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#Karen Koltrane
poetwritertgr · 1 year
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A Thousand Leaves (1998) - Sonic Youth
The hoarfrost - breathing in melody.
Finding bliss in the Autumn rain and Winter frost, where A Thousand Leaves (1998) lies. It is here we find Sonic Youth, playing in the Indian Summer and conjuring an album that sounds similarly brisk, tripped-out and meandering - in a very positive way. This might be the most underrated album of the vast catalogue of New York noise darlings Sonic Youth, where they take their pop leanings and experimental insights and harvest them in a beautiful flurry.
From its cream-coloured collage to the music itself, A Thousand Leaves find Sonic Youth in a more mellow, confident mood - one that inches towards a sense of melody and musicality not yet explored within the expanses of noise and power already within the Sonic Youth repertoire.
Breathy, lethargic opener Contre Le Sexism sees the seething of Kim Gordon now in more tender tones, even as the almost industrial pulses and lo-fi guitar keep the band in firmly sinister ground. The following song, Sunday, takes this lo-fi guitar interplay to extremes to bring us the most radio-friendly song of the album, one that provides a propulsion throughout, with its disjointed elements creating a harmony that seems to embody the spirit of the album and its more lax attitude.
Female Mechanic Now On Duty finds Gordon in a more nostalgic mood, evoking the palette of past projects within the playground established by the opening one-two punch of Contre Le Sexism and Sunday. Despite its subject matter, it uses its extended timeframe to play with many interesting sounds and interplay that evoke the harsh sounds of a mechanical environment - an automotive factory at night-time.
Wildflower Soul bounces between extreme noise and quiet guitar dynamics whilst playing with similar imagery to the Ronaldo-led Hoarfrost - an album highlight that catches the core identity of the project and exposes it openly. The appropriately named French Tickler uses the hoarse vocals of Gordon perfectly, its guitars and drums working to give us the mutilated corpse of a 1960s French Lounge song that captures the carefree confidence of the band at this stage in their career.
Songs such as Hits of Sunshine (For Allen Ginsberg) and Karen Koltrane take a fuzzy pleasure in wearing their influences out in the open of the September air they evoke, with the more melodic, psychedelic vocal performances and nonsensical lyrics succeeding at luring the listener into the teeth-chattering world of musicianship the band achieve with the final string of songs.
The psychedelic sprawl of Snare, Girl acts like a chime to signal an end to the odyssey across the equinox, before leaving us with Heather Angel, one of the defining Sonic Youth closing tracks. The subtle yet effortlessly trippy guitar effects lead the listener down one final binge of the soundscape the band is capable of on this record. As Gordon fades away, the second half of the track becomes the horrid comedown, the thump and the stomp before the fall that swirls us back to reality. Throughout, one can truly see the impassioned energy of the band on this project, willing to embrace all facets of their identity with a proud demeanour. And then, silence.
A Thousand Leaves ends and the listener is left, making angels in the pile. Certainly, one of the most underrated albums of the band’s discography and a career highlight, for a band with so many.
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radiophd · 1 year
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sonic youth -- karen koltrane
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paulaarantzazu · 4 years
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Listen/purchase: Karen Koltrane - Fin de Siglo by Foehn Records
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playmoss · 7 years
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► LISTEN to this Playmoss playlist: Good Fridays by La Bien Querida by eargasmweb Spanish musician Ana Fernández-Villaverde aka La Bien Querida (The Well-Loved) has released four studio albums, four rotund and essential works in which she has proved her enormous talent to compose intimate songs traversed by light, melancholy, darkness and a quirky sense of humor. She'll be releasing her fifth album, "Fuego," on October 6th. This is the first installment of our collaboration with our friends at Eargasm Web, who have just interviewed her. Read the results here (in Spanish only, sorry): http://www.eargasmweb.com/la-bien-querida-entrevista.


 La Bien Querida has prepared an eclectic and very amusing playlist that combines absolute classics and more unknown tracks. A bright collection of songs in which there's room for Brian Eno, Kraftwerk, New Order and The Cure as well as for indie music, flamenco and trap, and even rancheras.
