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Rake (band)

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mystical phenomenon. Included are early cassettes such as "The Day I Remembered Seeing Ice" and "Shock Tart Chew Up" as well as more recent recordings under other names or by single members. An early version of the web site included the following greeting: "OASTEM! You have landed upon a web site devoted to the exploration of the Sound of Peace and Harmony that is expressed through OASTEM! Discuss OASTEM! Receive OASTEM! Achieve an understanding of the message that has captured the imagination of a generation."
167:, the latter featuring a sidelong extemporization on the lead song from the "Motorcycle Shoes" EP. The band's early recordings featured (mostly shouted) vocals, but the band's later work was generally instrumental in nature. Although Rake.'s main instruments were electric guitar, bass and drums, they made liberal use of tape loops, synthesizers, static, and anything else they saw fit. The band's sound reached a highbrow, 161:, and Carl Moller (a.k.a. C-Man) released their first record in 1989, a 7” 45 rpm single called "Cow Song" and the follow-up EP "Motorcycle Shoes" in 1990. The punkish leanings on these recordings were soon superseded by more experimental offerings such as the cassette "The Day I Remembered Seeing Ice" and the LP 189:
Often wilfully mysterious (to the point of providing misinformation, particularly through the OASTEM! website), Rake. released a steady stream of vinyl singles, CDs, cassettes and later CDR's, mostly on the label VHF. However, they were never a touring act, only performing intermittently around the
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OASTEM! is a word invented by Rake. that appears in various album and song titles by the band, although its exact meaning has never been revealed. It may be used in several ways: as a greeting or as a way of saying good-bye; as an exclamation of satisfaction; or as a reference to cosmological and
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which combined lengthy improvisations with found sounds, field recordings and harsh edits. The second disc was largely indexed at 60-second intervals, regardless of the musical content, although one 5-second section was simply a recording of a male voice saying, "Look out: rattlesnake!".
142:/hardcore bands more commonly associated with the local underground music scene, Rake. took a more experimental route and were more closely associated with fellow Virginia-based bands 239:
that their name was chosen before becoming aware of the album and also that the final decision on their name had been taken by Kellum, who had designed the sleeve to "Cow Song".
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Virginia/ Maryland area. Although they never formally split and members of the band continue to work together, only archive material has been released during this decade.
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in 1989, about a year before Rake's first single. There was also a reference to Velvet Monkeys member
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It was rumored that the band chose its name from indie rock "supergroup"
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Several titles were puns on well-known musical and cultural references:
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Art Ensemble of Rake (Carlophonics)/The Tell-Tale Moog (Carlophonics)
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on the first Rake 45. However, in 1993, the band told UK magazine
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but their aesthetic is best summed up by their double CD release
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Motorcycle Shoes/Look at Rocks/My Miserable Existence/The Center
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double live CD is a modification of the cover of rebel organist
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Band members Jim Ayre (a.k.a. Vinnie Van Go-Go or OASTEM!),
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is a pun on the name of experimental jazz collective
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Index

The Rakes
Virginia
United States
Experimental music
Space rock
Noise music
Psychedelic music
1989
2001
VHF
Camera Obscura
Bill Kellum
art rock
noise rock
Virginia
post-punk
Pelt
Wingtip Sloat
VHF Records
Bill Kellum
Rake Is My Co-Pilot
minimalistic
Camera Obscura
The Art Ensemble of Rake/The Tell-Tale Moog
Vincent van Gogh
go-go dancing
Velvet Monkeys
Rough Trade Records
Don Fleming
Grim Humour

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