Exotic, jazz, kraut, pop, psych, obscure: good music we can know

Exotic, jazz, kraut, pop, psych, obscure: good music we can know

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Somewhere A Mountain is Moving: The Left Banke- Walk Away Renee/Pretty Ballerina (1967)


Another sweet musical gift from my dear friend Morgan, although it must be said in this case that the credit must fall at least equally on the shoulders of his goodly woman, and my own very very dear friend, Julia, the inimitable Julia of Just Julia infamy. The breadth of the man's knowledge and enthusiasms and the depth of the fine lady's pop instincts and curatorial sense has made them excellent fellows and friends to one such as myself, both before and after their fairy-tale coupling, and their bringing into my life The Left Banke is only one of the latest examples of their charms. Happy Mother's Day to you, you crazy kids!

And happy Mother's Day to you, Mom. I love you.

This excellent record from the Left Banke- a band unfailingly referred to as "baroque," or more amusingly, "Bach-rock," for whatever that's worth- has been in frequent rotation around these parts, ever since I first laid ears on it. I, and likely you as well, had heard the stellar "Walk Away Renee" somewhere before, but the real treat was the opening track, "Pretty Ballerina." An unbelievably pretty song about, simply put, a date with a pretty ballerina, the whole thing seems a little twee on its face until the singer poetically non-sequiturs, "somewhere a mountain is moving... afraid it's moving without me." It's hard to explain, but to me, that registers as a thunderclap, a fiercely serene surprise attack of Taoist profundity lurking like a perfect tiger in a song that might otherwise be described as an above-average, more baroque early-Zombies-esque pop single. It's inspired. There might not be another moment on the record as subtly radical as that- or even radical at all- but it is an excellent album the whole way through, and any Zombies comparisons are well-deserved compliments. Especially enjoyable are the selections, "Barterers and their Wives" and "Shadows Breaking Over My Head." Fans of Love (especially circa Da Capo), The Zombies, British Invasion, and Faux-British invasion (these cats definitely hail from New York) will likely enjoy this one. I certainly recommend it very highly, so get it while it's hot.

LEFT BANKE

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Mandarin Tornado: "Chinese Surf"- Non Stop Dancing (19??)


My friend Morgan gave this to me a few months ago and I've been meaning to post it ever since. Positively delightful Chinese surf-pop instrumentals. This is really just lethally pleasant. Not much info seems to exist on this, however, so all I can say is get it y'all.

NON STOP

Upon performing a perfunctory googling of this record, I seem to find that it likely originated at FM Shades, a blog with a lot to offer in its archives despite having slowed to a crawl of late. Mr. Shades aptly compares the sound of this record to Joe Meek, an observation which may titillate you Meek heads out there and persuade you to try this album on for size. Anyway, whether you obtain it from here or there, you should really give this one a "spin." And for Christ's sake, Morgan, don't be afraid to drop a comment now and again. I know you visit here often. Love you bro, see you 4th of July.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Monkey Drop, Good Gracious!: Scotty- Draw Your Brakes (1971)


For those of you listening to the The Harder They Come soundtrack thinking, who the ding dong is this Scotty fellow, and where can I get more of this charming fellow, babblin' as he does o'er top these old-school rocksteady beats, I have something for you. It is this.

Some kind of "Best of" comp from 1971, as far as I can tell. Seems the delightful Scotty dropped a lot of singles in his day but not much in the way of long-players at this point, so this serves as a sort of debut LP. In fact, it seems it was also released under the name "School Days" and presented more as an LP, with a slightly different tracklist- but I confess I'm not too keenly interested in the chronology of all this. What's important is that this is early-ass, delightful reggae, Scotty's singjay proto-toasts warm and unintelligible- somewhere between righteousness and baby talk, and everything is just as pleasing and cool as can be... as a very young man I remember listening to my father's The Harder They Come album on vinyl, staring into the impossibly tuff cover, and boggling at the singular weirdness of "Draw Your Brakes," a song unlike any I had ever heard before. Scotty may not have another song quite as devastatingly tite as "Draw Your Brakes" on Draw Your Brakes, but the rest of the tracks deliver about as much as you might hope.

On a related note, I finally tracked down a full-length of another group responsible for a fantastic track on that most-gateway of reggae drugs, The Harder They Come soundtrack: The Slickers, of the unbelievably cool "Johnny Too Bad," and their LP, Many Rivers To Cross. It was pretty fucking disappointing, actually. But you can't go wrong with Scotty, my brethren. Go to it.

