Friday, October 26, 2007

Weekend

Not looking forward to having to head down to Lincoln to do manual labor for my sister and
brother-in-law. Hopefully I'll be done to catch Game 3 of the World Series.
I haven't posted in a while and I thought I'd keep things light with a series that I'm rediscovering - Sifl and Olly. God, I miss this show. Add this to the list of shows that needs to come out on DVD. If King of Queens can get their seasons on DVD, I sure as hell want Sifl and Olly. If you're not familiar with the show, just fast forward to 4:44 to see one of the best covers of a Blondie song you'll ever see involving puppets.

iPod list for the day:
"Feel Good Inc." Gorillaz ***** (Whitey loves the hits)
"In the Springtime of His Voodoo" -Tori Amos **** ("got an angry s*atch, girl you know what I mean" - wow...thanks for that visual, Tori)
"Fashion Awards" - Eels **
"Bring Me Down" - Kanye West ****
"Doncha Bother Me" - The Rolling Stones ****
"Little Baird" - Charlie Parker ****
"Tymps (The Sick in the Head Song)" - Fiona Apple ****
"The Day the World Went Away" - NIN ****
"I Ain't Gone Under Yet" - Neneh Cherry ***
"Here Comes the Sun" - The Beatles *** (maybe **** - just not one of my faves)
"Your Little Hoodrat Friend" - The Hold Steady *****
"No More Kings" - Pavement ***
"Neon Bible" - The Arcade Fire ***
"The Electric Version" - The New Pornographers ****
"I Hung My Head" - Johnny Cash ****
"Bring The Boys Back Home" - Pink Floyd ***
"Parades Go By" - The Magnetic Fields ***
"Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp(live)" - Led Zeppelin *****
"Ngiculela - Es Una Historia - I am Singing" - Stevie Wonder ****
"Wish Fulfillment" - Sonic Youth ****
"Send His Love to Me" - PJ Harvey *****
"Outside the Wall" - Pink Floyd **
"I Don't Care (demo)" - The Ramones ***
"A Warm Place" - NIN ****
"Down on the Riverbed" - Los Lobos ****
"Ghost World" - Aimee Mann ***
"Whole Lotta Love" - Led Zep ****
"Something in the Way Of Things (In Town)" - The Roots *****
"Folsolm Prison Blues(live)" - Johnny Cash *****
"Thank You" - Tori Amos *****
"Bad Head" - Blur ****
"It Was Supposed to Be So Easy" - The streets ***
"I'm Always in Love" - Wilco *****
"Half Day Closing" - Portishead ****
"The Hammer" - Motorhead *****

"Feel Good Inc." Gorillaz ***** (Whitey loves the hits)
"In the Springtime of His Voodoo" -Tori Amos **** ("got an angry s*atch, girl you know what I mean" - wow...thanks for that visual, Tori)
"Fashion Awards" - Eels **
"Bring Me Down" - Kanye West ****
"Doncha Bother Me" - The Rolling Stones ****
"Little Baird" - Charlie Parker ****
"Tymps (The Sick in the Head Song)" - Fiona Apple ****
"The Day the World Went Away" - NIN ****
"I Ain't Gone Under Yet" - Neneh Cherry ***
"Here Comes the Sun" - The Beatles *** (maybe **** - just not one of my faves)
"Your Little Hoodrat Friend" - The Hold Steady *****
"No More Kings" - Pavement ***
"Neon Bible" - The Arcade Fire ***
"The Electric Version" - The New Pornographers ****
"I Hung My Head" - Johnny Cash ****
"Bring The Boys Back Home" - Pink Floyd ***
"Parades Go By" - The Magnetic Fields ***
"Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp(live)" - Led Zeppelin *****
"Ngiculela - Es Una Historia - I am Singing" - Stevie Wonder ****
"Wish Fulfillment" - Sonic Youth ****
"Send His Love to Me" - PJ Harvey *****
"Outside the Wall" - Pink Floyd **
"I Don't Care (demo)" - The Ramones ***
"A Warm Place" - NIN ****
"Down on the Riverbed" - Los Lobos ****
"Ghost World" - Aimee Mann ***
"Whole Lotta Love" - Led Zep ****
"Something in the Way Of Things (In Town)" - The Roots *****
"Folsolm Prison Blues(live)" - Johnny Cash *****
"Thank You" - Tori Amos *****
"Bad Head" - Blur ****
"It Was Supposed to Be So Easy" - The streets ***
"I'm Always in Love" - Wilco *****
"Half Day Closing" - Portishead ****
"The Hammer" - Motorhead *****


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Friday, October 12, 2007

Concert review - Wilco and Andrew Bird Oct. 11, 2007

I'm still a bit groggy from last night's Wilco show. I saw them a few years ago in Red Rocks when The Roots opened for them. This time, it was Andrew Bird. And unlike the Sokol show earlier this year - it was just Andrew performing - no backing band. Bird was his usual stellar self - my only complaint was the brevity of his set. But thankfully, a good number of the audience knew who he was and what a treat it was that he was opening.

