Still waiting on Jukebox Heart 012? Er…

Moonlight Radio December 2005
49.5 MB | 54:02

Still in the works. But, this hour-plus long mix of great tracks should hold you for a bit. It was first released in my Moonlight Radio online magazine in December 2005. And this is a continuing series of archiving those mixes which you may have missed the first time around. But watch this space for Jukebox Heart 012 soon… Enjoy!

Playlist:

The Atlantics – Lonely Hearts
The Homosexuals – Soft South Africans
Stained Rug Theory – Genetalia [sic]
Tuxedomoon – What Use…?
Broken Spindles – Matte
Ellen Allien – Washing Machine is Speaking
Siddal – When the Wolf Comes
Pnau – A Special Interlude
Feezepop – Outer Space
Hood – The Rest of Us Still Care
The Castanets – Dancing with Someone (Privilege of Everythin)
Jacob Kirkegard – Izanami

Behind the cut, you will find images and information about the music.
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The subcategory in Jukebox Heart of “The Sound of Silence” is where I blog on-topic but don’t include any media files. This is because all of the podcasts generally have some kind of category they fall into, and yet, I listen to so much more music that I don’t include all of it all the time in the podcasts. These excursions allow me to document all that stuff. Formerly, this was known as “Sonic Diary”, which was kinda lame. But it was also somewhat inaccuratre since I’ll be talking about more than just music.

Anyway. Cold Play. I was a little slow to take to this band, because I hated “yellow” – especially all of the remixes that came out. So I wrote them off. Of course, then “Clocks” blew me away enough to make it a standard ringtone on my phone. (My own creation, that is, not some downloaded midi atrocity). And now Vida La Viva. I have to admit, though, the band is reminding more and more of The Police – albeit updated for the new century – with each successive release. So much so, that I’d love to hear them do a cover of, say, Invisible Sun, or, not to be too obvious, but Roxanne. This has been rockin’ the car stereo for a little while now, and the title track is just to die for. And just when you think you get to exhale at the end, they close with those brilliant, off beat choral measures.

I’ve really been struggling to put together Jukebox Heart 012, “Rollin’ with Jukebox Heart”. But it is coming along. Almost all the tracks have been selected, and when I’m ready, I’ll jst have to sit at the mixing desk and spin it all into one. Two weeks ago, I traded a couple of rare CDs i had multiples of for this large collection of about 60 CDs. It was primarily of interest to me because it contained DNTEL’s “Early Works for Me if it Works for You”, which has become impossible to find. There was a wealth of great music in this collection, too, so I’ve been selecting tracks over the last two weeks. Let’s just say there is an amusing reason Jukebox Heart is titled such as it is…

I should also note that my on-line record store is back on line via Discogs.com. You can browse my items for sale just by clicking the link. But visit often, I’m updating it daily. There is a lot of nice stuff there that I wouldnt even consir selling but for the fact that I have duplicates.

Archive: Moonlight Radio September 2006

Moonlight Radio September 2006
62.7 MB | 1:06:50

This hour-plus long mix of beautiful tracks was first released in my Moonlight Radio online magazine in September 2006. And this is a continuing series of archiving those mixes which you may have missed the first time around. Enjoy!

ARTIST: Elephant Pixel
TITLE: Folk, Lysergia, Computers
TRACK: 1. Glass (Chegoku Remix)
LABEL: igloo
FORMAT: CD

ARTIST: The Album Leaf
TITLE: In An Off White Room
TRACK: A1. Project Loop
LABEL: Troubleman Unlimited
FORMAT: 10-Inch

ARTIST: Dntel
TITLE: Life is Full of Possibilities
TRACK: 7. Why I’m So Unhappy
LABEL: Plug Research
FORMAT: CD

ARTIST: Loess
TITLE: 3D Concepts, Part 2
TRACK: B1. Alt.Tone.Two
LABEL: Toytronic
FORMAT: LP

ARTIST: bitcrush
TITLE: In Distance
TRACK: 1. Post (9:05)
LABEL: n5MD
FORMAT: CD

ARTIST: The Workhouse
TITLE: Split Single
TRACK: A. John Noakes
LABEL: Awkward Silence
FORMAT: 7-inch

