Jan. 27th, 2008

fingertrouble: (Default)
Skip to the end

Long time friend of the show (and myself), Pete Juxtaposeur has started a new podcast called Skip to the End - well he did back in October but I was too busy pre-Xmess to listen to it, but more fool me as it's BRILLIANT. Very professionally done, and strangely reminds me of Radio 3 when it had a show like Mixing It (R.I.P.)

He's had the likes of Kid Carpet, Hoonboy, SP-SEPR, Parasite and Gusset and most recently Twocsinak aka DJ Sarah Wilson which I listened to live (he streams these live as he records them last Thursday of every month at 9pm, at Sound Unsound Radio) but also uploads them as podcasts. They are usually around 2 hours including a special 30 minute guest mix and if you like the more experimental/breakcore/silly side of the tunes I play, or the other podcast Pete is involved in WOBcast then you'll love this.
fingertrouble: (Radio Clash Podcast from a Pirate Satell)
Skip to the end

Long time friend of the show (and myself), Pete Juxtaposeur has started a new podcast called Skip to the End - well he did back in October but I was too busy pre-Xmess to listen to it, but more fool me as it's BRILLIANT. Very professionally done, and strangely reminds me of Radio 3 when it had a show like Mixing It (R.I.P.)

He's had the likes of Kid Carpet, Hoonboy, SP-SEPR, Parasite and Gusset and most recently Twocsinak aka DJ Sarah Wilson which I listened to live (he streams these live as he records them last Thursday of every month at 9pm, at Sound Unsound Radio) but also uploads them as podcasts. They are usually around 2 hours including a special 30 minute guest mix and if you like the more experimental/breakcore/silly side of the tunes I play, or the other podcast Pete is involved in WOBcast then you'll love this.
fingertrouble: (Radio Clash Podcast from a Pirate Satell)
Skip to the end

Long time friend of the show (and myself), Pete Juxtaposeur has started a new podcast called Skip to the End - well he did back in October but I was too busy pre-Xmess to listen to it, but more fool me as it's BRILLIANT. Very professionally done, and strangely reminds me of Radio 3 when it had a show like Mixing It (R.I.P.)

He's had the likes of Kid Carpet, Hoonboy, SP-SEPR, Parasite and Gusset and most recently Twocsinak aka DJ Sarah Wilson which I listened to live (he streams these live as he records them last Thursday of every month at 9pm, at Sound Unsound Radio) but also uploads them as podcasts. They are usually around 2 hours including a special 30 minute guest mix and if you like the more experimental/breakcore/silly side of the tunes I play, or the other podcast Pete is involved in WOBcast then you'll love this.
fingertrouble: (Default)

(I think I must have a rare or UK cover as it's different and nicer to this)

The soundtrack to Amateur - I mean the original music to the Hal Hartley film (by Hal Hartley himself and Jeff Taylor) from 1994 is haunting, but get this:
That's one hell of a lineup. I dug it out for a relisten and it's good as it sounds. Incidentally this is the album that introduced me to Red House Painters, Yo La Tengo and Pavement, (a little later than most; also they didn't have any hits here til Terror Twilight)  I picked this album up several years later for 99p at a stall near New Scotland Yard off Victoria Street, near where I was working. I was picking up some films from Jessops during my lunch hour and stopped to look at the used CDs. It kind of became one of my moving to London soundtracks which dates it to around 1999, although I might have bought it earlier. I remember I saw the film in London on my own at some point, and it really moved me. Odd since I wasn't living in London at the time, I think it was a matinee at the Curzon Soho (?).

People criticise Hal Hartley for his quirkiness and strange slightly cold characters but the alienation and surrealness of his characters and the soundtrack fitted my life at that point, cities are odd places where people don't communicate and years and years before the likes of Sliding Doors he was talking about the chance occurence changing peoples lives and breaking that silence. Which resonated with me, I must rewatch it.

Weird how one album has so much memories.
fingertrouble: (Default)

(I think I must have a rare or UK cover as it's different and nicer to this)

The soundtrack to Amateur - I mean the original music to the Hal Hartley film (by Hal Hartley himself and Jeff Taylor) from 1994 is haunting, but get this:
That's one hell of a lineup. I dug it out for a relisten and it's good as it sounds. Incidentally this is the album that introduced me to Red House Painters, Yo La Tengo and Pavement, (a little later than most; also they didn't have any hits here til Terror Twilight)  I picked this album up several years later for 99p at a stall near New Scotland Yard off Victoria Street, near where I was working. I was picking up some films from Jessops during my lunch hour and stopped to look at the used CDs. It kind of became one of my moving to London soundtracks which dates it to around 1999, although I might have bought it earlier. I remember I saw the film in London on my own at some point, and it really moved me. Odd since I wasn't living in London at the time, I think it was a matinee at the Curzon Soho (?).

People criticise Hal Hartley for his quirkiness and strange slightly cold characters but the alienation and surrealness of his characters and the soundtrack fitted my life at that point, cities are odd places where people don't communicate and years and years before the likes of Sliding Doors he was talking about the chance occurence changing peoples lives and breaking that silence. Which resonated with me, I must rewatch it.

Weird how one album has so much memories.
fingertrouble: (Default)

(I think I must have a rare or UK cover as it's different and nicer to this)

The soundtrack to Amateur - I mean the original music to the Hal Hartley film (by Hal Hartley himself and Jeff Taylor) from 1994 is haunting, but get this:
That's one hell of a lineup. I dug it out for a relisten and it's good as it sounds. Incidentally this is the album that introduced me to Red House Painters, Yo La Tengo and Pavement, (a little later than most; also they didn't have any hits here til Terror Twilight)  I picked this album up several years later for 99p at a stall near New Scotland Yard off Victoria Street, near where I was working. I was picking up some films from Jessops during my lunch hour and stopped to look at the used CDs. It kind of became one of my moving to London soundtracks which dates it to around 1999, although I might have bought it earlier. I remember I saw the film in London on my own at some point, and it really moved me. Odd since I wasn't living in London at the time, I think it was a matinee at the Curzon Soho (?).

People criticise Hal Hartley for his quirkiness and strange slightly cold characters but the alienation and surrealness of his characters and the soundtrack fitted my life at that point, cities are odd places where people don't communicate and years and years before the likes of Sliding Doors he was talking about the chance occurence changing peoples lives and breaking that silence. Which resonated with me, I must rewatch it.

Weird how one album has so much memories.

February 2022

S M T W T F S
  123 4 5
678910 1112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728     

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags