Thursday, April 28, 2016

DNTTA Playlist for April 22, 2016

Artist - Song - Album (Label)  * indicates Canadian Content 

Listen to Do Not Touch This Amp every Friday 8-9 PM Pacific at www.thex.ca 

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Radiation Flowers* - Dark Night - Radiation Flowers (Sundowning)
Pet Sun* - When Black Turns Green - Pet Sun (The Hand)
Notta Comet* - Goon Glang - Embankments (Independent)
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - By the Skin of My Yellow Country Teeth - Clap Your Hands Say Yeah (Independent)
Map 71 - Urchin Stomp - Sado-Technical Exercise (Foolproof)
Red Mass* - Apres Moi de Deluge - Le Rouge EP 1 (Slovenly)
Skin* - Run Too Far - Money and Guns, Guitars and Drums (Independent)
Redrick Sultan* - Panda - Fly As a Kite (Independent)
Devastations - Oh Me, Oh My - Yes, U (Rough Trade)
Gawker* - Spoiled Rotten - Demo (Independent)
Gawker* - Chongo - Demo (Independent)
Hindu Love Gods - Raspberry Beret - Hindu Love Gods (Slash)

Monday, April 25, 2016

DNTTA Playlist for April 15, 2016

Artist - Song - Album (Label)  * indicates Canadian Content 

Listen to Do Not Touch This Amp every Friday 8-9 PM Pacific at www.thex.ca 

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Bob Moses* - Far from the Tree - All in All (Domino)
Nicholas Krgovich* - Sunset Tower - The Hills (Tin Angel)
Patrick Lac* - Once Too Many - Streets of Life (Independent)
Couteau Papillon* - Paper Crane - Black River (Independent)
Vailhalen* - Bones of the Dead - Pop Violence (Saved by Radio)
Nobaby* - Champagne - Food Album (Independent)
Milk Toast* - Ears Around You - Your Band Sucks and Punk's Dead (Pee Blood)
Walden* - Edison - Apollo (Independent)
LNZNDRF - Kind Things - LNZNDRF (4AD)
No Museums* - The Slightest Touch - Darkening (Independent)
Oneida - Reckoning - Happy New Year (Jagjaguwar)
Evan Symons* - Con Artist - I Am a Bird (Step and a Half)

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Best of 2105 #1: The Soft Moon - Deeper (Captured Tracks)

I can't remember exactly when I heard The Soft Moon for the first time, but I know it was in 2015 on KEXP. I was enthralled with the couple of tracks I heard and vowed to find out more about the band, but the urge kept slipping my mind. One day, in the summer, I was digging through the used CDs at Red Cat Records in Vancouver and came across Deeper for $5. I bought it on sight.

Taking it home and popping it into my CD player was a revelation. After the first listen through, Deeper lived in my player for about a week straight. I bet I listened to it about 25 times just in that week. And I've continutally come back to it over the past year and into 2016.

The Soft Moon is Luis Vasquez, who lives in San Francisco. His music is an intriguing mish-mash of styles, firmly rooted in the percussive, dark and driving post-punk that Joy Division was best known for. There's a goth element in the tracks too, with Vasquez' half-buried, moaned vocals rising up through the angular music. There's also an odd, almost dance-floor friendly European electronic style to the album, heard in tracks like "Wrong".

The best track on the album is the third track, "Far", which teams a punding electronic beat with warped synth and guitar into a disorienting landscape.

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

DNTTA Playlist for April 8, 2016

Artist - Song - Album (Label)  * indicates Canadian Content 

Listen to Do Not Touch This Amp every Friday 8-9 PM Pacific at www.thex.ca 

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The Book of Lists* - Journey East - The Book of Lists (Scratch)
Holding Hands* - It's Funny - EP? (Independent)
Hansmole* - Heavy Magic - Clarity (Shake!)
Sandratz - Shark Attack 3D - Social Swarm (Shake!)
The Dirty Nil* - Zombie Eyed - Higher Power (Dine Alone)
Wood Lake* - Head in the Sand - Hell EP (Independent)
Hospital Bombers - Godwin's Law - Footnoes (Saved by Radio)
Black Cloud* - Deluge - Sundogs (Independent)
Did You Die* - I Felt I Never Had You - Weird Love (Independent)
The Beauts* - After All - The Beauts (Independent)
Buckets Of* - Fred - Buckets Of (Independent)
Dead Kennedys - Kill the Poor - Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables (Cherry Red)

Monday, April 11, 2016

Music Truisms... Part 1

Now is the time when I unleash my grumpy inner music critic and vent.

Chances are, if you cover this song, your band sucks...


The same goes for anyone trying to cover Tom Petty, The Beatles, Rolling Stones, Bruce Springsteen, the Who, the Eagles and many other classic rockers.

I heard this song while shopping and the cringe it send up my spine was titanic!

Saturday, April 9, 2016

DNTTA Playlist for April 1, 2016

Artist - Song - Album (Label)  * indicates Canadian Content 

Listen to Do Not Touch This Amp every Friday 8-9 PM Pacific at www.thex.ca 

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Download* - Out After - The Eyes of Stanley Pain (Nettwerk)
Bronswick* - Trouble - Chaisses Croisses (Lisbon Lux)
Paupiere* - Jeunes Instants - Jeunes Instants (Lisbon Lux)
Autre ne Veut - Cold Winds - Age of Transparency (Glassnote)
OneOverZero* - Span R3 - Searching Between High and Low (Independent)
Scannerfunk - Speechless - Wave of Light by Wave of Light (Sulphur)
Ugly Animal - Melting Horizon - Panic Button (Foolproof)
Khraken* - Trespass - Subliminal Seduction (Independent)
John Metcalfe - Just Let Go - The Appearance of Colour (Real World)
Purveyors of Free Will* - Unobserved Reflection - The Frozen Ice Age of Regret (Baffled Octopi)
Daniel Hains* - Onde Toxique - La Cave de l'Immonde (Independent)

Sunday, April 3, 2016

Book Review: Clayton Heylin's "From the Velvets to the Voidoids"

Since I shut off my cable TV, I've had a lot more time to read. I'd been working on Clinton Heylin's From the Velvets to the Voidoids: A Pre-Punk History for a Post-Punk World for a long time and finally, after a really nice day, I finished it. I went down to the park by the river, sat down and read the last few chapters. And I'm finally ready to do the first ever book review for this blog.

There's been a lot written about the New York scene of the late 70s and early 80s. It was the crucible for much of the punk explosion in the United States, and, to a certain extent, the rise of counter-culture, college radio and the “indy rock” of today. This book tackles a lot of material already covered by other authors, and does talk to and delve into the interviews of the most important people of that era. What makes this book a bit different is it's focus on some of the more important outliers of the scene, the bands that helped shape the scene but weren't necessarily the bands that “made it” or had much commercial success.

The big three obviously have to be talked about when exploring the New York scene: The Ramones, Blondie and the Talking Heads. And the important pre-cursors must also be talked about, bands like The Velvet Underground, The Stooges, the MC5 and the New York Dolls. But Heylin's focus isn't necessarily on those bands. They've been written about endlessly, and most even have their own books devoted to them. The focus here is on the bands that laid the foundation for those bands. The bands that, without them, the Ramones wouldn't even have existed, nor would they ever have had a stage to even start doing what they did.

At the centre of the New York underground scene was CBGBs. But also in the mix were other venues struggling along alongside CBGBs, and with them, a plethora of other bands. Heylin's focus are on bands like Television, and their main members, Tom Verlaine and Richard Hell. Television were one of the first post-punk bands, a band with a vision unlike a lot of punk bands and a band that influenced many, existed for a few short years, put out a seminal album, then flamed out. Bands like the Heartbreakers, where Richard Hell ended up after Television's flame out, joining former New York Doll, Johnny Thunders to make a sloppy and angular style of punk, before Thunders collapsing under the weight of his own drug addictions. Bands like Suicide, who's art-damaged, confrontational and often unlistenable music galvanized the no-wave scene that followed it.

One impressive bit about this book is the focus on the influential Cleveland bands that often found themselves in New York as a second home. The most important of these bands was Pere Ubu, fronted by the bizarre and eccentric genius David Thomas. Time is also spent with lesser known but influential bands like the Electric Eels, The Mirrors and Pere Ubu pre-cursor Rocket From the Tombs. I haven't read a book that took time to look at the Cleveland scene like this one does, and it's a welcome addition, since their contributions to post-punk are often criminally overlooked.

If the book has one weakness, it's Heylin's focus on Patti Smith. Fully a third of the book is spent talking about her career. While she is an important figure in the New York scene and in the more arty circles of post-punk and new wave, she feels out of place in a book like this. Smith was a poet first and a musician second, and her work was oddly folkish and, if I might cast aspersions, strangely pretentious. Smith is painted as a bohemian philosopher and misunderstood poet thrust into the world of music, perhaps by her own will and perhaps by forces outside her control. Her work isn't terribly punk, it wasn't terribly innovative, nor did it particularly capture the culture of the time any more than any other band. Heylin's over-focus on Smith drags the book down in places and her influence is overstated. One might blame Heylin's own pedigree as a Bob Dylan historian for this.

In the back of the book is a great discography of the bigger names. What's appreciated here is a pretty extensive list of what was available to purchase at the time of writing (1993) and an examination of live recordings and bootlegs worth checking out. The book is worth owning just for this section alone.