Sunday, 19 May 2019

PINK ORANGE



New product, available now! 


My little guys have been out surfing wormholes around the Universe’n’shit so I’ve had to do this one myself. That’s okay. They left me a mountain of ankh to work with. 

Yep, it’s another instalment of punked out psychedelic funk for that ass. This time we’re dealing with big data suffocation and dancing our way out of tight spots. Avoiding gangsters and the new age illuminati, while holding down our day jobs. The world is getting uglier, but we can still taste the good sounds. Sometimes rhythms clash, but they are basically all we have.

Available as stream / download from the usual suspects as listed below:



This is what you're getting yourself into:


Unhandled exception
Your request cannot be processed at this time.

Castaways
We're flotsam on a great big pond.

Yeah okay but
You can't get what you want with all that in the way.

Sous chef
That Porsche is all his own. In 14 hours I'll go home.

I need air
Oxygen thieves are at work in this area.

404
Artificial attitude.

Big data mash up
We know what you're gonna want, and when you're gonna want it.

It ain't metal, but it is heavy
Sho' nuff.

Ambossfunken
Hidden gardens, illuminated by sparks.

Soul on hold
The rhythm nazis are out to get you.

Synaesthesia
What does this taste like to you?

11 tons per minute
Santa doesn't believe in you either, and Jesus isn't too keen neither.

Pineapple Rattail
Tropical gangsters are at work in this area.

Who's tootin'?
It isn't me, it's the guy behind.

Sous chef piano reduction
Ivory sauce to finish.

Sources of ankh to various degrees: Wire, The Human League, Ultravox, Sandy Nelson, Meco, Magazine, Ron and Candy, Bad Medicine, DAF, Walt Rockman, A Certain Ratio. You'll find it in the beat, mashed into the mix and dusted on top. Everything else is news to your ears:

Words, music and production by Alvis Impulsive; (P) and (C) Banzona Music 2019


Monday, 29 April 2019

The times they are ...oh never mind


Ex CD

The future will no longer be etched in silver and sealed in plastic. It's official - the CD will soon be history. Industry figures are proving that sales of CDs are plummeting faster than an airliner in a volcanic cloud. How do you even play these things anymore? Although it pains me to say it, the next Hopkinsville Goblins release will be online only.


Why the pain? Well I kind of like them. You get a neat little package you can fit on a shelf, with a booklet to flick through and a nice picture disc. Plus you can fit 80 minutes of music on them in pristine, uncompressed digital stereo. Despite all that, they will soon be landfill. Vinyl, on the other hand, is making a come back.

A few LPs
It amazes me that vinyl sales are growing given their limitations. Size, cost, turntable maintenance, vinyl vulnerability (ever left one in the sun?), limited length. Don't get me wrong - I own a few vinyl LPs. A thousand or so at last count, some of which are shown in the photo on the left. But I don't play them that much because they are such high maintenance. And at 45 minutes tops split over two sides it severely restricts your creativity. Hell, my little guys are in full flight after 45 minutes and in no mood to stop.

Another ex CD
So we're moving with the times, getting our ducks in a row, cutting overheads and thinking outside the box. But I'll take heart from previous prophets of doom who said new technology would bring the death of a medium. That's what they said about books when TV arrived. That's what they said about vinyl when CDs arrived. That's what they said about movies when VHS arrived. That's what they said about VHS when DVDs arrived - oh hang on, that was correct. 

Anyway, gotta go. The online platforms are calling, demanding my metadata.

Friday, 26 April 2019

Mastodons of Ghastliness


In my down time while I’m polishing off the next Hopkinsville Goblins product, I’ve been plowing through biographies of David Bowie and Iggy Pop. Both of them are rollicking good reads and nicely filled in the back stories of some of the best rock albums ever made, and enhancing (not busting) some of the myths around these guys. Turns out not only are both real gents (within the confines of excessive 70s rock stardom), they are also highly intellectual and interested in something called art.

German expressionism
Now visitors to the pages of this humble blog will be visioning me as some kind of bookworm, but the truth is I don’t read as much as I’d like. Just like I don’t see as many movies as I’d like. And I definitely don’t go to art galleries because they bore me rigid. There are only so many hours in the day aren’t there. So the discovery that two serious rock icons were also into the link between rock and German expressionism (or something) came as a big surprise.

Art has always alienated me. I grew up in a city that had a high profile art community but I never had any desire to sign up to the clique. People got serious when art came up and I couldn’t understand what they were getting fired up about. It was too much like the Masons for me. One can only imagine what the conversations were like in the 70s when the topic of Art Rock came up. Arguing for the merits of Jethro Tull over Van Der Graaf Generator strikes me as being up there with the ultimate wastes of time imaginable, but no doubt people used to do it.

