26-May-2008
28-Apr-2008
Casio car-boot finds

Casio car-boot finds
Originally uploaded by bad_sector.
Two Casio keyboards found at a car-boot sale. I paid 50p for the SK-1 and £1 for the SA-8. I've heard they are both very 'bendable'.
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27-Apr-2008
15-Apr-2008
April update
I've recently been having lots of fun with a number of toys including:
A Korg Kaosspad mk1 on loan from Tim Matts
A No1derland Theremin 002 given to me by my mate Peter
My brand-new Roland SP-404 sampler
I'm expecting delivery of my Korg Kaossilator tomorrow! Life is good and musical. I'm pleased to find that the SP-404 is pretty wonderful as a drone-machine, and it's built-in tape delay effects are to die for!
And this happened after a night out...
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10:58 PM
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Labels: Music, Stellar Mass, YouTube
02-Dec-2007
03-Oct-2007
Hex Inverter gig footage
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5:50 PM
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Labels: bad_sector, Music, Stellar Mass
02-Oct-2007
Datarock - Computer Camp Love
Not my favourite Datarock track, but it goes well with the vid.
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28-Sep-2007
Hex Inverter
Excitement all round! Ben Goldstone aka George Lazenbleep has organised a gig in the Exeter Phoenix bar tonight to complement the Ozric Tentacles show going on in the auditorium. This should be interesting as the premise is somewhat more experimental that what will be going on with the Ozrics. Among those playing are Mr Lazenbleep himself, Edward J. Hicks, Simon Egan, gameboy fanatic omgphil! and myself.
It's the first time I'll have performed live in years, and my first ever noise set. I'm nervous and excited!
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Labels: Blog, Music, Stellar Mass
20-Sep-2007
Acid Mothers Temple in Bristol
The Acid Mothers Temple and Melting Paraiso U.F.O. are playing the Bristol Thekla on the 8th Nov.... And I just booked tickets!

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12:48 PM
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12-Sep-2007
RIP Joe Zawinul
Widely influential jazz musician and composer who introduced world music and electronic keyboards to the genre.
Immediately recognisable with his col-ourful woollen hat, Zapata moustache and huge sideburns, Joe Zawinul was a vivid and individual musical personality who wrote some of the best-known standard tunes in jazz and pioneered the use of electronic keyboards.
As a member of Cannonball Adderley’s band in the 1960s he composed their best-known piece, the Grammy-winning Mercy, Mercy, Mercy.As a colleague of Miles Davis in 1969, he wrote the title track for the seminal fusion album In a Silent Way, and in addition to the 1976 disco hit Birdland he also wrote a sizeable proportion of the remaining repertoire for the band Weather Report, which he coled with Wayne Shorter. More recently his Zawinul Syndicate band fused elements of world music into jazz, using keyboard samples and a range of Native North American, African, Asian and Latin American musicians.
Josef Erich Zawinul was born in 1932 in Vienna, where he attended the music conservatory and played his first professional engagements as a jazz and dance band musician, before moving on swiftly to studio work and broadcasting. For a time he was the house pianist for Polydor records, and worked with his fellow countrymen Friedrich Gulda and Hans Koller.
But postwar Austria was not the place to make a reputation as an international jazz player, and when Zawinul won a scholarship to the Berklee School of Music in Boston in 1959, he took the opportunity to emigrate to the US, and seek his fortune there.
His time at Berklee was short, because he swiftly landed the job as the pianist in Maynard Ferguson’s powerhouse big band, and opted to go on the road with this dramatic and exciting group, which featured its leader’s flamboyant trumpet and the saxophone of the young tenorist Wayne Shorter, who was to become a lifelong associate of Zawinul. Initially, however, their paths diverged, as Shorter went off to join Art Blakey, while Zawinul became the accompanist to the singer Dinah Washington, before joining the alto saxophonist Cannonball Adderley’s band in 1961.
This was the group that made his name, both for his forceful gospel-inspired piano playing and for his capacity to write chart successes for Adderley and his cornet-playing brother Nat, such as Mercy, Mercy, Mercy and the later Country Preacher. Towards the end of the 1960s Zawinul left Adderley and began working with Miles Davis, in particular contributing to the studio albums In a Silent Way and Bitches Brewin which Davis charted out new territory in the hinterland between jazz and rock.
A significant element of this was Zawinul’s use of electronic keyboards. He had begun to use the Fender Rhodes and Wurlitzer electric pianos in Adderley’s band, altering the ensemble sound to something which was perceived at the time as less dated and hidebound by tradition than the acoustic piano.
In due course, and beginning with Davis, Zawinul added a range of synthesizers to the instruments he used, and by the time he formed Weather Report with Shorter at the end of 1970, the idea of using electronic samples as additional tone colours was an essential ingredient of his style. Few musicians in jazz have been as influential in determining the sound of an entire branch of the music, and Zawinul’s command of the ARP, Oberheim and Prophet synthesizers set the standard for jazz-rock fusion throughout the 1970s.
