Sunday, February 22, 2009

Blast From The Past Vol.4: 1990-1994

The fourth chapter of our music history course that we like to call "Blast From The Past" is here and this time the focus is on the first half of the '90s. Last year, with the first three volumes of this series of posts, we presented some of the best albums from 1975 to 1989. Each time we take a five year period and compile a list of our favorite albums from that era, allowing the inclusion of just one record per band or solo act (so that we have a greater variety in our selections).

Last time, in volume 3, we left off just as a little known band called Nirvana was releasing its debut album on a new Seattle label called Sub Pop. The press coined a name for the emerging American North West heavy and noisy guitar scene and so grunge was born. Of course this sound existed throughout the '80s (just listen to the Wipers or the Meat Puppets) and Kurt Cobain, to his credit, was always keen to acknowledge his influences and point his fans to the right direction. The fact, however, remains that thanks to Cobain's songwriting genius and the unforeseen, tremendous success of his band's era-defining major label debut "Never mind", this underground sound, however you choose to call it, suddenly took over the charts worldwide. This optimistic start of the decade for rock music didn't last long, but at least the brief rise of the so-called grunge scene gave the opportunity to new as well as older bands to reach a much wider audience than before.

Meanwhile, Sonic Youth - who one could make the case that they masterminded this whole underground rock invasion by using the modest success that came with "Daydream Nation" as the Trojan Horse that opened the doors of Major Labeldom for the likes of Nirvana, Smashing Pumpkins, Pearl Jam et all to take over (making them Ulysses to Nirvana's Achilles in the great Grunge War) - continued being brilliant, as well as our other all-time Hall Of Fame heroes, Mark E. Smith's ever changing-always the same The Fall (releasing 5 excellent albums in as many years - the 3 of them on a major label for the first and only time in their career).

Other important players of the early '90s underground rock invasion force (newcomers or '80s heroes with newfound audience) included grunge godfathers Mudhoney, Afghan Whigs, Screaming Trees, Meat Puppets, Butthole Surfers, Pixies, Throwing Muses, Sugar, Sebadoh, Pavement, Girls Against Boys, L7, Babes in Toyland and last but not least Courtney Love's Hole (she got her celebrity status for all the wrong reasons but the fact is that all three Hole records simply rock).

On the other side of the pond, Madchester and the rave scene
initially took over (making for good party music but not so great rock) and when everybody's mind was finally fried, came Brit-pop with only a few memorable albums (Oasis' "Definitely maybe" being the best by far) and a lot of wind (as Mark Smith would say). There were of course a few bright exceptions operating beyond the narrow limits of the Brit-pop sound - for example My Bloody Valentine's unique "shoegazing" wall-of-sound, The Heart Throbs' and Blue Aeroplanes' underappreciated pop brilliance or Teenage Fanclub's back to basics earnest approach - but in the end, apart from The Fall, it was up to P.J. Harvey to give us something truly exciting from the British Isles. "Dry" was the first blast in '92 followed, a year later, by "Rid of me", the first masterpiece from one of the greatest talents of our time (with Steve Albini recording, but also in our Top 20 as a musician with the debut album of Shellac, his third band).


Top 50 Albums of 1990-1994

1. Never mind - NIRVANA
2. Rid of me - P.J. HARVEY
3. Live through this - HOLE
4. Extricate - THE FALL
5. Dirty - SONIC YOUTH
6. Siamese dream - SMASHING PUMPKINS
7. Fear of a black planet - PUBLIC ENEMY
8. Fontanelle - BABES IN TOYLAND
9. Trompe le monde - PIXIES
10. Every good boy deserves fudge - MUDHONEY
11. Too high to die - MEAT PUPPETS
12. Sweet oblivion - SCREAMING TREES
13. Henry’s dream - NICK CAVE AND THE BAD SEEDS
14. The real Ramona - THROWING MUSES
15. Slanted and enchanted - PAVEMENT
16. Copper blue - SUGAR
17. Definitely maybe - OASIS
18. Bakesale - SEBADOH
19. At action park - SHELLAC
20. Repeater - FUGAZI
21. Independent worm saloon - BUTTHOLE SURFERS
22. Gentlemen - THE AFGHAN WHIGS
23. New west motel - THE WALKABOUTS
24. Saturation - URGE OVERKILL
25. Cruise yourself - GIRLS AGAINST BOYS
26. Hypocrisy is the greatest luxury - DISPOSABLE HEROES OF HIPHOPRISY
27. Enter the Wu-Tang (36 chambers) - WU-TANG CLAN
28. Jehovahkill - JULIAN COPE
29. Blast the human flower - DANIELLE DAX
30. Cleopatra grip - THE HEART THROBS
31. Swagger - THE BLUE AEROPLANES
32. Submarine bells - THE CHILLS
33. Sack full of silver - THIN WHITE ROPE
34. Automatic for the people - R.E.M.
35. Bandwagonesque - TEENAGE FANCLUB
36. Loveless - MY BLOODY VALENTINE
37. Giant steps - THE BOO RADLEYS
38. Soundclash - RENEGADE SOUNDWAVE
39. Pills and thrills and bellyaches - HAPPY MONDAYS
40. 30 something - CARTER THE UNSTOPPABLE SEX MACHINE
41. O.G. Original Gangster - ICE T
42. The chronic - DR. DRE
43. Amerikkka's most wanted - ICE CUBE
44. Blue lines - MASSIVE ATTACK
45. Pod - THE BREEDERS
46. Hungry for sting - L7
47. Social Distortion - SOCIAL DISTORTION
48. Ritual de lo habitual - JANE'S ADDICTION
49. Let me come over - BUFFALO TOM
50. Come on feel the Lemonheads - THE LEMONHEADS


