Motörhead — Ace of Spades

Posted by Tracy Sigler, June 11, 2008 2:19 pm - Permalink   

Motörhead -- Ace of Spades

If you’ve heard only one song by Motörhead it’s almost certainly “Ace of Spades” from the album of the same name. There’s an AT&T television ad in heavy rotation, or maybe it’s just the type of shows I watch, that has a burly metalhead singing the song at the end. I’ve seen it so much I had to hear the real thing again.

One fun thing about the Ace of Spades (1980, this version on Profile Records 1986) album is its copious use of that curious percussion instrument the vibraslap. Hear one at Wikipedia. No sound conjures up the spaghetti-western, guns-about-to-be-drawn vibe more than the vibraslap’s rattle. I first became intimately familiar with the vibraslap when I was a percussionist in my junior high band, and I’ve been in love with it ever since. So, it’s probably no coincidence that my all time favorite Motörhead song is “Shoot You in the Back.” Just listen to all that vibraslap.

There are a few other great songs, but despite its fame this is not a consistent record. Unfortunately, there is also some really off-putting stuff like “Jailbait.” Come on, man.

Metallica — Live Shit: Binge and Purge

Posted by Tracy Sigler, April 25, 2008 12:26 pm - Permalink   

Metallica -- Live Shit: Binge and Purge

A package this big needs at least two pics…

Metallica -- Live Shit: Binge and Purge

My personal rule for all the music I’m posting is that I have to listen to the entire thing and decide whether to keep it. I’m not going to pretend that I’ve consumed the entirety of Metallica’s over-the-top-box-set Live Shit: Binge and Purge (1993), again. It’s almost nine hours of live music! There are three VHS tapes and three CDs. I don’t even have a VCR any more. They released it later with DVDs but I couldn’t wait for that. Actually, this was a birthday present, I believe, and it was stupid spendy. But worth every penny!

That package is the coolest. It even has little metal hinges on the back. In addition to the audio and video stuff there is a small stencil, a moss pit pass from the tour, and a great book. The book has tons of photos and photocopies of set lists, and some serious, but humorous, memos about what the band can and can’t do on stage in various countries, and much more.

I got to see them play at least once on this mega-tour, but I can’t find the ticket stub. This package is an even better memento. Happy birthday to me, and as they say the introduction in the book, “Happy Overdose”!

You can read all about Metallica’s Live Shit: Binge and Purge at Wikipedia.

Major Maker — Rollercoaster

Posted by Tracy Sigler, April 1, 2008 12:41 pm - Permalink   

Here is a fun floaty pop song from Canadian band Major Maker, all the way from Canadia. “Rollercoaster” is a great grooving song to help you stay awake this afternoon, and it would be perfect for your summertime mix tape. If the boss isn’t looking try to watch the video; it’s worth the risk of reprimand anyway. Fans of Duran Duran’s “Rio” video are sure to love it. I’m guessing these guys probably weren’t even born when that debuted on MTV.

Check out more of their music

Money Mark — Change is Coming

Posted by Tracy Sigler, March 26, 2008 3:37 pm - Permalink   

Money Mark -- Change is Coming

  • Artist: Money Mark
  • Title: Change is Coming
  • Year: 2001
  • Format: CD
  • Rating (1-10): 9
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: No idea

All right, I’m going to have to pull back to a low rating of 9 on this one. Change is Coming by Money Mark is still awesome, just not quite so much as the earlier records. Still, I’ve probably played in its entirety at least 100 times. Overall it’s more instrumental and jazzy than his masterpiece, Push the Button. The packaging is almost as interesting as the music. I didn’t include all the artwork, but it revolves around origami swans made from different paper currencies and then set on fire. Check out the folding, and burning, directions printed on the disk itself.

The sad thing about Change is Coming is it’s the last Money Mark record I got. There have been two more full length releases and it’s ridiculous that I don’t have them, yet. Somebody help me out!

Check out “Another Day to Love You” from Change is Coming at Jango.com.

As an added bonus today, I’ve included a video with Mr. Mark from an interview that was on the Sundance Channel where he explains his relationship with the Beastie Boys and his creative process.

