BARBELITH underground
 

Subcultural engagement for the 21st Century...
Barbelith is a new kind of community (find out more)...
You can login or register.


Make my mixtape: Day of the Dead

 
  

Page: 1(2)

 
 
Mono
11:17 / 14.10.07
Why, Mr Nolte! When I read grant's first post I immediately thought of Holland 1945 by Neutral Milk Hotel. Your pick from that album is prettier, but 1945 maks me want to dance & jump around every time I hear it. In fact, I haven't listened to that album in over 5 years and the song was stuck in my head yesterday. Spooky.


The only girl I've ever loved
Was born with roses in her eyes
But then they buried her alive
One evening 1945
With just her sister at her side
And only weeks before the guns
All came and rained on everyone
Now she's a little boy in Spain
Playing pianos filled with flames
On empty rings around the sun
All sing to say my dream has come

But now we must pick up every piece
Of the life we used to love
Just to keep ourselves
At least enough to carry on

And now we ride the circus wheel
With your dark brother wrapped in white
Says it was good to be alive
But now he rides a comet's flame
And won't be coming back again
The Earth looks better from a star
That's right above from where you are
He didn't mean to make you cry
With sparks that ring and bullets fly
On empty rings around your heart
The world just screams and falls apart

But now we must pick up every piece
Of the life we used to love
Just to keep ourselves
At least enough to carry on

And here's where your mother sleeps
And here is the room where your brothers were born
Indentions in the sheets
Where their bodies once moved but don't move anymore
And it's so sad to see the world agree
That they'd rather see their faces fill with flies
All when I'd want to keep white roses in their eyes
 
 
grant
20:35 / 14.10.07
I am so in love with this thread.

Have you considered collating the responses, zipping them up into a teenytiny file and sharing the result?


Ooo, that does sound like an exciting idea.

I wish my pppppowerbook wasn't broke. I had software on there to record audio from anything the computer played - including YouTube.

I know "Holland 1945" - is "Oh Comely" on the same album? The trumpets do have a certain Mexican flair on there, as well as being a song about dead folks being OK with being dead....
 
 
grant
20:37 / 14.10.07
Alas, Rizla, the very first of yer links appears to have expired. The others are all functioning and putting themselves in my computer, though.

That WSBurroughs thing, monk, by the way, is awesome.
 
 
sorenson
20:38 / 14.10.07
dunno if this is exactly what you're after, but there's a great 30s/40s version of the old bones song (leg bone's connected to the...hip bone etc) on the soundtrack for the Singing Detective (80s TV version not hollywood remake). at one point the words refer to the bones dancing around, so i guess that indicates happy and dead!
 
 
rizla mission
21:00 / 14.10.07
Some more for you:

Charlie Patton & Bertha Lee - Oh Death

Not the better known 'Oh Death' unfortunately, as I would like to have heard Charlie & Bertha having a go at that one, but whatever this one's all about, it rules pretty hard, and they're singing about death and having a ball, so - result.

The Rev J.M. Gates - Death, Where Is Thy Sting?

From Volume.2 of the Harry Smith anthology. Pretty self-explanatory.

Scott Walker - My Death

"My death is like a swinging door,
a patient girl who knows the score.."

- you said it, Scott.

Faun Fables - Oh Death

A storming version of the 'Oh Death' we know and love. The Faun Fables lady has a fairly scary voice and a heck of a set of lungs.

The Pretty Things - Death

S.F. Sorrow kicks the bucket. The most weird and underappreciated track on the most weird and underappreciated album of the '60s...? Crazy underworld twangy sitar antics going on here...

Ultimate Spinach - (Ballad Of a) Hip Death Goddess

Absolutely one of the greatest psychedelic tracks of all time: bizarre, beautiful, spaced out, unique... and the vocals chill my bones every time...

"Come and look into my frozen eyes
Come and let me free you from blank skies
I am the hip death goddess of your dreams..."

John Fahey - Dance of Death

Does exactly what it says on the tin. A thorny, waltz-paced guitar rag specially for the spirits to get down to.

The Beat Happening - You Turn Me On

"Turn me on, dead man
Turn me on, dead man
Turn me on, dead man
Turn me on, dead man
You turn me oooooooooon..."

