
Friday, April 25, 2008
WE DON'T NEED NO SIP-CUPS!

Friday, April 18, 2008
Thursday, April 03, 2008
GETTING PUBLISHED IS AWESOME, PT. 42,341
On a deeper level, though, the book registers as an indictment of modern North American life, as the hopes, dreams, and delusions of a test-tube dude ultimately sound no less ludicrous than those of real people living real lives in a country that's going to pieces at an ever-accelerating speed.
So, go ahead, lob your darts: it’s international minstelry, it’s theft, it’s plainly synthetic. But in the musical sphere writ-large, what isn’t?
More importantly, who cares? Hit play again.
Your average rock outfit peppers its catchy rapture with gnarly rupture.
This is the region where Kunstler resides; much of The Long Emergency was spent recounting his forlorn drives through all-but-withered towns where industry was on the wane and farms were selling out to developers dead-set on building McMansions the locals probably couldn’t afford.
“I’m sorry that I wrecked that tour for us/The drugs left me wigging out on the bus,” Bemis apologizes to his bandmates on the herky-jerky mea culpa “Sorry, Dudes. My Bad.”
All is not uplifting though: Black teams playing in white regions, according to the book, require police escorts to and from games.
All but invisible before, their bitter voices are heard here.
"I wore leather pants and suede cowboy boots — to high school — had hair down to my ass, knew grown men with names like Trashy and Freak, sold out nights at Hollywood's storied venues, such as the Roxy, Gazzarri's, and the Troubadour," Williams brags. "I wrote songs that made dozens of people sing."
Every race on Earth — and a few, like Merpeople, that aren't legit — comes in for a psychopathic revisionist-historical drubbing here.
Swapping files between Michigan and California, this Wire-worthy, Never-Never-Land Hanson cobbled together a freak-folk mystery blissfully impervious to patience, logic, and sobriety.
"A" IS FOR APRIL, "A" IS FOR AWESOME!

TYPING IN ALL CAPS SO IT SEEMS LIKE I'M YELLING AT YOU OVER THE INTERNETS: DISTRESSED METAL-FONT AWESOME
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
1 OUT OF 10 MUSIC EDITORS HATE VOGUING TO DANZIG
Beach House
Devotion
(Carpark)
Two years removed from its captivatingly cozy epymonous debut, there's something slightly different about Baltimore's Beach House. To be sure, the duo hasn't altered its core tactics: those lobotomized organs and guitars coast along on stoned cruise-control, those rattles and tambourines jangle blithely on occasion, and sombulant vocalist Victoria Legrand eks out dreamy relationship complaints and concerns as though she's on the verge of passing out on some opium-den couch. Yet Devotion feels slightly less passive, less drift-like in execution, more assertive: Legrand means it now, pushing up on figurative elbows to set her voice above the langourous fray, while the slo-mo drums hit harder and the woozy-snoozy melodies pop in the mix. For all its Sergio Morrocine overtones, "Gila" lives and dies on a sweet, loop-de-loop keyboard hook - not to mention Legrand's stretched, unsexualized "oh-oh-oh-oh" refrain. On "Wedding Bell," Alex Scally's ax figures register as dull buzz-saw roars as Legrand uncoils kalediscopic organ spools, drops. light-gobule keybs, and comes across as, well, happy. Creamy, reverb-soaked organ-balm "D.A.R.L.I.N.G." even deigns to ramp the Beach House pace up to a weak trot and indulge in a multi-tracked chorus that spells out the song's title; who'd have thought these two would ever have anything in common with Fergie?--Ray Cummings
The Whitsundays
The Whitsundays
(Friendly Fire)
