vendredi 25 avril 2008
Pretty Good
Third song of new Poni Hoax Amazing album "Images of Sigrid" released on 28th april on Tigersushi.
Poni Hoax--Pretty Tall Girls
vendredi 21 mars 2008
Let's dance to electronic!
Two killer tracks that makes me move my feet from recent days, especially the Late of the Pier remix ...really better than the original by the frenchy Toxic Avenger
Naive New Beaters--Live Good (The Bloody Beetroots remix)
Late Of The Pier--Space And The Woods (Toxic Avenger Remix)
Naive New Beaters--Live Good (The Bloody Beetroots remix)
Late Of The Pier--Space And The Woods (Toxic Avenger Remix)
mardi 18 mars 2008
Now Tell Me What You See?
New band from Essex,UK supporting Black Kids in London with no label but TOP friends with MGMT, MIA and Vampire Weekend on myspace so it might be good for sure... well may be. OUAAH!
Magistrates--The InBetweens (demo)
Magistrates--The InBetweens (demo)
mardi 4 mars 2008
Spirals of Love..yeaaahh
Hellohh hippies it's the psychedelic post!
Some songs to ease your mind after your animal week end...
First a new video from the Baltimore band Beach House
the video of "heart of chambers" from their new album Devotion,
out 2/26/08 on Carpark.
The second song is from Jim Noir new album out 4/8 on Barsuk.
Jim Noir--Don't you worry
Have a nice trip!!
Some songs to ease your mind after your animal week end...
First a new video from the Baltimore band Beach House
the video of "heart of chambers" from their new album Devotion,
out 2/26/08 on Carpark.
The second song is from Jim Noir new album out 4/8 on Barsuk.
Jim Noir--Don't you worry
Have a nice trip!!
mercredi 20 février 2008
Six Kinds of Glow
The Kills are back...
Their new album Midnight Boom is a mix of pure dancey
and intense tracks and high-gliding ballads. Out 10 March on Domino records.
Tape song has an exploding chorus that'll make
you want to play guitar and remind you the best of The Pixies shout out loud times.
A Hit on you.
The Kills--Tape Song [Track removed - Label request]
Their new album Midnight Boom is a mix of pure dancey
and intense tracks and high-gliding ballads. Out 10 March on Domino records.
Tape song has an exploding chorus that'll make
you want to play guitar and remind you the best of The Pixies shout out loud times.
A Hit on you.
The Kills--Tape Song [Track removed - Label request]
mardi 19 février 2008
"Where do You Live?," he asks. "Next Door," she answers.
The Syd Barrett-infused five-piece outfit Mystery Jets are back. Yeah, and they're not back on their own; Erol Alkan is behind the mixing desk. Together, they allow you to live -or relive the 80's vicariously, when unemployment was lower, the synths tackier, the sax soli ubiquitous..Enjoy. The LP "21" is out on March the 24th.
The Mystery Jets - "Girl Next Door"
The Mystery Jets - "Girl Next Door"
lundi 18 février 2008
Mighty as a Sword
Nothing musical has truly and utterly shaken me this week, at the very least nothing that could make the headlines of our constantly evolving Gogocommando blog, so here follows a list of top enthralling readings.
The first two batches are mainly journalistic works. Consequently, don't be surprised here, you'll be faced with the propensity that many rock critics, rock reviewers or rock fans display for exaggeration and myth at the expense of truth. However, all the biographies or musical movement studies consist in in-depth researches, buttressed with a cautious treatment of sources and are in consequence totally exhaustive. I am talking about reference books here,'right?
Of course, you can exclude Bangs' Gonzo-ish work from such a search for objectivity. Ok I spare you all the chitchat about Gonzo, but, yeah, just a few words. The quest for objectivity is doomed to failure; starting from the premise that as soon as you talk about something, no matter how hard you try to be detached from the initial subject, you're irremediably biased. However, by definition, subjectivity is indeniably fraught with reality. Gonzo's stumblig block is to acknowledge the validity and celebrate the pre-eminence of this inherent subjectiveness.
Nevertheless, no need to introduce Bangs; everyone knows is a dogmatic c***.
The last batch is made of more theoretical works. They are extremely valuable and helpful in order to conceptualise a musical object or a subculture and learn how to consider it. They provide really useful information for the layman, and a clear outlook upon the research made in their branch of learning for the scholar. However, be careful. Hall's and Hebdige's books are great, and gound-breaking, but not flawless. Indeed the two authors engage throughout their book in a plethora of contextual elements, while completely omitting any treatment of music as text. When music is referenced at all, you'll see, it is done only in passing. There is a total prioritisation of context over music as text. It is therefore necessary to complete the reading of these books with journalistic works that take the music into account.
That's all for now.
Bangs, Lester. Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung. New York: Albert A Knopf, 1987.
Bangs, Lester. Mainline, Blood Feasts and Bad Taste. London: Serpent’s Tail, 2003.
