Monthly Archives: May 2001

Oh, and since I’m being all-inclusive, I must confess to a couple of sneaky purchases yesterday lunchtime. Blame my friend David – he arranged to meet me for lunch, but in a record store!

I picked up Stereolab‘s ‘Fluorescences’ EP, and a David Holmes CD, ‘Bow Down To The Exit Sign’.

I used to be a huge fan of Stereolab. My first ever live show was McCarthy, the group which Stereolab grew out of. I find Stereolab can be of variable quality live – occasionally self-indulgent, but often brilliant. I like pretty much all of their records, although not with the passion with which I consumed albums like ‘Peng’ in 1992 and ‘Transient Random Noisebursts with Announcements’ in 1993. When I was trying to make money to make my transatlantic move in 1997, I sold most of the rare stuff I had by them. Anyway, Fluorescences was a Stereolab release which somehow fell through the tracks, and I had never heard it. And in fact I’ve still never heard it. Sounds stupid, huh? In fact, I often buy things and don’t really listen to them properly. I have a big, ugly 101-disc multi CD changer by Pioneer which serves up random tracks to me. So even if I’m lazy after buying something, I’ll always hear it in the end. That sounds pretty decadent and bad, doesn’t it….

Re: David Holmes, I really don’t know much about him, other than that like me, he was born in Belfast, but spends a lot of his time in New York. I have ‘Let’s Get Killed’, and it’s a kind of interesting ambient film-soundtracky kind of thing with a lot of samples of people from the street etc thrown in. This is his new one, and I’ll be interested to find out what direction he has gone in. Not interested enough to have put it on and listened to it last night, obviously, but quite interested!

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Tower outlet

My oh my -only three days since I posted; I’ve bought so many records since! And tonight is the WFMU fair….

On Tuesday I stopped by Tower Outlet (now moved to above Tower Books on Lafayette St at 4th, nyc) and found myself stuck in there for hours. All midpriced CDs were reduced to $8, which seemed like a good deal.
I picked up Trio Mocoto‘s self-titled 1973 album on a Brazilian CD this way. Trio Mocoto were Jorge Ben‘s backing band, and were pretty cool on their own. Without the genius Jorge there they lack focus slightly, but there are still some great numbers (‘disculpe’ struck me as excellent) and even a Bacharach cover (raindrops keep falling on my head, sung in Porguese).

I also got what, incredibly, was my first Bob Dylan album on CD, Blonde on Blonde. I have never been into Dylan remotely. I own probably 10 of his records, picked up at charity/thrift shops/yard sales over the years; never listened to them. But some friends of mine have become so obsessed by him that they have opened my eyes slowly. Why is it that I always get into things in such a strange order? I guess without the internet my path might have been more linear. I say this because the thing which really struck me most about this album on first listen was how much ‘I want you’ was ripped off by Belle and Sebastian on their sublime ‘The state that I am in’.

The $8 thing was also enough to persuade me to pick up the Pixies album ‘Trompe le Monde’, which was the one album of theirs I never had. One of many recent purchases I haven’t listened to yet.

The last purchase was a $2.99 Mystic Moods Orchestra ‘One stormy night’ CD, sealed, which turned out not to have the CD in it. Very odd, and the first time that has ever happened to me.

Tower outlet also sells vinyl, and incredibly, they seemed to have old, unplayed cutout soundtrack stock from the 60s. I think perhaps someone had been in before me and wiped most of it out, but I managed to pick up Johnny Williams‘s score to the 1966 film ‘Penelope’. It’s extremely groovy; the first track features a vocal group and sounds very reminiscent of Free Design. I was pretty happy with that at $5; I passed up on Quincy Jones‘s ‘Enter laughing'; hope I didn’t screw up… Finally, I got a Bud Shank album of movie themes on World Pacific from the mid-late 60s. Some of this is pretty sleepy, but a couple of the tracks are great Lalo Schifrin numbers (one is even from his impossibly rare ‘Murderer’s row’ soundtrack), and at least one other has that groovy 1966 rocking now sound feel.

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Oops, I did it again. I bought a couple of CDs at Academy, who must have a lot of my money by now. Frank Sinatra – ‘Sinatra and Company’, and Hugo Montenegro – ‘All-time greatest movie themes & schemes’. The Sinatra is interesting because half of it is arranged by Eumir Deodato, featuring Antonio Carlos Jobim. This may (?) be where some of the material from the aborted second Sinatra/Jobim effort went. I was also especially happy to pick it up for $6 because the CD is out of print in the US. Haven’t listened to the Montenegro yet, but somehow fancied it after my Ventures purchase yesterday…

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Well, I nearly managed to get through April without buying any more records. Not quite though. Last night I bought the Serge Gainsbourg compilation Classé X used at Kim’s. Oh, and a really cool Ventures compilation (honestly) – Televentures used at Sounds. I would never have bought the Ventures one, but it was playing in the store, and it sounded, well, very cool. Cool in a cheesy twangy 60s guitar sense, really much more what I was into about 5 years ago. But still cool.

Anyway, the Gainsbourg compilation is nice. Cheesy as hell – it’s deliberately focusing on his ‘sex’ related songs. Although one of the songs, ‘Evguenie Sokolov’, features the man farting into the microphone over a reggae beat for the whole song. Oooh, sexy!!. He wrote a book with the same title, apparently about someone who farts a lot. The last song on the Gainsbourg ‘suck, baby suck’ is really awful…

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