RIP Steve Albini
I am writing this first post on an unfortunate day. Another day that will be remembered as we say goodbye to another legend, gone too soon. A sad day for music lovers.
Just got the news Steve Albini died, aged 61, from a Heart Attack. It’s another sad day for guys my age, who were born in the 1970’s and have seen many of their childhood heroes gone.
A little bit of 80’s history
Losing yet another hero, a bright and talented musician prompted me to write this first post, looking back at some 40 years of listening to music, nonstop, everyday.
Got thinking about Steve and other legends that are gone, some of them I met, like Phill Niblock or Brian McBride… both gone in the last 6 months or so, Brian, not so much a legend due to age - as he was actually 53 like me - but due to influence and the sheer influence he had in so many bands and people I know. It got me thinking about the people I have met at gigs and festivals, and the records I have collected, traded, sold, got back, sold again, all as means to an end, to get going, to get cash.., for presents, for gigs, drugs, girls, for long distance petrol, to buy electronic gear, mostly amps, speakers, mixers, synths, racks of synths… all this way before the advent of computer music and software. Got me thinking about how important music is to me, and how I have benefited so greatly from being a music head, seriously addicted to sound and melody and noise.
It all started when I was 14 years old and discovered there was more to music than just radio hits and film scores.
In the early 80’s, in the north of Portugal, you really didn’t choose your music. Music chose you. Listening to music was easy, it was as simple as having a radio nearby, but listening to music with intent was an exercise in patience and at times, a dangerous one, for a kid. You see, there wasn’t any money for records and grown-ups didn’t trust you enough to lend over their cherished records. You listened to matinée radio: my oldest memories are the first encounters with the music of Cliff Richard, Elton John, Simon & Garfunkel or Tina Turner.
And then you ventured into the night, you’d listen to some programs that started really late, under the bed sheets, dim light, so you didn’t wake up your parents, and if they did wake up, that was it… the end.
I remember taking notes of the hosts going on about what they called “exciting new music” or “modern music”… there weren’t any post- prefixes yet, nor there were any fashion connections or stories. Back then radio was basic, you’d note information about the band, the album, the track, maybe the studio and the label and that was it. There were no attached stories, gripping with adventures, stories of hotels, and girls, and booze… not yet.
You see, in the early 80’s in Portugal, a mere 7, 8 years after the people’s revolution, culture was just catching up, music was undoubtedly the first art form to really flourish out of the obscure state of oppression that had closed the country for 48 years. Yes, you had a lot of dissatisfied young people, on the verge of anarchy, a mix of converted hippies on Pink Floyd and wanna be punks into the nastiest imports from London and Berlin, but only in the big cities, Porto and Lisbon, where students were more affluent and bars were open late. You didn’t get this primer from the radio experience, in the radio it was all according to the taste of the host.
I remember when I listened to Joy Division for the first time. It was before I listened to Sex Pistols and Buzzcocks. I look back with great joy and gratefulness at the opportunity I had to listen to The Cure, Bauhaus, The Fall, and Siouxsie and The Banshees for the first time. These bands shaped who I was, the taste in fashion, in literature… and the whole aesthetic that I would chase for the many years, decades to come.
It was in a show hosted by a dj who was very fond of new British music, he called it post-punk. That radio show was called “Som da Frente” (front sound) and the host was the much missed Antonio Sérgio. I was catching up too, to British post-punk and American no wave specifically. Weeks later I remember getting introduced to Joy Division, Clan of Xymox, Sisters of Mercy and… Big Black.
Antonio had a radio voice. Antonio was for us in Portugal what John Peel was in the UK. He was the voice of alternative radio.
These bands above represent a small fraction of that foundation of taste in music and other art forms. Music was and has been the glue that makes sense of everything else.
To have a better picture of the music that really influenced my years of teenager, during the 80’s, check this mix below:
MIX#1 - Foundation Series - TOP20 albums of the 80's (UK)
This MIX#1 and #2 posted below are mixes I put together more than 20 years ago. I have just redone them, with the same songs, in the same order but used 320 kbps mp3s instead of the incompetent 128 kbps of the time.
When covid hit in March 2020 I started organising all my music in vinyl, cds, k7s, dats, minidiscs (!) and mp3. Over 40 years of music, hundreds of physical material and 8TB of NAS content.
What followed was the desire to start making thematic playlists that would bring together great music of similar genres and moods, but soon I realised that there was a lot of my favourite music that wasn’t available in streaming platforms so I decided the best was to start from scratch, make my own mixes in Audacity and upload them to say Mixcloud or Soundcloud. But I was facing yet more issues, copyright limitations and fees… so I decided I was going to make my own website and post them in my server.
Big Black and the American sound
Its thanks to Antonio and the “Som da Frente” radio show that I got to listen to Big Black for the first time. I was immediately hooked. It represented such a switch from the music coming from the UK. It was harsher and more industrial and raw. It would come to influence my further experiences in sound with great impact.
From the no-wave shenanigans of Rhys Chatham's The Gynecologists, and Glenn Branca's Theoretical Girls, to Suicide, from Black Flag to The Misfits, and from Big Black to Swans, the American sound was something extraordinarily exciting to behold and for the years that followed, well until the end of the 80’s and the start of alt-rock and grunge, we had the best decade for music ever.
In this day of sadness, it was nice to remember some of these days back when I was a kid, getting to know Ian, Robert, Jello and Steve…
I chose to feature “Kerosene” from Atomizer in my second mix from the “Foundation Series”, available below and from www.portcorner.com.
MIX #2 – Foundation Series - TOP20 Albums of the 80’s (USA).
RIP Steve.