Hard News: Friday Music: Dubious achievements
25 Responses
-
I guess the Communications Tribunal will be able to deal with this.
At length.
Repeatedly.
On the taxpayer's dollar.
-
digging the jellphonic here, the blog is a daily smile inducer... solid track too
suns out and its a glorious day... for some beats
can never get enough of this... and adore that someone has edited the two sides of the 12" release into one as it should be
speaking of beats or EDM as some stupid american with no knowledge of their own musical culture would put it (spits on the ground)...
"The critic-heavy I Love Music message board has assembled the top 110 “very nebulously defined” dance tracks of the previous decade."
http://www.factmag.com/2012/08/30/i-love-music-compiles-top-110-electronic-dance-tracks-of-the-00s/
and as its the interwebs someone with too much time on their hands (awesomely) has compiled the list into:
youtube playlist: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL5D929515B2E7016D
and for the spotify crowd http://t.co/wPI5SsQZBoth of which a good friend sent me to wallow in.... share and share alike eh
-
Satellite Spies played at the Sandown Hotel, Gisborne, on New Year's Eve, 1999. Gisborne's population is normally 32,000 or so. On Millennium Eve, it swelled to over 40,000.
And how many turned up to see Satellite Spies bring in 2000, you ask ?Twelve, I'm told. Dear oh bloody dear.
-
the Sandown Hotel, Gisborne
ahhh the old "Sandpit" an early '70's corporate brewery concrete behemoth booze barn in the suburbs. Was wrong on so many levels, not least that it was where grab a DPB "granny" was played during week nights by travelling sales reps and in the weekends became the kindergarten bar for the under-agers hiding away from the CBD bars.
-
Small correction, it's Enprise, not Enrise.
-
Glenn Pearce, in reply to
Satellite Spies played at the Sandown Hotel, Gisborne, on New Year's Eve, 1999. Gisborne's population is normally 32,000 or so. On Millennium Eve, it swelled to over 40,000.
And how many turned up to see Satellite Spies bring in 2000, you ask ?Twelve, I'm told. Dear oh bloody dear.
Whereas I recall them being in Whangamata that night in the pissing rain, perhaps it was the "other" Satellite Spies ?
-
Among other regertable recollections (including SS 'warming up' the crowd at some stadium gig) one thing I knew them for was a synducate of businessmen finacing their venture (and I would speculate, losing some shirt). From such failures we may have to thank them for the government sponsorship of creatives (such that it is).
In the ears this week and
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&v=eTpP4NK0s7o&NR=1 -
I loved _Destiny in Motion_ when I was 15. I know better now.
Can't help thinking that the best outcome would be a judge dissolving the band as a legal entity and telling the two of them to get over it and go for a beer.
-
That SS story is hilarious. I was pulled aside years back by one member - not saying which - and asked who I regarded as the Satellite Spies and would I support him with a letter.
I said I really had no idea, and (didn't say this bit) really had never thought about or cared, plus I regarded Destiny in Motion as one of the eighties low points (it made the Nature's Worst compilation list that Wayne Bell and I put together a few years back for a giggle).
So, no but best of luck with whatever.
The odd thing - and something I'm going to have to deal with in the months and more to come - is how people blow up such minor achievements in their own minds.
I'm as guilty as anyone of that, but it seems particularly prevalent in music - a minor hit decades back gets somehow mentally conflated into a major cultural landmark over and over.
-
local beatmaker S.F.T. There’s plenty to dine on at his Soundcloud account
Thanks for that tip - had listenummage and ended buying the cool Rizvan EP online as a result.
-
I always thought that Destiny in Motion was akin to a bowel movement
-
Chip Matthews, in reply to
Allan, if you brought the one released yesterday, Riz also has a great one, Gemini from a couple months ago. Notable is the "friends" track with MC Arme, awesome song. Also, check out S.F.T.'s remix of HomeBrew's Yellow Snot Funk. Dude is on fire with the head nod music.
