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Billy Bragg

Blog

12…38Próximo
  • Top 20 genres.

    Nov 8 2009, 10h47 por neonlights13

    1. indie 1666 plays (The Smiths, The Decemberists, Modest Mouse...)
    2. punk 1420 plays (Anti-Flag, The Clash, The Gaslight Anthem...)
    3. ska 912 plays (Sublime, Sonic Boom Six, Grown at Home...)
    4. rock 567 plays (Harry Nillson, Faith No More, Joe Strummer and The Mescaleros...)
    5. post-punk 402 plays (The Fall, Joy Division, The The...)
    6. hip-hop 341 plays (Mattafix, The Streets, Kanye West...)
    7. electronic 327 plays (Simian Mobile Disco, The Prodigy, Balkan Beat Box...)
    8. folk 270 plays (The Pogues, Frank Turner, Billy Bragg...)
    9. hard rock 250 plays (Slade, Guns N' Roses, Thin Lizzy...)
    10. reggae 186 plays (Bedouin Soundclash, UB40, althea and donna...)
    11. dub 176 plays (Suicide Bid, King Tubby, Lee "Scratch" Perry...)
    12. heavy metal 160 plays (Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden, Slipknot...)
    13. riot grrrl 150 plays (Sleater-Kinney, bikini kill, team dresch)
    14. britpop 141 plays (Oasis, The Stone Roses, Cast...)
    15. experimental 136 plays (animal collective, holy fuck, grizzly bear...)
    16. new wave 130 plays (The Cure, New Order, The Stranglers...)
    17. emo 128 plays (Fall Out Boy, The Academy Is..., Brandston...)
    18. punk rock 118 plays (Green Day, The Offspring, blink-182...)
    19. drum and bass 103 plays (Chase And Status, Pendulum, Sub Focus...)
    20. alternative rock 102 plays (PJ Harvey, The Cranberries, Sinead O'Connor...)
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  • Illegal File Sharers Face Broadband Squeeze.

    Set 25 2009, 8h32 por Neonfiller

    Musicians including Lily Allen and Radiohead’s Ed O’Brien have ended their public spat about illegal file sharers and agreed a plan to “squeeze” the bandwidth of persistent offenders.... more here.

    Lily Allen Radiohead Pink Floyd Billy Bragg
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  • Frank Turner - Poetry of the Dead (Album Review)

    Set 4 2009, 13h28 por Neonfiller

    Frank Turner's work ethic is certainly not in doubt. Take the video for recent single The Road, from his third album Poetry of the Deed, in which he successfully pulled off the amazing feat of performing 24 gigs in 24 hours.

    For the album itself he has been similarly enthusiastic.... more here.

    Frank Turner The Hold Steady Billy BraggPoetry Of The Deed
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  • Green Man festival, 21 - 23 August 2009

    Set 2 2009, 22h22 por laurasnapes

    Fri 21 Aug – Green Man Festival 2009

    Words by laurasnapes up until the excellent Wilco review by motionpicture
    Originally published on http://www.thelineofbestfit.com

    Waking up to the sight of mist curled around the sleepy bosom of the Brecon Beacons is a festival sight so incongruously lovely that it feels as though Dylan Thomas’ words are the poles supporting our tents. There’s a poem of his, ‘Fern Hill’, that fits the weekend quite aptly – it starts bright with childlike wonder at “the night above the dingle starry” and being “green and carefree…green and golden” – as with most festivals, the sight of adults revelling in youthful abandon is a common one – but the extent to which innocence and charming guilelessness appear a permanent state of mind for many of the bands playing eventually induces a malaise at the intolerable niceness of everything on offer. The setting, jolly ambience and organisation are perfectly fine – as is the refreshingly relaxed attitude to BYO (that’s ‘Bring Your Own’ alcohol for you older types) – but musically, the weekend’s inoffensiveness undergoes a kind of dialectical transformation to become the most heinous Swellsian insult possible, to the extent that even much loved performers like Bon Iver become something of a chore to watch.

    Green Man is a festival that can certainly take risks – knowing Animal Collective’s penchant for scientific, inconclusive live renderings of their records makes them a risky proposition for a Friday night headline set at a folk-oriented festival, and it’s similarly daring to put formerly troubled ‘60s psychedelic musician Roky Erickson so high up on the bill to bark his grouchy 12 bar blues, but both sets are packed (even though the main joy inherent in Erickson’s set comes from figuring out if he’s really singing, “Pritchard, give me head again”). Heads down, Animal Collective perform a constant, steady application of sound that burbles like the euphoric head rush near-drowning is said to induce. Unsatisfying as many well-studied fans of Merriweather Post Pavilion find their set – a shy rendition of ‘My Girls’ blooms understated from the rush of sound a few songs in – there’s surely something to be said for the boldness of continuing to play such a well-loved album in this esoteric and oft criticized style. Easily the best day of the weekend, Friday’s more inventive highlights include the fluorescent Rorschach blooms and roars of Gang Gang Dance and Wooden Shjips’ heavy, bleary eyed textures. Where they could easily elongate their songs into 12-minute smorgasbords of drone and incoherence, they’re surprisingly brief as well as far too quiet. It should be impossible for audience members to talk over them and still hear themselves, a problem which reoccurs throughout the weekend – with no houses or towns nearby, the volume should be erupting from the peaks of the surrounding hills. Luckily though they’ve got a brilliantly unrecognisable cover of Neil Young’s ‘TocarVampire Blues’ and authenticity on their side, which is more than can be said for Cate Le Bon’s Saturday morning set.

