Showing posts with label logs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label logs. Show all posts

Sunday 23 July 2017

Log #43 - Inform, Educate and Entertain

Eddy Bamyasi


1. Ravi Shankar - Towards the Rising Sun
2. Jill Scott - Who is Jill Scott?
3. The Whitest Boy Alive - Dreams
4. Public Service Broadcasting - Inform, Educate, Entertain
5. Funk Soul Brothers - Compilation
6. Beatles - The Red Album

Just the one new entry this week, at No. 4, with the unique and eccentric Public Service Broadcasting and their full length debut album Inform, Educate and Entertain - the mission of both the band no doubt, and the original "public service broadcasting" introduced by the publicly funded BBC in the 50s. To gain the full value of the PSB tracks I urge you to check out their Youtube videos which often feature original black and white footage and plumby voiceovers. Here's a great one from this album>> https://www.rllmukforum.com/index.php?/topic/271039-public-service-broadcasting/

Sunday 16 July 2017

Log #42 - Who is Jill Scott, Anyway?

Eddy Bamyasi

...an American singer-songwriter, model, poet and actress. Her Who Is Jill Scott? Words and Sounds Vol. 1 was her debut album released in 2000.

1. Ravi Shankar - Towards the Rising Sun
2. Jill Scott - Who is Jill Scott?
3. The Whitest Boy Alive - Dreams
4. Radiohead - Best Of
5. Funk Soul Brothers - Compilation
6. Beatles - The Red Album

Sunday 9 July 2017

Log #41 - Funk Soul Brothers

Eddy Bamyasi


1. Ravi Shankar & Friends - Towards the Rising Sun
2. David Bowie - Black Star
3. The Whitest Boy Alive - Dreams
4. Radiohead - Best Of
5. Funk Soul Brothers - Compilation
6. Beatles - The Red Album

Sunday 2 July 2017

Log #40 - Ravi Shankar

Eddy Bamyasi


1. Ravi Shankar & Friends - Towards the Rising Sun
2. David Bowie - Black Star
3. The Whitest Boy Alive - Dreams
4. Radiohead - Best Of
5. Talk Talk - Spirit of Eden
6. Led Zeppelin - III

Sunday 25 June 2017

Log #39 - A Rediscovery of Radiohead

Eddy Bamyasi


1. Matthew E White - Fresh Blood
2. David Bowie - Black Star
3. The Whitest Boy Alive - Dreams
4. Radiohead - Best Of
5. Talk Talk - Spirit of Eden
6. Led Zeppelin - III

A rediscovery of Radiohead this week on account of their televised set at Glastonbury. I haven't heard them since the much acclaimed OK Computer which I didn't like much actually, but the set at Glastonbury showed they have matured very nicely over the years although I still struggle with Thom Yorke's very depressing wail.

Cover shot is from Matthew E White's second album with fave track Rock N Roll is Cold. He is appearing locally in a few months and a few months ago I would have jumped at the opportunity but having committed too early to a few recent gigs which have turned out to be slightly disappointing (Gilles Peterson, The Orb, Arbouretum) I'm keeping my powder dry.

Sunday 18 June 2017

Log #38 - Talk Talk - From Popstars to Jazz Proggers

Eddy Bamyasi



1. Matthew E White - Fresh Blood
2. Kings of Convenience - Quiet is the New Loud
3. The Whitest Boy Alive - Dreams
4. The Whitest Boy Alive - Rules
5. Talk Talk - Spirit of Eden
6. Gorillaz - Plastic Beach

Talk Talk did a sudden about turn with this album rather like David Sylvian did after leaving Japan, or Spinal Tap in their jazz fusion period! Having been Top of the Pops fodder in the early 80s this departure to an album of extended largely instrumental progressive jazz pieces was the last thing fans were expecting... and it's rather gorgeous!


Sunday 11 June 2017

Log #37 - Kraftwerk in Brighton!

Eddy Bamyasi

Kraftwerk returned to Brighton this week for the first time in 36 years. Playing at the Brighton Centre the "group" "played" a crowd pleasing set of greatest hits from Computer World, Man Machine, Electric Cafe, Tour De France, Radioactivity, Tran-Europe Express, and of course Autobahn - the original 1974 album that really announced their arrival.

Kraftwerk land in Brighton

So what of this? Well a number of things spring to mind...

It was an event! The "event of the season" as Buffalo Springfield once said? Possibly, although here in Brighton we are spoilt with many events. Kraftwerk concerts (and appearances of any sort) have been rare over their career although recently with their 3D tours and residences at various art galleries they have become a little more common place perhaps diluting the significance. It is still super hard to get a ticket though. I had failed a number of times before securing a side circle seat for this event.

Kraftwerk are one of those groups universally admired, not just for their music, but for their influence. In this way they are a bit of a sacred cow, immune to criticism. Listening back to the music they created in the 70s it really is remarkable - so different to anything else at the time and, although it is a cliche, still sounds as if it could have been produced yesterday. I was at school at the time and although the first pop synthesizer bands were starting to emerge in the wake of pioneers like Kraftwerk my interests remained firmly rooted in rock music. I didn't get these new synthesizer bands (Depeche Mode, OMD, Gary Numan etc) or Kraftwerk at all. But oddly Kraftwerk were one of the few electronic bands that many rock fans did like. Apparently it was not uncommon to see fans in denim jackets with Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin patches at Kraftwerk concerts. Apparently they were really loud too...

...which is why I was surprised that the music was quiet at the beginning as the house lights dimmed and neon green numerals danced across the backdrop and the band started with three numbers from Computer World. It was almost like it was still the background house music.  Later on people started shouting out that it was too quiet and amazingly someone must have heard as the volume was turned up from Radioactivity onwards.

