Monday, February 24, 2014

adrian belew - lone rhino


strong effort

the thing i always notice about adrian belew's first record is that i always walk away from it weirded out if i listen to it once, but if it ends up on rotation then it makes more and more sense on each listen. that makes it not just a grower but a record that you need to let grow on you every time you put it on. i think that's less of a commentary on the record's abstraction and more a reflection of it's stylistic explorations, which have a certain affinity with gen y indie rock but are, overall, going to be largely alien to just about anybody that didn't live through the late 70s. at points, the record sounds very dated; ironically, though, it's the song structures that sound dated, rather than the technology, which has largely aged quite well. so, the record packs this sort of initial "disco cringe" that weakens on successive listens, when the songs become more and more familiar. in the end, the disc flows well as a cohesive whole.

my connection to the progressive rock of the 1970s and 1980s is largely through sorting through my father's cd collection, and it's a happy coincidence that he happened to have an interest in guitar players, but this isn't a record that was ever in his collection. rather, it's something i've only ever interacted with through mp3. this is true of all of the early belew material, up to the guitar as orchestra. i recall some offhand remarks that his solo work was largely forgettable, which acted as a strong disincentive for further exploration until as late a date as the mid 00s and only after connecting fairly strongly with sides one and two. rather, he had a cd called "sleepless: the concise king crimson" that acted as my early teenage introduction to both belew and robert fripp. unfortunately, my father was one of the people that made the error (and the economics of the situation were no doubt relevant) of selling his sizable record collection at the dawn of the cd era. it's something he slowly rebuilt, but he deeply regretted that decision for the rest of his life. it seemed to have large consequences on his general interest in music, as limited funds that would have previously been dedicated to buying new music became dedicated to replacing old music. the result was that he basically skipped the 90s, only catching up by sorting through my cd collection. i have to wonder how widespread this phenomenon was. anyways, that means that the greatest hits disc was related to the slow, expensive and time consuming task of replacing lost vinyl. 70s and 80s crimson discs came in periodically (and i think he prioritized them because he noticed that i was reacting particularly well to them), but there was never a solo belew disc amongst them.

i think my dad's analysis of belew's solo work was generally correct, but this first disc very much stands out relative to the other pop discs. at the time, belew was coming fresh out of working with five of the most important musicians of the twentieth century: frank zappa, david bowie, brian eno, robert fripp and david byrne. they all show their influence on the record in different ways. see, this is the record's tragic flaw, though: it pulls ideas from a lot of different places into a highly competent combination but it doesn't really present any ideas of it's own. belew would continue this general formula for many years, with varying results but generally not with as much of an attempt to form a synthesis and certainly not as much of an influence from zappa. it's that latter aspect that both makes the disc more interesting than his other solo material (which largely exists as an anachronistic bridge between bowie's berlin period and the talking heads) and essential in the context of belew's substantial body of work.

if i'm suggesting a record from 1982 as essential then, surely, it must be a classic? as noted, the record has a really dated sound and is more of an interesting collection of existing ideas than any kind of statement of it's own. beyond that, there is a juvenile sense of humour on display that just comes off today as totally lame. if there's a debate around whether zappa was an asshole or a comedian, there's little debate over whether he was offensive; belew is carrying on similar themes, but seems generally interested in humour rather than offense and consequently waters his misogyny down to a sort of clownishness that couldn't legitimately offend much of anybody. the record also contains lengthy tributes to the cat and the rhinoceros, which is just not the topical content of classic records. sorry.

despite it's substantial flaws, it is a well produced and interestingly written record from start to finish that happens to wear it's influences on it's sleeves but still stands up as better than average and is fully worth exploring - especially if you're a fan of more than one of the five aforementioned artists.

stream:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqotFbF6sEE

http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/music/artists/AdrianBelew/1982-LoneRhino/index.html
independent cd stores. i love what they do for the community, but sometimes i wonder.

i went in to get the new mt. zion disc. i haven't been buying a lot of cds lately, but i try and keep up with those guys. and i've been "saving" a lot of money from not smoking, so i've actually put aside a small amount for a monthly budget. i used to collect those little round discs before real life came around and started demanding i start paying into it. it gave me great enjoyment, so i'd like to get back to doing it. i'm going to be kind of working around my reviews to fill in holes in the collection.

so i thought i'd check to see if there's any belew. they had some of the ones i have and a bunch of the ones i don't really want, as well as one that i have a sort of high-end bootleg of. it was a gift from a friend of my father. my uncle used to do the same thing. so, i have a stack of this stuff - mostly prog-related. i've never really considered them as 'part of the collection'. rather, i've always thought of them more as try-before-you-buy type things, but i'm treating them as though they are for the review site. in actuality, a lot of them are out of print, so those boots are the closest i'm ever going to get. that's the case for this one.

so: $10 for an out of print disc i don't have - collectors jump on that shit. bring it up to the cash...

"geez, this is an old disc."
"yeah."
"i'll mark it down to $6."
"swell."

it's $184, new, on amazon. and i'd be surprised if the disc i got was ever actually played. the insert doesn't look like it's been unraveled before. crisp.

now, that says more about amazon taking advantage of dwindling supply than anything else. it's kind of an asshole price. but, still.

if you collect cds, you have stories like this - and you're glad the indie stores don't do these sorts of rigorous checks. there's not much chance somebody's going to walk into a cd store in windsor and hand over $200 for a decades old out of print adrian belew cd. sure. but, it could conceivably be auctioned for more than $6.

so, i'm happy about this, but i have to wonder....
well, it's a silly question.

it's interesting to see them go back to the oil princess, though. that screams american interference looking for a "moderate" figurehead. i wouldn't expect the protestors to buy that. she's as much of a target of corruption as the president. the trial was politically motivated, but she's also notoriously corrupt. don't let them force you to choose either/or. it's all of the above.