ARTIST: gel-sol
TITLE: Gel-Sol 1104
TRACK: 5. Numby Numbs
LABEL: em:t
FORMAT: CD

ARTIST: Languis
TITLE: Other Desert Cities EP
TRACK: 4. I Forgot I Forgot
LABEL: pehr
FORMAT: CD

ARTIST: For Against
TITLE: In The Marshes
TRACK: B1. Amen Yves
LABEL: Independent Project
FORMAT: 10-inch

ARTIST: Another Electronic Musician
TITLE: Use
TRACK: A1. H+
LABEL: n5MD
FORMAT: CD

ARTIST: Osaka
TITLE: Brandon Whiskey
TRACK: B1. Apu
LABEL: Jonathon Whiskey
FORMAT: 7-inch

ARTIST: Deux Filles
TITLE: Silence and Wisdom
TRACK: A1. The Letter
LABEL: Papier Mache
FORMAT: LP

Below the cut is lots of information about each track…
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Jukebox Saturday Night, Volume 2

Jukebox Saturday Night Volume 2
38.1 MB | 41:37

Here’s another collection of scratchy jukebox singles for your Rockin’Saturday Night. Once again, these are all culled from my collection, all original 45 RPM records. Jukebox Heart Never forgets its roots!

Here’s the Playlist. After the cut, there’s information about each release and the obligatory label shots for my collector buddies and fabulous graphic design geeks…

The Videos – Trickle Trickle
(Casino Records, 1958)

The Jesters – I Laughed
(Cyclone Records, 1958)

Frankie Lymon – Little Bitty Pretty One
(Roulette Records, 1958)

The Revalons – Dreams Are For Fools
(Pet Records, 1958)

Nino and the Ebb Tides – Jukebox Saturday Night
(Madison Records, 1961)

Nino and the Ebb Tides – (Someday) I’ll Fall in Love
(Madison Records, 1961)

The Regents – Laura My Darling
(Gee Records, 1961)

Reparata and the Delrons – Whenever A Teenager Cries
(World Artists Records, 1963)

The Safaris – Image of a Girl
(Eldo Records, 1960)

The Knockouts – Darling Lorraine
(Shad Records, 1959)

The Pyramids – Ankle Bracelet
(Shell Records, 1961)

The Rivileers – A Thousand Stars
(Baton Records, 1954)

The Cadillacs – Gloria
(Josie Records, 1954)

The RObins – One Kiss
(Spark Records, 1955)

Fats Domino – Ain’t It A Shame
(Imperial Records, 1956)

Cark Perkins – Blue Suede Shoes
(Sun Records, 1957)

Bill Justis – Raunchy
(Phillips Int’l Records, 1957)

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Jukebox Heart 011+: Oh Pity Us Who Forget To Include Track Information In Our Podcasts…

It occurred to me, perhaps a bit too late, that I did not include any information on the selections in
Jukebox Heart 011: Oh Pity Us Who Still Believe In The Revolution. So, I’m including it now.

This podcast was indeed a simultaneous statement and indictment of my own personal politics. I generally keep my politics to myself, engaging in discussion only with people who have some meaning and relevance in my life. I don’t believe in proselytizing to put an agenda forth on anyone. Rather, I choose to live my life as an example of my politics and let people interpret as they are able. In any case, that all having been said, here’s some info about the music you heard in JBH011.

Coco Steel and Lovebomb – Harlem
(em:t 0094 – em:t records cd 1994)

Though Coco, Steel & Lovebomb grew out of the techno community, the group blends elements of garage, soul and disco with only an ambient-techno blueprint. After Coco (aka Chris Mellor) began DJing at the Brighton club Zap, his acid-house sets grew popular in the wake of the late-80s house explosion. With partner Steel (aka Lene [Stokes]), and Craig Woodrow (aka Lovebomb), he formed Coco, Steel & Lovebomb After taking three years to record debut album It!, they released it in 1994. An ambient outing, New World, followed in 1997, and that is my favorite work of theirs. This track is representative of their more ambient work. But their “Set Me Free” trackis probably their most recognizable, if you are a club goon… The label, em:t, is a wildly collectible imprint, with copies of their first-gen releases bringing in hundreds of dollars. They went bankrupt in 1998 and everything suddenly went out of print. The were one of the first to use the legendary Designer’s Republic firm for their branding. The second generation “em:t records”, which is discussed in the website, has already been launched and folded after a handful of releases. For more information about like minded music, try this mailing list.

