Friday, February 27, 2009
The Loss of the Rocky is Huge
Coincidentally, today the Rocky Mountain News enters the valley of death. For Colorado to lose this most excellent of newspapers is a shonda on every level. You will see great and lofty editorials of bellyache and remorse over this. Hopefully somewhere, sometime, an appropriate free press will trace the roots of this tragedy because it isn't your normal American failure story. The Rocky won Pulitzers, the Rocky had readers, the Rocky had spirit, spunk, and integrity. And, the Rocky made money. The catch was, it didn't make enough money.
The blame will center around the internet, the declining readership, the changing world that will demand video games over newspapers. Somewhere though, there were decisions made, no matter how well intentioned, that doomed the Rocky big time. Today the Rocky ran out of time, just shy of a 150th birthday party that's been canceled for all time. Sorry, Mr. Byers. Your independent spirit and legacy really deserved better.
--
Mike Flanagan
General Manager
Radio 1190 KVCU Read More......
DJ ALISHA RECORD REVISIT: Land of the Loops - Bundle of Joy
I'm gonna start a weekly exercise on here... a project if you will, and I need your help.
How you can help- Comment on what album you think I should review next. I'll leave you three choices and whichever gets the most votes, I'll revisit for the following Friday.
One last thing- Beware, I may accidentally post "incorrect" info about a band members name or somethin', so if I do, feel free to correct me in the comments area on this blog entry. I'm trying to use the filofax of musical information in my head and not rely on the internetzzzz.
<3
Joy Label: Up Records
Year: 1996
As I listen to this, I'm making connections in my head. Its starting to sound very "late-90s" to me. In a great way. Its putting me back where I was musically at this time in my teens and reminding me why I liked and still like this genre. I liked it because its lo-fi, but well produced enough to be listen-able. It honored the Casio keyboard, it used samples of clips from filmstrips 'n stuff that you would never encounter otherwise. It has cute girl vocals. This album actually really reminds me of Bran Van 3000 and their album Glee. I used to LOVE that album too.
Overall, this isn't a 5-star record on a mass scale, but at the time it was for me. I would say that if there were mp3s for download ten years ago (a la iTunes Store), I maybe would have just bought the "Multi-Family Garage Sale..." song, but I'm glad I own the whole album, because I was able to discover a cool concept album with more than one great song on it.
-I Confess
-Growing Concern
-Burning Clutch (Five-Speed Dub)
-Heidi Cakes
...and here's my jam, "Multi-Family Garage Sale (Bargain Bin Mix)." But wait! Before you press play, I just want to ask you not to watch the video. Close your eyes or have another window open. Its clearly a fan video as it doesn't appear that there was an official music video and it may ruin the listening experience.
EDIT: I'm now on my second listen of the record and I like it even better than the first listen. I kind of want to listen to Bran Van now.
VOTE FOR NEXT WEEK'S RECORD REVISIT- 1)Jurassic 5 - Quality Control 2)Sixteen Horsepower - Low Estate 3)Ween - Pure Guava
MAKE SURE TO ADD A COMMENT BELOW AND VOTE FOR NEXT WEEK'S RECORD REVISIT!
Thank you,
Read More......
Soviet No-Wave
Aquarium "Ashes" (Akvarium "Pepel") 1982
Before "Glasnost" in 1985, only a handful of Rock groups were signed to the only state-sanctioned recording label "Melodija", the rest were relegated to obscurity. Such was the case of "Akvarium".
Charles Read More......
Thursday, February 26, 2009
“Send Black Flowers” Release Party this Friday
There's more than one reason I frequently rant and rave about Denver locals The Omens, but the most important is very simple; they are incredibly good at what they do.
I'm not the only one who has taken these guys in either. 2008's “Make It Last” b/w “Won’t Be Ashamed” (45rpm Hipsville) got spins on legendary New York freeform station WFMU and was also picked up for distribution by the good folks at Bomp! records; home of the late great Greg Shaw.
2005's "Destroy The ESP" was a killer and I can't tell you how long I've been looking forward to a new Omens full-length. Suffice to say, I'm ecstatic the day has finally come. I’ve had the privilege of previewing their upcoming release “Send Black Flowers” and I can say in full confidence, The Omens do not disappoint. Get ready for another heavy dose of fuzzed out beat-punk, raved-up R&B workouts, and the occasional mild psych-freakout.
You can hear some cuts off their brand new release this Friday from 4-6pm on The Local Shakedown.
If you're still not convinced you can see them for yourself later that day at the Hi-Dive as they celebrate their CD/LP release party (that's right it's also being released on vinyl; with a limited number of color vinyl copies to boot!) You'll also find the psychedelic swirl of The Overcasters, and the Hawks of Paradise on the bill.
Ed (Under The Mattress Sun. 4-6pm) Read More......
Grouper/Center City - Split 7" [Self-released 2009]
Grouper, the moniker of Portland’s experimental song crafter Liz Harris, showed up on numerous best-of lists last year with her debut for Type Records, Dragging a Dead Dear up a Hill. The moody landscapes and darkly delicate vocals parallel the title in its resemblance of a wistful forest, at times howling only to be followed by faint whispers. For Harris’s first release of 2009, she’s self-released a split 7-inch with City Center, the latest lo-fi project of Fred Thomas, of Saturday Looks Good to Me and His Name Is Alive.
The A-side, “False Horizon,” harbors the familiar sound of Grouper’s previous release, yet the vinyl gives her murky strums and croons added warmth. City Center’s “This Is How We See in the Dark” utilizes backward masking and vocals hidden behind the haze of the instrumentation to create a lovely odd-pop number to finish the split. All that on limited-edition clear vinyl.
Read more reviews at Vitamin Fuzz.
Read More......Group Bombino - Guitars from Agadez [Sublime Frequencies 2009]
The desert is often romanticized in modern music. From Josh Homes’Desert Sessions and Six Organs of Admittance’s “The Desert Is a Circle” to Magic Lantern’s “Cactus Raga,” the desert's vast desolate landscape and its encompassing mystery is revered for its ability to inspire. As a Southwesterner, I've often fallen pray to this admiration, and I generally flock to music associated with the desert in any way. The Sublime Frequencies label hails from Seattle (a lush location for the home of so many arid sounds), but it has found a more authentic desert sound than most of the American underground. Group Bombino's Guitars From Agadez Vol. 2 is a further exploration into the Saharan guitar culture, and the music doesn’t merely rely on desert themes or use the desert as a muse; it is entirely a product of the desert.
Sublime Frequencies has proven that Saharan guitar culture is flourishing. The label introduced the scene to Western audiences through the auditory documentary Folk Music of the Sahara: Among the Tuareg of Libya and the group Tinariwen, which translates to "many deserts" (after the Tuereg belief that the Sahara is a region of numerous deserts). Since its initial Tuereg guitar release, the label has put out Group Doueh’s Guitar Music from the Western Sahara and Group Inerane’s Guitars from Agadez.
It's the second in the Guitars from Agadez series, but it's a perfect introduction to the Tuereg guitar sound because it features the two fundamental styles. The first side displays what Sublime Frequencies calls “dry guitar,” a stripped-down acoustic style, whereas the second side boosts the vigor with the Tuereg electric sound. Propelled by the innovative guitarist Omara Mochtar, Group Bombino offers a vivid glimpse into one of the most hidden regions and ethnic groups on the planet.
The Tuereg, a suppressed minority group in the Western Sahara (primarily in Mali and Niger), have struggled for autonomy for nearly a century: Group Bombino’s revolutionary sound parallels this struggle. The area of Agadez, where Group Bombino resides, has been shut off from the rest of the region. Although the political turmoil in Agadez is as dismal as the harsh environment that encompasses the region, Bombino’s reverberations are hopeful, optimistic and fertile.-Bardos Freedoom
A Super Group, if there ever was one
Peter Brotzmann, the leather-lunged reedist from Germany and his group 'Last Exit' consisting of ubiquitous bassist/producer Bill Laswell (Herbie Hancock, Material & c) Sonny Sharrock (Herbie Mann, Miles Davis, Space Ghost Coast-to-Coast) and Ronald Shannon Jackson (Albert Ayler) live in Frankfurt in 1986.