    After a few songs we hit the biliously clichéd “bastard lovechild of X and Y on acid” of folk music – singing of tides coming in and being left on the shore by a lover, ‘Out To Sea’ is turgid, dreary and performed without a smidgen of humour, and the rest of her set fails to pick up with a shamanistic drone number that runs on autopilot. The Leisure Society perform an untitled new song, the chorus of which repeats, “If we only knew the answers we could print them up onto t-shirts” over a muted tropical organ rhythm. Even given the sublime songwriting on their debut, The Sleeper, musically it’s an ambitious song by their standards, and highlights the inventiveness that comes through on their cover of Gary Numan’s ‘TocarCars’. Yet there’s no escaping the fact that they perpetuate the lull of Saturday afternoon, which doesn’t alleviate during Peter Broderick or Beach House’s sets. It’s undeniable that Peter Broderick’s records and work with Efterklang are gorgeous and poignant, and there are moments live where he plays violin like a bird bone fragile Arthur Russell, but his in between song chatter is symptomatic of the lack of subtlety that runs through a great deal of the music on show this afternoon. On the motivation for writing his last song, he says, “it came from something I saw written on a bathroom wall, which said, “You’re probably stupid”. I never write on bathroom walls, but I got out my pen and added, “But you’re probably beautiful.”” Being up to the eyeballs in insipid sentiment and polite loveliness, things don’t bode well for Beach House, who labour over what seem to be the same few piano chords for the duration of their set – if they were playing a headline gig on their own terms then this might well be quite beautiful, but it’s the pitching of the day that renders it an undynamic burden.

    All is not lost though as Beach House vocalist Victoria Legrand joins Grizzly Bear later on to sing the “ah-ah-aaaah-ah” parts of ‘Two Weeks’. Live, Grizzly Bear manage to pull off what it seems remains just out of grasp for a great many of the bands this weekend. Whether it’s the oblique resonance of the lyrics, the gut punch of Chris Taylor playing clarinet through a bass pedal or an absolute grasp and confidence in what they’re doing, they’re faultless. A group of guys near the front start a mass bear hug during ‘While You Wait for the Others’ and attempt to extend it across the whole crowd – the rest of the audience don’t bite, but it’s heartwarming reassurance that there’s no need for mawkish over-emphasis on emotion to get through to people.

    Happily, the band playing the main stage early Sunday afternoon seemingly couldn’t give an organic Goan fish curry as to whether they touch anyone or not. “We’ve noticed that to play Green Man, you’ve got to have an animal in your band name,” says Zun Zun Egui frontman Kushal, in pretty much the only instance of any band daring to make a joke at the festival’s expense. “Just look at the programme. So for this weekend, we’ve renamed ourselves Sexy Worm.” Yelping and howling in tongues like Melt Banana being fed poisonous frogs to the beat of polyrhythmic tribal drums, they’re on far too early in the day, but provide welcome noise respite before Scott Matthews’ bedwetting dirge. His first song could be a collaboration between Coldplay, Newton Faulkner, Snow Patrol and David Gray, such are its myriad chord changes, syncopated drum bursts and challenging lyrics… It’s music to read Dan Brown books and fall asleep to, the sound of ‘That’s Life!’-reading housewives sobbing into a cup of cold tea, and not even nuanced enough to nestle between Dulux’s ‘Magnolia’ and ‘Butterscotch’ swatches.

    A performer who doesn’t seem to have undergone the complimentary humour lobotomy at the entrance gates is Jessica Larrabee from She Keeps Bees. If you watched Jonathan Ross interviewing Miley Cyrus, you’ll remember his look of equal parts tentative hysteria and sheer terror as she failed to stem the flow of verbal diarrhoea emanating from between her slightly weird gums – it’s a similar situation with Larrabee, to the extent that it’d be infinitely preferable to watch her in the stand up tent than to have to sit through their uninspiring bursts of garage rock (their sound recalls Lenny Kravitz more than once during their set) before getting to the next joke. Highlights include, “I know what you’re all thinking. When did Cat Power get fat?” and a story of her begging drummer Andy to “GIMME THE QUIDS!” to let her investigate the culinary delights of the food stands.

    Aside from a few pockets of blistering heat, the threat of rain has hung heavy in dark clouds over most of the weekend, but it doesn’t actually start until the Dirty Three come on stage, and fits their perversely apocalyptic sense of humour neatly. “It’s great to be back in Scotland,” jests Warren Ellis, who’s on excellently inebriated avuncular form. Jim White plays tentatively over the start of ‘Some Summers They Drop Like Flies’ whilst Ellis yells at photographers, punches the air, and windmills his arms, all the while looping his violin and playing with his whole body – even without words, this carries infinitely more feeling than the “my lover left me on the shore” crap from earlier on. “We haven’t released an album in four years because we’ve been having problems making one,” he says, before offering 50%, no, 40% of the songwriting royalties to anyone who sends in workable ideas. “Not too many chords – we’re not an emo band contrary to what you might think, nor one of those bedwetter bands.” But if he is telling the truth, you’d never tell that they’re apparently losing creative momentum, ‘Indian Love Song’ (apparently “Black Sabbath's ‘[track artist = Black Sabbath]Paranoid[/track]’ in reverse, down an octave and up a third.”) is as blistering now as it was when it was written 16 years ago.

