Just because I don't care doesn't mean I don't understand.
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Music

In which grievances are aired

Monday, 4 May 2009, 9:35 PM (permalink).

The weekend before last, I made an excursion to Louisville to see my fellow New Jerseyans, Titus Andronicus. I was recently introduced to this band through a gift of their The Airing of Grievances (2008), and I'd been digging the album (especially "My Time Outside the Womb," "Titus Andronicus," and , so I was looking forward quite a bit to the show. Titus Andronics at Headliner's Music Hall by Bill Cole on Flickr...

File under: Music, Travel, Grouses.

Tiny changes

Monday, 22 Sep 2008, 2:23 AM (permalink).

I'm not sure if it is a measure of how much I miss my family or just an indication that I am going soft in my old age, but when a friend pointed me, some weeks ago, toward the following video for Frightened Rabbit's "Head Rolls Off," I found myself sitting in my office, transfixed and teary-eyed....

File under: Ego, Music, Digital culture.

Heavy Rotation: Oct. 29-Nov. 4, 2007

Saturday, 17 Nov 2007, 2:19 PM (permalink).

Here's installment number two of of my new format for music-logging. One thing that is already clear is that given my listening habits, which are structured around the monthly cycle of my eMusic subscription, the weekly "top artists" lists are going to have a fair amount repetition in them from one week to the next. I don't know if that's a problem per se—in fact it might be interesting to see if my enthusiasm for a brand new acquisition sustains for several weeks or fades after the first blush—but I'll go ahead an apologize in advance for entries along the lines of "Still listening to [insert album name] a lot. Still rocks."...

File under: Music, Ego.

Shopping around

Monday, 12 Nov 2007, 1:02 AM (permalink).

I finally got around to trying Amazon's MP3 Store, the latest attempt to challenge the hegemony of Apple's iTunes Store in the world of digital music sales, and for the first time, there seems to be a legitimate competitor in the market. I bought PJ Harvey's new album, White Chalk (2007). It's available on the ITMS as well, but because her label (Island) is a subsidiary of Universal, it is only available DRM-free from Amazon. That, much more than cost or encoding details, is the main draw of Amazon's store. ...

File under: Music, Grouses.

Heavy Rotation: Oct. 21-28, 2007

Wednesday, 7 Nov 2007, 10:20 PM (permalink).

Having fallen woefully behind on my "Acquisitions" series, I am trying out a new approach to logging my music habits, namely looking at my Last.fm "weekly top artists" list and commenting on what I find there. This should have two advantages over the Acquisitions approach. First, since it is limited to ten artists, I shouldn't get overwhelmed by sheer volume, as was happening regularly with my monthly acquisitions lists. Second, since this is the music I've listened to the most in a given week (more or less—not everything I listen to manages to get scrobbled to Last.fm, but the vast majority does), I should actually have something to say about it, which was not always the case with the brand-new music covered in my earlier posts. There should actually be some intersection between what comes up with this method and what 's actually new in my library, because the structure of my playlists keeps new arrivals in heavy rotation for about a month after they get added to iTunes. But it will also give me reason to revisit older music that's caught my ear, which appeals to me as well. Obviously, this will not wind up being some perfect log of my listening habits, but I never really set out to do that in the first place. The tougher question will be whether I can keep up with a regular schedule of weekly posts. History would suggest not, but maybe this exercise will be the impetus I needed to get more disciplined about my blogging. ...

File under: Music, Metablogging, Ego.

Of beer and bastards

Sunday, 23 Sep 2007, 11:50 PM (permalink).

It wasn't looking good for my chances of getting to the Heartless Bastards show in Lexington last night, but thanks to a last-minute babysitting offer from a friend, Sylvia and I were able to make a date of it. Heading out from Morehead after dinner, we skipped the opening act in favor of making a stop at the obscenely huge Liquor Barn at Hamburg Plaza to indulge in a little frivolous consumerism. Besides such difficult-to-obtain-in-Morehead items as decent bread, cheese, and wine, I picked up a couple of promising seasonal beers—Great Lakes' "Nosferatu" red ale (which I am sampling right now: it's pretty damn good) and Abita's "Pecan Harvest" (I'd had a tiny sample earlier this week and was intrigued)—as well as a couple old standybys: DAB and Staropramen. ...

File under: Music, Local color, Food.

Recommendation engine

Tuesday, 11 Sep 2007, 8:44 PM (permalink).

The following is a real-life email exchange between myself and a colleague regarding Belle & Sebastian:...

File under: Music, Ego.

Friday Night Lights

Sunday, 26 Aug 2007, 1:12 PM (permalink).

We are entertaining a foreign guest, specifically a 14-year-old French girl, at the moment and given how entertainment-challenged Morehead is, we've been racking our brains to find appropriate activities for our youthful ward. Friday night, it fell to me to acquaint her with the "savage ballet" that is American football in the form of a local grudge match between Rowan and Morgan County High Schools. This was the first high school football game I have been to in nearly two decades, basically since my own days as a marching band geek, and it was an unsettling experience. ...

