Results 1 to 15 of 15

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Crackhead Extraordinaire Dusty Chalk's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    below the noise floor
    Posts
    3,636

    Black Heart Procession DVD?

    "Tropics of Love" -- starting with a foundation of the concept of using the album Amore Del Tropico as a soundtrack, building up a movie from there. Ends up being some sort of David Lynch/film noir sort of thing, or so I hear. Anyone seen it? I love BHP, but have been eschewing DVD's, since I hardly watch the ones I have. So orient your review towards "skeptic". Please, and thank you.
    Eschew fascism.
    Truth Will Out.
    Quote Originally Posted by stevef22
    you guys are crackheads.
    I remain,
    Peter aka Dusty Chalk

  2. #2
    Forum Regular
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    Cambridge, MA
    Posts
    77

    here, here

    i'm of the same mind and would like to peer over your shoulder at the forthcoming review. let's have it, folks...

    btw - saw BHP a couple of months ago and they were wonderful. did a sabbath cover and a petty cover. the sabbath cover was a highlight - the petty cover was not.

    i love jimmy levalle and hope he's not spreading himself too thin. the new album leaf record should be amazing based on the convos i've had with him

  3. #3
    very clever with maracas Davey's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    on some faraway beach...
    Posts
    2,916
    Quote Originally Posted by Toady
    i'm of the same mind and would like to peer over your shoulder at the forthcoming review. let's have it, folks...

    btw - saw BHP a couple of months ago and they were wonderful. did a sabbath cover and a petty cover. the sabbath cover was a highlight - the petty cover was not.

    i love jimmy levalle and hope he's not spreading himself too thin. the new album leaf record should be amazing based on the convos i've had with him
    Hey Toady. LaValle's upcoming Album Leaf release does sound like a good one, from what I've read. Guess he recorded it in Iceland with Sigur Ros and Pall Jenkins and some others. Is he actually a member of BHP now? Was he at the show you saw recently? If so, on guitar or electronics? I see that he did appear on that Fishtank release. Hmmm. I stilll don't have that but can't explain why not. I should get it. And I need to add that Album Leaf to my list. Maybe you should go away because I can see your presence is gonna cost me

  4. #4
    Forum Regular
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    Cambridge, MA
    Posts
    77

    jimmy levalle is cool and i am not.

    jimmy levalle (the album leaf) is playing bass for BHP this year . yes, he played at the BHP show i saw. i also saw him open for sigur ros last march(?) as the album leaf, and saw him as main support for american analog set sometime this past winter. at each of those shows i asked him about progress on the new album (writing, done recording, mastering, etc). basically, the album leaf is him with a revolving cast of musicians. for this record, his "backup" is sigur ros. how cool is that?

    and i didn't know pall was involved. awesome!

    and dusty, don't hate me... but i have this mental block with names of sabbath songs. i can tell you that the lead guitar line was played on violin, and picture jimmy levalle rocking a geezer butler bassline. if that doesn't convince you it was cool, just take my word for it. i honestly can't remember which tune it was. something dark about going insane and stuff i think...

  5. #5
    very clever with maracas Davey's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    on some faraway beach...
    Posts
    2,916
    Quote Originally Posted by Toady
    basically, the album leaf is him with a revolving cast of musicians. for this record, his "backup" is sigur ros. how cool is that?

    and i didn't know pall was involved. awesome!
    Yeah, sounds good. You already know most of the details, but here's something I read about it in his bio at http://www.inlandempiretouring.com ...

    THE ALBUM LEAF
    In a Safe Place
    release date: June 22, 2004

    There are fewer locales more awe-inspiring than the frigid recesses of Iceland’s Western coast—a calm, glacial landscape at the polar opposite of Jimmy LaValle’s sunny, bustling California. Mosfellsbaer, Iceland and its surrounding areas are host to one of the world’s most secluded and spotlighted meccas of creativity—few outsiders are invited in. LaValle, a classically-trained and prolific pianist and musician whose ambitious projects have involved San Diego’s seminal ambient piano-rock outfit Tristeza, noise punks The Locust, the beat-driven GoGoGo Airheart and the gloomy, brooding epic-core group, Black Heart Procession, is one of the lucky elite.

