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-   -   Daydreaming Down Under (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=17434)

terminal pharmacy 12.12.2007 05:30 AM

got mine for adelaide

ZEROpumpkins 12.14.2007 05:26 AM

Are you doing the sound for it :D

Mon1018 12.16.2007 09:04 AM

I'm so excited!

This is GLORIOUS NEWS!!!

ohfuchsia 12.19.2007 07:33 PM

just a heads up kids.
the 2nd sydney show is back on. just saw it on the ticketek site. tix on sale 9am tomorrow.
yay.

the ikara cult 12.19.2007 07:48 PM

Are all Aussies on here Cricket fans?
I know its a stereotype but im just wondering

ZEROpumpkins 12.19.2007 08:10 PM

No way, I hate cricket. That's good news about the 2nd Sydney show. Not that it affects me or anything.

the ikara cult 12.19.2007 08:16 PM

i saw a group on facebook today, the greatest cricket sledges, it was good fun

bischiz 12.19.2007 09:16 PM

am going to auckland,
anyone heard of 'the dead c',
new zealand experimental noise band.
pretty old now, but this is good news.
looking forward to it.

terminal pharmacy 12.19.2007 09:38 PM

i'm a cricket fan but not a fanatical one

terminal pharmacy 12.19.2007 09:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZEROpumpkins
Are you doing the sound for it :D


no one of my colleagues is system engineer though.....

ZEROpumpkins 12.19.2007 09:59 PM

Sweet. I know that Dead C had a song sampling "Kerosene".

bischiz 12.23.2007 01:25 AM

is 'kerosene' a pretty popular song?

I think 'dead c' are a New Zealand
equivalent of 'wolf eyes',
they have something like 20 albums,
mostly underground stuff.

ZEROpumpkins 12.23.2007 01:59 AM

Kerosene is probably the second best Big Black song next to Passing Complexion.

Moshe 12.27.2007 02:03 PM

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au...-16947,00.html

New York's Sonic Youth are seasoned Don't Look Back campaigners, having performed Daydream Nation at All Tomorrow's Parties and at a series of DLB concerts in Europe and the US.
They weren't that keen to begin with, says the band's Lee Ranaldo, but were talked into it by DLB founder Barry Logan.
"We didn't want to do it because we're not a particularly nostalgic band," says Ranaldo. "We felt we'd rather spend our time writing new music than revisiting something from a long time ago."
Eventually, however, "it just seemed that the stars were aligned to the point where we couldn't say no", Ranaldo says. "We were preparing that album for a deluxe edition release, part of a three-album set, something that we started six years before. Then the album got inducted into the US Library of Congress.
"We couldn't have planned the concert any better if we'd tried."
Daydream Nation, released in 1988, represents the pinnacle of Sonic Youth's career to that point. It was a marriage of their earlier white noise sensibility to a newer pop framework and included songs such as Hey Joni and Teen Age Riot that have since become staples of their live performances.
"It's the album that put us on the map for a lot of people," says Ranaldo. "We were so confident in our abilities when we came to do it, which is why it's a double album. That's why Daydream was so peculiar because our general attitude is looking forward. That shows up in the music. It cuts free from a lot of the music of the past and tries to move somewhere else."
All of these nods to significant albums, as far as DLB is concerned, are down to the persistence and musical taste of Englishman Logan. A self-confessed music tragic, he has coaxed many of his favourite bands into performing the albums he loves.
It doesn't hurt, of course, that he has a festival stage to offer them, but it's his role as a fan more than anything that has convinced the acts to say yes and that has taken the concept across the world.
"The way we listen to music now, the album is under threat, so this is one way of preserving that idea of an album as a piece of art," Logan says.
He worried for weeks when he approached Iggy Pop about doing the first Don't Look Back performance with the Stooges. "He said it would depend on what album I wanted. I said Funhouse, and he said that was the right answer." Since then, other bands such as Dinosaur Jr, Mudhoney, Cowboy Junkies and our own Dirty Three are among those who have performed one of their albums track by track. The first to do so for Don't Look Back in Australia is Minnesota lo-fi outfit Low, who begin their short tour in Melbourne on January 11. Singer, guitarist and songwriter Alan Sparhawk agrees that the idea of doing an album from start to finish is a good one and gives the artists a chance to approach the work in a way that they may not have considered. They first performed Things We Lost in the Fire in London a year ago. Again, as with many of the other artists, the Fire album was a pivotal one in their career.
"We were at the cusp of being innocent about what we were doing and also opening up the door and going for different arrangements," he says.
Sparhawk recalls wincing at the prospect of doing the whole album live, "but the more I thought about it. it made sense", he says. "We still play half of the songs live. At this point in my life I feel comfortable going back to them. In fact there are a couple of songs that I think we probably have a better perspective on now than we did at the time."
As technology redefines the role of the conventional album, it's uncertain whether the concept of Don't Look Back will survive long term, but for the moment bands such as Died Pretty, who, unlike some of the others, are not a going concern, are happy to be able to revisit the work that made them famous.
"That album changed things a lot for us, in Australia that is," Myers says. "It certainly shows how an album is a powerful entity, but there are a lot more bad albums than there are good ones, plus there are a lot of albums where you only have two or three good songs, so when you get a classic album like, say, (Television's) Marquee Moon, it sticks out. It's not something you regularly do as a band, play your album from beginning to end."
The Don't Look Back concerts begin on January 11 and run until February 23.

Kina 12.29.2007 12:46 AM

I'm so excited about the Sydney show! Woo!

ZEROpumpkins 12.29.2007 12:49 AM

First one?

Kina 12.29.2007 01:49 AM

yep it is actually, despite having listened to them for 17 years now I've managed to miss every concert except this one, so I'm looking forward to it heaps! Daydream Nation would haveto be one of my favourites too which makes it even better

ALIEN ANAL 12.29.2007 02:18 AM

i still have to sneak in
hopefully the security isnt big
bob dylans security wasnt tight at alll, was easy to sneak a friend in
i wonder if there will be coloured arm bands.. hmm

ZEROpumpkins 12.29.2007 02:25 AM

You mean the Perth one Dan?

ALIEN ANAL 12.29.2007 04:21 AM

yes the perth one
its the only one i can try to get into
damn it SY
come on here and see that i need to get into your gig next yr


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