guest DJ set list (Sept. 30, 2021) - postpunk & disco

Thanks to ffog for inviting me to guest-DJ again on his weekly internet radio show, Myocyte.
The mix was "simulcast" on anonradio and tilderadio, and has been archived by anonradio (scroll down to "Ffog - Pleasure & Discomfort Myocyte"). An mp3 version of the mix is here: [1 hr mp3] (The show was broadcast at 1 am on October 1 UTC, which is 8 pm Central, September 30, in the US.)

To flesh out the ideas behind the mix, I've posted an essay with details and observations about the tracks and why I put them together (cross-posted to the anonradio blog).

While the tracks were playing I "announced" via text chat on the #sally and #tilderadio channels on IRC (Internet Relay Chat), as well as anonradio's chat service "com," which runs on a command line terminal. Listeners could comment or ask questions. This is an interesting way to DJ, very different from my old FM radio days and a few steps up aesthetically from having everyone's data and souls leeched out on Spotify, Mixcloud, etc.

00:00 Harvey Gold - Armadillo (1978) - Experiments 7 inch
03:00 Tin Huey - Puppet Wipes (1977) - 7 inch
05:41 Tuxedomoon - Driving to Verdun (1984) - Made to Measure Vol. 1
08:10 Stuart Argabright - Tipsy Turvy (1989) - IBM computer animation soundtrack
10:10 Hugh Hopper / Alan Gowen - Elibom (1980) - Two Rainbows Daily
15:10 Michael Giles / Jamie Muir / David Cunningham - Cascade (1983) - Ghost Dance
18:40 Aksak Maboul - Odessa (1984) - Made to Measure Vol. 1
22:30 Chrome - Nova Feeback (1977) - Alien Soundtracks
28:09 (The) Bizarros - Lady Doubonette (1976) - 7 inch
31:48 MX-80 Sound - Cry Uncle (2005) - We're An American Band
35:46 Glo (Gilli Smyth/Stephan Lewry) - Let's Glo (1995) - Even As We
42:13 Carly Simon - Why (1982) - 7 inch
45:30 Tullio De Piscopo - Stop Bajon (1984) - 12 inch
52:40 Losoul - Remember Your History (2000) - Belong

Notes for "postpunk & disco" mix

[I am working on a mix for (open source) internet radio streaming. Below are notes explaining my choices.* The mix is scheduled for this Thursday, Sept. 30, 9 pm Eastern on ffog's Myocyte show on tilderadio and anonradio. Update: The setlist, with link to an mp3 of the mix, is here.]

