Archive for the ‘Various and Sundry’ Category

Friday Five: Getting Shit Done

Friday, August 1st, 2008

Awhile back, I mentioned on twitter that I have a “gettting shit done” playlist in my iTunez. Here’s a sampling of said playlist.

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Track Listing:

  1. Hoppípolla by Sigur Rós on Takk…
  2. The Adjustor by The Octopus Project on One Ten Hundred Thousand Million
  3. Fallout by The Futureheads on News And Tributes
  4. Call Me Up by on Fancy Footwork
  5. Ibi Dreams of Pavement (A Better Day) by Broken Social Scene on Broken Social Scene

Thao at the Independent

Friday, August 1st, 2008

I have to admit, I didn’t know Thao Nguyen’s music very well before last night. I also wasn’t that impressed by it. Don’t get me wrong, I liked it, I just wasn’t impressed by it.

Then I saw Thao play it live. I realized then that she’s a tremendous guitar player, singer and songwriter. But don’t take my word for it. Judge for yourself:

Get more on myspace.

The Hold Steady at Mezzanine, 2008-07-29

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

Fellow jacketeer Ali and I went to see The Hold Steady at Mezzanine last night. Some words:

  1. Dude - As in, what 99% of the people in attendance were.
  2. Rock - What i love about THS is their willingness to play straightforward rock music (music that my parents would recognize as rock) in an age of self-conscious restraint.
  3. Joy - As Craig Finn said from the stage: “there is much joy in this”. THS are about as far from shoegaze as you can get
  4. Resurrection - After the show i told someone that it felt like a revival. But my favorite song is “How a Resurrection Really Feels”

The Hold Steady - How a Resurrection Really Feels

Friday Five: Back

Friday, July 25th, 2008

No theme this time. Just stuff I like.

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Track list:

  1. Going through the Motions by Aimee Mann
  2. For Real by Okkervil River on Black Sheep Boy
  3. Swagger by Calla on Collisions
  4. Sequestered In Memphis by The Hold Steady on Stay Positive
  5. Born To Be Your Man by Birdmonster on From The Mountain To The Sea

Friday Five: Stay Positive, Bitches

Friday, June 13th, 2008

I know its Friday the 13th, but you have to stay positive.

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  1. Perfect by Rogue Wave from Out of the Shadow
  2. Leaving Tennessee by Dusty Rhodes & The River Band from First You Live
  3. Put Us Back Together Right by Headlights from Kill Them With Kindness
  4. The Taming Of The Hands That Came Back To Life by Sunset Rubdown from Random Spirit Lover
  5. Stay Positive by The Hold Steady from Stay Positive

Friday Five: Sasquatch Hangover

Friday, May 30th, 2008

Sorry for the lack of posts recently. Many of us have been traveling, including going to Sasquatch Music Festival. Great times were had by all. Now enjoy the mixtape.

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Tracks:

You’ll Find a Way by Santogold from Santogold

I’ve been hearing about Santogold for awhile, and like fellow Jacket Attackee Ali, I’ve only recently listened to the album. Wow, I was missing out– it’s catchy and energetic without being simplistic or formulaic.

Gobbledigook by Sigur Ros

This is a new track from Sigur Ros, from their forthcoming album, með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust (roughly translated: “with a buzz in our ears we play endlessly”). It’s the first song they’ve released that’s writing in English (and maybe the first one to have “real” words). A nice departure from the usual stuff (which is good too), that takes them to a more raw and natural sound. I can’t wait for the album. (found via stereogum)

Another Radio Song by Okkervil River from Black Sheep Boy Appendix

I saw Okkervil River play for the first last weekend at the Sasquatch Music festival. If you don’t know their music, you should. That is all.

Nicest Thing by Kate Nash on Made of Bricks

I always forget that I have a crush on Kate Nash, until I listen to her music again. It’s deep and soulful despite being popular and accessible. She writes meaningful lyrics with catchy hooks and, most importantly, has fun while doing it.

Rooftops by Pela on Anytown Graffiti

I, along with fellow Jacket Attackee Aubrey discovered Pela on accident at Sasquatch. We were trying to go see The Little Ones play, but didn’t have a schedule on us and misremembered the time. I’m glad we did.

The funny thing about putting this mixtape together is that the intro to this song is the one that sounds the most like Sigur Ros.

Daily YACHT

Monday, May 5th, 2008

If you’re a fan of YACHT (all caps, but not an acronym, anymore), you should check out their flickr account, where they’re posting a series of videos from behind the scenes:

Leslie Feist on the Colbert Report

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

Canadian (and American) indie rock singer-songwriter Leslie Feist recently appeared on the Colbert Report. After an interview, where they talk about her dual citizenship, the iPod commercial, etc., she plays an acoustic version of I Feel it All.

Oh yeah, and Colbert wears the blue spangley outfit from the 1, 2, 3, 4 video. Enjoy:

Hella: Coachella 2008, Day 1 (part a)

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

It’s Year 2 (for me) of the Coachella festival out in Indio, CA. While underwhelmed on several of the headliners, there are some great day shows that’ll make the trip worth it.  After all, when else do you get your pick of 2-3 great performances at any given moment? And to start the trip off right, we were next to Steve Tyler in a Maserati on the drive in!   On with the shows….

Cut Copy (on Modular People)

I heard from some coworkers whose taste I trust that Cut Copy put on several great, energetic shows at SXSW. Their neo-new wave would be a fun way to get the festival kicked off for me, right?  Mmmm, no.  Even though they were on my “Must See” list for Coachella, what I got was disappointing. 

Thoughts from the show: Nice music, but I don’t really consider standing on stage and playing instruments a performance. 

Múm (on Fat Cat Records)

I love Mum.  I love their last album, I loved their albums from before, I love Icelandic music.  These guys did NOT disappoint.  The instrumentation was out of this world and I’m still trying to figure out how they got a baby grand piano on stage.  At any given moment there were people playing guitars, violins, kazoos, harmonicas, synths, cellos, percussion, that little keyboard you blow into and play (GOD what’s it called?), recorders and more. 

Thoughts from the show: there are a couple “oh jesus” notes in the high stratosphere of the female vocal range that left you scrambling for earplugs.  BOTH the ladies had accomplished upper registers. Their music is a little reminiscent of Cirque de Soelil. The live performance of ‘The Ballad of a Broken Birdie Records = goosebumps. With enough of those air powered piano things, it sounds exactly like bagpipes. This is a band that actually knows how to use dynamics, loud and soft, to the correct effect.  These dynamics actually bring the audience along emotionally with the swells and diminishing of songs. Mum is the perfect mix of dissonance and sweet melody, sampling with live, music and sheer noise. Somehow they manage to tie it all together with a mini-cover of “I Can’t Get Enough of You Darlin”.  Final thought?  I never want to hear 4 kazoos playing at the same time on a sound system this large ever again. 

Download Dancing Behind My Eyelids from Go Go Smear the Poison Ivy, Mum’s last record (which coincidentally, I did some marketing for previously).

 

Goldfrapp (on MUTE)

If some people are genetically predisposed to love Goldfrapp, I was born without the gene.  After standing awkwardly and wedged into the tent for her show, we left after one song.  Sorry lady, it’s not you, it’s me. And frankly it sounds like it took you too long to get to your upbeat stuff.  Because with what I heard, Goldfrapp=Mirah.

The Raconteurs (on XL Records/Warner Bros)

Many, many, many yards and feet and a ways off from the actual main stage, you couldn’t help from getting the feeling that Jack White was going to be a musician who would grow only to become more and more legendary within our lifetime.  He’s already quite accomplished with 2 albums out now with The Raconteurs and even more with the White Stripes but he manages to bring to his performances a quality that many musicians don’t exhibit nowadays.  I only wished we had been closer and stayed around for more of the set, but the handful of songs that were enjoyed were fantastic.  

Thoughts from the show: This band is everything you need to have a great rock performance: loud, unpolished, raw, and most importantly cocky. Their enthusiasm for the music is displayed clearly in their lack of enthusiasm for the crowd.  It seems like they could be practicing in the garage and they could care less that we were there watching them.  It was ruckus nonetheless. 

ACK!  The thing about Coachella is that there are only so many hours in the day.  The rest of mine will be spent seeing more shows and not finishing this entry.  There are more reviews from Friday coming so stay tuned for Santogold, Datarock, Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings, Spank Rock (or not) and Fatboy Slim. 

Friday Five: warm weather

Friday, April 25th, 2008

There’s some nice warm weather going on here in San Francisco. You should go out and enjoy it. Or listen to this mixtape. Or neither.

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Tracks

  1. Pony Ride by The Crash on Pony Ride
  2. Crumble by Dinosaur Jr. on Beyond
  3. Uncalibrated by bridges and powerlines on Ghost Types
  4. Blackout Curtain by Now It’s Overhead on Now It’s Overhead
  5. Juno by Tokyo Police Club on Elephant Shell