Sunday, September 5, 2010

August 2010 - Hum Along With Mr. Dan

I'm one of those people for whom silence is louder than noise; especially when I'm writing. However, since I get completely distracted by lyrics – especially good ones – I've spent the last 15 years hunting down MOW (mit-out-words) tunes, and compiled some of my best for y'all.

1. Out Of The Heat – Fluke
I've always wanted to make a short film of a crazy chase through a city with this as the soundtrack.

2. The Great London Traffic Warden Massacre – Morcheeba
I listen to a lot of Morcheeba, mostly for Skye Edwards' voice which I think is magical. Ironically, this is my favourite of their songs.
**FYI: I misnamed this on the cover of the CD. My bad. Please adjust accordingly.

3. In the Bath – Lemon Jelly
"What do you do in the bath?" What strange question to pose, huh? I've tried it a few times; some of the answers I received made me giggle. Others just scared me.

4. War (Rocky IV) – Vince DiCola
I listen to A LOT of movie soundtracks when I write. I got most of them from iTunes so I couldn't include them (also, a soundtrack disc has already been done). This particular ditty is the score for the Balboa-Drago fight on Christmas Eve in Moscow. Definitely the best bout of the Italian Stallion's career.

5. A Fifth of Beethoven – Walter Murphy & The Big Apple Band
This was my first foray into classical music (my parents were disco freaks). You can only imagine how disappointed I was when I started taking piano lessons and learned how the great pieces of yesteryear were supposed to sound.

6. Experiment – MC Kilo and Mr. Dan
In 2004, the office computer I was given came with Garage Band. One day, my friend Kieron and I started futzing around with it. This was the first of six songs we created with the loops that came with the program. As a point of interest, it was MC Kilo who named me Mr. Dan.

7. Pick Up The Pieces – Average White Band
There's a scene in Superman II (1980) when Clark Kent, having relinquished his super powers to be with Lois Lane, gets his ass whooped in a diner. For some reason, the song playing in the background always stuck with me, but I never knew its name. Years later, I heard it as part of a Best of the 1970s radio countdown, rushed to Napster and downloaded the first copy I could find (hence the skip at 2:18).

8. The Lonely Shepherd – Gheorghe Zamfir
Before Canadian advertisers figured out how to infiltrate commercial breaks on American channel feeds, we used to get all the great infomercials (and no matter what they were hocking, they all had the same number: 1-800-257-1257). One of the more heavily rotated products was Zamfir, Master of the Panflute – definitely not a moniker you'd want to have if you were in jail.

9. Layla (Pt 2) - Derek and the Dominoes
I never understood what this piece of music had to do with the lyrical, first part of the song. Either way, it mesmerized me the first time I heard it, and has been ever since. It seemed to have a similar effect on Martin Scorcese, who has used it in too many films to count.

10. In The Dawn - Robert Miles
This is off the "Dreamland" CD – a must have for anyone who's into trance music. Incidentally, Robert Miles is Italian. You wouldn't think that, would you? Kind of like no one thought John Cabot was Italian. That always blew my mind in middle school.

11. Variations 1-4 – Julian Lloyd Webber
It must've been tough growing up as Andrew's younger brother...
Mrs. LW: Welcome home, boys. How was your day at school?
Julian: I got an A on my history test.
Andrew: I penned a three-act musical during recess.

12. Toxygene (The Way Out West Begbe Mix) – The Orb
I love the freneticism of this track. Like the first song on the album, it would be great for a chase scene (especially with the car horn SFX throughout). If The Orb are still performing live, they're definitely worth seeing – kinda like a Pink Floyd show in triple time.

13. Duende – Delerium
Ending the CD with a little Canadian Content, Delerium is one of my favourite (as opposed to favorite) bands. Trancy and trippy yet mellow and mellifluous, it's perfect writing music. They have four or five albums now, and I strongly recommend them all. Go Canada Go.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

CD # 35: Musica progressiva italiana

The reason: My first entry in this club had a theme: film music. For year two I chose a specific country: Sweden. I kind of like the theme concept better, but nevertheless I combined my previous ways of thinking in making the year three entry an Italy-only theme-CD.