R O G A R

Monday, May 2, 2011

A Fine Safari Indeed: Flash Strap Mix #1- Grzimek Safari


Ok, so this is the first of a short series of mixes I'm thinking of doing. There's been a rapturous surplus of truly great music congregating openly in these waters of late, and I just sort of got the urge to throw together a mix in recognition of this bounty. Perhaps, too, it is necessary for me to commemorate a personal moment: this week my Safari, having spent s few weeks collapsed in the dust like a toothless elephant, came back from the shop all patched up, just as functional and pretty as a pony. It was a day that ensured my ability to go on many more motor safaris through the Mexican Serengeti, a tape in the deck and pulqu矇 in the jar. Not only that, I can once again drive my boat (The Continente Nero, a Seahawk Series II 9-foot inflatable rowboat- I assure you it is thoroughly awesome and definitely hilarious) to the presa and hunt for shoreline ruins and tribes of goats. So I'm feeling positive about the future.

This is not just a compilation of twenty-one excellent songs, cleverly assembled and sequenced so as to afford an enjoyable hour-and-some-change of superlative musical diversion. It also, more importantly, provides an opportunity to trace back thru the blogs to find the context and albums-in-entirety of any songs that may strike your fancy; click on a track from the playlist below, and you'll find a link back to the source from whence, for me, these shining jewels originated. The majority of these sources are wonderful blogs, and while most of them get more traffic than my own on the whole, I nobly urge you to visit them, enjoy their bounty, and give thanks where you feel it is due. Then, you know, come back and say hey.

This is the first of what could be several, if there's any interest. Vol. 2 is due to drop in a couple weeks regardless of y'all's fervor or indifference, but after that we can talk.


1. Fear Not- Daniel Higgs
2. Get Thy Bearings- Donovan
3. Contemplating Mind- Barrington Spence
4. Come Show Me The Way- Disco Blaze
5. Andalucia- Ranil y Su Conjunto Tropical
6. Pauline- Docteur Nico/Orchestra African Fiesta
7. My Mary (More Than Ever)- Jade
8. Domain of the Nadir Pasha- Dzhavanshir Kuliyev
9. Baia- Jose Oliveira
10. Funerale Di Un Contadino- Chico Buarque & Ennio Morricone
11. Phir Teri Yaad- Hemant Bhosle
12. Quicksand Beach Party- Missing Brazilians
13. Bogey Wobble- Paul McCartney
14. Blind- Deep Purple
15. I've Got Lightning- David Bowie
16. Techniques Special- Techniques All Stars
17. Ballake- Bembeya Jazz National
18. Cumulonimbus- Zru Vogue
19. Beautiful Black Woman- The Jihad
20. My Tane- Johnny Pineapple And His Orchestra
21. Til I Die (Desper mix)- The Beach Boys

GRZIMEK SAFARI


By the way, the image on the cover is a photo of famed zoologist Bernhard Grzimek zipping towards Uganda's Murchison Falls in his amphibious car. In my best moments, I think I can almost smell the shadow of something so great as this. I wonder if there's a tape deck in that thing.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

The Secret Genius of Ferrante & Teicher: Soundproof! (1956); Denizens of the Deep (1950)



At this point it's not exactly breaking news if I confide to you that Ferrante & Teicher's history contains richer moments of experimentation and creativity than one will usually find in the extremely easy easy-listening records that compose the bulk of their legacy. The fact that they began their careers as piano-treating, texture-seeking Julliard prodigies is by this point well-known to those with the proclivity to know such things, but let's shed a little more light on the subject today. from wiki: The duo... experimented with prepared pianos, adding paper, sticks, rubber, wood blocks, metal bars, chains, glass, mallets, and other found objects to piano string beds. In this way they were able to produce a variety of bizarre sounds that sometimes resembled percussion instruments, and at other times resulted in special effects that sounded as if they were electronically synthesized.

This period in their career is full of fascinating stuff, the textures and arrangements positively bursting with invention and the joy of discovery. One of the finest examples of the boys at their best is the 1956 album, Soundproof, a Dimension-X version of an easy listening record that's been compared to Joe Meek, John Cage, and Moondog, among others. This is fascinating stuff indeed, made all the more bizarre by their fairly conventional song choices- songs like "Greensleeves" and "Mississippi Boogie" find themselves run through extremely different treatments than they would on almost any other record, at least any other white record, in 1956. Especially wonderful are the more Exotica-flavored selections, "African Echoes", "Baia" ("Baia" being always a highlight of a record, it's such a fantastic composition), and "Dark Eyes". The dark, echoey tones and flat, alien percussion of the treated piano lends itself to a truly unique but quintessentially Exotic sensation. This is a must-have.

