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-   -   LOW - "Double Negative" (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=117445)

The Soup Nazi 11.19.2019 08:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by _tunic_
this is a splendid heavy rocking live version of Clarence White


So is this :D:

 


White and McGuinn "Traneing In" through "Eigh Miles High". Delicious.

hipster_bebop_junkie 11.24.2019 11:18 PM

Video of Low's performance at Nox Orae Festival 2019:
https://youtu.be/w-QXr41WFgA

hipster_bebop_junkie 12.24.2019 09:38 PM

It's Christmas for Jews as well. <3
https://soundcloud.com/feverdreammar...r-jews-as-well

_tunic_ 01.20.2020 09:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by @chrisgclarke1
One of my great curiosities for 2020 is how @lowtheband will follow up their one-of-a-kind 2018 album "Double Negative."


Quote:

Originally Posted by @lowtheband
Collab with Bjork, first band to go to Mars (October), our mime EP, tour backing up Michael Buble, soundtrack for Sharknado 8, Steve’s solo bass record called “Back to Bass-ics”, Mimi running for president (official announcement in February) and Alan has started a cult.




Low will release a Mime EP, finally!! :D:p;)

The Soup Nazi 01.27.2020 06:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The Soup Nazi
The new issue of Under The Radar (two covers: Sleater-Kinney and Angel Olsen) is a "my favorite album" special, in which a big amount of cats (64 in the print edition, 83 in total in the digital one) talk about their all-time favorite LP. Alan Sparhawk partook in these shenanigans, and while the magazine's website's announcement doesn't reveal the titles (fewer sales otherwise, you follow), he had this to say, in part:

"This whole record was this giant thing. It was the step further beyond Pink Floyd's The Wall, which had been the teen angst record that had been around a lot when I was the age when you start thinking, 'Oh, man. Life is heavy.'"


Under The Radar has disclosed this information online, so now it's A-OK to post it here :):

Quote:

My Favorite Album: Alan Sparhawk of Low on David Bowie's The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars
"Bowie was always cool. He was cool in the '60s. He was cool in the '70s. He was cool in the '80s."


I here was this book [sic :confused:] that my father had called Making Music by George Martin, The Beatles' producer. My dad was a drummer in a country band and was also an aspiring singer and songwriter. I had heard Bowie casually on the radio, but I remember seeing this picture of them playing live in Japan [in the book], and it was the most gnarly rock and roll picture ever. It just left an impression on me. And I thought, "Well, I'm going to buy [The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars] if I can find it." Of course, there were a couple songs that I had heard casually over the radio, just being around as a kid. But this whole record was this giant thing. It was the step further beyond Pink Floyd's The Wall, which had been the teen angst record that had been around a lot when I was the age when you start thinking, "Oh, man. Life is heavy." But for some reason the Bowie stuff was grittier and nastier. There are so many facets about it, anything from Mick Ronson being a sort of mixed and controversial Mormon, not unlike myself. I keep running into things where I realize what I'm attracted to about music and what I think about on a social and artistic level was heavily influenced by that record.

I was 12 or 13 when I bought it. Later on, I remember getting the Bauhaus record when I went to college and connecting through their "Ziggy Stardust" cover. Bowie was always cool. He was cool in the '60s. He was cool in the '70s. He was cool in the '80s. He was cool in the indie scene in the late '80s. And then we had kids, and there was a while there where we had to play Ziggy Stardust four or five times a day in the car with our son when he was two and three. And Hollis, our daughter, even before our son, there was a good while where "Changes" was her favorite song. Bowie has always been there in many ways. I guess that record, just because it was the start and the strongest record, I still catch myself singing the songs, even just strumming through them. My daughter is in college now, and she probably knows half a dozen Bowie songs off the top of her head. I'd probably have to look at a chart.

There's something about his kind of whispery and mystical but also very deep singing style. There's a fantastical way in the things he sings about, and the way he delivers it sounds like a very wonderful storyteller. There's something childlike about the blurred gender that makes it easy to identify with maybe. Maybe as a kid there's something about his voice where, even though it's definitely an adult, it doesn't sound like an old person. It's something that even a child can trust about him. And if you trust someone as a child, you're going to trust them for life.

(Alan Sparhawk formed Low in 1993 with his wife Mimi Parker, whom he first met when he was just nine. The band's most recent album, Double Negative on Sub Pop, was one of the most critically acclaimed albums of 2018. Portions of Alan Sparhawk's conversation have been abridged and edited for structure and flow.)

[Note: This article originally appeared in Issue 66 of Under the Radar's print magazine, which is out now. This is its debut online. For the issue we interviewed musicians and actors about their all-time favorite album.]

www.chairkickers.com

www.davidbowie.com

_tunic_ 02.19.2020 09:13 AM

This live session from 1996 is amazing
https://youtu.be/7088HRmhNaE

The Soup Nazi 02.19.2020 07:36 PM

Wait - they covered Toto's "Africa" in 2011? That's nuts! And way ahead of them Weezers.

