Astronauta Desparecido
"Sound And Fury"
Label: Tragic Figures – TFT025
Format: Cassette, Album, Limited Edition, C60
Country: Portugal
Released: 1991
Genre: Electronic
Style: Experimental
Capa
Astronauta Desparecido
"Sound And Fury"
Label: Tragic Figures – TFT025
Format: Cassette, Album, Limited Edition, C60
Country: Portugal
Released: 1991
Genre: Electronic
Style: Experimental
Capa
Grandes canções / melodias, que ouvidas na rádio não saem da cabeça até ao fim do dia.
Trata-se de um fanzine / revista que iniciou agora (2021) a sua publicação, sendo este o número inicial. É editado por um vendedor de K7s do ebay, apresenta apenas 20 páginas em papel grosso/pesado, branco mate, de muito boa qualidade.
É verdade que são apenas 20 páginas mas os artigos são interessante (ver abaixo a respectiva lista).
É um início. Esperemos que vingue, e que expanda o seu número de páginas e artigos.
Artigos:
- Apresentação (ler abaixo) – página 3
- Tarantula Tapes – artigo sobre esta editora canadiana de cassettes, mais ligada ao punk – páginas 4 e 5
- The 2000 Man: Jean-Jacques Perrey – artigo sobre este músico underground, nascido em 1929, pioneiro nas gravações e manipulações sonoras em cassette (interessante) – páginas 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 e 11
- Recensão à nova cassette dos Cabaret Voltaire “Shdaow of Fear” – página 12
- Cassettes Of Distinction (coluna) – começa com a Cassette dos The The – “Soul Mining”, que tem a particularidade de ter todo o álbum gravado no lado A da cassette (grande ideia!) – página 13
- Music on a Budget – coluna sobre a famosa editora Chevron Tapes – página 14, 15 e 16
- Lou Ottens (1926 – 2021) – Artigo / obituário do inventor da cassette (ler artigo abaixo) – página 17
- Recensão da cassette de Paul Weller – “On Sunset”, de 2020 – página 18
- Explicação / justificação do aparecimento deste fanzine / revista – página 19
623 |
Cassette Gazette – Cassette Pirate (REVISTA) |
Issue #1 £3.00
|
Editors: Mathew Woodall Contributors: Matthew Woodall,
Terry Wilson, Dr. Andrew Weber Thank you: Joyce Materego,
Marco Zanoni, Gary Knight, NRC Handelsblad, Koninklijke Philips N.V and all
the cassette pirateers Contacts: Printed by: Mixam UK Ltd. All contents ©
copyright Cassette Pirate 2021 ebay |
N/aA |
2021 |
Cassette Pirate (UK) |
20 |
Revista / Fanzine / Cassette / Música / Suportes Musicais |
N/A |
Comprei no ebay por £3.00 + £3.00 de portes à
+/- 8€ Em Maio / Junho de 1991
Cassette Pirate é mesmo o “nome” de um gajo que vende cassettes
no eaby e que decidiu agora lançar esta revista… |
Cassette Pirate
Cassette Gazette # 1
Welcome
to the first issue of the Cassette Pirate ‘Cassette Gazette.’
For a
potted history of how Cassette Pirate came to be here, please refer to the last
page. Much like the origin of Cassette Pirate itself, the idea for a
cassette-based journal has been knocking around in the back of my mind for some
time.
I have
always been an advocate of the fanzine, not only because it is free from the
limitations of mainstream publications but also because its DIY ethic lends
itself perfectly to the subversive glamour of home-taping as well as the warmth
and intimacy of the home-made mix-tape.
Just the
cassette tape (whether old or newly released) is niche and no longer mainstream,
this journal is proud to be of similar standing.
As
cassettes are portable, tactile and eminently analogue, I figured that most
readers would appreciate the significance of a publication that imbues similar
qualities.
That
said, this journal is not intended to simply be a tedious nostalgia trip, but
something more constructive and wide ranging, that can be enjoyed by anyone
with a passion for music and recorded sound in general.
Thank
you again to all my loyal supporters over the years, who have inspired this
title venture and welcome to the future of the cassette tape!
M.W.
LOU
OTTENS (1926-2021)
It
wouldn’t be right to launch the first issue of a cassette-based journal without
mentioning Lou Ottens, the Dutch engineer responsible for the invention of the
cassette tape, who died aged 94 at his home inn the village of Duizel in North
Brabant on 6 March.
Ottens revolutionized
the music industry, firstly with the cassette tape and later when he became
involved in the invention of the CD. He remained modest about both accolades
saying: ‘We were little boys who had fun playing. We didn’t feel like we were
doing anything big. It was a kind of sport.’
Born in
1926, he demonstrated an early interest in engineering and electronics, building
a radio as a teenager, enabling his family to receive Radio Oranje broadcasts
during Germany’s wartime occupation of the Netherlands.
After
the war, Ottens gained an engineering degree, and in 1952, began working at the
Philips factory in Hasselt, Belgium. He became head of Product Development, and
within a year had launched the EL 3585, a portable, battery-powered reel to
reel recorder with a microphone. Although the EL 3585 sold well, handling reel
to reel tapes remained fiddly. It was desire to create a simpler format that
led Ottens to make the biggest breakthrough of his career.
‘The
cassette tape was invented out of irritation about the existing tape recorder,
it’s that simple,’ he said. His idea was to create something that would fit
comfortably in his inside jacket pocket. In 1963 the first cassette tape was
unveiled at an electronics fair in Berlin with the tagline ‘Smaller than a pack
of cigarettes!’
Ottens
had anticipated that cassettes would prove useful for industry or enthusiasts
to record sound outdoors. He did not foresee the benefits of the home recording
of music. ‘We expected it to be a success, not a revolution,’ he said.
An
agreement was reached with Sony for the Philips patent to become standard.
Since then, more than 100 billion cassette tapes have been sold.
Ottens
revealed only one regret, which was that Sony and not Philips launched the
first Walkman. ‘It still hurts that we didn’t have one,’ he said.
Regarding
the renewed popularity of vinyl and more recently, cassette tapes, he said: ‘Nothing
can match the sound of the CD. It is absolutely noise and rumble-free. That
never worked with tape. I have made a lot of record players and I know that the
distortion with vinyl is much higher. I think people mainly hear what they want
to hear.’
M.W.
The Fall
interview
Background
informations: The late John Peel’s favorites, The Fall, were one of several
groups (alongside The Residents, Wire and Whitehouse) that newcomer to the
magazine Andy Pearson (or, simply, Andy P. as he soon became known) forever got
excited about to the point of often inflicting their countless records on me as
a birthday and Xmas presents. With the benefit of hindsight, of course, he was
doing me a huge favor, but I can’t claim to have been to fond of The Fall at
the time. All the same, never wishing to appear completely ungrateful for
anything, the very least I could do in return was succumb to Andy’s offer of an
interview with Mark E. Smith and his then wife Brix for Grim Humour, thus
heralding his triumphant debut into the publishing world. Of course, anybody
still retaining an ear glued to such matters will be fully aware of the fact
The Fall continued to remain a going concern for Smith until his untimely death
in late January 2018. Until this sad news interrupted proceedings it was quite
probable that the group would have kept going until he finally alumped over his
doubtlessly battered typewriter with his chemical-drenched muse gasping as it
witnessed the last word spewing across a sheet of A4, such was the
determination afoot. And, think whatever you like about The Fall, their place
in the music history has been long secured and seized upon as a huge source of
inspiration for countless others, particularly former runners in the US and NZ
underground such as Sonic Youth, Pavement, The Dead C. and various others prone
to pontificating over slovenly instrumentation and all manner of musical
imperfections most would do their utmost to iron out in their inevitable quest
to sound more ‘professional’ as time goes on. UK duo Sleaford Mods have often
been compared to The Fall, too, and whilst there are certain similarities in
their approach, at least on a surface level, they’re far more coincidental than
anything else. All the same, this once again illustrates just how great a stamp
The Fall made on the public consciousness.
Original interview:
Since
forming in Manchester in 1977, The Fall have continued to produce a succession
of progressive and highly individual records which, although usually totally
ignored by trendy ‘experimentalists’, have produced a sound as far from Culture
Club, and Duran Duran drivel as is possible without losing the factor of
‘entertainment’. The following interview took place just before their December
gig at the Electric Ballroom, which coincided with the release of their latest
LP, Perverted by Language. Group members present were Mark E. Smith and his
wife Brix, who plays guitar and adds backing vocals.
