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    <title>Burl Veneer’s Music Blog</title>
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    <updated>2008-03-18T21:53:37Z</updated> 
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    <id>tag:vox.com,2006:6p00d4144aef1d3c7f/tags/bill+laswell/</id> 
    <subtitle>Songs I Like</subtitle>  
    
    <entry>
        <title>Iggy is everywhere</title>   
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        <published>2008-03-15T21:00:54Z</published>
        <updated>2008-03-18T21:53:37Z</updated>
    
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        <p>Bill Laswell&#39;s Praxis project, originally a turntable-and-sampler affair, changed direction in the 90s to invent the &quot;cyberthrash&quot; genre.&#160; With a core lineup of Laswell, Buckethead, Bernie Worrell, and Brain, they constantly switched gears from funk to metal thrash to hip-hop to ambient to free jazz, often within the same song.&#160; Praxis has always been primarly an instrumental band.&#160; Their latest album, <em>Profanation</em>, includes a series of guest singers and a dose of nu-metal; it&#39;s watered down the Praxis concept, but on the other hand they now have some anthemic choruses to shout along with.&#160; On first listen the fourth track, &quot;Furies,&quot; grabbed my attention, because it sounded like Peter Murphy singing.&#160; Peter Murphy on a Praxis album?!&#160; Then as I listened and the singing went into a higher register and exhibited some very un-Murphy-like inflections, I decided it must be Iggy Pop, remembering that Bill Laswell had produced his <em>Instinct</em> album.&#160; And it is indeed Iggy Pop, but did you ever notice how similar he and Peter Murphy sound sometimes?</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<p>



It was not long after that that I happened upon Iggy Pop again, this time on the soundtrack to <em>The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou</em>, which I was listening to for my <a href="http://burlveneer.vox.com/library/post/spy-music-roundup.html">spy music roundup</a>.&#160; The Stooges&#39; 1973 classic &quot;Search and Destroy&quot; plays during the scene in which Steve Zissou drives the pirates from his ship, a perfect bit of snarling energy for the onscreen action:<br />
    
    
    


    
    
    


    
    
    


    
    
    


    
    
    

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So the other night I was watching the BBC Four Hawkwind documentary <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0074tmc"><em>Hawkwind - Do Not Panic</em></a>, and I heard &quot;Urban Guerilla&quot; for the first time.&#160; I&#39;ve been a fan of Hawkwind for over 25 years, but I was never a Hawkwind completist, and a good thing too because that&#39;s a losing proposition for sure.&#160; I wouldn&#39;t say there are gaps in my knowledge of Hawkwind; it would be more accurate to say that my Hawkwind albums are gaps in my ignorance of their body of work.&#160; My little collection of pre-Robert Calvert albums (<em>Hawkwind, In Search of Space, Warrior on the Edge of Time)</em>, Calvert-era records (<em>Quark, Strangeness, and Charm, Astounding Sounds, Amazing Music, PXR5</em>), and the post-Calvert <em>Live Chronicles</em> provided plenty of listening enjoyment.&#160; I never have been able to see the &quot;real&quot; (i.e. Dave Brock-led) Hawkwind.&#160; I got as far as actually going to a show at DC&#39;s Bayou nightclub, but the band were unable to obtain visas and the show was cancelled.&#160; Some years later I did get to see Nik Turner&#39;s Hawkwind at the 9:30 Club, with Helios Creed in the band, and that was good but not quite the full Hawkwind experience, I suspect.&#160; So anyway, I was heretofore oblivious to &quot;Urban Guerilla,&quot; but what struck me is how close it is to &quot;Search and Destroy.&quot;&#160; Both songs were written in 1973; they both contain first-person lyrics boasting of fighting, bombing, and general dangerousness; and while Hawkwind don&#39;t have the visceral punch of the Stooges, Iggy Pop and Robert Calvert deliver uncannily similar vocal performances.&#160; Here&#39;s &quot;Urban Guerilla&quot; for comparison:</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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1973: the Vietnam War, IRA bombings (which caused the &quot;Urban Guerilla&quot; single to be banned by the BBC, and ultimately withdrawn from the market), the Baader-Meinhof Gang, the Red Army, revolutionary (and pseudo-revolutionary) terrorism and bloody counterterrorism were in the air worldwide.&#160; Iggy Pop and Robert Calvert both picked up on it, apparently independently, and produced a pair of songs that will now be forever entwined in my mind.</p>   <p style="clear:both;">    
    <a href="http://www.vox.com/share/6a00d4144aef1d3c7f00e398e63a470004?_c=feed-atom-full">Send to a friend</a> 
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    <entry>
        <title>Prog backwards: Memories</title>   
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        <published>2008-02-23T01:08:59Z</published>
        <updated>2008-02-23T01:34:25Z</updated>
    
