BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS

Tuesday, 10 July 2012

I Scream - "Tomorrrow is Another Day" - (Grafika Airlines GRA21) 1986

Another Alain Neffe pseudonym I wager. Sounds very similar to anything he has to do with. Structureless electronics swirling around melodyless synth noodling, then it stops, and another starts. This is Do It Yourself music for people with no musical ability whatsoever.
Which is a good thing, because if Music was left to musicians, experimental music would probably not exist, except in a very exclusive high-brow world where Alain Neffe would be eternally exiled from. This is Punk culture in its purest form.The fact that these tracks were recorded between 1973 and  1978 makes this "proto-punk" and could well claim to be heavily influenced by various Krautrockers, probably Cluster more than anything else one believes.
Also check I Scream on Integrated Circuits here!


Track Listing:

A1 Scars 3:10
A2 Nothing To Do 5:20
A3 Tomorrow Is Another Day 1:40
A4 L'Arabe Est Le Juif Du Juif 2:40
A5 European Death 4:40
A6 Tarang?? 3:00
A7 Feudal System 1:50
A8 Never Say: "Die!" 2:10
A9 Why Do I Scream?? 1:20
A10 Take Your Headphone And Dance! 3:00
B1 Cyclical Music Part 1 5:40
B2 Cyclical Music Part 2 8:10
B3 Cyclical Music Part 3 5:40
B4 Cyclical Music Part 4 (Excerpt) 10:00


DOWNLOAD some flavoured I scream HERE!

5 comments:

B.O.F. said...

Yeah! You make an important point about punk in its purest form. I never could understand why, if punk in 1976 was so anarchic and non-conformist, the bands were all stuck playing generic rock n roll chords verse-chorus-verse-chorus. Seemed pretty lame to me, even at the time. Looking forward to hearing this. 1973!!?! Wowzers.

Nick Allison said...

Although I love Punk Rock,it is rock'n'roll, very pure, but ideologically confused and hypocritical.The situationist slogans and ideas used were just soundbites that were never acted on.
The purest 'Punk' ideologies were always from the more intelligent non-rock end of the spectrum. Underground electronics, and the early Industrial groups.Then quite a lot of the, so-called, Post-punk bands;
Basically B.O.F,you've summed up this paradox nicely.Thank you.

Greenlpir said...

Yeah! You make an important point about punk in its purest form. I never could understand why, if punk in 1976 was so anarchic and non-conformist, the bands were all stuck playing generic rock n roll chords verse-chorus-verse-chorus. Seemed pretty lame to me, even at the time. Looking forward to hearing this. 1973!!?! Wowzers.

Jonny Zchivago said...

Mmmmm, i've heard this somewhere before!!!???

Jonny Zchivago said...

But still spot on.