genushaha

recommendations for my music loving friends around the world

Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Swimming Pool Angels

I just got back from the steam room, which I love. So relaxing. Lately I've added a dip in the pool as part of the routine, which is not only a nice way to cool down, it adds relaxation on top of relaxation. Ahhhh.

I like going later in the evening, in part because that's when the fewest people are there. Pam and I had the steam room to ourselves and I only had to share the whole pool with one other person. They keep the door between the exercise and wet areas open, and there's techno work out music piped in that other room.

I found a spot in the pool where the angels sang. Somehow the acoustics work out so that in one particular spot, about the middle of the quadrant furthest from the open door, much of the music is stripped away, turning into something very ambient, very peaceful. At times it sounded like ethereal voices softly singing a song of inner peace. That was very nice.

It reminded me of one of the musicians I have really been getting into lately at my WXDU gig, Alice Coltrane. She basically made New Age music well before it was New Age. She's always on about transformation and transfiguration and pretty much anything beginning with the prefix "trans-". Her jazz seeks that inner peace. Reviewer Jim Macnie said, "her music morphed into the soundtrack for prayer." He got that right. There are many paths to God, but Alice Coltrane's is a most pleasant and soothing one.

From the liner notes of her last album, Translinear Light:

"At this time in history, I tried to share the light upon the greatness and Infinite Oneness of the humanity, the universe, and the vast Beyond. Within the light of this Oneness, the Supreme allows us to soar into the transcendental glories of divine Consciousness endowed with joy, peace, and love.

"Very truly, Alice Coltrane"

Ahhhhh.

Monday, August 29, 2005

WXDU Playlist 8/29/05

Sorry to have not posted anything since my last show. You don't want the week I've just had. But it could be worse, I could be in New Orleans. Started a little early tonight. I also think I'll be covering for BroRabb starting at 11.30pm next week.

The Arrival - Enuma Elish - Leviathan
Seeds Crossing the Interstellar Void - Radio Massacre International - Emissaries
Nikita - Ralph Myerz and the Jack Herren Band - A Special Album
Just Briefly - Daedelus - Exquisite Corpse
Geninha - Bango - Bango
Lufuala Ndonga - Konono No. 1 - Congotronics
So Easy to Forgive Him - Amber Digby - Music from the Honky Tonks
Soul Sauce - Cal Tjader - Soul Sauce
Where Do I Go? - the Free Design - The Now Sound Redesigned
Free Hand - Gentle Giant - Free Hand
Song for Mary - the Herbaliser - Take London
Raanjahn - Midival Punditz - Midival Times
Narrowed Iris - Alias & Ehren - Lillian
Rattlesnake Mountain - Alvin Curran - Maritime Rites
Jealous of the Moon - Nickel Creek - Why Should the Fire Die?
Bahia at Night - Speak in Tones - Subaro
Never Become Emotionally Attached to Man Woman Beast or Child - the Brian Jonestown Massacre - We are the Radio
Gnidjougouya - Amadou et Mariam - Dimanche a Bamako
Mental Freedom - Olvis - The Blue Sound
In the Name of Love - Rizwan-Muazzam Qawwali - Day of Colors
Socks on Ears - Michael Andrews - Me and You and Everybody We Know soundtrack
My Head is My Only House Unless it Rains - Nancy Falkow - Mama Kangaroos
Pyjama - Tosca - J.A.C.
nin com pop - Lali Puna - I Thought I Was Over That
Ha Palavras que nos Beijam - Mariza - Transpartente
One For the Father - Alice Coltrane - Transfiguration
Funky Aquarius - Herman Chin-Loy - Aquarius Rock
Stranger in the House - George Jones & Elvis Costello - My Very Special Guests
Yekermo Sew - Mulatu Astatke - Broken Flowers soundtrack
Birth of Liquid Plejades - Tangerine Dream - Zeit
Everything is Everything - Eddie Palmieri - Latin Soul
Id Chab - Mariem Hassan - Rough Guide to the Music of the Sudan
Last Day of Winter - Pelican - The Fire in Our Throats Will Beckon the Thaw

Monday, August 22, 2005

WXDU Playlist 8/22/05

The Creator Has a Master Plan - Pharoah Sanders - Karma
No More Olives - Tosca - J.A.C.
Mental Freedom - Olvis - The Blue Sound
My Head is My Only House Unless It Rains - Nancy Falkow - Mama Kangaroos
Id Chab - Mariem Hassan - Rough Guide to the Music of the Sahara
Just Briefly - Daedelus - Exquisite Corpse
Song for Mary - the Herbaliser - Take London
The Revealing Science of God - Yes - Tales from Topographic Oceans
Socks on Ears - Michael Andrews - Me and You and Everyone We Know soundtrack
L'amour et la Mort - The Real Tuesday Weld - The Return of the Clerkenwell Kid
Raanjahn - Midival Punditz - Midival Times
Cafe Con Leche - Zeb - Jesterized
nin com pop - Lali Puna - I Thought I Was Over That
Everything is Everything - Eddie Palmieri - Latin Soul
And Then So Clear - Brian Eno - Another Day on Earth
Saudosismo - Gal Costa - Gal Costa
The Arrival - Enuma Elish - Leviathan
Bahia by Night - Speak in Tones - Subaro
So Easy to Forgive Him - Amber Digby - Music from the Honky Tonks
Where Do You Want To Go? - Kahil El'Zabar's Ritual Trio - Live at River East Art Center
Ha Palavras que nos Beijam - Mariza - Transparente
Golden City - Kay Gardner - My Mother's Garden
Autumn into Summer - Pelican - The Fire in Our Throats Will Beckon the Thaw

Friday, August 19, 2005

NC Ballot Access News

We interrupt our coverage for this important commercial announcement. Here is a message I sent to our LPNC membership earlier this evening. (I don't care what the time stamp says, it's still Thursday until I go to bed.) Even if you do not live in NC, there's a way you can help at the end of this message.

Dear Friends in Liberty, there’s a lot of ballot access news to report to you, some good, some maybe not so good, and some downright defiant news.

The dicey news is that the State Board of Elections has scheduled a conference call meeting for Monday at 4.30pm and we’re on the agenda. Under North Carolina statutes, they could vote to decertify us at that time. We have provided them with plenty of sound arguments why they should not kick us off the ballot. LPNC’s Chair Thomas Hill and Executive Director Sean Haugh (that’s me) will be in attendance to make our case. We are hopeful of a positive outcome, especially in light of the timing of the good news.

The good news is that NC House Bill 88, the Electoral Fairness Act, is being heard on Tuesday morning in the House Finance Committee meeting at 8.30am in room 544 of the Legislative Office Building. That’s the one behind the main General Assembly building on Jones St. in Raleigh.

If passed, H88 would reduce the number of signatures needed to keep our place on the NC ballot to 25% of what it is now, and reduce our vote total requirement to stay on the ballot from 10% or Governor or President to 2% in those races.

If passed, we *already* have enough signatures to be done with our current ballot drive. If it doesn’t pass then we will have to collect an estimated 75,000 more signatures, at a cost approaching $100,000. Obviously we have great incentive for this bill to become law now!

We need people at the Finance Committee meeting! Please call Sean Haugh at 919-286-0152 or write to him at director@lpnc.org if you can attend or if you have any questions about this committee hearing.

We also need you to call or write the Representatives on the Finance Committee and tell them to vote FOR H88! Even if you have written already, send another email. If you have called already, call again. There are some talking points for your message later in this email.

When Thomas and I went to lobby these people for our bill a couple weeks ago, many of the Representatives we saw mentioned they had received your messages. That’s how it works folks, they have so much to consider that you need to push your concerns to the front of their minds. You have done this! Thank you! Now we need you to do it again.

Here is the list of House Finance Committee members who *especially* need to hear from you:

Chairman, Rep. Pryor Gibson (Union), 419A LOB, 919-715-3007, pryorg@ncleg.net
Chairman, Rep. Julia Howard (Davie), 1106, 919-733-5904, juliah@ncleg.net
Chairman, Rep. Danny McComas (New Hanover), 506 LOB, 919-733-5786, dannym@ncleg.net
Chairman, Rep. William Wainwright (Craven), 532 LOB, 919-733-5995, williamw@ncleg.net
Vice Chairman, Rep. Bill Daughtridge (Nash), 304B LOB, 919-733-5802, billd@ncleg.net
Vice Chairman, Rep. Larry Womble (Forsyth), 534 LOB 919-733-5777, larryw@ncleg.net
Rep. Bernard Allen (Wake), 1325, 919-733-5772, bernarda@ncleg.net
Rep. Curtis Blackwood (Union), 1317, 919-733-2406, curtisb@ncleg.net
Rep. Alice Bordsen (Alamance), 530 LOB, 919-733-5820, aliceb@ncleg.net
Rep. Russell Capps (Wake), 501 LOB, 919-733-5903, russellc@ncleg.net
Rep. Becky Carney (Mecklenburg), 1221, 919-733-5827, beckyc@ncleg.net
Rep. Bobby England (Rutherford), 2219, 919-733-5749, bobe@ncleg.net
Rep. Bill Faison (Orange), 537 LOB, 919-715-3019, billf@ncleg.net
Rep. Susan Fisher (Buncombe), 420 LOB, 919-715-2013, susanf@ncleg.net
Rep. Dale Folwell (Forsyth), 508 LOB, 919-733-5787, dalef@ncleg.net
Rep. Rick Glazier (Cumberland), 2215, 919-733-5601, rickg@ncleg.net
Rep. Bruce Goforth (Buncombe), 1220, 919-733-5746, bruceg@ncleg.net
Rep. Joe Hackney (Orange), 2207, 919-733-5752, joeh@ncleg.net
Rep. Jim Harrell (Surry), 403 LOB, 919-715-1883, jimha@ncleg.net
Rep. Verla Insko (Orange), 2121, 919-733-7208, verlai@ncleg.net
Rep. Earl Jones (Guilford), 536 LOB, 919-733-5825, earlj@ncleg.net
Rep. Marvin Lucas (Cumberland), 1323, 919-733-5775, marvinl@ncleg.net
Rep. Alice Underhill (Craven), 1206, 919-733-5853, aliceu@ncleg.net
Rep. Doug Vinson (Mecklenburg), 1010, 919-733-5886, dougv@ncleg.net

Please also take the time to THANK those Finance Committee members who have voiced support for the Electoral Fairness Act. Some of these folks are on the fence, some are strong supporters, but all have said they are inclined to vote for our bill. Of particular note, Reps. Luebke, Rayfield and Weiss (along with non-committee members Paul Miller and Paul Stam) are sponsors of our bill and Reps. Alexander, Lewis and Ross have worked hard to move it along. Now is the time to thank them and tell them to stay strong:

Chairman, Rep. Martha Alexander (Mecklenburg), 2208, 919-733-5807, marthaa@ncleg.net
Chairman, Rep. Paul Luebke (Durham), 529 LOB, 919-733-7663, paull@ncleg.net
Vice Chairman, Rep. Dewey Hill (Columbus), 1309, 919-733-5830, deweyh@ncleg.net
Vice Chairman, Rep. Deborah Ross (Wake), 2203, 919-733-5773, deborahr@ncleg.net
Vice Chairman, Rep. Jennifer Weiss (Wake), 2221, 919-733-5781, jenniferw@ncleg.net
Rep. John Blust (Guilford), 1420, 919-733-5806, johnbl@ncleg.net (yes)
Rep. Jerry Dockham (Davidson), 1424, 919-715-2526, jerryd@ncleg.net
Rep. Hugh Holliman (Davidson), 1213, 919-715-0873, hughh@ncleg.net
Rep. David Lewis (Harnett), 509 LOB 919-715-3015, davidl@ncleg.net
Rep. Bill McGee (Forsyth), 531 LOB, 919-733-5747, williamm@ncleg.net
Rep. John Rayfield (Gaston), 510 LOB, 919-733-5868, johnr@ncleg.net
Rep. Trudi Walend (Transylvania), 1015, 919-715-4466, trudiw@ncleg.net
Rep. Laura Wiley (Guilford), 513 LOB, 919-733-5877, lauraw@ncleg.net

Here is a sample letter to help you compose your personal message to your Representatives. It is better if you write in your own words, and best of all if you live in the district of the legislator you are writing. But the important thing is that you write! They won’t know how to vote unless you tell them how.

“Dear Rep. [name],

“I hope that this message reaches you in good spirits.

“H88, the Electoral Fairness Act, would encourage North Carolinians to vote by giving them more choices at the ballot box.

“Our President George Bush, when asked about the recent election in Iran, denounced them saying, ‘it was designed to maintain power in the hands of an unelected few who denied ballot access to more than 1,000 people who wanted to run.’ He is right to stand up for ballot access around the world. Will you join our President and stand up for ballot access in North Carolina?

“In the recent Supreme Court decision in Clingman v. Beaver, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, joined by Justice Stephen Breyer, wrote that if all of Oklahoma ballot access law were properly brought before them, ‘the Court would want to examine the cumulative burdens imposed by the overall scheme of electoral regulations upon the rights of voters and parties to associate through primary elections. A panoply of regulations, each apparently defensible when considered alone, may nevertheless have the combined effect of severely restricting participation and competition. Even if each part of a regulatory regime might be upheld if challenged separately, one or another of these parts might have to fall if the overall scheme unreasonably curtails associational freedoms.’ Note that Oklahoma ballot access law is extremely similar to North Carolina’s. If you won’t lower the unconstitutional restrictions on free association through ballot access, we will have no choice but to seek redress in court. If O’Connor and Breyer’s concurrence in Clingman is to be believed, it’s a case that you can’t win.

“According to Ballot Access News, North Carolina currently is ranked 47th in the country for ballot access fairness. If passed, H88 would bring North Carolina to the median among all states in this critical aspect of free and fair elections.

“For example, NC was one of only three states in the country where votes for presidential candidate Ralph Nader in 2000 were not counted. The Libertarian Party had to spend $100,000 on a nine month petition drive just to maintain their ballot access.

“Clearly, our current laws are too restrictive to parties with significant grassroots support in NC. They are not in line with ballot access requirements in neighboring states. Worse still, they are unfair to the voters, who are stay away from the voting booths in part because they don’t have enough choices to satisfy them.

“I ask for your support of the Electoral Fairness Act to make our political system in North Carolina fair and competitive. I believe, as I am sure you do, that the people of our great state deserve a choice at the ballot box.

“Thank you for your time and for your potential support on this very important issue.

“Best wishes,
“[your name and contact info]”

Don’t worry, I haven’t forgotten about the defiant news. It is time we take the fight to court!

The last time I wrote to you about ballot access, I told you we were beginning to look into legal action against ballot access law. There has been significant progress on this front. We have begun negotiations with an attorney to take our case and are preparing to file in state court.

We feel we have a very strong case. Very similar cases have been won since 1982 in Alaska, Maryland and Michigan, and one is being fought in Oklahoma right now. We are collecting our evidence and honing our arguments with a goal to be ready to file by the end of next week if we have to.

If the State Board of Elections votes to decertify us, we will have to file immediately so we can protect our strong candidates in Charlotte and Winston-Salem, where city council elections are partisan. If the General Assembly adjourns for the year without passing the Electoral Fairness Act, we can’t wait another year. Our resolve is firm.

The ONLY thing that will prevent us from suing the state now over ballot access is if the General Assembly passes our bill before they get out of town in the next week or so. That’s why we need you to write these Representatives now!

Meanwhile, we have to keep collecting signatures and raising money. As hard as we are fighting, we still cannot count upon any relief from either the legislature or the courts. We can’t afford sit back and wait.

Please visit our ballot access page. Download the petition and pass it around. Give money if you can so we can hire a great lawyer and productive professional petitioners.

Any way and every way you can help is appreciated! It takes a lot of work to create a political party, but that’s exactly what you are doing here in North Carolina. Every bit of progress we make happens because you sent in a $100 donation, or made a $25 monthly pledge, or sent an email to your Representative, or wrote a letter to the editor, or showed up at your city council meeting, or registered to vote Libertarian, or even just mailed in your own signature on our petition.

Take your contribution and add it to those from thousands of Libertarians all across North Carolina, and what you get is a strong voice for Liberty that elects Libertarians to office and changes public policy for the better. What you get for your contribution is more freedom.

Thank you!

yours in liberty –
Sean Haugh
Executive Director, Libertarian Party of NC

To subscribe or unsubscribe to LPNC Announcements, please reply to this message or send email to director@lpnc.org.

Monday, August 15, 2005

WXDU Playlist 8/15/05

song - artist - album

Healing with Turmeric - Dhol Foundation - Big Drum Small World
Leviathan - Enuma Elish - Leviathan
Everything is Everything - Eddie Palmieri - Latin Soul
Evolver - The Journey - Feed Your Head vol. 2
Song for Mary - the Herbaliser - Take London
Just Briefly - Daedelus - Exquisite Corpse
Dura Akase - Radha - Radha
Never Become Emotionally Attatched to Man, Woman, Beast or Child - the Brian Jonestown Massacre - We Are the Radio
My Head is My Only House Unless it Rains - Nancy Falkow - Mama Kangaroos
Let Me Down Easy - Bettye Lavette - Some of Her Best Songs
Ha Palavras que nos Beijam - Mariza - Transparente
Harve Daley Hix - the Free Design (Stereolab & the High Llamas remix) - The New Sound Redesigned
Step Into the Light - Angel - Explorations into Dance Floor Jazz vol.3
Bahia by Night - Speak in Tones - Subaro
Pyjama - Tosca - J.A.C.
Poppen - Voom:Voom - Compost Community
Yekermo Sew - Mulatu Astatke - Broken Flowers soundtrack
nin com pop - Lali Puna - I Thought I Was Over That
Sweet Little Kitten - Husky Rescue - Country Falls
Butterfly - Lascelles - Abstract Vibes vol.2
Lufuala Ndonga - Konono No. 1 - Congotronics
Socks on Ears - Matthew Andrews - Me and You and Everyone We Know soundtrack
Nardis - Common Ground - High Voltage
Where Do You Want To Go? - Kahil el'Zabar's Ritual Trio - Live at the East River Center
Raanjahn - Midival Punditz - Midival Times
Outra Vida - Les Gammas - Chillout: Adventures in Leisure
Id Chab - Mariem Hassan - Rough Guide to the Music of the Sahara
Autumn to Summer - Pelican - The Fire in Our Throats Will Beckon the Thaw

Sunday, August 14, 2005

Ditching the newspaper

We've decided to let our subscription to the Durham Herald-Sun lapse. This is for a few reasons. Living on the internet as I do, I find it rarer over time to find an article in the paper that I haven't already seen yesterday. Normally I love the letters to the editor column, but ours is dominated by a dozen or so cranks spewing the same crap every 30 days and I'm sick of all of them but one, and he's the one everybody else is sick of. The only real change we would have to make is to start reading comics online and get some morning puzzles for Pam.

We used to have a really special newspaper here in Durham until it was sold several months ago to out of town idiots whose very first act was to fire most of the staff (including almost all of the reporters and editors with whom I had spent years developing positive relationships) and have them escorted out by security. That near the top of the list of scummy corporate moves, just below stealing the pension funds. I wanted to give new management a chance but I guess I've never really gotten over this.

The notion of switching to the Raleigh News & Observer is a total nonstarter. While I have professional respect for a lot of folks who work there, I could never stand to start my day with their liberal pap. Ugh. The one column I must read there is online anyway.

The surprising thing about all this is how very dispassionate I am about this decision. I absolutely love newspapers. I love living in a state where every little town has one. For cryin' out loud, I taught myself to read at age two from newspapers and a book of Greek mythology. (I imagine that explains a lot, haha.) So you'd think I'd display a little more emotional attachment here.

Maybe I'll feel differently when they actually stop delivering it.

Thursday, August 11, 2005

Road Notes: Kansas City

We stay at a lot of Motel 6 and Super 8 on the road, and eat a lot at Cracker Barrel, Denny's and Flying J. Not that any of these brands are consistent, but they are more likely to offer something we know we'll like.

Good: The Super 8 in Wentzville MO has the best shower I have had in years. Great water pressure and temperature. I am a steamroom addict and rarely get to indulge that pleasure on the road, but here the water was hot enough and the door tight enough that I was able to rig up some steam action. Very pleasant, that is until I came out and the steam set off the smoke alarm.

Bad: Flying J generally has a decent buffet, most of them are quite satisfying especially after many hours of driving. But by all means do not go to the one at the Haw River exit (between Hillsborough and Burlington NC) on I-40/85. Pam and I had to return the loaner car I took to KC, so I figured on the way back I could treat her to a little of my life on the road. Looks like I'll have to take her further out of town for that. Not that I expect a gourmet experience or anything, but here the food was totally uninspired (open can, pour and heat) and the service even less so. I wish I had noticed the C sanitation rating before we sat down.

Powerball sucks ass. Not only did they just add more numbers to drive down the odds even further in an attempt to create bigger jackpots and fewer winners, they are phasing out their multidraw option. Living in a state with no lottery, frankly I don't see the point of buying a separate ticket for each drawing. If NC actually does start a lottery, I'll be lobbying for anything but Powerball.

Kansas City bbq definitely lives up to its reputation, but as an everyday thing, I'm glad to be back in eastern NC and the land of chopped pork bbq.

The visual highlight of the trip was coming back into the NC mountains during a light rain at sunset. I never really found a church that made me feel totally at home. The road is my church. Driving all over this beautiful country gives me more of the awe of creation and the glory of God than any formal worship. The mist kicked up by the rain with the orange backlighting of the distant sunset was spectacular beyond words. My traveling partner Lee has the same perspective of God as the greatest artist. Driving through the Smokies caused him to comment that He don't make no junk, but He was particularly on his game the day he made this. I couldn't agree more.

Feathers & Mama Kangaroos

One really neat consequence of blogging my playlists is that people in these bands or with the independent companies that make the records find me and write nice grateful notes. At least the ones who are smart enough to set up a google alert for themselves. Since I am on overnight, I get little feedback during my shows, so these emails are very satisfying. Makes the gig so much more worthwhile.

Since I started, I've heard from Adam at HomeTapes which put out the utterly brilliant Feathers release "Absolute Noon". Adam writes in part:

"Thanks tons for playing the Feathers stuff...they just returned home from Chicago last night after recording their 2nd EP!" and later, "just listened to the new feathers at lunch....it's great, even though it's unmastered in its present state...keep your eyes peeled late fall/early winter." Cool beans, can't wait.

From the Hometapes blurb on Absolute Noon:

"Approaching their music with an extremist, idiosyncratric attitude, it is simple to understand why things sway from glorious melodics to unexpected shifts in structure. The music is dense, melismatic and curiously orchestrated with soaring strings, a possesed flute, and persistent brass to the backdrop of electric harpsichord, farfisa organ, electric sitar, and jaunty electronic processes and ruminations."

Gotta love anyone who uses the word "melismatic." But forget the big words, the music is just a lot of unpretentious melodic fun.

I also heard from Mike at Genus Records (no relation, haha) in reply to my blurb about Mama Kangaroos. Mike says, "it was really fun to make, and you're right - i was really out to show how good the songs are rather than trying to do the usual out-weirding of beefheart that other tributes to him have done." Well, thank you for that Mike, because for the first time I am interested in listening to Captain Beefheart again.

Mike also forwarded my link to Nancy Falkow who also sent a very nice note. I'm looking forward to checking out the rest of her work.

They told me at the station when I started that since we're part of a university we're supposed to treat the gig as educational not just for our listeners but for ourselves as well. An excellent approach -- I can't tell you how much wonderful new music and new perspective I've learned since starting three years ago. The personal contact opens that up even more. Email proof that, for example, Nancy Falkow is a real human being (and a very nice one at that) and not just a disembodied voice on a CD makes me a much bigger fan. It's important to remember that these musicians and producers are real people very much like you and me, and not just part of the object that is a CD, and this feedback brings that point home.

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

Playlist notes

This is probably my last post for a week, off to Kansas City for a business trip. Being from Oklahoma, I insist on informing everyone that the Wilbur Harrison song about that city was originally written as Ponca City. But since Ponca City still only has a population of 25,000, I can't blame him for changing the song and going after a bigger market. Besides, Ponca City never really was that exciting.

Instead of just dry listings of what I play on my radio show for the benefit of search engines, sometimes I ought to talk a little bit about the music. Monday mornings 2-5am is in my mind the quietest time of the whole week. When I started I played more of a rock'n'roll show but have received a much greater listener response since I switched to a chill out format. If you see me play the same record for several weeks running, that means it's new, or at least new to us at the station.

My current fave is Radio Massacre International. It is straight up mid-70s Tangerine Dream, and not any pale imitation either but the full on art rock effect. There's an art rock revival going on and I couldn't be happier.

My favorite record of the year to date is The June Book by Magic City. It's a tribute to Sun Ra Arkestra vocalist June Tyson, the one who sang all those wacky space songs. I can't get enough of that Space is the Place vibe. They recorded in a Vermont farmhouse, giving the acoustics a pleasantly warm and airy feel. "We're Living in the Space Age" is far and away my favorite track, I could play it every show, as it has a loopy Dale Evans take on the song. I can almost hear the Trigger clopping along in the background.

Mama Kangaroos is a Captain Beefheart tribute album by 20 different all female Philadelphia acts. I was never much into Beefheart, something about his delivery rubs me the wrong way, but this record reveals that the songs themselves are brilliant. I keep playing the Nancy Falkow track because she best brings out the wistful melody that is the essence of these songs, and thankfully unlike most tribute albums this one has far more hits than misses.

It really doesn't fit in with my show, but I cannot resist the awesome funk power Congotronics by Konono No. 1. They wire up a bunch of thumb pianos called likembes while people bang on pots, pans and even car parts in the background. You can tell it's all firmly rooted in traditional deep Congo tribal music, but the energy and makeshift electronics turn it into a total freak out jam, the most original sound I have heard in quite some time.

One of my chestnuts has become "Rhodes Theme" by Alexandroid off the Datcha Studio 2 compilation. Not only is it a wonderfully beautiful downtempo melody, it closes with one of the funniest samples ever, the disjointed prerecorded female voice mail voice incanting in her infectious monotone, "You have nine hund-red and thir-ty seven messages, all of them marked Urgent." That just slays me every time. Unfortunately, no link since Uploud Records has gone belly up. I hope somebody else keeps bringing these nifty Russian electronic bands to us.

No show this week, I'll be back on the air August 15th.

Monday, August 01, 2005

WXDU Playlist 8/1/05

song - artist - album

Totally Together - Jackie Mittoo - Universal Sound
Holy Water - Mo' Horizons - ...and the New Bohemian Freedom
The Emissaries Reveal Themselves - Radio Massacre International - Emissaries
Nardis - Common Ground - High Voltage
My Head is My Only House Unless it Rains - Nancy Falkow - Mama Kangaroos
Just Briefly - Daedelus - Exquisite Corpse
Lufuala Ndonga - Konono No. 1 - Congotronics
Tempo de Amor - Smokey and Miho - Tempo de Amor
Pyjama - Tosca - J.A.C.
Ear Parcel - Lamb - Fear of Fours
Avril 14th - Alarm Will Sound - Acoustica
Funky Strip - Herman Chin-Loy - Aquarius Rock
Silent for a While - Eberhard Weber - Pendulum
Bahia by Night - Speak in Tones - Subaro
Together - Skalpel - Skalpel
What Would You Give in Exchange? - the Lilly Brothers with Don Stover - Bluegrass at the Roots
Dead to the World - Royksopp - The Understanding
Carta - Tom Ze - Correio da Estacao Do Bras
Let Me Down Easy - Bettye Lavette - Some of Her Best Songs
Oh Eileen - Ox - Dust Bowl Revival
Red Track - Slicker - The Latest
6.30am - Red Room - Le Paradis
Leviathan - Enuma Elish - Leviathan
Lucky That Way - Dwight Yoakam - Blame the Vain
The Sea of Core Experience - Single Gun Theory - Flow, River of My Soul
Sweet Little Kitten - Husky Rescue - Country Falls
Guru Bandana - Ali Akbar Khan - Legacy
I Am a Pilgrim - the Country Gentlemen - Classic Southern Bluegrass
So Danco Samba/O Pato - Wanda Sa & Roberto Menescal - Chega de Saudade
Way Back When pt.3 - John Surman - Way Back When
Corazon Viajero - Christina Ortega - The Vaquero Song
Ping Pong - Spacetime Continuum - Sea Biscuit
Negra Presentuosa - Susana Baca - Susana Baca
Gnidjougouya - Amadou et Mariam - Dimanche a Bamako