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1993-09-17 17:08???
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1993-09-17 17:08malcolm@minster.york.ac.ukSubject: musical histories Hi everybody. I've been really enjoying hearing about all your
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Fri, 17 Sep 93 17:08:32
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Subject: musical histories Hi everybody. I've been really enjoying hearing about all your musical pasts, so I thought I'd give you my story too, even though I'm more of a lurker and listener on mailing lists than a frequent poster. I seem to have followed a rather different path to most of you. 0-11 I don't recall any particular musical highlights at all. I learnt to play the piano in the standard classical exam-training style, but didn't enjoy it. We sang hymns and songs at church, but never listened to music on the radio, and the only records my parents had were classical and stage-musical. I recall seeing quite a few stage-musicals throughout my childhood, and of course whatever music was incidental to programmes on television. circa 11 We got this tape called "Pop Piano Party" from Readers Digest which was actually a compilation of boogie-woogie and ragtime piano from the first half of the century. It is the first time I remember ever getting excited about music. It made me want to move my body! Around this time I also started to learn the trombone and joined the school 'concert band', which played swing and other jazz-influenced brass/wind music. 11-14 Meanwhile, my school friends were arguing over whether they still liked Abba or not (it was cool not to), and played Adam and the Ants, the Police, Duran Duran, and all that sort of stuff. I liked odd bits here and there, but none of it turned me on or excited me. I was introduced to "Switched On Bach" and J M Jarre as "synthesiser music" and thought they would have to be excellent because synthesisers were cool things, but in fact they left me cold. 15 I realised that I still liked the boogie-woogie and ragtime piano stuff, and connected that with the fact I was still learning the piano, coming to the conclusion that I should start to play ragtime. From here, I decided that I would probably like Jazz in a broader sense, and started listening to the weekly jazz programmes on national radio. 16-19 I progressed chronologically from ragtime to New Orleans and dixieland, to swing and big band, to cool quartet jazz (missing out on BeBop). The crucial element for me was that I could BOTH dance to the music AND there was plenty to analyse in it. It was physical, but intelligent too. circa 18 Between leaving school and going to university I dropped for a time into "show" music: pre-WWii Broadway, Gershwin, Cole Porter, and so on, but got very schmaltzy and I abandoned it again. 19-20 Discovery! Dave Brubeck! Here was a jazz artist I could respect: immensely enjoyable and accessible, but at the same time doing interesting and intelligent things with the form. I started to collect him (an obsession I still carry on today, though somewhat lessened as I have over a hundred of his albums and there are only about another 20 left to find). Meanwhile my college friends were into the Smiths, Dire Straits, U2, the mainstream. I wasn't at all keen on any of it. 20 Perhaps I should branch out and spend a little money on other jazz artists? I developed a small collection of the "greats": Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, etc.. My closest friends had developed tastes for the Butthole Surfers, Velvet Underground, Sebadoh, and other noisy bands. At the time, I had an open mind but didn't like them much. Now they bring back fond memories. Late night listening usually involved Pink Floyd, Roy Harper, the Ozric Tentacles, and other hippies. 21 A musical wasteland as my Brubeck collection expanded and my friends graduated, leaving me without aural stimulation. My jazz horizons advanced to include 60s and 70s experimental and electric jazz. 22 I started my DPhil research and moved into a house where people listened to goth rock, industrial and rave. None of it inspired me until I heard "Get Higher" by the Moonflowers, a pschydelic dance track by a hippy band and the first 12" I ever bought, followed closely by "Summer's Magic", one of those rave tracks which samples kids TV programmes, in this case The Magic Roundabout. It predates "Sesames Treet" by about six months. My housemates took me to a goth/industrial club which I hated, and a rave club which I loved. I especially liked the Italo-house sound with lots of piano breaks and jazzy influences, and became a regular at the rave club. Another major turn-on was listening to "Hallelujah 92" whilst flying over the snow-capped Italian Alps at Easter. Also "Screamadelica" following the psychedelic vein. 23 Highlights of the year were seeing the Orb, the Shamen, 808 State, the Moonflowers, and many others live at Glastonbury 92, and NOS at Greenbelt 92. I gradually moved away from commercial rave towards progressive house, then further underground to intelligent techno, trance, and ambient. Got bored of the Orb very quickly, but discovered AFX, FSoL, and the Warp AI series. The re-emergence of acid in January 93 grabbed me, as did the Latin rhythm craze started by the Good Men in March 93, then digifunk from Easter 93. 24 Played my first proper rave event as DJ, mixing up lots of acid, trance, tribal and latin, which went down a storm. -malc.