« Previous Entries

Mount Eerie at The Dome

Nov 18 2008

Last night I had the plea­sure of seeing Phil Elv­rum live for the third time in Lon­don, this time at The Dome near Ken­tish Town, with High Pla­ces and Parenthe­ti­cal Girls supporting.

I loved the High Pla­ces set; their music is inc­re­dibly invi­go­ra­ting and refreshing, with a strange sort of aggres­sion and tri­ba­lism when pla­yed live — suf­fice to say I bought their self tit­led 12″ at the close. Parenthe­ti­cal Girls were not really my sort of thing, some stand out tracks, an inte­res­ting voca­list and ins­tru­ment rota­tion made it worthwhile though.

Phil’s set was, as usual, mes­me­ri­zing and won­der­ful, des­pite his obvious exhaus­tion from traveling.

Down­loads

Just for good mea­sure, here are two down­loads of the com­plete per­for­man­ces the last time I saw him live — recor­ded with per­mis­sion by Sonny (via MEPS); first at The Lumi­naire and the next day at the Lon­don School of Eco­no­mics library. Yesterday’s show didn’t top these, but to be honest that’s pretty hard ’cause they were awe­some; there was even sin­ga­longs and peo­ple sat cross leg­ged around him on the stage; it was all very inti­mate and beautiful.

Mount Eerie — Live at the Lumi­naire, May 23rd 2006 (my high­light from this one is track 28, Voice In Headphones).

Mount Eerie — Live at the LSE library, May 24th 2006

Media from The Dome

M83 Gig at Scala, 22nd Oct 08

Oct 23 2008

Raise your arms the highest you can, so the whole uni­verse will glow…

Last night I had the pri­vi­lege of seeing M83 live at Scala in Lon­don, with The Domino State sup­por­ting; and oh how superb it all was. Of course there was a strong focus on the new album, Saturday=Youth, but they didn’t for­get the old songs, mixing it up beau­ti­fully with Dead Cities and Before the Dawn Heals Us. As the rising drums, gui­tars and rhythm of “A Gui­tar and a Heart” crashed through the venue with ever inc­rea­sing furor and energy, a shi­ver shot down my spine and I hoped it would never end.

Here is some crappy foo­tage I shot on my camera just for my own nos­tal­gic pur­po­ses. Note how the camera can’t hold its auto focus in the light levels, giving the impres­sion I can’t focus anything.

Review by There Goes The Fear:

Nor­mally the words shoe­gaze, pop, 80s, rave and enjo­ya­ble shouldn’t be put next to each other, let alone used to desc­ribe the same 90 minu­tes. Howe­ver, those are just the words I’m going to use to desc­ribe last night’s M83 gig at London’s Scala.

Taking to a stage cove­red with enough cables to give even the most sea­so­ned of elec­tri­cians a heart attack, Anthony Gon­za­lez (who’s much sma­ller and more elflike in real life than I had rea­li­sed…) made it clear it was his night, and with the help of a few sup­por­ting artists ploughed through an impres­sive selec­tion of his work from the past 7 years.

Natu­rally, the focus of the eve­ning was on new album Saturdays=Youth, with tracks like Cou­leurs, Gra­ve­yard Girl and Kim & Jes­sie get­ting some of the big­gest cheers of the night. Howe­ver, whilst his new pop direc­tion was the rea­son Scala was so pac­ked, he didn’t for­get the diehard fans from his early days (and there were a few…), thro­wing in some har­der dan­cier num­bers which cul­mi­na­ted in the encore with an almost full-on rave. Well, for about 5 minutes.

Shoe­gaze was the theme of the eve­ning really though, with many songs blu­rring into one, and for the casual fan (like myself) it was easy to lose your­self in the music for 10 minu­tes, totally entran­ced by the team­work and the skills of everyone.

Judee Sill, Live Performances

Jun 21 2007

Jesus was a Cross maker

The Kiss

Music Vision

Jun 5 2007

I found a stats site that takes Last​.fm data to pro­duce a tidy graph sho­wing lis­te­ning trends over a set period. Here’s my resul­tant PDF from Sep­tem­ber 2004 until this month, June 2007, with a mini­mum of 10 plays requi­red to trig­ger an artist being shown:
My Lis­te­ning Trends PDF

Pre­view of my March 2007 lis­te­ning trend:
http://host.trivialbeing.org/up/fofr-music-trends-previews.jpg

The site is called Last­Graph and it was built using Processing.

Catherine Howe

Apr 18 2007

Wow, this Numero Group keeps get­ting bet­ter and bet­ter. I truly recom­mend their collec­tions. This is a track from disc 12 in their reper­toire NUM012, the album is called “What a Beau­ti­ful Place” and was ori­gi­nally relea­sed in 1971 but fell into obs­cu­rity until now.


codebase=“http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab”> type=“application/x-shockwave-flash” pluginspage=“http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer” />


Title: 13. In The Hot Sum­mer

Artist: Cathe­rine Howe

Album: What A Beau­ti­ful Place

The first ever com­pact disc issue of Cathe­rine Howe’s bri­lliant debut album. Pro­du­ced by legen­dary jazz pia­nist Bobby Scott, the album is a pas­to­ral blend of English country­side folk and Lon­don orches­tral pop, not unlike Bry­ter Lay­ter or North Star Grass­man And The Ravens. Ori­gi­nally relea­sed on Reflec­tion Records in 1971, the much sought after album disap­pea­red before ever hit­ting the racks. Boo­klet inc­lu­des half a dozen unpu­blished pho­tos and an ano­ta­ted his­tory of the album’s brief exis­tence. The fully remas­te­red album inc­lu­des an unearthed bonus track ori­gi­nally inten­ded to be inc­lu­ded on the album.

« Previous Entries