Tuesday, November 27, 2007

A bunch of Eels news related to Mark Oliver Everett and a documentary about his late father.

Some youtube clips here and here.

An interview with New Scientist, and a piece by E from the Times UK
I’m a singer and songwriter in a rock band called Eels. I never knew much about physics and my father was a complete mystery to me, even though I lived in the same house with him for 18 or 19 years. He rarely spoke. He was an ever-present lump of flesh sitting at the dining room table every night writing out crazy calculations on a pad of paper. That’s about all I saw of him.
I seem to remember people claiming that Eels were a ripoff of Beck back at the beginning, but listening to that last Beck album, I thought it sounded like Eels.

Monday, November 26, 2007

I just finished reading A Magnificent Catastrophe: The Tumultuous Election of 1800, America's First Presidential Campaign. It was engaging and pretty well done popular history. Especially interesting in light of the current situation with Russia and Putin, not so totally dissimilar. The changing of election law (i.e. how the electors for each state were to be selected) throughout the campaign is something that it probably not so well known.

Also, Larson does a pretty good job of providing evidence that Thomas Jefferson may have been the Hillary Clinton of his day. I mean, it seems like half the country really hated that atheistic, infidel, Jacobin guy.
We saw American Gangster yesterday. It was pretty much what you'd expect. Pretty good, but sort of in line with all those Academy Award winning movies I haven't seen. Wow, I haven't seen 8 out of the last 10 "Best Pictures". But I don't feel like I'm missing much...

Also, I'm pretty sure there will be deleted scenes on the DVD release...
The WFMU blog has links to a bunch of neat Andy Kaufman stuff.
Wednesday night we went to go see The Hold Steady and Art Brut at Terminal 5.

It was satisfyingly good; both bands seem to be perpetually on the verge of becoming uninteresting/annoying to me, but they've managed to maintain their appeal on the basis of fun.

The middle of the Hold Steady set included a bunch of new songs. A big part of the overall Hold Steady concept seems to be the recurring characters and cross references between songs. New song Stay Positive seemed to take this to an almost Destroyer-esque level. I guess it makes the new songs seem less new when there are lots of reference points built in.

Art Brut are still more enjoyable than I thought they'd be by now. The setlist was obviously from a can as they had powerpoint projections for each song and a bunch of the banter. Still a lot of songs are so recognizable and fun that they feel like hits.

You can listen to the Washington DC sets from the bands at NPR.

The Washington Post has an A to Z Hold Steady Glossary.

Photos by Ezwai Flickr

Saturday, November 24, 2007

I've never felt guilty about lurking around internet message boards and discussion lists, but in case you have, Virginia Heffernan of the NY Times discusses...
The English soccer team's performance against Croatia turned out to be fairly dismal, but apparently Croatians have a good sense of humor, as evidenced by reaction to a pregame mess-up of their national anthem.
Tony Henry, the opera singer tasked with singing the national anthems before England’s game with Croatia earlier this week, has become an unlikely hero of the Croatian game after appearing to make a somewhat risque slip of the tongue while belting out the nation’s tune.

The singer, from St Albans, Hertfordshire, should have sung “Mila kuda si planina”, which translates roughly as “You know my dear how we love your mountains”. Instead, he appears to have sung “Mila kura si planina”, which, although moderately nonsensical, can be interpreted as “My dear, my penis is a mountain”.
Here's an article.
Remember the attack on quirk? The Guardian blog gets around to a defense

Here's a Wes Anderson interview, covering both the Darjeeling Limited and Fantastic Mr. Fox

How involved are you in the actual animation process?

WA: My job is first to write the script, and then to record and edit the voices. And then I'm responsible for designing the environment and I have an art director I'm working with on that, costume designers and character designers. There are different people who are in charge of these departments. And then I work on planning the shots and the storyboards. There's a guy named Marc Gustavson who's the director of animation, and he's the one who really will take this puppets and make them seem alive and he oversees a team of animators. So I have my own ideas about what to do there, but he brings a great deal of experience into that and he's really the guy who's in charge when the puppets start moving around.

The Guardian on "the wall coming down" between comics and film

The Lavender Diamond girl is going to be in a Tom Hanks movie

Billy Collins wrote a poem about eating Fish, it's in the NY Times Magazine

My Thanksgiving was dominated by the sounds of Guitar Hero. (I didn't play it; my younger siblings did for about a day and a half non stop, and loudly.) Coincidentally, the NY Times Magazine has an article.

And the NY Times talked to Umberto Eco

Do you see yourself mainly as a novelist?
I feel that I am a scholar who only with the left hand writes novels.

I've got a bunch more tabs to close, but later...

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

some details on new Mountain Goats album over here
some song titles: Heretic Pride, In the Craters on the Moon, Lovecraft in Brooklyn, How to Embrace a Swamp Creature, Marduk T-Shirt Men's Room Incident
For religious types, Harry Potter controversy may have just been a warmup for The Golden Compass.

I'm not convinced that the talking bear et al is really going to convince any kid of the invalidity of religion any more than a talking lion will save anyone's soul.

Pullman is so overt that I guess I can admire his ability to manipulate the praise and fear his work has garnered....

Still, I think I generally feel that they are the kind of thing that exist to make people feel like they're smart for having read them/participated in their culture.

But, maybe not quite as bad a situation as the adults who claimed that J.K. Rowling was doing some great literary writing in an absurd attempt to validate their own reading....

Sunday, November 18, 2007


Friday night we went to go see the Freewheeling Yo La Tengo show in Williamsburg, and it was everything I hoped it would be.

The band played seated and answered questions in between songs. I think the setup made Georgia the star of this show, but there were moments that led audience members to comment that "that song sounded like you were standing up". YLT also revealed that they are just as happy to have a quiet audience rather than a dancing audience. Overall, the show was kind of like recent Mountain Goats shows where there was a lot of banter but then very quiet during songs.

The Hanukkah shows all sold out very early this year and so I'm not going, but this was the special Yo La Tengo show of the year for me.

The show was at that new Music Hall place that replaced Northsix in Williamsburg, and it was pretty nicely set up but eerie how much the overall design took from the Bowery Ballroom.

Photo from yolatreacy flickr.

The Jennifer O'Connor Myspace has some streaming covers, including Stockholm Sweden and an Elliott Smith track.

A good week of Daytrotter sets, with Magic Numbers and Emma Pollock following Okkervil River.

I'm really not too impressed with this Amazon Top 100 books of the year list.
Knuffle Bunny Too as the kidlit pick? Not really the one book I'd pick for such a list.

British papers are reviewing The Book of Other People, created by all the trendy writers and graphic novelists

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Drew Carey's going to bring innovation to American soccer?! He's the part owner of a forthcoming Seattle MLS team:

Carey wanted to allow fans to buy memberships that would allow them to, among other things, vote on the fate of the team's general manager.

"If you don't like the job he's doing, if he doesn't have a winning team, if you don't like the product, if you don't think the hot dogs taste good when you go to the stadium, you can just vote him out," Carey said, with co-owner and general manager Adrian Hanauer grinning in the background.

"We're not afraid to let the fans have the power," Carey added.

This is actually how some big European clubs run things. Apparently the Seattle team will also have a marching band.


The Hives have a free mp3 at Amazon. A few clicks to get to, but dumb commercial fun.

New Radar Brothers album in January.

Marvel Comics is doing a digital subscription thing.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Did YA author John Green get imitated on TV?

And from the emusic blog, info on a bizarre Spiderman album. I'm out of downloads right now, so I haven't taken a taste.

a special soccer goal from the past, via my dad
So, the Coen Brothers think that No Country for Old Men is not really a Western.

Still, the movie scared me enough that I don't feel the need to explore the great American west by myself anytime soon.
Okkervil River did a Daytrotter session....3 covers included
Pitchfork interviews Craig Finn and Eddie Argos...that Thanksgiving Eve combo show should be an entertaining time

The New Yorker on No Age

Publishers Weekly has a Best Of
Childrens Books 2007 online now

The Jewish Museum has a William Steig exhibit on now
This article has an update on Wes Anderson's forthcoming adaptation of Fantastic Mr. Fox, supposedly in the works for a decade...

Sunday, November 11, 2007

George Saunders on American elections

We saw No Country for Old Men this afternoon, and I left impressed and on board with most of the critical praise.

I haven't read the Cormac McCarthy novel, so I can't comment on the adaptation, but it definitely seems like a return to form for the Coen Brothers. It feels like a refinement of their earlier work, a bit less obvious humor than Fargo and a bit more directly related to Blood Simple or Miller's Crossing. Really violent, well constructed and thoughtful.

Official site
The NY Times Magazine seems to be about movies, and particularly Westerns
and includes Jonathan Lethem's thoughts on "the greatest death scene"

The Fall Children's Books issue is also online, and includes the Best Illustrated Books Slideshow

Also, Noah Baumbach made a new movie

And, bands as brands. Which the moneymaking ones probably always were...



Sunday, November 04, 2007

Yesterday we went to BAM to see the Sufjan Stevens show. The first part was the multimedia BQE experience...an orchestral work composed by SS, presented with video footage and five hula hoopers. The hoopers had a costume change. The hoops were on sale for $40. SS didn't want to leave the hoops/BQE connection up to the minds of the audience...he published an essay about the connection in the program and online.

I saw this article a few days ago:
The Lamest Pop-Classical Crossovers in Music History
although I wonder: what are the "great" pop-classical crossovers?

Anyway, the SS composition was amusing in parts in conjunction with the overall presentation, but not really memorable. Parts of it were just too loud.

We saw the Elvis Costello orchestral thing at BAM a few years ago, so it's an obvious point for comparison. I think the Elvis Costello piece was probably a bit more boring overall, but probably a bit more tasteful. I don't need to hear either of those orchestral pieces again, but they were good excuses to see each artist in the BAM space.

After an intermission, SS played the hits. His "band" proper was pared down a bit from the last times I'd seen him, but of course it was augmented by the orchestra. I didn't think the set choices and arrangements were particularly great, although I like the songs. Again, bits were just too loud, in an out of place way. While a couple horns complemented the songs before, a bigger brass section was pretty much unnecessary and counterproductive. There were also irritating "banging on the piano" moments during intros and outros that didn't add much. When SS does noise, it doesn't really work. I also think his arrangements of late (e.g. the ring them bells cover on the I'm Not There soundtrack) are a bit too much and need paring back. I think Ring The Bells may be my least favorite song on that soundtrack.

It's nice that BAM kept the cheap (balcony) tickets decently priced on these shows...$20 was about right for this show. They probably could have charged more but didn't...I feel better about the price for this show than $50 for football fields away from the White Stripes at MSG.

The NY Times saw the BQE

"CDs — who knows if you're going to be able to play a CD in 20 or 30 years? Come the apocalypse, they'll certainly be useless. Maybe people in millennia to come will find all these CDs embedded in clay and they'll think they're part of some big spinal column. They'll think they're vertebrae. 'We've found a lot of these things and we're constructing our idea of what kind of beast it was that had these in their back, rows of Doobie Brothers and Michael Jackson and Celine Dion CDs, making up some kind of spine.'

"Whereas vinyl, I'm figuring that any smart mind from the future or from another galaxy — or both — will be able to figure out, 'OK, this is some sort of rotating tablet. Let's put it on a wheel.' Somebody smart would drop a pin in there and could listen to it. Of course, they might accidentally play it backwards."

Amusing quotes from Robyn Hitchcock


Here's a Fiery Furnaces interview

If anything, you’re one of the few groups trying to escape the confines of a traditional rock band.
MF: We don’t try hard enough. We don’t have the solution to the rock problem of four people in a van coming to play in a club. We rearrange our songs in concert, but we still just go up and play. That’s not very interesting.

Stream S Malkmus's take on Ballad of a Thin Man
I don't think I necessarily agree with the entire commentary (I'm fine with the Cat Power song) but overall it's a good writeup.

The video for Marissa Nadler's Bird on Your Grave

Chris Ware designed Sundays with Walt and Skeezix, a Gasoline Alley collection

For lack of a better analogy, some writers tell stories and other writers write -- that is, they try to capture the texture and feeling of life within the limited means of their literary tools, and the story lives somewhere within. To my mind, King was really the first real "writer" in the comics, and its in these vista-filling sunday pages that he allows himself to write most eloquently. How many other cartoonists would dare make the colors of autumn the subject of their work? How lucky were the readers who received these temporary observations of life on their doorsteps every week; it seems almost inconceivable now that strips trading on such tenderness appeared in common newspapers.Which is not to say that Gasoline Alley is not funny.

A common complaint about we cartoonists writing about and citing our forebears' influence is that we highlight "sensitive" qualities in strips that others see as negligible (i.e. the deep empathy of Peanuts, for example.) In our defense, we're only picking out elements and tones that might not be otherwise immediately obvious. That's only because we really love what we're reading and writing about, and worry that these feelings might be lost in the visual translation. Here, however, there is no translation; this is how King's pages -- and Walt and Skeezix -- were always meant to be seen, read ... and felt.

Chris Ware also designed a poster
for the The Savages movie (Laura Linney/Philip Seymour Hoffman)

Here's a NY Times article on the Sweeney Todd adaptation

This week's George Saunders from the Guardian


Thursday, November 01, 2007

I purchased the I'm Not There soundtrack from itunes; my first album download in forever. There are bonuses, including a S Malkmus and L Ranaldo take on "What Kind of Friend Is This"...
so far, rated: worthwhile.

Stream the non-bonus-parts soundtrack here


Also today came news (with typically questionable grammar) of the forthcoming Malkmus + Jicks album, out in March 2008....

THe jicks finished finished finished NEW album. Its titled "REal EMotional TRash".
ONe HOur of Us--TOo much for my mirror???? ITs will be officially released in March. WIth a tour of the USA co-in-side-ing