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  1. When three musicians pulled out, he recruited guitarist Lee Ranaldo. Ranaldo had seen Branca's ensemble perform at The Kitchen and lived in the same building as Branca's friend, pianist Anthony Coleman. [10] Branca bought tickets providing unlimited flights for three weeks for what became his first tour.

  2. Glenn Branca’s ‘Lesson No.1’ [1980] is a foundational touchstone for late 20th C. electric guitar music: featuring both Lee Ranaldo and Thurston Moore, it’s a core inspiration over Sonic Youth and also Swans, and is regularly hailed in lists of influential experimental music.

  3. 19 de abr. de 2004 · View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2004 CD release of "Lesson No. 1" on Discogs.

  4. 22 de abr. de 2023 · This unreleased track, over 16 minutes long and featuring Thurston Moore and Lee Ranaldo from Sonic Youth, follows the same sound as the EP with a more ambient edge, although it comes closer to what would become noise rock.

  5. The group included guitarist Lee Ranaldo, who later joined alternative rock band Sonic Youth. The group's bass player knew the owner and engineers at The Power Station, so they were able to use it at little cost. They recorded five pieces in between tours for Branca's debut EP Lesson No. 1. "

  6. 18 de nov. de 2013 · Composed in the wake of his departure from No Wave outfit Theoretical Girls, Lesson No. 1 arrived on 99 Records in 1980. In contrast to the populous ensembles and tsunamis of noise found on...

  7. www.uncut.co.uk › reviews › glenn-branca-lesson-no-1-15936Glenn Branca - Lesson No 1 - UNCUT

    On his first solo release, 1980’s Lesson No 1, Branca’s music is actually closer to muscular, intensely adrenalised rock’n’roll. The title track begins with incantatory ringing guitars, a...