Witness the carnage. Submit to the sonic assault. Destroy Communism (the pent-up aggression expressed with this music can only be an allegory for tearing down the Berlin Wall)
"Mr. Brotzmann, Tear down this wall!"
-Charles
Production Director Read More......
DJ ALISHA INTERVIEW: My Favorite Local Celebrity Andrew Novick
Hi Peeps,
I interviewed Andrew Novick last month about his art show "The Astounding Problem of Andrew Novick" which is currently on exhibit at The Lab.
You may know Andrew as the former frontman of the legendary late-80s group Warlock Pinchers, or have seen him around town perform his current solo project Get Your Going, or maybe you've even witnessed his Microsoft Powerpoint project For Sale 1989 Toyota Corolla.
For the interview I to talk to Andrew as an artist and collector who has an art exhibition at the Belmar Lab appropriately titled "The Astounding Problem of Andrew Novick" which in short exhibits about 5000 items that he's collected over the years including: Barbie dolls, clown paintings, 90210 memorabilia, fake fingernails, phonebooks or one of my favorites cereal dust.
We talk about all this and more... and you'll get to hear a Warlock Pinchers song about stalking Crispin Glover and afterward Andrew will tell you what Mr. Glover thinks of the song!
When it comes to six degrees of separation, Andrew is my Kevin Bacon of cool stuff and a lot of his collections are on exhibit right now. Maybe if you go, you can take me... as a date!
Here's the interview: OKAY, LISTEN HERE, JUST CLICK ALREADY!
And so here's the deets of the show:
The Astounding Problem of Andrew Novick
The Lab at Belmar
404 S. Upham St. in Lakewood
Running through May 12
www.belmarlab.org
PS, Tod Kapke Opticals
PSS: Radio 1190 is the best! Read More......
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
When is there going to be an indie dance craze?
The inevitable dance-off, with the song du jour.
I still don't know the Soulja Boy dance. I don't know what to crank when. Something about Superman? It's always bad when a row of people try to do it, and one stumble causes a domino effect of squeals and ankle snaps.
Beyonce has the Single Ladies dance, which has been parodied on SNL and countless remixes on Youtube. I saw a drunken man at Hapa do his best to show off his ring finger. By the look on his girlfriend's face, he was bound to be a single lady himself for a long time.
I don't listen enough to regular radio to get in the loop on what's the new dance craze, and it's a little unsettling. I don't want to be the old lady looking back on her youth and realizing, oh my gosh, I though the Mashed Potato was a side dish! I though the Twist was a soccer injury!
So I hereby propose an all-out call for indie artists to make dance songs. I'm not talking about any electronic hip-shaker, but a dance with specific steps, with style and grace and booty bouncing ingrained in the very lyrics. I want to go to a show at a dusky hole in the wall dive, and have everyone there suddenly break out of their head bobbing and gentle swaying for a line dance that only tightly-panted individuals could pull off. I want dances like the Soul Bleeder, the My-Girlfriend-Dumped-Me-Again-And-I-Hate-Her-But-Still-Love-Her Shuffle, the Refusal-to-Wash-My-Hair Twostep.
Mainly, on the off chance that I go to a frat house and by some blessed mistake Bon Iver comes on the iPod, I want to have the moves to impress. I want to dazzle. I want to be, dare I say, suave? Or the lady equivalent. Lady suave.
-Carolyn (That DJ who rambles, the girl who draws stuff for flyers) Read More......
All Music Is World Music
~Adam (Culture Clash, Tues 9-11pm) Read More......
Bring Your Own Records Party
Get cool!
Perfect Sound Forever - Online music magazine with tons and tons of articles about under-recognized artists (Peter Brotzmann), interesting facets of the independent music world (Psycho-Geography of Record Fairs), overviews of obscure music genres (L.A. Orchestra Pop) and long-forgotten stories (Lost Music Venues). Every article is endlessly interesting and they put a new issue up every two months.