Yes
The Bowie biography helped clarify some of that. Within the confines of Art Rock there were different approaches and different takes on what qualified as art in rock’n’roll, and even where the continuum from art to rock could be drawn. For some it was the overall concept (eg Yes), for others it was the use of sound as an artistic medium (eg Bowie) and this fired up some of the serious discussions alluded to above. In 1972, one observer described King Crimson as “mastodons of ghastliness”, and the arrival of Bowie as crystallising in a vision everything they had felt growing up as an outsider to society. Those kind of extreme reactions were common throughout the book as Bowie moved from one phase to another, trashing what he had just done and changing groups of fans like he did his carefully designed pants.

King Crimson
Little did that Bowie observer know, but in five years Robert Fripp would be supplying the guitar muscle on Bowie’s “Heroes” album, so bagging King Crimson that badly is a tad unfair. Musically there isn’t too much wrong with them. They were more classically influenced than art influenced, and they treated their compositions accordingly. Any ghastliness comes from their lyrics, which frequently rely on fantasy mythology, obtuse poeticism and a gag-inducing interest in underage sex. To be fair, I think a lot of that stemmed from their contempt for the rock biz, rock morality and the rock world in general, and their reaction to that come out in their lyrics as a refusal, rather than a celebration, of it. Robert Fripp was well aware of the irony of being in his position despite it all, and was armoured to deal with the reaction to him as a rock star. As he said, the main difference between rock'n'roll and pop was that with rock, you might get fucked.

Modern Lovers
The same applies to art as well, in spades. I’ve seen art groupies at play. It truly defies logic, as artists are usually among the least sexy people imaginable and often can’t string two sentences together in a conversation on any topic other than themselves. Check out the Modern Lovers “Pablo Picasso” for their dead on take on it.

I think I’ve got a better handle on the whole Art Rock thing now, and I don’t have an opinion either way. It’s a bit like Bowie’s albums – love some of the tracks, don’t get others (but still find them interesting), and skip the rest. It all comes down to what you listen to music for: thrills, intellectual stimulation, artistic wonder, relaxation…whatever you want to get out of it, if it works, who cares what it’s labelled as. Don’t know about art but I know what I like.

Stay tuned for new Hopkinsville Goblins tunes soon. Art or no art, hopefully they will give you a big slice of what you like.

Posts from Planet Earth on Amazon, I-Tunes, Spotify, Deezer and Google Play.

The Hopkinsville Goblins Are Back! on: Amazon, Deezer, iTunes, Spotify, Apple Music and Google Play. Or check them out on Youtube or from any of the purveyors of fine sounds listed on this site

Paypal users can check us out (literally) on Bandcamp.


Thursday, 21 March 2019

Don’t forget the second division


I am a massive football fan. That’s football aka soccer, not football played with an oval ball. That said I have been known to be a couch potato for any World Cup regardless of ball shape. Actually let’s face it, I’m a massive sports fan full stop. If I hit on sports when I’m channel surfing I’ll stop and look regardless of what it is. But football’s what I grew up with so it’s always going to be number one.

Promotion to the big league
My approach to music is similar to my approach to sport. If it doesn’t give you a thrill and make you sweat it isn’t worth it. But the similarity doesn’t end there. In football you have absurdly overblown clubs with all the money in the world sucking up the resources of its supporters and giving them sometimes soulless teams that are only in it for the money in return. In music you have overblown record companies sucking up the resources of fans to provide a soulless mainstream product of no real value, for their ‘entertainment’. The difference is that music fans put up with it whereas football fans will boo a boring team off the field. That doesn’t change the fact that at the highest level in football you can get teams that are so full of talent that they cancel each other out. End result, technically proficient games with no real highlights. Go to a big money, energy drink sponsored gig and what do you get? Hmmm.

In football some of the best competition exists at the second tier. The fight for promotion to the top divisions produces some of the edgiest, most committed games you will ever see, with some of the wildest fans along for the ride. It comes down to commitment and a passion to prove yourself worthy of the big time. When it comes down to it, the only real difference between the first and second division is the money to put on the gloss and pull the big name sponsors.

