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Music Shit / Re: PSF
« on: March 10, 2016, 03:17:41 PM »
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http://www.whosampled.com/sample/115528/Danny-Brown-Adderall-Admiral-This-Heat-Horizontal-Hold/
Other songs sampled in Danny Brown's Adderall Admiral:
You Know You're Only Dreaming
by Hawkwind (1971)
Byard Lancaster - It's Not Up To Us
80's Minneapolis funk
Recommendations?
Prince, The Time, Sheila E., etc. Non-Minneapolis stuff like The Dazz Band also.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-V6obC2gLQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UVp5UDBOoo4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXiyGs-LxiU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfLZfyphg0M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=obf9AJXqZyo
Within rock culture, rock has always had magpie tendencies and it would seem to me that ...
There is not a rock culture. Rock music is the expression of an American folk music, it is not a universal language. People who aren't American don't understand rock music and can't listen to it appropriately, there's always a veil of alienation that falls between foreigners and the music because of the nature of it as folk music, it's in the blood of Americans, but not in the blood of other people.
It's not in the blood of the French, that's for sure ...
(Laughs) Nor the English, nor the Australians ...
You don't think so?
Of course not, you're not Americans, you don't understand the things that Americans understand in the same way as I don't understand reggae music. It's not in my blood, when I listen to reggae music or African music - just pick any music - you listen to it, you go 'this is great' and you see things about it and it speaks to you in certain ways, but you are always looking at it through the veil of alienation and it isn't your culture. This is simply the nature of the beast as a folk music.
img14615_b389e994aaabfcd b75bd971cfc13ffe0You don't think that it's in the nature of greater communication, an appreciation of the codes of understanding and so on that people in even this remote part of the world are very familiar with American culture in all its manifestations?
Yeah, Australia is not particularly any more remote than England is. But you're not supposed to feel bad about it. Of course everyone knows about American culture and rock music, as I explained its simply the difference between having something that's in your blood or that you are looking at from afar. Rock music has so much to do with the American sense of geography, the American realisation of space, Dwight Eisenhower, Jack Kerouac, John Dos Passos, William Faulkner, Ike Turner ... Everybody. It's all about a certain conception of space and geography and of certain historical connectives.
Also, Dave Grohl better stay the fuck out of it.
I'd love him to join a reformed Les Rallizes Denudes.