Stock label
Stock label
Play!
Recorded Matter: Satisfaction
Hosted by David Platzker
Originally aired on Monday, June 27th, 2005
17 versions of the Rolling Stones' 1965 rock and roll classic. Notes by host/producer David Platzker:

In 2002 I received a fantastic artists' book in the mail - it was titled Ellsworth Kelly 1:1, A Cover Version. Published by Casco Projects in Utrect, The Netherlands and "authored" by the fabulous Experimental Jetset. The book is an A4 size paperback consisting of 150 pages of solid color, with no text, save from what's printed on the covers.

The book mimics an installation Experimental Jetset executed in 2002 -- a 1:1 reconstruction of Kelly's 1966 painting Blue, Green, Yellow, Orange, Red translated into 150 sheets of colored paper almost 6 x 1.5 meters in size. And, since the title -- Kelly 1:1 -- exactly describes the work, all three elements (work, title and publication) can be seen as 1:1 scale models of each other. The artists wrote in the press release: "The choice of the original Kelly painting should not be mistaken as critism or post-modern irony. It should be seen as a tribute or homage instead. And since it is a homage in the same spirit rock bands cover other bands' songs, the book's subtitle is A Cover Version by Experimental Jetset. At the same time, the choice of the Kelly painting was also motivated in a more conceptual way as the original painting is an archetypical artwork: a monumental panorama, consisting of nothing but color and light." I might add that by extension the painting, itself, is a cover version - for the spectrum of light itself.

Regardless, the book got me thinking about cover versions. And when in 2004 I received a copy of Jonathan Monk's book, also titled Cover Version, I started pondering cover versions in visual art versus cover versions in music. My anti-intellectual stance is that cover versions are everywhere in most artistic forms -- in effect there's the original recording, first printing, vintage print, first airing, first iteration in music, books, photographs, television programs, etc. and every subsequent presentation is a cover version. However, it's rare that there is anything but a original article - the unique object - when it comes to visual arts beyond medias such as photography, video, or printmaking. Hence few cover versions -- just "unique works."

I'm of the feeling that great art does not need to be a unique artistic object - artists' books or recordings being prime examples where so much of the artistic output stands so clearly as being as interesting, as good, as valuable as a painting, sculpture, etc., though objects produced in volume naturally keeps the cost of these works relatively low versus the value of an unique object.

Here music creeps in. A fable of sorts is in 1965, during the Rolling Stones third United States tour, Keith Richards awoke late at night from a dream while in Florida. He flipped on a tape deck recorded a the introductory riff of (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction and promptly fell back to sleep. Supposedly the tape recorder kept on running recording the pick falling and Richards snoring. I find that hard to believe. Further, Richards later worried he stole the riff from Martha and the Vandellas song Dancing the the Street. He may have also lifted the hook from Chuck Berry's song 30 Days from 1955, which contains the line "I can't get no satisfaction from the judge." So, to some degree, the Stones song contains cover version elements itself.

(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction, by virtue of its anthem like qualities - Rolling Stone Magazine voted it the number two all time greatest rock and roll song - has been covered and covered and covered by every imaginable musician in every imaginable style. Whereas every cover version is a homage, and every cover version in order to succeed must contain the DNA of both the original song but interject the unique personality of the musicians playing it. This edition of Recorded Matter is looking for that expressive moment when boredom passes into fascination by playing 17 versions of the Rolling Stone classic (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction.

Cover version of (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction featured here include ones by Otis Redding, Quincy Jones, David McCallum, Wolfman Jack, Aretha Franklin, Jose Feliciano, Tritons, Devo, The Rolling Clones, Bjork & PJ Harvey, Claw Hammer, Junior Wells, Barbara Dennerlein, Brittany Spears, Cat Power, and The Hampton String Quartet.
Other shows from Impossible Music
Originally aired Monday, May 23rd, 2011

A trippy soundtrack for a 2005 installation by artist Justin Lowe at the SculptureCenter in New York. The installation had visitors crawl under and over a furniture-fort made of scavenged sofas, chairs, bed-frames, refrigerators, carpeting, and junk.


Read More
Hosted by David Weinstein
Originally aired Monday, April 25th, 2011

Why can't you see in outer space and why can't you hear in a rainforest? A conversation, with sound illustrations, with the composer and sound artist in advance of his performance at EMPAC in Troy, New York on April 28, 29, 30, 2011 with 90 speakers.


