Monday, January 30, 2012

Stream The New Magnetic Fields Single

Photo by Chris Buck
Stephen Merritt and his Magnetic Fields are famous for their audacious 69 Love Songs set and received even further notoriety when they were the collective subject of the recent documentary, Strange Powers chronicling Merritt's day to day life and his musical approach. Now, Merritt and Magnetic Fields are set to release their tenth album on March 6th.

Entitled Love At The Bottom Of The Sea, it marks the first Magnetic Fields release on Merge Records since the much lauded 69 Love Songs and the follow-up to 2010's Realism. The first single from the record, "Andrew In Drag", is a truly Merrtian pop song that both provokes chuckles and humming from the listener after just one spin.

You can stream the new song below and see upcoming Magnetic Fields tour dates throughout North America and Europe. There is also a track listing for Love At The Bottom Of The Sea.

The Magnetic Fields - Andrew in Drag by MergeRecords

Love at the Bottom of the Sea Track Listing:
1. God Wants Us to Wait
2. Andrew in Drag
3. Your Girlfriend's Face
4. Born For Love
5. I'd Go Anywhere with Hugh
6. Infatuation (With Your Gyration)
7. The Only Boy in Town
8. The Machine in Your Hand
9. Goin' Back to the Country
10. I've Run Away to Join the Fairies
11. The Horrible Party
12. My Husband's Pied-a-Terre
13. I Don't Like Your Tone
14. Quick!
15. All She Cares About Is Mariachi
--
THE MAGNETIC FIELDS - 2012 TOUR DATES
Mar 6 Hudson, NY Helsinki Hudson
Mar 7 Philadelphia, PA Union Transfer
Mar 8 New York, NY Barnes and Noble
Mar 11 Minehead, UK All Tomorrow's Parties
Mar 14, 15, 16 Austin, TX SXSW
Mar 18 Vancouver, BC The Vogue
Mar 19 Seattle, WA Neptune Theater
Mar 20 Seattle, WA Neptune Theater
Mar 21 Portland, OR Roseland Theater
Mar 23 Los Angeles, CA Orpheum Theater
Mar 24 Oakland, CA Fox Theater
Mar 26 Chicago, IL Vic Theater
Mar 27 Chicago, IL Vic Theater
Mar 28 Iowa City, IA Englert Theater
Mar 30 Toronto, ON Sound Academy
Mar 31 Montreal, QC Le National
Apr 3 New York, NY Beacon Theater
Apr 4 New York, NY Beacon Theater
Apr 6 Boston, MA Berklee Performance Center
Apr 7 Boston, MA Berklee Performance Center
Apr 9 Washington, DC 9:30 Club
Apr 11 Carrboro, NC Cat's Cradle
Apr 12 Carrboro, NC Cat's Cradle
Apr 13 Atlanta, GA Variety Playhouse
Apr 24 Brighton, UK Komedia
Apr 25 London, UK Royal Festival Hall
Apr 27 Manchester, UK RNCM
Apr 28 Dublin, IR Olympia
Apr 29 Cork, IR Opera House
May 1 Porto, PT Casa da Musica
May 2 Lisbon, PT Teatro Maria Matos
May 4 Murcia, ES Estrella Levante SOS 4.8
May 6 Barcelona, ES Sala Apolo
May 7 Madrid, ES Teatro Rialto
May 9 Oslo, NO Rockefeller
May 11 Gothenburg, SE Annedalskyrkan
May 12 Stockholm, SE Filadelfiakyrkan
May 14 Berlin, DE Passionskirche
May 15 Hamburg, DE Kampnagel k6
May 16 Amsterdam, NL De Duif

Hospitality Set To Release Debut LP

Tomorrow marks the official release date for the self-titled debut LP from Hospitality. Being a sucker for well-crafted and intelligent pop songs, it seemed a shame to let this occasion pass unnoticed. To celebrate, watch the video below for "Friends Of Friends". Not only is it a catchy song likely to make you run out to your local record purveyor, but it also features Alia Shakwat of Arrested Development fame. And if there is one thing we love around here more than intelligent pop songs, it's intelligent TV shows that make us laugh our asses off.

Oh, and after the new video, you can spy are a few Hospitality tour dates (imagine the puns they'll have to endure) along the eastern half of North America.


Hospitality - "Friends Of Friends" from stereogum on Vimeo.

Hospitality Tour Dates:
Feb 3 Brooklyn, NY Glasslands Gallery (Record Release Show)
Feb 25 San Francisco, CA Great American Music Hall (Noise Pop w/ Archers of Loaf)
Feb 26 Los Angeles, CA Troubadour w/ Archers of Loaf
Feb 29 Toronto, ON Horseshoe Tavern w/ Tennis
Mar 2 Boston, MA Brighton Music Hall w/ Tennis
Mar 3 New York, NY Bowery Ballroom w/ Tennis
Mar 7 New Haven, CT BAR
Mar 9 Chapel Hill, NC Local 506 w/ Tennis
Mar 10 Atlanta, GA The Earl w/ Tennis
Mar 11 Orlando, FL Orange You Glad Festival

Stream And Download New Bowerbirds Song

Photo by D.L. Anderson
On March 6th, North Carolina's Bowerbirds will release their third full length, The Clearing on Dead Oceans. After two records filled with mostly sparse and Appalachian-esque instrumentational approach, The Clearing brings on a bigger, more fulfilled sound. Trading murder ballads for genteel pop - at least a little bit.

In addition to being the supposedly "difficult" third record, the band have also undergone a number of trials and tribulations during the writing and recording process. After the release of 2009's Upper Air, singer Beth Tacular nearly died of a mysterious illness and she and her band mate, Phil Moore have broken up and then reunited. Pretty tough circumstances under which to make a record.

Based on the first two unveiled songs, Bowerbirds sound better than ever. Below, you can find a track listing for The Clearing, catch up on the planned spring tour and stream/download a track from the new album called "In The Yard".





The Clearing Track Listing:
  1. Tuck the Darkness In
  2. In the Yard
  3. Walk the Furrows
  4. Stitch the Hem
  5. This Year
  6. Brave World
  7. Hush
  8. Overcome With Light
  9. Sweet Moment
  10. Death Wish
  11. Now We Hurry On
Bowerbirds Tour Dates:
03-17 Carrboro, NC – Cat’s Cradle
03-21 Washington, DC – Black Cat
03-22 Philadelphia, PA – Johnny Brenda’s
03-23 New York, NY – Bowery Ballroom
03-24 Boston, MA – Paradise
03-26 Montreal, Quebec – La Sala Rossa
03-27 Toronto, Ontario – The Garrison
03-29 Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall
03-31 Minneapolis, MN – Cedar Cultural Centre
04-03 Seattle, WA – The Crocodile
04-04 Portland, OR – Doug Fir Lounge
04-06 San Francisco, CA – The Independent
04-07 Los Angeles, CA – Troubadour
04-08 San Diego, CA – Casbah
04-11 Austin, TX – The Parish
04-12 Dallas, TX – The Loft
04-14 Birmingham, AL – The Bottletree
04-15 Atlanta, GA – The Earl

Dark Shadows Pics Revealed, or Why Tim Burton Must Be Stopped

Some production stills from the Tim Burton film treatment of Dark Shadows starring Johnny Depp, have very recently surfaced on the intertubes, and just one image can bring on a whole bag of ughhh to the ribcage! In the first place, they've made Johnny Depp look precisely what Elliott from ET: The Extra Terrestrial would like if he had gone goth and become a recluse in a secluded New England castle. Furthermore, these images serve as a reminder of why the remake is an awful idea, why Tim Burton is a terrible filmmaker these days, and what a waste of talent it is to see Johnny Depp play these kinds of roles.