Another 10 albums equally worthy of inclusion: Ill communication - BEASTIE BOYS, Superjudge - MONSTER MAGNET, Beet - ELEVENTH DREAM DAY, San Francisco - AMERICAN MUSIC CLUB, Center of the universe - GIANT SAND, Park life - BLUR, Blood sugar sex magic - RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS, Gold mother - JAMES, Nowhere - RIDE, The low end theory - A TRIBE CALLED QUEST
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Hidden Bonus Track - 10 more records that you probably never heard before, but are well worth the effort to discover (start googling): Volume war - TRASH CAN SCHOOL, Full Isaac - LOTION, Laughing down the limehouse - ANASTASIA SCREAMED, Skiz - MUDWIMIN, Ventriloquist - VERTIGO, Perpetual motion machine - 13 ENGINES, Furthest from the sun - THE FAMILY CAT, Killing time - BLEACH, Pond - POND, Debut album - SAMMY
.
Coming Soon: The second half of the '90s in "Blast From The Past" Volume 5 - stay tuned.

Sunday, February 08, 2009

An Evening With Greg Dulli & Mark Lanegan - Live @ Gagarin 205 (February 4, 2009)



Greg Dulli and Mark Lanegan have been all over Cool Music Central in the last year thanks to the excellent "Saturnalia", the album that they released last March as The Gutter Twins on Sub Pop - one of our Top 10 albums of 2008. In May we had the opportunity to see The Gutter Twins in all their electric glory at Fuzz Club (review here), but on this evening Dulli and Lanegan had a completely different proposition for us: a "stripped down in the Gutter" set, as the announcement of this tour suggested (their last one together for the foreseeable future, since they're going to start working on separate projects soon).

With just Dave Rosser on guitar for accompaniment (and vocals on "Tennesse Waltz"), Dulli and Lanegan played an intimate 90minute acoustic set, that started with a few selections off "Saturnalia" ("The Stations", "God's Children") and proceeded with rarely performed songs from their extensive and glorious back catalogue. Dulli, apart from sharing vocal duties, was the main driving force behind the music, playing guitar, piano and harmonica, and Lanegan, sitting at the center of the dimly lit Gagarin 205 stage, handled the ultimate Gutter Twins weapon, his Voice, forcing the audience to complete and utter surrender! Highlights included "The River Rise", "Resurrection Song", "Candy Cane Crawl" and their closing cover versions of The Everly Brothers hit "All I Have To Do Is Dream" and the Cole Porter classic "I Get A Kick Out Of You".



Dulli, Lanegan and Rosser at the Gagarin 205 stage





The Gutter Twins - All I have to do is dream (live @ Gagarin 205, Feb. 4, 2009)
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P.S. A note to our greek-speaking readers: I have just started a collaboration with mix grill (fellow blogspoters with a website coming soon) and you can check out here my first grilled post, which happens to be a review of this gig. More to come soon... (I'm working on it gbal, scout's honour).

Thursday, February 05, 2009

R.I.P. Lux Interior...Long live The Cramps



The Cramps - Garbageman

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Listening Habits 01.2009

Favourite albums and songs for the period December 2008 - January 2009:

Top 12 Albums
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1. Dance Mother - TELEPATHE
2. Merriweather Post Pavilion - ANIMAL COLLECTIVE
3. Tonight: Franz Ferdinand - FRANZ FERDINAND
4. Alpinisms - SCHOOL OF SEVEN BELLS
5. Secret Machines - SECRET MACHINES
6. Workout Holiday - WHITE DENIM
7. Vivian Girls - VIVIAN GIRLS
8. The Week That Was - THE WEEK THAT WAS
9. Mega Breakfast - THE CHAP
10. Snowflake Midnight - MERCURY REV
11. Glasvegas - GLASVEGAS
12. Day & Age - THE KILLERS


Top 20 Tracks
.
1. So fine - TELEPATHE
2. Prince of peace - SCHOOL OF SEVEN BELLS
3. House jam - GANG GANG DANCE
4. My girls - ANIMAL COLLECTIVE
5. Dancing choose - TV ON THE RADIO
6. Ulysses - FRANZ FERDINAND
7. I'm throwing my arms around Paris - MORRISSEY
8. Carlos Walter Wendy Stanley - THE CHAP
9. One month off - BLOC PARTY
10. I’ve seen enough - COLD WAR KIDS
11. Mykonos - FLEET FOXES
12. Dark end of the street - CAT POWER
13. Scratch the surface - THE WEEK THAT WAS
14. Let’s talk about it - WHITE DENIM
15. Last believer, drop dead - SECRET MACHINES
16. Snowflake in a hot world - MERCURY REV
17. An eluardian instance - OF MONTREAL
18. Take off your sunglasses - EZRA FURMAN AND THE HARPOONS
19. In the new year - THE WALKMEN
20. Flowers and football tops - GLASVEGAS