Talkin' trash to the garbage around me.

29 September, 2007

Totally and utterly non-random ten plus one playlist

I'm not leaving it up to iTunes to pick the songs today. Instead, I'd rather share some of the songs I'm regularly dialing up on the Pod and tell you why I'm digging them. And there's not a conservative or Catholic tune in the bunch.
  • "Welcome to the Terrordome" - Public Enemy: It's a rare song that captures a moment and place in time so vividly. Chuck D's apocalyptic recounting of the mean streets of New York back in the "bad old days" of the late '80s is perfectly complemented by the Bomb Squad's production, which evokes the cacophony of a disintegrating social environment.
  • "The Gash" - the Flaming Lips: The world's first and only psychedelic gospel march. I once read someone who stated that this song should be listened to very loud, sitting directly between the speakers after taking a giant bong rip. That sounds about right - the dense, swirling sounds perversely buoy the sweetness of of Wayne Coyne's plaintive lyrics.
  • "Windchimes" - Brian Wilson: Staying in the realm of psychedelia, this little gem from the Beach Boys' lost masterpiece (finally released in the last few years) manages to capture the expectancy of a person about to embark on a wild trip, focusing on the minutiae of the surrounding landscape until the world explodes around him.
  • "Caribou" - the Pixies: A narrative of self-loathing, the spartan production of this tune from their first EP creates a mournful atmosphere that accentuates the massive crescendo in the chorus, culminating in Black Francis's desperate cry of "Repent!"
  • "Negative Creep" - Nirvana: More self-loathing (but really, what in Nirvana's catalog isn't about that?), but furious. The only thing that would make this song more perfect is morphing back into an angry sixteen year, huffing glue, and flipping off my parents while listening to it.
  • "Bread and Roses" - Utah Phillips and Ani DiFranco: Of all the labor hymns, this is the one that affects me the most. This memorialization of the Lawrence mill strike is a stirring testament of feminine (and human) dignity that never fails to make my skin tingle or bring a mist to my eyes. DiFranco's sympathetic accompaniment only underscores Phillip's sonorous baritone.
  • "Must Be The Moon" - !!!: A wry accounting a hook-up born on the dancefloor, this song is sexy as fuck. It's a driving piece of dance punk made all the more compelling by the layers of processed guitar drone.
  • "Hey Ladies" - the Beastie Boys: A hilarious send-up of the quintessential cad, I think this song also conveys a real, erm... appreciation for the women (especially the "beatnik chicks just wearing their socks"). Add to that the multiple obvious and subtle pop cultural references and the funky-ass Dust Brothers' production, and you have a bona fide classic.
  • "Side with the Seeds" - Wilco: I've gone on before about how much I enjoy the laid-back, jammy feel of Wilco's latest, but this song stands out for me as featuring some of Jeff Tweedy's most soulful vocals to date.
  • "One Reporter's Opinion" - the Minutemen: "What could be romantic to Mike Watt?" I have no idea what the answer to d. boon's rhetorical question might be, but this song rides on Watt's rolling bass lines and boon's perfect delivery of surreal lyrics.
And your bonus #11:
  • "Common People" - William Shatner: You might be tempted to believe that I'm offering this track with an ironic wink. It is Captain Kirk, after all, and one could be excused, after his campy take of "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" and the atrocious "Rocket Man," for believing that this is just more self-indulgence. But this cover of the Pulp classic honestly rocks (witness the Shat's dueling with Pulp icon Joe Cocker). Does this make me post-postmodern? The song certainly is self-conscious, but Shatner's vocals nail the song's not so subtle contempt for rich hipsters. It's worth price of admission just to hear the Shat deliver the lines, "Laugh along with the common people/ Laugh along even though their laughing at you/ And all the stupid things that you do/ Because you think poor is cool" with such vitriolic cool. It really is a great track, and iTunes does a great disservice classifying it in the "comedy" genre.

So there you have it. Songs that are worth the $10.89 to download from the iTunes store, download from Napster, or steal from your favorite on-line pirate. Not that I condone that.

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24 August, 2007

So, what're you listening to?

The consequence of moving to a new metropolis, not knowing many people with common interests beyond work, and having the family gone is lots of one-on-one time with ye olde blog. I'll spare you the "pity poor wobs" post, and instead relay to you that the vivacious ms. wobs got me an iPod as an early birthday present, allowing me to enjoy my commutes without that troublesome human interaction... and we wonder why I'm not meeting any new people!

So this seems like an opportunity to tell you what I've found aurally interesting these past few months.

Sky Blue Sky - Wilco
Enough people have commented on the mellow 70's rock vibe of Tweedy & Co.'s latest album, so I won't repeat what they have to say. When I hear it, it leaves the impression that instead of going in to the studio in order to make The Next Great Wilco Record, they had a ton of fun with some great songs. It's an effortless listen, especially compared to previous outings, and I think it features some of Tweedy's best vocal performances to date.

Pink Flag - Wire
This is one of those punk classics I keep rediscovering. It's a perfect soundtrack to the relatively new experience (for me) of urban anomie.

OK Computer - Radiohead
This is one of those albums I know I should have spent more time with in the past. But wow, it's an emotive, dense listen that I could get lost in time and again, and at this point their melodic sensibilities hadn't gotten lost in the heroin-nod bleeps and bloops of their later albums.

Clouds Taste Metallic - The Flaming Lips
Their last album with Ronald Jones tends to get lost in the shuffle, sandwiched between the psychedelic punk bubblegum of Transmissions from the Satellite Heart, the wild experimentalism of Zaireeka, and the lush emotion of The Soft Bulletin. Be that as it may, it's one of my favorite Lips listens. The buzzsaw two guitar attack is complemented by an expanded sonic palette, and the lyrical content, while still showcasing Wayne Coyne's surreal narratives, takes on a surprisingly touching character, foreshadowing later albums. "Bad Days," the albums closing track, is one of my all-time favorite pick-me-ups.

Damaged - Lambchop
I haven't been able to stop listening to this since pattyjoe burned it for me. It's an astonishing subversion of the whole Nashville idiom. Where other bands can create a kaleidescope of moods from the sheer density of the music, Lambchop creates that same effect with its sparseness. It really is one of the most beautiful pieces of music I've ever heard.

So now you know, and to top it off, how about 10+1 randomly generated songs for shits and giggles?
  • Kim's Watermelon Gun - Flaming Lips
  • Army Bound - Ted Leo and the Pharmacists
  • We're Only Gonna Die - Bad Religion
  • My Heart and the Real World - the Minutemen
  • 21st Century (Digital Boy) - Bad Religion
  • Floating Boy - Fugazi
  • Old Master Painter/You Are My Sunshine - Brian Wilson
  • Melt Away - Galaxie 500
  • Something in the Way - Nirvana
  • Nine Bones - Hush Arbors
And your home alone on a Friday night #11:
  • Finger Lickin' Good - Beastie Boys

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02 August, 2007

Had to start re-loading music on a new computer 'cause the old hard drive crashed playlist

I haven't done one of these in a while, and what better way to celebrate the death of a hard drive than a random 10+1 song playlist? We'll hope that the data recovery pixies can salvage something from the other 'puter...
  • Surgeon's Girl - Wire
  • Magnolia Mountain - Ryan Adams & the Cardinals
  • On a Plain - Nirvana [live]
  • Don't Look Now - the Minutemen
  • Little Cream Soda - the White Stripes
  • Modern Man - Bad Religion
  • Rats - Sonic Youth
  • In the Cold, Cold Night - the White Stripes
  • Familiar Love - William Shatner
  • Brain Damage - Pink Floyd
And as always, your 80 GB bonus #11:
  • Low Side of the Road - Tom Waits

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07 March, 2007

Posted for no other reason than to post it playlist

As advertised:
  • I Got Rhythm - Louis Armstrong
  • One Endless Night - Jimmie Dale Gilmore
  • Paper Cuts - Nirvana
  • How Dark My Shadow's Grown - Bad Livers
  • A Visit from Drum - Liars
  • I Want to Conquer the World - Bad Religion
  • Changer - Stereolab
  • The Process - the Minutemen
  • Ballad of a Thin Man - Bob Dylan
  • Another Girl - the Beatles
And your completely meaningless outside of the context of this recurring blog feature bonus #11:
  • Rosebud - Ryan Adams

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07 February, 2007

Generic playlist

What, I need a reason to post a random playlist? Well, fine... the Employee Free Choice Act [H.R. 800] was introduced today. So here's your labor-law reform playlist!

Jeebus, that doesn't make any sense...
  • Polly - Nirvana
  • I Got Stoned and I Missed It - Freedom of Expression
  • Re-Ron - Gil Scott-Heron
  • Nowhere Near - Yo La Tengo
  • Offshoot - Dave Brubeck
  • I Am a Lonesome Fugitive - Leo Kottke
  • A Tear for Eddie - Ween
  • All the Young Dudes - David Bowie
  • Good Night - the Beatles
  • 1968 - Bill Frisell

You want me to end this with some sort of witty repartée about the EFCA? You've got to be kidding me. I'm not doing it.

Seriously.

Oh... fine. Recognized through card check, here's your bonus #11. Jerks.
  • Eat Starch Mom - Jefferson Airplane

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24 January, 2007

SOTU Playlist

Guess what I didn't watch tonight?

"My fellow Americans, I am pleased to report to you tonight that the state of our Union is rockin'!"
  • Change of Ideas - Bad Religion
  • The Abandoned Hospital Ship - Flaming Lips
  • Live at P.J.' - Beastie Boys
  • Wild Wild Life - Talking Heads
  • Let Down - Radiohead
  • K.C. Blues - Frank Hutchison
  • Change of the Century - Ornette Coleman
  • Looking Down the Barrel of a Gun - Beastie Boys
  • Love Song/Round Dance - Boy Joe Fayant
  • Pork and Beef - The Coup
And your ambitiously vague bonus #11!
  • Final Fight - Vida Blue

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03 January, 2007

Out there having fun in that warm California sun

Not that the noodle has been cranking along at 100% the last few weeks anyways, but I'm taking a brief blogging hiatus while the family goes down to Monterey to visit the father-in-law (plus a bonus day in San Francisco). Hopefully our trip down south won't have the many, many complications of our previous adventure. Fingers crossed.

At any rate, I'll be spending the next few days catching up on some more reading, tramping around Big Sur, probably re-visiting the aquarium, and viewing art at the SFMOMA. Expect a full report of the carnage - with pics! - as well as Punk Rock Monday, late Monday evening.

In the meantime, here's a playlist to tide you over. Happy New Year!
  • Axilla - Phish
  • Heroes and Villains - Brian Wilson
  • At the Movies - Bad Brains
  • Soul Letter - Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
  • Jimmy James - Beastie Boys
  • Pink Moon - Walt Mink
  • Hold On - Tom Waits
  • Jimmy Jazz - the Clash
  • Parsec - Stereolab
  • Anna Lee - Bad Livers
And your bonus #11:
  • Just a Little While to Stay Here - ReBirth Brass Band


[updated on January 2, 2006 at 11:56 PM]: Everyday heroism. Wow.

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30 December, 2006

My year in music, as witnessed by discs of 0s and 1s

DR wants to spread some bloggy-list goodness, and I'm happy to oblige. I'm going to expand to the definition of albums that I bought or was given by someone else (but I'll omit my shameless archiving of the local research library's music collection). As you can tell, most of acquisitions this year were dedicated to reliving the halcyon days of the, well... halcyon-fueled late 80s and early 90s:
  • The Minutemen - Post-Mersh, Vol. 3
  • The Minutemen - Double Nickels on the Dime
  • Willie Nelson -The Red Headed Stranger
  • The Ramones - Hey! Ho! Let's Go!: Anthology
  • Morphine - The Best of Morphine
  • Justin Timberlake - FutureSex/LoveSounds
  • Dept. of Energy - [Eponymous EP]
  • Inkwell Rhythm Makers - En-Ragophonic
  • G. Love & Special Sauce - G. Love & Special Sauce
  • The Beatles - Love
  • The Flaming Lips - At War with the Mystics
  • Beck - The Information
  • Wilco - Kicking Television
  • Nirvana - Bleach
  • The White Stripes - Get Behind Me Satan
  • The Walkmen - A Hundred Miles Off
  • Wire - Pink Flag
  • Silkworm - It'll Be Cool
  • Mississippi John Hurt - Avalon Blues
  • The Humblebums - The New Humblebums
  • Bad Brains - Banned in DC: Greatest Hits
  • Fugazi - End Hits
  • Thom Yorke - The Eraser
  • Sonny Rollins - A Night at the Village Vanguard
  • They Might Be Giants - No!
  • They Might Be Giants - Here Come the ABCs
  • Blackalicious - Blazing Arrow

Passing the baton on to y'all, ash, dave, and pattyjoe.

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28 December, 2006

The return of the random playlist

It's baaa-ack!
  • Frankie Says - Phish
  • Think for Yourself - the Beatles
  • Come as You Are - Nirvana
  • Mister Would You Please Help My Pony - Ween
  • Cannonball Rag - Bad Livers
  • When I Fall in Love - Miles Davis
  • To Ramona - Bob Dylan
  • We Shall Overcome - Dorothy Cotton
  • Joplin's Sensation - Mutt Carey & His New Yorkers
  • Everything Happens to Me - Charlie Parker
And like the bow on a package, your bonus #11:
  • I'm in Great Shape/I Wanna Be Around/Workshop - Brian Wilson

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23 December, 2006

Blogger's block playlist: to the lovely #2

I still haven't resolved my issues with Wimpy's new random workings (really, it's not Wimpy, it's me). I was comfortable with the old Wimpy, and while the new Wimpy isn't bad, per se, it's different. It is more Mac-like, and while in-and-of-itself, that's not bad, I'm not really interested in having my computer to be more Mac-like. Had I wanted a Mac, I would've bought one two years ago, but I didn't. Not that there's anything wrong with Macs... I'm shutting up about this now - I have no particular allegiance to any particular OS, and if pressed, I'll just cop to being a Linux pirate.

Anyways, this non-random playlist is an homage to Track 2. Often in the shadow of the stage-setting opening track, and never, it seems, directly drawing the spotlight to itself, a well-placed Track 2 can be the difference between a good and great album:
  • Dear Prudence - the Beatles
  • Unconsciously Screamin' - the Flaming Lips
  • Pay No Mind (Snoozer) - Beck
  • Fat Mama - Herbie Hancock
  • Bodies - the Sex Pistols
  • Crosseyed and Painless - Talking Heads
  • Walkin' (For Your Love) - Widespread Panic
  • High Time - the Grateful Dead
  • I'm So Bored With the U.S.A. - the Clash
  • Pilgrimage - R.E.M.
And your bonus #11 #2:
  • Kamera - Wilco
Got any favorite #2s?

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15 December, 2006

Anti-playlist

A few events have conspired to make me temporarily eschew the random playlist feature on ye olde - or rather, ye updated - Wimpy. The good folks up in Redmond, WA felt it necessary to "improve" their Media Player this week, and the new random play feature isn't to my liking. They completely threw off the random chi, and until I grow comfortable with this strange, new randomness, I can't subject you, dear reader, to the unpredictable whims of an application I don't fully trust.

So instead, I'm going with whole albums. Because albums are where it's at. On tonight's playlist:
  • This Year's Model - Elvis Costello & the Attractions
    Sometimes you just want to bop around to fun tunes. Sometimes you're in the mood for something more literate. With Elvis Costello, you can do both.
  • Extra Width - Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
    The Blues Explosion ranks right up there with the Stones in producing really raw, libidinal, sleazy blues-based rawk. There's a lot of throw-away filler on this album, but on tunes like "Afro" and "Soul Typecast," they nail some of the fattest nasty blues grooves around.
  • Document - R.E.M.
    To be a southerner of our generation, as ash points out, is to love R.E.M. My first ever "real" concert (I don't count seeing the Monkees on their reunion tour with my mom!) was seeing R.E.M in the eighth grade at the Tennessee Theater in Knoxville, right after Document came out. To second ash again, R.E.M. actually made you feel proud to be a southerner, and Document, to me, was something of a manifesto for the "New South" (anyone remember that particular PR gambit?). It's hard to describe to people how vital the Athens-Atlanta area was during the late 80s/early 90s - especially in hindsight. Anyways, I love this album.

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08 December, 2006

Kiss and make up playlist

  • San Francisco - Secondhand Jive
  • I'm a Steady Rollin' Man - Robert Johnson
  • Ash Can Blues - Cliff Carlisle
  • You Ain't Goin' Nowhere - Bob Dylan
  • Cinderella's Big Score [Live] - Sonic Youth
  • Come Back Baby - Hot Tuna
  • I Don't Wanna Be a Soldier - John Lennon
  • Desolation Row - Bob Dylan
  • Jacksonville Blues - Barbecue Bob
  • Croton-Harmon (Local) - Walt Mink
And, singin' the metal heavy and fuckin' the U.S. Army, your bonus #11:
  • Formal Introduction - fIREHOSE

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28 November, 2006

Snowy Monday playlist

As I write this, a substantial (by Eugene standards) bit of snow lies on the ground, meaning my bike commute tomorrow will be, erm... interesting. So here we go!
  • James and Wes - Wes Montgomery
  • Au Grand Jour' - Stereolab
  • Dear Someone - Gillian Welch
  • I Shook Hands - the Minutemen
  • I'm Looking Through You - the Beatles
  • Instrumental - Pavement
  • Comanche - Cake
  • Clash City Rockers - the Clash
  • Concierto de Aranjuez - Miles Davis
  • Carnival - Tom Waits
And your ice cold bonus #11:
  • Love You Better - Walt Mink

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16 November, 2006

Music to plan your meal by

I'm putting together ye olde Thanksgiving feastravaganza. And making the thoughts oh so much more delicious, behold:
  • Teo - Miles Davis
  • Hose - Alice Donut
  • Raga Kaushi Kanada: Bhajana (Tala Rupaka) - Lakshmi Shanker & S. Nageshkar
  • 12XU - Wire
  • Sonnymoon For Two - Sonny Rollins
  • Velvet Goldmine - David Bowie
  • Million Dollars - Thinking Fellers Union Local #282
  • Heart of Mine (Live) - Bob Dylan
  • Champagne and Reefer - Dickens
  • I Fall in Love Too Easily - Miles Davis
And like a scoop of vanilla ice cream is to a piece of warm apple pie, so your bonus #11 is to this Miles Davis sandwich of a playlist:
  • D.'s Car Jam/Anxious Mo-Fo - the Minutemen
Ah, good ole bonus #11. We all know the importance of Track 1 on an album, and "D.'s Car Jam/Anxious Mo-Fo" is one of the all time greats. Other favorite Track 1s I have are "Silent Kit" leading off Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain, Beck's "Loser," and just about every Beatles album has a picture-perfect lead-off track.

Got any favorite Track 1s? Perhaps a Track 1 Playlist?

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11 November, 2006

The "Holy Crap! We won an election!" playlist

The "Wimpy" decides to be strangely relevant tonight!
  • Jesus, etc. - Wilco
  • I Shall Not Be Moved - The Word
BTW - if you haven't picked up the Word's eponymous album, do so. It's a supergroup (comprised of members of the North Mississippi All-Stars, John Medeski, and pedal steel phenom Robert Randolph) that does up some gospel standards. Really great stuff.
  • Avalon Blues - Mississippi John Hurt
  • Buzzard Pie - Rudy & His Orchestra Green
  • Enfant - Ornette Coleman
  • Pompeii Am Götterdämmerung - Flaming Lips
  • My Melancholy Baby - Charlie Parker
  • Stockholm Syndrome - Yo La Tengo
  • The Tourist - Radiohead
  • It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine) - REM
And surfing in on a Blue, Blue wave, your bonus #11:
  • Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll - Bob Dylan

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01 November, 2006

Spooooooooky Halloween Playlist

Unlike ash's mood-sensitive iTunes, the old WMP (or "Wimpy," as I like to call it) doesn't seem to have the same sense of occassion that us sentient types have:
  • Yellow Submarine - The Beatles
  • Roll on the Ground - Thaddeus C. Willingham, Jr.
  • Fourth of July - Galaxie 500
  • Flamenco Fling - Natalie MacMaster
  • Down - Swell
  • New Orthophony - Stereolab
  • Up on Cripple Creek - The Band
  • Midnight Indigo - Duke Ellington
  • L.A. - Widespread Panic
  • Go with Me to That Land - Blind Willie Johnson
And your CHUD-like bonus #11:
  • Subterranean Homesick Blues - Bob Dylan
Boo! What's spinning for you on the day for all saints?

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26 October, 2006

Cozy fall evening playlist

A random playlist as colorful as the leaves on the bike path...
  • Fillmore Jive - Pavement
  • Betray - Minor Threat
  • Flux=Rad - Pavement
  • It Makes No Difference - The Band
  • Good Morning, Good Morning - The Beatles
  • Joyful Sounds - The Word
  • Raga Vasanta: Jhampa Tala (Vina) - Asad Ali Khan & Gopal Das
  • Different To Me - Wire
  • Ash Can Blues - Cliff Carlisle
  • Pictures of Pandas Painting - They Might Be Giants
And the proverbial little red caboose, your bonus #11:
  • Tennessee Blues - Bill Monroe
What's playing on your digital music device?

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17 October, 2006

Special Request Playlist

Because some people (including me!) actually enjoy this!
  • Six Feet Down - Bad Livers
  • Casey Jones - Jerry Garcia & David Grisman
  • Recap Modotti - Fugazi
  • Rhymin and Stealin - Beastie Boys
  • Stand Together - Beastie Boys
Almost 4,000 songs, over ten days worth of music, and I get a doubleshot of the Beasties - not that I'm complaining. I just find it to be highly, highly improbable.
  • Music Always - Ornette Coleman
  • Found a Job - Talking Heads
  • Summer Song - Dave Brubeck
  • Home Motel - Willie Nelson
  • Real - William Shatner
And adding a certain je ne sais quoi to the proceedings, your bonus #11:
  • Taxman - the Beatles
What's randomly spinning in your neck of the woods?

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