people are asleep. In their sleep, they are involnerable
The poison is the dream. -- Edmond Jabès, The Book of Questions
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Valentines Special: February 14th 2008 Mix
This is a mix I sent to a girl last year for Valentines Day. It worked.
1. Let’s Kiss – Beat Happening
2. Have I the Right – The Honeycombs
3. Two Headed Boy – Neutral Milk Hotel
4. The Fool – Neutral Milk Hotel
5. Never Let Go – Tom Waits
6. Love – John Lennon
7. Petiatil Cx Htdui – Aphex Twin
8. Because – The Beatles
9. Honey Bee (Lets Fly to Mars) – Grinderman
10. Ramparts – John Frusciante
11. Sunshine – Handsome Boy Modeling School
12. Book of the Month – Lovage
13. How Does It Make You Feel? – Air
14. Oh My Dear (Falling in Love) – Ween
15. Butterfly – Mason Jennings
16. Sweet Thing – Van Morrison
17. Yearnin’ – The Black Keys
18. Haven’t You Heard – Jeff Buckley
19. Perfect Day – Lou Reed
20. I Wanna Make It Wit Chu – Desert Sessions
21. Be My Wife – David Bowie
22. A Warm Place – Nine Inch Nails
23. Digital Love – Daft Punk
24. We Were Born Mutants Again with Leafling – Of Montreal
126mb, Enjoy
Monday, February 9, 2009
Outside In - A Tribute To John Martyn
If we need to find the seeds of John Martyn's music in the music of someone else, then Davey Graham is a good place to start. Graham had started as a folk and blues guitarist, but by the mid sixties was experimenting with musical styles from around the globe, mixing and matching as he went, long before the term 'World Music' had been coined. Jazz and blues and Celtic themes collided with Indian music, all underpinned by the stand up bass of one Danny Thompson. Graham, who himself sadly passed away just before Christmas, perhaps helped to open up a world of possibilities to a young John Martyn, already establishing himself on the London folk scene revolving around 'Les Cousins' club in the late sixties. Martyn was signed to Island records, a label initially aimed at releasing ska and reggae. Indeed, he was the first white artist on the imprint, although Fairport Convention, Nick Drake, Traffic and Free would soon follow.
His first two albums could indeed be classified as folk, mostly gentle hippy dippy stuff about 'Butterflies wings and lots of nice things' but displaying an already eclectic acoustic guitar technique, exemplified by the instrumental 'Seven Black Roses' which combines a traditional sounding folk tune with blues style finger picking. The next two albums were collaborations with his wife Beverley. her songs have a jazzy feel whilst on some of John's songs there is already a veering away from what most people saw as folk music. he experiments with a band sound, indeed on 'Stormbringer', Levon Helm from the Band is present, and on songs like 'Would You Believe' from 'The Road To Ruin' he stretches out in an almost hypnotic way that suggests musical paths he wouldn't pursue fully till much later on in his career. A recording I have heard of a John Martyn gig recorded for the BBC between 'Road To Ruin' and his next solo record, .Bless The Weather' has a version of 'Would You Believe' that features experimentation with guitar effects that would blossom into his trade-mark echoplex guitar technique.
I saw him live around this time. A cheeky chappie blagging joints from the audience, but totally involved in the music once it began. When he used the echoplex, he sounded like a whole band, notes swirling round the room. The songs cut through me, as did the playing. I hadn't heard anything quite like it, yet through all this, he remained this jolly bloke onstage. It was like if your mate from the pub was incredibly talented as well as being a drunken sot! In all the times I saw him play, I was never really disappointed. I could keep on through the albums, 'Sunday's Child' 'Live At Leeds' (essential, that one), 'One World' and on, but if you are at all interested by any of this, you will go out and discover this stuff for yourself.
Martyn kept on releasing albums, I kept buying them, seeing the tour every year. By the early 80s, the acoustic guitar was mostly put away, he toured with an electric band. I drifted away from his music for around ten years. Not great years for him or me, actually, although I never gave up listening to the records of his that I loved. By the late 90s, I was running a website for my other musical hero, Peter Green, and had begun to look for John martyn material again. This was the decade of the email, and I got in touch online with a guy called John Hillarby who was putting a tribute website for John together. We swapped tapes as fans do, and through John I got to see John Martyn live many times again, even getting to meet him a few times. this was an older, much heavier man, and it was clear that his lifestyle over the years had affected the way he was now. Performances could be a little erratic at this stage, I remember one show John Hillarby and I saw at Shepherd's Bush Empire where John was a little worse for wear, but his voice still moved me to tears that night as it had done so often in the past, his guitar playing still cut through the sea of shit in which so many of his musical contemporaries still swim. There were truly magical shows too, like his appearance at the 'Drifting' Festival at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on London's South Bank. The South Bank had a reputation for putting on festivals with dodgy concepts and managing to tie whoever was good and available or on tour at the time into the event. This night was a double bill, with Bill Nelson, an improvising guitarist. Nelson had played an entertaining set, backed by tapes he had made that day, and with a backdrop of movies Film students had made that day inspired by the backing tapes. After the interval, the lights went up on stage and there was John Martyn and band sitting around reading magazines. After about two or three minutes, Martyn just said, "I'm sorry about that, we're just all drifting!" He proceeded to read out the backstage fire regulations (which were extremely funny" and eventually deliver a set so good that I was horse from cheering so much. At this stage he had Arrun Ahmun on drums, and his trip-hop rhythms were just what Martyn needed to expand his numbers onstage.