GH
You’ve been playing material from your new album live for some time now. Do you
prefer playing unrecorded material?
MARK
We’ve been doing it for about nine months… we just wrote the songs. It’s a
natural process to play ‘em. It’s not out of any sort of principle. Especially
with record companies being as they are, you have to wait so long if you only
want to do stuff you’ve recorded.
GH You
tend not to do old songs, though…
MARK
Sometimes we do… you’d be surprised. Brix helps me a lot with the set, ‘cos
what I was finding I was doing was sort of a quest for the perfect set, so I
was spending all me bleeding time, sort of two hours before we went on,
scribbling on bits of paper, trying to get a proper order. It’s good to have
another viewpoint sometimes.
GH Your
live shows are much more effective than your recorded work. Do you see this as
a drawback?
MARK
Well, they are two different worlds altogether. We have come to terms with
recording. A lot of the time, we don’t like recording, but we’re going to spend
a lot more time on it in the future… we throw a lot of studio time away, in
fact, by doing new songs, y’know. By the time we get into the studio, we’re
usually fed up with what we were going to do, so we’ll do something different,
which will take longer.
GH A
recent review of one of your gigs criticized people dancing. Do you prefer
people to dance or just to listen?
BRIX I
would say dance…
MARK It
doesn’t do any harm… as long as they think the music’s good enough…
GH Your
stage show has often been criticized, but at your recent Brixton Ace gig a
lavishly costumed character came on stage during ‘Tempo House’ to read out
press reports. What was he doing?
MARK
That was Allan Pellay, who just, like, hangs around when we come to London. The
song finishes with no guitar or vocals. I thought it would be a good idea to
have a report journal of how we’re supposed to be getting on.
GH What
happened to the single version of ‘Marquis Cha-Cha’?
MARK
Err, well, we were in Australia and the record company we were on (Kamara) did,
like, a dirty on us and pressed ‘em up wrong. As we were away, the record
company, which was only two blokes anyway, handed it over to some bloke from
The Face (NB: The Face was another monthly magazine devoted to music and culture,
albeit the more stylized end of it, generally, with fashion playing as
prominent a role within its pages as everything else. Very occasionally, it
featured somebody interesting, but its core interest appeared to be in priming
its readers to be ‘hip’ and possess whatever ‘street credibility’ may have been
necessary in order to get along in the art colleges, boutiques, clothes shops
and hip bars they all doubtlessly hung around at. On the, ho hum, ‘face’ of it,
it wasn’t an especially great magazine but, rather, a generally pathetic ‘style
bible’ – Ed.) or summat, and he did the cover too, which he fucked up… It’s out
again now, ‘cos the company went bankrupt and sold, like, 500 copies to pay the
bills. If you look at it, it’s got ‘Papal Visit’ as the B-side, and it’s really
“Room to Live’, which is, like, a complete fuck up… it wasn’t that funny at the
time, but he didn’t press that many up as we (weren’t) into the idea. So it was
out, then we went away, and when we got back it justn’t wasn’t mentioned.
GH
Kamara didn’t do the Room to Live LP right as well, did they?
MARK
Yeah, it wasn’t mean to be an LP, in fact. There are only seven songs on it,
and two of them are short. It’s only, like, ten minutes a side. It was meant to
be a big single and sell for £2.00 odd.
GH Going
on to your more recent stuff, one of the verses in ‘Ludd Gang’ goes on about
Shakin’ Stevens. What’s the song about, cheap nostalgia?
BRIX
It’s anti-Shakin’ Stevens! We hate him!
MARK
Yeah, all that sort of stuff… like, where I live in Manchester, the houses and
all that crap. The Luddites were from where I’m from; they used to smash
machines and stuff. I don’t know whether it’s nostalgia. I just thought that
would be good ‘cos, like, ‘Blue Christmas’ by Elvis Presley was a really
beautiful record, and to hear that bastard (Shakin’ Stevens) do it really
pissed me off. In fact, the cover to that was also fucked up, ‘cos the cover I
did for ‘Ludd Ganf’ was really good, weren’t it?