    (Wilco review by motionpicture)

    Those frustrated by the sweet and overly sincere acoustic balladry of the weekend breathe a collective sigh of relief as the first few notes of the dark groove of Wilco’s ‘Bull Black Nova’ pulsate throughout the arena. The tension mounts until Nels Cline – a man so familiar with his instrument, he could tell you which chord would sound if he were to throw his guitar against a brick wall – slowly increases the intensity of his playing until all that can be heard behind Jeff Tweedy’s raspy cries of “OH, PICK UP!” is the sound of a Jaguar being brutally contorted into a screech that would make the majority of the weekend’s acts wet their proverbial musical pants.

    “If you can’t play these songs at a folk festival, when can you?” jokes Tweedy, after a relatively mournful rendition of ‘Deeper Down’. By relatively, I mean that even a song like ‘Via Chicago’, essentially an acoustic ballad in its original incarnation, is completely reinvented in this live setting. Glenn Kotche’s assault on his drum kit during the second verse creates a tunnel of noise through which Tweedy seemingly obliviously travels through, refusing to fight the urge to increase his volume but, instead, continuing his heartfelt murmurs through to the other end, to be met by a huge cheer when the original beat comes back in.

    “That guy who said he loved me,” Tweedy announces as he points into the audience, “this one’s for you.” The highlight of the set for anyone basking in the bromance of the hour comes in the form of this next track, too. Definitely a candidate for the ’should-be-much-longer’ track of the year, ‘Wilco (the Song)’, with its tongue-in-cheek, anthemic lyrics, inspires the rowdiest sing-a-long of the weekend, at least in the front few rows.

    It’s a subtle “up yours” to those branding Wilco as ‘dad rock’, or in fact anyone who has attempted to pigeon-hole the band at all, that the set is arguably the most diverse of the weekend. The Queen-style clap-along during the 15 minute rendition of ‘Spiders (Kidsmoke)’ sits just as comfortably next to the wanky guitar battle between Pat Sansone and Nels Cline during ‘Hoodoo Voodoo’ (originally a collaboration with Billy Bragg) as it does next to the croons of “Jesus, don’t cry. You can rely on me, honey,” (with perfect harmonies provided by bassist John Stirratt) of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot favourite ‘Jesus, etc.’.

    Wilco return to the stage for a short encore of two songs from A Ghost Is Born and, although the 75 minute headlining slot proves too short to properly satisfy the hardcore Wilco fans, it’s long enough to pack in Cline’s 3 minute guitar solo during ‘Impossible Germany’; to see Glenn Kotche stood atop his drum stool, arms high in the air before jumping down to hit the first cymbal crash of ‘I’m the Man Who Loves You’, as well as Pat Sansone’s windmilling and Jeff’s high-pitched scream during ‘I’m A Wheel’ and the rock-solid foundations provided by John Stirratt’s bass-playing and Mikael Jorgensen on keyboards (that’s not to say they don’t also have their moments). Much like their stage predecessors Dirty Three, the years of playing together have left Wilco as a tight unit, completely aware of every nuance of each other’s execution and in a completely different league, performance-wise, from almost every other act at the festival.
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  • I actually read the selfish gene so I know where memes came from huzzah

    Jul 25 2009, 3h28 por Shibbie729

    1. What are you listening to right now?
    TocarWasted Life

    2. What song makes you sad?
    Lou Reed - TocarThe Bed

    3. What is the most annoying song in the world?
    Big Green Tractor... seriously the song is about romancing a girl by taking her for a ride on his tractor... and it plays at least twice a day at work unless I forcibly change the dial

    4. Your all time favorite band?
    yikes. The Screamers are always up there. Two Gallants and The Zounds are pretty high as well. velvet Undergound holds a special place in my heart. Billy Bragg and Leonard Cohen . Nick Cave in any iteration.

    5. Your newly discovered band is?
    lately I'm getting into Ramblin Jack Elliott

    6. Best female voice?
    hmm Ani DiFranco, Neko Case, Odetta, Anita Lane, Cat Power

    7. Best male voice?
    Leonard Cohen, Leadbelly, the guys from Two Gallants

    8. Music type you find yourself listening to most?
    70s punk; lately folk and blues

    9. What do you listen to, to hype you up?
    The Epoxies

    10. What do you listen to when you want to calm down?
    Belle and Sebastian

    11. Last gig/concert you went to?
    Jeffrey Lewis opened for that chick from The Moldy Peaches who did all the music for Juno. She was a bit much, but Jeffrey Lewis I would marry in a second. *hopes he's reading and waves*

    12. Band you find yourself listening to the most right now?
    lately I'm not hardcore into anything in specific

    13. Most hated band?
    whoever sings that fucking tractor song

    14. Song that makes you think?
    probably The Decemberists and B&S since they're a bunch of literary twats. Also, Crass makes me reconsider everything I believe.


    15. Band that you think the world should love as much as you do?
    Two Gallants and Kid Dakota; they're pretty much two of the only bands still touring I really love so it'd be awesome if they got famous enough to come visit dc on a regular basis.

