Showing posts with label Jim's posts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jim's posts. Show all posts

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Best of 2010



1. The Arch Android - Janelle Monae
2. Broken Bells - Broken Bells
3. Teen Dream - Beach House
4. Treats - Sleigh Bells
5. Plastic Beach - Gorillaz
6. This is Happening - LCD Soundsystem
7. Ginderman 2 - Grinderman
8. King Night- Salem
9. Go - Jonsi
10. Le Noise – Neil Young
11. Expo 86 - Wolf Parade
12. Odd Blood - Yeasayer
13. The Monitor - Titus Andronicus
14. The Suburbs - The Arcade Fine
15. Body Talk trilogy - Robyn
16. Crazy For You - Best Coast
17. The Guitar Song – Jamey Johnson
18. The Age of Adz - Sufjan Stevens
19. Big Echo - The Morning Benders
20. My Father Will Guide me Up a Rope To The sky – Swans
21. King of the Beach – Wavves
22. Magesty Shredding – Superchunk
23. Innerspeaker – Tame Impala
24. Castle Talk – Screaming Females
25. A Badly Broken Code – Dessa
26. Transference – Spoon
27. Snakes For The Divine – High On Fire
28. Maniac Meat – Tobacco
29. The Lady Killer – Cee Lo Green
30. Man on the Moon II – Kid Kudi
31. Ring – Glasser
32. Romance is Dead – Los Campesinos!
33. Gorilla Manor - Local Natives
34. Congratulations - MGMT
35. The First Four Eps – OFF!
36. Before Today - Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti
37. The Besnard Lakes - The Besnard Lakes
38. Shame Shame - Dr Dog
39. Subiza – Delorean
40. The Grand Theatre - Old 97s

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Woman sentenced for illegal lending of books

Onionville, MN - A federal jury Thursday found a 32-year-old single mother guilty of illegally loaning books to friends and family members without paying royalties and fined her $1.9 million. The criminal, Jammie Thisis-Redunkulous, is also suspected of clipping magazine articles and cartoons and illegally distributing them to the same posse.

RIAA (Reading Industrialist Association of America) has brought more than 35,000 lawsuits against alleged illegal book lenders. "We feel this fine is completely reasonable and in line with the severity of the crime" RIAA spokesperson Carol McDuck said. She cited Minnesota statute 609.205 which sets the maximum penalty for intoxicated vehicular manslaughter at no more than $20,000. "If community standards allow for a $20,000 fine for such a comparatively minor infraction, surely one would expect at least $2 million for such vile, unauthorized 'lending'!"

The RIAA now plans to go after people who browse in bookstores and don't buy any books. McDuck said she believes the problem has reached epidemic proportions. "People are blatantly stealing words from books in bookstores all over the country. The authors don't get paid a penny for these thefts," McDuck claims.

Reports have recently surfaced that the defendant may have a long history of skirting the law. A photo found on Facebook allegedly shows her posing next to the Mona Lisa while on vacation in Paris, smiling smugly and defiantly. A spokesman for the estate of Leonardo DeVinchi claims no records can be found of the defendant having paid for the legal rights to use image.

McDuck went on to say that illegal lending could bring the publishing industry down in the same way cassette tapes destroyed the music industry. "We must be vigilant!"

Note: this is a parody of the equally ridiculous prosecution of Jammie Thomas-Rasset's for illegally downloading music.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Downloading is not a crime - it's good for business!


Turns out the brilliant Chicago musician Saul Williams is also quite a businessman as well. He gave away his best album and was rewarded handsomely. He released The Inevitbale Rise and Liberation of Niggy Tardust online with two payment options. One could download it for absolutely free, or one could pay $5 for a high fidelity version that also included a .pdf file of original art and some other goodies - but the same exact songs. Over 200,000 downloaded it for free and only 60,000 paid for it, so he lost out on a lot of revenue - right? Well, actually he had never sold more than 30,000 copies of any of his previous releases, and his live shows started frequently selling out. And, most importantly, he reached thousands of new ears who had never heard him before - and likely would not have otherwise. He says he has also had the added under-the-table revenue of a bunch of kids at his shows who give him $5 bills saying they didn't have a credit card, so they couldn't pay to download it online. When is the record industry going to realize that downloading isn't a threat? In fact, they might still be saved if they rise from their death bed and use their remaining energy and resources to fight for downloading instead of against it! Why are so many artists able to figure out how to make money through free and cheap downloading, while the buggy-whip selling industry execs can only waste their time siccing their lawyers on people they should be courting as customers? And BTW, if you haven't heard the album - you really need to download it, buy it, steal it, rip it or do whatever you have to do - it's a masterpiece!

