h1

The Half Decent Christmas Mix

December 17, 2007

Collected from the depths of the Internet (okay… a handful of acquaintances on it) a few years back, here is a mix that may not actually want to bash your head into a brick wall during the holiday season…

or maybe it is just to avoid that feeling you get when you walk into yet another store and hear yet another crappy version of Silent Night that makes you want to jab forks into your eyes and ears and spend the rest of the year wrapped in bandages.

The first track is really the theme for the whole mix.  Stevie Wonder tells you all the wonderful things the Christmas means to him, and it sounds just dandy.  But let’s be honest, Christmas is just as likely to be about bitterness, anger, disgust, and despair, and it certainly has a tendency to depress as much as it does to actually make one happy.

So we try to cover all the range of emotions here from the genuine overblown, over-packaged, and over-produced X-Mas (Mariah Carey), to the truly heartbreaking holiday (Prince), to Elvis (Elvis), to a little girl singing to Elvis (Michele Cody), to Elvis impersonators (El Vez).  We’ll cover Santa, Satan, and Santas who are just plain evil (De La Soul).  We’ve got the machine gun guitar (Alex Harvey), the drum machine boy (Beck), the requisite Ella Fitzgerald track, and enough hoping Christmas ska and reggae to please teenagers who have to sneak away for the next three weeks to smoke their pot.

And by the time you reach the last track, you’ll know that when we say “Feliz Navidad” we really do mean it from the bottom of our heart.

1. What Christmas means to me – Stevie Wonder
2. Happy Christmas – The Maytals
3. Christmas in Hollis – Run DMC
4. All I want for Christmas is you – Mariah Carey
5. I’ll be home for Christmas – Al Green
6. I heard the bells on Christmas – Elvis Presley
7. Merry Christmas Elvis – Michele Cody
8. Santa Claus got stuck in my chimney – Ella Fitzgerald
9. Santa Claus is Ska-ing to Town – Granville Williams Orchestra
10. Just like Christmas – Low
11. Christmas with the Devil – Spinal Tap
12. Mistress for Christmas – ACDC
13. Millie Pulled a Pistol on Santa – De La Soul
14. Christmas Sucks! – Tom Waits & Peter Murphy*
15. Another Lonely Christmas – Prince
16. There’s No Lights on the Christmas Tree – Sensational Alex Harvey Band
17. Thank God it’s not Christmas – Sparks
18. Rock & Roll Santa – Yo La Tengo
19. O Come Emmanuel – Belle & Sebastien
20. Merry Christmas baby – Otis Redding
21. Christmas Song – Joy Zipper
22. Christmas Reggae – Bob Marley
23. The Litte Drum Machine Boy – Beck
24. Feliz Navidad – El Vez

http://www.divshare.com/download/6229994-10d
*See the comments for a note on this track.

-matej

h1

Willie1Foot’s X-Mas Mix

December 12, 2007

Willie1Foot makes his TouchedMix debut with a Christmas pop comp that recreates a time when X-Mas was less commercial and still a holy seas… what? Well, as W1F says: “OK, so they’re a bit cheesy, but I grew up with most of these blighters…” Slade, Wizzard, Wham! cheesy? These are X-Mas Anthems. Damn well stand to attention when they come on.

Elton John – Step Into Christmas
Boney M – Mary’s Boy Child
Canned Heat – Christmas Blues
Brenda Lee – Rockin’ Around The Christmas Tree
Gary Glitter – Another Rock N Roll Christmas
George Harrison – Ding Dong Ding Dong
Greg Lake – I Believe In Father Christmas
Wizzard – I Wish It Could Be Christmas Every Day
Jethro Tull – Ring Out Solstice Bells
Jona Lewie – Stop The Cavalry
Mike Oldfield – In Dulci Jubilo
Mud – Lonely This Christmas
Wham – Last Christmas
Showaddywaddy – Hey Mr Christmas
Slade – Merry Christmas Everybody
The Beach Boys – Little Saint Nick
The Wombles – Wombling Merry Christmas

DOWNLOAD (DivShare)

h1

Any Major Christmas Mix

December 8, 2007

Bringing down the tone a bit after Taylor’s fantastic Right-wing Rock exposition, a couple of TouchedMixers are planning to put up Christmas mixes. I’ve seen the tracklisting matej has in mind, and it looks great. While we wait, here’s my mix, which is also up on my real blog.

