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From: owner-mobility-digest@lists.xmission.com (mobility-digest)
To: mobility-digest@lists.xmission.com
Subject: mobility-digest V1 #356
Reply-To: mobility
Sender: owner-mobility-digest@lists.xmission.com
Errors-To: owner-mobility-digest@lists.xmission.com
Precedence: bulk
X-No-Archive: yes
mobility-digest Tuesday, March 30 1999 Volume 01 : Number 356
Re: (mobility) videos
(mobility) best albums
Re: (mobility) videos
(mobility) Wait A Minute
Re: (mobility) videos
(mobility) moby @ transformation 2, Cleveland 4/17/99
(mobility) ***review contest***
(mobility) Moby On TV
(mobility) "Run On" review of CD1
(mobility) Review
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 27 Mar 1999 22:56:24 CST
From: "Derek Goodwrench" <dgoodwrench@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: (mobility) videos
>THAT'S WHEN I REACH FOR MY REVOLVER: Moby and some "indie kids" hanging
>around outside a supermarket. The version I know features the original
>lyrics, but as far as I'm concerned there's also a version with
censored
>lyrics.
the
>box, which explodes.
>If anybody has infos about other videos, please e-mail me!
Yes, there is a video to the edited version (called "That's When I
Knew That It Was Over".) I don't remember much about this video, but it
has scenes of Mr. Hall sitting in a car (in a forest) with a girl (on a
date?) and she keeps talking and yammering on about nothing (you can't
hear them) while Moby looks extremely bored (with a "Wish she'd shut the
hell up!" look.) It's funny, actually. I think he runs in this video,
too. I can't remember much about this video, so that's why it's really
vague. M2 plays his videos every so often.
d...
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
------------------------------
Date: 28 Mar 99 15:38:56 CST
From: Jon <jon144k@netscape.net>
Subject: (mobility) best albums
new pages:
http://www.students.uiuc.edu/~jwsingle/97.htm
(best albums of 1997)
http://www.students.uiuc.edu/~jwsingle/98.htm
(best albums of 1998)
hehehe a little shameless plug... :)
______________________________________
Jon
jon144k@netscape.net
http://www.students.uiuc.edu/~jwsingle/
"dude get out of here man" -Olly
_______________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
Get your own FREE, personal Netscape WebMail account today at http://webm=
ail.netscape.com.
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 28 Mar 1999 17:26:53 -0600 (CST)
From: bill tatalovich <wt3@cec.wustl.edu>
Subject: Re: (mobility) videos
On Sat, 27 Mar 1999, Derek Goodwrench wrote:
> Yes, there is a video to the edited version (called "That's When I
> Knew That It Was Over".) I don't remember much about this video, but it
> has scenes of Mr. Hall sitting in a car (in a forest) with a girl (on a
> date?) and she keeps talking and yammering on about nothing (you can't
> hear them) while Moby looks extremely bored (with a "Wish she'd shut the
> hell up!" look.) It's funny, actually. I think he runs in this video,
> too. I can't remember much about this video, so that's why it's really
> vague. M2 plays his videos every so often.
Yeah...the version of the "That's When I Reach for My Revolver" video that
I've seen is the one that Derek speaks of above. The Man (I believe it
was MTV) made him change the line in the chorus to "that's when I realize
it's over" (but left the song title the same), presumably (from what you
guys said back then) because the original "advocated suicide." A crock,
but whatever.
As to the video, it has a lot of scenes of Moby in suburbia, sitting in a
car with a girl while headbanging, and (my favorite part) where he runs
around the neighborhood and knocks over a trash can or two. The chorus
tends to show Moby on this pedestal thing singing with a bunch
of "indie kids" dancing around him. Beautifully shot video.
Other than "Honey," that's the only video I've seen. I'd love to see
more...(hint, hint).
Bill Tatalovich
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
| Reverend Bill Tatalovich | Home page: |
| | http://students.cec.wustl.edu/~wt3/ |
| wt3@cec.wustl.edu |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| personnel@kwur.wustl.edu |
| emogeek@hotmail.com |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 28 Mar 1999 20:32:06 PST
From: "Steve Giles" <power_hymn@hotmail.com>
Subject: (mobility) Wait A Minute
The new Jon Spencer Blues Explosion song "Wait A Minute" that I
wrote about earlier this week is also on an Australian CD single for
"Calvin". Moby is credited for mixing, bass, & percussion. If you've
heard JSBE explosion you know how goofy and jangly they are. This song
is more restrained, not as spasmic as Jon Spencer usually is, and
actually has a fair dose of melody. It's very bluesy and has some light
gospel sampling later on that sounds like Moby's handiwork. If you like
blues rock you'll like this song. I don't have it but I got a chance to
hear it over the weekend. The CD actually has a copyright date of 1998,
so I wonder when they collaborated.
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 28 Mar 1999 22:32:44 -0700
From: Daniel Cerman <dcerman@verinet.com>
Subject: Re: (mobility) videos
markus wollina wrote:
> Since it seems like most of you live in the US and you don't get to see
> Moby's videos on MTV US too often, here's a short description of all
> videos I know:
Thank you very much! I'm amazed at how many videos there are.
In the US, I've only seen TWIRFMR and JBT(MRv) shown on TV.
> GO (VIDEO MIX): Moby (with some HAIR!) dancing and beating on his
> keyboard, some animated images floating around. Typical early 90's
> techno video.
I didn't know there was such thing as an early '90s techno video. :)
> HYMN (THIS IS MY DREAM) (MOBY'S OWN HYMN): I think there's also a
> commercial video for this, but I've only seen this one yet. It's black
> white with Moby going around New York (I think), kissing a girl and
> other things. Moby did this video himself to proof (prove? I'm not that
> good in English) that you can do a video for less than 1000$.
"prove". and "suit". :)
A tiny low-rez of this video is on _Disk_. I saw it years ago on a
Mac at my former school, but can't use _Disk_ with Win95. It was
pretty cool, though Moby kissing that model seemed out of place.
I just got the other version of the "Hymn" video, and it was not
what I expected. I had read about it I think in a Mute press
release, and seen a couple still pictures or brief cuts from it
before, maybe on _Disk_, and then it seemed interesting. But
now I saw the whole video, and though it probably was meant to
symbolize the human condition and the fight between good and evil,
it just looked ridiculous to me.
> FEELING SO REAL (7" EDIT): Moby crashing his keyboard in a club, getting
> covered by a plants (what are those plants called that climb their way
> up on walls?) and singing "I'm feeling so real" dressed up as a woman!
Eh? I'm going to have to watch my _Rock Video Monthly_ again.
I don't remember seeing him dressed as a woman.
> EVERYTIME YOU TOUCH ME (BEATMASTERS 7" MIX): Moby, swords, skulls,
> flowers, doll parts and naked women (no, you don't get to see any
> "OBSESSIVE" parts of their bodies) with very rich colours and light
> effects. I think this is the best Moby video ever, even though he hates
> it himself.
Moby hates it? I have to agree with Moby on this one. The EYTM
video is so bad as to be practically unwatchable for me.
> INTO THE BLUE (BEATMASTERS MIX): Mimi Goese and Moby walking around in
> New York, wonderful pictures of skyscrapers and Mimi singing in front of
> some sort of a big aquarium in which Moby is swimming.
Hmmm... that sounds neat. I don't even know what Mimi looks like.
> INTO THE BLUE (SPIRITUAL MIX): same scenes, different cuts.
I'm surprised there are alternate versions of videos for so many
of these songs. This video must have a lot more video footage,
since that mix is almost nine minutes long.
> BRING BACK MY HAPPINESS (EXTENDED MIX): little animated animals in the
> style of the caricature on the single's cover running around and looking
> cute.
I wonder if Moby animated them himself.
> THAT'S WHEN I REACH FOR MY REVOLVER: Moby and some "indie kids" hanging
> around outside a supermarket. The version I know features the original
> lyrics, but as far as I'm concerned there's also a version with censored
> lyrics.
The "That's when I realize it's over" version is what was shown
in the USA, and it's different. It shows Moby in a suit running
through a suburban neighborhood.
> HONEY: 3 Mobys wearing a suite and glasses and one Moby wearing t-shirt
> and jeans come out of a box that falls from the sky. They drive around
> in a car, suddenly appear under a bed to see a girl under the shower and
> doing other surrealistic things. In the end, they all go back into the
> box, which explodes.
This is a pretty cool video, and I like it. I'm sorry I can't
say the same for most of Moby's older videos that I've seen.
But Moby's music is excellent, and that's what counts. Unlike
some of these people who seem to be able to get great videos
made, but without good songs to back them up.
Daniel Cerman
http://www.moby.org/
NP: "Spirit" ...and loving it.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 29 Mar 1999 04:25:50 -0500
From: "cuate" <kandork@msn.com>
Subject: (mobility) moby @ transformation 2, Cleveland 4/17/99
Transformation 2
Brought to you by:
Badass Productions
Date: 1999-04-17
Moved?: N
Cancelled?: N
Shutdown?: N
Venue Type: Non-Club
Price: $ (USD)
Venue:
Address:
City: Cleveland
State: Ohio
Country: United States
Estimated Attendance:
Notes:
Last Updated: 1999-03-18 19:33:01
Flyers:
With Performances by:
7up
AK 1200
Bizz
Dank
Danny the Wildchild
Dig Dug
Doughboy
Ground Zero
Heretic
Highlanders
J. Smooth
James Christian
Matt B
Moby
Richard "humpty" Vision
Rob Riddem
Run DMC
Sound by:
Lighting by:
Lasers by:
Visuals by:
Back to Event search
Total search time: 7 seconds
Copyright ⌐ 1996-1999Partner Communications Group, Inc.
Back to Ravedata's homepage
Did you know: Ravedata now has mixtapes in
realaudio, too?
> *** The email above bounced & was delayed. It originates from a non-
> *** member, non-subscribed address. I decided to forward it to the
> *** list in hopes that the information might be useful to someone.
> *** The content has been edited. <owner-mobility@lists.xmission.com>
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 29 Mar 1999 14:34:28 PST
From: "Steve Giles" <power_hymn@hotmail.com>
Subject: (mobility) ***review contest***
Before I get to the contest portion of this message, here's a tidbit I
scooped up from Sonicnet:
Moby Album Due In June
Techno/dance/ambient chameleon Moby will release his next album, Play,
in June. "It's hard to refuse a word that's followed me around so much,"
Moby wrote of the album's title in a posting on his website. "There are
some other more esoteric reasons, but I'll tell you about them later."
He added that he plans to tour North America, Europe, Australia, New
Zealand, Japan and possibly South America this year.
[Fri., Mar 26, 1999 4:34 PM EST]
Also, you can expect a review of Run On from me tomorrow. (CDMute221)
*******REVIEW CONTEST*********
**WIN: an original UHF 12" vinyl single on Sonic (an Instinct imprint)
UHF [UHF, Nov 1991] 12", Sonic, SNC 2002
NOTE: "U.H.F." and "UHF3" are the same, but "UHF 2", which was
released with "Drop A Beat", is a completely different song.
1 5:13 UHF3
2 5:14 Peace Head
3 4:51 Everything
4 5:41 Protect Write
This is one of the original 12" records Moby put out on Instinct records
under a psuedonym. The others are Moby - Mobility, Brainstorm - Rock The
House, Barracuda - Drug Fits The Face, and Voodoo Child - (self-titled).
If all goes well, there may be another contest in the future that
features one of those as the prize.
**Write a review of any album or set of singles. To enter your review in
the contest, simply post it on mobility with 'review' somewhere in the
subject header. Any kind of entry is welcome. If you want to compare
Everything Is Wrong & GnR's Use Your Illusion II, go ahead. If you want
to do Go singles vs. Into The Blue singles, go ahead. If you want to
align I Like To Score with the wheel of karma, have at it. Do a
straightforward review. Do an unconventional review. Write whatever
floats your boat.
**JUDGING: Dan Cerman, Damian, and myself will be the judges. We'll
discuss the entries privately until we concur on which review takes the
cake. Try and make it a tough decision for us, everybody. :)
**RULES: The deadline for entries is Monday, April 5th. The winner will
be announced shortly thereafter. This contest is open to subscribers of
this mailing list only. Maximum of 2 entries per person. (write more
anyway!) The contest will be cancelled if there are less than 5 people
entering the contest. I reserve all rights. I may clarify the rules if
necessary. Moby, his maneagement, and record companies are in no way
involved in this contest. This contest is my sole responsiblity and all
decisions are at my discretion. All decisions are final. Don't look a
gift horse in the mouth, etc, etc...
P.S. I can only read English. Sorry.
:(
P.S.S. You can make a webpage for your entry and post the link if you
want. However, the entries will be judged on written content only. (text
only) HTML, graphics, etc. will NOT be taken into consideration in the
judging.
Ok then.
I hope to see plenty of reviews.
:)
- -Steve Giles
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 29 Mar 1999 15:49:42 -0800
From: michael.demattei@milliman.com
Subject: (mobility) Moby On TV
According to rockontv=2Ecom, Moby will be on Space Ghost Coast-to-Coast on=20=
4/30=2E
Deemo
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 30 Mar 1999 07:03:22 PST
From: "Steve Giles" <power_hymn@hotmail.com>
Subject: (mobility) "Run On" review of CD1
The first of the two "Run On" singles comes in a slimline jewel case
with the color of ketchup on the front and mustard on the back. As you
may know, there is a mousetrap on the cover. There are three mug shots
on the back, like Honey, but this time Moby is wearing a dark fabricated
winter coat. This single is about 15 minutes long.
1. "Run On"
Run On is a slow piano boogie like Honey, but instead of a honkeytonk
boogiedown, we have a barbershop quartet singing over bouncy pianos. I
can practically see them them with their white shirts, suspenders, and
armbands singing in a black & white commercial from the dawn of
television. This infectuous snapper of a song is built upon a cool
breakbeat, and aside from the bouncy pianos, there are also some
higher-pitched, twinkly pianos that accent the bouncy pianos to create
the infectuous melody. There are also occasional silly scratch noises
followed by a goofy sample that says "I did the right thing" that
punctuates the song later on.
The vocals stand out in this song. They're high-pitched voices that guys
used to sing with a long time ago, in the old oldies songs. At certain
times, they sound swing-like. The main chorus is
(lone singer) "Run On, for a long time,"
(group of singers) "Run On, ducking' 'n' dodgin'"
The duckin n dodgin part sounds a lot like the singing of "jumpin'
jivin'" from the 'GAP khakis swing' commercial.
This song is certainly unconventional, and may not appeal to everyone.
It isn't techno, and it isn't rock. It's pure Moby. I took to it right
away and I love it!
2. "Spirit"
Spirit begins with trademark Moby ambient synths, which are
multilayered. Also present is a lilting piano line that gently uplifts.
Dare I say "Dog Heaven" meets "The Rain Falls and the Sky Shudders"?
Well, that's not quite accurate, but it's somewhat close. This mellow
ambient journey continues for about 2 minutes until a frantic breakbeat
drops in, making this the fastest of these 3 songs. This song reminds me
of certain Go remixes in how it merges a mellow synth line with a
driving beat.
This song begins with an innocent sound and feeling, emotions like
wonder come to mind when the pianos come alive, and I can visualize the
sun coming out from behind the clouds after a violent storm, creating a
sky of bright light, rainbows and mist. When the breakbeat drops in I
feel like I'm riding down the street under that sky, moving quickly, but
I'm still very mellow and relaxed. This song feels like the emergence of
spring.
3. "Running"
Running begins very simply with a slow breakbeat, partially composed of
marakka shakers and reverbed cymbals. This song is very trancey and
sometimes disoriented. At first it sounds mildly unhappy and slightly
weary. As the song progresses the confidence of the mood increases,
although the disorientation remains. There are shimmery sounds that seem
to float through, somewhat like the illusion on an oasis would flicker
in the heat for a man dying of thirst in the desert. There's a quiet
cushion of a female voice floating, echoing through in a manner not
unlike the shimmering sounds. There are some accent pianos in this song,
too. The beat drops out, leaving a happier, fuller version of the
soundscape from the beginning, one that leaves a serene, calm feeling
with listener. The beat rejoins the song and it proceeds to fade out.
Now I can barely wait to hear the remixes! Vocal remixes of "Run On"
will be more interesting than "Honey"'s because the vocals are the focus
of this song, whereas "Honey" shares it's focus with the pianos and the
hodgepodge mishmash of styles and instruments Moby fit into one song.
Personally, I like "Run On" better than "Honey" simply because I like
these vocals more. I'm very interested to hear what everybody thinks of
"Run On", so share some opinions on that 30 second clip Daniel posted,
people!
:)
- -Steve
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 30 Mar 1999 13:21:54 -0600
From: "Robert Taylor" <phathead@flash.net>
Subject: (mobility) Review
This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
- ------=_NextPart_000_0004_01BE7AB0.47515D60
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset="iso-8859-1"
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Reviews =96 INSTINCT DANCE A Collection of Dance Music from Instinct =
Records
Robert Taylor
In January of 1992 I got my first glimpse of the future of electronic =
live performances. I had won tickets to see The Shaman, and the opening =
act was Moby. I was going crazy that day because I had been hearing =
about this Moby guy on the local, dance music radio show here in Dallas. =
It=92s called Edge Club 94. The show had been playing "Go" for a few =
months and I even bought the 12" single with the Rainforest Mix on it.
The show was incredible as Moby came out with only his keyboard and =
proceeded to tear the roof off the venue. He played "Go", of course, and =
even played other tracks that I had not heard yet.
I found INSTINCT DANCE about a month later. I remember driving around =
with my girlfriend and showing her the CD I had just bought. I =
couldn=92t believe I had an eleven track sampler of one of the most =
cutting-edge artists at the time.
The CD begins with the piano driven track "Party Time". It=92s vintage =
early 90s house music with a taste of acid rave. The "party time" sample =
throughout the track was popular in many techno songs at the time. "Drug =
Fits The Face" is funky, yet on the house tip as well. It can be a =
mellow, laid back track if you like, but if you get caught up in the =
repitition of the sample, it really can start to move you. One of my =
favorite tracks on the CD has got to be "Besame". It=92s definitely not =
the obvious choice, but a fun, little track nevertheless.
Which brings us to Moby=92s international club smash "Go". This song =
arguably changed the way techno was produced in the early 90s. The =
incredibly moody strings that are sampled from the Twin Peaks theme set =
up this masterpiece. The screaming "Go" samples are taken from early 80s =
goth pioneers Tones On Tail. Everything about this song is just so =
beautiful. "Mobility" brings everything back down to earth with its =
chill-out approach to techno-ambiance. It=92s a quite track, but with a =
lot of cool buried samples deep in the mix. "Rock The House" gets the =
dance-floor moving again as this timeless acid track rips through your =
system. "Move The Colors" is yet again a pounding acid track that moves =
around in many different directions. Another track that was light-years =
ahead of its time.
