tommoody on Myocyte: notes for “1970s underground pop”

In the bleak mid-’70s, a time when horrible songs by Elton John and Captain & Tenniel dominated the airwaves, a mutated form of ’60s pop song persisted in the college radio underground. This mix examines pop themes in the prog rock, dub, punk, and jazz rock subcultures of the ’70s. Some fairly eccentric ’60s songs are also sprinkled in for context. Many of these artists are now considered classic but at the time, only music nerds were listening to them.

Donovan’s “Wear Your Love Like Heaven” kicks off the set, mainly to show how effortlessly it seques into a quite different song, Genesis’ “Trick of the Tail.” “Trick,” coming from a then-arty band known for its portentous, doom-laden catalog, surprises with its catchy vibe and sprightly Brian Wilson-esque vocal harmonies. The doom isn’t completely absent, however, in this concise science fiction fable of a Satyr-like humanoid from a parallel universe who is imprisoned on Earth and jeered at by people who “got no horns and got no tail.” “Love Street,” by The Doors, continues the keyboard pop of the first two songs and also has some odd mystical elements, particularly that “store where the creatures meet,” which causes Jim Morrison to wonder, suggestively, “what they do in there.”

desperate_straights350w

Infectious piano (by Ray Manzarek) drives “Love Street” and the same can be said for Anthony Moore’s ivory-tickling in “Apes in Capes,” a joint Slapp Happy/Henry Cow project. In 1975 Dagmar Krause’s warbling vocals sounded downright strange, and they still do. Another chanteuse from the skewed side of pop, Dorothy Moskowitz of the short-lived ’60s art-rock outfit The United States of America, sings about “Coming Down” from an acid trip. She never “belts it out” a la Grace Slick but maintains an air of beatnik cool as she sings of Reality, which, as we know, “is only temporary.”

A startlingly clear “alternate mix” of The Mothers of Invention’s Freak Out has recently surfaced on the web, yielding tonight’s version of “You’re Probably Wondering Why I’m Here,” sung by Mr. Zappa, alternating vocal chores with the late great Ray Collins. Before Zappa could afford elaborate horn charts he played a kazoo, and this is possibly the most sarcastic use of that instrument ever heard. Next up is a ’60s throwback from 1978, Tina Peel’s “Knocking Down Guardrails.” A friend of mine was the roadie for this band and I fondly recall sitting with him on the stage at Max’s Kansas City one night after all the band’s instruments had been packed up. (I also once visited Tina Peel frontman Rudi Protrudi in his Alphabet City apartment.) The same year, Tuxedomoon released “New Machine,” which didn’t look back to the ’60s but rather forward to the ’80s, with its beatbox, synths, and anguished vocals from Winston Tong. A trace of the former decade can still be heard, however, in Michael Belfer’s unabashedly psychedelic guitar wails.

Next we hear an improbable (but smooth) transition to Curved Air’s “Not Quite the Same,” a song about masturbation sung with impeccable English reserve by Sonja Kristina Linwood, over a tight arrangement of trumpets, trombones, violin and VCS3 synth. Although keyboardist Francis Monkman didn’t write the song (that was Linwood and violinist Darryl Way), a similar eclectic style can be heard in Monkman’s later soundtrack for the film The Long Good Friday. Then, DC art rock band Grits takes us “Back to the Suburbs,” in a Zappa-esque plea for regression to babysitters, bowling alleys, and other markers of a safe childhood in the burbs, after the singer finds it too much of “a strain to be alive and so neurotic.” Infantile regression can also be heard in Zappa’s own “Let Me Take You to the Beach,” expressing a simple desire for a weekend weenie-roast, made to seem ironic only because everything Zappa writes is sarcastic.

revolution_dub

Kevin Ayers’ evocation of a romantic Paris sidewalk cafe, “May I?,” complete with accordion and street sounds, nowadays could be instantly summed up with the words “trigger warning.” Nevertheless, Ayers’ perambulating bass and Lol Coxhill’s ethereal sax perhaps succeed in charming us more than the dated come-on in the lyrics. Meanwhile, Can’s Damo Suzuki is having none of it with “Don’t Turn the Light On, Leave Me Alone,” a melange of gypsy-caravan ambience and rock jam, propelled by Jaki Liebezeit’s always-seductive drumming. The spirit of collage continues with Lee Perry’s “Doctor on the Go,” a slinky reggae beat layered atop a British sitcom that blares tinnily from a TV monitor (or so it sounds). Then it’s back to the ’60s with Rajput & The Sepoy Mutiny’s amazing, struggling sitar rendition of “Up, Up & Away.” This gem languished in obscurity in the US until its inclusion in Re/Search’s 1993 anthology Incredibly Strange Music, Vol I.