A flurry of emotions gobsmacked me across the chaw when I saw these photos. Not because of how they looked or even what they were of, but that the Dark Shadows project encapsulates so many things worth hating about Hollywood right now. So, let's get them all out before I show you the other still.

Someone needs to take Tim Burton's camera and notepads away. He's run out of original ideas and we're sick and goddamned tired of watching him filch source material only to make it worse. From Alice In Wonderland to Planet Of The Apes to Charlie & The Chocolate Factory, he's taken good things and sullied them with his deliberate weirdness and pseudo-gothic bullshit.

The Dark Shadows television program doesn't even hold any allure to me and yet I still feel like he's ruining it. There is a sense that Burton has this cadre of things he loves and wants to control, so he remakes them. Yet, this only leads to an inferior version of the thing he loved. It is sad to watch and damaging to the source material. Someone make him stop.

Johnny Depp is a very talented actor and yet he keeps palling around with Burton hoping to rekindle that Edward Scissorhands or Ed Wood magic. Those are very good films, but that light has long since gone out and now one gets the sens that Depp will play out his days as Jack Sparrow in a rest home, doing the bidding of the evil Dr. Burton or, after the failure of Rum Punch, perhaps just continue making bad film adaptations of Hunter S. Thompson novels. Dude, just get back to being an actor and stop trying to be a movie star.

Finally, we get down to the whole vampire nonsense. Between this, the Underworld franchise, Abe Lincoln Vampire Hunter and that Twilight Saga bullshit, the American movie making syndicate have basically created a cottage industry for fake blood purveyors and the makers of prosthetic fangs. At what point will the movie going public overload on this horseshit? It's hard to tell what teenage girls will be into next, but anything other than bloodsucking douchebags would be a wonderful reprieve for this cineaste.

Enough of my vitriol, here are some more stills.




















Spiritualized Announce New Album, North American Tour Dates

Spiritualized have announced plans to release their follow up to their 2008 LP, Songs In A & E. Fat Possum Records will release Sweet Heart Sweet Light in mid-March.

To coincide with the release of the new album, Spiritualized have also mapped out an extensive tour of North America slated for this May.

You can see tour dates and a track list for Sweet Heart Sweet Light below. As an added bonus, you can also find a video of the band playing a track from the LP called "Little Girl." The performance comes from the Other Voices Festival which took place in Ireland last April.



Sweet Heart Sweet Light Track Listing:
01 Hey Jane
02 Little Girl
03 Get What You
04 Too Late
05 Heading for the Top
06 Freedom
07 I Am What I Am
08 Mary
09 Life Is a Problem
10 So Long You Pretty Things

North American Tour Dates:
05-02 Minneapolis, MN - First Avenue
05-03 Chicago, IL - Metro
05-04 Detroit, MI - The Majestic Theatre
05-05 Toronto, Ontario - The Phoenix
05-07 New York, NY - Terminal 5
05-09 Boston, MA - Paradise
05-10 Washington, DC - The 9:30 Club
05-11 Philadelphia, PA - Theatre of Living Arts
05-12 Carrboro, NC - Cat's Cradle
05-13 Atlanta, GA - The Variety Playhouse
05-15 Dallas, TX - The Granada Theatre
05-16 Austin, TX - Emo's East
05-18 Tucson AZ - The Rialto Theatre
05-19 Phoenix AZ - The Crescent Ballroom
05-20 San Diego CA - Belly Up Tavern
05-22 Los Angeles CA - The Wiltern
05-23 San Francisco CA - The Fillmore
05-25 Portland, OR - The Wonder Ballroom
05-26 Vancouver, British Columbia - The Rickshaw Theatre

Honda Pimps CRV With Ferris Bueller Redux


















Last week a 30 second video hit the web setting off a load of speculation of a possible Ferris Bueller reboot or sequel or "God knows what Hollywood might do with this beloved teen classic" train of thought. Japanese automaker, Honda has now released their full two minute ad they'll air during this Sunday's Super Bowl.

The commercial cleverly reprises Broderick as himself but in the Bueller mold, faking sick to get out of shooting a movie for a day. Broderick trollops all over town in his new Honda CRV and encounters myriad situations that recall iconic moments from the original film.

Double relief is in store here since it's now certain for the time being there are no immediate plans for a Bueller remake, and this will occupy at least two minutes of Super Bowl ad time not occupied by beer commercials filled with douchey white guys saying stupid shit.

You can watch the full ad below.


Sunday, January 29, 2012

RECIPE: Pasta With Meat Sauce

Believe it or not, there are people out there who don't like to cook. I know. I know. It makes no sense and you can't imagine how that can be, but it's true. To fend off such fear of the kitchen, here is an easy and delicious recipe that requires just some basic knife skills, a big pot and an appetite. Once you can master this, you're gut will be full and your culinary self-esteem will be sky high and ready for more.

Ingredients
1.5 lbs. ground pork
1 large Spanish onion, chopped
1 head garlic, separated into cloves and peeled and sliced
1 small bunch fresh basil leaves
1 cup red wine
2 29 oz. cans tomato puree
1 6 oz. can tomato paste
2 tbsp. red pepper flakes
2 tbsp. thyme leaves
2 tbsp. oregano leaves
1 lb. spaghetti
salt
olive oil

Directions:
Heat your dutch oven (that's a pan, get your mind out of the gutter) over medium heat and coat the bottom of the pan with olive oil. Once the oil is hot, add the ground pork along with some salt and 1 tbsp. each of the red pepper flakes, thyme and oregano. Stir together and brown the pork.

Once the pork has browned, use a slotted spoon to remove the meat from the pan and set aside. Turn the heat down to medium-low and make sure the bottom of the pan is still coated with oil and/or pork fat. If needed, add oil to recoat the bottom of the pan. Add the onion and garlic along with another pinch of salt. Stir and sweat over low heat until the onions become very soft and have completely changed color.