Locust – Morning Light/Just Like You
(Morning Light – Apollo CD 1997)

Locust (not to be confused with US band “The Locust”) is one of the many projects of London musician and one of my personal heroes, Mark van Hoen.Visit his website and listen to some of the clips from the many albums shown there and you will begin to understand why. He has also produced some familiar bands like Mojave 3, Sing Sing, Scala (oh, yes!), Velma and Edison Woods. Vocals on this were performed by the wonderful Craig Bethel, whose recent album, A Day Full Of You, A Night Tired Of Me, is out now and prioduced by Mark…

Not Drowning, Waving – John Wayne Visits Port Augusta
– Hibakush
– Once LIke This
(Another Pond – Rampant LP 1984)

Not Drowning, Waving, were a musical group formed in Melbourne, Australia in 1983 (though they first performed as a group in 1984) by David Bridie and John Phillips. Their music combined elements of rock, ambient music and world music; their lyrics dealt with characteristically Australian topic: word-pictures of landscapes and people, the seasons, and some political issues (such as Indonesia’s invasion of East Timor). Their name is derived from Stevie Smith’s poem “Not Waving but Drowning”. In the 1980s, Not Drowning, Waving visited Papua New Guinea playing several concerts and meeting George Telek with whom they would record the Tabaran album. Not Drowning, Waving were the support band for Peter Gabriel on his first and only tour of Australia in 1994. The group disbanded in 1994 but Bridie and Mountfort continued to perform with their successful offshoot venture My Friend The Chocolate Cake which they had formed in 1989. November 4 2001 saw a short reunion of Not Drowning, Waving at the Corner Hotel in the Melbourne suburb of Richmond for the launch for the book ‘Blunt: A Biased History of Australian Rock’. On February 28 2003, they reunited again for The Morning Star Concert For West Papua at the Melbourne Concert Hall. The reunion was rekindled in earnest for several months starting in March 2005 when the band, together with George Telek, performed twice at the 2005 WOMADelaide festival. Several other performances followed – at the 10th Fest’Napuan in Port Vila, Vanuatu; the Corner Hotel in Richmond, Australia; and the Northcote Social Club, Northcote, Australia. The band’s final show with the full lineup (as listed above) took place at Festival Melbourne2006 in the Alexandra Gardens, a free concert for Melbourne’s Commonwealth Games celebrations on March 25 2006.

Six Twilights – Tonight I’m Letting You Drive
(Six Twilights – Own Records CD 2007)

Six Twilights is a music and video project by Aaron Gerber of the Portland based band A Weather.
The music is a collection of carefully recorded bits of hushed, delicate male and female vocals, warm acoustic guitars and melancholy piano all rearranged in non-repetative patterns which sometimes resemble songs in the traditional sense and sometimes veer more towards ambient electronic atmospheres. The accompaning DVD is a visual conterpoint to the music: tiny moments of nostalgic, essentialized forms swaying and bending to the warm rushes of sound. I bought this because it looked intertesting and I trust my instincts. What a prize…

Liquorice – Drive Around
(Listening Cap – 4AD LP 1995)

Liquorice was a kind of indy superstar band featuring Dan Littleton of Ida, Trey Many of His Name is Alive and Jen Twomey of Grenadine, Tsunami and, well, Jennifer Twomey. :) Produced and Recorded by Warren Defever. This wonderful album got inexplicably rotten reviews, but I get the feeling they were written by those who could not possess Ms. Twomey. That’s the only kind of subtext that would explain some of the drivel I’ve read about this.
And Liquorice moving to 4AD for this was a coup, given Warren D.’s connections there via his own band, and the Trey Many link as well. This whole album is filled with a wry sense of humor as well as a surrender to romance – a fabulous combination.

Low – I Remember
(Immune – Tugboat 7-inch 1999)

This is the rare non-LP alernate version, sung by her rather than him…

Force.Fed – no title
(Various Artists – Infiltrate 6 – Rice and Beans LP 2004)

First, I left the title out of the original bl0g entry: Microthoughts For System Format.
I don’t know much about this project, except that it is shrouded in mystery and one of the projects of Skymall. Rice and Beans, the imprint, has an interesting history. It is a Beta Bodega Coalition label, and operated from 2000 to 2005. Originally, Rice And Beans was a short lived t-shirt line started in early 1996 by La Mano Fria and Lord SP, ended in 1997. Brought back again in 2000 to serve as a record label for BBC. Rice And Beans also had its special series, Rise And Defeat. After completing mission, label was deactivated in 2005, returning in 2006 to original duties, to carry a social and political message through La Mano Fria t-shirt designs. Today, Rice And Beans is the official clothing line of Beta Bodega Coalition, based and manufactured in BBC chapter RL66 headquarters in Tokyo, Japan.

The Fleetwoods – Care So Much
(45 – Liberty Records 1959)

A totally groovy 45 with some funky background stuff. First, this is the flipside of the 45 shown in the original blog entry. “Come Softly To Me” was first pressed by Dolton (aka Dolphin) records, a Seatlle based imprint. While the Fleetwoods first record, “Come Softly To Me” was such a big hit, it was the first record put out by the imprint. Dolton was so overwhelmed by the demand for the record that it had to be picked up by Liberty for distro. Despite this, the label is probably best known for The Ventures. The Fleetwoods were way ahead of their time. Their arrangement owes more to the background beat culture (bongoes and acoustic guitar only) than to any of the commercial pop music of the time. The flip, “Care So Much” is featured here, and juxtaposed wth a current song with similar arrangement sensibility. And given the repressed tenor of the times, pictures of the group featuring group members Gretchen and Barbara hanging off each of the arms of Gary, dressed in a sailor’s uniform, sent rumors flying. The fact that the title of the hit song featured the word “Come” had people whispering and giggling around jukeboxes nationwide. In a recent interview, Gretchen and Barbara both expressed their horror, when, at the tender age of 20 years, revealed that they didn’t understand all of the controversy and that they had no idea of “that meaning” of the word. Uh-huh. Yes, it’s pretty hilarious…

The Boats – I’m Talking Facts, Not Shit
(Tomorrow Time – Moteer CD 2006)

The Boats features Craig Tattersall, one of the members of Hood, The Remote Viewer and The Famous Boyfriend — all staple bands in the Jukebox Heart world. Unfortunately, all of their releases appear to be out of print and dreadfully collectible – you really gotta jump on these when they come out. I managed to pull this one out of a clearance bin for a couple of bucks. The label itself is run by the folks in The Remote Viewer and carries on with all the charm you’d expect…

Helios – A Rising Wind
(Ayres – Type Records LP 2007)

It hasn’t been long since Keith Kenniff’s gorgeous collection of gauzy, cinematic sound-poems, Eingya slipped into the consciousness. In a short space of time, the Boston-based multi-instrumentalist has become awash with acclaim and been invited to perform numerous live dates around Europe, something which gave life and inspiration to this latest collection of work. Those who managed to catch him on the most recent tour will already be aware that Keith has just taken up his most breathtaking instrument yet — his voice, and Ayres is his first exploration of this new-found talent. Eingya, his previous effort, managed with the simplest of means to show just how crushing Keith’s songwriting was, but here he pieces together five gorgeous “songs” and one inspired cover with devastating results. Combining his many musical loves, Keith manages somehow to bring in the warring elements of indie-pop, experimental electronics, folk and world music, resulting in a sound which is distinctly his own; these might be songs in the traditional sense, but there’s little traditional about the way they have been produced. Decaying synthesizer sounds trip up over carefully strummed guitars and expertly carved percussion — take opening track “A Rising Wind,” which is maybe the most effortless display of Keith’s talents; this is a slow burning epic, beginning with the simplest of sound-palettes and growing into a jubilant dream-pop masterpiece. Elsewhere, standout track “The Obeisant Vine” blends the hazy nostalgic electronics of Brian Eno with the songwriting heart of The Innocence Mission, leaving you gasping for more. By the time the mini-album ends with a cover of “In Heaven,” that song from David Lynch’s seminal Eraserhead, you realize you have spent half an hour in Helios’ world, and it’s a world you’ll want to escape to again and again.