Having got a seat to the side (it is a case of first come first served with seat selection on the internet for such a popular event) I was also wary of the effectiveness of the 3D. As a green number 4 launched towards my head at the start these fears were allayed. The crowd cheered. Later on a satellite floated above me during Spacelab from Man Machine (one of the musical and visual highlights). A UFO hovered in front of the i360 and the Brighton Centre before moving off to the Pavilion - nice local touch. More cheering.

However I continued to wonder if the 3D graphics would have been more impressive or evident from front on. I think probably not as I did have a look on my way to a bathroom break. Also, surely, they would have checked these things, and there were many seats much more to the side than mine.

Boom! Boing! Tschak!

I say "played" but that's a relative term. The four musicians (they are no doubt consummate musicians, not just technicians, having written the music at least in the case of original member Ralf Hutter, even if it is debatable how difficult it is to "play" it on computers) stood mostly motionless behind four stands and you could not see what they were doing from my angle. But their arms were moving up and down (punching some drum pads and things) or from side to side (keyboards), and Hutter (far right) was "singing" (speaking) in German and heavily accented English into a head mic. The screen helpfully showed the words to many of the "songs".

The Man Machine robots play to a full house at The Brighton Centre

At the start of the extended "encore" the real musicians were replaced by the famous Kraftwerk robots from Man Machine and "played" Robots. Humourously one of the robots wouldn't move at first. Eventually his arms rose - more crowd cheering. At the end the robots were unceremoniously pulled off stage by crew. This could have been more slick - for instance I did think the robots could have done a bit more visually although their virtual playing was exemplary. The humans returned and finished off, leaving the stage one at a time to tumultuous acclaim.

One frustration I find with a lot of concerts, especially ones like this, is the insistence on seating only. Although there are great visuals to watch, it's not a classical concert. Standing (and dancing) would have been much more exciting - I know the band are too big for such a venue but a Kraftwerk DJ set at the Concorde2 for instance would be immense! Health and safety is important of course, and in the circumstances the increased airport-like security on the door was welcome, but I do get a bit annoyed when the bouncers ask you to return to your seat if you go walkabout. Some brave souls did dance a bit in the aisles before the inevitable.

Over 2 hours of Musique Non Stop

But what of those tunes? They are all very familiar. I don't have all the Kraftwerk albums but reckon I recognised 90% of the set list. The music is simple yet perfect  - chunky repetitive bass lines and hypnotic drum beats overlaid with catchy 4 bar melodies. The tracks played live were respectful to the originals - perhaps slightly beefed up in places more akin to the remixes in The Mix album. The more recent (still old but relatively recent in Kraftwerk years) tracks from Tour De France and Electric Cafe (or Techno Pop as it is now renamed) sounding particularly current. Autobahn was the slightly edited version which appears on that album - the opening car door slam and horn receiving one of the loudest cheers of the night. Greatest hit The Model was welcomed with glee and accompanied by the original black and white video - Hutter's voice equal to the original single which strangely was officially only the B side to a track from Computer World not released until 1982. Pete Paphides explains -
Though it originally appeared on 1978's The Man Machine, The Model made more sense in a pop scene reconfigured by a rouge-streaked generation of androgynes who paid as much attention to the mask as to the emotions that it sought to conceal. In the world of Spandau Ballet, Gary Numan, Duran Duran, Visage and Scary Monsters-era Bowie, some people called themselves futurists; others preferred the term New Romantic. In terms of sound and subject, The Model was the exact point where the two intersected.
Kraftwerk at the time were a secret known only to the cool kids at school. The Model became a no.1 hit and blew that cover.


My choice from Kraftwerk this week is the Trans-Europe Express album - one of their best from their 70s hey day/decade. The music sounds fresh and vibrant, mathematically perfect, and decades ahead of its time.  Showroom Dummies is the consummate Kraftwerk tune (one of the few favourites missing from the Brighton setlist actually). The full log this week:

1. Henryk Gorecki - Miserere
2. Kings of Convenience - Quiet is the New Loud
3. Kraftwerk - Trans-Europe Express
4. Talk Talk - Spirit of Eden
5. Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffiti CD 1
6. Gorillaz - Plastic Beach



Sunday 4 June 2017

Log #36 - Bonobo's Animal Magic

Eddy Bamyasi


1. Caitlin Canty - Reckless Skyline
2. Budgie - The Best Of
3. Laura Marling - I Speak Because I Can
4. David Crosby - If I Could Only Remember My Name
5. Talk Talk - Spirit of Eden
6. Bonobo - Animal Magic

Down tempo mellow beats from Brighton's very own Simon Green aka Bonobo.

Sunday 28 May 2017

Log #35 - Laura, Anna and Rachael

Eddy Bamyasi

One of the nice things about keeping this log is you rediscover, or even discover for the first time in some cases, albums in your collection that you had overlooked or forgotten. 7 or 8 years ago (actually around the time of this album release actually) I was lucky enough to see Laura Marling at a tiny festival at Stanmer House, Brighton. The festival I believe was a one off and was called Foxtrot. Hang on, I'll see if I can find any reference to it on the interweb...

Marling was already quite well known by then and was part of what I think was called the nu-folk movement in the UK at the time with the most prominent members being Mumford and Sons. M & S are a curious thing for some reason. They appeared just on the crest of the wave when that sort of fashion (beardy waistcoated Victorian/Peaky Blinder gentleman's wear) and music (fast foot stomping, literally with a bass drum in their case, acoustic strumming) was getting very popular. I heard a track - The Cave - and bought the debut album.

Fleet Foxes (although not British) were another band everyone loved then. At the Green Man Festival in 2011 their much anticipated headline set was underwhelming with some technical issues. Slightly less well known but also appearing at the same festival were Iron and Wine. More recently we have Bears Den. But then something happened. Mumford and Sons became really naff. Was this because they just got popular? Is it the image? Is it the affected folk/Irish style singing beloved of X-Factor contestants? Laura Marling was actually going out with Marcus Mumford too at the time and I imagine that record label they all belonged too was a cosey affair.

