Tuesday, 18 November 2008
Yikes! Forever-by Pete Drake and his vocoder
This should have one of those 'love to hate' tags. Everything about this is creepy. I don't think those lads are hitting all those high notes either. Watch while trying to avoid an involuntary shudder.
Posted by
Mike Bass
at
15:55
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Labels: Musicbox
Friday, 14 November 2008
Lil' Liza Jane- Thumbs Carllile & Curly Chalker, Also, Cotton-Eyed Joe- Thumbs Carllile'08
I've never seen this kind of technique played so well by a sighted man. There are certainly benefits to chord variations that can be achieved. Amazing!
Posted by
Mike Bass
at
11:37
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Monday, 10 November 2008
Jan Švankmajer, "Zamilované maso/Meat Love" (1988)
Inspiration for becoming a Vegetarian.
Posted by
Mike Bass
at
15:05
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Labels: Animation
Sunday, 2 November 2008
Ernie Kovacs - Nairobi Trio [Original Music]
I remember seeing this as a kid on our old black and white set and laughing at it uncontrollably.
Though dated and well known in the annals of television history, the comic timing is great and this should bookend nicely with Leona Anderson's LP below.
Posted by
Mike Bass
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21:01
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Labels: 50's TV
Music To Suffer By [1957] - Leona Anderson
BIO: [From www.spaceagepop.com]
Born Leona Aronson 20 April 1885, St. Louis, Missouri
Died 25 December 1973, Fremont, California
Leona Anderson secured he spot in Space Age Pop history with her aptly-titled 1957 album, Music to Suffer By. Anderson made bad singing a legitimate, if entirely unnecessary, form of entertainment. She reveled in the limitations and deficiencies in her singing voice and her publicity proudly proclaimed her as "the World's Most Horrible Singer." She milked her lack of talent into her own special shtick, and ended up landing spots on The Ernie Kovacs Show and other 50s variety series.
Ironically, Anderson had legitimate showbiz roots. Although born into a midwest Jewish family, her older brother Max became perhaps the world's first cowboy movie star, making one- and two-reelers for the Essanay Studio in Niles, California as early as 1915, billed as "Bronco Billy" Anderson. Leona studied singing, unbelievable though it may seem, and the liner notes of Music to Suffer By claim she had landed a spot in a George M. Cohan show by the time she was 15. Something in that claim is off, since Cohan's first Broadway revue wasn't until 1901, and the only Leona Anderson credited with appearances on Broadway is another lady entirely.
We do know that she wound up in the movies, if only sporadically. Her name shows up in several films made at the Astoria Studios in New York City. She must have moved to California to join her brother, since she shows up again in several films made there in the early 1920s. One was a short satirizing Rudolph Valentino, starring Stan Laurel as "Rhubarb Vaselino," and the other a western directed by her brother.
One assumes she worked in radio and vaudeville after that, for by the early 1950s, she had become known for her awful singing, which was apparently an act she created to mock the pompous style of serious opera singers. "Opera singers just can't kid themselves properly ... they can never let their voices go." Anderson, on the other hand, let hers go anywhere it chose to wander, in a manner rather like a drunk's random walk--up, down, and in between the scale. In comparison with the better-known opera comedienne, Anna Russell, though, Anderson's act wasn't something that could sustain an entire show single-handedly. Unlike Florence Foster Jenkins or Mrs. Miller, to whom she's usually compared, Anderson doesn't appear to have been naive, but rather, dissembling. "I'm not sure whether she knew she was funny--but I have my suspicions," one of her acquaintances, jazz label artist (and comb player) Paul Bacon, has commented.
Somewhere in the mid-1950s, she recorded a single, "Fish," for a small New York City label. Anderson's co-conspirators were two other figures in fringe entertainment: Bill Baird, a pioneering puppeteer best remembered for performing the marionette scene in "The Sound of Music"; and Tony Burrello, who recorded another famous 7" slice of discord, "There's a New Sound (The Sound of Worms Eating Your Brain)," that pops up occasionally on the Dr. Demento radio show. Her catterwauling was accompanied by Baird on tenor tuba and Burrello on calliope, which also makes this perhaps the only known pairing of this instruments.
Inventive television comic Ernie Kovacs heard it and was inspired to build one of his recurring routines around it. Kovacs would stand next to a knight's suit of armour and periodically open the visor. Out would come the discordant tones of Ms. Anderson's singing. Later, Kovacs had her appear live and offer viewers a taste of her act. Kovacs' widow, Edie Adams, later recalled that ""She knew she was camp, but she was very funny, and very sweet." This tidbit of notoriety probably led Unique Records to record and release Music to Suffer By, quite consciously packaged as a joke. It probably also led to her landing a small part in the 1958 Vincent Price horror film, "The House on Haunted Hill."
Her show-biz career appears to have come to a close not longer after that, and she died at the age of 88 in a retirement home not far from where her brother first started making movies.
Posted by
Mike Bass
at
20:32
1 comments
November Playlist
LINK:
NOV08.zip
HOSTED FREE AT BOXSTR.COM
Tracklist:
01) Set Your Receivers -Meat Beat Manifesto
02) Bubblegum (Hubba Bubba remix feat Marie)- Books on Tape
03) Sexo Perfecto (Feat Ask) -Supabeatz
04) Facing That Void (w/Maroons) -General Elektriks
05) Deaf Mick's Throwdown -Clockwork Voodoo Freaks
06) Because I Got It Like That (Ultimatum Mix) -Jungle Brothers
07) Give Me My Anger Back -Psychedeliasmith
08) Sasafras Seedlings -Borts Minorts
09) Velvet Pants -Propellerheads
10) All I Want -Supabeatz
11) Crosseyed & Painless (Talking Heads cover) -Brazilian Girls
12) Animal -Bitman & Roban - Feat. Anita
13) Ocean Games -Funk 4 Sale
14) Radio Mellotron -Meat Beat Manifesto
15) Cominagetcha -Propellerheads
16) Saturday Night Worldcup Fieber -Mouse On Mars
17) Kalifornia -Fatboy Slim
18) Say Aha -Santogold
19) Flicking Your Switch -Ladytron
20) Peppermint -Plastic Operator
21) Rrrrrrright: germlin remix -Deerhoof
22) 06 60 92 92 -Prototypes
23) Elvis Presley For President -Lou Monte
Posted by
Mike Bass
at
19:13
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Friday, 31 October 2008
Tiki and then some...[Here]
Scott Scheidly is talented and funny. Visit his site to see a gallery of interesting art inspired by the absurd and a tiny dose of Tiki culture. All done with acrylics. Very inspiring.
http://www.flounderart.com [click title]
Posted by
Mike Bass
at
12:34
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Labels: Artist
Wednesday, 1 October 2008
1973 Cheech & Chong's : Basketball Jones
Tyrone Shoelaces has a fantasy...some might call the imagery racist now but in 1973 it rose to #15 in the record charts.
This is the short released to promote the single by Cheech & Chong off their LP Los Cochinos. The Beatles even make an appearance!
If this looks familiar, Peter Sellers watches this as Chance the gardener during a sequence of the 1980 film, Being There. Enjoy!
Posted by
Mike Bass
at
16:23
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James Blackshaw plays: The Eye
Hypnotic!
Yes, there's a bit of trickery and repetition, but overall there's still some soul to the music.
Posted by
Mike Bass
at
15:32
1 comments
Labels: Guitar player