television: classic or dud? search and destroy

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inspired by reynolds' article, where he trashes every other cbgb's band but praises television for revolutionizing rock. now i don't think television were a bad band but i was always puzzled by the worshipful acclaim. they were a fairly solid jangly classic rock band, possibly the least "revolutionary" of the cbgb's bands. they put together one heartachingly gorgeous pop song and a number of decent songs with fairly long, relatively conventional guitar solos. they were just embarrassing when they tried to rock out. and they certainly did nothing so incendiary as "gloria" or "rock'n'roll nigger."

search: "days"

destroy: "shane, she wrote this"

sundar subramanian, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I always thought it would help if you played guitar, so you could understand what all the fuss is about.
Search all of Marquee Moon. Especially "See No Evil".

Stevie Nixed, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I'll make it simple...Search: Venus, Prove it, Days; Destroy: solos.

Larms, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Search: all of Marquee Moon and most of Adventure
Destroy: the self-titled 1992 album, not because it was bad, more because it ruined the mystique

Sean Carruthers, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

search - the blow up - i also like that mr lee tune

Geordie Racer, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

"Marquee Moon" isn't as good as all the hype would have you believe - it's actually BETTER.

Search - all of MM. And I've always loved "Ain't that Nothin'" from Adventure.

I refuse to destroy anything.

Sundar - CONVENTIONAL guitar solos!!! CONVENTIONAL?

Dr. C, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Gotta agree with Sundar here. First half of Marque Moon has some decent songs then it goes downhill fast. Haven't listened to that record in ages, maybe because Tom Verlaine's voice is irritating after 3 songs. Guitar solo's, don't see what the big deal is, totally effect-free wankery so the muso can admire them in their full glory (okay that was to wind up Dr.C ;) Mmm yeah I see, Can: the prog band punks decided was cool, Television: the guitar-solo band punks deemed worthy.

As recurring soundtrack to Anne DeMeulemeester fashion shows pretty good though, somehow.

Omar, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Absolutely, irrefutably Classic.

SEARCH: MARQUEE MOON and BLOW-UP

DESTROY: all Destiny's Child discs. This is real music.

Patti Smith *WISHES* she produced anything a tenth as good as Television. To paraphrase Lydia Lunch, Patti Smith wasn't anything but a barefoot hippy.

alex in nyc, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Without looking at the this thread, I listened to Television Marquee Moon this afternoon. Deja Vu. Cranked up the max - sounded brilliant.

DJ Martian, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Not that it matters, we all have different tastes, but just how did you wind up HERE, alex in nyc, you horrible horrible D-Child hater?

Larms, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Predictably, Reynolds chooses to search the very CBGB bands I would destroy. Television isn't as bad as Suicide or the Talking Heads, but basically they're the Grateful Dead with short hair. What charms the Dead had were basically in their folksy lyricism, and what charms Television had were in their artsy, bohemian lyricism (Venus, in particular, is a remarkable song). None of these bands rely on energy and attitude (except Suicide maybe, but their audience-baiting "charms" don't exactly translate well to record I don't think), which seems to me a prerequisite of punk, and in fact by their conceptualism and their craftiness they'd get labeled as prog had they come from any town other than the one where 90% of the rock critics seem to live and operate.

Search: "Venus", "Foxhole", "Elevation", "Marquee Moon", "Little Johnny Jewel"

Destroy: not much actually, "Torn Curtain", most of that 90's album

In a more general NY "punk" sense:

Search: The Dolls, the Heartbreakers, the Dead Boys, the Ramones, the Testors

Destroy: Suicide just cause they sucked, the Talking Heads for prefiguring the Dismemberment Plan and for sucking, Richard Hell and Patti Smith for being sucky poets, Tom Verlaine for naming himself after a sucky poet

As far as Reynolds' points about US vs UK punk, they certainly are different (US punk dreams in color, UK punk in black and white), but any preferences I have generally depend on my mood at the time.

Kris., Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Search: '1880 Or So'.

Destroy? Maybe we could lose 'The Rocket'.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Search: Mar

Keiko, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Search: Marquee Moon. On repeat. For as long as you can stand.

Destroy: I don't care as long as you don't lay a hand on Beyonce.

Keiko, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

"This is real music."

