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dustedmagazine · 5 years
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Dust, Volume 5, Number 12
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Matthew J. Rolin 
Ned Starke was right. Winter is coming, and maybe, for our Chicago and Eastern Seaboard contingent, it’s here. That’s a good excuse to find a big comfy chair near the stereo and dig into some new music. This time we offer some hip hop, some finger picking, some music concrete, some indie pop and, just this once, a Broadway musical. Contributors include Ray Garraty, Jennifer Kelly, Justin Cober-Lake, Jonathan Shaw, Bill Meyer and Andrew Forell. Stay warm.
ALLBLACK x Offset Jim — 22nd Ways (Play Runners Association)
ALLBLACK and Offset Jim have collaborated on a few tracks before, but this is their first release together. Their differences, which are significant, make the disc enjoyable through and through. Offset Jim has a poker face delivery that can fool anybody into thinking he’s deadly serious when he’s clearly having fun. ALLBLACK, on the other hand, is known for his goofy humor, but his goofiness is a mask that obscures a poetic psycho killer. Their combination of a healthy dose of humor and true-to-the-streets seriousness—seen here— makes a case for tolerating all kinds of oddball pairings:
“Don't leave the house without your makeup kit Diss songs about your real daddy just won't stick Hey, bitch, say, bitch, I know you miss this demon dick Please comb Max hair, take off them wack outfits”
Ray Garraty
 David Byrne — American Utopia (Nonesuch)
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If you live long enough, everything that seemed edgy and electrifying in your youth will turn safe and comfortable in middle age. You’ll buy festival tickets with access to couches, tents and air conditioning. Clash songs will turn up in Jaguar ads. Kids at the playground will run around sporting your Black Flag tee-shirt. You may even find yourself in a $250 seat, at a beautiful theater, with your beautiful wife, seeing “American Utopia,” David Byrne’s new jukebox musical, and, to borrow a phrase, you may ask yourself, “How did I get here?” And look, you could do worse. These are wonderful songs, still prickly and spare even now in full orchestral arrangements, still booming with cross-currented, afro-beat rhythms (Byrne got to that early on, give him credit), still buoyed with a scratchy, ironic, ebullient pulse of life. It’s hard to say what plot line stitches together “Born Under Punches,” “Every Day is a Miracle,” “Burning Down the House” and “Road to Nowhere,” or how absorbing the connective narrative may be. It’s not, obviously, as kinetic and daring as the original arrangements, stitched together with shoe-laces, stuttering with anxiety, bounced and jittered by the back line of Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz, clad in an absurdly oversized suit. And, yet, it’s not so bad and if I had three big bills to spend on a night at the theater, I might just want to see it re-enacted. Because I’ve gotten safe and comfortable, too, and anyway, better that than the Springsteen show.
Jennifer Kelly
 Charly Bliss — Supermoon EP (Barsuk) 
Supermoon by Charly Bliss
Charly Bliss’ latest release Supermoon, collects five tracks written during the Young Enough sessions that didn’t make the final cut. The EP showcases the band transitioning from the grungy edge of their debut Guppy to the more polished pop sound of its successor. Eva Hendricks is one of the moment’s most distinctive voices, and these songs find her grappling with the themes so tellingly addressed on Young Enough. Although the songs here deserve release, the interest is in what they don’t do. More than sketches, they are less lyrically formed than those on the album, more guitar driven and without the big pop pay offs. The band, Hendricks on guitar and vocals, her brother Sam on drums, guitarist Spencer Fox and bassist Dan Shure still produce a hooky, engaging record which will appeal to fans. Newcomers might want to start with the albums but Supermoon is not without its moments.
Andrew Forell
  Cheval Sombre — Been a Lover b/w The Calfless Cow (Market Square)
Cheval Sombre - Been a Lover b/w The Calfless Cow by Market Square Recordings
Cheval Sombre teamed with Luna/Galaxie 500’s Dean Wareham last year for a haunting batch of cowboy songs that found, as I put it in my Dusted review, “unfamiliar shadows and crevices in some very familiar material.” Now comes Cheval Sombre, otherwise known as Chris Porpora, with a brace of soft, dreamy folk-turned-psychedelic songs, one a gently sorrowful original, the other a cover of Alasdair Roberts. “Been a Lover” slow-strums through a whistling canyons of dreams, wistfully surveying the remnants of a long-standing relationship. It has the nodding, skeletal grace of Sonic Boom’s acoustic “Angel,” perhaps no coincidence since the Spaceman 3 songwriter produced the album. “The Calfless Cow” anchors a bit more in folk blues picking, though Porpora’s soft, prayerful vocals float free above the foundations. Both songs feel like spectral images leaving traceries on unexposed film—unsolid and evocative and mysteriously, inexplicably there.
Jennifer Kelly
 Cigarettes After Sex — Cry (Partisan Records)
Cry by Cigarettes After Sex
Cigarettes After Sex’s 2017 debut album was a quite lovely collection of slow-core, lust-lorn dream pop. On the follow up Cry Greg Gonzalez (vocals, guitar), Phillip Tubbs (keys), Randall Miller (bass) and Jacob Tomsky (drums) double down on their signature sound with half the effect. The melodies are still here, the delicate restraint also, Gonzalez’ voice whispers seductively sweet nothings but this time around it is largely nothings he’s working with. It’s not that this is a terrible record, it’s more that the wreaths of gossamer amount to not much. Lacking the humorous touches of the debut, Cry suffers from Gonzalez’ sometimes witless and earnest lyrics which are mirrored in the lackluster pace which makes one desperate for the sex to be over so one can get back to smoking. Cry aims for Lynch/Badalamenti atmospherics and hits them occasionally but too often lapses into Hallmark sentimentalism. For an album ostensibly about romantic and physical love Cry is dispiritingly dry. There is only ash on these sheets. Serge Gainsbourg is somewhere rolling his eyes, and a gasper, in the velvet boudoir of eternity.
Andrew Forell
  Lucy Dacus — 2019 (Matador)
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Between Historian and boygenius, Lucy Dacus had a pretty memorable 2018. It makes sense that she'd want to document 2019. What she did instead was release a series of holiday-ish tracks over the course of the year and then collect them as the 2019 EP. The covers will likely get the most attention, whether her loving take on Edith Piaf's “La vie en rose” or the rocking rendition of Wham!'s “Last Christmas.” Dacus doesn't perform these songs with any sense of snark; she's both enjoying herself and invested. Counting Bruce Springsteen's birthday as a holiday might be silly, but she nails “Dancing in the Dark,” turning it to her own aesthetic. The weird one here is “In the Air Tonight,” which smacks of irony and whatever we call guilty pleasures these days, but she plays it straight, arguing for it as a spooky Halloween cut, and sort of pulls it off.  
Focusing on the covers might lead listeners to forget how good a songwriter she is. The Mother's Day “My Mother & I” feels thoroughly like a Dacus number, opening with contemplation: “My mother hates her body / We share the same outline / She swears that she loves mine.” Holidays aren't easy. “Fool's Gold” (stick this New Year's track first or last) falls like snow, laden with regret and rationalization. Dacus works through holidays with care and concern. The covers might be fun (even the Phil Collins number works as a curiosity), but when she lets the more conflicted thoughts come through, as on “Forever Half Mast,” she maintains the hot streak. The EP might be a bit of a diversion, but its secret complexity makes it more surprisingly forceful. Justin Cober-Lake 
 Kool Keith — Computer Technology (Fat Beats)
Computer Technology by Kool Keith
Naming an album Computer Technology in 2019 is like calling a 1950 disc A Light Bulb. Ironic Luddite-ness is a part of the charm of the new Kool Keith’s album, his second this year. The record has a cyberpunk-ish (circa 1984) feel, thanks to wacky, early electronics-like beats that no sane hip hop artist today would agree to rap over. But who said Kool Keith was sane? He’s like a computer virus here, infesting a modern culture he views with disdain. His kooky brags could be written off as old man rants if he been in the rap game since day one. On “Computer Technology” he says: ‘You need to sit down and slow down’, yet he himself shows no signs of slowing down.
If Kool Keith’s 1980s science rap messed around in a high school lab, he’s now a tenured professor in hip hop science blowing up the joint.
Ray Garraty
 Leech — Data Horde (Peak Oil) 
Data Horde by Leech
Brian Foote’s work has a knack for showing up in slightly unexpected and subtly crucial places, whether it’s behind the scenes at Kranky and his own Peak Oil imprint, or as a member at times of Fontanelle or Nudge, or even just helping out Stephen Malkmus with drums. On Data Horde, his debut LP of electronic music under his Leech moniker, Foote works with his customary quiet assurance and subtly radical take on things, delivering a brief but satisfying set of bespoke productions that somehow evoke acid and ambient tinges at the same time, feinting towards full-out jungle eruptions before turning the corner and somehow naturally going somewhere much more minimal. Whether it’s the skittering, pulsing “Brace” or the lush and aptly-named “Nimble”, the results are consistently satisfying and the six tracks here suggest that we could stand to hear a lot more from Leech.  
Ian Mathers
Midnight Odyssey — Biolume Part 1: In Tartarean Chains (I, Voidhanger)
Biolume Part 1 - In Tartarean Chains by MIDNIGHT ODYSSEY
 Midnight Odyssey’s massive new record sounds like what might happen if Gary Numan’s Tubeway Army smoked up a bunch of Walter White’s finest product and decided that they must cover Pink Floyd’s Live at Pompei, complete with ruins and really big gongs. It’s interstellar. It’s perversely grandiose. The synths soar and rumble, the vocals come in mournful choral arrangements, the low end thunders and occasionally explodes into blast-beat barrage. It’s almost impossible to take seriously, and it’s presented with what seems like absolute seriousness. In any case, there’s a lot of it: seven tracks, all of which exceed the eight-minute mark, and most of which moan and intone and resonate well beyond ten minutes. You’ve got to give it to Dis Pater, the only identified member of Midnight Odyssey — he really means it. But it’s often hard to tell if Biolume Part 1 (Pater threatens that there are two more parts to come) is the product of an unchecked, idiosyncratically powerful vision or just goofball cosmological schmaltz. To this reviewer, it’s undecidable. And that’s interesting.
Jonathan Shaw
 Nakhane — You Will Not Die 
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South African singer Nakhane Touré has a voice that can stop you in your tracks when he unleashes it, and a willingness to tackle uncomfortable topics (homosexuality, colonialism, and the way the imported Presbyterian church interacts with both) that’s seen him both praised and threatened in his homeland. You Will Not Die marks a shift in Nakhane’s music, both in terms of how directly and intensely he engages with those places where the sacred rubs up against, not so much the profane but the disavowed, even while sonically everything is lusher and brighter, whether it’s the slinky electroglam of “Interloper” or the bell-tolling balladry of “Presbyteria.” For once it’s worth seeking the deluxe edition, for the Bowie-esque Anohni duet “New Brighton” and the defiantly melancholy cover of “Age of Consent” alone.
 Matthew J. Rolin — Matthew J. Rolin (Feeding Tube)
Matthew J. Rolin by Matthew J. Rolin
Matthew J. Rolin steps to the head of the latest class of American Primitive guitarists on this self-titled debut LP. He is currently a resident of Columbus, Ohio, but his main inspirations from within the genre are Chicagoan. Reportedly a Ryley Walker concert sent him down the solo guitar path, but the one time this reviewer caught him in concert, Rolin only made one substance-oriented statement throughout the set, and it was more of a shy assertion than an extravagant boast. His sound more than pays the toll. Bright and ringing on 12 strings, pithy and structurally sound on six, he makes sparing use of outdoor sound and keyboard drones that bring Daniel Bachman to mind. Like Bachman did on his early records, Rolin often relies upon the rush of his fingerpicking to draw the listener along, and what do you know? It works.
Bill Meyer
  Claire Rousay — Aerophobia (Astral Spirits)
Aerophobia by Claire Rousay
To watch Claire Rousay perform is to see the process of deciding made visual. You can’t put that on a tape, but you can make the tape a symbolic and communicative object. To see Rousay repeatedly, or to play her recordings in sequence, is to hear an artist who is rapidly transforming. This one was already a bit behind her development when it was released, but that can be turned into a statement, too. Perhaps the title Aerophobia, which means fear of flying, is a critique of the tape’s essentially musical content? It is a series of drum solos, unlike the more the more recent t4t, which includes self-revealing speech and household sounds. If so, that critique does not reproach the music itself, nor should it. Even when you can’t see her, you can hear her sonic resourcefulness and appreciate the movement and shape she articulates with sound.
Bill Meyer
 Colin Andrew Sheffield & James Eck Rippie — Exploded View (Elevator Bath)
exploded view by colin andrew sheffield & james eck rippie
Colin Andrew Sheffield, who is the proprietor of the Elevator Bath imprint, and James Eck Rippie, who does sound work for Hollywood movies, have this understanding in common: they know that you gotta break things to make things. The things in question don’t even have to be intact when you start; at any rate, the feedback, microphone bumps, blips and skips that make up this 19-minute long piece of musique concrete sound like the product of generations of handling. It all feels a bit like you’re hearing a scan of the shortwave bands from inside the radio, which makes for delightfully disorienting listening.
Bill Meyer
 Ubik — Next Phase (Iron Lung)
Next Phase MLP (LUNGS-148) by UBIK
 Philip K. Dick’s whacko-existentialist-corporate-satire-cum-SF-novel Ubik turns 50 this year, and serendipitously, Australian punks Ubik have released this snarling, tuneful EP into the world. There’s a whole lot of British street punk, c. 1982, in Ubik’s sound, especially if that genre tag and year make you flash on Lurkers, Abrasive Wheels and Angelic Upstarts — bands that knew how to string melodic hooks together, and bands that had pretty solid lefty politics. Ubik’s songs couple street punk’s populist (in the pre-Trump sense) fist-pumping with a spastic, elastic angularity, giving the tracks just enough of a weirdo vibe that the band’s name makes sense. The combination of elements is vividly present in “John Wayne (Is a Cowboy (and Is on Twitter)),” a hugely fun punk song that registers a fair degree of ideological venom as it bashes and speeds along. Somewhere, Horselover Fat is nodding his head and smiling. 
Jonathan Shaw
 Uranium Club — Two Things at Once (Sub Pop)
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Uranium Club (sometimes Minneapolis Uranium club) made one of the best punk albums of this year in The Cosmo Cleaners. “A visionary insanity, backed by impressive musical chops,” I opined in Dusted last April, setting off a frenzy of interest and an epic major label bidding war. Just kidding. Hardly anyone noticed. Uranium Club was this year’s Patois Counselors, a band so good that it made no sense that no one knew about them. But, fast forward to now and LOOK at the heading of this review! Sub Pop noticed and included Uranium Club in its storied singles club. And why not? The bluntly named “Two Things at Once,” (Parts I and 2), is just as tightly, maniacally wound as the full-length, just as gloriously, spikily confrontational. “Part 1” scrambles madly, pulling hair out by the roots as it agitatedly considers “our children’s creativity” and whether “I’m too young to die.” It’s like Fire Engines, but faster and crazier and with big pieces of machinery working loose and flying off the sides. “Part 2” runs slower and more lyrically but with no less intensity, big flayed slashes of discord rupturing its meditative strumming. There are no words in it, and yet you sense deep, obsessive bouts of agitation driving its motor, even when the brass comes in, unexpectedly, mournfully, near the end. This is the good stuff, and no one wants you to know about it. Except me. And now Sub Pop. Don’t miss out.
Jennifer Kelly
 Various Artists— Come on up to the House: Women Sing Waits (Dualtone)
Come On Up To The House: Women Sing Waits by Dualtone Music Group, Inc.
Tom Waits’ gravelly voice is embedded deep in the fabric of how we think of Tom Waits songs. You can’t think of “Come On Up to the House” without sandpapery catch in its gospel curves, or of “Downtown Train” without his strangled desolation; he is the songs, and if you don’t like the way he sings, you’ve probably never cared much for his recordings. And yet, here, in this all-woman, star-studded, country-centric collection of covers, you can hear, maybe for the first time, how gracefully constructed these songs are, how pretty the melodies, how well the lyrics fit to them. You cannot believe how different these songs sound with women singing. It is truly revelatory. Contributors include big stars (Aimee Mann, Corinne Rae Bailey), living legends (Iris Dement, Roseanne Cash), up-and-comers (Courtney Marie Andrews, Phoebe Bridgers) and a few emerging artists (Joseph, The Wild Reeds), and all have a case to make. Phoebe Bridgers distills “Georgia Lee” into a quiet, tragic purity, while Angie McMahon finds a private, inward-looking clarity in “Take It With Me.” Courtney Marie Andrews blows up “Downtown Train,” into a swaggering country anthem, while Roseanne Cash infuses “Time” with a warm, unforced glow. These versions transform weird, twisted reveries into American songbook classics, which is what they maybe were, under all that growling, all along.
Jennifer Kelly
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odysseusthedead · 5 years
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Odysseus and the land of the dead
The vessel, a ship that had sailed the roughest of seas with a hull as black as the eddying ocean that surrounded it, made its way through clouds of rolling mist that consumed the breath within the lungs of the crew with a hungry gasp. As the ship rowed towards the lands of the Cimmerians, the sun resplendent and bold seemed to reach a certain death and would not touch the shore, the land, or the mountains. The beams refused to near the wretches that slumber between the earth and sky; cursing a perpetual, never-ending night to overhang their shallow lives.
Odysseus and his crew beached their vessel, the sand the colour of ash and smoke crunched like skeletons beneath their feet as they pulled a ram and a ewe from the cabin within the ship. The reluctance to move and abnormal bellowing coming from the animals made Odysseus’ stomach clench and his skin crawl over his bones. The dull ache of an unseen fear did not stop him as he and his men walked beside the stream of ocean that beckoned them to a place that emanated a cruel laughter. The place in which Circe had told him of and there was no mistaking it as the blood seemed to seep from his pores, feeling less human with every second that passed.
Odysseus called forth Perimedes and Eurylochus who seized both sheep, bleating as if already feeling what would come next. The sword that hung at Odysseus’ side gleamed, sharp and bright despite the night that hung over them and he drew it with intent. His hand’s shook as he cut a trench in the ash, a cubit long and a cubit broad whilst the crashing waves and rasps from the sheep created a sickening cacophony in their ears. Around the cut earth milk and honey was poured first, the ground swallowing it in gulps as sweet wine and water followed. Lastly, over the libation, he took his time and sprinkled white barley-meal as he knew what must be done next.
Odysseus kneeled on the ground, bowing his head as his knees sunk deep into the sand and felt as if each grain gripped him unmoving. To everyone, and no one at all, he whispered a promise that upon his arrival to Ithaca he would sacrifice a calfless heifer, the best he owned. He would load a pyre with items that could not be found in this life or the next. That for the blind prophet Teiresias he would slay a ram that had wool as deep and black as the blood that flows within it.
Dread filled Odysseus as he stood with his hands trembling so terribly the sword nearly slipped through his fingers. He motioned towards Perimedes and Eurylochus and as instructed they pushed the heads of each sheep to face the earth. He placed the sword upon the neck of the ewe and in one quick motion the life flew from its body, splashing into the trench beneath it. The crashing waves blended with the animal’s almost human screams until both Odysseus and the men that joined him could hear nothing else. Everything roared and then stopped the moment the blood of the ram touched the sand. Time seemed to slow, and the breath was sucked from the lungs of the men circling the trench.
A chasm seemed to open around each of the men as the blood dripped from both animals, still as they lay, a void that would pull you in if you moved so much as an inch. Chaos was unleashed, Erebus ripped open his chest and every soul that had faced a wretched death flew free in cackles and screams. Each soul, black and bloody, smoothed into their once human-like form; the people they had been when they had faced the reapers hand.
