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Tropical Rainstorm

Painting: Paul Klee, Red & White Domes (1914)

NomoAll the Stars
Ghost Rock (Ubiquity / 2008)
Air FranceBeach Party
On Trade Winds ep (Sincerely Yours / 2007)
Desmond and the TutusKiss you on the cheek (King of town remix)
Kiss you on the cheek Ep (Tigersushi / 2008)
RubiesRoom without a Key (Studio Version)
I feel Electric single (Tellé / 2008)
Low Motion DiscoEast Mountain Low
Keep It Slow (Eskimo / 2008)

It had been raining for a week, raindrops marched into the earth like Chinese warriors with rigid faces.
Mountain streams lay on their backs greedily lapping up water and October, and the clay shaped ever more perfect forms.

-Adam Zagajewski.

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Category: Electronica, Pop, Rock

Off The Grid

It’s Tuesday List

01. St GermainRose Rouge
Tourist (2000)
02. Ursula 1000Tigerbeat
Kinda Kinky (Eighteenth Street, 2002)
03. Beastie BoysOff The Grid
The Mix Up (2007)
04. LODSabado Gris
The Unexpektheadz Chapter II: A Space Conquest Soundtrack (The Unexpektheadz Chapter II, 2007)
05. Miles DavisRated X (Doc Scott remix)
Panthalassa (the remixes) (1999)
06. Digable Planets9th Wonder (Blackitolism) (Elaine Brown Mix)
Beyond The Spectrum The Creamy Spy Chronicles (2005)
07. Georges Delignypanique au salon
Boutique chic : chez le coiffeur (Stereofiction, 2006)

note: Quickie entry, fun beat for Tuesday. It’s mid tempo la la la, bop your head pop. Slightly jazzy, slightly loungy, a bit of rock, but mostly in danceable hip-hop flavor. The return of almost groovie lunch list. (btw, I haven’t posted in awhile and forget what I was doing with previous series. I think I will do request for a warm up, recent pop/chart, then return to whatever I was doing. Plus I need to post something with lyrics. So comment away if you have idea.)

image: Jean-Michel Basquiat. (American, 1960-1988). Untitled. (1981). Oilstick on paper, 40 x 60″ (101.6 x 152.4 cm).

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Category: Hip hop, Pop

An autumn evening

Photo: Kathy Zhuang.

Comme un éléphant son ivoire, J’ai en bouche un bien précieux.
Pourpre mort! J’achète ma gloire au prix des mots mélodieux.

- Guilleme Apollinaire, L’Éléphant.

The Middle EastThe Darkest Side
The recordings of the middle east (self released / 2008)
Fleet FoxesHe doesn’t know why
Fleet Foxes (Sub Pop / 2008)
Death VesselJitterkadie
Nothing is precious enough for us (Sub pop / 2008)
Cairo GangWarning
Cairo gang (Narnaack / 2006)
AdemLoro
Takes (Domino / 2008)
Red House PaintersSmokey
Shanti Project Collection 1 (Badman / 1999)

Music souvenirs from a Sunday morning in bed with a subtle headache and some thoughtful lonesome driving on a warm autumn evening.

Previous hangovers:
Like a Slumbering Cat Still Life with crown fire The Unknown Bird.

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Category: Acoustic, Bedroom playlist

Sinitaivas

apollinaire_par_marie_laurencin_400.jpg

Painting: Marie Laurencin. Apollinaire et ses amis, 1907.

They say, that inside the arctic circle, on summer nights the sun does not set. They call it the midnight sun.

Astor PiazzolaMilonga del Angel
Nuevo Tango: Hora Cero (American Clavé/ 1986)
Anibal Troilo y Roberto GrelaLa trampera
Anibal Troilo y Roberto Grela (1962)
Julio de CaroBoedo
Julio de Caro:100 años (1928)
DanubiusMaros vize folyik csendesen
Danubius (Web of Mimicry / 2002)
Olavi Virta & Harmony SistersSinitaivas
Juhannus Tanssit (web compilation / 2008)

Esta noche te estaré esperando mirando al sol. Venga valiente, salta por la ventana.

see also: Viejo tanguero, Strawberry Hotel / Tango.