File under: Lesser sports, Local color, Music.

Christmas in July

Wednesday, 11 Jul 2007, 10:41 PM (permalink).

iTunes has been besieging me with Christmas music lately. Why this happened and how I fixed it cannot be explained, however, without delving into the maze of twisty little passages (also known as playlists) that I use to manage my iTunes and iPod listening experience. So strap on your spelunking gear, here we go!...

File under: Music, Tools, Geekery.

Acquisitions—February 2007

Wednesday, 11 Apr 2007, 2:13 AM (permalink).

Still trying to catch up on the inventory additions. February was a very light month: it's shameful that I haven't been able to get this posted before now. At least I've formed some pretty firm opinions on most of this....

File under: Music, Ego, TeeVee.

iTunes Innovations Big and Small

Friday, 6 Apr 2007, 2:31 AM (permalink).

The big iTunes news of the week is the announcement by Apple and EMI that beginning in May, EMI music will be available without Digital Rights Management and at double the current 128kbps bitrate for $1.29. Consumers will even be able to previously purchased ITMS tracks to the higher-quality unprotected format for 30 cents a song. Besides being, very likely, the death knell for DRM in the music industry (yes I know we aren't there yet, but without a united front, the other majors won't be able to hold the line on copy protection much longer), this announcement is pleasant vindication for those of us who took Steve Jobs at his word when he released his "Thoughts on Music" two months ago. (As for cynics, like Cory Doctorow, who accused Jobs of lying in February, the Macalope puts it succinctly: "Eat my shorts." On the other hand, kudos to the BBC's Bill Thompson for admitting he was wrong [via Daring Fireball]. ) It's also probably the end of Apple's European lawsuit problems. Everybody wins, except, perhaps, people who've stockpiled a lot of Zune-bucks. ...

File under: Music, Digital culture.

Acquisitions—January 2007

Thursday, 29 Mar 2007, 11:08 PM (permalink).

Continuing my attempt to get back up to date with my library additions. ...

File under: Music, Ego.

Acquisitons—December

Wednesday, 7 Mar 2007, 9:12 AM (permalink).

Since I have fallen so very far behind with this, I'm just going to list the last couple months of iTunes library additions with a minimum of commentary. Here's the rundown for December. ...

File under: Music, Ego.

Jobs throws down over DRM

Tuesday, 6 Feb 2007, 11:36 PM (permalink).

Well, this is interesting. There's an open letter by Steve Jobs, dated today, on the Apple website. It is simply titled "Thoughts on Music." It may, however, be a landmark moment in the history of Digital Rights Management. In the letter, Jobs takes on the various calls that have been made for Apple to "open up" the iPod+iTunes franchise. After a brief history lesson on how we got to the current state of affairs (namely that the "big four" music labels were dragged kicking and screaming into digital distribution and only with promise of DRM protection), Steve gets down to business with refuting the criticisms that have been leveled against Apple's successful combination....

File under: Music, Digital culture.

it's not you, it's me

Monday, 29 Jan 2007, 11:23 PM (permalink).

As I alluded to briefly a while back, The Hold Steady played in Louisville on December 9, and by a happy coincidence, I was in town for work that very weekend. The show was supposed to be the highlight of my trip, but while there's little I can fault about the show, it was not the exhilarating experience I'd hoped. The biggest reason for this was that I was just too tired to fully enjoy it: I'd been conferencing for two days already, my arthritis was majorly acting up (thanks to my boneheaded decision to walk from downtown out to Headliners, which seems to be in some sort of outlying industrial district), and I just don't have the stamina for those midnight start times that are a point of pride among the indie hipster set (the two abysmal opening bands I endured to get to that midnight start didn't help either). ...

File under: Music, Ego, Local color.

Acquisitions—November

Saturday, 20 Jan 2007, 1:47 PM (permalink).

Ooops, it looks like I've fallen a little lot behind in my 'Acquisitions' reporting. Although I reined in the breakneck pace of previous months, I still have plenty to write about, so I'll catch up in two posts, starting with November's acquisitions....

File under: Music, Ego.

Glorious Autonomy

Sunday, 26 Nov 2006, 11:46 PM (permalink).

On Wednesday night, I kicked off my Thanksgiving break with a trip to The Dame in Lexington to see the Heartless Bastards. I've been listening to this Cincinnati-based trio for about six months now (here's what I had to say in September), and my appreciation for them continues to grow. It's terrific blues-based rock fueled by the gutsy vocals of Erika Wennerstrom. I was positively giddy when I heard they were coming to Lexington, and the show did not disappoint. It's impossible to write about the Heartless Bastards without mentioning The Voice (i.e., Wennerstrom's). Its presence dominates the music, and in the live setting, it basically becomes a fourth member of the band, especially since it seems impossible that something so powerful could be emanating from as unimposing a frame as hers. Drummer Kevin Vaughn was pretty impressive as well, glowering from behind the set and banging out the snare beats like gunshots. And then there was bassist Mike Lamping, providing the rhythmic glue from a private island of tranquility apparently only he can access. However they manage to put all this together, it works. ...

