Mountain*7 - for the person with nothing better to do

A cheery wave from a stranded youngster

Tuesday, September 30. 2008

Yes, we are still here, in some form at least. Personally speaking it feels like I've been buried for a couple of weeks: the crunch-clutch of personal commitments, the soil of booze... Now the more I read about what the fucks going on around me I wonder if it's even worth the bother, as soon I'll probably be stealing corn cobs from the local farm and wondering what the asbestos on my garage roof tastes like. No matter. You have to go hide somewhere, so it might as well be here.

As you may have noticed we have a new plug-in on the right hand panel which allows you to see what crap we're reading when we should be working. Fill your boots. We'll be back soon.

Young Knives – Koko, Camden. 9th Sept 2008

Thursday, September 11. 2008


The Young Knives

This was a free gig for the fans. No queue or even a search, just stroll through the doors and you’re in. Dodgy bar as per usual, and it’s always best not to consider the damage. After some decent support from Lightspeed Champion (especially the Star Wars rendition), they’re on, with sharp white suits to boot. The House of Lords appeared to be Buddy Holly on Stars In Your Eyes. Cool.


The Young Knives

I am always happy to see the Knives, knowing I will hear songs from the exceptional Voices Of Animals & Men. Loughborough Suicide is an anthemic joy. Tailors appeared even odder live. The recent 2nd Long Player is of only average standard yet songs performed from this were delightful too. This was a very confident performance by the Young Knives. A confidence that allows all their fun & nerd qualities to shine. I thought noticeably so compared with previous gigs I had attended. The white suits helped too. A good night was had. Cheers Young Knives.

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Hugh MacDiarmid - Skald's Death

Tuesday, September 9. 2008

I have known all the storms that roll.
I have been a singer after the fashion
of my people – a poet of passion.
All that is past.
Quiet has come into my soul.
Life’s tempest is done.
I lie at last
A bird cliff under the midnight sun.

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Opacity - Riverside Hospital

Friday, September 5. 2008


Curvature

It's been an age since we featured anything from motts over at Opacity - this latest photo set from the abandoned shell of the Riverside Hospital on North Brother Island in New York's East River has some fabulous images.


Buffalo State Hospital, Darkness

For some other examples of his work, see this set of the Buffalo State Hospital.

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Palindromics

Thursday, September 4. 2008


Sarah Palin

It only happens once in a while but wee Sarah Palin has caused our resident political mountebank to come out of his west London hideaway...

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So, McCain has picked Palin, a 44-year-old beauty queen. It has widely been read as a cynical attempt by the GOP to cash in on the millions of women voters left apparently disenfranchised by Hillary Clinton's failure to win the Democrats' presidential nomination.

People point at her brief political record, her pro-life, , pro-drilling (anti-polar bear) stance, her advocacy of creationist teaching in Alaska's schools, her NRA membership and the ongoing corruption case against her back home as the many good reasons why she will fail to win over those who feel let down by Obama's accession to the Democratic candidacy.

People may well look at her age, too. At 44, the age gap between herself and the Republicans' patriarchal presidential candidate is 28 years; indeed, Senator McCain is fully well old enough to have finished his education, proceeded into a career and, generally speaking, established himself in life and still be of the age at which to sire his own running mate. Whereas Obama has chosen Joe Biden to bestow upon his campaign a greater sense of experience, in contrast to his youthful appearance and relatively short time in political office, many believe this age gap between McCain and his vice-presidential nominee will only accentuate his own advancing years.

Others too, may recognise that Sarah Palin does not fit into the baby-boomer generation that was so crucial to Senator Clinton's campaign – the generation that has played such an important role in the last 40 years of American history. Further proof why she will fail to take the middle ground in this election battle and appeal across the deep fault lines that run through America's partisan political landscape.

All these points are completely valid, should McCain's choice of running mate be based on what appears at first sight to be that cynical attempt to steal Obama's thunder (and Hillary Clinton's jaded supporters) by picking a young woman governor, fresh in the job. However, that point of view is dependent on whether McCain and the GOP are basing their campaign strategy on seizing the middle ground.


In fact, if there was a Republican in the party most likely to appeal to Democratic voters, it would be McCain himself. But taking votes off the Democrats has rarely been the Republicans' concern; and the times when they have, say, in '72 or '84, their sweeping success came more as a result of a catastrophic collapse of the Opposition from within, than a grand strategic blow.

McCain's choice of Sarah Palin, the pro-guns, pro-life, pro-oil, creationist believer and good Christian hockey-mum of five children (one of whom has signed up to fight the good fight for his country) was made to reinforce his own Republican credentials and maximise the turnout of the GOP faithful in November. Of particular significance are Christian Right element, which has been as important to the Republicans in recent years as they have been suspicious of McCain. McCain's historic position as a maverick of the Republican Party may well have once endeared him to many independents, but McCain, like his predecessor as Arizona Senator, Barry Goldwater, has long been a thorn in the side of the Christian Conservatives, speaking out against the social policies they endorse, and their contemporary domination of the Grand Old Party, and the political debate in general.

Amidst this, Sarah Palin acts as a paean to this powerful group. McCain's liberal street cred will buy him no favours with the Democrats, and if he wants to count on the Party standing behind him, the thinking goes, he has to appeal to the supporters. Palin's selection is not an attempt to cash Clinton's cheque, but instead is another example of how the neo-Cons have been infiltrating McCain's campaign team. McCain has shown in the past that he is more than capable of political expediency where necessary – his endorsement of George W. Bush in 2000 (after an acrimonious battle for the Republican nomination he eventually lost) and his equivocal support for the President in 2004 is evidence of this – but the selection of Palin after a summer of conservative missives dispatched from McCain's campaign HQ is symptomatic not only of an old political war horse ready to sell everything to get what he's most craved for 8 long years: it coldly demonstrates that the liberal side of the GOP is still nowhere to be seen on the political landscape, 34 years on from Nelson Rockefeller's defeat in the Republican presidential nomination at the hands of none other than John McCain's antecedent, Barry Goldwater.

That the liberal Republican wing of the Party is still in hibernation and is nowhere to be seen on the political landscape of the United States is by no means a good thing for either the Democrats or political junkies at large. It appears the upcoming election is likely to be every bit as partisan as the last, and the tone of it will, no doubt, be just as caustic, and by no means fair. Intelligent and reasoned debate will give way to ignorant and uneducated diatribe, spewed out of the sewer outlets of the right-wing media. And if Obama manages to become the first African-American President of the United States, it is highly unlikely the Christian/Conservatives will go into dignified retirement: they will fight the Obama White House tooth and nail, in much the same spirit as they fought the Clinton administration – it will be savage and brutal, like a pitbull in a dogfight.

Hopes for any kind of consensus to take hold in Washington seems further away than ever.

New York Public Library Podcasts

Thursday, September 4. 2008

The New York Library has put a vast section of its public author events online as videos and audio files. There's a archive stretching back to 2005 and plenty to keep you busy from Werner Herzog to a symposium on Freud.

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Belong - Same Places

Tuesday, September 2. 2008


Belong, Same Places

The Belong sound-journey is turning into a strange trip. October Language was a quietly fierce album, full of bubbling drones and turned-inside-out soundscapes - at times it sounded like the surface of the sun; at others like the slow foetid heat of the Louisiana bayous. And, almost inevitably I guess, the full force of the Katrina catastrophe was mapped backwards onto the record (October... was recorded before the hurricane hit) and it came to stand for an expression of rage and melancholy (I discussed this briefly in an interview I did with Turk back in 2006). Which is fair enough, it was a beautiful enough elegy, even if it was post of the fact - but I still felt the record exceeded this remit. It stood apart from the events. It still does.

The Colorloss Record E.P. was a strange beast and to some extent reminded me of Mark Hollis' escape into enervation - the evidence for which is apparent in the journey from The Colour of Spring to his own solo record, then...nothing. All the aggressive elements of October Language had been stripped away and instead there was a kind of heightening of a sense of decay - a feel that was present on the LP but not nearly as prominent as this. The 4 tracks were cover versions ('Late Night' by Syd Barrett, 'Beeside' by Tintern Abbey, 'My Clown' by July, and Billy Nicholls' 'Girl From New York') but cover versions heard through the metal ribcages of rotting buildings - the songs are there but buried beneath dense washes of reverb and tape-disintegration. It's a strange effect (one notionally, at least, close to what Kevin Shields was up to, or more recently Liz Harris with Grouper) and a a disorienting one, rather like listening through the walls to a late night conversation in an adjoining room. But whereas Hollis' inward retreat might have been in response to something pathological and as such more intense and neurotic, this, I think, has a different, more aesthetic aim - something to do with stripping sound away, returning it to some primordial starting point. And all achieved through technology so you're left with an odd, uncanny paradox. But one that gets into your body cavities, into your skin.

Now we have Same Places which might be an EP or it might be a single, I'm not sure. It's a 14 minute track and a one-side vinyl only release (on clear vinyl which is very apt), and the sound is closer in its construction to October Language in that it feels almost more exploratory, even topographical at times. The surface of the sound is like distempered glass - the smoothness and limpidity disturbed by the whorls of the added texture of the paint; but as the piece takes shape it's the tectonic shifts beneath the exterior that pull at you. It's like listening to the warm garbled feedback from a depth gauge or a sense probe as it works its way across terrain - the rise and fall in the oscillator drones mirroring the sharp inclines, level screes and plunging valleys of the landscape. And after a few listens, by the centre of the track (which lest we forget is called Same Places), it's possible to feel airborne above it and to have something like a full appreciation of the structure, which all in all is a peculiar way to appreciate a piece of music but there you are... I'm intrigued to see where they take this thing next.

Same Places is available as a free download (a 320 bitrate download, at that) and you can get the superbly packaged vinyl here.

The band have also made the CDR only tour EP available as a free download. Go get.

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