Friday, September 29, 2023

Live shot(s) #96!

 

All shots taken at 191 Toole, Tucson AZ 9/29/23. 

Below: Over Thinking. Teenage riot. 



Above: Non Grata, continuing their journey into the heart of heavy.

Below: Evasion. Does humor belong in Grind? 


Above: Head Rust returns to live action after four years. 

Below: Sleeping With the Witch precision attack invoking lunacy. 


There may have been one more band on the bill, and if I missed them I'm sorry. Five Metal bands is a lot and Disaster Amnesiac was dead on the feet.


Sunday, September 24, 2023

Live shot(s) #95!

 


Keyboard master Guy Whatley playing pieces by composer William Byrd on Flemish Keyboard and virginal. Lovely interpretations of English Early Music! St. Alban's Episcopal Church, Tucson 9/24/23.

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Paul Lytton & Erhard Hirt-Borne On A Whim-Duets, 1981; Corbett vs. Dempsey Records 2023

 

Great news for fans of the deeply individualistic sounds of European/British Improvised Music scene emerges via Corbett vs. Dempsey Records in the form of Borne On A Whim-Duets 1981! Eight archival tracks from percussionist/electronics innovator Paul Lytton and guitar/dobro player Erhard Hirt have been unearthed, mastered, and packaged into a very pleasing release from the Chicago-based label. The depths that these two players plumbed during this session will be audible and pleasing for said fans. Lytton and Hirt conjure all kinds of scrapes, whirls, twirls, pops; basically any kind of "not allowed" sounds from their respective instruments are investigated and pushed to their limits. Borne's vibes are ones that evince an intimacy that will surely transmit to the attentive listener. One can hear and feel how closely Lytton and Hirt were paying attention to each others' sounds as they improvised: calls are sent, responses are intoned, and all within a very non-pompous atmosphere. These two musicians must have felt quite a lot of pleasure themselves as they got down to business over two days in Spring of 1981. Disaster Amnesiac recommends listening to Borne On A Whim-Duets 1981 with headphones. There are depths to this mix that really show themselves under 'phones. Such a wonderful release, and as it's listed as Paul Lytton Archives #1, it feels safe to assume that we can look forward to further sonic delights from the great drummer by way of Corbett vs. Dempsey. Bring 'em on!

Friday, September 8, 2023

Live shot #94!

 

Jazz guitarist, Settlers West Galleries, Tucson AZ 9/7/23.

Wednesday, September 6, 2023

Las Mordidas-Ex-Voto; L.G. Records, LG-6; 2023

 

It was a tremendous pleasure to have recently scrolled over to Dischord Records and seen that Ex-Voto, an archival release from Las Mordidas being served up. To paraphrase Ian Mackaye, D.C. bands have always seen the album as the menu and the show as the meal, but Disaster Amnesiac was not anywhere near the District when Las Mordidas were being plated live. Hence I have had to enjoy their lone 7" for many years as the best example of what was clearly an ass kicking band. No cool memories of seeing them in flesh for this listener, but I recall making the purchase of that 7" at the legendary Epicenter Records on Valencia St. in 'frisco (yes, I'm calling it that now). Surrounded sounded so great at that time (1996? 97?), and it's only ever sounded better to me over the years. I'd go so far as to say that it's one of the best songs of that decade. Good for you, the listener (and Disaster Amnesiac, too), it is included on Ex-Voto. It's so cool that Surrounded is now buttressed by nine other tracks of groove and rage from this quartet of Dischord schooled players. Las Mordidas pumped out a chunky, funky fusion that was rooted in the Hardcore Punk Rock aesthetics of that long running successful label but had moved horizontally away from them in solidly Rock-ist ways. Jerry Busher was one of the best drummers that I've ever seen play live, and those skills can be heard all over the LP, for example on Surprise Goodbye with its solid groove-centered traps playing. When Dug E. Bird is playing the bass, the Funk of D.C. is going to be present, and indeed it is. Oh, to have heard this rhythm section live! Their sets must have moved some butts! Dig on Solar System and Just About Buried for evidence of that potentiality. Guitarist John K. seems not afraid to make heroic moves worthy of the six string electric tradition on Bad Man and the snappy instrumental Ransom. Big riffs and sweet melodic runs can be heard all over the guitar parts from Ex-Voto. And then, there's Chris Thomson. Chris evolved into perhaps the Top Punk Rock Singer of the post-Nirvana era in Monorchid and Skull Kontrol, in vocal timbre and lyrical astuteness. It's quite fascinating to hear these qualities in their primal state within the Las Mordidas matrix. He'd clearly already envisioned and developed an absolutely singular delivery therein, a delivery that only got better over time. Rock 'n Roll singers must have a cool, individual style, unique to themselves and rooted within their decisions about, as Joe Carducci noted, what will and also won't work. Thomson had that shit nailed for years, and the documentary evidence on Ex-Voto evinces it in ways that will make fans of his art very happy. Slight critical thoughts have arisen from the kind of tossed off sounding Not Again and a few moments where then-current musical influences/trends poked out with a bit of glare, but, on the whole, this album, so lovingly packaged and produced by a top flight team, is very worth seeking out and digging into. It they did a reunion show, Disaster Amnesiac would try really hard to make it out to D.C. to hear them. Maybe get Hammered Hulls on the bill? Hell, if they did that, maybe re-form Ignition as the show opener? You guys have almost a year to get if happening at Fort Reno.........