“That’s Ramsey F—ing Lewis, right there,” announced l0de AKA Zak ZYZ on his YouTube radio show, as he listened to “Cry Baby Cry,” an over-the-top lounge-jazz version of John Lennon’s song. “Lounge” then had its avant garde apotheosis 10 years post-Lewis with Gary Wilson’s cult LP You Think You Really Know Me, from whence comes the next tune, “You Were Too Good To Be True,” a winsome, slap-bassed instrumental. Quentin Tarantino already rediscovered the penultimate track, George Baker Selection’s “Little Green Bag,” and used it in the “cool gangsters walking” intro of Reservoir Dogs. And lastly comes The Modern Lovers’ “Old World,” from the period before Jonathan Richman went full-blown twee, included here for the organ work by soon-to-be-Talking-Head Jerry Harrison, as well as the involvement of ’60s-turned-’70s-trailblazer, John Cale, who produced this track.

Playlist

0:00 Donovan, 7 inch, Wear Your Love Like Heaven (1967)
2:20 Genesis, A Trick of the Tail, A Trick of the Tail (1976)
6:40 The Doors, Waiting for the Sun, Love Street (1968)
9:24 Slapp Happy/Henry Cow, Desperate Straights, Apes in Capes (1975)
11:32 The United States of America, The United States of America, Coming Down (1968)
14:09 The Mothers of Invention, Freak Out, You’re Probably Wondering Why I’m Here (1966)
17:44 Tina Peel, :30 Over D.C.~~Here Comes The New Wave!, Knocking Down Guardrails (1978)
19:15 Tuxedomoon, No Tears EP, New Machine (1978)
23:33 Curved Air, Phantasmagoria, Not Quite the Same (1972)
27:17 Grits, As the World Grits, Back to the Suburbs (mid-’70s, released 1993)
31:23 Frank Zappa, Studio Tan, Let Me Take You to the Beach (1978)
34:06 Kevin Ayers and The Whole World, Shooting at the Moon, May I? (1970)
37:56 Can, Soundtracks, Don’t Turn the Light On, Leave Me Alone (1970)
41:34 Lee Perry & The Upsetters, Revolution Dub, Doctor on the Go (1975)
45:24 Rajput & The Sepoy Mutiny, Flower Power Sitar, Up, Up & Away (1968)
47:35 Ramsey Lewis, Mother Nature’s Son, Cry Baby Cry (1968)
50:50 Gary Wilson, You Think You Really Know Me, You Were Too Good To Be True (1977)
52:45 George Baker Selection, 7 inch, Little Green Bag (1969)
55:58 The Modern Lovers, The Modern Lovers, Old World (1976)

–tommoody

FroggyMe’s Fantastic Fantasy – playlist for Nov. 7th, 2021

Brenda Russell – Walkin’ In New York – Paris Rain (Hidden Beach)
Rare Silk – New York Afternoon
Madeline Bell – That’s What Friends Are For (feat. Alan Hawkshaw on keys)
Bob James – Sign of the Times
Raul de Souza – A Song of Love (Lonnie Liston Smith) – Sweet Lucy
Rodney Franklin – The Groove
Dadisi Komolafe – Speak No Evil (Wayne Shorter) – trippin’: the groove merchant compilation (Ubiquity/Luv ‘n Haight)

Ronnie Laws – Tidal Wave
Ramsey Lewis – Spring High
(Emir) Deodato – Super Strut – Deodato 2 (CTI)
Deodato – Skyscrapers – Deodato 2 (CTI)

Freddie Hubbard, Herbie Hancock, Stanley Turrentine, Ron Carter, Jack DeJohnette, Eric Gale – Gibraltar (live in Detroit) – In Concert Vol. 2 (CTI)
James Mason – Sweet Power Your Embrace
Paulinho da Costa – Deja Vu

FroggyMe’s Fantastic Fantasy – playlist for Oct. 31st, 2021

Kepes Mode – N.Y.T.
Kepes Mode – Nortit
Diamond D – Sally Got A One Track Mind – Stunts Blunts and Hip-Hop
Yusef Lateef – Sister Mamie – Live at Pep’s (impulse!)
Andy Bey – Celestial Blues – Experience and Judgement
Chico Hamilton – Forest Flower (Sunrise) – Man From Two Worlds (impulse!)

Greyboy Allstars – Miss Riverside – West Coast Boogaloo
Greyboy Allstars – Soul Dream feat. Fred Wesley – West Coast Boogaloo
Gato Barbieri – Cuado Vuelva a Tu Lado (What a Difference a Day Makes) – Chapter 3: Viva Emeliano Zapata (impulse!)
The Dry Look – Mr. Puffy – Up & Down Club Sessions vol. 1
Josh Jones Latin Jazz Ensemble – Blues in Havana (sounds like Killer Joe) – Up & Down Club Sessions vol. 2

The Solsonics – Ascension – JAZZ in the Present Tense

Roni Size/Reprazent – hi-potent
Black Sheep – Flavor of the Month – A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing
Erik Truffaz – The Mask – The Mask (Blue Note)
Lenny White – Dark Moon – Anomaly
Deodato – Skyscrapers – Deodato 2 (CTI)

News to Me November 05

Suspected Islamic extremists kill 69 people in western Niger | Africanews

Chinese journalist jailed over Covid reporting is ‘close to death’, family say | China | The Guardian

Air Quality Index: Delhi air turns toxic after Diwali fireworks – BBC News

Youth activists protest against climate inaction at COP26 | Climate News | Al Jazeera

Russian diplomat found dead outside Berlin embassy – BBC News

Japan death row inmates sue over same-day executions – BBC News

Police investigate people taking partially nude photos near Russian landmarks | Russia | The Guardian

Muslims barred from Friday prayer sites in India’s Gurgaon | Islamophobia News | Al Jazeera

Ethiopia: 9 rebel groups join forces against the government | AfricanewsCraft beer brewery for women empowerment | Africanews

US Navy sacks commanding officers of crashed submarine – BBC News

Why telling a cop you have Covid in New Jersey could get you 10 years in prison | Coronavirus | The Guardian

US sees strong jobs growth as wages edge higher – BBC News

PLAYLIST – zeptar

on my last show it was all reruns. however i have a new project called “PLAYLIST” where I am scouring the archive and doing writeups about each show. i want to post them here however I use this platform rarely because it is such a privilege. If you want to read more PLAYLIST of Zeptar – The Zeptar Show please visit into my new new site antichrist.blog for the PLAYLIST category. Future shows playlists will be featured here.

I did this ages ago yet have lost those web pages.

zeptar

tommoody on Myocyte: notes for “2000 Tech House”

If you happened to be in New York City in the year 2000 and hung out at Chinatown’s Good World Bar & Grill on a Wednesday night, you may have heard the tunes in this mix. The Bowery Boogie website remembers Good World as a happenin’ place and lamented its passing a few years later:

Just like CBGB’s, Max’s Kansas City, Studio 54, Danceteria, The Mud[d] Club, Twilo’s, The Saint, The Sound Factory, Tonic, The Crobar, 8BC, Club 57, The Paradise Garage, The Peppermint Lounge, Save the Robots… The Good World Bar is now just a memory. And we loved being a part of it and will always miss it…

“The first alternative restaurant below Delancey” (as the owners described it in their goodbye notice) is now an ugly glass building. Bowery Boogie remembers:

It was a Scandinavian-inspired cool kids hang which got its start in 1999 when co-owners Annika Sundvik and John Lavelle converted a sketchy Chinese barbershop (i.e. brothel) into Good World. New York Magazine called it a “pioneer” in the area, championing its “long beer list, house cocktails, and rear courtyard.” All under the watchful eye of a stuffed caribou.

Annika and John invited me to spin records on Wednesdays and generously gave me a cut of the bar. I started off playing my own collection and then became obsessed with finding current music suitable for a place where people were eating and drinking (and occasionally illegally dancing — this was the Giuliani era of crackdowns on fun). From January to November I gradually built up a collection of “deep house” vinyl scarfed at places like Satellite Records and Throb. Near the end of my tenure one of the co-owners complained “you started out great and now you’re just like all the other DJs playing this damn stuff.” Considering my learning curve I took it as a compliment but I wasn’t around much longer after that conversation.

For this mix, I used the original wax and did a “rough cut” using two turntables and a mixer. All the sounds were eventually digitized and timestretched to compensate for my mediocre beatmatching skills. There is some mashing up, too. Most of these are “deep house” or “deep tech house” tracks released the year I was DJ’ing. It was a fun year. People were still smoking in restaurants back then and the place was always full.

00:00 Dan Electro “I Hear Music in the Air” (Better EP)
06:16 Phunky Drakes “Guilty (Classic Rework)” (12″)
12:44 Noisy Beach “Stax Music” (Where’s Montpellier? EP)
19:37 Harley & Muscle, “Friends and Enemies” (House Church EP)
25:41 James Flavour “Full Flavour” (If the Pimp Calls Back EP)
28:05 Forme “Instant Space” (Aqua-note EP)
32:18 B-Funk Production “Ladies and Gentlemen” (Ladies and Gentlemen EP)*
32:18 Steve Bug “Magic 120” (B_Series Vol.1 EP)*
37:52 Sascha Funke & Djoker Daan “Yachad” (Doppelpass EP)**
37:52 Leandro Fresco “Amor International” (Amor International EP)**
40:40 Scott Findlay “Untitled” (The Modern Dance EP)
44:34 Fish Go Deep “Sweeter” (Flying Funk EP)
47:40 Betamax Crew “Abrasera” (The Betamax Crew EP)
51:21 Cozy Creatures “Wanna Sing” (12″)
56:54 [Reprise/filler] Steve Bug “Magic 120” (B_Series Vol.1 EP)

*B-Funk and Bug are mashed up, hence the duplicate start time
**Funke and Fresco are mashed up, hence the duplicate start time

–tommoody

Celebrating and listening to 8-track tape cartridges on 2 episodes of FFF

Back in May of 2020 before I took a few months off from aNONradio, I did two episodes where we explored and listened to some 8-tracks. You might enjoy these episodes; I hold the microphone up to the player so you can hear the cartridge loading and program switching sounds of the machinery.

