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chieftizorecords · 8 years
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Song of the Day: Survival Knife - Cut The Quick
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Since the blog had its death in early 2013, three years worth of music that I have enjoyed is sorely missing a written appreciation. Right around March 2012, I was feverishly excited to learn that Justin Trosper and Brandt Sandeno (ex-members of Unwound) had begun playing live in a band called Survival Knife. In the hands of fate though, they would not release their 7" single Traces Of Me/Name That Tune until exactly a year later on March 2013. By then of course, the blog was all but buried and I was not able to give an approximation of how much I loved the single, the following Divine Mob/Snakebit 7-inch, their sole album Loose Power, and how I thought their Survivalized EP was a shoddy collection of odds and sods. But aside from diverging this into becoming an entire breakdown of the band's small discography (I will attempt it some day), I wanted to focus on what I consider is one of their strongest tracks entitled "Cut The Quick". Starting off with the click of a distant harpsichord, the song enters a slow burning 4/4 trudge with a riff progression reminiscent of Challenge for a Civilized Society. But where the late-career Unwound would focus on atmospherics and layers of unique instrumentation, Survival Knife focuses its collaborative songwriting in a more emotional and straightforward fashion. The song itself has a song structure reminiscent of Polvo if they were slowed down about 50% (see: "City Birds") and were half as long and complex. But instead of dizzying riffs and frequent tempo changes, Survival Knife allows for "Cut The Quick" to build its tension during its introductory verses, release some "false" tension during the first refrain, enter an uplifting second verse, release the "real" tension ("STOP CUTTING YOURSELF DOWN!"), have a louder noise break, enter the guitar solo outro, and end on an acoustic guitar/banjo/harpsichord instrumental piece. Much like sister song "Roman Fever", "Cut The Quick" is more audibly influenced by guitar-based progressive rock and the more adventurous sounds of late-70's rock. Yet, it is crucial to understand the most radical shift that Survival Knife introduces is that we hear Trosper loud and clear, front and center. While Unwound's lyrics were typically abstract and passionately sung/shouted, an audibly older Justin Trosper now sadly intones: "A letter from an alien/Never to be read/By anyone/Sorry about the things I did/Couldn't find my way/In this world we live." It is a sign of maturation in a way, where he would previously mask his voice by layers of distorted guitar in the early years or by studio effect trickery in the end, listeners are treated to the full blow of musical inertia in his voice. It seems progression is stripping things back to all muscle and sinew. Sadly. at present it appears that the band is defunct since their website is down, they have not made any updates since exactly last year (June 2015), and pleas asking about the status of the band have been left unanswered. I was lucky enough to catch them live twice, and genuinely hope they return to make enjoyable and relevant rock music. Purchase Loose Power HERE.
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chieftizorecords · 8 years
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Song of the Day: 12 Rods - Telephone Holiday
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It is hardly hyperbole that I immediately loved 12 Rods after about 30 seconds of listening to their music. They possessed a very good and rare sense of experimentation and interesting musical arrangement mixed with catchy melodies, strong drumming, and genuine lyrics. Unfortunately, they never got big, were abandoned by their label after their second album, and never really expanded beyond their regional popularity in Minnesota. Still, they remain a very important band to me that evokes excitement and admiration. This song, “Telephone Holiday”, is the closing number from their final album from 2002 entitled Lost Time. It is funny to think that while the whole musical world over was busy praising post-punk revival and heralding some sort of second coming of NYC bands, this album was receiving no attention for its great songwriting, performances, and blending of rock with other musical approaches. “Telephone Holiday” itself is by no means their most experimental or complex song in their discography (it sticks to a standard verse/chorus/verse/chorus/bridge/outro format), but it does seem to mix in all their eras (from the gay? EP to Split Personalities to Separation Anxieties to Lost Time) into a convenient 4:42 package. The guitar and bass interweave in an almost impossible to ignore earworm in the first part of the opening verse, but then the second guitar (at 0:30) reveals the underlying tension of the song to gorgeous effect: “I’m a bad, bad person and I just wanted to play.” By the chorus, the ultimate intention of the narrator to avoid his Other is fully disclosed with swirling (and violent) synths entering, and finally shifting into a chaotic disco rhythm with incredibly melancholy synthesized strings. It is a perfect representation of 12 Rods’ nervous energy manifesting at full potential. To no surprise, the narrator gets destroyed in the song, as leaving this one night stand now becomes an increasingly fucked up situation (“Little did I know, you were still in high school.”) and as the song gets to the bridge, the dramatics are set to stun. Is it the narrator, or the Other, who is now lamenting, “I’m waiting… for someone to TURN ME ON! Make it SEXY! Make it last LONG!”? It could sound all so sleazy on paper, but instead there is a depressing sense of remorse and desperation in the delivery; the sexual innuendo can double as desire for a meaningful and long lasting relationship. The narrator laments, that while he wishes for this too, that emotional distance and abandonment are just ingrained in nature and cannot be avoided. Is any of that even what the song is about? Who really knows, but I have always found that 12 Rods mixed sexual tension within relationships in their lyrical content very well (see: "Kaboom”, “I Wish You Were A Girl”, “Accidents Waiting to Happen”), and it is a mature and rare quality in most modern music. If anything, the situation in “Telephone Holiday” is an eternal subject in pop music (see: "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover"), but now judgement is entirely ambiguous as it can often be in real life.
