Archive for August, 2009



Quotes that have come back to bite me

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Pillaging my old LiveJournal today for things I definitely regret saying. Enjoy.

October 11, 2004

I’m really hoping Dos Ambuli is going to get off the ground. It’s got potential. If only we had drums. But if it turns out how we’re hoping, it’s gonna be something really cool. Or I’m just talking out of my ass again.

December 5, 2004:

So I applied at the (ED: FRUIT COMPANY) Store tonight. Online. Yeah. Me. Applied for another job. I don’t think I’ll have any chance of getting it anyways.

February 21, 2005

I think I’m gonna try this low-carb thing.

April 25, 2005

“Make Believe” is a record that may not go down as a classic by any means, but it’s an exhiliarating, refreshing listen from a band that I thought long ago had forgotten what made them popular in the first place.

October 24, 2005

I’m drinking Lemonade Iced Tea from the carton.

I’ve Never Understood

Friday, August 14th, 2009

I’ve never understood Monty Python. Their humor completely escapes me. To this day, I have not seen all of Monty Python and the Holy Grail because I cannot stay awake for it. The count now is around seven. I admit the part with the Black Knight is pretty funny, but the rest I’m not entertained by. The same goes for Monty Python’s Flying Circus and it’s Ministry of Silly Walks. Let’s get the record straight: I don’t actively dislike them. Make your case to me in the comments, and if it’s good enough, I’ll give them another shot.

I’ve never understood why people continuously find OK Computer to be a better record than Kid A. It’s not. It’s a classic case of parts being greater than the sum. Sure, you’ve got “Paranoid Android”, “Exit Music (From A Film)” and “Karma Police”, but the whole record, after several listens, doesn’t fit together congrouously. Kid A, in all of it’s discordant glory, is a much more impressive feat. There’s the antiseptic title track, with it’s inhuman vocal processing and gorgeous wash of synthesizers, the unforgettable bass riff that starts “The National Anthem”, the spectacular pop of “Optimistic”, and of course, the overlapping vocals on “Idioteque”. Kid A takes you to a place. It breathes. It’s alive. OK Computer spends an entire record telling you it’s not.

I’ve never understood audiophiles. I love music, but I’ve never been particularly concerned with how music sounds. Most of my music listening comes digitally, either when I’m on my computer or through my iPod, and on the rare occasion, a record or CD. That’s fine enough for me. With that said, I don’t enjoy fuzzy mp3s, and anything below 128kbps is UNACCEPTABLE.

I’ve never understood mayonnaise. In fact, it should be abolished. Absolutely disgusting.

The Gaslight Anthem @ Double Door 8/8/09

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Out in a sea of Gaslight Anthem fans – especially those at the Double Door Saturday evening – there’s a meshing of two very distinct types of music fans.

In one corner, there’s the punk rock fans – kids who get their kicks from groups like Alkaline Trio, Against Me!, and the Lawrence Arms. Those bands are scruffier, edgier versions of their pop-punk counterparts that probably spent more time with the first three Clash records than the three hit Blink-182 albums.

In the other corner, there’s the always mercurial indie rock fans, who have been won over by the band’s roots-rock Americana and cinematic lyrics. The band’s working class image is the in rock-and-roll trend right now – it’s a template that they follow like their counterparts Lucero, the Drive-By Truckers, and The Hold Steady. There’s a simple reason for that: it never gets old.

The Gaslight Anthem took the stage shortly after midnight. By then, the club had turned into a sweatbox. Any hopes of recycling a pair of pants or t-shirt for the next day were dashed. Those in the first few rows were dripping from head to toe – it was overwhelmingly soggy.

For a band with as much positive buzz as The Gaslight Anthem, it’s hard to believe that they’d be anything but a sure-thing live act. In that category, they disappoint.

Rock and roll to me, comes from the interactivity. I enjoy watching frontmen like Eddie Argos of Art Brut treat his songs as if they were his own personal theater, jumping into the crowd, faux-sulking while sitting on a monitor, and acting as if his band members are just some second-rate session musicians carrying out his bidding.

So, it’s was a bit maddening as a concertgoer to watch The Gaslight Anthem with a such a short range of motion. Strumming the guitar and occasionally playing to the drummer caused my mind to wander more than I hoped. There’s a barometer I carry to measure my enjoyment level at a show: my cell phone. If it’s out, and I’m texting someone, the performer’s lost me. If you don’t see it, we’ll, let’s just say, I make myself seen.

Despite the glaring shortcomings, the heroic chords of “High Lonesome” were an inspiring open to the set, supercharging the crowd worn out by the heat. “And Maria came from Nashville with a suitcase in her hand/I always kind of sort of wished I looked like Elvis”, vocalist/guitarist Brian Fallon sang. It’s funny, because it’s true.

On stage, he and bassist Alex Levine are a study in contrast to their counterparts, guitarist Alex Rosamilia and drummer Benny Horowitz. Fallon and Levine have adopted a nu-greaser look – short, high and tight haircuts and white tees and Dickies – while the other two deliberately eschew it for more modern stylings.


IMG_8955

Brian Fallon of The Gaslight Anthem

The set was culled heavily from the band’s breakout disc, last year’s The ’59 Sound, and a generous heaping of songs from the band’s more aggressive debut disc, 2007′s Sink or Swim. The reason for this, explained Fallon, that after 50 festival shows, the band was excited to be playing another club show.

Despite the band’s lingering greenness, there were moments of brilliance. “The ’59 Sound”, propulsive guitars, huge chorus and all made standing in the heat worth it. The mixture of the stage lights, pumping fists and the room screaming at the top of it’s lungs was a classic rock show moment. Ditto for “Great Expectations”, which produced a similar, equally passionate response.