Gilbert, Pat. Passion is a Fashion: The Real Story of The Clash. London: Aurum Press Ltd, 2004.
Greil, Marcus. Lipstick Traces. Cambridge, Massassuchets: Harvard University Press, 1989.
Harris, John. The Last Party -Britpop, Blair and the Demise of English Rock. London: Fourth Estate, 2003.
Haslam, Dave. Manchester England. London: Fourth Estate, 1999.
Lydon, John. No Irish. No Blacks. No Dogs. London: Plexus Publishing Limited, 2003.
Mathur, Paul. Take me there -Oasis the Story. New York: Overlook Press, 1997.
Reynolds, Simon. Rip it up and Start Again. London: Faber and Faber, 2005.
Robb, John. The Stone Roses and the Resurrection of British Pop. London: Random House, 2001.
Savage, Jon. England’s Dreaming. London: Faber and Faber, 1991.
Thornton, Anthony, and Roger Sargent. The Libertines: Bound Together. London: Time Warner Books, 2006.
Frith, Simon. The Cambridge Companion to Pop and Rock. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
Frith, Simon, and Andrew Goodwin. On Record. London: Routledge, 1990.
Hall, Stuart. Resistance Through Rituals: Youth Subcultures in Post-War Great Britain. London: Hutchinson & Co, 1976.
Hebdige, Dick. Subculture-The Meaning of Style. London: Methuen &Co. Ltd, 1979.
Longhurst, Brian. Popular Music& Society. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1995.
Roszak, Theodore. The Making of a Counter-Culture. New York: Double Days, 1969.
Madchestertransmission.
The first two batches are mainly journalistic works. Consequently, don't be surprised here, you'll be faced with the propensity that many rock critics, rock reviewers or rock fans display for exaggeration and myth at the expense of truth. However, all the biographies or musical movement studies consist in in-depth researches, buttressed with a cautious treatment of sources and are in consequence totally exhaustive. I am talking about reference books here,'right?
Of course, you can exclude Bangs' Gonzo-ish work from such a search for objectivity. Ok I spare you all the chitchat about Gonzo, but, yeah, just a few words. The quest for objectivity is doomed to failure; starting from the premise that as soon as you talk about something, no matter how hard you try to be detached from the initial subject, you're irremediably biased. However, by definition, subjectivity is indeniably fraught with reality. Gonzo's stumblig block is to acknowledge the validity and celebrate the pre-eminence of this inherent subjectiveness.
Nevertheless, no need to introduce Bangs; everyone knows is a dogmatic c***.
The last batch is made of more theoretical works. They are extremely valuable and helpful in order to conceptualise a musical object or a subculture and learn how to consider it. They provide really useful information for the layman, and a clear outlook upon the research made in their branch of learning for the scholar. However, be careful. Hall's and Hebdige's books are great, and gound-breaking, but not flawless. Indeed the two authors engage throughout their book in a plethora of contextual elements, while completely omitting any treatment of music as text. When music is referenced at all, you'll see, it is done only in passing. There is a total prioritisation of context over music as text. It is therefore necessary to complete the reading of these books with journalistic works that take the music into account.
That's all for now.
Bangs, Lester. Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung. New York: Albert A Knopf, 1987.
Bangs, Lester. Mainline, Blood Feasts and Bad Taste. London: Serpent’s Tail, 2003.
Gilbert, Pat. Passion is a Fashion: The Real Story of The Clash. London: Aurum Press Ltd, 2004.
Greil, Marcus. Lipstick Traces. Cambridge, Massassuchets: Harvard University Press, 1989.
Harris, John. The Last Party -Britpop, Blair and the Demise of English Rock. London: Fourth Estate, 2003.
Haslam, Dave. Manchester England. London: Fourth Estate, 1999.
Lydon, John. No Irish. No Blacks. No Dogs. London: Plexus Publishing Limited, 2003.
Mathur, Paul. Take me there -Oasis the Story. New York: Overlook Press, 1997.
Reynolds, Simon. Rip it up and Start Again. London: Faber and Faber, 2005.
Robb, John. The Stone Roses and the Resurrection of British Pop. London: Random House, 2001.
Savage, Jon. England’s Dreaming. London: Faber and Faber, 1991.
Thornton, Anthony, and Roger Sargent. The Libertines: Bound Together. London: Time Warner Books, 2006.
Frith, Simon. The Cambridge Companion to Pop and Rock. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
Frith, Simon, and Andrew Goodwin. On Record. London: Routledge, 1990.
Hall, Stuart. Resistance Through Rituals: Youth Subcultures in Post-War Great Britain. London: Hutchinson & Co, 1976.
Hebdige, Dick. Subculture-The Meaning of Style. London: Methuen &Co. Ltd, 1979.
Longhurst, Brian. Popular Music& Society. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1995.
Roszak, Theodore. The Making of a Counter-Culture. New York: Double Days, 1969.
Madchestertransmission.
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