Next, add the cup of wine to the pan and bring the heat up to medium-high and allow to boil. Then, simmer over medium heat and allow the wine to reduce by about half. This ought to take 10-15 minutes. Make sure that you are scraping the bottom of the pan with a spoon to remove and deglaze and meat from the pan. This will wind up adding deliciousness, I assure you.

After the wine has reduced, add the tomato puree and the tomato paste along with half of the basil. Be sure to tear the basil into smaller pieces.Then, add the remainder of the thyme, oregano and red pepper. Stir the mixture, turn the heat down to low and simmer while covered.

The sauce needs to simmer at least 90 minutes, but will be even better if you allow 3-4 hours. Just be sure to keep stirring and add water or wine if your sauce gets too thick.

Once the sauce is ready to serve, bring a pot of water to boil on the stove and cook the spaghetti for 8-10 minutes, or until it's al dente. Drain the pasta, and then serve.

This is especially nice with a crust of bread or garlic toast. A nice salad or green beans work as a terrific side dish. Although, this will be fine all by itself.

Yep, it's that freaking easy, folks. Get to cooking and then get to eating.







Saturday, January 28, 2012

300 Million Degrees Of Separation

On this very blog, I update a regular article called the 2012 Film Journal. In addition to thoughts on the films and links for trailers and director's credits, I also include the way in which I watched the films. This inclusion was something that got me thinking.

There was a very, very recent time when I would have had three ways in which to view a film: I could have gone out to the theater. I could have watched a DVD/VHS/BetaMax/Laserdisc homemedia style physical product. Or, I could have watched it through my cable provider on networks like HBO or Showtime or on commercial cable with ads every few minutes or so.

Now with the advent of the home DVR, on-demand media services and my subscription to Netflix I can watch any of literally thousands of films at any given moment. Of course, there are millions of people just like me who have the same luxury, and maybe even similar tastes and subscriber services. Yet, it is still highly unlikely that my film of choice for that night will be the same as millions of other Netflix subscribers or that we will watch it with similar reference points, perspectives or expectations. Furthermore, even if I watch it along with thousands of other streamers, will there be a single one o those streamers that I actually know or can share the film with?

It's at this point where our cultural collectiveness begins to fracture. This is the phenomenon that has me intrigued. Is it possible to have more access to media and simultaneously move further away from a cultural zeitgeist?

Technology is a big part of life for my whole family. We have a gaming system that allows us to watch Blu-Ray and stream digital media like Netflix and Hulu. My wife has a kindle Fire that has apps for the aforementioned streaming sites as well as all the ability to surf the net throughout our home. My kids have iPods, which are basically a smaller package version of all the shit my wife's Kindle can accommodate. We are plugged in as a family, but very often, not plugged in with each other.

My wife can read an e-book while I watch a film on Netflix, all while our kids are upstairs watching cable or using their iPods. Even within our nuclear family the cultural distractions are often fragmented - and we love each other and enjoy each other's company.

Lately, I have become fascinated by what happens when this sort of fragmentation occurs to millions of us at the same time. There is an inherent disconnection in accessing media and culture in a private, individualized way. So, even though we have unfettered access to more information and media than at any time in human history, we are in many ways, more removed from each other than we have been in a very long time.

Most groups of people have a base of cultural experience that they share. That cultural experience certainly shifts from group to group based on age, gender, race, educational level and areas of interest. However, the cultural circle in which you spend most of your time will share a great deal of common cultural experience. Certain films, records, books, articles and radio programs will have become common knowledge amongst your chosen groups of peers.  It is altogether common for your inclusion in such groups to be based on your tastes and cultural proclivities. So, if you like 80's college rock records, Quentin Tarantino films and the works of Ernest Hemingway, you and I will likely have a lot to talk about. These trivial topics may be the thing that bind us.

Based on those criteria, many, if not most of my social circle will have a very similar viewpoint on those cultural goods. Sure, I might like Hemingway more than you, but if we find a communal and slightly esoteric pop-culture common ground, our relationship can take flight from there. It may seem insignificant, but these are the foundations upon which many lasting friendships are started. Whether it be based on a shared love of thrash metal, Dungeons and Dragons or Sex And The City, people connect with other people through the device of culture.

Of course, if we are all able to digest that culture from the comfort and privacy of our own homes, we are less likely to meet people with whom we share a cultural bond. Unless your film student pizza delivery guy catches you watching a Godard film in your living room, it's tough for you to meet anyone at the movies when you soak up Vivre Sa Vie on your couch. Now, unless you're digesting a live happening like a sporting event or a concert, you're very likely on your own.

The vast majority of music buyers in this country spend their cash through the iTunes account on their home computer. iTunes even includes a function called Genius that will recommend songs for you to try and/or purchase, so there is no exploration for discovery of new music, it is simply handed to you. Many music buyers see this as an advance. I view it as subtraction by addition.

Outlets like Twitter and Facebook do allow us to bridge thousands of miles and create new online friendships in ways that have never been possible before. For the most part, that has had a positive effect on our cultural communication - on the surface. Sure, I can "friend" you and suggest a movie or book I have been enjoying, but the conversation rarely extends beyond that because of the bite-size nature of social media. There is very little true interaction that exists in these online kiosks, we're just waiting for our turn to post. So, in that world, the dispensation of ideas most frequently trumps our digestion of them.

Many cultural critics have discussed the idea of the "convenience factor". This phenomenon focuses on the idea that as a viewer/listener/reader, we are more likely to consume something based upon the ease with which we can get to it, instead of how worthy it is to consume. Through this way of thinking, you could easily deduce that I would be willing to watch a sub-par film because I have instant access to it via my Netflix streaming account than waiting two days for the DVD to arrive in the mail. I cannot speak for all viewers, but in my case, the theory seems to have a great deal of merit. Therefore, our drive to watch something is more powerful than our drive to watch something good.

Overall, there is a terribly conflicted feeling I have about the access and ease of ideas and content to which we are privy. The amount of information that we can easily grab in a moment is staggering, and we have far fewer instances to parse out the cultural choices we make because they're so easy, they cease to feel like real choices. That is what is most troubling about it. As the writer Aldous Huxley once wrote, "Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means for going backwards."

Friday, January 27, 2012

Fanfarlo Set To Release Sophomore Effort

After storming the folk-indie-pop gates with their terrific 2009 debut, Reservoir, London based Fanfarlo played a ton of shows and made a host of really solid acoustic and stripped down web videos. Now, they're prepped to launch their follow-up LP, Room Filled With Light on Feb. 28.

As frontman, Simon Balthazar (yep, that is really his name) explains in the interview piece below, the band have slightly adjusted their sound, but based on what we've heard so far, they're still focused on simple melodies, tight songs and orchestrated arrangements.


405 Focus: Fanfarlo from The 405 on Vimeo.

To celebrate the release of the new long-player, Fanfarlo will also be hitting North America throughout March and April, including stops at SXSW and Coachella. The full list of dates can be found at the end of this post along with one of those terrific aforementioned 'stripped down' vids.