    16. Coolest music video?
    Probably not what you mean, but Jeff Lewis and The Books both have visual accompaniments at their shows and both are very fucking cool. Jeff Lewis does his own comic book story things while The Books raid thrift stores, etc and splice together weird films. Both can be found on the you tube I'm sure.

    17. Music video with the most babe watch?
    I don't know I don't watch standard music videos.

    18. What do you play/would you play in the bedroom to spice things up?
    So into You as covered by Shudder to Think;

    also if any attractive man wants to be the Janis Joplin to my Leonard Cohen(it's my fantasy, I get to receive), we can rent a room at the Chelsea Hotel and play the song and you know how it goes

    19. Can you play a musical instrument?
    nope

    20. Ever been in a mosh pit?
    um kind of. Been on the outskirts pushing people back in when they get to close to the edge, not much of a mosher though.

    21. Are you in a band?
    no, you need talent for that

    22. Ever dated a musician?
    no

    23. Do you wish yourself that you were a musician?
    yes!

    24. Best chick band you know of?
    Bikini Kill is my "chick" band of choice

    25. Last song that you heard on the radio/cd...etc...?
    idk I didn't work today

    26. What do you think of Classical music?
    usually don't go out of my way to listen, but I will sometimes put it on at work

    27. What do you think of Country music?
    I like the non-lame kind that doesn't involve taking my girlfriend for a ride on my tractor. Hoyt Axton, that kind of thing. i suppose I lean towards folk/bluegrass/cowpunk rather than country country.

    28. What do you think of Death metal?
    eh, I can take it or leave it.

    29. Last BIG band that you saw live?
    um I saw the Who with the 'rents. Probably the BIGGEST band I've ever seen.

    30. Are you a groupie?
    nope

    31. Do you listen to music in foreign languages?
    yes.

    32. What famous musician would you like to fuck?
    something about Nick Cave's receding hair line and matching handlebar mustache is bizarrely appealing in ways it wouldn't be on anyone else

    33. Worst concert moment?
    um well at the jeff lewis show these weird high schooler kids tried to befriend me.

    34. Funny concert moment?
    moldy peaches' girl actually puts on a good show if only I didn't not particularly care for her music. so anyway she's wickedly funny and at one point stopped singing and all the little high schoolers kept on singing and it was comical comical comical.

    35. Sad concert moment?
    eh well Jeff Lewis show again I guess. a bunch of love songs when you're recently broken up with a boyfriend is not good for the emotional well being. especially when you start texting him and he doesn't answer because he's fucking some other girl.

    36. Best local act you can think of?
    merm... The Evens; are they together any more? and do they transcend local?

    37. If you were a musical instrument what would you be?
    banjo

    38. Do you listen to the radio?
    only at work

    39. Do you watch music TV?
    no

    40. Do you follow the music charts, like the top 40?
    does anyone actually follow the charts? I assumed they just all listened to the same radio stations which resulted in the charts.

    41. Have you meet any famous musicians?
    Once I rubbed against both Ian Mackaye and Henry Rollins. I also shook hands with the guy from CKY at a concert once and I thought he was just doing the hand touch thing, but apparently he wanted a shake and he told me I had a weak handshake and should work on it. r.i.p. the downtown

    42. Are any of your friends/family/etc. musicians?
    a decent amount play instruments just not particularly professionally or organized-ly; My cousin is a music teacher.

    43. Song that best describes your feelings right now?
    The Buzzcocks - Boredom

    44. Song that describes your life?
    eh I'm tiring of this

    45. Do you know the names of all the band members that you listen to?
    no

    46. Does a musician’s physical attractiveness play a role in the music?
    no, but it makes the shows more fun

    47. What famous musician do you want to marry?
    I'm not the marrying kind. oh except for you Jeff Lewis *waves again*

    48. Favourite movie soundtrack?
    I don't watch movies

    49. Any musician pet hates?
    no

    50. What do your parents listen to?
    my dad listens to show tunes from Broadway; my mom used to have this divas CD featuring mariah carey, shania twain, etc; they both enjoy the beatles and meatloaf; apparently they were both cool once as I've purloined enough records from them to suggest that. Daddy's Zappa, David Peel and The Lower East Side and Velvet Underground, Mom's Led Zeppelin

    51. What are you listening to right NOW?
    Lou Reed - Perfect Day

    52. Do you wear band etc T-shirts?
    sometimes

    53. What do you think of people who do?
    I once fell in love with Tom from physics due to his awesome t-shirt collection. I was too scared to talk to him so I'd try to coordinate wearing my Minor Threat shirt with his wearing of his Minor Threat shirt so I could be like "hey, you like Minor Threat too? I had no idea" and then we'd make out in the distance but it never worked out for me and anyway his myspace was full of love for his girlfriend. hah. This was a very long time ago.

    54. What music sub-culture do you feel like you belong to?
    thoughtwise I belong with the Punks, but actionwise who knows

    55. What song is stuck in your head right now?
    none

    56. Do you sing in the shower?
    usually no, unless I bring my computer with me

    57. If so, what? If not, why not?
    I'm usually focused on cleaning myself out

    58. Would you rather marry a musician or be one yourself?
    be one myself

    59. How important is your partners taste in music to you?
    it's nice to go to concerts together and have something to talk about. I don't think I could love someone whose taste was completely terrible.