So what are Destiny's Child supposed to be, exactly? It comes on the radio, and they sell it on CDs, right? Tones and rhythms and stuff coming out of the speakers etc.?

I think Thomas Pynchon writes much better books than lots of other authors but I don't deny that they write books too...

crankily,

Josh, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

i echo kris's sentiments: if there's a canonical album i've "gotten" less than marquee moon...well, i'm just glad i haven't come across its likes yet. that said, marquee moon does make for a nice...what's the name for them? 'pigeons'? in skeet-shooting? and so forth.

perhaps i should've taken up the guitar rather than have wasted my time with my studies and such (i mean, where the hell have they gotten me, except into debt?). then maybe i would've gotten this album and it would all make sense to me and i would be saying things like, "yes, richard lloyd really was the genius of the group, do track down his second solo album as it is sadly overlooked, an absolute GEM, if i may so."

so, DESTROY: television, but not until that 70s show is over.

and, hell, suicide while you're at it too. i distrust any cbgb's band i can't envision doing a cover of "baby, i love you" and meaning it, maan.

fred solinger, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

We call them clays, Fred, as in clay pigeons, so you're not so off, but you still sound like a flatlander. Marquee Moon is one of the first indie-rock records and should be shot for that reason, but there are some nice songs on there, and besides, it doesn't have the weight of a clay, it wouldn't fly good at all.

Otis Wheeler, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Search: guitar solos on "Elevation" and "Mr Lee."

Destroy: all that crap in between the solos.

AP, Tuesday, 1 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Oh puh-leeez, Omar, De Meulemeester? Christ, she's so hell bent on becoming the Patti Smith, she forgets that she's actually creating fashion. I wish she'd have some sense of humour. The scandal with Herman Brusselmans just showed that even more, a nag nag nag nagging woman.
I like Television.

Stevie Nixed, Wednesday, 2 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Stevie you picked up on that? Cool, even if you don't like her, hell, I don't know her personally knowwoti'msayin'. Like the clothes though (elegant stuff) and the shows too. But then again I'm a Patti Smith fan ;) Btw H.Brusselmans is one dour arsehole who should crash his car into the next tree, pronto.

In general: interesting how emotions flare up as soon the 70s Noo Yawk scene is made a subject of discussion.

Omar, Wednesday, 2 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Muso, Omar? Me? Oh alright then, but only VERY occasionally and never in public.

Dr. C, Wednesday, 2 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I hardly think Television "cleansed" music as Mr. Reynolds claimed, did they? everyone else wanted to sound like Television but actually went on to form the Cars because they couldn't copy their licks. Televisions bass player left Blondie to be in them full time because he thought Verlaine & co. were more likely to suceed commercially. Doh!

To call Television musos is a bit like calling John Coltrane a muso, i.e. totally meaningless, and doubly so when you're trying to invoke some long departed spirit of punk/pop mistrust for noodling. The economical frenzy they play with sends shivers down my spine.

And to say that UK punk was in essence more political than its US cousin seems to me risible - in what way was giggling about spitting in Glen Matlock's pint an act of political rebellion? Grow up!

Search - the interplay between Verlaine's lyrics and his beautifully complimentary guitar work.

Destroy - the cloth eared naysayers on this thread (er.. not literally, obviously ;-))

As classic as classic can possibly get.

Peter, Wednesday, 2 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Spot on, Peter.

Dr. C, Wednesday, 2 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

wow! we agree on something, Dr. C!

Astounded Peter, Wednesday, 2 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Here on the Television thread or here on ILM? I'll answre both, you horrible Destiny's Child fan.

THE TELEVISION THREAD: I live in NYC, Television's home, right next to The Strand bookstore where Tom Verlaine used to work (and still shops). Television were a truly great band. If you disagree, well then fine...but you're wrong.

THE I LOVE MUSIC BOARD: Killing Joke sent me.

alex in nyc, Wednesday, 2 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Dud. Dreary rock band that managed to pretend to be something they weren't - they rival Tom Petty for dullness. Any success they had is down to the latent homoerotic fantasies of the critics that fancied them. Once Tom Verlaine lost his looks his career rightly ended. Anyone who likes them is irredeemably rockist.