Friday, January 1, 2010

Best songs of the decade


Here are my picks for the best songs of the decade.
Note: I limited myself to only one song per artist.

1. Dead leaves and the dirty ground - The White Stripes
2. The District sleeps alone tonight - The Postal Service
3. Jesus, etc - Wilco
4. Fill me with your light - Clem Snide
5. Black like me - Spoon
6. Can you feel it? - The Apples in Stereo
7. Caring is creepy - The Shins
8. Chemicals collide - Cloud Cult
9. 2 + 2 = 5 - Radiohead
10. The chills - Peter Bjorn & John
11. A sentence of sorts in Kongsvinger - Of Montreal
12. Broken boy soldier - Raconteurs
13. Kids - MGMT
14. Soldier's grin - Wolf Parade
15. I was a lover - TV On The Radio
16. Chips Ahoy - The Hold Steady
17. Float on - Modest Mouse
18. It's gonna be a long night - Ween
19. Ragged wood - The Fleet Foxes
20. The man who loved beer - David Byrne
21. I like giants - Kimya Dawson
22. Our love will change the world - Outrageous Cherry
23. Sly - The Cat Empire
24. New English - Ambulance LTD
25. Untrust us - Crystal Castles
26. Is this love? - Clap Your Hands and Say Yeah
27. The ark - Dr Dog
28. Dig! Lazurus, dig! - Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
29. Inner peace- Nellie McKay
30. The Golden Age - Beck
31. The Iliad - Tapes 'n Tapes
32. Bohemian like me - The Dandy Warhols
33. Crazy - Gnarls Barkely
34. Crescendolls - Daft Punk
35. Ten years ahead - Soundtrack of our Lives
36. Are you gonna be my girl? - Jet
37. I'll bet you look good on the dance floor - Arctic Monkeys
38. Skinny love - Bon Iver
39. My Girls - Animal Collective
40. The greatest - Cat Power
41. Chicago - Sufjan Stevens
42. Mirrorball - Elbow
43. Another lost summer - Blanche
44. Panic open string - Calexico
45. Wild Mountain Nation - Blitzen Trapper
46. The Modern Age - The Strokes
47. Art is hard - Cursive
48. Photobooth - Death Cab for Cutie
49. 99 - Black Bottom Collective
50. Hey man (now you're really living) - Eels
51. Elevate myself - Grandaddy
52. Two weeks - Grizzly Bear
53. The yeah yeah song - Flaming Lips
54. Formed a band - Art Brut
55. Up the bracket - The Libertines
56. Extraordinary machine - Fiona Apple
57. Spit it out - Brendan Benson
58. Worlds apart - ...And you will know us by the trail of dead
59. Imitosis - Andrew Bird
60. Now, now - St Vincent
61. I changed my mind - Lyrics Born
62. Get it while you can - The Dirtbombs
63. We are rock stars - Does It Offend You, Yeah?
64. Cherry blossom girl -Air
65. Never stops - Deerhunter
66. The light - Common
67. My heart is breaking down - Caesars
68. Karen - The National
69. Jenny & the ess-dog - Stephen Malkmus
70. Get in or get out - Hot Hot Heat
71. Highly evolved - The Vines
72. Smokers outside the hospital doors - The Editors
73. Hate to say I told you so - The Hives
74. Our life is not a movie or maybe - Okkervil River
75. Gold digger - Supreme Beings of Leisure
76. The shinning- Badly Drawn Boy
77. Notice of Eviction - Saul Williams
78. My superman - Santogold
79. Sweet talk - Spiritualized
80. Where's your head at? - Basement Jaxx
81. Sidewalk serfer girl - Super Furry Animals
82. No one knows - Queens of the Stone Age
83. Life is long - David Byrne & Brian Eno
84. Blind - Hercules and Love Affair
85. Sunrise - Yeasayer
86. Cobrastyle - Robyn
87. Brothers & sisters - Blur
88. Maps - Yeah, Yeah, Yeahs
89. Careful - Hot Chip
90. Soldier girl - The Polyphonic Spree
91. Out of my system - Jamie Lidell
92. We're from Barcelona - I'm from Barcelona
93. Gay Bar - Electric Six
94. Idle ties - Vetiver
95. To go home - M. Ward
96. Crack the skye - Mastodon
97. Ghosts under rocks - Ra Ra Riot
98. Amen - Jolie Holland
99. Doorman - Stereophonics
100. Geraldine - Glasvegas


Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Best Christmas songs


Over the past few years I've been putting together my favorite versions of Christmas and winter holiday songs as well as new works. There's a lot of holiday music out there! Below is my 2009 version of this work in perpetual progress, in no particular order. I'd love to hear your favorites.

