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Monday, March 24, 2025

Fritz Pfleumer 💫

 


Fritz Pfleumer was a German-Austrian engineer who invented magnetic recording tape.




Born on 20 March 1881, he would revolutionize the world of sound recording with his invention. Pfleumer's journey into the world of magnetic recording began with his work on cigarette papers. He developed a process for applying metal strips to cigarette papers and reasoned that a similar technique could be used to coat a magnetic stripe for sound recording. In 1927, after experimenting with various materials, Pfleumer successfully used very thin paper coated with iron oxide powder and lacquer as glue. This innovation led to him receiving a patent in 1928.


In December 1932, Pfleumer granted AEG the right to use his invention, which paved the way for the creation of the world's first practical tape recorder, the Magnetophon K1. This groundbreaking device was first demonstrated in 1935. Pfleumer's invention laid the foundation for modern magnetic recording and had a profound impact on the recording industry.


Despite his significant contributions, Pfleumer remains a relatively obscure figure in the history of technology. His work, however, continues to be celebrated by those who recognize the importance of his invention in the evolution of sound recording. Fritz Pfleumer passed away on 29 August 1945, but today we remember his significant contribution to the world of Hi-Fi.


During WWII, samples of  German-made AEG/Maihak tape machines were thieved by US contractors and brought to USA where they got back-engineered to make Ampex 300.


Reportedly, of course… these represent the folds of history.




Saturday, March 22, 2025

Henry Cow’s eponymous, first record on sought-after Japanese pressing…

 


… for the sake of it 💫💎💫



Thanking my pal and trusty (music) pusher, Mirco Sarto and his “Hi-Fi Records” shop in Padua 🥇






Welcome, springtime 💫

 






The X Commandments 💎

 







Two halves 💫

 


Graham Nash and Art Garfunkel are two of the most influential figures in the music industry, each with a distinctive career that has left a lasting impact on the world of rock and folk music; they humbly brought their duos career to the peaks, unequalled in music history.


Graham Nash, born on February 2, 1942, in Blackpool, England, first gained fame as a member of The Hollies, one of the leading British bands of the 1960s. In 1968, Nash left The Hollies and formed Crosby, Stills & Nash (CSN) with David Crosby and Stephen Stills. The group's harmonious blend of folk and rock, combined with their socially conscious lyrics, resonated with audiences and earned them critical acclaim. Nash's songwriting prowess is evident in hits like "Teach Your Children" and "Our House." His solo career also flourished, with albums such as "Songs for Beginners" showcasing his talent and versatility.




Art Garfunkel, born on November 5, 1941, in Forest Hills, New York, is best known for his work as part of the iconic duo Simon & Garfunkel. Alongside Paul Simon, Garfunkel's angelic voice and impeccable harmonies helped define the sound of the 1960s. The duo's hits, including "Bridge Over Troubled Water," "The Sound of Silence," and "Mrs. Robinson," became anthems of the era. After the duo split in 1970, Garfunkel pursued a solo career, releasing successful albums like "Angel Clare" and "Breakaway." His contributions to music have earned him numerous accolades and a dedicated fan base.


They aren’t their long-time partners David Crosby and Paul Simon, yet still without their heavenly voices and harmonies we’d never get the timeless masterpieces we know.




Friday, March 21, 2025

Twogoodears or Two Good Ears?

 


This morning, while lazily browsing the WEB, I encountered a podcast bearing almost exactly my moniker, that “Twogoodears” I’ve been using since July 2007…

The podcast is music related, as well and… nothing! 



I smiled by myself and began thinking: when you’re copied it’s because the nickname is cool! Maybe because different minds work the same… or because you’re “famous”?




I don’t know… world is such a small place and…

Life is good 💫




The first 💫🥇💫

 









THE LOST RECORDINGS First release ever! JÁNOS STARKER & GYÖRGY SEBÖK THE UNRELEASED BERLIN STUDIO RECORDINGS 1963 💎

 


An amazing recording of two awesome artists 💫


I ordered my copy… act fast as only 2000 copies have been pressed 🤓






An unknown, lost Beatles demo tape found 😳

 


Lost Beatles demo discovered by Vancouver record shop owner 


Jack Herschorn said he got the tape in London “in 1968 or 1969” from a “well-known record producer” who he declines to name.





A few years ago, Rob Frith of Neptoon Records bought a reel-to-reel tape labelled “Beatles demo.”


But he didn’t bother to actually listen to it. He just assumed someone had put a Beatles bootleg on the tape.


“I’ve had that Beatles thing sitting at the store for years,” said Frith, a record and poster store owner.


Last week, he was transferring some tapes and came across the Beatles tape.


“All of a sudden, it was like the Beatles are in the room playing,” he said.


