Sunday, February 28, 2010

girls - lust for life

i guess i haven't really been following 'current' music so i sifted through some of the big sites and came across this band girls. i was kind of bummed o realize it wasn't by the same band of girls in the garage vol. 9. they're cool though, been diggin' lust for life, video's live on a roof:

Saturday, February 27, 2010

miniUPLOAD

IN WESTERN NEWS: we have changed our name to CHELSEA SAINTS and are givin' away our free demo, EP 2010, HERE.



tracklist:

1. playtime
2. movies
3. radio
4. hot town (part 1)
5. hot town (part 2)

IN OTHER NEWS: there's this comp i compiled, some excrement, some revivalist ethiopia. anyway, it's called 'Vagabondage: Friendly Noise & Psychotic Covers', the title overly explains the contents. also, we had mad new members; shout out to pierre, oli, and alex. cover art by justin, download here.



tracklist:

1. lost guitars
2. smells like teen spirit (nirvana cover)
3. "hello, this is your rite aid store..."
4. purple rain (prince cover)
5. i want you back (jackson 5 cover)
6. can't explain (the who cover)
7. in da club (50 cent cover)
8. orgasm addict (buzzcocks cover)

or stream 'in da club below':

in da club (50 cent cover) by james_morley

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

pearson/glover

this is pretty rad, justin pearson of the locust on springer:




also, check out crispin helion glover on letterman:



his track clowny clown clown ain't bad neither:



'thanks luke!'

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

drawin'/dosto/demo(n)s/deads


"I am a sick man. ... I am a spiteful man. I am an unattractive man. I believe my liver is diseased. However, I know nothing at all about my disease, and do not know for certain what ails me. I don’t consult a doctor for it, and never have, though I have a respect for medicine and doctors. Besides, I am extremely superstitious, sufficiently so to respect medicine, anyway (I am well-educated enough not to be superstitious, but I am superstitious). No, I refuse to consult a doctor from spite. That you probably will not understand. Well, I understand it, though. Of course, I can’t explain who it is precisely that I am mortifying in this case by my spite: I am perfectly well aware that I cannot “pay out” the doctors by not consulting them; I know better than anyone that by all this I am only injuring myself and no one else. But still, if I don’t consult a doctor it is from spite. My liver is bad, well—let it get worse!"

fyodor dostoyevsky, notes from the underground


that was some dostoyevsky, here are some 'western' demo(n)s from last night:

movies:
movies (demo) by james_morley

playtime:
playtime by james_morley

blue eyes radio:
blue eyes radio by james_morley

hot town:
hot town by james_morley

last western demos i'll be uppin' to soundcloud for a while, they have these weird sanctions on how much a 'free' user can upload. kinda wish they'd take my blood or just:

Monday, February 22, 2010

aleatoricism/tp bath

aleatoricism - virtual 7":

tracklist:

1. alone
2. space

i guess aleatoricism is kind of ambient/noise thing i'm doin' for fun. i recorded this late las year but only just got 'round to uppin' it. anyway, here is the first aleatoricism release: aleatoricism - virtual 7".


tp bath - polygon:

tracklist:

1. Polygon
2. Polygon Must DIE!!
3. Poly's Gone

tristan put this up on his blog a couple of days ago. download it here: tp bath - polygon.

i guess all you really need to know about this old chestnut, besides the fact that "all music was improvised, but overdubbed" is:

- tristan
- guitars
- tabla
- cello
- melodica
- glockenspiel
- recorder

more importantly is that polygon is:

Sunday, February 21, 2010

western - playtime (demo)


errol: vocals/guitar
james: drums

Saturday, February 20, 2010

MEGAupdate

IN EXCREMENT NEWS:


left hand side drawn by justin - right hand side drawn by me


since the brain autopsy demo we've been kind of busy, but don't worry excrement are still on our hustle. currently we're refining as well as re-writing some of the tracks off brain autopsy for our album, 'broken biscuits'. here's a new track we're pretty stoked on:

untitled new demo by james_morley

justin: guitar
james: drums

we also recorded this track called 'relaxin' at the apocalypse (bowing to luke)' for our boy luke. get on it:

relaxin' at the apocalypse (bowing to luke) by james_morley

justin: guitar
james: guitar

IN REVIVALIST ETHIOPIA NEWS:



we got two new members: cj (a.k.a prolifik, pictured above) and homie pete. we've cut this since our expansion. here's 'we cut this, you cut yourself':

we cut this, you cut yourself by james_morley

cj daley (prolifik): voice/?
pete: precussion
savva: precussion
justin: kit
james:precussion

