
While vacationing in Detroit recently, I found a used-CD copy of Associates’ Fourth Drawer Down, a collection of singles by the Scottish group led by Billy Mackenzie and Alan Rankine. They flourished in the ’80s and were mightily lauded by the UK music press (which I read religiously in that decade), but remained obscure in the US.
Reacquainting myself with Fourth Drawer Down—which I’d lost in that move last year—reminded me of the stunning uniqueness of “Message Oblique Speech,” with which I’ve become obsessed all over again, some 28 years after first falling in love with it. (You can hear it here.)
In a catalog studded with dazzlingly original songs, “Message Oblique Speech” stands above all others. What the hell is this? Operatic prog funk with delusions of Bowie? Talking Heads’ “Slippery People” played by Eno-era Roxy Music? Van der Graaf Generator fronted by an angst-ridden Freddie Mercury? A Tartan Sparks? I dunno. There’s never been anything like “Message Oblique Speech,” really—those crazily see-sawing/rubber-necking chord progressions, this flamboyant Mackenzie vocal performance, that porpoise-squawk guitar, those mad lyrics. We’re talking once-in-a-lifetime-level genius here.
Even more so than Fire Engines, Associates were the most outré Scottish post-punk group. They deserve much wider and more slavish recognition, but maybe they’re just too strange to appeal to more than a tiny cult and too bloody difficult to inspire a lot of young bands. It would take way too much effort to emulate Associates. Plus, nobody in rock can really sing like Billy Mackenzie these days; “Message Oblique Speech” represents just a fraction of his very odd and brilliant repertoire of vocal mannerisms.
So, yeah, I’m obsessed with this tune until further notice.

"Sheila," you're three years old now.
A toddler!
Jamie T might be the absent father from Wimbledon, but he's been spending most the time on his follow-up LP Kings & Queens, letting everyone come see one of the new kids just a few days ago.
"Sticks 'N' Stones" is more pub-rock than drum-machine. It's quite open-armed and fun, though, has a welcome air of summer, a gentle hooliganism — like The Libertines on a waterslide — and sounds so delighted with everything you want to be a part of it.
The video has smashed glass, a bunch of running, and a clown drinking beer in a lawn-chair.
The song is a lead-off to both a new EP and a whole album, the first of which has a sleeve like St. Etienne and comes out at the end of the month.
Still, we miss "Sheila".
They grow up so fast.
And Norwegian death black metal dudes are the craziest of them all, which is I think why tonight's showing at the Northwest Film Forum should be fascinating. Until the Light Takes Us, documents, among other things, remaining members (the lead vocalist killed himself and the guitarist was later killed by the bass player) of Mayhem, a shithouse-rat crazy outfit that, as I've learned from the interwebs, basically broke death black metal in Norway during the late 80s before they started offing themselves/each other.
See the times/dates here.
Update: I now know the difference between death metal and black metal. Thank you.
At number three of the five of the most intelligent hiphop tracks in history? Intelligent Hoodlum's "Grand Groove."
While I work on my RCMTC contribution for this weekend, I'm unearthing all the summer songs that have been hibernating for a good six months. There's a lot of pop and punk and it's put me in a really good mood. This has been one of my favorite "summer jamz" since about 1996:
Former Stranger Bug in the Bassbin columnist Donte Parks took several photos at Detroit’s Movement (aka Detroit Electronic Music Festival), which I also attended over the Memorial Day weekend. You can view them here.
When I get a spare hour, I hope to post my Movement highlights/impressions on Line Out. In the meantime, revel in the Motor City spectacle.


