Jump to content

Ammagamalin Crew

Forum MVP
  • Posts

    1,971
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    127

Everything posted by Ammagamalin Crew

  1. thus the inception of Gilligan's Island followed by "last fair deal in the country ..."
  2. each small candle lights a corner of the dark
  3. Just announced North American tour July- August. He says he's going to be trying to do more with rock and roll than what's ever been done. He is not one to miss. We got a Saturday show in cincy right before he goes to MSG to close it all out.
  4. Gonna be cranking it thru the 6 channel. Nugs.tv always has great filming. I think this will be much more enjoyable than last weekend's relix broadcast, free, free , free
  5. One of the between set placards during the webcast stated he's been doing 200+ shows for the past 8 years. The whole set had a lot of Old and in the way songs including Jerry's Breakdown and closing the second set with Wild Horses. He took each song out to places they'd never been. All fresh approaches with the first shows of the year. Next Friday's tippitinas show is a free webcast also. Playing in the Band threads through out the show. Lots of dead heads (young and old) in the audience. He's getting to places that used to be "space " at dead shows a lot. Which Zeppelin cover band was it? Hopefully not Zeppelin 2. I've heard good reports of Get The Led Out and zoso was fairly decent. This is the year of Jimmy page 2020=ZOZO
  6. Did anyone else catch that wharf rat tonight?
  7. Free webcast of the capital theater shows Friday and Saturday on relix channel.
  8. how could they not play a High Time in Jamaica? Plus, it must be like Terrapin Station there. Another very wise choice of sets by the band, kinda like the dead were when the machine was running well, each song had meaning to the particular venue they were playing at, esp 6/30/87 Toronto with the scary border check getting to Wonderland (listed as Kingswood theater on relisten , but it was actually called the Wonderland amphitheater)
  9. 2/17/79 Oakland Coliseum #1 GSET Don't Ease Mama Tried> Mexicali FOTD Passenger High Time LL Rain Jack A Roe Lazy> Supp #2 Might as Well Miracle> Bertha Good Lovin From the Heart of Me Big RR blues Terrapin> Playing> D/S> Wheel> Shakedown Street> Playing> Sugar Magnolia Encore: OMSN
  10. Billy Strings tour closer at the Vogue June 29 where he dropped a meet me at the creek as a second encore (unfortunately I missed DSO in cincy that night) The Who at Deercreek, noticeably better than the 2017 Louisville show. Emmylou Harris at the symphony hall in Atlanta on a beautiful sunny Sunday in November, we got a "home sweet home" Del Mccoury Band at the Dayton art Institute November 22nd Star Wars The Rise of Skywalker opening night The Comet Bluegrass Allstars, also in November when Ed Cunningham pulled off a stunning rendition of The Wreck of The Edmund Fitzgerald (if you've ever tried to memorize this song, you can appreciate the magic)
  11. Wow, just like that we get to watch the show! Thank you! unbelievable compared to what it took to get a video of a show back in the 80's and 90's.
  12. The cover art to Flesh And Machine – the new album by gifted musician, renowned producer and ambient pioneer Daniel Lanois – contains a curious image: a baby with cybernetic antennae. The child represents Lanois himself. He explains: "The cover shows a boy who is looking for something that's never been heard before. He's my little seeker, he represents the bit of me that's always in the laboratory experimenting, looking for new sounds and sensations." But the image is apt in another way. Flesh And Machine, his third album for ANTI–, represents nothing short of a total artistic rebirth. Lanois has been involved in playing, recording and producing music for four decades now. In that time he helped push the ambient genre forward into celestial new territory as Brian Eno's foremost protégé; he has recorded landmark albums for U2 and Peter Gabriel and has helped to revitalize the sonic dimensions of Bob Dylan and Neil Young. But this marks the first time he has truly deployed every sonic weapon in his arsenal and attempted to break virgin ground in support of his own music. Lanois has a refreshingly optimistic attitude toward his craft and the creative potential it still holds: "I'm always heading for the future and I'm always hoping I'm going to find the next dimension of sound. It's my job to raise the spirit of sound. I've been able to do it a number of times in the past on other people's records. Well, it's still my job today to raise that spirit of sound and I'd like to think that I've done it on this record." Flesh And Machine was initially conceived as an ambient album, and tracks such as 'Forest City' take the classic Brian Eno albums that he worked on ("Ambient 4: On Land" (1982) and "Apollo: Atmospheres And Soundtracks"(1983) as a wonderful bedrock to stand on to see the sonic future. His guitar is processed to the point where it is no longer possible to tell what the source instrument is. The album bristles with new ideas. The softly spoken Canadian spent countless hours processing an array of source sounds – steel and electric guitars, piano and human voice – to create the sound palette that is Flesh And Machine. Talking about the track 'Sioux Lookout' he says: "It is meant to be a native chant or a cry for all living