Uncategorized

https://open.spotify.com/track/1b8tEYUKCYZJSDn4r1Vgz3?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio

Not sure I’d have thunk it, but THE GORIES, on the basis of evidence presented on the “Shaw Tapes – Live in Detroit 5/27/88”, were already a smoking live band by mid-1988. I interviewed them for my old fanzine in 1991, and they belittled themselves and their early days as being crude and drunkenly inept. Not so – and this live record is a great one, as live records go.

Uncategorized
http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/125141295/stream?client_id=3cQaPshpEeLqMsNFAUw1Q?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio

Reposting this one in case you missed it on Monday….

New show, recorded on a laptop on our day off from work, instead of enjoying the sunshine and outdoor large-motor skill activities. I’ve got new stuff for you: HOUSEHOLD’s new EP, for instance – or one song from it. Just came out. We’re on it! Other new things include stuff from Dreamsalon, Bikes, Veronica Falls, The Nots, Ausmuteants, Roachclip, The Clits and other bands with classy and tasteful names. Older items include sun-defying tracks from the likes of Shoes This High, Crime and XYX. The more I type about it the more I realize what a monster hour-long thing this is. You’d better get started!!

Download Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #27.
Subscribe to the show via iTunes.

Track listing:

AUSMUTEANTS – Daylight Robbery
HOUSEHOLD – Out of Reach
THE CLITS – Zoo Song
XYX – Pan de Muerto
CRASH NORMAL – Moon Food
SHOES THIS HIGH – A Mess
ROACHCLIP – Appearing Ill
THE SHITTY LIMITS – Medication Time
SPIDER – Boozetown
THE NOTS – Dust Red
THE SLEAZE – Weird Truck
CRIME – Hot Wire My Heart (alternate version)
DREAMSALON – Now You Tell Me
SEX TIDE – Never Get To You
SPRAY PAINT – I Need A Bag
STEEL WOOL – Devil’s Night
PAMPERS – T.H.T.F.
BIKES – Ocean Penis
TALULAH GOSH – Spearmint Head
VERONICA FALLS – Need You Around
VENOM P. STINGER – Walking About

Past Shows:
Dynamite Hemorrhage #26    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #25    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #24    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #23    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #22    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #21    (playlist) 

Uncategorized

Such an amazing performance. This is part of the new hour-long Fahey documentary film that’s making the rounds. The film was up on YouTube illegally for one day, but I didn’t get to it in time. DVDs are available right here.

internationalsadhits:

John Fahey performing “The Red Pony” for Guitar Guitar, an instructional show on San Francisco public television, 1969. Fahey had been invited to demonstrate his “American primitive” technique. At the end he helpfully explains that the last chord in the song is lifted from Gustav Holst’s The Planets.

The Fahey Files list three titles for this same tune:

  • The Red Pony – Wine and Roses – The Approaching of the Disco Void

“Wine & Roses is a graceful minor melody learned by Fahey from an old Indian he met while visiting the Mississippi Monner Monument Coffee and Gift Shop in West Heliotrope, Maryland. He was given to understand that the song was an anthem used by the Indians in their heroic struggle on Capitol Hill in the early 1930’s against the political entrenchment of the brief alliance of the Episcopal Ministry with Captain Marvel and the Mole Men.” – from the liner notes by “Elijah P. Lovejoy” for the first recording of the song, on the LP The Dance of Death and Other Plantation Favorites,1964. The Rev. Lovejoy also includes a footnote: “‘Wine and Roses’ is mistitled, it is actually ‘The Red Pony.’”

“According to Fahey, swinging soundtrack composer Henry Mancini deserves a nod for inspiration for the opening ‘Wine and Roses,’ a moody minor-key testament to the powers of syncopation. After hearing Mancini’s ‘Days of Wine and Roses’ on the radio, Fahey tried to play it from memory later and came up with this tune, which he later retitled ‘The Red Pony.’” – from Lee Gardner’s liner notes to the CD reissue of The Dance of Death, 1999

“I made an orchestra out of the guitar. It was immediately available to me, from Sears and Roebuck… I bought one but employed no teachers. I could tolerate none, nor they me. Would that there had been a wise and quick teacher – one who knew more than the music on the page, on the radio, in the concert hall – one who knew the music of men and women. Perhaps he could have taught me about that instead. I would prefer that it would have been that way. But there was no teacher like that around. So I taught myself all these things, and now I must play.” – from Fahey’s liner notes to the LP Requia, 1967

“John Fahey went insane in 1964 and died shortly thereafter. He spoke to me in his last minutes on his dying bed and said: ‘Take down my old guitar and smash it against the wall so I can die easy.’ I did so and he passed away with a chthonic smile on his face.” – from the liner notes by “Chester Petranick” for the LP Blind Joe Death, 1964.

There’s another well documented version of the tune, as “Wine and Roses,” from the German television show Rockpalast, 1978.

And here it is introduced by, “Now it’s time to go into the Void!” at the Varsity Theater in Palo Alto, 1981.

“A good piece, but I don’t play this anymore. I don’t know how you write a song that you later find is too frightening to play, but I did. I don’t like to hear it, it’s scary. Open D minor tuning, D-A-D-F-A-D.” – Fahey on “The Approaching of the Disco Void”, as quoted by the Fahey Files in their documents for the album Live in Tasmania, 1981. The Files also note that, “Some Fahey scholars suggest this track may not, actually, be Fahey at all.”

