Alternative Editions of Contemporary Music.

Rock/Blues/Jazz/World/Folk/Country etc.
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markof
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Re: Alternative Editions of Contemporary Music.

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cybot
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Re: Alternative Editions of Contemporary Music.

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This one, believe it or not, features a Johann Johannsson collaboration - see clip below.
The album is called V and it's by that ultra heavy duo KTL - Peter Rehberg and Stephen O' Malley.



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Re: Alternative Editions of Contemporary Music.

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If you like the sound of something humming you'll love the next three posts 😱



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Last edited by cybot on Tue Mar 06, 2018 2:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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cybot
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Re: Alternative Editions of Contemporary Music.

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M.P. Hopkins 'Blue Lit Half Breath' vinyl from Penultimate Press....



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cybot
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Re: Alternative Editions of Contemporary Music.

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Arek Gulbenkoglu – 'Three Days Afterwards' vinyl from Penultimate Press....






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https://soundcloud.com/quockenzocker/th ... ud-excerpt
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cybot
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Re: Alternative Editions of Contemporary Music.

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Reisssue on double 45 rpm vinyl. Includes at least 20 minutes of extra material.




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cybot
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Re: Alternative Editions of Contemporary Music.

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Vinyl edition with bonus cuts on the d/l only. The Bald One strikes again......



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Re: Alternative Editions of Contemporary Music.

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I'm putting this here simply because it's bound to polarise ears used to form and structure and a tune or two. It came out last year sometime and I only found out last week. Being a long term Tibbetts fan I promptly ordered my cd along with another one I never got around to getting. Anyway this one arrived earlier. It's a stunning reaffirmation of his undoubtably stellar guitar talents and production skills. Of course he hasn't changed that much since his first output back in the 80's so it's easy to fall into the trap of thinking that everything he does sounds samey. Until you listen......really listen.

Anyway while Rome burns have a read and listen to one rather unique guitar player. A battered 50-year-old Martin D12-20 12-string acoustic guitar no less.

Dig that sleeve :)


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Stereophile’s Recording of the Month: Life Of

Recording of July 2018: Life Of

by Jon Iverson · June 12, 2018 · Stereophile

Steve Tibbetts: Life Of

Steve Tibbetts, 12-string guitar, piano; Michelle Kinney, cello, drones; Marc Anderson, percussion, handpan · ECM 2599 (CD). 2018. An ECM production; Steve Tibbetts, eng.; Greg Reierson, eng., mastering. DDD. TT: 50:40 · Performance ***** · Sonics *****

The sound of Steve Tibbetts’s guitar music is unique—one need hear only a measure or two of his new album to identify the distinct tang of his playing. Common wisdom is that a guitarist’s sound is in the hands and fingers, but Tibbetts has another trick: his weathered, 50-year-old Martin D12-20 12-string acoustic guitar.

As Tibbetts was growing up, his father drove around Wisconsin teaching labor law. “When he’d break out his 12-string at a meeting of tired union Boot and Shoe workers in Stevens Point, everyone would perk up,” Tibbetts explained to me. “Guitar is an attention-getting device. They’d sing from the Joe Hill songbook, or whatever passed for an AFL songbook.

“I came home from college some winter break around 1978 and saw the guitar in its case, propped up against the shoe rack in the front hall of our house,” Tibbetts continued. “I stamped the snow off my boots and said, gesturing to the guitar case, ‘Hey, you should let me take that back with me!’ I was kidding. Ten days later I was putting on my shoes, getting ready to leave, the guitar in the same place. My dad was leaning over the railing again, hands clasped. He gestured at the guitar with his chin and said, ‘Take it.'”

It’s important to note that, after all those years of wear, the metal frets and the wood between them along the guitar’s neck were worn down so far that pressing hard on a string pushes it out of tune, until you let it up a little again. Listening to Life Of, I picture Tibbetts’s fingers as strong, fleshy, gecko-like digits that can grab the pairs of steel strings and deform them slowly in all directions, producing subtle acoustic flanging and chorus effects as he pushes and pulls. “I like the physicality of playing 12-string,” he said. “I don’t use a pick. If I’m drifting off to sleep at night and feel my fingertips throbbing, I know I had a good day.”

Tibbetts has also learned to resist changing his strings, letting them age until the bright edges wore off. “Sometime in the ’70s, a friend of mine (and Leo Kottke’s sound man) called me up and told me to come over,” he recalled. “He had Leo’s guitars in his front hall. ‘You can play them if you’re careful.’ I zoomed over. The action was very high on the two 12-string guitars, and the strings were dead. It sounded like Leo. I decided then and there that I would make dead strings my sound. If you get used to the bright, ringing tone of new strings, you’ll have to change them all the time. Dead is better.”

But all of this would amount to little more than neat gimmicks were it not for Tibbetts’s ability to play in unexpected ways, to sound unique and exotic and, at the same time, comforting. Unlike some of his more electric and frenetic albums of past years, Life Of, coming eight years after his last record, Natural Causes, never strays far from its center of acoustic guitar or piano, with sparse layers of carefully placed percussion, cello, and other artifacts floating around the capacious soundstage.