Sunday, September 3, 2023

Live shot(s) #93!

 

All shots taken at 191 Toole, Tucson AZ 9/2/23 at Celestial Fest 2023.

Below: In Lessons. Dramatic twin guitar emotional Rock with good stage presence and thick bass lines. Cool stuff. 


 

Below: Rat Trap. Blending of Hip Hop and Metal for the sake of fun.

 

Below: Non Grata. Lemmy once said something like "somewhere in the world right now, the best band in the world is playing", and for this listener on this night that band was Non Grata. They do it RIGHT. 



 

Below: Of the Lost. Technical overdrive pushed through the house speakers for streamlined mix, and interesting thing to see no amps and speakers on the stage. 


I think that one band was missed, sorry, I had to eat dinner before heading downtown.


Saturday, September 2, 2023

Live shot(s) #92!

 


Organist and composer Pamela Decker with composer Ken Yukl as page-turner.  Holsclaw Hall, Universtiy of Arizona, Tucson 9/1/23. A recital featuring 20th-21st Century pieces by Decker, Yukl, Calvin Hampton, Herbert Bielawa, Charles Villiers Stanford, Gerald Near. Organ by Schoenstein & Co., San Francisco. Full spectrum sounds!

Friday, September 1, 2023

How 'come Disaster Amnesiac was the last to find out?


 

Steve Miller Band's The Stake and Joe Walsh's Rocky Mountain Way are the same song? Wish you guys would have told me. These were the tunes that made the Punkers do it themselves. These were the tunes that young 'uns listened to as they were schlepped to the grocery store by mom and sometimes dad. I guess it's a zeitgeist type of issue? 

Well, time keeps on slippin' into the future. The culture was so much different than as compared to now, but Disaster Amnesiac guesses that each and every era has that characteristic. Probably each and every minute does for that matter. I read about the suicide of Frank Kozik recently. His art was very popular within cultural strains that Disaster Amnesiac was aware of and inspired by. He had just turned, or was about to turn, sixty years old when he went through with his decision. I can't help but ponder what factors they were that made him decide to end it once and for all. In terms of "the average American male", whatever the hell that is, Kozik was nearing some major endings. Perhaps he'd already began having some of them. Who can say, and that's really not my business anyway, but it has given food for thought. 

The presence of human death is one to be so engaged with for a person as their later years envelop them with tremendous quickness. It would be so nice to be able to phrase that into some kind of "rage, rage" line, but, honestly Disaster Amnesiac can be a pretty Steve Miller Band type of guy, and I fear that an attempt to do so would emerge dorky at best. Instead I'll just try to focus on these moments that are left for me with some kind of presence, worthy of their gifts.