Must be Santa Claus - Bob Dylan. This just came out and I love it! So far I've heard three music critics use it as an example of how awful Dylan's Christmas album is. Yes, it's cheesy, silly and ridiculous - I have no problem with that. (See "Thank god it's Christmas" below if you need further proof!)
I've got my love to keep me warm - The Ink Spots
Oh holy night - Tracy Chapman

The Christmas song - Nat King Cole. This version is the only Christmas song I know of that has only one definitive version - I mean no other version even comes close. Having said that, The Blind Boys of Alabama and Shelby Lynne also do a very nice version.
The Christmas Song - The Ravonettes (Though it shares the name with the Mel Torme written song mentioned above, it's completely different).
It doesn't often snow at Christmas - The Pet Shop Boys. This is one of my absolute favorite modern Christmas songs.
You're A Mean One, Mr Grinch - Albert Hague
Silent Night - Johnny Cash, The Temptations, Willie Nelson. The Simon & Garfunkel 7 o'clock news version is very moving, but I usually don't include it in my holiday collections - too somber.
White Christmas - The Darlene Love version the only one I know of that beats out Bing Crosby.
Happy X-mas (war is over) - John Lennon. There are other interesting versions out there (The Polyphonic Spree comes to mind), but none I need to hear every year. I can't get enough of the original.
Christmas (Baby please come home) - Darlene Love. The Death Cab for Cutie version is great, too.
Christmas must be tonight. - The Band
Shake hands with Santa Claus- Louis Prima
Pretty paper - Willie Nelson
Donna & Blitzen - Badly Drawn Boy
Thank god it's Christmas - Queen

Merry Xmas Everybody - Slade
Little Drummer Boy - I absolutely love the David Bowie & Bing Crosby version. Other good versions: The Dandy Warhols, Johnny Cash and Neil Young.
Let it snow! - I like a lot of versions of this including Luscious Jackson, Dean Martin, and Ella Fitzgerald. Great song!
A change at Christmas - The Flaming Lips
That Old Christmas Moon - Leon Redbone
Christmastime - Aimee Mann
Christmastime- Smashing Pumpkins
(completely different song from Aimee's)
Merry Christmas, baby - Otis Redding version is #1 for me. Other good ones: Lou Rawls, BB King, and James Brown.
Pine Cones and Holly Berries - The Osmonds
Purple Snowflakes - Marvin Gaye
Feliz Navidad - El Vez

Jingle Bells- The Electric Prunes and Lena Horne's versions are my faves. And yes, Prunes, Christmas is the "most psychedelic time of the year"!
All I want for Christmas - Maria Carey. What can I say - she turns out an awesome version of this song.
Rudy - The Be Good Tanyas
Feels like Christmas - Al Green
2,000 miles - The Pretenders
It doesn't have to be that way - Jim Croce
Cool Yule- Louis Armstrong
Joy to the world - Sufjan Stevens
Christmas won't be the same this year - The Jackson Five
Fairytale of New York - The Pogues

White winter Hymnal - Fleet Foxes. Not really a holiday song, but a great song and every time I hear it I think of the season and being outside this time of year - close enough for me.
My evergreen - The Squirel Nut Zippers
Winter Weather - Peggy Lee, Fats Waller and Squirel Nut Zippers are among my favorite versions.
Carol of the bells - The Bird and The Bee
Santa baby - Eartha Kitt, Macy Gray, and Vanessa Williams.
Light One Candle - Peter, Paul & Mary

Put the lights on the Tree - Sufjan Stevens
Santa Clause is coming to town - I'm not sure which is my favorite version, but I like the takes by The Jackson Five, The Crystals, & Bruce's live version (even though it's really over played this time of year).
I've longed for Christmas - Los Lonely Boys
Jingle Bell Rock - Brenda Lee is still the definitive version for me.
Spotlight on Christmas - Rufus Wainwright. A great melody and an interesting lyrical take on the holidays and liberalism in general.
Christmas in Hollis - Run DMC
Father Christmas - The Kinks
Love came down at Christmas - Shawn Colvin

