#swellmaps — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #swellmaps, aggregated by home.social.
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Nikki Sudden died twenty years ago today.
This was a big one for me because he'd performed live on my WFMU radio program just days before he passed. The events of that night are presumably the last studio recordings he ever made, and so obviously remain very close to my heart.
I was a huge Nikki fan and always went out of my way to see him perform when he'd hit NYC. Even then, his gigs felt like an alien visitation from some other dimension -- he was a classic rock and roller with a seminal artpunk past. A considerable departure from the hipster posing and faux-No-Wave culture that was gathering steam in early aughts NYC. His gigs weren't the type you'd show up to dressed in a hoodie and jeans -- something about his presence signaled that dressing sharply was the expectation, and for (single, mid 30ish) me that meant anything from my black velvet suit jacket to a pair of red leather John Fluevog kicks. A little embarrassing upon review many years later, but these sartorial choices seemed spot-on in the moment.
I was unusually nervous the night he performed live on my show. I'd had plenty of revered bands down for FMU sessions by 2006, but Nikki accepting my invitation felt different. He was a bona fide legend! I did my best to bottle up the gushing fanboy routine, and his initial skeptical glances at me through the studio glass softened as the night progressed. By 11 PM, we were sharing a bottle of champagne, laughing, and discussing plans for him to return to the station on his next stateside visit. Before he left, he signed my copy of "The Bible Belt", his solo LP from 1983.
And a few days later, he was gone.
RIP Nikki Sudden. Art punk terrorist in the Swell Maps, Bolan/Bowie refugee in the Jacobites, and prolific solo troubadour who played an outsized role in shaping my understanding of art and life’s various tragedies.
#nikkisudden #swellmaps #postpunk #jacobites #staybruised #wfmu
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Nikki Sudden died twenty years ago today.
This was a big one for me because he'd performed live on my WFMU radio program just days before he passed. The events of that night are presumably the last studio recordings he ever made, and so obviously remain very close to my heart.
I was a huge Nikki fan and always went out of my way to see him perform when he'd hit NYC. Even then, his gigs felt like an alien visitation from some other dimension -- he was a classic rock and roller with a seminal artpunk past. A considerable departure from the hipster posing and faux-No-Wave culture that was gathering steam in early aughts NYC. His gigs weren't the type you'd show up to dressed in a hoodie and jeans -- something about his presence signaled that dressing sharply was the expectation, and for (single, mid 30ish) me that meant anything from my black velvet suit jacket to a pair of red leather John Fluevog kicks. A little embarrassing upon review many years later, but these sartorial choices seemed spot-on in the moment.
I was unusually nervous the night he performed live on my show. I'd had plenty of revered bands down for FMU sessions by 2006, but Nikki accepting my invitation felt different. He was a bona fide legend! I did my best to bottle up the gushing fanboy routine, and his initial skeptical glances at me through the studio glass softened as the night progressed. By 11 PM, we were sharing a bottle of champagne, laughing, and discussing plans for him to return to the station on his next stateside visit. Before he left, he signed my copy of "The Bible Belt", his solo LP from 1983.
And a few days later, he was gone.
RIP Nikki Sudden. Art punk terrorist in the Swell Maps, Bolan/Bowie refugee in the Jacobites, and prolific solo troubadour who played an outsized role in shaping my understanding of art and life’s various tragedies.
#nikkisudden #swellmaps #postpunk #jacobites #staybruised #wfmu
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Nikki Sudden died twenty years ago today.
This was a big one for me because he'd performed live on my WFMU radio program just days before he passed. The events of that night are presumably the last studio recordings he ever made, and so obviously remain very close to my heart.
I was a huge Nikki fan and always went out of my way to see him perform when he'd hit NYC. Even then, his gigs felt like an alien visitation from some other dimension -- he was a classic rock and roller with a seminal artpunk past. A considerable departure from the hipster posing and faux-No-Wave culture that was gathering steam in early aughts NYC. His gigs weren't the type you'd show up to dressed in a hoodie and jeans -- something about his presence signaled that dressing sharply was the expectation, and for (single, mid 30ish) me that meant anything from my black velvet suit jacket to a pair of red leather John Fluevog kicks. A little embarrassing upon review many years later, but these sartorial choices seemed spot-on in the moment.
I was unusually nervous the night he performed live on my show. I'd had plenty of revered bands down for FMU sessions by 2006, but Nikki accepting my invitation felt different. He was a bona fide legend! I did my best to bottle up the gushing fanboy routine, and his initial skeptical glances at me through the studio glass softened as the night progressed. By 11 PM, we were sharing a bottle of champagne, laughing, and discussing plans for him to return to the station on his next stateside visit. Before he left, he signed my copy of "The Bible Belt", his solo LP from 1983.
And a few days later, he was gone.
RIP Nikki Sudden. Art punk terrorist in the Swell Maps, Bolan/Bowie refugee in the Jacobites, and prolific solo troubadour who played an outsized role in shaping my understanding of art and life’s various tragedies.
#nikkisudden #swellmaps #postpunk #jacobites #staybruised #wfmu
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Nikki Sudden died twenty years ago today.
This was a big one for me because he'd performed live on my WFMU radio program just days before he passed. The events of that night are presumably the last studio recordings he ever made, and so obviously remain very close to my heart.
I was a huge Nikki fan and always went out of my way to see him perform when he'd hit NYC. Even then, his gigs felt like an alien visitation from some other dimension -- he was a classic rock and roller with a seminal artpunk past. A considerable departure from the hipster posing and faux-No-Wave culture that was gathering steam in early aughts NYC. His gigs weren't the type you'd show up to dressed in a hoodie and jeans -- something about his presence signaled that dressing sharply was the expectation, and for (single, mid 30ish) me that meant anything from my black velvet suit jacket to a pair of red leather John Fluevog kicks. A little embarrassing upon review many years later, but these sartorial choices seemed spot-on in the moment.
I was unusually nervous the night he performed live on my show. I'd had plenty of revered bands down for FMU sessions by 2006, but Nikki accepting my invitation felt different. He was a bona fide legend! I did my best to bottle up the gushing fanboy routine, and his initial skeptical glances at me through the studio glass softened as the night progressed. By 11 PM, we were sharing a bottle of champagne, laughing, and discussing plans for him to return to the station on his next stateside visit. Before he left, he signed my copy of "The Bible Belt", his solo LP from 1983.
And a few days later, he was gone.
RIP Nikki Sudden. Art punk terrorist in the Swell Maps, Bolan/Bowie refugee in the Jacobites, and prolific solo troubadour who played an outsized role in shaping my understanding of art and life’s various tragedies.
#nikkisudden #swellmaps #postpunk #jacobites #staybruised #wfmu
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Nikki Sudden died twenty years ago today.
This was a big one for me because he'd performed live on my WFMU radio program just days before he passed. The events of that night are presumably the last studio recordings he ever made, and so obviously remain very close to my heart.
I was a huge Nikki fan and always went out of my way to see him perform when he'd hit NYC. Even then, his gigs felt like an alien visitation from some other dimension -- he was a classic rock and roller with a seminal artpunk past. A considerable departure from the hipster posing and faux-No-Wave culture that was gathering steam in early aughts NYC. His gigs weren't the type you'd show up to dressed in a hoodie and jeans -- something about his presence signaled that dressing sharply was the expectation, and for (single, mid 30ish) me that meant anything from my black velvet suit jacket to a pair of red leather John Fluevog kicks. A little embarrassing upon review many years later, but these sartorial choices seemed spot-on in the moment.
I was unusually nervous the night he performed live on my show. I'd had plenty of revered bands down for FMU sessions by 2006, but Nikki accepting my invitation felt different. He was a bona fide legend! I did my best to bottle up the gushing fanboy routine, and his initial skeptical glances at me through the studio glass softened as the night progressed. By 11 PM, we were sharing a bottle of champagne, laughing, and discussing plans for him to return to the station on his next stateside visit. Before he left, he signed my copy of "The Bible Belt", his solo LP from 1983.
And a few days later, he was gone.
RIP Nikki Sudden. Art punk terrorist in the Swell Maps, Bolan/Bowie refugee in the Jacobites, and prolific solo troubadour who played an outsized role in shaping my understanding of art and life’s various tragedies.
#nikkisudden #swellmaps #postpunk #jacobites #staybruised #wfmu
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Recorded #OnThisDay 46 years ago:
Swell Maps - (Let's) Buy A Bridge (Peel Session)
(Let's) Buy A Bridge by Swell Maps, taken from the Peel Session recorded on 18 March 1980.
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Post Punk Classics. No 105 in an occasional series:
Swell Maps - Secret Island
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Recorded #OnThisDay 47 years ago:
Swell Maps - Peel Session 1978
The complete session recorded by Swell Maps on 16 October 1978 for the John Peel show on BBC Radio 1 and first broadcast on the 27th of that month.
Tracklist:
1. Another Song (0:07)
2. Full Moon In My Pocket / Blam!! / Full Moon etc (1:51)
3. Harmony In Your Bathroom (8:00)
4. International Rescue (12:01)
5. Read About Seymour (14:17)https://vibracobra23.blogspot.com/2012/05/swell-maps-peel-session-1978.html
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🇺🇦 #NowPlaying on #KEXP's #SonicReducer
Swell Maps:
🎵 Forest Fire -
NEW POST: Epic Soundtracks "emerging from the post-punk scene, his music suffused with an air of vulnerability and melancholy centred on the pursuit of the perfect pop song”
Here’s our #EpicSoundtracks top 10 (RIP Kevin Godfrey 1959-1997) #SwellMaps #TheJacobites
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Post Punk Classics. No 23 in an occasional series:
Swell Maps - International Rescue
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New upload:
Swell Maps - Full Moon In My Pocket / Blam!! / Full Moon (Peel Session)
Full Moon In My Pocket / Blam!! / Full Moon (Reprise) by Swell Maps, taken from the Peel Session recorded on 16 October 1978.
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New upload:
Swell Maps - Bleep And Booster Come Round For Tea (Peel Session)
Bleep And Booster Come Round For Tea by Swell Maps, taken from the Peel Session recorded on 18 March 1980.
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Here's a picture of Nikki Sudden signing my copy of his "Bible Belt" LP at WFMU. This photo was taken the night he performed live on my show -- he passed away a few days later.
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11.04.2023
1. SWELL MAPS - Dresden style
2. THE CLASH - remote control
3. CRAVATS - who's in here with me
3. SLITS - in the beginning there was rhythm
4. POP GROUP - she is beyond good and evil
5. ASSOCIATES - nude spoon
6. DAWN PATROL - all our yesterdays
7. THE FALL - fantastic life
8. WIRE - ignorance no plea (I
https://www.subjektiv.net/11-04-2023/
#2023 #ASSOCIATES #BLACK #CLASH #CRAVATS #DAWNPATROL #FOETUSUNDERGLASS #POPGROUP #SIOUXSIEANDTHEBANSHEES #SLITS #SWELLMAPS #WIRE