    60. Hanson moves in next door to you, do you go introduce yourself, or do you arrange to beat them up?
    They never did anything to me, but I'm not the meet and greet kind of gal.

    61. Sex, drugs, and rock 'n roll, you dig?
    yes, just shrooms, yes

    62. Do you cook to music?
    yes, I do most everything to music

    63. Do you sing in the toilet?
    nope
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  • Three: Art & text [Thurston Moore, Robert Pollard, Mission of Burma, Chris Knox, The…

    Jul 20 2009, 19h08 por pennyante



    Penny-Ante is proud to announce our third book installment, properly titled Three, featuring interviews, art, short stories, photography, and more by the likes of such indie icons as:

    Billy Bragg, Thurston Moore (Sonic Youth), Roger Miller (Mission of Burma), Robert Pollard (Guided by Voices), Ian MacKaye (Dischord, Fugazi, Minor Threat), Jad Fair (Half Japanese), Mick Farren (The Deviants), Billy Childish (Thee Headcoats), Chris Knox (Tall Dwarfs, Toy Love, The Enemy, The Nothing), Martin Phillips (The Chills), Rob Roberge (Urinals), Silver Apples, Bettina Koster (Malaria!), Sean Bonniwell (The Music Machine), Martin Newell (Cleaners from Venus), Mark C (Live Skull, Int'l Shades), Sharon Cheslow (Chalk Circle), Helios Creed (Chrome), and Allison Wolfe (Bratmobile, Partyline).

    Such indie luminaries are met with today's current leaders in music: Phil Elverum (Mt Eerie, Microphones), Matt Valentine (MV/EE), Cassie Ramone (Vivian Girls), John Dwyer (Thee Oh Sees), Honey Owens (Valet), Joe DeNardo (Growing), Wynne Greenwood (Tracy & the Plastics), Finland's CIRCLE, Matt Maust (Cold War Kids), Arrington de Dionyso (Old Time Relijun), Pocahaunted, Robedoor, Sumi Ink Club (aka Lucky Dragons), George Chen (KIT), Stephen McCarty (Dead Meadow), Spires That in the Sunset That Rise, Lora Norton (The Chuck Dukowski Sextet), Naked on the Vague, TV Ghost, Loto Ball (of Loto Ball Show), and Christopher Ilth (Daily Void).


    Also featured: Artists Terence Koh, Maya Hayuk, Julian Hoeber, Gregory Jacobsen, Dawn Kasper, Jed Ochmanek, Liz Haley, Mathew Cerletty, Hanna Liden, Maria Joan Dixon, and writers Larry Fondation (Harvard Business Review, Fiction International, Flaunt), Bett Williams (Out Magazine, Frontiers Magazine), Andrew Pogany (Flaunt), Steven Salardino, Jason Diamond (Impose Magazine, Heeb), and Jason Burke Sutter to only name a few.




    320 pages, squarebound book, in color.

    First 2,000 orders come with a FREE CD featuring music from contributors: Jad Fair, Robert Pollard, Billy Childish, Chris Knox, Bettina Koster, Loto Ball Show, Growing, Naked on the Vague, Lucky Dragons, Robedoor, TV Ghost, Int'l Shades.

    Plus unreleased tracks from Phil Elverum, Book #2 contributors The Moon Upstairs, Book #2 contributor (Quasi's) Sam Coomes' new music project with Spencer Seim of Hella called Crock, and a previously unreleased track from The Chills.



    Preorder are available now here:
    http://www.penny-ante.net/

    Direct link to Three:
    http://www.penny-ante.net/three.html

    (Orders will ship starting August 1st)










    Thurston MooreSonic YouthBilly BraggRoger MillerMission of BurmaRobert PollardGuided by VoicesBoston SpaceshipsIan MacKayeEgg HuntFugaziMinor ThreatJad FairHalf JapaneseMick FarrenThe DeviantsChris KnoxToy LoveTall DwarfsThe EnemyThe NothingThe ChillsBettina KosterMalaria!UrinalsSilver ApplesThe Music MachineCleaners from venus\Live SkullInt'l ShadesHelios CreedChromeBratmobilePhil ElverumMt. EerieThe MicrophonesMicrophonesBilly ChildishThee HeadcoatsMatt ValentineTower RecordingsMV/EEMV & EEMV & EE with the Bummer RoadVivian GirlsThee Oh SeesCoachwhipsValetGrowingTracy + the PlasticsCircleCold War KidsArrington De DionysoOld Time RelijunPocahauntedRobedoorSpires That in the Sunset RiseLucky DragonsDaily VoidNaked on the VagueTV GhostGrowingKITDead MeadowThe Chuck Dukowski SextetThe Moon UpstairsHellaQuasi Cleaners From VenusThe Cleaners from Venus
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  • Music as sticky as mud...

    Jul 18 2009, 11h00 por pallfreeman

    About halfway through the old CD collection.

    One problem is these sodding multi-CD sets. I don't think I've ever listened to the entirety of Billy Bragg's Must I Paint You A Picture but it looks like I'm going to be stuck with him and Joy Division for some time. I don't so much mind Perrey & Kingsley being there, at least that's a tad esoteric.

    Still, I suppose this is what happens when you visit the local HMV intending to get one specific CD but instead start picking through the bargain bins.

    Bah.
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  • the best LYRICS ever

    Jul 8 2009, 10h23 por fotsvett

    So make all your fat fleshy fingers to moving, and pluck all your silly strings and bend all your notes for me, soft silly music is meaningful magical
    (Neutral Milk Hotel - Oh Comely)

    I wish the world was flat like the old days and I could travel just by folding a map, there'd be no speedtrains, airplanes, or freeways, there'd be no distances to hold us back
    (Death Cab for Cutie - The New Year)

    I carved your name across my eyelids, you pray for rain I pray for blindness
    (The Arcade Fire - Crown Of Love)

    You were right about the stars, each one is a setting sun
    (Wilco - Jesus, etc.)

    Something always takes the place of missing pieces
    (Beck - Missing)

    I saw two shooting stars last night, I wished on them but they were only satellites, and wrong to wish on space hardware, I wish, I wish, I wish you'd care
    (Billy Bragg - A New England)

    I'm not fucking Buddhist but this is enlightenment
    (Björk - Alarm Call)

    Yes to dance beneath the diamond sky With one hand waving free
    (Bob Dylan - Mr. Tambourine Man)

    This is the first day of my life, glad I didn't die before I met you. Now I don't care, I could go anywhere with you, and I'd probably be happy
    (Bright Eyes - First Day Of My Life)

    The bearers of all good things arrive, climb inside us, twist & cry, a kiss on your molten eyes
    (The Shins - Those To Come)

    My girl, linen and curls, lips parting like a flag all unfurled. She's grand the bend of her hand, digging deep into the sweep of the sand
    (The Decemberists - Summersong)

    I am thinking it's a sign, that the freckles in our eyes are mirror images, and when we kiss they're perfectly aligned
    (Iron & Wine (orig. The Postal Service) - Such Great Heights)

    Someday girl I don’t know when we’re gonna get to that place, where we really want to go and we’ll walk in the sun, but till then tramps like us baby we were born to run
    (Bruce Springsteen - Born To Run)

    I am a writer, a writer of fictions, I am the heart that you call home. I've written pages upon pages, trying to rid you from my bones
    (The Decemberists - Engine Driver)

    Your legs are a melody my hands would like to play, and your hips are a note that does take me away
    (The Cat Empire - The Rhythm)

    If there's one thing you can say about mankind, there's nothing kind about man
    (Tom Waits - Misery Is The River Of The World)

    Rest in my arms. Sleep in my bed. There's a design to what I did and said.
    (Sufjan Stevens - Vito's Ordination Song)

    And you try to find one source of light, try to name one thing you like. You used to have such a longer list, and light, you never had to look for it. But now it's so easy, it's so easy to--it's so easy, it's so easy to second guess everything you do. Until all you want, all you want is to finish this half empty glass before the ice all melts away. This feeling always used to pass, seems like it's every day seems like it's every night now.
    (Bright Eyes - A Line Allows Progress, a Circle Does Not)

    And I am nothing of a builder, but here I dreamt I was an architect. And I built this balustrade, to keep you home, to keep you safe, from the outside world. But the angles and the corners, even though my work is unparalelled, they never seemed to meet, the structure fell about our feet, and we were free to go
    (The Decemberists - Here I Dreamt I Was An Architect)

    Follow me through a city of frost covered angels, I swear I have nothing to prove. I just want to dance in your tangles, to give me some reason to move
    (Neutral Milk Hotel - Gardenhead/Leave Me Alone)

    I'm in love with the world through the eyes of a girl, who's still around the morning after
    (Elliott Smith - Say Yes)

    She said she'd never seen someone so lost, I said I'd never felt so found
    (The Good Life - Album Of The Year)

    She told me she loved me like fireworks, and that's the way I like it
    (Ben Lee - Catch My Disease)

    If you'll be my star, I'll be your sky, you can hide underneath me and come out at night. When I turn jet black and you show off your light, I live to let you shine
    (Gregory and the Hawk - Boats & Birds)

    Stones, taught me to fly. Love, taught me to lie. Life, Taught me to die. But it's not hard to fall, when you float like a cannonball
    (Damien Rice - Cannonball)

    If you weren't real then I would make you up
    (Joseph Arthur - Honey And The Moon)

    This scar is a fleck on my porcelain skin. You tried to reach deep but you couldn't get in. And now you're outside me you see all the beauty, repent all your sin
    (Stars - Your Ex-Lover Is Dead)

    I've seen you around I can tell that you're just like me, you'd rather watch reruns than deal with the bad spin-off called life
    (Billie the Vision & The Dancers - Overdosing With You)

    I loved you in the morning, our kisses deep and warm, your hair upon the pillow like a sleepy golden storm. Yes many loved before us, I know that we are not new, in city and in forest they smiled like me and you. But let's not talk of love or chains and things we can't untie, your eyes are soft with sorrow. Hey, that's no way to say goodbye
    (Leonard Cohen - Hey, That's No Way To Say Goodbye)

    You might have been a neon lover. But you didn't have to advertise
    (The Cars - Up And Down)

    A kitten on fire, a baby in a blender. Both sound as sweet, as a night of surrender
    (My Morning Jacket - Into The Woods)

    Now, how I remember you, how I would push my fingers through your mouth, to make those muscles move, that made your voice so smooth and sweet
    (Neutral Milk Hotel - In The Aeroplane Over The Sea)

    I know someday you'll have a beautiful life, I know you'll be a sun in somebody else's sky, but why, why, why can't it be, why can't it be mine...
    (Pearl Jam - Black)

    Kissing the lipless and bleed all the sweetness away
    (The Shins - Kissing The Lipless)

    She never stumbles, she's got no place to fall
    (Bob Dylan - She Belongs To Me)

    And I swim along with the sun in my eyes, and the cloudless skies singing lullabies. I turn my head and I see your smile, and a water sparkle in your eyes
    (The Slaves - Everyone Is On Drugs)

    Well I wish I had a parachute, cause I'm falling mad for you. I can see the ground approaching now, but I'm not sure what to do. I feel like the piñata, won't you take a swing at me. If you could just crack the shell open, I think inside you would find something sweet
    (Bright Eyes - Theme From Piñata)

    To make a mountain of a life is just a choice
    (Nada Surf - Always Love)

    And if you have five seconds to spare, then I'll tell you the story of my life: Sixteen, clumsy and shy. That's the story of my life
    (The Smiths - Half A Person)

    I was scared at first 'cos when he spoke it wasn't very soft, he told me about the life-long love of his heart. Had a t-shirt on that said we're all gonna die alone, I still believe that's true, oh I truly do
    (Tiger Lou - Oh Horatio)

    In my dreams you're alive and you're crying, as your mouth moves in mine soft and sweet, rings of flowers around your eyes and I'll love you for the rest of your life
    (Neutral Milk Hotel - Two-Headed Boy Pt. 2)

    Won't you come by and see me? I'm a love letter away
    (Voxtrot - The Start Of Something)

    How to shine like California when your heart feels like Detroit
    (Woodface - White Light To You)

    My radio's my heart
    (John Frusciante - Time Goes Back)


    what's your favorite quote?
    Ler mais 13 comentários Adicionar comentário
  • ~*~bandz i hav seen live~*~

    Jul 1 2009, 19h32 por asdfkennedy

    in my sixteen yrs of existence:

    #

    !!!

    a

    A Sunny Day in Glasgow
    Abe Froman
    Abe Vigoda
    Acoustic Front of Resistance
    Aesop Rock
    Against Me!
    Akron/Family
    Amanda Palmer
    Amy Millan
    Andrew Bird
    Animal Collective
    Antony and the Johnsons
    Anti-Nowhere League
    The Apples in Stereo
    Arcade Fire
    Arlo Guthrie
    The Arrogant Sons of Bitches
    Art Sorority for Girls
    Atlas Sound
    Azure Ray
    A.C. Newman

    b

    The Baby Skins
    Bad Brains
    Badly Drawn Boy
    The Bananas
    Bat for Lashes
    Be Your Own Pet
    Beach House
    Bid D And The Kids Table
    Billy Bragg
    Black Dice
    Black Kids
    Black Lips
    Black Milk
    Black Moth Super Rainbow
    Blackalicious
    Blitzen Trapper
    Bloc Party
    Blonde Redhead
    Blood Red Shoes
    Bob Dylan
    Bomb the Music Industry!
    Bon Iver
    Bonnie 'Prince' Billy
    Boredoms
    The Bouncing Souls
    Bright Eyes
    Broken Social Scene
    Brook Pridemore
    Brother Ali
    Built to Spill

    c

    Cannibal Ox
    Cap'n Jazz
    Casiotone for the Painfully Alone
    Castanets
    Cat Power
    Chicha Libre
    Circle Jerks
    Cobra Skulls
    CocoRosie
    Conor Oberst and the Mystic Valley Band
    The Constantines
    CunninLynguists
    Cursive

    d

    Dan Deacon
    Daniel Johnston
    David Dondero
    David Rovics
    dead prez
    Death Cab for Cutie
    The Dead Milkmen
    The Decemberists
    Deer Tick
    Deerhunter
    Del tha Funkee Homosapien
    Deltron 3030
    Desaparecidos
    Destroyer
    Devendra Banhart
    Diane Cluck
    Dillinger Four
    Dinosaur Jr.
    Dirty Projectors
    Dream Bitches
    The Dresden Dolls
    Dwarves

    e

    Eisley
    The Elected
    Elliott Smith
    Elvis Costello
    El-P
    Emily Haines & the Soft Skeleton
    Emily Jane White
    The Ergs!
    Explosions in the Sky

    f

    The Faint
    Fake Problems
    Feist
    Fiasco
    Final Fantasy
    Fiona Apple
    The Flaming Lips
    Fleet Foxes
    Free Kitten
    Frida Hyvönen
    Frightened Rabbit
    Fruit Bats

    g

    Gang Gang Dance
    Ghostface Killah
    Gogol Bordello
    Great Lake Swimmers
    Gregory and the Hawk
    Grizzly Bear
    Guided by Voices
    Guignol

    h

    Handsome Boy Modeling School
    Headlights
    Heathers
    Herbie Hancock
    Hieroglyphics
    High Places
    The Hold Steady
    Holy Fuck
    Hot Chip
    HUMANWINE

    i

    Immaculate Machine
    Immortal Technique
    Indigo Girls
    Inspectah Deck
    Interpol
    Iron & Wine
    Islands


    j

    Jana Hunter
    Japanther
    Jawbreaker
    Jean Grae
    Jeff Buckley
    Jeffrey Lewis
    Jenny Lewis
    The Jesus and Mary Chain
    Jets to Brazil
    Joanna Newsom
    John Vanderslice
    José González
    Josephine Foster
    Josh Ritter

    k

    Katzenjammer Kabarett
    Kevin Devine
    The Kills
    Kimya Dawson
    King Khan & The Shrines
    Kool Keith
    KRS-One

    l

    Laura Veirs
    LCD Soundsystem
    Le Tigre
    Leftöver Crack
    Leonard Cohen
    Les Savy Fav
    Liars
    Lightning Bolt
    Little Brother
    Little Wings
    The Long Blondes
    Los Campesinos!
    Los Gatos Negros
    Lou Reed
    Loudon Wainwright III
    Lydia Lunch

    m

    M. Ward
    M.I.A.
    Madeline
    Madvillian
    The Magnetic Fields
    Maria Taylor
    Marissa Nadler
    Mark Gunnery
    Martha Wainwright
    Matty Pop Chart
    Metric
    MF DOOM
    Mirah
    Modest Mouse
    The Moldy Peaches
    Mos Def
    Mount Eerie
    The Mountain Goats
    Mr. Lif
    Murs
    Mustard Plug
    My Bloody Valentine
    My Brightest Diamond
    My Morning Jacket

    n

    NaNucKa
    The National
    Neil Young
    Neutral Milk Hotel
    The New Pornographers
    Neva Dinova
    New York Dolls
    Nice and Friendly
    No Age
    Now It's Overhead

    o

    of Montreal
    Oh No! Oh My!
    Okkervil River
    Orenda Fink

    p

    Page France
    Panda Bear
    Patrick Wolf
    Paul Baribeau
    Peaches
    Peanut Butter Wolf
    Pete Seeger
    Pixies
    PJ Harvey
    The Postal Service
    Propagandhi

    q

    Q and Not U
    Quasi

    r

    Regina Spektor
    The Replacements
    Rilo Kiley
    Rio en Medio
    The Roots
    Rufus Wainwright

    s

    The Shins
    Silver Jews
    Simon Joyner
    Smog
    Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin
    Songs: Ohia
    Sonic Youth
    Son, Ambulance
    Soophie Nun Squad
    Sorry About Dresden
    Souls of Mischief
    Spoon
    Star Fucking Hipsters
    Stars
    Straylight Run
    The Strokes
    St. Vincent
    Sufjan Stevens
    Sun Kil Moon
    Sunset Rubdown

    t

    Talib Kweli
    Tapes 'n Tapes
    Ted Leo and The Pharmacists
    Tegan and Sara
    The Thermals
    Tilly and the Wall
    Tim Barry
    Tim Buckley
    Tiny Masters of Today
    Toby Goodshank
    Tom Waits
    Townes Van Zandt
    TV on the Radio
    Two Gallants

    u

    The Unicorns

    v

    The Velvet Underground
    Very Be Careful
    Vetiver
    Voxtrot

    w

    The Weakerthans
    White Rabbits
    Wilco
    Wolf Parade
    The World/Inferno Friendship Society
    The Wrens

    y
    Yeah Yeah Yeahs
    Yo La Tengo
    You Say Party! We Say Die!



    leavin out most classical/jazz musicians (and also the ones i cannot remember presently)


    ... .. .. .yeah

    (upd8ed cos i'm dumb)
    Ler mais 14 comentários Adicionar comentário
  • Late 80s Political Pop - the Red Wedge

    Jun 14 2009, 17h31 por larrybob

    I recently purchased The Singular Adventures Of The Style Council. I own several Style Council records on vinyl, but that means that I haven't listened to them for a while. This CD was in the bargain bin, and definitely worth it to hear - in some cases the songs are 12" versions that I hadn't heard before. It was nice to revisit the music of Paul Weller's post-The Jam musical project

    Anyway, listening to songs like TocarWalls Come Tumbling Down with lyrics "Are you gonna realize/
    The class war's real and not mythologized/
    And like Jericho - you see walls can come tumbling down!" it made me think about how the late 80s period of The Style Council there was quite a bit of political pop. In fact, there was an organized movement in the UK - The Red Wedge, with the goal of politicizing youth and unseating Margaret Thatcher in the 1987 elections. Along with the Style Council, Billy Bragg was one of the instigators - nobody could miss the left politics in his music. And Jimmy Somerville of The Communards who definitely had a leftist outlook as reflected in their name was also a participant.

    The Special A.K.A. was another musical group of the period that wore their politics on their sleeves with their best-known song being (Free) Nelson Mandela. Jerry Dammers of that group, which he formed after the splintering of The Specials, was also a participant in Red Wedge. I really like the Special A.K.A. and the way their music mixes songs about nightlife and politics, in a similar way to the subversively political lounge-pop of The Style Council.

    The Style Council CD I bought has a copyright date of 1989 and has a notice "This recording is not for sale in South Africa." Nelson Mandela wasn't released from prison until 1990 and Apartheid wasn't formally ended until the multi-racial democratic elections of 1994. It's hard to believe it was so recent, yet so long ago.
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