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Showing posts with label Dalis Car. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dalis Car. Show all posts

Tuesday, 11 January 2011

It is the first blog of 2011! What better way to kick off a new year and a new decade than the third installment of my "Great Album Covers" series. If you want to suggest any album covers for me to feature feel free to leave a comment. Try and keep suggestions in the spirit of the previous posts though.


Bauhaus - 'In The Flat Field', 1980
Bauhaus' debut was pretty much panned by every single music magazine in the UK upon it's release. But their previous four singles ['Bela Lugosi's Dead', 'Dark Entries', 'Terror Couple Kill Colonel' and 'Telegram Sam'] had built them a solid fan base in the scene that was to become known as Goth.
Bauhaus' minimal formula of driving bass-lines, relentless drum beats and screeching guitars coupled with Peter Murphy's baritone voice and often surreal lyrics became the blueprint for all the Goth bands that would follow.
The cover of their eponymous debut is probably their best visual depiction of their sound. The sleek and stylish black and white and bold font (with no title... just the band name) is simplistic and striking. However, at the heart is a impressionistic, blurred photograph that imitates a classical or renaissance nude. The photograph titled “Homage To Puvis De Chavannes” (1978) is by the American photographer Duane Michals. The title is a reference to the influential 19th Century French painter and founder of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts Pierre Puvis De Chavannes. Michals, a prolific commercial photographer working for the likes of Vogue and Esquire. His artistic photography on the other hand often explored homosexuality and homoeroticism from a spiritual point of view.


Dalis Car - 'The Waking Hour', 1984
Another group involving Peter Murphey, this time in partnership with former Japan Bassist Mick Karn, who sadly died earlier this month after a long battle with cancer. Again this is an album that was much maligned upon its release. Unfortunately its avant garde style of bass and keyboard driven surreal pop was a commercial flop, but it has since come back into its own thanks mainly to rabid collectors of Bauhaus and Japan material.
The album is surreal and peaceful and the cover image, a detail from "Daybreak" (1922) by Maxfield Parrish, is suitably apt. The soft but colourful depiction of two feminine figures cast against the 'dynamic symmetry' of the composition could have been taken straight from the pages of Shakespeare's 'A Midsummer Night's Dream'. Parrish considered this to be his "great work" and it is one of the 20th century’s most popular art prints that, according to The National Museum of American Illustration continues to outsell the likes of Andy Warhol’s "Campbell’s Soup Can" and eve Da Vinci's "The Last Supper". The original painting was bought at auction by actor Mel Gibson's wife Robyn in 2006 for the sum of $76 million.



Covenant - 'Northern Light', 2002
Sweden's Covenant have been a shining light in electronic music for nearly twenty years. Though their album art can sometimes be accused of being a little bland - choosing modern graphic design over photography and paintings - but when they do put effort into the packaging it definitely pays off.
2002's 'Northern Light' was one such instance. Another album that seems to divide critics and fans, it gets mixed reviews. But the photograph by Kaskara adorning its cover - depicting a rear view of a lone male figure sat on a chair in the mountains who has apparently frozen to death - is very striking and even a little disturbing as it invites the viewer to fill in the details of his back story.
The image is both beautiful and sombre, and bares comparison to the work of Storm Thorgerson on the Pink Floyd albums 'A Momentary Lapse Of Reason' (1987) and 'Delicate Sound Of Thunder' (1988) which again are somewhat abstract in their composition but equally fascinating at inviting the viewer into the story of the pictures.

 
Vol 4, Coming soon...

Monday, 7 June 2010

I've just stumbled across an upsetting article on http://www.side-line.com/ about Mick Karn the former bassist of the band Japan, and former ½ of Dalis Car (alongside Peter Murphey). In a statement on Karn's website it has been revealed that he has been diagnosed with an advanced stage of cancer.


The statement reads:

With great sadness we regret to inform you that Mick has recently been diagnosed with advanced stages of cancer. Mick is currently in a positive mood and undergoing further tests and treatment. His family and friends are close with him, supporting him in practical ways, and surrounding him with their love, friendship and care.

Mick has been struggling financially for some considerable time now and we are hoping that this appeal may help to raise funds for any necessary treatment and perhaps go some way towards providing a small degree of financial support whilst Mick's immediate family provide the care and comfort we would all wish for him. We are hoping that his friends, fans and musical colleagues will, over the coming months, offer any support they feel capable of giving. Quite aside from the sheer brunt of daunting medically-related costs, Mick's clear and major concern is for the security and well being of his wife and young son.

If you would like to make a donation whether as an individual or as a group, you can do so via the paypal link below which has been set up for this sole and express purpose. Any support you are able to give, no matter how small, could make a difference in helping Mick cope during this difficult period. His friends will be looking at a variety of ways to raise funds.

If you would simply like to leave your kind messages of support for Mick, please do so, here: Messages



I've always thought of Karn as being somewhat under-appreciated by the wider music community. Ryuichi Sakamoto and David Sylvian's success somewhat overshadowed the rest of Japan who, as individuals as well as a unit, were truly talented and ground-breaking. I think that was proved the most by Mick Karn post-Japan when he collaborated with Peter Murphey on Dali's Car.



The news about Mick Karn has made me think a bit about electronic music in general. You may not have caught the Synth Britannia documentary on BBC4 yet (it's been repeated a few times, and I imagine it will be repeated a few times yet) it is a fantastic introduction to a rather complex field of music. Buter here is part one of nine courtesy of Youtube.




Get well soon Mick Karn
http://www.mickkarn.net/

Imago Alchemae: Imago Mortis on Tumblr

 
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