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My latest Eardrum playlist:



One of the surprises of Tom's Twitter tourneys is that I sometimes like Belle and Sebastian. I'm still put off by the sensitive sensibility of their manner, but I'm also hearing in them Morricone-style mariachi and unsignaled Electric Prunes/Easybeats. And good tunes.*

In the meantime you also find me knocking about with medleys and cut-ups, lilting abrasion from Brazil, Korean guitar beauty, horny female guitar crunch, and freestyle guitar dance. (Roses are red, violets are blue/Disco goes dancing, guitars dance too.) Also, atmospheric wall-clawing hip-hop; declamation and mumbling from Kazakhstan (title, "Style is my wife - this flow-cave," from closed-caption translation); jazz; amapiano; and an actual Morricone.

*And you might be interested in this Belle and Sebastian colloquy (in response to "Stars Of Track And Field," not the track of theirs on this playlist, which is "Dog On Wheels"):











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"great music!! ive been enjoying this since i ws 18. now im 57. Korea 김광배"
--from a YouTube comment thread for Rare Earth's "Get Ready"

I saw Rare Earth when I was 15;* my cousin Larry in NYC took me to see Steppenwolf at Carnegie Hall, and Rare Earth were the opening act. And I've barely given them a thought since. I mostly remember waiting for them to be over, so I could hear the "Born To Be Wild" guys.



But given that it was Korea that taught me the greatness of LMFAO's "Party Rock Anthem," I'm wondering if it can do the same for Vanilla Fudge, Rare Earth, and Iron Butterfly.

All right. None of you are going to listen to all of these. I'd recommend, first, "Funky Broadway" and "Jingle Bells," and after that you can wallow in whatever you have time for.

Fact is, I didn't want to like Rare Earth. They represented long plods and interminable solos, the heavy clompfooted doltishness that was coming to outshout the Stones-style hard rock that I loved. And adding what seemed like BST-type jazz-rock dullness didn't help. I don't think I got that there were soul elements. I was tending to overlook soul anyway.

Of course, in retrospect heavy bands came on to produce some great stuff. I was only a month or so away from being won over by Zep's "Whole Lotta Love." So now, going back, I'm hoping to discover giant mountains of behemoth motion — squelching the valleys, flattening the forests, ripping into and rolling up the plains like a motel-room carpet. Listening today to Rare Earth's Get Ready album, I'm not really hearing that. They're still not getting the mountain to dance much. The most movement is their cover of Traffic's "Feelin' Alright." But deep in the middle of "Get Ready" they achieve a relentless kinda drum-n-gtr pile-driver of a slugfest. Anyway, there's more to explore and contemplate amidst the stomp (e.g., whether Rare Earth heaviness helped steer the Norman Whitfield/Barrett Strong experiments with the late '60s/early '70s version of the Temptations towards the stunning mammoth beat of "Papa Was A Rollin' Stone").

Rare Earth "Get Ready"


The Koreans had a defter touch and more of a dance, though therefore rarely made it to purple mountain massiveness. But some good excitement, and some smoking guitar lava [EDIT: Well, more guitar excitement on "Jingle Bells" than on this].

He 6 "Get Ready"


Funky Broadway, Iron Butterfly, Vanilla Fudge )

Merry Christmas )
koganbot: (Default)
Kim Wan Sun, from 1987. It's not quite freestyle, but it's pretty close (closer than Madonna ever got, for instance). And it's pretty great. The same piercing passion.



"리듬속의 그 춤을" is translated most often as "The Dance In The Rhythm." Google Translate gives us "In Rhythm With The Dance," which I like more, whether or not it's accurate.

If YouTube commenters are right, the track was written and produced by Shin Joong Hyun, who also provides the guitar solo; this is interesting in itself, since from last year's compilation I gather he was more a psychedelic and metal guy than a dance guy. Think of Jimmy Page producing the Cover Girls. [EDIT: The guitar solo on "The Dance In The Rhythm" is not by Shin Joong Hyun but by his son, Shin Daechul, of the band Sinawe. Did I just assume the solo was by producer Shin Joong Hyun, without checking, or did one of the YouTube commenters assume it, and I copied the assumption? (The original embed was killed by YouTube, the embed above is a replacement, so the YT comment thread I was reading is gone.]

Don't know where this music would have found itself in the sounds of South Korea circa 1987, since I barely know what those sounds were. If Wikipedia is right, K-pop didn't coalesce as a genre until the early '90s. But if "Roly-Poly" is right, South Korea was glomming off American disco and club sounds since the '70s. Could Shinsadong Tiger and SweeTune been listening to this song as tykes? (Tiger'd have been four when it came out.)

h/t G'old Korea Vinyl, who stream this and many other vintage tracks, and where I will be spending many hours.

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Frank Kogan

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