Money Mark — Push the Button

Posted by Tracy Sigler, March 25, 2008 2:07 pm - Permalink   

Money Mark -- Push the Button

  • Artist: Money Mark
  • Title: Push the Button
  • Year: 1998
  • Format: CD
  • Rating (1-10): 10
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1998 - Advance copy?
  • Keeper: Yes

Genius! Genius I tell you! More Money Mark greatness today. This record is deep! Somehow this disk is even better than the first. I don’t know where or how I got this advance copy of Push the Button but it’s good to have friends that know what’s going on. This record has a lot more vocals and that’s just more to love. Mark’s lyrics are brilliant and at times poignant. His voice is perfect for his unique style of music. Noise, techno, electronic, gospel, soul, funk, rock and jazz are all in the mix.

I have played Push the Button for countless people over the years and I have never met anyone who didn’t love it. And if there are people out there who don’t dig it I doubt I want to meet them.

Push the button
Push the button
Open the door and let me come innnnnn…

Money Mark at MySpace
Proper cover art for Push the Button at Wikipedia
Clips and review at AllMusic

Money Mark — Mark’s Keyboard Repair

Posted by Tracy Sigler, March 24, 2008 3:25 pm - Permalink   

Money Mark — Mark’s Keyboard Repair

  • Artist: Money Mark
  • Title: Mark’s Keyboard Repair
  • Year: 1995
  • Format: CD
  • Rating (1-10): 10
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1995 - Dunno where
  • Keeper: Yes

Money Mark is the greatest. He’s played with everyone from Beck to the Beastie Boys, but the truth is, even though I love those artists, I play his music much more often. Mark’s Keyboard Repair has 30 tracks. You’re probably thinking “that’s too much” but I assure after one listen you’ll start thinking “I want more.” Some folks describe this recording as demo quality, but I disagree. It’s free and loose but the sound is perfect. Many of the songs are only about a minute long. In some ways it feels less like a typical album and more like the cue track to your favorite unmade movie. Give it a spin and pretend you’re the star.

Gimme more Money Mark…
MoneyMark.com
Money Mark at Wikipedia


Masters of Reality — Masters of Reality

Posted by Tracy Sigler, March 19, 2008 5:38 pm - Permalink   

Masters of Reality -- Masters of Reality

  • Artist: Masters of Reality
  • Title: Masters of Reality
  • Year: 1988
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 7
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1988
  • Keeper: Yes

I was thinking this record was on the Delicious Vinyl label, but this is the original release which came out on Rick Rubin’s Def American. Turns out Delicious signed Masters of Reality and re-released their eponymous debut a couple years later. It’s better than I remember. There’s a weird vintage rock and roll vibe, but that’s how it sounded 20 years ago when it was new. It reminds me of Cream with a dash of Queens of The Stone Age. And there are in fact real connections to those bands. Ginger Baker would later play with the group, and singer Chris Goss has a side band with Queens front man Josh Homme.

Delicious Vinyl has one of the coolest logos of all time, but I dig the industrial looking Def American graphic on the liner pictured below.

More about Masters of Reality.

The Music Machine — Best Of The Music Machine (Featuring Sean Bonniwell)

Posted by Tracy Sigler, February 27, 2008 9:15 pm - Permalink   

The Music Machine -- Best Of The Music Machine (Featuring Sean Bonniwell)

  • Artist: The Music Machine
  • Title: Best Of The Music Machine (Featuring Sean Bonniwell)
  • Year: 1984
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 7
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1984 - Probably mail order from some place like Midnight Records in NYC.
  • Keeper: Yes

Since I mentioned The Music Machine in my last post I thought I would post this Best Of The Music Machine (Featuring Sean Bonniwell) record next. It’s been a while since I’ve heard it and it’s more rocking than I remembered.

This album was released by Rhino in 1984. That’s like some label today re-releasing music that was popular, or at least existed, in the late 1980s, for a new audience. I was in high school when I bought this re-issue, so it’s not like I was being nostalgic. I suppose there may be some teenagers out there who would be excited to discover music from 1988, but it seems weird to me.

Most people think the seeds of heavy metal were sewn in the late 1960s, but I think The Music Machine got there a few years earlier. They have some heavy riffs, tricky song structures, dark lyrics, and –best of all– they wore all black clothing, dyed their hair black, and wore a black glove on one hand only. The notes on the back cover describe them as being “in the vanguard of the punk rock boom.” Maybe, but after another round of listening I’m convinced The Music Machine was proto-metal. And that’s what I’m talking about.

More about The Music Machine at Wikipedia.