The mix: I have dwelled upon the subject of progressive rock before (see the liner notes for the Swedish CD), and once again: some of you may have heard a bit of Yes, Genesis, King Crimson or Emerson, Lake & Palmer before – but you probably didn't know of the vast Italian prog scene that went on simultaneously. As a prog rock fan though, one eventually finds out. As a subgenre in the nerdiest of genres, I do expect some of you to not like this CD very much, perhaps even listening to it just once and then shelving it (like I did with the house and opera entries before, sorry Dan & Pants!), but hopefully someone finds El Dorado here. In that case, I recommend italianprog.com for further reading.

The plays:


1.
Premiata Forneria Marconi
"Introduzione"
(Storia di un minuto, 1972)

Marconi are small Italian biscuits and Premiata Forneria Marconi (a.k.a. P.F.M.) means "prime marconi bakery". P.F.M. is one of the best known Italian prog bands, both nationally and abroad (Greg Lake of King Crimson and Emerson, Lake & Palmer is a big fan for instance). One reason for this is that they actually played for a while. Most other Italian prog bands made one or two albums before disbanding. "Introduzione" is the opening track of their debut album and as it is a quite common title for opening tracks in this genre, it seemed to fit as a starter here too.


2.
Latte e Miele
"Menestrello"
(Aquile e scoiattoli, 1976)

As all rock music, Italian prog rock turned into shit ca 1975. This track is an exception, but still might be considered the one least in tune with the others on this compilation (notably the Pink Floydish guitar solo two minutes in). "Latte e Miele" means "milk and honey", "Menestrello" is "minstrel", "Aquile e scoiattoli" is "eagles and squirrels" and the album cover is the Best Album Cover Ever.


3.
Le Orme
"Sospesi nell'incredible"
(Felona e Sorona, 1972)

Felona e Sorona by Le Orme ("the footprints") is a typical Italian prog rock album: a concept album (about the two planets Felona and Sorona) where the different tracks sit tightly together. The album was the band's biggest success, and they actually recorded an English version of it. As my Italian is not very great, I really don't know what any of these bands are singing, but I love that the title "Sospesi nell'incredible" kind of translates into "hanging in between the incredible". On the English version album, they simply called it "In between" though.


4.
Museo Rosenbach
"Della natura"
(Zarathustra, 1973)

A song from the sole album by Museo Rosenbach (before the band reunited in the 90s). With lyrics inspired by Friedrich Nietszche and Benito Mussolini pictured in the collage on the album cover, there were some accusations of the band being right-winged assholes. "Della natura" means "to nature" and works like a mini-opera in itself, with typical slow, fast, instrumental etc. segments put together. As much as I hate fascism, I love this song.


5.
Alphataurus
"La mente vola"
(Alphataurus, 1973)

Another band who made only one album but are currently reuniting (although there exists a second album release, put together from what was recorded before the band split up in the 70s). This is perhaps my favourite Italian prog tune, and thus one of my favourite songs of all time. I mean, it is a nine minute song with a three minute intro. And a title translating into "the thought flies". Loving it.


6.
Banco del Mutuo Soccorso
"Il giardino del Mago"
(Banco del Mutuo Soccorso, 1972)

18 minutes worth of prog music, this is a journey into the Magician's Garden, consisting of the parts "... passo dopo passo ..." (step by step), "... chi ride e chi geme ..." (those who laugh, those who moan), "... coi capelli sciolti al vento ..." (with the hair loosened in the wind) and "Compenetrazione" (penetrating). The ridiculously long band name means "bank/desk for mutual assistance". I once wrote forty pages of a novel based on the high concept of that name.


7.
Metamorfosi
"Conclusione"
(Inferno, 1973)

Another concept album, built upon another piece of classic literature: Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy. An album that got a sequel 30 years later, with Paradiso (thus, another recently reunited band). "Conclusione" is obviously as common an end track as "Introduzione".


