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05:00 - 06:00

Special guest shows from around the world.

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Milan
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A dimmed journey through New York City's meanderings and sounds during the days and nights of Winter Jazz Fest. Healing practices, liberation sounds, gathering, calling of the spirits, togetherness. Featuring words, sounds, enlightenments, and glides by Jaimie Branch, Meghan Stabile, Nate Mercereau, Jeff Parker, Kahil El Zabar Quartet, Isaiah Collier & the Chosen Few, Kassa Overall, I AM, Pharoah Sanders, Brandee Younger, Angel Bat Dawid, Makaya McCraven, LNDFK, Sam Gendel, Dawuna.

Angus MacLise

Angus MacLise

Angus MacLise has been played on NTS over 10 times, featured on 17 episodes and was first played on 28 July 2014.

Angus MacLise (March 4, 1938 - June 21, 1979) was a percussionist, composer, mystic, shaman, poet, occultist and calligrapher. He is probably best known as the first drummer for the Velvet Underground, but had an intriguing career outside of that group. MacLise was a member of La Monte Young's Theater of Eternal Music, with John Cale and Tony Conrad. He was brought into the Velvet Underground by flatmate John Cale. MacLise played bongos and hand drums during 1965 with the first incarnation of the band. Although the Velvets regularly extemporised soundtracks to underground films, MacLise never officially recorded with them, and is often considered something of a shadowy, legendary figure in their history. When the opportunity of the band's first paying gig at a New Jersey high school in November 1965 arose, MacLise promptly quit, suggesting the group had sold out. He was replaced by Maureen Tucker, resulting in the "classic" lineup. In 1966, when Velvet Underground singer Lou Reed was in hospital with hepatitis, MacLise rejoined the group for a few performances. By this time the Velvet Underground had found some notoriety (if not great financial success) and MacLise was anxious to rejoin the group, but this was explicitly refused by Reed. After leaving the Velvet Underground for good, Angus traveled around between North Africa, India, Greece, the Middle East and finally finding his place in Nepal. A student of both La Monte Young and Aleister Crowley (he was working a script for a film version of Crowley's Diary Of A Drug Fiend before he died), he would begin to blend Tibetan mysticism with his music to create magickal forms of transcendent sound through various drone techniques. He died of tuberculosis in Kathmandu in 1979.

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Angus MacLise

Angus MacLise has been played on NTS over 10 times, featured on 17 episodes and was first played on 28 July 2014.

Angus MacLise (March 4, 1938 - June 21, 1979) was a percussionist, composer, mystic, shaman, poet, occultist and calligrapher. He is probably best known as the first drummer for the Velvet Underground, but had an intriguing career outside of that group. MacLise was a member of La Monte Young's Theater of Eternal Music, with John Cale and Tony Conrad. He was brought into the Velvet Underground by flatmate John Cale. MacLise played bongos and hand drums during 1965 with the first incarnation of the band. Although the Velvets regularly extemporised soundtracks to underground films, MacLise never officially recorded with them, and is often considered something of a shadowy, legendary figure in their history. When the opportunity of the band's first paying gig at a New Jersey high school in November 1965 arose, MacLise promptly quit, suggesting the group had sold out. He was replaced by Maureen Tucker, resulting in the "classic" lineup. In 1966, when Velvet Underground singer Lou Reed was in hospital with hepatitis, MacLise rejoined the group for a few performances. By this time the Velvet Underground had found some notoriety (if not great financial success) and MacLise was anxious to rejoin the group, but this was explicitly refused by Reed. After leaving the Velvet Underground for good, Angus traveled around between North Africa, India, Greece, the Middle East and finally finding his place in Nepal. A student of both La Monte Young and Aleister Crowley (he was working a script for a film version of Crowley's Diary Of A Drug Fiend before he died), he would begin to blend Tibetan mysticism with his music to create magickal forms of transcendent sound through various drone techniques. He died of tuberculosis in Kathmandu in 1979.

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Chumlum
Angus MacLise
Counter Culture Chronicles1997
Untitled (Recorded October 18 1968 At Tony Conrad's Apartment)
Angus MacLise, Tony Conrad
Boo-Hooray2011
Trance #2
Angus MacLise
Sub Rosa2003
Humming In The Night Skull
Angus MacLise
Siltbreeze, Quakebasket1999
Two Speed Trance
Angus MacLise
Sub Rosa2014
Trance #1
Angus MacLise
Sub Rosa2014
Tunnel Music #3
Angus MacLise
Sub Rosa2014
Tunnel Music #2
Angus MacLise
Sub Rosa2014
Tambura Drone + Sine Wave Generator
Angus MacLise
Sub Rosa2003
Description Of A Mandala
Angus MacLise
Sub Rosa2003