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Showing posts with label andrew weatherall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label andrew weatherall. Show all posts

Le Weatherall Remix


June seems to be turning into a Bagging Area Weatherall fest, so I thought I'd chuck this one in. Released as a freebie a few months back through Rcrdlbl, (it doesn't seem to have had any proper physical release) this is Andrew Weatherall's remix of Cliche by The Shoes. The Shoes are a French outfit about whom I know rien. It also features Cock 'n' Bull Kid, who I have heard of. This is a scorcher, with a great big kettle drum stomp, deep backing vox and the dub basslines he's been sticking all over recent remixes. This one is more of a close cousin of the glam rock Trentmoller remix. Vive le Weatherall remix.

Weatherall Mix Roundup 2


More Weatherall mixes, both available to download. They're all over the place at the moment. I'll never have time to listen to them all.

Old school stuff with rapping and quite ravey vocals, Weatherall at KAOS in Leeds, 1991


And recently in Paris



Raise Your Hands If You Think You Understand


While we're in the Weatherall area I thought I'd post this for Friday morning. It popped up on the mp3 player the other day driving to work with the sun shining and sounded really good. Bocca Juniors were the inhouse studio band of the Boys Own collective/magazine/cultural trendsetters/ex-football hooligans. In the studio this amounted to Andrew Weatherall, Terry Farley, Pete Heller, Hugo Nicholson and vocalist Anna Haigh, along with for this record a massive piano sample from Thrashing Doves' Jesus On The Payroll. So, it's got those pianos, well-balearic all-roundness, Anna Haigh's Alastair Crowley quoting lyrics, and a rap in the middle as many good songs had back then.


Weatherall Mix Roundup


I've found a variety of Andrew Weatherall mixes, three recent and one old, which may be of interest to some of you.

Numero Uno- Andrew Weatherall live at Disco Deviant, April 2011, 'two hours of pitched down Balearic psyche disco'. Slightly confusing, it was available to download but only the first 500 and that depended on people following it or something. Idon't think you can download it now but it's there to listen to.


Deux- Weatherall live at the Electron festival in Geneva, 21st of April 2011. This one you can download.


Drei- Lord Sabre live at The Hacienda back in 1993, also there to download in all it's glory. I believe I was there. Or at one very similar.


Four- the wonderful Exile On Moan Street blog, Mona's mix of politics and music, had this one to download back in May which I missed somehow. Audrey live in Lille at Wonky Tonk, 9th of April 2011.


Happy listening.

I Don't Know Why I'm Telling You Any Of This


Continuing the recent Nancy and Lee theme this is Fallen by the much loved and much lamented One Dove. One Dove were Scotland's premier post acid house dub-techno band, featuring the voice of the lovely Dot Allison, also featured recently round these parts. I know Drew will disagree, saying the original Soma version of Fallen is superior, but to my ears this Weatherall version, the Nancy and Lee Mix, is by far the best. Seven or so minutes of bliss.

It's half term in England. We may be off camping for a few days, so if nothing happens here until Friday we're under canvas somewhere. Hopefully dry.

Nineteen




I was going to post something else but given events at Old Trafford this afternoon I'm going to put this up- Two Lone Swordsmen's remix of Throbbing Gristle from 2004. Weatherall and Tenniswood keep the Genesis P. Orridge vocal and give the song a techno twist. The song is called United. Purely coincidental...



Runaway Dub



Bagging Area doesn't know very much at all about Alice Gold. The singles reviewer in The Guardian Guide on Saturday was a bit sniffy about her. Apparently she's twenty-something, plays the guitar, and makes 60s inspired poppy, psychedelic, soul.

Bagging Area knows a bit about Andrew Weatherall and is pleased to inform you his version of Alice Gold's Runaway Love is a just-under-seven-minutes bass heavy remix, full of sundrenched dub and funny noises, and is just what you need this balmy Wednesday evening.

02 - Runaway Love (Andrew Weatherall Remix).mp3

Very Early Audrey


I found this on Youtube earlier today- hey, I'm off work for Easter, what else is there to do? I can't get the clip to embed at the moment so follow the link if you're interested in what claims to be very early Andrew Weatherall. The song, Laughing Soul, has Weatherall fronting a band called The Other Side live at Windsor Arts Centre on September 22nd 1981. The only photo does show a very young Weatherall with a bleached quiff, singing. The audio track gives us Windsor's own version of A Certain Ratio's punk-funk. I remember an interview with Weatherall where he mentioned this band and he claimed there were no surviving tapes. Posted by Pylon King, this is either a surviving recording of Weatherall's first band or a hoax. And frankly who could be bothered to hoax it? Enjoy, Weatherall obsessives. Both of you.


