179,854Messages
9,130Senders
30Years
342mboxes

← archive index

RE: (idm) Meat Beat Manifesto and Burger/Ink (was: my babble...

2 messages · 2 participants · spans 1 day · search this subject
1998-09-14 00:12Bob Bannister Re: (idm) Meat Beat Manifesto and Burger/Ink (was: my babble...
└─ 1998-09-14 14:16martin burbridge RE: (idm) Meat Beat Manifesto and Burger/Ink (was: my babble...
expand allcollapse allclick any summary to toggle that message
1998-09-14 00:12Bob BannisterMessage text written by laerm >having decided to not mention your lack of taste, i'm only
From:
Bob Bannister
To:
\[unknown\]
Date:
Sun, 13 Sep 1998 20:12:57 -0400
Subject:
Re: (idm) Meat Beat Manifesto and Burger/Ink (was: my babble...
permalink · <199809132013_MC2-595B-4011@compuserve.com>
Message text written by laerm
quoted 1 line having decided to not mention your lack of taste, i'm only going to>having decided to not mention your lack of taste, i'm only going to
inform you that meat beat manifesto is one english fella,< and Mark Kolmar: <1) They were not awful. 2) They have changed. 3) They are a UK import.> My second post ever to the list and I'm in hot water! I guess I had them mixed up with Ministry and all their various offshoots (at least for place of origin) - I'm always willing to mend my erroneous ways in the direction of liking everything (especially if I find something for $2 or less in the used bin ) - what's their single best release? Michael Upton said of the Matador Burger/Ink _Las Vegas_: <I haven't heard it in a while, but my memory of it was a lot of big washy synth sounds over metronome-style pulsing kicks, and quite a raw production style - things distort at the edges, without it ever getting aggro. > Not sure about "big washy synth" which makes me think more of a classic Detriot techno style but perhaps that's not what you meant - it reminds me of Mannequin Lung which I wouldn't consider raw at all (at least compared to Autechre or Farmer's Manual or anything like that) - it bubbles along a bit unassumingly with a dubby edge to the bass parts and eventually draws me in through it's sheer repetitiveness which eventually become almost intense in its insistence - it reaches that degree that makes unimaginative coworkers suggest that the record is skipping. Bob
1998-09-14 14:16martin burbridgenot being a big fan of the eloctro/industrial sound which was formed a large part of mbm's
From:
martin burbridge
To:
Bob Bannister , \[unknown\]
Date:
Mon, 14 Sep 1998 10:16:00 -0400
Subject:
RE: (idm) Meat Beat Manifesto and Burger/Ink (was: my babble...
Reply to:
Re: (idm) Meat Beat Manifesto and Burger/Ink (was: my babble...
permalink · <000001bddfea$32e8c9a0$2ff36420@insite5>
not being a big fan of the eloctro/industrial sound which was formed a large part of mbm's early bag, and also not being enamoured of mr dangers' vocal stylings, i would say their one release that i can still recommend is "version galore" which was 8(?) mixes of 2 tracks "radio babylon" + "psych out". all trancy deep bass'n'bleep proto-idm w/ a big assist from andy weatherall in best dubby daze, and boney m samples too. "radio babylon's" killer bassline went on to enjoy fame and fortune as the hook to fsol's "papua new guinea". i'm not sure how available this is nowadays, but a couple of the mixes showed up on nothing's "original fire" comp, tho' i didn't feel this was a better release despite its greater length and variety. apologies now as this is probably not the typical response you'd get from an mbm aficionado. -martin np - lee perry/the complete uk upsetter singles collection vol 1. (sweet)
quoted 22 lines Subject: Re: (idm) Meat Beat Manifesto and Burger/Ink (was: my babble...> Subject: Re: (idm) Meat Beat Manifesto and Burger/Ink (was: my babble... > > > Message text written by laerm > >having decided to not mention your lack of taste, i'm only going to > inform you that meat beat manifesto is one english fella,< > > and Mark Kolmar: > <1) They were not awful. > 2) They have changed. > 3) They are a UK import.> > > My second post ever to the list and I'm in hot water! > > I guess I had them mixed up with Ministry and all their various offshoots > (at least for place of origin) - I'm always willing to mend my erroneous > ways in the direction of liking everything (especially if I find something > for $2 or less in the used bin ) - what's their single best release? > > Bob > >