8.
Il Balletto di Bronzo
"Epilogo"
(Ys, 1973)

... but sometimes there's an epilogue attached! Il Balletto di Bronzo made two albums, distinctly different. The first one, Sirio 2222, was released in 1970 and is kind of their "Led Zeppelin album". This is from their "Yes album". I have many times thought that someone ought to sample the bass at 2.30, speed it up and make a rap song out of it. On a personal note, Ys was the album that opened the door to the Italian prog scene for me. Hopefully it won't shut yours!

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

In the 'hood with Mr. Dan

1. Let Me Ride/Dr. Dre – I'm drawn to good syllable management, and Dr. Dre's a master. You can tell he's really paying attention.

2. Noble Art/IAM (feat. Method Man & Redman) – I moved to Brussels in 2003 and had terrible jet lag for the first week I was there. I found myself watching MTV at 4 in the morning; and for some reason, it was the MTV feed from Israel. Very strange. They had 6-8 songs on rotation and the video for this song always made me smile. The occasional "oui" thrown in there made me smile more.

3. Bow Down/Westside Connection – Ice Cube is the first singer on this song. I like that he's reinvented himself as a family movie actor. He's got personality. And a potty mouth.

4. Fire It Up/Busta Rhymes – This is the only Busta Rhymes song I like; and I love it. I first heard it in the movie Can't Hardly Wait, which might be the best teen movie of all time.

5. Got Your Money/Ol' Dirty Bastard – He dedicates the song to all the pretty girls in the world, then gives a first hand-account of his life as a pimp. Ballsy.

6. Radio Ga Gangsta/Snoop Dogg vs Queen – This is the first of three mash-ups on the album and the first of two that I named myself.

7. 2/Gang Starr Featuring M.O.P./ 1/2 & 1 – This song is off the soundtrack to Blade, which is far from the best movie in the world, but does have a pretty incredible opening scene.

8. Benzie Box/Danger Doom feat. Ceelo – Listen for "cookaracha exoskeleton" somewhere in the song. I wonder if those two words have ever appeared together before?

9. Deadly Zone/Bounty Killer featuring Mobb Deep & Rappin Noyd – I like the voice of the guy singing the chorus. It's a style really popular with Toronto rappers.

10. Battle Without Honour Or Humanity/Beastie Boys vs Hotei Yasushi – This is the second mashup on the record, and I think it's a super-cool idea. Man, they work well together.

11. In Da Disco/The Bee Gees vs 50 Cent – I'm a sucker for anything with "Stayin' Alive" in it, especially when it's me singing it at karaoke. This track makes great use of the song.

12. Triumph/Wu Tang Clan – It's pretty amazing how differently the Clan members approach the art of rapping, and we get to hear them all here. I like Method Man (#2)

13. Kung Fu Nu/b*Boss – The main songwriter for this band is a friend of mine. They've been around for only a few months, but they're already featured in a video game.

Monday, April 12, 2010

I, Movie - March 2010 - DJ Cucumbah

Because I neglected to put any explanation on the packaging, the title of this month's CD doesn't really make any sense by itself. I, Movie is a collection of songs that were either, featured in, or composed for films I have produced and/or directed. Roughly assembled in chronological order, except for some treats at the end of the disk (placed for purposes of flow and structure), it is my filmography in song. It also includes tracks that were chosen, but never made it into the final films (because of cash shortages, mean agents, uncooperative and just plain greedy music publishers, etc). There are some original compositions recorded for specific films and even a few tracks that I hope will appear in projects that are still just scripts (my future filmography). It does evolve from garage rock, into female pop, and then onto much more funky and atmospheric material - I think it holds together as a disk. A bit of an ego trip perhaps, but at least I don't sing on any of the tracks.


Population 420 (1993, 28 minutes)

1. Wake Up

A snippet of dialogue from my first post-film school drama - the short drama Population 420. A dark tale of an alcoholic ex-cop who tracks his missing girlfriend back to her tiny rural hometown - but what are Frank's real intentions?