(Uploads available on request.)
 
 
grant
03:07 / 15.10.07
Rizla, I'm putting you in charge of my funeral.

Uploads YES.

Is Free Witch still around?? I like that lady's voice.
 
 
grant
03:25 / 15.10.07
My hip bone is connected, sorenson. Just so you know. Hear the word!
 
 
rizla mission
08:12 / 15.10.07
Uploads YES.

'll see what I can do!

Is Free Witch still around?? I like that lady's voice.

I like it too! But, no, appropriate to this thread, they lived but a short life and met with a sticky end I'm afraid.
 
 
Feverfew
08:35 / 15.10.07
There was, serendipitously, a version of the Bones song on the Science mix from a while back. You may wish to hook it out, grant.
 
 
Tsuga
09:11 / 15.10.07
There's a few songs by They Might Be Giants (if you can take them) on Apollo 18 I just thought of, "Dig my Grave" and "Turn around".

I was working all night in my office
When a man I had recently killed
Called me up from a phone near my building
So I looked out the window at him
He had the same obsequious manner
That was the reason I had him killed
So to calm my nerves I sang this song
To him, over the phone

Turn around, turn around
There's a thing there that can be found
Turn around, turn around
It's a human skull on the ground
Human skull on the ground
Turn around

I was out by myself in the graveyard
I was doing an interpretive dance
When I felt something heavy and pointed
Strike me in the back of the neck
And then the ghost of my dance instructor
Pushed me down into an open grave
And as dirt rained down she played a xylophone
And sang me this song

Turn around, turn around
There's a thing there that can be found
Turn around, turn around
It's a human skull on the ground
Human skull on the ground
Turn around

We were waving our arms out the window
Of a fast moving passenger train
Acting in an irresponsible fashion
Until the engineer whose back had been turned
And who we thought would find us highly amusing
Quickly swiveled his head around
And his face which was a paper-white mask of evil
Sang us this song

Turn around, (round) turn around (round)
There's a thing there that can be found (there's a thing there that can be)
Turn around, (found) turn around (round)
It's a human skull on the ground (it's a human skull on the)
Human skull (ground) on the ground (round)
Turn around (turn around, turn around)

Turn around, (round) turn around (round)
There's a thing there that can be found (there's a thing there that can be)
Turn around, (found) turn around (round)
It's a human skull on the ground (it's a human skull on the)
Human skull (ground) on the ground (round)
Turn around (turn around, turn around)
 
 
Closed for Business Time
11:07 / 15.10.07
grant, Oh Comely is from the same album as Holland 1945, the utterly fantastic In the aeroplane over the sea.
 
 
grant
16:02 / 15.10.07
I love TMBG (I'm not sure I own Apollo 18, though), and I found Oh,Comely on Rhapsody and recognized it as "that long song" from the very same album.

That's one of the albums that really works for me as an album - everything flows so damn well. There's such a lot of ghost/channeling material in those songs, too, it's hard not to think of it all as one big story about... something.
 
 
Closed for Business Time
20:15 / 15.10.07
If you can stand some classic Florida death metal, there's always heaps of legendary necro-growling from the likes of "Fuck" Chuck Schuldiner, John Tardy and David Vincent. The latter shower would even chuck in some trumpets once in a while.
 
 
Mon Oncle Ignatius
11:04 / 16.10.07
How's about the various versions of Charles Wesley's "Idumea" from 1763:


And am I born to die?
To lay this body down!
And must my trembling spirit fly
Into a world unknown?
A land of deepest shade,
Unpierced by human thought
The dreary regions of the dead,
Where all things are forgot.
Soon as from earth I go
What will become of me?
Eternal happiness or woe,
Must then my portion be!
Waked by the trumpet sound,
I from my grave shall rise;
And see the Judge with glory crowned,
And see the flaming skies!


It appeared on the soundtrack to Cold Mountain, sung by the Sacred Harp Singers At Liberty Church (apparently, I've not heard this version yet), but also in several different versions on Current 93's Black Ships Ate The Sky, sung by Marc Almond, Bonnie 'Prince' Billy, Baby Dee, Antony, Clodagh Simonds, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Pantaleimon, David Tibet and Shirley Collins.

