Monday, October 7, 2013
Sunday, October 6, 2013
Screw the Helmet Law - Schlitz Family Robinson
Recorded in 1997! Holy Crap, and we just got around to doing a "video" now.
1000 Homo DJ's - Supernaught
Because I'm highly-caffeinated and feeling old school. I love this pretty much as much as I love the original.
Saturday, October 5, 2013
The Rejected Theme to VideoDrome - Schlitz Family Robinson
The first finished product of Mr. Brown and I working on new Schlitz Family Robinson!
Torment Teaser Trailer
Via Bloody Disgusting (I haven't had time to go to that site in ages and look what I've been missing!). I love the Ginger Snaps movies, especially #2 even though we'll likely never get a continuation of that mind-fuck ending, and so I love Katharine Isabelle. I haven't quite had the time or the guts to watch American Mary yet, and this just looks... awesome but possibly on the outskirts of places I'm no longer really comfortable going with films. Torture porn no but excessive pain and suffering? Maybe. We'll see. I LOVE the concept of torn-off stuffed animal heads as masks though.
| image courtesy of imdb.com |
Author & Punisher - Lonely live at the Fillmore
Another newly-released Author & Punisher video, also via Metal Sucks. I liked the other one I just posted quite a bit (guess I'm in that Author/Punisher mood) but I LOVE this one.
Author & Punisher NTG Part 2 Live at the Fillmore
Via Metal Sucks. This reminds me very much of Gub-era Pigface at the start, then it just deteriorates into a hellish plasma of primordial anguish. I don't always dig Author & Punisher - that's not quite the correct way to say it. The man's music simply requires a very specific state of mind for me to get into it. But when I get into it, it's like a bottomless pit - one of the only current artists I would consider to be carrying on and adding to the Industrial genre.
Treehouse of Horror XXIV Intro by Guillermo del Toro
See what I mean? I haven't really had any interest in watching the Simpsons in years. I love seasons 3-around 10 or 11, then that's just kind of enough for me personally. The odd episode here and there can be cool, but it's just not something that factors in much. But this... del Toro is just a God.
Video Introduction to Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities
This man can really do no wrong in my eyes. Not many people can so wonderfully translate the dark fantasy concepts that linger and skulk through their subconscious/imaginations.
1971 Schlitz Beer Commercials A-Plenty
Working on new Schlitz Family Robinson material with Mr. Brown at Dysfunctional Fuckhouse studios West Coast (my spare room).
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Savages - I AM Here - Pitchfork TV
First night in a while I've gotten to sit down and flip through the internet for interesting tidbits to post (primarily because I'm blowing off about a half dozen other things I should be doing. This will end the night and give me some time to answer some emails and do a little bit of writing.
What a way to end though, eh?
Imperial Triumphant - Crushing the Idol
And now I find this. Imperial Triumphant's video for Crushing the Idol skirts a line that I become weary to cross, however it does so fairly tastefully, without ever actually crossing it. I'm still suffering my "violence in media" hangover so this is perfect. Kind of Bret Easton Ellis-ish too.
Ministry - Breathe (In Case You Didn't Feel...)
Awesome. If there is one concert I would pick to go back in time to see it's probably from this tour - most likely the Chicago stop.
Imperial Triumphant
I dig the first track, but I REALLY dig the second one. This is $5 on Imperial Triumphant's bandcamp. More info on Brooklyn Vegan here.
Grasshopper! The Movie
So a big, fun part of the H.P. Lovecraft filmfest is always the shorts. This year we missed a small portion of them, but all of the ones we did see were great. One though stood out above all the rest. Grasshopper! The Movie. Find this WHEREVER you can and watch it, it's that good.
One Song: Protection on Milk Magazine Now
Well-respected Chicago Magazine Milk has gone online and I've got an article on it! I've wanted to do a series of pieces I call "One Song" for some time. The essential idea is I take one song and talk about it in relation to the world around me. First up, Massive Attack's Protection, the dark, brooding title track of the band's 1994 second album of the same name. Read One Song: Protection on Milk here. Then stick around the site and do some more reading. Some marvelous writing therein.
Monday, September 30, 2013
Shaolin Wooden Men - Mirror Ball of Death
Holy cow! The Loved Ones - a fantastic Australian horror flick my friend Missi showed me this evening.