The Last Poets – True Blues
(Jazzoetry – Douglas LP 1975)

Originally released in 1975, the Last Poets (who took their name from a poem by South African poet Willie Kgositsile) used the term ‘Jazzoetry’ to describe their own syncopated style of politicized, jazz-laced spoken word, unwittingly laying the groundwork for the entire hip hop genre. The group used their hard-hitting proto-rap verses to teach solidarity and condemn America’s inherent racism, a position that earned them FBI surveillance.

Brooklyn Funk Essentials – The Revolution Was Postponed Because of Rain
(Cool and Steady and Easy – Dorado CD 1994)

Brooklyn Funk Essentials were a musical group who mixed jazz, funk, and hip hop collective featuring musicians and poets from different cultures. The band was conceived in 1993 by producer Arthur Baker and bassist and musical director Lati Kronlund. In the mid-1990s the group became a staple of the New York City club scene.
Their debut album Cool and Steady and Easy (1994) scored an underground hit with the rendition of Pharoah Sanders’ “The Creator Has a Master Plan”. The following album, In The Buzz Bag (1998), included Turkish folk music rhythms and instruments, recorded in consortium with the Turkish clarinettist Hüsnü ?enlendirici.

Golden Palominos – The Ambitions Are
(Dead Inside – Restless CD, 1996)

The Golden Palominos were an American musical group headed by drummer and composer Anton Fier, first formed in 1981 either after or during his tenure with The Feelies, I’m not quite sure of that. Apart from Fier, the Palominos membership was wildly elastic. While the Palominos records usually featured a core set of musicians and emotional feel though the bulk of an album, various guest appearances would result in some stylistic changes from track to track. This particular GP release is particularly disturbing in its images of violence, deception and brutality coupled with the claustrophobic illbient-era slow, pounding beats. Nicole Blackman has the perfect voice for the delivery of this imagery and her sense of rhythm is impeccable, even if the mix is a little heavy.

Ted Milton/Andreas Gerth/Paddy Steer – Oh Pity Us
(Oh Pity Us – Hausmusik LP 2000)

Ted Milton (Blurt), Andreas Gerth (Ogonjok, Tied & Tickled Trio) and Paddy Steer (ex-Biting Tingues) all come together for this brilliant EP. Ted Milton is founding member of Blurt, and has a susbtantial body of music in his own name as well.

Letters Letters – Dealer Dealer
(Letters Letters – Type Records 2007)

This is the debut album from Montreal/Chicago trio Letters Letters, a band made up of veteran electronic music producer Mitchell Akiyama, singer Jenna Robertson and producer/singer Tony Boggs. Mitchell Akiyama has been an active part of the music scene for some time now as a solo artist, label boss and collaborator with various other musicians, most notably with Boggs (as Désormais) and Robertson (as Avia Gardener), but this is the first time the three musicians have put their heads together and created something which absolutely defies their earlier work. Turning electronic music and post-rock on its head, Letters Letters instead decided to look to the early ’80s. With broken synthesizers, fizzled-out drum machines and the usual arsenal of guitars and overdriven amplifiers, they managed to figure out a perfect pop formula. Taking the usual hooks and choruses and feeding them through a mire of grimy effects, they ended up with something flickering and desperately neon-colored. Music for day-glo wrist bands and basement parties, this is a fresh take on the DIY lo-fi scene, and even if the whole fanzine culture has broken down, making way for blogs and webzines, it doesn’t mean we have to lose touch with the grittier side of life. Touching on themes as diverse as sex, drugs and the all-important unicorn scene in Blade Runner, there shouldn’t be any reason not to usher Letters Letters into your life immediately.