Guy, Wednesday, 2 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Luc Sante wrote somewhere (WMS maybe? somewhere) that they were the best LIVE band in NYC c.1975-8: says he saw them SCORES of times (hundreds). Talked (raved) abt "improvisation", as I recall. Implication: that their recorded whatever is no match for whatever whatever. I dunno: I never saw them live. Nor did S.Reynolds, come to that (a guess, but unless he went to New York as a supercool tot...)

Generally wanted to like TV more than I do: cuz they were called "cerebral" as a diss, and I wd always ALWAYS defend such.

mark s, Wednesday, 2 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I have a really hard time understanding how anyone could like Chic and not like Television (or vice versa). Totally intertwined for me in their vision of end-of-70s NY as a place to be/imagine.

Tom, Wednesday, 2 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

The most amusing thing to me about Television is that I read somewhere that their triumph was in completely exercising the blues influence from their rock sound. The reviewer on AMG said they stripped away "any sense of swing or groove". That has to be the most ridiclous assertion anyone has made in the history of recorded music criticism. Classic, with occasional reservations. While I really like it when I do listen to it, I can't say I listen to it that much.

Dave M., Wednesday, 2 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Omar, how could I not pick up De Meulemeester, she's the daaaahling of the fashion press. Personally I'd rate her as high as... H&M. hah!

Stevie Nixed, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Search: the 90's s/t album. Pure beauty, no rock.

Sterling Clover, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Tom can you elaborate the links you see between chic and TV? It reads like a provocation at the moment, which I'm sure it isn't...

Guy, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Rhythm is one of the links, and one of the ways Television weren't JUST rockist rock. They were all angles (tho I bet this was often a mess in a club with bad sound). Chic were of New York, yes, but how much were they IN it?

mark s, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Not a provocation, but probably more provocatively stated than it would have been had it not been posted post-pub. Apologies Guy. But the qn is do I still believe it this morning, and the answer's yes.

The links for me are in the wish to produce a kind of clear, clean, layered sound - Kraftwerk fit in here too - which is also somehow detached and upmarket (the worst thing about Marquee Moon is its horrible cover - much better to have put them in suits). It's hard to explain but they do seem to me to fit together and feel somehow similar. The interplay on Chic productions between the string stabs and cuts and the bass and guitar feels a cross-genre-tracks cousin to the guitar architectures on MM.

Rhythm and repetition come into it too, as Mark says. And as someone whose never been to NY I love the idea of it as a city which includes both TV and Chic - and yeah, Chic says fantasy New York to me, as does TV.

Obviously Chic are better, if only because they're so emotionally affecting at the same time as being so austere in some ways. But Chic are better than almost anyone, so that's hardly saying much.

Side question - are Chic the most rockist disco group?

Tom, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

They made "albums" which were to be considered as works. As opposed to hurried slam-loads-of-rubbish-together follow-ups to the club smash. Which is a pity, I think: cuz the second approach wd have loosened them up somewhat. Hurried wd have kicked them into a different (improvisational?0 mode. Like TV, Chic were CONSIDERED.

mark s, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I’m not all that convinced by this time/place connection. To my ears there is a closer affinity between Talking Heads and Chic, or PIL and Chic for that matter.

It’s all to do with disco and the virulence of the anti-disco campaigns of the time. This was both an American thing (Rolling Stone’s "disco sucks" campaign) and, until Danny Baker started writing for the weeklies, a commonplace of punk journalism in Britain. Some ‘new wave’ bands allowed disco to influence their work, Television didn’t.

I don’t find Television’s sound glamorous – and glamour one of the important 70s aesthetic. The sound is too historic, too angsty, too nasal. They sound like country boys up in town for the night – not a bad quality of itself (that was always the delight of the Stooges as opposed to VU) but certainly a very different quality to Chic who literally strolled out of Studio 54 at 3am and began recording.

The other major difference is in their attitude to the studio. There is a mystique about the idea of Television as a live band (and how it was never caught on record) – which like all such things says more about the weakness of the recordings than anything else. There is no such mystique about Chic (or Kraftwerk for that matter) because they were clearly absolutely fantastic in the studio.

Personally I feel that Talking Heads and Blondie were the obviously brilliant CBGBs bands (with the strongest interest in disco incidentally); and Jayne County is the maverick I care about. Television have always had a slightly hip, rock critic discovery cool, but so what.

Guy, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

re side question - new thread? Or back to the Chic thread...

Guy, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

"Disco sucks": yeah, sure, but this campaign kinda lost, bigtime, in the end. At every level. Didn't it? Does it still keep needing to be refought? (I ask as someone who totally swung with disco back then, instantly and w/o reserve).

Danny Baker and the discoboys: well, krautrock-aesthete Angus Mackinnon did the FIRST EVER Moroder-as-auteur piece in NME years before Baker even started writing; and Penny Reel followed up with his 'By the Rivers of Babbacombe' Boney M celebration. Maybe these were anomalies: to me, these writers were the secret heart and mind of the paper, 78-80.

The point abt live vs recording is quite right. Tho I don't necessarily think Luc's nostalgia shd be ruled OUT as a part of the argument, it shouldn't begin and end the argument, as per old-skool rockism ad nauseam.

What I'd want to rescue TV for is their, erm, Superb Angular Glacial Chilliness (who did the hell did THIS before them?): except I don't just think there's ENOUGH of it.

mark s, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

What about Nico's VU tracks - aren't they angular & glacial? Stravinsky's 'Soldiers Tale' has some of this quality too, as do some performances of Weill.

However I don't think doing something first matters that much. I have problems with notions of absolute originality - origins discussions too easily become battles about authenticity.

Guy, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I should also actually make my position clear on TV. No interest in the history or the image or the punkbore stuff, no interest in the live bootlegs, no interest in the second album (I can only remember one hook from it, never a good sign), heard the third once but didn't take anything away from it. No interest really in swathes of the first album BUT the four or five tracks on it I *am* interested in I am for the reasons above and I am really very interested in. I think they would probably have considered their strengths rather differently from me, and yes, disco would have loosened them up too.

Chic qn - we've got a Chic thread so we may as well use it.

Tom, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Which tracks Tom?

Guy, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Frank Kogan once wrote (in WMS I guess) that (and paraphrasing here, hopefully not too far from truth) Cinderella remind him of Television (or vice versa) if Tom Verlaine could've sung and Television's rhythm section could've "rocked". Not a connection I'd've made. Only parallel perhaps being both have rhythm guitarists seemingly hyper-aware of playing "correct" chord to most augment wherever the lead guitar is going; both bands thus capable of relatively stunning interplay (compared to their peers, esp. Television's). (And refer Cinderella's "Shake Me," "Love Gone Bad.")

(Chic as most-rockist disco 'cos Rodgers was a hard funk guitarist, ditto Edwards on bass, and that interplay was their music's foundation rather'n beat and/or vocal-melody focus of "trad" disco?)

AP, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

"See No Evil" and "Marquee Moon" and "Friction". "Venus De Milo" I like pretty much as a rock song, too. The rest I either can't remember or dont think are that great.

Tom, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Anyone who likes them is irredeemably rockist.

Guy, I always felt agressively dismissive attitudes to other people's taste was part of the rockist pantheon... Maybe Baxendale claimed it back for pop? -and therefore people (like you) who can spell irredeemable properly ;-)

Ghetto Fabulous Peter, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Yes, there was a provocative phase to this discussion, (including some hypocritical passive aggression by me) but i think we're over that now!

Guy, Thursday, 3 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

ag: you almost ruined cinderella for me.

i put on _adventure_ again. aside from "glory" and "days," it was worse than i remembered. i was going to make the tom petty comparison but guy beat me to it. i certainly didn't hear much supreme angular glacial chillness. just like something the local classic rock station would put on when they wanted something lighter. executed with greater proficiency of course. _mm_ might be better though. don't remember it being too different.

but tom verlaine is just beautiful on the cover.

dr c: yeah, pretty conventional. perfectly executed in a conventional way.

