Archive for March, 2008



New Björk Video - “Wanderlust”

Monday 31 March 2008 @ 10:42 pm

On this most Björk-y of days, Iceland's favorite daughter is also premiering her video for Volta's "Wanderlust." We've mentioned it previously, offering a few stills of the luxurious Isaiah Saxon and Sean Hellfritsch-directed landscape (yes, of Encyclopedia Pictura, the folks behind Grizzly Bear's "Knife"). But now you can actually watch it and its various water buffalo, swirling rivers, and on-the-run gymnastics in live, visually sumptuous action. Grab your popcorn and put your feet up, 'cause it's epic. Just watch out for the waterfall and giant cat.




R.E.M. Brings La Blogothèque To Athens

Monday 31 March 2008 @ 10:23 pm

A lot has been made of R.E.M.'s approach to announcing "they're back." Their work with Vincent Moon -- which we've see in official video and Take Away form already -- has been a major basis for the approach, and the ensuing discussion. Earlier today, while we've been busy enjoying, the La Blog folk published the other four tunes from their sessions in Athens, Georgia with the Accelerate-rs. We have them here for you, but we particularly dug this passage in the accompanying essay, which speaks directly to the potential friction from a veteran band squeezing itself into up-and-comers' means.

Doing a Take Away Show with REM could be seen as a way to rejuvenate their image. Obviously, it's part of the whole thing; letting aside the huge venues and ultra-sophisticated recording studios to play in the street, that is said to be highly fashionable. But when you push REC for the first time, doubts assail: what if it didn't work ? What if the band looked ridiculous, old-fashioned, too much used to playing songs perfectly, in front of cameras you're expected to be looking at ? Most of the bands filmed for the Take Away Shows are young and almost beginners, they participate in acoustic sessions often with great pleasure and curiosity - as it also represents a very welcome promo. So, what with such an "old" band, so experienced in the classical media stuff...?
That night, on the 7 songs played in only two hours, it had to get to the third song, "Living Well", crammed in the car, to finally see the doubts fade away. It happened when Stipe burst into laughter, finding sincere pleasure in taking part into this little game. After that moment, everything seemed to be floating, dreamlike elements like when "Born To Be Wild" came right after "Living Well", but no one will be able to see that - record companies stuff. A night in Athens which (almost) changed into a trip between old friends.

The first tune up is "Until The Day Is Done," the superserious, acoustic cut that premiered while Anderson Cooper was out saving the world. Obviously, it works well as a La Blogothèque take:

"Until The Day Is Done"

And more...




The Ardels

Monday 31 March 2008 @ 9:49 pm


1964, l-r: Fred Masson on bass, Doug Dixon, Gary Brennan (at drumset),
David Burt, Bob McKay and Jim Pernokis with Fender

The Ardels formed in Etobicoke, just outside Toronto, in 1963. They released an album of rock n' roll standards of the day in 1964, then three 45s, one on Hallmark and two on Cancut, including what is now their most well-known work, Piece of Jewellery, an original by vocalist Doug Dixon. Fred Masson, bassist and founding member of the group took the time to answer my questions about the band.

Fred Masson: The Ardels were originally formed when three of us: Dave Burt (piano), Robin Scott (guitar) and I met at a local church dance.  I'm not sure that, at that point, we had any defining musical influences other than current pop tunes and early blues.  Rather, as I remember, we were more influenced by the bands that were playing the local circuit.  We came up at the same time as a bunch of local bands who were fairly busy copying one another and stealing licks and stage business that worked.  As an example of that I can vividly remember playing a John Lee Hooker song in the style of a local band long before I actually heard the original.

After a few months of practicing we realized that none of us had the type of voice that would work as a front man and we recruited Bruce Saracini for the position. We also added Gary Brennan on drums at about the same time.
 
Over the first 6 months or so we probably played no more than 7 or 8 jobs, mostly local restaurants, house parties and a bunch of university frat parties.
 
We were competing in the neighborhood at the time with two very good garage bands, "The Checkmates" (later "John and Lee and the Checkmates") and The Lucernes (years later Doug, Russ and I would form "The Green Apple Quickstep" with Doug Duff, the horribly talented piano player from "The Lucernes") and realized that we needed a dynamic front man - leading us to Doug Dixon who lived in the neighborhood and had an unswerving drive to be a pop singer and composer. Doug joined us replacing Bruce and was responsible for writing almost all of the original Ardels material.
 
