Fluxblog

Archive for 2005

7/27/05

You’re Gonna Know Me For The Rest Of Your Life

Kudu “Physical World” – Ah, it’s too bad Missy Elliott just put out a record with speakeasy imagery on the cover – that concept would’ve been more appropriate for a hypothetical single for this song. (Maybe I’m being too literal, though.) The Kudu album yields consistently strong results in spite (or because) of their restless style hopping, but their singer never seems quite as comfortable and in full command of her voice and persona as on this cabaret/jazz vocal/r&b/electronic mut. (Click here to visit the official Kudu site.)

While I was out yesterday, I saw a teenager wearing what I believe might be the saddest rock band t-shirt that I’ve ever seen. Here’s the front of it:

Now, I’m not trying to rag on Everclear here. I don’t hate them (in fact, I quite like at least six or seven of their songs), and the near total lack of coolness of that band really isn’t that much of a factor in why I find this shirt so sad and desperate. (If that was the case, I’d surely be mocking a Candlebox or Seven Mary Three t-shirt instead.) The “disco still sucks” thing is the most obvious problem here – judging by the tour dates on the back of the shirt, this was made in 2000, placing it about 20 years after the point when the whole “disco sucks” thing was relevant. It just seems like a pitiful last gasp of a lifelong rockist who is totally out of it, hung up on ridiculous old grudges, and oblivious to the fact that the record the shirt is ostensibly promoting actually sorta flirts with disco-ish pop on a few tracks. But on the other hand, Everclear may be doing the public at large a favor by helpfully marking out clueless rockist (potentially homophobic/racist/sexist) turbodouches in a crowd, so that we can all avoid their company.

And then there’s the sad happy face. Is there any better way to force the impression that you’re a cut-rate Walmart version of Nirvana than by putting a half-assed generic variation of their iconic, highly ubiquitous stoned happy face logo on your band’s t-shirt?

The back of the t-shirt is arguably more depressing than the front, with a long Mother 13-esque tour itinerary comprised entirely of radio festivals. I did not infer that these were radio festivals just from a quick glance, mind you. It says that it’s a radio festival tour, right there in big bold letters. Now I guess it’s admirable in a way that Everclear is unashamed and unpretentious about sucking up to corporate radio on a full-time basis (after all, it is/was their bread and butter), but um, maybe they should at least be a little more discreet about it! There’s really only two ways of reading that itinerary – 1) Everclear is a band desperate to stay in the good graces of Clearchannel et al and will do anything to keep their music in rotation 2) Everclear is a band so beaten down by the commercial process that they just don’t care at all what anyone thinks of them. It’s a little bit of both, I’m sure, but I can’t help but suspect that it was born mainly out of resignation.

7/26/05

I Want To Look Into Your Future

Morningwood “Nth Degree” – Oh my God, it’s the audio equivalent of Skittles! The chanting-out-the-letters-of-their-name bit in the middle is probably better suited to live performances, but I suppose they could just be legitimately concerned about journalists getting the name right, being a new band and all. (Click here for the official Morningwood site.)

Clor “Magic Touch” – This song teeters right on the edge of confidence and insecurity, but ultimately errs on the side of self-assurance, but how could it not with a refrain like “you’ll come alive with my magic touch”? Nice synth squiggles too, by the way. I’m pretty sure that this song reminds me of some obscure Prince song, but it’s a vague feeling and I really can’t place it. (Click here to buy it from Amazon UK.)

7/25/05

Lost In The Cracks Between The Paving Stones

Jenny Wilson “Love Ain’t Just A Four Letter Word” – I can’t tell you how many times I listened to this song before I figured out why it seemed so familiar to me, despite being rather distinct in its oddball Swedish cabaret-pop style. On the surface, it would seem very Kate Bush, but if you just listen to the melodies and the vocal tics and the shifts in structure, it becomes quite clear that this isn’t very far removed from Sleater-Kinney’s The Hot Rock. That would explain the way the chorus cuts right into my heart very well – really, I’m just a sucker for these kinds of melodies and progressions, and my sentimentality for that particular Sleater-Kinney record only intensifies a reaction that could just be instictive for me. But if you hate Sleater-Kinney, don’t be put off – I’m sure many people will think I’m crazy for making the connection in the first place. (Click here to visit the official Jenny Wilson website.)

David Wrench “Sodium Lights” – I love living in a world where there are actually Welsh albino synthpop stars. Many of you will remember David Wrench for his song “World War IV,” which I believe to be one of the finest songs ever to be featured on this site. “Sodium Lights” does not quite reach those giddy heights, but it has a grand romantic sweep that is difficult to resist and a chorus that will likely take up residence in the back of your mind for weeks to come. (Click here to buy it from Amazon UK.)

7/22/05

The Stars Would Be Their Own

Fannypack “Nu Nu (Yeah Yeah) (Double J and Haze UK Edit) – We’ve still got a month and a half of summer left, right? It’s not too late for this to be the summer jam that it deserves to be. I mean, it’d be great if this was a hit (mainstream, cult, or otherwise) at any time, but let’s face it – this song is meant for the summer. Especially the sticky, kinda gross parts of the season that everyone but me seems to loves so much. This track is a thing of perfect pop beauty, as relentlessly hooky as The New Pornographers at their sugary best, or more accurately, like a superconcentrated dosage of early Salt N Pepa. (Click here to buy it from Amazon.)

Helen Love “Debbie Loves Joey” – Awww. So sweet! If Helen Love is the ultimate British twee indie pop band (and I believe that they are), then this must be the ultimate Helen Love song; the one that sums up their aesthetic so perfectly that you can figure out whether or not you’d like, love, or hate the rest of their catalog based on hearing this one track. Amazingly (and luckily, I suppose), this is the very first Helen Love single to be released domestically in the US. (Click here to buy it from Scratch Records.)

7/21/05

This Is The Pressure That Competes To Keep My Soul Alive

Drink Me “Manifesto” – You all can have a ball annotating the bits in this composition lifted from other songs in the comments box. The funniest thing about this track is that one of the bands Drink Me are obviously knicking is Elastica, who built their career with the same sort of magpie songwriting tactics and cool-girl sass. If the bubbly disco beat and sexy vocals aren’t enough to sell this song, lyrics detailing dreams involving gossiping with Robert Smith in mundane settings and some vague talk about a manifesto ought to do the trick. (Click here to buy it from Piccadilly Records.)