        <author>
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        <p>Cranking up The Mars Volta&#39;s <em>Frances the Mute</em> album the first time was revelatory, and it had me jumping around for days.&#160; I caught up with their other albums afterwards, but none of them quite did it for me the way <em>Frances</em> did.&#160; And now they have a new one out, as you may have heard, <em>The Bedlam in Goliath</em>.&#160; They have also released five cover songs as bonus tracks.&#160; One of them is &quot;Memories&quot;--</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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Listening to that the first time I recognized the tune; it took me a minute but I placed it as a song from Material&#39;s 1982 album, <em>One Down</em>.&#160; It&#39;s a nice breather from the electronic funk of the rest of the album, and significant for being sung by a pre-solo-career Whitney Houston:</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<p>

I had always assumed this &quot;Memories&quot; was either original to Material
or an obscure R&amp;B cover, but The Mars Volta listed it as a Soft Machine cover.&#160; And sure enough, the first version of The Soft Machine--Robert Wyatt, Daevid Allen, Kevin Ayers, and Mike Ratledge--recorded it in 1967 with producer Giorgio Gomelsky.&#160; It never got beyond the demo stage, but has been released several times on &quot;Soft Machine early years&quot; albums:</p>

    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<p>

But wait, there&#39;s more!&#160; It wasn&#39;t actually a Soft Machine song originally, but a song written by bassist <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Hopper">Hugh Hopper</a> in the pre-Soft Machine band The Wilde Flowers.&#160; The Wilde Flowers first recorded it as an instrumental, then added lyrics for a 1966 recording, with Robert Wyatt singing but not drumming:</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<p>
 Hugh Hopper joined The Soft Machine <em>after</em> their first (demo) recording of &quot;Memories,&quot; and in 1969 the new SM lineup --Hopper, Wyatt, and Mike Ratledge--recorded &quot;Memories&quot; once again... but as The Wilde Flowers!</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<p>

And that&#39;s only a part of the rather amazing history of this little song.&#160; <span style="font-size: 1.25em; color: #000000; font-size: 1em;"><a href="http://www.lunakafe.com/moon87/en87e.php">Luna Kafé</a> has the definitive article on &quot;Memories,&quot; the </span><a href="http://www.dprp.net/forgotten/wildeflowers/index.html">Dutch Progressive Rock Page</a> has a complete Wilde Flowers chronology, and Richie Unterberger gets some interesting tidbits from <a href="http://www.richieunterberger.com/allen.html">Daevid Allen himself</a> about the early Soft Machine.&#160; I obviously still have a lot to learn about the swiftly-shifting alliances of those nascent prog rock years.<br /></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
    <a href="http://burlveneer.vox.com/library/post/prog-backwards-memories.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments">Read and post comments</a>   |   
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    <category term="hugh hopper" scheme="http://burlveneer.vox.com/tags/hugh+hopper/" label="hugh hopper" /> 
    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>Zillatron</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="Zillatron" href="http://burlveneer.vox.com/library/post/zillatron.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
        <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="Zillatron" href="http://burlveneer.vox.com/library/post/zillatron.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments" /> 
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        <link rel="enclosure" href="http://a0.vox.com/download/6a00d4144aef1d3c7f00e398acbef00001-pi.mp3" type="audio/mp3" length="6323607" />          <id>tag:vox.com,2007-09-27:asset-6a00d4144aef1d3c7f00e398acbef80001</id>
        <published>2007-09-27T00:44:00Z</published>
        <updated>2007-09-27T03:45:59Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>Burl Veneer</name>
            <uri>http://burlveneer.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
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        <p>I&#39;ve been hankering to listen to <a href="http://www.silent-watcher.net/billlaswell/discography/xasamp/lordoftheharvest.html">Zillatron&#39;s <em>Lord of the Harvest</em></a> again recently, and after about a week of looking I located a copy.&#160; &quot;Zillatron&quot; is one of the alter egos adopted by Bootsy Collins for this 1993 album, produced by himself and <a href="http://www.musicianguide.com/biographies/1608000159/Bill-Laswell.html">Bill Laswell</a> for Ryko&#39;s shortlived Black Arc imprint (and reissued by Innerhythmic in 2004).&#160; The other driving force behind this album is guitar phenom <a href="http://www.bucketheadland.com/faq/">Buckethead</a>; the album as a whole achieves a weird balance between Bootsy&#39;s supremely funky bass playing, Buckethead&#39;s metal licks, and a running thread of William Burroughs paranoia and Area 51 UFO conspiracy theories, either sampled from movies or narrated by Bootsy through a vocoder.&#160; The sound is rounded out by P-Funk alumnus Bernie Worrell&#39;s keyboard wizardry.&#160; Frankly, all the crazy talking can get tedious when you want to hear music, so I&#39;ve snipped the first minute and a half from the album&#39;s <em>tour de force</em>, &quot;Fuzz Face&quot; (another character played here by Bootsy):</p>