    LaValle has released critically-acclaimed solo work as The Album Leaf (the name comes from a Chopin piece) since 1999’s mellow An Orchestrated Rise to Fall (Linkwork). The releases that followed bubble with moody, contemplative slow builds and Brian Eno-inspired compositional atmospherics. Structural drum and bass undertones ground and direct dreamscapes that are painted with varieties of organic instruments, making for sonic journeys that are as whimsical as they are epic. During the realization of 2003’s Lifetime or More (Arena Rock) and Seal Beach (Acuarela) EPs, he prepared himself to take on a new direction by founding his rich, textural documents on minimalist beats. At the time of 2003’s recording sessions, however, nothing could have prepared LaValle for the experience he had overseas.

    “It was a constant invite—they kept asking me,” says LaValle, who first befriended Icelandic sensations Sigur Rós on their first U.S. tour and eventually began occasionally joining the group onstage several tours later. Along with Sigur Rós, members of Amina (Sigur Rós’ string section) beckoned LaValle northward until he gave in. “There was this crazy rolling green countryside with horses and ponds; it was really surreal. I felt like I was on Mars,” he chuckled warmly. Outside of the hustling, bustling confines of his previous environment, LaValle realized that he was in a profoundly different mental space—one that would deeply change the very nature of his compositions: he was in a safe place.

    “I’ve always felt that the music I make is perfect for that kind of (Icelandic) setting,” he explains. Inside Sundlaugin (the name of the studio means “swimming pool” in Icelandic) and with the help of his hosts, including members of Sigur Rós, Múm, Amina, and Black Heart Procession, LaValle was able to craft an album that ventures into new, at times beat-intensive, territory. Chillingly delicate and more pop-based than ever before, In a Safe Place masterfully negotiates the spaces between minimal electronic music and melancholy instrumental neo-rock. The inclusion of vocals from The Black Heart Procession’s Pall Jenkins, Sigur Rós’ Jon Thor Birgisson, and LaValle himself is one of the striking results from this newly collaborative process. “If I wasn’t in that environment, I sure wouldn’t have sung,” he marvels. We’re glad he did, and you will be, too.

    Look for The Album Leaf’s gorgeous live show (it includes a large touring entourage involving projection art and live strings) throughout 2004!

  6. #6
    Forum Regular
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    Cambridge, MA
    Posts
    77
    Quote Originally Posted by Davey
    Yeah, sounds good. You already know most of the details, but here's something I read about it in his bio at http://www.inlandempiretouring.com ...

    THE ALBUM LEAF
    In a Safe Place
    release date: June 22, 2004

    There are fewer locales more awe-inspiring than the frigid recesses of Iceland’s Western coast—a calm, glacial landscape at the polar opposite of Jimmy LaValle’s sunny, bustling California. Mosfellsbaer, Iceland and its surrounding areas are host to one of the world’s most secluded and spotlighted meccas of creativity—few outsiders are invited in. LaValle, a classically-trained and prolific pianist and musician whose ambitious projects have involved San Diego’s seminal ambient piano-rock outfit Tristeza, noise punks The Locust, the beat-driven GoGoGo Airheart and the gloomy, brooding epic-core group, Black Heart Procession, is one of the lucky elite.

    LaValle has released critically-acclaimed solo work as The Album Leaf (the name comes from a Chopin piece) since 1999’s mellow An Orchestrated Rise to Fall (Linkwork). The releases that followed bubble with moody, contemplative slow builds and Brian Eno-inspired compositional atmospherics. Structural drum and bass undertones ground and direct dreamscapes that are painted with varieties of organic instruments, making for sonic journeys that are as whimsical as they are epic. During the realization of 2003’s Lifetime or More (Arena Rock) and Seal Beach (Acuarela) EPs, he prepared himself to take on a new direction by founding his rich, textural documents on minimalist beats. At the time of 2003’s recording sessions, however, nothing could have prepared LaValle for the experience he had overseas.