Avenue D “You Love This Ass (Pete Loves This Acid mix)” – Sticking with EPs, singles, and guest spots on other people’s records has been a good career move for Avenue D, whether it is intentional or not. For one thing, a little bit of their hipster booty music shtick goes a long way – a full record of them would be very overwhelming, and inviting numbness and boredom is sort of antithetical to what they’re all about. It’d be nice to see them get a bit of credit for being quality songwriters, but lord knows those sort of accolades are rarely bestowed upon anyone who writes fun novelty dance pop songs about loving asses. (Click here to buy it from Juno.)

7/20/05

You’re In A Sleepless Dream

Annie and the Anniemals “The Wedding (Sirius Satellite Radio Session)” – This new unreleased song was recorded in NYC right around the time Annie and her band were in town for their show at the Tribeca Grand. “The Wedding” bodes well for Annie’s eventual second album, boasting a bouncy and immediately catchy synth funk track that sounds like early Tom Tom Club or mid-period Talking Heads, and coy, spunky vocals reminiscent of Cristina on Sleep It Off in place of the wispiness that characterized most of Anniemal. (Click here for the official Annie site.)

Broadcast “Goodbye Girls” – Following a fairly radical downsizing of the band’s membership, Trish Keenan and James Cargill continue on with the Broadcast name as a duo on the forthcoming Tender Buttons LP. The personality of the band remains intact, though the ponderous percussion and baroque sci-fi orchestration of The Noise Made By People has been jettisoned in favor of stark, streamlined electronic arrangements which ironically radiate more warmth and humanity than their more organic (and far fussier) recordings. I don’t think that I would have gleaned that “Goodbye Girls” is about prostitution just by listening to it, but according to Keenan, the song is about making peace with the idea of prostitution, and the fact that there are prostitutes in her family. It’s not a particularly positive or negative song, but rather one which acknowledges and respects the social and emotional complexity of the world’s oldest profession. (Click here to pre-order it from Amazon.)

7/19/05

Tying You Is Fine And Whipping You Is Grand

This is the second in a series of posts dedicated to revisiting songs that were staples of my old mix tapes and cds circa 1996-2001.

Millie Jackson “It Hurts So Good” – I never kept any records so I don’t know for certain, but I find it hard to imagine that any other song appeared on as many of my various tapes and cds as this sexy ode to masochistic love. I originally acquired the track on a free soul compilation that came with some British magazine circa early 1998. This song usually came in somewhere in the middle of side a, and I seem to remember that it frequently came after “Seeing Other People” by Belle & Sebastian. (Click here to buy it from Amazon.)

United States of America “I Won’t Leave My Wooden Wife For You, Sugar” – Oh, so classic! I bought the United States of America album on import at Other Music during my “getting to know the canon” phase, and it was worth every penny just for this jaunty little number about a selfish, hypocritical man dismissing his college-aged BDSM partner and embracing the suburban lifestyle with his wife and kids. (Click here to buy it from Amazon.)

7/18/05

Oh Yeah, Captain Fudge and the Fantasies

Amy sings with Prince for Caroline – This is a found recording of a girl named Amy singing along with Prince’s “Kiss” at the start of a mix cd that she made for her girlfriend Caroline. Amy makes flirtatious comments throughout the track ranging from cryptic in-jokes and adorable come-ons to possessive (and very pushy) declarations of love. It’s a fascinating document of a person putting their heart on the line, and the most devastating thing about it is that it’s hard to imagine Caroline not being put off by Amy’s earnest intensity. When Amy says “you’ve got to love me, Caroline, because I love you so much, and you will never love me as much as I love you” on the bridge, I can’t help but feel that it was probably a very accurate assessment of their relationship. I hope for Amy’s sake that I am wrong! (Many thanks to WFMU’s The Professor for acquiring this track and broadcasting it on The Audio Kitchen.)

Pitchfork’s Intonation Music Festival ought to become the new template for outdoor multi-band shows in the United States. The park was set up very well, and ideal for a show of this size. The prices, even for concessions, were entirely reasonable. The audience was mellow and low key, but definitely put forth a huge amount of enthusiasm when the artists called for it. Everything ran smoothly, and everyone seemed comfortable and happy even in spite of some rather intense heat. The most encouraging thing about the festival is that it proves that a line up of artists who are either relatively unknown or smallish cult acts can be commercially successful and draw a few thousand people. Sure, a lot of it has to do with the Pitchfork brand name and that it happened in Chicago, but it’s a very positive thing no matter what.

The M’s – Amiable indie rock, probably didn’t get as much attention from me as they deserved. 6.3

AC Newman – It was great to hear all of those songs from The Slow Wonder played live, especially “Secretarial,” “The Town Halo,” and “On The Table,” which was actually played twice in a row at the beginning because Newman’s guitar was out of tune the first time. He also played a very good Tall Dwarfs song that I only kinda knew and can’t remember the title of – it’s the one with the line “I want to screw you” in the chorus. 8.7

Magnolia Electric Company – Not very compelling but a fine soundtrack for sitting in the shade and chatting. 4.9

Four Tet – Pretty good, even if it got to be a little much towards the end. Not much to look at, but it worked pretty well if you were on the other side of the park waiting on line for concessions, as I was at the time. 6.5

Broken Social Scene – I didn’t watch this, but listened to it in the shade near the other stage while waiting for the Go! Team. It was okay. 5.2

The Go! Team – So much fun! The audience loved them, and they seemed to be having a great time. The lead vocalist is extremely charming and charismatic, especially when she was dancing with all the little black kids (who had previously been dancing to Four Tet by the public pool adjacent to the park) they brought on stage at the end for “Ladyflash.” They played a few brand new songs, and they were just as good, if not better, than the songs from the first album. 9.3

Prefuse 73 – What I heard sounded pretty good, but I left during this set. 6.0

Dungen – They are much better live than on album. Stoner psychedelia always goes over well in the early afternoon at an outdoor festival. The bass player was particularly good, both in terms of playing, and in stage presence. 7.3

Out Hud – Oh. My. God. Out Hud were incredible. They only played five songs and skipped my favorite (“It’s For You”), but it didn’t matter, they were so on, and got a huge number of people to dance nonstop in the punishing midday sun. I can’t believe I’ve never bothered to see them play before. I need to do it again sometime soon. Wow. 9.5

The Hold Steady – Very enjoyable for about 15 minutes, and then I walked away and met up with some friends. 6.4

Andrew Bird – This was sort of ideal for sitting in the shade and taking it easy in the middle of the day. Very beautiful at times; I’m going to have to listen to the album again. 6.5

Deerhoof – I had intended to get closer to Deerhoof, but never got around to it. It sounded okay from across the park, but nothing really amazing. 5.6

The Wrens – I just thought they were alright. Apparently the front section for their show was packed full of superenthusiastic Wrens fans. Well, good for them. 5.1

Les Savy Fav – I’d always been okay with Les Savy Fav, but hadn’t ever bothered to see them. What a mistake. This set was intense, and I had a perfect spot for it, right on the line so I could view Tim Harrington’s over the top antics on stage as well as watch the front of the crowd sing along and flip out to every single song in the show. Harrington was an amazing thing to see, starting off in red short shorts and a tank top and eventually stripping down to a speedo and sneakers; making out with people that he brought on stage; setting up a slip n’ slide in the audience halfway through the show; getting a huge number of people in the crowd to squat down and make guttural noises through the middle of “She Believes You;” leading one of the most incredible call and response breakdowns I’ve ever witnessed in “ROME,” and dancing with a crazy Napoleon Dynamite-looking dude who got up on stage towards the end. I’m still overwhelmed by this show. Easily one of the best punk shows I’ve ever seen, and probably ever will see. 9.5

The Decemberists – I think I get the Decemberists thing a lot more live than on record. Their albums are so mannered and mellow compared to their performance, which is very driven by audience participation and silly stage antics. Very fun, even though they did not play “The Engine Driver.” 7.6

7/16/05

Watch The Skies: My Star Keeps Glowing Brighter

Rinôçérôse “Bitch” – I spend a lot of time searching for music, and I don’t always know what I’m looking for. I think that I do a pretty good job of keeping the quality control pretty tight on this site, but lately I’ve been feeling like I haven’t been getting many new pop songs that have that certain spark that I want need. This song doesn’t just have sparks – this is more like fireworks. Like, the grand finale on the 4th of July. Times ten! The vocals are wonderfully androgynous, but there’s nothing ambiguous about the song’s raw sexuality. The hooks are huge and relentless, as though the music was created in a lab for maximum pop power. Frankly, I’m in awe of it. This is unquestionably one of the best singles of 2005. (Click here to visit the official Rinôçérôse site.)

Special bonus: Stream the JD Twitch/Optimo remix of “Bitch.”

Gene Serene & John Downfall “U Want Me” – Those of you who read the comments box yesterday already know, but the bad news is that Louise de Fraine aka Gene Serene was hit head-on by a taxi in Berlin a few weeks ago. Luckily, she is in stable condition and is recovering nicely, and will hopefully be back to her pop antics before too long. Louise has an amazing voice for dance pop; it just overflows with sexual confidence and coy flirtatiousness, but it’s not without a subtle undertow of humanity and vulnerability. Her discography is very small at the moment, but as far as I’m concerned she has already recorded four all-out classics including this song, which has yet to be released commercially. (Click here for the official Gene Serene website.)

7/14/05

Called Only By Number

Bedtime For Toys “6×9” – If you were disappointed by the fact that Gwen Stefani never collaborated with Peaches on her solo album, have heart – there is a band in Los Angeles who sound like that hypothetical combination all of the time! Interestingly, Bedtime For Toys avoid the sort of hypersexual lyrics that are customary of most young electroclash bands, instead favoring obscure character narratives filled with vivid details and a touch of cultural criticism. (Click here for the Bedtime For Toys site.)

Crazy Girl “Kick Yo Booty” – Was Crazy Girl specifically trying to write a song for televised sporting events? It’s cheesy and fun and totally ridiculous, and it makes me want to watch football, even though that is hardly a natural impulse for me. (Click here to buy it from Tummy Touch.)

7/13/05

Drum Beats 24 Hours A Day

This is the first in an unofficial series of posts dedicated to revisiting songs that were staples of my old mix tapes and cds circa 1996-2001.

The Geraldine Fibbers “Yoo Doo Right” – This is one of, if not THE, greatest covers ever recorded. The original version by Can is fine, but compared to this, it’s rambling and lacking in power and emotion. The Geraldine Fibbers whittle the song down to one fourth of the original’s length and radically rearrange the music, giving it a newly coherant structure that retains essence of the song and plays up the lyrics’ roots in gospel and country. Whereas the Can version implied passion, the Fibbers sell the feeling with inspired guitar dissonance by Nels Cline and a showstopping vocal from Carla Bozulich that burns with intensity and desire. The instrumental section from 2:40 up through the build up to the chorus that kicks in at 3:19 easily ranks among the most powerful and affecting things that I’ve ever heard in a rock and roll song. It’s a potent cocktail of lust and love and longing and doubt, and it feels like a kick in the gut if you hear at it just the right moment. (Click here to buy it from Amazon.)

Sebadoh “Give Up” – Sometime not long after the release of Bakesale, Sebadoh performed a few songs live at the MTV studios for 120 Minutes. I haven’t seen the footage in over a decade now, but the performance of “Give Up” left an indelible impression on my young mind. I was only 14, and indie and punk was still very new to me. I don’t think it made much sense to me back then, especially since I was coming into this all on my own, and was piecing it all together mainly through magazines, 120 Minutes, and CMJ cds. If I recall correctly, all of the guys in Sebadoh looked shlubby and were wearing winter clothes indoors. The playing was very messy, and the heavy riff refrain was especially shambolic. Lou Barlow was singing in the flatest, most disaffected voice imaginable, and in retrospect, the lyrics about “a hopeless slob in his dead-end day job” and “a co-dependent self-styled nightmare” seemed almost as though he was deliberately trying to embrace the “slacker” media label. I’m not sure if I ever actually formed the thought “this is the real punk rock,” but I certainly believed it for a while, hopelessly searching for more music that was exactly like this. Some other Sebadoh songs and a good chunk of the Archers of Loaf catalog hit the spot, but I’ve mostly been disappointed ever since. (Click here to buy it from Sub Pop.)