So there's a lot of choice of how that particular song can be interpreted - my personal favourites are the Clodagh Simonds, Bonnie "Prince" Billy and Pantaleimon ones.
 
 
grant
14:44 / 16.10.07
Tampa grindcore always made me laugh.

That Current 93 thing looks awesome, though - I'll have to check iTunes or something once I gets home today. Flaming skies!

I'm also quite enjoying the Squirrels. This may be wrong, but I don't care.
 
 
Closed for Business Time
15:45 / 16.10.07
Tampa grindcore always made me laugh.
Well, that's the most evil reaction of them all!
 
 
rizla mission
19:58 / 16.10.07
Here's a .zip file containing all the songs mentioned in my previous post, plus a couple more.
 
 
Closed for Business Time
20:54 / 16.10.07
That's wicked, rizla. Gracias, cabrĂ³n!
 
 
grant
03:22 / 17.10.07
Dayumn.
 
 
Mon Oncle Ignatius
14:44 / 17.10.07
Another track which occurred to me is "My Grandfather's Clock":

My grandfather's clock
Was too large for the shelf,
So it stood ninety years on the floor;
It was taller by half
Than the old man himself,
Though it weighed not a pennyweight more.
It was bought on the morn
Of the day that he was born,
And was always his treasure and pride;

But it stopped short
Never to go again,
When the old man died.
Ninety years without slumbering,
Tick, tock, tick, tock,
His life seconds numbering,
Tick, tock, tick, tock,
It stopped short
Never to go again,
When the old man died.

In watching its pendulum
Swing to and fro,
Many hours had he spent while a boy;
And in childhood and manhood
The clock seemed to know,
And to share both his grief and his joy.
For it struck twenty-four
When he entered at the door,
With a blooming and beautiful bride;

But it stopped short
Never to go again,
When the old man died.
Ninety years without slumbering,
Tick, tock, tick, tock,
His life seconds numbering,
Tick, tock, tick, tock,
It stopped short
Never to go again,
When the old man died.

My grandfather said
That of those he could hire,
Not a servant so faithful he found;
For it wasted no time,
And had but one desire,
At the close of each week to be wound.
And it kept in its place,
Not a frown upon its face,
And its hand never hung by its side.

But it stopped short
Never to go again,
When the old man died.
Ninety years without slumbering,
Tick, tock, tick, tock,
His life seconds numbering,
Tick, tock, tick, tock,
It stopped short
Never to go again,
When the old man died.

It rang an alarm
In the dead of the night,
An alarm that for years had been dumb;
And we knew that his spirit
Was pluming his flight,
That his hour of departure had come.
Still the clock kept the time,
With a soft and muffled chime,
As we silently stood by his side.
But it stopped short
Never to go again,
When the old man died.
Ninety years without slumbering,
Tick, tock, tick, tock,
His life seconds numbering,
Tick, tock, tick, tock,
It stopped short
Never to go again,
When the old man died.


I never knew that it was written by the same person (Henry Clay Work) who wrote "Marching Through Georgia".

Here I'm thinking of the Johnny Cash version as being the most gravelly and appropriate.
 
 
Tsuga
00:40 / 18.10.07
There's also the new Radiohead song, Videotape, or Sufjan Stevens Casimir Pulaski Day.
By the way, here is the TMBG song, for a short time.
 
 
grant
15:07 / 29.10.07
You angels have given me so much material, I seem to have made *three* CDs.

I'll try to get zipfiles up this week....
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
15:27 / 29.10.07
Here I'm thinking of the Johnny Cash version as being the most gravelly and appropriate.

Dude. Brian Cant.
 
 
Mon Oncle Ignatius
18:20 / 29.10.07
Whoah! Supercool, Brian Cant is the man. Where can one hear this gem?

And was it from Playaway?
 
 
Feverfew
19:15 / 31.10.07
This should be me getting off my lazyness and setting up a yousendit link for A Place Called Home by Kim Richey. Hopefully, it works. Hopefully, you'll enjoy it.
 
 
grant
03:18 / 01.11.07
I'm in the middle of uploading three massive zipfiles.