Anyway this album is a real grower. She is an excellent singer and guitar player employing some interesting tunings. Also the songs are just good and don't over employ those vocal gymnastics which she could no doubt use if she wanted (Joni Mitchell anyone?). Lots of good tracks of differing paces. My current favourite is Hope in the Air which pretty much showcases Marling's talent in a single track.

There were only about 400 tickets at the Foxtrot Festival and the artists were playing in the intimate rooms within Stanmer House, and a marquee in the grounds. On that day I also saw an unknown Anna Calvi just before she burst on to the scene - she was amazing. Dressed like one of Robert Palmer's models but playing guitar like Jimi Hendrix. Right place right time. Not quite the same as seeing Jimi cover Sgt. Pepper 3 days after it's release but a stroke of luck nonetheless.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ZbGkoEhRp4&index=59&list=PLYKrwDb2QSorgG9b-o4DSHlrGv0TcobRL
Anna Calvi and the Robert Palmer Band

I also highly recommend an artist called Rachael Dadd who played that day. Checkout this lovely video.

Rachael Dadd - low fi loveliness

1. The Doobie Brothers - The Captain and Me
2. Budgie - The Best Of
3. Laura Marling - I Speak Because I Can
4. David Crosby - If I Could Only Remember My Name
5. Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here
6. Bonobo - Animals





Sunday 21 May 2017

Log #34 - Classic Floyd Revisited

Eddy Bamyasi


Dong Da Da Daaaaaaaaaang! Dow Da Da Daaaaaaaaaang! Dong Da Da Daaaaaaaaaahhh! Dow Da Da Daaaaaaaaaahhhh!  faster... faster, dagger dagger dagger dagger de dah!

Bb, F, G, E !



What's that? It's that Shine On You Crazy Diamond riff innit! Funny how the simplest of motifs just get stuck in your head forever.

In my teenage years the Wish You Were Here album blew me away, and in particular the centrepiece being this Syd Barrett tribute. It was my favourite album for a time when I was about 18. I'd discovered rock and heavy metal, I'd graduated from ELO, through Rainbow and Deep Purple, to Led Zeppelin, but Pink Floyd were a whole new level opening doors to further prog excursions like King Crimson and Genesis I'd enjoy for many years afterwards.

Nowadays I probably play albums like the more understated Animals more. Meddle is excellent too with the side long Echoes. But Wish You Were Here (which strangely wasn't all that well received at the time following the classic Dark Side of the Moon) has really stood the test of time, particularly in the new remastered version recently released.

Title track Wish You Were Here suffers a little from over exposure and familiarity but nevertheless was a superb song. But what really stands out in the new remastered recordings for me are the less celebrated tracks - Welcome to the Machine gains new power with pulsing synthesizer jumping between speakers and reminds me of Kraftwerk (Autobahn) and Tangerine Dream (Cloudburst Flight)- comparisons I had never appreciated before, and quite a daring composition in its time, and Have a Cigar is a soaring rocker. Keyboards have more prominence and there are even some funky rhythms in places! The album is much closer to the follow up Animals than it's predecessor Dark Side... With the individual tracks knitted together by the Floyd trademark sound effects and spoken word interludes this is a satisfying concept album bookended by the largely instrumental Shine On...

Some have criticised the CD packaging on these new releases. I think it's great. I love cardboard sleeves and the booklet is fine with the original artwork and one or two pictures I don't recall (although both the booklet and the CD are so very snuggly fitted such that they require some crow bar work to extract). Even the sticker can be peeled from the plastic and reinstated on the cardboard if one is so inclined.

The setting for one of the Wish You Were Here photos - Mono Lake, California, then and on a visit I made in 2011

The full log this week #34:

1. The Doobie Brothers - The Captain and Me
2. Budgie - The Best Of
3. Laura Marling - I Speak Because I Can
4. David Crosby - If I Could Only Remember My Name
5. Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here
6. Bonobo - Animals

Just a quick word to finish on Budgie. They should have been huge but never were. This greatest hits package showcases some excellent rockers, great musicianship, a keen ear for a hook, and some extended guitar solos. Maybe the name Budgie just never sat well with the heavy rock fraternity. Maybe hailing from Wales wasn't cool either. Their closest comparison would probably be Rush and high pitched vocalist and bassist Burke Shelley was the spit of Geddy Lee.

Budgie and Rush, separated at birth 





Sunday 14 May 2017

Log #33 - Camel's Nude - a remarkable guitarist, a remarkable story.

Eddy Bamyasi

Synthesizer Rock Confusion

I was a bit of a music snob when I was younger and liked to know about bands that others hadn't heard of. So when I was a student in the 80s and everyone was playing Led Zeppelin, Genesis and Pink Floyd, and little else, I liked to branch out a bit and take risks on less well known bands.

Sometimes I had no idea what I was buying when I walked away from a second hand record store with a tatty LP, just because I liked the name, or the cover (very important), or the instruments listed on the back. I had many friends in my school sixth form who were into the new synthesizer bands of the time - OMD, Depeche Mode, Ultravox, Visage, Gary Numan, and the much older Kraftwerk of course, they being one of those rare groups that bridged the synth/rock gap somehow and had fans from both genres. I was always looking for a rock band that used synthesizers, not in a bland over produced backing fashion adopted by many bands in the 80s, but up front and in your face, not afraid of a gated rhythm or Philip Glass like loop.