Dog Faced Hermans – Keep Your Laws Off My Body
(These Deep Buds – Alternative Tentacles CD 1994)

Formed in Scotland in the mid-’80s, Dog Faced Hermans began as a close cousin to the jittery, semi-atonal Ron Johnson Records sound, with a few curious fillips: vocalist Marion Coutts, a striking onstage figure with trumpet and distinctive gestures, sang curious intellectual-poetic lyrics (“Enzymes do the protein march/Hm baa hm baa hm baa hm baa,” began their first EP), and the band — Colin on bass, Wilf playing a drum kit augmented with metal scraps and Andy (later of the Ex as well) getting all kinds of strange noises out of his guitar — were liable to break into an old folk song. The disc collecting their first two EPs and a single finds them not quite in their groove, though it’s got a couple of DFH classics: the gleeful “Mary Houdini” and covers of “John Henry” and the WWII Italian partisan song “Bella Ciao.” By the turn of the decade, they’d relocated to Amsterdam and released a superb single, the never-on-album “Time Bomb” (no relation to the EP). Their close association with the Ex resulted in a joint tour of Europe, a split cassette and “Stonestamper’s Song,” a tremendous collaborative single recorded under the name Ex Faced Hermans.

März – Blaue Faden
(Wir Sind Hier – Karaoke Kalk LP 2004)

A relatively obscure – and fantastic – project by the famed and prolific German producer and musician Ekkehard Ehlers.

Jukebox Heart 011: Oh Pity Us Who Still Believe in the Revolution

Oh Pity Us Who Still Believe in the Revolution.
69.8 MB | 74:26

I believe in the Revolution.
We have routed out the old tyrants,
and now we have new tyrants.
But still, I believe in the revolution.
The spoils have been grabbed by businessmen,
middlemen, financiers, salesmen, operators, manipulators…
but the revolution must continue…

Coco Steel and Lovebomb – Harlem
(em:t 0094 – em:t records cd 1994)

Locust – Morning Light/Just Like You
(Morning Light – Apollo CD 1997)

Not Drowning, Waving – John Wayne Visits Port Augusta
– Hibakush
– Once LIke This
(Another Pond – Rampant LP 1984)

Six Twilights – Tonight I’m Letting You Drive
(Six Twilights – Own Records CD 2007)

Liquorice – Drive Around
(Listening Cap – 4AD LP 1995)

Low – I Remember
(Immune – Tugboat 7″ 1999)

Force.Fed – no title
(Various Artists – Infiltrate 6 – Rice and Beans LP 2004)

The Fleetwoods – Care So Much
(45 – Liberty Records 1959)

The Boats – I’m Talking Facts, Not Shit
(Tomorrow Time – Moteer CD 2006)

Helios – A Rising Wind
(Ayres – Type Records LP 2007)

The Last Poets – True Blues
(Jazzoetry – Douglas LP 1975)

Brooklyn Funk Essentials – The Revolution Was Postponed Because of Rain
(Various Artists – Dorado CD 1994)

Golden Palominos – The Ambitions Are
(Dead Inside – Restless CD, 1996)

Ted Milton/Andreas Gerth/Paddy Steer – Oh Pity Us
(Oh Pity Us – Hausmusik LP 2000)

Letters Letters – Dealer Dealer
(Letters Letters – Type Records 2007)

Dog Faced Hermans – Keep Your Laws Off My Body
(These Deep Buds – Alternative Tentacles CD 1994)

März – Blaue Faden
(Wir Sind Hier – Karaoke Kalk LP 2004)

…but the revolution was postponed because of rain.

The underlying immediate, political, socio-economic
and trigger mechanism causes were all in place when
some nee-gro or the other got hungry –
had to stop at the McDonald’s –
had to get on the line
with the new trainee cashier.
“uhh, where’s the button for the fries?”
so we missed the bus…

Then the leader couldn’t find his keys
didn’t want some poor ass moving
his brand new 20″ and VCR
out his living room on the shoulders.
It was too late when the locksmith came.

