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The Barbelith Song Pimpin' Club

 
  

Page: 12345(6)

 
 
Spatula Clarke
16:42 / 03.04.02
Just because I've been having a tidy up and found the CD hiding in a gap between the shelves and the wall, my pimp today is Coldcut's 70 Minutes Of Madness Journeys By DJ set.

Warning: actually lasts 70 minutes. Downloading will require much patience or a better Internet connection that I've got. Results will be worth it, though.
 
 
gridley
17:08 / 08.04.02
Feeling kind of astro-hillbilly today, so that's what's on the menu.

This is my current favorite song. very groovy, very infectious. It's by keller williams. freeker

And this is a groovy little song that includes fiddle with electronics and has as it's chorus: "How about a drink, Commander? How about a drink at the speed of light?" It's by the Hix and it's called teenage danceland
 
 
Ethan Hawke
17:22 / 08.04.02
I want to recommend a song called "The History of French Cuisine" by Kid Congo Powers and the Pink Monkey Birds, which I heard live on Saturday Night when they opened up for the White Stripes, but I sadly can't locate it on the web.
Nonetheless, Kid Congo Powers is a brilliant performer, and his band just rocks. Best opening band I've EVER seen, by miles.

If anyone can locate this song, give me a shout.
 
 
No star here laces
10:01 / 09.04.02
Beatnuts - 'We got the funk'

Awwwwwwwwwwwwww yeah. Nuts are ruling. It does indeed have the funk. It stomps all over dancefloors like a T Rex with itchy gonads. It's subject matter is very filthy. There's a girl in a bikini on the cover.

Sexist, crude, crass, thuggish music based on sampling other people's tunes. Hip hop boiled down to the bare essentials and still rocking.
 
 
Matthew Fluxington
17:57 / 15.04.02
Making up for lost time -

Otis Redding's cover of "Satisfaction" - stomps all over the Stones' original as far as I'm concerned - it rocks and roll and screams and shouts, it improves over every aspect of the original. One of the best covers I've ever heard.

The Bar-Kays' cover of "A Hard Day's Night" - Okay, this doesn't quite surpass the original the way that Otis masters "Satisfaction", but this instrumental soul version certainly has a great charm to it.

"I Want A Girl" by the Mad Lads - Just a lovely lovesick Stax soul ballad, but with an intro that sounds like it came off a recent Stereolab LP. Some quasi-Oedipal lyrics, too - "I want a girl/ a girl just like the one/ that married my dad..."

"Teach Me Tiger" by April Stevens - an overtly sexual ballad from the mid-50s, complete with very randy Eartha Kitt grrrrrrowling and purrrring vocals. Teach her how to kiss you, or she'll teach you...

"Too Hot To Hold" by Big Ella - fast, insistent soul rocker, of the James Brown variety. It's a mover, you've just got to hear this. It's rather self-explanatory...

"Leaving Here" by Eddie Holland - another fast soul number, this one with a stern warning to lying cheating men, warning them about how all the women are "leaving here" cos they can't take the abuse anymore. It's a great proto-feminist number.
 
 
autopilot disengaged
23:21 / 15.04.02
loads, really - but for now:

'the conductor' by the faint is fucking murderistic.
 
 
autopilot disengaged
23:25 / 15.04.02
i rilly rilly hate the way i have to ask the moderator if i can change ther italics, above, from 'fucking' to 'murderistic'. so i won't. i'll sulk out here in the open.

just download the song already.
 
 
Matthew Fluxington
14:53 / 16.04.02
"This Is My Room" by Jonathan Fire*Eater - It was hard for me to figure which of JFE's many excellent songs to pimp in specific, but I choose "This Is My Room" for it's sunny, breezey-day feeling. A lot of the time, JFE sound as though they are a band who are trying to make me like them, me specifically. The organs, the loose/tight dynamics, the clever clever lyrics, the way the melodies kinda sprawl out... This song is highly recommended.

"Sing About Me" by Papas Fritas - Boppy super-pop anthem, very Motown-crossed with cheesy 80s pop, as performed by a 90s alt-pop band. This song is just so much fun, and addictive. Very danceable, too.

"Set The Controls for the Heart of the Pelvis" by Barry Adamson and Jarvis Cocker - it's really a crime that this song isn't a huge hit. It's essentially a big stomping disco song with a gospel choir singing about masturbation, while Jarvis pops in to sing some verses of pure self-deprecating sleaze. Best part: Can't you see what's on offer?/ Yeah, it's going cheap today/ I enter a room and all the girls say/ "C'mon, Jarv, can I be the first?/ You make us so hot, we fear we're gonna burst!"
 
 
rizla mission
21:14 / 16.04.02
You bastards will probably all hate it, but if anyone wants to hear a mad-as-fuck German band who sound like Shonen Knife meets Ministry, as recorded in a shed, download 'Pussycat USA' by the Nazis From Mars
 
 
Red Cross Iodized Salt
00:19 / 17.04.02
Seeing as how I've just spent a happy hour downloading stuff pimped by others, I figured it was long past time I did some myself.


