Showing posts with label El-P. Show all posts
Showing posts with label El-P. Show all posts

Friday, June 26, 2020

HEAVY TUNES: Records I Listened to The Last Couple Days, as of June 26, 2020

June 21

  1. Deltron 3030, Event 2
  2. Minutemen, Introducing the Minutemen
  3. Bob Dylan, Bringing It All Back Home
  4. Phoebe Bridgers, Stranger in the Alps
  5. Roger Manning, Roger Manning 2

I bought the Roger Manning album in maybe 244, at Green Noise Records in Portland—same day I bought Situationist Comedy, if I remember right—and have always liked it a lot. I think it's a secret precursor to the Mountain Goats, with percussive abused acoustic guitar and a high voice keening a lot of syllables, but I've never seen it cited as an influence.

Today, these lyrics from 1992 seem as prescient and depressingly still relevant as the scene from Do the Right Thing where a cop kills a Black man with a choke hold and a neighborhood responds by chanting the names of other victims of police violence.


walk the pigs once around the park
they're looking for a fight
don't give it to 'em
don't give 'em anything they want
no more donuts, no more pizza
pigs out of odessa
get your asses off the green grass
and while you're at it
eat all of that horseshit

fuck you have a nice day
fuck you have a nice day
fuck you have a nice day
fuck you

and while you're at
quit your stupid wasteful job
so we can hire back some teachers
and feed old folks in the bronx
and keep the pools open
and keep recycling
and all that shit that's being thrown away
so we pay
you to sit on your
stupid
fascist blue butt
in the park
rehearsing for bigger riots to come
in which you'll get your asses kicked severely
...
fuck you have a nice day
fuck you have a nice day
fuck you have a nice day
fuck the pba

June 22

  1. The Paranoid Style, Rolling Disclosure
  2. Funkadelic, Funkadelic
  3. Wand, Plum
    Another one I listened to a LOT last year.
  4. Destroy Boys, Sorry, Mom
    There are people out there still trying to come up with good song titles after Destroy Boys called a song "I Threw Glass At My Friend's Eyes And Now I'm On Probation".
  5. Kowloon Walled City, Grievances
  6. A Giant Dog, Pile
  7. fIREHOSE, flyin' the flannel

June 24

No entry today, as I killed my pen—Bic Crystal, natch—and had to mourn.

June 25

  1. Ted Leo, The Brutalist Bricks
  2. Hot Snakes, Audit In Progress
  3. Future of the Left, The Plot Against Common Sense
  4. Solar Halos, Coiled Light
  5. Deltron 3030, Event 2
  6. El-P, Cancer 4 Cure
  7. Windhand, Eternal Return
  8. Captain Beyond, Captain Beyond

I don't read a lot about music anymore, but I was really enjoying Event 2, so I thought I'd look up its reviews. I saw one that said, in part, "this hip-hop concept album has bad skits and a plot that is obscure and hard to follow", which I found deeply notable, as it seemed to identify a record using genre descriptors, and then be disappointed when the features of the genre—dumb plot on a concept album, bad skits on a hip-hop record—actually showed up on the record. But whatever: bad skits are bad skits, and can be called out, and it's true that Event 2 is maybe a little shaggy, story-wise. The review also claimed, though, that the song "Nobody Can" was unclear. To be clear: the album is about music saving the world, and the chorus is "Deltron is our hero, if he can't do it nobody can". This ... doesn't seem that complicated. But, hey, nobody asks ME to review records, so what the fuck do I know about anything.

June 26 (apparently at some point today it became 1996?)

  1. Russian Circles, Blood Year
  2. The Paranoid Style, Rock and Roll Just Can't Recall
  3. Alice Donut, Mule
  4. Sonic Youth, Washing Machine
  5. Radiohead, OK Computer
  6. Sneaker Pimps, Becoming X

Monday, June 01, 2020

HEAVY TUNES: Records I Listened to Today, June 1, 2020

history lesson -- part II
...what. It's a really good song.

  1. Breeders, Title TK, (2002, 4AD)
    (It took nine years to come up with this?)
  2. Iron Maiden, Seventh Son of a Seventh Son (1988, Capitol)
    There are, I gather, certain amongst us who view this as the finest effort from Maiden. If you encounter such a person, smile and nod, smile and nod. Try to avoid eye contact or showing your back or belly.
  3. fIREHOSE, if'n (1987, SST)
  4. Kate Bush (Top Tracks, Pandora)
    (No frigging "Wuthering Heights", wtf.)
  5. Deltron 3030, Deltron 3030 (2000, 75 Ark)
  6. MF Doom, Operation: Doomsday (1999, Fondle 'Em)
  7. Slade, Rogue's Gallery (1985, RCA)
    One day a bit before high school, I bought this and the Ramones record Leave Home and I don't think anything was really ever the same again. Probably mostly due to the Ramones record, but. But...the giant vocal melodies on the better ones here ("Hey Ho Wish You Well" or "All Join Hands") will stick forever.

Today's theme was escape. But there isn't any escape right now.

Friday's theme was "Get Loud".

  1. Future of the Left, Last Night I Saved Her from Vampires (2009, 4AD)
    My second-favorite live Future of the Left album!
  2. Body Count, Body Count, (1992, Sire)
    Pusillanimous non-"Cop Killer"-having version, unlike the tape I bought at the time.
  3. Public Enemy, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back (1988, Def Jam)
  4. N.W.A., Straight Outta Compton (1988, Ruthless)
  5. El-P, Fantastic Damage (2002, Definitive Jux)
  6. Mike Watt, The Secondman's Middle Stand (2004, Columbia)