You wouldn't believe it to listen to them, but the Whitsundays hail from Edmonton, Alberta - not the United Kingdom. That's somewhat surprising considering the influences this group's self-titled debut brings to bear: Clinic's sterile-yet-gritty garage revival chic and the Zombies' gloomy British-invasiveness. Whitsundays frontman Paul Arnusch - on leave from his drumming gig with post-rockers Faunts - clearly digs on the Walkmen and the Strokes, too: guitars jab gamely or stagger like a hungover sailor on Sunday morning, romantic quandries are drolly dissected and reassembled, warm vintage organs abound, and Arnusch maintains a practiced, above-it-all disinterest throughout. "Falling Over" is the sort of protracted, please-don't-dump-me appeal to some lovely young thing that inspires restraining orders in real life; as a pair of pealing guitars tease out a lightly grooving, retro melody, he wonders "If your feelings of love have truly gone, gone/and you can't find the strength to carry on, on/Or what to do, or what to say, say/Just tell me where to go/I gotta know." "The Ways of the Sweet Talking Boys" fairly bubbles over with gleaming strands of Fender Rhodes as multitracked gangs of Arnusch surf a darkly jealous wave. Given the mood here, "Antisocial" makes for a leftfield shock - tasteful, three-chord punk ala early Blur. As bygone, earnest pastiche goes these days, the Whitsundays are moderately enjoyable, at best; maybe, given the myriad options available, that's enough for now. Originality can wait. --Ray Cummings
Monday, March 10, 2008
NODIN'S TOP TEN ACTIVITIES, MARCH 2008

2. Losing his pacifiers while sleeping, causing him to half-awaken in a whiny huff.
3. Being chased around the house by Dad, who is grunting "DUR! DUR! DUR!" is a comic-threatening manner. (Mom's variation on this theme: "Gonna GETCHA! Gonna GETCHA!")
4. Eating breakfast sausage! This kid loves him some breakfast sausage. Like, if there's sausage on the scene, those bits of pancake or biscuit or whatever aren't gettin' eaten, no sirree.
5. Having books read to him, sometimes the same books several times per day. Nodin's especially partial to On The Day You Were Born, The Very Hungry Catepillar, and one about the Wiggles that's supposed to teach kids about reading and setting clocks. It's rewarding beyond words to watch his face light up when he's handed you a book and you've opened it and started reading; he doesn't totally understand what's being read yet, of course, but something about the combination of familiar sound constructions and familiar voices just seems to invigorate and temporarily fascinate this eternally curious/mobile little boy.
6. Trying so, so very hard to talk and sing. He's almost there, and none of us can wait for him to arrive and start shouting out statements at the least opportune moments possible.
7. Climbing stairs! (with adult supervision, of course)
8. Grabbing, toying with, and breaking everything he can.
9. Opening and closing doors. Cabinet doors, oven doors, and closet doors - but not front doors or refrigerator doors (yet). He isn't supposed to open any doors, of course, but it's fun to pretend that no-one's telling him not to do this stuff.
10. Absconding with Mom and Dad's waterbottles and dropping them into the living room waste basket, because he can.
Friday, March 07, 2008
COLOR VOGUING TO DANZIG WORRIED SICK ABOUT PAULA ABDUL BECAUSE PAULA ABDUL IS ON THE LOCOMOTIVE EXPRESS TO LOCOSVILLE

1. She no longer seems to have any idea where she is while appearing on national television.
(On this show, the expectant tension is supposed to center on the performers, but more likely it's centered on the camera operators and control room staff who have to decide how much attention should be directed towards the judges' table where Paula Abdul's getting her loon on and Randy Jackson and Simon Cowell are pretending conditions aren't being created for a complete Courtney Love-esque trainwreck.)
2. Following contestant performances, she rambles on longwindedly, incoherently, and disjointedly, as though the sounds coming out of her mouth bear little or no relation to whatever positive den-mother kudos she's thought up; thus, dear Paula comes across as deranged or mentally disabled at best, totally smacked-out at worst.
3. She keeps threatening to fall, sideways, out of her chair; only arrogant Simon Cowell stands between Miss Opposites Attract and certain concussive disaster.
4. She dances to songs - both sitting and standing - really, really badly. Now, I understand that this world is full of bad dancers; I'm one of them, admittedly. But Paula Abdul doesn't even come close to matching the beat of whatever Danny or David or Carly or whoever's belting out; it's like she's hearing a totally different song and swaying or bopping to that. Again: on national television.