The two episodes start with an mp3 while I am still setting up, and then the fun begins. You will enjoy hearing a big hit single being split across two programs of the tape (a common flaw with 8-tracks), and me joke about how the wow and flutter was so bad it changed the key of the song (because it really did, haha! 🙂 )

FFF 8-track tape special 1
FFF 8-track tape special 2

Happy listening!

Tribute to Earth, Wind & Fire’s Maurice White on FFF from 2016

Digging through my old playlists (which are available as 2015-2017 and 2018-2020) I found an episode from February 6th, 2016 made in honor of Maurice White who had just passed away in 2016. I think you will enjoy it too, as there are a lot of awesome rare album cuts, long jam sessions, and new material you may have never heard before from the kozmigroov funk band Earth, Wind & Fire.

Also contained in this episode is a snippet of aNONradio history, as I mention at the end of the episode the upcoming shows for the day, which was Saturday and so it was DGC, The Soundshow, IGWM (which I mention is my favorite show on all of aNONradio 🙂 ), and Asia Culture Adventure with Hong Tudou. Hey, that’s still pretty much the line up!

FFF from Feb 6th, 2016: EW&F Special

Here is the playlist:

Feb 6, 2016
Earth Wind & Fire Special
EWF – Serpentine Fire – All ‘n All – 1977
EWF – Runnin’ – All ‘n All – 1977
EWF – Getaway – Spirit – 1976


EWF – Guiding Lights – Now Then & Forever – 2013
EWF – Show me the way (feat Raphael Saadiq) – Illumination – 2005
EWF – Imagination – Spirit – 1976
EWF – Jupiter – All ‘n All – 1977
EWF – Keep your head to the sky – Head to the sky – 1973
EWF – KYHTTS/Devotion – Gratitude (1975) the eternal dance (1992)
EWF – Sun Goddess feat Ramsey Lewis – Alive in ’75 (2002)
EWF – Power – Last Days and Time – 1972
EWF – Fan the fire – EWF – 1971


EWF – Sign On – Now then and forever – 2013
EWF – Hold Me – The Promise – 2003
EWF – After the love has gone – I Am – 1979
EWF – Let Your Feelings Show – I Am – 1979
EWF – And Love Goes On – Faces – 1980
EWF – See the light – That’s the way of the world – 1975
EWF – Faces – Faces – 1980

**

EWF – Fill You up – In the name of love – 1997

FroggyMe’s Fantastic Fantasy – playlist for Oct. 24th, 2021

Gene Harris – Theme for Relana
Typhorns – Nightlife
The Diddys feat. Paige Douglas – Intergalactic Love Song – Gilles Peterson Digs America 2 (Ubiquity/Luv ‘n Haight)
Incognito – The Smile of a Child – Jazz Funk
Hall & Oats – Sara Smile
Quiet Boys feat. Greg Franks – Inside Your Mind
The Brand New Heavies – A Day at the Seaside

Terry Callier – I Don’t Want To See Myself (Without You)
Skunkhour – Up To Our Necks In It
GURU – Trust Me
Gangstarr – Who’s Gonna Take The Weight

Patrice Rushen – Number One
Hubert Laws – Family feat. Debra Laws – Family (1980)
Sonny Rollins – Harlem Boys
Hank Crawford – Sugar Free
Stanley Turrentine – Sugar

Paulinho Da Costa – Love till the End of Time

FroggyMe’s Fantastic Fantasy – playlist for Oct. 17th 2021: Dr. Lonnie Smith Tribute

George Benson Quartet with Lonnie Smith – Benson’s Rider – The George Benson Cookbook
Lonnie Smith – Dancing In An Easy Groove – Lost Grooves (Blue Note)
Lonnie Smith – I Can’t Stand It – Live at Club Mozambique
Dr. Lonnie Smith – Your Momma’s Got a Complex – Too Damn Hot
George Benson Quartet with Lonnie Smith – The Borgia Stick feat. Ronnie Cuber – The George Benson Cookbook

George Benson Quartet with Lonnie Smith – Jumpin’ With Symphony Sid feat. Bennie Green – The George Benson Cookbook

Lou Donaldson – The Scorpion – Lost Grooves (Blue Note)
Lonnie Smith – Impressions – Live at Club Mozambique