Hawkwind - The Synth/Rock Fusion

The closest I found was Hawkwind. So in misguided attempts to be cool with the synth boys I would share my Hawkwind albums highlighting for them the synthesizer dominated tracks and hoping to surprise them (I don't think they were particularly impressed, after all if you like synth pop, old rock bands dabbling in synthesizers are not going to over excite you - I read a live review of Tangerine Dream once saying that a modern synth pop band like Depeche Mode could generate more excitement from one cheap keyboard than Tangerine Dream could from their banks of electronics, although I don't think that was the point really).

So Hawkwind then were my favourite band for a year or two around the age of 18 - the must have albums of the time being Sonic Attack and Levitation, the latter which I had on blue vinyl. These two albums were a pretty good fusion of rock and electronics with excellent musicianship at least in the studio (read my Night of the Hawks live experience here). Some of their other albums especially from the Robert Calvert mid 70s era were a bit more random with a mix of pop, rock and novelty keyboard instrumentals, and their much loved early psychedelic albums are nuch more on the raw rock spectrum with occasional synthetic weirdness.

Camel - On the Prog Rock Fringes 

On the prog-rock scene a very underrated band in my view was Camel who I would share with friends who liked Pink Floyd and Dire Straits. In particular I liked to argue that Camel leader Andy Latimer was possibly the best guitarist in the world, even better than Dave Gilmour and Mark Knopfler, two contemporaries his playing was often compared with (and maybe a bit of Alex Lifeson from Rush too?). Listening back to Nude now the guitar really is very similar to Gilmour's - Latimer certainly produced a rare thick luscious tone with the touch of a classical guitarist and a fine ear for a heart wrenching melody - witness a track like Ice from their I Can See Your House From Here album (what is the meaning of that cover by the way?). It is also so nice to hear an electric guitarist play with depth and feeling rather than all out shredding!


WAS THIS COVER REALLY A REFERENCE TO THE UN-PC JESUS JOKE?*

The music on Nude is a bit middle of the road and verging on that 80s over produced synth backed watered down rock mentioned above, but there are some good rock tracks on there like Lies where Latimer displays his trademark Q and A, vocal/guitar, call and response (have a listen and see what I mean about the Gilmour/Knopfler comparisons).

LATIMER WRINGING EVERY OUNCE OF SOUL FROM HIS GUITAR

Camel's best work had already come and gone by the time of Nude, with classic albums like their eponymous debut, the popular Snow Goose, and my personal favourite Mirage. I saw them at Portsmouth Guildhall in the 80s on the Stationary Traveller tour which must have been just after Nude. They'd gone further down the keyboard route (they had two keyboardists on stage I seem to remember!) by then but did encore with Lady Starlight from Mirage. It was one of those gigs where I was right at the front resting my elbows on the stage (rarely possible these days). Someone threw Andy Latimer a red rose. I hear he has had a serious chronic illness and has not been able to play much in recent years but has been making a tentative comeback with a reformed Camel - I would certainly go and see them again if I had the chance.

The Nude Concept

The most interesting thing about the Nude album is the story behind this loose concept album. It relates to a Japanese soldier who was separated from his unit while on a mission to a tiny Pacific island during World War II. Unaware that the war had ended he lived a Robinson Crusoe existence for 29 years on the island until eventually being "rescued" and returned to "civilisation".  Unable to make the adjustment back into mainstream life back in Japan he disappeared again shortly afterwards. A fascinating mystery and one of those stories you are surprised is not more well known although a few articles did surface about the apparent real life "Nude" after his death as late as 2014.

Nude's story as retold by Camel - lyrics and sleeve notes reproduced below:

1942 saw a world torn apart. Daily routines had been taken over by a harsher order that drastically altered the lives of millions of people.

Based on fact, this album tells the story of NUDE.

City Life

Wake-up,
Wake-up, wake-up
Signs tell the time
you're wasting.
Wake up
wake-up, wake-up
Life you will find
is changing.
O the city life,
endless confusion.
Hanging on too tight,
to this illusion...
I'm not what I appear to be.
I couldn't take the honesty,
It seemed to be...
too easy for reality.
O the city life,
what have I come to?
Faces in the night,
friendly to fool you.
I always try to justify,
the way I am and wonder why
I couldn't be...
the same to you I am to me.

Drafted

Nude's thoughts were interrupted by a knock at the door. The postman muttered something about wishing he could go too and handed over a yellow envelope. It was a command long overdue that called for healthy, young men.

In reply to your request,
please find...
I hereby protest.
To the ways and means you use
you know...
I cannot refuse.
So I'll take this vow
of Loyalty.
Fight for the right,
You have said,
To be free.
When this time has run its course,
I must...
Live without remorse.
For the deeds I'm bound to do,
I know...
it's all the same to you.
But I won't forget
the memory...
Taking a life,
for a life...
to be free.

Nude's life revolved around orders. He found himself pushed and pulled onto a crowded deck of uniformed figures who shared the same expressionless faces. Loved ones stood anxiously on the pier as the transport faded into separating mist. Water and night seemed one. Nude was going to war...

Thunder cracked. Ramps hit the beach and countless boots assaulted the shore. His heart pounding, Nude stumbled headlong into the undergrowth in a desperate search for refuge. Sheets of rain drenched the sunless forest as the skies opened raging down on the tiny island. Panic-stricken, Nude staggered forward and fell unconscious.

Raindrops spattered from the trees onto Nude's face. Startled and confused, Nude listened in the humid silence; he was alone and had no idea where he was. Worst of all, he didn't know what had become of his Regiment.

The setting sun left Nude with the growing darkness of his fears. He made camp and slept with dreams of a dawn rescue, unaware that his Unit had already left the island. In wartime, one less soldier is hardly noticeable.

Seasons turned with time. Nude had given up the search for his Unit but continued to move through the jungle, bayonet poised, as if a thousand eyes were upon him. Home was a cave in a hidden lagoon with abundant vegetation and fresh springs. The highest point of the island provided shelter from annual monsoon floods and sanctuary for his soul.

