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TELEGRAPH
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Entertainment for the discerning indie geek
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Published by the Telegraph Pioneers Of America: A partnership between
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Klang Industries and IndieCoRe
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Telegraph Transmission Three: The Search For Spock - October, 1994
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In This Action-Packed Episode
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* My Forgotten Favorite, aka Whatever happened to... : Scene is
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crazy, bands start up, each and every day. I saw a new one just
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the other day, a special new band... uh, here's where Mark, Sean
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and Jodi take a look back at some indie faves from a few years ago
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and find out what happened. Did you see the drummer's hair?
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* Media Bullshit Watch: "The Alternative Beer"
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* IndieCoRe's Field Guide To The Net: hey, someone's bound to do
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this eventually - why not A Name You Can Trust (tm)? Free plugs
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for mailing lists, archives, etc. in this joint IL/TG project.
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* Live Review: Yep, it's a review in Telegraph. Said I wouldn't do
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it but I lied. Jawbox, Picasso Trigger, and Maximillian Colby, a
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night to remember?
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* The award-winning Coursing Thru The Wires
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* More more more
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Note
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Tim Day missed his deadline, so his CMJ article will not be appearing
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in this issue. Check back next time. Sorry.
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Introduction/Editorial Rant
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Mark Cornick, mscornic@vax1.acs.jmu.edu
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Hey, look! It's a new issue of Telegraph and the last one was only
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something like six weeks ago! Oh, MY.
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You may notice that the plaintext version of this TG has nicer
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formatting than the last few. Well, net.audience, the reason for this
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is that TG is now being edited as hypertext, and then created to
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plaintext. I'm going to be concentrating on the hypertext (WWW)
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edition in the future, adding more graphics to it & etc. However, the
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plaintext mail version will always continue to exist. The formatting
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may be a little strange - especially the names of LPs, which show up
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as underlined and/or italics in HTML, but unformatted in plaintext.
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I'm trying to find a workable way to fix this.
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For those of you reaing this on WWW, you probably noticed that we have
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a new home on the Web at etext.org, who have hosted our FTP and Gopher
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archive for a while now. My departure from the Hopper project
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necessitated the move, but it actually works out for the best because
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now everything's in one place. Also, we are able to keep back issues
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in hypertext and plaintext formats.
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Mail addresses are the same as before - mail Sean for subscriptions
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and me for everything else. Depending on what etext.org management
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does, we may end up with a mailbox on their machine, but we'll worry
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about that if/when it happens.
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etext.org (as you may know) provides archives to many electronic
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'zines. Other than Telegraph, you can find quality stuff like
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Armadillo Culture, SuperStupidSlambook and the ever-popular Screams
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Of Abel on etext.org. Take a look around!
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Unfortunately, the price of progress is the 33% downsizing of
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Telegraph Pioneers Of America. I would like to thank Chris Karlof, who
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has capably archived Telegraph since its inception, for his services
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as Telegraph archivist. The new arrangement with etext.org has
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eliminated the need for an archivist. Chris will be continuing as
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Indie-List archivist, however. Thanks, Chris!
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Well, I'm now settled comfortably back into Harrisonburg, Virginia,
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quickly becoming known for something other than poultry processing
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(Harrisonburg, not me), although I don't know what... Oh, yeah, right,
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the live scene. Believe it or not, folks, this little farm town has
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become a return stop for touring bands. In the four weeks I've been
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here we've hosted Eggs, the Coctails, Nothing Painted Blue, the
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Woggles and Pitchblende, for starters. Next up: Jawbox and Picasso
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Trigger. Later, Archers of Loaf. This in a place where, two short
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years ago, the only place to play was in somebody's basement. Wow,
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man. (Actually this sort of makes sense; a lot of JMU's students are
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from Washington DC or its suburbs, and have (a) pretty diverse musical
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tastes and (b) an expectation that there'll be something good to
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watch. It's paid off, I think.)
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As I type this it's September 26, a Monday. This, of course, means
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that new major label releases will be out tomorrow. There's a bunch -
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R.E.M., Ween, Slayer (SLAYER! SLAYER! SLAYER! 6! 6! 6!), and many
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others, possibly including the long-delayed DGC reissues of Sonic
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Youth's Evol, Sister and Ciccone Youth: The Whitey Album. There is,
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however, one release that's being particularly hyped in these parts:
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the RCA Records Label Of BMG Music (that's the name of the label,
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check that used copy of the 700 Miles CD in any record shop in the
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USA) debut of Virginia's own Dave Matthews Band. Under The Table And
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Dreaming is its name, truly awful music is its game.
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Let me say first that I have nothing against Dave Matthews (or his
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band) personally. Early in his career, he and his band played here at
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JMU and I thought he was a nice guy. I understand that he still is, in
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spite of his enormous, nearly-rock-star-plateau success. And some of
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his sidemen (particularly sax man Leroi Moore) are ace musicians. Ol'
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Dave may, in fact, be proof that nice guys finish first. He sold 74
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gajillion copies of his DIY first CD, attracting the attention of
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various major labels and affording him the opportunity to hire Steve
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"Will Produce U2 For Food" Lillywhite to produce the new one. This
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tirade is not about Dave Matthews The Human Being.
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It's about Dave Matthews The Musician. He's annoying. Lord, is he
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annoying. That voice! That whiny, nasal,
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whasisface-from-Live-(The-Band)-affected howl. Do a few whippets, grab
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your throat, and say the five vowels very quickly. This is
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approximately what Davey boy sounds like. Now let's turn to his band.
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They can blow jazz. They can rock. They can, in the words of
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Klangfellow Mike Gangloff, play some HOUSE ROCKING BLUES!
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Unfortunately, they've decided to do that H.O.R.D.E. Boogie. (I think
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the DMB even played some dates on the last H.O.R.D.E. insurgence.
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Wouldn't surprise me a bit. Of course, since I didn't go, I don't
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know.) This naturally makes Dave & co. popular with a bunch of people
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whose musical tastes I generally can't abide:
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* frat boys
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* Deadheads
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* Phish heads (roly poly Phish heads, eat 'em up, yum!)
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* Michael Stipe
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* Every booking agent in Charlottesville
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* AAA radio
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* H.O.R.D.E. zombies
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* You get the idea.
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Well, there's very little I can do to deny Dave Matthews and band the
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mainstream success they will very likely achieve. I suppose I could
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cruise by the release party at Crossroads Concert Hall And Sports Bar
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(one of the few times I will say that "Trax" was a better name for
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this place) in Charlottesville tonight, and fire a flamethrower into
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the release party in progress. Advantages: Not only would this wipe
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out Dave, it would wipe out hundreds of his fans, and Shannon Worrell
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too (the less said about her the better.) Disadvantage 1: My friend
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Stephanie will be working there (her day job is at Plan 9 Records
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who's co-sponsoring the show) and would most likely be killed in the
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resulting inferno. Stephanie doesn't deserve to die. Disadvantage 2:
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This would make Dave a martyr. "Dave Matthews Died For Your Sins!" I
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don't think so. Disadvantage 3: Dying is a great career move. Ask Jim
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Croce, Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison (why are all these guys named "Jim",
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anyway?) or you-know-who. Nah, as much as I'd like to, I can't do
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this. It's fucking futile.
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So, anyway, when you see that copy of Under The Table And Sucking Slag
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Battery's Dick on the record store shelves, or when the Dave Matthews
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Band rolls through your town, think of me and what I've said, and go
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see another band instead. (No one else playing? Go read a book.)
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Forgotten Favorites
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Mark Cornick, mscornic@vax1.acs.jmu.edu
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The vaguely definable shared experience we call "the indie scene" has
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a few notable characteristics. One is its dynamic state. The
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do-it-yourself ethic has been around for years, ostensibly since the
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Flamin' Groovies released the first widely successful DIY album back
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in 1968 or so. Of course, it took hold with the punk thing in the late
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70s, and has existed in some form or another since. Lately it's become
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pretty fashionable, even. The DIY spirit that typifies the world of
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indie music inspires hundreds of bands yearly. You wanna play music,
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you go right ahead and make yourself a band. Indie folks have always
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been good at publicity, too; between the numerous large and small
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'zines, word-of-mouth, and now Internet, it's not terribly hard to get
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noticed if you're doing something halfway decent. (Or something
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horribly wretched, actually, but that's another story.) People like
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seeking out new bands, and indie fans like to latch onto new bands
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that they like, much like fans of any other form of music.
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The fact that no one's waiting on The Man to create their music career
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for them results in a lot of new bands competing for indie listeners'
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attention on almost a daily basis. At WXJM Radio, we get several 45s
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and dozens of CDs a month from bands we've never heard of. When you're
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presented with a bunch of new bands and end up liking a handful of
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them, it's inevitable that some of the bands you used to be into will
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take a backseat to your new favorites. (Don't say you don't do this. I
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saw those Duran Duran records in your closet.)
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What happens to a band deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin in the
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sun? Or does it EXPLODE? Could go either way. There've been a few
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bands that I thought were 100% Hot Shit who putzed out and are
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probably working at El Taco now. On the other hand, there've been some
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bands that I wrote off early on who've become big stars. (I never,
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NEVER would've predicted the success of Alice In Chains, f'rinstance.)
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Okay, here's a look back at some bands/artists/records I was into a
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few years ago, and what happened to them.
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* Sexual Milkshake (1991): The presence of Harrisonburg's Sexual
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Milkshake, and their merrie band of fans & groupies, were what
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made my first year at JMU tolerable. SM weren't a great band
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musically -- OK, let's face it, most people think they were
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horrible -- but they successfully covered up for it with a
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fantastically calculated image. Going to a Sexy Milkshake show was
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like going to a carnival as presented by the Church of the
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Sub-Genius - wild costumes, films projected all over the place,
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etc. There was one show where they each had trampolines and they
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trampolined thru the entire set. OK, so the music sucked (they
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admit as much) but Sexual Milkshake were one of the most
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entertaining acts since vaudeville. Where They Are Now: They
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released one album, Sing-A-Long In Hebrew (Teenbeat, 1992) which
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was easily one of the most extravagantly packaged CDs ever.
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Vocalist Greg Allen moved away in 1992 and SM ground to a halt
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sometime thereafter. Bassist Jill Murphy hasn't been heard from
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since. Guitarist Todd Massie and drummer Chris Callahan stuck
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around Harrisonburg for a while, playing in a few bands. Massie
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moved to Portland, Oregon and is probably doing something or other
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out there. Callahan moved to Arlington and hit the Lollapalooza
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bigtime in Blastoff Country Style.
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* Courtney Love (1992): Like many other people, I stumbled onto
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Courtney Love (the band) through confusion with Courtney Love
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(lead singer of Hole.) I'd heard some of the Hole stuff and while
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it didn't excite me terribly, I was curious to see what would come
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next. So I was a little surprised to pull this 45 off the shelf,
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put it on and hear this acoustic pop stuff. It definitely wasn't
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what I expected, but I liked its simplicity and directness. I
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picked up the Olympia, Washington duo's three 45s which, along
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with some compilation tracks, comprise the Courtney Love
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discography, and thus began my investigation of the K label, which
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eventually led me to Beat Happening. Pretty cool, huh? Where They
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Are Now: Courtney Love's duo, Lois Maffeo and Pat Maley, called it
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a day sometime in 1992. Maffeo, who had moved to Washington DC
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previously, formed a new band called Lois, recorded two albums,
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Butterfly Kiss (K, 1992) and Strumpet (K, 1993) and was called a
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folksinger in Option. Maley still lives in Olympia where he runs
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the Yo-Yo studio and label, and recently hosted a multi-day,
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multi-band indie extravaganza called Yo-Yo A-Go-Go.
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* Therapy? (1992-3): If you look back at the Spring, 1993 WXJM
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Program Guide, you can see my review of Therapy?'s major-label
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debut, Nurse. I noted that the public was tiring of MTV grunge,
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and would soon be demanding something a little more substantial. I
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predicted that these Killing Joke-influenced Irish lads would be
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the proverbial Next Big Thing. Guess I was wrong. Where They Are
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Now: Nurse (A&M, 1992) garnered a lot of critical praise but
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didn't sell very many copies. Ditto for the followup, Troublegum
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(A&M, 1994.) Maybe it was that scary cover art on the
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"Teethgrinder" 45... Therapy? are still around and will probably
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continue to make records, although I seriously doubt their next LP
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will be recorded for A&M. (Therapy? did release an album,
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Caucasian Psychosis, on Quarterstick/Touch & Go before they got
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signed by A&M, but very few people noticed then, either.)
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* Sliang Laos (1993): Richmond, Virginia has long been known for two
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musical exports: GWAR, and instrumental, jazz-influenced rock
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bands (Alter Natives, Hotel X, King Sour, and perhaps most
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notoriously, Breadwinner, kings of the carefully measured,
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spastically polyrhythmic form of music that became known as
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"math-rock.") Sliang Laos, while not directly affiliated with any
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of the above groups, nonetheless uncomfortably (VERY
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uncomfortably) fused GWAR's cartoony metal sludge (albeit without
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the ridiculous costumes) with the noise and morse-code patterns of
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math-rock. The result? Where They Are Now: Sliang Laos cut a 45,
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"Alabama Ego" (Tenderizer, 1993), and made appearances on a few
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compilations, culminating in a Sliang Laos track appearing on an
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Invisible Records compilation, Can You See It Yet? They play live
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about once every six months; however, the dueling egos (six or
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seven of them) keep them from assembling in one room without
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killing each other, and people are afraid to ask them when they're
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going to get off their butts and do something new. Many of the
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Sliangers have side projects which sound nothing like Sliang Laos,
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notably the techno/ambient band Somatron.
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So there you go; four bands that I thought were going to do big
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things. Courtney Love definitely had their day. Therapy? enjoy some
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limited success. Sexy Milkshake broke up before they could sell out.
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Sliang Laos hate each other too much to try. What's the moral of the
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story? I dunno. Some people make it, some don't. It's hard to predict.
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What Ever Happened To __________?
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Sean Murphy, grumpy@access.digex.net
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NOTE: Before I launch into another "controversial" piece of writing,
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I'd like to make a formal apology to all members of the bands Scarce
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and Juicy and to Steve Silverstein for my factual errors in Telegraph
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#2. While I stand by my personal assessment of the music I saw
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displayed by Juicy on one occasion and the stories related to me by
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other friends whose musical opinions I value (i.e. they weren't doing
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anything remotely interesting or worthwhile on stage), the more
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derogatory remarks or insinuations were not specifically intended.
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Specifically, I apologize for alleging that Juicy was "merely content"
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to mimic Bratmobile's style and devoid of any heart or seriousness.
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Additionally, my error in calling Joyce "a member of Juicy" was a
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substantial one, particularly for someone who 1.) has been informed
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otherwise in the past; and 2.) places a significant value on the
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factual accuracy of written material, as those who witnessed my
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editorial stint at the Indie List [and the overabundance of square
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brackets during that time] may recall.
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DISCLAIMER: Any questions or concerns about the content of the
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following article should be directed to me at grumpy@access.digex.net.
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I do take responsibility for my writing, including its factual
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content, its potential pretensions, and some of its possible
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implications. Unintended inferences are the responsibility of the
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person doing the inferring, however, not mine. I would be happy to
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discuss individual points at greater length through private e-mail.
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[ This would be a good time to remind everyone that opinions presented
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in TG are those of the individual authors, and are not necessarily my
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opinions, unless I wrote the text in question. If you have a beef with
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an author, take it to them, not me. - Mark ]
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OK, enough of that. (Guess who's supposed to be studying for the LSAT
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but writing this instead...) Let's get down to business.
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"What ever happened to... ?"
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It's a nice song lyric, and a decent question to ask every once in a
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while. Perhaps just as important as the question, though, are the
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reasons the question exists - why things which seemed
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great/wonderful/huge just disappear sometimes. (Yes, rhetorical
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questions are a bad way to start essays, but nobody's grading this, so
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fuck it. It's an easy intro, at any rate...)
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A couple days ago, I was listening to a tape I had made early in 1991,
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during my first semester as a "full time" college DJ. I didn't own any
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of the stuff I taped, though I wanted to have my own copies of each
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record (and I still do, oddly enough, after picking up all but 2 of
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the culprits). The stuff on side two was King Kong (Movie Star 7"),
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Ed's Redeeming Qualities (Ed's Day 7"), Superchunk (4 songs from the
|
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first LP), Dinosaur Jr. (The Wagon 7"), and King Missile (two tracks
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from "Mystical Shit"). [Side one was Funkadelic's Maggot Brain and
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although it's a wonderful album, it doesn't really enter this
|
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|
discussion - we all know where George Clinton is right now...] And
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Mark's "suggested topic" just hit me. What the fuck happened to all
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those bands since I made that tape, considering that I more or less
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don't care about what they do at this point?
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First, a quick rundown of the bands:
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* King Kong - released a second single, then the enormously popular
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Old Man On The Bridge LP on Homestead (I can't begin to explain
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|
the number of requests I and my fellow DJs have gotten for the
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||
|
"heba heba heeba hobba hoba hooba hobba" song). After a tour in
|
||
|
support of that LP, Ethan Buckler broke up the band and then
|
||
|
proceeded to re-form it with a new cast of characters, leading to
|
||
|
the incredibly disappointing Funny Farm LP on the Drag City label.
|
||
|
* Ed's Redeeming Qualities - have a couple LPs, have broken up as
|
||
|
far as I know. The unfortunate death of one member placed a
|
||
|
definite strain on the band, and the songwriting deteriorated -
|
||
|
demented classics like "Lawn Dart" and "The Boy I Work With" gave
|
||
|
way to dull songs notable only for the use of ukeleles and violin.
|
||
|
Carrie Bradley still makes guest appearances on other records
|
||
|
(like the Breeders).
|
||
|
* Superchunk - became the absolute darlings of the independent world
|
||
|
(this was the pre-Slanted & Enchanted era) based on "Slack
|
||
|
Motherfucker." Put out a number of great singles, each time
|
||
|
followed by less successful albums. While I've been complaining
|
||
|
this point for ages, I still think that Jon Wurster's drumming
|
||
|
gets mixed WAY TOO HIGH in live settings, making it impossible to
|
||
|
distinguish songs from each other. This basic formula (great
|
||
|
single, dull LP) will probably persist until the band breaks up.
|
||
|
* Dinosaur Jr. - got signed to Reprise. Put out one somewhat
|
||
|
interesting LP (Green Mind), followed by a dull one (Where You
|
||
|
Been), and now apparently have another new one that I'll hear on
|
||
|
the radio shortly and probably not bother buying. Lou Barlow had
|
||
|
already played his last with J. before "The Wagon" was released,
|
||
|
making the steady decline in Dino-output a potential case of "J.'s
|
||
|
got nobody to fight with - the lack of tension has led him to
|
||
|
produce boring shit not worthy of the name Dinosaur."
|
||
|
* King Missile - got signed based on the strength of their
|
||
|
"underground hit," "Jesus Was Way Cool." Changed the band line-up
|
||
|
and musical sound to the point where kids will slam at their shows
|
||
|
without thinking about it, even when the band decides to cover
|
||
|
Elton John's "Love Lies Bleeding." (No joke - I witnessed this in
|
||
|
March of '93 at the 9:30 Club in DC. Frightening.) They're relying
|
||
|
too much on John S. Hall to make up another couple of stories that
|
||
|
will have the mass appeal of "Jesus..." - and I'm still somewhat
|
||
|
surprised that the record label pushed "Detachable Penis" in this
|
||
|
age of FCC hysteria about indecency and obscenity - this song
|
||
|
breaks the innuendo line a few times... Apparantly, they have a
|
||
|
new LP, too - I'll race you to Tower Records...
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Scorecard - 4 bands still active. 2 signed to major labels. 1 1/2
|
||
|
still marginally interesting (I think Ethan Buckler's still got a
|
||
|
trick or two left up his sleeve if he picks up the damn guitar again,
|
||
|
and I'll get back to Superchunk in a moment, but neither one rates a
|
||
|
full band-point).
|
||
|
|
||
|
For 5 bands which seemed really exciting and interesting to me at the
|
||
|
beginning of 1991, a "survival" rate of 35% isn't so hot. Of course,
|
||
|
this may say more about my ability to choose good bands than anything
|
||
|
else, but in 1991, I would bet that many other people were expecting
|
||
|
good things from these same bands.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Superchunk is the most interesting case of the five, because they
|
||
|
illustrate a phenomenon that I'm finally beginning to understand - the
|
||
|
"singles" band. The Buzzcocks and The Jam were singles bands. Pet
|
||
|
Clark was a singles singer. While full LPs from such performers can be
|
||
|
entertaining in toto, more often it is a collection of specific songs
|
||
|
that sparks the most interest. I listen to Singles Going Steady much
|
||
|
more than I listen to A Different Kind Of Tension. For Superchunk, I
|
||
|
think their true defining moments come in 7" doses - Slack
|
||
|
Motherfucker, My Noise, Cast Iron, Mower, What Do I, Cool, Seed Toss,
|
||
|
Precision Auto. For this reason, Tossing Seeds (and its inevitable
|
||
|
future companion) has a place right next to Singles Going Steady (and
|
||
|
the forthcoming Tsunami singles comp) in my heart - that's where the
|
||
|
winners are, without it being an explicit "greatest hits" package. In
|
||
|
a difference over the days of Pet Clark, however, it's not a label
|
||
|
executive declaring "we need a hit single before we release an album"
|
||
|
but rather a quirk of fate that makes this all possible. [I'm obvously
|
||
|
going to allow for the occasional great song to slip by onto the LP
|
||
|
format - Not Tomorrow being my favorite example for Chunk - but in
|
||
|
general the LPs ride on the singles at best and bury them at worst.]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Essentially, some bands just aren't meant to make LPs. When they
|
||
|
persist in doing so, they risk losing the attention of the people most
|
||
|
inclined to like them. I don't think all the bands listed above were
|
||
|
singles bands - Dinosaur wasn't, and King Kong's first LP was a
|
||
|
cohesive, solid listening experience. Superchunk is a singles band (or
|
||
|
rather, Mac is a single-writer - looking over his expanse of recorded
|
||
|
output, I find it much easier to extract songs than full recorded
|
||
|
units, from Slushpuppies to Wwax to my beloved Bricks to Portastatic.)
|
||
|
Extended listening can become tiresome, and this isn't an effect of
|
||
|
MTV or any other cultural phenomenon.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the same time, there are numerous counterexamples to the singles
|
||
|
band. MX-80 Sound LPs should be listened to in their entirety. The
|
||
|
same is true for Antietam. Husker Du. (If you still haven't done this,
|
||
|
listen to Zen Arcade, all four sides, in one sitting, preferably at
|
||
|
high volume and with lots of caffeine accessible. It's a truly
|
||
|
mindblowing experience to reach the piano interludes or the false end
|
||
|
siren in "Recurring Dreams" and then get kicked back into the frenzy.)
|
||
|
Rodan (R.I.P., and may all their individual musical endeavors in the
|
||
|
future be as successful). Lots of jazz should be taken in full blocks
|
||
|
- A Love Supreme, a significant portion of Charlie Mingus's stuff,
|
||
|
Pharoah Sanders, Anthony Braxton, Eric Dolphy. I can't imagine
|
||
|
listening to excerpts from Terry Riley's "Descending Moonshine
|
||
|
Dervishes" or "A Rainbow in Curved Air" although the shorter of those
|
||
|
two pieces is 18 minutes (the longer is 52 minutes). Ditto for Glass's
|
||
|
"Einstein On The Beach" - a major part of the effect of the work is
|
||
|
the saturation of repetition and arpeggiation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What is the point, you ask? Well, perhaps bands should do some sort of
|
||
|
self-evaluation every so often. They should look at what they've done,
|
||
|
what they've been satisfied with, what has interested them the most.
|
||
|
I'm not saying that a "singles band" can't make a coherent, satisfying
|
||
|
LP. (Superchunk's first LP was a good one, not just because it had
|
||
|
"Slack MF" and "My Noise" on it.) Bands should recognize their
|
||
|
strengths, however, and while they shouldn't rest on their laurels,
|
||
|
it's still worth knowing what you're good at and occasionally sticking
|
||
|
to it or going back to it. Neil Young has tried a million and one
|
||
|
different musical experiments, but every so often he takes the time to
|
||
|
record with Crazy Horse. It's not always perfect, but the musical
|
||
|
environment "Neil Young with Crazy Horse" is a known commodity where
|
||
|
it's safe and certain types of songs will essentially "work,"
|
||
|
particularly the epic guitar stuff (though that ploy doesn't work on
|
||
|
Sleeps With Angels). It's not just a gesture for the fans, it's not
|
||
|
cashing in (unlike the "reunion" tours of late - why the fuck do we
|
||
|
need a fucking Eagles tour with $100+ tickets at the box office?),
|
||
|
it's a return to an accustomed, enjoyable musical expression.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So, I've rambled far off the intended path, come to no real
|
||
|
conclusions, and wasted a significant amount of time (both mine in
|
||
|
writing and yours in reading). I'm bound to come back to these ideas
|
||
|
again (both "whatever happened to" and the idea of singles vs. lp
|
||
|
bands) but maybe I'll have more coherent points to make next time.
|
||
|
Maybe we can get a discourse going on the more philosophical aspects
|
||
|
of music instead of x number of people spitting their thoughts into
|
||
|
the wind.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Whatever it all means, at least there was music then that made a
|
||
|
difference. Maybe there are a couple bands in the world which have had
|
||
|
the plain goal of making one single and then disappearing, but if
|
||
|
someone heard that single, then the band filled its role. Maybe I'm
|
||
|
full of shit. These issues aren't changing, though - it's just the
|
||
|
examples pulled or the circumstances under which they're revisited
|
||
|
that vary, based on writers and their experiences. But if anyone out
|
||
|
there has that Ed's Redeeming Qualities single, I'd still like to have
|
||
|
a copy - "Lawn Dart" still makes me both laugh and cry and that's a
|
||
|
good feeling to have sometimes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nostalgia Is Beautiful
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jodi Shapiro, jodi@dsm.fordham.edu
|
||
|
|
||
|
There are a lot of records in my room, my mom's house (taking up her
|
||
|
closet space, she yells), my dad's house, my office. A lot of them
|
||
|
haven't been played in a long while for one reason or another. Some
|
||
|
are just unpacked from my last move (two years ago, if you must know).
|
||
|
Some are truly forgotten and my kids will find them and say "Hey mom!
|
||
|
You liked these guys?".
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then there's the ones that I can't get to because they're in my mom's
|
||
|
house upstate (though I couldn't live without Tar's Jackson so I
|
||
|
bought it on CD), and I didn't have a turntable until a week or so
|
||
|
ago, so I didn't bother to bring them to my apartment. I fished it out
|
||
|
of the garbage and re-wired some things. It works like new, and now I
|
||
|
wish I had these four records with me:
|
||
|
* Dirt, "Cleft On The Chin, Devil Within" 7": John Forbes is in
|
||
|
Mount Shasta now, but Dirt was where he started yelling. They were
|
||
|
pretty much ignored when they were around, maybe because they were
|
||
|
based in Atlanta, not the hotbed of musical scenes. Eventually
|
||
|
they mutated into Seersucker, put out a full album, then imploded.
|
||
|
I only know of one other person who liked Dirt, and that's Steve
|
||
|
Albini (gratuitious name-drop) and I'm not sure what that means. I
|
||
|
got this single when I was working at Rockpool, and I played it
|
||
|
every day for about three months. I hummed it in class. The
|
||
|
b-side, "Booger" was cool too. Everyone thought I was crazy, which
|
||
|
made me feel better.
