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Knuckledragger

High Rollers
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Everything posted by Knuckledragger

  1. Vince from Totem Acoustic standing with a bunch of prototypes.
  2. Test Tone @ Home live right now: http://mixlr.com/illuminator/chat
  3. Cadillac dealership in 1921. Kirk Douglas and his wife, Anne Buydens, at the premiere of "Spartacus" at the McVicker's Theater in Chicago- 13 October, 1960. Stars behind an old North Carolina factory, 30 sec. The Matterhorn ascent. Stein's Pillar, Oregon. Click for slightly larger.
  4. Russ Gabriel's modular. Daytona Beach, 1957. Cabulco volcano eruption, Chile by Jorge Nauto.
  5. Had silence for the first 5 minutes (thx, mixlr). It appears to me working now.
  6. Test Tone @ Home live right now: http://mixlr.com/illuminator/chat
  7. Factoria Circular. Click for slightly larger.
  8. Joan Collins. Campbell-Railton-Rolls Royce Blue Bird (1935). Three Sisters Wilderness, OR. Click for slightly larger.
  9. Well, fuck it, then. Guess I'll stick to having a hairy wrist.
  10. Game(boy Advance) of Thrones. Dawn Richard, late 50s. King of Wings - It still stands! San Juan Badlands, USA by John Fowler.
  11. Test Tone @ Home live right now: http://mixlr.com/illuminator/chat
  12. In my above post I mentioned Aspen. Anyone who listened to the entirety of last week's Test Tone heard me talk over the song that got me into Bevan Smith's work. "This Is Why Only Teenagers Can Really Love Music" sums his output up pretty well. A fairly lengthy track with a weird, pretentious title. It's minimal (dubby) techno, a genre which is more often boring and pretentious that it isn't. All of this said, the song is bloody brilliant. When Bevan is/was good, he is the absolute master of doing a great deal with very little. He evokes so much emotion out of a few drum hits, some frosty ambience and some fairly simple melodies. This Is Why Only Teenagers Can Really Love Music is probably not his best work, but it's certainly up there. I liked it enough to pay obscene amounts for his entire catalog (it averaged out to $25 a CD), shipped from the other corner of the globe (New Zealand). That was a dozen or so years ago, when the Information Age was a lot less information-y.
  13. The Yardbirds - Roger the Engineer (40th anniversary edition blah blah). For Your Love might be the song everyone knows, but I maintain that Over Under Sideways Down is the real gem here. It's the most jangly proto-punk rock thing ever. Also, I got to know Heart Full of Soul first via the Chris Isaak cover. Chris did a faithful rendition and made it his own song, but having heard the original it's pretty clear to me which version is the better one. Jeff Beck was pretty much the coolest thing ever when this album came out.
  14. It will be tough for me to contribute to this thread because ...I have too many suggestions. For over 13 years, I have been listening to SomaFM's Groove Salad. Via GS, I discovered the brilliant minimalism of Aspen, the atmosphere of All India Radio [EDIT: URL got munched] (my most listened-to artist on last.fm, with over 5000 plays), the synth pop of 2raumwohnung and a legion of others. This was the song I heard on Groove Salad that got me in to 2raumwohnung. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jofp9zDbTF0
  15. Once a Beatle - When Ringo was ill with tonsillitis, he substituted on drums for 8 concerts & lived a superstar's life for 10 days. But Ringo has returned... Now Jimmie Nicol sits alone in the Melbourne airport, waiting for the plane that will take him back to obscurity (15 June 1964)
  16. Kruder & Dorfmeister - The K&D Sessions, 2014 Web release. THE definitive collection of downtempo remixes. Unfortunately, the web release is a very lazy re-issue. The original 1998 2CD set was "blended" in the studio, as was the trend at the time. The in-studio mixing wasn't done very artfully and it's pretty distracting to listen to. Worse still, the tracks are a nightmare to use for DJing purposes. The definitive edition remains the 4LP German vinyl version. Tragically, I do not own this. I remember seeing it for sale in Newberry Comics, for $40 or so. In the fall of '98 I was fresh out of college, marginally employed and drinking heavily, so I didn't buy it. At one point, any decently clean copy of the vinyl version sold for nearly $100. Prices have come back down as vinyl has fallen out of favor with all but the most dedicated DJs. I don't buy vinyl through the mail anymore after the mouth breathers at my local post office stuffed a 1-of-1000 1992 trance 12" into my mailbox by FOLDING IT IN HALF (I paid 35 British Pounds shipped for the fucking thing, which was ~$75 at the time.) Studio !K7 did just release a glorious looking 5LP version which is mighty tempting, but I'd have to have it delivered on flatbed trailer. What? This is What are you listening to Part the Third and not Knuckles Obsesses Over Ancient Electronic Music? Oh, my bad...
  17. That's a TR-606. The Painted Hills, OR. Click for slightly larger.
  18. Test Tone @ Home live right now: http://mixlr.com/illuminator/chat
  19. A friend of mine bought Black Sabbath Vol. 4 sneakers.
  20. This is one of the ugliest handguns I've ever seen. Miky Way, Karamu, New Zealand. Click for slightly larger.
  21. Forging the Iron Throne. The Milky Way and Aurora Australis (Southern Lights), New Zealand. Click for slightly larger.
  22. Hay guise anything on TV tonight?
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