Guitar Building Heroes
Running until July 4 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Guitar Heroes: Legendary Craftsmen from Italy to New York is an exhibition tracing fine guitar lutherie from the 16th century to the present.
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Archive for April, 2011
Guitar Building Heroes
Running until July 4 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Guitar Heroes: Legendary Craftsmen from Italy to New York is an exhibition tracing fine guitar lutherie from the 16th century to the present.
Big Gizzards In The Meat Yards
Dead Milkmen at Chicago’s Congress Theater this Saturday night.
Sascha Braunig
Only a few days left for this show at Foxy Production, but we’ll still have the web. Sascha Braunig renders curious portraits of constructed heads. Go, see, it’ll make more sense than I do.
Decline and Fall
Decline and Fall by Evelyn Waugh (1928) – Waugh’s first novel, rather in P.G. Wodehouse territory, though with much less mercy for its characters.
Elmyr
It’s an art history/true crime sandwich. Your optional reading assignment for today: legendary art forger, Elmyr de Hory.
Cocktail Culture
Cocktail Culture: Ritual and Invention in American Fashion assembles booze-related fashion and ephemera from that far away world — the 20th century. Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, through the end of July.
Krazy & Ignatz 1919-1921
Krazy & Ignatz 1919-1921: A Kind, Benevolent and Amiable Brick by George Herriman (1919-21) – Lushly rendered india inkling landscapes? Casually poetic and prolix narration? Yes and yes, and yes I do love these early years of Krazy Kat.
R. Crumb: Lines Drawn On Paper
Last couple of weeks for R. Crumb: Lines Drawn On Paper, an exhibit at the Society Of Illustrators, NYC.
Kurt Schwitters
Kurt Schwitters: Color and Collage — an exhibit on view at Princeton University Art Museum through June. See also.
The Spins Wins
Saturday is Record Store Day. Celebrate ‘em and support ‘em while you still can.
Beefheart: Through The Eyes Of Magic
Beefheart: Through The Eyes Of Magic by John “Drumbo” French (2010) – A valuable document, but not an easy read; John French’s sprawling autobiography of his hard-knock life playing “weird music” in late 20th century America. Coverage from the surprisingly fertile 1950s/60s rock scene in the Mojave desert to his on and off lifetime involvement with The Magic Band and Don Van Vliet, aka Captain Beefheart. If you wish to preserve the picturesque (self-made) myths surrounding Mr. Vliet, you may want to avoid the cruel realities related here. Me, I’d rather have the full picture.
The Potato Eaters
Way-ahead-of-their-time acoustic rock eclectica band (acousteclectirock?) Baby Flamehead, finally has their own website up. And two live shows this weekend: Fergies on Friday night and the Media Americana Roots Ramble on Saturday night. Check the website for details.
All In The Family
All In The Family is not, in this case, a TV show. It is an exhibit of art by parents, children and siblings at Philadelphia’s Green Line Cafe from April 14 to May 29.
Pablo Rocks It
Not exactly. Picasso: Guitars 1912-1914 features a pair of rickety abstracted guitar constructions, but mainly documents one his more excitingly experimental periods. Running at MoMA through June 6.
Cozy
Cozy is Karen Schmidt’s remarkable knitted art installation now occupying a cell at Philadelphia’s historic Eastern State Penitentiary.
Friedrich Schröder-Sonnenstern
Colored pencils and a singular imagination. Friedrich Schröder-Sonnenstern exhibit at Michael Werner Gallery, NYC through the end of April.
Weathercraft
Weathercraft by Jim Woodring (2010) – Another volume of nightmarishly beautiful wordless comics by the remarkable Mr. Woodring. Even for those accustomed to his work, there is page after page that makes you say, “I’ve never seen anything like that before!” And then hide under your bed.
Punk Rock Pierogi
The Dead Milkmen play at Brooklyn’s Warsaw this Saturday night. No doubt they will be flogging their new (?!) long player, The King In Yellow.
German Expressionism
Posted by M.Ace - April 3, 2011...Generic...no commentsWeb hosting by Dreamhost
Bill Griffith: Lost and Found – Comics 1969-2003 by Bill Griffith (2011) – A fat volume compiling material ranging from Mr. G’s early underground comix to later non-newspaper strip work. I am amazed at the crudeness of his earliest stuff. Not the content — with underground comix I expect that (and you are warned). But the technique. The earliest work I’d seen previously was mid-1970s, when his draftsmanship was quite deft and cross-hatched luxuriously. Surprising to see that there was a time when he was almost as bad as… me, for example.