The men, who moments ago stood silent, bowed and yelled in pure terror. The souls unleashed sang and spat like banshees surrounding them, encircling the trough of blood that seemed to gurgle in delight. Odysseus hoped that what he had done would be worth this fear that paled and gripped his entire body and mind, a fear he’d never forget until he too would kiss the chaos of Erebus.
Everything within him screamed to find his ship and run as fast as his legs could carry him, but he had come so far and would not make it home without speaking to the blind prophet. He forced his eyes to move within the crowds of ghosts that drank the blood maliciously but one face he did not expect to see was that of Elpenor, his comrade and one of his men whose body still lay in the hall of Circe. Odysseus fell to his knees and wept like a babe who had been torn from his mother. He looked into the shade’s eyes, those that once belonged to someone he knew so well and could not utter a word.
Elpenor turned to look upon the men cowering along the shoreline who watched in pure torment upon the shades screeching and wailing in delight and turned back to his once dear friend. His voice left his throat in a moan, trying to remember how to speak. Minutes passed before Elpenor’s words formed sentences but finally it was realised that he only wanted his crew to fulfill a final request. For Odysseus to bury him with his armour, grieve for him on the shore of the grey sea and leave his oar upon the mound of his grave, the one in which he used to row besides his comrades.
At last Odysseus rasped out agreeance, he vowed to do as he asked and to never forget the man Elpenor was when by his side. With that Odysseus had one last thing to do, find the blind prophet Teiresias and carry his crew homeward.
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tularue11 · 3 years
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Reposted from @mydreamforanimals “Walruses are one of my favourite species on this planet and when they beach themselves off the coasts of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago near Nunavut, it’s a photographers dream and it’s mostly only accessible through plane or boat. Here a Atlantic walrus mother is the mother of all mothers. For two years she provides constant protection, cradling the calf between her fore-flippers, or letting it cling to her back, as can be observed in this photo. Both female and male walrus have been observed carrying an orphaned calf away from danger. It is also not unusual for a calfless cow to adopt an orphaned calf” 📷 @makwa_photography #walrus #walruses #walrusesofinstagram https://www.instagram.com/p/CNbTwadhUe5/?igshid=1tisx77xdtnub
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gatheredinamber · 3 years
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Cheval Sombre covers The Calfless Cow
Just released.
Days Go By by Cheval Sombre
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De Algemene Verwarring #51 - 7 June 2021
The fifty-first episode of De Algemene Verwarring was broadcast on Monday June 7 2021, and you can listen to it by clicking on the Mixcloud widget below. And if that does not work, here’s the direct link to the Mixcloud page:
https://www.mixcloud.com/MedialabKortrijk/de-algemene-verwarring-51-7-juni-2021/
Pictured below is of course The Velvet Underground. They are one of the three real “bands” I have played in this episode, together with Galaxie 500 and Enhet För Fri Musik. The rest of the tracks are all brought to you by solo acts. After the party edition of De Algemene Verwarring #50, I thought it was time for some contemplation, peace and rest. So I collected some quiet tracks for you. About The Velvet Underground, I have discovered via podcasts and radioshows such as Dynamite Hemorrhage and Soul Food Radio that they were quite sensational live. I’ve been checking out some of their live footage on YouTube and found this very nice version of Venus In Furs for you.
And there’s also quiet music from the likes of Dirty Beaches, Rob Noyes, Isaac, Blod, Ögon Batto, Jack Rose, Galaxie 500, Enhet For Fri Musik, Paul Messis, Edgar Wappenhalter, Ignatz and more! And beneath the photo you find the playlist for this show. Enjoy!
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Playlist:
Dirty Beaches: I’m A King Bee (7” “Tarlabaşı” on Bronson Recordings, 2012)
Slim Harpo: I’m A King Bee (from YouTube)
Paul Messis: Win Or Lose (7” “Win Or Lose/Please Don’t Tell Me Why” on Market Square Records, 2021)
Rob Noyes: You Are Tired (7” “You Are Tired/Nightmare Study” on Market Square Records, 2019)
Cheval Sombre: Been A Lover (7” “Been A Lover/The Calfless Cow” on Market Square Records, 2019)
Galaxie 500: Don’t Let Our Youth Go To Waste (LP “Today” on Domino Recording Co., reissue from 2010, originally released in 1988 by Aurora records)
The Velvet Underground: Venus In Furs (YouTube - live San Francisco 1969 - (Live Exploding Plastic Inevitable Footage)
Stefan Christensen: Loimaa X (tape “Loimaa” on Garden Portal, 2021)
Ignatz: Ghost Bird (7” “You Can’t See Me” on (K-RAA-K)³, 2021)
Edgar Wappenhalter: Stroom (7” “Zingt Hendrik Marsman En Karel Van De Woestijne” on Lexi Disques, 2012)
Tony Conrad: May (split 7” with Gastr Del Sol “The Japanese Room At La Pagode / May” on Table Of The Elements, 1995)
Isaac: MLN (LP “The Evenings”, self-released, 2021)
Ögon Batto: Poster Girl (LP “Browse” on Ultra Eczema, 2021)
Enhet För Fri Musik: Orden Du Aldrig Säger (LP “Ömhet & Skilsmässa” on Discreet Music, 2021)
Blod: Danmark Frit (LP “Missväxt” on Grapefruit Music, 2021)
Jack Rose: Hart Crane’s Old Boyfriend (CD “Raag Manifestos” on VHF Records, 2007)
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kusunokihimea · 6 years
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     [ OKAY SO Sylvie’s weekend is taking several unexpected turns, and anyone curious can look under a cut for more info, but in short: idek what’s going on so I’m a lil fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants today =‘D So I’ma be slow! Warnings for mentions of animal death, so be advised! ]
     Okay, point one: I’ve got ALL my grandparents coming over (some rather spur of the moment), so uh...that makes a rather full house compared to usual, which means I’ll likely get pulled afk a fair bit.
     Point two: I’m still working on my first intro commissions, so I’m trying to prioritize that cuz my friend’s a sweetie and I need to get it done!
     Point three: I’m adjusting my sleep schedule for babies so I’m v tired. Also v v sore cuz OOF I moved a lot of hay and poo yesterday to clean the stall for them.
     And point three.five is: babies probably aren’t coming today. Which is my longest point cuz oof backstory.
     So the two babies I’m supposed to get are: one whose mother is a first calf heifer (it’s her first baby) and she’s just...not doing it right. The other is a twin, and it’s better to have just one baby per mama, so hence me getting it.
     Now the complications: my dad had ANOTHER cow who had a twisted uterus (OUCH) who lost one calf pre-birth, and the other post-birth: she WAS going to have twins. She’s still at the vet today, and Dad wants to TRY to graph a calf onto her. In other words, get her to adopt one of the orphans since she’s now calfless.
     And then this MORNING he had a cow who looked like she had given birth, but...no calf to be found. So that might be another graph candidate. 
     So in short, until ALL THAT is ironed out, no babies...and possible none at all (yet) if both these take to new mamas. But it doesn’t always work, and the first cow is a lil ill, and the second might still have a calf we just haven’t found yet. So uh...it’s all up in the air and I JUST WANT MY BABIES, DARN IT T^T
     SO YEAH, I’m gonna be slow today. Possibly for longer because...I’m really just waiting to hear what’s going on, so I gotta be ready at any time for this to go down, and...yeah.
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gourmetmilkshake · 7 years
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yeah i'll be honest... i dont wear skinny jeans anymore bc i realized they look weird on me since i dont have calves! i only wear tapered mom, straight leg and flare jeans to hide my calfless legs!
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calfless
'bri skam - calfless dry dri [IW]
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gatheredinamber · 5 years
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Cheval Sombre covers The Calfless Cow
A new 7″ single from Cheval Sombre features a song from The Amber Gatherers on its B-side. Currently available in small quantities from Rough Trade and Bandcamp
Cheval Sombre - Been a Lover b/w The Calfless Cow by Market Square Recordings
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