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chieftizorecords · 8 years
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A Preface to a Series of Reviews
Hi everyone! I am happy to be back writing under the Chief Tizo banner once again. Over our hiatus I've been so focused on school I seemed to forget how to write casually about the things I love. Hopefully with more practice and reader support I'll find my tone. Shout out to all three of our followers, you are the reason why we do this!
Iceberg Slim chillin
I've had the privilege of being the only black male in a class full of white liberals speaking about race. It always seems like it is the white liberal's responsibility to face underprivileged communities with the heaping loads of their valuable pity and dignified ignorance. Just as quickly as one person may point out the problems with Law Enforcement, another would point to the flagrant gang culture found in rap music. Becoming the black representative in this kind of environment is easily the most stressful part of the semester, but even after this discourse is had the burden of all these people's unrecognized ignorance hurts. The one thing that makes it it worse is when these discussions are spawned by reading black writers that are a part of academia. Writers like James Baldwin, Ralph Ellison, Toni Morrison, Zora Neale Hurstonand Richard Wright are all accepted as great BLACK writers. Writers who speak against Jim Crow, against the dominant white culture that has kept them repressed. Now there is no denying the power of James Baldwin or Richard Wright, but their writings ,as well as the many other names I listed above, have become accepted within an academically constructed black literary canon.
I don't think it would be too radical to say that the majority of black writers published over the years remain unknown. Alice Walker's recent rediscovery of Zora Neale Hurston proves there are masterpieces left to be uncovered. While it is so easy for white liberal academics to hold up a Toni Morrison novel as evidence of their diversity, they are ignoring the greater bias within the publishing industry. Academics can't see beyond their Eurocentric culture and values to notice that there is an implicit  favoring of a certain kind of representation.
The great cultural critic, bell hooks points out in her essay "Postmodern Blackness" that academics calling themselves "postmodernist" always attempt to call attention to the experience of difference and otherness. However, postmodern studies are so Eurocentric, they never acknowledge the concrete problems of the black underclass. It not on;y is through the dominant discourse that racial essentialist attitudes are disseminated but also the academic subculture in universities as well.  To bring closer attention to the helpless "Other", and to challenge the dominant white supremacy in American culture, hooks advocates creating new subjective representations of the black living. While there is no doubt that there is an explosion of black talent hitting shelves in the 21st century, there is still very little understanding of our past. hooks' hope has only partially come true. The problem of color blindness in American culture has created a new impediment for achieving a full acknowledgement of the issues that attack the vulnerable black underclass.
I am not sure if any Pan African Studies department is doing any work to uncover the neglected works by black writers. I am not sure if anyone really cares. Its just that the mold for a black writer was so narrow and still is narrow. The subjective experience of the ghetto is mostly being published by independent publishers as street lit. The black avant garde is still too weird to draw much sales or praise. I am thinking of Charles Wright's zany avant garde satire The Wig. I am thinking of about the gritty and inflated autobiography Pimp by Iceberg Slim.
So,consider this a kind of preface to a series of reviews on neglected novels from the black community. Here is a list of novels I hope to review this summer:
Donald Goines: Dopefiend, Black Gangster, Black Girl Lost, Daddy Cool
Iceberg Slim: Pimp, Trick Baby, The Naked Soul of Iceberg Slim
Charles Wright: The Wig, The Messenger
Clarence Cooper Jr. : Weed, The Black Messenger, The Scene, The Farm
Ann Petry: The Streets
Herbert Simmons: Corner Boy
Charles Perry: Portrait of a Young Man Drowning
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chieftizorecords · 8 years
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Chief Tizo Interviews #4: MC Coolarge
Hey folks! We promised new interviews, so here we are with a fresh interview with experimental hip-hop stalwart MC Coolarge. We discuss the lyrical content behind his old/new material, question some of his sonic influences, and get some info about his upcoming untitled LP, which is due in Autumn. Check it here:
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You can find MC Coolarge's current discography HERE.