|
||
|
* In Tua Nua, The Long Acre: Okay, it's wussy Celtic pop, but "Don't
|
||
|
Fear Me Now" was an aces song, as was the rest of the album. It's
|
||
|
probably the only album out of my "I love U2 so I have to buy all
|
||
|
these other Irish records too" phase that I actually miss. I
|
||
|
bought it on the way home one day, in The Wiz, because I had heard
|
||
|
one of the songs on the radio and liked it. The girl's voice was
|
||
|
really beautiful. As was the custom with bands I liked in high
|
||
|
school, they were destined to obscurity. I think this was their
|
||
|
only album.
|
||
|
* Sad Sack, "Heinous Bitch" 7": I got this from two guys in Albany,
|
||
|
Jack and Dave. They ran a record store named ERL and later started
|
||
|
the record label of the same name. I'd spend about $100 a week
|
||
|
there, using my food money for as many singles as I could afford.
|
||
|
Dave and Jack always took care of me, giving me credit, slipping
|
||
|
free records in my bag, special ordering stuff. The store is gone
|
||
|
now (or so I'm told), but Dave and Jack are out there somewhere.
|
||
|
Sad Sack was the third or fourth record ERL put out, pre-Mosquito
|
||
|
and Jad Fair stuff. It was poorly recorded, cheaply pressed and
|
||
|
had a handmade cheesy cover. The singer sounds like he's drowning,
|
||
|
and the drum machine sounds tinny. The song is timeless, with it's
|
||
|
chorus of "Heinous bitch! Fucking witch!". There's a real neat
|
||
|
guitar hook buried somewhere in this sludge, and I can still play
|
||
|
it if I really concentrate. I saw a copy of this in Reckless
|
||
|
(Chicago) a few weeks ago and tried to convince my friend Nuuj
|
||
|
that it was worth getting. It's still there. What a pity.
|
||
|
* Olivelawn, any and all: Now they're broken up, because they all
|
||
|
hated each other's guts. Some are in fluf, another great band I
|
||
|
never shut up about. Their "Instant Punk Rock Song Just Add Water"
|
||
|
single is indespensable. I've owned their first album a total of
|
||
|
three times (well, 2 1/2 because one got stolen out of a friend's
|
||
|
car). So they were derivative punk rock. They still fried my
|
||
|
burger.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
There's lots more. Like a lot of people, I started really buying
|
||
|
records when I was in high school. Nobody else ever liked what I
|
||
|
liked, and if they did, they never admitted it. Lots of stuff I liked
|
||
|
back then has stuck with me, and I eventually found other people who
|
||
|
had those records too. Some of those bands are regarded as
|
||
|
'influential' now, which makes me feel sort of smug when someone says
|
||
|
"Hey, these guys were really cool- -where was I?". I just sit there
|
||
|
quietly and think about the day I went to the CBGB record canteen and
|
||
|
bought it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Alternative Beer (non-musical article, but with a humorous slant)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mark Cornick, mscornic@vax1.acs.jmu.edu
|
||
|
|
||
|
I guess it was bound to happen eventually. Parntership For A Drug-Free
|
||
|
America contributors Anheuser-Busch, manufacturers of a popular
|
||
|
recreational drug called Budweiser, has realized what Taco Bell did a
|
||
|
couple years back: that they better start marketing to that Generation
|
||
|
X pretty damn quick!
|
||
|
|
||
|
The result: Bud Dry, one of the absolute worst beers I've ever had
|
||
|
(and that includes Milwaukee's Beast), is now marketed as "The
|
||
|
Alternative Beer." Jangle-pop radio commercials,
|
||
|
win-a-trip-to-the-Reading-Festival contests, blah blah blah. Drink Bud
|
||
|
Dry, they say, and you'll be a young, cool, totally-with-it
|
||
|
alternadude/alternababe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I'll approach this from several sides:
|
||
|
1. Principled Rant: Who'd be drinking an "alternative beer"? Right,
|
||
|
alternadudes and alternababes. How many alternadweebs do you know
|
||
|
that are of age? I don't know any. (At least, I don't know anyone
|
||
|
of age that would dare call themselves "alternative." It kinda
|
||
|
dates you, ya know.) Given the fact that hundreds of teens
|
||
|
(alternative or not) die or are injured in alcohol-related
|
||
|
incidents each year, I'd say it's pretty damn irresponsible of
|
||
|
Anheuser-Busch to market to a hugely underage demographic. I got
|
||
|
nothing against beer - I drink, copiously on occasion, never to
|
||
|
inebriation - but there's enough pressure on kids to drink without
|
||
|
this "alternative" shit.
|
||
|
2. Indie-centric Rant: Bud Dry? A major-label beer? Alternative?
|
||
|
Fuck, no! I ain't buying no corporate beer! (And that includes
|
||
|
those psuedo-indie beers like Icehouse.) Bartender! A round of
|
||
|
Yuengling Porter for me and my indie-punk friends! (Shit. The Man
|
||
|
just keeps eating into every last bit of the independent world.
|
||
|
Damn. Next thing you know, Sam Adams'll sign a bottling deal with
|
||
|
Miller.)
|
||
|
3. The Pragmatic Approach: Well, I guess Bud Dry could be an
|
||
|
alternative beer. I mean, if they were out of everything else,
|
||
|
including Oly (it's the^H^H^H water!) and I really needed to
|
||
|
drink, Bud Dry would be my only alternative.
|
||
|
4. Rebuttal Of The Pragmatic Approach: I'd never be *that* desperate.
|
||
|
5. Budget-Conscious Approach: Hey, wait a minute. Bud Dry's a
|
||
|
"premium" beer (it costs more money.) Alternative folks ain't got
|
||
|
no cash. They just spent it all on Lollapalooza. They can't afford
|
||
|
nothing but Beast. Man, Beast's the alternative beer. No question
|
||
|
about it.
