Thursday, November 27, 2008

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Beard on Subcity Radio 24.11.08

William Parker

This week! Music! Mumbling! An MV&EE diss!

Lokonon Andre and Les Volcans - Mi Kble Dogbekpo (African Scream Contest, Analog Africa, 2008)
William Parker - Morning Mantra (Double Sunrise Over Neptune, Aum Fidelity, 2008)
Arthur Russell - Habit Of You (Love Is Taking Over Me, Audika, 2008)
Bruce Haack - Electric To Me Turn (Electric Lucifer, Omni, 1970)
Baby Dee - Compass Of The Light (Safe Inside The Day, Drag City, 2008)
Directing Hand - What Put The Blood (What Put The Blood, Dancing Wayang, 2008)
Robert Wyatt - Gharbzadeghi (Old Rottenhat, Domino reissue 2008, orig 1986)
Burning Star Core - Challenger (Challenger, hospital, 2008)
This week's background music: The Best of Martin Denny on Liberty Records

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Hinterland 2009


Finally, Glasgow gets its own one-ticket, all venues festival!

Hinterland
will showcase established and upcoming Scottish talent as well as some of the UK and Europe’s best emerging and well known bands. The visual art element of the festival will provide a backdrop to the entire event in venues and en route. About 50% of all performers at Hinterland will be Scottish and the Hinterland Committee will advise upon the final line-up. Bands will run from 7-11pm and will be followed by DJ sets and guest appearances in clubs running into the early hours on both days.

Looks promising, and with Glasgow School Of Art and Rock-A-Rolla magazine involved, the lineup should hopefully be pretty diverse.

Taking place between 30th April and 1st May, it may just be the thing to plug the gap left by Triptych.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

RememberRember Interview



The Royal We and Sexy Kids bassist, Multiplies synth wizard, Mogwai auxiliary, Flying Matchstick Men axe-smith…Graeme Ronald’s musical CV is impressive to say the least. But it’s as RememberRemember that Ronald has come into his own, spinning guitar loops and found sounds into densely beautiful compositions that suggest a post-rock Steve Reich, or Mogwai making mischief with Eno’s ambient works. His debut album, on Rock Action, is out now and the launch party takes place on Sunday at Glasgow’s Brel bar. To recreate the dense layering of the album, Ronald is playing with a special 10-piece ensemble.

For those who know you as a member of Multiplies or TRW, the sound of RR might come as a surprise. When did you start making RR music and why?


I don't think anyone, particularly now with the rate and manner in which music is consumed, listens exclusively to one type of music. I love pop music, and the Royal We was a great pop band, really fun to be involved with. Multiplies, for me at least, was all about repetitive rhythm, circular melody, propulsion and movement. I think the connection to RememberRemember is more evident there - slowed down a lot though, obviously! I've always doodled away on tunes in my bedroom whether it was tracking with two ghetto blasters, four track tapes, or computers. It was in the midst of the maelstrom that playing with Multiplies kind of became that I started developing these ideas a bit further, about four years ago I suppose, but it took me another couple of years to have the confidence to start playing them live.

Do you use loops and delay as a compositional tool or are they just a way of creating the arrangements?

I bought a looping pedal when I was in America with Mogwai and it was a godsend to me. I think they are the greatest invention since the television! I find writing music on a computer quite tedious and time consuming, now whenever I have a melody in my head I just stick it right down with my guitar and instantly start imagining what other melodies and textures could complement it. I actually find looping a truer rendering of the music that my brain is imagining because it's almost like being able to sing or play 20 melodies at once, which is quite hard to do in real life.

You also use toys, stationery and other gadgets as sound sources. What’s the thinking behind that?

Partly it's just a fun gimmick, it's hardly tremendously original, Matmos being the first obvious example that comes to mind, but I just like the idea that anything can be an instrument. I use the toys and everyday objects mostly to create rhythms, because I can't play drums and they just sound a lot cooler than drum machines. I also really enjoy those happy coincidences when you're listening to a record at home and somebody’s cooking in the room next door, or some building work is going on outside, or like now, I’m tapping the keys on my dad's laptop. So you hear all of those sounds alongside the music and it almost becomes part of it. There are a lot of "everyday" sounds on my record because I want people to be listening to it and not know if what they’re hearing is on the CD or happening in their house somewhere.

To what extent are your live sets improvised?


Since all the sampling and looping is done live, the sets are never identical performances, there's always some new mistake that ends up on a loop that has to be accounted for! The improvisation comes in as a response to making the mistakes into not being mistakes anymore. Every song has a set of four or five melodies that I really like and try and make sure I remember to play them at some point.

The live set has evolved from solo performances to a trio with violin and saxophone – how has this come about and what are the aims?

