Author: andrea Page 47 of 72

Unrepentant Anglophile, a music obsessive with a fetish for luxuriously packaged objects, and an armchair traveler.

bend sinister + bombast

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There’s plenty of music out there that aims for —er, cordance. Fall leader Mark E. Smith has devoted his entire cantankerous career to discordance. But his curiously appealing grit-in-the-oyster, rant-tastic schtick has made the very idea of collaborations thorny to say the least. His inimitable MES-ness cannot be tamed or tampered with, or watered down to mass-popularity-loving levels. Now, this is a good thing in my book, but it means that collaborations with the man must be undertaken with mating-with-porcupines levels of extreme care. When they work, there’s a breathtaking quality that can only come from operating without safety nets. (Exhibit A: his work with British dancer Michael Clarke.) When they fail, well, to paraphrase the tale of the girl with the curl: when they’re bad they are horrid.

It’s early days yet to decide which side MES’s latest album-length collaboration with Cologne Dadaists Mouse on Mars settles into. Group name: Von Südenfed. Song title: “Family Feud.” Initial response: you’ve got your chocolate in my peanut butter. And it turns out I don’t like chocolate in my peanut butter. The recent Wire cover story made it sound like much more of a true collaboration, with each party influencing the other and pushing their respective boundaries. But so far I don’t really hear it. The resulting track is very much MES-bluster welded to MoM’s trademark bleeps + bloops. I’d like to hear more in order to get a more full-rounded picture of it, but so far I’m distinctly underwhelmed.

Just for kicks, I’m posting a few other MES-flavored collaborations from the near-past. I must sheepishly admit to being partial to the Elastica one, A) ‘cause it’s freakishly catchy and B) I never could resist a Fall in –joke.

The Long Fin Killie song I cherish the most, though —not simply because of Luke Sutherland’s undersung talent, but also because of the way Smith’s sharp-tongued, all-angles enunciation plays off of Sutherland’s gentle lilt. It’s one of the few times where I feel that Smith has been well-matched with a vocal-duetting partner.

“Family Feud” taken from the album Tromatic Reflexxions, out 6/5 on Domino US. More info atDomino or via the band’s MySpace page.

MP3Von Südenfed, “Family Feud” [2007]

MP3Long Fin Killie, “Heads of Dead Surfers” [1995]

MP3D.O.S.E. with Mark E. Smith, “Plug Myself In” (7” Mix) [1996]

MP3Elastica with Mark E. Smith, “How He Wrote Elastica Man” [from 2000’s The Menace]

IMAGE TAKEN FROM CALEB JOHNSON’S BRILLIANT INTERACTIVE COLLAGE ANIMATION, NFCTD.

more like space

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I consider Seefeel as as radically important in their own way as My Bloody Valentine. Both took the indie-rock blueprint and warped it. If MBV mined a fraught emotional terrain of ever-threatening psychic rupture, Seefeel took their music in a gentler, but no less vital, directions. They started life worshipping Pram but quickly came into their own, laying down the blueprint for a new kind of uncompromising ambient, connecting the dots between indie rock and experimental techno. Their amniotic blissout was expansive and oddly innocent —no matter how disorienting or fractured their music became, their was always an almost pre-lapsarian purity at the heart of the chaos. It’s oddly comforting.

Their startling debut Quique has been given remix/remaster treatment. It’s been expanded to two CDs (meaning unreleased songs and remixes) and we can all be very thankful for that. This album’s been out-of-print for awhile (and fetching not-so-gentle prices on ebay and GEMM) so if you haven’t heard it, you’re in for a treat. This music sounds as startling now as it did when it came out. It’s amazing how well it’s aged.

Buy from ToneVendor | Seefeel | Official MySpace | Too Pure Blog + News

MP3Seefeel, “Filter Dub”

MP3Seefeel, “Clique”

PHOTO BY ANDREA | LONDON 2007

Garden of Earthly Delights

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This photo doesn’t require too much explanation. Neither should this song. Everyone should own this album.

Read more at Dusted. | Buy the reissue.

MP3The United States of America, “The Garden of Earthly Delights”

Page 47 of 72

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