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Category: Acoustic

Flutter

Image: Artwork from Boustrophedon (ECM, 2008)

Here’s an eclectic jazz-oriented list to start off September with some sly foot-tapping grooves and mostly laid-back spirit. The theme of the list flows from several relaxed yet sumptuous tunes to a much more brooding atmosphere and finally turning into an urgent yet seemingly directionless endeavour. Lately I’ve increasingly been finding myself going back to jazz records and gigs again. So more than anything else I guess I made this list for myself just to play around a bit with a certain mood that I wanted to create. I guess contemplation is the key denominator here for this list. These tunes are going places but not necessarily with a distinctive sense of direction. It’s easy to think of yourself as a truly rational and calculated individual who has it all figured out – who thinks, plans and acts accordingly – but right now if you’d somehow be able to map my existence with an EEG-monitor-like device it would look a lot more like the image above than a well constructed blueprint. Flutter – to move about or behave in an agitated aimless manner. From a distance, just like the image, it might seem that way to some, but every twist and turn along this grand voyage feels natural and clearly meant to be. It doesn’t always have to make sense, does it?

  1. Amancio D’SilvaA Street in Bombay
    Konkan Dance (Qbico, 2006)
  2. Faruq Z. Bey with Northwoods ImprovisersOncala
    Infa’a (Qbico, 2006)
  3. John ZornMow Mow
    The Dreamers (Tzadik, 2008)
  4. Bohren & Der Club Of GoreDestroying Angels
    Black Earth (Wonder, 2002)
  5. Michael MooreMiss Yosemite
    Fragile (Ramboy, 2008)
  6. Sun RaIntergalactic Motion
    Outer Spaceways Incorporated (Saturn, 1974)
  7. Evan Parker / Transatlantic Art EnsembleFurrow 6
    Boustrophedon (ECM, 2008)
  8. Dirty ThreeFlutter
    Cinder (Touch and Go, 2005)
  9. Yo La TengoLet’s Be Still
    Summer Sun (Matador, 2003)

Stream playlist
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Yo La Tengo in a jazz list? I know! But it works damn well if you ask me and that’s also due to the guests contributing here on the underrated Summer Sun album. None other than jazz heavyweights William Parker, Daniel Carter, Roy Campbell Jr. and Sabir Mateen enrich the album with their playing. You also may well remember Sabir Mateen and Daniel Carter’s Not on Earth…In Your Soul! from my 2006 year-end list. In the same batch of jazz records that the Italian Qbico label released that month was Faruq Z. Bey’s spectacular Infa’a, an album that quite possibly provides my favourite tune to this playlist. And earlier that year the same label already treated us with Amancio D’Silva’s 1972 recording Konkan Dance, of which a song is also featured on this playlist. Hm, maybe in some way, if you connect all the dots, all things do make sense after all?

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Category: Jazz

With wonderful deathless ditties
We build up the world's great cities,
And out of a fabulous story
We fashion an empire's glory:
One man with a dream, at pleasure,
Shall go forth and conquer a crown;
And three with a new song's measure
Can trample an empire down. [1]


Down, down, down. Would the fall never come to an end! `I wonder how many miles I've fallen by this time?' she said aloud. `I must be getting somewhere near the centre of the earth. Let me see: that would be four thousand miles down, I think--' (for, you see, Alice had learnt several things of this sort in her lessons in the schoolroom, and though this was not a very good opportunity for showing off her knowledge, as there was no one to listen to her, still it was good practice to say it over) `--yes, that's about the right distance--but then I wonder what Latitude or Longitude I've got to?' (Alice had no idea what Latitude was, or Longitude either, but thought they were nice grand words to say.) [2]



O long-silent Sybil,
you of the winged dreams,
Speak out from your temple of light
as the serious constellations
with Greek names
still stare down on us
as a lighthouse moves its megaphone
over the sea
Speak out and shine upon us
the sea-light of Greece
the diamond light of Greece

Far-seeing Sybil, forever hidden,
Come out of your cave at last
And speak to us in the poet's voice
the voice of the fourth person singular
the voice of the inscrutable future
the voice of the people mixed
with a wild soft laughter--
And give us new dreams to dream,
Give us new myths to live by! [3]


So our princes who have lost their principalities after many years’ of possession shouldn’t blame their loss on fortuna. The real culprit is their own indolence, going through quiet times with no thought of the possibility of change (it’s a common human fault, failing to prepare for tempests unless one is actually in one!). And when eventually bad times did come, they thought of •flight rather than •self-defence, hoping that the people, upset by conquerors’ insolence, would recall them. This course of action may be all right when there’s no alternative, but it is not all right to neglect alternatives and choose this one; it amounts to voluntarily falling because you think that in due course someone will pick you up. If you do get rescued (and you probably won’t), that won’t make you secure; the only rescue that is really helpful to you is the one performed by you, the one that depends on yourself and your virtù. [4]