Read More
Hosted by David Weinstein
Originally aired Thursday, September 9th, 2010

This program exposes some of the edgier creations made by composers who innovated in the surprisingly complex world of minimalist music with works by Philip Glass, Steve Reich, James Tenney, Terry Riley, LaMonte Young, Brian Eno, Arnold Dreyblatt.


Read More
Hosted by David Weinstein
Originally aired Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

A glimpse at the turntable as musical instrument and its influential role sparking creative innovation in music from the streets of the Bronx to the ateliers of the avant garde. Selected and compiled by David Weinstein for Art Basel Miami Beach 2007.


Read More
Originally aired Saturday, August 18th, 2007

The name Dewanatron refers to a family of instruments which "hazard unpredictable behaviors and self playing tendencies. They make all previous and future instruments obsolete. Ideal for home, church, school, or the electronic music laboratory."


Read More
Hosted by Alanna Heiss
Originally aired Saturday, May 5th, 2007

Tracks commissioned by Alanna Heiss for her 1993 Venice Biennale John Cage show feature homages and wild re-dos of the work of Cage by Jello Biafra, Joey Ramone, John Zorn, Lou Reed, Elliott Sharp, Shelley Hirsch, John Cale, Cage reading, more...


Read More
Originally aired Monday, July 10th, 2006

What do artists hear when they're alone? Filmmaker Jim McBride (The Big Easy, Great Balls of Fire, David Holzman's Diary) answers with this unusual mix of music from Willie Nelson to David Byrne to Kings of Leon to Henry Kaiser.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, October 24th, 2005

Artist Jon Kessler plays with band Dirty Mirrors at the Grey Area opening on April 28 and Barbara Sukowa sings Elliott Sharp music in Toni Dove's Spectropia at Roulette on May 5, 2012. The X-Patsys trio is completed by Robert Longo. Neo-fabulous.


Read More
Originally aired Monday, October 10th, 2005

A mix by artist Fred Tomaselli known for paintings that incorporate acrylic, photo-collage, pills, hallucinogenic plants and medicinal herbs in abstract compositions or fictive landscapes, with tracks ranging from Richard Hell to Barry white.


Read More
Hosted by David Weinstein
Originally aired Monday, September 12th, 2005

A survey of Gulf Coast music assembled in the week following Hurricane Katrina in 2005 including artists Amédé Ardoin, Napolian Strickland, Dixie Cups, Dennis McGee, Professor Longhair, Allen Toussaint, Louis Armstrong Hot Five, and many more.


Read More
Hosted by David Weinstein
Originally aired Monday, September 5th, 2005

The Google synth is cool! Here's our birthday celebration of Robert Moog and his influential electronic instrument, the Moog Synthesizer, with tracks by Wendy Carlos, Dick Hyman, Kraftwerk, Perrey & Kingsley, Sun Ra, Emerson, Lake & Palmer, others.


Read More
Hosted by David Weinstein
Originally aired Monday, June 27th, 2005

Vocal explorer, improviser, raconteur, chanteuse and so much more, Brooklyn born Shelley Hirsch has been a central figure in New York's downtown music scene since the mid 1970s. This show samples from her CD sampler produced by John Zorn.


Read More
Originally aired Tuesday, June 7th, 2005

A mix by Mike Hajar made for the exhibit, Cabinessence, a 2001 work by artist Justin Lowe which consisted of a "hive-like dome" structure for six people to lounge in. The 65-minute mix tape of nostalgic ’60s music completes the experience.


Read More
Originally aired Tuesday, June 7th, 2005

Venice Love Boat Venice is a faux radio show assembled by composer Massimo Simonini. It features a wide variety of music effectively interspersed with "displaced announcers" - voices cut and pasted out of context. With Sun Ra, Stockhausen, Zappa...


Read More
Hosted by David Weinstein

This playlist, curated and compiled specifically for Art Basel Miami Beach 2006 by David Weinstein, was designed for visitors to the Miami Beach Botanical Gardens to listen to with wireless headphones while roaming freely through the flora and fauna.


Read More
Hosted by David Weinstein

A morning music mix with word jazz from Ken Nordine, a bit of pop from Arling & Cameron, some Bacharach, happy oldies, and advice from filmmaker-turned-composer Baz Luhrmann.


Read More
A mix by Salleem Dhame made as a soundtrack for an installation by artist Justin Lowe.
Read More