_tunic_ 03.04.2020 06:06 PM

Robert Plant has covered another Low song with his new band: Everybody's Song

hipster_bebop_junkie 04.02.2020 10:16 PM

Friday, I'm in Low!
Low will be on Instagram Live every Friday at 3pm CST. :)
https://www.instagram.com/lowtheband

_tunic_ 04.03.2020 06:20 AM

thanks for the note! I do hope you don't have to be a registered member in order to watch it, because I'm not, we'll see ...

I uploaded that Low set to Archive.org: https://archive.org/details/low2004-..._wm-f46.flac16
Brings back memories of how much I liked Poor Man's Daughter. Low rarely performed it, there's only one other set with that song on LMA

Here's a stunning version of it by RGC: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wDum2coNe1g

hipster_bebop_junkie 04.07.2020 09:49 PM

Coronavirus has claimed another legend today. Alan very recently had tweeted about LOW's song named after John Prine.

 

The Soup Nazi 04.08.2020 12:37 AM

Fuck! AGAIN!
:(:mad:

hipster_bebop_junkie 04.18.2020 02:21 PM

Friday I'm In LOW session from yesterday is on Youtube:
https://youtu.be/kwqTpxt41UI

_tunic_ 04.18.2020 04:22 PM

Thanks! Need to find a way to flip my TV to watch this properly

hipster_bebop_junkie 04.24.2020 10:52 PM

A fraction of this week's Friday I'm in LOW is on Youboob:
https://youtu.be/ma44bYY1oM0

:)

Bytor Peltor 04.25.2020 06:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by hipster_bebop_junkie
A fraction of this week's Friday I'm in LOW is on Youboob:
https://youtu.be/ma44bYY1oM0

:)


Appreciate the YouTube link as I don’t IG

I’m watching in my living room, thankful for the opportunity, but this narrow camera view isn’t idea, but it’s better than nothing!

They slayed that last song!!!

I’m guessing that’s Mim’s sister reading comments from behind the camera?

I wish Alan would gather with his Neil Young cover bandmates in a empty school parking lot and crank out an hours worth of NY.

hipster_bebop_junkie 04.25.2020 06:59 PM

It's actually Hollis Mae Sparhawk (one of Alan and Mimi's kids) with the commentary and all the awesome filming skills behind the Friday I'm in LOW videos.

I agree the format isn't ideal, but these sessions so far have been really cool offering excellent versions of many beloved songs, cool vibes from the band and crew, and the opportunity to listen to a few new songs in development stages. :)

_tunic_ 04.26.2020 10:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bytor Peltor
I wish Alan would gather with his Neil Young cover bandmates in a empty school parking lot and crank out an hours worth of NY.

He didn't do that (yet?). He did do an acoustic stream session with Actual Wolf (aka Eric Pollard drummer of Retribution Gospel Choir) and two guys last month. His songs are mostly RGC.

Gaelynn Lea also did a session together with the other Al, Church. But the audio quality is lacking a bit

This is older, but here's an interview with Al's guitar

_tunic_ 04.27.2020 03:36 PM

I thought there was a separate thread for this but can't find it so I'll just place this here


 



Quote:

DRONE NOT DRONES: the 7th annual live 28​-​hour drone –
a benefit for Doctors Without Borders

Held every winter in Minneapolis, DRONE NOT DRONES is a protest that is part benefit concert, part art project, and part community event. More than sixty acts rotated on and off the stage to create a single uninterrupted seamless drone to protest the extrajudicial and immoral drone program and raise money for the victims of the United States military-industrial complex.

January 31st to February 1st at The Cedar Cultural Center in Minneapolis, MN
credits
releases May 1, 2020

Recorded live at The Cedar Cultural Center and mastered by Tom Herbers and Mike Whitney at Third Ear, Minneapolis.

Artwork by Kendraplex


65 tracks with a few already streaming, but most are not yet. Haven't listened to them all yet, but I really like that last one by Saariselka (but only 5 minutes into it)

Bytor Peltor 04.27.2020 03:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by _tunic_
I thought there was a separate thread for this but can't find it so I'll just place this here


This is the perfect place for it!

Possibly you were thinking of the Drone Music thread?




Quote:

Originally Posted by _tunic_
He didn't do that (yet?). He did do an acoustic stream session with Actual Wolf (aka Eric Pollard drummer of Retribution Gospel Choir) and two guys last month. His songs are mostly RGC.

Gaelynn Lea also did a session together with the other Al, Church. But the audio quality is lacking a bit

This is older, but here's an interview with Al's guitar


Thanks for the links!


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