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A Thurston Moore Photo
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Musician — Florida
A Thurston Moore Photo
Name?
Thurston Joseph Michael Moore
Where are you from?
Coral Gables, Florida / Bethel, CT / NYC / Western MA / London.
What do you do?
Poetry / Music / Collage / Teach / Archive / Travel.
Describe your style?
Jeans, sneakers, button down shirt - preferably 2nd hand/vintage or irregulars.
If you could make a record with anyone from history?
I like playing and recording music with musicians devoted to free improvisation and/or experimental music. It would have been incredible to record with Sun Ra - synthesiser/electric guitar duo! He did whisper in my ear one night while he was parading through the audience, "Sing the Cosmos Song!"
What’s the best gig you’ve ever been to?
When we asked Nirvana to tour with us in Europe they complied and we began in Cork, Ireland. They had just employed Dave Grohl as a drummer and from the first moment of their set I knew I was at the best gig in the universe. The first song they played was 'Drain You' and as soon as the drums kicked in after Kurt's vocal intro it was...nirvana.
What music icons inspire your sound today?
Billie Holiday for her dignity and earth/soul passion. Jimi Hendrix for his almost irreal guitar technique and freak scene vocals. Iggy Pop for his complete freedom of unified physical/intellectual expression.
If you could spend an hour with anyone from history?
Ted Berrigan, the poet who was the guiding light of what is called third generation New York School poetry. He lived in holy poverty on the lower east side of Manhattan throughout the '60s, '70s and '80s and constructed poems informed on classic poetic tropes with an honest ear to the humanism of contemporary urban life, springboarding from Frank O'Hara and Allen Ginsberg to an "All Poets Welcome" communitarian aesthetic that is still resonating in the world of working poets today. He passed away in the 80s and I never met him though I would spy him strolling along 2nd Avenue with young poets in tow catching his every word.
Are there any British subcultures that mean something to you?
Britain has a history of subcultures in its society. Most of which I know from the different factions of punk rock like goth, crusty, industrial, Two-Tone, riot grrl, shoegaze etc. They all mean a lot to me as they represent like-minded collectives where a pleasure is shared within the group as a gift to anyone who finds intrigue in their ideas.
If you could share the bill with any band in history?
So many bands I would have loved to be on the same bill as! Some of which I have: Patti Smith, Public Image, Neil Young & Crazy Horse, The Stooges - all dreams realised. I would've loved to have been playing on a bill with the Feminist Improvising Group, free improvisers who existed in the early '70s in London and played a handful of gigs and only released one astounding cassette in its time. They are underdocumented in the history of British underground music and I'd love to publish a recording/book of their work at some point!
What music did you listen to growing up?
I was always attracted to music that was from the outer zones. It started in the '60s with the records my older brother brought into the house like Jefferson Airplane, The Beatles, Black Sabbath, Moody Blues into my own choices which were weirdo sides by The Stooges, MC5, Velvet Underground, Captain Beefheart - all precursors to punk rock in 1976 when I turned 18 and my vocation became apparent by hearing and witnessing the Ramones, Richard Hell & The Voidoids, Suicide, Talking Heads et al.
Thurston Moore was the singer, songwriter, guitarist and founding member of the iconic American post-punk group Sonic Youth. He is also a solo artist in his own right and his latest album 'Rock N Roll Consciousness' was released in April 2017.
Sonic Youth recently featured in an article we did on the importance of American independent artists, read it here.
Moore's record label 'Ecstatic Peace' also recently launched a book collecting the '70s zine for improvised music & art called 'Musics'. Read about that here.
What was the first song you played on repeat?
'Louie, Louie' by The Kingsmen.
One record you would keep forever?
'Ege Bamyasi' by Can. Track 'Vitamin C'.
A song from your favourite album?
'Betrayal Takes Two' from the 'Blank Generation' LP by Richard Hell & The Voidoids.
A song you wish you had written?
'In Love' by The Raincoats.
A song that defines the teenage you?
'I Got A Right' by Iggy & The Stooges.
What was the last piece of music you bought?
A vintage 7" by French musician/jazz writer/novelist/surrealist Boris Vian for my love Eva.
A song lyric that inspires you?
'Godspeed' by the Patti Smith Group.
Is there a song you like that people wouldn’t expect?
'Dizzy' by Tommy Roe.
Best love song of all time?
'Oh Yoko' by John Lennon.
Best song to turn up loud?
'Time's Up' by The Buzzcocks.
Best song to bring people together?
'Give Peace A Chance' by The Plastic Ono Band.
4 songs you can’t stop listening to right now?
'Não Consegues' by Pega Monstro
Portuguese beauty spirit music - their new LP on the Upset The Rhythm label is fantastic!
'Everything Is Fine' by Es
They're a London based band that did some shows with us on a recent English tour. Strange dark-wave in high colour sound.
'Everything in Order' by The Worms
Three-piece London no wave Wire meets Teenage Jesus band - killer tune.
'TV OD' by Nots
An excellent cover version of the classic by The Normal. UK electronic weirdness through the prism of Memphis garage noise psyche.
Name?
Thurston Joseph Michael Moore
Where are you from?
Coral Gables, Florida / Bethel, CT / NYC / Western MA / London.
What do you do?
Poetry / Music / Collage / Teach / Archive / Travel.
Describe your style?
Jeans, sneakers, button down shirt - preferably 2nd hand/vintage or irregulars.
If you could make a record with anyone from history?
I like playing and recording music with musicians devoted to free improvisation and/or experimental music. It would have been incredible to record with Sun Ra - synthesiser/electric guitar duo! He did whisper in my ear one night while he was parading through the audience, "Sing the Cosmos Song!"
What’s the best gig you’ve ever been to?
When we asked Nirvana to tour with us in Europe they complied and we began in Cork, Ireland. They had just employed Dave Grohl as a drummer and from the first moment of their set I knew I was at the best gig in the universe. The first song they played was 'Drain You' and as soon as the drums kicked in after Kurt's vocal intro it was...nirvana.
What music icons inspire your sound today?
Billie Holiday for her dignity and earth/soul passion. Jimi Hendrix for his almost irreal guitar technique and freak scene vocals. Iggy Pop for his complete freedom of unified physical/intellectual expression.
If you could spend an hour with anyone from history?
Ted Berrigan, the poet who was the guiding light of what is called third generation New York School poetry. He lived in holy poverty on the lower east side of Manhattan throughout the '60s, '70s and '80s and constructed poems informed on classic poetic tropes with an honest ear to the humanism of contemporary urban life, springboarding from Frank O'Hara and Allen Ginsberg to an "All Poets Welcome" communitarian aesthetic that is still resonating in the world of working poets today. He passed away in the 80s and I never met him though I would spy him strolling along 2nd Avenue with young poets in tow catching his every word.
Are there any British subcultures that mean something to you?
Britain has a history of subcultures in its society. Most of which I know from the different factions of punk rock like goth, crusty, industrial, Two-Tone, riot grrl, shoegaze etc. They all mean a lot to me as they represent like-minded collectives where a pleasure is shared within the group as a gift to anyone who finds intrigue in their ideas.
If you could share the bill with any band in history?
So many bands I would have loved to be on the same bill as! Some of which I have: Patti Smith, Public Image, Neil Young & Crazy Horse, The Stooges - all dreams realised. I would've loved to have been playing on a bill with the Feminist Improvising Group, free improvisers who existed in the early '70s in London and played a handful of gigs and only released one astounding cassette in its time. They are underdocumented in the history of British underground music and I'd love to publish a recording/book of their work at some point!
What music did you listen to growing up?
I was always attracted to music that was from the outer zones. It started in the '60s with the records my older brother brought into the house like Jefferson Airplane, The Beatles, Black Sabbath, Moody Blues into my own choices which were weirdo sides by The Stooges, MC5, Velvet Underground, Captain Beefheart - all precursors to punk rock in 1976 when I turned 18 and my vocation became apparent by hearing and witnessing the Ramones, Richard Hell & The Voidoids, Suicide, Talking Heads et al.
Thurston Moore was the singer, songwriter, guitarist and founding member of the iconic American post-punk group Sonic Youth. He is also a solo artist in his own right and his latest album 'Rock N Roll Consciousness' was released in April 2017.
Sonic Youth recently featured in an article we did on the importance of American independent artists, read it here.
Moore's record label 'Ecstatic Peace' also recently launched a book collecting the '70s zine for improvised music & art called 'Musics'. Read about that here.
What was the first song you played on repeat?
'Louie, Louie' by The Kingsmen.
One record you would keep forever?
'Ege Bamyasi' by Can. Track 'Vitamin C'.
A song from your favourite album?
'Betrayal Takes Two' from the 'Blank Generation' LP by Richard Hell & The Voidoids.
A song you wish you had written?
'In Love' by The Raincoats.
A song that defines the teenage you?
'I Got A Right' by Iggy & The Stooges.
What was the last piece of music you bought?
A vintage 7" by French musician/jazz writer/novelist/surrealist Boris Vian for my love Eva.
A song lyric that inspires you?
'Godspeed' by the Patti Smith Group.
Is there a song you like that people wouldn’t expect?
'Dizzy' by Tommy Roe.
Best love song of all time?
'Oh Yoko' by John Lennon.
Best song to turn up loud?
'Time's Up' by The Buzzcocks.
Best song to bring people together?
'Give Peace A Chance' by The Plastic Ono Band.
4 songs you can’t stop listening to right now?
'Não Consegues' by Pega Monstro
Portuguese beauty spirit music - their new LP on the Upset The Rhythm label is fantastic!
'Everything Is Fine' by Es
They're a London based band that did some shows with us on a recent English tour. Strange dark-wave in high colour sound.
'Everything in Order' by The Worms
Three-piece London no wave Wire meets Teenage Jesus band - killer tune.
'TV OD' by Nots
An excellent cover version of the classic by The Normal. UK electronic weirdness through the prism of Memphis garage noise psyche.
100 Club Stories
Thurston Moore | Smoke Of Dreams (2017)
Thurston Moore | Benediction (2011)
Sonic Youth | Teen Age Riot (1988)
Sonic Youth | Kool Thing (1990)