Ken Favoriting | Come for the peace and tranquility; stay for the guttural screaming.

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Playlist for 01 August 2007 Favoriting | When God Pokes Me With His Sharpie

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(* = new)
Artist Song Album New Approx. start time
David Holmes  Living Room   Favoriting Bow Down To The Exit Sign    0:00:00 (Pop-up)
Talibam  Lunch Break at Naan   Favoriting Ordination Of The Globetrotting Conscripts  *   0:06:37 (Pop-up)
The Red Elvises  Cosmonaut Petrov   Favoriting Russendisko    0:09:33 (Pop-up)
The Moontrekkers (Joe Meek)  Night of the Vampire   Favoriting Vampires, Cowboys, Spacemen and Spooks  *   0:12:48 (Pop-up)
Moir Drammaz  czy znasz mnie czy nie?   Favoriting to.je.take.co.take.to.!  *   0:15:18 (Pop-up)
 
Fall of Saigon (Pascal Comelade)  Visions   Favoriting Self Titled    0:22:26 (Pop-up)
Young Marble Giants  Final Day   Favoriting Nipped In The Bud    0:23:56 (Pop-up)
Young Marble Giants  Radio Silents   Favoriting Nipped In The Bud    0:25:51 (Pop-up)
Nini Raviolette  Suis-Je Normale   Favoriting So Young But So Cold: Underground French Music 1977-1983    0:28:09 (Pop-up)
Nobody Presents Blank Blue  All the Shallow Deep   Favoriting From L.A. With Love (compilation)  *   0:31:26 (Pop-up)
Ludus  Breaking The Rules   Favoriting Grrlz: Women Ahead of Their Time    0:34:42 (Pop-up)
Electronicat  Seveneves   Favoriting Chez Toi  *   0:37:29 (Pop-up)
Moskitoo  Tarantella   Favoriting Drape  *   0:41:29 (Pop-up)
Romvelope  Finger of Blame   Favoriting One Course Meal  *   0:43:56 (Pop-up)
Jablkon  Baba Aga   Favoriting New Music From Central and Eastern Europe Vol 1    0:47:49 (Pop-up)
Yat Kha  Solun Chaagai Sovet Churtum   Favoriting Yenisei Punk    0:50:00 (Pop-up)
Theater of Tragedy  Der Tanz Der Schatten   Favoriting Velvet Darkness They Fear    0:55:07 (Pop-up)
 
Music behind DJ:
Neu 
Fur Immer   Favoriting     1:00:55 (Pop-up)
Unknown (found by Jaime Fillmore)  Phil's Baby   Favoriting The Relay Project    1:08:19 (Pop-up)
Cerberus Shoal  Ding   Favoriting The Vim and Vigour of Alvarius B & Cerberus Shoal    1:13:37 (Pop-up)
Zarah Leander  Ich Weiss Es Wird Einmal Ein Wunder Geschehn   Favoriting     1:32:02 (Pop-up)
Kinderlieder aus der DDR  Mit Klingelingeling   Favoriting Wenn Mutti Fruh Zur Arbeir Geht    1:35:08 (Pop-up)
 
Girlschool  20th Century Boy   Favoriting     1:42:37 (Pop-up)
Rocket Freudental  Beneluxus Europoort   Favoriting Die Weisheit Wachst Auf Baumen    1:46:10 (Pop-up)
Jah Wurzel  Wuthering Heights   Favoriting A Collection of Hybrid Mutants  *   1:49:05 (Pop-up)
EZ Lee  Vain Mistake   Favoriting LondonBooted    1:53:18 (Pop-up)
The Friendly Hopefuls  The Friendly Hopefuls Salute the Punks of '76   Favoriting     1:56:48 (Pop-up)
Girls at our Best  Getting Beautiful Medley   Favoriting     2:00:42 (Pop-up)
Painoj  Khor Tan Gor Mee Hua Jai (The Night Chicago Died)   Favoriting Thai Pop Spectacular  *   2:05:14 (Pop-up)
Ofo The Black Company  Love is You   Favoriting The Last King of Scotland (soundtrack)  *   2:09:21 (Pop-up)
 