The highest tier of music is generally defined by major record companies with the money to force their turgid mainstream product onto as many people as can stand it (or who simply don’t know about anything else because it isn’t pushed). Occasionally you get someone who gains promotion to the big time, but watch how quickly they change and start to sound like everyone else, or crash and burn from the pressure to sell out. The first division of music is a factory cataloguing a few acceptable designs using pre-determined and proven components following the time honoured “if it worked yesterday it will work tomorrow” method of production. Start beat A, add synth line B, get pretty performers (vocal talent optional), teach them dance move C for use in glossy soft porn video style D. If possible try and generate some kind of crappy controversy around them to get social media going and Bob’s your uncle. Job done. Let’s do it all again tomorrow with the next celebrity sucking sap waiting in line.

Concrete Blonde
None of this is new of course. It’s how showbiz has always worked. Taking risks is bad practice. It could affect the bottom line. Risks are left to people with less to lose. But that’s where things start to get a bit more interesting. This post was inspired by me coming across a CD by Concrete Blonde for $2 in a charity shop. It came out in 1987, at a time when the music biz had a serious strangle hold on what people had access to, similar to the way the biz is now but without the streaming options. There was a massive gap between the first and second division in what could be achieved commercially in other words. At that time independent labels were struggling against MTV and the absurd money being thrown into pushing crap at the highest levels. Think hair metal. Think synthesizers with everything. Think primitive digital studios producing the same robotic drum sound on every hit record. Indies had to come up with the goods to survive, and they did. The second division was where the only real action could be found in that hideous cultural wasteland.

My Concrete Blonde CD is a time capsule. It’s an awesome slab of pure rock made at a time when pure rock was not included on any major label’s sales sheet. This was their first album and they made a few more great records without making it ‘big’. Johnette Napolitano had one of the best female rock voices in history and should have been massive but was just too real for the majors to accept. Which is a tragically familiar story no matter what the date is.

So who else was playing hard in the second division in our late 80’s time capsule?

The Replacements - Tim
Most of the action was in the USA. In fact most of the action was focussed on Minneapolis and LA. In Minneapolis, Husker Du made it to major label status (Warner Bros) and then promptly imploded after a couple of okay albums that filed off their hardcore edges and left the songs as the focus. Probably one of the least likely acts to ever perform such a trick, but the band were nice guys and that probably made it more likely than someone like The Replacements from across town. Led by an eminently nice guy in Paul Westerberg, booze and other substances were The Replacements undoing, and they got to the play offs for the first division before scoring an own goal by getting drunk on Saturday Night Live and saying a rude word to the audience. Neither act was likely to endear them to the chairman of the board, and they eventually faded away after some thrilling, emotionally rich and powerful albums. Pleased To Meet Me and Tim are the ones that brought them close to the big time, but Let It Be also includes bits of their earlier hardcore roots and is probably the pick of the bunch. Here Comes a Regular and Little Mascara off Tim pack a real emotional punch and I admit to getting a little choked up by them at times. Definitely not music for the good times but it will surely help you get through the bad. The Replacements are another one of my favourite bands.

Soul Asylum - Grave Dancers Union
Also from Minneapolis were Soul Asylum. They had more commercial appeal and released albums on A&M and Columbia, eventually selling enough to get a platinum album off the back of Nirvana’s success, but they only released a couple of worthy products and after grunge became passé to record companies they quickly faded back to their roots. Pre-Megaupload’s massive fail, I managed to find a set of demos for their A&M album Hang Time on a blog somewhere. They have a more rock n roll edge than the commercial product and are recommended if you can track them down.

Dream Syndicate - Days of Wine and Roses
From LA, well Hicksville California actually, The Dream Syndicate provided a Velvet Underground inspired wall of noise that had strangely appealing pop hooks. Leader Steve Wynn had a voice that wasn’t about to challenge Seal in the chanteuse stakes, but he and the band did a convincing job of merging artiness and rock n roll without sounding pretentious. Debut album, The Days of Wine and Roses was easily their best and they were more influential than commercial, dogged by line-up changes that killed any momentum. Kurt Cobain’s vocals owe a big debt to Steve. So do mine for that matter.

Rain Parade - Emergency Third Rail Power Trip
Definitely from LA, The Rain Parade were lumped in with the Dream Syndicate as part of the Paisley Underground – a marketing term from the early 80s for rock acts that had a 60’s psych influence. The Rain Parade produced a fairly gentle take on things in comparison to The Dream Syndicate but held their own along with bands like Green on Red and jangly girl group The Bangles. What I like most about The Rain Parade are their album titles and covers more than the sounds within. Emergency Third Rail Power Trip and Explosions in the Glass Palace are nice listens, but without a commercial point of reference they were ultimately destined for obscurity.