IN 'SONGBOOK' (EXPLAINED BELOW) NEWS:


james william elwood morley - 'songbook #1: oracle too weird':

1. intro
2. messy recipe
3. interlude (squidbillies)
4. your kids are going to grow up to be just like me
5. interlude (emo philips)
6. hippies
7. song for gabriella
8. drum interlude (beavis & butthead)
9. neurocentrism
10. interlude (american movie, sun ra, j. mascis, and bbc chernobyl reenactment)
11. ché kit
12. untitled
13. hippies (reprise)

besides all the other groups i'm hoping to put up a mixtape of stuff i made by myself. i guess it's kinda a weird alternaive to hip-hop mixtapes, same idea anyway. the first installment is called 'songbook #1: oracle too weird'. it's 8/13 of the way done. i'll post the whole thing on completion, here are some finished tracks:

intro:
intro by james_morley

song for gabriella:
song for gabriella by james_morley

interlude (american movie, sun ra, j. mascis, and bbc chernobyl reenactment):
interlude (american movie, sun ra, j. mascis, and bbc chernobyl reenactment) by james_morley

that is all.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

western

all excrement aside, i'm drumming in a ol' time rock n' roll band with my boy errol. it's current name is wetern but i think it's subject to change. anyways we practiced last night and got some stuff down, check it out:

'currently untitled song'
Untitled by james_morley

'take me to the movies'
take me to the movies by james_morley

one

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

acoustic

thurston moore - fri/end:



john fahey - in christ there is no east or west:

Sunday, February 14, 2010

"happy valentines day, PARTY HARD!"

only a valentines day message from one of the best people ever:



and an unreleased valentines day excrement jam from the 'broken biscuits' sessions for all the broken biscuits:

theme by james_morley


justin: drums
james: guitar

Friday, February 12, 2010

tristan bath


tristan bath is my friend and he can play a lot of instruments. he linked me to a record he cut (i think under the name tp bath but i'm not sure) a few years ago called batavia. it's really rad, i guess guitar improvisation #2 (raga rag for amateur guitarists) was my favourite. anyways, he said i could put some of his stuff up here.


tristan bath (or tp bath) - batavia



tristan bath (or tp bath) - dronement

also, check out his myspace and blog

"great show, didn't do much for his hair that rain"


Prince @ Superbowl XLI

DУLДИ | MySpace Video

Sunday, February 7, 2010

ripper #8, 1983


By Murray Bowles
Photos by Tim Tonooka


MDC stands out among even political bands, as not just SOUNDING more political than most, but in applying their beliefs in everyday practice. MDC got together in Texas four years ago, and they've had the same lineup for the last year. In April '82 they moved to San Francisco. Their "John Wayne Was a Nazi" single was released in April '81, and their LP in June '82.

MDC was interviewed on July 16, '82 at the Vats by Tim Tonooka.

"IT DOESN'T MAKE US LAY DOWN AND GO TO SLEEP"

dave: "John Wayne Was a Nazi" was I think the first song that we wrote. Franc'o and I had been politicos in Texas working on different things. "John Wayne Was a Nazi," it's so obvious. In Texas, John Wayne's revered like a hero. If he could be alive and running for governor, he'd win in a snap. Frank, I, and Ron had just been friends hanging out in Austin, Texas. We figured, "Where can we make our stand where it will be the most felt, where we're doing what we really want to be doing with it?" Just being a local politico wasn't what I wanted. I wanted to put it into art and music, and rebellion, and that's how the group started. I don't knock anyone who's doing things like going door to door, or calling no nukes on the phone, because there's a lot of great people doing that. But we just felt like that wasn't us. We have this real kind of dark image of what the future is going to be. Just world wars and so much hate and repression, and, it sounds kind of weird to say in an interview, but deep down inside, my soul tells me there's so much misery happening, that's it's just a little too late. Everything that's in me point to this total destruction of our life. Amerika, the United States, mabe the whole Northern Hemisphere.

franc'o: It's like the finger's on the button, just waiting for the order to push it. And it's like, it doesn't make us lay down and go to sleep, it makes us pissed off as hell.

dave: And write songs, and put our energy, instead of being a doctor, or being whatever else our sideline interests would be if we weren't politicos, it makes us fucking reach down inside of us and do shit like this.