File under: Music, Local color.

Boola, boola!

Monday, 20 Nov 2006, 9:48 PM (permalink).

Last Saturday, while many of America's football-watching eyes were focused on a little contest in Columbus, OH, something much more important happened back east in Cambridge, Mass: as Yale trounced Harvard, 34-13, and claimed part of the Ivy League championship. For those who would like to celebrate the blessed event with me, please listen to to Bull-dog and Down the Field (performed by the Yale Precision Marching Band). Feel free to sing along....

File under: Lesser sports, Music.

Acquisitions - October

Saturday, 18 Nov 2006, 3:13 PM (permalink).

Installment number 3 in the saga of the ongoing bloat of my hard drive. ...

File under: Music, Ego.

Acquisitions - September

Thursday, 26 Oct 2006, 12:53 AM (permalink).

In the same spirit as my August report, here's all the additions to my iTunes library for the month of September, with comments: ...

File under: Music, Ego.

Cathartic...

Thursday, 19 Oct 2006, 1:19 AM (permalink).

…is the only word that comes to mind to encapsulate Saturday night's triple bill of Ruby Vileos, Swearing at Motorists, and The Wrens at The Southgate House in Newport. This was my second trip to the Southgate (the previous being Yo La Tengo during their 2004 'Swing State Tour'), and it has already earned a place in my heart for serving up great bands in a great atmosphere. All three bands were of some interest, so here's the rundown....

File under: Music, Local color.

By George, I think she's got it!

Tuesday, 17 Oct 2006, 9:01 PM (permalink).

Just when I thought everyone in the media industries had their eyes clamped shut, their fingers in their ears and started chanting "DRM, DRM, DRM" whenever the topic of the digital revolution comes up, ABC-Disney's Anne Sweeney proved there is some sentient life in that sector after all. The following comments quoted in Ars Technica are so startlingly perceptive, open-minded, and forward-thinking it's hard to believe they came from the mouth of a media executive....

File under: Digital culture, Music.

Acquisitions - August

Monday, 18 Sep 2006, 11:05 PM (permalink).

I seem to be fighting blogger's block (or perhaps blogger's "I have things to write about but that would require thinking harder than I feel like doing right now") at the moment, so here's a pretty much mechanical post, which might become a regular feature, just to get things moving again: all the new additions to my iTiunes library for the month of August. ...

File under: Music.

Meet the new hacks, same as the old hacks

Monday, 28 Aug 2006, 10:03 PM (permalink).

Cory Doctorow's article on Digital Rights Management in InformationWeek a few weeks back is a sad example of the "new" journalists of the blogosphere being every bit as sensationalist and inaccurate as the "old" journalists they disdain. Provocatively titled "Apple's Copy Protection Isn't Just Bad For Consumers, It's Bad For Business," this piece is a muddled critique of DRM that inexplicably blames Apple—purveyors of the most consumer-friendly and commercially successful DRM scheme in existence—for all of the problems inherent with copy-protection generally. Even more bizarrely, the article somehow manages to portray the entertainment industry—whose short-sighted, heavy-handed policies have given us our current DRM mess—as victims of mean old bullying Apple. ...

File under: Digital culture, Grouses, Music.

Finding new music

Monday, 3 Apr 2006, 10:39 PM (permalink).

Diane Greco was moved by my post on the New Pornographers/Belle & Sebastian show to go out and get The Life Pursuit (Stuart Murdoch, you now owe me 37¢!). She goes on to muse on the difficulty of finding new music: "I don't find new music by listening anymore. No radio, no MTV. It's all so sucky and boring. So the result is I don't hear about much, and when I do, the channel is almost as interesting as the band." ...

File under: Music, Ego, Digital culture.

Pornos & Sebastian

Monday, 13 Mar 2006, 3:10 AM (permalink).

By a curious sequence of serendipities—being sent to a conference I'd had no plans to attend, overhearing a stranger's conversation about his evening plans, and arriving at the ticket window just after a number of reserved seats went back on sale—last Thursday evening I found myself smack in the middle of Row F of the Brown Theatre in Louisville for the New Pornographers/Belle & Sebastian show. I was, in a word, well chuffed....

File under: Music, Travel.

Beyond iTunes

Sunday, 29 Jan 2006, 10:29 PM (permalink).

Not that my love of iTunes and the ITMS is waning, but recently, I've been experimenting with a couple other online music services. Pandora and eMusic are quite different from each other, and for my purposes, both are complements to rather than replacements for iTunes. Each is interesting in its own way....