Wilco's performance was like their music catalog: some of it threatens to derail into arty pretensiousness while some of it threatens to careen into jam-heavy "dad rock" as Pitchfork summed up Wilco's last album. But heard in a live setting - everything makes sense. The alienating white noise of A Ghost is Born actually sounds warm and inviting in a live setting. And listening to Sky Blue Sky, you can tell this was an album that seemed to be born from the road and not in the studio. The songs off of Sky Blue Sky seemed as familiar and worn to the band as the tracks off of Being There.

Holding everything together was Jeff Tweedy. Wearing a cowboy hat and some nice, grizzled facial hair, he looked like Eddie Vedder's wiser older brother from my Orchestra 3 seats. His sardonic humor kept a few idiots in the audience in check. "Sometimes you need to stand up, sometimes you need to sit and take it all in" he quipped, noticing the abrupt moment when most of the audience on the main floor decided to sit down during one of their slower numbers. There were a few times when Wilco went full on country, making me wonder if the band genuinely loves playing their songs with a country edge, or if it was their way of wryly mocking some of the audience's hooting and hollering.

The entire band was damn-near flawless, but guitarist Nels Cline and drummer Glenn Kotche were in spectacular form Thursday night. Kotche didn't miss a single beat as he was flashing a grin throughout most of their set. As for Cline - his fretwork could be vicious (see "A Shot in the Arm," "I Got You (At the End of the Century)," the encore of "Spiders") or delicate ("Sky Blue Sky," "Impossible Germany").

The encores were a heavy smattering of Being There favorites such as "I Got You (At the End of the Century)," "Red-Eyed and Blue" and the final song "Outtasite (Outta Mind)." My friend, who has never seen Wilco play live before, said "I was wondering why they went all Van Morrisson at the second half of the set, but at the end, it made perfect sense."

The thing that stuck with me was how stellar Wilco's songs are when you look at their setlist. In two hours, the audience heard "Red-Eyed and Blue," "Handshake Drugs," "Hate it Here," "I am Trying to Break Your Heart," "Heavy Metal Drummer," "Impossible Germany," "Via Chicago" and "The Late Greats" to name a few. And that is without such favorites as "At Least That's What You Said," "Hell is Chrome," "Reservations" and "Misunderstood." Any songwriter would be lucky to have an output half as productive as Tweedy.

Different topic - Radiohead's In Rainbows
I have to say that I think it's probably their best work since Kid A. While I liked Hail to the Thief, I thought it was sort of a forced effort to return to their guitar heavy sound of The Bends. I think "House of Cards" may be one of the most beautiful songs the band has ever recorded. And while OK Computer will probably be this band's high water mark, it would be a shame if fans were to judge the band on just these two albums. Can you imagine trying to judge Dylan on two of his albums, or the Beatles on just two of their albums? Album of the year? I think LCD Soundsystem's Sound of Silver still is the frontrunner, but like Sky Blue Sky, In Rainbows will find a place in your headphones if you give it some time and if you judge the album on its own merit.

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Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Coming to the Defense of Funky

Tom Batiuk has been taking lumps recently from fans for opting to end the life of one of the main characters in his strip Funky Winkerbean. True - this has to be one of the most depressing comic strip since the last Bloom County strip (but for an entirely different reason):








I'll come to his defense on this. First, because it shows the other side of the cancer battle. In the comic medium, and in the majority of the books we read and television shows we watch- we hear the triumphant stories of those who have conquered cancer. But for every story of triumph, there are countless other stories of people who have lost the battle. Second reason I'll come to his defense ... a lot of his critics want him to go back to when the strip was funny. Unfortunately, I can't remember when this strip was ever funny - so dude might as well try his luck on the dramatic end of things.








Finally - I never knew the messenger of death had a formal dress attire and wore a mask. Dude looks like one of the party attendees for that sex party in the movie Eyes Wide Shut.

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Monday, October 01, 2007

H O U S E

So - I put down an offer on a house a few weeks ago. And the reaction has been split down the middle. My family and the friends that I have who have warmed to the idea of suburbia - a nice back yard, weekend trips to the Home Depot for the latest house project, changing the lawn mower blade in the garage, playing KISS covers, beautiful and stoned - all welcomed the move as a sign of maturity. The friends that are more of the nomadic nature are not as receptive. Especially when I got a call from a newspaper I applied for in Oregon.

It also didn't help that I viewed this on CBS News. First off - yes - the cynic in me sees this lecture as another 'how to live your life' lecture. But we can't be cynics all the time - and this is one time I let my guard down - I actually listened to the entire lecture after this report:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/09/28/assignment_america/main3309721.shtml?source=mostpop_story

Different topic - new albums come out tomorrow. Top pic so far: PJ Harvey's White Chalk

White Chalk

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