Gun Club - Fire of Love
Completing the LA legacy are the hardest case band on the page. The Gun Club would have been huge on any planet that worships deep rooted, blues based, hell raising rock n roll, but sadly Planet Earth is not one of them. Leader Jeffrey Lee Pierce raged more than Nirvana against ugly bullshit, wrote better songs than any MTV hogging mega act and had the balls to call The Cramps tame. What prevented them from reaching promotion to the big time were two things: Jeffrey Lee had alcohol issues even AA would struggle with, and their live act was scarily aggressive at best and dangerously deranged at worst. That is not a winning combination for major label A&R men on the lookout for the next Huey Lewis. Somehow they kept going for a decade or more before Jeffrey Lee reached the end of the road and became another ghost on the highway. Any of their albums are worth checking out, if you can excuse some of their more excessive peaks.

I’ll leave the last word on this post to Jeffrey Lee as a challenge to all mainstream power brokers: “it is not an art statement to drown a few passionate men”.

For music without division check out:


Monday, 25 February 2019

We know what you like


Owners of websites and bloggers alike know the power of site analytics. That’s the back end stats that tell you many people in Russia have checked out your latest creation, from what referring site, using what browser. Its fascinating stuff (no, really) and you can spend hours wading through it (assuming you receive enough traffic to create the stats).

For the modest but elegant numbers of non-Russian visitors to this here blog (and even for some of them) I’d like to clue you into some other stats that are pretty significant. It seems like there’s a pattern emerging in the streaming for certain tracks on the Hopkinsville Goblins releases available on your favourite streaming services. Whether it’s the way things are tagged bringing in specific music hunters, or whether people are just previewing and choosing what they like on the fly, it seems like people like streaming three tracks from Posts from Planet Earth together as a group and then going onto their next trip. I don’t have the power to link the streaming stats to country referring site or browser, but what I can tell you is that people dig the three spaciest tracks on that album. And why not. It’s the final frontier and we do aim to please.

So with that in mind, this page hooks you up to what the most discerning Hopkinsville Goblins fans are streaming. Check them out, and if you like them there are another 30 or so tracks you can peruse while you’re at it.

PS Russian visitors really go for Amerikaemia. Not sure if it’s because it’s a free download or because they actually like it. The stats don’t go into that kind of detail. Yet. But I’m sure the great Goog is working on it. And we’ll be watching. Because we all want to know what makes each other tick. There’s a song percolating on that for the next Hopkinsville Goblins product. More about that later.






Sunday, 16 December 2018

Sources of Ankh



Ankh is the wellspring of life. To my little guys that means the frequencies generated by music and their effect on the hormonal system of living beings. In other words, the stuff that sends the shivers down your spine and makes you rage like a fool. Ankh is timeless. The taste and smell may change but the effect is the same.

Nothing exists in isolation and everything is related to something that has been done before. Anyone that tells you they have come up with something completely original is deluded. When you are talking ankh there is a big difference between inspiration and plagiarism. When you absorb your influences and spew them out as something that belongs to you, that’s inspiration. When you sound like a hack, that’s plagiarism. Ripping off a cool bassline to suit your financial bottom line is hack behaviour. Getting fuelled by a source of ankh is inspiration. This post is a not-very-comprehensive list of sources of ankh the Hopkinsville Goblins use to build their musical matrix. It’s inspired by the record sleeves of the Chocolate Watch Band. This is the only web page you will read that lists Cold Chisel and Japan in the same breath.

Simple Minds, Dub reggae, Gong, original blues, Virgin Prunes, Throbbing Gristle, Sleazoid 60’s rock, XTC, the best bits of 60’s acid rock are all covered already on this here blog. 

Add to that The Boys, Adam & the Ants, and The Rezillos for making punk you can laugh along to; Gang of Four, Japan and New Order for making post punk you can dance to; The Soft Boys, Swell Maps and ATV for warping traditions before they became traditional; and Humble Pie, Free and Cold Chisel for putting soul into hard rock and roll.

Plus Little Feat, Little Bushman and Little Richard for making little sound big, Big Star and Big Black for making big sound tight, The Black Crowes and Black Keys for making black come alive; and Black Sabbath and Black Uhuru for making black sound deep.

And in no particular order:

AC/DC and ZZ Top for the greatest guitar sounds, Graham Central Station for the heaviest bass playing and The Jam for the gnarliest drumming ever.

Antibalas for blurring the lines between tribute and inspiration, and I-Roy for his shameless appropriations from legends.

