Sunday, October 17, 2010

Pixies and Interpol Live in Mexico City

http://pixiesmusic.com/interpol.html

One video clip(La La Love you) and 5 audio clips, totally free. Go Download them! Very good quality and pretty fun.

The Pixies just continue to roll on after, what I assumed would be a one off reunion tour. Hopefully more new material is on its way, but that has seemed to be in a perpetual holding pattern.
It still gives me a 14 year old's thrill to see them live. The Pixies were somewhere between my Beatles or Big Star. A band that toured so briefly you had to be the perfect age to see them live. Like both the Beatles and Big Star, they influenced nearly everyone I have liked since. Like Big Star they were appreciated by most people more after the fact than while they were an active act.
I was just a little too young, and lived a little too far from civilization(in Northern Michigan) to go and see them while they were together and they were gone just as I went away to school and could have. I saw Nirvana that first fall, month's before Cobain (as big of a Pixies fan as ever lived) died. I felt lucky to have seen them. It was uneventful but solid show...except for a pretty girl stealing my borrowed Sony Professional tape recorder(yes, tape). While I felt lucky, looking back, it was really a make-up for missing the Pixies.
To this day, I put the Pixies on regularly. They still sound fresh, still sound better than most of the new music that they inspired. Strangely, as I think of that music and remember that time, I honestly can't say that about Nirvana. While the music is clearly classic, that is almost how it hits me, as Classic Rock. With no more depth or inspiration than your run of the mill Doobie Brothers record. OK, I am kidding. Nirvana could melt Michael McDonald's brain just turning their amps on, but listening to Nirvana is not that different than listening to the Who for me. Kurt Cobain is probably wishing he could mainline himself into a deeper oblivion, if he is somehow reading this from the grave. But I think he knew it before we did. The business sucked some of the life out of one of the unique voices in music.
Thankfully for me, if not the Pixies checking accounts, the Pixies never ascended to those heights. And probably because of that, are still around, touring to the biggest crowds of their lives with music that I love almost as much as the day I bought Surfer Rosa at the late. lamented Full Moon Records in downtown Traverse City 20 years ago.

A side note: The Mexico City gig pales in comparison to the, unsurprisingly, somewhat cool, somewhat goofy Pixies logic displayed in their outlook on the recent show in Chile:
In a press release, frontman Black Francis says, "We were so moved by this story, by how many lives had been affected by this, and how the Chilean people banded together to support what can only be described as a miracle. We wanted to do something to show how affected we were by this, so we played a special set at tonight's show, 33 songs for the 33 miners, the longest set we've ever played as a band. We found out five minutes before we went on stage that all of the miners had safely reached the surface. This was definitely one of the most meaningful show we've ever played."

Ok.............anyway, it is nice to have them playing. Whatever the reason.

On top of that, the Pixies have just launched a new website with free shows every week. Here is the release:
We're writing to let you know that we've just released an all new PixiesMusic.com.

It feels like the right time for the band to have a proper home, share some music, and provide a place for fans and the band to communicate. We'll be releasing live shows once a week starting immediately, and have posted a free show (Live at Coachella, 2004) just for you through the end of the week.

Since you're on the list, you can get the free show at http://www.lalapixiesloveyou.com.

We hope you like what we've done, and hope you're ready to help add content to the site.

Coming Soon:
Wavves Vs No Age, Episode 2: Attack of the Drone
and...
Ruminations on a Reatard: Jay Reatard, One year after his death

Friday, October 1, 2010

Music I actually do like 10/01/10

I haven't even been able to go back to finish my thoughts on the steaming pile of crap known as the new Kings of Leon video. I just don't feel like dwelling on the negative when something has gone so irredeemably wrong. So, I am going to put out a few notes on music I actually do like right now.

The release receiving the heaviest current rotation is easily, and has been for awhile, Wavves King of the Beach.
I will get into more detail in the upcoming article Wavves vs No Age, Episode 2: Attack of the Drone.
Suffice it to say, though, that "Linus Spacehead", "Post Acid" and the title track are my current guess as to what was in Marcellus Wallace's briefcase.