1. Smashing Pumpkins – Christmastime
2. Crash Test Dummies – God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
3. Donny Hathaway – This Christmas
4. Lou Rawls – Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas
5. Darts – White Christmas
6. Bruce Springsteen – Santa Claus Is Coming To Town
7. The Ramones – Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight)
8. They Might Be Giants – Santa’s Beard
9. Sufjan Stevens – Come On! Let’s Boogey to the Elf Dance!
10. Low – Just Like Christmas
11. The Flaming Lips – A Change At Christmas (Say It Isn’t So)
12. Fall Out Boy – Yule Shoot Your Eye Out
13. Ron Sexsmith – Maybe This Christmas
14. The Weepies – All That I Want
15. Mindy Smith – I’ll Be Home For Christmas
16. The Darkness – Christmas Time (Don’t Let the Bells End)
17. Twisted Sister – Deck The Halls
18. Weezer – Christmas Celebration
19. Eels – Christmas Is Going To The Dogs
20. Fay Lovsky – Christmas Was A Friend Of Mine
21. Johnny Cash – Christmas As I Knew It
22. The Band – Christmas Must Be Tonight
23. Simon & Garfunkel – 7 O’Clock News/Silent Night

DOWNLOAD  (DivShare)

h1

Right-wing Rock

December 7, 2007

If the Halloween collections didn’t scare the shit out of you, this will. Taylor Parkes, one of Britain’s finest music journalists, has compiled a “Right-wing Rock” album designed to make you gasp and shake your head in utter astonishment until it spins and falls off into a strategically placed bucket of bile. And, quality man he is, Taylor has made his mix available to Touched Mix. He even designed a cover, in case anybody would like to display this comp in their CD collection! His liner notes follow below. Just to make it clear, though, this album may not be downloaded by people who actually believe in the noxious messages these songs convey. Neither Taylor nor the Touched Mix crowd endorse these messages in any shape or form.

1. THE RIGHT BROTHERS – Bush Was Right
World-class suckers The Right Brothers might not know what “cognitive dissonance following disconfirmed expectancy” means, but if they look it up they may just find a picture of themselves. MTV’s decision not to playlist this song proved, according to the Brothers, that it is guilty of liberal bias; presumably, this also applies to the countless Clear Channel rock stations who also didn’t play it. Derisive nyah-nyah-na-nyah-nyah guitar riff recalls the theme to 1980s ITV kids show “Your Mother Wouldn’t Like It”. France? WRONG!

2. ROBIN & CRYSTAL BERNARD – The Monkey Song
Creationist singalong from reverend’s daughters Robin & Crystal, captured from old-tyme radio by “the miracle of recording”. Until a few years ago, this would have sounded hilariously archaic. Crystal, incidentally, remained in show business, appearing as KC Cunningham in Happy Days, and later as Helen in the bafflingly long-running US sitcom Wings. She also continued to make records, whose nauseatingly pious content suggests she never did renounce that “Monkey Song” sentiment.

3. THE STRAWBS – Part Of The Union
It’s perhaps the perfect punishment for The Strawbs that this piss-taking dirge was adopted by British trade unionists and sung lustily on freezing picket lines for more than a decade, without a trace of irony. It’s also quite satisfying that it completely overshadows the rest of their output, which would otherwise have attained cult status but is now eschewed by self-respecting rock fans since The Strawbs are, forever more, just those “Part Of The Union” guys. True poetic justice would have the ex-Strawbs currently eking out a living in de-unionised jobs with no workers’ rights; sadly, they used to make a lot of money playing Tory cabaret nights, so they’re probably not.

4. JANEEN BRADY – Free Enterprise
Mormon horror Janeen Brady churned out a welter of kiddy-indoctrinating claptrap in the 1980s, but this catchy ode to capitalism leads the field in sheer strangeness. From the poorly-illustrated disc-and-book set “Take Your Hat Off When The Flag Goes By”.