Brian Eno - An Ending (Ascent) - Stromae - Papaoutai Los Planetas - Espíritu Olímpico Primogénito López - 03. Einheit Spanischer Freiwilliger (La Bien Querida) C. TANGANA FT ROSALIA - ANTES DE MORIRME (LETRA) JOSÉ ALFREDO JIMENEZ - PARA MORIR IGUALES (CD 2) New Order - Age Of Consent Bambino - La pared Wilco - Jesus, Etc. Karen Koltrane - Ondas Gravitacionales Kraftwerk - Radioactivity Los Planetas - Seguiriya de los 107 Faunos Joan Miquel Oliver - Atlantis the cure - lovesong - with lyrics
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alvertesongdiary · 7 years
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Karen Koltrane - Ondas Gravitacionales
11/04/2017
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lovejustforaday · 3 years
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Sonic Youth Albums Ranked (Part 3)
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6. Sister (1987)
Main Genres: Noise Rock, Alternative Rock, Post-Punk
A decent sampling of: Experimental Rock
This is the first LP in the Sonic Youth discography accessible enough to be labelled a true ‘Alternative Rock’ record. It’s still rough around the edges, but Sister is full of catchy hooks and thrilling guitar sounds. I feel like this record and Daydream Nation probably went on to spawn at least 200 new alternative rock bands by the time the 90s came around (not that I was there to see it or anything, just speculation).
Sister deserves a lot of credit for solidifying on tracks like “Catholic Block” and “Stereo Sanctity” what would become the dominant formula for the band’s sound throughout most of the rest of their discography. I think that's part of the reason why this is Sonic Youth’s second most acclaimed and beloved record. Perhaps some fans would even be downright offended that I only put this at #6 on the list, but trust me when I say that this is only because the band has made so many fantastic records. In fact, for most bands, this would easily be their greatest record.
I can still remember the first time I heard the opening to “Schizophrenia”, I had never heard anything quite like it. The guitars sound upbeat yet worn out and dejected, making me feel isolated and almost spiritually weak when I listen to this track, yet somehow also comforted. The song is partially inspired by Kim’s older brother who has schizophrenia, though the roles are reversed in this song with a brother whose sister is schizophrenic. It’s a deeply fascinating and memorable piece, and I can see why many fans consider this to be a top five Sonic Youth track.
Most of the rest of Sister is very scratchy and punkish with some very tight guitar work, like “Catholic Block” which boasts one of my favourite melodic riffs in the Sonic Youth canon. There’s also “Hot Wire My Heart”, another major highlight and a cover of the obscure British punk band Crime, where Sonic Youth takes their song and upgrades the guitars and drums while also adding a bold wall of feedback at the end.
Then there’s “Pacific Coast Highway”, a completely sickening song and one of Kim’s very finest moments as a lyricist and vocalist. This haunting noise rock jumble tells the story of either a unhinged stranger, or perhaps a resentful ex-lover, who is obsessively catcalling the listener from their car, with the not-so-subtle implication that you’re all by yourself somewhere and that this person intends to harm you. I have no idea if this was written about a personal experience, but I do know from listening to their voices that this is something many women have either gone through or live in perpetual fear of. Seriously fucked up stuff, but also one of Sonic Youth’s very best tracks.
"Cotton Crown” is an odd one out in the Sonic Youth discography; an uncharacteristically sincere but still off-kilter love song that Kim and Thurston sing as a duet. Their voices are a bit out of tune with each other, but i think that honestly fits the Sonic Youth aesthetic and it’s sweet in its own quirky way, although very bittersweet decades later with hindsight about the fate of their relationship. Sort of a noise rock lullaby almost, maybe even with hints of early shoegaze.
Sister does a really good job of taking the seemingly juxtaposing ideas of the ‘fun’ and the ‘grotesque’ and fuses them together. This album is both largely exciting and still somehow alienating and depressive. It’s textbook Sonic Youth, really. I will say that the best tracks are clustered together with a noticeably weaker middle portion, but really this is still a consistently great record throughout. Altogether, Sister is one of the many entries in the band’s discography from 1986 through 1990 where Sonic Youth could basically do no wrong. A classic record.
9/10
highlights: “Pacific Coast Highway”, “Schizophrenia”, ‘Catholic Block”, “Cotton Crown”, “Hot Wire My Heart”, “Beauty Lies in the Eye”
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5. A Thousand Leaves (1998)
Main Genres: Noise Rock, Experimental Rock
A decent sampling of: Alternative Rock, Post-Rock, Neo-Psychedelia
I’m just gonna say this now: A Thousand Leaves is by far Sonic Youth’s most underrated record. It’s also the last truly amazing record that the band ever put out. Maybe it’s just the bizarre choice of an album cover that turns people off of this LP. Really, what the hell were they going for here with the minimalist hamster vibes? The beautiful title really suggests something a lot more visually stunning.
In all seriousness though, I feel like nobody talks about this one because it’s overshadowed by its predecessor Washing Machine, but if there’s one area that this record exceeds above all other Sonic Youth LPs, it’s that it perfectly captures that mellow feeling that the later Sonic Youth albums were inclined towards. Not a lot of Sonic Youth records put me at ease like this one does.
Likewise, this is maybe the most ‘feel-good’ record in their discography along with Murray Street. But where Muray Street is something you could put on in the background and enjoy pretty modestly, A Thousand Leaves is a largely experimental, out-of-body experience that pulls you into its surreal, flowery, evergreen world.
“Contre Le Sexism” is a perfect opener for this kind of record; this quiet daze of a waking dream is both dainty and delirious, alluding to Alice in Wonderland with Kim’s vocals never before sounding so gentle and bright. I swear I start to hear a door creak at the end. Maybe that’s the sound of stepping out into the rest of A Thousand Leaves.
What follows immediately after is “Sunday” which is actually one of the band’s poppiest moments, making it somewhat of an outlier on this highly avant-garde and immersive record. But the warm spring vibes of the melody fits right in. The wall of sound introduced during the bridge is a soft mesmerizing bliss more akin to a band like My Bloody Valentine, if not for the tiny distant screeches of atonality whirling around here and there. As a big fan of both bands, I’m all for this kind of sound.
“Wildflower Soul” is easily one of the best things Sonic Youth has ever written. Endless amounts of creativity are poured into this nine minute noise rock acrobatics performance along with a lyrical ode to love, nature, and childhood. The vibes of this one are really quite jaw-dropping given the fact that these are the same guys who wrote “Schizophrenia” and “Death Valley ‘69″. There’s such unison and harmony in the band’s performance here as they switch between different bpm and even time signatures, and the usage of the heavy phaser effect towards the end sounds nothing short of godlike. "Wildflower Soul” almost feels like an entire album experience in one song, and I’m beyond impressed every time I listen to it.
This makes for a hard act to follow, but A Thousand Leaves still has plenty of other highlights. “French Tickler” is a strange and satisfying track that switches back and forth between a playful melody and churning, stretchy distortion. “Karen Koltrane” is a murky but textured portrait of Lee Renaldo’s ex-girlfriend, who got addicted to hallucinogens and became heavily withdrawn from the rest of the world. “Snare, Girl” is a soothing spell where Thurston sounds like he’s trying to coax the listener into a never-ending slumber.
My only real complaint here is “Hits of Sunshine (For Allen Ginsberg)”, a lackadaisical jam session that sounds cool enough, but really overstays its welcome given the lack of development it achieves over its eleven minute run time. It’s a nice piece to vibe to, but it very noticeably disrupts the album’s flow. Take this one track away entirely, or even just edit it down severely, and this would probably be a 10/10 record for me.
Still, wow what a cool album. A Thousand Leaves is a great example of why I respect this band so much. Even this late into their career, Sonic Youth were willing to try so many new bizarre things while also building judiciously upon the foundations of their past work with great attention to detail. I wouldn’t recommend most people start with this one, it’s definitely a bit more challenging especially if you haven’t listened to some other really weird experimental rock records. But once you’re in the right headspace for it, it’s easy to get almost completely lost in A Thousand Leaves.
9/10
highlights: “Wildflower Soul”, “Sunday”, “French Tickler”, “Karen Koltrane”, “Snare, Girl”, “Contre Le Sexism”, “Heather Angel”
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4. Goo (1990)
Main Genres: Noise Rock, Alternative Rock
A decent sampling of: Experimental Rock, Post-Punk
Goo was my very first Sonic Youth album, and I can definitely still feel some of the old teenage angst that I had at the time whenever I listen to this one. What probably adds to that feeling is the fact that this along with Daydream Nation is one of the two albums in the band’s discography that I’d say possesses a great deal of immediacy. Albums like Sister and A Thousand Leaves are a bit more subtle and they take a while to be fully digested. But this one, this one hit me like a brick wall.
Between “Tunic (Song For Karen)”, “Kool Thing”, and “Cinderella’s Big Score”, Goo is above all others the Sonic Youth record where Kim Gordon is really the star of the band, featuring not one but three of her most captivating songs. Likewise, I would also say that this is Sonic Youth’s most overtly feminist and socially conscious record.
