Showing posts with label The Farm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Farm. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 July 2024

Namesakes #96: The Farm


I grew up on a farm. I have many happy memories of feeding the calves, trying to get the chickens back into their hut, and chasing the cows down the road in the middle of the night when they escaped the field and ran past my bedroom window. And in summer, the haymaking. That's the thing I miss the most, being up on the back of the trailer while my dad, my brother and my brother in law chucked bales up at me and I had to fit them together in a giant Jenga puzzle that could make it back to the barn without toppling from the trailer. This time of year then, I always think back to my youth on the farm... but will any of these bands be ably soundtrack my memories? Let's find out...

FARM #1


Bluesy psychedelic southern rock band from Mt. Vernon, Illinois who were mucking out the pigs between 1969 and 1973.


FARM #2


In the late 60s / early 70s, filmmaker George Greenough made two movies that attempted to communicate the exhilaration of surfing to cinema audiences. The first of these was called Innermost Limits of Pure Fun, dudes. It was rad. George recruited a surf band call The Dragons to soundtrack the movie, though it was eventually released under the name "Farm" because, as one website puts it...

"The Dragons had progressed within a world ready for jazz improvisation in rock. What set it apart from the reverbed surf crunchers of the early '60s was its beyond "Pipeline" instrumentation. Keyboard riffs meshed fluidly with bass harmonica, sophisticated percussion, snap drums, and a fuzzy guitar ripping through bass lines so thick you would swear there was an orchestra behind them. What you're dealing with are surf instrumental musicians on a par unmatched, a few years after the trend, getting a chance to really dig in,"

I figured I should alert you to that stuff, in case you can't hear it when you press play on the track below...


FARM #3


UK band originally known as Fusion Farm, when they were a bit more prog / psych. By 1974, they'd jumped on the glam tractor with Fat Judy, losing all their Fusion in the process...


THE FARM BAND #4


I'm letting these guys sneak past the Namesakes Pedantry Officials because they have an interesting story to tell, and I figure adding the word "band" to your Namesake doesn't really take you too far from The Farm.

The Farm was a hippy commune in Tennessee founded in 1971 by Stephen Gaskin and 300 spiritual seekers from Haight-Ashbury and San Francisco. The Farm had its own electrical crew, composting crew, farming crew, communications, construction & demolition crew, clinic, firewood crew, alternative energy crew, motor pool, laundromat, tofu plant, bakery, school, ambulance service, publishers... and its own band. I want to go live there.


THE FARM #5


Originally known as The Excitements, though they became The Farm when lead singer Peter Hooton joined in 1983, this Scouse collective found their way onto the charts in 1990 when they became ringleaders of the baggy movement, with a little help from Suggs on production. Their debut album was huge, but a change of sound meant follow-up records didn't keep the chickens fed.


FARM #6


Experimental folk trio from Enosburg Falls, Vermont, farming between 2008 and 2012 on the camp of bands. They may or may not favour a lower case initial letter...


FARM #7

Grungy farm-folk from Sacramento, circa 2021, who write things such as this on their bandcamp page...

"I eat wasps and spit fire into my periwinkle dreams, such an essence overcomes my very being and I ignite. My Mind Is A Blank Oasis Of Silverberry Thoughts."


Farm - The Island

How Ya Gonna Keep 'em Down on the Farm after they've heard these guys?


Sunday, 11 November 2018

My Top Ten World War I Songs


100 years ago today.

Here's ten songs in tribute to all those soldiers - on all sides - who lost their lives in what tragically wasn't "The War To End All Wars".

With a special mention to Franz Ferdinand, who started it all...



10. Whistling Jack Smith - I Was Kaiser Bill's Batman

Rumoured to be based on a WWI marching song, the hit version was written by the two Rogers: British songwriters Cook & Greenaway. There was no Whistling Jack Smith, and some debate over who actually did the whistling. On the album version, someone shouts "Oi!" near the end, but this was "cleaned up" for the single release and changed to "Hey!" instead.

Those crazy 60s also brought us The Royal Guardsman - Snoopy Vs. The Red  about Baron von Richthofen, Germany's infamous Red Baron airman. Charlie Brown's cartoon pooch Snoopy often imagined himself fighting The Red Baron in the war.