so, the fundamental situation has not changed. there's still a corrupt government in power. i wouldn't expect the situation on the ground to change much.

of course, media will initially attempt to suggest otherwise.

http://www.democracynow.org/2014/2/24/a_coup_or_a_revolution_ukraine

the unfortunate truth is that the only way they're going to put this genie back in the bottle, russian pawn or western pawn, is through the use of force. expect that.

see egypt.
i'm pretty much convinced at this point that the reason obama claimed iraq was "stupid" was that he didn't understand the larger strategy. that is to say that he thought it was about "containing terrorism" rather than containing russia. now that he understands the strategy, he seems to actually want to escalate it.
ok, about robots.

sure. two things.

first, this idea that robots should be smart isn't going to get us anywhere. there's no value in building highly intelligent androids. where robots have a function is simply that they are more productive than us. the focus ought to be on building physical ones, not intellectual ones.

second, our understanding of genetics is leaps and bounds ahead of what it was in asimov's time. a lot of the things he was thinking about applying to robots are better applied to genetic engineering, and we may actually see some of these things happen sooner. from a resource perspective, genetic engineering is more sustainable. but genetically engineering superhuman strength is obviously more perilous than hardcoding it into otherwise dumb as shit robotic systems.

i want robots, and i want mutant creatures, but i don't want androids or cyborgs. the former will make our lives easier. the latter will simply give us a set of ethical questions that will no doubt end in emancipation followed by social problems. android welfare. let's just not bother. let's keep robots stupid...

to be entirely clear - let's leave robots for production, and focus on genetic engineering and computer-human brain interfacing to move the species forwards.
http://revolution-news.com/venezuela-mcrevolution-attempts-regime-change/
so, it seems to be a currency crisis in venezuela that's being spurred on by an undiversified economy. and the protestors in the street seem to not have any particular ideological persuasion.

if there's something to this, it reduces to the idea that venezuela is basically a mercantilist and colonial import/export economy, rather than a socialist state. in other words, what this says is that while the "bolivarian revolution" may have dramatically reduced inequality it has completely failed in producing a self-sustainable socialist economy. they import everything. that's the opposite of socialism...

all the signs are that venezuela is in for a rough ride. this was obvious to me after reading maduro's first public remarks. let's remember that, moving forward.

http://libcom.org/news/express-summary-venezuela%E2%80%99s-situation-curious-people-andor-poorly-informed-22022014
it's not really that we've dropped the connection between wages and productivity. it's more as though the new right economic paradigm argues that the market will determine how productivity should be awarded on it's own and that attempts to modify the way the market distributes wealth using government are actually interfering with the way that things "ought" to be awarded "naturally". it's really the second part of the thing that doesn't wash with me, not the first. it's true that if you don't have rules that protect the weak from the strong then the strong will enslave the weak. i'm not sure how "natural" that is (market economies are no less planned, and are no less human constructions, it's just planned by and for an elite rather than the masses), nor am i one to fall into the naturalistic fallacy in the first place.

but it's not a rejection of the connection. it's this idea that markets determine value for work more fairly than government can, and that setting up those laws is giving workers more than they deserve for the contribution they make.

i want everybody to be able to make truly free economic decisions. however, for the exact issue of fast food workers, precisely? regarding the question as to how productive fast food workers actually are in a social sense? well...

....maybe what we need is a new economic paradigm that considers not just the amount of labour performed but also it's worth in a social sense. i know the guy was sort of dancing around that point, but he wasn't as extreme about it as i would be.

i'd actually rather see mcdonalds in bankruptcy and it's workforce on welfare.

http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=11510
well, i went to check it out and it hasn't changed yet. i wasn't sure what i'd pick, i just wanted to see the option. i'm not sure if it's a slow roll out or because i live in canada. i can't promise i'll remember to go back and check again later...

i'll be cynical. it's about advertising. i'm not buying tampons any time soon. and i use adblock anyways.

but i do agree that there's a certain normalization attached to this that is overwhelmingly positive. i don't really care about what the gender designation is on facebook, but it would be useful to have more fluid options on a border crossing card or a health card.

http://www.democracynow.org/blog/2014/2/19/cece_mcdonald_laverne_cox_on_facebooks
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/116608/silicon-valley-labor-scandals-prove-minimum-wage-hikes-dont-cost-jobs
well, if you listen to snowden, he doesn't sound like somebody i have a high level of agreement on things with.

https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/02/15/pers-f15.html
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2014/02/19/you_cant_always_get_what_you_want_iran_nuclear_negotiations
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/02/19/wiki-f19.html
http://canadiandimension.com/articles/5952/
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2014/02/18/head_in_the_sand_venezuela_economic_policies
http://transitions.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2014/02/17/in_tunisia_its_shoot_first_ask_questions_later
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2014/02/18/a_comprehensive_strategy_against_terrorism
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/02/15/bang-f15.html
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/02/15/indi-f15.html
she wants to go after middle class 905 voters. rip ndp. now, it's important that reformists get the memo, disassociate and reconstruct.

https://www.thestar.com/news/queenspark/2014/02/20/ndps_andrea_horwath_on_track_to_derail_transit_cohn.html
remember that this is the big keystone; the little one is already pumping.

https://www.thestar.com/news/world/2014/02/19/nebraska_judge_strikes_down_law_that_let_keystone_pipeline_through_state.html
http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/21984-william-rivers-pitt-not-the-onion
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/02/20/obama-pushes-for-regime-change-in-venezuela/
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/02/20/masking-tragedy-in-ukraine/
http://phys.org/news/2014-02-sociable-humanoid-robots-advance-human-robot.html
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/new-drugs-may-transform-downs-syndrome/?MT.wc=SA_MindFacebook