I thought I would reblog this because if I have the time I will definitely give it a go. Robotic listening ought to be really cool.
Last Fm: 'Do You Have Robot Ears?'
I thought I would reblog this because if I have the time I will definitely give it a go. Robotic listening ought to be really cool.
I just wanted to recount some thoughts on CDs and some (rare) issues that have cropped up recently. Remarks on Sugar's recent Copper Blue reissue and The Sonics on the 2003Psycho-Sonic compilation after the jump. Apologies in advance for any moaning. Another tiny item of news is that I've decided to start compiling a discography for music you absolutely have to listen to in mono (vinyl or CD), head-on. The first entry will be Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators. The intial entries are going to be largely Psychedelic and Garage rock, I hope to branch out after that.
This is just a brief update covering some changes made to the overall structure of the blog. Mainly to content management. You will now see on the right a list of labels which in time I hope will do a good job of categorizing the posts. There's also some links to friends' projects. Hopefully there will be more collaboration on those fronts soon.
There are also some new pages: my editorial policy of sorts, which I felt the need to draw up because I'm trying to get some more contributors on board, and my page for submissions as I feel the need to get some submissions in to grow the coverage and add in some serendipity to the enterprise.
Of all the Alternative Rock stories of the 1980s which followed the cresting Nirvana into the early 90s, it is perhaps that of Bob Mould which has, at least on this side of the pond, struggled to be told. Bob Mould rose to prominence in the seminal Hüsker Dü. That band had a rock ‘n’ roll rivalry with fellow Minneapolis band, The Replacements. Much of their material was released on SST, the independent label of Black Flag’s Gregg Ginn. They influenced both Pixies and My Bloody Valentine, to name but two acts, and they were responsible along with groups like REM for appropriating a certain 1960s pop jangle for the wider Alternative Rock scene. This trend matured in the 1990s and is well epitomised in albums like Teenage Fanclub’s Grand Prix and the first album of Mould’s second group, Sugar: Copper Blue. British bands like Yuck and Gross Magic, and indeed the night's support act Cloud Nothings, owe an awful lot to the roughing work done by Mould and his contemporaries in the 1980s and the perfected models they left in the 1990s.
More after the jump.