1
1

N
o
v
e
m
b
e
r

2
0
0
4

Taz: Aaja

There was a time when east-west crossover music was pretty rough. Bhangra, which itself emerged in the 1400s, picked up on western arrangements and instruments. It seemed that every track released in the mid to late 90s was a rehash of the previous one. Nothing remarkable happened. Nothing was worth listening to.

BBC Radio 1 DJs Bobby Friction and Nihal occupy the 9-11pm slot on Wednesdays, and it’s a lot more diverse than one might expect. Starting off yesterday with two drum ‘n’ bass tracks with a distinctly Asian influence, they then played this. A number of house and dance labels are sniffing around it, and I can see why.

Eastern vibes meet Apollo 440. Hypnotic. Hot. And it goes on and on…

Listen to the show here, but be quick ‘cos it’ll change next week.

1
0

N
o
v
e
m
b
e
r

2
0
0
4

Butterfly Boucher: Flutterby

Number 2 of 2003 — Butterfly Boucher: Flutterby

One of the things that’s really good about music is its ability to let you into other people’s lives. Back when this album was released, Butterfly Boucher didn’t have much of a website, so I knew pretty much nothing about her. Based on the music, however, I think I learnt a lot about her and what makes her the person she is. Now that she has a decent website, it’s nice to know that those insights proved correct. Mainly: that she’s really passionate about music, life and family.

Flutterby is to all intents and purposes a solo album. Butterfly was born the middle child of seven daughters to free-spirited, creatively-endowed, and very spiritual parents. Few of her siblings played instruments, and because they lived their lives roaming around the Australian outback, she couldn’t learn from, or play with others. She taught herself how to use a four-track recorder by the time she was 10 and played as many instruments as she could find, building up multi-instrumental layered demos.

She and her family eventually moved to Europe to pursue a career in street theatre, with Butterfly ending up in Stockton to stay with family and friends. It’s there that she honed her songwriting skills and developed her career as a solo artist. With the exception of a cello, and some of the drum tracks (which Butterfly answered on bass, live), everything you hear on this debut album is played and arranged by Butterfly. So we have guitars, drums, bass, piano, vibes, organ, mellotron, a toy piano, field organ, banjo, and various percussion (including planks of wood, a tympani, a steel wheel, and a hammer). Sounds like it would be a mess? But it isn’t.

Sure, it’s a busy album. There are plenty of sprinkles and motifs that wouldn’t be there in more mature arrangements. But, unlike some reviewers, I think everything should be there. Take for example the throwaway plucked coda to second track Can You See The Lights?. It comes out of nowhere, absolutely no hint it’s coming, and boom.. Perfect.

Breakthrough track (well it was on MTV) I Can’t Make Me is musically and lyrically impressive – “Paper pen and a piece of your heart / I can read it but where do I start?” Butterfly doesn’t skimp on ideas: the break in the middle might go off on a slightly different tangent than one might expect, but this means there’s loads of tunes inside each individual song. Why use one instrument when you can use three. Or why play this part of the song the same as you did last time around? The start to every verse is a little different from the rest. It’s a real treat to uncover these nuances on each listen, and on each track.

More highlights: Soul Back, one of my favourites. I should repeat the lyrics in full. But just the first verse instead: “I must have left it on the table / Or the chair / Not sure / I didn’t feel it it was painless / Oh dear / I guess I’m just a little careless / I’ll confess / When the music’s on / Everything else gets lost”. It’s really important to play this loud. Real loud.

A Walk Outside continues to demonstrate her passion for music and the fact she cannot distinguish or separate music from life, nor life from music. “Which came first / The love or the love song?”.

A click track starts Never Leave Your Heart Alone which is joined by piano. Then it all goes off. Twice. The break is incredible, joined by Butterfly’s ‘ahhh, oooohh’ backing vocals. It’s a very personal song. Autobiographical or not, it speaks volumes to me.

Imagery. Or is it? A Beautiful Book can be read in one or both of two ways. Depending on which mood I’m in, it’s either a song full of daft lyrics out of the Kate Bush songbook, or something a bit more. A tree that wants to be a book or sand that wants to be turned into a pair of spectacles. Hmm.. Still I wouldn’t want to be the bear. But what’s this doing here: “There was a book that took the world by storm”. I dunno. I’m just a tease I guess. Listen to the song yourself and make up your own mind.

“Another song about love / gone right” is the ear catching lyric on Never Let It Go. It’s a fair romp through a library full of musical instruments.

Drift on is the last track on the album. A solo guitar accompanies Butterfly, and I still can’t work out if there are any overdubs or if it’s live. Boy, she can sing.

Or it would be the last album if you don’t live in the UK. For we’re fortunate to get two bonus tracks. And I still can’t work out why they are bonus tracks. They’re both astonishing: For A Song is one of those tracks that builds up and up. A chord change and a whole new set of instruments.. piano please. Then we get to the second break and everything comes back, with a tamborine. Strangely it sounds more impressive on headphones.

Then we get to Gift Wrap: A Kristin Hersh style layered guitar intro, and some soft backing vocals, which lull you into thinking that’s all it will be. Then one minute in. “Gift wrap / this town / this chance / to keep a little joy / to pass onto another / steal a little joy”. The gentlest percussion. “Wrap it up / keep it safe / let it go another day”. And we’re no longer unaccompanied. Bam! A kind of ‘wig-out’ with Scrawl electric guitars. Those poor cymbals.

There you have it. Fourteen luscious tracks. If this album was a food, it would be one of those meaty, rustic, country soups. It leaves me totally fulfilled. You can hear the enthusiasm in each track. Each song has a purpose. Each means something to Butterfly and therefore to me. Love life. Love music. And Love this album.

1
0

N
o
v
e
m
b
e
r

2
0
0
4

No smoke

Hoorah!

Smoking is to be banned in enclosed public places in Scotland, the Scottish Executive has decided.

The decision, which was a unanimous one by Scottish ministers, will be announced in the Scottish Parliament about 1430 GMT.

9

N
o
v
e
m
b
e
r

2
0
0
4

What is it about Supercomputers?

According to Top 500, Virginia Tech’s cluster of Apple XServes is now only 7th in the list of supercomputers. This kind of news causes ripples in the Apple community. But I can’t think why.

So I had this thought: Universities and other institutions seem bent on getting faster supercomputer clusters. It’s obvious that they do this for prestige and to gather funds, sponsorship and work from businesses that need the computing power to solve their problems.

However, if Virginia Tech are like any other organisation that has supercomputers, they spend a lot of time replacing them or upgrading them. Which means there’s quite a bit of downtime. If they have time to upgrade, then surely they don’t have enough work, ergo they don’t need to upgrade. On the other hand, if they have enough work, but they have the time to upgrade, then they must have enough capacity to meet all their computational requirements, ergo they don’t need to upgrade.

I have a suspicion that they’d do equally well with one XServe… or maybe it’s just to keep students and post-graduates occupied during the holidays.

9

N
o
v
e
m
b
e
r

2
0
0
4

Firefox

Firefox 1.0 came out today. In the light of the ever diminishing market share of Internet Explorer (and I never thought I’d ever write that!), Firefox is a good bet alternative.

Be gentle on Mozilla’s servers. They’re a teeny bit busy today ;-)

9

N
o
v
e
m
b
e
r

2
0
0
4

Happy Now

Work has been really hectic over the past few weeks, including a 21 hour session over the weekend before last. I ended up being emotionally and physically exhausted. Rather depressed actually to put it mildly.

But, this difficult stretch of work doesn’t appear to be at an end yet. However, following some discussions with my good friend (and business colleague) Mark, I’ve decided to try and lighten the load, which may cause difficulties with our clients, but there’s no practical alternative. We didn’t start the business so that we’d end up ruining the lives of one or both of us.

Winston Churchill is a good source of quotations for times like this:

“If you’re going through hell, keep going.”

“Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.”

I’m listening to di.fm’s Trance channel at the moment for the first time in a week or so and I’m kind of happy. Furthermore, the iTunes Music Store has just been loaded with lots of albums from the Beggars Banquet group of record labels. This means that those who don’t know Kristin Hersh, Throwing Muses or 50 Foot Wave can now discover more about them, and I can buy Breakbeat Era’s classic 1999 album Ultra Obscene (which predated the more commercial Kosheen by a good few years, and which saves me having to record it from my vinyl version).

Nice.

Breakbeat Era: biography
Ultra Obscene: review

6

N
o
v
e
m
b
e
r

2
0
0
4

No Magenta

A couple of days after I bought by Apple Cinema 23” display I decided to calibrate it because of the magenta tinge. Since I don’t have professional calibration equipment it all had to be done by eye and the results were quite pleasing.

Yesterday, Apple released MacOS X 10.3.6, which included revised ColorSync calibration profiles for the display and I installed it this morning. No more magenta! And what’s more, the greys look like greys.

No doubt we will see lots of people complain in the Apple Discussion forum about how it doesn’t get rid of the magenta completely, but I think they’ll be imagining things. I did say it was a software problem, didn’t I?

6

N
o
v
e
m
b
e
r

2
0
0
4

Where in the World?

According to one web poster who just bought an iPod from Apple Store:

My FedEx Tracking sayes that is shipping from “SHANGHAI CN” I have no clue were this is. Please help. (I have 2-3 day shipping)

Hmm.. let me take a guess.

copyright ©2006 and so on, ninthspace.org, except quotations, lyrics and some images which are the rights of their respective holders