-
You can also hear the S.F.T. track with Raiza Biza over the top. Track was released to the net this week, also well worth a listen. http://soundcloud.com/raizabiza
-
Destiny in motion was an 80s minor hit but what's amusing is that both of them still want to be associated with it. OK, admitting you were part of SS at a party amongst friends so they can all have a light hearted chuckle at your expense, that would be ok, but beyond that i can't see why you'd want to be remembered for it.
-
Job done - looks like the LinkedIN profile has been updated. No reference to anything in motion.
-
DexterX, in reply to
I always thought that Destiny in Motion was akin to a bowel movement
How Blasé, How Blasé - Destiny in Motopm - sounded like a retread - the bastard child of a Duran du run run and the Fixx - The 80s produced some awful stuff
Here is a retread - takes 40 odd seconds to get started - sit back and have a Comfylicious Chairgasm:
.http://dl.dropbox.com/u/45104813/Hungry%20Like%20The%20Wolf%20Live%20at%20Clare%20Inn.mp3
.
.
-
I have a soft spot for "Destiny in Motion" because it was a track on the very first recorded music I bought - a compilation cassette tape called "The Hit Zone", circa 1985. Back then (I was 10) they seemed cool. But with all this hooha, over the name, they seem most uncool.
I wonder what's so special about the Satellite Spies brand that both guys want it, yet neither seem to be doing much with it. It's not like it's 2004 and they can embark on a "I Heart the '80s" tour along with Peking Man and the Narcs, raking in the nostalgia cash. There's no beloved album they can reissue and tour in track-by-track order. All the cyber bickering seems a terrible lot of fuss just to be able to say, "The Satellite Spies? Yeah, that's my band." Ugh. Shut up and make some music.
-
Lilith __, in reply to
All the cyber bickering seems a terrible lot of fuss just to be able to say, "The Satellite Spies? Yeah, that's my band."
Perhaps this is the equivalent of The Dirty Frypan Argument between flatmates? ie. a great excuse for a row? It's not usually about the frypan. :-)
-
HA, wikilarious
That scrub life blog rules.
-
-
Sacha, in reply to
how people blow up such minor achievements in their own minds
Can picture fascinating interviews along those lines being added to the trove at some stage. Might require strong liquor.
-
Glenn, they were definitely in Gisborne for Millenium Eve, as I recall seeing the posters around town...and shuddering. Though given the circumstances, it's entirely feasible they also in Whangamata, too.
-
Might be worth noting that "minor hit" of theirs secured them the support slot for Dire Straits at Western Springs. At the time, the biggest gig any NZ band had ever played at home. Few have topped it since.
Also - go through every compilation of kiwi hits that's ever been released, and for some reason, that song is always in there — usually either the last track or the second-to-last track. As earners go, it appears to be a bit of a perennial. :)
-
Simon Grigg, in reply to
At the time, the biggest gig any NZ band had ever played at home.
That honour might actually go to Larry Morris. The Angels were booked to play with David Bowie at Western Springs and pulled out at the last moment. The posters were already printed so Larry quickly renamed his band The Angels and played the gig.
Might be worth noting that "minor hit" of theirs secured them the support slot for Dire Straits at Western Springs.
I'm not sure that it hurt, but mostly the support acts tended to be "chosen" because of contacts and relationships with the promoter. I scored These Wilding Ways, who I managed, a U2 support in 1989 because I knew the promoter (and we had an unrelated business relationship at the time) and the above "Angels" scored because Larry was managed by Hugh Lynn who was also the promoter.
And score it is too - a support gig gets you a pro-rata % of the APRA fee, so if you play 10 songs and the main act plays 20, you get 10/30ths of approx 2% of the gross ticket sales - yay.
-
Moz, in reply to
And score it is too - a support gig gets you a pro-rata % of the APRA fee, so if you play 10 songs and the main act plays 20, you get 10/30ths of approx 2% of the gross ticket sales - yay.
Hence the popularity of short songs in the punk world? Pink Floyd played 12 songs in a three hour set, but we played 24 songs in our 20 minute set!
Post your response…
This topic is closed.