Free MP3 downloads! On-location recordings, interviews, original music by the Zoo Pilots, John Clay and the Lost Austin Band. More music available soon.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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ON-LOCATION RECORDINGS: For these spontaneous audio experiments, binaural microphones are positioned at ear level to capture ambient sound as realistically as possible. Headphones STRONGLY RECOMMENDED for maximum effect!

"Christmas at Taos Pueblo," 12-26-2004, Taos Pueblo, Taos, NM: 15 minutes of gunfire, singing, and matachines dancers. There's nothing like it in the world. MP3, 13.70MB. •DOWNLOAD•

"Up in the Valle Vidal," 10-10-2004, Valle Vidal unit of the Carson National Forest, northern Taos County, NM: almost six minutes of spontaneous commentary from a trip into the wilderness. MP3, 5.34MB. •DOWNLOAD•

"Coyotes," 8-30-2004, Llano Quemado (Taos), NM: a quick 30 seconds of yips from my back door. MP3, 456KB. •DOWNLOAD•

"Thunderstorm," 4-14-2004, Llano Quemado (Taos), NM: About 3 minutes, 30 seconds of strange echos. MP3, 4.6MB. •DOWNLOAD•

"Vaca Visit," 4-13-2004, Llano Quemado (Taos), NM: I go see my new neighbors. 6 minutes, 30 seconds. MP3, 7.2MB. •DOWNLOAD•


ZOO PILOT MUSIC: Live recordings from a Zoo Pilots rock & roll show at Washington College in Chestertown, MD, USA in the early '80s. The band members were John H. Farr, Kate Bennet, Dale Trusheim, John Hansen, and Mike McBride. Other songs are demos submitted under various names: the Zoo Pilots, Johnny & the Zoo Pilots, even Bothoflu & the Zoo Pilots. John D'Aquino joins Dale Trusheim on the minimalist studio demos. (All songs written & sung by John H. Farr.)

Anthrax Boogie MP3, 1.42 MB
Bering Strait
MP3, 1.63 MB
Butternut Street
MP3, 1.28 MB
El Salvador
MP3, 2.37 MB
John-John
MP3, 3.24 MB (live)
Piss Test
MP3, 2.26 MB (experimental)
Sixties Song
MP3, 2.22 MB (live)
2011
MP3, 2.01MB


JOHN CLAY & the LOST AUSTIN BAND: Where to start? If you know who John Clay is or hung out at UT Austin during the '60s & '70s (and had your ears open), these live recordings will speak for themselves. (The Lost Austin Band deserves its own page here, coming soon.) Recordings and a helluva lot more by Leo Sullivan. Truly amazing stuff. (All songs written & sung by John Clay, accompanied by Gary Smith, Johnny Moyer, Doug Tabony, and John H. Farr.)

"Road to Mingus," perhaps the best known of several signature songs, this one is about the perils of cold beer, fast cars, and "a reckless, speeding train." MP3, 3.44 MB. •DOWNLOAD•

"Don't Look Now," one of the first ecological protest songs: "Every place you ever knew or loved, it will all be gone someday..." Written when Austin was a quarter the size it is today. Dig it! MP3, 6 MB. •DOWNLOAD•

"All Our Weed is Gone," an ironic lament that rises to the level of an authentic cultural document. San Franciscans and Austinites, take note. MP3, 4.28 MB. •DOWNLOAD•

"Do We Still Belong in this Land," beneath the irony, a spiritual warrior's struggle for the soul of the earth. MP3, 4.28 MB. •DOWNLOAD•

"It Helps to Pass the Time," INCOMPLETE (so far). Missing the rousing opening line, "Another needle in his last good vein... " but still a great downer. MP3, 3.08 MB. •DOWNLOAD•

"West Texas," captures what it was like out where the wind blows back in the '50s. An amazing sociological statement in song that brings it all home. MP3, 10 MB. •DOWNLOAD•

"One Last Trip Down to the Border," a true story of treachery in dope smuggling and love. The chorus is a classic wail of irony and despair. MP3, 8 MB. •DOWNLOAD•

"Forties Song," compelling emotional depth. An evocative cultural history with underlying sadness and bite. MP3, 6.6MB. •DOWNLOAD•

"Harley Hog," an early and distinctly Austin signature song. Significantly weird and free. MP3, 7.3MB •DOWNLOAD•


GRACK! AUDIO: Only one GRACK! essay is available in spoken word format at this time. Recorded in Taos, NM in the dead of winter, complete with folksy introduction.

"Tunnel," originally published 3-15-04, no longer available online. MP3, 7.4MB. •DOWNLOAD•


KTAO-FM INTERVIEW: From an appearance on the "Spotlight on New Mexico" program on Jan. 4, 2004. The 30-minute segment is posted at MyMac.com.

QuickTime audio. •LISTEN•

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