    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<p>


 This is another album from my earliest days of parenthood, when I couldn&#39;t afford to buy any music, so I would tape the new CDs that my friend Brian (a.k.a. &quot;Tumbleweed&quot;) brought over every Saturday.&#160; I distinctly remember listening to my Zillatron tape in the car on September 23, 1994, driving home after spending the night in a recliner in my wife&#39;s hospital room with our newborn son.&#160; I was exhausted, but &quot;Fuzz Face&quot; woke me right up and carried me home.&#160; (And when it got to the part where Bootsy says, &quot;My speakers blown, my speakers blown,&quot; it was almost prophetic, as I&#39;d cranked it all the way up by then.)&#160; It also carried me home from work last week, but that wasn&#39;t quite as momentous.<br /><div><br /></div></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
    <a href="http://burlveneer.vox.com/library/post/zillatron.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments">Read and post comments</a>   |   
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            ]]>
        </content> 
    <category term="90s" scheme="http://burlveneer.vox.com/tags/90s/" label="90s" /> 
    <category term="bootsy" scheme="http://burlveneer.vox.com/tags/bootsy/" label="bootsy" /> 
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    <category term="bill laswell" scheme="http://burlveneer.vox.com/tags/bill+laswell/" label="bill laswell" /> 
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    <category term="black arc" scheme="http://burlveneer.vox.com/tags/black+arc/" label="black arc" /> 
    <category term="zillatron" scheme="http://burlveneer.vox.com/tags/zillatron/" label="zillatron" /> 
    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>Simon Shaheen at Cornell</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="Simon Shaheen at Cornell" href="http://burlveneer.vox.com/library/post/simon-shaheen-at-cornell.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
        <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="Simon Shaheen at Cornell" href="http://burlveneer.vox.com/library/post/simon-shaheen-at-cornell.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments" /> 
        <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" title="Simon Shaheen at Cornell" href="http://www.vox.com/atom/svc=post/asset_id=6a00d4144aef1d3c7f00e398abac070001" />   
        <link rel="enclosure" href="http://a4.vox.com/download/6a00d4144aef1d3c7f00e398abc91c0003-pi.mp3" type="audio/mp3" length="4645129" />   
        <link rel="enclosure" href="http://a7.vox.com/download/6a00d4144aef1d3c7f00e398abc9af0003-pi.mp3" type="audio/mp3" length="5259358" />          <id>tag:vox.com,2007-09-24:asset-6a00d4144aef1d3c7f00e398abac070001</id>
        <published>2007-09-24T04:24:31Z</published>
        <updated>2007-09-26T13:04:29Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>Burl Veneer</name>
            <uri>http://burlveneer.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
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        <p>The news that <a href="http://www.simonshaheen.com/">Simon Shaheen</a> would be performing at Cornell was exciting; I was familiar with his violin and <em>&#39;oud</em> playing from <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicky_Skopelitis">Nicky Skopelitis</a>&#39;s <em>Ekstasis </em>album (1993), which got me through many a long day at my record store way back when.&#160; Shaheen plays violin on &quot;Proud Flesh:&quot;</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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                <div class="enclosure-asset-name"><a href="http://burlveneer.vox.com/library/audio/6a00d4144aef1d3c7f00e398abc91c0003.html" title="04-Proud Flesh">04-Proud Flesh</a></div>
