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 From
the late 80s through the late 90s Charlie McAlister recorded and released an ungodly
number of tapes upwards of 70 by some counts (even Charlie isnt sure)
on his own Flannel Banjo label as well as on the numerous other micro-labels
that flourished during this period. Youd expect that such a furious output
would dilute any good ideas into watered down repetitive junk, but the opposite
was more often the case: Charlies inspired mix of banjo-driven songs, collage
pieces, and whacked-out radio plays only seemed to get more interesting with each
release. By 1994-95 he was at a real pinnacle, releasing four of his finest cassettes:
Suburbian Beachtown (Flannel Banjo), Southern Promenade Porch Party
(Flannel Banjo), Fake Punt Egg Roll Bomb Pass (Car-in-Car Disco Product),
and Have Fun This Summer (Car-in-Car Disco Product). On Death Water
Estates, Charlie has chosen songs from these four tapes and blended them together
into a seamless whole. Those familiar with Charlies
more pop-structured work on Mississippi Luau (Catsup Plate) will find the
music on Death Water Estates more rough-hewn: there are crazy banjo and steel
drum (!) driven pop songs aplenty, but theyre buried in between collaged
pieces, found sounds, iron pipes clanging, field recordings, manipulated radio
plays, etc. Charlie, at this point in his recording career, kept laying sounds
upon other sounds until he got the overmodulated, lo-tech wall of sound he wanted.
Charlie was listening to a lot of Due Process (RRR Records industrial damage
unit) and you can hear the musique concrete influences at work in the crazy sound
sculptures hes working with here, though Charlie infuses the whole thing
with a particular Southernness thats all his own. Make
no mistake this is fun music. The songs are some of Charies finest,
full of wry humour and anti-suburban vitriol; Urge to Leave and The
Day the Strand Burned are particularly excellent examples of this. Even
the most out there sound collages are engaging and amusing: tweaked square dance
records, a monotonous listing of those buried at sea, promotional pieces by a
Miss South Carolina from God-knows-when. And the whole thing has an unmistakable
Southern charm, recalling debutante balls, marsh mud and oyster beds, mint juleps,
kudzu covering the telephone poles, and a half-lit Chik-Fil-A sign out by the
interstate. Edition of 300 copies in foldover two-color silkscreened
chipboard sleeves. | |   
 The
Day the Strand Burned (2.7Mb) 
 Misc.
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