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C93 - Aleph at Hallucinatory Mountain
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fauny fergus
fauny fergus
310 posts

Edited Sep 14, 2010, 20:37
Re: C93 - Aleph at Hallucinatory Mountain
Sep 14, 2010, 20:34
IanB wrote:
fauny fergus wrote:
Yeah, it depends on which bits of Black Ships annoyed you. The endless variations on Idumæa annoyed me and I quote liked Aleph, natch ymmv.

Not heard Baalstorm yet but will probably pick it up. I'm still hoping for another Nick Saloman collab.


I know little or nothing about this scene (such as it is) but am open to recommendations. Love a lot of the music i have heard especially when it dove-tails with Popol Vuh territory. The "Woe Is Me! I Left My Morris Bells At A Test Department Gig" vocals not so much.




I'm not that knowledgeable about the scene and tend to dip into it here and there - I'm a beginner myself in these parts. Tibet's apocalyptic bent mirrors my own interests and parts of my work - I started off listening because of that and loved some of his imagery - yeah, and even his delivery. Emotional, sometimes overwrought but always involved in what he's singing/saying. When I found he'd collaborated with Nick Saloman (Mr Bevis Frond and Woronzow records) I was hopeful.. and not disappointed: Hitler as Kalki (SDM) on Thunder Perfect Mind is an absolute favourite of mine - Tibet on a Revelation tip and Nick Saloman's sprawling psychedelic guitar trip coiling and uncoiling in the background. Fantastic.

Oh, and Tibet's reasons behind the song:

Tibet wrote:
Since this New Year of 1993 I have been reflecting on questions people have asked me concerning the song Hitler As Kalki (SDM) and my views on Hitler. I am in no doubt: Hitler was Antichrist; Jesus killed Hitler - eventually... We can hope that it should have been much sooner, but for whatever reasons it was not to be. Unfortunately since Hitler's death, all around his cruel spirit lives and multiplies, and many antichrists now surround us. In the dark corners of the nightworld he and his followers wait, emerging once more and more into the day. I remember my father telling me of his experience as a member of the first British troops to enter the extermination camp of Belsen, and the hell on earth he found there. So then, perhaps this earth is hell, but it rests to us to ensure that we defend our own hearts against the call from the abyss. May all be happy; may all be aware. The Little Shining Man approaches. Terrify not Man, lest God terrify you.

David Tibet, London, January 10, 1993.


NOt sure why i added that but i alwayss like an artist with a vision (hence ending up being a sporadic visitor to Copey's site :-)
Kosmischeboy
Kosmischeboy
664 posts

Re: C93 - Aleph at Hallucinatory Mountain
Sep 14, 2010, 22:18
Thunder Perfect Mind is bloomin fab :0) The 2 cd version particularly so...
IanB
IanB
6761 posts

Re: C93 - Aleph at Hallucinatory Mountain
Sep 15, 2010, 09:54
TIbet seems sincere. I have heard him interviewed and he sounds like an intelligent man who treads softly. Which I like.

Although I am finding the C93 vocals a hard swallow some of the music I am hearing is gorgeous and I will persevere. Which I didn't do with DIJ.

The totalitarian flirtations (at least in terms of imagery) of some of the associated artists are a profound irritation. Though probably no more irritating than artists who glamorise heroin or alcoholism. I am at an age where all that rock n roll bad boy stuff is kind of charmless.

And then you get the artists who say they are into the works of Charley Hawtrey & Adorno, Wagon Wheels, Kinbaku and SS Uniforms. It's all that we're so super ironic and amoral we're the super badasses of all badasses. Very Rag Week.

Anyway if we didn't listen to all the music made by people who say and do stupid things there wouldn't be much left.

Any recommendations gratefully recevied.

What was the story with that C93 Shirley Collins reissue? Seemed like a bizarre piece of perfunctory repackaging.
smrt
130 posts

Re: Fovea Hex
Sep 15, 2010, 10:04
You may be interest to hear that there is a full Fovea Hex album in the works..

Just received this news in the latest Die Stadt mail out..

"Work on the new Fovea Hex album is almost completed. Clodagh Simonds is
putting the finishing touches to it soon. It'll most likely come in the same special cover which most of you'll already know from the 'neither speak nor remain silent' ep series. There'll also be a special mail order version of the album will incl. a bonus disc feat. remixes / re-workings by William Basinski, Colin Potter and Michael Begg."

Did enjoy the last series of EP's, but it was an expensive way of getting the music. - I've now put the three onto a single CDr and they flow very nicely together.
IanB
IanB
6761 posts

Edited Sep 15, 2010, 10:07
Re: C93 - Aleph at Hallucinatory Mountain
Sep 15, 2010, 10:05
machineryelf wrote:
IanB wrote:

The singing really (other than the guests).


best admit defeat then, as Aleph has even more of Mr Tibet, if you want to be really put off I'd recommend listening to his cover of Tamlin



I have just realised the problem. He reminds me of Malcolm McLaren when he does his talking bits on the vogueing album he made with Bootsy and Jeff Beck et al
1001realapes
1001realapes
2387 posts

Re: Fovea Hex
Apr 30, 2017, 02:49
https://foveahex.bandcamp.com/album/neither-speak-nor-remain-silent
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