By the way, if anyone can hook me up with the follow-up record, Soundblast, I'd be most grateful. I understand it is more of the same in the best of ways, but can't seem to locate a source for it. BREAKING NEWS: Holly from Den O' Sin has graciously heeded the call and generously dropped a post with a link over at her spot. Avest yourselves, fellows.

SOUNDPROOF!



As good as a good F&T record can be, they almost always ply their insane talents in the service of standards and lite-pop selections. This provides and excellent contrast of course, and is especially delightful when the song is as awesome as "Baia" or "Tabu" (which they knock wholly out of the park on Hi-Fi Fireworks and Pianos in Paradise), but it means dealing with more than a little outsized wackiness as they caper about in and demolish innocent little bland songs. Usually this is a good thing, but the idea of a record comprised exclusively of F&T originals is pretty alluring. Compositions actually designed to showcase their sensibilities, not retrofitted to acommodate them; if only there were more of this.

What there is, is Denizens of the Deep, a record the duo began making in 1950 at the start of their recording career, and abandoned. A marvellous set of more abstract compositions describing undersea motifs and moods, this could damn near have been their masterpiece. The more ambient approach causes it to resemble a bit of fantastic soundtrack work, or perhaps something by Sven Libaek. Unfortunately, the tapes in all their aged glory don't really sound that great- the music is positively superlative but it does compete with some vicious tape hiss. (Compounding this problem is the fact that my copy is in 128 kbps- if anyone has a better copy, consider throwing us all a bone in the comments.)

Now that I've denegrated the sound quality of this record, let me back up and reiterate. This shit is crazy, crazy good. Lost Masterpiece to the Max. Believe in it, my friends. When you hear the unhinged madness of "The Loch Ness Monster Stomp", you will thank me for convincing you to go on this journey, and that is a promise. If you're still unsure, then have a look at this tracklist, and feel your desire for undersea-themed music surge and rush, flooding your heart with an imperative to night-swim in a lit pool, wearing a SCUBA mask and playing this fantastic record.

1. Underwater Expectations
2. Things to Come at Sea
3. Whiptailed Stingrays
4. Barracudas on the Chase
5. Spinning Steelheads
6. Floating Manatees
7. Plunging Sharks & Diving Swordfish
8. Crafty Bowfin
9. At Sea Watching Voracious Piranha
10. Searching the Seas
11. Loch Ness Monster Stomp
12. Electric Eels
13. Treacherous Octopi & Devilfish
14. Manatees & Dolphins
15. Sneaky Spiny Sturgeons
16. Ink of the Giant Squids
17. Underwater Reflections
18. A Whale of an Aquarian Finale at Sea


DENIZENS OF THE DEEP

(I originally found this over at Music for Maniacs, but that maniac left out all the track names- I have rectified the oversight and provided my own link, but feel free to give him, as well as myself, some love over this share. Also feel free to share in the comments what you know about all the secret goodnesses of Ferrante & Teicher, as my collection and knowledge is far from complete.)

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Get Thee Ready to Go to Second Level: Jean Michel Jarre- Oxygene (1976); Zoolook (1986)


You've probably all heard this album, seeing as it's sold over 15 million copies and is considered one of the most successful and influential electronic albums of all time, but just in case this bold shit remains a mystery to any of you, here's a 320 rip. Not as experimental as the bulk of his forebears and contemporaries, his pop instincts infuse the minimalist synthscapes with an unexpected, pure magic. This is one of my favorites of all time- I bought it at a backwoods thrift shop when I was 13 or so just because I mistakenly thought the cover art was a Roger Dean piece (something which seemed very cool at the time, only moderately so now), and when I finally gave it an honest spin I was transfixed. Dreamy and apocalyptic: perfect.

As for that cover art, it's by Michel Granger, and the original was given to Jarre by his future wife, Charlotte Rampling. The painting served as the primary inspiration for the record, interestingly enough. For those of you who don't know Mrs. Rampling, here she is as "Consuela" with the mighty Zed of Zardoz:


Oh, boy. Oh, heck yeah. It all makes sense somehow... what a groovy cosmic coupling.

