News
KISHI BASHI VS. TALKING HEADS/ELO/BEIRUT
European tour & album release!
Wes Anderson World
Notown Ripoff/Cox Mix
The original release of the Monomania EP happened last March–that is, in March of 2012. We re-released it as an LP last week, April 2nd, in the form of LP combining Child Bite’s two transcendentally brutal EP’s Vision Crimes/Monomania.
Yeah, that’s right. Two days before Monomania by Deerhunter went on sale over at 4AD. Karl called up Deerhunter’s manager a few weeks ago and was like, “Hey I just thought I’d call because –you know………I just thought you should know about this.” Reportedly, Deerhunter’s management was like: “Yeah. [Pause] That doesn’t surprise me. It’s a great title.”
Despite this somewhat inconvenient chronological coincidence, even here at Joyful Noise, we’re pretty excited about Deerhunter’s new album. So tonight I’ve been revisiting Bradford Cox’s Micromixes which you can find (at least the track listings) over at the Deerhunter blog.
In Like a Lion: Mike Adams At His Honest Weight
Sleeping Bag “Slime”
Kishi Bashi “Manchester”
‘H/C’ by Thurston Moore
In the future, when social scientists study the mix tape phenomenon, they will conclude- in fancy language- that the mix tape was a form of “speech”, particular to the late twentieth century.
— (Dean Wareham of Galaxie 500 quoted by Thurston Moore on p. 28 of his book “Mix Tape: The Art of Cassette Culture”
At a time when, he couldn’t afford to purchase singles Thurston Moore recorded mixtapes in Dan Graham’s living room. Here is the story of one such mixtape quoted (again) from Moore’s Mix Tape book:
“[In the early 80’s] My love Kim would come home from work each day, which was at Todd’s Copy Shop on Mott Street or waitressing at Elephant & Castle on Prince Street, and I’d be playing hardcore singles all day. I thine she even wrote some lyrics about her boyfriend [me] doing this. I felt slight guilty, but I also needed to hear these records in a more time-fluid way, and it hit me that I could make a killer mix tape of all the best songs on these records–and since they were all so whort and they all had the same kind of sound and energy, the mix tape would be a monolithic hardcore rush. As we had access to Dan [Graham’s] apartment [ie. where there was a library of records, and equipment to do dubs], I went up there and did just that. I wrote ‘H’ on one side, and ‘C’ on the other side. That night, while we were in bed, and after Kim had fallen asleep, I put the cassette on our stereo cassette player, dragged one of the little speakers over to the bed, and listened to the tape at ultra-low thrash volume…. For my birthday that year, Kim bought me a Walkman with a speaker built into it. This allowed me to have the Walkman right next to my pillow and play the ‘H/C’ mix tape at an even more intimate range…”
And so without further ado, Joyful Noise has assembled and presents to you (a close approximation) of….
H/C Mixtape*
Prank Calling Buzz Osborne
So what we would do is on a Friday night–after consuming heroic doses of various illicit substances–we would call up our hero: the superhuman, the electric centaur. That is, Buzz Osbourne. And we would read into his voicemail, passages from the book. In retrospect, the whole procedure was almost like a strange form of prayer. Here’s an exemplary passage, chosen at random:
They are twins, fitly mated & as either gains control of the unfortunate subject, his soul withers away and decays, and at last dies out. The souls of half the human race leave them long before they die. “They cover all the skin of him that hath the plague, from his head even to his foot.” Even the raw flesh of the heart becomes unclean with it. Algebra applies to the clouds; the radiance of the star benefits the rose; no thinker would dare to say that the perfume of the hawthorn is useless to the constellations. Who, then, can calculate the path of the molecule? How do we know that the creations of worlds are not determined by the fall of grains of sand?