sundar subramanian, Friday, 4 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

i think i might be coming to a self-realization of sorts:

at the root of my distaste for television, slint, and _daydream nation_ might be a distaste for elaboration in traditional ways, i.e. either through elaborated melodies or through large-scale structural constructions esp in a climax/release kind of way. whereas, and this makes some sense looking at my 40-records list, i do like things that innovate by taking the most basic musical elements and approaching them in a new way. this is central to both punk and minimalism. thus, when sterling said _daydream nation_ was when sonic youth stopped being punk, he might have been onto something. it's the album where they construct songs that are more structurally ambitious in a traditional way, e.g. the different melodic sections to "candle" and "cross the breeze." this is all quite broad and leaves some things unexplained but it makes sense to me right now.

sundar subramanian, Friday, 4 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Guy: Stravinsky. Good call. Fucking GREAT call — I wz knocked boss- eyed by it for 24 hours: not just Soldier's Tale, either, but right through his 20s and 30s music. His "neo-classical" music: his "neue sachlichkeit/new objectivity"

Stravinsky was accused of writing "sewing-machine music" by a hostile critic. He loved the phrase: adopted it. Exactly, exactly, is how he responded.

New York Rock-rhythm as a thing-in-itself comes in two forms: the loose pulsar stuff — Elvin Jonesy/Keith Moon-y/Mo Tuckery bulbous flowing in and round a pulse (Dolls, Patti, S.Youth) vs the super- crisp, crystalline exact clock-precision Billy Ficca got from where? Sewing machines is where.

(Bangs and Bangsy-types called those guitars — replayed in the Voivoids, R.Quine against I.Julian – "switchblade interplay" and such, which is just more and unhelpful nostalgie-de-boo rimbaudism: switchblades is macho, and none of the above are pre-eminently macho)

More machines: less emotion. No precedent in rock (VU with Nico not a good call, because while she's somewhat angular, esp. visually, they are soft and fuzzy behind her — hard and fuzzy elsewhere, obviously, w/o her). Precedent, yes, out of rock: Stravinsky, the man who infested the [anti-romantic] classical canon with his own exacting modern-texture ear. For example (to get the dogs out): Verlaine is the only player (on any instrument) who ever HEARD Coltrane, as opposed to merely hearing Coltrane's (finer) feelings, and mimicking those.

How much of the above is actually THERE IN THE RECORDED GROOVE? Not enough, plainly.

PS: PiL and Chic — well, PiL have NEVER had a decent drummer. (Not sure if this holds — Who was the drummer on Rise? — but PiL when PiL were PiL never had a decent drummer.)

mark s, Friday, 4 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Ginger Baker plays drums on "Rise", if I'm not mistaken. The drumming on Second Edition sounds great to me - no idea what it's like technically, but it sounds and feels great.

Patrick, Friday, 4 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

*jaw agape for a good 10 seconds*

the drums on _flowers of romance_ are *incredible.* i'd say more but i'm still dumbfounded.

re precision: i guess. i mean, isn't most of what's on the radio played pretty fucking precisely? what makes television any more mechanically precise than boston?

sundar subramanian, Friday, 4 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

One's a sewing machine and one's a garment factory, each precise in its own way.

Kris, Friday, 4 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Now that I think about it, Mark's probably right about the machines/rock thing (I can think of smokestacks, iron mills, hydroelectric plants, and jacks-in-the-box, but no precedent for sewing machines in rock, other than a few Steppenwolf jams that no-one heard and had no rhythm anyway), and it makes my own Grateful Dead comparison seem rather obtuse. But I still have very little interest in pulling out Marquee Moon and listening to it. Am I spelling Grateful Dead correctly?

Kris, Friday, 4 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

where i *do* hear clean, precise, crystalline efficient little guitar figures and all that is in the first three r.e.m. albums, which strike me as much improved on television.

sundar subramanian, Saturday, 5 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

the super- crisp, crystalline exact clock-precision Billy Ficca got from where? Sewing machines is where. (mark s)

A drummer with a very distinctive style who had a strong influence on my drumming aspirations at the time (along with Chic's Tony Thompson and the Banshees' Kenny Morris).

PiL and Chic — well, PiL have NEVER had a decent drummer. (Not sure if this holds — Who was the drummer on Rise? — but PiL when PiL were PiL never had a decent drummer.) (mark s)

Probably true when it comes to any attempt at funk or disco, but the simplistic rock drumming (a kind of copy of Paul Cook) on "Public Image" is great.