Secret Garden Video Series: Fanfarlo (SXSW Edition) from hoovesontheturf (sarahana) on Vimeo.

Fanfarlo 2012 Tour Dates:
03/05 – Boston, MA @ Paradise Rock Club
03/06 – New York, NY @ Webster Hall
03/07 – Wahsington, DC @ U Street Music Hall
03/08 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer
03/09 – Chapel Hill, NC @ Cat’s Cradle
03/10 – Atlanta, GA @ Vinyl
03/13 – Houston, TX @ Fitzgerald’s
03/14 – Dallas, TX @ The Loft
03/15-18 – Austion, TX @ South by Southwest
03/19 – St. Louis, MO @ Blueberry Hill
03/20 – Nashville, TN @ Mercy Lounge
03/22 – Louisville, KY @ Zanzabar
03/23 – Ann Arbor, MU @ The Blind Pig
03/24 – Toronto, ON @ Mod Club
03/25 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Mr. Smalls
03/27 – Columbus, OH @ Skully’s
03/28 – Chicago, IL @ Lincoln Hall
03/29 – Madison, WI @ High Noon Saloon
03/31 – Minneapolis, MN @ Varsity Theatre
04/01 – Kansas City, MO @ Record Bar
04/03 – Denver, CO @ Bluebird
04/05 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge
04/06 – Boise, ID @ Neurolux
04/07 – Portland, OR @ Doug Fir Lounge
04/09 – Vancouver, BC @ The Biltmore
04/10 – Seattle, WA @ Crocodile Cafe
04/15 – Indio, CA @ Coachella Music Festival
04/17 – San Francisco, CA @ Slim’s
04/22 – Indio, CA @ Coachella Music Festival

Heavy Rotation - Week of Jan. 27th


Sorry for the absence last week. The ice of northern Michigan and the frosty chill of peppermint schnapps called your humble writer away. I'll do my best not to let you down again, faithful reader.
In our weekly series, Heavy Rotation, I will write about the five records I have been spinning regularly over the last week. There is not an expiration date. The records included can be from any time period at all. All entries are eligible to appear for multiple weeks. In fact, repetition is likely due to the fact that while I listen to a fair amount of music, it's not as much as I'd like to make time for. Also, as some of you may know, we have a vinyl only policy around our house, so as expected, all entries on the list are being listened to via turntable.
Ladies and germs, presenting week two (or thereabouts) of Heavy Rotation . . .


Cartagena | Compilation
Soundway Records | 2011

Yet another killer world music re-issue from the world combing collector/repackagers over at Soundway. This volume fixates on the Discos Fuentes record label and the singles they released between 1962 and 1972. Mastered from the original recordings, all of which went straight to 45 rpm at their release, Cartagena unleashes a feast of great Colombian dancehall, pop and cumbia. This record is fun, funky, hip shaking and mind-blowing. In short. it's a groovy and catchy ass kicker. Nearly all of the Soundway stuff laid upon my ears sounds great, but this is in the upper echelon.


Cartagena! Curro Fuentes & The Big Band Cumbia and Descarga Sound of Colombia 1962 - 1972 by Soundway

Luna | Penthouse
Beggars Banquet | 1995

Penthouse represents a high water mark for Luna's fine career. Though the band have many other fine records, Penthouse reads like a series of short stories written by an author who envisioned narratives contrived by Flannery O'Connor and Woody Allen all set to a poppier version of the Velvet Underground. There are not many records from the mid-90's that still resonate with me, but Penthouse is a very special record. There is an emotional response every time I hear it - and I never tire of that feeling.




The Byrds | Live At Royal Albert Hall 1971
Sundazed Records | 2011

If someone asked me to make a short list of the most criminally under-appreciated bands ever, the Byrds would slide into second place behind the Kinks without another thought. This 2-LP live set vinyl reissue further solidifies the point. After years of lineup changes and brushes with pop superstardom, the Byrds of 1971 were an undeniably powerhouse four piece consisting of just one original member (Roger McGuinn) and the badassedness guitar player (Clarence White) country rock ever saw. This Sundazed reissue is a beautiful pressing with wicked versions of hits throughout the Byrds' canon. This is not a band to forget about it. Just listen or yourself.


The Jam | Snap!
Polygram Records | 1983

As a general rule, I do not spin a lot of greatest hits collections. Yet there are always exceptions to every rule. In this particular case, The Jam are a really great band with many very good records, but their greatest strength is most often found within their singles. This double LP set is therefore, a clinic in how The Jam made a bevy of singles in the late 70's and early 80s with a punkish energy, a mod-like sense of style and an Elvis Costello-ish knack for melodies and hooks. For the uninitiated to the work of The Jam and Paul Weller, this is the ideal place to dip your toe into the pool.




Brian Eno | Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy)
Edition EG | 1974

Brian Eno is perhaps best known as a producer of mammoth records by gigantic bands like U2, Coldplay, Talking Heads and David Bowie. Many others will link him to his ambient instrumental work. Some will even recall his involvement in the early Roxy Music records. But the greatest gift of Eno's career are the four solo pop records he made in the early and mid 1970's. Mixing cooky-yet-catchy melodies with oddly fascinating veiled lyrics, he crafted some really great songs, especially on this record. At times, he comes off like a more educated Bowie or T-Rex with a tad of Graham Greene intrigue tossed in for good measure. It is exceedingly difficult to make a smart pop record with an attitude, an agenda and a penchant for glam. Brian Eno pulled it off in spades on this one.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Hear The New Andrew Bird Single

World renowned whistler, violin player, ex-Squirrel Nut Zipper and tall indie-rawk hearthrob, Andrew Bird has unveiled the new single from his forthcoming LP, Break It Yourself. EyeOnEye is a bit more rocking than the typical Bird fare, prompting Rolling Stone to inquire "Who Pissed Off Andrew Bird" when reviewing the single in its most recent issue. But, fear not Bird lovers, the same old catchy melodies and semi-sensical lyrics are still in full plumage. Furthermore, there's a hooky whistle break just like you know you wanted.

You can listen to the new single below. In addition, you can see a track list for the Break It Yourself record which hits stores on March 6th and see upcoming tour dates in support of the album.





Upcoming American Tour Dates:
03-15 Dallas, TX - Majestic Theatre
03-16 New Orleans, LA - The Howlin' Wolf
03-17 Atlanta, GA - Tabernacle
03-19 Nashville, TN - Ryman Auditorium
03-20 Columbus, OH - Southern Theatre
03-22 St. Louis, MO - The Pageant
03-23 Kansas City, MO - The Uptown Theater
03-24 Milwaukee, WI - Riverside Theater
04-09 Seattle, WA - Paramount Theatre
04-10 Vancouver, British Columbia - The Vogue
04-11 Portland, OR - Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall
04-13 Oakland, CA - Fox Theater
04-18 Mesa, AZ - Ikeda Theater at Mesa Arts Center
04-19 Santa Fe, NM - Lensic Performing Arts Center
04-20 Tucson, AZ - Rialto Theater
05-03 Philadelphia, PA - Union Transfer
05-04 New York, NY - Beacon Theatre
05-05 New York, NY -Beacon Theatre
05-06 Boston, MA - House of Blues
05-08 Washington, DC - 9:30 Club
05-09 Baltimore, MD - Ram's Head Live
05-10 Detroit, MI - The Fillmore Detroit
05-12 Chicago, IL - Auditorium Theatre

Break It Yourself Track List:
01. Desperation Breeds…
02. Polynation
03. Danse Caribe
04. Give it Away
05. Eyeoneye
06. Lazy Projector
07. Near Death Experience Experience
08. Behind the Barn
09. Lusitania
10. Orpheo Looks Back
11. Sifters
12. Fatal Shore
13. Hole in the Ocean Floor
14. Belles

Monday, January 23, 2012

New M. Ward Record Coming In April, Tour Dates Announced

M. Ward will soon release his first album in three years. Wasteland Companion, the follow up to Hold Time, will arrive via Merge Records on April 10. Ward says he was heavily influenced by his rigorous travel schedule over the last several years, giving the album the feel of a travelogue.
He explains, “Between now and when I made Hold Time there has been a lot of traveling which requires a lot of reckoning with what to leave behind and what to carry – material and otherwise – and thinking about what I want versus what I need, creatively and otherwise. I wanted to get a reflection of that on the album. It was a process of stripping away my security blanket, which is the same four walls I always record in.”

The record was recorded in eight different studios and features contributions from the likes of She & Him bandmate Zooey Deschanel, Mike Coykendall, Howe Gelb, Steve Shelley, Adam Selzer and many more.

In addition to the forthcoming LP, Ward will also be busy out on the road with a host of tour dates across the US in April and May. Scheduled dates for the tour and a track list for Wasteland Companion are below.

Track Listing:
1. Clean Slate (for Alex & El Goodo)
2. Primitive Girl
3. Me And My Shadow
4. Sweetheart
5. I Get Ideas
6. The First Time I Ran Away
7. A Wasteland Companion
8. Watch The Show
9. There’s A Key
10. Crawl After You
11. Wild Goose
12. Pure Joy

M. Ward Tour Dates:
Feb 2 Los Angeles, CA Masonic Lodge at Hollywood Forever Cemetery
Apr 11 San Francisco, CA The Fillmore
Apr 12 Santa Cruz, CA The Cocoanut Grove Ballroom
Apr 13 Indio, CA Coachella **SOLD OUT**
Apr 14 Santa Barbara, CA SoHO
Apr 16 San Diego, CA Belly Up
Apr 17 Phoenix, AZ Crescent Ballroom
Apr 18 Flagstaff, AZ The Orpheum
Apr 20 Indio, CA Coachella **SOLD OUT**
May 5  Portland, ME State Theatre
May 6  Burlington, VT Higher Ground
May 7  New Haven, CT Toads Place
May 8  Boston, MA House of Blues
May 11 New York, NY Webster Hall
May 12 Philadelphia, PA Union Transfer
May 13 Washington, DC 9:30 Club
May 15 Durham, NC Duke Performances at Page Auditorium
May 16 Athens, GA Georgia Theatre
May 17 Atlanta, GA Buckhead Theatre
May 22 Chicago, IL Vic Theatre
May 24 Minneapolis, MN First Avenue

Apple, iPhones and The American Middle Class

The New York Times has just published a fascinating piece focusing on a detailed examination of how Apple, Inc. came to make its products, specifically the iPhone in a massive plant in Shenzhen, China. This account, which is essentially an allegory of what has happened to much of what used to be the American middle class, deftly explains just how easy it has become for big companies to ship jobs overseas.

Reporting Apple's massive operations in China has become increasingly common in the last few weeks. Public Radio program, This American Life just devoted an entire episode to the one man show by Mike Daisey chronicling his own amateur reporting adventures in Shenzhen. While Daisey tells his story from the first person, Times writers Charles Duhigg and Keith Bradsher look at the machinations behind overseas job competition and the sea of factors involved in choosing where to locate a factory or hire workers.

The article is not an expose of Apple, but a specific example of the increasingly ubiquitous problem of middle class job exportation. In one anecdote, a former Apple executive discusses the flexibility and fast reaction times of their plant in China and the likelihood that such a system could exist in the United States.

Apple executives say that going overseas, at this point, is their only option. One former executive described how the company relied upon a Chinese factory to revamp iPhone manufacturing just weeks before the device was due on shelves. Apple had redesigned the iPhone’s screen at the last minute, forcing an assembly line overhaul. New screens began arriving at the plant near midnight. 

A foreman immediately roused 8,000 workers inside the company’s dormitories, according to the executive. Each employee was given a biscuit and a cup of tea, guided to a workstation and within half an hour started a 12-hour shift fitting glass screens into beveled frames. Within 96 hours, the plant was producing over 10,000 iPhones a day. 

“The speed and flexibility is breathtaking,” the executive said. “There’s no American plant that can match that.” 

Similar stories could be told about almost any electronics company — and outsourcing has also become common in hundreds of industries, including accounting, legal services, banking, auto manufacturing and pharmaceuticals. 

But while Apple is far from alone, it offers a window into why the success of some prominent companies has not translated into large numbers of domestic jobs. What’s more, the company’s decisions pose broader questions about what corporate America owes Americans as the global and national economies are increasingly intertwined. 

“Companies once felt an obligation to support American workers, even when it wasn’t the best financial choice,” said Betsey Stevenson, the chief economist at the Labor Department until last September. “That’s disappeared. Profits and efficiency have trumped generosity.” 

Companies and other economists say that notion is naïve. Though Americans are among the most educated workers in the world, the nation has stopped training enough people in the mid-level skills that factories need, executives say. 

This is but one example in a stirring piece of reporting that explores a complicated problem that appears to be here for the foreseeable future.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Trailers Galore: Sifting Through The Rubble Of The Worst Movie Time Of The Year

Your local cineplex may be stocked up right now with all the big awards season nominees and a few leftover holiday blockbusters, but soon that theater complex will look more like a prison with 18 different options for your two hour sentence.

After the big Christmas time films and awards contenders run out of gas at the box office, America's worst movie drought of the year begins. From late January until the middle of May when the unofficial hunting season opens for the summer blockbusters to be, the offerings at the ticket window are, in a word, shitty.

The chance does exist for a bright spot or two, and I'm not so cynical about it that I have completely given up all hope. So, here are few films scheduled to hit theaters during the dry spell that just might break the mold for the typical first quarter drought we're usually treated to. No promises on these though, they're coming out now for a reason.

HAYWIRE | Starring: Gina Carano, Channing Tatum, Ewan McGregor, Michael Fassbender, Antonio Banderas, Bill Paxton, Michael Douglas | Directed by Steven Soderbergh | Opens January 20, 2012

Synopsis:
Beautiful freelance covert operative Mallory Kane (Carano) is hired out by her handler to various global entities to perform jobs which governments can't authorize and heads of state would rather not know about. After a mission to rescue a hostage in Barcelona, Mallory is quickly dispatched on another mission to Dublin. When the operation goes awry and Mallory finds she has been double crossed, she needs to use all of her skills, tricks and abilities to escape an international manhunt, make it back to the United States, protect her family, and exact revenge on those that have betrayed her.

Outlook:
It sure looks a lot like the Bourne Vagina, but it is Steven Soderbergh. And, if it were a femme fatale meets Jason Bourne, wouldn't that be bad ass too? Soderbergh is generally pretty reliable and his use of non-actors is always interesting and here he's chosen to work with Gina Carano who made her name in women's MMA. The supporting cast looks solid (super-duper solid - Michael Fassbender I am looking at YOU!) and Soderbergh has the potential to make really fascinating choices as the director of a fast paced action film. Don't go in expecting an award winner, but it could be a fun gender twist on a fun genre that usually winds up worth the price of admission. Oh yeah and it's Soderbergh plus Fassbender. Did I mention I kinda like those guys?





RETURN | Starring: Linda Cardellini, Michael Shannon and John Slattery | Directed Liza Johnson | Opens in limited release on February 10, 2012

Synopsis: Linda Cardellini, best known for her work on the under-appreciated TV series Freaks and Geeks plays a woman (Kelli) just back from a tour of duty trying to assimilate with her old life back in the town where she grew up. However, it becomes apparent that her husband and family have no idea what she has been through and her return to her old way of life will be anything but easy.

Outlook: It's nice to see Cardellini get a meaty role. She deserves the chance and I hope she can pull it off. The supporting cast looks terrific, what with the use of ringers like Shannon and Slattery. This film looks to have lots of promise as long as it stays away from obvious choices, like a soundtrack filled with Bruce Springsteen and John Mellencamp numbers.




BEING FLYNN | Starring: Robert Deniro, Paul Dano, Julianne Moore, Olivia Thurlby and Lili Taylor | Directed by Paul Weitz | Opens March 2, 2012

Synopsis:
Being Flynn is the new dramatic feature from Academy Award-nominated writer/director Paul Weitz (About a Boy). Adapted from Nick Flynn’s 2004 memoir Another Bulls—t Night in Suck City. Nick Flynn (Dano) is a young writer seeking to define himself. He misses his late mother, Jody (four-time Academy Award nominee Julianne Moore), and her loving nature. But his father, Jonathan, is not even a memory, as Nick has not seen the man in 18 years.

Jonathan Flynn (De Niro) has long defined himself as a great writer, “a master storyteller.” After abandoning his wife and child, Jonathan scrapes through life on his own terms, and ends up serving time in prison for cashing forged checks. After prison, he drives a cab for a number of years, but with his drinking and eccentricities now accelerating, he loses his job. Despite the occasional grandiose letter to his son, he has remained absent from Nick’s life.

Suddenly facing eviction from his apartment, Jonathan impulsively reaches out to Nick and the two come face-to-face. The older man is eloquent and formidable; overwhelmed, Nick nonetheless prepares to integrate his father into his own life. But, as quickly as he materialized, Jonathan flits away again.

Outlook:
The trailer gives the impression that Deniro might be back after a very long dry spell. Weitz did a nice job with his previous feature, About A Boy and with Dano and Moore onboard along with a good supporting cast, this has promise. Don't forget though, that this is in essence a biopic, and one based on a memoir to boot. Those are a tricky lot and in the hands of the wrong script writer and director it can mean a very mushy and tedious night out. It's probably worth a ticket just to see if Deniro still has it.




THIS MUST BE THE PLACE | Starring: Sean Penn, Frances McDormand, Judd Hirsch and Harry Dean Stanton | Directed by Paolo Sorrentino | Opens March, 2012

Synopsis:
Cheyenne, a wealthy former rock star (Penn), now bored and jaded in his retirement embarks on a quest to find his father's persecutor, an ex-Nazi war criminal now hiding out in the U.S. Learning his father is close to death, he travels to New York in the hope of being reconciled with him during his final hours, only to arrive too late. Having been estranged for over 30 years, it is only now in death that he learns the true extent of his father's humiliation in Auschwitz at the hands of former SS Officer Aloise Muller - an event he is determined to avenge. So begins a life-altering journey across the heartland of America to track down and confront his father's nemesis. As his quest unfolds, Cheyenne is reawakened by the people he encounters and his journey is transformed into one of reconciliation and self discovery. As his date with destiny arrives and he tracks down Muller, Cheyenne must finally decide if it is redemption he seeks ....or revenge. Starring two time Academy Award winner Sean Penn and marking the much-anticipated English-language debut of acclaimed director Paolo Sorrentino,

Outlook:
It seems tough to imagine watching Sean Penn dressed as a guy from The Cure for two hours, but like him or hate him, he's always making interesting choices as an actor. The road movie meets family reunitement meets black sheep all seems pretty hokey until you toss in the part about a hunt for a Nazi War criminal! In reality, it has a "this is so crazy it just might work" kind of feel to it. I'm sort of skeptical on this one, but hearing a pudgy middle schooler ask for an Arcade Fire song that's really a Talking Heads song in the trailer probably puts on my Netflix queue at the very least.




The Sabauteur Radio Hour

Remember when you used to make mix tapes to make friends and impress girls? So do I. And, I miss it. Therefore, I bring you the new endeavor from our humble little blog; The Sabauteur Radio Hour.

To kick off my excitement of all things musical in 2012, here is the very first episode of a new podcast type effort I'm calling The Sabauteur Radio Hour. The concept is pretty simple: There are songs I like and some stuff I want to say about those songs. So, that is primarily what happens here.

Along the way, I will attempt to uncover the new, revisit the old and aged and talk about what's going on in music that excites me. In the first installment we check out the new single from the forthcoming Shins LP. I wax poetic about the first LP from Youth Lagoon, wish a happy birthday to a soul legend, mention many times, many bands on the playlist that will also be playing at Coachella, and I'll explain why The Eagles are a far greater scourge on society than Marilyn Manson or Judas Priest.

You can listen or download the Sabauteur Radio Hour here.

The written down version looks a lot like this . . .

Sabauteur Radio Hour | Episode 001

Intro Music | Upside Down - Fela Kuti

Simple Song - The Shins
Options - Gomez
Honey Bunny - Girls
Agent Double-O-Soul - Edwin Starr
Holland, 1945 - Neutral Milk Hotel
It's Real - Real Estate
Santa Fe - Beirut
Daydream - Youth Lagoon
Come Back To Us - Release The Sunbird
Taking It Easy Too Long - Blitzen Trapper
Leave Me Alone - Destroyer (New Order Cover)

Outro Music | The Fool - Neutral Milk Hotel



WATCH: Criterion Releases Blu-Ray Of "Belle Du Jour"

For the last year and change, the esteemed Criterion Collection has been updating much of their vast catalog for Blu-Ray. Most of these Criterion Blu-Ray titles get a digital remastering and have newly included bonus material as well. It's a veritable, if rather expensive to own, treasure trove of important indepent, foreign and classic cinema.

Amongst the slate of January releases is the iconic 1967 Luis Bunuel film, Belle Du Jour starring the mesmerizing Catherine Deneuve. To celebrate the Blu-Ray release of this famous psycho-sexual tale of existential longing, Criterion has issued another in its series of Three Reasons vids. Essentially, these are trailers for their releases that focus on three aspects of a film they love.

In addition to a great visual peek at Belle Du Jour, the Criterion site is now featuring a terrific essay by Village Voice writer, Melissa Anderson on the making of the film and the affect it had on both the star and the director. It's an interesting study of the film fit both for the first time viewer and the seasoned vet who'd like to dig a bit deeper into Deneuve's famous character, the damaged housewife, Severine.

You can watch the video for Criterion's Belle Du Jour: Three Reasons below.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

RECIPE: Beef and Bean Chili With Buttermilk Corn Bread

Photo by Matthew Carlson. Bowl and plate designed and hand crafted by Wayvie Ceramics.



























CHILI RECIPE

Ingredients:
3 Pound Boneless Bottom Round Beef Roast (cut into half inch cubes)
1 Large Spanish Onion (diced)
8 Cloves Garlic (roughly chopped)
3 Jalapeno Peppers (cut in half lengthwise with seeds removed)
32 oz. Beef Stock
28 oz. Petite Diced Tomatoes (canned)
15 oz. Black Beans (canned)
15 oz. Light Red Kidney Beans (canned)
48 oz. Pinto Beans (jarred or canned)
12 oz. Bottle American Pale Ale Style Beer
2 Tbsp. Olive Oil
6-8 Shots Picante Style Hot Sauce
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Roasted Ground Cumin
Cayenne Pepper
Red Chile Powder
Salt

Directions:
Place the cubed beef in a large mixing bowl and add 6 to 8 shots of the hot sauce, 2 tbsp. of the cumin, 1 tbsp. of the chili powder, 1 tbsp. of chili powder, 1 tbsp. of cayenne pepper and a couple large pinches of salt. Mix the ingredients by hand until all the beef is covered in the seasonings.

Place a large Dutch style oven or a heavy stock pot on the stove top burner over high heat. Add the olive oil and wait until the oil is hot. Then, add the seasoned beef to the hot oil and brown evenly over the heat. Do not cook this all the way through. Simply brown the outside of the meat and then remove it from the pan with a slotted spoon to reserve all of the oil and juices in the pan.Set the meat aside on the counter.

Turn the heat down to medium and add the onion and garlic along with a pinch of salt. Continue to cook over medium heat until it becomes caramelized and soft.

Once the onions and are garlic are caramelized, add the bottle of beer and raise heat to medium-high. Wait until the mixture begins to boil and then add the tomatoes and all three styles of beans. Then return the meat to the pot and top off with the beef stock. If your pan is unable to accommodate all the stock, just fill it to the brim. If your pan is not completely full after adding the stock, just be sure that you can easily stir all of the ingredients. Try to avoid adding any water as it will just dilute the flavor of the chili.

After all of the above ingredients have been added, sprinkle in more seasonings to taste. Start small and add as needed. Let the chili simmer with a a lid set slightly askew for 3-4 hours. After that several hours of simmer time, (Can't touch this . . . ) and  all the flavors have mingled and the liquid has cooked down significantly, take a taste sample for tenderness of the meat and adjust the seasoning according to your preference.

Serve the chili in a small to medium sized bowl and garnish with a dollop of sour cream and some shredded sharp cheddar cheese. Leftovers can be stored in your refrigerator for several days.

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BUTTERMILK CORNBREAD RECIPE

Ingredients:
1/2 Cup Butter
2/3 Cup White Sugar
2 Eggs
1 Cup Buttermilk
1/2 Teaspoon Baking Soda
1 Cup Cornmeal
1 Cup All-Purpose Flour
1/2 Teaspoon Salt

Directions:
Preheat the oven to 350 Degrees F. Grease an 8" x 8" square baking pan.

Melt the butter in a large skillet. After butter is melted, remove the pan from heat and stir in sugar. Then, quickly add the eggs and beat until they are well blended. In a measuring cup, combine buttermilk with baking soda and stir to mix, then add to pan. Stir in cornmeal, flour and salt until the batter is well blended and only a few lumps remain. Pour the batter into the greased baking pan.

Bake in the preheated oven for 30-40 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in to the center comes out clean. Then, cut and serve.




Friday, January 13, 2012

Penguin To Release Huge Collection Of John Steinbeck's Letters

Penguin Books will soon be releasing a mammoth collection of the letters of John Steinbeck, the American author most famous for novels like The Grapes Of Wrath and East Of Eden. Weighing in at nearly 900 pages, the collection covers correspondence from the bulk of the author's life beginning with his early years in California to his final days in 1968 in Sag Harbor, NY.

A noted hater of the telephone, Steinbeck preferred written correspondence. Within these letters, he touches on life, marriage, children, people he both loved and hated and the craft of his own writing.

The Atlantic published a letter from the book that Steinbeck wrote to his son Thom in 1958. It's a beautiful letter from a father to a son about what love means and the advice he gives his son on how to appreciate and embrace the love he has for a young with whom he's fallen in love while away at boarding school.

New York
November 10, 1958 

Dear Thom: 

We had your letter this morning. I will answer it from my point of view and of course Elaine will from hers. 

First -- if you are in love -- that's a good thing -- that's about the best thing that can happen to anyone. Don't let anyone make it small or light to you. 

Second -- There are several kinds of love. One is a selfish, mean, grasping, egotistical thing which uses love for self-importance. This is the ugly and crippling kind. The other is an outpouring of everything good in you -- of kindness and consideration and respect -- not only the social respect of manners but the greater respect which is recognition of another person as unique and valuable. The first kind can make you sick and small and weak but the second can release in you strength, and courage and goodness and even wisdom you didn't know you had. 

You say this is not puppy love. If you feel so deeply -- of course it isn't puppy love. 

But I don't think you were asking me what you feel. You know better than anyone. What you wanted me to help you with is what to do about it -- and that I can tell you. 

Glory in it for one thing and be very glad and grateful for it. 

The object of love is the best and most beautiful. Try to live up to it. 

If you love someone -- there is no possible harm in saying so -- only you must remember that some people are very shy and sometimes the saying must take that shyness into consideration. 

Girls have a way of knowing or feeling what you feel, but they usually like to hear it also. 

It sometimes happens that what you feel is not returned for one reason or another -- but that does not make your feeling less valuable and good. 

Lastly, I know your feeling because I have it and I'm glad you have it. 

We will be glad to meet Susan. She will be very welcome. But Elaine will make all such arrangements because that is her province and she will be very glad to. She knows about love too and maybe she can give you more help than I can. 

And don't worry about losing. If it is right, it happens -- The main thing is not to hurry. Nothing good gets away. 

Love,
Fa

The collection was edited in part by Steinbeck's widow, Elaine, who worked on the project prior to her death in 2003.

This American Life Adapts Live Monologue For Radio

For those of you who are devoted listeners of This American Life, you have likely already heard last week's terrific episode with storyteller, monologist and self-confessed Apple fanboy, Mike Daisey. If you haven't, what your missing is a terrific audio tale of Daisey recounting the story of his love for technology - the products of Apple specifically - and how he came to think in larger terms about where the stuff we use actually comes from.

In the hour of gripping radio that ensues, Daisey tells his first person account of his amateur sleuthing into the sweat shop culture of China. Specifically focusing on a tech manufacturer called Fox Con, Daisey uses an interpreter to find out what life is really like for these workers.  Once he's exposed to the grimy details, he's left figuring how to reconcile his love of technology with his guilt.

The radio program is a shortened and revised version of the one man show called The Agony And The Ecstasy Of Steve Jobs, that Daisey has been performing for some time at New York's Public Theater. Now, Mike Daisey has written a fascinating blog entry that explains some of the steps and procedures of how the radio program was designed and put together. It's an interesting window in to how we get a radio story about a story on how we get our goods. How very meta-meta.

You can listen to the full episode below. After you have listened to the TAL episode, be sure to check out the Mike Daisey blog article on how it all came together.



Heavy Rotation - Week of Jan. 13th

In our new weekly series, I will write about the five records I have been spinning regularly over the last week. There is not an expiration date. The records included can be from any time period at all. All entries are eligible to appear for multiple weeks. In fact, repetition is likely due to the fact that while I listen to a fair amount of music, it's not as much as I'd like to make time for. Also, as some of you may know, we have a vinyl only policy around our house, so as expected, all entries on the list are being listened to via turntable.

Ladies and germs, I give week one of Heavy Rotation . . .


Real Estate | Days
Domino Records | 2011

A little gem of a jangly pop record from this New Jersey outfit. The songs are compact, catchy as hell and damned fun to listen to. The band also seem to have developed a pretty great sense of humor as evidenced by their new video for the forthcoming single for the album lead-off track, Easy.

If you like The Shins, The Fruit Bats or The Byrds, this is probably for you.



Real Estate - It's Real by DominoRecordCo


Youth Lagoon | The Year Of Hibernation
Fat Possum Records | 2011

I just recently posted a review of this terrific debut from 22 year old Boise, Idaho native Trevor Powers. Yet, even after listening to the album multiple times for the review I was still happy to slap it on the deck again the following day. A record that gets more interesting with each successive listen.





Youth Lagoon - Bobby by overmuziek


David Bowie | Low
RCA | 1977

My favorite record of the David Bowie/Brian Eno collaboration. Perhaps the most remarkable thing about this LP is its ability to simultaneously be of its time and still somehow timeless. There is a warmth about the recordings that feel like an old blankey you could just crawl right inside. But leave it to Eno and Bowie to also make it seem incredibly pioneering and just plain awesome. It remains one of the very best records of the 1970s. If Blade Runner were a David Bowie record, it would be this one.







Les Paul and Mary Ford | Hits Of Les And Mary
Capitol Records | 1960

What is not to love? There are great songs like The World Is Waiting For A Sunrise, I'm A Fool To Care and How High The Moon. Les Paul (you know the guy that invented the prototypical rock guitar, multi-tracking and about a thousand other awesome musical things you take for granted) is a staggeringly beautiful player. His style isn't just unique or impressive, it's amazing, in that you are amazed by it. You hear it and stop in your tracks even when you've heard the record a dozen times. Mary Ford's vocals are just sweetly heartbreaking. If you think that standards aren't for you, drop the needle on this and listen to yourself start to feel stupid.





Grandaddy | Sumday
V2 Records | 2003

Over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend, the vinyl reissue of Grandaddy's Sumday arrived in my mailbox. Since then, it has been subject to myriad revolutions on the turntable. I have always had a soft spot for this album, but the vinyl reissue was done in all the right ways, and throwing it on the turntable now brings on the sense of sitting down for a beer with an old friend. Jason Lytle's hummable melodies, junkyard production techniques and anachronistic narratives weave together in an album that begs repeated listens.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Guggenheim Offers 65 Books Online For Free

The Solomon H. Guggenheim Museum is now offering 65 art books from its archives online, for interwebs users to read and peruse for free. This move comes just a week before Apple has planned its big "textbook push" announcement at the Guggenheim Museum. The books in the collection include work from artists like Wassily Kandinsky, Vincent Van Gogh, Paul Klee, Francis Bacon, Alexander Calder, Edvard Munch and many more.

The interface for the Guggenheim site is very easy to use and at first glance the books available seem very well rendered for use on the web. This idea also seems like a huge leap in getting very expensive art books into the hands of users who are either intimidated on what books they should purchase or unsure of where to begin their own exploration of the art world. Its an idea with a great deal of promise. Hopefully, even more content is forthcoming.

For more details on the project and other great free e-book suggestions, head on over to Open Culture where we first got wind of this story.

Watch The Trailer For Wes Anderson's 'Moonrise Kingdom'

Focus Features today unveiled the trailer for the upcoming Wes Anderson film, Moonrise Kingdom. Written by Anderson and Roman Coppolla, the film marks Anderson's first live action film five years.

The press sheet for the film describes it thusly, "Set on an island off the coast of New England in the summer of 1965, MOONRISE KINGDOM tells the story of two twelve-year-olds who fall in love, make a secret pact, and run away together into the wilderness. As various authorities try to hunt them down, a violent storm is brewing off-shore -- and the peaceful island community is turned upside down in more ways than anyone can handle. Bruce Willis plays the local sheriff. Edward Norton is a Khaki Scout troop leader. Bill Murray and Frances McDormand portray the young girl's parents. The cast also includes Tilda Swinton, Jason Schwartzman, and Jared Gilman and Kara Hayward as the boy and girl."

Now, the real question here is whether we'll get the wit and quirky charms of Anderson's first three films (Bottle Rocket, Rushmore and Royal Tennenbaums), or if his rambling and vague tendencies as they've been on display in his last two live action films, The Life Aquatic and The Darjeeling Limited. Based on the trailer, it appears it could go either way. The inclusion of Edward Norton, Bruce Willis and Frances McDormand to the Anderson repertory players in the cast is a good sign though.

Moonrise Kingdom opens in limited release on May 25. Watch the trailer below.