The Gentlest Gentleman

And now, on a lighter note (or a series of lighter notes), here's Shara Worden of My Brightest Diamond performing a sweetly simple version of "The Gentlest Gentleman":

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=3744221&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=ffffff&fullscreen=1
My Brightest Diamond - The Gentlest Gentleman from LaundroMatinee on Vimeo.

Sigur Rós Take Away Show

One of my favorite bands, Sigur Rós, performing "Við spilum endalaust" off of their latest studio album, Med Sud I Eyrum Vid Spilum Endalaust (put together by the always excellent La Blogotheque):

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=3814849&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=ffffff&fullscreen=1
Sigur Ros - Við spilum endalaust - A Take Away Show from La Blogotheque on Vimeo.

That Song

This week's AVQ&A over at A.V. Club was all about music rendered unlistenable by emotionally tragic times in our lives - times ranging from the death of loved ones to heartbreak.

If I had to think of a song that even approaches having such an effect on me it would be "That Song" by the now disbanded Big Wreck (I've posted this video before, but it's relevant again):

http://media.mtvnservices.com/mgid:uma:video:mtvmusic.com:46306
Big Wreck |MTV Music


For me this song came to describe, line by line, a seriously screwy relationship I had with a girl during high school. We never dated or anything - she was already involved with the man she'd eventually marry - but there was a great deal of emotional intimacy developed during my last two years at home. These first three stanzas aptly sum up the mental flotsam that lingered for, quite seriously, years after I moved away:

So I always get nostalgic with that song.
But in my room it's forced. It has to be in some car across the street.

And I always catch the back of your head in a crowd.
Just don't turn around. It's never you and you'll ruin those memories.

And those photos are great if I catch em with the side of my eye.
But if I stare, it just turns into you and me. We're just standing there


You know what, though? It's now nearly ten years since I left Lunenburg County, and in those years I've never stopped loving this song. The baggage is gone and I experienced closure ages ago, but I enjoyed this track even in media res. The same goes for a number of other songs associated with my sadder memories, from the Allman Brothers' "Melissa" to "The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys" by Traffic.

I acknowledge that individual personalities and experiences are likely influencers here. Maybe I haven't yet experienced something heart-rending enough to spoil some previously beloved music. For my part, however, I prefer to revel in the songs themselves than pretend they didn't exist just because they might be connected to some sour recollections.

So you crank that song, and it might sound doomed.
So just leave the room while I sit'n stare, 'cause yeah that's rare.
I really love that tune.
Man I love that song...
I love that song...
I love that song...

Remixing YouTube

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AzZi-btc8AA&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&feature=player_embedded&fs=1&w=580&h=470]

File this under the "too amazing not to post even though everybody else is doing it" department, but Kutiman's project, ThruYou, is one of the most incredible media experiments I've yet seen.

This audio/video cut-and-paste represents, to me, the very best of the Internet's potential. YouTube became a gigantic repository of largely user-generated material which has become reasonably easy to mine. An enterprising (and brilliant according to my ears) musician needed only to piece together samples from a seemingly endless pool of candidates. I'm sure Kutiman may not have been the first, but he sure is good. I'd like to see more of this - there's so much material available, and plenty of talented mixers out there.

And, more broadly, I'd love to see what else clever artists can assemble from the mass of content at their collective disposal.

Music of the Class of '99

My ten year high school reunion is approaching this year, and I was trying to remember what songs were popular around my final days at Central High in Lunenburg County, VA. Naturally, all the music of my younger days has started blending together, so I turned to Wikipedia for help.

Now I'm counting music over a rough one year period that starts right after my junior year (when I became a rising senior) and ends around the time I graduated (when I was no longer a high school senior). I think music from that last summer before college is associated with its own set of memories and transitional nostalgia.

So, for better or for worse, here's everything that hit number 1 at least once on Billboard's Modern Rock and Pop Charts between the second half of June, 1998, and the first half of June, 1999. I've linked, where possible, to YouTube videos of the songs, so there's always the risk that some might disappear over time.