OXYGENE



Jarre's next best effort, and by far his craziest, is this twisted little gem. A bit like Oxygene meets My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, Zoolook finds Jarre augmenting his soundscapes with the "actual" playing of art-funksters like Adrian Belew and Laurie Anderson, in service of a group of airy, experimental songs piled high with ethno-samples in a multitude of languages (these, among others: Aboriginal, Afghan, Arabic, Balinese, Bhundi, Chinese, Dutch, English, Eskimo, French, German, Hungarian, Indian, Japanese, Malagasy, Malayan, Pygmy, Polish, Quechua, Russian, Sioux, Spanish, Swedish, Tibetan and Turkish). Fans of Holger Czukay, Brian Eno, and David Byrne may very well be pleased with this sample-laden abstract funkiness, which retains a great deal of Jarre's pop accessibility while achieving a surprisingly challenging listen. Good stuff if you ask me, again in 320.

ZOOLOOK

(link now fixed)

Sunday, April 3, 2011

"This Ain't Rock n' Roll, This is in Strict Violation of International Law": David Bowie- Shadow Man (1971), Strange Fascination (1974)


Six unreleased Bowie outtakes from the Hunky Dory period. A little rough around the edges, and as much akin to Man Who Sold the World rough drafts or Arnold Corns demos as anything off Hunky Dory, these tracks are nonetheless essential, delicious Bowie secrets for any Fan of the Man. The track "Looking For a Friend" can be heard elsewhere (in less clunky form) on Bowie at the Beeb, but the rest are otherwise previously unbeknownst to me in any other ramification (except for "Tired of My Life", which contains prominent components of the much later "It's No Game" from Scary Monsters). Especially cool is the chugging mutant psych-blues of "I've Got Lightning"... when I listen to Man Who Sold the World, I wish the whole record might have sounded more like this.

1. I'm Just Looking for a Friend
2. How Lucky You Are
3. Shadow Man
4. I've Got Lightning
5. Rupert The Riley
6. Tired of my Life

SHADOW MAN




Here's a fantastic soundboard bootleg of a '74 live show in LA. There's lots of Diamond Dogs material here, including a pretty solid rendition of the "Sweet Thing" suite. Diamond Dogs is one of my favorite records, possibly my favorite "non-Berlin-period" Bowie effort, so I embrace with wide open arms the chance to hear some quality recordings of the Diamond Dogs tour, which I understand is a fairly rare proposition. I just recently started listening to this one, but it's quickly risen to become one of my favorite live Bowie recordings, bootleg or official.

Other highlights include "Big Brother", the criminally underappreciated Young Americans outtake "It's Gonna Be Me" (holy holy that's a good track), virtually any thing else from Diamond Dogs, and the always welcome "Time" and "Rock n' Roll Suicide".

CD 1
Intro
1984
Rebel Rebel
Moonage Daydream
Sweet Thing
Changes
Suffragette City
Aladdin Sane
All The Young Dudes
Cracked Actor
Rock And Roll With Me

CD 2
Knock On Wood
It's Gonna Be Me
Space Oddity
Diamond Dogs
Big Brother
Time
The Jean Genie
Rock 'n' Roll Suicide
John I'm Only Dancing (Again)

I got both of these gems from World of Bowie Bootlegs, so make sure to pay the place a visit. You'll have to, to get this Strange Fascination.

STRANGE FASCINATION


Hey y'all, don't be afraid to drop a comment, now. We were doing so good there for a while.

Friday, April 1, 2011

"A Horn Player With A Really Fucked-Up Axe": The Velvet Underground- The Legendary Guitar Amp Tapes (1968-69)


A monstrously necessary bootleg of the Velvet Underground playing various shows at Boston Tea Party in '68 and '69, as heard through the jagged, swirling prism of Lou Reed's guitar amp. Some fan made the recordings by simply plugging into Reed's amp, and there you have it. The results are juggernaut.

The visionary genius of Reed's guitar playing is no secret at this point. From the epileptic free jazz of "I Heard Her Call My Name" to the sparkling, quicksilver rhythm guitar on tracks like "What Goes On" (with the deranged and brilliant "Sister Ray" lurking conspicuously in between), his work has been undeniably influential and largely unparalleled. One doesn't need this tape to hear the free jazz/avant-garde influences of Ornette Coleman and Sonny Sharrock in Reed's playing- evidence abounds, especially in other live recordings (especially in the indispensable Quine Tapes)- but this is a mammoth-sized treat for those obsessed. Along with the marvellous bootleg Sweet Sister Ray, it's one of the most focused and cohesive dissertations on a specialized aspect of VU history.