His military duties consisted of a monthly visit to the mountain top whereupon he ceremoniously croaked the national anthem and fired one precious bullet into the air.

In the loneliness he endured, Nude found an inner strength that flowed with the rhythm of instinct.

Please Come Home

The 29th monsoon had finally dried when a distant buzzing sent Nude scrambling for cover. A tiny plane dipped and swerved, filled the air with swirling white and disappeared.

He cautiously approached one of the scattered pieces of paper:

We've been writing letters each day
hoping that you'll come home.
And we're wondering if you're okay.
As you're not on the phone.
Face the facts now
Take a chance.
Come on back now.
Fast.
Please come home,
Please come home.
Everyone cares for you.
Please come home,
Please come home.
Everyone cares for you,
Everyone.
We've been writing letters each day.
Hoping,
that you'll...
come home.

As the sky turned to afternoon gold, Nude picked up the rest of the envelopes and carried then carefully up the mountain.

For a long time afterwards he sat rocking gently. The letters fluttered... the war was over. Long ago. But it seemed of little consequence to Nude. For him, it had never started.

In the days that followed, Nude was no longer at one with his environment. He was now burdened with the need to explain what could not be explained to those who would never understand.

With the air heavy and his instincts dulled by the preoccupation of his thoughts, he failed to heed the warning silence of a normally busy afternoon. With a gasp and a grunt he was wrestled to the ground. A sting in his skin and he was released. He reeled around to stare into the eyes of familiar uniformed figures. The sudden weight of his head plunged him face down into sand denying him protest or the right of a farewell glance at his island...

The band marched beneath a banner that read WELCOME HOME SOLDIER. City streets were littered with cheering crowds entangled in the paper streamers that filled the air. Hailed for his 'unquestioned patriotism' and 'heroic bravery' Nude was unable to respond. The tidal wave of publicity that engulfed his life had a devastating effect after 29 years alone.

Lies

Tell me no lies,
has peace arrived...
Or, is this some kind of joke?
What a surprise,
you don't realise...
There's some things you don't own.
Can you disguise,
can you simplify...
This change you put me through?
Can you revive,
and will I survive...
This life you've brought me to?

Physically and emotionally exhausted, Nude was confined to a sea-side resort nursing home.

His war had finally begun.

Weeks of monotony filled his life with an opposite extreme. No longer pursued by opportunists who disguised themselves with good intentions, his body regained strength. The government arranged his back-pay. The mass of generation-removed relatives ceased their dutiful visits and eventually no one came to see the hero who had fought the longest war.

For his 50th birthday, the nursing staff organised a small party. To make him feel at home, the festive cake has been decorated in the form of a tropical island. Nude was visibly moved by the occasion and yet he seemed strangely distracted.

They thought it best to leave him alone.

Nude was last seen on a summer evening in 1972 talking to a small group of people just before he sailed out of the harbour.

In the morning paper, buried within the articles about Asian, Middle Eastern, Irish and American conflicts, was a short column on the disappearance of 'The Island War Veteran Who Could Not Live in The Civilised World.'

All lyrics by Susan Hoover
except "Please Come Home" (Andrew Latimer)

The Real Nude

The story is apparently based on the life of Hiroo Onoda and as you would expect is slightly embellished but in many respects true to life.

Onoda was enlisted in the Japanese army and sent to the Philippine Island of Lubang in December 1944 - a tropical island in the South China Sea just 100 miles to the south west of Manila. With a population today of 30,000 the island is not entirely deserted or remote.



Onoda and his unit were tasked with protecting the occupied Island from allied attacks and sabotaging any invasion attempts. Under no circumstances must they surrender.
It may take three years, it may take five years, but whatever happens we will come back for you. 
Major Yoshimi Taniguchi

When the Americans invaded the island in early 1945 Onoda took to the jungle remaining there in hiding with three comrades. Believing the war was still on the soldiers lived on bananas, coconuts, rice and the occasional cow, and continued their covert operations carrying out guerrilla raids (these were inflicted upon the post war civilian population after 1945).

One of the soldiers gave himself up in 1950 and another was killed four years later by a search party.

Onoda was actually only completely alone for the last two years. His last surviving colleague, Private Kinsichi Kozuka, was shot by police in 1972 as the pair raided a local farm.

The leaflet drops over the jungle described in Please Come Home above did happen but Onoda and his colleagues, still believing the war was on, assumed they were tricks and ignored them.

Bizarrely after years of fruitless official searching for Onoda it was a student traveller who discovered him in early 1974 after only 4 days trekking in the jungle. Norio Suzuki had set out to find "Lieutanant Onoda, a wild panda, and the Abominable Snowman, in that order."

SUZUKI WITH ONODA 1974

Onoda told Suzuki that he would only surrender if ordered to by his superior officer. Remarkably his superior officer Major Tiniguchi, who had issued his original orders back in 1944 with the promise that he would come back for him one day, was still alive and was tracked down by Suzuki working in a bookshop in Tokyo. He was able to travel to the Island in March 1974 and relieve Onoda of his duties.
We really lost the war? How could we have been so sloppy?
Onoda on hearing the news

Onoda, still wearing immaculate uniform, finally surrendered to the Philippine President and was given a pardon for his actions over the previous 29 years on account of his belief that the countries were still at war. Reportedly Onoda and his colleagues had killed up to 30 people during their operations!

"NUDE" FLANKED BY SUZUKI AND TANIGUCHI ON HIS EVENTUAL SURRENDER, 1974

Onoda did return home to a hero's welcome and an emotional reunion with his parents but was reportedly unhappy with what Japan had become.
There are so many tall buildings and automobiles in Tokyo. Television might be convenient, but it has no influence on my life.
The album suggests that he stayed in a nursing home and then absconded back to his desert island but in fact he emigrated to Brazil living there as a cattle rancher for ten years. He then returned to Japan and established a group of wilderness training schools. He died in 2014.

THE HERO RETURNS
See remarkable footage of Onoda's return to Japan here >>.

Why the name "Nude"? 

Contrary to some suggestions that the jungle dweller forwent clothing the patriotic Onoda seems to have religiously worn his uniform throughout his mission. The "nude" may just be a reference to the invisibility of the disappeared man and themes of loneliness, loyalty, survival, displacement, alienation, and honour, which seem in keeping with the cover art depicting an empty suit standing on a desert island with Mt. Fuji in the distance.

It is indeed very strange to put yourselves in the shoes of Onoda. 29 years abandoned on a tropical island without all the usual trappings of "modern" life and company through friends, family and relationships (he did marry shortly after his return). What would you have missed between 1945 and 1974? The atom bomb that ended the war and basically flattened the country, the post war industrial and technological growth under US occupation, the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo, JFK and the moon landings. Would you have gone mad or would you have adjusted to an idealic simple lifestyle living in paradise? What would 29 years even mean or feel like if you were just living day by day with nature and the sun and the seasons without any man made method of time measurement. Would time have passed quickly or slowly. Would you have got bored? What were your routines?

As Onoda still believed he was actively fighting a war it is likely he was on constant high alert living a fairly stressful life but in a very different way to the population in his homeland. Even so there must have been days and weeks where he did not see or speak to anyone. Footage of Onoda on his homecoming suggest a well adjusted happy and healthy man but it is unimaginable the underlying psychological effects of his experience and the subsequent adjustment. Remember too he, with his comrades, was responsible for killing and injuring many islanders - why and how and in what circumstances? Apparently this detail was not revealed in his ghostwritten book.

Lubang Island


And What of Norio Suzuki?

In a fateful aside Norio Suzuki did succeed in his quest for both Onoda and the panda but was tragically killed in an avalanche in the Himalayas in 1986 presumably while still looking for his Yeti.


***********


Finally the full magazine this week for the record was:

1. The Doobie Brothers - The Captain and Me
2. Budgie - The Best Of
3. Camel - Nude
4. Laura Marling - I Speak Because I Can
5. Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here
6. Rautavaara - Canctus Arcticus/Symphony No. 3


* The Peter and the Cross joke:

Jesus, on the cross, in his waning moments of life, calls to the crowd below, 'Peter!' The apostle Peter hears the call and moves closer to his liege. 'Yes, my Lord, he says. Jesus calls again, 'Peter!' Peter approaches the base of the cross, 'Yes my Lord, it is Peter, I am here for you what do you need?' Jesus calls, 'Come closer Peter.' Peter is beside himself, wondering what the son of God might have to say to him alone... He climbs the cross. Jesus calls 'Peter, come closer.' Peter replies that he is coming. At last, Peter reaches Jesus on the cross, and says, 'I am here my Lord, what can I do?' Jesus says 'Peter? Peter? Is that you Peter?' 'Yes my Lord, I am here for you.' Jesus says 'Peter, I can see your house from here....' 







Sunday 7 May 2017

Log #32 - Worshipping the Dub Pistols

Eddy Bamyasi


Highlighted this week is the tremendous Worshipping the Dollar album by the Dub Pistols. The Dub Pistols are a very entertaining live band drawing on electronics, samples, big beats, dub (of course), reggae, dance, rap, brass, drum and bass, acid house and hip hop. A perennial festival favourite it is very pleasing the group have captured the excitement of a live performance in the studio with this 2012 offering. Sample their infectious high energy music here with West End Story.

The always well turned out Dub Pistols

A bit of an unplanned world flavour in the also-rans this week with Tex Mex band Calexico, German/Norwegian Whitest Boy Alive, Spanish flamenco guitarist Paco Pena, Orquesta Reve from Cuba and DJ Vadim from Russia. As for the Pistols - straight outta London.

1. Calexico - The Black Light
2. The Whitest Boy Alive - Dreams
3. Orquesta Reve - La Explosion Del Momento
4. Paco Pena - Fabulous Flamenco
5. DJ Vadim - The Soundcatcher
6. Dub Pistols - Worshipping the Dollar





Sunday 30 April 2017

Log #31 - David Sylvian - From Pop Star to Serious Musician

Eddy Bamyasi

David Sylvian found fame as the flamboyant front man of pop group Japan who were actually active a lot earlier than I'd assumed. They were formed as far back as 1974 ie. in the hey day of prog and glam. This surprised me as I'd always thought of them as an 80s pop band of the Duran Duran, Flock of Seagulls, Spandau Ballet type, rather than contemporaries of Roxy Music and David Bowie. To be fair they didn't really emerge proper until the early 80s having adopted a new romantic style.

David Sylvian did not like to be associated with the new romantic movement which may explain the break up of the band at the peak of their success at the end of 1982, and his subsequent about turn in his solo recordings which began with Brilliant Trees in 1984. But the real eye opener for me was Secrets of The Beehive which I heard at a friend's house shortly after it's release in 1987. Frankly, it blew my mind. I thought it was superb and could not believe it was David Sylvian. I don't play it that often now but for a time it was one of my favourite albums and one of those nice surprises to share with others (I remember Talk Talk's Spirit of Eden was a similarly revered "surprise" album).

Continuing his bee obsession Dead Bees on a Cake came 12 years later. It's a lengthy album with 14 mostly substantial tracks touching on jazz, rock, blues and world music - beautifully produced and performed by Sylvian's usual plethora of top notch session musicians who included Talvin Singh, Marc Ribot, Bill Frisell and Ryuichi Sakamoto on this one.