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The other players on this track are Jah Wobble, bass; Jaki Liebezeit (of Can), drums; Foday Musa Suso, kora; Guilhermo Franco, tambourine; and Nicky Skopelitis on one or more of his arsenal of guitars and other stringed instruments.&#160; <em>Ekstasis</em> is the pinnacle of Bill Laswell&#39;s ethnic fusion productions on his <a href="http://music.hyperreal.org/labels/axiom/">Axiom</a> label.&#160; Every song grooves right along, but not for too long, with funky drumming by either Liebezeit or Joseph &quot;Zigaboo&quot; Modeliste of the Meters, and throbbing basslines from Wobble or Laswell.&#160; A few more of Laswell&#39;s usual suspects put in appearances as well: Amina Claudine Myers on organ, percussionist Aiyb Dieng, and Bachir Attar on <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhaita"><em>ghaita</em></a>.&#160; I also love James Koehnline&#39;s cover art; I am usually ambivalent about collage as an art form, but Koehnline really makes it work.&#160; Many of his collage covers for Axiom are in one convenient online gallery <a href="http://www.koehnline.com/gallery01/">here</a>, and an index to all his online galleries is <a href="http://www.koehnline.com/galleries/">here</a>.<br /><div><br />On Sunday, Simon Shaheen was at Cornell not as a sideman but as a bandleader, with his ensemble Qantara.&#160; Palestinian-born Shaheen has lived in New York since 1980, and has been an ambassador for Arabic music ever since.&#160; One thing I learned at the concert is that Arabic <a href="http://www.kairarecords.com/oudpage/Oud.htm"><em>&#39;oud</em> </a>styles are the basis of Spanish flamenco, as demonstrated in &quot;Al-Qantara:&quot; <br /><br />
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<br /></div><div>(That brings to mind Eric Random&#39;s <em>Ishmael</em> album, featured here on <a href="http://burlveneer.vox.com/library/post/eric-random-the-great-lost-worldbeat-album.html">July 20</a>.)&#160; The other thing I learned at the concert is what a versatile instrument the tambourine is.&#160; One of the two percussionists, <a href="http://tribes.tribe.net/31216ece-2764-4f15-8821-09c3243d6259">Michel Merhej</a>, played only the <em>riqq</em> (tambourine), but that single instrument can be made to sound like a whole drum kit (minus the bass drum).&#160; Holding the riqq with both hands, he taps the fingers of each hand in different places on the instrument&#39;s head to produce a whole range of percussive sounds.&#160; The left-hand motion is all in the fingers, but the right-hand motion has a lot of wrist action as well.&#160; Even so, you must have to have strong fingers to make the beats heard over everyone else!&#160; Then there are the jingles (cymbals): they only sound when he wants them to.&#160; He could be tapping away on the tambourine head without the jingles making a sound, or he could decide to let them ring along with the beats.&#160; He would sometimes shake the tambourine to emphasize the jingles, or ring them with his thumbs, or lift the tambourine up in a circular motion to make them ring non-percussively.&#160; Can you tell I was fascinated?&#160; My previous notions of tambourine playing (i.e. that it&#39;s what a band&#39;s singer does during the songs that another band member sings) were completely invalidated.&#160; After the show, Merhej wrapped up his two <em>riqqs</em>, put them in a Louis Vuitton messenger bag, and carried them away.&#160; Now that&#39;s a portable instrument!&#160; (Click <a href="http://www.ethnomusic.ucla.edu/ensembles/worldmusic/neareast/Riqq2.htm">here</a> for a Quicktime video demonstration of the <em>riqq</em> by Vince Delgado.)<br /><br />To give credit where it&#39;s due, I will note the other members of Qantara: <a href="http://www.bassamsaba.com/">Bassam Saba</a>, flute and <em>nay</em> (Arabic flute); <a href="http://www.newenglandconservatory.edu/faculty/shepikB.html">Brad Shepik</a>, guitar; <a href="http://www.oudman.com/">Najib Shaheen</a>, <em>&#39;oud</em>; Thomas Bramerie, double bass; and <a href="http://www.mattkilmer.com/">Matt Kilmer</a>, percussion.&#160; Thanks for a great show, gentlemen!<br /><br />Finally, since embedding a YouTube video takes practically no effort on my part, here is a clip of Simon Shaheen and Michel Merhej taken at a 2004 performance at McDaniel College in my onetime home town of Westminster, Maryland:<br /><br />
    
    
    


    
    
    


    
    
    

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<br /></div><div><br /></div></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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            ]]>
        </content> 
    <category term="90s" scheme="http://burlveneer.vox.com/tags/90s/" label="90s" /> 
    <category term="00s" scheme="http://burlveneer.vox.com/tags/00s/" label="00s" /> 
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