Delving further into our rich musical heritage...we have some restocks of the
MOONDOG stuff in. I felt I should mention it this time cos its remarkably
good. In case you didn't know he was some blind dude who made a load of crazy
sounds from the 40's onwards. The Viking of Sixth Avenue 2LP/CD is astonishing
for the simple reason that you can't believe the music you're listening to is
over 50 years old. The guy was so ahead of his time it's terrifying. It's very
percussive and tuneful but overall it's just impossible to describe. It's
absolutely essential and I really can't recommend this or any his stuff highly
enough. Hunt down what you can cos it's brilliant!
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What their label says...
Moondog learned rhythm from American Indians and counterpoint from J.S. Bach. Many of his recordings feature instruments he built himself: trimba, yukh, tuji, oo. Sometimes you can hear in the background the streets of New York, where Moondog often slept rough (even though blind, since an accident when he was 15).
Sometime in the 1950s, fed up with being mistaken on the street for Christ — his regular busking spot was uptown on Sixth — Moondog put on a Viking costume, with spear and horned helmet; and he dressed like this till the late 1970s (by which time he was working with orchestras in Germany).
Igor Stravinsky lobbied a judge on Moondog's behalf. Charlie Parker wanted to play with him (Julie Andrews did play with him), and he was feted by Bob Dylan, Marlon Brando, Steve Reich. Andy Warhol's mum designed one of his covers, and Weegee took photographs of him (included in the booklet). Janis Joplin covered him, Mr Scruff owes him badly, and Antony And The Johnsons does him live.
This is the first retrospective of Moondog's music — thirty-six tracks from 1949 to 1995, most of them exceptionally rare and reissued now for the first time, all of them miraculous.
'This selection of 36 of his pieces for percussion, brass and the odd howling canine, and occasional, madrigal-like songs, is both ethereal and earthy, sounding old as the hills and utterly out of time. Sometimes it's almost jazz, mostly it's that rare thing in music: unique. Moondog was a creature of an entirely lost New York' (The Guardian).
'... utterly contemporary — invoking trance, fidgety electronica, spooky folk and oriental drones... Highly recommended' (Time Out).
'One thing's for certain: you can buy this album secure in the knowledge that nothing else in your collection sounds remotely like it. Go on, surprise yourself' (Observer Music Monthly).