David Sylvian through the ages


1. Prem Joshua - Yatri
2. Iron and Wine - Kiss Each Other Clean
3. David Sylvian - Dead Bees on a Cake
4. Van Morrison - Enlightenment
5. Luke Vibert - YosepH
6. Luke Vibert - Stop The Panic

Sunday 23 April 2017

Log #30 - Impressive Beards / Mixed Results

Eddy Bamyasi


1. Willard Grant Conspiracy - Mojave
2. Iron and Wine - Kiss Each Other Clean
3. David Sylvian - Dead Bees on a Cake
4. John Surman - Coruscating
5. Luke Vibert - YosepH
6. Arbouretum - The Gathering


The Willard Grant Conspiracy album is so so. I used to love this sort of laid back Americana stuff but now it sounds pretty middle of the road and very low key. Actually a bit depressing. The lead singer has one of those baritones popularised by The Handsome Family, Tindersticks and Nick Cave. Sadly on googling a meaning for Willard Grant (there wasn't one particularly) I learn that the lead singer died only this February and that wasn't his name.

Willard Grant singer Robert Fisher 1957 - 2017

I was surprised the band were still going actually. I saw them at our local Komedia venue many years ago, probably around the time (1999) of the Mojave album (which also has a pretty bleak cover) and they seemed jaded at the end of a long European Tour. I could see the drummer lying on the floor back stage before the band made their appearance.

Depressing imagery on the WGC album


Iron and Wine on the other hand really resonate with me. I came to them late when I saw beautifully bearded leader Sam Beam with full electric band at The Green Man Festival in Wales about 7 or 8 years ago. I thought they were excellent - superb musicians, great vocals, and powerful songs especially Your Fake Name is Good Enough for Me. Later I read that diehard fans of Sam Beam were not so impressed with his switch to electric band from his acoustic roots. I've now caught up on the more solo emphasized earlier albums and they are excellent, but that doesn't detract from Kiss Each Other Clean this week's cover album.

Sam Beam, impressively bearded well before it became fashionable


Finally this week a return for Baltimore rock band Arbouretum who I was surprised to see are playing at a tiny venue in Brighton in June. Tickets secured and I hope for some tracks from this guitar laden Gathering album.


Sunday 16 April 2017

Log #29 - I Love Luke Vibert's Acid

Eddy Bamyasi
1. Iron and Wine - Around the Well CD 2
2. Iron and Wine - Kiss Each Other Clean
3. David Sylvian - Dead Bees on a Cake
4. John Surman - Coruscating
5. Luke Vibert - Lover's Acid
6. Luke Vibert - YosepH


I love these heavy beatz Luke Vibert albums from his early noughties acid phase. They sound so fresh and current even though they are both over 10 years old now. An artist who has kept up a remarkably original and consistent standard over a number of years and name changes including Plug, Kerrier District and Wagon Christ.

One of my fave tracks with it's Kraftwerk like pulses and vocoder is I Love Acid from YosepH which does exactly what it says on the tin.

Sunday 9 April 2017

Log #28 - Lost and Found, the Unusual Career Trajectory of The Sugarman

Eddy Bamyasi


Like many I discovered Rodriguez through the superb Searching for Sugarman film. My partner wanted to go to the cinema and I'd read rave reviews about the film Argo which was also showing (also a brilliant film incidentally). I wasn't fussed about seeing the Sugarman film but I was wrong and it was fascinating. I knew nothing about him apart from through the track Sugarman which appeared on a David Holmes DJ mix album in 2002 entitled Come Get It I Got It.  And as I knew nothing and indeed had no idea if he was still alive the suspense in the film during "the search" was tangible. I'm sure the story of a poor manual labourer from Detroit achieving overdue fame and fortune in South Africa unbeknownst to himself was somewhat romanticised but still a great one.

*spoiler alert* I don't think there are many music fans left with an interest in his music who would not know the outcome of the film so it is ok for me to say that a still living Rodriguez was tracked down and by coincidence he appeared at Brighton Dome just two weeks after I saw the film in November 2012.

It was a superb concert where a fragile but strong voiced Rodriguez played most of the tracks from his only two albums Cold Fact and Coming From Reality plus a storming encore of Blowin' in the Wind (Rodriguez was yet another artist originally hailed as the new Dylan or could have been as good as...). The former album is the more famous and includes the Sugarman track but I actually think the Coming From Reality album is stronger. This edition includes a couple of new outtakes and B sides.

As a tragic aside the Oscar winning director of the Searching for Sugarman film shockingly took his own life in 2014: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/searching-sugarman-director-dead-thr-710882

1. Rodriguez - Coming From Reality
2. Bob Dylan - Desire
3. Iron and Wine - Around the Well CD 1
4. Neil Young - After the Goldrush
5. Calexico - Garden Ruin
6. Van Morrison - Moondance/St. Dominic's Preview*

A bit of a cheat on the whole selection this week as I was on holiday and away from the CD magazine. These are the CDs I had with me and was able to play in a hire car. Amazingly I really was on the way to some Aztec ruins in Mexico when I heard Bob Dylan sing: "Past the Aztec ruins and the ghosts of our people" from Romance in Durango off of my favourite Dylan album Desire. #evocative

Durango is a real place in Northern Mexico


*The last CD in the list is a home made compilation of two of Van Morrison's greatest albums (sometimes fun to do this when you can fit two on the same CD) - a combination not officially available.




Sunday 2 April 2017

Log #27 - Four Tet Doing The Rounds

Eddy Bamyasi


1. Rodriguez - Coming From Reality
2. Money Mark - Mark's Keyboard Repair
3. Fairport Convention - The History Of
4. Four Tet - Rounds
5. Wagon Christ - Sorry I Make You Lush
6. Van Morrison - The 1967 New York Sessions

Cover album is from Four Tet. I really like this DJ Artist, real name Keiran Hebden, who composes his own material. Seeing him live too was a good experience (not normally the case I find with DJ sets as a spectacle). This is the only album I have of his and by many accounts is the best one to start with. There are some great hooks and loops and lugubrious jazzy down beats similar to DJ Shadow's best stuff. Centrepiece is the piano piece Unbroken. And They All Look Broken Hearted is fascinating with it's phased Japanese koto.



Sunday 26 March 2017

Log #26 - How to Tell the Temperature from a Cricket

Eddy Bamyasi


1. Rodriguez - Coming From Reality
2. Money Mark - Mark's Keyboard Repair
3. Sly and the Family Stone - The Collection
4. Four Tet - Rounds
5. Wagon Christ - Sorry I Make You Lush
6. Van Morrison - The 1967 New York Sessions

Wagon Christ is one of the pseudonyms of Luke Vibert - a prolific DJ and mixer, like Aphex Twin, from Cornwall. What I admire about Vibert's output is that although he covers different styles (electronica, acid, disco, dance, trance) he always stamps his own personality on his music - a characteristic not all that common in the rather anonymous world of DJ mixing. I found my way into Luke Vibert via his Stop the Panic album with slide guitarist BJ Cole - an unusual marriage, but one that works brilliantly.
That cricket was chirping at 76 degrees fahrenheit.
Also on the playlist this week is an intriguing album from Money Mark. Money Mark is actually Mark Nishita who has played keyboards with The Beastie Boys. Hear this frankly bonkers but brilliant track Insects Are All Around Us and ponder if you have ever heard anything like it before.




Sunday 19 March 2017

Log #25 - Van's Window on Astral Weeks

Eddy Bamyasi


1. Lynyrd Skynryd - Gold and Platinum
2. John Martyn - Solid Air
3. Tom Waits - Blue Valentine
4. John Martyn - Grace and Danger
5. Van Morrison - The 1967 New York Sessions
6. John Martyn - Glorious Fool

The Van Morrison New York Sessions are outtakes from around the Astral Weeks time. Releases of studio outtakes like this are often filler for some artists. But not in the case of Van Morrison whose perfectionism has meant many great songs not making the cut to his albums over the years (see the tremendous Philosopher's Stone for example). On these tracks we hear the genesis of the Astral Weeks album with early takes of some of the songs that would resurface a year later on the album proper. The sound is rawer, his voice is powerful and soulful, and the songs are bluesy with an improvisational quality. Listening to this album reminds me of Bob Dylan's Basement Tapes and the aforementioned Philosopher's Stone.

Cover album Blue Valentine is classic Tom Waits,  providing a bridge between his early soulful ballads and his later industrial rhythms. I love the night hawk neon green tinged seedy imagery which augments the groovy blues tinged music and lyrics within.

Blue Valentine, back shot.

The evocative track titles tell some stories in themselves.




Sunday 12 March 2017

Log #24 - Johnny (Martyn) Be Good

Eddy Bamyasi


1. Lynyrd Skynryd - Gold and Platinum
2. John Martyn - Solid Air
3. Tom Waits - Blue Valentine
4. John Martyn - Grace and Danger
5. Van Morrison - Tupelo Honey
6. John Martyn - Glorious Fool


So there I was on this barge on the river wearing nothing but denims and a smile, and this blue man says to me, 'You know I used to be like you, but I saw sense and I changed myself.' So I looked at his sage expression and black shoes and thought 'Thanks all the same, I'll stay on the river.'

I do feel lucky to have discovered John Martyn relatively early in life. I was introduced to him on a summer holiday in France one year by a friend of a friend who played a bit of acoustic guitar in that percussive slapping manner which was very new to me at the time, and characteristic of Martyn's acoustic playing especially on his earlier folky albums. Then later the same (long) summer (I assume) I was helping another friend refurbish a boat down in Cornwall somewhere and had two albums in rotation on my Walkman: Bob Dylan's Desire and John Martyn's Solid Air.  Not a bad selection if you only had one C90 tape for the whole summer (and two of my favourite albums still today 30 years later)!

It sounds wonderfully free and romantic, rather like Martyn's quote from the sleeve notes of his debut album above. I had indeed just met a new girlfriend and in my mind's eye the sun shone and I would have been bare footed and long haired too! What emotional memories particular music always brings up.


JM with smoking joint lodged in machine head

Solid Air is the classic John Martyn. A lovely blend of folk and jazz and the beginnings of his more electronic echoplex guitar playing. Perhaps most evocative is the lovely electric piano. It is of course, like most of his records, a very chilled laid back album - there is a track entitled Go Down Easy and the title track is a homage to Island label mate Nick Drake. But perhaps his most famous song in his full catalogue is May You Never, a song he always played live and one the crowd would sing along with especially in later life when the drugs and booze had taken such a toll his concerts had become a little more ramshackle.

However like many artists who suffered poor health in later life his voice never left him (just becoming even more of a bear growl), nor did his unique guitar playing which although relying increasingly on effects still mesmerised. Like his very easy going effortless slurred voice the guitar also looked extremely loose and free but he was obviously channelling some higher source as I could never work out what he was doing despite studying May You Never guitar tabs for years.

We also have two later albums in the list above. I say later but Grace and Danger and Glorious Fool were released in 1980 and 1981 respectively so still very early relatively. The heartbreaking Grace and Danger album I've written more extensively about here. The slightly harder edged Glorious Fool was a bit of a crossover album between classic John Martyn and later 80s smoothness, and slightly disjointed as a consequence but still contains some excellent tracks. One disappointment is the electrified rendition of Couldn't Love You More which loses much of the soul of the acoustic original on the excellent One World album. In fact I'd proffer that One World is Martyn's peak, representing the perfect equilibrium of his earlier folk days and the later electric period. All his 70s albums right up to, and including Grace and Danger which was a departure, are worth getting but start with One World and Solid Air.




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