“The quality was that good.”


As it turns out, it really was a Beatles demo — the session they recorded on Jan. 1, 1962, for Decca Records.


Decca rejected the band, which is arguably the biggest mistake in music history.


The tape features the Beatles’ original drummer Pete Best. Most of the songs are covers like Money, To Know Him is to Love Him and The Sheik of Araby. 


But there are three original songs by John and Paul: Like Dreamers Do, Hello Little Girl, and Love of the Loved.


Not all 15 recordings in the Decca session have been officially released, although it’s been widely bootlegged. Five songs from the session were officially released on the Beatles Anthology I in 1995.


“It is a huge mystery to unravel but this is an amazing find,” Hennessey wrote, noting it was “not a bootleg copy, as this reel was prepared as a master (tape for a record) with leader tape between cuts.”


Jack Herschorn had obtained it in London “from someone inside Decca.”


Herschorn is now 80 and living in San Jose del Cabo, Mexico. He confirms that he got the tape in London “in 1968 or 1969” from a “well-known record producer” who he declines to name.


“He thought that maybe we could put it out as a bootleg album in Canada and the U.S.,” said Herschorn. “And he gave me a copy.”


It’s indeed a duplicate made off the original master tape, which is why the sound quality is so good.


At the time, Vancouver had a record pressing plant, International Record Corp., which made bootlegs and which was sued by Bob Dylan in 1969. But when Herschorn got back to Canada, he decided not to put the Beatles tape out.


“I wouldn’t want somebody doing that to me,” he said. “It was just a moral issue with me. I could have put it out, made a few bucks on it, but then I could get bad PR … get sued over. It wasn’t my style.”


“We had a closet, a good-sized closet where we kept master tapes,” he said. “And it was in there.”


The studio and property has been sold several times over the years: Whoever took the Beatles tape probably didn’t know what it was: they didn’t hype it to Frith.


Frith won’t be able to legally reproduce the music on the tape for copyright reasons. 


But it has value as an artifact: a copy of the Decca sessions that once belonged to Brian Epstein sold for 62,500 pounds in 2019. And that tape had only half the recordings.





Devon Turnbull goes MJ - Musen to Jikken 💫

 

From the man himself:

Ojas Japan, est. 2025.

Major announcement – post 1 of 3.


An exciting new chapter for Ojas, and for Kas and me personally. Breaking this into three posts to do it justice.


Many of you know that Tokyo has been a second home for over half my life. Some of my closest friendships started here, and no culture has influenced me more than Japanese audio. I spent some time reflecting on my journey and wrote a fairly long article about it in the Spring 2025 issue of MJ, intended to be my first installment of a regular contribution I’ll make in every issue for the near future. I hope it is well received, and I hope my contributions to MJ are enlightening and educational, for the reader and the author alike. Soon I’ll have a home on Ojas.nyc where I post all of these articles in English as well. 


This year, @mj_audiotech turned 100! I’m so grateful to their team for welcoming me in. 


Lately, I’ve been thinking and writing more—learning through the process and hoping to share what I find along the way. If you’ve been to the Ojas Listening Room at @usmmodularfurniture or follow @listening_room, you know how much I admire MJ and Stereo Sound. The photos here are from visits to both of their headquarters.


I’ve embarked on a second journalistic pursuit in collaboration with the with Tube Kingdom (Stereo Sound) to analyze the work of Japan’s great audio designers through traditional aesthetics:












Wabi-sabi 侘寂 – the beauty of “imperfect” vintage gear, natural materials, handmade craft.

Kanso 簡素 & Shibui 渋い – minimalism in tube amps, full-range drivers, stripped-down signal paths.

Takumi 匠 – master craftsmanship in point-to-point wiring, handmade components.


I’ll be interviewing Japanese artisans to explore their ikigai 生き甲斐—their creative drive.


But a journalistic pursuit alone doesn’t make Ojas Japan. See the next post for more of what I’m up to.



I wish to Devon the very best for his new adventures 🍀



Wednesday, March 19, 2025

… even upside down! 💫

 








The Mascara Snake 🤟

 


I've seen this photo posted about a dozen times on Beefheart sites over the years, and it's ALWAYS reversed.