Saturday, September 28, 2013
H.P. Lovecraft Film Fest Los Angeles 2013
| image courtesy of tentaclii.files.wordpress.com, |
The art for this amazing flyer by the way is by one Jason Bradley Thompson
Friday, September 27, 2013
The Ocean Has a Video and a Film (NSFW)
I totally missed out on the fact that there is a version of The Ocean's Pelagial record that comes with a film shot to the length of the album (a 53:13 long song they were unfortunately forced to break into pieces when I saw them live at Summer Slaughter). Apparently I also missed the fact that they released a music video a few months ago for Bathyalpelagic II. A big, hearty thank you to Metal Sucks for bringing all this to my attention. Read their articles here and here.
The Only In Utero Review You Need
| image courtesy of http://www.taringa.net/ |
New Luscious Jackson Record!!!
Another insanely busy week - so busy that I almost completely forgot that I read about a new Luscious Jackson record on Brooklyn Vegan (their article on it right here) at some point earlier in the week! How the hell could I forget about that? Good thing the weekend sometimes allows me to collect my thoughts and re-examine a lot of the stuff I read in quick, passing bursts throughout the week when I can steal a moment or three.
When Luscious Jackson called quits it hurt. And even though we got the wonderful Jill Cunniff solo record City Beach there was no way it was going to be enough to quell the sting from losing the band that put out Fever In Fever Out and Electric Honey, two fine examples of main ingredient funk, synth and straight up pop. The news of a brand new album is pretty much from out of left field to me and makes me very, very happy.
The new Luscious Jackson album is titled Magic Hour and it will be released on November 5th via their own City Song record label.
Ryan Black's Tension #1 Rocks!
I do a post Tension #1 release interview with Ryan Black in this week's Thee Comic Column on Joup. (essentially a sequel to my interview with him from May which can be found here).
The book is a fantastic independent debut. There's espionage, reality-based super powers (main character draws Dark Matter for his power! How awesome is that?), accommodating stewardesses and dirty black ops government agencies!
The book is a fantastic independent debut. There's espionage, reality-based super powers (main character draws Dark Matter for his power! How awesome is that?), accommodating stewardesses and dirty black ops government agencies!
Sunday It All Comes Apart
I don't want it to but I need this to end. It is devastating me. However, at the same time the writing is so good that I'm pretty sure I can actually feel myself becoming a better writer just watching it.
I'm going to cry.
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Annotations for Grant Morrison's Batman
| image courtesy of http://blogs.villagevoice.com/ |
JSBX
In honor of the fact that Jon Spencer Blues Explosion is playing a free show tonight in NY (see Brooklyn Vegan here if you're there and want to try your luck at attending) I thought I'd post my all-time favorite song by the band. Of course, it's not quite the same when r i got soul doesn't bleed directly into get over here, but what can you do?
Deltron 3030 Ft. Mike Patton
You had me at Mike Patton, however despite my pervading prejudice against a lot of hip hop I dig this quite a bit and the video is fantastic. Very urban ex., steampunk, dystopian visuals and great low budget costume design.
Ghost - Papaganda Episode One: The Olde One
My good friend Tori is the one who turned me on to Ghost back when Opus Eponymous was released. I dug the album but there was something that kept me from really loving it. There seemed to be a certain... I don't know if lethargy is the exact right word, but it's the word I always think of when I listen to or contemplate that album. When the hype started for the band's second album, this year's Infestissumam Tori told me she thought the band had switched singers. This intrigued me, however once the album came out and I found that it did everything so much better than the previous one did I found it hard to reconcile the idea of the singer having been changed. Well, unless this is an elaborate hoax - which it might be - this video show's that Tori was completely correct.
Saturday, September 21, 2013
Bells into Machines - Chris Connelly & Paul Barker Reunited!!!
Holy cow does this make super extra happy! Chris Connelly and Paul Barker in a new band together? Go to their website here or their facebook here and shower them with love folks, this is going to be great!
23 Skiddo
One of those bands I have always read about and yet they've stained perpetually on my peripheral radar. So this is a first experience for me. And it is a fantastic first experience.
Wire - Chairs Missing
Pink Flag is one of those records that changed my life when I got into it later in life, circa twelve years ago. It immediately became one of those albums that is ALWAYS on me, occupying a constant, non-negotiable spot in both my automobile CD binder and the ipod that I constantly have to juggle the contents of in order to accommodate day to day fancies along with such mainstays. Chairs Missing is a step further down the Wire spiral, and from the first track you can feel a little bit more madness eating in around the fringes of the classic post-punk sound that means so much to so many.
Pinebender - Fifth to Last
I came by Working Nine to Wolf by Pinebender on accident back when it was released in the fall of 2006. In the press that accompanied the record it's interesting to note that the band describes their music as "amplifier worship", and when you get to know the music that becomes a crystal clear encapsulation of what they do. I wish I could see them live, because as good a job the recordings on this album are in translating the loud factor - my guess is there are a lot of good room mics involved in the mix - simply by listening to it you become swallowed by the sound and inevitably I find myself wondering how much more glorious the 'worship' would be in a live room, with thundering space and the occasional breeze from a back room. This has been a peripheral staple of mine ever since, however listens are infrequent enough that I really never kept tabs on the band and as such with just a smidge of internet research this morning (woke up thinking of this song again) I am unable to discern whether or not Pinebender still exists. Perhaps someone from the band will see this and drop a comment? One can hope...
Al Jarreau's Working on the Night Shift
I'm rounding out the night watching Night Shift for the first time in about... oh, twenty-something years. Not even twenty, had to be twenty-something. Night Shift was originally released in 1982 - I would have been 6 at the time - I don't remember what year I saw this flick on late night WGN Chicago's channel 9 but a lot of it stuck with me. That's how 80's movies were. Part of that is probably just the nostalgia - you know, the first time you see Michael Keaton jump off a second floor balcony in a cave man toga and land flat on his face it stays with you, right? Yeah, but of course there's the fact that my brain was still gathering mad information and formulating future experiences based on what I was perceiving at the time - a lot of deep-seated psychological growth going on that explains the attachment as well. Either way, my boss and I have talked about this movie a couple times and I've been surprised how much I remembered for having seen it once. Surprised despite the fact that I held it in a slightly unexplainable regard ever since...
Alas, I fear that this post has become incoherent because I've now been up for almost 24 hours and have a handful of Sierra Nevada's in me, so why don't I just let my sudden predilection for jabber-jawing take the proverbial dive off the second floor balcony of an $8k a year strip club and let Mr. Jarreau attempt to pull my ass out of the recycler?
What?
Future Primitives
This is the shit. I LOVE the fact that this surf/punk is proliferating at the moment. I heard pretty much this entire record tonight and it is fantastic.
Spider Heart
| Add caption |
Driving home late at night, unseasonably cool air for September in Southern California whipping through the windows as I drive La Brea, dodging double parkers waiting for spots outside trendy bars, swerving to avoid bold or drunken J walkers, tired but buzzing from the electric city wrapped around me. And Spider Hearts is ripping through my speakers and everything is pretty goddamn awesome at the moment.
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Future Islands - Long Flight
Just discovered Future Islands, a band that hails from my beloved Baltimore, MD. This song takes me all over the place - something about it evokes some of the Empty Bottle/Thrill Jockey corner of mid/late 90's indie rock (and lo and behold, guess what label two of their last two long-players were on?) and something else evokes Euro synthoids Stereolab. Either way, I love this and aim to hear more. You can check out some stuff on Friends Records bandcamp or just go to the band's website.
Friday, September 13, 2013
Lebanon Hanover
I was just introduced to Lebanon Hanover yesterday via Part Time Punks radio show on Los Angeles' KXLU. Very good, very dark and atmospheric. Their bandcamp is loaded with music that is just perfect for the encroaching season of Autumn.
Take Action Day - Make a Sequel To Dredd!!!
Disappears Cover U2 For AV Club
Disappears cover U2
I really dig Disappears. And I've always really liked New Years Day. This then, is a great combination in my book.
The band really nails it. Notice how they say they don't so much turn it into one of their own as get traditional with it, but as traditional as it is, I would argue that they add some of that smoky, mysterious flavor that makes Disappears' music so unique and compelling.
Monday, September 9, 2013
The Pixies @ Echo: 2 New Songs
Friday morning the following email arrived while I was at work. It was about an hour until I saw it, and as such I missed what probably sold out in .0003 seconds. Sender was PIXIES, subject heading LA TONIGHT;
FUUUUUUUUUCCCCCKKKKKKKKK!!!
Doubly so after last week's early surprise with the last minute drop of EP1 (so last minute the press release didn't go out until until the small hours the day of.
Thanks to Gigwise for posting this footage. Still wish I as there - the Echo is SO small. 300 people tops I think.
Hello
We are playing a special warm up show TONIGHT in LA. Friday, Sept 6 @ ECHO
Doors at 7pm / Pixies on stage 7:45pm
18+
$10.00 ticket
Tickets are available right now:
Access code: BAGBOY
La La love you
PIXIES
|
FUUUUUUUUUCCCCCKKKKKKKKK!!!
