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there are 3 titles featuring tully in stock.
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$20.01

back in stock as of
november 30th, 2011

first in stock on
december 15th, 2007


threads:
psych-prog
film-video

em (japan) #em 1069 cd

tamam shudevolution (o.s.t.)” compact disc

  • (a) music train (b) evolution *
  • i'm no one
  • mr strange
  • lady sunshine
  • falling up
  • feel free
  • it's a beautiful day
  • jesus guide me
  • rock on top
  • slow one and the fast one
  • too many life

  • bali waters
  • got a feeling
  • my father told me
em press release...
tamam shud
evolution (music feat. on paul witzig's movie "evolution")

* originally issued in 1969.
* cardboard special cd case
* 3 bonus tracks from their non-album recordings of "bali waters e.p"
* english/japanese texts.
* lyrics/scarce photos inside
* original jkt cover art

liner notes written by: paul witzig and stephen mcparland (surf music historian).


featured the songs for another classic australian surf movie "evolution" filmed by paul witzig in 1969, played by australian group called tamam shud. this surfer quartet featured lindsay bjerre and tim gaze, both of them were successful for their solo career.

tamam shud was one of the most original and innovative australian groups of the late 60s and early 70s. they played a very important part as pioneers of acid-rock and progressive music. for many years after they split they were something of a cult, and their original recordings were (and still are) very hard to obtain. but thanks to a gratifying 'comeback', and some commercial success with their 1994 album permanent culture, and the driving, bluesy single stay, there has been a significant revival of interest in this outstanding and original group, and it sparked interest in this classic band with younger listeners as well.

the evolution of shud was typical of many groups of the era, beginning as an instrumental band, through 'beat' pop group and psychedelia, to progressive rock.. from the original line-up (the sunsets), through to evolution, goolutionites, morning of the earth and permanent culture line-ups, the lingering "surf band" tag linked them with sydney's northern beaches surf culture. in reality, they established their major fan base on sydney's university and college dance circuit, and with the 'hippy' audiences at inner city underground venues like the mandala theatre in darlinghurst and the beacon theatre in newtown.

a bonus track, bali water (m-12) is featured richard lockwood (from tully) and played his etheriaal flute for this aesthetic & mystic psychdelia instrumental tune which became one of highlights of this cd.

----------------------------------------

evolution burst explosively on the surfing world in 1969, heralding a period a dynamic change which has never been repeated. the raw energy of the film, the surfing and the music came together to blow away old film & surf music styles, & seeded a youth culture which has swept the world ..... paul witzig

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back in stock as of
november 30th, 2011

first in stock on
december 15th, 2007


threads:
psych-prog
film-video

em (japan) #em 1068 cd

tullysea of joy (o.s.t.)” compact disc

  • sea of joy (part 1) (lockwood)
  • pseudo-tragic-dramatic (firth)
  • follow me (campbell)
  • cat-clarinet mit orgel (lockwood-carlos)
  • trinidad (campbell)
  • i feel the sun (campbell)
  • thank you (campbell-stewart)
  • syndrone (tully)
  • softly
  • softly (firth)
  • brother sun (firth)
  • down to the sea (campbell)
  • sea of joy (part 2) (lockwood)
em press release...
tully
sea of joy (the music from the film by paul witzig)

* originally issued in 1972
* cardboard special cd case with booklet
* english/japanese texts
* a lot of rare photos/lyrics
* original jkt cover art

featured on booklet; liner notes written by paul witzig, original members of tully & stephen mcparland


first time re-issue & on cd of the music for the classic australian surf movie filmed by paul witzig in 1970, starring wayne lynce, nat young and ted spencer. filmed in australia, mauritius, south africa, oahu and kauai. the music was all written & performed by a psychedelic rock acid folk outfit called tully featuring richard lockwood and michael carlos.

tully, the band that recorded sea of joy, was the precocious child of two very different creatures, tully the first (wild psychdelic & spiritual progressive rock) and extradition (ethernal acid folk sounds, later survived the album "hush"). they played together once then became tully the second. the music they played for the soundtrack was engrossing and particularly enchanting (and still is!). you may find there will be nothing to compare such a recording with other surf soundtracks or surfing related music in whole surf music history (even now). acid-deep-psyche-progressive-rock-folk surf on in early 1970s!

some tracks were heard on the movie, but actually many of them are different version and arrangement (or feeling like so) for this long player, its rightly much higher audiolable quality than we hear on the original film.

sea of joy, a title borrowed from the blind faith song of the same name (featured on the group's 1969 self-titled longplayer), was, as a film, a relaxing experience instead of the usual "story" or "travelogue". uncrowded waves from australia to africa to hawaii were a strong feature of the film and there was a serene beauty to the production.

geoff watson in his review of the film in the surfing tabloid tracks (issue #8) commented, "paul witzig takes us into his child's world in his newest film. it is a world of puppy dogs and slow motion pony rides, of fish eye gnomes and laughing faces. the grown-ups are friendly and very kind and every day is a holiday."

a style and sound that won them inclusion in lillian roxon's highly acclaimed rock encyclopedia. in fact, they were the only truly australian group included in the book.