Modern Rock:
Semisonic - "Closing Time"
Goo Goo Dolls - "Iris"
Eve 6 - "Inside Out"
Barenaked Ladies - "One Week"
Hole - "Celebrity Skin"
Goo Goo Dolls - "Slide"
Lenny Kravitz - "Fly Away"
Cake - "Never There"
Everlast - "What It's Like"
Sugar Ray - "Every Morning"
Lit - "My Own Worst Enemy"

Hot 100 (for all intents and purposes, this was the Pop chart until February 2005):
Brandy and Monica - "The Boy Is Mine"
Aerosmith - "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing"
Monica - "The First Night"
Barenaked Ladies - "One Week" (yeah, this was on both charts)
Lauryn Hill - "Doo Wop (That Thing)"
Divine - "Lately"
R. Kelly and Céline Dion - "I'm Your Angel"
Brandy - "Have You Ever?"
Britney Spears - "...Baby One More Time"
Monica - "Angel of Mine"
Cher - "Believe"
TLC - "No Scrubs"
Ricky Martin - "Livin' la Vida Loca"
Jennifer Lopez - "If You Had My Love"

It appears that the pop charts had a lot more variety, but consider that they covered pretty much every genre at the time (hence Barenaked Ladies appearance on both the Modern Rock and Hot 100 lists above).

Space Invaders

Dig this sweet Space Invaders-in-real-life style video from Röyksopp for their latest single:

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=3281558&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=ffffff&fullscreen=1
Happy Up Here from Röyksopp on Vimeo.
(via kottke, from whom I rarely re-post because he's so widely read, but I couldn't help myself with this one)

Radiohead + Dave Brubeck = AWESOME

This is seriously one of the coolest musical experiments I've yet heard, and I've been listening to it repeatedly:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYa7furgQsA&hl=en&fs=1&rel=0&w=580&h=470]
(via waxy)

Rock Monster

busker

I finally got some pictures worth sharing. This dude was rocking faces (while hiding his own!) in front of Plan 9 on Friday the 13th.

Bohemia!

I was in the car with Val last night when "Bohemian Rhapsody" (Yes! It has its own Wikipedia entry!) came on the radio. I can never resist the opportunity to crank it, and I still mist up a little at the sound of the first guitar solo (I mean, you do, too, right? You're not heartless...are you?).

So this evening, I'm perusing the web as usual when I come across the most glorious of mash-ups...a smooshed audio tour de force (farce?) containing pieces from nearly every cover of the song that could be found. While the genres and quality truly run the gamut, it's actually...well...awesome. Beware the end, though...I believe there's some coarse language (in case you're sensitive to that or at the office).
(via waxy)

tasty hip hop treats

I guess I'd be remiss if I didn't tell everybody about my friend Patrick's new Tumblog, tasty hip hop treats. If you're a fan of clever music regardless of the genre, give this a look. Patrick is beginning to curate a fine selection of beats, songs, and collections, much of which is free at least for the listening (and some for the downloading, too).

Look, it's all worth it at least for Dert's Talk Strange.

The Glass Armonica

For whatever reason this morning I felt compelled to read up a bit on US founding father Benjamin Franklin. Among the description of his inventions was an item called the "glass armonica" - a mechanical arrangement of glass bowls which rotate about a coincident axis. Such an arrangement allows many notes to be played simultaneously compared to simple water-filled goblets, for example. During its heyday, the instrument was the center of works from composers such as C.P.E. Bach, Beethoven, and even Mozart, as in this piece:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXSnI8VTIDM&hl=en&fs=1&w=580&h=470]

It turns out the glass armonica - or glass harmonica - is still manufactured, though it certainly isn't cheap.

Ode to Beaker

If this doesn't make you smile I don't want to know what does:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xpcUxwpOQ_A&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&feature=player_embedded&fs=1&w=580&h=470]

Shine a Light

I just finished skimming through the first 50 minutes of Martin Scorsese's Shine a Light and had to turn it off. Netflix delivered this DVD to my place nearly three months ago and I'm finally sending it back tomorrow morning, incompletely viewed.

Don't get me wrong - the direction was great, the camera work was what I expected, and the interstitial footage was fantastic. But this film is about 80% concert documentary, and I underestimated just how much I'd have to be a Stones fan to actually enjoy footage of the performances. I've never really been a Stones fan, and I remain thus after my partial viewing.

There was one serious problem I had with the concert footage though, too. As a musician and an appreciator of music I was put off by the boosted audio level of any instrument/musician on whom the camera focused. If the Charlie Watts was the main subject of a shot, for example, his drum levels were pumped up in the mix. For my taste this would have ruined the balance of music I love, let alone music I was merely tolerating for the sake of its filming.

Sorry Marty, but this one gets a 2/5 from me.

SoundUnwound

Amazon and IMDB have collaborated on a music website called SoundUnwound - and it even has some wiki-like elements allowing users to submit page edits (I've already submitted corrections for Steve Taylor's page). It's not the prettiest website around, but it does have sound clips from AmazonMP3, YouTube clips, and plenty of room for growth.