5. That glassy, out-to-lunch grin. It's ever-present and totally fucking scary. You know the one.
6. Sort of a corrolary to #2, I guess, but the woman can't seem to finish saying words most of the time, managing, like, a first syllable before skipping to the first syllable of a different word. It's like she's having a perpetual heart attack that never becomes fatal or requires a trip to the ER.
7. Paula, you know we all love you, right?
8. Those hats. Those outfits. That hair! Viva fashion, and all that, but expensive and questionable couture and heavy, heavy makeup only serves to make crazy folks seem crazier.
9. Tears! Tears, tears, tears. Nothing wrong with a good cry, but so many tears when no-one's died or anything. Paula, they're just going home, and home's a good place!
10. Or maybe all of this is tied into promotion for her comeback record later this year and I'm just a big ole all-day sucker.
Friday, February 29, 2008
Andrew W.K., Talking At Considerable Length About Stuff
Sightings
"White Keys"
FROM LIVE AT BULB CLUBHOUSE (BULB) 2001
ANDREW W.K.: Mr. Velocity Hopkins?
MARC MASTERS: No. [Vocals come in]
ANDREW W.K.: Sightings! This is "White Keys," right?
Yes.
ANDREW W.K.: This is one of my favorite songs by them. At this time they were making these songs that were bouncy and upbeat, with really strong vocal hooks. I really like the vocal hook on this one (sings along). And that drumbeat with the syncopation - this is a really exciting era of the band.
MARC MASTERS: How did the idea of producing them come up?
ANDREW W.K.: I had helped out on a couple of their albums. I was always around and involved, but I'm not sure how it came up. It just seemed very obvious to all of us, I guess. The feeling was in the air that it made sense to do that now. And what I proposed was what they wanted to do. To record in a really good studio, to be able to hear everything, and to be able to work on it as long as they wanted. That's what I felt I could offer them. It wouldn't be rushed and it wouldn't be frustrating, and I felt confident I could provide that for them. I know they had always made the records they wanted to make, but I don't know that they had the opportunity to work on them as long as they could. So I wanted to give them the best of both worlds.
MARC MASTERS: How was working with them, given that you know them so well?
ANDREW W.K.: It was an amazing experience. There were times when it was an ordeal, and then there were times when we were just on this huge high, and so excited about the work that we were doing. It got better at every step along the way. As far as the personal interactions, I learned a whole new understanding of myself, and how it is to work with people, friends or not. I learned that it's not always so important to say your ideas, to say what you think. Sometimes you have to have faith that the other people are thinking the same thing, and will arrive at the same place. A lot of times at the beginning, I would have an idea and I would say it, and sometimes they would agree, and sometimes they would say no. Sometimes it would just not be the right time to say something. But I noticed later I could still have an idea and not even say it, I would just keep it in my mind or even just let it go. And then, sure enough, it could be minutes later or days later, but somehow or another that idea would come to pass. Either just happening on its own, or someone else would suggest it, or it would just evolve out of circumstance. But that approach I was then able to use a lot when recording with Lee Perry. I don't think I would've been able to work with him had I not just come off of making the Sightings record. I've talked to other people about it, and I've been told it's a process called "Silence", where you silence your own impulse to blurt something out, and you put it inwards into your subconscious. The more you keep it on the inside, the more power it has from working inside out. That all started with Sightings.
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
You just knew this would happen, didn't you?
NORRISTOWN, Pa. - Montgomery County authorities say a man stabbed his brother-in-law during an argument over who should get the Democratic nomination for president.
What's more, Jose Ortiz, 28, who's charged with felony assault, is a registered Republican.
District Attorney Risa Ferman said Ortiz supports Hillary Clinton and Sean Shurelds supports Barack Obama. She told reporters Monday that the two got into an argument in a Collegeville home Thursday night and Shurelds tried to choke Ortiz. She says Ortiz then stabbed Shurelds in the abdomen.
Shurelds was taken to a hospital in critical condition, but is expected to recover.