Linton Kwesi-Johnson, Gil Scott-Heron and John Cooper-Clarke for giving hyphenated surnames a sound of their own.

Magazine for giving attitude and paranoia an honours degree.

The Glove and Visage for significant one-offs.

Mandrill for bringing the tropics to New York.

P-Funk for reclaiming the pyramids, Billy Lee Riley for flying saucer rock and Hawkwind’s sonic assault across time and space.

DEVO’s alternative universe.

Brian Eno’s fluid future explorations and the darker time zone of Chrome.

The Ramones and Led Zeppelin for spawning the most imitators in history and The Buzzcocks for spawning a 100 UK indies.

Edgar Broughton's gentlemanly eccentricity and Captain Beefheart’s gentlemanly madness.

John Martyn’s cosmic celticness.

Cheap Trick’s goofy identity and The Comsat Angels honest anxiety.

The Fall, Tall Dwarfs and Hound Dog Taylor’s minimalist genius.

The Gun Club, The Replacements and The Faces for giving drunken sloppiness soul.

The Pink Fairies, New York Dolls and The Stooges for prototypes that work better then the final product.

The D4 for proving pure punk is timeless.

Supergrass’s single malt 60s drop.

Vernon Reid, Ice-T and Public Enemy’s killer collages.

Prince’s genius libido.

Wire for capturing the soul of the lost banker.

And Talking Heads for their slippery funk.

Now see what you can find in us:

Posts from Planet Earth on Amazon, I-Tunes, Spotify, Deezer and Google Play.

The Hopkinsville Goblins Are Back! on: Amazon, Deezer, iTunes, Spotify, Apple Music and Google Play. Or check them out on Youtube or from any of the purveyors of fine sounds listed on this site

Paypal users can check us out (literally) on Bandcamp.


Wednesday, 24 October 2018

Nowhere to run, nowhere to hide




So Google and Facebook have been playing fast and lose with your personal data huh? Surprise, surprise. They were given a free gift and no one told them they couldn’t play with it until it was too late. Every time you click “yeah whatever” on the terms and conditions page for your latest app you’re twitching yourself even further into the web. Most people live online now because it makes sense to, but have you ever considered what happens if you want to undo the digital footprints you are leaving behind? Data is a commodity and is going to be one of the most valuable commodities of the 21st Century after all the ivory and tiger gall bladders have been collected.

People have gotta make a living and they need you. And now they know where you live. Online anyway. The world is a village and you are its idiot because you made friends with those acquaintances you bumped into via friends of your partner’s cousin’s friend and, because of some links to some historical Marilyn Manson gigs in your news feed, they now want to out you as an aethiest to their Mormon Facebook community that keeps spamming your inbox with invitations to join them. Or the time you got tagged in that photo in a restaurant with your girlfriend’s friend’s boyfriend, who your boss recognised as someone he sacked in a previous job - and now he’s looking at you funny, just when you need him as a referee for your dream job. The grapevine produces instant fruit. It’s complicated, is it not, trying to tell the people who are messing up your life to bog off without looking like as asshole (for eternity) in front of the people you do care about.

If honesty is a dangerous thing, how about hiding behind a fake persona? Worth a try if you can get away with it, but don’t let the guys from Catfish find you. Plenty of people stretch the truth online, to some pretty outrageous extents. Why, it won’t be long before some mad musician is claiming they're acting under the influence of aliens. First impressions are almost certainly not what they seem, so think carefully when you’re weighing up those friend requests. Those hot photos are probably just a front.

But it’s all so tempting and it’s available instantly. Or instantly after you give them your credit card details that is. Then after you've signed up you find the glossy hooks on the front page are pure eye candy. All sugar coat and no filling. Like a drunk tourist in Amsterdam, you’re being played every time you venture online. A decent set of digital blinkers are a must have. How many times have you gone looking for stuff online and by the end of the night, not only achieved nothing, but ended up with a whole lot more you never thought of to chase down tomorrow.

Then there’s the whole business about business. You’ve gotta be upfront with the government and the bank and all the other corporations that have you by the short and curlies. Mess up your official identity and you’re life will vanish before your very eyes. They don’t pay money in little brown envelopes anymore. No bank account, no life. Even homeless people are struggling in a cash-free society, but that’s where you’ll be if you screw up. Is that really the only way left to retain your privacy?

Big data = bigger control. And you thought aliens were scary.

Now I know what you’re thinking – what has this got to do with rock n roll? Not a whole lot – this is a shameless plug for some of the ideas my little guys have been throwing out on their albums. Try these tunes on for size: