Favoriting World of Echo with Dave Mandl: Playlist from April 20, 2014 Favoriting

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Way-left-of-center music and chatter. Guaranteed less than 2% rock and roll. (Visit homepage.)

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Favoriting April 20, 2014

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Artist Track Album Approx. start time
Arto Lindsay  Invoke   Favoriting Invoke  0:00:00 (Pop-up)
Webster Lewis  Silent Lights   Favoriting The Club 7 Live Tapes  0:04:52 (Pop-up)
The High Llamas  Cuckoo's Out   Favoriting Hawaii  0:08:37 (Pop-up)
East-West Collective  Humeur de Terre   Favoriting Humeurs  0:13:16 (Pop-up)
Jon Hassell  Sundown Dance   Favoriting Earthquake Island  0:17:31 (Pop-up)
 
R. Weis  Glass Casserole Lid Rocking on Ceramic Casserole   Favoriting Excitable Audible  0:28:07 (Pop-up)
Factoria  God Knows You're a Liar   Favoriting Heroine  0:31:27 (Pop-up)
Ground-Zero  Stock, Hausen & Walkman Part 4: Constipations   Favoriting Conflagration  0:35:02 (Pop-up)
Intelligent Shanghai Mono University  [Track 3]   Favoriting 7.9  0:38:39 (Pop-up)
Horace Tapscott  It Never Happened Before   Favoriting The Tapscott Sessions Vol. 9  0:42:41 (Pop-up)
 
The Moody Blues  Eyes of a Child I   Favoriting To Our Children's Children's Children  0:56:27 (Pop-up)
Skip Bifferty  Come Around   Favoriting Skip Bifferty  1:00:00 (Pop-up)
New Bums  Black Bough   Favoriting Voices in a Rented Room  1:04:35 (Pop-up)
Tiny Ruins  Carriages   Favoriting Brightly Painted One  1:07:49 (Pop-up)
Henry Grimes Trio  Walk On   Favoriting The Call  1:12:26 (Pop-up)
 
Linda Perhacs  River of God   Favoriting The Soul of All Natural Things  1:21:49 (Pop-up)
Pietro Grossi  Riccardo Andreoni: Studio Sugli Impulsi (estratto)   Favoriting Combinaora  1:27:13 (Pop-up)
Karsh Kale  Drive   Favoriting Broken English  1:33:14 (Pop-up)
Thievery Corporation  Quem Me Leva   Favoriting Saudade  1:36:57 (Pop-up)
 
Jeong Ga Ak Hoe & Hye Jin Yoon  A Deep Thinking Is Coming Across/A Bird Is Weeping with Sorrow   Favoriting Thinking Being Irresistibly Burnt  1:45:17 (Pop-up)
The Haints of Dean Hall  Forelock of Gold   Favoriting The Haints of Dean Hall  1:55:17 (Pop-up)


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Listener comments!

Avatar 10:02pm
Dave Mandl:

Evening, good people.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:03pm
pacific standard simon:

Hello Dave and all kindly listeners! I will be back after Easter supper.
  10:03pm
P-90:

Evening @ DJ Dave M.
Avatar 10:04pm
Dave Mandl:

Hey, @pss, @P-90. By all means, finish your Easter dinner.
Avatar 10:09pm
Droll:

I'm hungry, too, but all I need to do is think of Irwin's warning about the True Meaning of Easter Eggs and my appetite is gone.
  10:15pm
P-90:

@ Droll: you mean "the testicles of Satan" issue?
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:29pm
pacific standard simon:

Aaah... back. Roast pork with lemon glaze, steamed broccoli with garlic sauce, and apple sauce from our own apple tree (frozen last summer). No testicles, man. Maybe the apples could be considered the Breasts of Eris, eh?
  10:30pm
P-90:

Glass Casserole Lid is one of my favorite non-traditional instruments. Great choice!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:31pm
mariano:

There was a Simpson's episode where they're on a wagon train heading west, and after Homer kills the last buffalo and eats it, he asks what's left. Lisa hands him an apple, and he exclaims "buffalo testicles!"
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:32pm
pacific standard simon:

I love garage rock/frat rock tunes featuring beer bottle percussion. Also guitar case percussion and oatmeal box percussion.
Avatar 10:34pm
Droll:

Cooking in my kitchen doesn't sound anything like that. Maybe I should replace the food processor with a signal processor.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:36pm
pacific standard simon:

There's an article in the latest Make magazine about making a contact mic out of the piezo-electric speaker in talking toys. Wonder if those singing greeting cards would work?
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:38pm
pacific standard simon:

You could put a contact mic on your wire whisk, and make pancakes!
Avatar 10:38pm
Droll:

pss, Probably, but good luck working with the micro-miniature surface-mount electronics.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:40pm
pacific standard simon:

The problem is in the washing-up!
  10:46pm
P-90:

@ pss: you can find plenty of cheap tiny speakers to make mics out of, Droll's right that greeting card stuff is no good for that application
Avatar 10:48pm
Andy says hi:

not bad.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:49pm
pacific standard simon:

Good to know, thanks!
Avatar 10:53pm
Droll:

Analog electronics used to be cheap and easy to work with, now it's almost unheard of to use discrete components or analog anything. Digital electronics, unlike analog, don't bend, they just break.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:54pm
pacific standard simon:

Heroine, she's my wife and she's my life.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:55pm
pacific standard simon:

Or happy 4/20, pot-head pixies.
Avatar 10:58pm
earrie:

It could have gone hero or heroina, or any other direction, but no, it's heroin and heroine. Who's idea was that, I wonder?
Avatar 10:59pm
Andy says hi:

not too shabby
Avatar Swag For Life Member 10:59pm
pacific standard simon:

My mom got a copy of Days of Future Passed when I was a youth, and I came to loathe it.
Avatar 11:01pm
Dave Mandl:

Very overrated record, IMO. "To Our Children's etc." is much better.
Avatar 11:03pm
Droll:

Moody Blues hippie tech-worship music? What's that burning smell? Doesn't smell like electronics... Oh! Simon's right!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:03pm
joeray:

Dave, I thought you were leading up to playing: "In the Beginning" from Threshold of a Dream.
Avatar 11:04pm
earrie:

(Heroine v. Heroin The latter is a German trademark from way back when. And in german, heroine = die Heldin. ..Phoques.)
Avatar 11:05pm
Dave Mandl:

@joeray: Sorry!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:05pm
pacific standard simon:

As is aspirin, ja?
  11:08pm
P-90:

@Dave: you were right, "Eyes of a child" is like a snapshot of the musical moment when Prog began to evolve out of "Hippie Music"; the instrumental intro is very proto-proggy, then it becomes this dark and dirge-like, too-serious folk-rock thing
Avatar 11:10pm
earrie:

Aha, yeah. Aspirin, too. 'Whose word is it anyway?' is a flummoxing game if it's considered language.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:10pm
joeray:

@Dave: No need to be sorry. As usual,loving the show!
Avatar 11:11pm
Dave Mandl:

@P-90. Yeah. But most important, their keyboard player, Mike Pinder, *worked in the factory where Mellotrons were manufactured*. So of course they used tons of Mellotron.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:11pm
pacific standard simon:

I confess to being more of a "hippie music" fan than a prog fan. Early Steve Miller Band, and like that.
Avatar 11:11pm
Droll:

Moody Blues used lots of Mellotron, but I never considered them prog. I never considered Pink Floyd prog, either, but did consider Kansas prog. Prog was born in '67: Sgt. Peppers is the blueprint for prog.
Avatar 11:11pm
Dave Mandl:

@joeray: Thanks.
Avatar 11:13pm
Dave Mandl:

@Droll: You lose me with that Sgt. Pepper claim. They used non-RnR instruments and orchestras. But stylistically--no.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:14pm
pacific standard simon:

Also, connecting the dots with Droll, early Pink Floyd had blues roots in common with Steve Miller.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:17pm
pacific standard simon:

A lot of Sgt. Pepper sounded like a tribute to The Beatles' parents' music. Like Elvis Costello would do later.
Avatar 11:17pm
Dave Mandl:

Early ELP--THAT's prog.
Avatar 11:19pm
Droll:

DM, Not the bombast part, but the idea of a concept album with integrated lyrics, music, and packaging.. The notion of making progress on the whole enchilada altogether -- not just singles and compilations of singles (an album).
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:19pm
pacific standard simon:

I always think of Gryphon when I think of Prog -- but, yeah, ELP first.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:22pm
pacific standard simon:

Dave, your daughter thinks you're a music nerd. But probably in a nice way. I'm SO glad you're not being filled-in this week!
  11:23pm
P-90:

pss: good point, a big part of Sgt. Pepper's is that it was part of a wave of nostalgia that was part of 60's culture, something we forget about now because everyone's been so busy being nostalgic FOR the 60's
Avatar 11:25pm
Dave Mandl:

@Droll: True, the concept album all that. But stylistically, I think it started with...maybe the Nice? Or possibly the Moody Blues. I am thinking of the bombast, which is a big part of it.
Avatar 11:26pm
Dave Mandl:

...And then there were all the groups doing classical covers, like Hall of the Mountain King.
Avatar 11:26pm
Dave Mandl:

@pss: Thanks. She actually doesn't make fun of my music...yet. I'm sure she will eventually.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:28pm
pacific standard simon:

Any love for Robin Holcomb, here? I haven't heard anything in a long time, but I haven't been trying. The Linda Perhacs reminds me...
Avatar 11:29pm
Droll:

Yes, overplaying is a critical prog signpost, but I don't think it's required. Krautrock, which is a kind of prog, rarely overplays. Can are wonderful underplayers. Obviously Nice/ELP brought "Too Much Chops" to the party!
  11:30pm
P-90:

The Moody Blues and especially the Nice belong on the early part of the prog evolutionary tree. The Beatles broke a lot of new ground all over the place, in that sense helped lay the foundations, but were less truly proggy than some other bands.
Factoid: John Lennon was quite the Yes fan, dug their originality and harmony singing
Avatar 11:31pm
Dave Mandl:

@Droll: It's funny, because when they used to say "progressive rock" it encompassed a lot more." "Prog," to me, refers to the heavy, bombastic, overplayed stuff.
Avatar 11:31pm
Droll:

Before I forget -- If anyone is still curious from last week's discussion about band names with exclamation points, all caps, or both: there are 1,452 Band!Names!, 18,596 ALL CAPS band names (too many to list), and 91 CAPS LOCK! band names.

A sneak peek at the new site under construction -- it generates these lists more or less on the fly: 54.187.95.85...
Avatar 11:32pm
Droll:

Oh look! Kenzo's software broke that link while I was trying to talk about my software! I hate software! Someone give me a Rickenbacker!
  11:33pm
P-90:

@Droll : that "overplaying" thing about prog has been exaggerated and is misleading, quite a bit of quintessential prog is actually in quite spare, tight arrangements
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:33pm
mariano:

@P90: Good point about nostalgia in the 60s for a bygone (pre-war) England. You can also really see it in the Kinks' "Village Green Preservation Society" and "Arthur."

To me Sgt Pepper isn't prog, though I can see how prog expanded on the concept album idea. To me though prog has a fixation on what someone called "the dubious splendors of virtuosity," which was never part of the Beatles' aesthetic, not a lot of long solos, or showboating.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:34pm
mariano:

Some of Abbey Road is kind of proggy though, like "The End" suite.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:36pm
pacific standard simon:

BTW, Robin Holcomb = Mrs. Wayne Horvitz. Looks like I've missed some CD releases...
Avatar 11:38pm
Droll:

The musicianship aspect of prog (I didn't realize Prog is separate from Progressive Rock) came from Jazz. When jazz wasn't hip anymore, all the hot-shit players took up rock. Hard bop unison swinging at 160BPM and prog riffing are roughly the same thing in terms of musicianship.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:40pm
pacific standard simon:

I disagree, Droll. I think it comes from rock musicians who were infected with a CLASSICAL bug early on. What you're talking about is jazz-rock and/or fusion.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:42pm
pacific standard simon:

Not musically exclusive, though. King Crimson moved from proto-prog to fusion quite quickly.
  11:42pm
P-90:

@mariano: that streak of 1920's-30's nostalgia ran through 60's pop culture in the US too, not just England, where Paul's dad was of course a music-hall musician himself

Also: the "long solos" and "showboating" things are misnomers that have been stuck to prog but just aren't true. Of course there are a few exceptions (ELP famously got lost in too-long solos, live on tour) but long solos were more the province of Allman Brothers and Cream type Psychedelic Blues bands, and "showboating" implies a kind of flashy theatricality that prog bands mostly avoided.
Avatar 11:44pm
Droll:

pss, Prog uses classical framework for songwriting and arranging, but in 1974 when King Crimson turned a 7 minute song into a 12 minute improvisational jam in 9/8 time -- that's jazz, even though there are strings (Mellotron and real).
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:46pm
pacific standard simon:

Probably due to the departure of Greg Lake.

Let's face it, "showboating" is all about pulling groupies. When Jean-Luc Ponty did it in Zappa's band, everybody would chant, "Soooooo!"
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:47pm
pacific standard simon:

Whoops, that should be "Spooo!"
Avatar 11:48pm
Droll:

Pshaw! There's no money above the 5th fret.
  11:48pm
P-90:

Sorry, good guesses, but this time you're ALL wrong! Real prog didn't really come out of fixations with Jazz OR Classical.
It came out of experimentation by English Psychedelic bands.
Exceptions would be the Jazz-spawned Mahavishnu Orch, if that counts as Prog (it cetainly was an influence on Prog), and Rick Wakeman's training as a classical musician, pointedly an exception raher than the rule- and his Classical background did not determine his style as a rocker
Avatar 11:52pm
earrie:

Maybe it's like convergent evolution - like the eye. Many routes arriving at the same/a similar thing.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:53pm
mariano:

@P90: I guess showboating was too strong a term, wasn't trying to disparage the entire genre. Mahavishnu, though: that's fusion, I thought. As I understand it, fusion = jazz people playing rock, whereas prog people tended to come from the rock side. Weren't the seeds of prog really in the Canterbury scene, Robert Wyatt, people like that, the scene that gave rise to King Crimson as well as (I think) ELP?
Avatar Swag For Life Member 11:59pm
pacific standard simon:

@Mariano - hmm... the Soft Machine side, Canterbury, was often called prog, but now I tend to think of it as jazz-rock fusion. You can't point to one source, of course; a movement comes from multiple sources.
Avatar 11:59pm
Droll:

. o O ( Well, at least it's not a "This sux/rulez" debate )

Prog always had (and still has) conservatory trained ringers. At least we can all agree Mandl's wrong about Steely Dan.

Thanks DM! Have a good week yinz!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:00am
mariano:

Eep! Outta time! Maybe continue discussion on next board? Thanks Dave!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:00am
pacific standard simon:

Oh Dave, go another hour! They're only subs!
  12:00am
P-90:

@mariano: your point about the Beatle's "medley"-style songs and "suites" being very proggyis well taken. Paul stayed with it in his early solo years, "medley" songs like "Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey" and "Venus and Mars/Rock Show" are pretty proggy.
Also: after prog bands became prominent, they directly influenced things like "love Lies Bleeding" from Goodbye Yellow Brick Road"
Avatar 12:01am
Dave Mandl:

Thanks, everyone. You've been great as usual. See you next week.
Avatar 12:01am
earrie:

Regardios.
  12:01am
P-90:

Thanks Dave, and yes you're wrong about S. Dan...
Avatar Swag For Life Member 12:02am
pacific standard simon:

Wait, what about Steely Dan?!
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