Hurtleturtled Out of Heaven - an electronic music composition, on CD and vinyl
https://michaelpdawson.bandcamp.com
http://www.waysidemusic.com/Music-Pr...MCD-spc-7.aspx
Obsessed with Sheik Yerbouti all over again. Side four is one I can take to the grave with me ("Wild Love", "Yo Mama"). Been spinning the vinyl.
It's a bit like the dark satirical short Fallen Art. The general represents the greedy corporations behind AI generators, and the soldiers' corpses represent the generators' datasets build upon artist's works acquired without their consent.
''The world's worst movie''
The World’s Greatest Sinner
Directed by Timothy Carey • 1962 • United States
Starring Timothy Carey, Gil Barreto, Betty Rowland
Timothy Carey—the unforgettable character actor whose weird, wiggy energy brought a manic edge to classics like THE KILLING and PATHS OF GLORY—wrote, produced, directed, and starred in this outrageous underground satire of all-American demagoguery, one of the great gonzo cult films of all time. He plays insurance salesman Clarence Hilliard, who, disenchanted with his ordinary life, transforms himself into a self-styled evangelist, declares himself God, and—using rock ’n’ roll and sex—builds a cultlike following that propels him up the political ladder. But first he’ll have to face the wrath of the real God. With a singularly crazed performance from Carey, unhinged camerawork, and a soundtrack by a young Frank Zappa, THE WORLD’S GREATEST SINNER is a truly independent, one-of-a-kind expression of its creator’s warped genius.
THE WORLD’S GREATEST SINNER was restored by the Academy Film Archive and The Film Foundation with funding provided by the Hobson/Lucas Family Foundation. With permission from the Timothy Carey Estate and Absolute Films.
https://www.criterionchannel.com/the...reatest-sinner
IINK has a page about that: http://www.donlope.net/fz/songs/Worl...Sinner_OS.html
Just listening to the 1973 Hollywood Palladium show that's included in the Overnite Sensation 50th Anniversary box set, and am wondering:
Was Jean-Luc Ponty known in the US at all before he played with Zappa? When I was a kid he was sort of a household-name, but I don't know if it's because of his time with Zappa, or something else, like being on the Mike Douglas show or something...
Not really. Bear in mind that Ponty's connection with Zappa goes back to 1969, very early in his career, when he appeared on Hot Rats and recorded the King Kong album. He had only released his first US album the year before, his few previous albums being on European labels. More than his time with Zappa, I think it was his stint with the Mahavishnu Orchestra that really brought him to the wider public's attention.
Hurtleturtled Out of Heaven - an electronic music composition, on CD and vinyl
https://michaelpdawson.bandcamp.com
http://www.waysidemusic.com/Music-Pr...MCD-spc-7.aspx
Though it doesn't obviously sound that way, the chord progression for this is absurdly complicated; it's like every jazz re-interpretation of every Great American Songbook tune mashed together. Even dedicated bebop players might find those changes tough to solo over without some preparation. One clue: When the second verse ("I don't regret having met up with a girl who....") begins, the music sounds like it has modulated up by at least a step. It hasn't. It's in exactly the same key, but - as in "The Song is You" by Jerome Kern - multiple modulations within the verse combine to create that illusion.
Last edited by Baribrotzer; 05-17-2024 at 10:17 AM.
Dieter Moebius : "Art people like things they don’t understand!"
It looks like (at least as of now) there are 3 tracks from this album released on YouTube.
This one has a feature that is common to a lot of live albums on CD and is a pet annoyance of mine: putting the spoken intro to the next song as part of the track with the song before it.
I guess I can understand why a DJ, for example, might not want to start a track with a spoken intro but wants to "put the needle down" (so to speak) where the actual music begins, and then "lift the needle" when the music ends. But that makes no sense when the CD tracks are part of a playlist; who wants to hear "The next song is gonna be..." and then not hear the next song? A spoken intro belongs on the track with that song on it. It's just dumb otherwise.
What we feel we have to solve is why the dregs have not dissolved.
If you mean when Ponty joined Zappa in 1973, I think he was getting a bit of attention from his solo records and had guested on Elton John's Honky Chateau in 1972. Elton mentioned in Rolling Stone that he had hopes of signing Ponty to the Rocket label he was starting then.
Listening to those 1973 Zappa tapes, it is interesting that in nearly every band intro Ian Underwood gets big applause, Ponty a moderate reaction and some recognition of George Duke.
/\/\/\
Well, Zappa sure turned solos into compositions!
The 'art' and package on this new one is zzzzzzzzzz... oh well. Missed opportunity with that venue and that date. Jeeeesh.
Artist formerly known as Phlakaton
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