(from the liner notes by stephen mcparland)

************************************

"sea of joy is a score filled with evocative memories of an era when youth culture was emerging and searching for a new era of peace and hope of a better world.the world may have lost this path, but the music lives on as a testament to dreams of freedom." ... paul witzig

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new to stock as of
august 1st, 2007


threads:
modern-composition
sound-art
sound-installation
free-improvisation
electro-acoustic-composition
musique-concrète
1960s-electronic
1970s-electronic

 best of 2007 !!! 
shame file music (australia) #sham 050 cd

artefacts of australian experimental music: 1930 - 1973” compact disc

  • jack ellitt "journey #1" excerpt (early 1930s)
  • percy grainger "free music (reed box - top and bottom ranks - thick)" (1951)
  • melbourne dada group (featuring barry humphries) "wubbo music" excerpt (1952)
  • robert rooney "duo 3" (1965)
  • bruce clarke "of spiralling why" excerpt (1966)
  • val stephen "fireworks" (1967)
  • barry mckimm "monotony for eight trumpets" (1967)
  • syd clayton "yehudi" excerpt (1968)
  • arthur cantrill "soundtrack for eikon" (1969)
  • tully "phsssst" (1970)
  • felix werder "oscussion" excerpt (1971)
  • keith humble "and tomorrow" excerpt from an opera (1972)
  • niaggra "excerpt #2" (1973)
  • ron nagorcka "apathetic anomaly 2" excerpt (1973)
awesome collection offering a nicely curated history of early experimental/electronic music & sound art from australia...

this set comes complete as a full-length compact disc housed in a full-color digipak with a 16-page booklet rife with notes, photographs, remembrances, etc... meticulously researched; certainly a labor of love for curator clinton green - an eye-opening survey of an under-documented inlet of 20th century music.

highly recommended !!!
shame file music press release...
shame file music presents a new compilation cd documenting the forgotten history of australian experimental music: artefacts of australian experimental music: 1930 - 1973 is a landmark in the historical research of early australian innovative and exploratory music created and recorded in australia.

over three years of research by clinton green has resulted in this compilation cd that stretches over four decades, a time previously thought by many to be barren of experimental activity in australian music.

artefacts of australian experimental music: 1930 - 1973 was launched as part of the 8th liquid architecture festival. the melbourne launch included a panel discussion on the question of whether there exists a tradition of experimental music that influences contemporary practitoners. the panel featured pauline oliveros, warren burt, clinton green, rainer linz and robin fox.

"many of the early pioneers of australian experimental music have been ignored or forgotten for a long time, and your project will bring to light these important works. i hope your project goes some way towards addressing this gap in the history of australian music." - barry humphries o.a.

"australia is a country that buries its past almost before it occurs in the present. a place with a more developed case of cultural amnesia would be hard to find. in the middle of all this, clinton green's artefacts project stands out as a beacon of the kind of activity we should be having much more of. there is a past there - one that we can be extremely proud of - and clinton's project is one important way we can recover it.” - warren burt.

...

1. jack ellitt "journey #1" excerpt (early 1930s)

ellitt grew up in sydney in the early decades of the twentieth century, where he met the young new zealander len lye (who would later become an important avant-garde film maker and sculptor). ellitt later worked with lye on his films in london from the early 1930s, when ellitt began to create musique concrete compositions on tape. he wrote, somewhat prophetically of contemporary sound art practice, in 1935, "when good recording apparatus is easily acquired, many people will record simple everyday sounds which give them pleasure. the next step would be to mould these sound-snaps into formal continuity" ellitt worked in film for many years and on retiring returned to australia in the 1970s where he continued to work on his sound compositions in private, eschewing attempts from the likes of stockhausen to contact him.

2. percy grainger "free music (reed box - top and bottom ranks - thick)" (1951)

an internationally known composer, pianist and collector of folk music, grainger was perhaps the first australian to record a significant body of experimental music. the central idea of free music was the concept of a "gliding tone". he worked with leon theremin and his theremins in the 1930s in pursuit of this idea. his desire for more precise pitch control led him to work with physicist and engineer burnett cross to construct devices that could produce the gliding tones grainger envisioned. the instrument used on this recording was a reed organ, with two sets of 126 reeds retuned to 48 tones per octave equal temperament. harmonium reeds were used along with hand cut paper rolls, which were cranked by hand, using variations in speed and direction.

3. melbourne dada group (featuring barry humphries) "wubbo music" excerpt (1952)

in early 1950s australia, barry humphries (best known for his dame edna everage character) was introducing neo-dadaism to melbourne audiences with his improvisatory music theatre work and elaborate publicly-staged practical jokes. "wubbo", a pseudo-aboriginal word for "nothing" was used by humphries' dada group to distinguish themselves from their european counterparts. the group's recordings from 1952-3 are possibly the first instances of such experimental work recorded in australia.