Reed's guitar is all the way the hell up front, but the rest of the band isn't wholly excluded. The drums are about as audible and visceral as ever, and the bass, organ, and second guitar can be heard (if more as a support than anything else). The vocals are fairly well washed out, but they are there. This dynamic works best on the more savage compositions, however; a selection like "Candy Says" may suffer from such reduction more than anything. On the other hand, it should come as no surprise that "Sister Ray" takes a truly awe-inspiring form here, a half-hour of passionate, furious Fire Music, a grand dichotomy of primitive pure expression and an aggressive deconstruction of the "guitar solo." "Foggy Notion", "Run Run Run", "What Goes On", and a welcome version of the somewhat rare "Move Right In" also all fare extremely well, among others. This is pure stuff. Uncut ear scag for your loud days, a real brain-stabber.

Disc 1
1. I Can't Stand It
2. Candy Says
3. I'm Waiting For The Man
4. Ferry Boat Bill
5. I'm Set Free
6. What Goes On
7. White Light/White Heat
8. Beginning To See The Light
9. Jesus

Disc Two
10. Heroin/Sister Ray
11. Move Right In
12. Run Run Run
13. Foggy Notion

AMP TAPES FOR YOUR DING DONG, JIM

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Secret Genius: Paul & Linda McCartney- Ram (1971)


Okay, let's just do it. Let's talk about Ram. This record is nothing short of a pop apocalypse to me, the place where the pleasure of the genre reaches a critical mass and just ends it all, eclipsing any other work of a Beatle or the Beatles for sheer enjoyability and playful creativity. I've been listening to this album since I was a youngster, and it's never lost a bit of its luster. Hell, I still have the same tape (not a homemade tape, either, but an official cassette release... that always pleases me, in a strange way) that my father played in his truck when I was a child, that I now play in my truck.

It rips open with the anthemic "Too Many People." This is the song that really stoked John Lennon's paranoia and bile, causing him to drop the vitriolic dis track "How Do You Sleep?", a bit of a rabid response, I would say, to such reasonable, even resonant, observations such as "Too many people preachin' practices/ Don't let em tell you what you wanna be...", but I digress. It's a good fucking song, a real satisfying slice of 70's rock for driving fast through the countryside, feeling good about who you are in the world. It's also a fairly salient entry in the Lennon-McCartney grudge myth, if you buy into that stuff, as McCartney's vague jabs at his friend seem level-headed and ultimately caring. It's followed by the doofy blues of "3 Legs", a marvellously produced trifle about a three-legged dog and a one-legged fly. It's dumb as hell lyrically but there's bigger fish to fry here, the guitars sounding as crisp and weird as they do, and the various vocal filters being applied as they are... At times, McCartney's approach really reminds me of Eno's on Here Come the Warm Jets, laying out artful but nonsensical pop abstractions, then distorting them by treating each instrument, or section, with an effect or filter or Oblique Strategy, tossing in rewarding frills and textures all over the place.

The next thing is "Ram On", an utterly, devastatingly pretty little ukulele ditty with deceptively cavernous, ramshackle production. Opening with a quick blurble of distorted tape, leading into a cascading piano line, studio chatter, and a demo-quality intro on solo uke, it builds layers from there, adding Linda's always-straightforward backing vocals, reverbed electric piano, hand claps and bongos endowed with enormous echo, more and more backing vocals, and Paul performing mouth bass; imitating then shadowing a french horn; then whistling the whole thing out... a wonderfully complex and perfectly simple 2-and-a-half minutes. A similar effect is achieved in the next track, "Dear Boy", an ecstatic revelation of his love for Linda with that divine electric piano, layers and washes of vocals (which even perform the bass line of the song, to delightful effect), and a sudden, staccato chunk of electric guitar pushing the whole thing straight up into the heavens... quite simply, these have been two of the best and coolest love songs ever made.