Sublime drone-centric composer Simon Wickham-Smith performs a free in-store at Dissonant Plane (5459 Leary Ave. NW, 98107) at 7 tonight with Jonathan Way. A Buddhist monk in addition to being a translator and astrologer, Wickham-Smith now dwells in Seattle, which is great news for local experimental-music fans.
Press release after the cut.
Show no mercy pt. 1: Rihanna to testify in Chris Brown case
Show no mercy pt. 2: Phil Spector pushes for reduction in prison time
The cleanest he’s been: David Gahan has tumor removed, cancels more Depeche Mode dates
Nostalgia for an age that never existed: Dispute arises over Woodstock trademark
Knowing one’s demographic: Less Than Jake drummer writes children’s book
Two tastes that go great together: Tool announces tour; singer announces Whole Foods wine tour
Yeah Yeah Yeahs have released a new video for the song "Heads Will Roll."
Michaelangelo Matos recently said this about the song: "'Heads Will Roll' sets a They Shoot Horses, Don't They? scenario to dance-rock that's been French-kissed by rave (the opening organ loop is straight out of a 1992 breakbeat-hardcore anthem)."
That dress looks like it'd be really uncomfortable.

San Francisco’s Pacific Heights is home to a theatre of sound called Audium. Listeners sit in darkness, surrounded by 169 speakers, and their ears are made to see. The show is of sound only. Noises spiral in all directions. Tones bounce multi-dimensionally. Sound is sculpted they say. Audium is a one of a kind room built in and operated since 1975 specifically for listening. With a National Endowment for the Arts, Audium was given life. It’s a building inside a building with a floating floor and a suspended ceiling. Speakers are spread throughout - dangling, buried underneath, and embedded in the walls. The show features found sound meets conducted instruments meets Philip Glass. Recorded offerings are mixed live. The “tape operator” (conductor) fades and melds the sonic movement from a one of a kind soundboard. Blank space takes on the images of hearing.
Eighty year-old Audium creator Stan Shaff greets listeners at the door himself. He’s kindly, soft spoken, and austere as he leads those waiting to a foyer, then through a tunnel, and into the main performance space. Seats are taken, lights go out, Shaff disappears to his conducting booth, and the program begins. An hour-long live performance, called simply Audium 9:

Waves hitting a shore rise in stereo from the center. A gruff seagull’s cry splits diagonally four ways and travels outward toward the corners of the room. There, the quadra-gulls become a little girl’s voice talking about her name and the colors pink and orange. Inverted trumpet notes sprout from smaller speakers and shoot back and forth from wall to wall and ceiling to floor. Raindrops begin to land in pockets. It all morphs and meshes. Violins undulate diagonally. Then the sound of a plane taking off is birthed from subwoofers below the floor. It washes the other sounds out from bottom to top and wipes away. Then a heavy wooden door slams sixteen times in a spiral back to center, and a guitar strums the note E minor 7. There is echo and buzz. Footsteps in boots march the periphery of the room. The buzz on the guitar is jittery and your mind pictures a flickering neon vacancy sign on top of a run down hotel. Sanguine clothesline underwear there wafts in the breeze. In the seventh floor room below, a small girl with orange from Cheetos smeared across her face is learning how to write her name for the first time. Violins fold out again left to right like origami herons over white noise drone. It is starting to rain. A hush - the sound. A million soft snares. A million soft snare drums rolling, playing the theory of thunder to the smell of wet streets below. Rolling the ions. Embroidery of the storm.

Stan Shaff spoke:
What made you actually bring Audium into existence?
Shaff: Insanity and a need to see sound? I’ve always been motivated by music and sounds. And by memories and the imagery they evoke. Audium is a combination of those two things for me. Some people paint. I do this. I like the suggestive qualities some sounds seem to have, be them natural or electronic. I think sounds touch certain levels of our inner lives, layers that exist beneath the visual world. I’m interested in sound as object, sound as environment, and sound as an event.
So you’re way into Judas Priest then?
No. Not very much.
You know Judas Priest right? “You’ve Got Another Thing Comin’”? That song?
I recall that song yes. But I myself am not a Judas Priest fan.
What do you want your listeners to take away from an Audium show?
I’d say whatever memory of image their mind brings up. Or a sensation. Or maybe they go home and dream.
Can you talk about your soundboard?
It’s a series of faders and knobs basically. I control direction, speed, and intensity on multiple planes. It changes from show to show. I am interactive with the crowd even though I can’t see them. I feel the energy in the room. Sometimes people breathe heavy or fidget a lot in their chair, I pick up on all that.
I looked at your booth during the performance and couldn’t see any light at all. I thought for sure I’d see some light in there.
No, I don’t need light anymore. I know the board pretty well after using it for thirty years. It’s all by feel. The performance is much more vivid in the dark. I can take everyone in the room and put them inside the same mind. The speakers see out.

