Showing posts with label nurse with wound. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nurse with wound. Show all posts

Thursday, October 03, 2019

COME ORGANISATION BOX - PREORDERS LIVE!




















Pre-orders now live!
Celebrating Come Organisation's 40th Anniversary of its first release in November 1979, VOD-Records is proud to announce the release of an ultimate deluxe retrospective set including 10x LPs in folder format with special sleeves + bonus 'Examples Of Cannibalism' 10" + a beautiful 212pp book + a truly massive poster. All of this is housed in a stunning embossed slipcase holder. The book included in this incredible limited edition box contains masses of unseen archive photos, posters, artist bios, stories, notes and all the Kata zines. Please note this is in a strictly limited edition of 585 signed copies with special certificate.

Sunday, June 12, 2016

ACQUISITIONS 33

reading
Pure, White And Deadly - John Yudkin
The Clintons' War On Women - Roger Stone & Robert Morrow
Flesh And Excess - Jack Sargeant
Into Thin Air - Jon Krakauer

listening 
Band Of Pain - Nurse With Wound (10")
Roots - Thorofon (CD)
2011 Hit Best Album - Tae Jin Ah (CD)
CLPPNG - clipping. (double LP)
A New Trilogy - Lovelyz (mini-album)

viewing
Shutter
Stoker
Everest (2015)
Everest (1998)

ACQUISITIONS 32
ACQUISITIONS 31
ACQUISITIONS 30

Thursday, February 19, 2009

RHODIUM 3

At around the age of 18 until my early 20s, I used to be excruciatingly purist about music. Most everything would be summarily rejected as rubbish, save for a tiny handul of records that I deemed - in my insufferable arrogance - as all you needed for a 'real' collection, to the extent that, at one stage, this was whittled down to a mere three vinyls. The following LP on the legendary ESP label (also home to recordings by Albert Ayler, Charles Manson and family, and innumerable other wonderful weird gems) was one of that still highly valued triumvirate.

Cro-Magnon : Orgasm (1969)

Despite its tragically shoddy sleeve and label art, Cro-Magnon's Orgasm is,
in my opinion, quite simply the most important experimental (for want of a better term) record of all time.

In its day, it was mostly dismissed as an
oddball exercise in psychedelia - yet, in truth, it's about as far removed from disposable crap like 13th Floor Elevators, Love, and Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd as it's possible to go. There are eight eclectic tracks that each boast more original new ideas than nearly all other bands achieve in a lifetime - and despite this wide diversity, they all work perfectly well as a whole, in their chosen sequence, and combine to provide an adventure that's unpredictable, exhilarating, startling, and at times unnervingly absurd.

Revisiting Orgasm in 2009, one is immediately struck by how many subsequent bands and genres echoed these ideas: Nurse With Wound, Faust, The Residents (who some allege were involved with the Cro-Magnon project, though it seems that Cro-Magnon's Austin Grasmere and Brian Elliot were in fact bubblegum pop songwriters), neofolk, drone, avant-garde, noise, guitar improv freakery, and more. And of course, my own music too: this album was unquestionably a huge inspiration, not only musically, but also in the sense of artistically opening a mind to a truly radical imperative.

It's difficult even to appreciate what Cro-Magnon were thinking at the time, or how they were inspired to make these mysterious sounds in the first place. Robert Ashley, perhaps? It's like it almost dropped out of the sky from another galaxy. And I can think of no greater compliment than that with regard to its uncompromising originality.

I just noticed this year's forthcoming Instal Festival's rather dodgy corporate-style branding and self-given 'Brave New Music' epithet, in addition to an uncomfortably self-conscious view of what avant-garde music represents along with its expected audience. If you're not familiar with Orgasm, then do make a point of finding it (there are vinyl and CD reissues out there); experience for yourself what open-minded and brave, and new and innovative, can genuinely represent. It's that good.

RHODIUM 2
RHODIUM 1