Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Monday, August 25, 2008

Go sing songs, go rock on

Check it out:
This makes Minneapolis/St Paul the place to be next week:
It's right outside of the airport! I know that I haven't watched The Daily Show in forever, so this reminds me of how nice it is to see Jon Stewart and his pack of well-dressed satirists tearing the GOP a new one. God bless America.

So yes, I did see day one of the Democratic National Convention; or at least most of it. I made the stupid mistake of thinking that CNN would do more than "Dear god, what will we dooooooo about CLIIIIIIINTOOOOOOOOOOON?!" for hours on end. Give it up, you guys. So I switched over in time to C-SPAN to see Nancy Pelosi speak, and though I enjoyed all of the speeches, for the most part I was underwhelmed by the overall feel of things. Yes, we have Hope, and we want Change, and we'll fight for Obama. Pelosi did the attacks (which I've been waiting for the most) the best, getting the crowd to chant over and over, "John McCain is wrong", and what she said about his record was a great attack: "The Republicans say that John McCain has 26 years of experience. We say that John McCain has 26 years of being wrong."

And of course, I got a little misty when Ted Kennedy came out to speak and said that nothing would keep him from being there. The fact that the entire remainder of the Kennedy family supports Obama is a huge deal, and it seems pretty obvious that the camp is glad to have it, what with all the Kennedy signs flying through the audience...with "barackobama.com" printed right below them. I enjoyed hearing Jesse Jackson, Jr. speak, as well as Michelle Obama, and I was glad to hear her acknowledge–however briefly–the 18 million votes that Hillary Clinton won in the primary elections. I think that, overall, they did a good enough job as showing Obama as the family-loving everyman instead of just the high-minded intellectual celebrity that the Republicans like to peg him as.

Of course, the big question on everyone's mind, as CNN showed before, is what will happen with the Clinton camp: the inclusion of her name in the vote as well as giving voice to Michigan and Florida, two states that she would have won, as well as the selection of Joe Biden for VP instead of Clinton has re-opened the can of worms that is the so-called rivalry between the two senators. And though I know that Clinton and Obama aren't the best of friends right now, I doubt that Hillary is so immature that she would continue to bear a grudge up to this point, or to allow her supporters to. Tomorrow night, and Bill's speech on Wednesday, will hopefully clear the air on that subject and put it to rest, and hopefully shut down the two recent attack ads that McCain aired that urged Hillary supporters to vote McCain.

By the way: if you support Hillary Clinton, then do what she would do and vote Democrat. Voting on a grudge because your candidate didn't make it is the wrong way to vote, period.

So tonight I think that I'm going to write as much as I can, since I've become so bad about it in the past while. Tea and writing! socks and hummus!

My life is getting sad. My job is over, and it's making me feel a weird unfulfilled sensation, which only happens when you leave school after a good semester, or say goodbye for what you know will be years. The irony is, on my first day not working with the DNC, my Obama sweater came in the mail and I watched the convention. Talk about not letting go easy. But this time next week I'll be settled into my new home, going out to dinner with Amanda and Aletheia and hopefully Peter and Esther, enjoying my return to BC and to University, and entering into my last year.

One last thing before I disappear for another week:
Listen to it (when it comes out legally, yuk yuk yuk). I'm actually liking it more than The Stage Names. Less of that meta-fiction self-awareness shtick that made The Stage Names a bit tiresome after a while, though when it needs to be, The Stand Ins has plenty or well-matured cynicism. Also, it sounds like it would be good live, and I'm going to see them on the 18th. YAY.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

It was Oprah on the TV show, she told me so!


What a weekend! Nothing happened, and yet here I am, ready to talk about not one, not two, but THREE movies, and not three, not two, but ONE album that I have since become acquainted with. I also did a painting (that one) and began reading Goethe's Faust for real this time. Here's a quick quote before I move on:

FAUST: Where can I grasp you, never-ending Nature?
Breasts, where? You founts of all of life,
That earth and heaven hang upon with love
And where the parched soul craves to be,
You flow, you give drink, but not to me.

I shouldn't have to explain that one to y'all.

First up: let's do the album.

So I was in Everyday Music with my mom (she was picking up the Alison Krauss and Robert Plant album, which is actually pretty good despite how I can't get it out of my head that one of the songs might, might be a sonic ripoff of Tom Wait's "Underground") and I passed by this album on the "new releases" shelf. I'd been meaning to look into her, since she did such great work on the Leonard Cohen documentary I'm Your Man, where she did an ethereal cover of "Tower of Song", among others. Since then I've been familiar with only one of her songs; the intense hate-on song "Bloody Mother Fucking Asshole", about her father Loundon Wainwright III.

So anyway, I saw the album, and fell in love with the title (in case you can't read it, it's called I Know You're Married But I've Got Feelings Too), and now I've listened to it and I'm not disappointed. The production is smooth, her voice is wonderful, and the lyrics are coarse enough to keep me interested; they seem to fit somewhere between "You Oughta Know" Alanis Morrisette and "Horse and I" Bat For Lashes: Wainwright holds her ground as a jilted woman and as an artistic personality without getting too bemoaningly bitchy on one end nor too shut-the-fuck-up on the other.

Have you ever listened to The Red Shoes by Kate Bush? It's this album that she put out after she had an apparently nasty breakup with her longtime boyfriend. Before that time, Kate Bush hadn't really had any need to digress into writing love songs, not to mention rejected love songs, and really we should be grateful that she didn't. She's not good at it. The album also was written for a live band, so it lacks the production and depth of something like Hounds of Love, which is about twenty times better. It's poppy, it's sappy, it's like Kate had to roll out of bed and wipe off the salty mascara tears before she crawled to work and slumped over the microphone, smelling like anything but soap, naming each tile on the studio floor for something that makes her miserable. And you know what? We all know Kate was better than that. Hell, he was the ugly one, she's Kate Bush. She's talented and musically brilliant, she could have taken that relationship and turned it into something spectacular, but instead it's tired and self-pitying.

So here's my point: I Know You're Married But I've Got Feelings Too is what The Red Shoes should have been. Hell, half the reviews I've read say that Wainwright evokes Bush on at least one or two tracks. "In The Middle Of The Night" sounds like something right out of The Dreaming or the better parts of Never For Ever. It seriously does, you'd think that it was a cover. All in all, I liked I Know You're Married But I've Got Feelings Too on the first listen, and right now I'm on listen number two and I'm still liking it. I should point out that it is definitely an album for women, or at least men who aren't completely ignorant. There's definitely a note of Lilith Fair in there, only less unshaved-armpits and more patent-leather heels, which I think we can all be thankful for.

Okay, next up: the movies! The weekend was a B&W triple-feature. First on the list:
The upside:Peter Lorre. The downside: Mary Astor, the script. The stupid, stupid script. I know that at the time it was hailed with an Oscar nod, and that since then it's been put on every goddamn AFI list ever made, and that Roget Ebert thinks it's top shit, but to my modern ears, the overly-explanitory script makes the Da Vinci Code adaptation look like To Kill A Mockingbird. Humphrey Bogart's apparently irresistible Sam Spade is a decent enough character, but seems a bit dumb in the way that he sets himself up for, well, any kind of physical pain. And he's not very nice to all those women who can't resist him. 1940s tough guy dilogue is tossed around so much it's like the characters are playing for points. This worked well enough in the darker and more claustrophobic The Big Sleep or in films like The Thin Man, but either I'm getting bored with it, or it turns into a joke after too long. Bogart is plain terrible at laughing on command, instead of the slower, thoughtful guffaw that would suit the role, he starts giggling like he's being tickled with an ostrich feather. And Mary Astor. Mary Astor. Maybe it's the character, I don't know. But it's possibly the worst femme fatale type that I've seen in a while. Yeah sure she's a murderer, but she doesn't have the attitude of a dangerous woman, she just runs around saying that she's dangerous: "I haven't lived a good life. I've been bad, worse than you could know." Puh-lease. She just pretends to be helpless but never shows the wolf under her wool, at least not on-camera. And she just annoyed the shit out of me. And all the "aha, you're lying, but guess what, i was lying to you, so we are all liars, haha! That was a lie!" stuff was grating, like bad guys and P.I.'s only have one trick up their sleeves. Guess what it is: lying. Like a lying liar. The cinematography was pretty decent, though, and Peter Lorre, who played Peter Lorre, was fun to watch in his role as Joel Cairo, also known as Peter Lorre.

Second up: More Bogart/Huston!

You'd think; same director, same actor, similar result? Not in the least. This one is a Western, but only so much as it takes place in the West (Mexico, to be exact). The film is almost flawless, actually: the script, performances, cinematography, pace, settings, so forth. Even Bogart is good, and usually I don't like him too much (it's the voice, really). The story, basically, is about a few homeless Americans who decide to go prospecting for gold, led by an older prospector. They begin with confidence and friendship, then descend into greed, mistrust, and eventually madness. Nearly every element is treated with maturity; from the depiction of the men's poor lives in the small hole-in-the-wall Mexican town where they're stuck to the reading of a letter in the pocket of a man who they had planned to kill, to the prospector's rescue of a young indian boy that saves him from the misery that the gold brings them. There is one drawn-out section of Bogart talking to himself that isn't the easiest thing to watch for lack of finesse, but other than that I can't find any criticism. Yeah, it's just that good.

And finally, something completely different:

Madcap screwballery that is wonderful to watch, but gets a bit too screwballed toward the end. Katherine Hepburn as a spunky young woman is surprising given what I'm used to from her, but she still completes the role perfectly, I can't imagine anyone else pulling it off. Likewise Cary Grant as an uptight scientist is delightful, since if you put him thick-rimmed glasses, he does look so awkward and boyish that you forget, for a moment, that under that he's Cary Grant. The scenes of just the two of them are the best, or better, the two of them with the leopard. The inclusion of other silly characters makes the film too loose and gets in the way of the developing love story between the two leads (though I adore the line "He can't do that, he's the only man I've ever loved!"), especially when it results in everyone getting thrown in jail, which is, um, clichéd. But if you have a free afternoon, watch it, it's one of the first movies that I've genuinely laughed at this much in a long while.

By the way, I'm listening to Martha Wainwrights eponymous debut, and it is quite good. Also, I'm tired, which means that I should get off the blog and go to bed. So here I go, off the blog, into bed.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

If I were queen then you and I'd be neighbors, I would pick you up each morning for doughnuts and tea

An album recommendation: My Brightest Diamond's output for this summer, A Thousand Shark's Teeth. Though it doesn't blow me away as much as Bring Me The Workhorse it's still got that great moody feeling that I love so much; and Shara Worden's vocals don't ever ever disappoint. I hate her for how good her voice is. Since I don't want to go into a long-winded review of the album, all I can say is this:

Have you guys seen the Romantics series on the BBC/PBS? No? Well, in the series, Mary Shelley was depicted as a beautiful woman writhing around crazily on her bed in a red satin gown. This gives you the impression that a night with Mary Shelly is full of opium and pretty colors, and the most mindblowingly physical sex you can imagine; the kind of sex that makes you question existence. This, to a somewhat lesser yet still powerful extent, is the impression that I got from Bring Me The Workhorse, it was just so different (to me at least) and had such a well-done cinematic feel that was beautiful in a polished but raw way, like madness that definitely had a method, a method so good that it seemed like madness all over again. With A Thousand Shark's Teeth, the method is still there, but there's less of the madness, though that works out just fine. The big orchestral feeling is more chamber-like, thanks to the help of a string quartet, and there's a thicker production quality on some tracks that seems reminiscent of Tear It Down, a group of remixes of the stuff. There's also a wider array of music here, and Worden is obviously borrowing from various styles, maremba, baroque, etc. It's all done as best as it could be done, albeit a little sleepier than I expected. So, to continue the metaphor, if Bring Me The Workhorse is the crazy rolling around on the bed Mary Shelley sex, then A Thousand Shark's Teeth is calmer but still fantastic after a few months of dating Mary Shelley sex. Yeah, that works perfectly.

Another thing of interest: I made Sachertorte! True, the chocolate glaze was not as thick as I'd want it to be, and making it was a giant mess of baking goods and abusing the standing mixer, but it was fantastically good and my mom, for whose birthday it was made, thought it was delicious. And really, if I had more time and wasn't trying to make it for a surprise, it would have turned out better and I would have had more time to enjoy the cooking, which I really did enjoy.

Oh, and I cut my hair. Ironically, on the same day that my 14-year-old brother was taken to a salon to get a $60 haircut. Yeah, I did it myself. Again.
Dr Crookedmouth to the OR, Stat!

It looks like it did while I was in France, only the front looks better. I took off about an inch from the bottom just to clean it up. Here's how it looked before, about two weeks ago:
Oxford, home of hot chicks and bicycles.

So it's less shaggy now. Also, I don't know who that girl on the left is. I look AWESOME.
And yeah, I promised Girl On The Left that I would grow it out this summer, which I might still do. The good thing is that the shortest layer in the back is down to my ears now, so it should grow out pretty even. Or keep it short, because that always looks good, right? Right?

God, I need to use this blog to talk about more interesting things. Like, why am I not writing right now? Because there are DVDs here. And I have torrents now? And........yeah. I'm gonna get going on that within the next week, for real. Right now I'm trying to get a job for the summer, and my expectations are being throttled by the boa constrictor of minimum wage part-time positions.