You can see my white Premier kick drum behind him on the right.  Victor Hayden (Haydon) was the only child of Jack and Charlene Hayden.  I don't know which spelling was the family name, but his parents were Don's Aunt and Uncle; Jack and Charlene. Charlene being his mother's sister.  The "Ch" is Charlene was always a hard "Ch" sound like in "Charles." Using a photo program, I turned the photo around so that now, finally, the hands are placed on the bass clarinet properly.  I recognize this as the laundry shed behind the house at the Trout House property.  I spent a bit of time in here working on the parts for TMR.  I'd haul my drum kit out here from the house so as to have a bit of privacy and not disturb the others.  I always envied the guitarists, who could practice anywhere -- in the living room, the bathroom, the downstairs bedroom, outside on nice days.  Drums are very loud acoustically, and so very brash when being practiced upon.  I eventually put cardboard on the entire set, which allowed me to at least work on the coordination of the parts, even though there was absolutely no stick rebound because of the drum heads being covered.  The "style" I developed to play to the unorthodox music was more of an independence issue (hands a feet), with little actual standard technique used  -- like rolls, fills.  In the little time I was able to cull from my daily duties of transcribing / re-transcribing the guitar and bass parts for the others, I would first write, and then attempt to play, rather complex parts.  I used to jokingly refer to them as "stick twisters." The first part I worked on that I would place in that category was for "Hair Pie."  It took me four hours of painstaking concentrated work to actually achieve the coordination to play this part along with the band -- and it only was played FOUR TIMES!  Four measures of music on the whole album...  Wow.  Jeff, Bill, and Mark all played very complex parts, which they then had to synchronize with each other, and my job was to sort of provide a common pulse while staying out of their way and not causing a train wreck.  Victor, who had NO knowledge of the bass clarinet, was brought in by Don to freely play whatever he wanted -- in the last six weeks or less before we went into the studio.  He was never really at a rehearsal, but was just inserted into the band after all the months of work were nearly over.  We all had a bit of resentment over this.  Bill challenged this idea even more than the rest of us.  I remember him having Victor come over one day and challenging him to play the same note as Bill played on guitar.  Jeff, who had played clarinet in band as a kid, showed him the fingering ( as he also showed Don the fingering on the sax -- because all the woodwinds are loosely related in technique).  Victor would struggle and then, eventually, be barely able to play the note.  I think Don was under the impression that, because Vic was an artist, that he could just "paint with sound" intuitively.  Well, I suppose that, with the foundation the four of us ( Jeff, Bill, Mark and I) were laying down, that the abstract sounds injected over the top would be considered "valid."  To my knowledge, the only playing Victor did on the entire album was Hair Pie Bake I (the 'bush recording').  Victor's friend, Jeff Burchell, was a non-musician as well.  He was chosen by Don to play drums as my replacement.  Don knew almost nothing about musical technique, though he had a great intuitive / creative sense of what he wanted, creating a finished piece required the input of others.  Certain pieces, such as "Ant Man Bee" had a lot of input from Don, but mostly, he was out of the room, or gone somewhere and the composition of the parts Don created was left to me.  Victor's character, "The Mascara Snake," became well known, as did "Rockette Morton," because of the verbal snippets on Trout Mask Replica.


A BIG thank you to John Drumbo French for the above insight 



💫💎🙏💫




Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Steve Reich “Collected Works” on Nonesuch 💫💎💫

 


40 years of Steve Reich compositions, compiled by Nonesuch across a 27 disc box-set.



"Nonesuch Records releases Steve Reich Collected Works, a 27-disc box set featuring music recorded during his 40 years on the label.  The collection represents six decades of Reich’s compositions, ranging from It’s Gonna Rain (1965) to first recordings of his two latest works: Jacob’s Ladder (2023) and Traveler’s Prayer (2020).  Two extensive booklets contain new essays by longtime Nonesuch President Robert Hurwitz, conductor Michael Tilson Thomas, Steve Reich and Musicians percussionist Russell Hartenberger, producer Judith Sherman, and composer Nico Muhly, as well as a comprehensive listener’s guide by pianist and composer Timo Andres.

Nonesuch made its first record with Steve Reich in 1985.  He was signed exclusively to the label that year, and since then the company has released 22 all-Reich albums, two retrospectives, and two remix releases. Among his many honours, two of Reich’s Nonesuch records, Different Trains and Music for 18 Musicians, won Grammy Awards and his Double Sextet recording for the label won a Pulitzer Prize.

“I first heard Music for 18 Musicians when I was in my mid-twenties, at a moment when I was still in the process of figuring out my own taste in contemporary music.  I wasn’t yet certain what modern classical music really meant, nor was I sure how it stacked up against work from the past.”   Hurwitz says in his liner note.  “Music for 18 Musicians was an event of such immense importance that it changed how I felt not only about Steve, but about minimalism, modernism and, in some respects, classical music.  Music for 18 was a piece that could sweep listeners up with its non-stop kinetic activity, its opulent sound, its rhythmic invention, its stunning architecture.  But only years later did I recognize what drew me in to such an intense degree: it was harmony.