BRIX Oh,
err, yeah – sorry, I’ve forgotten the tape recorder can’t see me nod my head!
GH Why
was the cover of ‘The Man Whose Head Expanded” so different to any of your
previous artwork?
MARK
Well, I wrote the song on a home computer, hahaha! That’s why the computer
lines are all across it. That’s just a joke! But, seriously, the way they do
covers now has changed. You seem to be able to get more colours. They’re no so
bothered with expense.
GH Why
did you choose to sell ‘Kicker Conspiracy’ as a double pack, including the
older tracks?
MARK
Well, it was part of Rough Trade’s smart ideas, which usually fall flat on
their faces, but it appealed to me in the way that it was a bit disorientated;
it sorta fits in with ‘Wings’, which is about time and stuff. It was something
no-one would expect us to do. I was surprised to find out how different those
tracks were as well… people did actually want ‘em.
GH
‘Kicker Conspiracy’ is about football hooliganism. Do you enjoy writing about
controversial subjects?
MARK
Yeah, well, if you’re going to do a single it’s got to be either a dance tune
or very interesting, and the idea of, like, writing a song about football
hooliganism appealed to me… like, inn a rock song, it made me laugh. The idea
behind it was to question whether it’s so bad anyway, y’know… question why
everyone gets so worked up about it. I don’t see the point. If you send English
people abroad, it’s obvious they’re going to fight. It’s talking about England,
in a way. I think it’s good to put stuff like that in a song, y’know… it’s not
like people like ABC, who think that getting serious is talking about fucking
egg on toast and stuff. That sort of thing really makes me sick.
GH Do
you get annoyed that a a lot of people don’t recognize the humour in your
lyrics?
MARK I
think that’s a lot of fun. I mean, anyone who says they’re not funny, the jokes
on them. I think it’s good that people can share in it, like, without it having
to be fucking shoved forward in an advertisement, like, “WE ARE FUNNY”, ‘cos
then there’s not much point in it.
GH Do
you enjoy doing narratives, such as ‘Wings’, ‘Spectre vs. Rector’ and ‘New Face
in Hell’?
MARK
I’ve gotta admit I like doing ‘em, but a lot of people won’t get ‘em,
especially in one night… but the challenge of them interests me, and I think
the weirdness of ‘em is good.
GH
What’s the ‘Haxan’ thing that crops up a lot in your lyrics?
MARK
Haxan is a German word for a group of witches around a cauldron. There’s no
such word as ‘enduction, though I could have sworn I’d seen it after I wrote ir
down…
GH Why
don’t you ever include lyric sheets with your records?
MARK
Err, we just thought we’d take the fun out of it, really. It’s a boring job
saying, like, “I’m very important, look at me. I’m writing lyrics on the back
of records.”
GH Then
why do you include vague notes on the covers?
MARK
That is just to confuse a lot of the time, hahaha, but also to give an insight
to the songs.
GH How
did you get on The Tube, and why did you do two unreleased tracks?
BRIX
Well, one is on the album (Smile), and it was on a Peel session…
MARK It
didn’t strike me to do any of our old stuff.
BRIX
They’d expect you to do something like ‘Kicker’ so, y’know, why do it?
MARK It
was good actually as they didn’t want us on, like John Peel wanted us on. We
were shoved on really early. It was great. I thought ‘cos we had a load of shit
to put up with. It was funny. They wanted to put dry ice on the stage, drum elevations,
stuff like that.
GH I
read recently that you were going to be on a Cherry Red compilation cassette
along with groups such as Virgin Prunes and Throbbing Gristle. What happened to
this?
MARK
I’ve no idea. I believe the bloke who was getting it together has left now. All
it was was a live version of ‘Slates’ from Berlin or somewhere. It was some
sorts double cassette with so many acts on it. It would have been good.
GH
You’re releasing a video soon. Could you give some details about this?
MARK Err,
we thought we’d do it ‘cos Factory Records have now got, like, a video part
called Ikon, run by a good mate of mine, the video DJ at The Hacienda, and he
said there would be a lot of interest. It’s like a hotchpotch of stuff… there’s
some live stuff, ‘Kicker Conspiracy’ filmed at a football ground… I don’t
really like watching rock videos, so I was trying to make a laugh out of it.
It’s pretty funny when we mime and stuff. It’s come out really good. It should
cost about £12.00.
GH Now
that you are married, are we ever likely to hear you singing love songs?
MARK I
don’t know… hahaha… I was thinking about it in the other day. Surely, if you’ve
been married, you’ve been in love, so that’s it, you don’t need to write about
it. Hahaha! It’s not as you if you’re homosexual like Marc Almond and you,
like, want to put it into a song… hahaha!
BRIX We
don’t do love songs, but we sing duets on things like ‘Creep’…
MARK
Yeah, but… I’ve never wanted to write one. I’ve never seen the appeal in ‘em… I
like some (though).
BRIX
They’re sloppy and embarrassing. It’s like showing your underpants in public.
I’d feel embarrassed if he wrotes one. I wouldn’t want him to sing it. I’d
feel, like, “Oh god, everyone knows it’s about me, fucking hell…”
GH What
do you think of bands like The Birthday Party, The Nightingales and The Smiths,
who claimed to have been ‘inspired’ by your musical style?
MARK
Enough said… hahaha. No, The Birthday Party have always been alright by me…
BRIX
Shall I say… The Nightingales, never heard of ‘em… The Smiths, no comment, NO
FUCKING COMMENT!
MARK I
do like several of The Nightingales’ singles, I must admit. They used to play
with us a lot. I was a big fan of The Perfects…
GH To
end with, do you ever think The Fall will ever become superstars and appear on
Top Of The Pops?
MARK I
think there’s an outside chance… hahaha… I don’t see why not… when the others
catch up with us!
The
Fall: Selected Discography
NB: The
Fall possibly rank as the most prolific group to have emerged from post-punk.
As all the other discographies noted, we are just focusing on several releases
especially liked or lauded here. Most of The Fall’s official output is worth
getting, anyway. Of course, you can find the complete discography online, but
here’s a selection from some of the records personally owned, at least. Nearly
all the early albums have been released on either CD or vinyl via different
labels.
‘It’s
the New Thing’ 7” (Step-Forward, 1978)
‘Bingo-Master’s
Break Out’ 7” (Step-Forward, 1978)
Live at
the Witch Trials LP (Step-Forward, 1979)
Dragnet
LP (Step-Forward, 1979)
‘How I
Wrote Elastic Man’ 7” (Rough Trade, 1980)
Hex
Enduction Hour LP (Camera, 1982)
Perverted
By Language LP (Rough Trade, 1983)
The
Wonderful and Frightening World Of… (Beggars Banquet, 1984)
This Nation’s
Saving Grace LP (Beggars Banquet, 1985)
The
Frenz Experiment LP + 7” (Beggars Banquet, 1988)
Extricate
LP (Cog Sinister, 1990)
Code:
Selfish LP (Cog Sinister, 1992)
Cerebral
Caustic LP (Cog Sinister, 1995)
Levitate
LP (Artful, 1997)
Are You
Are Missing Winner LP (Cog Sinister, 2001)
Fall
Heads Roll LP (Slogan, 2005)
Reformation
Post TLC 2LP (Slogan, 2007)
Your
Future Our Clutter CD (Domino, 2010)
Re-Mit
LP/CD (Cherry Red, 2013)
Sub-Lingual
Tablet LP (Cherry Red, 2015)
New
Facts Emerge CD/2x10” (Cherry Red, 2017)
Mark’s
Personal Holiday Tony Tapes LP (Dandelion Records, 2019)
Agora em Portugal - BUBOK - clique na imagem
Agora em Portugal - BUBOK - clique na imagem
Agora em Portugal - BUBOK - clique na imagem
Agora em Portugal - BUBOK - clique na imagem
Agora em Portugal - BUBOK - clique na imagem
Agora em Portugal - BUBOK - clique na imagem
Agora em Portugal - BUBOK - clique na imagem
Agora em Portugal - BUBOK - clique na imagem
Agora em Portugal - BUBOK - clique na imagem
Agora em Portugal - BUBOK - clique na imagem
Agora em Portugal - BUBOK - clique na imagem