SRP  Blues   Favoriting Self Titled    2:16:32 (Pop-up)
Ethel Smith  Theme From Carnival   Favoriting The Many Moods of Ethel Smith    2:21:47 (Pop-up)
People Like Us & Ergo Phizmiz  Soggy Style   Favoriting Perpetuum Mobile  *   2:24:27 (Pop-up)
Alexander Fedoriousk & Ensemble Harmonia  Geamparalele Tsambalul   Favoriting Balkans without Borders    2:27:41 (Pop-up)
Tapani Varis  Menuetti   Favoriting Jews Harps    2:29:36 (Pop-up)
Ken Wallace  When God Dips His Pen of Love   Favoriting     2:33:46 (Pop-up)
Gotz Allsmann  Dein Kuss von gestern Nacht, Mein Schatz   Favoriting German Pop, Vol 1    2:36:09 (Pop-up)
Chicha Libre  Primavera en la Selva   Favoriting Amazonicas!  *   2:38:14 (Pop-up)
Ennio Morricone  Velvet Muscles   Favoriting Malamando    2:42:08 (Pop-up)
Asi Mina  Wszystko Mami / Have All   Favoriting Title Track  *   2:44:40 (Pop-up)
Moir Drammaz  Track 16   Favoriting to.je.take.co.take.to.!  *   2:47:41 (Pop-up)
too many things going on to say...        2:51:58 (Pop-up)
Johann Georg Albrechtsberger  Menueto, Moderato   Favoriting Concerto for Jews Harp, Mandora and Orchestra    2:56:03 (Pop-up)
Anton Bruhin  Eifachs Marschli   Favoriting     2:59:24 (Pop-up)

Listener comments!

  9:03am JJZ:

Good morning, fellow listeners.
  9:07am Derek:

Good morning!
  9:10am Ken:

Hallo Moskau!
  9:19am bwalker:

its KID TALK
  9:22am j frank parnell:

Moir Darammaz? Def Polish:
http://www.mikmusik.org/musik/artists.php?artist_id=2&lang=1
  9:23am bwalker:

russendisko!
Don't know that one.. I was telling you about Russensoul

go Trikont
  9:29am Ken:

Thanks J Frank.. can you tell me the title of track five also? I like this system of reverse playlistery...
  9:31am ali:

i <3 minimalism...
  9:31am fightingJCityStyle:

Moir Drammaz. Thinking they are from Poland (based on quick google search)


"Review by Frans de Waard (Vital Weekly 263 - a newsletter of Staalplaat Records):
"Wojt3k belongs to the people behind the Polish band Moir Drammaz (who have a couple of releases on Open Circuit) and works as a visual artist and runs the Mik Musik label. However this is his first solo release. Even when some people out there think that Poland is still a remote area, Wojt3k proofs he's been catching up with the latest stuff on electronica, more particulary microwave and click music. He presents us very clinical pieces, pieces that enter a groove, a mode and continue inside that mode. Clicks remain clicks, and rhythms never become danceable. Unclear wether these clicks are derived from digital sources or from good old analogue synths. Wojt3k manages to keep his pieces short and despite some repetition, his release is varied enough to hold ones attention throughout. And some of these sounds are inspiring enough (or should that be "empty enough"?) to attempt remixing or reworking? Maybe Mik Musik could start a series of likewise releases. Arty package too, blue transparant box and small edition, 55 copies only...""
  9:33am j frank parnell:

No Problem - I was looking for a way to buy it, and found one (http://wsm.serpent.pl/sklep/album.php?alb_id=1029)
and the track is called, as if it helps until you get a Polish translator:
"czy znasz mnie czy nie?"
  9:40am fightingJCityStyle:

possible

"czy znasz mnie czy nie?" = If (or) you know me if (or) not

or play more Moir Drammaz
  9:40am ken:

So, to pick up where we left off last week - do any web designers feel like taking a shot at designing a new version of this playlist page, with 3 frames instead of the current two, so that the most recent comment and the most recent song dont need to be separated? The only additional requirement is that this change would need to be applicable to all WFMU playlist pages, not just this one.
  9:51am Chuck:

I would do it but I dont know what a frame is. Or how to make a web page. Or how to read good.
  9:51am Pat:

Why not just add another small frame to the right of what you have? Keep in mind though that these frames are hell on search engines. You could be searching for Frans de Waard in Google and just end up with the comments.
  9:52am The Framinator:

Finally, a topic I can sink my teeth into. The more frames the better, I always say.
  9:54am Trish:

If someone just wants to design it, I'll code it in css/html.
  9:56am woj:

mmmmmmmm melons
  9:58am Melon Lover:

Whether growing or buying melons, it is discouraging to select melons which are not ripe, and most people prefer melons which are ripe and freshly picked from the garden.

Watermelons give you several clues as to when to harvest. Observe the tendril, a small curly stem (pigtail) on the watermelon vine directly opposite the point where the melon is attached to the vine. When the melon ripens, this tendril dries and turns brown or gray. The melon also develops a "soil spot" where the melon sits on the soil, unless you periodically turn the melon. Don't turn the melon, because you want to use this soil spot to determine ripeness in the melon. When the melon is immature, the spot is greenish or white. As the melon ripens the spot develops a cream or yellowish color. This indicates ripeness. Thumping the melon to determine ripeness is difficult. However, people with a musician's ear may wish to choose their watermelon by thumping it. A dull thud sound indicates ripeness, or perhaps over-ripeness. A ringing sound heard when the melon is thumped indicates an unripe melon.

The method with the greatest chance of success for choosing a ripe watermelon is "plugging," or cutting a plug out of the melon to look at the flesh just beyond the rind. Some watermelon sellers will plug melons for you, others do not. Plugging is not acceptable practice in the grocery store unless the produce manager does it for you. In the garden, plugging ruins the watermelon if it is not ripe.
  10:09am pat:

Phil's baby--Man I just can't believe this isn't a hoax. It has to be fake. It's just too good...
  10:10am Jane in Tenafly:

This is kind of creepy, is something bad going to happen?
  10:13am Derek:

This really sounds like a short story. I can't escape from the feeling that some kind of disaster is coming.
  10:22am John from Oslo:

Kelly Johnson passed away in July- Lead guitarist of Girlschool during the early 1980s.
All-female groups have always been a rarity in rock music. One of the best was Girlschool, which combined a heavy metal sound with a punk sensibility in their early 1980s heyday. The group's outstanding instrumentalist was lead guitarist Kelly Johnson, who has died of cancer of the spine, aged 49. Read the obituary in The Guardian.
  10:29am mark:

Cerberus Shoal: Ding Beautiful. Thanks. Mark
  10:31am John from Oslo:

Of Race With the Devil and Johnson's trenchant guitar playing, the eminent rock guitarist Jeff Beck was quoted as saying he "couldn't believe it was a girl playing", a remark described by the DJ John Peel as the most sexist comment he had ever heard.
  10:33am Derek:

mark, was about to say the same thing. That "found sound" followed by the Cerberus Shoal & Alvarius B was pure radio bliss.
  10:38am Listener John:

RE: "Mit klingelingeling": That krautrock sure has changed a lot over the years from those early days!
  10:42am dei xhrist:

hello from Hampton NH, USA. Which culturally IS a country different from Orange NJ.
  10:44am John from Oslo:

whoha! Girlschool! Thanks Ken
  10:46am Buz:

Hola, from overcast Los Angeles -- I'm in for helping with the HTML/CSS/Javascript/Whatever... ...good god, I AM a geek (fresh realization)
  10:52am Ken:

Thanks for all the offers on the new playlist design - what we really need is the design, not the coding which would need to be done by Kenzo anyway.
  10:57am Doctor B.:

Your show is truly sample-delic today! (You know you're getting old when you recognize the songs people have cribbed samples from!) Keep spinning good stuph like this, and I'll be happy!
  11:13am Buz:

Design it is! Just email mock-ups/comps to Ken Garson?

Another fine show: any Clash (LondonBooted) sop is cheating, but effective. I'm a sucker for pandering...
  11:18am Ken:

Buz - The ideal way to submit a design is to post it on a server and e-mail me the URL to ken at wfmu dot org but if you can't post it on a server then send me a jpeg of the design as an attachment.
  11:22am Trish:

Go Buz!
  11:36am spacehoof:

i don't like jesus
  11:37am NEGATOR:

hOW COME alot of gospel songs talk about penetration of some kind? After awhile it seems clear they want GOD rod...
  11:37am Jesus:

But I am rather fond of you...
  11:38am NEGATOR:

Do me Jeebus!
  11:46am Kenzo:

Quick note on Pat's "frames are hell on search engines" comment: That's why the playlist page turns back into a non-frames-oriented page as soon as the show is finished. I only go into frames temporarily.
  11:49am ali:

i know people mostly hate the idea of iframes,

but what if the play list and the comment box were in iframes of their own, that would allow them to dynamically update without making the whole page flash.
  11:53am Buz:

this may be the first time geek-speak -- overlayed with whatever the hell ken is playing -- is cool, so ... Ali, you're suggesting, perhaps an AJAX approach... sorry, this track is awesome!
  11:55am Kenzo:

The problems with an iframes-based solution (which I considered):
1) Not going to work reliably in every browser.
2) Still makes the user scroll all over the place to get between totally different kinds of content.

My ideal design, assuming no pop-up for entering comments, is the 3-frames one. I'd stick the comments along the right side in their own frame, and keep the comments box at the bottom. I think what Ken F. must be asking for is a more broad pretty-fying of the generic playlist pages.

Buz: ali's iframes suggestion isn't quite AJAX. I also considered an AJAX approach but it suffers even more from the mixed browser support issue. I would consider it unacceptable if a playlist page didn't function on even one browser. (* The text-based browsers Lynx and Links DO support regular frames!)
  11:56am ali:

not necessarily ajax oriented, just with those stupid iframes, so they could be set inside a page. and yes this track is great, i think its cause the broad is laughing so much.
  11:58am Kenzo:

P.S. For the record, if it weren't for compatibility concerns, I would MUCH prefer an AJAX solution on Accuplaylists in general. Having the page reload over and over is a bit wasteful.
  11:59am Sara:

One thought to add to the playlist design discussion -- I don't know how other browsers behave, but in Safari every time the playlist is updated the page reloads with the scroll position back at the top so that you have to scroll down to the bottom every time you want to see the current song. Is it possible to make the page automatically reload with the scroll position at the bottom of the page length instead? This way if you have the playlist and the comments in separate frames (say, one above the other, and then the comments form in a frame beneath them so the screen is split into 3 horizontal bands) and they both reload in this manner, you'd always be looking at the most recent song and the most recent comment, and wouldn't need to worry about interleaving them or placing them side by side or anything fancy like that...
  12:02pm Kenzo:

Sara: It does seem to work differently in different browsers. I had considered an anchor-jump solution to try to head off that issue, but maybe I didn't consider it long enough. Thanks for your report!
  12:08pm pat:

[after show, to Kenzo and his note about search engines] Oh.
  12:42pm doron:

The vast majority of people who come to the site have browsers that support AJAX and it's become somewhat ubiquitous w/ thing like Google Maps, Youtube, etc. I think once you go down the road of trying to provide a rich media experience AJAX makes a lot more sense then reloading frames.

Random suggestions:

you might consider letting people sort if they want the oldest song on top or the newest with a "sort" button.

For comments, You Tube has a decent approach where newest comments come first but you can jump to the oldest.

I think the current design (in terms of layout) is really functional. I would go for song list on top w/ new songs sliding in below, a list of comments with new ones sliding in below, and a form that allows you to verify the post via ajax at the bottom. In an ideal world it would be great to not have to re-load the page.

Congrats on getting the live commenting going by the way... It's a really great feature.
  1:14pm Ken:

Sara - I'm unclear why that's a problem - while the show is in progress, the song that is currently playing always appears at the top of the list of songs.
  3:01pm Sara:

Hi Ken -- this is true, and it appears in my iTunes window as well. But I always wind up looking at the playlist to see other details that don't show up on top, or to see what the song before was, or to copy the complete text into my ever-growing list of intriguing and fabulous things I've heard on WFMU that I want to look into further or buy. So it's gotten to be kind of a reflex for me to just use the playlist, I guess...
  5:56pm fatty jubbo:

jesus...Phil's Baby is really other-worldly and haunting. It almost sounds like a page from the Wild at Heart script. Where did the audio come from?
  6:30pm Lipwak:

I thought it was Bronwyn at a younger age doing the Phil's Baby bit.

Cheers,

Lipwak
  8:53pm Ken:

Fatty - According to The Relay Project, Jaime Fillmore found it in her Grandfather's attic.
  10:35am Sara:

Ken, what is that picture of?
  10:42am Ken:

Hi Sara - That is a picture of the Maunsell Sea Forts in the UK:

http://www.undergroundkent.co.uk/maunsell_towers.htm

-Ken
  3:25am LelandM:

I love the Munsel Sea Forts! It's so DADA!

I love Cerberus Shoal's Ding. It has been on my mind all week, and I keep replaying it. It's like Bolero for the DIY singer. And the singer sounds like Alanis Morisette. (sp). Love.
  6:13am Poutre Apparente:

Molr Drammaz
(correct spelling use a polish character which is a crossed out l and not a i, and corresponding to a w ...)
is indeed a polish band. You can find more info at
http://www.mikmusik.org/musik/artists.php?artist_id=2&lang=1
  6:50am Doctor.boogie:

The above image of the fort belongs to me, there is no link to the orginal and no credit to me. I hold the copywrite and you now need to remove the image, thank you
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