Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Robert Poss + E-Clark Cornell-Kepler's Choice; No Sides Records, 2026

 

One just has to love a label that branches out into a broad range of musical approaches, a label such as No Sides Records. Since their initial contact with Disaster Amnesiac, it's been a pleasure to hear the many and varied sounds that they've pushed out into the world so far, not the least of which has been this year's Kepler's Choice, a release by Robert Poss and E-Clark Cornell. For starters just look at that great Abstract Expressionist cover art! Don't know about anyone else, but when this fan sees an album with visuals such as that, it's intrigue at minimum. Additionally interesting are the c.v. of this work's two creators. Poss found renown as a founding member of Band of Susans and Cornell has logged countless credits with some of the top flight Euro Art Rock bosses. These two have put in the work, that's for sure. As for the sounds of their collaborative work, they are based within the aesthetics of contemporary composition and symphonic works. Generally longer pieces during which modal explorations are presented, that's the set list on Kepler's Choice. Much of the album features moods of minimalist atmosphere, sometimes brooding and sometimes ecstatic. The duo of Poss and Cornell pull many different timbres from their respective rigs on each of the eight tracks, yet there is a genuine cohesiveness that binds them all, making for a very coherent listening experience. Pieces such as the ripple effect from an emotional error, Russian Tea Room, and Codified Betrayal would be so great if presented at and by a symphony. Large string sections would suit their writing ideally. Excellent piano passages extend forms but retain melodic aspects that are warm and inviting as their electronic frames float alongside and atop. Yesterday, as Kepler's Choice streamed from my desktop speakers a large rain front rolled up in the sky above, and it was the perfect soundtrack for observing it as it floated by. Find a nice quiet time and spot in which to listen to this low key but intense release from two veterans and it'll surely float your perceptions to some interesting spaces.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Live shot #220!

 

 

Chick Blundy & Tryin' Times, Slow Body Beer Tucson 5/1/26. Straight up honky tonkin' with an incredible guitar player. The drummer rules, too.

Thursday, April 30, 2026

Modelbau-Nine Times Makes Ten; No Sides Records, 2026

 

No Sides Records made Disaster Amnesiac aware of Nine Times Makes Ten, a new release from Modelbau, a few months back. It took some time to get to really hearing it, though, mostly on account of the stated obsession with the Ramones debut at its 50th anniversary. With those thoughts out of the way now, it's been a bit easier to check into this quietly burning album from Dutch composer/improvisor/writer Frans de Waard. Its sounds are sourced from two reel to reel tape machines, in order to "uncover old ghosts in the machines", and in that endeavor Modelbau succeeds. The nine tracks on Nine Times Makes Ten all share an aura of mystery, each one building upon the somewhat eerie pulses of its predecessor. It's a perfect album for time spent drifting off into abstract mental zones or cloud watching. Indeed as Disaster Amnesiac sits at the keyboard and types these words, Nine Times Makes Ten's sound are perfectly framing a gloomy desert sky that's drifting across the Sonoran sky. It's great ambient music too, in the sense that one could also play it while attending to other tasks. Again, as this post is being assembled de Waard's sounds blossom in pleasing and inspiring manners that outline a mental space conducive to the imagination's wanderings. What are the source tapes from this album? Are they original recordings made by Frans? Whatever their origin, Modelbau certainly did find a way to reveal them on these broodingly intense tracks of sonic experimentation.

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Salon De Musique-s/t; Savers Records #03, 2026

 

There are tons of compellingly mysterious tales from the era of Punk Rock, especially its early years, and for Disaster Amnesiac possibly the top one is that of Suburban Lawns and Su Tissue. The band's name appears on flyers from the 1978-79 wave of Los Angeles high greatness pretty regularly. There's one amazing LP and one decent EP from them, both of which I'm happy to have tracked down during my collecting years. Seek them out and when you see them, purchase on sight, regardless of cost. If you're a fan of Punk Rock, they will not disappoint. Their tunes were creative and intriguing, not the least because of the vocal delivery and lyrics of Tissue. She was a fascinating figure within that scene, and surely those that got to experience her live presentation must have been blown away. Suburban Lawns fans must surely also be aware of short clips on them playing live, on YouTube, such as one from San Francisco's storied Deaf Club or on New Wave Theater. From these stated documentary sources, it's clear that Su Tissue was deeply creative and inspired as an artist during those times. It's not recalled exactly where on the web Salon De Musique, the post-Lawns work from Su came across my listening radar, but the first hearing of it via download some time in the late aughts is. The lovely piano arpeggio, the mysterious vibes of the three long pieces within this 1984 release have, since that time, been a favorite for mellowing out type of scenarios at my listening station. Tissue's repetitive modal piano action, supplemented by soprano sax and electronic washes, and her wordless vocals, never fail to send Disaster Amnesiac into the blissful zones that arise from great Serialism. Salon De Musique has qualities of such deep reverence and veneration for the act of music making as to leave the massive negation of evinced by so much of the Punk Rock scene and a lot of its music behind in a cloud of purple beauty and otherworldly mystery. It's an album of sounds that, despite possibly being rooted within Minimalism, creates a totally unique world, and thankfully for fans, Savers Records has reissued it on a well-produced cassette at least twice within the recent decade. Salon De Musique is a crucial document of an important musical voice from the era of Punk Rock and Post Punk, a voice that, after its initial release, chose to fade away from the music industry entirely in order to find some other, purely personal and private vision. It's also a work that showed musical possibilities, blends of Avant Garde and Punk that were mostly disregarded. While that may seem sad for fans of Su Tissue and the adventurousness of her creative vision, we can be happy in finding these newly minted editions. Do not sleep on them, for one never knows how long these small batch cassettes will be pressed.