Doubly so after last week's early surprise with the last minute drop of EP1 (so last minute the press release didn't go out until until the small hours the day of.
Thanks to Gigwise for posting this footage. Still wish I as there - the Echo is SO small. 300 people tops I think.
Sunday, September 8, 2013
Soundgarden - Halfway There
I've been meaning to post this for days, but it's been hard to find time to do anything other than work on my writing, which is something I am definitely not complaining about. I've already talked in these pages about how unexpectedly pleased I was with King Animal after expecting it to suck based on that awful audio-slave-ish song Soundgarden had in the Avengers. Halfway There's definitely not my favorite song on the record, but it's good and it's very reminiscent of the tone the singles on Down on the Upside - which I love - had.
My Three Favorite Songs by The Rolling Stones
Yeah, that's a bold statement and a damn hard pick, but I'm having a Stones Sunday, well have been having a Stones week really, and these are the three I ALWAYS hold in the highest regard.
I bought Sticky Fingers at Rolling Stone records (no connection) on Irving Park Road in Chicago back when I was a Junior in High School. Or a Senior, I forget. I was a metal head and on the same trip I bought another all-time favorite, Type O Negative's Bloody Kisses (the superior, digi-pak version). I probably also bought more metal. And my girlfriend at the time probably bought all metal. I say this to illustrate what a departure this was for me. By this time I knew and loved a lot of Stones songs from the radio, liked some and disliked some. I had a pretty thorough knowledge of classic rock in general thanks to WCKG and I had already been a Zeppelin fanatic for years thanks to my Aunt Dottie generously gave me the Zeppelin box set for what was probably my fifteenth or sixteenth birthday. But Zeppelin has, somewhat enigmatically with hindsight, always been more of an analogue to metal. While I liked the Stones it was a limb I went out on spending some of the little money I made at the time on a CD I was unsure of.
I was instantly justified upon hearing Sticky Finger, esp. Sway.
The 70's. Funk. Disco. Espionage. Coke. Fingerprint File. Who's Listening? Who indeed. For my money this is the funkiest, dirtiest the Stones ever got.
Henry Hill. 'Nuff said.
I bought Sticky Fingers at Rolling Stone records (no connection) on Irving Park Road in Chicago back when I was a Junior in High School. Or a Senior, I forget. I was a metal head and on the same trip I bought another all-time favorite, Type O Negative's Bloody Kisses (the superior, digi-pak version). I probably also bought more metal. And my girlfriend at the time probably bought all metal. I say this to illustrate what a departure this was for me. By this time I knew and loved a lot of Stones songs from the radio, liked some and disliked some. I had a pretty thorough knowledge of classic rock in general thanks to WCKG and I had already been a Zeppelin fanatic for years thanks to my Aunt Dottie generously gave me the Zeppelin box set for what was probably my fifteenth or sixteenth birthday. But Zeppelin has, somewhat enigmatically with hindsight, always been more of an analogue to metal. While I liked the Stones it was a limb I went out on spending some of the little money I made at the time on a CD I was unsure of.
I was instantly justified upon hearing Sticky Finger, esp. Sway.
The 70's. Funk. Disco. Espionage. Coke. Fingerprint File. Who's Listening? Who indeed. For my money this is the funkiest, dirtiest the Stones ever got.
Henry Hill. 'Nuff said.
Joshua Hale Fialkov & Joe Infurnari's The Bunker
Friday, September 6, 2013
Regis - Blood Witness
I've not yet read Warren Ellis' novella Dead Pig Collector (available here), but it's on the list (and what an enormous list that is). Stumbled upon a great interview with the author today via twitter where he talks about the 'playlist' for the writing of the book. This is on it. Mr. Ellis has written some of my favorite comics and the one novel of his to-date three (I think - someone please correct me if I'm wrong) that I've read was fantastic. Crooked Little Vein. Mmm good.
Anyway, here's the link to the full article on Large-Hearted Boy's wonderful music blog. And you can purchase this wonderful music here.
| image courtesy of comicbook.com |
Tricky + The Antlers - Parenthesis
Wow. There's a strong amount of garbage-can funk in that guitar riff that comes in and out to mock a chorus. Reminds me a bit of 'Strugglin' from Maxinquaye. Wicked.
As an aside, the Real Rock n Rolla from Guy Ritchie's Rocknrolla - Johnny Quid - he's just gotta be based on Tricky.
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