May 10, 2012...no commentsThe Futurological Congress by Stanislaw Lem (1971) – A seminar of futurologists is caught in a crossfire of psychoactive crowd control chemical warfare, and a chaos of nested hallucinations ensues. Clever, but cold.
April 18, 2012...no commentsSurf Beat: Rock ‘n’ Roll’s Forgotten Revolution by Kent Crowley (2011) – Instro is one of my most favorite musical genres, and I really wanted to like this book — a good-hearted effort — but I was sadly disappointed. More proofreading and fact checking, please. Less repetition and topic hopping, thank you.
April 16, 2012...no commentsThe B-52′s by The B-52′s (Warner Bros/1979) – With the mainstream slowly catching up to them over the decades, it may be hard to remember what a radical album this was upon its release. Perhaps not as ‘in your face’ radical as the No Wave bands of the same era, but every bit so, in a sneakier way. Listening to the old vinyl, I’m remembering. The B’s may have been from Down South, but instrumentally they cranked out as much downtown skronk as anyone from Southern Manhattan. Ricky Wilson’s guitar sound was so unique, with his detuned, 4 stringed Mosrite (which I had forgotten about until the photo on the liner reminded me). One part rock ‘n’ roll twang, one part primeval raunch. Add hard punching dance beats on the drums and careful keyboard colorings for a band that found a new way to subvert, avoiding the already tiring buzzsaw guitars of punk. But that’s only half the picture. On top of that, you got a deviant take on the traditional vocal group — with inventive arrangements, theatrically shared leads and bizarre vocal sound effects. Not quite the way the Mills Brothers would have done it, but the DNA is there. And belated kudos to Cindy Wilson for her untamed and always passionate vocals. Listening now, I realize how valuable her contributions were. Listen to Hero Worship for a shining example of total, full-body commitment to a vocal performance. Wow. For the lyrics, US pop culture of the atomic age was thrown into a blender — any of us could find cartoonish shards of our own lives floating around in there. I always imagined the (early) B’s as a band you might find playing in a basement rec room while young kids play wacky old Milton Bradley board games. Or maybe I imagine them as a band based on wacky old Milton Bradley board games — Mousetrap, perhaps. It was, what’s the word… hilarious, yes, to see Rock Lobster slowly build into a novelty hit a year or so later.
Now, about the first time I heard the album. I had already read about the B’s in NY Rocker or Trouser Press, but I didn’t actually hear them until an afternoon in the week of the album’s release in July 1979. WPRB, Princeton, played the track 52 Girls (“wow, great!” would have been my thought), and the DJ noted that they would be playing the whole album that evening. This was a regular night time feature at ‘PRB that summer, playing a new album straight through without interruption, just a break to flip sides (facilitating those naughty home tapers who were “killing music”). I had my cassette ready. Now for me, living in the boondocks as always, ‘PRB was a pretty weak signal, so I had to switch my receiver to mono to clean up the signal — right there, you’re pushing the sound further into the primitive. On top of that, there were thunderstorms in the area between me and Princeton that night, making for weird static and crunches. Was this a bad thing? No, it totally enhanced that ‘mysterious transmission from space’ production aspect of Planet Claire and extended it to the whole album. I bought the vinyl not too long after, but it was never as cool as the space-fi sound of that cassette. Wish I still had it. And that sums up what the B-52′s sounded like in summer 1979: a cool and mysterious transmission accidently beaming in from outer space. Has it really been 30 years?
This was all set off by Maria T’s recent (more or less, maybe already a couple of months ago) spin of 52 Girls on yes, WPRB (I’d link to the playlist, but can’t seem to find it anymore).
And now I’ve set a new Irregular Orbit record for longest sidebar piece ever.
April 22, 2009...1 commentAnthology Of American Folk Music by various artists (Folkways/1952) – Harry Smith’s legendary collection is the grandfather of all ‘old music’ compilations. I wondered how it would set now in the age of the CD re-issue, when so many compilers have followed in its footsteps (and I’ve listened to many of them). Would it be just another batch of old rekkid sides? No — it really is “all that.” Smith made an excellent selection of tunes and sequenced them in a remarkably artful manner. It still works.
October 17, 2008...no commentsJ.S. Bach: Cello Suites Nos. 1-6 by Pablo Casals (Naxos/2000) – Vivid 1920s and 30s recordings of Bach’s cello suites by the artist who brought them into the modern performance repertoire. Intense performances and rather nice sound quality.
July 4, 2008...no commentsPowered by WordPress
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