Uncategorized

Though it might not always be clear, we’re huge VASHTI BUNYAN fans here at Dynamite Hemorrhage. I’ve been listening this week to the 2xCD they put out a few years ago of her early tapes and 45s – “Some Things Just Stick In Your Mind” – and while I’m far more partial to the aching, cracked folk songs that were simply Vashti and her guitar, I like the songs that came out of the brief attempt to make her into a pop star as well.

Just check out how uncomfortable she is in that role on this clip from mid-1960s British TV. She subsequently moved to a faraway island off the coast and pursued her loner folk vision, free of the trappings of potential stardom. Mission accomplished. If you’ve never heard “Just Another Diamond Day” – run, don’t walk, as they say.

Uncategorized
http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/125141295/stream?client_id=3cQaPshpEeLqMsNFAUw1Q?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio

New show, recorded on a laptop on our day off from work, instead of enjoying the sunshine and outdoor large-motor skill activities. I’ve got new stuff for you: HOUSEHOLD’s new EP, for instance – or one song from it. Just came out. We’re on it! Other new things include stuff from Dreamsalon, Bikes, Veronica Falls, The Nots, Ausmuteants, Roachclip, The Clits and other bands with classy and tasteful names. Older items include sun-defying tracks from the likes of Shoes This High, Crime and XYX. The more I type about it the more I realize what a monster hour-long thing this is. You’d better get started!!

Download Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #27.
Subscribe to the show via iTunes.

Track listing:
AUSMUTEANTS – Daylight Robbery
HOUSEHOLD – Out of Reach
THE CLITS – Zoo Song
XYX – Pan de Muerto
CRASH NORMAL – Moon Food
SHOES THIS HIGH – A Mess
ROACHCLIP – Appearing Ill
THE SHITTY LIMITS – Medication Time
SPIDER – Boozetown
THE NOTS – Dust Red
THE SLEAZE – Weird Truck
CRIME – Hot Wire My Heart (alternate version)
DREAMSALON – Now You Tell Me
SEX TIDE – Never Get To You
SPRAY PAINT – I Need A Bag
STEEL WOOL – Devil’s Night
PAMPERS – T.H.T.F.
BIKES – Ocean Penis
TALULAH GOSH – Spearmint Head
VERONICA FALLS – Need You Around
VENOM P. STINGER – Walking About

Past Shows:
Dynamite Hemorrhage #26    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #25    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #24    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #23    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #22    (playlist) 
Dynamite Hemorrhage #21    (playlist) 

Uncategorized

fuckinrecordreviews:

SUPERDOPE #5 1993 (no page #)

AGUATURBIA review by JAY HINMAN, Editor

  • There was this point in 1992 where the incipient Forced Exposure catalogue tilted toward gonzo psych obscurities, about four years before the website and prior to Jimmy’s conversion to outré 808 digitalis. Jay references this early turn in the header above. 
  • Aguaturbia  were easily one of the more exciting early rediscoveries of the era for former B.A.L.L. fans. As we all know, the late 6Ts/early 7Ts period has been mined quite extensively during the past twenty years, and much has been offered up in exhaustive legit reissue digit/vinyl formats. Our 1992 heads would swoon. 
  • What has Jay Hinman said about Superdope #5 since he published Superdope #5? From 2/24/11: “Finally, I find way more to cringe about in this issue than even in the earlier ones. I was getting cocky, with a fanzine that (a few dozen) people actually liked, and started writing a little over my head. I was just 25 years old, but should have known far better than to start cracking so many BANANAFISH-like dumbass in-jokes that I don’t even understand to this day. My credo at the time appeared to be, “If this line will make my friend Brett (or Doug, or Steve, or Grady, or Mitch, or whomever) laugh, then I’ll put it in there”. Other fanzines seemed to employ this trick, and perhaps at the time I thought it helped cultivate an air of mystery – like something I might want to get in on – but there are things in this one that would have made me just put the thing down and call the editor an insufferable bore. But it was a blast at the time, and perhaps you’ll like it better than I do.”
  • We L-U-V it!

Look out, Dynamite Hemorrhage is destroying the ecosphere and coming to a toilet seat near you. DECEMBER 2013!

…and lovers of intense fanzine dorkery and great writing should know that Fuckin’ Record Reviews contributed an excellent piece to our upcoming fanzine.

Uncategorized

Advertisement taken from our new fanzine, which I’m happy to report I just completed layout on about 20 minutes ago. It goes to the printer next week, and will be available the final week of December.

68 pages; 5 interviews; 1 big piece on 80s-90s fanzines; 60+ record reviews; 15 pages of book reviews – and more. Watch this space.

Uncategorized

Single of the Week: Nots – self-titled (Goner)

I’m a big fan of this record as well. There are some vocal histrionics you need to get comfortable with – and I’m quite comfortable – and the music is a wild ride of garage punk & panic pop. Another aces review from Dynamite Hemorrhage fanzine contributing editor Erika Elizabeth.

Single of the Week: Nots – self-titled (Goner)