A few years earlier, he had released an album called "And" where the trip-hop element was fully explored. This album in particular, and his career in genera l had been a big influence on Beth Gibbons of Portishead, and when he later covered 'Glory Box' it seemed fitting somehow. There were a couple of more albums, including the last studio effort, 'On the Cobbles', an attempt by producer Jim Tullio to recreate the 'Solid Air' kind of vibe. John allegedly hated it, refusing to play much from it on stage, but some fans loved it. It does have some charm, but I prefer Martyn's music when it is hard edged and challenging such as the mighty 'My Creator' from the previous album, 'Glasgow Walker.' I learned today that song was played during the memorial service for him in Ireland on february 8th. Quite right too.
In later years, John Martyn had had some financial problems, he had to have a leg amputated, and life was harder than it should of been for a musician of his talent. Voiceprint records did do an excellent job of releasing many live shows and rarities that came to light, many from the collections of the various fans who followed Martyn through the years. Do we need 18 versions of 'Outside In' for instance? Need maybe isn't the word, but I guarantee there will be a different element in each performance which keeps it interesting. I was going to post some mp3s at one point, but no, go and explore the amazing canon of work he has left. Youtube videos are a good place to start, as is johnmartyn.com, still run by my friend John Hillarby. As for albums, my favorites are 'Bless The Weather', 'Outside In' 'Live At Leeds', 'One World', 'Grace & Danger', 'And', and 'The Church With One Bell' and of the live albums, there are a couple with Danny Thompson from the late 80s which are very wonderful. To start with though, I would suggest 'Ain't No Saint', a four CD retrospective of his 40 year career which features some classic yet not always obvious selections, plus much unreleased material from all eras that in some strange way seems to sum up his genius better than anything else I can think of. I couldn't imagine life without this man's music, it is a fucking tragedy that he will not be making any more, (although I have to believe there is lots to hear that hasn't been released yet) but at least what is out there is available to be explored. John Martyn was never an easy option, but the best options never are.
Friday, February 6, 2009
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Escape to Hell Mixtape
1. Religion I - Public Image Ltd.
2. The Second Sitting for the Last Supper - 10cc
3. At the Edge of the Wood - Dead Meadow
4. The whores Hustke and the Hustlers Whore - PJ Harvey
5. Young Men Dead - The Black Angels
6. Tach Piano/Paris - Triumph of Lethargy Skinned Alive to Death
7. 11th Ave. Freakout Pt. 2 - Odd Nosdam featuring Mike Patton
8. Verbal (Topo Gigio Remix) - Amon Tobin
9. 10th Ave. Freakout - Fog
10. Chronological Disorder - 90 Day Men
11. Scotland's Shame - Mogwai
12. Like a Mirror - Morphine
13. 1963 - Brazzaville
14. The Quim Adjuster - Golden
15. Andy Warhol - David Bowie
16. The Ballad of Jody Frosty - Masters of Reality
17. Badd - Richard Cheese
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Night Time Sweat Mixtape
1. Elegant Bird – Yoshimi and Yuka
2. Pareidolia – Foetus
3. Maritime (Mike Patton Remix) – Isis
4. Death is the Road to Awe – Clint Mansell w/ The Kronos Quartet and Mogwai
5. Na Na Na – The Knife
6. Hallelujah – Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
7. Ear – Mugison
8. A Punch-Up at a Wedding – Radiohead
9. You Beautiful Bastard – The Sea and Cake
10. On a Neck, On a Spit – Grizzly Bear
11. Montreal – Ataxia
12. Turquoise Hexagon Sun – Boards of Canada
13. Ever Since WW1 – Team Sleep
14. Daily Living – Kaada
15. Theme from “Behind the Curtain” – Skalpel
16. Coda Maestoso in F (Flat) Minor – Earth
17. 09-15-00 (Part Two) – Godspeed You! Black Emperor
18. Flood (Part 2) – boris
19. Alone and Unaware….. – Red Sparowes
20. A Warm Place – Nine Inch Nails
21. Rhubarb – Aphex Twin
22. Captain – Ween
23. The Sinking Belle (Blue Sheep) – SunnO))) & Boris
24. So Long, Lonesome – Explosions in the Sky
25. Mannequin Hand Trapdoor – Boom Bip f. Doseone
197mb, Enjoy