I don’t know if anybody else feels this way, but to me the opener “Dirty Boots” really does sound like “Teen Age Riot” part 2. That’s not a bad thing of course, Sonic Youth making more songs like “Teen Age Riot” could never be a bad thing, and “Dirty Boots” is definitely one of the highlights of Goo with its massive build up of kinetic energy. That being said, I do have to say that I don’t think any song could do this particular kind of album opener better than “Teen Age Riot” already does it, but I still really do enjoy “Dirty Boots”.
“Tunic (Song For Karen)” is one of Sonic Youth’s most poetic and poignant songs. Kim’s sing-talking voice is even more solemn than usual as she takes on a surreal retelling of the final days of drummer/pop star pioneer Karen Carpenter from her perspective, highlighting the severity of her loneliness and the criminal negligence of many of the people around her who let her succumb to her eating disorder. Set to a backdrop of stark and droning alternative rock, I would say that this is possibly the band’s most depressing moment and certainly one of the biggest statements that they ever made.
A lot of the rest of Goo is actually pretty fun though. “Kool Thing” features Chuck D on guest vocals, and its a funny sarcastic take down of the subjugation of women’s voices in supposedly liberated spaces like the world of rock and hip hop, inspired by the time Kim interviewed L.L. Cool J and attempted to have a political conversation. The song mocks L.L.’s attitude towards women while also poking fun at Kim’s own self-perceived elitism. There’s also “Mote”, a sensational head rush that dissolves into noise rock weird-isms, sorta recreating the feeling of going from buzzed to totally black out.
“Mildred Pierce” is almost a practical joke but I kind of love the hell out of it anyway. A short track with lyrics consisting only of the song’s title, it starts with the band getting into a nice little riff before (without warning) bursting into a hardcore punk cacophony as Thurston screams the name over and over into the listener’s ears. Made me jump the first time I heard it.
And then there’s “Cinderella’s Big Score”. If “Schizophrenia” vaguely hinted at Kim’s estranged relationship with her older brother, then “Cinderella’s Big Score” confronts it dead on. Featuring some of the band’s most totally insane and disfigured guitar work ever, this song sounds harsh and militant, like the dawn of a nuclear cataclysm. It’s very hard to believe that Kim is 37 years old here; she reverts to sounding exactly like a hurt teenage little sister, rebelling against her childhood trauma and lashing out at her brother’s past bullying and now his cold indifference towards her.
The song grapples with some very painful emotions, but the experience is raw and cathartic. “Cinderella’s Big Score” is definitely somewhere in Sonic Youth’s top 10 tracks for me; it just doesn’t get any realer than this. Honestly, the record could’ve ended here. I like “Titanium Expose” enough as a closer, but this would’ve made a really powerful and lasting impression to end the album.
Despite that, Goo is an excellent Sonic Youth record that demonstrates just how much the band had mastered their craft after a decade of making all sorts of noises. Obviously I’m biased since it was my own first Sonic Youth record, but I really do feel like this is the very best place to start with the band. Goo is one of their more melodic and accessible offerings, but it’s also one of their most provocative records and it really captures the essence of Sonic Youth’s identity.
9/10
highlights: “Cinderella’s Big Score”, “Tunic (Song For Karen)”, “Mote”, “Kool Thing”, “Dirty Boots”, ‘Mildred Pierce”
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3. EVOL (1986)
Main Genres: Noise Rock, Experimental Rock, Post-Punk
A decent sampling of: No Wave, Alternative Rock
If Bad Moon Rising was bleak and desolate, than EVOL is disturbed, uncanny, and deeply paranoid. Sonic Youth’s third record evokes the feeling of being all alone at midnight on a sketchy highway, complete with mental images of flickering street lights and looming shadowy figures. I mentioned earlier that I have to be in the right mood to enjoy Bad Moon Rising, but this record puts me in the right mood almost instantly whenever I put it on.
EVOL isn’t exactly a no wave album like their first two records. The highly experimental influence is still there, but the arrangements are starting to sound fuller and more intentional.
You could say that this LP marks somewhat of a transitional phase between Sonic Youth the no wave band and Sonic Youth the alternative rock band, and in many respects it has the best of both worlds. There’s a few catchy darker alternative rock songs here and there, sandwiched between tracks that could best be described as ‘mad scientist’ music, which altogether creates a varied and unique album experience.
