Wednesday, July 31, 2019
A brief review - Chip & Tony Kinman - Sounds Like Music (2019, Omnivore)
Splitting vocal duties, Chip on guitar and Tony on the guitar with fewer strings cut their teeth in the late '70s in The Dils, an L.A. area punk trio who's minimalist and succinct approach yielded an equally scant discography, so brief (say eight songs) it might as well have fit inside a thimble. Two singles and an EP was about the size of it to be exact, but despite the brevity of the Dils output they were responsible for bona fide nervy rants like, "Mr Big" and "I Hate the Rich," that have become nothing short of classics to punk connoisseurs. In fact, the Dils cupboard was so damn lean, only one song by them is represented here, "Folks Say Go," a bouncy 1977 ditty, that's explores a slightly different wavelength than those aforementioned bratty and cutting 45s.
Their next endeavor, the Austin, TX-based Rank and File would become their most renown and commercially viable. Operating almost solely on a roots/cowpunk continuum, Rank and File churned out three highly consistent albums in the '80s, all of which were infinitely more sophisticated than the Dils - then again that's not the most even comparison given the two groups divergent agendas. Interestingly enough however, Rank and File began on a punk premise, not country. Sounds Like Music enlightens us with two examples of the first-blush R&F sound few of us even knew existed via the band's theme song (of sorts), and the careening but melodious basher "Citizen." Immensely revealing stuff and damn-near worth the price of admission alone. Naturally, power chords and bratty ethos weren't what Rank and File would become renown for, so if you're looking to graze more familiar pastures, Sounds... offers four more rarities by the band in question in keeping with their twangier reputation.
If any of Chip and Tony's affiliated projects dominates this compilation, it's Blackbird, who check in with thirteen accredited numbers. Typically, Blackbird was the most non-descript of their ventures, and in some respects left the smallest legacy - despite enjoying a brief tenure on a major label in the early '90s. This post-Rank and File operation eschewed the bulk of the Dils/R&F's warmer, analog hues placing the emphasis on keyboards...and an omnipresent drum machine that grated on my nerves, particularly when absorbed in heavy doses. Top this off with intermittently contrived vocals and an overarching tenor that bordered on impersonal, and voila, Blackbird comes swooping down for an oblique landing. Nonetheless, there are melodic constructs tucked inside this band's lightweight industrial drone (check out the poignant "Old Paint"). "Dope," which tangentially channels the Doors "Twentieth Century Fox," is another minor saving grace, but the sheer amount of material presented by this idiosyncratic foray has a tendency to clash with the more earnest offerings by the Dils, Rank and File, and finally...
Cowboy Nation, who had the distinction of being the only Kinman studio entity (that we know of) to record music in the current millennium. Three albums to be exact, all very much under the radar, skewing considerably closer to Rank and File's penchant, but with more of a traditional country flavor. Then again, "traditional" wasn't exactly a watchword for the Kinman clan. Two C/N songs made the cut for Sounds..., an alternate take of the galloping, bilingual "Paniolo," and another swift hoedown, "Rebel," a deep cut fleshed out with equally deep vocals. Going into this album, I had no familiarity with Cowboy Nation, but I'm compelled to dig deeper.
Despite this being the only release on the market to span the arc of Chip and Tony Kinman's entire career, I should note again that it's not a best of or anthology, rather an outtakes compendium. In essence, Sounds Like Music is geared towards existing clientele, but it's bound to parallel as a jumping off point for listeners who are brand new to the duo. To newbies, I'd also recommend you invest in the Dils' Dils Dils Dils compilation on Bacchus Archives, as well as the debut Rank and File LP, Sundown, not only for a primer, but as examples of what the Kinman's were capable of both in and beyond the punk realms they abundantly contributed to for so many years. Sounds Like Music is available straight from Omnivore or Amazon.
Monday, July 29, 2019
Pull me out, save me from the voices in my head...
**Please do not reveal artist in comments!**
Sunday, July 28, 2019
Those XCleavers - First Album/The Waiting Game (1982-84)
s/t (1982)
01. Smooth, Wild & Dirty
02. Butt I Will
03. 18 (Unprotected)
04. Suzie La Bruzie
05. Facts of Life
06. Nocturn Dub
07. White Reggae
08. Trying To Have Fun
09. Skip A Beat
10. Klubb Talk
11. No Brain Needed
12. Mondo Commando
13. What's In Style
14. Reprise
The Waiting Game (1984)
15. In God We Trust
16. Right Right Girl
17. Nobody But You
18. The Waiting Game
19. Some One In My Dreams
20. Duplicator
21. Silence The Critics
22. Quicksand
23. Riot
24. Take A Hint
25. People
bonus
26. Little Drummer Boy
27. Nice Legs
28. Confusion (Do The)
Hear
Friday, July 26, 2019
Another Carnival - Seven Lines (1988, Janet Marie)
Another Carnival were the assumed pride and joy of Eau Claire, WI, circa the late '80s - early '90s. And not a bad flagship band at that for a town of about 60,000 to boast, given Carnival's penchant for meat 'n potatoes jangle pop that seemed all too fitting for their midwest locale. Nervy guitar salvos illuminate "How to Find It" and the roiling "The Big Mistake," but this quartet was even more effective when sticking to breezier guitar pop motifs like "Stay" and "She Says it's Real." Seven Lines entails a few clunkers (e.g. "Over Our Houses") but nothing egregious enough to weigh down it's overarching strengths. In short, a satisfying listen. Two more Carnival albums would follow.
01. All Away
02. The Big Mistake
03. Hand Across the Heart
04. How to Find It
05. Banners Like Sirens
06. No Surprises
07. Stay
08. She Says it's Real
09. Seven Lines
10. Over Our Houses
11. Who Cares
Sunday, July 21, 2019
Blow up the house that owns you.
**Please do not reveal artist in comments!**
Friday, July 19, 2019
Monkey 101 - A tale of two 7"s (1990-92)
Per their facebook page (linked above) they still gig occasionally, and additional audio exists over on Bandcamp. Also, our colleagues at One Base on an Overthrow had a few things to say about their "French Feelings" single.
French Feelings 7" (1990, Siltbreeze)
A. French Feelings
B. Now That You Have Left Me
Transitor 7" ep (1992, Papa Popov)
01. Transistor
02. The Method of my Machinery
03. Kentucky Woman
04. The Man Who Sells His Votes
05. Burgundy Wine
Hear
Wednesday, July 17, 2019
Melinite - Push the Button and Run! (1983, Noose)
01. Who Needs Foreplay?
02. When You Turn Again
03. My Anna of Discretion
04. Waiting 4-U
05. Trouble in Sector 17
06. Another Attempt
07. Seasoning
08. A Daydream Dilemma
09. For Now
Hear
Sunday, July 14, 2019
She carries my confusion in the pocket of her jeans.
The Passions - Amersfoort, NL 7.14.81
Barbara Gogan continues to perform occasionally in Europe. More info on the Passions can be had at their Wiki page.
01. I Radiate
02. Bachelor Girls
03. Oh No, It's You
04. Don't Talk To Me (I'm Shy)
05. Someone Special
06. War Song
07. Into Night
08. Snow
09. Alice's Song
10. The Square
11. Skin Deep
12. I'm In Love With A German Film Star
13. Run Away
14. The Swimmer
MP3 or FLAC
Saturday, July 13, 2019
Closedown - 1993 demo
The title of the first track says it all. Heavy-handed practitioners at that, alas there's nil I can inform you of regarding Closedown's background details, even as basic as where they called home. Named after a Cure tune, but more in league with early Slowdive (and surprisingly, not even so much My Bloody Valentine) this was a defiantly noisesome lot whose amped-out histrionics must have had a concussive impact on their audience back in the day. Case in point is the bracingly dense "Monolith," so overpowering it virtually mimics the sensation of ascending in an airplane. Things chill-out as this tape progresses, with the instrumental "Sundown" emanating a soothing comedown of sorts...or I suppose in this case, a "closedown."
01. Shoegazer
02. Monolyth
03. Amber
04. Vitrescence
05. See Me Fade
06. Infinite
07. Sundown
Hear.
Sunday, July 7, 2019
Pay dirt is big trouble, yes sir...
**Please do not reveal artist in comments!**
Saturday, July 6, 2019
Matt Finish - Fade Away ep (1981)
Frontman Matt Moffitt died unexpectadly in 2003. Matt Finish reconvened in 2006, featuring a revamped lineup of course. A thorough bio of the band can be perused over at their Wiki site.
01. Introductions
02. Fade Away
03. It's On My Way
04. Eat Your Lips Off
05. Calls
Hear
Wednesday, July 3, 2019
Tirez Tirez - Etudes (1980, Object)
A pesky write-up in the Trouser Press Record Guide has embedded the notion in me that Tirez foreman Mikel Rouse took his cues from David Byrne and ran with 'em, but"Razorblade's" delicately clanging chords and mid-paced tempo exudes a catchy, minimalist allure that the Talking Heads rarely elicited so subtly. Elsewhere, Etudes isn't routinely immediate in sparking such visceral reactions, though you don't have to dig too deep to excavate some of Rouse's more convincing ideas, which happen to reside on side one. "Hair" is a particular anomaly, flirting with a traditional rock-ballad setup before settling into the more artful dabblings Tirez were known for. The problem with so much of Etudes resides in it's patently repetitive rhythms, which might make sense in two or three minute doses but Rouse insists on treading water for double that length in most instances. Nevertheless, I'll take magic where and when I can find it, and "Razorblade" and this album's other intermittent surges of inspiration are worth revisiting.
01. Radiation Dance
02. Razorblade
03. A Summary
04. World War
05. Hair
06. I'll Be That
07. West Led The Diamond King
08. Strike
09. Vowels
10. Observation
Hear