Fifty fave tunes done for an Italian magazine, can’t remember when - just what struck me that day…
FAVES / UNFAVES
CHEESY WOTSITS
Saturday, September 27, 2025
50 faves (variant)
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
questionnaire pour Libération (2020)
What is the first record you bought in your youth with your own money ?
Ian Dury and the Blockheads, Do It Yourself, 1979
Your favorite way for listening to music ? (MP3, CD, vinyl, radio for example) ?
Radio – London pirate stations in the 1990s, listening to rap or classic rock in the car in Los Angeles today.
The last record you bought?
Last vinyl was Some British Accents and Dialects (BBC, 1971). Last digital was Beatriz Ferreyra, Echos+ (Room40, 2020).
Where do you prefer to be when you are listening to music?
I like to be doing something that occupies me physically but leaves me mentally open to the music – in the kitchen, cooking, is ideal.
A mascot/favorite record to start the day with ?
Sacred, “Do It Together (London Massive)”, 1992
Do you need music for work or do you prefer silence ?
Usually I’m listening to what I’m writing about, but for pure acceleration as the deadline approaches, hardcore rave and jungle tapes that I made off pirate radio in the early Nineties maintain my pace and sustain my spirits.
The song you feel a bit ashamed to listen to with pleasure ?
I don’t feel shame about liking anything, because – through solipsistic logic – I conclude that if I like it, it must be good. But if pushed, I would admit that enjoying “Rock You Like A Hurricane” by the Scorpions feels slightly embarrassing.
The record that everybody likes and that you despise ?
I can’t think of a record that everybody likes – there’s always a contrarian these days who’ll say “this is overrated”. I’m actually struggling to think of a record I despise. Panic! At The Disco’s “High Hopes” is fairly horrific, but I’m sure many would agree with me.
The records you need to survive on desert island ?
I made it records plural because it’s too hard to pick just one. Miles Davis, In A Silent Way. Joni Mitchell, The Hissing of Summer Lawns. John Martyn, Solid Air.
What cover art would you frame at home like a piece of art ?
Electronic Panorama, a Prospective 21e Siecle series box set released by Philips in 1970. I don’t have it framed but the silver metallic box is displayed on a shelf in our living room.
Your best memory of a concert ?
Daft Punk making their US debut at the Even Furthur rave in the wilds of Wisconsin, 1996.
Do you go in a club to dance, listen to music on a big sound system, to chat up… Or you never go in the clubs ?
I used to go to clubs and raves all the time. But now hardly ever. When I went, it was to dance and to do certain other things people at raves do. But also increasingly I went as a participant-observer, the use the anthropologist’s term. To read the living text of the crowd, decode the rituals.
What is the record you share with your significant other in your live ?
Too many, but among the core shared favorites are Pixies, Cocteau Twins, Aphex Twin, A.R. Kane, Fleetwood Mac, Saint Etienne, Omni Trio, Orbital, Ultramarine.
The track that makes you mad with rage ?
I cannot think of one at the moment. There are tracks that make me rage with madness, in a good way, i.e. Dionysian frenzy – The Stooges’s “TV Eye”, Beltram’s “Energy Flash”, Future’s “Fuck Up These Commas”.
The last record you listened to over and over again ?
Thin Lizzy, “My Sarah”.
The band you wish you have joined ?
Often the bands that do great things that I’d have been thrilled to be involved in creating also have nasty internal struggles and a long periods of misery and decline. So I will say the Wilson Sisters, a very short-lived conceptual outfit started by friends of mine, with whom I did the Oxford pop journal Monitor. But I had moved to London so missed their one and only recording session.
The piece of music that makes you cry ?
The Smiths, “There Is A Light That Never Goes Out”. Runner up: Kraftwerk, “Neon Lights”.
Do you know what drone metal is ?
Sunn O))) ?
Quote the lyrics of a song you know by heart ?
The whole lyric? I’m not sure I know every last word in this, but I know most of it. This is just one bit: “Why in the world are we here? Surely not to live in pain and fear. Why on earth are you there? When you're everywhere, come and get your share. But we all shine on, Like the moon and the stars and the sun, And we all shine on. On and on and on and on.” (“Instant Karma”, John Lennon)
Name three of your favorite songs ?
Sly and the Family Stone “Everyday People”, Foul Play “Open Your Mind (Foul Play Remix)”, The Sweet “Ballroom Blitz”.
Friday, August 15, 2025
Cultural Striptease
(done in 2010)
Your
first cultural memory?
Probably
The Beatles ("Yellow Submarine"). Unless we count British children's
TV shows like Andy Pandy and Pogle's Wood.