Have yourself a merry little Christmas - Another of my favorite traditional Chrsitmas songs. I love the versions by James Taylor, The Isley Brothers, Perry Como, Aimee Mann, and Carly Simon.
Merry Chrsitmas, baby (I don't want to fight) - The Ramones
A Christmas to remember - Amy Grant.
Frosty the snowman - Gene Autry, Fiona Apple versions.
Santa Claus go straight to the ghetto - Belle & Sabastian
What are you doing new year's eve?- Diana Krall
Presents for Christmas - Solomon Burke
The Gift of Giving - Bill Withers
Come on Christmas - Dwight Yoakam
Here It Is Christmas - Old 97s
All My Bells Are Ringing - Lenka
Home for the holidays - The Carpenters
Chrsitmas wrapping - The Waitresses
I'll be home for Christmas - Perry Como, Glen Campbell, and Sarah McLachlan.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Best political and protest songs of all time

I don't know if it's because I'm going through political withdrawl - it's November and I'm living in an area with out a significant election this year - or all the talk about health care. Whatever the reason, I've been thinking about political songs a lot lately. So, here are my favorite political or protest songs of all time. They're in order, but I'm sure every time I look at this list I'll want to re-arrange them. BTW, if you're curious about the critera I used for my list, look at my previous post "What makes a great political song?"

1. Ohio - Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young
2. Cortez the killer - Neil Young
3. What's going on - Marvin Gaye
4. Sam Stone - John Prine
5. Imagine - John Lennon
6. Alice's Restaurant - Arlo Guthrie
7. Shipbuilding - Elvis Costello
8. Fight the Power - Public Enemy
9. Strange Fruit - Billy Holiday
10. Bungalow Bill - The Beatles
11. Kill the poor - The Dead Kennedys
12. Get up! Stand up! - Bob Marley
13. This land is your land - Woody Guthrie
14. Everybody knows - Leonard Cohen
15. Dear god - XTC
16. What's so funny about peace, love and understanding - Nick Lowe
17. Know your rights - The Clash
18. Alabama, God damn! - Nina Simone
19. Southern Man - Neil Young
20. American Rouse - MC5
21. Black steel in the hour of chaos - Public Enemy
22. Sunday, Bloody Sunday - U2
23. People have the power - Patti Smith
24. A change is gonna come - Sam Cooke
25. Maggie's farm - Bob Dylan
26. The man in black - Johnny Cash
27. Not a pretty girl - Ani Difranco
28. Revolution - The Beatles
29. Anarchy in the U.K. - Sex pistols
30. Untitled song for Latin America - Minutemen
31. Alabama - Neil Young
32. You haven't done nothing - Stevie Wonder
33. When the President talks to God - Bright Eyes
34. London Calling - The Clash
35. War pigs - Black Sabbath
36. The guns of Brixton - The Clash
37. Radio, radio - Elvis Costello
38. Peace Train - Cat Stevens
39. Sky pilot - The Animals
40. Won't get fooled again - The Who
41. Fortunate son - CCR
42. The Fish Cheer - Country Joe & The Fish
43. Union made - Woody Guthrie
44. Working Class Hero - John Lennon
45. And the band played Waltzing Matilda - The Pogues
46. Taking care of business - El Vez
47. Stop the violence - Bogie Down Productions
48. Cowboys Are Frequently, Secretly Fond of Each Other - Willie Nelson
49. Telegraph Road - Dire Straits
50. Society's Child - Janis Ian
51. Trouble every day - Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention
52. California, Uber Alles - D.K.
53. Waiting for the great leap forward - Billy Bragg
54. The message - Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five
55. Homosapien - The Pansy Division
56. Universal Solider - Buffy Saint Marie
57. For What It's Worth - Buffalo Springfield
58. Military Wives - The Decemberists
59. Rockin in the free world - Neil Young
60. 1913 Massacre - Woody Guthrie
61. Give Peace a chance - The Beatles
62. Subdivision - Ani Difranco
63. God save the queen - The Sex Pistols
64. I shot the sherrif - Bob Marley
65. Army Dreamers - Kate Bush
66. The Hurricane - Bob Dylan
67. War - Edwin Starr
68. I ain't marching anymore - Phil Ochs
69. Gimme Shelter - the Rolling Stones
70. Ball of Confusion - The Temptations
71. Sound of da police - KRS One
72. Cheerleaders - Minutemen
73.
Across the wire - Calexico
74. Clampdown - The Clash
75. Born in the U.S.A. - Bruce Springsteen
76. Rebel Girl - Bikini Kill
77. I Wanna Conquer the World - Bad Religion
78. Us and them - Pink Floyd
79. Beds are burning - Midnight Oil
80. Is it too late? - World party
81. Redemption Song - Bob Marley
82. Killing in the name of - Rage Against the Machine
83. Oliver's Army - Elvis Costello
84. Never cross a picket line - Billy Bragg
85. I love a man in uniform - Gang of Four
86. They paved paradise - Join Mitchell
87. The queen is dead - The Smiths
88. Tin Soldiers - Stiff Little Fingers
89. God on my side - World Party
90. Only Women Bleed - Alice Cooper
91. No god - The Germs
92. Forgive them, Father - Lauryn Hill
93. Notice of eviction - Saul Williams
94. I have forgiven Jesus - Morrisey
95. Youth against fascism - Sonic Youth
96. No Man can find the war - Tim Buckley
97. Talkin' bout a revolution - Tracy Chapman
98. Leagalize it - Peter Tosh
99. Revolution - Mother Earth
100. The Mercy Seat - Nick Cave

