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Originally Posted by Jack Pat
That couldn't be anymore further from the truth...
Voted for Kallaps.
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That is a great record. I've heard listened to it countless times but still it's true it is awesome.
OK
I'll recommend something
Gum - Vinyl
please note the track listing
Gum - Vinyl (Vinyl, LP) at Discogs
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A1 Stormy Weather
A2 Testicle Stretch
A3 Injected By A Certain Amount Of Charisma
A4 Sporadic Acts Of Violence
A5 Smooth Torture In Exile
B1 Involuntary Orgasms During The Cleaning Of Automobiles
B2 Outfits For Agony
B3 Stomach Irritations
B4 Fear
B5 Arm ****
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That was the original release but in all likelyhood people will end up downloading the full Anthology should this win but my suggestion is for the tracks on the original release only
Gum : Vinyl Anthology
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Gum's music consisted entirely of locked grooves, vinyl surface noise derived from the duo's destruction of thrift store acquisitions. You could say that Gum were early "turntablists" before there was a scene or a school for such a thing, before the instrumentalists' concern for technique spoiled it, before the community of practice turned it into "an artform". They presaged serious turntablists and noisicians like Philip Jeck, Otomo Yoshihde, Martin Tretault, Merzbow, Janek Schaefer. At their best, Gum rendered absolute minimal abstractions into foreground role, musically, playing off the residual, vestigial remains of sounds that threaten contextualization but routinely fail to deliver. Exquisite sound poems like "Smooth Torture in Exile" hold all of the manufactured memory that old vinyl carries, mangled just enough so the sounds don't divulge their sources and muddy the waters with 'reference'. The sounds come to represent only themselves and, as this collection demonstrates, these stand up to time. The results of decomposition, trusted even if its appropriateness is quite unclear.
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