“Here were the kinds of colors and voicings I loved in the earlier twentieth-century music of Stravinsky and Bartók and others, but had found missing in practically all of the new music I had been hearing for years.  It was the key that unlocked the music of modern times for me,” Hurwitz continues.  “It now seemed possible to love contemporary music.  With Music for 18 Musicians, Steve suddenly flung open a door to the possibilities of what a modern composer could be in our time.”

Reich also has become a significant mentor of the younger generation of American composers.  “This music is as part of my artistic ecosystem as air is to my respiratory system, and I can’t imagine saying anything about it which wouldn’t somehow get its importance wrong,” composer Nico Muhly says in his liner note.  “Steve once told me that the trick is to ‘find your band’, the group of instruments that form the core of your musical language, and this is advice I pass on to all younger composers who cross my path.”

Composer and pianist Timo Andres adds, “It is Steve Reich, perhaps more than any other musician, who prefigured our ideas of a twenty-first-century composer...  For audiences, too, Reich has proven that contemporary music can thrive outside the insular world of its own practitioners.

“On initial approach, Reich’s music appears both friendly and a little forbidding, its surfaces immaculate, polished, yet also playful and viscerally beautiful...  It exudes a specific kind of energy in live performance as well,” he continues.  “Watching an ensemble play Music for 18 Musicians, for example, one has the sense of observing a utopian society in miniature, a mass of people working towards a common goal with no apparent leader.”

Steve Reich has been called ‘the most original musical thinker of our time’ (New Yorker) and ‘among the great composers of the century’ (New York Times).  Starting in the 1960s, his pieces It’s Gonna Rain, Drumming, Music for 18 Musicians, Tehillim, Different Trains, and many others helped shift the aesthetic center of musical composition worldwide away from extreme complexity and towards rethinking pulsation and tonal attraction in new ways.  He continues to influence younger generations of composers and mainstream musicians and artists all over the world.




In addition to his Grammy Awards and Pulitzer Prize, Reich received the Praemium Imperiale in Tokyo, the Polar Music Prize in Stockholm, the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale, the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge award in Madrid, the Debs Composer’s Chair at Carnegie Hall, and the Gold Medal in Music from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.  He has been named Commandeur de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in France, and awarded honorary doctorates by the Royal College of Music in London, the Juilliard School in New York, and the Liszt Academy in Budapest, among others.

One of the most frequently choreographed composers, several noted choreographers have created dances to his music, including Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker, Jirí Kylián, Jerome Robbins, Justin Peck, Wayne McGregor, Benjamin Millepied, and Christopher Wheeldon.

Reich’s documentary video opera works – The Cave and Three Tales, done in collaboration with video artist Beryl Korot – opened new directions for music theater and have been performed on four continents.  His work Quartet, for percussionist Colin Currie, sold out two consecutive concerts at Queen Elizabeth Hall in London shortly after tens of thousands at the Glastonbury Festival heard Jonny Greenwood (of Radiohead) perform Electric Counterpoint, followed by the London Sinfonietta performing his Music for 18 Musicians.





Nonesuch Records has historically had close relationships with modern composers.  During the years of the label’s first president, Tracey Sterne, it made multiple recordings of Elliott Carter, George Crumb, Charles Wuorinen, and William Bolcom.  Since 1985, Nonesuch has made multiple recordings of works by Philip Glass, Stephen Sondheim, Laurie Anderson, Caroline Shaw, Louis Andriessen, John Zorn, Adam Guettel, Henryk Górecki, Timo Andres, Nico Muhly, and Donnacha Dennehy.  For John Adams, like Steve Reich, Nonesuch has recorded every new piece of his music since 1985; the label released a collection of his complete works in 2022.

While Nonesuch recordings comprise 24 of the 27 discs in Collected Works, the set also includes recordings licensed from other labels: Mahan Esfahani’s recording of Piano Phase (Deutsche Grammophon); Ensemble Avantgarde’s recording of Pendulum Music (Wergo); Art Murphy, Jon Gibson, Steve Chambers, Philip Glass, and Steve Reich’s recording of Four Organs and Murphy, Gibson, Chambers, and Reich’s recording of Phase Patterns (Shandar); Andreas Hartmann and Waltraut Wächter’s recording of Duet with MDR-Sinfonieorchester led by Kristjan Järvi (Sony Classical); Steve Reich and Musicians’ recordings of Music for Mallet Instruments, Voices and Organ and Six Pianos (Deutsche Grammophon); San Francisco Symphony and conductor Edo de Waart’s recording of Variations for Winds, Strings and Keyboards (Philips); Ransom Wilson’s recording of Vermont Counterpoint (Angel); and Ensemble Signal’s recording of Music for 18 Musicians (Harmonia Mundi)."





Happy birthday to Bill Frisell 🥂

 






Robert Crumb’s acid-trip 😳