21 December 2023

My coat contained a furnace where there used to be a guy

Thursday music corner: US indie group They Might Be Giants formed in Brooklyn in 1982. They have released 18 'grown-up' albums, plus five albums for children. Their most successful album was their third, Flood, which was certified platinum in the US and gold in the UK; in the UK it also peaked at number 14 in the national album charts.

The Statue Got Me High was the first of three singles released from their fourth album, Apollo 18, in 1992. The album was named after a cancelled lunar mission, and the single's lyrics play with the notion of an unlikely statuary-inspired epiphany.

They Might Be Giants - The Statue Got Me High (1992)  

See also:
Music: They Might Be Giants - Istanbul (Not Constantinople) (1990)
Music: They Might Be Giants - New York City (1996)
Music: They Might Be Giants - Why Does The Sun Shine? (2009)

15 December 2023

Russians in Queen Charlotte Sound

In the 1820s foreign shipping began to frequent Cook Strait in greater numbers. All the vessels known well before 1826 missed Whanganui-a-Tara, but it is hard to accept that all the many visitors to the area, where sealing, whaling or flax trading spanned Cook Strait, learned nothing at all of the existence of this handy safe harbour. Here, as elsewhere, there is no reliable alternative but to present what evidence we have of the near misses, and the probable visits, that preceded the known visits.

Bellingshausen, the leader of a Russian exploring expedition, took his two ships, Vostok and Mirny, into Queen Charlotte Sound for a week in June 1820. His officers wrote extensive reports on the Maori they met near Ship Cove, and the secured many Maori artifacts for Russian museums.

Recently intensive studies of these Russian records by Barratt, O'Regan and Simmonds, show very clearly that the Russians met Maori with very different lifestyles from the people Captain Cook and his men had met there fifty years before. The earlier Maori were mobile food gatherers without agriculture, passing between temporary villages in constant fear of attacking raids by their similarly itinerant neighbours. But the Maori the Russians met in 1820 were cultivators of potatoes, living a relatively settled life centred on defensive hill forts, or pa, but with their livelihoods based firmly on trade and agriculture, not war. The population had fallen between 1770 and 1820 from almost 500 to under 100. Many of the latter were exterminated by Te Rauparaha and his Te Atiawa allies by 1828, and more were killed by 1840. Consequently it is hardly surprising then that they, and their Wellington relatives, many of whom were also killed by Te Atiawa, failed to pass on any collective memory of the early sealers. That unrecorded sealers had been there nevertheless, is confirmed by the Russian observations that some garments were, or were modelled on, 'half coats with sleeves of flax sewn on', like those worn by sealers. Such are the shreds of history!

- Rhys Richards, The First Pakehas Around Wellington & Cook Strait 1803 to 1839, Porirua, 2020, p.27-8.

See also:
History: Wellington's early architecture, 10 March 2023
History: In memory of Captain Williams, 22 September 2019
History: Pre-1840 European visitors to Wellington, 21 February 2016

14 December 2023

Powers of today so pretty darn confused

Thursday music corner: American funk band The Meters formed in New Orleans in 1965 and during their heyday until splitting in 1977 released eight studio albums and worked as producer Allen Toussaint's house band backing many artists including Paul McCartney, Dr John and Robert Palmer. After seeing them perform at a McCartney album launch, the Rolling Stones invited The Meters to open for them on two tours in 1975 and 1976. (The band re-formed in 1989 and are still active with three of the original four members).

People Say appeared on The Meters' fifth album, 1974's Rejuvenation. Produced by Toussaint and the band, it was their second album with vocal songs and arrangements, with their early albums being mainly instrumentals. People Say was the opening track on Side A, and was written by all four band members: Ziggy Modeliste, Art Neville, Leo Nocentelli and George Porter.

The Meters - People Say (1974)

See also:
Music: The Meters - Cissy Strut (1969)
Music: Dr John - (Everybody Wanna Get Rich) Rite Away (w/ The Meters, 1974)
Music: Red Hot Chili Peppers - Hollywood (Africa) (Meters cover, 1985)

07 December 2023

Stupid fish I drank the pool

Thursday music corner: English musician Denny Laine, who died on Tuesday in Florida aged 79, was a founder member of both the Moody Blues from 1964 to 1965 and Wings from 1971 to 1981. Born Brian Hines in the Channel Islands, he grew up in Birmingham and adopted his rock name from a combination of a backyard den and the singer Frankie Laine. 

At a young age formed the Moody Blues along with Mike Pinder and Ray Thomas. Despite the success of their single Go Now, money disputes (chiefly the lack thereof) led Laine to depart the group, and he formed Denny Laine & the Electric String Band, which presaged the Electric Light Orchestra sound, and the short-lived and ineptly-named group Balls with ex-Move guitarist Trevor Burton. After a short stint in the ill-fated Ginger Baker's Air Force, Laine joined Paul McCartney's Wings, which then became his job for the rest of the 1970s. He co-wrote the band's only UK chart-topper Mull of Kintyre, but only received a flat fee.

Laine released 12 solo albums from 1973's Ahh...Laine to 2008's The Blue Musician. Say You Don't Mind was his first solo single, released in 1967. While it failed to chart at the time, former Zombies lead singer Colin Blunstone's 1972 cover reached number 15 in the UK pop charts.   

Denny Laine - Say You Don't Mind (1967)

See also:
Music: Denny Laine obituary, Guardian, 6 December 2023
Music: Wings - Time To Hide (1976, written by Laine)
Music: Ginger Baker's Air Force - 12 Gates of the City (live, 1970) 
Music: The Zombies - Time of the Season (1968)

02 December 2023

The War On Drugs

 The War On Drugs, Anderson Park, Wellington last night