Then our demo expert Willie Blue got arrested.
came out with his head hanging under his hoody,
“Didn’t know they started doing that
for jumping the turnstiles,” he said.
“How many times must we tell you –
Don’t.. get.. caught.”
We voted against shootin’ him on the spot.

In the winter we were all depressed
so we leaned our guns against the sofas
and listened instead to Tim Tim Tiree
singing about his dysfunctions:
“Sometimes I wonder if ah’ll ever be free
free of the sins of my brutish daddee
Like the cheating, the stealing, the drinking, and the beating”. . .

The weatherman said the 17th would be sunshine
and it wouldn’t be too hot –
Tim Tim Tiree doesn’t like sweatin’
but that night the weatherman came on crying
saying he didn’t control the weather
that God was real
that he’s lucky He, God, didn’t strike him, the weatherman, with lightning
for taking the credit sometimes
and that he, the weatherman, was in no way responsible
for the hurricane coming
and that we, the viewers, should
pray Jesus into our hearts
before it was too late.

Superbowl Sunday was out.
all the women wanted to see the game,
and the men were pissed at their insensitivity.

The 20th was supposed to be a definite.
we looked for some Bastille to storm,
didn’t find any,
settled on the armory instead
before they moved the homeless in…
“We’ll bum-rush it anyway,” I said
“It smells like a collection
of a thousand farts in there,” they said
So we waited for the approval of the city
contract to build a Bastille
which set the revolution back five years.

Peace wanted to start the revolution on Tuesday.
She was in a pissed-off mood;
her tax return didn’t come in time for the rent.
But they showed the We Are the World video
on cable that evening
and we all held hands
and cried to stop from laughing
and our anger subsided.
Looking back, it could’ve been a plot,
but there are more substantive plots to expose
than the We Are the World conspiracy.

Now we wait for the rain to stop.
All forces on the alert,
some in Brooklyn basements
packed in between booming speakers
listening to Shabba Ranks and Arrested Development,
bogling and doing the east coast stomp,
gargling with Bacardi and Brown Cow,
breaking that monotony with slow movements –
slow, hip-grinding movements,
with the men breathing in the women’s ears to
Earth Wind & Fire’s Reasons
and wondering what the weather will be like
next weekend.

Not subscribed to Jukebox Heart yet? You should! But until you’re ready, you can download this podcast here.

Images after the cut…

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Jukebox Saturday Night!

Jukebox Saturday Night! Volume 1
41.8 MB | 44:40

A new series and a big departure from the usual freeform style of the Jukebox Heart podcast, this new series is called “Juekbox Saturday Night”, and features a series of early rock, doo wop and R&B singles selected from my collection. I know that lots of members of my family will especially enjoy this new series, and I hope to make it appear frequently; it will always happen on Saturday nights.

The playlist follows, and for my graphic design geek friends (like me!) I’ve placed photos of all the record labels and logotypes after the cut… Enjoy!

Playlist:

1. The Pin Ups – Lookin For Boys
2. The Elegants – Little Star
3. The Excellents – Coney Island Baby
4. The Fantastics – There Goes My Love
5. Rosie and the Originals – Angel Baby
6. The Harptones – The Masquerade Is Over
7. Barbara George – I Know (You DOn’t Love Me No More)
8. Dee Dee Sharp – Gravy (For My Mashed POtatoes)
9. Duane Eddy – Peter Gunn
10. Lee Dorsey – Ya Ya
11. Al Brown – The Madison
12. The Flamingos – A Kiss From Your lIps
13. The Capris – There’s A Moon Out Tonight
14. Lloyd Price – Lawdy Miss Clawdy
15. Darlene Love – (Today I Met) The Boy I’m Gonna MArry
16. The Nutmegs – Story Untold
17. The Bop Chords – Castle In The Sky
18. The Happenings – See You In September

Not subscribed to Jukebox Heart yet? You should! But until you’re ready, you can download this podcast here.