What Follows is "Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey", such an utterly weird little song suite that I hesitate to even describe it. He actually won a "Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocalists" Grammy for this tune, and while it seems too odd to have warranted the attention of the idiots at the Grammies, it certainly deserved its praise. Beginning with a warmly evocative childhood theme, complete with melancholy/nostalgia-inducing rainfall sounds, then imitating and sampling insect noises; reprising the first verse in a John Cleese-esque brusque British accent, and lurching into a french horn piece, followed by a giant chorus from Linda: "Heads Across the Water, Heads Across the Sky..."; the french horn coming back to accompany a "Pirates of Penzance" reminiscent bit of a maritime nonsense ditty, then back to the chorus, then out of nowhere a "weedle-weedle little gypsy getaround" diversion, back to the chorus, and fade out rocking... This is creativity operating with total confidence and utter abandon. It's so charming, you almost lose sight of how fucking all over the place and random it is. Once you've heard it, babies, it's in your life forever.

It fades into the closest thing the record has to a misstep, the ghastly, raunchy blewz of "Smile Away", a song about how smelly his feet, breath, and teeth are. It's not my favorite, but it's still kind of great. The backup vocals in particular are inspired, and you gotta give it points for being so godawful peculiar.

Side two opens on "Heart of the Country" another composition which finds Paul scatting out bass lines and imitating the other instruments. In fact, this track may be one of his all-time great vocal performances, his wistful delivery of the verses achieving a sweet perfection. It's followed by "Monkberry Moon Delight", a monstrously grotesque shanty of Tom Waits-level of bone machine ramshacklery, scary nursery rhyme imagery, and growliness. So unhinged and howlingly strange, Screamin' Jay Hawkins' perhaps-inevitable cover of it sounds positively tame by comparison. In terms of sheer strangeness as a composition, it succeeds in every way that, say, "Maxwell's Silver Hammer" might not. And again I will point out, the everything-but-the-kitchen-sink production is pure gravy. Beautiful.

The Buddy Holly-inspired "Eat at Home" I've always found pleasant but fairly inconsequential. It's central entendre is wonderfully sexy, though. "Long Haired Lady", on the other hand, is another in a series of masterpieces. Opening with the closest Linda would get to a lead vocal, she demandingly inquires, "Do ya love me like you know you ought to do?" in a flat, mock-teenage voice that always flummoxed me as a child (it's seeming so incongruously off-putting), a delivery that I now relish, especially as it contrasts to Paul's especially sweet and heartfelt delivery. It's like a version of "Paradise by the Dashboard Light" where Meat Loaf enthusiastically proposes to Ellen Foley (or was it Karla DeVito?) with the reassuring voice of an angel, pledging his eternal love to the support of heaven's horns as they both ascend to a paradise of mutual passion and devotion. Of course the track fades into a reprise of "Ram On", the album's first song of love, and of course it would have to segue into the sublime ode to teenage amor, "Back Seat of My Car." This song has been often compared to the works of Brian Wilson, both from a production and thematic content perspective, and rightly so. The relatively intimate emotions of young love (and all the friction with the girl's father that that usually entails) are here amplified to soaring, heart-exploding heights, the sentiment further heightened by an absence of the kind of goofy playfulness that's been sweetening the album up to this point. Here the record ends, and makes its stand with a gorgeous and heartfelt finale, declaring of their love "Oh, we believe that we can't be wrong."

I strongly suspect that any of you who might be reading this are already familiar with this record. If you're not, then I hope I've managed to pique your interest, and if you are, I hope I've provoked in you a desire to throw it on give it another listen. Seriously, if you don't know this joint in your bones, then get it inside of you, tonight. I'm looking at you, Jacob Kerner. This is Paul's best solo work by a mile, and one of the best albums of all time.

Again, I won't be posting a download link here for fear of being taken out by an anti-Beatles-pirating death squad, but I'm sure you can find it out there in that big old world, my friends.

Also, my friend from UbuWeb has recently tipped me to the delightful and surprising fact that Paul recorded an instrumental version of this record, under the pseudonym of Percy "Thrills" Thrillington. It's god damn great, and I'll be chatting you and your computers up on that subject in the coming days as well. Search it out, fellows, and dare to dream of greatness. Good night.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Secret Genius: Paul McCartney- "Lost" McCartney II (1980)


Here is the so-called "lost" McCartney II. Like most things bearing the oft-spurious title of "Lost Album," the truth of this one is that it is a collection of outtakes, excluded tracks, and extended or alternate takes. It offers, to my ears, no greater or more complete a vision of the record than the extended rerelease of the original discussed below, but it does make for fascinating listening for those, like me, who always want to "hear more." Get it if you want it, I shouldn't have to convince you. There's some seriously cool mysteries on here, though.

CHECK YOUR MACHINE