I will admit to being behind the curve with the band San Francisco band Girls. It wasn't even that I wasn't aware of them. Honestly, it was that their outrageously homoerotic(?, you'd have to ask someone else if it is erotic, I guess) video for the song "Lust for Life" turned me off so badly I didn't even hear the music. Say what you will, it was just my reaction. It put me off to the point I stopped listening and effectively wrote the band off for months. That is, until "Lust for Life" crept back into my brain through my sub-conscious and I found myself singing along in the car.
After a still reluctant download, I have come to the conclusion that the music is irresistible and for the most part cleansed the video's smiling allusions to male on male oral sex from my mind. "Lust for Life" is nearly perfect, and it really had to be. You don't borrow the name of an Iggy Pop/David Bowie classic, use another dude's hard-on as a microphone in your video and expect to take over the world unless you can write a fine tune. Even the semi-cute naked girl in the bathtub lip syncing a few lines can't balance out the horror...
But enough about the video, all it really did was save this gem for me, like a forgotten final Christmas present. From the subtle "la da dadadeda da da" refrain, to lines like "I wish I had a pizza and a bottle of a wine, I wish I had a beach house, we could make a big fire every night", the song drips with a nostalgia never tasted. It taps into a universal feeling that something, anything, else would surely be better because where you are now is royally F'ed.
Like lead singer Christopher Owens says, "Maybe if I'd had a father, maybe then I would turned out right, instead I'm just crazy, totally mad, yeah I'm just crazy and fucked in the head."
But the melody almost wills you to sing lines like that with at least a wry smile. Even if you are singing into another man's penis.
Below is the edited version:


I jumped all over "the Rat" by The Walkmen in 2004 but somehow they faded, not out of mind but out of heavy rotation at least. "Stranded", from the new album Lisbon, may end up being the song that pulls The Walkmen off my bench and transforms them from bench-warmers, behind the more fun The Hold Steady, the more immediate The National and more accessible bands like The Stills and Deer Tick, into full time playlist starters.
Driven by horns, "Stranded" sounds like what it is, a boozy funeral song for a relationship that has passed away and relationships and lives deteriorating in front of the our eyes. Or maybe"Stranded" is a song for a wake...either way it is a slowburn that is dynamic in its restraint and, like its narrator, dramatic in the empty, open spaces of what isn't said.
It is almost like the story has been told often enough that everyone involved, as well as the listener, can fill in the blanks. The sum here is more than its parts and The Walkmen are a band worth revisiting.



I've loved Japandroids since the first note. Their brand of noisy 2 man smash and yell, 100 word a minute melodic fuzz out is right up my alley. So the between-album single, "Younger Us", would have been a welcome morsel to tide me over even if it wasn't a time machine.
This 3 and half minute blast of sprinting guitar and diving symbols captures a time just-past so perfectly in one couplet that they never need to try again.
When they sing" Remember that night, You were already in bed, said fuck it, and got up to drink with me instead....Give me younger us," I, for one, remember perfectly.



Finally, on to one that escaped me: I have never been a full card carrying member of the Ted Leo fan club. I like a few tunes, I don't change the channel when he comes on, but the politics always fatigued me and the songs didn't always hold up to repeated listens.
"Timorous Me" crept up on me though. Lyrically sharp, emotive and catchy as hell, not mention damn hard to sing along with, "Timorous Me" from the 2001 sophomore effort from Ted Leo and the Pharmacists finds Leo at his best, capturing his inner Thin Lizzy complete with chorused guitars near the end. Nearly a decade old it sounds brand new and Ted Leo must have known he got it right. The last 30 seconds of the song sound like he set his guitar down, shut off the lights and admired his still whining amp before he strolled out of the studio. The musical equivalent of a walk off home run.



Coming Soon:
Wavves Vs No Age, Episode 2: Attack of the Drone
and...
Ruminations on a Reatard: Jay Reatard, One year after his death


Fading but Fantastic:
the Morning Benders: Cold War and Waiting for a War
Best Coast: Summer Mood
Dead Weather: Gasoline
Avi Buffalo: What's it in for
Kid Cudi, Best Coast and Rostam from Vampire Weekend: All Summer

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Her Spelling's Atrocious: My Music Blog-a place for me to go when music generally disappoints and, occasionally, pleasantly surprises me

So, I have been thinking about writing a music blog for awhile. I know there are ton of them out there and most of them really suck. Hopefully mine won't but honestly, it is just for me to vent and hopefully make a few friends laugh.

I finally got motivated to start writing after watching the new Kings of Leon video, "Radioactive", from their forthcoming album, Come Around Sundown.
When I talk about consistently music disappointing me these guys could be exhibit A.
They fluffed me for years with songs like "Trani" and "McFearless". Songs so good and so different that I thought they might be the next truly great rock and roll band.
They had a following in Europe that would support them financially while they slowly built a loyal fanbase in the US by making interesting and different music with deep roots in what I believe to be true rock and roll.
As it turns out they were as contrived as their back story and this steaming road apple of a song and video finally put them away for life. Guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of perpetrating a fraud that I just can't forgive.

****TO BE CONTINUED...