File under: Music, Digital culture.

Tit-bits

Friday, 6 Jan 2006, 5:18 PM (permalink).

I am back from a 12-day family trip to Germany (Christmas with the grandparents), and am still working through my (and the kids') jet-lag, but I want to get a post up for the new year and there's some interesting stuff going on there that I don't want to completely ignore, so here's some quick jabs that I might (but very well might not) come back to in greater depth....

File under: Digital culture, TeeVee, Music.

Spencer Bohren

Sunday, 6 Nov 2005, 3:35 PM (permalink).

New Orleans bluesman Spencer Bohren, who was on campus last week as an artist-in-residence, did a show Friday night at local coffeehouse Grounds & Sounds (which has been a godsend to Morehead's sparse restaurant and even sparser music scene). This was an exciting event for several reasons. It was the first live music I've managed to see in about a year. I didn't know much about Bohren except that I really liked the free MP3 of "Ghost Train" I downloaded from Playlist magazine a while back, so I was eager to hear more from him. And the show provided the impetus for my wife and I to get a babysitter and go on a much-overdue date....

File under: Music, Local color.

Numa numa iei

Wednesday, 2 Nov 2005, 1:36 AM (permalink).

My recent expedition to AECT was satisfying on several levels, but the most indelible memory would have to be the session on open content that began by showing the Star Wars Kid and Numa Numa memes. (I realize that having heard of neither of these prior to the conference makes me majorly unhip, but that's no surprise, right?)...

File under: Digital culture, Music.

Punk Rock and the Absolute

Wednesday, 19 Oct 2005, 4:01 PM (permalink).

I'm reading Greil Marcus's Ranters and Crowd Pleasers: Punk in Pop Music, 1977-1992 at the moment and finding it difficult to put down. Composed of 15 years of assorted reviews and brief essays loosely organized around the idea of "punk" (for Marcus, this term is capacious enough to include the Rolling Stones, Bruce Springsteen, and Cyndi Lauper alongside the Sex Pistols and the Clash), the book turns into something much more: a sustained critique of an increasingly moribund music industry and the deadened popular tastes that the industry shapes and serves. In the process, Ranters also becomes one of the more lucid treatises on aesthetics I have read....

File under: Music, Books, Politics.

I Wanna Be Lou

Wednesday, 28 Sep 2005, 5:15 PM (permalink).

Quizilla says: ...

File under: Ego, Music.

The ultimate iPod?

Sunday, 25 Sep 2005, 10:06 PM (permalink).

All the world seems to be a-twitter about Apple's iPod nano. The press is using words like "marvel" and "perfect" to describe the ultra-thin music player (I'm impressed, too, but I have to say that one of my first thoughts looking at the promotional pictures was "I wonder if it breaks as easily as a Number 2 pencil, too?"). In that light, let me nominate this ad for the "iPod Flea" (which was forwarded to me by a colleague a few days before the nano launch) as the logical extension of the product line.

File under: Digital culture, Ludic, Music.

Alphabet Soup

Saturday, 25 Jun 2005, 1:20 PM (permalink).

Saw this meme a while back on mamamusings and thought it would be an amusing exercise. The rules are: sort your music collection by title and pick the first song listed for each letter of the alphabet. I decided to go one further and include songs for each numeral and miscellaneous punctuation marks. Here goes:
  • "A Big Hunk O' Love," Elvis Presley, The Number One Hits.
  • "B + A" Beta Band, The Three E.P.'s.
  • "C Is The Heavenly Option," Heavenly, Le Jardin De Heavenly.
  • "D-C-G," Silo the Huskie, Cringe.com/pilation.
  • "E Motel," The Clean, Old Enough To Know Better - 15 Years Of Merge Records.
  • "Fabliau Of Florida," Wallace Stevens, Poetry Speaks.
  • "Galveston Bay," Bruce Springsteen, The Ghost Of Tom Joad.
  • "H.W.C.," Liz Phair, Liz Phair.
  • "I (Heart Sign) Apple," The Mekons, I (Heart Symbol) Mekons.
  • "Jackals, False Grails: The Lonesome Era," Pavement, Slanted & Enchanted.
  • "K-Jee," M.F.S.B., Saturday Night Fever Soundtrack.
  • "L Dopa," Big Black, Songs About Fucking.
  • "Ma Rainey," Sterling Brown, Call & Response - The Riverside Anthology To The African American Literary Tradition.
  • "Nadine," Chuck Berry, The Great Twenty-Eight.
  • "O Death," Camper Van Beethoven, Our Beloved Revolutionary Sweetheart.
  • "P-Funk (Wants To Get Funked Up)," Parliament, Live: P-Funk Earth Tour.
  • "Quarrel With The World," Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments, Bait and Switch.
  • "R & R," Charles Mingus, In A Soulful Mood.
  • "SAAB," Randys, Cringe.com/pilation.
  • "T. & T.," Ornette Coleman, Ornette!
  • "U Can Do (Life)," De La Soul, Art Official Intelligence: Mosaic Thump.
  • "Vague Space," Stephen Malkmus, Stephen Malkmus.
  • "W-I-F-E," Old 97's, Wreck Your Life.
  • "x-ray man," Liz Phair, Whip-Smart.
  • "Ya No Hay Mujeres Feas," Tito Puente, The Very Best of Tito Puentes and Vicento Valdes.
  • "Zebra," The Magnetic Fields, 69 Love Songs.
  • "09-15-00 (Part One)," Godspeed You Black Emperor! Yanqui U.X.O.
  • "1 Million Bottlebags," Public Enemy, Apocalypse 91...The Enemy Strikes Black.
  • "2 Piano Pieces: 1," Daniel Barenboim, Mendelssohn: Songs without Words.
  • "3 Away," Pretty Girls Make Graves, Pretty Girls Make Graves EP.
  • "4 (from The Dream Songs)," John Berryman, Poetry Speaks.
  • "5 Nights," Grafton, Salt Horse Release Party CD.
  • "6' 1"," Liz Phair, Exile In Guyville.
  • "7 Chinese Bros.," R.E.M., Reckoning.
  • "8 Ball (Remix)," NWA, Straight Outta Compton.
  • "9-9," R.E.M., Murmur.
  • "?," Outkast, Stankonia.
  • "...and Carrot Rope," Pavement, Terror Twilight.
  • "(Crazy for You But) Not That Crazy," The Magnetic Fields, 69 Love Songs.
  • "#1 Hit Song," The Minutemen, Double Nickels On The Dime.
...