THE KLAN AND THE POLICE

dave: The Klan showed up at a gig in Texas in about three or four old Amerikan cars one day, a couple guys in fatigues, real scroungeyish looking, almost between hippie and not quite bikers, but just real East Texas white trash kind of Klan people. They came to the gig and they were handing out literature. There's a lot of young kids in the scene, and I didn't want them to pick up on all this hate and shit. I went up to them and I confronted them, and I started burning their propaganda, and there was like a little scene started, it was a bunch of punks and a bunch of Klan, and then it got cooled out by the security guards, and then some other guy came over and punched one of them cold. The Klan are real active in Texas. Some of the Vietnamese refugees there became fishermen, and it was cutting in on the local fishermen, and the Klan came out in support of the white people, and they drove all the Vietnamese fishermen out.

ron: On the Rio Grande border, the KKK patrol the area with dogs and shotguns to make sure that no "wetbacks" get across.

dave: There's been substantiated reports where they say up to a third of the Houston Police Department is Klan infiltrated.

ron: That's where this comes from (back cover of the MDC album): "Blue by day, white by night." Policemen in the day, Klansmen at night.

franc'o: Like Joe Campos Torres. He was just a Mexican guy hanging out in a bar, and the police didn't like him. They handcuffed his hands behind his back and threw him in the bayou.

dave: Knocked him unconscious and he drowned in the bayou. Houston's got a record in the last five years, probably the most homicides of any major police department in the country. They even overtook Philadelphia and Mayor Rizzo.

FARMWORKERS

ron: In Texas, we did a benefit for the Texas farmworkers. They only pay them a couple dollars a day.

dave: And they go to prisons, and they get all these crazy white trash white people who are just twisted, they hate the Mexicans, they hate the blacks, and they arm them and take them out when there's a farmworkers problem going on. It gets SO little national attention it's unbelieveable. Every now and then the camera will go down there, "Three farmworker union leaders were beaten and shot." It's in the news a day and a half, then life goes on. And it's not just based on racism. It's based on economics. I believe even if there weren't different races in this country, rich people would still be using power to thwart poor people

"MY FAMILY IS A LITTLE WEIRD"

franc'o: I think punk has tried to get people together, to say, "Hey, things aren't so cool." Especially if your family didn't have a lot of money and stuff, and you had to come from a broken family but meanwhile you're being fed all this stuff that you're supposed to be Mr. & Mrs. Donny Osmond. It just doesn't work, and it's real alienating to a lot of kids, because they think that they're the weird ones, when actually it's the society that's all fucked up.

dave: That's almost where the song "My Family is a Little Weird" comes from. It was a song I wrote that had to do with growing up in Amerika, like Frank said, though my family isn't word for word like the family in that song. It was just so weird when I was young watching Leave It to Beaver. It wasn't like that at all for my background.
Frank was talking about a new disco song, one that comes to mind, "In The Navy," which subliminally enters in that Coca Cola disco society that in the Navy, it's cool and I'm on the deck of a ship, and the wind's blowing. Of course there's the macho gay element in the song, but it appeals over the whole society. And what's that other song?

franc'o: It's "I Love a Man in a Uniform." This guy has progressed to being in the army, and being proud, and all the girls like him now, because he's in a uniform.

dave: And it's all surface bullshit. It appeals to just a basic sexual thing of, "Oh, he's a man in a uniform, and I'm just a fluff fluff girl."

franc'o: And it just creates the mentality that that's what's cool, and it's being fed all over the airwaves, and a lot of people suck it right up, just like the rest of the propaganda. A lot of the shows on TV are cop shows, it makes you feel like the cops are always right, and anybody who's a stranger on the street or who might look a little bit different from you is automatically a criminal or drug addict or this or that, and definitely ought to be avoided. It keeps people apart from each other. People don't feel like they can come up to each other and talk, because everybody's afraid of each other from what they've been taught on the TV.