“Tom Violence“ immediately establishes the tone of EVOL with crooked, scraping flashes of post-punk guitars. This track reminds me of heads hung low, bodies slouched uncomfortably, and the feeling of being completely wide awake at 2:00 am. There’s something very unfriendly that lurks beneath the dissonance of these sounds.
If “Tom Violence” is uneasy, then “Shadow of A Doubt” is an auditory nightmare, managing to capture something akin to the fear of being watched by an unknown stranger hiding in the shadows. Notes are gently plucked like icy cold fingers slowly crawling up the listener’s back while Kim whispers about murder plots and oneirophrenia. The “just a dream” lyrical motif is first uttered reassuringly, but eventually turns into a desperate plea as Kim begins to shout frantically and the music intensifies.
The album dials down the spook factor a few notches with “Starpower” and “In The Kingdom #19″. The former is an early example of Sonic Youth’s ability to combine melodic hooks with meandering chaos that would become refined on the next few LPs, while the latter features Lee’s first solo vocals (and one of his best performances) reciting a lucid, jet black vision of a car accident. Thurston threw firecrackers into the recording studio when they did Lee’s vocals on this track and you can hear it in the recording, and just like “Mildred Pierce” it really caught me off guard the first time I heard it.
“Secret Girl” is the scariest fucking thing in the whole Sonic Youth discography, and also just one of the scariest songs I’ve ever heard. It starts with a deep shuddering thud that sounds like it’s getting closer and closer. Then out of nowhere, a cassette-recording of an old detuned piano starts to play a simple, unnerving refrain while Kim offers a cryptic and uncomfortably suggestive spoken word piece. It feels like a scene that might play out in a horror film, where a television screen comes on by itself and the person on the screen begins to talk directly to the viewer.
Finally, there’s “Expressway To Yr Skull” (alternatively titled “Madonna, Sean, and Me”), which would be my #1 Sonic Youth album closer if not for the #1 album on this list. That being said, this song is still one of the biggest highlights of the band’s career. "Expressway To Yr Skull” starts off restless and spectacular, leading up to an utterly earth-shaking climax, and then it’s as if the song promptly dies, only to become a lingering undead entity that pulls you down with it. I still can’t get over how the ending really manages to sound like it’s dragging you down further and further into its barren depths.
To add to that, there’s actually a locked groove on the original vinyl release of this LP that plays the last little bit of “Expressway To Yr Skull”, meaning that if you let the needle sit there, it will forever loop that last little bit of droning at the end of the track. I really appreciate this little detail; it’s as if the pervasive darkness of EVOL is so encompassing that it could turn into a deep midnight that never ends.
EVOL is honestly so close to being a 10 for me, but just like Sister I find that it is decently weaker towards the middle. Still, I’m absolutely enamored with the atmosphere on this album. No gothic rock record has ever managed to sound so deeply unsettling to my ears like this little experimental record does. You really just have to experience this one for yourself. Honestly, don’t be surprised if in a year or two I’ve changed my mind and bumped this one to a 10.
9/10
highlights: “Expressway To Yr Skull”, “Shadow Of A Doubt”, “Tom Violence”, “Secret Girl”, “In The Kingdom #19″, “Starpower”
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davidjrojas · 5 years
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El jardín de senderos que se bifurcan.
"El jardín de senderos que se bifurcan" es un proyecto fotográfico que muestra las distintas personalidades de una chica llamada Karen: de manera fragmentada por la misma hora, sus distintos alter ego encarnan a tres personajes, tales como una escritora, una cantante punk y una astronauta. Si ponemos a la obra sobre una línea podría ser representada por un garabato: altibajos personales, crisis de ideas y a un mutismo caníbal que forjaron a la tempestad de la creación a un nuevos rumbo. Lima como escenario principal, mis ojos siempre abiertos y un personaje talentoso para encarnar el papel, dejaron una honda huella en el proceso. En un punto dejamos todo a merced de la espontaneidad, jugando a los dados recorrimos distintas escenas donde fuimos, a pesar del razonamiento; carne de una obra real donde la ciudad habitada termina por convertirnos en seres de pobres corazones. Terminada en su totalidad con película de 35 milímetros para un presentación en tamaño fanzine: siempre fiel a sus limitaciones y costos, todavía no existe un tiraje ya que su publicación oficial se realizará en un par de meses. A continuación muestro el archivo de un proceso creativo de dos años. A veces siento que fueron más. Muchas gracias a todas las personas que fueron parte de esta obra que hasta la fecha fue la más difícil de realizar. Un beso siempre para todos los que acompañan en cada lágrima derramada, a los que estuvieron del otro lado y sobretodo a los que ya no están aquí.