    “It was a constant invite—they kept asking me,” says LaValle, who first befriended Icelandic sensations Sigur Rós on their first U.S. tour and eventually began occasionally joining the group onstage several tours later. Along with Sigur Rós, members of Amina (Sigur Rós’ string section) beckoned LaValle northward until he gave in. “There was this crazy rolling green countryside with horses and ponds; it was really surreal. I felt like I was on Mars,” he chuckled warmly. Outside of the hustling, bustling confines of his previous environment, LaValle realized that he was in a profoundly different mental space—one that would deeply change the very nature of his compositions: he was in a safe place.

    “I’ve always felt that the music I make is perfect for that kind of (Icelandic) setting,” he explains. Inside Sundlaugin (the name of the studio means “swimming pool” in Icelandic) and with the help of his hosts, including members of Sigur Rós, Múm, Amina, and Black Heart Procession, LaValle was able to craft an album that ventures into new, at times beat-intensive, territory. Chillingly delicate and more pop-based than ever before, In a Safe Place masterfully negotiates the spaces between minimal electronic music and melancholy instrumental neo-rock. The inclusion of vocals from The Black Heart Procession’s Pall Jenkins, Sigur Rós’ Jon Thor Birgisson, and LaValle himself is one of the striking results from this newly collaborative process. “If I wasn’t in that environment, I sure wouldn’t have sung,” he marvels. We’re glad he did, and you will be, too.

    Look for The Album Leaf’s gorgeous live show (it includes a large touring entourage involving projection art and live strings) throughout 2004!
    wow.

    it was already on my most-looking-forward-to list for this year. "beat intensive" and "delicate" make me think of "Malmo" from Seal Beach. and pall and jonsi contributing vocals? so awesome. could be haunting even, no?

    davey, are you also a fan of Three Mile Pilot and Pinback?

  7. #7
    Crackhead Extraordinaire Dusty Chalk's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    below the noise floor
    Posts
    3,636

    I don't hate you, but...what good are you?

    Quote Originally Posted by Toady
    and dusty, don't hate me... but i have this mental block with names of sabbath songs. i can tell you that the lead guitar line was played on violin, and picture jimmy levalle rocking a geezer butler bassline. if that doesn't convince you it was cool, just take my word for it. i honestly can't remember which tune it was. something dark about going insane and stuff i think...
    That's like most of them. "Am I Going Insane?" comes to mind.

    EDIT: PS Welcome to Rave Recs, I already see we have a lot in common.
    Eschew fascism.
    Truth Will Out.
    Quote Originally Posted by stevef22
    you guys are crackheads.
    I remain,
    Peter aka Dusty Chalk

  8. #8
    Forum Regular
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    Cambridge, MA
    Posts
    77
    Quote Originally Posted by Dusty Chalk
    That's like most of them.
    yeah, that was newbie humor... i tried.

    edit: thanks! this is a great forum. was here years ago and just got back.

  9. #9
    Crackhead Extraordinaire Dusty Chalk's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    below the noise floor
    Posts
    3,636

    Where's that confounded review?

    There's an Album Leaf/BHP connection? I dig both bands, can you please synopsize? I suppose I can look it up myself...

    Well, at least tell me what Sabbath song they covered -- I can almost hear it, I'm thinking "Black Sabbath"...
    Eschew fascism.
    Truth Will Out.
    Quote Originally Posted by stevef22
    you guys are crackheads.
    I remain,
    Peter aka Dusty Chalk

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. Rave Recordings Group Comps
    By Davey in forum Rave Recordings
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 09-08-2015, 05:15 AM
  2. Pinnacle Black Diamond Series
    By nbklc68 in forum Speakers
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 01-04-2004, 11:27 AM
  3. Black Text on Dark Blue in Subject Fields!
    By Pat D in forum Site Feedback/Discussion
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 11-13-2003, 07:33 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •