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- Newsgroups: rec.music.bluenote
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!enterpoop.mit.edu!bloom-picayune.mit.edu!athena.mit.edu!wildman
- From: wildman@athena.mit.edu (Timothy Worsley)
- Subject: Kristallnacht and some other stuff
- Message-ID: <1992Dec24.034259.22868@athena.mit.edu>
- Sender: news@athena.mit.edu (News system)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: marinara.mit.edu
- Reply-To: eprice@sybase.com
- Organization: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Date: Thu, 24 Dec 1992 03:42:59 GMT
- Lines: 174
-
- Hi folks,
-
- Here's a report on some stuff I checked out in NYC during the past week or
- so. I'll post this to both nm-list and rec.music.bluenote; sorry for any
- annoyance that may cause!
-
- * Tuesday, Dec 15: Went to SKEP, a SoHo performance space, to see "Hugh
- Brown Shu" do a reading. He did a bunch of material from his album "Bomb
- the Womb" (supposedly available at HMV and Tower). This was a spoken word
- thing, but he also played some drums, mostly as punctuation between stories
- or whatever. He did the Kojak homage which I like, and also "Miles Davis
- Owes Me Ten Bucks", which is funny. But my favorite one was what he ended
- with, not from the album, about a town where the people are plagued by
- "Johnny cats" -- parasites, cats, living in one's stomach, which one can
- endure in suffering, or rip out with great pain and disfigurement. Hugh's
- story was about a guy who starved his out. It was cool, and I think it was
- interesting metaphorically as well. Partly I'm just plugging this cuz Hugh
- is a cool guy. Hey, he's even a Blind Idiot God fan!!
-
- * Wednesday, Dec 16: John Zorn's composition "Kristallnacht" at the
- Knitting Factory. This was fantastic. This was the US premiere of the
- piece, first performed in Germany as part of Zorn's "Radical New Jewish
- Culture" thing, I believe. There is a studio recording of it that was
- broadcast on the radio in NY a while back, and I think this might be
- released at some point but I'm not sure. Anyway, Kristallnacht is when the
- Nazis went and smashed the windows of all Jew-owned stores in Germany or
- something. The piece opened with a long (ten minutes or more?) section of
- train-like music. This was very cool. The Knitting Factory is a long
- narrow room, and it was packed, with everyone standing, and in almost
- complete darkness, with this weird rhythmic train music, quite an
- experience. After this, sounds of breaking glass were featured
- prominently, I suppose Anthony Coleman was doing most of this with sampling
- keyboards. There was also what must have been German folk music, some
- relatively normal melodic lines on the violin, hardcore screaming and
- guitar-torture (Marc Ribot on guitar I believe), etc. I hear that the
- studio version of the piece is substantially different. The second set was
- apparently better (and less crowded) than the first one, but I didn't stay
- for it (too bad). I'm hoping to get a tape of both sets though. My
- brother and I didn't get there early enough to get good "seats" but my
- sinister web of spies tell me that the score Zorn was conducting from was
- interesting, with a piece arranged on a big page, some written sections,
- some blotches, some notations like "Enter the Nazis" and stuff. I think
- someone should publish Zorn's scores, for his game pieces, for these
- compositions like "Elegy" and "Kristallnacht", and for Naked City too, they
- are all "art", no question about it...
-
- * Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Dec 17-19: Paul Motian, Joe Lovano, Bill
- Frisell at the Knitting Factory. They've got lots of albums out, I've seen
- them before, but I just had to go all three nights. What a great band. I
- can't really remember any tune names, but they did some of the tunes from
- "Misterioso" and other albums. Frisell had a couple fantastic solos, with
- him messing around with his 16-second digital delay, setting up some weird
- pattern that would accompany him as he played his usual bluesy lines and
- spare chords. Lovano had some good, powerful solos too, really tearing up
- the keys on the tenor sax -- in particular on this one tune that I could
- hum but I don't know the name, they played it two nights, he had a cool
- motif going where he would end on this three note chromatic run, coming
- into it from increasingly explosive phrases. Paul Motian was in great form
- much of the time, really rocking along with Bill's solo on Thursday night
- for example. One guy said that the second set on Friday was one of the
- best Frisell performances he had ever seen. There were some real geeks in
- the audience on Saturday for the first set. Really obnoxious and arrogant
- kids, music students I think. Makes me a little disturbed -- because I'm
- hoping to become a music student myself... :-/
-
- * Sunday, Dec 20: Alien Planetscapes, Fire in the Kitchen, Borbetomagus,
- Elliot Sharp & William Hooker, and some other band I can't remember at
- CBGB. Actually this was next door to the "real" CBGBs, in the smaller,
- more upscale-looking room at 313 Bowery. But this was a great deal, 5
- bands for $7, including Elliot Sharp, and I'd always wanted to see
- Borbetomagus, having heard a lot about them. Alien Planetscapes was first.
- They are a big band, with bass, drums, violin, flute, keyboards, sax, and
- probably some other instruments. They played long, heavily textured,
- sometimes funky and driving, somtimes more mellow, tunes. I liked them.
- They were selling a painting too, as well as cassettes. If I could have
- afforded it I would have bought a tape. Fire in the Kitchen was a trio I
- think, I don't remember them too well. I wasn't that impressed. Now,
- Borbetomagus... I had been led to believe that this was some sort of
- "difficult-listening music", avant-garde baritone saxes with guitar. Turns
- out, these freaks are not so much a trio of two sax players and a
- guitarist, as three guys playing ONE instrument -- this big amplifier that
- they all plugged into. I should have brought earplugs. It was LOUD. The
- two sax players at one point were both playing baritone, standing facing
- each other, both with microphones in the bell of their instrument, and had
- the bells pressed against each other, presumably because this is the most
- effective way to make the most painful sound possible. Meanwhile their
- guitarist was sawing away at the strings with a file, and every now and
- then would fool with the knobs on the amp. After a while, he would just
- turn it off, and this echoing would remain, either from the sound system,
- or from my ears ringing, I'm not sure which. Anyway, I'm glad I saw them.
- I would just like to say to all those Borbetomagus fans out there -- YOU
- ARE SICK! SICK! SICK! SICK!!! Last on the program was a duo performance
- with William Hooker on drums (does anyone know who this guy is??) and
- Elliot Sharp on his double-necked guitar-thing (it looks like it must be
- custom-made, or homde-made, or something). They played for a long time,
- just one "tune", I assume it was improvised. It was good. No big
- surprises is you're familiar with Sharp's style.
-
- Recent acquisitions:
-
- The Molecules: "Steel Toe" -- They're sort of vaguely like the Boredoms,
- maybe? I don't like them as much at this point, but I've only listened to
- the CD once. Oh, that reminds me, they have a song called "Fuck New York"
- where they say "Sonic Youth makes me sick"; I think Thurston Moore was at
- CB's on Sunday, taping some of the music in fact. I could be wrong though,
- I only recognize him from seeing him play with Zorn and Haino Kenji et al.
- last summer. I've never even heard Sonic Youth, believe it or not...
-
- John McCracken: "Outloud" (MuWorks) -- I hope I got the name and title
- right. My brother likes this CD a lot, so he has it in NYC... Anyway,
- this guy is a guitarist. He's good. The tunes are mostly (all?)
- improvised. Not as crazy as Elliot Sharp, or (need I say) Borbetomagus or
- whatever, perhaps this leans a little closer to jazz than rock or
- something? Anyway, I recommend it.
-
- OLD: "Lo Flux Tube" (Earache/Relativity) -- Zorn was involved with this,
- and plays on the title track (they credit him with "turbo sax"). It's a
- good album, sort of industrial/metal or something like that.
-
- Elliot Sharp: the second "Bootstrappers" album -- I highly recommend the
- first "Bootstrappers" album, with Elliot Sharp, George Hurley, and Mike
- Watt, which was almost entirely live improvisations. This, the second one,
- is Sharp with different people, a studio recording. It's good but I don't
- like it as much as the first one (but I've only listened to this one once
- too so far).
-
- Naked City: "Leng Tch'e" (Toy's Factory) -- Tower does indeed have it, at
- least the Tower in Boston does, or at least they did this afternoon.
- Anyway, this is the 31-minute studio version of that insane Zorn
- composition apparently "dedicated to the erotic splatter theatre of
- turn-of-the-century Paris", according to a blurb about "Grand Guignol", the
- forthcoming Naked City album on Avant. I have raved about it to everyone
- who will listen since seeing them perform this piece live last April at the
- Marquee. Nice to hear it again, although I have to admit that it was ten
- times better live. But hey, everything is better live!! I wish I could
- read Japanese, because the CD appears to have a small (three-line) blurb
- that may have something to do with the "subject" of the piece, or at least
- the cover art -- which is fairly hideous but not as bad as I had expected.
- In any case, if you do get it, BLAST THE HELL OUT OF IT. It was *intense*
- to see them play this at the Marquee, with the waves of Frisell's power
- chords rolling over you, the thunder-drumming from Baron, Frith reinforcing
- the bass, and Zorn screeching and conducting like the freak he is. (Thanks
- to Mason for offering to special-order this item before its availability
- was established!)
-
- BTW, I was talking to Bruce Galanter at the Downtown Music Gallery about
- Zorn recordings, and apparently he has compiled a Zorn discography -- and
- of course, it's a much more impressive one than mine!! The one item he
- does't have is apparently some sax trio record. Anyway, if I get a copy of
- his discography and he says it's ok to distribute, I'll post it.
-
- Someone told me that Blind Idiot God is one the Knitting Factory's "What Is
- Jazz?" CD compilation. Anyone have this? Is it from their Town Hall
- performance or from their Knitting Factory gig? Or what??
-
- The Knitting Factory also sells a video with clips and interviews with a
- highly intriguing lineup -- Zorn, Elliot Sharp, Naked City, etc. -- but
- it's apparently only 7 minutes (intended as a promotional thing), so not
- not really worth $15... Shees. If they're gonna do something like that,
- why not do it right???
-
- You know what really sucks? This whole time, I had borrowed a DAT deck (a
- nice one too -- TEAC DA-P20) to hopefully tape some of this stuff, but I
- couldn't find anyone who could lend me a decent pair of mics!! :-( :-( :-(
- Oh well.
-
- That's enough from me. Hope this wasn't a complete waste of time.
-
- Ciao,
-
- -Ed
- eprice@sybase.com
-
- PS Just listened to "Leng Tch'e" again. Awe-inspiring.
-