Lord Sabre Day


Today is April the 6th, Andrew Weatherall's birthday. Two Lone Swordsmen's excellent and krauty remix of Fujiya and Miyagi is your present. Blow the candles out and make a wish.


Looks Like We're Shy One Horse


One of the records Weatherall played when warming up for the Screamadelica live show on Sunday night was this- Looks Like We're Shy One Horse by Colourbox, a magnificent piece of electronic dub with an extended and very dubby outro. Sounded even better booming through Primal Scream's PA system. Looks Like... was released as the B-side to Colourbox's 1986 single Baby I Love You So. On the same day they released their Offical Colourbox World Cup Theme single. Colourbox went on to collaborate with A.R. Kane as MARRS and hit the number one spot with the mighty Pump Up The Volume. This is subtler and spacier but no less good.


No-one- that's no-one, not one single soul- has downloaded yesterday's live version of Come Together. This is a Bagging Area first, a completely unwanted track.

12 Looks Like We\'re Shy One Horse.wma

Lie Down Beside You Fill You Full Of Junk


Mediafire have removed Technova's cover of Atmosphere. Bit random isn't it?

One of my brothers, currently working for a large international sportswear corporation in Nuremberg, has got into the habit of sending me a Youtube link every Monday. The only rule seems to be that it has to be connected to Monday. One of his emails prompted me to post the wonderful cover of Blue Monday by The Times several weeks ago. Yesterday I got sent Happy Mondays performing Hallelujah on Top Of The Pops back in 1990. That episode of TOTP has grown in status, which tells us something about pre-internet, pre-satellite TV days (let's face it, no-one I knew had MTV at home). It seemed like a genuine 'stop what you're doing' moment- Happy Mondays and The Stone Roses appearing on the same show, signifying a seachange in tastes and musical and clothing styles. The idea that one pop TV show could have that importance seems very odd now.

The Mondays bit is hilarious. Shaun makes no attempt to pretend he's singing live, lipsynching with the mic held at arms length and clearly slightly worse for wear, Bez doing his saucer eyed Bez thing, and Kirsty MacColl doing backing vocals at the front of the stage. Kirsty dressed down in jeans, denim shirt and Reeboks, the Mondays dressed up. Hallelujah was a chaotic, messy song but brilliant with it, especially the guitar part. When Vini Reilly first came across the Mondays he stomped out, stopping Anthony H Wilson to tell him Horse's guitar playing was hideous and unlistenable, but possibly the most interesting and original guitar playing he'd heard for years. Hallelujah niggles it's way inside your head frazzling brain cells. The rest of the Madchester Rave On e.p. was equally messy and they never really sounded like that again. After Hallelujah they became more streamlined, more radio friendly, and more polished, Steve Osbourne and Paul Oakenfold's production nous ensuring Pills 'n' Thrills was a hit album (and a really good album) but at the expense of the some of lunacy of their sound- six men sounding like they're playing four different songs at the same time, while a drunk shouts and mutters brilliant nonsense over the top.

Hallelujah isn't on the hard drive at the moment and I can't be bothered ripping and uploading so I'm posting the Club Mix, remixed by Paul Oakenfold and our old friend Andrew Weatherall. Weatherall's first time in a studio I think. The Club Mix starts with a high pitched vocal scream, then some lovely monastic chanting before bringing the bass drum well to the fore, some house piano and then pumping up the bassline. Again it loses some of the ramshackle charm of the original but it's a quality remix of a band about to get big.

Hallelujah(Oakenfold & Weatherall).mp3

Don't Walk Away


Technova's electronic cover version of Joy Division's Atmosphere, finding light amongst Joy Division's shade. This is a really good cover, with moments of beauty- lovely synths (showing the direction Bernard Sumner was already heading in 1980), dancey drums, squidgy bass and a blissed out, treated vocal replacing Ian Curtis' sombre baritone. Assuming this Technova is the same Technova who were on Weatherall's Emission Audio Output record label in the mid 90s, then this is the work of David Harrow, who also records as James Hardway. Weatherall and Harrow also recorded together as a fictional female techno artist Deanne Day (D and A, geddit) and Blood Sugar.

Edit 8th March 2011 Post and track removed by Mediafire and Blogger. I've reposted without the track.

Dexter


Time for some more Weatherall I think. This is the Two Lone Swordsmen remix of Ricardo Villalobos' Dexter from 2004. TLS took on the remix but then didn't get the files sent through in time, so did a live remix/reworking using real bass and drums, with Weatherall then doing his sonic knobtwidling. Result? Nearly six minutes of Joy Divisionesque post punk with a melancholic edge. Wonderful stuff.