Then came the lasting image of the evening. The set closing tune “The Backseat” (which Fallon called ‘Backseats’ – Springsteen nod?). As a crowd surfer made his way towards the front, the song climaxed at the chorus, the surfer rose on his hands and knees, mere feet from Fallon, screaming along the words: “In the backseats/we just try to find some room to breathe”.

For those fleeting moments, The Gaslight Anthem’s deficiences were forgotten. Both fan and artist were just two people sharing the same experience: The pure, infectious energy of rock and roll.

Exactly how it should be.

Books Are Hard

Friday, August 7th, 2009

I’m trying to read a bit more lately. I’ve always liked reading and have tried to read more than a few books a year, but lately, I’ve noticed, it’s very difficult for me to pay attention to certain books – mainly those considered ‘classics’.

Admittedly, most of my reading material nowadays probably comes within the past few decades. I’ve been enjoying books by NPR contributor Sarah Vowell – I’ve read both The Partly Cloudy Patriot and Assassination Vacation in the past two months, Craig Thompson’s stellar graphic novel/autobiography Blankets, and a little less recently, Jonathan Safran Foer’s brilliant, yet mistifying Everything is Illuminated and Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close.

I’ve tried to read Jack Kerouac’s On The Road on three separate occasions. Every time I’ve tried, I’ve fallen asleep before the 50 page mark – in broad daylight, no less. For someone as my self who enjoys going on road trips, you’d think it it’d be a no brainer. Instead, I feel zero connection to it. Let’s take a quote lifted from the first chapter:

“They danced down the streets like dingledodies, and I shambled after as I’ve been doing all my life after people who interest me, because the only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones that never yawn or say a commonplace thing, but burn, burn, burn…”

The slang fails to hook me. I want to be able to enjoy Kerouac’s prose, instead it comes off kind of rambly and self-serving. I find that when I’m reading something, and it’s not linear, I have a hard time following. I’ve found that books written from an era I’m unfamiliar with are also a struggle to read. I’m disappointed in myself, as I feel these are the types of books I should read, but don’t particularly enjoy. Era specific novels such as Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad and The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald have been miserable failures on my part as well.

on-the-road

I don’t get you.

I’m not attacking the integrity of these works, I’m stating that I simply lack the ability to deconstruct and analyze them effectively. In more recent books, I’ve spent reading – Dave Eggers’s A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius comes to mind – the author’s stream of conciousness writing is alternately fascinating as it is frustrating. I have a real desire to finish the book, but often have had to put it down for long stretches of time. I began reading the book in March 2006 and have yet to complete it.

I’ve made many references to how I’m attempting to read David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest. It’s an incredibly dense, if not readable novel that I still feel a bit unprepared to get in the thick of. Before giving it a serious crack, I’ve acquired his Consider The Lobster: And Other Essays collection to complete first. One thing I’ve noticed about his writing is that it commands the reader’s absolute attention. There is an incredible amount of analysis and detail written into his pieces. It’s certainly accessible, but can also be a bit exhausting.

Perhaps youth is the best excuse for my intolerance for classic or dense literature. Maybe I haven’t hit the emotional plateau necessary to break down somewhat difficult books, or maybe I lack the ability to find the threads in these books that make them so engaging to such a wide audience.

I’ll keep trying. No promises, though.

Technologic

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

BORED-ER: Today is Border Crossing Day at the site, or as I like to call it “I’m bored and Wiki-ing”. Unofficially, unofficial.

SECOND BEST SONG WITH ‘MAGGIE’ IN THE TITLE: Can’t get enough of the new Lucero material, specifically this song, “The Devil and Maggie Chascarillo”. Horn sections are always awesome.

BREAKING: For their 50th Anniversary, The Second City will be reuniting the cast of SCTV for one night only, Friday, December 11. Pretty awesome. I’ve lived in Chicago my entire life and have not once been to Second City. For shame.

NICE: I’ve never seen the first TRON movie, but the sequel, TRON Legacy looks pretty sweet.

Bands I’ve seen, in no particular order, nor complete.

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

1. The Hold Steady
2. Animal Collective
3. Drive-By Truckers
4. Weezer
5. The Pixies
6. The Strokes
7. Vampire Weekend
8. Fleet Foxes
9. Jay Reatard
10. Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street Band
11. The Mars Volta
12. Le Tigre
13. Catfish Haven
14. Art Brut
15. Matt & Kim
16. The Thermals
17. Phish
18. Dave Matthews Band
19. The Decemberists
20. Blink-182
21. 311
22. The Crystal Method
23. Puddle of Mudd
24. Dashboard Confessional
25. Sparta
26. Tsunami Bomb
27. The Distillers
28. No Doubt
29. Incubus
30. Phantom Planet
31. Daniel Johnston
32. Motion City Soundtrack
33. Sherwood
34. Smoking Popes
35. The Jesus Lizard
36. Yo La Tengo
37. The Mae Shi
38. Grizzly Bear
39. Iron and Wine
40. The Flaming Lips
41. The Stooges
42. Broken Social Scene
43. Sonic Youth
44. Dinosaur Jr.
45. Sean Lennon
46. AFI
47. Hot Water Music
48. Bleeding Through
49. Sean Lennon
50. Billy Joel
51. Elton John
52. Wilco
53. Modest Mouse
54. Death Cab for Cutie
55. Booker T
56. Sean Na Na
57. The War on Drugs
58. Birds of Avalon
59. The Loved Ones
60. The Walkmen
61. Shellac
62. Ted Leo and the Pharmacists
63. Bob Dylan
64. Kings of Leon
65. The Mountain Goats
66. Kaki King
67. Bon Iver
68. Franz Nicolay
69. The National
70. Radiohead
71. Bloc Party
72. Gogol Bordello
73. Yeasayer
74. Man Man
75. Be Your Own Pet
76. Black Lips