Davey
06-15-2004, 10:13 AM
Anyone heard Bill Holt before? Dreamies? 1973? Not me, but I've been listening some recently to the new The Places <i>Call It Sleep</i> CD and absolutely loving the last two songs. I just assumed they were all Amy Annelle songs, but checking the liner notes I see that the amazing and nearly 9 minute "Program Ten", the second to last and current favorite, is actually by Bill Holt from the <i>Dreamies</i> LP. Hmmm, never heard of him so I go to AMG and sounds pretty interesting. Just one album to his credit, and that one with just two songs, each about 26 minutes long. Probably more like full side suites or something. Anyway, appears to have been released on CD in 2000 as well. I love it when artists respect the past and aren't afraid to take chances and reinterpret obscure music like this, while at the same time helping to keep some of that interesting old music alive and introduce it to new listeners. I'll post the AMG review below but everyone knows it came from allmusic.com
<hr size=3 width="100%" align=center>
<img src="http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/dre100/e133/e13396qjqej.jpg" align=left hspace=10><font size="-1">Inspired by the aural collage of the Beatles' "Revolution Number 9," as well as the <I>musique concrete</I> of composers such as John Cage and Terry Riley and Bob Dylan's conscientious rock lyricism, Bill Holt quit his straight job in 1972 to follow his musical muse, hoarding various electronic gadgets and an acoustic guitar and holing up in his basement. He emerged a year later with <I>Dreamies</I>, one of the finest pieces of experimental pop from the era. Unlike the Beatles' <I>White Album</I> collage, though, the pair of sidelong, 26-minute epics — "Program Ten" and "Program Eleven" (as if progressing directly from "Revolution Number 9") — that Holt created were much more than symbolic representations of the chaotic times. At its heart, the album is a blend of folk and pop/rock, and in many respects, <I>Dreamies</I> fits in with the singer/songwriter scene that flowered in the early '70s. Instead of relying simply on the juxtapositions of his sound samples to impart subjective meanings, Holt composed lovely, downhearted melodies (very much recalling John Lennon) and trippy lyrics as a jumping-off point for each collage and then let acoustic guitar guide them through the gauntlet of sound. In fact, "Program Ten" is a combination of two identifiable songs, "Sunday Morning Song" and "The User," the two melodies weaving in and out of the cacophony of noise-crickets, atmospheric sounds, a John Kennedy speech, NASA chatter, news reports, glass breaking, a thunderstorm, sports broadcasts, and gunfire while a synthesizer spits out spacey alien sounds or cuts like a kettle whistle, and an ominous bass line oscillates beneath it all. "Program Eleven" exchanges that white noise for airport sounds, creepy <I>Sgt. Pepper</I>-style chants that bubble up from beneath the single melody fragment ("Going for a Ride"), game show catch phrases, and popping corn. Of the two pieces, "Program Ten" is the more socially charged commentary, setting the innocent recollections of youth — the sounds of summer and nature — against the misanthropic confusion of war and politics to powerful effect. "Program Eleven" is more psychedelically eerie and haunting, aurally dense, and thick with bad vibes, but wonderful nonetheless. The spoken samples are mostly more buried in the background and difficult to make out. It adds both intrigue and mystery to the piece, a foreboding end to what began optimistically. The music, in other words, ingeniously mirrored the sort of evolution of consciousness that was so much a part of the era. <I>Dreamies</I> went virtually unheard when it was released, perhaps because it was the antithesis of commercial rock at the time, but, despite its grounding in the ambiance and issues of the '60s, it still sounds outstanding decades after the fact.</font>
<hr size=3 width="100%" align=center>
<img src="http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/dre100/e133/e13396qjqej.jpg" align=left hspace=10><font size="-1">Inspired by the aural collage of the Beatles' "Revolution Number 9," as well as the <I>musique concrete</I> of composers such as John Cage and Terry Riley and Bob Dylan's conscientious rock lyricism, Bill Holt quit his straight job in 1972 to follow his musical muse, hoarding various electronic gadgets and an acoustic guitar and holing up in his basement. He emerged a year later with <I>Dreamies</I>, one of the finest pieces of experimental pop from the era. Unlike the Beatles' <I>White Album</I> collage, though, the pair of sidelong, 26-minute epics — "Program Ten" and "Program Eleven" (as if progressing directly from "Revolution Number 9") — that Holt created were much more than symbolic representations of the chaotic times. At its heart, the album is a blend of folk and pop/rock, and in many respects, <I>Dreamies</I> fits in with the singer/songwriter scene that flowered in the early '70s. Instead of relying simply on the juxtapositions of his sound samples to impart subjective meanings, Holt composed lovely, downhearted melodies (very much recalling John Lennon) and trippy lyrics as a jumping-off point for each collage and then let acoustic guitar guide them through the gauntlet of sound. In fact, "Program Ten" is a combination of two identifiable songs, "Sunday Morning Song" and "The User," the two melodies weaving in and out of the cacophony of noise-crickets, atmospheric sounds, a John Kennedy speech, NASA chatter, news reports, glass breaking, a thunderstorm, sports broadcasts, and gunfire while a synthesizer spits out spacey alien sounds or cuts like a kettle whistle, and an ominous bass line oscillates beneath it all. "Program Eleven" exchanges that white noise for airport sounds, creepy <I>Sgt. Pepper</I>-style chants that bubble up from beneath the single melody fragment ("Going for a Ride"), game show catch phrases, and popping corn. Of the two pieces, "Program Ten" is the more socially charged commentary, setting the innocent recollections of youth — the sounds of summer and nature — against the misanthropic confusion of war and politics to powerful effect. "Program Eleven" is more psychedelically eerie and haunting, aurally dense, and thick with bad vibes, but wonderful nonetheless. The spoken samples are mostly more buried in the background and difficult to make out. It adds both intrigue and mystery to the piece, a foreboding end to what began optimistically. The music, in other words, ingeniously mirrored the sort of evolution of consciousness that was so much a part of the era. <I>Dreamies</I> went virtually unheard when it was released, perhaps because it was the antithesis of commercial rock at the time, but, despite its grounding in the ambiance and issues of the '60s, it still sounds outstanding decades after the fact.</font>