7/12/05

Hit Me With Your Flame On

The Fantastic Four – I just don’t understand the point of making a Fantastic Four movie that removes every single interesting thing about the series and its characters, especially when it is proven that being extremely faithful to source material is the key to producing massively successful geek films. Why abandon the superheroes-as-family-unit concept, even if The Incredibles ripped that off and made it to the theatres first? Why make Reed Richards, who is meant to be the most brilliant man on earth, a bumbling and ineffective fool? Why diminish the subtext of the group – that Sue is Johnny’s mother figure as well as his sister, and that Reed is Sue’s father figure as well as her husband? Why waste time with the origin story when the most interesting thing about the group is that they are explorers, and that they’ve always been at their best when they are venturing off into the unknown? Why not play up the fact that Victor Von Doom is the ruthless monarch of a small nation when that is utterly essential to his character? Also, why on earth would you put a guy in an iron mask, and still have him talk in his regular whiny voice when he ought to be menacing?

I’m not totally offended by the awfulness of the movie, but I am definitely saddened by the fact that the majority of the population will now associate the Fantastic Four (easily one of the five best superhero concepts of all time along with Superman, Batman, Spider-Man, and the X-Men) with excessive shlockiness. It’s such a shame, because those old Lee/Kirby comics from the 60s are among the most brilliant comics ever made in any genre, and Mark Waid, Grant Morrison, James Sturm, and Warren Ellis have all done impressive work in reinterpreting the characters for a modern audience.

Dog Ruff “Jon E Storm” – If the film got anything right, it was Johnny Storm. The spirit of the character was the only thing that actually seemed at home in a cheesy, brash 00s Hollywood film, even if the studio mainly used the character as a flimsy excuse for packing in an absurd amount of blatant product placement. Longtime readers will no doubt remember this electropop ode to The Human Torch from when I originally posted it back in 2003. Everyone else is in for a treat. (Click here to buy it from Tigersushi.)

The Fantastic Four “Meet Dr. Doom!” – This is an episode of the old Fantastic Four radio serial from the early 70s, narrated by Stan Lee himself. This is a straight adaptation of The Fantastic Four #5, featuring the first appearance of Dr. Doom. This is a story from before Lee and Kirby hit their stride on the series, and it certainly loses a lot of appeal without Jack Kirby’s artwork, but it’s also sort of camp and adorable. They certainly did a much better job casting Reed Richards and Dr. Doom, that’s for sure.

7/11/05

Always Up To Something Ill And Evil

Tiger Tunes “Kirsten Is A Fuckmachine” – If you are an insecure doormat-y sort of guy dealing with an insensitive girlfriend who makes up for her outrageous cruelty by being quite a handful in the bedroom, then this is YOUR summer jam, especially if you’re into Danish twee-wave. (Click here to visit the Tiger Tunes website.)

Queens of Noize “Indie Boys (Don’t Deserve It)” – It’s so true, and you know it! If you’re an assertive scenester girl who is growing bitter after being burned by Seth Cohen and Conor Oberst types, then this is YOUR summer jam. These two songs compliment each other very well – after all, it’s not hard to imagine that the Queens Of Noize are singing about the Tiger Tunes guy, and vice versa. (Click here to buy it from the Queens of Noize.)

7/8/05

What You Touch, You Don’t Feel

Ladytron “Destroy Everything You Touch” – It’s a very good thing that Ladytron have signed to a major label, because it would be a shame for this song to not get the commercial push that it deserves. The chorus has the sort of casual, insidious catchiness that seems sort of normal at first, and then pummels you into submission upon repeat listenings. I will be very surprised if this song doesn’t become a chart hit in the UK. (Click here to visit the Ladytron website.)

The MFA “The Difference It Makes (Superpitcher Remix)” – You don’t need to tell me that I’m about nine months late getting to this track. For one thing, this is not a race; and more importantly, the song didn’t leave much of an impression on me at first, and just sat around on my harddrive until I accidentally stumbled upon it last night and fell in love with it. The music sounds like a rush of ineffable in-between emotions, sort of like everything that you feel in a day (or a lifetime) concentrated and shot back at you all at once. It’s the tranciest thing that I’ve ever heard from Superpitcher, though I admit that I’m not exactly an expert about his discography. (Click here to buy it from Juno.)

7/7/05

I Still Believe In Fun

It’s rather perverse, but I’ve had “Panic” by The Smiths stuck in my head all morning. I am relieved to know that all of my friends in London are fine, and I hope that goes for the rest of my British readers and their loved ones as well.

Nepo “Yer Warpin’ Me” – While most of their peers in Brooklyn are spending their time recycling tired cock rock, art-hippy, and new wave cliches, the mysterious Nepo have been hiding out in their studio crafting slick dance pop that sounds like a twisted, bratty version of a 90s boy band or an evil version of Phoenix. (If you would like to contact Nepo, please send an email to nepo.nepo @ verizon.net)

Death From Above 1979 “Blood On Our Hands (Justice Remix)” – Attn: Justice. Please become a full-time member of Death From Above 1979 so that they can rule nonstop rather than only occasionally. Your aesthetics merge so wonderfully here – why not keep at it? Lord knows we could use more bass-heavy electro rock and less raw nu-rock duos in this world. (Click here to buy it from Amazon.)

7/5/05

She Seems This Close, But Not To Me

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks @ Castle Clinton/Battery Park 7/4/2005
Dynamic Calories / (Do Not Feed The) Oyster / Post-Paint Boy / Pencil Rot / Water And A Seat / No More Shoes / Animal Midnight / It Kills / Baby C’mon / Church On White / Mama / Dark Wave / Loud Cloud Crowd (aborted quickly after SM botched the intro) / Jo Jo’s Jacket / Witch Mountain Bridge

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks “Jo Jo’s Jacket (Live in Malmo, 2001)” – No hyperbole, just facts: This was probably the best non-Pavement Malkmus show that I’ve ever seen. (For perspective, I’ve seen all but one show that he’s played in NYC since 1997.) Interestingly, the setlist’s lack of novelty – no unreleased songs, no covers, no improvs – was exactly what made it very refreshing. For the first time since Pavement, it seemed as though he was making some attempt at playing an accessable show in NYC for people who weren’t super geeky about his solo career. The set summed up the strengths of the Jicks catalog very well, skipping only a few key tracks and generally emphasizing the songs that I would consider to be distinctly Jick-ish – “Water And A Seat,” “Oyster,” “It Kills,” “No More Shoes,” “Witch Mountain Bridge.” It certainly helped that the band was in very good spirits, particularly SM, who was more playful and silly than he usually is when he plays in NYC. I think I’m figuring this out now – they only play “Jo Jo’s Jacket” when they are in a good mood, because otherwise the song just doesn’t work. Why bother playing a song about joy and freedom if you’re not feeling it? (Click here to buy Stephen Malkmus albums from Matador Records.)

Yo La Tengo @ Castle Clinton/Battery Park 7/4/2005
We’re An American Band (YLT song) / We’re An American Band (Grand Funk Railroad cover) / Stockholm Syndrome / Tears Are In Your Eyes / The Summer / jaunty piano song with Georgia singing that I didn’t recognize / Cherry Chapstick / Autumn Sweater / Little Eyes / Big Day Coming / Tom Courtenay / extremely long and boring jammy song with Ira singing a bit towards the end // some cover that I did not recognize / Sheena Is A Punk Rocker

Yo La Tengo “Cherry Chapstick” – Yo La Tengo is a great band, but I find them to be extremely frustrating live. For one thing, with only a few exceptions, I could really do without their penchant for covers. The three of them all have excellent voices for their own material, but their limitations as vocalists is always very apparent whey perform songs by other artists. They have a way of making most any song seem bland and flimsy by dulling down the edges and shrinking the emotion so that it suits their timidity. Their low-key stoicism is often sublime in their own music, particularly in droning rockers like “Tom Courtenay” and “Cherry Chapstick,” which smolder with repressed passion. (I’m not sure if I’ve ever heard another song that articulates the impotent resignation of realizing that lurid fantasy sexuality will almost certainly not be part of one’s own life as well as “Cherry Chapstick.”) Whereas guitar noise usually indicates aggression in rock music, in the context of Yo La Tengo, it’s invariably a signifier of passive aggression. This is poetic in their best compositions, and nagging in others, such as the tedious jammy song at the end of their main set yesterday. Still, in spite of some rather dull moments scattered throughout their set, I’m very glad that I stuck around to watch them play if just for the string of “greatest hits” played through the middle of the show. (Click here to buy Yo La Tengo albums from Matador Records.)

Laura Cantrell’s opening set was very pleasant and ideally suited to the environment (a park full of picnickers on a mild summer afternoon), but I don’t have much more to say about it. Laura started her set with my favorite song in her catalog, “14th Street,” a lovely little tune that I most certainly would have posted by now if Matador didn’t already have the song up for free on their mp3 page and if there was any possibility that I could write something about it that came even close to being as good as Abby’s review of the song from back in May.

7/1/05

Do You Want To Change It?

Nine Inch Nails “The Hand That Feeds (DFA Remix)” – Most of my favorite Nine Inch Nails songs are the ones that flirt openly with funk and disco, so it’s hardly a shock that I would see this DFA mix as an improvement over the Modern Rock arrangement of the original single. Of course, Murphy and Goldsmith aren’t taking this song too far from its roots – it already had an aggressive dance-rock pulse to it which was not unlike the producers’ work with The Rapture. DFA did not go full-on “gay disco” on this track as previously threatened (way to get my hopes up, James), but they do slip into their default house mode, a la the “pretentious” mix of “Yeah.” The mix does a lot of favors for the chorus, which seems a lot catchier to me now without all the radio-required loud guitars flattening the dynamics. (I miss the keyboard part on the bridge of the original mix, though.) Interestingly, placing Reznor in this context reveals a vocal similarity to Primal Scream’s Bobby Gillespie, which I hadn’t ever noticed before. (Click here to buy it from Pure Groove.)

Nice Nice “Yesss!” – This isn’t music for sober people, is it? Kudos to Nice Nice for making the Can-iest fake Krautrock that I’ve heard in a long time. They totally nail that “we are bearded mystics who fucking jam” thing, when most fake Kraut bands either emphasize the Neu! “motorik” 4/4 beat to the point of plodding dullness or go way overboard with the “we are art hippies so let’s freak out and make noises” routine. (Click here to buy it from Darla.)

6/30/05

Let’s Form One Continuous Chain Of Ourselves

Murray Saul “Give Me That Weekend Salute!” – Many of you will remember Murray Saul from the bizarre “It’s Friiiiiidaaaaay!” mp3 that I’ve posted here a few times in the past. On June 16th, WFMU’s Aircheck aired a full hour of Saul’s insane drug-fueled rants about his intense love of the weekend and deep loathing for “the slavedrivers,” including this ‘new’ clip. I’m not sure whether I’m more relieved or disturbed by the fact that much of the old “It’s Friday!” clip is revealed to be shtick by these other recordings. On one hand, it is sorta nice to know that it wasn’t simply the result of an on-air breakdown as I had originally suspected, but on the other, it’s a little unnerving to realize that Saul could serve up these unhinged, totally surreal diatribes at will. This particular clip starts off in a relatively mellow place for Saul, but it eventually gathers some momentum once he goes off on a tangent encouraging people to turn their “sweetie” into a tossed salad with French dressing, croutons, and a bit of parsley in their navel.

Meadow House “My Window Cleaning Days Are Over” – Despite the character’s creepy disingenuousness and poor judgement, I still kinda feel bad for him losing his job as a custodian at a porno theatre. Meadow House is the recording alias of British DJ/songwriter Dan Wilson, formerly of Resonance FM’s strangely compelling The Exciting Hellebore Shew. (Click here to buy it from Resonance FM.)

Also: Speaking of high quality high concept radio programming, I strongly recommend Ed Shepp‘s new show on WFMU, The Ed Shepp Radio Experiment. The program is extraordinarily difficult to explain, but if you’re a fan of Jeff Koons, Andy Warhol, and Madonna, it will probably seem like some kind of miracle. Definitely start with the first episode, “Celebrity” – it could very well be one of the best hours of radio ever produced.

6/29/05

When These Ashes Blow Away

Slow Dazzle “Fleur De Lie” – It’s just too hot and muggy lately. This is most certainly not my time of the year, especially given that I’m still living in a place that entirely lacks air conditioning and I have to sleep in an attic that is at least 15°F hotter than it is outside. Recently, I’ve been wondering if my hatred of the summer months is really just a conditional thing, and that if I was in better shape, got out more often, and had a more comfortable home, I’d be all for it. I can understand what some people get out of this time of the year – it’s a good time to be an exhibitionist, sure, but there’s also some romance to it at times, and that’s always been lacking in my own life. “Fleur De Lie” has that sexy summer night sound to it, and it at least supports a pleasant fantasy. With any luck, I might end up having a summer more like this song before too long. (Click here to buy it from Misra.)

Contramano “Checking U” – The name “Contramano” translates to “against the flow,” which is sort of ironic when they makes songs like this which seem to flow with a natural grace and urgency. The percussion is lively and the vocals are spirited, but the star of this show is most certainly the cello, which dominates the arrangement and lends an airiness and elegance to the lead melodies that probably would not have come off if they had played the same parts on the standard electric guitar. (Click here to buy it from Contramano.)

6/28/05

It’s Not Good, But It’s Not Bad Either

Me and You and Everyone We Know – I think that it’s very possible that if I saw this film at a different point in my life (when I was 19 or 20 maybe?), it may have struck an emotional chord with me, or I would have at least been more impressed by its gawky charm. This may seem very facile to the film’s passionate supporters, but I don’t see this movie as being particularly joycore, and I just don’t have room in my life for tweemo cinema at this moment in time. Whereas other people seem to be getting a “everybody deserves to be loved and make real connections with other people” message from the film, all I see is a bunch of characters totally crippled by their neediness and loneliness, who never quite advance beyond that stage in spite of some rather arc-y screenwriting. Is profound emotional immaturity a sort of virtue in Miranda July’s world? Are hugs and let’s-hold-hands togetherness really the answer to everything? As noted by several other critics, July clearly loves her characters too much, and I would suggest that she has a rather misguided affection for her own creations.

Though the film follows an assortment of interconnected characters, the A story follows the painfully awkward romance of July’s character and a recently divorced shoe salesman played by Deadwood‘s John Hawkes. The two lack chemistry entirely, and it’s never quite clear why July takes a liking to him other than that he may be the only available man that she knows, and he has the same propensity for revealing far too much about his interior world at totally inappropriate moments. There are several chunks of dialogue spouted off by these two characters that are just far too precious and over the top for their own good, to the point that I realized about halfway through the film that Batman Begins was actually a more plausible film in spite of Me and You‘s mundane setting. July does better with her supporting characters, particularly with Hawkes’ two young sons, but it’s never enough to make up for the relative ickiness of the leads.

I hate that the film’s ostensible villain is a curator who rejects the shitty, amateurish video art made by July’s character, and that she ultimately includes her in a museum show because July has wheedled her way into it, and the curator has realized how very sad and lonely she is. Oh boo hoo, Miranda! Some people have to reject things in life. Some people have to be critical. And thank God for that! Todd Serencha at The Face Knife absolutely nails this point:

It’s hard for me to take the film seriously philosophically when the world is so twee. Out of “everyone we know,” everyone is a secret snuggler, and I say to that Nay. It would be kind of hell to live in a world where people are spontaneously participating in little art projects or where cuddle parties are liable to break out at the drop of a guard.


Dub Narcotic Sound System featuring Miranda July “Out Of Your Mind” So yeah, it’s not very shocking that with her combination of starving-artist pretensions, twee sensibility, and yearning for a supportive community, July would have ended up collaborating with Calvin Johnson at some point. That’s just sort of inevitable, right? This isn’t anything new, though – it goes back to 1998. This track will always bring to mind nostalgic thoughts of The Black Cat in Washington, DC, though I am almost entirely certain that the images and “memories” that it evokes aren’t in any way rooted in any actual experiences that I had during my brief time living in that city. But it’s probably better that way, given what a boring, depressive, repressed mess I was back then, and that I don’t remember the other people being that much different. (Click here to buy it from K Records.)

August 8th edit: The comments box discussion for this entry was particularly good, and since Haloscan eventually deletes them for space, here are the best bits of the thread for readers who come by and check this post out via Google in the future. All of the comments credited to Matthew are my own words.

Chalk up one reader who emphatically disagrees. I loved the movie, though I should note that I don’t see it as having “everybody deserves to be loved and make real connections with other people” as one of its themes at all. Though it appears I disagree on several fronts – I never saw the museum curator as a villain (certainly not after the “macaroni” bit, which happens shortly after you meet her), and I think the suggestion that July loves her characters too much is way off-base; she simply doesn’t judge any of them at all (this type of debate is, of course, always at the center of discussion about Solondz’ movies, which this has been compared to in some reviews – does he want to punish his characters? etc.) I related majorly to the idea that in moments of loneliness, we tend to fixate on details and give significance to small gestures (the banana sticker in John Hawkes’ car, the quarter the man hands the kid, the way a shoe fits, etc.)
Fuck, I don’t know, I loved it. Then again, the notion of people spontaneously participating in little art projects sounds excellent to me.
The Fixin’s Bar | 06.28.05 – 2:23 pm | #

Yeah, I wouldn’t say that it was a bad movie, cos I see an incredible power in this film to really make people happy or inspire them, etc. It just meant little to me, and so I only really think about the accumulation of little things that I really hated in the film, because that’s what lingers in my mind.
Matthew | Homepage | 06.28.05 – 2:27 pm | #

At the very least, you had to have loved the initital “back and forth” scene, right?

))((
The Fixin’s Bar | 06.28.05 – 3:56 pm | #

“Is profound emotional immaturity a sort of virtue in Miranda July’s world?”

She’s from Olympia. You do the math.
mike | Homepage | 06.28.05 – 4:04 pm | #

Actually, she is not from Olympia, she is from the Bay and spent a few years in Portland. She has a lot of reverence for everyone’s art and connection through art — she was basically the film arm of Riot Girl, with her DIY film/feminist video chainletter MISS MOVIOLA. Which is applaudable and not cynical. I am not sure why so many people see the neediness as pathetic, or even see neediness so profoundly and are so quick to typify it as negative. I see the film being about being failing and flailing in our humanity, where child sexuality intersects with adult word ( rather than adults scared of sex as the Reader’s J. Rosenbaum called it as), it felt very real – the people I know in my life are p[eculiar and desperate and want to be loved and suffering and showing up at thier crushes work with socks on their ears like Eeyore. They are doing

rabbit rabbit style hex removal by touching banana stickers. I think there is a huge difference between TWEE and PAYING ATTENTION TO DETAIL. Twee means you are not brave, you are sweet and smooshable, you are a Belle and Sebastian obsessive. Miranda’s movie is brave. Any movie that portrays teen sexuality as honestly as it does — rather than salacious OTT rub fantasy ala Thirteen or like Porky’s style virginity loss gigglefest — that cannot be twee. I think maybe people are taking MJuly’s egalitarian love and hope for something wide eyed and naive. The movie dares us to betray our cynicism.

Also, I suggest anyone who liked the movie checked out an art project project that miranda is involved with called learningtoloveyoumore.com
and also seek out MJ’s recent short stories published in Harvard Review and Paris Review — more on the themes of trying to get past yourself to have real connection with the world, and/intersection between adult world and kid world – the gap between.
Jessica Hopper | 06.28.05 – 4:34 pm | #

One thing that I did find really interesting about Me and You is how it presented all of the characters as though they were all the same age, but their age in most cases was something that boxed them in to their roles.

All of my favorite scenes were the ones involving teen sexuality, and I basically agree with Jessica on that score. It’s the adult relationships that bugged me – that’s where the tweeness came in as far as I’m concerned. I don’t think I could ever view neediness as being an attractive or admirable quality, so I think that’s the major point of philosophical departure here.
Matthew | Homepage | 06.28.05 – 4:51 pm | #

So Miranda July is kind of the Eminem of the hideously cute?
Eppy | Homepage | 06.28.05 – 6:08 pm | #

Can you unpack that a bit, Eppy?
Matthew | Homepage | 06.28.05 – 6:25 pm | #

So yr pissed at the movie for treating people precious or for the adults not being adult enough?

To need and to want to be needed – romantically or platonically — is not only one of the fundamental tenets of life, but it’s what about 86% of slow jams/pop-rock/indie-rock/sex-pop/mooney french vocal house etc etc is about. I think it’s such a strange thing to beef with. I mean, granted, on a sociological level, men are goaded to view “need” as weak and not part of their emotional palate, so that might make sense… though Fluxblog comments zone might not be the best place to through down some 80’s style gender essentialism, so pardon if that’s offending yr wild style. Also, re: ‘starving artist pretentions’ — I do not think there was ever pretense or pretend or anything other than tres vrai informed experience. Homegirl was making movies for $11 for years, and doing spoken word remix 12″s with IQU, I really doubt it paid the bills.
Jessica Hopper | 06.28.05 – 6:26 pm | #

“To need and to want to be needed – romantically or platonically — is not only one of the fundamental tenets of life, but it’s what about 86% of slow jams/pop-rock/indie-rock/sex-pop/mooney french vocal house etc etc is about.”

This is true, so my problem with the film is more in its style and execution. There’s nothing wrong with that theme per se (I loved Funny Ha Ha, which certainly dealt with similar things, but with far more subtlety and almost zero preciousness), but I think that July’s articulation of the idea and her apparent conclusions are something I just can’t get with at this point in time.
Matthew | Homepage | 06.28.05 – 6:42 pm | #

Fuck. I thought Hopper had my back until I got to the Belle & Sebastian-obsessive part. Because I loved “M&Y&EWK,” but I’m also one of those B&S freaks.
The Fixin’s Bar | 06.28.05 – 7:06 pm | #

I’ve never even heard of the movie but from the way everyone describes it–both supporters and detractors–it sounds fucking horrible. Makes me want to listen to my Big Black records.
Rich in CLE | 06.29.05 – 2:21 am | #

Er, unpacking: Jessica was making basically a realism argument, i.e. it’s OK that MJ is showing these repulsively cutesy things because friends of Jessica also do these things, which is one of the arguments made to justify Eminem back in the day, as I recall: sure, it’s odious, but it’s an accurate representation of white male underclass rage etc. etc. I guess this interpretation probably runs counter to MJ’s intentions–she was trying to charm people, not throw the terrifying reality of Northwestern cutsiness in their faces–but it’s funny, anyway.

Also, there’s a difference between “needing” and “being needy,” and from what I can see, Matthew’s decrying the latter. Being needy is regarded as a pretty much 100% negative, uber-turnoff amongst my peer group, which I can have show up en masse and vouch for their mixed-gender status etc. if needed.

Also: if anything, it’s the males I know that are needy, not the females! But then I hang around with dorks.

I think if you’re looking for men being masculine and not-weak, you’re barking up the wrong corner of the interweb.
Eppy | Homepage | 06.29.05 – 10:58 am | #

RE: the curator lady. Being from Portland, I recognized her character as so real–there has always been an entrenched artist beef w/ Portland Institute of Contemporary Art’s rigid lack of support for local artists, and their notorious one show a year (or in the case of the Portland Art Museum, the Oregon Biennial). (PICA is getting way better about this.) But it’s not just a Portland thing, it is an incredibly difficult, almost sadistic process for young artists to get into museums, always has been. Did you see the Diane Arbus exhibit at the Met? She pratically had to clean the Guggenheim’s toilet to get in. It was a realistic narrative, and not whiney or fitful at all, whereas it could have been. It was an interesting way to show the artists’ uphill climb for legitimacy, without really villainizing anyone.

It’s not so twee, either– w/miranda’s movie you have to distinguish between infantile and childlike, being willing to accept a kind of newness and openness into your life versus simply getting fetal (p.s. i don’t think the word childlike has neg connotations). Miranda’s movie wasn’t any more breathless, sweet than say Rushmore– its characters were odder actually, in a subtler manner. (I mean, she was stalking the shoe salesman. And it was more about being in the moment than romanticism, even–she started loving him just as her older friend told her he had wasted his life with someone he didn’t love, and mentally you could see she was like, “oh snap, carpe diem”–that was a real turning point in the movie.)

I think neediness is entirely relative. But I am actually curious as to what you would define as “being needy.” I have my own ideas but i would like to know what you think.

Personally I was like, “finally a movie with characters who feel as alienated lonely OCD weird and effed up as I and most people I know feel, but (this is key) never talk about–only these characters don’t end up offing themselves or marrying Richard Gere.” Their neuroses really spoke to that (i.e. Christine obsessively touching the round sticker on her dashboard.) I don’t think Miranda was making a concerted effort to charm people. She has spent the past like 14 yrs talking to all kinds of people about their lives for her art–she’s probably talked to more people than some journalists–and she was trying to present a real story of how real people deal, but put a little magic inside, to maybe manifest the impulses ppl suppress because of cynicism and fear. It was all about being on a limb.

Rich in CLE: you should totally check it out, it is a movie about fucking (kind of). And a guy lights his own h

and on fire.

one more thing, sorry–if you listen to the albums miranda made w/kill rock stars when she was living in oly, they are like the creepiest ever–more david lynch/dr demento. they’re terrific, broken-edged and nothing twee about them.
Julianne Shephard | Homepage | 06.29.05 – 5:46 pm | #

“there has always been an entrenched artist beef w/ Portland Institute of Contemporary Art’s rigid lack of support for local artists, and their notorious one show a year (or in the case of the Portland Art Museum, the Oregon Biennial).”

See, this is kinda the thinking that I hate – that curators of any kind have some kind of obligation to “local artists” regardless of whether or not said local artists are any good or interesting to the curator or something that will draw people and money to the institution. That “but I’m a local artist!” line always seems like a complaint born of entitlement.
Matthew | Homepage | 06.29.05 – 11:41 pm | #

oh i’m with you on that–ppl shouldn’t expect anything SIMPLY cause they’re local, if their work is substandard–i guess i should have clarified that PICA branched off the PAM because of its lack of local support/vision.
Julianne Shephard | Homepage | 06.30.05 – 10:03 am | #

It’s so refreshing to see a negative/constructive criticism about ‘Me And You And Everyone We Know’ – I thought it was poorly executed and thematically trivial. Yet everyone seems to love it – for no real reason apart from it’s universally dull goody-goodyness. There’s another amusing text/review over at this place: http://lost.burnthead.com/index….hp? showimage=27 Anyway, good review.
theguy | 06.30.05 – 12:48 pm | #

I’m 20 and I thought it was a total load of crap. The only highlights were the initial back-and-forth scene, as someone mentioned, and the salesman fitting the old man’s shoes, just because that’s a ridiculous procedure that needed to be committed to film.
Anthony | 06.30.05 – 3:14 pm | #

The part of my review that Matthew chose to excerpt here is mostly tongue-in-cheek; it’s a reflection of my own horror and fear of intimacy, ironically aligning me with some of the characters in July’s movie, because that’s pretty much the theme of the movie. Like Todd Solondz’s movies, July’s film is about the crazy things people do to establish or avoid intimacy, but unlike Solondz, July’s characters have the possibility of redemption. The possibility for growth is explicitly precluded in Solondzville, where as in Julysylvania, things can change in an instant, and you more or less don’t have to try. That’s what makes it twee, beyond the design, the music, etc. Twee is not necessarily a bad thing, but when coupled with the hermetic world of an over-workshopped short story, which is what July’s plot and characters are victim of, it seems to me, creates an ornamental view of life that’s incompatible with any serious feeling.

The comparison to Wes Anderson is apt – Anderson’s films are twee in design and concern, but his characters have explicit, dislikable flaws. He’ll err on the side of making someone unsympathetic (Steve Zissou) whereas July errs on the side of making everyone sympathetic.

That’s not to say that July is a shitty director/writer. The film is very funny, but I don’t think it transcends the indie ghetto from whence it came.
Todd | Homepage | 07.01.05 – 11:34 am | #

It’s funny that someone with such a cloyingly designed/written website would take Miranda July to task for being twee. Look at your logo, dude, and tell me that Fluxblog isn’t all about a desire to be cuddled.
Anonymous | 07.06.05 – 3:25 am | #

Style of Eye featuring Freeda “You Got That” – When they sing “you’ve got the feeling,” I don’t think they necessarily mean that it’s something that you have and that they are acknowledging, but rather something that they are granting you (or unlocking within you) at that moment in the song. It’s like a funky benediction. (Click here to buy it from Tunes.)

Also: I am way behind in checking/sorting through all the mp3s that get sent to the fluxblog @ gmail.com address, so please don’t be offended if it takes me a long time to even get to your email. As you can imagine, I am swamped with mp3s and cds, more and more all the time, and it’s almost impossible for me to be very fair with this while also having a life and working. This goes double for people who write me with link requests. I do not do link exchanges as a rule, but I do check every site and sometimes like them a lot. I will be changing the design and layout of this site sometime in the not-too-distant future, and the links section is either going to be reduced or expanded, I haven’t decided just yet. Either way, I haven’t been tinkering with the existing links bar much recently, except to add a handful of notable sites that I check regularly for one reason or another. Please don’t be offended or discouraged if I don’t link you immediately, or at all. The links are there for my own convenience more than anything else.


©2008 Fluxblog
Site by Ryan Catbird