Most are songs from right here in this thread or from various Barbelith swaps. But they all make me insanely happy.

I'm now dreaming of an mp3 archive consisting of great songs of death.

And I'm d/ling Kim Richey right now.
 
 
electric monk
03:31 / 01.11.07
I can't wait to see what you've put together here.
 
 
grant
13:18 / 01.11.07
Well, with more time, it could've been better.

Mix 1: Black Roses

Mix 2: Dance of Death

Mix 3: City of Ghosts

I could have separated by genre- bluegrass/country/old time in one, punk & psychedelia on another one - or by theme - my death, people I knew who died, ghosts & corpses - but I didn't. I just put 'em all together.

I'm more than happy to talk about any songs that haven't already been discussed on here. The one I knew I couldn't do without was Virgil Fox on the heavy organ, because he's nuts.
 
 
rizla mission
13:23 / 01.11.07
Wow!

I don't suppose there's any chance of posting the track-listings, as I'm without downloading capability at the moment, and would be interested to know what's on 'em..?
 
 
Closed for Business Time
13:54 / 01.11.07
Fan-fuckin-tastic!
 
 
grant
13:54 / 01.11.07
That might have to wait - I stuck 'em in the zipfiles as labels and don't have the CDs with me at work.

A great deal of the songs came from you, rizla.
 
 
grant
15:03 / 01.11.07
Oh, I have the third one:

When I Wake Up To Sleep No More 2:28 Ralph Stanley

Narrowly beat out his "O Death" from the O Brother, Where Art Thou soundtrack. I liked the way the baritone behind him led into...

You Turn Me On 4:28 Beat Happening

Beatles-inspired rock that sounds nothing like the Beatles.

Graveyard 3:13 Jeffrey Lewis

Not exactly in keeping with the theme, if you listen to it, and it's not the only Jeffrey Lewis in these, but it's called "Graveyard" and fits really nicely between the above and...

Rockin' Bones 2:24 The Cramps

..which I absolutely had to have on here somewhere. This version was recorded onto the computer off a tape I made in 1989, I think. I did what I could to make it sound better.

Such a great song. The undead rockabilly machine - it's like a practical meditation on the nature of embodiment.
And those rimshots...

People Who Died 5:00 Jim Carroll

Had to go somewhere, seemed to fit best here. It's the punk song that best fulfilled what I was aiming at for these - remembering dead people.

Become Your Ghost 1:58 Slant 6

This one, I just liked. Almost didn't make the cut, but I have a soft spot for Slant 6 in general. Plus, it was an ok lead into...

Don't Fear The Reaper 5:17 Lydia Lunch & Clint Ruin

A cover I've loved for more than a decade. It still sounds new to me, which is doubly weird (old cover of older song). It's part Ruin's HUGENESS and part Lunch's sincerity.

Oh Death Where Is Thy Sting 1:30 Rev. J. M. Gates

A cool-down.

The Light 3000 4:05 Schneider TM

Ganked off one of the Barbelith mix swap/competition things in Creation. Has etched a valley in my brain from repeated listening.

Death To Everyone 4:32 Bonnie 'Prince' Billy

This seemed like too good of a disparate style/matching mood thing to pass up from the prior Smiths cover.

(Ballad Of The) Hip Death Goddess 8:16 Ultimate Spinach D

Oh, duuude.

Coffin Joe 0:49 Juan Carlos Martin

I can't for the life of me understand what he's saying, but he sure seems insistent about the death of it all.

Dance Of Death 7:41 John Fahey

Synthesizes the Will Oldham and the Ultimate Spinach, in a way. And I can picture this as the soundtrack to a puppet show with skeleton marionettes.

O Death 3:43 Faun Fables
Like Malvina Reynolds, a powerful voice that has to grow on you.

Wayfaring Stranger 10:24 H.P. Lovecraft
Wow. Trippy.
It was sort of a toss-up between this and the Free Witch, rizla. Psychedelia beat lo-fi. Blame Faun Fables - they had the vox + minimal accompaniment market cornered.