I=92ve heard Moby talk about "Drop A Beat" being his least favorite =
track. It=92s definitely a period piece, full of techno-rave cliques =
like the sped-up vocal samples and the hardcore sounds that were so =
popular in 1991. It=92s still a good track but does sound a little =
dated. "Voodoo Child" however is an instant classic. Jimi Hendrix =
samples and pure Moby production make this one of Moby=92s all-time =
classics. This version is an edit of the popular Brainstorm mix that I =
would hear at clubs all the time. "Have You Seen My Baby" is a little =
disappointing. It never seems to go anywhere as the bizarre sample loops =
within the music. "Permanent Green" is a powerful, underrated track that =
features what sounds like Michael Jackson samples. The build up in the =
middle of this track is again ahead of it=92s time.=20
This is such a great collection of classic Moby tracks. Most of these =
tracks have appeared on later Instinct releases such as Early =
Underground and the debut LP Moby.=20
- ------=_NextPart_000_0004_01BE7AB0.47515D60
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<BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
<DIV>
<P>Reviews – INSTINCT DANCE A Collection of Dance Music from =
Instinct=20
Records</P><I>
<P>Robert Taylor</P></I>
<P>In January of 1992 I got my first glimpse of the future of electronic =
live=20
performances. I had won tickets to see The Shaman, and the opening act =
was Moby.=20
I was going crazy that day because I had been hearing about this Moby =
guy on the=20
local, dance music radio show here in Dallas. It’s called Edge =
Club 94.=20
The show had been playing "Go" for a few months and I even =
bought the=20
12" single with the Rainforest Mix on it.</P>
<P>The show was incredible as Moby came out with only his keyboard and =
proceeded=20
to tear the roof off the venue. He played "Go", of course, and =
even=20
played other tracks that I had not heard yet.</P>
<P>I found INSTINCT DANCE about a month later. I remember driving around =
with my=20
girlfriend and showing her the CD I had just bought. I couldn’t =
believe I=20
had an eleven track sampler of one of the most cutting-edge artists at =
the=20
time.</P>
<P>The CD begins with the piano driven track "Party Time". =
It’s=20
vintage early 90s house music with a taste of acid rave. The "party =
time" sample throughout the track was popular in many techno songs =
at the=20
time. "Drug Fits The Face" is funky, yet on the house tip as =
well. It=20
can be a mellow, laid back track if you like, but if you get caught up =
in the=20
repitition of the sample, it really can start to move you. One of my =
favorite=20
tracks on the CD has got to be "Besame". It’s definitely =
not the=20
obvious choice, but a fun, little track nevertheless.</P>
<P>Which brings us to Moby’s international club smash =
"Go". This=20
song arguably changed the way techno was produced in the early 90s. The=20
incredibly moody strings that are sampled from the Twin Peaks theme set =
up this=20
masterpiece. The screaming "Go" samples are taken from early =
80s goth=20
pioneers Tones On Tail. Everything about this song is just so beautiful. =
"Mobility" brings everything back down to earth with its =
chill-out=20
approach to techno-ambiance. It’s a quite track, but with a lot of =
cool=20
buried samples deep in the mix. "Rock The House" gets the =
dance-floor=20
moving again as this timeless acid track rips through your system. =
"Move=20
The Colors" is yet again a pounding acid track that moves around in =
many=20
different directions. Another track that was light-years ahead of its =
time.</P>
<P>I’ve heard Moby talk about "Drop A Beat" being his =
least=20
favorite track. It’s definitely a period piece, full of =
techno-rave=20
cliques like the sped-up vocal samples and the hardcore sounds that were =
so=20
popular in 1991. It’s still a good track but does sound a little =
dated.=20
"Voodoo Child" however is an instant classic. Jimi Hendrix =
samples and=20
pure Moby production make this one of Moby’s all-time classics. =
This=20
version is an edit of the popular Brainstorm mix that I would hear at =
clubs all=20
the time. "Have You Seen My Baby" is a little disappointing. =
It never=20
seems to go anywhere as the bizarre sample loops within the music.=20
"Permanent Green" is a powerful, underrated track that =
features what=20
sounds like Michael Jackson samples. The build up in the middle of this =
track is=20
again ahead of it’s time. </P>
<P>This is such a great collection of classic Moby tracks. Most of these =
tracks=20
have appeared on later Instinct releases such as Early Underground and =
the debut=20
LP Moby. </P></DIV></BODY></HTML>
- ------=_NextPart_000_0004_01BE7AB0.47515D60--
------------------------------
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