Monday, December 19, 2005

Song of the Day




So rumor has it Phish will return next fall 2006. Let's hope they can maybe practice and stay off drugs. Here's a kickass weekapaug from 12.31.95 back when they remembered words/music and were seemingly flawless. Could it ever be this good again?

The pic above I took from my seat at lakewood 2003.


"Weekapaug Groove" aiff, Phish 12/31/95

**The "aiff" is compatible with iTunes

Thursday, December 15, 2005

Morgan Geist- "Unclassics" (2004)




"Go On And Do It" mp3, Victor

This disc is amazing! The review from stylus magazine below couldn't sum it up any better. Check out the track above as well...


If the name Pierre Perpall doesn’t ring a bell, don’t be alarmed. Lacking any recognition outside disco-electro junkie circles, Perpall is a virtual unknown even to the most comprehensive music guides—in essence, Perpall has been all but forgotten. But not for much longer. With his new mix-cd, Environ label owner and Metro Area superstar Morgan Geist has reissued a collection of lost synth-pop, italo-disco and electro funk under the title of Unclassics. Eight months after releasing the last of three eye-opening Unclassic singles, this LP compilation lives up to all the sonic mayhem and also reveals how Geist’s work with Metro Area branches out from these lost classics.

Pierre Perpall (more commonly known as Purple Flash) is a great starting point for this compilation. As a Canadian whose mini Disco hit “We Can Make It” was a couple years (and time zones) too late to be more popular, Unclassics gives the song’s shimmering exterior and the varied percussion new life. The sleek synths of “We Can Make It” straddle the strange and subtle line between too-sweet r’n’b and unnerving melancholy. Perpall’s other contribution to Unclassics is production work on the rare italo-electro cut, Pluton and Humanoids’ “World Invaders.” Although the original 12” can be found on e-bay selling for hundreds of dollars, “World Invaders” is one of the undeniable centerpieces to Unclassics. The song sounds like a fleet of androids racing and screaming toward the future, underpinned by a churning disco beat.

Although these songs are not perfect, there’s a certain sense of playfulness that is all too accurately described by the title “unclassic”. This is a collection of songs that haven’t been held to the scrutiny of canonization and therein sound refreshingly sweet—not hindered down by their own importance. Alexander Robotnick, for instance, was last found on the excellent Italo-Electro-Disco collection I-Robots released earlier this year, but his contribution to Victor’s “Go On Do It” finds a song that is both cheeky with the tale of a guy “looking for a woman with tits and ass” and has an uncanny 80s pop sensibility that probably has Richard X eying from afar, muted electronic cowbells and all. Such flourishes and catchiness litter the mix, from Margueritas’ “Margeherita (Hot Edit)”’s mariachi horn section and cartoonish one-finger synth line to Gaz Nevada’s “Special Agent Man (Female Version)” surreal lyrics and dub feel. In a lot of ways, this sounds like a mix-CD made for the closet-popist—excessive, but nonetheless overwhelmingly charming.

Disco’s untimely demise swept these songs to the wayside, but when brought together as a compilation, Geist reveals how much is left to be uncovered. A summation of a few years of Geist’s obsessive record-digging, Unclassics feels like a beginning for any other producer or DJ to start the process of reclaiming the lost classics of a genre that is nowadays largely ignored.

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

Velvet Pants Vol. 1-- The Big Snow




I had a few different ideas for my Xmas gift Velvet Pants style. I wanted to throw together something that was holiday compatible yet a notch up from festive. At first, I was going to throw together all Christmas related tracks and set aside genre, etc. That didn't work out so basically what I've put together is 12 tracks that are compatible with any holiday related function, social or non-social. Although not 100% x-mas oriented, this disc works well turned up real loud or down real low. Please send me your address at wes.whitten@gmail.com and I'll drop it in the mail before the ice melts. Merry Chrimakwanzikah.

Here's the track listing:

1. La Femme D’argent-Air
2. Dust- Recloose (feat. Joe Dukie)
3. The Joker (feat. Bootsy)-Fatboy Slim
4. Multiply- Jamie Lidell
5. Emergency on Planet Earth-Jamiroquai
6. Business before Pleasure-Group Sounds
7. Try it Out- Gino Soccio
8. Action Tape 1- NOM (Aim Madscope Mix)
9. Missing- Beck
10. Cachaca- Soulive
11. In My Arms- Mylo
12. My Favorite Things- Andre 3000


~WW

Saturday, December 03, 2005

Best Touring Band Ever



Ahh, let's see where to start with this band. Throughout my personal evolution of musical interests, I can't deny that I spent a large part of my time dedicated to enjoying (and following) Phish. I don't listen to them really at all now which is probably the result of lackluster performances for the entire year of 2004 and realizing how downhill their music went after they came back from hiatus (with the exception of a few here and there), not to mention there's toonnnns of music out there to be heard. In addition, it seemed crowds were getting worse and worse, and it became more of a drug infested wook party and less and less about the music. After reading the recent interview with Trey regarding the crowds/scene, drugs infiltrated the stage as well (apparently hard core since 98) and maybe that's why they threw in the towel. The 04' Vegas shows were all terrible. Stories I heard of trey being carried out at 7am in the Mandalay Bay lobby due to excess heroin may as well be the best excuse for any rock musician. "I was too fucked up". Trey is sober now and is loving life once again on his solo pedestal orchestrating anything he wants while weeping morons lap it all up. As Phish created the 'jamband' scene, it also seems they have layed it to rest. I mean let's be honest, the only reason most jambands were started were to land a gig at an after-show on some random Phish tour and be known as 'the band like phish'. Of course I guess noodling wooks have to follow someone around the country and sell grilled cheeses, so you could pick moe., widespread panic, string cheese, phil lesh, or any similar psychadelic option. They are all the same! However jaded the scene and music may have gotten (along with my current opinion), I won't deny that I have had some of the best times and seen different parts of the country all only for one reason.

~WW


PS-- My apologies for lack of posts, but stay tuned. I'm also planning on throwing together some sort of X-mas mix to send out as my gift to the world...