things. I wanted to mix the sound of humans with the sound of animals. But they're not animal sounds really – I've created all of these sounds myself but that's kind of my aim, you can't actually tell where these sounds came from. I got to this place of mysterious sounds and invented a new sonic language." He continues: "The track 'Two Bushas' is very symphonic and it almost sounds like someone is conducting it but the tones and textures can't be pinpointed. You wouldn't say, 'Oh, yeah, that's a flute and that's a cello.' The result is a symphonic one and it appeals to that part of us that responds to orchestral music but with sounds we're not used to hearing. On a good day, if I'm feeling big–headed, I like to think that I'm taking symphonics to the future." One of the many standout tracks on the record is called simply 'The End' and is supposed to represent "a final protest song, the closing of a chapter or the burning down of an edifice and the rising of a phoenix. It's hellfire, avalanche, collapse and tsunami: The End essentially!" He continues: "If you're expecting nothing but ambient music you'll be surprised... 'The End' is not meant to be peaceful and textural by any means. I think it has a lot of rebellion in it. I'm on guitar and Brian Blade is on drums and then everything else is processing. Brian and I have played together for a long time. Years ago I was taking a walk in New Orleans with Iggy Pop and we heard this amazing drumming coming out of this cafe. So we went inside and there he was... young Brian Blade ripping it up on the drums. And I've been working with him ever since; he's one of the greatest human beings I know." The stunning polyphony and cascades of ultra–pointilistic sound on this track all come from two humble sources: guitar and drums which are then sampled, sliver by tiny sliver, processed and placed carefully back into the track. All of these countless samples, no matter how radically they are changed, have to be placed back into their surroundings in a harmonically correct manner, so his process is not only highly technical but compositionally very astute as well. His method is so dazzling in places that sometimes sounds as if Burial, Amon Tobin, Prefuse 73 or Four Tet were producing a modern fusion LP. However, these effects were achieved by a personal evolution which was perhaps in some ways parallel but far, far removed as Lanois is blissfully unaware of who any of these producers are... He playfully doffs his cap to both his mentor Brian Eno and the intensely productive period they worked together in the 1980s on the track 'My First Love'. Keen–eared listeners might recognize the beautiful celestial tone on the track: "I used the same Suzuki Omnichord on 'My First Love' as we used on 'Deep Blue Day' – the track from "Apollo..."which was used in "Trainspotting" during the infamous toilet bowl scene..." Talking about what he learned from Eno he says: "Above any particular technique, I learned to be devoted to a direction. And I made a pact to myself after working with him that I would never do anything musically that I didn't want to do again – which was a real turning point for me." This spirit of artistic restlessness is something that he still feels fully today, some thirty years later. He has already prepared songs from Flesh And Machine to be performed live by a trio including himself, where both the playing of instruments and the sampling, dubbing and processing will happen in real time on stage: Our crescendos and our risings very much belong to the night, never to be played the same way again." Daniel Lanois is still raising that spirit of music and still opening up doors to the unknown.
  13. Daniel Lanois is playing 5/5/20 in Sacramento, 5/7 at the Alladin in Portland, 5/8 The Neptune in Seattle and then Great American Music Hall in SF on Monday May 11th, $25.00. If you can, get in for these
  14. 2.2.68 Portland's got a terrific viola Lee. Crediting Rob Eaton giving the reels to Charlie Miller. Crispy critters you all will be
  15. Thread drift, this list seems canned. I'm sure Hunter would have Ship of Fools up there
  16. 84 was the last NYE they broadcasted on NPR. Used to love getting done with celebrations and then heading over to my deadhead friend's apt for the 1:30am start here in the midwest
  17. Were sitting around a crystal ball one says to the other "Ah, ah I see a family in your future".
  18. Any Intell ,st Stephen, from the first set of tonight's Mars hotel show tonight at cc? second set, I'd imagine, to have the controls set for the heart of the sun
  19. I'm tall; however, I'm super conscientious about who is around me and make sure I'm not obstructing someone's experience. If standing it's easy to slip into another space to open up for those behind me.
  20. Really grate camera work, as usual for nugs. Billy seems very happy, which is good for the universe. Looks like the Denver crowd is as laid back as usual. Ogden is a wonderful theater. Hope you all are tuned in, feels like something special is coming up. Well rested crew members guiding the repertoire
  21. Free webstream of tonight's Ogden theater show on nugs.net. thanks to cash or trade
  22. Kinda had a feeling Scarlet Fire was due. The first set had the cowboy songs and usual suspects in it. Wish we would have stayed for what appeared in the second. I generally don't leave until after 1am.
×
×
  • Create New...