SOUNDTRACK: THERAPY?: Music Through a Cheap Transistor: The BBC Sessions (2007).
I enjoy the title of this disc quite a bit. Fortunately, I also enjoy the music quite a bit. This is a collection of BBC recordings from Therapy?
It’s a strange collection in that they recorded songs on five separate occasions and yet there is a lot of duplication of tracks (the liner notes deal with this issue).
John Peel Sessions (and there’s much made in the liner notes about the fact that they thought they’d be meeting Peel himself when they went in, when in fact it was just a random engineer) are essentially live recordings done in the studio. They tend to be slightly more experimental (done after a band has toured and messed around with the songs some) and for some bands (like Therapy?) they tend to be more raucous.
This collection was recorded from 1991-1995 with a final show in 1998. Obviously the band isn’t thinking about the future CD release of the sessions when they recorded these sessions, so it probably didn’t seem strange to record “Totally Random Man” 3 times. But it does seem strange to listen to it like that.
The songs are definitely rawer than the studio versions. Even their more poppy tracks from 1998 are a bit harsher. However, their first EPs were really raw, so these songs sound much better (much cleaner). They also include a lot of fun/weird unreleased tracks and covers.
My only complaint is that neither version of “Teethgrinder” features that awesome drum sound that is my favorite part of the track. Otherwise, it’s a great collection.
[READ: June 1, 2010] Lost in the Funhouse
I checked out this book so I could read the title story. I enjoyed that one quite a bit so I decided to read the whole collection. The Author’s Note says, “while some of these pieces were composed expressly for print, others were not. For instance: “‘Glossolalia” will make no sense unless heard in live or recorded voices, male and female, or read as if so heard.” Um, yeah.
The first story: “Frame-Tale” consists entirely of this: “Cut on dotted line, twist end once and fasten AB to ab, CD to cd.” The cut part is a strip of paper that reads: “Once Upon a Time There/Was a Story That Began.” It’s cute.
The next story, “Night-Sea Journey” is a proper story of a night sea journey. The secret to the story is gradually revealed, and is rather amusing. (more…)










SOUNDTRACK: THE DECEMBERISTS-“The Mariner’s Revenge Song” (2005).
This was the hardest week for music tied to Moby-Dick. (I’m saving Mastodon for the grand finale). I don’t really have anything that relates directly to the book. I have a number of nautical-themed songs, but very little in the way of albums. And, it’s true that this song doesn’t have anything to do with Moby-Dick directly.
The Decemberists are one of your more nautical bands (and I’ve reviewed all of the albums here somewhere). Their first album, Castaways and Cutouts featured an album cover with a ship with ghosts drifting from it.
SOUNDTRACK: TEENAGE HEAD-“Picture My Face” (1979).
Teenage Head is a punk band in the vein of The Ramones. If I were younger I probably would have enjoyed this song more. Not because it’s a punk song (and I’m old) but because it’s so derivative of just about every Ramones-inspired punk song I can think of.
SOUNDTRACK: MOBY GRAPE-Moby Grape (1967).
Moby Grape is one of those bands that I’ve always heard of but had never heard. I know, their debut is 43 years old and yet I’d never heard it. Well, thanks to the internet (lala.com, RIP as of today), I was able to listen to what I assumed was their Greatest Hits. If only I had done a modicum of research. The disc I chose was Legendary Grape, which it turns out is not a greatest hits at all, but is actually some weird pesudo-Moby Grape record released in 1989 under a different band name due to legal protractions, but then reissued as Moby Grape. It was rather uninspired and nothing at all what I thought it would sound like. Nothing dreadful, just nothing worth thinking that this band “legendary.”
So, with a little research, I learned that their first album is what I should have been checking out. Moby Grape is the eponymous release and it sounds much more like what I assumed this psychedelic era-band would sound like. This disc is pretty much in keeping with what a band that produced an album cover like this would sound like.
SOUNDTRACK: THE BEATLES-Help! (1965).
At last, a Beatles album that I knew from start to finish. And here it is, another soundtrack album. This disc is the first that starts to really embrace the diversity that The Beatles were capable of.