The Suburbanators (1995, 87 minutes)

2. Atom Smacker - The Primrods

The Suburbanators was my first feature film as producer. Shot in Calgary in 1995, we used local indie-bands for the soundtrack. The Primrods were a really great band that almost went places. They eventually recorded an album for Geffen Records but it got shelved and the group fell apart. The Suburbantors played at The Sundance Film Festival and was quite successful for a super low-budget first feature. The notorious Troma Entertainment (of Toxic Avenger fame) released it in the USA and still distributes it internationally.


Kitchen Party (1997, 92 minutes)

3. Ragweed - Rollerball

I produced Kitchen Party (Gary Burns 2nd film) but also worked closely on the soundtrack. We had a real budget and a real music supervisor as well, John Bissell who had just finished doing the music for The Horse Whisperer? He lived in Montana in a little town filled with Hollywood screenwriters and was pretty plugged into the music scene on the west coast. I have no idea where this group came from or where they went, but I still like this track (it's so old its retro, again).

4. Nothing Boy - The Lux

A Vancouver band that seems to have disappeared.

5. The Truth This Time - The Soft Tips

Twin brothers from Calgary who only recorded a couple of songs. A really catchy tune - a little rough, but it works. That's just the kind of shit that happens in a garage.


Bad Money (1999, 89 minutes)

6. Carnavalis - Schaun Tozer

Part of the tropical themed score for Bad Money - my first feature as director. Schaun Tozer composed much of the music and supervised the recording. We used a lot of real musicians and spent a lot of time on the soundtrack. The movie is about the financial struggles of four different middle class people. The premise was to look at the lengths people will go to to hold onto their station in life, no matter how modest. Oh, and it's a comedy and is still available on DVD in Germany.

7. The Magnificent Seven - Tito Rodríguez

We edited a big scene, where two down and out punks try to make some money by working as prostitutes at a gay cowboy convention, to this lounge version of Elmer Bernstein's title music for The Magnificent Seven, but we were unable to secure the rights. The composer doctored up a facsimile that had the same feel and tempo, and we recorded and used that instead (included as track 20 The Cowboy Thong). But this original is still an awesome arrangement.

8. Don't Die Just Yet - David Holmes

Again, we used this in the editing but it turned out we just couldn't afford it. We listened to this so much while we were editing that it feels like it's part of the film - even though it isn't.


These Girls (2005, 92 minutes)


9. Friday is the Spice of Life - The Von Zippers

I tried to have as many rocking girl groups as possible on the These Girls soundtrack but I needed a little something heavier in select places. Shooting on location, I listened to The Von Zippers' album 'The Future Is Now' every morning in my shitty little vacation cottage in Shediak New Brunswick - to knock the cobwebs out of me head and the bugs out of the rug. Later on in the editing room I used it when we needed some heavy lifting done. These boys have crunch. The DVD cover shown is the Portuguese version, it can be found in Spanish, German, French and the original English as well. It just played on Romanian TV.

10. Smack - Bettie Serveert

A friend of mine was a big fan of this Dutch outfit (headed up by a Canadian gal) and they fit perfectly into the These Girls soundtrack. They came to Montreal when we were in post-production so I was able to accost them after the show.

11. Combat Baby - Metric

These guys (and gal) were just starting to take off so we got this song for a song (and some cash). It plays over the credits sequence and lends the overall film a certain combative tone.

12. Finacé - The Sunday Sinners

An all girl (plus a dude on bass) group from Montréal The Sunday Sinners put on quite a show. They really know their old school rock. They still play around town.

13. Walking With A Ghost - Tegan & Sara

I can't handle too much of Tegan & Sara at one time, but this song really works. The White Stripes covered it.

14. What is the Light? - The Flaming Lips

In the several years it took to develop and write (rewrite) These Girls, I always had this grand idea that I would get The Flaming Lips to agree to let me re-mix the entire album 'The Soft Bulletin' into a soundtrack. That of course never happened, and even if it had it would have been for a far moodier and darker film than what These Girls eventually turned out to be. But I did listen to this song over and over again as I toiled over the script.