"YOU CAN'T JUST PLAY TO THE HOMETOWN CROWD"
WHY MDC LEFT AUSTIN

al: Logistically, Texas is not a good place for a hardcore band to be, because Austin and Houston are the only viable cities to play in. And it's a thousand miles in any direction. The media support for hardcore is NIL. Three years later they're playing the Sex Pistols to do everybody a big favor. It kinda hurts to put out your music and know there are people who are interested, and never get media support. There's fanzines and stuff, but radio isn't interested.

ron: None of the radio stations play hardcore punk. And the newspapers rarely write anything. They prefer to ignore punk rock or they'll label it as nazi goon squads, or berating the police at a safe distance, etc. Even the college station wouldn't play the Dicks or us, and as far as clubs are concerned, when we left, we were having to rent halls to do shows.

dave: We wanted to spread our music to more places than just Texas.

ron: You've got to test yourself too. You can't just play to the hometown crowd, where it's real safe and it's always the same people. You gotta go and check it out in different places, to see if they accept you and your message, so we left. And it's the best thing we could have done, I swear. It's like, if we were still there, we'd be nowhere.

dave: I found myself setting up a lot of the shows, putting all of this energy into a part of the scene that is cool, but I found here, there's people setting up the shows, so we can put the energy into MDC itself, or into new songs.

MUSICAL INFLUENCES

MDC is a band whose musical influences are VERY diverse, spanning the musical spectrum from classical to jazz to salsa to rock to hardcore, bands ranging from the Who to Black Flag and Minor Threat to name but a few of a long list. But of all their influences, the Dicks, a Texas band, are cited as being especially inspiring.

dave: Their lead singer is a man named Gary Floyd. He's a tremendous sized gay transvestite commie street politico who I met in Austin four or five years ago. I was a college sophomore or something, and he had a little stand in front of the college. He was a real inspiration, just talking politics. He doesn't fit in, he comes from a small town in Texas. They wanted him to just roll up and die, because he's such a freak. Instead he got up and was strong enough to persevere, against all the "You fat queer," etc., that he must have heard a million times, coming from Palestine, Texas, the rural part of Ku Klux Klan country. He was a real influence spiritually and intelligently and emotionally.

"DON'T WASTE TOO MUCH OF YOUR TIME"

dave: If there's anything MDC says, it's take yourself seriously, don't waste too much of your time. People use drugs, and that's okay, we're not holy rollers and we're not straight edge, but just don't fuck up and waste your time. Don't let drugs use you.
I read something that was in a letter in one 'zine about how they hated the school system so bad. They said people are ruling over others, they had to vote in a school election for one person or another, and that's where it starts. You have to choose somebody who is going to rule you. Think about it. Don't let people rule you.

franc'o: Get together with your friends and try to figure stuff out instead of just falling into regular trendy molds. Your friends are the people you can depend on.

dave: And if these friends fuck you up and don't let you be who you are, change your friends. Enjoy yourself, not meaning disregard what we've been saying, like ignore all this and just have fun while there's time, but just enjoy yourself because you know that you're doing the best you can do. Like the fact that I'm not a fucking corporate slave working 9 to 5, and that we live in a beer vat. I sleep in an air shaft and Frank and Al live on foam mattresses on either side, and Ron lives in the van. It's very spartan, but I'm having more fun and more good feelings about my life than I ever did, than when I was 17 living in mommy's house with mommy's car and daddy bringing home the paycheck. Those days were okay, and were part of my growing up, but don't get caught in the bourgeois trip of supporting your new car to support your expensive apartment to support fuckin' big business who support whatever. You can have fun and do what you want to do and feel meaningful. And try to find people who will help you along that way and not fight you. That's it.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

21st birthday party mini showcase

tristan bath and his brown finger band - lovesick blues (hank williams cover):


members:

tristan bath - guitar/vocals
luke waldock (aka 'jimmy shimmer') - bass/backing vocals
myself - attempted precussion

unseemly girl - italian verse:



members:

graham carlow - beats
myself - guitar

the vessel (mikey georgeson), professor rimschott (graham carlow), luke waldock, and james morley - miscellaneous (david devant and his spirit wife cover) pt. i
:


the vessel (mikey georgeson), professor rimschott (graham carlow), luke waldock, and james morley - miscellaneous (david devant and his spirit wife cover) pt. ii:


members:

mikey georgeson - vocals/guitar
graham carlow - beats
luke waldock - bass
me - guitar

maybe even follow trusty rombone on youtube?

http://www.youtube.com/user/trustyromboneful
http://www.youtube.com/user/trustyromboneful
http://www.youtube.com/user/trustyromboneful
http://www.youtube.com/user/trustyromboneful
http://www.youtube.com/user/trustyromboneful
http://www.youtube.com/user/trustyromboneful