Play Nice (album)

Play Nice is a 1999 album from Twisted Tutu, featuring composer/vocalist/performance artist Eve Beglarian and pianist/keyboardist Kathleen Supové.

Play Nice
Studio album by
Twisted Tutu
Released1999
RecordedEVBVD Music, Noise Production, Mastersound Astoria, Baby Monster, Corelli Jacobs New York City
GenreAvant-garde/Experimental/Electronic music
Labeloo discs
ProducerEve Beglarian

Track listing

  1. Boytoy / Toyboy (Eve Beglarian)
  2. Touchtone Tony (Eve Beglarian/Ben Rubin)
  3. The Buncacan Song (Eve Beglarian)
  4. I Let A Song Go Out of My Heart (Duke Ellington)
  5. Tahoma (Robin Lorentz)
  6. Tea Song (Guy Klucevsek/ text from a box of Chinese tea)
  7. One Tough Lama (Randall Woolf/ text from an interview with 13-year-old Pema Jones, a Tibetan Lama)
  8. Ngat + Treva (Traditional)
  9. My Feelings Now (Eve Beglarian)
  10. Play Nice (Eve Beglarian)
  11. I Touched Your Cheek (Kitty Brazelton)
  12. God B's Lullaby (Arthur Jarvinen)
  13. Written on the Body (Eve Beglarian/ text from Written on the Body by Jeanette Winterson)

Personnel

  • Eve Beglarian – Electronics and Vocals
  • Kathleen Supové – Piano and Keyboards
  • Jim Rohrig – Additional vocals on The Buncacan Song
  • Thi Hong Ngat – Vocals on Ngat + Treva
  • Treva Offutt – Vocals on Ngat + Treva
  • Robin Lorentz – Additional violin on Tahoma
gollark: Unless they're really cool robot overlords.
gollark: No.
gollark: Historically technological advances have at least eventually replaced lost jobs (not that I think jobs created/lost is a good way to judge innovations) but I suppose you could argue that AI is different somehow. It definitely would be if AI stuff started being able to make more AI stuff, but you would probably run into bigger issues than high unemployment then.
gollark: It also seems unlikely that we would suddenly jump from the current situation where a bit of stuff is automated and quite a lot isn't to everyone being immediately unemployed, so you can notice and do stuff about it in the interval. Restructure the economy for post-material-scarcity or whatever. No idea how that would *work* but oh well.
gollark: If you can make robots/AI/whatever do any work you want easily, I'm sure you could make a few to produce food and whatever without problems.
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