Friday, November 6, 2009

What makes a great politcal or protest song?

What makes a great political or protest song? The best definition of leadership is whether or not people follow, and the same is a good standard for judging political songs as well. If it moves people, or otherwise has an impact, it's a a success. The 60s protest songs truly helped end the war and Neil young's "Cortez the Killer" was banned for years in Spain (making it an underground hit).
But I want to concentrate on the music a bit more. Here's my criteria: 1. It must be a good song in and of its self. If you change the lyrics to "ode to a peanut butter sandwich" it would still sound good. 2. The lyrics have to be clever and bring an interesting take to the issue. There were a ton of very boring "Bush sucks" or "Bush is dangerous" or "Bush is an idiot" songs during the W years. Have a take, please. 3. The best political songs paint a picture or tell a story and 4. add a personal touch. The best songs add a personal element that pull you in on an emotional level. When Neil Young sings "What if you knew her and found her dead on the ground" about the Kent State Massacre in "Ohio" you truly feel like you're there. In fact, Neil is one of the greatest political/protest song writers ever because most of his songs in this genre use brilliant narratives that really hit home.
I make a slight distinction between "political" and "protest" songs. A "protest" song does all the things a "political" song does, but has the additional quality of being physically moving. They make you want to stand up and sing, and march and act!. Like Country Joe's "It's one, two, three, what are we fighting for?" or the Clash's "These are your rights!" Imagine being one of a couple thousand people singing aloud "You can get anything you want at Alice's Restaurant" or trying to stay in your seat as Bob Marley sings, "Get up! Stand up! Stand up for your rights!" "Strange fruit" is an incredible political song, while "This land is your land" is one of the best protest songs ever (though it seems to have lost it's teeth over the years).

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Blown away!


What's the best concert you've ever seen? It's one of the most fun questions music fans can ask each other and it's a toughie. I've got mine narrowed down to 3 or 4, but if you forced me to choose it would probably be the Talking Heads circa "Speaking in Tongues."
One rarely gets a chance to revisit a "best ever" moment of anything in life, but Thursday night I did just that. I attended a screening of "Stop Making Sense" (a fundraiser for Sound Opinions and WBEZ) at the Navy Pier imax theater. It was incredible.
I've got to admit I've got a prejudice against concert films and even live albums I think it's pretty rare that the concert experience can be captured even remotely. For the most part, I prefer seeing music live to listening to it recorded, but I'd much rather listen to the studio version of almost anything than any live recording. Thursday night was a massive exception!
I had seen the film when it first came out and on video since. I've always said it's the best concert video ever. But in my book, that ain't saying much! I enjoyed it for the visual aspects of the film - shot perfectly, it captured the energy, fun, deconstruction-reconstruction-deconstruction again artistic vision, showmanship and unity of those Heads shows - but the music was flat. Bottom line: like the Grand Canyon and Krazy Jim's Blimpy Burgers - you have to be there to experience it.
But now after seeing and hearing it as it was intended (when it was filmed in 1983, the technology existed to record directly to digital, but there was no where to play it back that way for audiences) I was blown away. It was the most incredible "recorded live" experience I've ever had. I had to move to the back of the theater and dance through the last 2/3 of the show after my seat would no longer contain me... not a pretty sight, but any one who saw me would have had to turn around and look, so it's on them.
It really transported me to that fun, tight, party of a concert that so moved me over 20 years ago. And it sounded perfect! Amazing. I never thought a concert film could do that.
So.... what's your favorite concert? Your favorite live recordings or films?
Thanks to Colleen for all but forcing me to go.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Best band names


Usually the best bands have the lamest names. that's not always the case, though. Here are some of my all time favorite band names - and most are bands I like a lot. What are your favorites?

Ladyfuzz
Throbbing Gristle
The Violent Femmes
The Butthole Surfers
The Velvet Underground
The Breeders
Touched by a Janitor
The meat puppets
Dead Kennedys
Sex Pistols
Drowning, Not Waving
Beastie Boys
Revolting cocks
Superchunk
The Darkness
The Hope Bombs
The Nipple Erectors
And my favorite names for back-up singers and bands: The Pips, The Scorchers, The Bad Seeds, The Homewreckers
 
 

Sunday, December 21, 2008

You let me down, baby!


The great Chicago (WBEZ) radio program Sound Opinions has an annual Thanksgiving "Turkey Shoot" show- i.e. bands and albums that have dispaointed them in the past year:
http://www.soundopinions.org/shownotes/2008/112808/shownotes.html

Loving lists as I do, I though this would be a great idea for us to list our biggest recent dissapointments. Here are mine, looking forward to seeing yours:

1. Skeletal Lamping - Of Montreal. Of Montreal is one of the band's I've been the most excited about in a while. Fun, talent, wit, brilliant song-writing and extreme silliness. However, being too clever for their own good has always been a potential flaw with this band - and in this case it proves fatal. Too much of evrything - tempo changes, interludes, effects, nerd-sex one liners, geek pimpin' - all stuff that they've used brilliantly in the past, but here it distracts from the actual music. It's still all about the songs - remember? I had thought this bad got that.

2. Stay Positive - The Hold Steady. I really don't have anything bad to say about this album. they're still a great band and this is a fair album. I guess it's just a huge dissapointment to me compared to Boys and Girls of America. This album is fine - it just lacks majic. I just can't get into it.

3. Evolver - John Legend. Just when you though John legend was going to be the messiah to lead R&B back to the promised land of creativity, talent and soul, he goes to sleep. This album is booooooooooring and over-produced. 

4. Chinese Democracy - Guns N’ Roses. Not that I expected it to be good, but I thought just maybe... ah, no! Street of Dreams may be the worse rock song ever. 

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Best of '08: My faves

My three favorite albums of the year:
Fleet Foxes - Fleet Foxes 
At Mount Zoomer - Wolf Parade
Dig lazarus, Dig - Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds

My other faves in no particular order:
Jim - Jamie Lidell
The Stand Ins - Okkervil River
Carried to Dust - Calexico (I think they are trying to take the title of best active band away from Wilco)
Oracular Spectacular - MGMT 
Third - Portishead
Do You Like Rock Music? - British Sea Power
Flight of the Conchords - Flight of the Conchords
Erykah Badu - Amerykah, Part 1
Bake Sale - Cool Kids
Modern Guilt - Beck
Real Animal - Alejandro Escovedo
Earth To The Dandy Warhols - The Dandy Warhols
The Odd Couple - Gnarls Barkley
Everything That Happens Will Happen Today- David Byrne & Brian Eno
Chemical Chords - Stereolab
Dear Science - TV on the Radio
Everywhere at Once - Lyrics Born
Real Emotional Trash - Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks
Consolers Of the Lonely - The Raconteurs

Honorable mentions: I guess I'll call R.E.M.'s Accelerate an honorable mention. I really enjoyed it - and I'm so glad they're back to making rock and roll music after years of boring mush - but it didn't stay with me long. Despite some of the most ridulous lyrics I've heard since re-reading my high school love letters, I liked Flock by Bell X1. The Way I See It by Rapheal Saadiq and Santogold's self titled albums were really nice. She & Him Volume One had disaster written all over it - but it wasn't. In fact, it's a great album. Priscilla Ahn's A Good Day was a good, simple and sweet debut.