Mark Mothersbaugh — Musik for Insomniaks (Limited edition Japanese boxed cassette with deck of cards)

Posted by Tracy Sigler, December 16, 2007 2:58 pm - Permalink   

Mark Mothersbaugh -- Musik for Insomniaks (Limited edition Japanese boxed cassette with deck of cards)

  • Artist: Mark Mothersbaugh
  • Title: Musik for Insomniaks (Limited edition Japanese boxed cassette with deck of cards)
  • Year: 1985
  • Format: Cassette
  • Rating (1-10): 6
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1985? - I must’ve been working at a record store…
  • Keeper: Yes

All the nerds in the house say, “Hey!” This one is for you. I know I promised something for the nerds the other day, but I’ve been planning on posting Mark Mothersbaugh’s Musik for Insomniaks since I saw him playing “guest programmer” on TCM a couple weeks ago.

Mark had some interesting movie choices. I didn’t see his entire shift. I wonder if Robert Osborne asked him about Devo. Anyhow… Of course, Mark has made many soundtracks and that’s pretty much what Musik for Insomniaks sounds like. It’s a little too staccato to be considered truly soporific (false advertising!) but it does get boring at times. And those times really depend on the listener because all of the “songs” sound similar. I thought I was playing the same side of the tape by mistake for a minute, but it turned to be side 2 after all. Even the names of the songs are similar: “XP25″, “XP31″, etc. To be fair, the collection is really more like a film score where the pieces are variations of the core theme. It’s all instrumental, with no drums or guitar, that I could tell.

What makes this piece interesting enough to keep is the total package. This version was a Japanese import produced as limited edition boxed cassette with a deck of cards. Mothersbaugh completely covered this thing with art and quirkiness. The text on the cover is in gold leaf box, the cassette itself is metallic gold, there is a comic inside the box top, and included is a letter in kanji signed by Mark. I saved the best for last, there is also a full deck of playing cards, to play some sleep-inducing Solitaire I assume. All the cards have a different picture of Mark. For each suit he is wearing a different suit of his own. I don’t know who the woman is with him on one of the Joker cards.

Mark Mothersbaugh

Metallica — Master of Puppets

Posted by Tracy Sigler, December 11, 2007 11:47 pm - Permalink   

Metallica -- Master of Puppets

  • Artist: Metallica
  • Title: Master of Puppets
  • Year: 1986
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 10
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1986 - Probably when I worked at Mother’s Records
  • Keeper: Yes

The great one from the great ones. Some, people smarter than me that is, consider this the greatest heavy metal album of all time. I wouldn’t argue with that.

I was listening to Rodrigo y Gabriela’s version of Metallica’s “Orion” this Saturday and decided I should play the original, which ended up turning into a Metallica history lesson for my son Mars. Then, coincidentally on Sunday I got another, and unexpected, dose of Master of Puppets. We were at our kids’ music recital where most of the tunes were seasonally-correct holiday stuff. But then this one middle-school-age-looking youngster came up to play the title track, “Master of Puppets.” He was even wearing the t-shirt. He has the same cool teacher as my kids, and his teacher accompanied him on bass. There is nothing simple about this music. It’s intense in every way, but the kid did a solid job getting pretty far through the song then stopped somewhat abruptly before the pretty bridge and solos.

I was looking around the room at the faces of the parents and relatives wondering if anyone else in the room was getting it. As great as this music is, it’s not for everyone. And even for metal aficionados it takes some adaptation just to digest what’s going on. I’ve played “Master” more than you can imagine and I was still surprised how fast, intense and sophisticated it is when I spun it again this week. I was talking to the kids’ teacher yesterday and as he put it, “it still holds up.” Indeed. Side one alone qualifies it as a “10″ in my book.

Check it out:
“Battery”
“Master of Puppets”
“The Thing That Should Not Be” (for you fans of H.P. Lovecraft)
“Welcome Home (Sanitarium)”

Also worth mentioning about “Master” is that it was the last album with bassist Cliff Burton. He would die in a bus accident while on tour. OK, everybody knows that. But do you know this? Tipper Gore’s PMRC had it in for the title tack, which they apparently said was about “getting kids hooked on drugs.” Any moron could read the lyric sheet and see that the song was about the nightmare of drug addiction. I remember reading an interview with James Hetfield some time after the flare up. He might have even had to testify at a Senate hearing, can’t remember for sure. When he was asked about the whole thing he just said “people are going to believe what they want.” He didn’t need to explain anything.

Smashing through boundaries
Lunacy has found me
Cannot stop the Battery!

Lemme see those horns people!

More at Wikipedia:
Metallica
Master of Puppets

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