About the same time Robin Scott decided that he wanted to devote more time to his studies and we held open auditions for a new guitar player. Jim Pernokis, the brother of Ken, the guitar player for "Little Caesar and the Consuls" (which, over a few years, had included Robbie Robertson and Gene McLellan and was probably the most popular local/area group at the time) came to sit in for an hour and stayed around for about 40 years.
 
At the same time we recognized that we needed a horn in the group and recruited Bob McKay on tenor sax.  Bob not only proved to be a terrific addition musically but also added a huge amount of charisma to the group.  He can be heard on "Comin' Down".

As to the album, we had recorded about 12 songs at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) and had been given access to the master tapes.  At that point we were playing regularly around Ontario and were getting requests for recorded material.  Using the CBC masters we self-produced an album through Quality Records in Scarborough, Ontario so that we'd have promotional material to offer at dances - and to promoters. I think we only had about 500 of them to begin with!
 
The album leaned very heavily on standard rock songs of the period and borrowed heavily from Ronnie Hawkins (Lonely Hours) and James Brown (I Go Crazy) which showed off Doug's range. 
 
The Ardels - Lonely Hours









About the same time we had been contacted by Bill Gilliland of ARC Records who had auditioned us at the Met Dance Hall in Toronto and was interested in looking at the group for the label.  This brought about an ARC recording session which didn't result in a contract.  Unfortunately the masters of that session have been lost.
 
A few weeks thereafter we went into Hallmark Studios in Toronto - a huge, cavernous room used at the time for large orchestral recording - to produce a single - primarily to impress Stan Klees and Walt Grealis who were becoming a force in Canadian music at the time, just starting to publish RPM, the music magazine (which, over the years, would morph into The Junos - Canada's national music awards) and Ron Scribner who ran Bigland Agencies - the only large and credible booking agency in the country.  The session resulted in "Comin' Down" (a song written for Bobby Darin that had been rejected by Darin - or so we were told) and "So Glad You're Mine" [the Arthur 'Big Boy' Crudup song].

The Ardels - Comin' Down
The Ardels - So Glad You're Mine

The first single was impressive enough to bring about the deal with Cancut Records and representation with Bigland.

The Ardels - I Love You
The Ardels - Piece of Jewellery
 
The band played very few (if any) bars or night clubs at that time.  There were, in fact, not many venues of that type available for young bands in Southern Ontario.  The Toronto Strip - an area about 4 or 5 blocks long - had Le Coq D'Or, which was Ronnie Hawkins' (almost) permanent home; The Brown Derby booked larger national acts like Joe King and the Zaniacs; The Sapphire catered to a slightly more esoteric audience and regularly featured Jackie Shane backed by Frank (Duel Trumpet) Motley while The Zanzibar catered to a more blues-oriented audience and booked in groups like The Bossmen/Shays.
 
The rest of us played regularly at dance halls: The Mimicombo (a roller rink), The Met, Krang Plaza, Myzeric Hall, The Masonic Temple - along with the usual school, university and church dances. 

Q. Did you play on the unreleased 45, Stronger Than Dirt b/w I Should Have Known? - Was that supposed to be for Cancut as well?

I'm not sure if I played on the unreleased version of "Stronger Than Dirt".  It had been redone several times over the years but I'm almost certain that Roger played on the one that you're thinking of. And yes it, along with "I Should Have Known" (below) was (probably) going to be the next CanCut recording.

The Ardels - Stronger Than Dirt
The Ardels - I Should Have Known

The band didn't so much break up as slowly slip away.  Several of us left to pursue either job or educational opportunities and some were drawn to different types of music.  We were very fortunate to have been a part of the Canadian music scene at what would become known as the first gasp for recognition. 

I can remember having a discussion with Garth Hudson in front of The Met Dance Hall on Lakeshore Road in Toronto at about 1:30 in the morning bemoaning the fact that there weren't many opportunities for air-play (this was before the fabled days of CanCon, the government-mandated order for all Canadian radio stations to devote huge blocks of air time to Canadian talent. Check out the bios on Stan Klees and Walt Grealis for more on that). I seem to remember that Hudson managed to rise above the problem eventually.






1966: clockwise from top: Gary Brennan, David Burt, Jim Pernokis,
Bob McKay, Doug Dixon and Roger Charlesworth.

Q. You were impressed by the Fireflies of Sault Ste. Marie when you were young - did you grow up in the Soo before moving to Etobicoke?

I lived in The Soo for about 5 years before my family moved to Etobicoke. There's no reason that Eddie Pelletier and Howard Hall of the Fireflies [from Sault Ste. Marie Ontario] would remember me but their music - or, more accurately, the fact that a bunch of kids from the Soo could actually produce some great music - was the first bit of inspiration I needed to get on that same track.  I have great memories of those guys playing the "Y" dances (and still fondly remember Eddie's version of "Home").

Q. I've read that the Ardels backed David Clayton-Thomas on a tour, is that correct?

The Ardels didn't back Sonny Thomas at any time (at least not during my time) as he was associated with a very talented band - either The Bossmen or The Shays depending upon the time.  A few of the guys in these bands - Freddy Keillor - guitar (sorry, I'm unsure of the spelling) and Tony Collicott - piano (listen to "Brainwashed" - Tony had 36 fingers.) were as good as anyone playing anywhere at the time.

The Ardels recorded a number of songs that have never been released. Along with Stronger Than Dirt and I Should Have Known, there is also an earlier version of Piece of Jewellery and an untitled song with original lyrics set to the music of Stronger Than Dirt.

The Ardels - Piece of Jewellery (alternate version)
The Ardels - Untitled (Stronger Than Dirt)

After the group broke up in 1968, Doug Dixon and Jim Pernokis joined The Bedtime Story, who had two 45s on Columbia.

In 1988, Fred Masson, Doug Dixon, Jim Pernokis and Ardels backup drummer Russ Crerar formed Pastime, playing together until 2000.

David Burt has had a long career as solo pianist, teacher and writer. Gary Brennan passed away in 2007.

Thanks to Fred Masson for helping with material for this article and for patiently answering my questions, and to Ivan Amirault for contributing many of the photos and scans of RPM.


RPM 100 chart, September 28, 1966


1966, l-r: Doug Dixon, Jim Pernokis, Gary Brennan (top), Roger Charlesworth and David Burt.




Monday Evening Updates Again…

Monday 31 March 2008 @ 7:40 pm
RADIO FREE WOHLMAN said... Transmission 6508 As sonic a NP as there ever was, Nurse Ratched highly recommends these mostly newer releases by Sonic Youth, Daniel Lanois, M83, Nik Bartsch's Ronin, Free Form Funky Freqs, Hercules & Love Affair, Guillemots and MGMT! Cuckoo! T6508 is a 60.1mb 128k mp3 1:05:39 in length made loud to be played loud! "we turn the light on your lonely home" RFW http://radiofreewohlman.blogspot.com tuttsi_fruttsi_icecream said... LA The Darkman - Heist of the Century...

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Stereogum Presents… Enjoyed: A Tribute To Björk’s Post

Monday 31 March 2008 @ 7:27 pm
Stereogum Presents... Enjoyed: A Tribute To Björk's Post cover



Oldstand: Rolling Stone, March 10, 1988

Monday 31 March 2008 @ 7:12 pm

Take our ink-stained hands and join us at the OldStand, where Jon McMillan goes to remind everyone what an honest-to-goodness music magazine is supposed to look like.

Not sure why it took Rolling Stone until March 10th, 1988 to release the results of the 1987 Music Poll when basically all they had to do was take the same batch of index cards they use to choose their covers (Springsteen, R.E.M., U2, David Bowie, any Beatle, something from 1968, male white actor etc.), throw them on the floor, and let David Fricke ("the critic"), and an intern ("the reader") pick them up in a different order. Which is to say: no surprises here. U2 picks up most of the coveted non-awards, and are rewarded for their trouble with a super-pretentious four-page spread of their heads juxtaposed with U2 lyrics. Oh, and a profile of The Edge (known, at this point in his career, as "the guy who isn't Bono").

