Cool and Strange Music Vol. 2, Number 4
by
Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers
by Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers
Thanks
for the great letters from all you lucky folks who bought a CD or
two from my
last review. I do appreciate it.
Also,
thanks for the letters of condolence from all of you who alertly
read the by-line at the bottom of my previous article. It said,
..."He has the distinction of being fired from every FM radio
station in Tokyo one of them three times..." One nice lady
said she felt sorry for me and wished me well. Aw shucks. Don't
worry about me. I wear my being fired from every FM station as a
proud badge of honor. If you have ever heard FM radio in Japan,
then you'd understand why. It's bleeding awful. They are all Top
40 stations. Imagine if Clear Channel owned every radio station
in your area and that was all you could tune into FM hell.
That's what FM radio in Japan is like. Every station is not owned
by the same company, but they might as well be, they all play the
exact same music. If Brittany Spears has a new hit song out, you
can bet that every lame-o station in Tokyo is playing it... Sometimes
at the very same moment. Can you imagine that? No, don't even try
to you might get sick. So don't feel sorry for me. I made
the best shows that those loser stations ever had. My shows were
consistently number one in ratings. If the people running these
stations don't get it, then that's their problem (and it is as their
problem as ratings have slowly and consistently declined since the
inception of FM in Japan in 1979).
Also,
I should mention that there are only five FM stations in the Tokyo
Metropolitan area. Twenty-seven million people here and we only
have 5 lousy stations. There are four just outside of the Tokyo
area. I've also been fired from all of those too. But hey! Who's
counting, right?
Let's
just say that I'm not corporate schlock material. I want to play
good music, new music, something a bit different that's interesting
for people who really like music. I want to play music for people
who are sick and tired of the same old thing over and over. I want
to play music for people who want to live! People who enjoy adventure!
Unfortunately, that's where the problem always arose for me here.
The station drones thought that if a song wasn't on the Billboard
charts, then it couldn't be any good. I thought, as a general rule,
that if a song was on the Billboard charts, then it must be crap.
So that's it. I'm right. They are wrong. Period.
Okay,
now that I've gotten that off my chest, let's get into some of the
crazy and groovy tunes I've got for you adventurous folks today!
Ill-Conceived
PDQ Bach Anthology PDQ Bach
List
Price: $18.98
One
of the stations that fired me was run formerly, quite successfully,
by the father. Then the father retired and let his idiot son take
over. The son like someone you all know and love so well
is a total moron. Need I say more? The dad was fairly cool
and he and I got along quite well. One day he came into my studio
with another gentleman from England and he asked me if a Classical
Music station in Tokyo could be profitable. "Of course." I answered.
That's an easy call, actually. If everyone else is playing Top 40,
then it only makes sense to go after a niche market. 810%
of all record sales in Tokyo are Classical Music. All you need to
do is get the word out and capture 100% of that 810% and you'd
be pretty healthy, I'd imagine. Also, the Classical Music Market
would yield some pretty heavy-hitter sponsors: Toyota, Japan Airlines,
Honda, etc, instead of companies that sell pimple pads.
I
then went on to play some music for him that I thought fans of Classical
Music as well as fans of Pop Music would just love. First up to
bat would just have to be PDQ Bach.
In
the CD booklet, PDQ claims to be, "The twenty-first of Johann Sebastian
Bach's twenty children." What can I say about PDQ? I think
the guy is genius. He definitely has a great sense of humor too.
The music is par excellence! PDQ handles his Classical Music
from a totally different perspective than you've ever heard before.
He introduces each record as if he knows what was going on in the
original composers mind, then he twists them and turns them upside
down for a rollicking fun and beautifully constructed and performed
"masterpiece." My favorite song is "Classical Rap." PDQ takes
Vivaldi and uses it to rap about the pitfalls of being the world's
greatest Classical rapper.
How
about these rap lines:
"I'm
doing pretty well for myself right now,
I'm
pulling down about $80 thou,
My
wife makes $40,
she's
a Vassar grad,
and
for a woman,
that
ain't half bad...
So
we're talkin' 6 figures here,
but
I want to make one thing crystal clear,
I
have to laugh,
and
I have to scoff
at
people who think that we're well off.
Anyone
who thinks we're sittin' pretty,
doesn't
know what life is like in the big, bad city.
You
gotta buy your apartment,
but
the mortgage will be
a
mere pittance compared to the maintenance fee.
To
get a light-bulb changed in the hall
takes
27 men it's a union call..."
He
then goes on to complain about the costs of tipping the doormen,
the cleaning lady, waiters at French restaurants, the valet parking,
etc., And don't forget the membership fees to stuff like the Golf
Club, Book-of-the-month, the Monthly Flower Club, the Zoo, etc,...
Finally I just crack up at these lines:
"You
will never have money,
you
can never relax,
with
a federal, state, and city income-tax.
And
you can't do your own returns, oh no!
You
might end paying what you owe!"
If
you like humor and if you like Classical Music; if you think Spike
Jones is funny; or if you'd like to wean those kids off the Hit
Parade of Hell, then PDQ Bach is as good a bet as you can
get!
Harpo
in Hi Fi/Harpo at Work Harpo Marx
List
Price: $18.98
According
to the FBI dossier on all you LRC readers, I see where just about
all of you are Marx Brothers fans. With how incompetent our government
is today, I wonder how this all came about? Could it be that you've
all watched the movie, Duck Soup, one too many times?
The
Marx Brothers Silver Screen Collection (The Cocoanuts / Animal
Crackers / Monkey Business / Horse Feathers / Duck Soup)
List
Price: $59.98 On Sale Now: $44.99
Harpo
Marx will always be remembered as one of the world's best-loved
and funniest comedians. But that doesn't take into account that
he was also one of the world's foremost self-taught serious and
uniquely tasteful musicians.
This
CD is a steal at $18.98. It features Harpo's first two solo records
in full and has Harpo doing renditions of the songs that were the
hits of the day as well as a couple of Harpo originals. The sound
quality is great and the label, Collector's Choice, has done a fantastic
job of putting this rarity together. Harpo does his renditions of
"I Got Rhythm," "My Funny Valentine," and "Autumn Leaves," just
to name a few. There are 24 tracks in all and this is the perfect
choice for winding down after a tough day at the office. Buy this
CD and see a side of Harpo that you probably never knew existed.
Star
Wars Trilogy [6 Disc] [Box Set] [Soundtrack] John Williams
List
Price: $59.98 On Sale Now: $47.99
Okay,
okay, Star Wars time again, is it? Okay folks, that means
your kids (and husband) are going to go Star Wars nuts over
Star Wars toys and junk very soon, if they haven't already.
That also means that, this Christmas, you won't be able to buy anything
that they want isn't that the way it always is?
Star
Wars: Millennium Falcon (Galactic)
Price:
$29.99
So
old Mike is here to help you out. For you fans of Star Wars
"stuff" toys, figurines, dollies, etc., I recommend the above
box set. I believe that as a "collectible" or as a present, this
is your best bet. It's on sale. Six CD's for $47.99, that's $7.99
per disk. And it's in a handsome box, which makes it look presentable
as a present or collectable for yourself. Plus, you get free
shipping. What more could you want?
Here's
what Amazon.com has to say:
Given
that it's largely credited with reinventing Hollywood or
at least fostering its overweening box office expectations
it's hard to imagine that the genesis of George Lucas' sprawling,
multi-billion dollar Star Wars franchise was once considered
a risky studio proposition at best. But Lucas himself has wisely
singled out the robust, retro-romantic music of composer John
Williams as the unlikely artistic linchpin that holds all of the
saga's disparate dramatic, thematic and technical elements firmly
together. Boxed together here then are three of the most successful
and influential film scores of modern Hollywood, work that draws
as much on Williams' masterful sense of classical music history
as it does his own well-studied melodic and arranging instincts.
Each of the three double-disc collections here contains all of
the music written for Star Wars: A New Hope, Empire
Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi (and even Alfred
Newman's introductory "Fox Fanfare"), newly upgraded via Direct
Stream Digital remastering that adds stunning new presence and
clarity to Williams' rousing, epochal scores. Each chapter also
features a lenticular 3-D cover and newly designed fold-out film
poster, as well as encoded disc features allowing online access
to elaborate new Star Wars screen savers; the ultimate
musical compendium of the original Star Wars triptych.
Now,
if you just want the music for the new movie only, here's the link
to that. I still think you'd be better off buying the box, though.
Star
Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith Original Motion
Picture Soundtrack [Soundtrack] John Williams
List
Price: $18.98 On Sale Now: $13.49
The
last time I actually went to a movie theater to see a movie was
about five years ago. I went to see some Charlie Chaplin silent
movies as they were meant to be shown. Before that I saw the Japan
premiere of Star Wars Episode One. What a crap movie that was. The
best part of the movie was when, in a quiet theater of about 1000
people, the good guy killed the bad guy and I jumped from my seat
and yelled, "Woah, yeah!" Everyone just stared at me and my wife
told me to shut-up and sit down. Besides that, it was quite an uninteresting
and uneventful evening. Even my kids were bored.
The
Chaplin Collection, Vol. 1 (Modern Times / The Great Dictator /
The Gold Rush / Limelight)
List
Price: $79.92 On Sale Now: $63.94
This
Pop Movie Culture stuff gets to me. They all go in cycles. First
we get the space movies, aliens and invasions included; then we
get off onto some silly dinosaur kick; then we go to some dance
craze; then it's back to the alien nonsense again. Recently, the
Terrorist Craze has been a pretty popular notion, I gather.
A
far as movies and stories go, well, beauty in the eye of the beholder.
Instead of paying $17 to wait in line to see a dumb movie, I'd rather
wait until the movies come on TV to miss it I don't watch TV either.
But there have been some really super movie soundtracks that I can
highly recommend.
Planet
Of The Apes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Also
Featuring Music From Escape From The Planet Of The Apes [Soundtrack]
Jerry Goldsmith
List
Price: $16.98 On Sale Now: $14.99
The
first is the soundtrack from the original Planet Of The Apes
movie. Now this was a great soundtrack. The movie? Well,... I remember
watching as a kid at a drive-in theater with my mom and dad and
I was terrified. The guy in the next car to us was laughing his
head off. So I guess the movie had its merits. If you are wondering
what is more enjoyable: Charlton Heston in a loincloth or the excellent
soundtrack from the movie, then I think you'd better stick with
the soundtrack. This movie came out in 1968 and the music is a trip.
Jerry Goldsmith composed all the scores and this must have really
blew people's minds when it came out. I highly recommend this superb
soundtrack.
Come
to think of it, that record jacket looks pretty darned silly too!
That's definitely worth a laugh or two.
Planet
of the Apes DVD (Widescreen 35th Anniversary Edition)
(1968)
List
Price: $26.98 On Sale Now: $24.28
A
Clockwork Orange: Wendy Carlos's Complete Original Score [Soundtrack]
Wendy Carlos
List
Price: $16.98
This
is my favorite movie score of all time. It was one of the most eagerly
awaited film scores to be released. This was the first completely
electronic score to be composed for a major motion picture. Stanley
Kubrick could have picked no one better to do the job than Wendy
Carlos, either. And think about this, this music is not digital
it was created completely on an old Moog synthesizer. Moog synthesizer's
were analog and could only play one note at a time, that means that
this soundtrack must have been a major pain in the you-know-what
to record. But here it is in all its glory. Just put on the headphones
and relax in the Beethovian world that Carlos created. This album
is legendary. One listen and you'll see why too! And while you are
at it, you might want to really get into another world by reading
the original Anthony Burgess novel at the same time too.
A
Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
List
Price: $13.95 On Sale Now: $11.16
So,
for you droogies, here's what Anthony Burgess wrote: ."..
a human being is endowed with free will. He can use this to
choose between good and evil. If he can only perform good or
only perform evil, then he is a clockwork orange meaning that
he has the appearance of an organism lovely with colour and
juice but is in fact only a clockwork toy to be wound by God
or the Devil or (since this is increasingly replacing both)
the Almighty State. It is as inhuman to be totally good as it
is to be totally evil.
...I
don't think I have to remind readers what the title means. Clockwork
oranges don't exist, except in the speech of old Londoners. The
image was a bizarre one always used for a bizarre thing. "He is
as queer as a clockwork orange" meant he was queer to the limit
of queerness. It did not primarily denote homosexuality, though
a queer, before restricitve legislature came in, was the term
used for a member of the inverted fraternity. Europeans who translated
the title as Arancia a Orologeria or Orange Mecanique could not
understand its Cockney resonance and they assumed that it meant
a hand grenade, a cheaper kind of explosive pineapple. I mean
it to stand for the application of a mechanistic morality to a
living organism oozing with juice and sweetness."
The
first time I ever saw Clockwork Orange was when I was a college
student and I walked into another class and they were watching this
movie. I thought, "What the heck is going on here?" I sat and watched
for a little while. Later, when the film finished, I decided to
skip all of my classes for the rest of that day and I sat and watched
this timelessly frightening and sometimes comical
movie at least four times in a row. It still stands as one of my
favorite films of all time. And while we're here, I might as well
link you to the DVD:
A
Clockwork Orange (1972)
List
Price: $19.97 Now On Sale: $14.98
Easy
Tempo V.7 [Import] Various Artists
List
Price: $32.49
Don't
let that $32.49 price tag put you off. This is one of the best CD's
I own and I own more than 10,000. In fact, I was surprised when
I found this CD listed on Amazon. I had searched for this gem for
years before I finally got lucky.
This
is by far the best of the Easy Tempo series. It's a totally fantastic
and funk-a-delic collection of Italian B-movie soundtracks from
the 1960's and 70's. And it's way groovy, baby. In fact, I know
that Austin Powers plays this CD constantly in his car. The songs
on this particular album cover the period of 1966 to 1975, but all
share a go-go beat and a terrifically sexy undertone. This collection
has a cooler "rock" influence than others in the series, and that's
what makes it so enjoyable to listen to. You'll love this fun, but
still incredibly easy to fall in love with Lounge music CD.
Austin
Powers 3-Pack (International Man of Mystery / The Spy
Who Shagged Me / Goldmember)
List
Price: $26.97 Now On Sale: $24.27
The
album just oozes with Lalo Schifrin (Mission Impossible)
references and catchy riffs borrowed from 1960s rock classics. This
album, as is, would be the perfect soundtrack for a swinging international
man-of-mystery bachelor pad party minus the Britanny Spears
nonsense and will definitely make you the coolest kid on
your block. Not only is it too cool and great for parties it's also
just fab for tearing off the necktie and winding down with a Martini
or a shot or two of Scotch. But beware, if you play this CD too
much, the neighbors may think that Hugh Hefner has moved into your
pad. Don't say you weren't forewarned!
Music
From Mission: Impossible (19661973 Television Series) [Soundtrack]
Lalo Schifrin
List
Price: $11.98
The
Complete Mercury Recordings [Original Recording Remastered]
Flatt & Scruggs
List
Price: $18.98 Now On Sale: $14.99
Y’all
know who these two guys are. They made the theme song for the classic
TV show, The Beverly Hillbillies ("The Ballad of Jed Clampett")
and they used to appear on a TV show called, Hee Haw. Is
Hee Haw still on TV? Anyway, I don't care if you claim to
not like Country Music or Bluegrass. Nobody dislikes this music.
I love it. These two guys can play their instruments as easy and
effortlessly as you or I can scratch our heads. And that's what
you'll be doing if you listen closely to this fabulous record. Just
how does a human play that fast and that well? Heck if I know.
This
is all of Flatt & Scruggs from the Mercury years and it's a
steal at only $14.99. Until now, this music was only available on
various albums or records, but now you can find them all in one
place. If you want to hear some real music or turn your long-haired
heavy metal playing son onto some mighty fine playing and show him
how it's really done, then this is the record for you! Fantastic
for playing while you are stuck in those long rush-hour traffic
jams too!
Pickin'
on the Beatles, Vol. 1 & 2 Pickin' On
List
Price: $19.98
So
your kids won't have an open enough mind to actually sit down and
listen to Flatt & Scruggs, eh? Well, that's a darned shame.
Alright, then, let's go to Plan B. Here's some of today's finest
young Bluegrass musicians getting together for a hootenanny playing
Beatles numbers. And you are darned tootin' that these good ol'
boys are having a good time and will be getting everyone else into
the fun.
Some
mighty fine picking and playing of some mighty fine tunes. Shoot,
this might even be better than the originals. And I just ain't whistling
Dixie here, either. Try this record out for some great songs done
in a way that you could have never imagined. Five stars and a bottle
of Moonshine!
Well,
that's it for today. I don't want to break the bank. Check out all
these fine CD's and DVD's and, as my North Carolina born dad would
say, "I guarn-dam-tee you will be more than satisfied." And don't
forget, that old gift-giving season is right around the corner and
will be here sooner than you think (I've finished my Christmas shopping
already no kidding). So what are you waiting for?
Drop
me a line and let me know how much you enjoyed today's selection
and gift ideas. Until then, stay Cool & Strange (and groovy),
baby!
May
28, 2005
Mike
(in Tokyo) Rogers [send
him mail] was born and raised in the USA and moved to Japan
in 1984. He has the distinction of being fired from every FM radio
station in Tokyo – one of them three times. His first book, Schizophrenic
in Japan, goes on sale in July.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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(in Tokyo) Rogers Archives
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