Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10.1 6/24/83; site mit-eddie.UUCP Path: utzoo!decvax!genrad!mit-eddie!gds From: gds@mit-eddie.UUCP (Greg Skinner) Newsgroups: mod.music Subject: Love-Hounds Digest Message-ID: <1151@mit-eddie.UUCP> Date: Sun, 2-Mar-86 15:40:47 EST Article-I.D.: mit-eddi.1151 Posted: Sun Mar 2 15:40:47 1986 Date-Received: Mon, 3-Mar-86 02:33:43 EST Organization: MIT Lusers and Hosers Inc., Cambridge, Ma. Lines: 124 Approved: gds@eddie.mit.edu Love-Hounds Digest Sunday, March 2, 1986, 15:40 Today's Topics: Octobre Children in Adult Jails [][][][][][][][][][] Date: 22 Feb 86 22:08:00 PST From: "ROSSI J.A." Subject: Octobre Reply-To: "ROSSI J.A." In actuality, the French band Octobre, is really a Quebec band. In the mid to late 70's, the4 band was quite popular throughout Quebec and they made substantial inroads to other markets. Like most good Quebequois rock acts, they fell prey to the local idology that all good is French. This was probably the only mistaker the band made, since they did appeal to the English speaking public. I believe that their final demise came soon after their live appearance at the St. John Baptiste festival in Montreal in 1976. Since this was the highpoint of the new 'FRENCH' government in Quebec, too much political emphasis was placed on the band's worth. At the same time, other bands with promise (Harmonium being the easiest to recall) also started to flounder. Contemporary acts which were English based, and not nearly as good (e.g., Mahogany Rush) did well as they defied the French influence. Annette Workman is probably the only top performer of that period to go on to go from French to English and then back to French (now apparently doing jean comercials on CTV). Sorry, to go through this as a history lesson, but I still live in that musical period. If Tom Waits (who is one of my favorite performers, by the way)can have his period, I can have mine. John ------ [][][][][][][][][][] Date: Sun, 23 Feb 86 20:58:37 EST From: nessus (Doug Alan) Subject: Children in Adult Jails Really-Really-From: Jim Hofmann I thought I sent a review of their last and first album to lhounds ... I'll dig up a copy before I trash my copy --- what I noticed was that the cover is a still from Brazil (when he is in the police van behind a wired fence) and inside is the still where his mother was having her face pulled (there is one song called lady with the elastic face - i think) ... there is also a song about a guy named Sam Miami (sort of like Sam Langley?) ... I'll tack on the review here: Subject: I'm dying in a house of weenies (it's the nitrate maaaan) ************************************************************************* Children In Adult Jails (Buy Our Records) "Man Caught In Waffle Iron" So after hearing these guys on N.J.'s Got It? comp - I was expecting more of what I had termed Northeastern Industrial Tex & The Horseheads only to have my egomaniac and stupid assumptions gummed up and smeared back on my face like play makeup or sumpin. So like I was saying, but not really, I was laying on my sofabed ruminating about how much Sam Miami sounded like X in their Desperate stage and was getting all excited about this new band to carry on where X left off and ... like I wuz thinking, these guys went ahead and stole that riff from Trucking and stuck it in this song called Displacement Blues which rags on the parochialism of the NY Band scene so like maybe these are the true post-punk reincarnations of the dead ... what I really was thinking these guys are came to bear on the first cut of side two complete with mixmasters and cartoon sound effects and I thought like this is the recording that could bring a smile onto the face of the as of late solemn Butthole Surfers when and if they'd ever get a chance to hear this before they prematurely die or sumpin ... so like, I was REALLY thinking that here be the noize band of the 80's who would crystalize everything Frith was trying to do on those Japanese recordings with songs about lizards and houses of weenies (which goes quite well with the sound turned down on that Madonna video - Material Girl) ... NO KIDDING - these guys can funk out like no posthardcore types ever, maaaann - with their very own cover of Brickhouse (incidentally co-penned by our favorite father-figure/pepsi drinker/live-aider Lionel Richie - and i betcha you thought you'd never see HIS name on one of yer LP's huh?). IT was at this point, when the needle left the groove and returned itself back to point zero - normalcy that I said fuggit and went to go find my rounded scissors, construction paper and rubber cement to have some real fun instead of this phoney, asinine, pseudointellectual bullshit search for a label and/or explanation for Children in Adult Jails while replaying this 12" (grind, grind) Oh fershure excellent bordering on professional production job by Sblendorio and CIAJ on this lump of vinyl (and lyric sheet) - manages to keep in the weirdness without muddying up the mix 'n message. And I'd sure like to find out the answer to 18 ACROSS sometime, Diane. ****************************************************************************** "The mind industry can take on anything, digest it, reproduce it, and pour it out. Whatever our minds can conceive of is grist to its mill; nothing will leave it unadulterated: it is capable of turning any idea into a slogan and any work of the imagination into a hit.. . .The mind industry's main business and concern is not to sell its product: it is to 'sell' the existing order, to perpetuate the prevailing pattern of man's domination by man, no matter who runs the society, and by what means. Its main task is to expand and train our consciousness--in order to exploit it." --hans magnus enzensberger "the industrialization of the mind" 1962 [][][][][][][][][][] -- It's like a jungle sometimes, it makes me wonder how I keep from goin' under. Greg Skinner (gregbo) {decvax!genrad, allegra, gatech, ihnp4}!mit-eddie!gds gds@eddie.mit.edu