The compositions are modest in length, each named for a friend or family member. Not songs per se, they pour forth slowly like careful meditations, or a deep fog moving over a range of tree-shaded mountains. That last sentence might suggest new-agey syrup, but Tibbetts’s approach is too intelligent, textured, and idiosyncratic for that characterization. There are no repeating patterns or gratuitous dynamic builds—instead, you feel Tibbetts trying to gently reach inside the guitar to pull out every ounce of detail and meaning as a piece develops. He later flavors and spices the tracks with his confederates’ contributions, to further bring out the embedded intent.

Those confederates are Tibbetts’s longtime companion Marc Anderson, on percussion and handpan, and new collaborator Michelle Kinney, who provides sparse cello and, per her liner-note credit, “drones.” Kinney has performed with many jazz legends, including Henry Threadgill and John Zorn; here she provides deep backdrops for Tibbetts’s sinewy, sweet-and-sour guitar lines. I imagine this trio quietly sipping green tea together, getting their breathing in sync before trying another take.

Tibbetts primarily records in his self-built studio, using two microphones, a Mojave and a Neumann, set up to record an acoustic guitar. “They haven’t moved in years. Using an unmatched pair seemed like the right thing to do. The Mojave worked well at the 12-string’s sound hole, the Neumann made a home looking at the 12th fret.” He also resists EQ or compression, the tradeoff being that “the music can sound a little dull, like the speakers are wrapped in muslin. I tried jacking up the treble, like everyone seems to do, and it just sounded screechy and annoying.”

As he’s done in the past, Tibbetts recorded the subtle reverb on Life Of in a concert hall. “Nobody will ever be able to tell the difference between digital reverb and this hall, but I thought it would be worth trying again,” he said. In the photo of the setup he sent me, two Bowers & Wilkins bookshelf speakers sit center stage in the empty venue, with microphones farther back in the room. “I set a Neumann and a Mojave mike at the back of the room,” Tibbetts wrote, “along with a pair of AKG 451s in an ORTF pattern in the middle. I also played the mixes live in the hall up an octave, recorded the hall’s sound on new tracks, then pitched that reverb back down and mixed it with the music, to get long tails at the conclusion of songs.”

This mannered approach has resulted in a soft, glowing sound that manages to capture plenty of detail and character across a deep, wide soundstage. Some moments—as when Anderson adds a deep drum pulse, then moves to a hazy wash of cymbal—will flex your speakers or headphones, and add just the right amount of grunt to keep it interesting.

ECM is not a label much known for humorous album covers, but when I saw the press release announcing Life Of, I burst out in an involuntary laugh. It’s a photo of a night scene in which the reflective tapeta lucida of the eyes of dozens of cats are brightly lit—a reminder that, out in the world (and on the Internet) there are often many observers, quietly watching us from the dark. I picture Tibbetts traveling the globe, unseen and quietly taking notes, then sending his perceptions back to us in sublime recordings such as this.—Jon Iverson
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markof
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Re: Alternative Editions of Contemporary Music.

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cybot wrote: Fri Aug 09, 2019 12:30 pm I'm putting this here simply because it's bound to polarise ears used to form and structure and a tune or two. It came out last year sometime and I only found out last week. Being a long term Tibbetts fan I promptly ordered my cd along with another one I never got around to getting. Anyway this one arrived earlier. It's a stunning reaffirmation of his undoubtably stellar guitar talents and production skills. Of course he hasn't changed that much since his first output back in the 80's so it's easy to fall into the trap of thinking that everything he does sounds samey. Until you listen......really listen.

Anyway while Rome burns have a read and listen to one rather unique guitar player. A battered 50-year-old Martin D12-20 12-string acoustic guitar no less.

Dig that sleeve :)


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Super Recommendation - been listening to Yr quite a bit lately.

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cybot
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Re: Alternative Editions of Contemporary Music.

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Nice one Mark! Finally someone has been paying attention. That YR album is an absolute stunner encompassing both his electric and acoustic skills.

Here's a story : since I got my new cdp only a few weeks ago (first in twenty years!) I've moved away from downloads etc because I just cannot believe how good the cd medium really is. So there and then I decided to fill in any Tibbetts gaps I had n my collection. I have all the vinyl (naturally!) including multiple copies of much loved albums especially YR. I have an original private Frammis edition plus the reissued ECM edition. Now here's the thing : when I went looking for YR on cd I was aghast to find that it's no longer in the ECM catalogue. Then Discogs reared its ugly over priced head. I thought only second hand vinyl was overpriced! I was wrong. So I'm currently on the lookout for YR on cd.

You do know about the free triple cd/download best of that Steve put out back in 2010? Unfortunately I went for the download and now I'm hoping to find that delicious triple offering. I've only started to look, so we'll see how far I get. Last night when came across this link on Steve's site : Scroll to bottom : https://stevetibbetts.com/licensing/
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