File under: Music, Ego.

8'03" (apologies to John Cage)

Thursday, 3 Mar 2005, 5:34 PM (permalink).

I've mentioned Apple's iMix before — a feature of the iTunes Music Store that allows account-holders to upload playlists and gives other shoppers the opportunity to buy those tracks with one click (I wonder if anyone actually does this, or if iMix mostly serves the vanity of the mixer). Well some clever iMixer has posted what is perhaps the ultimate playlist: one consisting entirely of silent tracks from iTMS albums. 14 tracks (seven of which are individually purchasable) amounting to 8 minutes, 3 seconds of empty bytes. Even more interestingly, three of the tracks are offered in both "Explicit" and "Clean" versions. ...

File under: Music, Digital culture.

You have no chance to survive make your time

Saturday, 26 Feb 2005, 11:57 PM (permalink).

Following up on my earlier post on an All Your Base-inspired Valentine's verse, the Evolution Control Committee — the merry samplers whose 1998 single "Rocked by Rape," consisting entirely of clips of Dan Rather talking about violence and destruction on the evening news, led to a legal dispute with CBS and some notoriety — have posted a number of karaokesque renditions of popular songs with the original lyrics replaced by the infamous Zero Wing dialogue. The "Smells Like Teen Spirit" version is excellent, and the "Piano Man" and "Jailhouse Rock" versions are amusing enough to be worth your bandwidth.

File under: Digital culture, Music.

Clutterific

Saturday, 26 Feb 2005, 10:06 PM (permalink).

I just became aware of Clutter this week, and already I'm in love. Although the intended purpose is to add a more familiar interface for selecting music to listen to on your computer (namely the visual metaphor of "albums" laying scattered all over your desktop), what I found most delightful about Clutter is that it automatically looks for album art (via Amazon) and you can copy that found art into iTunes. So I was up till 3 a.m. the night after installing it, grabbing cover art for all the music in my iTunes library. I was amazed that I managed to find most of it, although my practice of renaming and re-dating compilations and re-releases to reflect the original issues sometimes caused some confusion. I'm not sure I will use Clutter in its primary capacity that much (my desktop is cluttered enough, thank you), but I definitely like having the visual reminders of where my music cane from.

File under: Tools, Music.

iPod segue of the day

Thursday, 10 Feb 2005, 12:25 PM (permalink).

My iPod is almost always set to random shuffle. Sometimes this leads to small miracles of juxtaposition. Today's: Sonic Youth's "Bubblegum" (from EVOL) into "Questo è il fin chi fa mal!," the choral coda to Don Giovanni. Delightful!

File under: Music, Digital culture.

Expo redux

Sunday, 16 Jan 2005, 1:46 AM (permalink).

OK. Like everyone and his brother has already posted their impressions of the Macworld San Francisco announcements from last week. Reactions have been mixed (Mac Net Journal is "underwhelmed"; Creative Bits thinks the marketing of the iPod shuffle is "genius" even if the device itself isn't; bsag finds the MacMini "adorable"), but there seems to be broad agreement that the three announcements of significance are the the $499 Mac Mini desktop, the ultra-small flash-based iPod Shuffle, and (to a lesser extent) the iWork productivity suite. Here's my two cents....

File under: Digital culture, Music.

2004 music review

Saturday, 8 Jan 2005, 11:24 PM (permalink).

It is the season of 2004 retrospectives and best-of lists. In that spirit, I offer this meager review of 2004 music releases. Meager primarily because I just did not buy much new music last year. I actually acquired quite a bit of music last year, adding over 1300 songs to my iTunes library (admittedly many of these were me ripping CDs I already owned), but only 80 of these were 2004 releases (and quite a few of these were free MP3s from band and label websites). In the end, I only picked up six new albums last year, just about all by established members of my personal canon.
  • PJ Harvey, Uh Huh Her : Her first album since 2000's Songs from the City, Songs from the Sea, this is certainly a good album, but does not match the near-perfection of its predecessor. I can't think of anything negative to say about Uh Huh Her except that after six months of listening, only "The Letter" has managed to stand out in my mind as an exceptional song. That track is quintessential PJ Harvey: haunting, jagged vocals and razor-sharp guitar riffs held together by a driving percussion that never let's you forget this is a rock song. PJ Harvey is the artist that wannabe angst-mongers like Kate Bush and Alanis Morrisette dream of being.
  • Interpol, Antics : I probably shouldn't like Interpol, given that everyone traces their geneaology back to New Order/Joy Division/The Cure, all of which I never did have any time for. But 2002's Turn on the Bright Lights, reminded me, instead, of The Feelies, in its jangly, almost percussive guitars and (oddly appealing) flat vocal style. Antics is similar, although I hear the other influences more strongly here. It's still fun in a dreamily moody sort of way.
  • Le Tigre, This Island : Their third full-length release, This Island sees Le Tigre polishing the art of merging the raw energy of feminist punk with the danceable beats of the techno-club scene. The explosiveness is still there (on "Seconds" and "Don't Drink Poison"), but the balance seems to be tilting further toward pop appeal. Occasionally, I think the balance has swung too far (the cover of The Pointer Sisters "I'm So Excited"), but more often they seem to hit it just about right and succeed in creating an unexpected hybrid: the dance-music of radical politics ("Viz," "New Kicks").
  • The Magnetic Fields, i : There was probably no way that Stephen Merritt could live up to the expectations he established on the last Magnetic Fields album, 1999's epic triple-CD, 69 Love Songs. To be honest, i probably doesn't reach the level of my second-favorite Magnetic Fields album, The Charm of the Highway Strip (1994), but it is a solid effort and does boast at least one perfect gem, "I Thought You Were My Boyfriend," perhaps Merritt's best song ever.
  • Sonic Youth, Sonic Nurse : I have been faithful to Sonic Youth ever since I was exposed to the Starpower EP by a roommate my freshman year of college, although the intensity of my devotion is not what it once was. Stick-in-the-mud that I am, I still think 1987's Sister is the pinnacle of their oeuvre (with 1990's Goo a solid second). I kept up with them through the 90s but, to be honest, found a lot of the stuff from that period to be meandering and diffuse. Murray Street (2002) sparked my interest again, and I think Sonic Nurse might really signal a Sonic Youth renaissance. It seems more tuneful than anything they've done since Goo, and while I don't hear a "Schizophrenia" or even a "Kool Thing" on this, the top-to-bottom consistency of the album is impressive. Their art-punk sound seems to reach full maturity here: effortless, controlled, and utterly confident in what it is trying to do. I'm not sure this album will entice new converts to the SY cause, but it ought to be good for winning back a few prodigals.
  • VA, Old Enough to Know Better - 15 Years of Merge Records : A 3-CD retrospective in celebration of Merge's 15th birthday, I got this on the strength of some of the more recognizable contributors (The Buzzcocks, Neutral Milk Hotel, Superchunk) and the presence of a number of I've-kinda-herad-of-them-but-don't-really-know-what-they-sound-like bands (The Clean, East River Pipe, Portastatic, Spoon, Versus). Also because proceeds were supposed to go to the Future of Music Coalition. Unfortunately, I haven't heard much on this to hold my attention -- no lost gems, no new finds (OK, maybe Portastatic, a side-project of Superchunk's Mac McCaughan). At least some of the money went to a worthy cause.

File under: Music.

iMix and ITMS's birthday bash

Thursday, 29 Apr 2004, 10:31 PM (permalink).

The iTunes Music Store is a year old and celebrating by giving away free singles....

File under: Music, Digital culture.

Crooked Rain^2

Wednesday, 28 Apr 2004, 1:25 AM (permalink).

Through the 90s, I waffled back and forth on the question of CDs. To be sure, I bought a fair share of CDs, but I also kept buying vinyl, both out of used bins and from indie labels that continued to offer it. But even as I continued to buy new LPs, I seldom listened to them. The convenience of CDs and, recently, the deterioration of my turntable, trumped my nostalgic loyalties. However, I've more or less forbid myself (for financial reasons as much as any real scruple) from actually buying CDs of albums I have on vinyl. As a result, a large portion of my music collection is seldom listened to, and quite a few of my late vinyl acquisitions didn't get much play at all....