Keeping up the Detroit techno pimping...

Underground Resistance - Amazon Classic Detroit techno (and Classic UR) from the World 2 World EP - grab a copy of last years 4-Hero remix while you're there.
 
 
Red Cross Iodized Salt
00:54 / 17.04.02
More Detroit...

Carl Craig's 69 - Desire. More downtempo then the UR stuff, and one of Carl Craig's best moments (which is saying a lot).

Outlander - Vamp (Kevin Saunderson Remix). Lots of trademark KMS sounds here in this remix of the Belgian rave anthem from when we were all youngsters.

Manuel Göttsching - Ruhige Nervosität . From his e2 e4 LP. Not Detroit, but people from Detroit (and elsewhere) have been using bits of it for years. It's listed as 'Manuel Göttsching - E4' on Audiogalaxy.
 
 
Red Cross Iodized Salt
01:11 / 17.04.02
Some non-Detroit non-techno...

Downloading Pyramids of Giza earlier prompted me to dig up a copy of Prolapse - Doorstop Rhythmic Bloc, which in turn reminded me of Disco Inferno - It's a Kids World (a track that anyone who likes samples of shouting, eighties pop and Iggy Pop - and lets face it, who doesn't? - should hear) cause I had them both on a tape once...
 
 
Matthew Fluxington
13:26 / 19.04.02
Do you ever just hear a song, and just want everyone else in the world to hear it too, because it's just that catchy and wonderful? This is how I feel about "Back To The Lake" by Guided By Voices. I'm not sure how to describe it literally without making it sound dull, but you've got to hear it, if just to humor me. You'll hum it all day long, trust me. Pick up, for God's sake, when Bob calls you back to the lake, okay?

Come with me, back to the halcyon days of the mid-90s, a time when Mary Timony created noisy art-pop songs like "Trixie's Star" rather than cutesy songs about dragons and magical kingdoms. Oh Mary, please go back to the noise pop - please! You don't even have to call it Helium if you don't want to!

"Last Train To Cool" by Nation of Ulysses is, by my reckoning, one of the greatest punk songs ever penned. "Three chords/ yeah, they're yrs/ we stole them/ from yr bottom drawer/ sixteen strings or something/yeah, don't listen/ cos we stole everything/Yeah, it's true/ we got it from you/ don't worry man, there's nothing new." A pre-Make Up Ian Svenonius belts out the vocals while the guitars and horns churn in a way that sounds a bit like the way a severe stomach ache feels, the drums pound - this song is fucking vicious, and righteous.
 
 
Matthew Fluxington
14:57 / 25.04.02
(lifted from my blog)

Let's talk about some recent Neptunes tracks, okay?

Last night I heard "Grindin'" by Clipse for the first time - I'm pretty amazed, it one of the most naked, spare, minimalist songs I've ever seen on MTV. It's all repetitive electronic percussion, no bass, there's no keyboards, no nothing. On what passes for a chorus, Pharell from the Neptunes softly sings the word "grind-ing" while a percussive keyboard sound makes a brief little cameo. It's so simple, so tense, so effective. It sounds primal. The MC isn't special, I sort of wish this track was for someone a bit more charismatic - I get the feeling that this song would sound great with Mystikal or Ludacris.

The Neptunes-produced "Grimey" by N.O.R.E. (aka Noreaga) has a very similar beat (but hey, don't all Neptunes tracks have more or less a variation on the same beat?), but with a really cool early 80s kind of keyboard hook, and a nervously pulsating bassline. Noreaga is a competant and passable MC, so he's barely a factor in the quality of the song - the chorus is pretty good, once it comes in along with that keyboard hook, it really clicks. A good track, but not quite a classic.

The Neptunes remix of "Emotions" by Destiny's Child is a really interesting one - what was originally a soft-pop acoustic ballad is now re-outfitted with a chugging keyboard riff, tambourines, a lightly thudding snare, and a politely funky bassline. It's very satisfying, especially because Beyonce et al recorded a brand new vocal track for the mix, so it's really smooth. I'm surprised that this wasn't the regular single mix, really. Very strong.

Their remix of Angie Stone's "Everyday" is nice enough, and certainly improves upon the original version; but is more or less The Neptunes on autopilot. Standard Neptunes beat, standard Neptunes keyboard and bass, you've heard it all before. It's the sort of self-parody that they could do for the rest of their careers, but thankfully they are avoiding that lately.

