Sasquatch! Music Festival
« Post Message »

Welcome Guest. Please Login or Register.
May 24, 2013, 2:59pm




Sasquatch! Music Festival :: Non-Sasquatch Discussion :: Music Related :: Post Message
Post Reply
Name:
Subject:
Terms of Service: I agree to the ProBoards Terms of Service
Security Check:
Message Icon: icon
Add Tags:
Add Smilies:
Message:
Expand
Characters Remaining:
Disable Smilies: If this box is checked, smiley emoticons will be disabled in your message.
shortcuts: hit alt+s to send, alt+p to preview, alt+c to spell check, or alt+r to reset


Topic Summary
Posted by NO LOVE DEEP BJORRITO on Nov 5, 2012, 6:45pm
The Most Serene Republic - ...And the Ever Expanding Universe
Lubomyr Melnyk - KMH - Piano Music in the Continuous Mode
Alexis Gideon - Video Musics I
Neil Young - Neil Young
Neil Young - Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
Neil Young - After the Gold Rush

HEY GUYS I "GET" NEIL YOUNG NOW. HIGH FIVES
Posted by NadineHurley on Nov 5, 2012, 8:13pm

Nov 5, 2012, 6:45pm, NO LOVE DEEP BJORRITO wrote:
The Most Serene Republic - ...And the Ever Expanding Universe
Lubomyr Melnyk - KMH - Piano Music in the Continuous Mode
Alexis Gideon - Video Musics I
Neil Young - Neil Young
Neil Young - Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere

HEY GUYS I "GET" NEIL YOUNG NOW. HIGH FIVES


Let's go see him with Joni and Mike for Xmas...
Posted by Horned Gramma on Nov 5, 2012, 8:23pm

Nov 5, 2012, 6:45pm, NO LOVE DEEP BJORRITO wrote:


HEY GUYS I "GET" NEIL YOUNG NOW. HIGH FIVES


Congratulations, you got me beat in that regard. I've spent thirty years trying to 'get' Neil Young and it just has never taken hold.
Posted by Friendly Destroyer on Nov 5, 2012, 10:25pm

Dec 21, 2010, 12:07pm, Friendly Destroyer wrote:
[image]

NEIL YOUNG - ON THE BEACH

Many people percieve Neil Young as "classic rock", which is a classic mistake. Neil Young albums are probably some of the best sounding recordings ever made. I won't go too into the details, but Neil was basically a psycho in the studio and worked with an equally psychotic studio man in David Briggs. Briggs' goal was to capture the rawness in a transcendental way. Meaning he wasn't looking to get a gritty or dirty sound, he wanted to actually record the raw emotion itself, and on records like "Everybody Knows this is Nowhere", "Tonight's the Night" and the "On the Beach" he certainly did. While his studio technique and know how were largely responsible, he recorded everything to tape, so getting the exact performance out of the artist was equally important. By "exact" I mean pushing already unbalanced people into further madness and recording it. The result is listening to someone spilling their guts through music right in front of you, it sounds like the most live recording you've ever heard, but the beauty is that it sounds this way as a result of the studio manipulation, almost like some new 4D way of hearing music. In many ways I feel a strong aural connection to the above mentioned albums and "Areoplane Over the Sea".

Here is the problem, unfortunately much of the nuances that just popped like voodoo into your brain on vinyl were diminished or lost on CD. Neil has been resistant to put many of his early solo stuff on CD, either he's too picky about the original recording or wants to wait until a medium arrives that he believes will do justice to the recordings. In fact "On the Beach" was never going to be put out on CD by him. I'm hazy on all the facts here, but I believe a large fan petition for the album eventually lead to its reluctant release in the 2000's. So if you can find a vinyl copy to listen to please do. If not, the CD us nit all that bad.

Listen to this in a dark room, with great speakers and what ever else you may find and pay attention to the vocal recordings and spacing of the instruments. "See the sky about to Rain" will send you through the stratosphere by the end, the guitar solo on "Revolution Blues" is one of the most sublime sonic freak outs ever, the harmonies and banjo/Dobro interplay on "For the Turnstiles" will show you some of that voodoo I was talking about (really pay attention to this one), and the bass and pacing of "On the Beach" is completely mind bending. "Vampire Blues" is the only weak track for me, but really it's still pretty great. As with most great pieces of music, listen to this one from front to back if you really want a total outer body experience by the time "Ambulance Blues" (check the viloins!) rings out.