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chieftizorecords · 8 years
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Song of the Day: On A Friday - To Be A Brilliant Light
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Many adore and love Radiohead's catalog for very deserving reasons (seriously, how many bands match the stretch from The Bends to In Rainbows?), but very few people know of their initial embryonic recordings under the name On A Friday from 1985-1992. Dabbling in a wide variety of different sounds across their handful of cassette recordings (see the hilarity of the sped-up ska in "Tell Me Bitch" or the steel drum tinged "Happy Song"), this particular recording comes from their second demo from 1988. At the time accompanied by three saxophone players,  On A Friday wastes no time crashing "To Be A Brilliant Light" headfirst with full melodrama and force. Slowing down with a reverberated acoustic guitar riff resembling something out of In the Court of the Crimson King, Thom Yorke quietly sings, "I'm getting sort of worried/Like the time of life I've reached /I'm getting pretty old /I should be reaching my peak". As a song obsessed with growing old (see "Bones") and desperate to find success while one is youthful, the nervous energy is apparent throughout and remains one of OAF's strongest songs. Possibly influenced by Elvis Costello and the Attractions during Punch the Clock (and perhaps even Dexys Midnight Runners), the trio of horns go further to add that extra touch of desperation as Yorke sings "Where to start to build a clock?" They then joyfully enter a call and response to his pleading of "TO BE A BRILLIANT LIGHT, YEAH", and it is nothing short of melodramatic brilliance. A definite must-listen for Radiohead fans, and to listen to Thom Yorke's powerful and youthful vocals.
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chieftizorecords · 8 years
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Song of the Day: Tears for Fears - Advice for the Young at Heart
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My listening history with Tears for Fears is one that is rivaled only by The Police, but to be clear, TFF were my first "absolute favorite band of all time". Despite not being as regular of a listen as they used to be, TFF set the gears in motion for my later taste in music: a healthy fascination with gloomy synthpop and quasi-post-punk music with their debut The Hurting, and introduced a seamless fusion of drum and synth programming with live "arena-sized" instrumentation on Songs From the Big Chair. Among the innovations that TFF brought into their sound with Songs From the Big Chair, they subtly tapped into jazz flourishes (most notably on "The Working Hour" and "I Believe") and organic, almost post-rock sounds ("Listen"). These subtleties were something that TFF would explore further on their following 1989 record, The Seeds of Love. The record contains multiple elements of jazz, organic textures, and use of "widescreen" ambiance throughout its running time. Whether it be in "Standing in the Corner of the Third World"'s use of heavy dynamic shifts between its sleepy verses to explosive chorus, the bluesy piano and rattling drum patterns on "Badman's Song", or the sophisticated and expensively arranged pop sounds on "Swords and Knives", it was obvious that TFF shifted to a paradoxical raw but cleanly produced sound. Many consider it to be the poorest of the group's releases under their first phase, before Curt Smith departed, and it is not hard to see why. While TFF definitely shifted their sound into new territory, it is arguable that many moments are overproduced, pretentious, or at worst, boring (the almost two-minute guitar solo on "Swords and Knives", the sheer length of "Third World", the veering on annoying sentimentality of "Famous Last Words", among other things). I actually love the record though, and when the mood is correct, The Seeds Of Love comes off as an overly ambitious pop record that has an interesting mixture of psychedelia, jazz, and blues within its roots. Not to mention how damned inspiring some of the production is since TFF spent over a million pounds on this record, and it shows, for better or worse (I am of the former). But even if you think the whole record is a bombastic mess, I find it hard to believe anyone who does not think "Advice for the Young at Heart" is a brilliantly arranged and produced piece of romantic pop. A song that pleads "Soon we will be older/When we gonna make it work?" and "Love is a promise/Love is a souvenir/Once given never forgotten/Never let it disappear", it is a melancholic masterpiece of romantic territory that many do not attempt today. With its salsa influenced piano chords, ghostly synths that fill empty space, a rising and falling timpani, wailing organ, and the propulsive chorus, it all comes together to create a really beautiful track. By the end, a downtrodden Smith sings a quiet melody with the sole descending piano, and are treated to a final bit of "Advice."