The Neptunes contribution to the "What's Going On?" all-star benefit cd is pretty fair - some preachy MCing by LL Cool J, Fabolous, Da Brat, Mobb Deep, Noreaga, and Queen Latifah over some benign light-soul keyboards, an easy-going beat, and some crooning by Pharrell Williams. I like it, but it's nothing really special. It's certainly good for what it is meant to be...

On the opposite end of the spectrum, the Neptunes mix of Mr. Cheeks "Lights, Camera, Action" is really inspired and fun. It's similar in feel to their mix of Britney Spears' "I'm A Slave 4 U", but with a nice catchy pop hip hop song, with that chorus quoting Outkast's "Ms Jackson"... It's a bit of a novelty song, I think, but it's worthwhile and memorable.

Also fitting that description is their remix of N'Sync's "Girlfriend" with Nelly on guest vocals. This one is really great - smooth, slick, fun modern pop. This song is really all about Nelly being Nelly, Justin Timberlake doing his best Michael Jackson impression, and the rest of N'Sync crooning innocuously in the background. The acoustic guitar is a nice touch, too... I'm pretty sure that in 20 years, there will be folks working very hard to make a retro record that sounds a lot like this.

Finally, I bit the bullet and decided to check out the re-recorded-with-a-live-band versions of my favorite songs from The Neptunes' N.E.R.D. LP, and I'm glad that I did. I never expected that live version of "Brain" could ever improve upon the electropop original, but hey, I've got to admit that it feels a lot more energetic and fluid without losing the basic sound of the main riff or sacrificing any of the original's nervous twitchiness. In fact, the live band version sounds a lot more twitchy and manic. Similarly, the live version of "Things Are Getting Better" has some really well-done/well recorded percussion that automatically one-ups the original. Not bad - I guess it's best to not be so quick to judge what seemed like a really insane decision to re-record the LP, they seem to know exactly what's the best for them.
 
 
nikon driver
21:37 / 25.04.02
this one goes out to all the non-uk 'lithers, since i don't know how well this man's gonna travel. but he's getting big hype over here, he's getting critical acclaim, he's cross breeding garage and >fill in musical genre here<

he is 'the streets'.

and he is a little patchy, sometimes verging on novelty - but always interesting.

my top 3 tracks are:
weak become heroes
turn the page
let's push things forward

so download them now. impress your friends.
oh, and be warned. his mc-ing is a little idiosyncratic/weak(delete as appropriate)
 
 
Matthew Fluxington
11:54 / 13.05.02
I know that Rizla and Glint have already gone on about how much they like McLusky and Ikara Colt - that's how I know them in the first place - but I feel a strong need to gush about my favorite songs by the both of them.

McLusky's "Whiteliberalonwhiteliberalaction" has got to be one of the most vicious punk songs I've heard in a long while. It gives off a strong, contagious feeling of bitter resentment and loathing, though I'm not certain exactly who their target is. I would think that they are going on about self-satisfied and arrogant white liberals and political correctness, the title and the sing-song mantra "cos everyone's a hero" clue me in as much. The singer's voice is amazing, I love the way this guy sneers, and when chorus is screamed, it is incoherant but communicates his desperation very well. The guitars in this song sound great too, they sound more like electronic shrieks and machine noises than guitars, always a plus.

Ikara Colt's "Sink Venice" seems to be all about incoherant desperation too - I have no idea what the singer is on about, other that they seem very intent on having Venice sink. The song is overflowing with defiance as it speeds along on a bassline that sounds suspiciously like "Negative Creep" by Nirvana. The singer reminds me a lot of Mark E. Smith while sounding nothing like him - I think it's just a similarity in attitude and lyrical style.
 
 
bio k9
03:31 / 04.06.02
The first time I saw Sunset Valley was at the Crocodile Cafe. They were opening for Death Cab for Cutie and Pedro the Lion. Best of the three in my opinion.
 
 
Saveloy
10:05 / 05.06.02
Bobby Mitchell - I'm Gonna Be a Wheel Someday

A classic New Orleans R'n'B tune from the 50's (Fats Domino did a version, which I haven't heard). A jolly, medium paced thing with a bouncy step and a stoopidly simple but totally addictive tune. The guitar break is just 3 or 4 notes, an up'n'down nee-naw affair, which you think is going to get fancy but is just repeated over and over. Reminds me a bit of some of the cheesier early Fall tunes (Bingo Master's Breakout). Anyway, your grin will be doubled in width by the childishly evil lyrics:

"I'm gonna be a wheel someday,
I'm gonna be somebody,
I'm gonna be a real gone cat,
THEN I WON'T WANT YOU."
 
 
Solitaire Rose as Tom Servo
01:53 / 28.07.02
Bump....

"Whom Shall I Kill" from Mystery Science Theater 3000 and "The Greatst Frank of All" from the same. LOVE those songs.
 
  

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