Dusted Magazine - Esoteric CD reviews, charts compiled from several hip radio stations (including us!) and band interviews/tributes. Since it's volunteer-run the features aren't updated super often, but since they've been around since 2002 they've got lots of content. My favorite feature is Listed in which a pair of bands are asked to make lists. Usually they list favorite artists or albums, but sometimes the lists cover other topics, like Melt Banana's 10 favorite bands from Aichi and the kind of sushi each band brought to mind. Quality content always.
Cerysmatic Factory - This site is specifically about Factory Records, the former home of great bands like Joy Division and A Certain Ratio. Factory Records was interesting because they had a very strong asthetic that made album covers into a new art form. They had a catalogue numbering system for all their releases, which included posters and other objects in addition to music. They also started their own club and were very innovative in the way they did business with their artists. They pioneered the idea of "handshake" contracts and a 50/50 deal with artists, ideas which have been emulated by other labels like Touch and Go. This website has biographies about every band ever on the label and a huge number of images of Factory artifacts.
Awesome Tapes from Africa - A blog dedicated to tapes from Africa. There are a lot and you can listen to them all! It's hard to go wrong with African beats and rhythms.
Phoning it In - A radio show which features all of your favorite bands playing songs over the phone. They have years of archives up on the site. Fun fact - Colorado's very own Chris Adolf (Bad Weather California) was the first band ever to be featured on the show!
-Katherine (of music director fame) Read More......
Should we talk about the weather?
Talking about the weather always seems so impersonal, but not when there's awesome music involved to be your soundtrack.
Here's what I've rocked out to in the last 15 minutues:
The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart - "Everything With You"
...I do so love this song.
But not as much as one of my favorite rollerskating songs that would make me squeal with excitement at the rink as a young lady. I'm talking about Lisa Lisa and the Cult Jam's "Lost in Emotion." I would embed this song too, but unfortunately "embedding has been disabled by request," so you're gonna have to go there and jam with me in spirit. While you're there, listen to her equally infectious song "Head to Toe"
LYLAS,
Alisha (don't forget to listen to me Wednesdays 4-6pm) Read More......
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Paolo Angeli & Janet Feder
Monday, February 23, 2009
A Shoreline Dream
Wired did an interview with them.
They were highlighted in Yahoo's music blog.
And Westword wrote an article about their DIY approach to releasing music.
Check them out at the Bluebird this Thursday evening with sonic brethren Moonspeed and Sonnenblume. It's a CD release show for the brand new album "Recollections of Memory".
-Katherine (local shakedown) Read More......
Current 93 and Me
Every time I end up talking about music with some stranger, which gets sparked by some 1190 apparel that one of us is wearing, they get really excited and tell us to play more Coil or Boyd Rice. This time I'm referring specifically to the clerk at Argonaut who told me how the first time he tuned into the station he heard Coil and flipped his shit. Anyway, let's consider this the birth of the dark ages for me. A week later I think I'm approaching the renaissance, but since then I've been in some helpless stupor where David Tibet is constantly whispering to me, "stay in bed, existence is ripe with rot, their souls will perish when the black ships eat the sky. . . " As painful as existence is, I've been having a lot of fun exploring Death in June, Current 93, Coil and early Swans in a much more absorbed way than I ever did before. I'm telling a certain crowd in Denver everything they already know, but this shit is amazing, I can't tell if it's the awful state of depression it puts me in that makes me like it, or its distinct musical quality that makes me nod and stroke my chin with modest approval.
Drunk with the nectar of submission, I retire, until next time when I will convince you that Älgarnas Trädgård are the greatest psych obscurity of the early 70s (seriously though)
Your Program Director
-Tyler Read More......
Sad news
In honor of Touch and Go check out the new Sholi album that's in rotation right now on T & G's sister label Quarterstick. Really pretty math rock that's not boring like math rock often can be. The band also put out a great 7" last year that has one cover of Joanna Newsom and another cover of Iranian pop-goddess Googoosh.
-Katherine (the mighty music director) Read More......
Sunday, February 22, 2009
First Post
Something to look forward to:
Program guides/ promos of yore are currently being compiled for digitalization. If you're feeling nostalgic for the past, or if you at all curious as to the previous 1190 aesthetic(s) then check back with us in the nearby-future.
See You Then!!
--Charles (Mon. 10-1) radio 1190 am Read More......