Here's a vote: This is the most half-assed "poll" ever. Many of the categories have multiple winners, and the "artists" section is just a list of stuff, with no explanation or qualifications whatsoever (for example, Michael Stipe's "list" includes the following quote: "I didn't listen to anything in a year, but I know these came out and are the best. Of what they are. Next year will be Downey Mildew and Hetchy Hetchy. You watch." Um, thanks big fella. Why don't you sit the next few plays out?). And how can Belinda Carlisle, of all people, be the only person (critic, fan, artist) to include "Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me"? This whole thing just makes me mad. At least the guys from Crowded House have the good sense to name check "Strangeways Here We Come."

Elsewhere there's a huge article about the Rock 'N' Roll HOF inductions (a six-page list of names, basically, but some of the pictures are hilarious), a PJ O'Rourke piece about post-Marcos Manila, and Kurt Loder's four-star review of Robert Plant's Now And Zen ("Even Jimmy Page, who is a guest guitarist on two of the tracks, flourishes in this hot new context"). Fred Goodman checks in with an insightful report on how the record industry is (was) dealing with the death of vinyl (if you guessed "by charging hubristic prices for CDs," give yourself a twist of the arm).

Also: Spuds Mackenzie, Richard Marx, and the most wonderfully eclectic dance chart of all time.




Monday Evening Updates Continued…

Monday 31 March 2008 @ 5:00 pm
DjTaurunum said... 7 & 12 inch Massacre Blog, new singles Method Man feat. Mary J. Blige-1995-I'll be there for you [Maxi Cd] The Funky Space Nation-1992-Ride the rocket [Maxi Cd] Cypress Hill-1995-Illusions [Maxi Cd] http://djtaurunum.blogspot.com 320 raider said... 320 raider - a new album blog sharing only the highest quality music, in 320 kbps. tortoise & bonnie 'prince' billy - the brave and the bold cut chemist & dj shadow - brainfreeze http://320raider.blogspot.com JS said... more...

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Stereogum Presents… Enjoyed: A Tribute To Björk’s Post

Monday 31 March 2008 @ 3:30 pm

Stereogum's complete 12-track Enjoyed comp is live and ready to be downloaded (for free). Yep, 12. Because No Age cooked up an excellent alternate take on "It's Oh So Quiet," which we wanted to keep a surprise until ... now. In addition to Dean and Randy's Björk, you'll hear, in order of appearance, the previously announced covers by Liars, Dirty Projectors, High Places, Bell, Pattern Is Movement, Evangelicals, Xiu Xiu, Final Fantasy & Ed Droste, White Hinterland, El Guincho, and Atlas Sound. Each artist gave us their thoughts on Post, their Enjoyed take, and/or Björk's work in general (additionally, we've included video interviews with High Places, Pattern Is Movement, and El Guincho). We also offer a contextual "essay" and, finally, we caught-up with Björk and asked her for her thoughts, 13 years later, on her 1995 follow-up to Debut. Enjoy!




Monday Evening Updates…

Monday 31 March 2008 @ 3:09 pm
Radu said... Babe(b)logue Update: Indian Ocean - Black Friday OST (India 2005) http://babeblogue.blogspot.com gomonkeygo said... Oh. The weekend is over. Happy week. Dumptruck - Live at the Metro, Chicago, IL (11/20/87) http://thenewdisease.blogspot.com jj said... Mazzy Star - So Tonight That I Might See Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - Clap Your Hands Say Yeah The Hold Steady - Boys & Girls In America Boy Least Likely To - The Best Party Ever http://frontofthequeue.blogspot.com Redtelephone66...

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Monday’s Pickin’ My Feeds… Part 10

Monday 31 March 2008 @ 3:08 pm
Coven/Pitrelli/Reilly - CPR Bumblefoot - Normal Pat Martino - Stone Blue Allan Holdsworth - Against The Clock (2CD)(2005) Frank Gambale - Best Of Jazz & Rock Fusion Wenlin - Unattended Battlefield http://virtuososguitarristas.blogspot.com Brandon Fields - The Other Side Of The History 1985 http://www.zonadejazz.com AMY WINEHOUSE - DISCOGRAFIA http://alltribes.blogspot.com Aorta - S/T - 1969 US http://hippy-djkit.blogspot.com indigenous - chasing the sun alligator stew -...

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