I'm Going Home 2:19 Sacred Harp Singers

Came off a mix CD Jack Fear mailed to a bunch of folks a couple years ago - I think from the Cold Mountain soundtrack. Old arrangement of old hymn about eternal rest and eternal reward.
 
 
grant
18:21 / 06.11.07
Other track listings:

1. Black Roses: (supposed to be the "pretty" one)

Idumea (feat. Bonnie 'Prince' Billie) 2:43 Current 93

Stunningly gorgeous. I'll have to buy the rest of this album when I can.

This one track kind of combines a lot of the deadish threads running through this music - old voices, drones, tranquility and aspiration.


The Western Lands (A Dangerous Road Mix) 8:32 Material


Followed well from "Idumea," although I really wanted to put it elsewhere. It kept popping back here.

This bumped the Burroughs track from The Black Rider off the list, too. Ain't no sin? No, tell me wisdom, old Beat.



Dybbuk Shers 4:49 The Klezmatics/ Itzakh Perlman


From Itzakh Perlman's klezmer album, a track from a musical about a love affair with a possessing ghost - a dybbuk.

Although dybbuks are usually terrifying, I figured the romance angle made it less spooky and more of a piece with Neutral Milk Hotel.



Tattooed Man 6:23 COIL


From one of the first Creation mix swap contest things. Lovely, strange, striking song about dopplegangers and graves. I kind of think it's narrated by a dead guy who's confused about his status.



Turn Around 2:53 They Might Be Giants


Recommended here. Almost ejected because about the killin' more than the being dead, but the accordion reeled me back in.



Dem Dry Bones 2:57 The Delta Rhythm Boys


Again, Barbelith mix. Then again, I grew up with my dad singing this song to me. Bones!



If You Have Ghosts 4:00 John Wesley Harding And The Good Liars


I know very little about John Wesley Harding. This track came from a Roky Erikson tribute CD called Where the Pyramid Meets the Eye. It's a hard sentiment to argue with.



Six More Miles to the Graveyard 2:59 Camper Van Beethoven


I love this band. Irrational, perhaps. This really should be "O, Death," but there are other versions of this elsewhere, and I kind of like the cheeriness of a song that should be funereal.



Oh Death 2:52 Patton and Lee (Charley Patton and Bertha Lee)


...and...


Cave Spirits (recorded in a cave near the Mongolian border) 0:56 Sayan Bapa


There's something strange and exultant about these old voices.


Lyke Wake Dirge 3:30 Pentangle


An old, old song about the stages a soul goes through passing through Purgatory to Heaven. There are, apparently, Appalachian versions of this song. The "whinny moor" is a field of "whins" or thorns - and if you've given a poor person socks and shoes, they'll be waiting there for you to wear. And so on.


Death 3:11 The Pretty Things


Rizla, the dead love you.


Videotape 4:40 Radiohead


Seemed to go well with the Pentangle's subject. Haunting song in its own right, too.


Your Ghost 3:16 Kristin Hersh


Loved this when it first came out. It's really kind of cheating, since the ghost is more metaphorical, but why not? Cellos! Michael Stipe!


Don't Fear the Reaper 4:48 Gus Black


More cellos! Wimps out on the bridge, though.

1
Bach: Come, Sweetest Death 8:46 Virgil Fox


Recorded off one of the first LPs I owned, a Christmas gift from the early 80s of Virgil Fox going nuts on his organ with the psychedelic lights behind him.

I tweaked the audio to try and boost the volume/clarity of the intro. He worships Bach. Like, practically literally.


---------

2. Dance of Death: (supposed to be the "inappropriate" one - mostly about zombies & ghosts)


The Dead Only Quickly (w/ Neil Hannon) 1:04 The 6ths


So wrong for this. So bouncy. So irresistible.



If You Shoot The Head You Kill The Ghoul 2:49 Jeffrey Lewis


Flips my Romero-geek switch.



Holland, 1945 3:13 Neutral Milk Hotel


Discussed above - fits the beat well.



I Walked With A Zombie 3:10 R.E.M.


From that same Roky Erikson tribute. As a stand-alone song, it kinda bugs me. Repetitive and goofy. But put in this context, it's really sort of fun. At least for me.


