help name our website

2»

  Comments


  • hcrinkhcrink 8,729 Posts
    yeah, that is like the perfect name. Breakshelf rulez!!!

    Begin work on the statue immediately!

    crink, breakself wants you to start erecting.


  • BreakSelfBreakSelf 2,925 Posts
    yeah, that is like the perfect name. Breakshelf rulez!!!

    Begin work on the statue immediately!

    crink, breakself wants you to start erecting.

    Yikes! I walked right in to that one.

  • gloomgloom 2,765 Posts
    yeah, that is like the perfect name. Breakshelf rulez!!!

    Begin work on the statue immediately!

    crink, breakself wants you to start erecting.

    Yikes! I walked right in to that one.


    DOUBLE AYOOOOOOO!

  • DocBeezyDocBeezy 1,918 Posts
    yeah, that is like the perfect name. Breakshelf rulez!!!

    Begin work on the statue immediately!

    crink, breakself wants you to start erecting.

    Yikes! I walked right in to that one.






    why dont you sit the next couple of plays out ok?>

  • FlomotionFlomotion 2,391 Posts

    waxidermy.com


  • edubedub 715 Posts

    ...
    it is to be a site about unusal records
    ...

    GO!












  • edubedub 715 Posts


    waxidermy.com



    this is awesome!



















    DJ Shadow: Waxidermy At UC-Davis



    Who is the preeminent man of contemporary popular music, the "man by

    virtue of which other men are men"? The answer I can think of is Josh

    Davis, AKA DJ Shadow; and that's because I can't think of anyone else

    and I have a few ideas why.




    Non-Constructive Myths: Lou Reed And DJ Shadow

  • parsecparsec 5,087 Posts
    Waxidermy should be the winner, can't wait to get the ball rollin with this site.

  • hcrinkhcrink 8,729 Posts
    I just bough it, so fuck DJ shadow!

  • edubedub 715 Posts
    I just bough it, so fuck DJ shadow!


    LOCATION!!!


  • hcrinkhcrink 8,729 Posts
    hahaha!!!

  • edubedub 715 Posts
    so what's this site of yours about again?... stuffed raers?


    I didn't read the thread.


  • noznoz 3,625 Posts
    popsikel.com
    popsiskel.com

  • GuzzoGuzzo 8,611 Posts
    www.IjustboughtitsofuckDJshadow.com



  • mylatencymylatency 10,475 Posts
    whoa, read that whole post:

    --------------------------------------------------
    Non-Constructive Myths: Lou Reed And DJ Shadow

    Can a myth, however, be non-constructive? How could an instrument
    conceivably be effective if, as in Sorel's vision of things, it leaves
    the collective will in the primitive and elementary phase of its mere
    formation, by differentiation ("cleavage") -- even when this
    differentiation is violent, that is to say, destroys existing moral
    and juridicial relations?

    Gramsci

    Lou Reed: The Mystery Man, Or, Were You Confused?

    In the history of postwar American popular music, there is no more
    enigmatic figure than Lou Reed: to the point that consideration of the
    Velvet Underground has been hampered by the perception that they were
    a band rather than a group. And they are much so-considered, even
    thirty-six years after their first record and thirty-three years after
    their last one; but perhaps this is, in some fairly definite sense, a
    bad thing. Do people like the Velvet Underground? People will never
    like the Velvet Underground, but their rising popularity with
    individuals during the 90s said something about that era. Not about
    the Velvet Underground, whose music was "obsolete" when it was
    recorded, but about the coming of a "long present" in youth culture ヨ
    where references to long-ago acts could be much more with-it than
    contempo confabs. Was this a bad thing? I don't think so, although I
    am very much of that era. Did Lou Reed think this was a bad thing?
    Who the hell knows, and that's the subject of this section.