With its strong backers and potential, this site may surpass the Allmusic Guide as my primary music research tool.

Play on, sisters.

I read an interesting profile of nearly all-girl hard rock band today. The AccoLade isn't all that interesting, musically - the lyrics are a touch cheesy and the music isn't my taste, but the New York Times wouldn't write up any average rock group. This band, you see, is from Jidda, Saudi Arabia. While Jidda is apparently one of the more "moderate" cities in that desert its citizens still risk getting dragged downtown for a head shaving from the religious police. The fact, then, that these young girls play loud Western music, sing in English, and hang around with their robes open to reveal jeans and t-shirts is really quite extraordinary and brave.

Here's the line that really got to me:

“The upcoming generation is different from the one before,” said Dina, the Accolade’s 21-year-old guitarist and founder. “Everything is changing. Maybe in 10 years it’s going to be O.K. to have a band with live performances.”


Rock on girls.

The Price of Love

My friend Stephanie has made a habit of posting an 80s/New Wave music video every Thursday for a while now, and yesterday she posted New Order's "World" (I've embedded the MTV Music version because it's a little clearer):

http://media.mtvnservices.com/mgid:uma:video:mtvmusic.com:47153
New Order |MTV Music


I'm not terribly fond of the song, but the video is fantastic short-form film making. The whole thing is only five shots over nearly 4.5 minutes, and the second shot is almost 1.5 minutes alone! That's some serious coordination and rehearsal. It was directed by Baillie Walsh who's since directed videos for Kylie Minogue and Oasis.

"Sleepyhead" by Passion Pit

I caught "Sleepyhead" by Passion Pit on WRIR this morning (though I know I heard it already - I just can't remember where...), and it's my jam-of-the-day:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5bfseWNmlds&hl=en&fs=1&w=580&h=470]

I find the video to be extremely clever, and the song is just short enough that the idea isn't worn out on me. It was directed by The Wilderness, a collaboration between Juliet Rios and Gabe Imlay, whose work seems generally to rock my socks off. Be sure to check out some other videos on their site.

MTV Music

I don't know how long it'll be until it's little more than crappy reality TV shows, but MTV has returned to music...online.

MTV Music is a joy to my music-loving heart. The interface is - so far - fairly uncluttered. The search engine is quick to dig through the 22,000+ videos. In addition to a simple but fast-loading player you have sparse but useful information such as the director (linking to other videos by the same person!). As a fitting test, here's the video to one of my favorite songs by the sadly-no-more Big Wreck:

http://media.mtvnservices.com/mgid:uma:video:mtvmusic.com:46306
Big Wreck |MTV Music


And as a bonus here's Stars by Hum:

http://media.mtvnservices.com/mgid:uma:video:mtvmusic.com:55357
HUM |MTV Music

Wii Can Make Beautiful Music

This is probably the most brilliant non-gaming application of the Wiimote I've yet seen, and makes me wonder what other excellent possibilities await the patient tinkerer (maybe moving the guitar adjusts delay repeat frequency? Please?).

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmuggHx_H5Y&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&hl=en&fs=1&w=580&h=470]
(via Engadget)

Bandcamp and 20 Minute Loop

For the love of all that is good, go check out Bandcamp - a new web app designed for bands to present and distribute their music on the Internet. The whole thing looks so gorgeous and easy to set up/use that I practically want to record some music just to have an excuse to set up my own page.

Currently, they include a track on the main page from 20 Minute Loop - a pretty cool rock band if I do say so myself. So in order to show both how easy-to-use/gorgeous Bandcamp can be, and how cool 20 Minute Loop sounds, here's the whole album:

http://bandcamp.mu/EmbeddedPlayer.swf/album=119385304/

Some Led In Your Diet

Well well well...it appears ol' Zep may be getting back together. Nothing's official, and Plant isn't yet on board, but all the instrumentalists are recording new material. That has to count for something :-)

Francis and the Lights

So the mini-site for Francis and the Lights' EP, A Modern Promise, is making the rounds on teh interwebs, and I have to admit that I'm enjoying it quite a bit myself.

What I really dig about the mini-site, though, is the 35mm film for "The Top." Two things impress me about this: First, it sounds like he's singing live (varying sounds depending on his approach to the microphone) while still dancing around like a maniac. Second, and this is my absolute favorite part, once the music starts the whole thing is a single continuous camera shot (unless there's some genius editing that I've missed).

This is an expert little piece of film making for a short music video like this, and it doesn't go unappreciated. Oh yeah, and the music itself? Welcome back, 80's pop (in a good way).

UPDATE: Awww yeah, it's live vocals and a single shot as I thought. SUPER WOOT.

Just Beat It

I was already a huge fan of Isiah Flores' short films, but below you can see him assembling beats in real time. I'm guessing many of them, if recorded, were edited later to smooth out the timing and what-not, but either way, I'd bump to these beats.

[vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/1456446 w=580&h=437]
isiah flores live mpc beat making from Spencer Keeton Cunningham on Vimeo.

Don't you forget about me.

When I hear Simple Minds' iconic 80's anthem, "Don't You (Forget About Me)," I'm filled with a semi-false nostalgia that tricks me into reminiscing about my mostly crappy high school years...

It was December of my senior year at Central Senior High School in the depressed rural county of Lunenburg, Virginia, and I was preparing for a concert on Saturday, the 19th. I was in this concert, playing bass guitar for a band with Mugs and Lucas called Uprooted, and we were getting ready for a six-band show in the improvised back room club at the Mean Bean coffee shop in Clarksville. We'd drawn the third slot out of a hat and had a 45-minute set to rehearse consisting of songs written almost entirely by Mugs.

Some of the tunes were decent, some of them were crappy (in retrospect), but nearly all of them reflected some romantic angst between Mugs and an unnamed gal from our school, and for whatever reason, the songs enjoyed a growing popularity in our area. By the week before the gig, word had spread around our school of the upcoming show and we were expecting a fair portion of concert attendees in support of our fledgling act.

The night of the show came, and while the two bands before us had disappointingly short sets we were more than ready to take the stage. As we stood on the riser, instruments in hands and stage lights coaxing the sweat to surface before we even started playing, we looked out over a steadily building crowd in this ersatz concert hall and kicked into what would be our last concert together. We played a varied set, sure to include some of our shorter instrumental pieces that grabbed the attention of the small town youth when Uprooted debuted at Autumn Days back in October. The room continued to fill until a girl, the object of Mugs' lyrics, walked through the door. We scrapped our next song and substituted a straight blues rocker, "I Can't Get You Off Of My Mind." My brother wailed the lyrics in a scratchy baritone, all but singing to the unnamed show-goer in the front.

I remember stepping out of the lights with a high I've yet to experience again. I've never sought to draw attention to myself (honest!), but for the better part of an hour we were rock stars in our region. After unplugging our instruments we joined the crowd for the rest of Bean Fest '98 (seriously), receiving many a high-five and compliment as we mingled with the patrons. I remember enjoying the rest of the night, but I don't remember the rest of the bands...

We packed up our gear from the back of the building in the van of our drummer's father, and after the lights went up and concert-goers started to leave, we made our way to the curb in front of the coffee shop to meet up with our ride. Paulie, our step-dad, had pulled up in our '93 Dodge Intrepid with Farmville's WXJK playing over the speakers.

When he stepped out of the car I could hear Simple Minds start to play over the radio, so I rolled down all the windows and cranked up the volume so we could bask in our short-lived teenage glory.

Will you recognise me?
Call my name or walk on by
Rain keeps falling, rain keeps falling
Down, down, down, down


Okay, so here's some honesty: Memories are notoriously unreliable and murky, so I'm sure some of the events described herein aren't completely accurate. I may have even exaggerated some of it for effect. What I know to be accurate for sure, though, is what I felt. What I still feel. Uprooted didn't last much longer. The drummer and his father - our sort-of manager - wanted to avoid any more free gigs and start playing more clubs further around the state. Mugs wanted to focus on the music and was afraid of being too caught up with the money. We dissolved before Christmas.

We may have only lasted three months, but that band gave me some of the only good time I ever had in high school, capped-off and summed-up in the strains of "Don't You (Forget About Me)."

Neil Young, check your ears.

Neil Young is whining about a perceived lack of audio quality from MP3 files and players.

This is humorous to me on a number of levels:
1. I'm no fan of Neil Young's music, but I've heard a fair amount of it in my life because my dad was a fan. Young's work isn't exactly the sort of "music" that would benefit from a higher-grade sound system, and his vocals and guitar work make me question whether he can really hear the difference anyway.
2. Sure MP3 files may not be ideal, but at higher quality levels (like the 256k files from AmazonMP3 or iTunes Plus) any loss from a CD is hardly noticeable to the average ear, especially on the sound systems that the average listener can afford.
3. Young shouldn't blame the playback technology too much either - the phrase "garbage in, garbage out" from computing works in the recording industry, too. An overwhelming amount of recordings are created to maximize volume and even out the levels for the sake of radio singles.

But go ahead, Neil. Blame the technology. I'll keep blaming your tin ear.