File under: Music.

Song of the day

Monday, 26 Apr 2004, 11:06 PM (permalink).

I doubt I have the discipline to do this every day, but the best song I listened to today was "Bowtie" by Outkast (with Sleepy Brown and Jazzy Pha) from Speakerboxx (from last month's buying binge) Pure unadulterated funk.

File under: Music.

Binge Breakdown

Thursday, 8 Apr 2004, 11:34 PM (permalink).

Over spring break, I made what is becoming an annual pilgrimage to the High Street record stores in Columbus. Time was short, so no Magnolia Thunderpussy this year, but Johnny Go's House of Music and Used Kids Records had more than enough fuel for my music addiction....

File under: Music.

Fun with Smart Playlists

Thursday, 1 Apr 2004, 4:05 PM (permalink).

iTunes's Smart Playlist feature (which creates dynamic song lists based on search criteria) is useful for all sorts of silly things. Among the ones I am currently using: ...

File under: Music, Tools.

iPod discoveries

Friday, 20 Feb 2004, 11:30 PM (permalink).

But she's a girl discusses one of the surprising joys of iPod random-play: listening to a song you didn't think you even had. ...

File under: Music.

del.icio.us

Wednesday, 18 Feb 2004, 10:39 PM (permalink).

I signed up with del.icio.us, the "social bookmarking" service, a few weeks ago (found via Liz Lawley, who's had quite a bit to say about it). So far I'm not really using the social aspects of it, but it is a handy repository for links I suspect I am going to want to look at again, but which I don't want in my bookmarks or which I'll need from another computer. Lately, del.icio.us/donutage has been especially useful for holding links for my off-campus course (hence the links to Kentucky curriculum standards)....

File under: Tools, Music.

Morning Edition rocks!

Thursday, 12 Feb 2004, 9:53 PM (permalink).

This semester, I am teaching a course at one of our extended campuses, over an hour away. It's normally a pretty dull drive with the paucity of decent radio stations in the area (the state cars they give us don't even have tape decks), but yesterday I was on the road early enough to catch the end of Morning Edition on the university NPR-affiliate. Inside half an hour, I got to hear Bob Edwards talking to Robert Christgau about this year's Pazz and Jop poll and then a feature story on Jenny Toomey. That's quality radio programming. (Unfortunately, the drive back featured an infuriating duet on how the government wants to crack down on "obscenity" while letting media consolidation steam forward.)

File under: Music.

Is the bloom off the blogosphere?

Saturday, 24 Jan 2004, 10:49 PM (permalink).

Everyone in the blogosphere seemed to have their hackles up yesterday. I got snippy with grandtextauto last night; there's a firestorm at misbehaving.net over an apparently innocent suggestion to try to meet up at a conference; and there seems to be a whole swirling maelstrom forming around the questions of whether blogs are about business or community, "publications" or "parties" in the words of David Winer....

File under: Metablogging, Digital culture, Music.

Singles Going Steady

Wednesday, 10 Dec 2003, 12:35 AM (permalink).

One of the ways in which the iTunes Music Store revolutionizes music purchasing/listening is by once again making the single a viable unit of music. Album-oriented rock has been in ascendence since the seventies; today the main purpose of singles, at least in mainstream music, seems to be to lure saps into paying $15-$20 for a CD with two or three listenable songs on it. (This argument is perhaps a tangential elaboration on a theme I vaguely remember reading in Robert Christgau's Record Guide.) Singles (whether 45s, 7"s, or mini-CDs) have remained available, but they have not really been things you'd buy unless you were a professional DJ, a collector or a completist. Albums have been the center of the music industry for three and a half decades. ...

File under: Music.

Yielding to temptation

Monday, 10 Nov 2003, 12:01 AM (permalink).

Jenny Toomey and Franklin Bruno's Tempting has been on my heavy-rotation playlist ever since I bought it at their recent show in Lexington, and it keeps going up in my estimation. The songs are clever and infectious, and Jenny's singing is first-rate. I don't think there's a weak link in the dozen songs on the album, but the closer, "Every Little Bit Hurts," is the one I currently want to listen to over and over again. Go buy the album at Misra Records, cause I'm not sharing mine.

File under: Music.

A night at the Dame

Tuesday, 28 Oct 2003, 11:00 PM (permalink).

Jenny Toomey's show at The Dame last night was well worth the hour-plus drive and $8 admission (even if that worked out to approximately a dollar per song). Accompanied by Franklin Bruno on piano (mostly) and Jean Cook on violin, Jenny didi a short set alternating songs from 2001's Antidote and 2002's Tempting: Jenny Toomey Sings the Songs of Franklin Bruno. The Antidote material sounded much better live -- if anything, my complaint about that album is that it seems a little overproduced and too "smooth." Live, it was more raw and passionate. The stuff from Tempting -- which I was hearing for the first time, is a bit unusual, recalling, dare I say it, classic showtunes more than anything else (the CDDB listing I pulled when I added the album to my iTunes library today classified the album as Easy Listening). But if post-punk indiepop has taught us anything, it's that no style is inherently uncool, and this stuff was definitely not uncool. "Your Inarticulate Boyfriend" deserves a prize just for its delightful title, and the rest of the album maintains a tone of clever but embittered wackiness that is endearing. I would have liked the set to go on all night, but as first openers, Jenny et al. played less than an hour. Since it was a school night, I only stayed for a few songs by Fruit Bats and missed headliners Iron and Wine completely. Given the small sample size, I'll refrain from comments on either....

File under: Music, Local color.

Jennifer, O Jenny

Monday, 27 Oct 2003, 12:34 AM (permalink).

I discovered the website of Jenny Toomey -- another of my personal heroes -- this weekend. Tonight, I'll be going to see her open for some bands I've never heard of in Lexington (at The Dame). Those two events feel a little like tracking down an old school friend or long-lost relative. ...

File under: Music.

Old and nasty

Tuesday, 21 Oct 2003, 1:53 PM (permalink).

Listening to a track from Chuck Berry's The Great Twenty-Eight, I was momentarily stunned by:...

File under: Music.

Impulse buyers beware

Monday, 13 Oct 2003, 8:35 PM (permalink).

I finally got around to trying the iTunes Music Store, which is part of Apple's iTunes 4 software. Although I'd been keeping tabs on this since it was first released, I hadn't been in a hurry to actually use it because initially all that was on it was mainstream from the major labels. But I had heard that they were expanding the inventory, and I had some time on my hands, so......

File under: Digital culture, Music.

Many-to-many

Sunday, 5 Oct 2003, 10:30 PM (permalink).

Mark Bernstein just blogged about the need to avoid the "temptation... [of] the mass audience" and the promise of hypertext to help us do just that. I think I was trying to get at something like that when I called Yo la tengo my heroes, because I think they have succeeded in finding a middle ground between mass appeal based on compromise and a purity that yields only irrelevance and isolation. In any case, this is, I think, what the Indie music scene is about: creating the means so that musicians can work and record without being controlled by the demands of mass appeal. What worries me (and this would apply also to Mark's comments on hypertext) is that people keep missing this point. Many people, it seems, would rather beat the system than change it. The enduring rock and roll dream is not to be on an indie label that allows you freedom to pursue your musical vision and to have a small but ardent fanbase interested in sharing your vision. The dream is to Make It Big, whatever the cost. Likewise, the 90s dot-com bubble was fueled by people who wanted to cash in on a craze rather than really revolutionize the way people conduct business. I would like to share Mark's optimism about a brave new many-to-many world -- I agree that the potential is there -- but I find it hard to believe that it will ever overcome the din of broadcast.

File under: Music.

YLT Concert Review

Saturday, 4 Oct 2003, 5:35 PM (permalink).

Despite Ira Kaplan's apologetic comment that the show had not exactly been "rocktastic," Yo la tengo sounded great to me last Wednesday. The show featured mostly songs from their most recent album, Summer Sun, which like its predecessor, And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out, is certainly in a quieter vein than some previous Yo la albums. And the assigned-seating theater-style venue helped contribute to the feeling that one was at some avant-garde jazz-fusion event rather than a Rock and Roll show. But just when I would start feeling antsy at the electronica-inspired atmospherics, they would switch gears, Ira would lay down some skronk on his guitar, and they were a rock act again. One of the things that occurred to me during the show was how wide-ranging YLT have been stylistically, and how effortlessly they move between styles. It got me thinking that style can be a kind of trap. Perhaps an idea for a future post....

File under: Music, Local color.

Rock-n-roll heroes

Sunday, 28 Sep 2003, 10:55 PM (permalink).

This Wednesday I'll be going to see Yo La Tengo at the Singletary Center in Lexington. I'm pretty excited because I haven't seen them in a number of years and haven't seen any shows to speak of since we moved back to Kentucky (after being spoiled by the decent music scene of Columbus, OH and the outstanding music scene of Athens, GA). And YLT are, more or less, my personal heroes. Here's a group that has managed to survive as an "indie" band for at least 17 years without selling out, blowing up, or falling apart; a band that has stayed artistically interesting for their entire careers -- no descent into repetition, nostalgia, or self-indulgence; a band that seems never to have been seduced by the lure of Rock Stardom, but simply remained true to themselves and their music. I'm sure I'm romanticizing what has probably been a grueling and at times disheartening career path, but I find the continued existence of Yo La Tengo to be one of the few positive signs of the viability of not just music but art itself in our culture. Viva YLT!

File under: Music.