5. THE CHARLIE DANIELS BAND – A Few More Rednecks
It’s a long way from “The Devil Went Down To Georgia” to this pig-eyed slop, a fine example of just how successful the American Right has been in convincing the working class that hardcore conservatism stands up for them against a moneyed Leftist “elite”. The indisputably talented, Darwin-hating Mr Daniels – whose latter-day blog is a nightmare of ultra-right rhetoric – gives it his best shot (“You intellectuals may not like it, but there’s nothing you can do”), and makes a holy fool of himself.

6. THE EXXON SINGERS – America’s Way
The corporate anthem – fist-chewing propaganda song voiced by hack session singers or, sometimes, actual employees of the company concerned – is still de rigeur for the self-respecting multinational, but they don’t make them like this anymore. While most corporate anthems simply bang the drum for whichever company put up the money, The Exxon Singers branch out into fully-fledged paeans to rapacious capitalism, as in this unparalleled tooth-grinder. They were sometimes more strident (see track 17), but the wobbly, overblown schmaltz of “America’s Way” has a charm all of its own.

7. THE SPOKESMEN – Dawn Of Correction
“Maybe you can’t vote boy, but man your battle stations.” This conservative answer song to Barry McGuire’s “Eve Of Destruction” wasn’t a big hit, but it’s arguably a lot more enjoyable than the ludicrously earnest original. Much has changed since then, of course – check out those anachronistic props for the UN. The sleeve notes are inspiring: “The Spokesmen are aptly named, for they represent the voice of a generation that has endured many and frequent changes, a generation that hovers on the dawn of a new and better tomorrow, with promises of many more changes. But there is good reason to feel strong confidence in the future so long as there remains the youthful optimism of tomorrow’s leaders, as expressed in the words and music of THE SPOKESMEN.”

8. VICTOR LUNDBERG – An Open Letter To My Teenage Son
Victor was a radio newscaster from Michigan who got the bright idea that a spoken-word album of reactionary diatribes set to stirring patriotic music might go down well in the summer of love; this fatherly message starts off reasonably enough, then builds to a ghastly climax. There was actually a glut of these records in the late 60s and 70s (see track 19): see also “These Things I Believe”, by the fictional John Calhoun, which sits proudly in Homer Simpson’s record collection. Mr Calhoun would presumably have taken his name from the Confederate icon, in the manner of Stonewall Jackson, whose pro-war – any war – “The Minute Men Are Turning In Their Graves” narrowly missed out on inclusion here.

9. JOHN LENNON (via LINDA POLLEY) – Hussein’s Butt Song
Linda Polley and her husband Gerald are self-professed visitors from another planet, now living in North Dakota, who also claim to be psychics channeling the songs of John Lennon from the afterlife. It seems that in death, Lennon has abandoned his anti-establishment stance and joined the Religious Right, returning to a “back to basics” style based around Casio keyboard and nursery-rhyme phrasing, on exciting new songs such as this jaunty tribute to American military power. All things considered, it’s a shame the other three Beatles didn’t reform to record a backing track for this, rather than the comparatively dreary “Free As A Bird”.

10. TOBY KEITH – Courtesy Of The Red, White And Blue (The Angry American)
Merle Haggard prodigy Toby Keith, The Confused American. Possibly the high water mark of Right Wing Rock, this gutbucket growl was a radio sensation back in the days of Shock And Awe, and stands, arms folded, way beyond parody. The idea of the line here “somewhere in the back” not appearing in the original draft of the lyrics as “somewhere in Iraq” is utterly inconceivable. Still, in its way, this record is surely as magnificent as it is horrific.

11. KPMG – Our Vision Of Global Strategy
Who could fail to love many-tentacled accountancy and financial services firm KPMG, whose vision of global strategy involves acting as independent auditors for Accenture, Burger King, Deutsche Bank, BMW, American Express, Nestle, Bertelsmann Media Group, Citgo and Halliburton, and the surreptitious creation of illegal tax shelters in order to assist various corporate clients in dodging two and a half billion dollars in taxation? Here is their stirring corporate anthem.

12. MERLE HAGGARD – The Fightin’ Side Of Me
“Okie From Muskogee” was deliberately over the top, but the gyppy old jailbird means every word of this one. Don’t run down his country, hoss!

13. THE CONSERVATIVE PARTY – Four Jolly Labourmen
In the run-up to the 1964 General Election, “The Conservative & Unionist Party Central Office” issued “Songs For Swinging Voters”, a six-track flexidisc of anti-Labour singalongs. Not a single positive word for Alec Douglas-Home, but much mirth at Harold Wilson’s mac (and a sideswipe at Jo Grimond for good measure). This hearty satire of the soon-to-be Government may be the only popular song in history to namecheck Dick Crossman.

14. THE JAM – Time For Truth
Essentially the same as the previous track, but with swearing. “Whatever happened to the Great Empire?” fumes Tory voter Paul Weller (aged 18 and a half). The answer is that Jim Callaghan’s Labour government have “turned it into manure”, while simultaneously creating a “police state”, in order to “rule our bodies and minds” (considering the Home Secretary at this point was Merlyn Rees, this might have made some sense had The Jam hailed from Belfast rather than Woking). While The Clash were mashing up Trotsky and Baader-Meinhof, The Jam’s early stabs at political pop seem to be informed largely by what Paul heard his dad grumbling about at breakfast over a dog-eared copy of The Sun.

15. MORMON KIDS SING – I Want To Be A Mother
Nothing inherently reactionary about motherhood, of course, but you’d be forgiven for thinking otherwise after listening to “Mormon Kids Sing”, an LP whose title guarantees Mormon-only sales as surely as if they’d called it “Everyone Who Isn’t A Mormon Can Fuck Off”. The Phyllis Schlafly-style agenda peeps through by the second stanza.

16. JACKIE DOLL & HIS PICKLED PEPPERS – When They Drop The Atomic Bomb
While US forces battle it out in Korea, Jackie Doll has a plan to put an end to the Cold War once and for all – but heaven knows what Hawkeye Pierce would have made of it. Anyway, Jackie had the last laugh, because not only are his ideas back in fashion, but this infectious bluegrass still sounds great.

17. THE KINKS – Get Back In Line
More union-bashing from 1970s England, but at least this time it’s a beautiful song. Part working class rebel, part old-school conservative, Ray Davies wouldn’t be quite so fascinating without his occasional lapses into Little Englanderism; one would think this anti-union line stems more from a distaste for demagogy than genuine political feeling, but it’s hard to say for sure. In all honesty, when the music is as good as this, it’s also hard to care.

18. THE EXXON SINGERS – Efficiency
Way out of their jurisdiction, The Exxon Singers hold forth on the evils of big government and the unimpeachable majesty of laissez-faire economics. Truly chilling.

19. THE NEW CREATION – Sodom And Gomorrah
Socially-illiberal Christian rock from Vancouver – lyrically, this could be the squarest record in history, but the spooky combination of tone-deaf geeks who sound like they’re trying to sing without waking up the kids, and what could almost be the young Lou Reed playing guitar, makes this a tiny classic. Doing the one-guitar-and-drums thing years before The White Stripes (and indeed, looking rather like an ultra-unhip version of them), The New Creation rock, somehow. You probably wouldn’t have bothered with their after-show party, though.

20. CHARLES ASHMAN – An American’s Answer (To Gordon Sinclair)
“An American’s Answer To Gordon Sinclair” is not a retort to the star of Gregory’s Girl, but to “The Americans (A Canadian’s Opinion)”, a 1974 novelty record by a Canadian radio presenter which spawned about 10 cover versions, a handful of parodies and countless answer songs, including this one. Gordon Sinclair’s pro-US tract – a booming on-air rant backed with “The Battle Hymn Of The Republic” – is historically selective, but not really right wing as such; in his whitewashing reply, Charles Ashman’s appraisal of post-war America strays so far into the realms of patriotic fantasy it could be a Washington Times editorial. I’m pretty sure this is not the same Charles Ashman who wrote a series of paperback exposés of links between the CIA and the Mafia in the 1970s. Despite the aural evidence, it definitely isn’t Phil Hartman.

21. LEROY VAN DYKE – Mister Professor
“Mister Professor, you’re well educated, I know…” Can’t you just feel that “but” coming? Country sub-legend Leroy is wary of fancy book-learning, because he’s heard that the American college system is a nest of commie vipers. Just the strangled delivery of the words “poor working slobs” is enough to make a dead dog smile.

22. THE CONSERVATIVE PARTY – Nationalisation Nightmare
Nothing like a poor analogy for ramming home the point. Those singing Tories are back to make the case for privatisation in the lamest way imaginable, armed with their bizarre belief that privately-owned business is seamlessly efficient and entirely free of bureaucracy. The football theme, faux-prole accent and nursery-rhyme backing make it easy for the lerr clarses to understand. One is tempted to suggest that Labour’s 1964 election victory can perhaps be traced directly to Songs For Swinging Voters.

23. GILBERT O’SULLIVAN – A Woman’s Place
Drip-rock pioneer Gilbert is all for a woman who can make it on her own, but…

24. JOHN LENNON (via LINDA POLLEY) – Vote Republican
Another posthumous Lennon classic, brought to us by the redoubtable Linda Polley, this time explaining the spiritual consequences of voting Democrat in the 2004 election. “Jesus won’t take his throne, cos Hillary is such a witch!” reveals John / Linda. “If you want to have a world left, there’s something that I’d strongly suggest! / If you want there to be Heaven, you’d better vote Republican!” Thankfully, the American electorate chose to heed Lennon’s message, and cosmic catastrophe was averted. But for how long? “Don’t you know, the Democrats are really really in a fix / Their leaders are even accusing President Bush of playing dirty politics!”

25. THE BEATLES – Taxman
This track’s electrifying brilliance is undimmed, but so is the Daily Mail-reading repulsiveness of its message. Yes, the top rate of tax in mid-60s Britain looks like a misprint, and yes, it must have hurt like hell for nouveau-riche scruffbags like The Beatles. Nonetheless, the fact that George Harrison wrote his famous gripe at having to contribute towards schools and hospitals while sitting next to the swimming pool of his Esher mansion does leave a distinctly un-fab taste in the mouth.

26. JANET GREENE – Commie Lies
Fired as Cinderella on WCPO’s Krusty-tastic “Uncle Al Lewis Show” for refusing a trip to the casting couch, Janet Greene became involved with anticommunist profiteer Fred Schwarz, and was relaunched in 1964 as the anti-Joan Baez, a singing figurehead for Schwarz’ Christian Anti-Communism Crusade. Here’s how the CACC’s own newsletter reviewed one Greene performance: “In a way it wouldn’t be sporting to compare her to most female ‘protest’ folk singers, because Janet has a number of unfair advantages. For one thing she looks like a girl. Not many female protest singers can say that. And that may be what they are really protesting against, deep down… Janet does things that most protest folk singers wouldn’t dream of. Like taking a bath. And like wearing clean clothes and dressing neatly and being legally married and having legitimate children and loving her country.” In 1964, she was fortunate enough to share a bill with both Ronald Reagan and The Goldwaters.

27. THE GOLDWATERS – What Have You Done?
In a deranged attempt to whip up support for Barry Goldwater’s doomed 1964 presidential bid, the owners of a Nashville radio station took four smug, unfunny fratboys and moulded them into The Goldwaters, satirical right-wing folk sensation and general pain the ass. Their one LP, The Goldwaters Sing Folk Songs To Bug The Liberals (plastered throughout with the same Top Cat laughter track heard here) supposedly sold 200,000 copies, and was enough to secure them a tour of political meetings and Young Republicans’ jive parties. “Give this album to one of your liberal ‘friends’,” suggests the sleeve notes. “No doubt you will convert a liberal!”

28. KEITH EVERETT – Conscientious Objectors
Vietnam-era garage-folk sensation Keith Everett lays into snivelling conchies, sounding mad as hell. Almost nothing is known about Keith (he’s not the guy who turns up when you Google his name, anyway), but his effortless rhyming shall live long in the memory.