Are you an analog only man?
Everything I do with Audium is analog. But really, I don’t hear a difference anymore. I’m interested in sound period, whether it's made electronically or if it’s played by acoustic means, it’s all just the same to me. What really matters is how it shapes. Hit your hand against a poll, does it sound good? Then I’ll use it. When I began thinking conceptually of Audium in the late 1950's, obviously technology was more limited. Believe me, I’d love to have been able to play with a Pro Tools or Ableton program back then. I'm a trumpet player by trade. So is my son. The trumpet sounds you hear in Audium 9 are him. I'll probably hand this off to him when I retire. I'm not going to do it forever.
Can I be your groupie?
I don’t know, can you? I’m not sure I’ve ever had one of those.
Photos by Vicente Montelongo , PingMag .
The Pack play El Corazon tonight with Dyme Def. In this week's music section, Charles Mudede dissects the Pack's place in hiphop's current landscape:
Their music is a sublation (two things becoming one) of old-school and bling-school principles, which is why initially it was not surprising that none other than Too $hort (a hiphop granddaddy) discovered them and got them a record deal with Jive. This deal, however, proved to be not so good for the Pack. According to one of the crew's rappers, Young L, Jive did not know how to promote their first album, Based Boys, and the excitement from "Vans" fizzled by the end of 2008. Jive could understand the old-school side of the Pack (which is essentially party/bad-boy rap), but not their new side, which had much to do with the cultural and economic openness of a postracial hiphop.
Also tonight, speaking of hiphop, is Fatal Lucciauno at Nectar:
Fatal Lucciauno, Dway, Bobby Hustle, Wizdom, Filejerks, 100 Proof, Cide, Swervewon
(Nectar) Shortly after Fatal Lucciauno was unceremoniously dropped from a hiphop show at the Crocodile in late April, DeVon Manier, the owner of Fatal's label, Sportn' Life Records, alleged that even Nectar, one of Seattle's most hiphop-friendly venues, was keeping Fatal out of its doors. The problem? Fatal performed at Chop Suey on the night that a gunman opened fire into the club, killing one man and wounding two. There was also the problem of his gangsta lyrics and his criminal record. Fatal Lucciauno, however, is an excellent example of the reforming power of hiphop. For him, the music and culture is about survival and making sense of a childhood that was spent on the streets, in deep poverty. See him once and you will be forever be impressed by the heaviness of his honesty. If indeed the doors at Nectar had been closed to Fatal, it is nothing but good news to see that they have been reopened. CHARLES MUDEDE
And lastly, Night Canopy (who is, perhaps, the furthest thing from hiphop), plays the Comet:
Night Canopy, Big Eagle
(Comet) I remember the first time I saw Night Canopy perform—it was at 20 Twenty in Ballard, on a sunny summer afternoon, during an art opening. There were beautiful cakes for a cakewalk to my left, racks of vintage clothes to my right, and the hot sun poured in through the shop's windows and doorway, beating on the backs of the crowd seated on the floor in a half moon around the timid but lovely Amy Blaschke. As she sang songs like "Seasick Casanova" in a summer dress and cowboy boots, her voice went from quiet whisper to a strong, romantic croon, and everyone in the room was mesmerized. Not long after that, Blaschke moved to L.A., taking her Night Canopy project with her, and I haven't had the chance to see her since. I'm so glad she's back in town, even if temporarily. MEGAN SELING
See all of tonight's listings in our calendar. You know you want to.