4. robert rooney "duo 3" (1965)

rooney's "duo 3" is the final section of the three part work 'duos 1 2 3', played by the mckimm rooney clayton trio. it was recorded for the abc jazz club in august 1965, but was apparently rejected before being broadcast because it was too progressive for the program. each "duo" begins with two performers interpreting the score, while the third improvises over the top of what the other two are playing. each "duo" follows this structure except that there is a rotation of players, so each of the trio takes a turn at improvising whilst the other two interpret the graphic score.

5. bruce clarke "of spiralling why" excerpt (1966)

in the early 1960s, intrigued by the electronic works of stockhausen, clarke began exploring electronic music. during this time a strike by the australian musicians union led to clarke creating an electronic soundtrack for a cigarette commercial. clarke was one of the first in australia to work with early synthesisers, including the moog. "of spiralling why" was one of the first completely electronic compositions produced in australia.

6. val stephen "fireworks" (1967)

val stephen is believed to be the first australian electronic music composer to be released on an international label. "fireworks" is one of two short pieces by stephen included on the folkways records electronic music of 1967. the piece was created by tape manipulation of everyday sounds.

7. barry mckimm "monotony for eight trumpets" (1967)

outside of the mckimm rooney clayton trio, barry mckimm continued to write scores designed as controlling processes for improvisations. he saw such methods as avoiding the repetition and patterning fundamental to jazz improvisation, as well as involving classical musicians in improvisation. "monotony for eight trumpets" is an example of mckimm's work from this period.

8. syd clayton "yehudi" excerpt (1968)

syd clayton's post mrc trio work moved towards music theatre, and he produced many theatrical works that were performed at la mama theatre in carlton, melbourne. many of these works showed heavy cage influences and contained elements of music, theatre and ritual. "yehudi" was the first work clayton composed for "musicians to become actors", who "speak, sing, clap, act, perform magical gestures as well as playing their instrument". clayton's compositional form was a game of cricket, where the brass was one team and the strings another.

9. arthur cantrill "soundtrack for eikon" (1969)

arthur and corinne cantrill have been making films together since the 1960s, initially childrens films and art documentaries as well as short experimental films. their "colour separation" films and expanded cinema led the australian avant-garde film community and also received international acclaim. many of their early soundtracks were created by arthur cantrill using violins, the inside of pianos and tape manipulation. "soundtrack for eikon" is for the 1969 film, and consists of a looped soprano note accompanied by two tracks of cantrill improvising on violin. the sound track is inextricably linked with the films images, which are arranged as a three panel screen, matching the two violins in the left and right channel and the voice in the centre.

10. tully "phsssst" (1970)

tully emerged from the sydney alternative surf culture in 1968. the following year tully became the house band for the australian production of the rock musical hair, which featured a nightly improvised jam; something which must have bewildered traditional rock audiences. they are reputed as the first australian rock band to use the moog. "phsssst" is from tully's debut self-titled album. the drones on this track are achieved with tape manipulation. keyboardist michael carlos later joined the pioneering fairlight synthesiser company.

11. felix werder "oscussion" excerpt (1971)

born in berlin in 1922, felix werder and his father fled the second world war to australia in 1940, where he initially spent time in an internment camp. he has been a leading avant-garde composer in australia since the 1950s. werder experimented with electronic music in the early 1970s, collaborating with other innovators in this field. "oscussion" is piece for synthesisers and percussion.

12. keith humble "and tomorrow" excerpt from an opera (1972)

keith humble's compositional palate ranged from avant-garde music to electronic works to his vast "nunique" events, but perhaps most significantly humble mentored several young composers who would form the next generation of australian experimental music. he set the scene in the late 1960s that made the later burst of activity in melbourne possible, including institutions like the clifton hill community music centre. he pioneered the la trobe university music department, which in turn brought another musical 'lightning rod' to australia in warren burt. "and tomorrow" was recorded in san diego in 1972. this recording is believed to be a computer piece for an unrealised opera.

13. niaggra "excerpt #2" (1973)

the improvisation group niaggra ("new improvisors action group for gnostic and rhythmic awareness") was formed by a group of musicians largely from jazz backgrounds who wanted to explore different methods of improvisation. active from 1972 to 1974, the group performed mostly at la mama theatre in carlton, melbourne, between and went through a number of incarnations. "excerpt #2" was most likely recorded at one of the la mama performances. simon wettenhall (trumpet) recalls the group as an attempt "to provide an environment where instrumentalists could experiment with musical situation; some composed, some purely conceptual and free of the expectations of an audience; but always with a largely improvised component…for us it was more about the ability to respond immediately to what was happening with relevant melodic/rhythmic counter-melody, interpreting and creating out of an ensemble. music creating itself".

14. ron nagorcka "apathetic anomaly 2" excerpt (1973)

ron nagorcka went on to be a major influence on experimental music in australia from the mid 1970s, particularly for his role in setting up of the clifton hill community music centre and with his work developing low-tech approaches to composition and performance using consumer devices such as cassette recorders. "apathetic anomaly 2", one of nagorcka's first major works, involved a number of performers who used radios, televisions and record players, directed by a series of flowcharts.

this project has been assisted by the australian government through the australia council, its arts funding and advisory body.

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