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Live shot(s) #219!


 

Shots taken at Saint Charles Tavern Tucson, 4/25/26.

Below: Trikochet getting down to the business of grounded Prog trio interactions. Distinct SST Records late 1980's feels at times. Obscure and cool cover tune. Post Funk, Post Rock instrumental bliss.


Above: August Minotaur. Carnival prankster sounds with metaphysical lyrics from Tucson native. Poetry and street gang harmonies. 

What is the Saint Charles Tavern resident cat's name?
 

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Live shot(s) #218!

 

Shots taken at Music Box, Tucson 4/24/26.

Below: Bear Down Bear are a duo who play and sing songs that deal with friendship, travel and the frustrations inherent in creative work. 



Above: Alex Wilkerson & Them. Tight trio interactions with fine Psych guitar soloing and on point harmonizing. Desert Blues! 

Music Box Lounge is a real gift to Tucson's East Side!

Friday, April 24, 2026

Ramones at 50

 

Ramones turns fifty years old this week and it's a noticeable event. Disaster Amnesiac has seen various social media personalities giving their takes on the incredible, impeccable debut from the first so defined Punk Rock group, the Ramones. It's realized that Lester Bangs had used the term, perhaps a few others, too, but I'm in the camp that Punk Rock as qualified began at Ramones. That being stated it's not the intention here to analyze that origin but instead to try and dig deeply into the essential album that Ramones is. Ramones music has been a study for this listener since 1984 or so, when in the latter months of 8th grade I became aware of musics other than Heavy Metal, which had me enthralled from about 1981 or so. Kiss a bit earlier on that timeline. Sophisto-Jazz and Funk and Disco and Soul Jazz a bit before them. Etcetera. Over the years since '84 this listener has listened to the Ramones with some regularity. Starting in late February of this year the need to dig even deeper and with much more focused intent and regularity due to the coming 50th anniversary of Ramones arose. Hence the album has been pretty much the sole soundtrack to any drives in my increasingly desert worn ride. Its speaker are still great though. Basically only songs from Ramones traveled through them from that time until yesterday. And not as if it's been removed from the CD player yet even. Guess it will be determined whether or not that remains the case after today. The entire album song to song must have been looped one hundred times. Here's the thing though, and I'm sure you're already aware of it: Ramones can and may just as easily will remain being blasted for one hundred more times before some other sounds are deemed critical. It just has this power which is so lasting, so enduring and forceful and essential as to render it timeless. Many times as I've listened to it over the past couple of months it's been realized that the album will remain being listened to by fans of music on its 100th anniversary. It's cranking within my ears buds at this very moment and continuing to offer new sound combinations or technical brilliancy or mind blowing lyrics delivered by a singular vocalist. Just now: a hidden harmony vocal on 53rd & 3rd, an aspect that to just this point in time has never revealed itself to me. And yet there it is. No way that Disaster Amnesiac is the only one going through this experience right now either. Ramones were a seminal band within Rock 'n Roll and its various offspring. Millions know it. Their children know it. Their grandchildren will know it. So forth Ramones will live on through several generations of humans. They're huge in Argentina. Ditto Spain. And New York City, Tokyo, Tucson. Do they have a following in Kabul? Moscow? A listening update: Today Your Love, Tomorrow the World's last strains of crunchy guitar are pumping into my brain. I'm about to scroll back to Blitzkrieg Bop and start the entire process once again. And there it is, those power chords and that plunking bass guitar and open hi-hat cymbals roiling, and here we go again and it's just as good as it was the last time and the time before that and the time before that one and on and on back to that first time the musical brain was exposed the magical chemistry of the Ramones. Ramones is a multi-tiered work. Musically its conception and execution are high level genius as people such as Rhy Chatham and Thurston Moore and Joe Carducci have stated. There was a point the other day as Disaster Amnesiac merged onto Congress St. from I-10 when the guitar line in Chain Saw reached points of the highest abstraction, JS Bach levels of heavenly otherworldly sound. Ramones being a work of the 20th Century it's a work conjured from electricity and electricity feeds amplifiers. The amplifiers' sound emanations feed into microphones which in turn send these signals to mixing boards, wherein they're mixed down or up into whichever alchemist's recipe is in need of. All musicians and engineers are hoping for that elusive alchemy in which something effective and lasting is brewed up. Ramones, as you well know, is such a brew. I Don't Wanna Go Down to the Basement is now up in the rotation. From the simplicity of the players' and the singer's approach arises an ensemble sound, so sharp and cutting as to be able to inflect fresh cuts each time it's utilized. Perhaps somewhat more problematically for at least Johnny Ramone Ramones is also a template for, after its emergence from the zeitgiest, the Punk Rock movement. It's been inferred that he wasn't a huge fan of too many exemplars for the genre that his and the other Ramones imaginations, as many of them found much more material success. Did Johnny realize that in 2076 there would still be a market for his band's music, which will surely be the case? Ramones also enshrined the negative affirmation with music and art. After the album's release the the public's hearing of it, it became more of an option to go with "I don't wanna", except in cases such as "I don't wanna be taxed at high rates to fund incompetent programs run by government", in which case even the Punkers and the Hardcore Punks tend to bond with their inner Little Emperor but quick. Hell, Ramones pretty much invented Hardcore now that I'm thinking about it: Today Your Love Tomorrow the World again. Ramones Ramones Ramones Ramones Ramones. Say it forty five more times in celebration of its golden anniversary. Better yet spin it fifty more times, even if it's just once a year for the next fifty years. Those, and even additional listens, will offer up rich aesthetic rewards for their listening. Ramones will never die.