Oh, and make sure it is LOUD!
Posted by Horned Gramma on Nov 5, 2012, 10:35pm
FRIENDLY DEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE

Alright, I'll do it.
Posted by Pea on Nov 5, 2012, 10:40pm

Nov 5, 2012, 6:45pm, NO LOVE DEEP BJORRITO wrote:
The Most Serene Republic


Whoa. I totally saw these guys at The Croc a couple of years ago. I can't remember for the life of me why though. There are at least 485 people in that band.
Posted by NO LOVE DEEP BJORRITO on Nov 6, 2012, 1:27am

Nov 5, 2012, 10:25pm, Friendly Destroyer wrote:

Dec 21, 2010, 12:07pm, Friendly Destroyer wrote:
[image]

NEIL YOUNG - ON THE BEACH

Many people percieve Neil Young as "classic rock", which is a classic mistake. Neil Young albums are probably some of the best sounding recordings ever made. I won't go too into the details, but Neil was basically a psycho in the studio and worked with an equally psychotic studio man in David Briggs. Briggs' goal was to capture the rawness in a transcendental way. Meaning he wasn't looking to get a gritty or dirty sound, he wanted to actually record the raw emotion itself, and on records like "Everybody Knows this is Nowhere", "Tonight's the Night" and the "On the Beach" he certainly did. While his studio technique and know how were largely responsible, he recorded everything to tape, so getting the exact performance out of the artist was equally important. By "exact" I mean pushing already unbalanced people into further madness and recording it. The result is listening to someone spilling their guts through music right in front of you, it sounds like the most live recording you've ever heard, but the beauty is that it sounds this way as a result of the studio manipulation, almost like some new 4D way of hearing music. In many ways I feel a strong aural connection to the above mentioned albums and "Areoplane Over the Sea".

Here is the problem, unfortunately much of the nuances that just popped like voodoo into your brain on vinyl were diminished or lost on CD. Neil has been resistant to put many of his early solo stuff on CD, either he's too picky about the original recording or wants to wait until a medium arrives that he believes will do justice to the recordings. In fact "On the Beach" was never going to be put out on CD by him. I'm hazy on all the facts here, but I believe a large fan petition for the album eventually lead to its reluctant release in the 2000's. So if you can find a vinyl copy to listen to please do. If not, the CD us nit all that bad.

Listen to this in a dark room, with great speakers and what ever else you may find and pay attention to the vocal recordings and spacing of the instruments. "See the sky about to Rain" will send you through the stratosphere by the end, the guitar solo on "Revolution Blues" is one of the most sublime sonic freak outs ever, the harmonies and banjo/Dobro interplay on "For the Turnstiles" will show you some of that voodoo I was talking about (really pay attention to this one), and the bass and pacing of "On the Beach" is completely mind bending. "Vampire Blues" is the only weak track for me, but really it's still pretty great. As with most great pieces of music, listen to this one from front to back if you really want a total outer body experience by the time "Ambulance Blues" (check the viloins!) rings out.

Oh, and make sure it is LOUD!


I need to hear this one! I only have his first four.
Posted by NO LOVE DEEP BJORRITO on Nov 6, 2012, 1:34am

Nov 5, 2012, 10:40pm, Pea wrote:

Nov 5, 2012, 6:45pm, NO LOVE DEEP BJORRITO wrote:
The Most Serene Republic


Whoa. I totally saw these guys at The Croc a couple of years ago. I can't remember for the life of me why though. There are at least 485 people in that band.


Fuckin' eh man, I was at that show! But I believe they've cut the roster down to 5 or 6 members these days.
Posted by NO LOVE DEEP BJORRITO on Nov 6, 2012, 1:42am
Neil Young - Harvest
Akita/Gustafsson/O'Rourke - One Bird Two Bird
Nice Nice - Chrome
Posted by Pea on Nov 6, 2012, 1:52am
Any idea who the headliner was?

EDIT: Nevermind. It was Grand Archives.
Posted by NO LOVE DEEP BJORRITO on Nov 6, 2012, 2:01am
They've played the Croc twice in the last few years, 2009 and 2010 I think, and I was at both. They headlined the second show, but I can't remember who headlined the first one because I left.
Posted by chud on Nov 6, 2012, 2:36am
Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark - Architecture & Morality
OMD - Dazzle Ships
Talk Talk - The Party's Over
Talk Talk - The Colour of Spring
Posted by NO LOVE DEEP BJORRITO on Nov 7, 2012, 8:20am
Merzbow - Animal Magnetism
Zammuto - Zammuto
Boredoms - Super Roots 5
Pavement - Wowee Zowee
Kites - Peace Trials
Posted by Kalvor on Nov 7, 2012, 11:29am

Nov 5, 2012, 8:23pm, Horned Gramma wrote:

Nov 5, 2012, 6:45pm, NO LOVE DEEP BJORRITO wrote:


HEY GUYS I "GET" NEIL YOUNG NOW. HIGH FIVES


Congratulations, you got me beat in that regard. I've spent thirty years trying to 'get' Neil Young and it just has never taken hold.


Yeah I don't think that will ever happen for me.
Posted by Kalvor on Nov 7, 2012, 11:33am
MF DOOM - MM FOOD
Flying Lotus- Until the Quite Comes
Burial - Untrue
Green Day - Dos (These guys are my 'but he likes' band. i.e 'Kalvor is an alright dude, but he likes Green Day.')
Kanye West - The College Dropout

Click Here To Make This Board Ad-Free


This Board Hosted For FREE By ProBoards
Get Your Own Free Message Boards & Free Forums!
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Notice | FTC Disclosure | Report Abuse | Mobile