Dexter_Two_Lone_Swordsmen_Remix_.mp3

Lone Star Psych


Another track by a band featured on Weatherall's 6 Mix show last weekend, this time from The Black Angels, a psych rock band from Texas. They make the kind of 60s influenced dark psych-rock that seems to be part of the birthright of people from Austin , Texas. Maybe they pump it into the water supply over there. The Black Angels released an album last year called Phosphene Dream, which is now on my shopping list.

River_of_Blood.mp3

Cosmic



Another track that's come from Andrew Weatherall's 6 Mix record box (which is where half the new stuff I hear comes from these days). This one is from the show he did last Sunday night. In the last half hour Weatherall played his customary 30 minute disco mix, where we were treated to a Weatherall remix of Alice Gold, his own cover of AR Kane's A Love From Outer Space (original featured here last summer) and his remix of this- Stratus by Pablo. There's almost nothing about Pablo from a cursary internet search other than he's actually called Michael Hunter, is from Glasgow, has released this single through Soma, and it's 'cosmic synth dub disco'. It's very good cosmic synth dub disco too. If anyone knows anything else, please write in, usual address, no prizes though it's just for fun.

Stratus.mp3

Route 1


White Williams is an American artist whose music I first heard when Andrew Weatherall played his first 6 Mix show a few years back. White's record label said the album Smoke is 'unapologetic pop that flirts with the vacuous nostalgia of the American dream; engaging ambiguous and schizophrenic instruments with impressionistic lyrics; driven by a casually heterosexual backbeat'. Got that? A heterosexual backbeat. I assume this is supposed to be 'ironic'.

This song Route To Palm mixes synths with a vaguely rockabilly guitar line and is really rather good. The album also has a decent cover version of I Want Candy. Other than this, I know nothing.

Route_To_Palm.mp3

There's Been A Brainwave At The Radio Station


Two pieces of wireless related news as Bagging Area toys with becoming an online listings service. Andrew Weatherall, featured once or twice round these parts, is in the chair on 6 Mix tonight (Sunday) from 8 until 10. Don't touch that dial.

On Tuesday night Mick Jones is on Radio 2, also from 8 o'clock, with Mark Radcliffe and Stuart Maconie talking about The Clash and Big Audio Dynamite. The original line up of B.A.D. have reformed for a tour this spring to play their still wonderful, groundbreaking first album (Medicine Show, The Bottom Line, and E=MC2 are all firm favourites) and hopefully this 1986 follow up, C'Mon Every Beatbox- a rush of guitars, samples, machine drums and catchy lyrics. B.A.D. play Manchester on Friday April 8th, the day we drive off for a week away. Bugger. I'm currently weighing up Liverpool and Leeds as alternatives.

02 C\'mon Every Beatbox.wma

Bass Can You Hear Me? Loud And Clear


A bit of a lazy post tonight I'm afraid, but the quality of the tune remains top notch. A key early 90s Andrew Weatherall remix for you, Finitribe are given the full-on dancefloor treatment. The 12" of this has four mixes and I've got another two on the hard drive. This is the seven minute plus 101 (Sonic Shuffle) version, to shake your speakers and your tailfeather.

101 (Sonic Shuffle).mp3

Gold Medal


The standout track from Fuck Buttons 2009 album Tarot Sport- Olympians. Ten minutes plus of joyful, melodic, ecstatic, headspinning, roomfilling noise, drums and production courtesy of Andrew Weatherall. If the organisers of London 2012 use this for the opening ceremony it'll be an interesting games. I've sometimes wondered about the band's name- is it just two words jammed together, one being offensive in order to catch the eye? An attempt at being 100% Googleable? Or did they overhear a jacket fastening conversation? 'It's zips for me, I can't handle buttons, fuck buttons'.

Olympians.mp3

Trish Keenan


I've just read on the web that Trish Keenan, vocalist and one half of Broadcast, died on Friday morning following complications with pneumonia arising from swine flu. She was 42. Broadcast have been making highly acclaimed records for Warp since 1997, fusing 60s pop art and modern electronics, 2003's The Ha Ha Sound being a personal favourite (the cd version coming in a lovely hardback book). 2009's Broadcast And The Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults Of The Radio Age was chock full of interesting and arresting moments, retro and futuristic at the same time. This is Two Lone Swordsmen's remix of Come On Let's Go from 2000, one of the first records I bought using the then-newly-fangled-to-me internet mail order system at Warp. RIP Trish Keenan.

cmonletsgo tlsremix.mp3#2#2