Cold Hands, Warm Heart 3:27 Brendan Benson


I think this came from Fluxblog.
It's almost certainly not intended to be about zombies, but was too good a gag to pass up.


Dead Melodies 2:36 Beck Mutations


And with this one, I started to feel like I was creating a soundtrack to a zombie film I'd never seen.


Seasons In The Sun/Hustle- The Squirrels 3:19


Reminds me of Dr. Demento. Lovely. Lovely. "Mad," but lovely.


Don't Fear the Reaper 5:29 Apollo 440


I'm not sure how kooky these folks thought they were being. I'd dance to this cover, that's for sure.


Get Up 3:47 Sleater-Kinney


Off The Hot Rock, again with the soundtracking, although it's explicitly about waking up from death and rising up in glory.


NYC Ghosts & Flowers 7:53 Sonic Youth


This one is more obliquely about ghosts. It's hard to get around the idea that it's about someone hearing about an acquaintance who just died, and thinking about what that means.


Death, When You Come To Me 2:06 Moondog


Moondog, you're goofy. I often wonder what Japanese folks make of his Japanesey songs.


death don't have no mercy 3:04 Young People


It certainly doesn't. This is one of those songs I like singing along to. The countryness leads well into...


Atlantic City 4:42 Hank Williams III


A brilliant cover off another one of them Creation swaps. Springsteen, you have been bested.

I like the way it's two songs for the price of one, too.


Ghost Riders In The Sky 3:18 Riders In The Sky


Once ghosts and riders showed up, this song had to happen. Yes, it's about spooky dead people, but they're trying to help... really! Plus, everyone knows this song. Because it's awesome. Cowboys! Ghost cattle!



The Black Rider 3:18 Tom Waits


And Death hisself shows up, heralded by Tom Waits in top hat and tails.



My Death 4:57 Scott Walker


Yes, Rizla. He is *groovy*. There's actually this whole mode of 50s hipsters entering the late 60s with "heavy" songs - I suppose "Seasons in the Sun" would be the ultimate result of this, but I'm thinking of Sinatra doing "When I was 17" or the spoken word Rod McKuen stuff about emptiness, and Orson Welles croaking about I know what it is to be young, but you don't know what it is to be old.

This seems to be part of that tradition.



Dawn of the Dead 6:04 Goblin


Romero soundtrack. An actual zombie movie score. A bit long, but fills the end out nicely.
 
 
Tsuga
23:56 / 06.11.07
Gee, thanks, fella!
I just downloaded them, somehow I missed your previous post. This will be fun. Very nice of you.
 
 
yichihyon
00:51 / 09.11.07
In Asia people celebrate ancestor worship where they bow down to elders and the eldest male hands down the worship and ceremony to his eldest son and families gather and eat food but they wait and let the ancestors in first and eat the food first. They say in korea thats why the food lost it's taste because our ancestors ate it first.

It's similar to making offerings to the dead in other areas. Asians believe in ancestor worship and I believe its a good communal type holiday. I had my experimental kut at my apartment in korea while I'm teaching here abroad and strange things have been happening with the weather and stuff. It's like my Grandfather and other spirits are guiding me.......

Enjoy your own kut at home......To perform a kut in your own home invite your family and friends....First clean the home since dead ancestor ghosts will be visiting and prepare their favorite foods and drinks and alcohol. Set the food down after prepared and bow down 3 times. Wait an hour so that the ancestors devour the food and open beverages. Then enjoy the sacrificed food to the ancestors your self. The kut, the ceremony for ancestor worship, happens throughout Asia at the same time around Sept or Oct. It's usually harvest time and they call it asian thanksgiving. So Enjoy! After eating the food enjoy chats with cousins and distant relatives and catch up on old talk. Maybe the Indians of the past still remembered this ritual and performed it in the new lands or maybe not........Talking to old ghosts is very fun.

here is a song to celebrate a Day of the Dead from Asia
Dead End's Danse Macabre from the Ghost of Romance album: Morrie sings:

The Danse Macabre, The Danse Macabre, dance with me tonight!
 
  

Page: 1(2)

 
  
Add Your Reply