9. Metallica - One

One of the more accessible Metallica songs, about a WWI soldier whose injuries are so terrible he's left praying for death.

8. The Zombies - Butchers Tale (Western Front 1914) 

Definitely the scariest song on this list... perhaps because (unlike Metallica's usual fare) it's a million miles away from the sunshiny pop of She's Not There.

And I have seen a friend of mine
Hang on the wire
Like some rag toy
Then in the heat the flies come down
And cover up the boy
And the flies come down in
Gommecourt, Thiepval,
Mametz Wood, and French Verdun
If the preacher he could see those flies
Wouldn't preach for the sound of guns

7. Siouxsie and the Banshees - Poppy Day

...In Flanders fields
The poppies grow
Between the crosses
Row on row
That mark out place
We are the dead...

Based on a 1919 poem by war poet John McCrae. See also 10,000 Maniacs take on Wilfred Owen... Anthem For Doomed Youth.

6. The Beautiful South - Poppy

Leave to Paul Heaton to mourn with bitterness and anger...

They dressed you up and took you off to World War One 
Armed you and surrounded you with wire 
Sat in stinking mud you sung your stupid songs 
And waited till they told you when to fire

Cause the rulers always laugh 
At a video bloodbath 
Nothing makes them laugh 
Like a video bloodbath

From the First World War to the Yom-Kippur 
It was Beadle's About 
The bayonets slice, the rockets roar 
And he jumps out

5. The Pogues - The Band Played Waltzing Matilda

Written by Scots-Aussie Eric Bogle (whose other big WWI tune was The Green Fields of France), but Shane and the boys did the definitive version for me...

When I was a young man I carried my pack
And I lived the free life of a rover
From the Murray's green basin to the dusty outback
I waltzed my Matilda all over
Then in nineteen fifteen my country said, "Son
It's time to stop rambling 'cause there's work to be done"
So they gave me a tin hat and they gave me a gun
And they sent me away to the war
And the band played Waltzing Matilda
As we sailed away from the quay
And amidst all the tears and the shouts and the cheers
We sailed off to Gallipoli

4. Radiohead - Harry Patch (In Memory Of)

Written in tribute to "the last surviving Tommy", the oldest survivor of WWI who died at the age of 111 in 2009...

I am the only one that got through
The others died wherever they fell
It was an ambush
They came up from all sides
Give your leaders each a gun and then let them
Fight it out themselves

3. PJ Harvey - On Battleship Hill

Polly Jean mourns the 500,000 who died at Gallipoli...

On Battleship Hill I hear the wind,
Say "Cruel nature has won again."

2. Randy Newman - Going Home

Here's Randy's explanation of this song...

This is a World War I song.
World War I fascinates me because it was such a shock to the world.
Nothing before or since has come close.
It was a horrible, horrible event.
It was modern weaponry and cavalry and then tanks.
They fought for four years over a hundred yards, some ridiculously small amount of ground.
It's the stupidest event in history.
This is one of those songs that I just can't sing - it's right in one of the cracks in my range.
So we did it to approximate what a recording of that era would sound like.
I know Mitchell's going to get blamed in some review for using all these effects, but we did it because I simply can't sing the thing.

1. The Farm - Altogether Now

I was nineteen when this record came out and I had no idea what it was about. I guess I just didn't listen to the lyrics...

Remember boy that your forefather's died
Lost in millions for a country's pride
But they never mention the trenches of Belgium
When they stopped fighting and they were one

A spirit stronger than war was at work that night
December 1914 cold, clear and bright
Countries' borders were right out of sight
When they joined together and decided not to fight

All together now
All together now
All together now, in no man's land

The same old story again
All those tears shed in vain
Nothing learned and nothing gained
Only hope remains

All together now
All together now
All together now
In no man's land

The boys had their say they said no
Stop the slaughter let's go home, let's go, let's go

(See also Pipes of Peace by Sir Macca Thumbs Aloft... which I like more than I ought to... but then, I was only 11 when it came out.)




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