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chieftizorecords · 8 years
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A Reunion worth a Million in Prizes
"Seven years is not the kind of time you can just leave behind."
 - "Seven Years" by My Dad Is Dead
Well, let us not be so dramatic. It has only been about three years, but it really has been quite some time since Chief Tizo, formerly with Records at the end and a proposed "digital label", was updated. 
So what happened? Well, school and life took over, interests diverged, and the entire label idea failed immediately. Once we figured we had no real way of offering anything of physical value to artists, all we could say was "Well... we can feature you on our shitty blog, and maybe see your show in some ugly cafe in DTLA". Not very label-like (well if we apply 2016 standards, then we are on-par)! It was fun while it lasted, but the idea of Chief Tizo being anything other than a personal collective of friends (both online and in the physical realm) that contributed their art or writing is just how it is (and will be). What this means is that we are reviving this blog to again feature our thoughts on art and music, post new music that we find interesting, and ultimately feature whatever art our friends and ourselves come up with. Additionally, we will be reviving our old artist "Interviews" series with the local artists we have out here and hopefully will produce something of value. On a final note, we still want any and all artists (online or local) that want their art, film, or music featured to reach us at our e-mail and we will do our best to check it out and write about it. We always want something to talk about, so do not shy away. So here we go, yet again.
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chieftizorecords · 11 years
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Song of the Day: Interpol - Leif Erikson
I have had a mini-resurgence of Interpol songs being played since I was working on a cover of their song "NARC" with a few friends for a show. Like so many other bands, Interpol's early era (2002-04) was probably their best, but that is not to say they are entirely devoid of talent after this peak. It is just that the last two albums are either overproduced or try to gain depth through sheer amounts of instrumentation. I assume the reason I am unable to completely hate them is because of the band being there with me during a few key moments throughout high school. So banal nostalgia strikes again. It is love-hate at its finest and despite my vocal protests that Bloc Party are the better cool-guy mid-2000's post-punk revival band, my feelings will remain with Interpol for better or worse. "Leif Erikson" is among their best songs and one of my favorites, the simplicity in the guitar playing, the brooding bassline, and the subtle organ just make this really tense atmosphere that oozes a disgusting but oddly seductive New York City at night. Paul Bank's singing here is also top-notch despite the rather strange lyrics at the quasi-uplifting climax (Bloc Party is victim to this as well...). The vocal and lead guitar melody are too pretty to ignore and then we are left with this ambiguous ending with no real indication if the Interpol who recorded Turn On the Bright Lights would return. Perhaps TOTBL didn't really need a sequel and the band knew that by the last note on the record. I don't think that the New York City that I mentioned earlier really exists, but if a song can make you imagine such a setting, then surely the band is doing something right.
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chieftizorecords · 11 years
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Book Review: The Orange Eats Creeps & Nova Express
It has been a while since I posted. A lot of things have been going on with school opening up ,and all, and me getting a stomach virus. So here is my belated reviews of both The Orange Eats Creeps by Grace Krilanovich and Nova Express by William S. Burroughs.
Starting off with The Orange Eats Creeps, I think that it is best to explain what the overall story of the book is. The book is about a roaming "Slutty Hobo Junkie Vampire" that wanders through America having sex for money in 7-11s and going to a lot of underground punk concerts (which may or may not feature the infamous G.G Allin). The style of the novel is reminiscent of the cut-up method and even Thomas Pynchon's long and beautiful sentences. The book seems to wander from subject to subject not being able to find a place to stay still in which matches the overall "Hobo" idea of the novel. The main character continues to shift through her memories and sometimes through the influence of drugs, the memories of others.  (She has this ability where she could see the thoughts and the past of someone through touching them.) The character seems to be looking for her sister who she was separated from in a foster home. She continues to have these wandering thoughts of her laying down on the side of the road dead; being murdered by some serial killer that resembles the character Bob from Twin Peaks. The meat of the novel is surrounded by the theme of immortality. What do you do with immortality? The novel feels like an extended account of some existential crisis where the person's life doesn't end. The main character struggles with this in her sexual experiences with men, taking to the road, thinking back to the past, and going to explosive rock concerts that contain vomit and blood. For me this book got a bit taxing towards the end. Not because of the experimental prose, but because it is a very repetitive book (which totally makes sense within the context of the novel but still...) that recycles phrases a bit too much. Overall it was a very well thought out novel that has very beautiful and vivid language that I find unique in literature today. It is a very exciting debut from a talented writer that I hope to see more of.
