Showing posts with label Arto Lindsay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arto Lindsay. Show all posts

2023-05-20

THE GOLDEN PALOMINOS @ 40

Marking its 40th anniversary today is the eponymous debut LP from New York art-funk freaks, The Golden Palominos, which was released on May 20th, 1983. Combining elements of funk, hip-hop, no-wave & jazz, it was an album of extreme fusions and deliberate confusions.

Formed by acclaimed session drummer/producer/arranger Anton Fier in 1981, along with Material members, bassist Bill Laswell and guitarist Nicky Skopelitis, the extended lineup of the group was as consistently mutating as the music itself. For their recording debut, the core trio were augmented by DNA frontman, Arto Lindsay on guitar and vocals, violinist/guitarist Fred Frith, percussionist David Moss, turntablist M.E. Miller and keyboardist Michael Beinhorn (also a member of Material). The inclusion of a DJ scratching along with the music made it one of the first records outside of the rap genre to incorporate the technique.

As an album, the music occupies a soundscape of idiosyncratic hybrids skirting the edges of numerous avant-garde sub-cultures of the early 1980s, offering a cutting discordance along with the interplay of tribal-verging-on-funky rhythms. It’s not easy listening by any stretch, but it remains one of the most distinctive creations of the era, particularly in its ability to pull in strands of the burgeoning hip-hop scene, utilizing DMX drum machines along with scratching, but bending them into contorted free-jazz influenced shapes. It’s a record that creates its own rules, which it then indiscriminately breaks. 

2020-05-06

INFLUENTIAL ALBUM - DNA, A TASTE OF DNA


Clocking in at barely 9 minutes across six songs, DNA's 1981 EP/mini LP, A Taste of DNA, fascinated me as one of the shortest albums in my collection.  I had thought the Ramones were concise, but DNA took the idea of abbreviated to a whole other level.  Across the 12" surface of the EP, you could literally count the grooves on the record as they were so far apart. 

DNA was fronted by guitarist/vocalist Arto Lindsay (who also appeared on the first Golden Palominos LP), and they were at the forefront of the more avant-garde end of the spectrum of the New York "No Wave" scene.  The biggest influence here was discovering that having a guitar in tune was entirely optional and the necessity of articulating actual words was also up for debate.  Against the loping, stumbling bursts of Ikue Mori's drums and Tim Wright's bass, Lindsay snarled out guitar string stretching knots while blathering vocals like a psychotic in the middle of a breakdown.  It was pure expressionism as music, splattered across the recording tape like a Pollock painting.