Showing posts with label Trompe le Monde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trompe le Monde. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

Albums That Were Important to Tosh in 1991



 

1991 was a mega-year for me. I worked at Book Soup and worked at Beyond Baroque Literary Arts Center in Venice, California. We also moved from a crummy apartment in Hollywood to Silver Lake in one of those dreamy Walt Disney Snow White architectural wonders. While living in Japan, I did a book of poetry, and everything seemed right to me. And we were still going to Japan, at least once a year. The amazing thing about that year is I had no interest in any music released that year. It was a big year and iconic, due to Seattle bands' resurgence like Nirvana making it big. I admired Kurt and company, but the music meant nothing to me. What impressed me, and was totally new to me at that time was Pixies's "Trompe le Monde." I have heard of them but never their music, until a visit at Tower Sunset, and out of curiosity, listened to this album. By the time I heard the third track, "Alec Eiffel," I was hooked. To this day, I love "Alec Eiffel." I then purchased their past albums, and although I wasn't a fanatic fan, I really love "Trompe le Monde." While visiting Tokyo that year, I picked up on a compilation of Joe Meek's productions/songs as well as his odd masterpiece "I Hear a New World." In 1991, I became a Meek obsessive. Also, I started to listen to Serge Gainsbourg. He died that year, and again, being in Japan, it's easy to be exposed to French pop music. Every music store in Japan had a sizable French Pop section. So, yes, French pop culture made an appearance, which leads to my TamTam Books.