The song
where you would like to inhabit?
The
second (subaquatic idyllic) section of John Martyn's "I'd Rather Be The
Devil", but I'd need to have gills instead of lungs.
A song
you are listening obsessively on your iPod? (do you have one?)
I do
have an iPod but hardly ever use it. The last song to obsess me was Black Eyed
Peas's "Boom Boom Pow" which came out in summer 2009 but which I only
heard this month -- that got several replays on YouTube.
An embarassing (or dangerous cultural) pleasure?
I can't think of anything that embarrasses me.
I suppose I am ashamed of how much time
I waste watching junk TV -- cooking shows, reality-type pseudo-documentaries,
"Best Interior Design/Next Top Model" type contests. There really are
so many better things I could do with my time.
The
song/movie which changed your life (a quote from it).
Sex
Pistols, "Anarchy in the U.K."--no specific line, but the excessive
demand in the song and Johnny Rotten's performance left me with excessive,
unrealistic demands in terms of what I expect from music (world-shaking impact,
breath-choking intensity)
A recent
album/book/movie/author that you consider your personal discovery.
In the
era of webbed music and hyper-hipsterism, it is very hard to be first on the
block with a new group, or a new anything. Generally I am happy to pick up on
things a little bit after the "new thing" hunters get there.
Things
your children should read, listen and see?
The Wind In the Willows by
Kenneth Grahame.
Beethoven's
Pastoral Symphony.
The Railway Children.
If I say
television: is there a sitcom or something unexpected you can’t stop to watch
at?
Peep Show.
Music:
the playlist/soundtrack of your life, in 5 songs.
The
Slits, "So Tough"
My
Bloody Valentine, "Slow"
Orbital,
"Chime"
Omni
Trio, "Renegade Snares (Foul Play Remix)"
Ariel
Pink, "The Ballad of Bobby Pyn"
The
ringtone you have on your your mobile phone, now?
The
standard one it comes with.
What do
you think of people who obsessively wear earcuffs while walking or other?
It's
not how I would choose to live. I don't like to be insulated from the outside
world. I was never a big fan of the Walkman and the only time I use my iPod is
on long train or bus journeys, or late at night when I want to read while
sitting on the sofa (rather than attached to the stereo via headphones).
A quote
from a song to tell someone: you love him/her; you want to leave him/her. And a
song (quote) to convince someone to stay with you?
"It's
only me/Who wants to wrap around your dreams"--Fleetwood Mac,
"Dreams"
"Lovin’
you...isn't the right thing to do"--Fleetwood Mac, "Go Your Own
Way"
"I can still hear you saying/You would never break the chain"--Fleetwood Mac, "The Chain"
Your
relationship with new technologies: do you have a Blackberry/iPhone, you are an
email addict, what’s your opinion about Facebook or similar?
No
Blackberry, no iPhone, only shaky command of my mobile phone to be honest.
Email, addicted, yes of course. Facebook--coming up with clever comments on
stuff is too much like work for me. I'm on it but I hardly ever update or leave
anything comments. Twitter is another step in the ephemeralisation of
everything: I can remember magazine articles and music paper record reviews
from 30 years ago; I can remember certain blog posts and online essays from 7
or 9 years ago. But do people remember a Tweet for more than a day?
A stupid
thing that you cannot stop to do online. Or a digital gaffe.
Saving
articles and blog posts "to read later". "Later" never
comes and I have a folder called Reading Matter with a couple of thousand files
inside it.
Have you read books on kindle or some e-readers?
No.
What you
would have want to learn to do in life?
Practically:
Drive a car (I've just moved to Los Angeles so this is essential). Play a
musical instrument. Learn how to make beats. Learn how to beat-match as a
deejay.
Existentially:
Be more patient. Waste less time.
What did
you learn from a book/movies/music about: sex?
There's
no substitute for hands-on experience.
Do you
read magazines?
Yes,
but not as much as I used to.
What did
you save/hated of our last ten years culture, the so called Noughties, Anni
Zero.
Love:
Music's inexhaustible capacity to come up with the unexpected, the revelatory,
unknown pleasures (Dizzee Rascal, Animal Collective, Ariel Pink, Ghost Box,
Vampire Weekend...). Blogging as a rebirth of music journalism.
Hate: The effect on the internet on my attention span, which is
shot to pieces (see above, about magazines). The wars and the propaganda
machine that attempted to justify them. Still waiting for the future/the 21st
Century to start, the first ten years just seem like the Nineties continuing.
Twitter as the slow erosion of blogging
A word
that you love. A word that you hate.
Joy
Root
canal
Were
would you go for a “cultural” tour? 3 places
Places I've never been -- Tokyo, Bombay, Beijing.