David
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Fanzine.
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Machote Nª 4.
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Página cinco y seis.
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Ceguera.
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Bocetos sobre Moleskine.
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Karen Koltrane.
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Viñetas de la astronauta.
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Retrato del 2019.
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Eva tiene tres caras.
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El paradero.
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Bahía Violeta.
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Antenas.
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Retratos 2019.
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Canción compuesta por Patti Smith para Janis Joplin. Del libro “Eramos unos niños”
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Block amarillo.
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rosellos · 5 years
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🎸 Can you post the songs of the playlist?
Sure!! 💕
1. He’s Funny That Way - Billie Holiday
2. Lisa Says - The Velvet Underground
3. Backlash Blues - Nina Simone
4. You’re So Good To Me - M. Ward
5. Think I Might Be In Love - Cut Worms
6. Take Your Shoes Off - Dinah Washington
7. African Lullaby - Eartha Kitt
8. The Same Love That Made Me Laugh - Bill Withers
9. Old Man River - Ramin Karimloo
10. C’est ça l’amour - Luce & Mathieu Boogaerts
11. My Little Corner Of The World - Liza Minnelli
12. The Blower’s Daughter - Damien Rice
13. Ace In The Hole - Joel Grey
14. Karen Koltrane - Sonic Youth
15. Top Of The City - Kate Bush
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momentmovementum · 3 years
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Watch "Karen Koltrane" on YouTube
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lamuya · 4 years
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Album covers, badly drawn from memory — #10
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Sonic Youth A Thousand Leaves
Too bad I forgot the girl has mouse ears too! One of my favourites by the band; it doesn't rock much but it has a very nice sound that's both experimental and emotional. “Sunday”, “Karen Koltrane” and “Hits of Sunshine” are melancholic in a very good way.
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holidayjoecoffee · 7 years
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Favourite Sonic Youth albums
Rather Ripped. I was not a fan of this at first, thinking it was a little too slick, a little too rock. But I flipped around and now consider it one of, if not my fave SY album. With the exception of the last track it’s rather great. Incinerate is a great song. 
Evol. It has that spooky early SY sound that I adore. Lots of great songs on here, some of my absolute faves. Green Light, Shadow of a Doubt, Star Power, Tom Violence, oh yeah. I even dig Lee’s spoken word “In the Kingdom #19″. 
Sister. Well of course! It’s a little more cohesive than Evol, but doesn’t have the same spooky vibe. But the songs! All the songs are great from Schizophrenia to White Cross. 
Confusion Is Sex. Raw, noisy, loud, thrilling. This wasn’t an easy album for yours truly to get into, seduced as he was by “Sunday” and the dreamy SY of the early 2000′s. But at the end of the day I think SY is just SY, and I began to really love this album, and connect with it on a different level than other of their records. This one is a treasure, a game-changer, and will always be one of my absolute faves. 
Sonic Youth. Their self-titled EP sometimes feels like an appetizer rather than a full meal, which I guess is fitting, considering it ISN”T a full album. But it’s so hypnotically delicious.
Dirty. OK this album is kind of a mess as a whole, but there are way too many good songs to not have this on my list. 
A Thousand Leaves. I can’t leave this off because it contains the beautiful Sunday, Wildflower Soul, Hits of Sunshine, Karen Koltrane and perhaps my favourite SY song, Hoarfrost. F’n love that song. 
And don’t get me wrong, I really like Experimental Jet Set Trash & No Star, Goo, Murray Street, Washing Machine, and Bad Moon Rising. I can’t talk them up like the above, but it would feel criminal not to mention them.
Absent from my favourites list, conspicuously so if you read music journalism, is Daydream Nation. It is very dreamy, but it leaves me cold. The Eternal has its moments, as does NYC Ghosts & Flowers, but the less said about Sonic Nurse the better. 
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nofidelity · 9 years
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Indica Mood: Sonic Youth // Karen Koltrane
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srtalo · 10 years
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Karen Koltrane - La Montaña Artificial
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rober-noir · 10 years
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Karen Koltrane - “La Montaña Artificial” Foehn Records,2014
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harmmassage · 11 years
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Sonic Youth- Karen Koltrane live, 2000.
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