Sunday, November 30, 2008

Great find: Sound Opinions


Along with Yu's Mandarin noodles and Salerno's pizza, Sound Opinions radio show and podcast has been reason enough to live in Chicago. Music critics Jim DeRogatis (of The Sun-Times) and Greg Kot (Chicago Tribune), host this hour-long program. Despite their creds, what I love about this show is it's just two music nerds (sorry guys!) talking about music and interviewing great artists. they play a lot of music and have great topics. I also like the fact that they have similar tastes in general, but they alos disagree a lot - so you get a couple takes. You can listen live, listen to the stream or download the podcast. Check it out!

http://www.soundopinions.org/about.html

What's your favorite holiday music?


I'm currently putting together my favorite Christmas and holiday music. Any suggestions? What are your favorites? And while we're on the topic, what do you think about David Bowie and Bing Crosby's version of "The Little Drummer Boy"? Everyone has a strong opinion about that one.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Alejandro Escovedo - Real Animal


When I heard Alejandro's new album was going to be made up of songs inspired by his musical career and personal life I winced. "No, not Alejandro," I thought! usually reminiscing should be left to one's friends and families - or at least save it for the memoirs. When any rocker looks backwards it's usually like masturbation - fun for the doer only. Often these types of records feature lyrics stretched or squeezed to fit into awkward musical spaces and the music itself sounds soundtracky or contrived. "Real Animal" certainly falls into none of these traps. Each song is rich, melodic and the music stands alone - no back drops for lyrics or stories here. The lyrics, too, are not a bore. I think the reason is instead of just recounting his "crazy days" or regrets, or whatever, he ties his stories to bigger (or smaller) themes we can all relate to. A perfect example is the song "Chelsea Hotel '78"- I cringed when I saw this potentially pretentious title. But early in the song the lyric "..we came to live inside the myths of everything we heard" let's us know this isn't going to be an idealized 'gee, don't you wish you where there' hipster brag trip. The song goes on to name drop left and right, but it still works and connects to every situation we've all had in our lives where expectations fade and reality takes us in a different direction - and in the end it's just as it should have been. All the songs feature excellent story telling, but this album is all about the music - at once clean and deep and each songs builds in a specific, logical, but fresh direction. Very complex layers, but not showboaty or distracting. Great stuff.

Monday, November 24, 2008

My current top ten songs


Dating back to my high school days, I periodically try to make a list of my favorite songs and albums of all time. It's impossible, but fun. I'd love to hear your list or comments. Here's my most recent attempt:

  1. Down by the River - Neil Young
  2. Can't Get Next To You - The Temptations
  3. This Must Be The Place - Talking Heads
  4. Fake Plastic Trees - Radiohead
  5. Know Your Rights - The Clash
  6. Jesus, etc. - Wilco
  7. Kentucky Cocktail - Pavement
  8. Since I've Been Loving You - Led Zeppelin
  9. Dead leaves and the Dirty Ground - The White Stripes
  10. Search & Destroy - The Stooges




The birthdate and place of Punk rock


Some may disagree, but I believe Punk rock is one of the few movements that's birth can be pinpointed to an actual moment in time. October 20th, 1967 The Doors played a concert in front of a bunch of drunken frat boys in University of Michigan's Yost Field House in Ann Arbor. Morrison, himself so intoxicated the show had to be paused and restarted, became irritated by the attitude of the crowd who chided his long hair and "girly" hippie attire. Morrison decided to mock the crowd by singing in a false falsetto voice, and squirming in a provocative, satiracly feminine frenzy. He berrated and taunted the preps in between sets and the crowd responded by throwing objects at him and yelling insults. It became quite ugly to the delight, it seems, of two people in particular: Morrison and a high school student in the audience, James Osterberg. The boy who would be grow up to become Iggy Pop was struck at that very moment with an idea for a new possible performer-fan relationship. A relationship fueled less by envy and worship, and more on confrontation, mutual aggression, angst and violent expression. James left that concert with the wheels turning in his head and soon began experimenting with new stage personas, tactics and provocative sets. When he took these ideas to New York City, he spread a virus to all the early Punks who started the NY, London and West Coast Punk scenes. No one was doing this before Iggy, and all the early punks saw an Iggy show at one point or another. I think the simplicity, the do-it-yourself attitude and the anti-rock god elements of Punk may have been an inevitable response to the state of commercial rock at the time, but the Punk attitude may not have ever caught fire without Iggy's influence.
Thus, I can make the bold statement: Punk, like most great things, was born in Ann Arbor, MI.
DOB: October 20, 1967
Location: Yost Field House