"Jarvis" on Looper. And "Jarvis":
well, i really love it. It's strange, but the record really reminds me of me, if that doesn't sound too conceited. It's like, well, it sounds for all the world like a little segment of a Duke's Living Room set, with some blips and slow beats and then some break beats and a spoken word thing over the top.
I haven't heard the record, but I have heard Looper over the Internet, and yes, they reminded me of myself as well, insofar as they sounded bloody terrible and kept stopping and starting. Stuart's stories, particularly Impossible
Things, are lovely understated pieces, and really remind me of the short pieces we used to stick in the LR booklets, not that anyone read them, but whatever.
I've read some of them. My favourite is the Manifesto, especially the suggestion that anyone who wants 4/4 beats all night should bugger off down the shops and buy a Cream LP. I'm paraphrasing, of course. The only story I can remember off the top of my head is about a bloke sitting on a bench that says "arab strap". I mean that has "arab strap" written on it, it doesn't actually say "arab strap" out loud, although that would probably be quite good, can you imagine the look on the bloke's face? Sheer Heart Attack or what? Anyway, seeing as I'm not going to get the Looper single, what I thought I'd do is read that story out loud over a bit of that drum'n'bass tape you sent me (which I really like now, I'm Squarepusher too) and record it as a kind of substitute, back to their roots, Looper record. Anybody want a tape? It's just weird is all... and really nice to feel that
maybe someone somewhere else has a similar sensibility or something.
I know just what you mean. The same thing happened to me when I discovered Isaac Hayes a couple of years ago. Jon G - you might like Echo and the Bunnymen, the first two Billy Bragg albums and some albums by The Fall, such as This Nation's Saving Grace, as well as Orange Juice. Of course, you might hate them, but those are some of the things I liked when I was around about your age. Well, I'm not sure how old you are, but this kind of thing kept me company through the sixth form. In fact I was so impressed by Mark E. Smith that I once refused to analyse poetry because I'd heard him saying it was a bad idea on the radio. The teacher must have thought I was a complete twat. But I digress: I used to use and abuse the local record library, if you've got one of those nearby, it's a good way to get to listen to new stuff dead cheap. When I say "new" I mean stuff that you haven't heard before, because most of it's really old. Keith was a prefect, eh? I don't want anybody's address, you can all breathe a sigh of relief. I've got Paul's and it's him I'm after. He might wake up to find a goldfish's head in the bed one day. I'd forgotten about that tape he was going to do me. love, Mad Frankie Miller ----------------------------------------------------------------------- . This message was brought to you by the Sinister mailing list. . To send to the list please mail "sinister@majordomo.net". . For subscribing, unsubscribing and other list information please see . http://www.majordomo.net/sinister . For questions about how the list works mail owner-sinister@majordomo.net . Coinini athasach ata muid - ag canuint amhrain na . coinini - nach bhfuilimid? -----------------------------------------------------------------------