David, Sunday, 6 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

four years pass...
why is marquee moon so hyped? it's simply a decent, if unspectacular, rock album from the late 70s. i don't understand why people are sucking each other's dicks over this album

velocityboy, Tuesday, 9 August 2005 18:19 (eighteen years ago) link

two years pass...

Marquee Moon is so perfect that it hurts to listen to it.

roxymuzak, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:38 (sixteen years ago) link

Marquee Moon hooked me for about a week. i had an mp3 of "guiding light" on my mom's computer when i was in high school. sometimes it would come up on shuffle and i'd be stoned and half-asleep on the couch and unable to figure out who it was. good times.

I can't listen to it now.
I had a roommate whose bedroom was adjacent to mine. thin walls, and he played it constantly. that and the 3rd & 4th talking heads records. gaaaah. i also don't like brian eno's pop stuff because of this guy.

ian, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:41 (sixteen years ago) link

Yeah, I don't know what the fuck I was on about 7 years ago. (I'd never even heard MM until 2 years ago so that was all based on the other 2 albums but even they're good. MM is absolutely great though.)

Sundar, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:57 (sixteen years ago) link

(That might be the old ILM post of mine that I agree with least but there are a bunch of bad ones.)

Sundar, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:58 (sixteen years ago) link

(Perhaps it would help if you played guitar.)

roxymuzak, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:59 (sixteen years ago) link

haha, perhaps.

Sundar, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:02 (sixteen years ago) link

'Marquee Moon' LP is overrated

I started this thread. I was a doofus. But still the only tracks that do it for me are Guiding Light and Prove It. (I've overplayed Venus de Milo). I am always disagreeing with you roxymuzak.

wanko ergo sum, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:16 (sixteen years ago) link

Not as much as Bo Jackson Overdrive (or worse, the 'nebb).

roxymuzak, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:23 (sixteen years ago) link

I had a roommate whose bedroom was adjacent to mine. thin walls, and he played it constantly. that and the 3rd & 4th talking heads records. gaaaah. i also don't like brian eno's pop stuff because of this guy.

:-( Did you live with me last year? What a shame to have these albums ruined for you!

the next grozart, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 08:59 (sixteen years ago) link

'torn curtain' is so amazing.

haitch, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 09:07 (sixteen years ago) link

can definitely see how it'd be annoying if heard all the time though!

search: that 'live at the old waldorf' boot that rhino handmade put out in some ridiculously limited number a few years back; i think you can get it off itunes now if you wanna buy.

haitch, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 09:09 (sixteen years ago) link

yessssss, the live at the waldorf disc is positively mindbending. also it is super-crunchy. when i interviewed richard lloyd a few years back, he said this: "That's the chainsaw heavy-metal version of the band," he jokes. "We were playing Ampeg V-4 amplifiers on that tour. They were the size of a fucking house! Keith Richards talked us into using them. The Stones were using those outdoors for stadium shows, and we were playing indoors for 500 people!" i've gotten heavily into television bootlegs over the years -- there are a ton of them! it's pretty fascinating to hear the pre-Marquee Moon recordings that show how the band developed the songs into the perfect versions that are on the album.

tylerw, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 16:37 (sixteen years ago) link

I also have a knee-jerk "turn it off!" reaction to Marquee Moon from overexposure. It's too bad. But I wouldn't mind hearing Adventure some more.

Trip Maker, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 16:52 (sixteen years ago) link

I really should have got that "waldorf" disc when I had the chance!

Mark G, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 16:55 (sixteen years ago) link

yeah, it is really silly that they put that out in such a limited format ... i think it was rhino handmade's fastest sellout ever. and it's a pretty vital addition to Television's scant discography. but i guess you can get it via itunes or other more nefarious means ... just google it.

tylerw, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 17:13 (sixteen years ago) link

three years pass...

huh.

nerve_pylon, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 03:20 (twelve years ago) link

interesting, will have to check it out.
other extracurricular activities: http://www.cereghinosmith.com/

tylerw, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 12:10 (twelve years ago) link

Did y'all catch that they have finally committed "about 10 tracks" to tape with another session in the offing? Apparently Jimmy Rip has been pushing everyone to get the new album done.

Axolotl with an Atlatl (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 3 August 2011 18:16 (twelve years ago) link

six years pass...

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