Disco and "hard rock" were once poised as arch-enemies but tonight's mix suggests a continuum where they exist side by side and even cross-pollinate. Postpunk music (new wave, synthpop, hardcore, etc) overlapped disco in '77-'85 but the genres mostly stayed within their market niches. The first part of the mix skews towards "rock" and the second "dance" but the intent is to imagine them intertwined.
Tin Huey was an Akron OH band that only put out one LP, Contents Dislodged During Shipment (1978) on Warner Brothers.** Many would categorize it as prog-rock but it's also hard-rocking in the manner of fellow Akronites DEVO and The Bizarros. With its emphasis on horns, strident vocals, and sometimes forced-sounding zaniness, it could also be called a "Midwest Oingo Boingo" -- though I prefer the Hueys' music. Guitarist Chris Butler went on to fame and fortune with The Waitresses ("I Know What Boys Like," "Christmas Wrapping") but the "auteur" of the band arguably is Harvey Gold, who has a songwriting credit on 7 out of 11 songs.
Tonight's mix begins with Gold's "Armadillo" (1978), a 7 inch single release under his own name. The song shifts gears from prog to country to folk to avant garde, reveling in its own refusal to take itself seriously.
(As a biographical note, I have heard that several Hueys were in college at the time of the Kent State massacre and were deeply affected by that event. Much late '70s "underground" music has an anger and nihilism that took the form of almost militant absurdity. Gold's and Tin Huey's singing wears its heart on its sleeve, but sarcastically: the lyrics are smart and cynical and frequently nonsensical.)
Next up is a 7 inch version of Tin Huey's "Puppet Wipes" (1977), co-written by Gold and Ralph Carney, who also went on to later success, as a sought-after session "reed man." A catchy, herky jerky DEVO-ish beginning is interrupted by a rockin' middle section where Gold barks out barely-comprehensible phrases like an enraged street person ranting to himself.
Another cult band of this era is Tuxedomoon, which launched in San Francisco and then relocated to Belgium as arty expatriates. "Driving to Verdun" is a pretty synth dirge from their Belgian phase. This track is followed by Stuart Argabright, who had some club recognition with "The Dominatrix Sleeps Tonight" ("women beat their men," "the men beat on the drums" etc) from 1984. Tonight's mix features Argabright's later score for a 1989 CGI animation made by IBM, "Tipsy Turvy," demonstrating Pixar-type effects, pre-Pixar. Synthy arpeggios flutter in the background as rubberized dinnerware sneezes, bounces, and crashes around on a tabletop.
Next we briefly detour into some jazzy prog from the UK that was going on at the same time as postpunk and disco and belongs in our imaginary de-genre-fied conversation. Canterbury duo Hugh Hopper and Alan Gowen perform "Elibom" (1980), on bass and keyboards, then ex-King Crimson percussionists Michael Giles and Jamie Muir join Flying Lizards leader David Cunningham for the gamelan-like "Cascade" (1983). These tracks mesh pretty well with Aksak Maboul's Odessa (1984), another pretty synth dirge with an Eastern flavor, which cycles us back to Belgian art rock.
Rounding out our postpunk exploration are tracks by Chrome (Nova Feeback, 1977), The Bizarros (Lady Doubonette, 1976) and MX-80 Sound (Cry Uncle, 2005). Each features psychedelic guitar wailing and warbling, divorced from the hippie romanticism of psychedelia and placed into a harder, more cynical context. The overall sound of MX-80 changed between 1977 and 2005 from garage rock to pseudo-hiphop, but a constant has been Rich Stim's relentlessly sardonic vocals.
"Pseudo-hiphop" might also cover the next track, "Let's Glo" (1995) by Glo, an offshoot project of UK space-rock pioneers Gong. The "Gong vibe" can still be heard in the Tim Blake-esque analog synth sweeps and Gilly Smyth's whisper poetry but otherwise this is a dance track falling somewhere between later New Order and UK triphop.
The "disco" section of the mix kicks off in earnest with a Chic produced track by Carly Simon (!) from 1982, titled "Why." Bernard Edwards' poppin' funk bass and a haunting melody almost make us forget this is Carly Simon. Next up is some vintage Italodisco, Tullio De Piscopo's "Stop Bajon" (1984), with a driving beat and catchy horns. And lastly, "disco" gets the deconstructionist treatment in Losoul's "Remember Your History" (2000), with its various elements -- four on the floor kick, bassline, rhythm guitar vamping -- broken into segments, layered, and scientifically analyzed in the laboratory of German tech-house.

* This essay also appears on the anonradio blog.
**In 1999 they released a CD, Disinformation, collecting odds and ends from various later incarnations of the band.

robert w. malone interview

Jimmy Dore talks to Robert W. Malone about vaccines, antivirals, etc: YouTube
This goes against pharma lobby narrative so it may not be up long (I have a copy if you'd like to see it).
Predictably the Wikipedians have included caveats about Malone in their entry about him. Again, to be expected for anyone not sticking to the party line.

Update, Sept. 24, 2021: I took down this post for a while after a friend described Malone as a charlatan. I'm putting it back up with heavier qualifications. Much of what Malone says makes intuitive sense whether or not he's right about all of "the science." We should be able to discuss which of his claims have merit and which don't. The interview has been up on for 10 days on YouTube without interference. As I wrote almost a year ago, "Just because the Covid truthers are wrong about this being a manufactured crisis, doesn't mean evil technocrats aren't waiting in the wings, hoping it will provide a technological 'reset' that benefits the largest and most vile corporate actors." Malone isn't saying it's a manufactured crisis but he is right to question the role of large pharmaceutical companies (which stand to benefit from vaccinations) in crafting a narrative that their products are the only solution to the pandemic. That's fair for any non-expert to ask.