My very first couple of gigs were actually improvised "happenings" with random assortments of friends. I wasn't taking it particularly seriously then. When I wrote some pieces that I really liked, and realised I could do it on my own, I started playing solo. I met James (saxophonist) randomly smoking outside (Glasgow music bar) Nice & Sleazy's a while ago and we got talking about music and after a while started playing together. He can create some really rich, beautiful tones. Joan (violin) was in The Royal We and we'd been talking about working on Remember stuff for ages. I've been in too many more or less traditional "rock" bands, and wanted to incorporate tones that just can't be created with a guitar or a synth. I still play on my own from time to time though. I see RememberRemember being more of a fluid collective than a band, where people are free to come and go whenever they feel, apart from me, obviously.

Tell us about the album.


I worked at Green Door studios with Sam from Mother and the Addicts engineering. It was an extremely productive session. All of the gear in there is analogue, and it was recorded mostly to tape. I wanted all of the long looped sections to be played continuously live, so it was hard work...it sounds like it paid off and I’m super excited about it. The instruments, apart from the obvious sax, violin and guitar, range from mobile phone keypads to a Chinese harp, with a lovely smattering of Rhodes piano too! It's going to be fucking impossible...I mean quite a terrific challenge to recreate live!

Monday, November 17, 2008

Beard Radio 17.11.08

The Brotz brings the motherfucking skronk with the aid of his enormous horn.

IT'S A BRONTOSAURUS SEX PARTY!!!

Minutemen - The Glory Of Man (Double Nickels, SST)
Rolo Tomassi - Oh Hello Ghost (Hysterics, Hassle)
Brotzman/Gustafsson/Nilssen-Love - Bullets Through The Rain (The Fat Is Gone, Smalltown Superjazz)
High Places - Visions The First... (High Places, Thrill Jockey)
Brian Eno/David Byrne - Regiment (My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts, EG/Ryko Reissue)
Extra Life - I Don't See It That Way (Secular Music, Planaria)
Beach Boys - 'Til I Die (Surf's Up, Brother)
Sunhil Carguly - Ajhoun Na Aye (Bollywood Steel Guitar, Sublime Frequencies)
Kleenex - You (Angry Side) (Lipstick Traces, Rough Trade)
Mika Miko - Capricoronations (CYSLABF, Kill Rock Stars
Yeasayer - Sunrise (All Hour Cymbals, Now We Are Free)

Plus the not exactly wonderful Moog Party Time playing in the background as bed music. It's high time I made use of all my dodgy charity shop records. Watch out for more easy cheesey sounds in coming weeks.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Beard on Subcity Radio 10.11.08


Gil J Wolman


To paraphrase Fontella Bass's scatalogical exclamation in tonight's first tune, this show is like a low fart that's music to your brain. In the best possible way.
We've got some hot jazz, existential art-song, Lettrist sound-poetry and a novel take on a Jewish melody. There's a Bollywood synth and steel guitar wigout and some tranced out excursions for organ and tape delay. We also celebrate Neil Young's loopy cinematic folly Human Highway by playing an awesome cut from his unfairly maligned electro-rock opus Trans and a rare, but super-catchy apocalyptic hoedown from Devo. Enjoy!

Art Ensemble Of Chicago - Theme De Yo Yo (Stance A Sophie, Soul Jazz reissue 2008)
Gil J Wolman - Megapunies: 24 Mars 1963 (Lipstick Traces, Rough Trade comp, 1993)
Secret Chiefs 3 - Akramachamarei (Xaphan: Book 9 of Angels Vol 9, Tzadik, 2008)
Scott Walker - Psoriatic (The Drift, 4AD, 2006)
Gautam Dasgupta - Duniya Mane Bura To Goil Maro (Bollywood Steel Guitar, Sublime Frequencies comp, 2008)
Neil Young - Computer Age (Trans, Geffen, 1982)
Devo - It Takes A Worried Man (Pioneers Who Got Scalped, Rhino/Wea)
Terry Riley - Anthem Of The Trinity (Shri Camel, Sony, 1978)


Terry Riley

Monday, November 03, 2008

Beard Radio - US Election Special



It's our US Election Special!

Songs about politics, race and protest, as well as some comedy clips, old and new.

We also pay tribute to the late, great Yma Sumac, and Mother Of Invention Drummer Jimmy Carl Black.

James Brown - Funky President (Polydor)
Nas - Black President (Columbia)
DVDA - America Fuck Yeah! (Atlantic)
Bill Hicks - The Elephant Is Dead! (Rykodisc)
Tom Waits - Hoist That Rag (Anti)
Yma Sumac - Ataypura (Capitol)
Mothers of Invention - Concentration Moon (Rykodisc)
Richard Lewis - Election Rant (dailyshow.com)
Parliament - Chocolate City (Casablanca)
Leonard Cohen - First We Take Manhattan (Columbia)
Richard Pryor - Bicentennial N****r (Warner)
Public Enemy - Fear Of A Black Planet (Def Jam)
Extra Golden - Obama (Thrill Jockey)
Charlie Haden - We Shall Overcome (Impulse)

Here's Richard Lewis's glorious election/penis rant on the Daily Show in all its glory!