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clifford_thornton

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Everything posted by clifford_thornton

  1. So Gerald Fried's music for "The Baby" (1972 film) is pretty excellent. Also, the movie is quite enjoyable/absurd - if you like adult babies, that is.

  2. Waited about eighteen years to see Bitch Magnet perform. It was well worth the wait.

  3. FWIW, I actually enjoyed this disc, listening to the material on ubuweb. Normally I find lowercase stuff kind of off-putting, but this is so damn weird it's hard not to like it.
  4. Well, of course I dig "music" and one could argue that hard drives, tape, CDs and LPs are all just "containers." From an archival/media storage perspective that's true. But I do like to have something to contextualize the sounds - images/artwork, a certain tactile sense, something to read and learn from. Not everyone agrees but I think you can understand where I'm coming from.
  5. Have you tried asking on the ihatemusic board? (not a joke, that's really what it's called)
  6. Tony Oxley - The Baptised Traveller - (CBS Realm UK)
  7. I guess my attention is drawn to a different sort of fruit...
  8. Modern Jazz Quintet Karlsruhe - Trees - (Excenter)
  9. Yeah, I wouldn't claim to "own" copies of anything downloaded. That stuff - and there's not a lot of it, for me, comparatively - I don't even consider to be a collection. They are just reference copies. Some archivists might disagree with me, but literal format matters.
  10. I ain't gonna fall for no banana in the tailpipe!
  11. Unless you're talking about something else, Ear of the Behearer came out on CD in 1991 (Japan)/1998 (US), well before Dewey passed.
  12. Who knows. Esoteric is a fine album, hope it does get reissued soon.
  13. The version of "Sonny's Back" on that LP is really cool. As the years progress, I find I actually like that side of the album more than the sidelong orchestra piece.
  14. Cool, looking forward to diving into this sale.
  15. Either way I'll be happy!
  16. I looked and the only Nessas I am without are the soon-to-be-reissued "Eftsoons" and the Ensayo titles (which have reverted, if I'm not mistaken).
  17. If we're talking commercially-released stuff, I am a completist with certain people. Those with smaller discographies haven't been too hard to complete collections of: Alan Shorter, Ric Colbeck, Kees Hazevoet. I have all but one Bill Dixon recording, all but one of my o-board namesake. I think all but three Frank Wright-related releases I have (a few of those Penck CDs are hellish to track down). With labels I have some complete runs. Almost all the Nessas, all the Actuels, pretty good percentage of the ESP catalog, etc... I find it hard to be a completist with catalogs that are super-huge; invariably, I get interested in someone/something else and that's where my money starts going. Maybe by the time I die I'll have every Archie Shepp vinyl, but there's certainly some of his catalog I don't feel a pressing need to wade through. But I don't feel like having all this stuff is really the end; if you're trying to learn something about the music, you can have every release by someone and still not get what that person is saying. For that, context is necessary and that's provided by hearing other people's work as well.
  18. I would say that The Sea and Cake are on a fucking tear right now. Saw them last night at LPR and they were amazing, best I've seen them since 1996.

  19. Bruce Palmer - The Cycle is Complete - (Verve Forecast)
  20. The Grateful Dead - Aoxomoxoa - (Warner Bros., 70s press)
  21. He's an excellent player; I have a few records of his, including one w/ J.R. Monterose and Jon Eardley, and another early one with Dick Vennik.
  22. Yeah, I have had it in both configurations. The Time LPs were first - Concert Percussion, Cage/Wolff, Nono/Maderna/Berio, Berio/Bussotti/Cage, Mayazumi, Feldman, Gazzeloni-Kontarsky, maybe a couple of others. These were reissued on Mainstream along with a number of new recordings - Sonic Arts Union, AMM/MEV, Yuji Takahashi, New Music from London, and a few more. Both were excellent series.
  23. Maybe this will be the straw that breaks the camel's back. I still maintain that LA wasn't a "fraud" - he was still the best guy out there with the best team, all things being relatively equal (i.e., everyone doping). But EPO alone isn't going to make a sloppy amateur into a seven-time stage race winner. I quit racing in 2000 because of an injury, but at the time I was glad to see the sport becoming a household thing; too bad people feel they were duped by the drama. Even with races being fixed and PEDs running rampant, I still can feel the excitement and heartache felt watching the pros compete. It's a fascinating sport, and it's too bad that so many people feel they have to renege on years of enjoyment. Even if LA and his boys are a bunch of assholes, I still have respect for the undeniable work and the accomplishments that resulted, tainted though they may be.
  24. That to me sounds like a pressing fault. I've got a few LPs that are mis-grooved but are near mint/little played.
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