29. L’IL MARKIE – Diary Of An Unborn Child
Evangelist Mark Ford’s nauseating creation “L’il Markie” is usually somewhat chirpier than this, but here he goes in for some serious zygote anthropomorphism and ends up with what is possibly the grimmest record in the history of the world. It goes exactly where you think it’s going. And then, with the closing refrain, it goes somewhere even worse.

30. THE CONSERVATIVE PARTY – John Citizen (version two)
Well, there it is.

Download link 1 (Megaupload)
Download link 2 (Rapidshare)
Download link 3 (YouSendIt)

h1

Mr. Wind-up Bird’s Halloween Mix

October 26, 2007

Well, that was a little harder than expected. It turns out that I have many songs with spooky themes. Unfortunately most of them are deeply mediocre. What’s below is the best of the rest, minus a couple of tracks already selected by ad hoc and Not Me, Boss.

Cover and mailout to follow when I get my arse in gear.

OTF Halloween Mix:

1. Congo Drummers of the Societe Absolument Guinin

2. Voodoo Ray A Guy Called Gerald

3. Bat Macumba Gilberto Gil

4. The Gorgon Speaks Cornell Campbell

5. Gorgon Sound Horsepower Productions

6. Ghost Dance Prince Buster

7. I Was a Teenage Werewolf The Cramps

8. Plague of Zombies Scientist

9. At Midnight T-Connection

10. Horror Business The Misfits

11. Burial of Long Shot The Prince of Darkness

12. The Phantom Renegade Soundwave

13. I Don’t Care About You Fear

14. I Put a Spell On You Screamin’ Jay Hawkins

15. Ghost Rider Suicide

16. Blood and Fire Niney The Observer

17. Lavender Coffin Joe Thomas

18. In The Midnight Hour Moloko

19. Fearless Vampire Killers Bad Brains

20. Testone Sweet Exorcist

21. Bad Touch Example Company Flow

22. Shadow Boxing Doc Scott

It starts with your actual Haitian voodoo drummers from the (imaginatively named) Soul Jazz CD “Voodoo Drums” and closes with Shadow Boxing (because it sounds creepy). It’s fairly obvious why most of the others are included but I stretched the theme to include songs about the witching hour.

The .rar mp3 files are just over 100MB, so they are split into two files: part one and part two.

Hope you enjoy.

h1

2 Cups Of Blood (the Not me, boss Hallowe’en mix)

October 12, 2007

2CupsOfBloodCover

1. Dr John – Gris Gris Gumbo Ya Ya
2. AC/DC – Hells Bells
3. Liars – There’s Always Room On The Broom
4. The Birthday Party – Release The Bats
5. Cozy Powell – Dance With The Devil
6. The Fall – New Face In Hell
7. Method Man – Sandman
8. PiL – Flowers Of Romance
9. Godley and Creme – Under Your Thumb
10. Crystalites – Blacula
11. Black Sabbath – Iron Man
12. Botox Zombies – I Was A Teenage Satan Worshipper
13. Innerzone Orchestra – Blakula
14. Gravediggaz – 2 Cups Of Blood
15. Upsetters – Black Bat
16. Marsha Hunt – Walk On Gilded Splinters  

I’ve gone for a voodoo, Satanism, witchcraft, priapic goth, occult Lancastrian visionary, horrorcore, ghost story, blaxploitation vampire, Obeah, gothic nursery rhyme kind of vibe, with big drums.

Dr John’s dragon blood, secret sand, and broken heart and get together drops should warm you up enough for the bells of hell, and then there’s Liars’ ‘There’s Always Room On The Broom’, the radio-friendly unit shifter from their bracing concept album about witches, They Were Wrong So We Drowned. 

The songs about bats, devils, hell and the sandman speak for themselves. PiL’s Flowers of Romance is technically unspooky, but you only have to listen (or watch the TOTP performance) to know where I’m coming from. And when I was a kid I remember getting scared shitless by Godley and Creme’s tale of seeing the ghost of a train station suicide, so I had to stick it on here.

I don’t know much about Botox Zombies but I love ‘I Was A Teenage Satan Worshipper’, an electro-disco confessional including what sounds like a eurotrash zombie with a crystal meth habit repping his Satan-worshipping posse: “We’re fun, we’re beautiful, we’ve done everything you’ve ever dreamed of.”

Innerzone Orchestra is one of Carl Craig’s many pseudonymous projects. Programmed is my favourite of his studio albums; it’s got a typically vague concept (something to do with computers, surveillance, and, er, a there’s a vampire and stuff) which Craig’s got too many good musical ideas to keep in mind.

The Upsetters’ ‘Black Bat’ is an awesome dub I found on the bargain compilation Original Bass Culture a few years ago, described by Ian McCann in the sleevnotes as being ”full of the creepy magic of Obeah, the Jamaican mystical religion”. And to end where we began, only foxier, Marsha Hunt’s version of the bad doctor’s  ‘Walk on Gilded Splinters’).

2 Cups Of Blood

h1

evilC’s Halloween mix(es)

October 7, 2007

Okay… you know the score – the theme is ‘Halloween’. I soon started making a list of candidate tunes in my head (and on my mobile phone) but I was torn over whether to make the compilation ‘atmospheric’ and a little bit spooky or just go for the obvious and compile tunes that had creepy themes rather than creepy atmospheres. In the end I basically couldn’t decide …so I did both and made two compilations! Cheeky, but hey! :-)

Compilation 1 – ‘evilC’s slightly spooky AmbientDubHopStepThingy mix’ – is the more atmospheric one. It’s constructed largely from the tunes I was listening to in the mid-90s: Dub-Hop, Ambient and Electronica, but is given a tiny contemporary edge by the presence of Burial’s ‘Wounder’. I’d like to think that this music is part of Burial’s ‘lineage’, but that’s a topic for another time. As you can see, this compilation is held together by Biosphere’s (literally) chilling ambience – Geir Jenssen actually originating from Tromso, 70 miles inside the arctic circle in nothern Norway – something to bear in mind when listening to his music. It crossed my mind to make the whole of the compilation in the same vein: Dark Ambient. However, in the end I opted for a slight compromise, in order to keep it a little accessible and packed the middle out with the atrophied beats of Dub Hop. Some of these selections may not be the best examples of that style, but I had to bear in mind the theme of Halloween and spookiness and thus Spectre’s slightly cartoon-y ‘Invasion Of The Body Snatchers’ made it to the final version simply because it’s in keeping with the theme, whereas offerings from Techno Animal or Alec Empire might have seemed more obvious. It’s undeniably heavy going in parts, but deliberately so. I’ve actually edited most of these tracks slightly, minimising the silence at the end and beginning of most of the tracks or fading them in/out if they merged with their neighbours on their original CDs. This is so that those lucky people with CD burning software that leaves no gaps between tracks can make a CD version where the relentlessness (and thus the atmosphere) is optimised. One word of advice, though: mind your speakers!

Download

Tracklisting:

1. Biosphere – ‘Antennaria’
2. Scorn – ‘The Next Days’
3. Biosphere – ‘Phantasm’
4. SIMM – ‘Clown’
5. Torture – ‘Soaking Bodies In Dub’
6. Tricky vs. The Gravediggaz – ‘Psychosis’
7. Spectre – ‘Invasion Of The Bodysnatchers’
8. Witchman – ‘Hammerhead’
9. Burial – ‘Wounder’
10. Skull vs. Ice – ‘Operation Mind Control’
11. Biosphere – ‘Silene’

-

Compilation 2 – ‘evilC’s not-quite-so-spooky mix’ – started out as an attempt to be a bit more varied and playful, but when I looked at my final selections, I saw that my misspent Goth youth had come shining through! Again, I’ve minimised the silence either side of some – but not all – of these tracks and also fiddled with the volume on some of them, where they may have seemed inappropriately quiet next to other tracks that had been mastered louder. I’m not sure if this has entirely worked, but there you go. Again, it’s a slight compromise, stylistically, but I just *had* to end it with This Mortal Coil’s quite devastating version of ‘I Come And Stand At Every Door’ – a track originally recorded with this tune by The Byrds, but whose lyrics are actually a poem (sub-titled ‘The Dead Little Girl’) by Turkish poet Nazim Hikmet. Not really a Halloween song, but slightly spooky nonetheless.