In a World Created by a Drunken God (2008, 92 minutes)

15. I'm On My Way - The Dead Indians

Drunken God was an odd little project I was hired to direct. It is the story of a white man who tries to get his 'long lost' native half-brother to donate a kidney to their dying father. It's all about healing or as the Edmonton Journal aptly wrote 'Film questions our need for healing'. For a super low budget project it has done very well and picked up a few awards here and there. I wanted a tough soundtrack to reflect the boiling anger of the main native character and listened to a lot of native rap music looking for the perfect tracks. The Dead Indians fit the bill. This track didn't make it into the film, the producers took it out for some reason. Too much cussin' on the mic perhaps?



My Present Age

16. Donauschingen
(Peter Kruder's Donaudampfschifffahrtsgesellschaftskapitänskajütenremix)
- Trüby Trio


I have been working on My Present Age - an adaptation of Guy Vanderhaeghe's novel of the same name - for ten years. The story of a divorcee-to-be who gets too much into his own head - Ed is given to wild flights of fantasy that have wreaked his relationship with Victoria. This piece off the classic Kruder and Dorfmeister's K&D sessions would go very nicely with the off kilter comic tone of the film. With a bigger budget this time I just might be able to afford it.

17. You're Gonna Get Yours - Public Enemy

In My Present Age there is a character called Rubacek. She is maybe 20 years old on a good day, but she claims to have an extensive criminal past and has a memoir she is writing based on some hard prison time she also claims to have done. This song should play as she drives her purple vintage Grand Prix around town.



O Cannabis

18. Double Drums (DJ DSL Mix) - Peace Orchestra

I was hired to rewrite a script called O Cannabis - I threw out the script, kept the title, and started over. The tale of a hapless farmer who has bankrupted the family raising ostriches and llamas, O Cannabis tracks the Potter family as they turn to growing marijuana to save the farm. Because this is well trod territory, I have to aim to put a new spin on this type of story, and I thought that this track would go well with and in beautiful contrast to the wide open skies of Saskatchewan where this is set. Imagine smoking a fatty and relaxing to this remix as the prairie wheat and country bumpkins drift by.
19. The Day My Baby Gave Me A Surprize - Devo

I just wrote my first TV pilot. A half hour comedy penned collectively with fellow screenwriters Dan Williams and Lienne Sawatsky. Brannen is a handsome detective who solves odd ball crimes in the Plateau neighbourhood of Montreal and he has lots of trouble with ladies. I thought this would make a great titles sequence song. The poster image is a mock-up for demonstration purposes and by no way implies that Jon Dore (featured) is associated with the show.

20. The Cowboy Thong - Schaun Tozer & Dan Seguin

Because we couldn't get The Magnificent Seven title music, the composer for Bad Money did a 'version' for the film. We recorded with a horn section and a few percussionists - it was a fun day in the studio.

21. Track 12 - Andy Greatrix

We recorded a lot of country music for Population 420 - funny ersatz hurtin' song that my co-director Michael Gregory wrote the lyric for. However they aren't great listening songs for my purposes here. So this is the instrumental version of one of the songs we used a lot in the film. The pedal steel player, Andy Greatrix, was super talented and rock solid, so we just let him go. It is a one take track and has flaws but I really like the feel of this one.

22. Fry 'em Right

Another snippet from Population 420. Some wisdom from a local character on the deeper meaning and nuance of ordering eggs.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Significant Digits

2009 was damn busy. Not much time to investigate new music, can't listen to music while I'm writing... in short, far too few tunes. Finding stuff and compiling the mix could break this terrible pattern.

But theme, theme, theme, theme....


Books scattered, papers strewn, digi-bookmarks marked. I was getting ready to teach an undergraduate course called "New Media" (not my title) that would be focusing on the computer as cultural artifact -- getting inside that badass black box and theorizing the chip out of it. Had machines on my mind, algorithms on the brain, codes in my nodes.


The digging began with music that was made with computers, and led me around to early stuff that experimented with electronic sounds, and later stuff that keeps on trucking with electronics and computers with the same enthusiasm as the pioneers. I liked what I found.


I was also lured in by groups and songs that were about these things in name/theme only. One gets the impression that you can hardly consider yourself a band these days (or those days) if you don't have at least one album that celebrates electronics (or robots).

Those 0s and 1s on the album cover are my digits, by the way. I didn't realize until after I'd designed this that it could look like finger puppet penises and vaginas. Well, if you fancy that interp (my new word for today, rhymes with 'perp' as used on CSI or Law & Order SVU or any other acronymmed TV cop show), you're welcome to it. Really, though, I was trying to allude to the musician's hand betwix' the computerized mix.

So on with the data:


1. Detune / Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna 1:07


I broke a wee rule here, since this track is actually composed by Karlheinz Essl, who will also be providing us with track 20. But this song is damn short, and is played by a whole orchestra, which track 20 is not, so really, there's a lot of different musicians involved.
Essl, an Austrian "composer, performer, improviser, media artist and composition teacher," uses a lot of computing in compositions, music installations, and performances. Detune is a "fragment for oboe and large orchestra", written for the 40th anniversary of the Vienna Symphony Orchestra.


Every time you refresh Karlheinz's homepage, there's a new photo of him, along with a weird phrase that may or may not be machine generated. Included are such things as:

trims a modest technique
fails to achieve the proposed sentence
messes around with the problematic search
flattens the inner revelation
obeys the essence of a junction
departs from his data track

2. electric to me turn / bruce haack 1:53

This was a fun find. This guy is my alma mater, for god's sake. He's apparently from Nordegg, a town not far from Rocky Mountain House (Alberta, Canada), which Cucumbah and I happened to drive through this summer. If I'd known about Haack, I would have asked about him in the town museum (doubles as the coffee shop). Word is, Haack tried to get into University of Alberta's music program, but was shown the hand. He took psychology instead, and then went off to NYC to get groovy and experimental in ways probably frowned on by central-west Albertans at that time. Have a look at these vids and fall in love like I did.



And that's not nearly all, folks. Check out Haack's 'dermatron'... a human theremin, plays on skin, not air:



Perhaps the neatest thing about Haack is that a large part of his discography is made up of albums for kids, featuring "Miss Nelson".


























3. Take It In / Hot Chip 4:08

I love how this song moves back and forth between arty dissonant pop and 80s inspirational easy listening.
This track is from their latest album, one life stand.


4. Summertime Clothes / Animal Collective 4:30

Animal Collective's latest album, Merriweather Post Pavilion, made it onto a bunch of 'top' lists for best music of 2009, and rightly so. This is music for the church choirs of the future. The electroplay makes a perfectly calibrated nest for the complex vocal layering -- and these guys are really singing. Big bonus points for having an album cover image that fucks with our perceptual apparatus.


5. Step Aside / Efterklang 4:39

Efterklang is a Danish group with 3 studio albums (newest one, Magic Chairs, being released any day now). Step Aside is from their first (2004). Wikipedia reports that Efterklang means "remembrance" or "reverberation". They're coming to play a small venue in Montreal shortly -- looking forward to seeing how they fill the room with that sweet, seductive sound. They performed their entire second album, Parades, with the Danish National Chamber Orchestra. Check out 'Caravan':



Update: Checked out the show at the small venue. It was well attended and supremely enjoyable.
When they introduced "Step Aside," I felt like they were playing it just for me. This is a truly happy bunch of musicians, who smile as they sing. They're also a very generous and caring band, treating both their compositions and their audience like precious jewels. I left the show with a profoundly calm optimism I hadn't felt for some time.

6. Symphony For A Spider Plant / Mort Garson 2:41

Mort Garson is another born-in-Canada (New Brunswick) electro pioneer, known mainly for his Moog synthesizer compositions during the 60s and 70s, especially his "The Zodiac: Cosmic Sounds", with tracks for every astrological sign (Elektra Records (1967)).
Though there are spacier songs out there (enjoy "Deja Vu" from "Ataraxia The Unexplained" (1975) below), my four years of greenhouse work compelled me to choose from a Garson album entitled "Mother Earth's Plantasia...warm earth music for plants... and the people who love them" (1976). Other track titles: Concerto for Philodendron and Pathos, Swingin' Spathiphyllums, Ode to an African Violet...:





7. skip for love / minikomi 3:19

I found this cool track on a chiptune blog out of Australia. Chiptune is a type of music generated by computer or sound chips (e.g. from Atari, Nintendo, Game Boy, etc.), or that generates the sound chip sound using other means.
minkomi 'itself' is apparently from Australia, residing in Japan, and recently launched M>E>T>R>O>D>U>B, a dub-oriented chiptune label.

8. Dancing Choose / TV On The Radio 2:56

I first saw TV on the Radio on the Colbert Report, likely a billion years after 'the kids' had picked up on this group. This album is apparently the more poppy of all their efforts... I like the media frenzy whipped by the title and first lines (about the newspaper man), not to mention the album name (Dear Science).


9. One Note Samba / Jean-Jacques Perrey & Ger… 2:08

One Note Samba was originally 'Samba de Uma Nota S
o,
composed by Antonio Carlos Jobim. It appeared on the Grammy-winning 1963 Getz/Byrd/Jobim album "Jazz Samba". This version is by Jean-Jacques Perrey and Gershon Kingsley, from their 1967 collaboration, Kaleidoscopic Vibrations: Spotlight on the Moog (1967). Perrey was experimenting with sound looping, splicing with tape and scissors when he befriended Robert Moog, to become an early Moog synth musician. Check out the Moog-less one note melody line with Jobim, lyrics, backup vocals and flute:



AND Ella's scat rendition:



10. Let X = X / Laurie Anderson 3:54

"Let it Be" for postmoderns. From Big Science (1982). Genius words. "It's a sky-blue sky. Satellites are out tonight!" An especially appropriate song by NASA's first ever artist-in-residence.

"Oh boy. Right. Again."

Let Laurie = Laurie:





11. To A Little Radio / Chumbawamba 1:08

Must divulge the embarrassing truth that I thought this was a Sting song, having heard his version first, as "The Secret Marriage" on "...Nothing Like The Sun" (1987). I now know that this was a composition by Hanns Eisler, a product of a longstanding creative collaboration with Bertolt Brecht. This was part of "Hollywood Songbook" which Eisler composed in exile, in California, where he worked writing popular film scores (two of them Oscar-nominated). Hollywood Songbook is a "cycle of art songs" -- lieder -- based on poems, many by Brecht, including this one, An den kleinen Radioapparat. Media studies is fond of citing Brecht's reflections on radio's democratic potential.

"Radio is one sided when it should be two. It is purely an apparatus for distribution, for mere sharing out. So here is a positive suggestion: change this apparatus over from distribution to communication. The radio would be the finest possible communication apparatus in public life, a vast network of pipes. That is to say, it would be if it knew how to receive as well as transmit, how to let the listener speak as well as hear, how to bring him into a relationship instead of isolating him.“
Chumbawamba did right to stick to Brecht, and not write new lyrics like Sting did. Here it is with the original German poem:



12. Golden Phone / Micachu 2:44

Don't know much about Micachu, but really enjoy this album, Jewellery (2009). It's complicated, tough to listen to at times/in places, sweet and dainty in others. Dissonant, experimental, spastic, captivating.



13. Plug Me In / Add N To (X) 5:32

This song's title refers to electronics. The band's name is an equation. It's the perfect combo for this mix. Add (N) to (X) is also fond of making sex-themed vids. The "Plug Me In" video adopts porn vid stylings while featuring sexy women having hot fun amid a variety of gadgets -- see it, read about it here.

Another Add (N) to (X) song called "Metal Fingers in My Body" a racy 'sex with robots' animation.




14. Abwärts / Echokrank 2:12

I don't know anything about this group, just stumbled on this song at the site of "Gagarin Records", which might be defunct. Also have no idea what the title of this song means, but am quite curious. If you find out, let me know. I would put a picture of them up, but Blogspot doesn't let me use the paste function anymore for some reason. So no more photos in this post. Here's a video that pans back on the photo I would have included:




15. 09 The Last Song-1 / Plant Life 3:37

PlantLife, out of LA, are Jack Splash, Panda One, Dina Deadly and DJ Rashida. They've described their sound as 'tomorrow music', a mix of funk, electro, hiphop, disco, bit o' this, bit o' that, eclectic-like. Shout out to DJ Jesh for suggesting it for my disk. This disk needed some groove.

16. Are Friends Electric / The Dead Weather 4:25

A remake of Tubeway Army/Gary Numan's "Are Friends Electric?" by "American alternative rock supergroup," The Dead Weather (says Wikipedia). Cucumbah thought it was a bit heretical to include this cover -- the Numan original is luscious. But doesn't The Dead Weather one grow on you, too? A Numan fanvid for comparative purposes:




17. 22 Moog Cookbook - 01 - Black Hole Sun 4:23

A tribute to Moogs and Moog Music, Moog Cookbook is a 2-person band that composes everything on analog synthesizers. The Moog Cookbookis their 1995 album. (Love how this article from the Moog archive talks about how Canadian customs officials wouldn't let the early Moog in the country... a cultured Quebecois customs officer, versed in 'musique concrete,' saves the day and gets the papers signed.)

In the spirit of homage, I chose Black Hole Sun in honour of A-Funk's version on last year's "Not ABBA" compilation. I hope this nod to Soundgarden reworkings can be a continuing theme for our group.

18. Loop duplicate my heart / Suburban Kids with Biblical Names 3:07

Cheerful Swedish boy duo, singing about love and computers. Fits the bill. Another taste:



19. Jetpack Blues, Sunset Hues / Anamanaguchi 3:28

Couldn't have a computer music themed disk without including some more 8-bit chiptune, of the Nintendo sort. Anamanaguchi's psychedelic graphics and jumpy bitmaps cook up the right dose of hyper (hold the Ritalin!):




20. Hoquetus / Essl, Karlheinz 3:43


I love that this song uses fragments of speech as its structural elements. At least, that's what they seem like to me. Nothing better than bits and blurbs of chit and chat that make no sense, but generate an arresting pattern. Apparently, Essl performed this live on "m@ze°2", his computer-based instrument (23 March and 19 November, 1999). Here's a look at the instrument, Karlheinz's performance style. This one's definitely got a bit of Hoquetus happening, oo-oo, aa-aa, ee-ee:



21. IBM 1403 (Printer) / Jóhann Jóhannsson 9:33

I love the buildup in this song. It's beautiful. At first I thought it would be too snoozy for this mix, but I'd never take it out now. It's from Icelander Johannsson's 2006 album (4AD) entitled "IBM 1401, A User's Manual," which consists of 5 tracks inspired by a recording Johannsson's father made of an IBM mainframe computer. He had been the chief maintenance engineer for the 1401 since it's arrival in Iceland in 1964. The story of the computer, the work of the engineers and technicians, their efforts to make it perform outside its business capacities -- they made music and recordings -- as well as the funeral ceremony they held to commemorate it when it was dismantled in 1971, is behind Johannsson's project and compositions. The story is touching -- read more about it here.

Here's Track 1, IBM 1401 Processing Unit



22. daisy / IBM 704, 1962 1:39

In 1961, the IBM 7094 was programmed to 'sing' -- this was the song, Daisy Bell. It was also the song HAL sang before being forever unplugged in 2001: A Space Odyssey. I thought it was an appropriate outro to the disk. A suitable ending to these liner notes, I think, is this 11:00 youtube video that's called "Hal 9000's voice played 2000 times slower"... it's cool and creepy.