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Sonic Diary

I’ve been keeping a “Sonic Diary” elsewhere, taking notes on whatever I happen to be listening to, whatever it may be. It’s interesting to go back to them from time to time to see what I was thinking about what I was listening to. I figured I’d start keeping them here, even though there is no audio media to accompany them. I mean, who really needs me to feed them Simon and Garfunkel, fer Chrissake… 😉

Some of the lesser known stuff may appear in upcoming podcasts…who knows? This is exactly how that selection process begins…

Simon and Garfunkel – Bridge Over Troubled Waters
(Columbia LP – 1970)

“So Long Frank Lloyd Wright”, for whatever reason, was an interminable brain-stain this week, so I figured the only way to erase it was to finally listen to it. So I pulled out the vinyl, and fell in love with S&G all over again. Decades have come and gone since I’ve listened to a S&G record all the way through. I guess that means I’ve come full circle – but I’m not sure what exactly that implies. In fact, the notion of that bothered me so much, I had to throw down the first acid/DNB/Jungle thing I could reach for and that was…

1.8.7 – The Cities COllection
(Jungle Sky CD – 2000)

And the familiar “Blaaaaang” of the San Francisco track reset my inner clock and kept the tears of sentimentality at bay, at least for now. It all started because I decided to clean and dust my studio this morning – really, it’s unworkable in there – and now here I am, cloistered in the house on a rainy day cranking 1.8.7. Jordana’s sense of rhythmic flow on this CD just rocks. Its a collection of tracks named after cities, compiling the EPs with Hollywood, Los Angeles and New York (EP1), Pittsburgh, Miami and San Francisco (EP2) and two exclusive tracks, Philadelphia and Detroit. Hot

One Mile North
(Ba Da Bing! CD – 2003)

One Mile North is the New York-based project of guitarist Jon Hills and keyboardist Mark Bajuk. Breathaking and painstaking passages. It is like wandering through an unknown place, blanketed by silken curtains that flow in the breeze, caressing you as you pass through, only to find more. Their softness soothes  you and the breeze cools you, as the music beckons you on. (I know, how lame is this…but, you get the picture?)

Joni James – When I Fall In Love
(MGM LP – 1960)

The first Joni, a Your Hit Parade era megastar, she sold over 100 Million records – a phenomenal feat for a female artist in the 1950s. Consequently, Joni’s records are easily obtained in thrift stores everywhere. Her style is soulless and naive, like Doris Day in a training bra, and “Joni dreamed the dreams that girls have always dreamed – the tender, misty world of the first romance, the longings, the laughter and the loneliness of young love…” Man, they sure don’t write liner notes like they used to! This is an album of standards, and she hauls out some sweet versions of Embraceable You and People Will Say We’re In Love. But, I definitely have to be in the mood for this stuff…

Gene Pitney – Greatest Hists of All Time
(Musicor LP – 1966)
Gene Pitney’s Big Sixteen
(Musicor LP – 1964)

We watched the classic “Town Without Pity” this week (where the fabulous jukebox image above was ganked from…), and the movie’s theme song, a childhood favorite of mine, was stuck in my head. So I dug out both of these LPs. There’s a fair amount of overlap, but a total of 23 unique tracks over both LPs. So I’ve had my Gene Pitney fix for a bit. It was great to listen to “Last Chance to Turn Around” again. :)

Jukebox Heart 010: The Jukebox Heart Singles and Lonely Hearts Club

Jukebox Heart 010:
The Jukebox Heart Singles and Lonely Hearts Club

56.8 MB | 60:35 Minutes

In a different world that feels like an eternity ago, the jukebox ruled any room it was placed in. Weekly rags once rated bars and restaurants on the basis of the selections on their jukebox. It was the single that provided the pulse that kept the jukebox alive. The Jukebox Heart Singles and Lonely Hearts Club appears periodically to pay respect to a format now relegated to collectors and niche markets. Each time, I scoop a batch of 45s laying around the house. You never know what your going to find here…

The playlist, images and a whole bunch of links are found after the cut.

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