|
||
|
6. And finally, Mark's honest opinion: If you ask me, the Radioactive
|
||
|
Rat Brewery 1993 Pumpkin Brew was a truly alternative beer. (What
|
||
|
the hell brewing process was that, Mike?) Actually, I think the
|
||
|
whole idea is fucking ludicrous. It's a good thing we Generation
|
||
|
X'ers are supposed to be immune to advertising, eh? Whatever.
|
||
|
|
||
|
IndieCoRe's Field Guide To The Internet seeks listings
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mark Cornick, mscornic@vax1.acs.jmu.edu
|
||
|
|
||
|
Indie-List Communications Research (IndieCoRe, aka ILIJ) is
|
||
|
currently seeking listings for IndieCoRe's Field Guide To The
|
||
|
Internet. This joint IL/TG project will create a net-accessible
|
||
|
list of indie-related resources on Internet: mailing lists,
|
||
|
newsgroups, WWW pages, FTP archives, label/band addresses, etc.
|
||
|
The purpose is twofold: (1) to help indie fans on the Net find new
|
||
|
stuff to check out, and (2) to help the people operating these
|
||
|
resources get some publicity. We seek your input - take a look
|
||
|
through your hotlist and tip us off to your favorite indie
|
||
|
net.stuff. We have a few stipulations:
|
||
|
+ Resources must be available to the general public. Also, this
|
||
|
guide will be widely distributed over Internet, so please
|
||
|
don't ask for a listing for a resource that's averse to this
|
||
|
sort of publicity (there are some out there - if you're not
|
||
|
sure, check with the owner first.)
|
||
|
+ Label/band addresses will be listed only if directly
|
||
|
requested by the owner of the address. That is, an address
|
||
|
won't be listed unless the person who owns that account sends
|
||
|
mail (from that account) requesting a listing. This is to
|
||
|
respect people's decisions as to whether or not they want to
|
||
|
receive mail (and how much.)
|
||
|
+ Include a short (5 lines or less) description to go along
|
||
|
with the listing. Be objective.
|
||
|
+ Anything indie-related is acceptable. Listings will only be
|
||
|
rejected if the editors deem them unrelated (in some way or
|
||
|
another) to indie music.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
If you'd like to have something listed, send the appropriate
|
||
|
information to mscornic@vax1.acs.jmu.edu. We will continue
|
||
|
accepting listings through the end of November.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Live Review: Jawbox/Picasso Trigger/Maximillian Colby
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mark Cornick, mscornic@vax1.acs.jmu.edu
|
||
|
|
||
|
Earlier I mentioned that the next show to arrive in Harrisonburg
|
||
|
(at the time that article was written) would be Jawbox with
|
||
|
Picasso Trigger, sponsored by WXJM. Well, they came, they played,
|
||
|
and here's what happened.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Opening the show were local hardcore heroes Maximillian Colby. Two
|
||
|
old friends of mine, neither of whom I've talked to lately, are in
|
||
|
the group. They played the sort of dense, heavy emo HC that's all
|
||
|
the vogue around here lately. A little bit Gorilla Biscuits, a
|
||
|
little bit Fugazi and a little bit just plain screamin'. Couldn't
|
||
|
understand a word they said, but I enjoyed their set. (MC are
|
||
|
releasing a record on California's Nervous Wreckids some time soon
|
||
|
- look for it.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was planning on skipping Picasso Trigger - they've never really
|
||
|
floated my boat, so to speak - but decided to stay and give them
|
||
|
another chance. Their Southern-fried punk was OK but not
|
||
|
memorable, except for the idiot stagedivers who knocked over two
|
||
|
light towers. (WXJM's faculty advisor came to this show, but
|
||
|
fortunately she left before the lights came down.) PT's best songs
|
||
|
were the ones when singer Kathy pulled out a trumpet or trombone,
|
||
|
but even then they just sounded like Geezer Lake on ephedrine. I
|
||
|
dunno - they didn't fit very well with the other two bands and
|
||
|
they had a bad attitude overall.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jawbox - well, I like each Jawbox LP more than I liked the
|
||
|
previous one, and apparently that pattern's going to work for live
|
||
|
shows too. I saw Jawbox a few years ago (in between Grippe and
|
||
|
Novelty) and thought they were OK. This time they were great. J.
|
||
|
Robbins (gtr/vox) seemed a little tired (especially when
|
||
|
chastising the afore-mentioned stagedivers) but Bill Barbot
|
||
|
(gtr/vox) made up for it, taping his set list to a fan in the
|
||
|
front row and cracking jokes throughout. Kim Coleatta (bs) was the
|
||
|
most fun to watch, though - during the first few songs she had
|
||
|
this goofy "Uh, how're we doing?" look on her face, followed by an
|
||
|
equally goofy "Aw, thanks guys" look between songs. (She also
|
||
|
jumped around a lot, like Laura from Superchunk - is this a female
|
||
|
bassist's thing? Beats me.) Jawbox played several songs from their
|
||
|
big-time LP For Your Own Special Sweetheart as well as a few songs
|
||
|
from earlier LPs and a couple of new ones. They may be some huge
|
||
|
rock stars now (I heard some high school kids went and got
|
||
|
autographs) but they're as personable as ever, and they put on a
|
||
|
fantastic set, Atlantic or not. (So all the people whining about
|
||
|
them leaving Dischord can shut up. Now.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Final count: Two great bands, one OK band, two light towers down,
|
||
|
one stagediver injury, and the radio station turned a profit for
|
||
|
the first time ever (at one of these shows.) Awesome.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Coursing Thru The Wires
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
(TG's cool stuff of the month)
|
||
|
|
||
|
MARK
|
||
|
+ LaBradford, "Julius" (Merge)
|
||
|
+ Slint, untitled 10" (Touch & Go)
|
||
|
+ Stereolab, Mars Audiac Quintet (Elektra)
|
||
|
+ The Fall, Middle Class Revolt (Matador)
|
||
|
+ Slug, The Out Sound (PCP)
|
||
|
+ Brise-Glace, When In Vanitas... (Skin Graft)
|
||
|
+ Noise Addict, "Young And Jaded" (Grand Royal)
|
||
|
+ Lync, These Are Not Fall Colors (K)
|
||
|
+ Smog, Burning Kingdom (Drag City)
|
||
|
+ East River Pipe, Shining Hours In A Can (Ajax)
|
||
|
+ Very Pleasant Neighbor, The Boy With Only One Head (Big Ten
|
||
|
Rex/D-Tox)
|
||
|
+ Muppet Voice zine (contact johnson@mail.ph.ac.ed.uk for info)
|
||
|
+ Talk Soup (E! Entertainment Television)
|
||
|
+ Disney's decision not to build a theme park in Haymarket, VA
|
||
|
(population <1000)
|
||
|
+ URouLette
|
||
|
+ Sam & Max Hit The Road CD-ROM (LucasArts)
|
||
|
+ Fruitopia Lemonade Love & Hope (Coca-Cola - ditch the
|
||
|
hippy-shit name, d00dz)
|
||
|
+ Lettuce
|
||
|
|
||
|
SEAN
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hmmm... tougher choices this time due to less influx of new
|
||
|
music... lots of evenings spent with my trusty Mac and my stereo
|
||
|
have led to a renewed look through my record collection...
|
||
|
+ Television Personalities, Live at Forum Enger (Pastell)
|
||
|
+ Bullet LaVolta, Swandive ("some icky major label")
|
||
|
+ Death of Samantha, "Strungout On Jargon" (Homestead)
|
||
|
+ The Clean, Compilation (Homestead/Flying Nun) - I'm still
|
||
|
meaning to get the CD version with about 30 more songs, but
|
||
|
hearing "Slug Song" first thing in the morning is a good way
|
||
|
to avoid the "wrong side of the bed" blues.
|
||
|
+ The Skatalites, "Guns of Navarone"
|
||
|
+ Rolando and the Soul Brothers, "Phoenix City"
|
||
|
+ The Gaylads, "Stop Making Love"
|
||
|
+ Rita Marley, "The Pied Piper" [All these songs are on a great
|
||
|
compilation called Club Ska '67 (Mango) and they make me
|
||
|
dance, not just bob my head over/under/sideways/down, which
|
||
|
finally brings me to...]
|
||
|
+ Yardbirds, Great Hits of... (Atlantic)
|
||
|
|
||
|
JODI
|
||
|
+ fluf, Home Improvements : It's old, yeah, but these guys make
|
||
|
music that reminds me of the days when I could actually dance
|
||
|
a little. I saw that horrible Tower Records magazine compare
|
||
|
them to Husker Du, which isn't really fair to both bands. O's
|
||
|
voice is a lot like Burton Cummings'.
|
||
|
+ Polonium, Safe: Some of my old next door neighbors are in
|
||
|
this band, and the tape is 45 minutes of Earth/Melvins/Zeni
|
||
|
Geva inspired stuff. I listen to it while I back up the
|
||
|
systems here and it makes the time go by much quicker. They
|
||
|
do a cover of ZG's "Autobody" live too. $4 from 2486 Hughes
|
||
|
Ave. #7, Bronx, NY 10458.
|
||
|
+ The Baffler #5: I dare you to read it all in one sitting. No,
|
||
|
I double dog dare you.
|
||
|
+ Pulp Fiction: All I can say is Samuel L. Jackson should be
|
||
|
nominated for an Academy Award. Sure there was a lot of hype,
|
||
|
but it's all true.
|
||
|
+ Sound Master: A little freeware program for the Macintosh
|
||
|
that lets you assign sounds to different keys, like the
|
||
|
delete or escape keys, as well as grow/shrink windows,
|
||
|
errors, etc. It's great for the clueless in your office, who
|
||
|
will call you over and say "My mac hates me, it belched when
|
||
|
I emptied the trash!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Credits
|
||
|
|
||
|
+ Publishers: Telegraph Pioneers Of America
|
||
|
+ Editor: Mark Cornick
|
||
|
+ Senior Writers: Sean Murphy, Jodi Shapiro
|
||
|
+ Postmaster: Sean Murphy
|
||
|
+ Subscription requests should be addressed to
|
||
|
grumpy@access.digex.net. Other Telegraph-related mail
|
||
|
should be addressed to mscornic@vax1.acs.jmu.edu. (These
|
||
|
addresses point to real people, not LISTSERVs or Majordomos,
|
||
|
so please phrase your requests in human language.) Authors of
|
||
|
individual articles can be contacted at the address listed
|
||
|
above their article.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Telegraph archives
|
||
|
|
||
|
+ http://www.etext.org/Zines/Telegraph/
|
||
|
+ ftp://ftp.etext.org/pub/Zines/Telegraph/
|
||
|
+ gopher://gopher.etext.org/
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The entire contents of Telegraph Transmission Three, The Search
|
||
|
For Spock are in the public domain. Please copy and distribute. We
|
||
|
would appreciate it if you would leave these credits intact.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Opinions presented in articles are those of the individual authors
|
||
|
and do not necessarily represent the opinions of anyone else.
|
||
|
Please address rebuttals, me-toos, or hate mail to the individual
|
||
|
authors, not to TG in general.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On a similar topic, while we believe everything printed here to be
|
||
|
true, we cannot under any circumstances guarantee it. That is,
|
||
|
anything written here may not be factually correct. Errors are the
|
||
|
fault of the individual authors.
|