    Normally, this would be the point in the essay where I would give a
    run-down of Reed's maturation and formative influences: but no such
    thing is really possible, since Reed really got "younger than that" as
    time went on. He went to Syracuse and studied under Delmore Schwartz,
    *went* to the city and wrote a couple minor hits for the
    then-dwindling Brill-Building system, formed a band with a Welsh
    Fluxus reject and "made an honest proposition of it" by confounding
    record company hopes for the longest recorded stretch ever; first by
    being the most-talked-about, least-purchased act of all time and then
    being the most-purchased solo artist you wouldn't want to take home to
    mother. Who is this Welsh Fluxus reject? Everybody knows, and Lou
    Reed's interviews for many years have consisted largely of asking
    exactly why it is him, and not the chain-smoking radical historian or
    Southern Wal-Mart checker, who was the figure of Zen out of the bunch.
    Yeah, the German chick was great. No, not like that.

    Reed himself is not a Zen figure, and really doesn't have to be: after
    a couple years, more than a couple thousand people started buying
    Velvet Underground records and stopped forming bands (in a trick of
    genealogical sleight-of-hand, it seems rather obvious that was the
    purpose of the Pixies, which were engineered to be). Lou Reed is mad;
    and he has some reason, because people buy the wrong records. Yes,
    that's right, some VU records are better than others; and Doug Yule
    didn't actually make the group worse, 'cause those are the better
    records. Is it unfair that the Velvet Underground was Lou Reed's
    group? It's unfair that they are remembered as Warhol's
    flash-in-the-pan freak-out kit, and not the band which later exerted a
    powerful tellurian influence on proto-punks. The powerhouse live band
    which toured with later-released material is the one persons of the
    era remember, and fondly: the opposite of Michael Jackson was Lou
    Reed, you couldn't get molested by Lou Reed if you wanted to.

    Why is this? As reported in Lester Bangs' fan's notes, Lou Reed
    doesn't tip much; but he always pays, and not just up-front. It seems
    clear that a lot of Reed's career moves were intended for other
    people's careers, and at a distance of several years; he is nothing if
    not unselfish. Perhaps this is because there is no natural appeal to
    Lou Reed: he is also the opposite of Al Green, there is absolutely no
    reason for Lou Reed to act as he does. Laurie Anderson tolerates Lou
    Reed, does your woman tolerate you? Probably not, so why mod up a
    good thing? And so the question is, why do so many people try to act
    like Lou Reed? And the answer is, you can't do it wrong because you
    can't do it right: Lou Reed doesn't take sides, and you are.

    DJ Shadow: Waxidermy At UC-Davis

    Who is the preeminent man of contemporary popular music, the "man by
    virtue of which other men are men"? The answer I can think of is Josh
    Davis, AKA DJ Shadow; and that's because I can't think of anyone else
    and I have a few ideas why. Davis is known as a purveyor of
    "trip-hop", but this is something of a sop to James Lavelle and
    company; "trip-hop" is either DJ Shadow only or something else, and
    not quite because he is sui generis. DJ Shadow is not generous at
    all, because he is not "talking with his hands" to other people, or
    even to himself; his records are about as close to visual art as
    contemporary culture gets, but what are you gonna do? Nothing due to
    his influence. Shadow walks a different sort of "razor's edge" than
    Lou Reed, one first articulated by Bowie (James, that is): that some
    layabout be most intellectual at their most earthy. Does DJ Shadow
    accomplish this by fusing his art completely with black culture? It
    would never in a million years occur to you that DJ Shadow was black,
    but it doesn't occur to me too often that he should be; he is the
    complete master of his instrumentation.

    Should he be? Maybe it should occur to me, and this is the underside
    of Shadow's focus on the "spiritual"; his (rather massive) cultural
    influence is not worked by speaking to you with his soul's tongue, and
    in fact may primarily derive from a record predating his rather
    massive popularity: "In/Flux", available on the (popular enough)
    Preemptive Strike, which collects material released before
    Endtroducing. The 12-minute "In/Flux" is typically referenced as the
    founding document of trip-hop, and it is not completely of a piece
    with the rest of the DJ Shadow records: it's a lot funkier. Or so it
    seems, but in my opinion what "In/Flux" really accomplished was ending
    the Sixties, and not the Sixties of Davis' parents. The
    subject-matter of the song (quite definitely established through
    heterogeneous materials, which is a testament to the character of this
    piece as "masterwork") is the media reception of the 1967-68 riots (a
    time period later revisited with "Six Day War"). DJ Shadow is from
    Davis, California; and there weren't any riots anywhere near Davis;
    Oakland, which has never burned for much of anything, did not turn
    over a new leaf at the Black Panthers' behest.

