Nitsuh Abebe

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Nitsuh Abebe

Nitsuh Abebe

@ntabebe

magazine editor. email grammarlog @ gmail. save your speeches, flowers are for funerals

New York, NY Katılım Ekim 2010
1.4K Takip Edilen9K Takipçiler
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
tweeting about stuff nobody’s really interested in is a political 👏🏾 act 👏🏾
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Ana
Ana@_motherslug·
I’m trying to imagine the lives of these Texan sci-fi fans in the ‘80s and it’s really doing something I can’t articulate to my brain.
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Ana
Ana@_motherslug·
If I had unlimited funds I would create a museum/directory for sci-fi mags of the ‘70s & ‘80s.
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
Further context from Albini’s column
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
One highlight from his early career at the Daily Northwestern
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
@alienvsrobbins @J_Zuckerman i’m sorry, you expect me to believe a piece of paper over some guy with a computer?? (no but i did eventually find a PDF of the source cited and it does say NJ)
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michael röbbins
michael röbbins@alienvsrobbins·
@ntabebe @J_Zuckerman wiki, as i tell my students, is not a trustworthy source. Holmes explains why the family was in the American colonies, so they'd have had to ship back to England for their son's birth. obviously whoever edited this thought someone else had made a mistake about which Newark
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michael röbbins
michael röbbins@alienvsrobbins·
whoa—Percy Bysshe Shelley's grandfather was born in Newark, New Jersey
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
@en_cohen ack dude you remind someone of this song on boxing day and now i’m gonna go become a paramedic
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
@dada_drummer sure — though i genuinely like what the recording was trying to do here! i suspect that’s because i’m more of an 80s college-jangle/new-wave/anglophile guy than a rawk’n’roll guy, and have no issue with Tim sounding a little like the UK stuff Sire put out that year (or Dramarama)
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Damon K 🎤
Damon K 🎤@dada_drummer·
@ntabebe Also: some bands just don’t translate to recording, like the MC5…
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
ok, here’s my contrarian take: the new version of “tim” is great, but i prefer it to sound like it’s from 1985! this doesn’t just “improve” the mix, it also scrapes off the era to make it sound like no particular time at all, which … i dunno
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
@MarkRichardson i’m sure you know most of these songs already, but when they’re back to back i think the sonic profiles are clearer. honestly i should have just told you to revisit “meat is murder” and do some A/B tests / search for andy rourke on “what she said” !
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
@MarkRichardson this'll take forever but i'll do you a mix. not soundalikes, just the mid-80s left-of-dial context in which, to me, it sits pretty naturally
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Mark Richardson
Mark Richardson@MarkRichardson·
@ntabebe I hear you on this & I'm generally v. skeptical of remixes like this, but to me the original didn't sound "1985" so much as just badly done, actually in a very unique way that isn't "dated" as much as "wrong"; I'm struggling to think of another mid-80s record that sounds like Tim
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
admittedly i’m part of the minority with really fond feelings about the sound of 80s ’wavers, but if we start looking at stylistic choices of the past (even regretted ones) as impediments to hearing some “real” “true” underlying essence, what are we even doing here, recordingwise
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
@emsuerob honestly not sure what could be more striking than Fido Dido on a 2023 magazine cover
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
@elite_gz i may well obsess about this; so far, looking for 1969 metrics, it seems possible a tom jones live album was somehow certified gold faster than abbey road? though the RIAA records are … weird. anyway: LOVE yr column (and music!) and will update if i learn anything useful here
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jaime brooks
jaime brooks@elite_gz·
@ntabebe am very interested in the economics of the record biz of that time period and the question of how to compare a sale of the white album at the equivalent of $60 in 2023 money to the way music is consumed now. would love to read the results if you do end up looking into the numbers
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jaime brooks
jaime brooks@elite_gz·
what’s interesting is that the artists wenner admired were the biggest and most successful artists of the boomer era. in that context, he was biased towards chart-topping celebrities in exactly the same way that cranks claim “poptimist” music media is today
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
@elite_gz and, of course, deeper partisans lined up to publish deep thoughts about the end-of-60s rock canon than Diana Ross, Tom Jones, the Jackson 5, Andy Williams, etc. — but maybe i should double-check the numbers to make sure i’m not swallowing a rockist underdog story here!
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
@elite_gz i mean, agreed that hit singles are a tossed-off metric, but i think there are two very different lanes of cultural domination here, with the narrower rock/album one tending to perceive actual *celebrity* in the broader pop/radio one
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
@elite_gz which is not to say they weren't huge, just that it's in the album-canon lane that poptism, in theory, hopes to get beyond by considering what more people listen to in the moment: motown singles, neil diamond, streisand, lots of stuff
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Nitsuh Abebe
Nitsuh Abebe@ntabebe·
@elite_gz this feels off to me: the artists he talks to were not necessarily hitmakers! stevie wonder has 10 number ones, which is 10 times as many as the who, springsteen, & dylan combined. honestly a poptimist look at the era would probably involve talking to the carpenters & osmonds too
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Aaron Bady
Aaron Bady@zunguzungu·
What's an example of a short story that has a beginning, middle, and an end--that tells a story, that has conflict and resolution--but which is a single unbroken first-person monologue?
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