He and Shorter jointly led Weather Report until 1985. Over the years such players as the bassists Miroslav Vitous and Jaco Pastorius, the drummers Alphonse Mouzin and Peter Erskine and the percussionists Alex Acuña and Airto Moreira passed through the lineup, and the band made a series of extremely influential recordings, including I Sing the Body Electric, Heavy Weatherand Black Market.Several critics have identified this band as changing the way jazz musicians improvise, because of the way soloists were made to function within the context of the overall ensemble, reexamining notions of collective improvisation that to some extent had been dormant since the 1920s.
Zawinul’s finest playing dates from the 1970s period of Weather Report, with an ability to infuse performances with boundless energy and drive – the finest example of which was the Birdland opening with synthesized bass notes that introduce stabbing, urgent keyboard phrases that underpin the repetitive main theme. In later years the energy was sometimes quick to subside, and somewhat theatrical effects took over from genuine musical substance. This was particularly true of his most recent band Zawinul Syndicate. The Times critic wrote of their appearance at Ronnie Scott’s in 2002 that it was like “a latterday Weather Report without the tunes. Most numbers involve setting up a heavy groove from drummer Paco Sery, guitarist Amit Chatterjee and bassist Etienne Mbappe, decorating it with percussion and wordless vocals from Sabine Kabongo, and then waiting for Zawinul to drop in thunderous riffs or ethnic samples from his battery of keyboards.” Such internationalism was a Syndicate hallmark, but too often it lacked the dash of inspiration that had made Weather Report a cut above the fusion standard.
More recently Zawinul had once more been active in his native Austria, receiving several awards for his services to jazz, and opening a club in Vienna. There he recorded his most successful recent album, Brown Street, a collaboration with the WDR Big Band, revisiting several of his famous compositions with considerable verve.
Joe Zawinul, jazz keyboard player, bandleader and composer, was born on July 7, 1932. He died of cancer on September 11, 2007, aged 75
From Times online
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Labels: Music
11-Sep-2007
03-Sep-2007
My RYM Wishlist as of 3/9/07
I've been using RateYourMusic for a while now, and I've got to say that it's a cool resource. The community forums are pretty interesting at times as well.
Just in case you're really bored, here is a summary of the items that I've added to my 'wishlist' over the last few months.
On a similar topic, a friend of mine recommended I listen to Pithecanthropus Erectus by Mingus a while back, and while I did get hold of it I didn't give it a huge listen. I think I'll try and get round to listening to it again over the next week or so.
Altered States - Bluffs
Ambitious Lovers - Envy
Ash Ra Tempel - Ash Ra Tempel
Art Blakey - Moanin'
Can - Future Days
Elliott Carter - The Four String Quartets
Court Gamelan - Pura Paku Alaman, Jogyakarta
Miles Davis - Big Fun
Miles Davis - Pangaea
Deep Chord - Vantage Isle
Eric Dolphy - Out to Lunch
Carlo Gesualdo - Quarto Libro di Madrigali, 1596
Hototogisu - Brooming Mephitic Blast
Hush Arbors - Cleaning the Bone
Kayo Dot - Live WMBR
Michio Kurihara - Sunset Notes
Fela Kuti - Gentleman
Alvin Lucier - I Am Sitting in a Room
Madrigal [USA 70s] - Madrigal
Musica Elettronica Viva - Leave the City
Musica Transonic - Orthodox Jazz
Os Mutantes - Everything Is Possible! The Best of Os Mutantes
Pandit Pran Nath - Ragas
Pandit Pran Nath - Midnight: Raga Malkauns
Pandit Pran Nath - Raga Cycle: Palace Theatre, Paris 1972
Ranaldo / Giffoni / Moore / Cline - Four Guitars Live at Luxx
The Replacements - Let It Be
Slint - Spiderland
Karlheinz Stockhausen - Klavierstück I-XI - Kontarsky - Mikrophonie I & II
Sunroof! - Silver Bear Mist
Horace Tapscott - Dial 'B' for Barbra
Various Artists - Genres - Doo Wop - The Doo Wop Box
Various Artists - Labels - Last Visible Dog - The Invisible Pyramid: Elegy Box
Vibracathedral Orchestra - My Gate's Open, Tremble By My Side
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13-Aug-2007
More Stellar Mass online
Having finished a total of 14 new Stellar Mass tracks, I have set up a rudimentary (ie. free and full of ads!) web page to present some of these tracks. I may duplicate the links on the Stellar Mass MySpace, but only when I get the time.
So if you have the chance to check out the link below (and I'm aware that this genre might not be to everyone's taste), please let me know your thoughts. There is a small feedback app embedded on the site itself, but there is always the comments facility here.
Flux Density
27
61 Cygni
BY Draconis
Beta Decay
Chromospheric Structure
GlueX
Helium Core
Lensing
Oppenheimer
Playing amongst the catacombs of Nephren-Ka
Protoplanetary Disks
Schwarzchild
Spitzer
Or download all of these tracks packaged to a ZIP archive here.
All of these works are protected under Creative Commons license: Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0
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Labels: Music, Stellar Mass