If you
would have to write an autobiography, what could be the firts line? And the
dedication?
Thursday, August 29, 2024
50 Favorite Songs
(for an Italian publication, 2009)
The Eyes -- "When the Night Falls"
The Beatles --
"Strawberry Fields Forever"
John's Children -- "A Midsummer Night's Scene"
We The People -- "You Burn Me Up and Down"
The Byrds -- "Everybody's Been Burned"
Pink Floyd -- "Paintbox"
The Doors - "The Soft Parade"
Love -- "You Set The Scene"
The Stooges -
"Ann"
Scott Walker -- "Boy Child"
Miles Davis -- "Bitches Brew"
The Rolling Stones -
"Moonlight Mile"
Roy Harper -- "The Same Old Rock"
Black Sabbath --
"Iron Man"
John Martyn -- "I'd Rather Be The Devil"
Roxy Music --
"If There Is Something"
Al Green -- "I'm Still In Love With You"
Can -- "Quantum Physics"
Kevin Ayers -- "Decadence"
Robert Wyatt -- "Sea Song"
Faust -- "Jennifer"
Neu! -- "Seeland"
Max Romeo -- "War Inna Babylon"
Television -- "Marquee Moon"
Sex Pistols -- "Bodies"
X Ray Spex -- "Let's Submerge"
Ian Dury -- "My Old Man"
Kraftwerk -- "Neon Lights"
The Slits -- "So Tough"
Public Image Ltd -- "No Birds Do Sing"
Gang of Four -- "At Home He Feels Like A Tourist"
Fleetwood Mac -- "Sara"
Michael Jackson -- "Rock With You'
Scritti Politti -- "PAs"
Talking Heads -- "Seen and Not Seen"
The Associates -- "Party Fears Two"
The Blue Orchids -- "Low Profile"
Meat Puppets -- "Two Rivers"
The Smiths -- "There Is A Light That Never Goes
Out"
Nitro Deluxe -- "This Brutal House"
Public Enemy -- "Public Enemy No. 1"
My Bloody Valentine -- "I Believe"
Orbital -- "Chime"
Joey Beltram -- "Energy Flash"
Aphex Twin -- "We Are the Music Makers"
Omni Trio -- "Renegade Snares (Foul Play Remix)"
New Horizons - - "Find the Path"
Daft Punk -- "Digital Love"
Sunday, February 11, 2024
four favorite riffs
Not actually my four absolute favorite riffs (Lord alone knows where I'd start with that) but four of my favorite riffs, commented on for The Wire's Greatest Riffs feature of 2004
KING SUNNY ADE -- “Eje Nlo Gba Ara Mi”, “365 Is My Number/The Message” (from Juju Music, Mango, 1982), “Synchro System” (Synchro System, Mango, 1983)
The riff so good they used it thrice. Actually, that’s an underestimate. This twangy, twinkly rhythm guitar figure, mostly likely played by Ade himself, is all over The Best of The Classic Years compilation of 1967-74 material (notably “Sunny Ti De” and “Ibanujde Mon Iwon”), and I’m told it recurs throughout the man’s vast discography. Whether it’s creative thrift or a Zen-like exploration of the infinite inflectional possibilities within a few chords, who knows? In any given track, this crisp crinkle of scintillating Afro-funk serves a double function, operating as both audio-logo (this is KING SUNNY ADE you’re listening to) and intensifier, its flecked flicker tightening the surface of the music until it’s as taut as a drum skin.
NASTY HABITS--“Shadow Boxing” (31 Records, 1996)
Nasty Habits is the alter-ego of deejay/producer Doc Scott, one of jungle’s under-sung pioneers, and “Shadow Boxing” contains the most gloriously doom-laden and ponderous synth-riff in that genre’s history. Scott’s from Coventry, so it’s tempting to think he must have accessed the heaviness of this sluggish, scowling riff from the harsh West Midlands environment in the same way Sabbath did with “Iron Man,” “War Pigs,” and the rest. More likely, though, is that in the early Nineties Scott had his head rearranged at Coventry’s Eclipse raves and ever since then he’s been chasing down his own ultimate version of the miasmic “Mentasm” noise-riff, as heard on Joey Beltram’s early R&S tracks and Belgian hardcore anthems beyond counting. Beautiful and ominous like a cloud of poison gas looming on the horizon, “Shadow Boxing” is the culmination of a life’s work. Something drum’n’bass as genre most likely will never surpass.
RESILIENT--"1.2" (Chain Reaction, 1996)
KRAFTWERK--“Ruckzuck” (Kraftwerk 1, Philips, 1971)