smoe.org mailing lists
ivan@stellysee.de
From | Sam Smith <sam@lullabypit.com> |
Subject | Re: Loud bands ...GeoSats |
Date | Wed, 07 Dec 2005 13:36:49 -0500 |
[Part 1 text/plain ISO-8859-1 (2.0 kilobytes)]
(View Text in a separate window)
Back in the mid-80s I saw Jason & the Scorchers with the Georgia
Satellites opening. The Sats weren't content to simply make some
eardrums bleed, they were out for nerve damage. We walked outside and
stood on the sidewalk across the street from the club, and it was too
loud from THERE. The Scorchers came on and turned the amps to 11, as
usual, but it sounded calm by comparison. My ears rang for three days.
Good show, though.
erhoek@comcast.net wrote:
>The loudest concert I remember had to have been My Bloody Valentine at St Andrews Hall in Detroit .. Some of the show was amazing but quite a bit of it was akin to a chainsaw on sheet metal. I read in David Cavanagh's My Magpie Eyes Are Hungry for the Prize book about Creation Records that main MBV guy Kevin Shields had an eerie fascination with pain thresholds to sound and was in a Joseph Mengelev sort of way doing his own experiments with his audiences as guinea pigs.
>Speaking of MBV has anyone (who enjoys the so-called shoegaze style of dreampop) heard the Club AC30 comp of neo shoegaze bands (and some original ones like the Ecstacy of Saint Theresa) doing covers of songs by such artists as Chapterhouse,Slowdive,MBV,Swervedriver,Ride,Lush,Telescopes,etc?
>It is called Never Lose That Feeling Volume 1 and can be had for around 13.00 from Parasol which is currently having a 15% off sale on every cd in stock:
>http://www.parasol.com/catalog/catalog.asp?words=club+ac30&qsearch=all
>
>
>
--
Sam Smith, PhD
1805 Brantley St.
Winston-Salem NC 27103
336.480.6179 /m
sam@lullabypit.com
http://www.lullabypit.com
...it's a lonesome thing to be passing small towns with the
lights shining sideways when the night is down, or going in
strange places with a dog nosing before you and a dog nosing
behind, or drawn to the cities where you'd hear a voice
kissing and talking deep love in every shadow of the ditch,
and you passing on with an empty, hungry stomach failing
from your heart.
- John Millington Synge
For assistance, please contact
the smoe.org administrators.