Nova Express by William S. Burroughs is the conclusion to the Nova Trilogy which Burroughs claimed to be the "mythology for the Space Age" and to some respect he is right. The book is filled with this quest to take over the omniscient and omnipotent powers at be that are constantly referred to as being part of a board room filled with people that are part of the Nova Mob. The "main character" William Lee is an agent that is part of the Nova Police that is supposed to take down the Nova Mob and the wicked boardroom that is controlling the actions and thoughts of people through words and addiction with a special weapon: the cut-up. The book that preceded Nova Express, The Ticket That Exploded, set up what is going to happen this novel greatly. Showing the creation of an uprising coming up against the boardroom and even giving a step by step way of using the cut-up and further explaining the power of a tape recorder (a section that is also recycled for Nova Express) for destroying whole governments. Burroughs ideas behind the cut-ups are nothing less than genius; Burroughs has found a way to overrule all metanarratives that transfixes the general public in its clutches. In a section concerning the power of tape recorders, Burroughs explains that sound creates an image and that image is therefore a part of language due to association (all of language is relating to image). For example, by using a recording of a political demonstration in say... Japan during the 1960s. Playing it back on three different recorders will insight a political demonstration. The sound of a political demonstration creates an image of a political demonstration, which in turn causes a political demonstration due to the infectious nature of language ( a thing that Burroughs straight out calls a virus). To me, Nova Express is the weakest of the Nova Trilogy, while The Ticket That Exploded is the best for its amazing cut-ups and ideas. Nova Express to me is just trying to wrap up, but to me not in a completely new way. It feels like it is a reiteration of The Ticket That Exploded with a good handful of good cut-ups, but it was still a fun read.
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chieftizorecords · 11 years
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Song of the Day: The Angels Light - Praise Your Name
 Right now I am reading The Orange Eats Creeps by Grace Krilanovich and Nova Express by William S. Burroughs which I hope to finish before school starts. I will be posting reviews of both right when I am finished. Now right now this was the song of the day for me: Angels of Light's "Praise Your Name." Praise Your Name is probably my favorite song due to the dissonant violin coming in and out reach with the icy xylophone and mournful piano. The lyrics are dark and drenched in apocalyptic imagery concerning the worship of some lover. The chorus' choir behind the yelping of Michael Gira sounds all so glorious. I gained an emotional attachment to this song after listening it everyday, for three weeks last year after feeling trapped in my small dorm room. In fact, Gira was pretty hot on Bryan's and mine playlist for majority of our first year at CSUN.
Where are you wounded girls With bruised faces and blackened eyes Break open your glass doors Welcome the whirling debris Carve your name there In the marble and concrete
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chieftizorecords · 11 years
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New Release: How Scandinavian - Philistine Empathy EP
Philistine Empathy EP by How Scandinavian
The latest and most delayed-est release by How Scandinavian ever. I put a good deal of work on these and I hope I didn't overcook the songs as a result. Much darker and 'lush' than Pity Won and it reeks of some sort of dreadful nostalgic call-back to Dolorous along with some new influences I've found through nightmares, dreams, and harsh cynicism. Probably the least messy and 'mid-fi' release I've been able to muster at this point in time as well. Now that this is out I'll be working on the sophomore LP and have some peace in not following personal deadlines. How Scandinavian will probably tour this little EP locally for a month and then I'll concentrate on both school and finishing the work I've already begun for the next LP. I hope any fans that still abide by this blog and HS will enjoy this. I'm sorry I took so long. Track list: 1. Eucalyptus Burning 2. We Exist 3. New Romantic Ideas 4. A Brighter Hell 5. Life Is Saccharine
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chieftizorecords · 11 years
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the last three books I've read
With the new year, there is always the obligatory post where I say it is nice to be writing in the next year to "great" "readership" and what I have been "doing", this is it. Since the beginning of this year I have been feeling way too "groggy" to do much but to sit around play WiiU, watch TV and read books. Here are a few books that I have finished and enjoyed greatly over break
The Insurgent by Noah Cicero This is my first foray into Cicero's work after knowing of his existence for a little over a year.  Cicero writes with this depressed urgency that I like. He has this weird humorous tone where he could be talking about the inability of humans to communicate with each other then he could switch to the disinergration of America's pride nearly seamlessly. Towards the end of the Insurgent, I was left feeling like I experienced a book that truly denotes what it is like to be in contemporary America. Though there was a few typos--- small presses people, small presses---- it was forgivable since the material was so poignant. I heard he is coming out with a new book so that is going to be cool.