    But you don't know what I mean by that, and not necessarily because
    you don't know the Panthers were against riots; consideration of those
    events is consigned to the study of history, and not least because of
    this record: Shadow crystallizes the structure of the media response,
    such that it cannot be utilized as a tool for getting at
    "on-the-ground" realities of the riots: Andrei Codrescu once said he
    had a great time during the early part of the Detroit riots. But
    Andrei Codrescu is a) from Romania and b) prone to saying a lot of
    stuff; and really, who's to say, including someone face-to-face with
    Andrei Codrescu? Nobody, and this is DJ Shadow's function: to
    "reveal" that portion of American cultural history which is "dead"
    (has only visible means of support). Does he accomplish it well?

    I couldn't imagine anyone doing i t better, and so he reminds me of
    nobody so much as the person contracted to preserve the utilitarian
    moral philosopher Jeremy Bentham for display in King's College London
    (that city also being one of his haunts); to resolve sound-impressions
    which moved the masses into absurd remainders. By contrast, Prince
    Paul's most recent record (which has Paul engaging in the contemporary
    form of the early-modern business of "colportage" on the cover)
    features Paul asking for money, or love, or neither, and young fools
    from Paul's neighborhood stepping up to the mike. That's not the
    right kind of kind of control for DJ Shadow's project; Paul does too
    much with too little. Does Shadow appear on his records? Nobody
    appears on Shadow's records. Does Shadow do anything more than what
    we've talked about? In my opinion, no: The Private Press, one of the
    most intellectual music projects of recent years, is fundamentally of
    a piece with the aforementioned antiquarian tendencies.

    This record (although I can't imagine Shadow ever listening to wax and
    not using the CD, that's what it is) deals not with the present nor
    the inflammatory past, but features snippets of sound from
    "private-press records", novelty vinyl records cut at cottage-industry
    "studios" such as the one Elvis recorded for his mother. Is it a
    fascinating project? Oh yes, and if it is a choice between Davis and
    Stephin Merritt as curator of our musical heritage I'll say something
    I'll regret. Is it living culture? No. And perhaps this says
    something about more than Josh Davis' life-world, but perhaps it's not
    what you'd hope for.
    -------------------------------------------------



  • tuneuptuneup 586 Posts

    waxidermy.com


    this really MUST be the name...it is just too perfect.

  • hcrinkhcrink 8,729 Posts
    I registered it.

    here is the erection I promised breakshelf


  • SoulOnIceSoulOnIce 13,027 Posts
    NSFH!

  • mordecaimordecai 2,204 Posts
    NSFA!

  • HawkeyeHawkeye 896 Posts
    anders.com

    (diffrent)

    abseits.com

    (allof, apart, away, aside, offside)

    komisch.com

    (queer, freaky, strange but it means at the same time funny, hilarious, comical)

    krank.com

    (ill, sick)

    unerkannt.com

    (unrecognized)

    unbekannt.com

    (unknown, fameless, innominate, nonfamous, unacquainted, unavowed, unbeknown, unidentified)

    verkannt.com

    (misjudged)

    um-die-ecke.com

    (round the corner)

    grenzwertig.com

    (means something like: the absoult last possibilty to keep within the limits)



    Frieden
    Hawkeye

  • dollar_bindollar_bin I heartily endorse this product and/or event 2,326 Posts
    hcrink said:

    waxidermy.com

    this is awesome!

    memorial bump.
Sign In or Register to comment.