Download

Tracklisting:

1. MC 900ft Jesus & DJ Zero – ‘A Place Of Loneliness’
2. MC 900ft Jesus & DJ Zero – ‘Real Black Angel’
3. In The Nursery – ‘Haunted Dancehall’
4. Voltaire – ‘When You’re Evil’
5. Tom Waits – ‘Whistlin’ Past The Graveyard’
6. Danielle Dax – ‘Yummer Yummer Man’
7. Diamanda Galas – ‘See That My Grave Is Kept Clean’
8. Suicide – ‘Frankie Teardrop’
9. The Cure – ‘Subway Song’
10. Solvent – ‘An Introduction To Ghosts’
11. Brendan Perry – ‘Death Will Be My Bride’
12. Gavin Friday and The Man Seezer – ‘Death Is Not The End’
13. This Mortal Coil – ‘I Come And Stand At Every Door (The Dead Little Girl)’

Have fun!

h1

He’s Gonna Get You – Crusoe’s Halloween Mix

September 26, 2007

01 (intro) He’s Gonna Get You
02 Tenebre, Goblin
03 Movie Monster, Sound Team
04 Delicious Demon, The Sugarcubes
05 Horror Head, Curve
06 Killer Klowns From Outer Space, The Dickies
07 Teenage Zombie Blues, The Blowtops
08 (interlude) Help Me To Stop It
09 We Know Where You Sleep, The Paper Chase
10 Unsolved Child Murder, The Auteurs
11 Trick Or Treatz, Metronomy
12 Can’t Break A Dead Girl’s Heart, Zombina & The Skeletones
13 Dead Cruiser, Kavinsky
14 Burial Dub, Sly & Robbie
15 An Elegy (Kid Koala & Dynomite D Mix), The Free Design
16 (outro) It Was The Boogeyman
17 Be Careful, It’s My Throat, Frankie Stein & His Ghouls

Download here

h1

The ad hoc halloween mix

September 19, 2007

Does what it says in the title really.

Conceptually this is supposed to be the night of Halloween itself, through the darkest hours until the dawn. I have realised on finalising it that this makes it seem like I am a bit more into the dark death/tormented souls side to halloween than the sweets and costumes side.

Anyway without further ado, the track listing is as follows:

  1. Journey2Darkness – BurnBabyBurn
  2. You No Go Die…Unless – Fela Kuti
  3. The Ghost – Burning Spear
  4. Vampire – Devon Irons
  5. Soul Fire – Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry
  6. Wandering Soul – Fun>Da>Mental
  7. Turkish Song of the Damned – The Pogues
  8. The Mark of the Devil – Pulp
  9. Dead Souls – Joy Division
  10. Torture – The Cure
  11. Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family – The Wedding Present
  12. Dead – Tom Waits
  13. Ghosts – Eddi Reader
  14. November Has Come – Gorillaz

Enjoy. If enjoy is the right word.

h1

Hallowe’en – Matej

September 17, 2007

Hallowe’en 2007

01 – Things Are Not What They Appear – Gothic Archies
02 – Oranges and Lemons – The Mekons
03 – Weird Beard – The Sir Finks
04 – Black Rider – Bob Wills & the Texas Playboys
05 – (Ghost) Riders in the Sky – Johnny Cash
06 – In Your Dreams Tonight – Agent Orange
07 – If Looks Could Kill – Camera Obscura
08 – Black Magic Woman – Yat-Kha
09 – Santa Marinella – Gogol Bordello
10 – Lucy – Divine Comedy
11 – Black Wind Blowing – Billy Bragg; Wilco
12 – Chase the Devil – Lee Perry
13 – Black Flowers – Fishbone
14 – Freddie’s Dead – Curtis Mayfield
15 – Pardon this Coffin – Roger Miller
16 – Dead Man Blues – Jelly Roll Morton
17 – Aj Zajdi Zajdi Jasno Sonce – 3 Mustaphas 3
18 – Worms – The Pogues
19 – (Bonus Track)

Matej

Download