Scorch Atlas by Blake Butler This is, once again, my first foray into Butler's work after knowing of him for a while. Butler has garnered a reputation for being the "21st Century Burroughs" but I think he is a different animal. Butler's work is more like a mix between David Lynch's atmosphere and Michael Gira's harsh yet beautiful lyricism in both Angels of Light and Swans. Describing Scorch Atlas is nearly impossible for me. I guess the easy route is saying that it is a collection of prose about the end of the world but there is so much more. It shows the decay of relationships due to a death in the family, the effects of television on children and the fear of child birth (Even these simple explanations feel like cop-outs)  It is definitely an experience and one of the best things I have read in a while.
The Ticket That Exploded by William S. Burroughs The second book in the Nova Trilogy, Burroughs really attacks metanarratives and language with his infamous cut-ups. The cut-ups throughout are amazing and sometimes nearly vivid. The closer I got towards the end it got better and better. I feel like the way Burroughs structured The Ticket is perfect. The way he explains what exactly the ticket is and what is the entire point of the cut-up is just absolutely great. To me 'The Ticket' rivals that of Naked Lunch in terms of writing and the overall shape of the novel. It would be cool to do some of the tape cut-ups Burroughs explains for a musical project.
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chieftizorecords · 11 years
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you pull the units down
new how scandinavian EP release is imminent
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chieftizorecords · 11 years
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second hand anything
doesn't belong to me thankful for that but guilt finds a way maybe empathy is the enemy but I can't change myself grateful for whatever defines me yet I look over and notice an ongoing despair none of my business move along (stay kinetic) and only those who ask get what they want empathy versus reason which one will win I don't know but once you dirty your hands the expectation is there I pretend to not care but I don't care that much genuinely disaffected what's the expectation
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chieftizorecords · 11 years
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Famous musicians have better gear than you do
I've been closely watching this "Rig Rundown" series for a few weeks now and there are quite a few cool things to witness. Aside from immense amounts of gear lust, it's really cool to see some of the weirder brands, live demonstration, and personal approaches that are used by bands in their live rigs. Highly recommend the J Mascis and Nels Cline rig rundown.
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chieftizorecords · 11 years
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Song of the Day: Aesop Rock - Oxygen
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Getting seriously back into Aesop Rock after I stopped a few months after his latest album Skelethon came out. Float had some really great beats provided by Blockhead and Aesop's lyrics seemed a bit more 'raw' in a good way. I gotta say though, his flow really hasn't evolved too much over the years, which isn't a bad thing to me but I can see why some people would find this hit or miss. Either way, some nice nostalgia to be found here (the album art just seems very turn of the century). 2000 was 13 years ago...
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chieftizorecords · 11 years
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Track Review: David Bowie - Where Are We Now?
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David Bowie surprised everyone with the month's best kept secret that he was returning with a new album titled The Next Day. He also decided to drop this song "Where Are We Now?" as the first taste of what is to come from the album. I personally find it hard to really have any expectations of Bowie since I've really never explored much beyond Scary Monsters because drum and bass 90's Bowie doesn't really sound that interesting to me and the 2000-onward releases didn't really indicate as if I was missing out on much. While "Where Are We Now?" isn't game-changing or revolutionary in any way, it does lend itself some charm with it's sad vocal performance, lush production, and depressing chord progression. It's a pretty tune and it does catch your ear with the subtle hook in the chorus: "Where are we now? Where are we now? The moment you know, you know, you know." It's a nice, melancholy, and polished song, it doesn't seem like it sets itself to be more than just that and I think most people who are pissed off that this isn't a return to the experimenting Bowie we heard during the 1970's were really asking for more than they deserve. But then again, this is the first single, so perhaps we'll be surprised when the entire album drops. Who knows what awaits? I guess we don't really know where we are exactly... Wandering thought: It'd be interesting if David Bowie did an entire album in slowcore style with songs that went in 10+ minute lengths that became slow burning epics with amazing production and instrumentation. I'm thinking a tamer The Seer meets Rollercoaster meets Station to Station meets Frigid Stars meets Low. Only in dreams!
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