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Jigsaw Linkz
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
#995 LL Cool J feat. Jennifer Lopez "Control Myself" (Def Jam, 2003)
Sunday, February 17, 2008
WHEW!*
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
"Until I Started Clicking, I Thought Crackpot Done Lost His Mind": Adventures in Link Presentation
NIN remixed, again
This party never stops!
Friday, December 28, 2007
Ya know, I'll never get used to the unspoken "Sorry, we cut your work for space this issue," no matter how many times I don't hear it
NO AGE Weirdo Rippers
On Melvins’ Hostile Ambient Takeover, metal tunes occasionally coalesced within the dense, gnashing whirl; on Guided By Voices’ Alien Lanes, proto-rock nuggets blasted through a lo-fi lens. Los Angeles duo No Age (a.k.a. ex-Wives members Dean Spunt and Randy Randall) operates in a gnarly middle ground between those two extremes, where chaos and craft enable and embolden one another. First impressions say otherwise: An initial hit of Weirdo Rippers suggests a 10th-generation Misfits or Ramones cassette inadvertently run through the wash then roasted on a clothesline. Further listening reveals an apparent seamlessness. While straight-up, three-chord thrasher "Boy Void" is the exception that proves the No Age rule, the static-soaked, shoegaze turbulence that opens "Semi-Sorted" builds to a storming, kick-drums vs. blitzkrieg-riffing plateau. "Loosen This Job" solidifies almost accidentally from scattered, distorted guitar loops that mimic raw DJ scratches into a messy, disorienting tune where Spunt and Randall muse with an equal measure of rhetorical uncertainty: "Why are there so many records of my life?/Why can’t I just curl up until the night?" A combination of boisterous experimentalism, pop songwriting and bargain-basement production, Rippers makes for one of the year’s most thrilling rides. [Fat Cat, www.fatcat-usa.com]
—Raymond Cummings
LITTLE WINGS Soft Pow’r
Even affable folkies sometimes find themselves brooding in the doldrums. A winning string of sunny albums and guest spots on projects by K Records-affiliated pals established Portland, Ore., musician Kyle Field’s optimistic, surfer-dude persona. Comparatively speaking, Soft Pow’r is a nocturnal break-up bummer, the sort of album you’d want to keep away from a freshly dumped friend battling suicidal depression. As guitars mumble in whispers, drums tap quietly and piano keys plink with an aching melancholy, Field transcribes emptiness into whimpering, feathered-mullet songs, alternating as usual between his normal register and a tune-challenging falsetto so strained it salts old wounds listeners were sure had healed. “Free Bird” (which has nothing whatsoever to do with Lynyrd Skynyrd) might be Soft Pow’r’s most heartrending moment and the most fragile, pretty tune Field has ever written, the lyrics comparing and contrasting gingerly between the comforts of domestic bliss and the uncertainty of solitude. The rueful chorus of “Scooby” (“Scooby’s gone again”) cuts to the heart of Field’s misery through the intermingling of downer ivories, light-touch strums and expository verses such as, “Tall trees overhead are swaying and all the daylight started leaving.” Field’s anguish acts as our commiserative, voyeuristic nourishment—even if we wish he’d just cheer up and move on. [RAD, www.marriagerecs.com]
—Raymond Cummings
Thursday, December 20, 2007
Voguing to Danzig's Top 31 Albums of 2007
- Sightings Through the Panama (Load)
- The Dead C. Future Artists (Ba Da Bing!)
- PJ Harvey White Chalk (Island)
- Carlos Giffoni Arrogance (No Fun)
- Kieran Hebden & Steve Reid Tongues (Domino)
- Needlegun The End of August at Hotel Ozone (MT6)
- Air Conditioning Dead Rails (Load)
- Odd Girl Out Hurry Up and Wait (self-released)
- Nine Inch Nails Year Zero (Interscope)
- Jay-Z American Gangster (Def Jam)
- Ghostface Killah The Big Doe Rehab (Def Jam)
- Khate Field Report (self-released)
- Incapacitants/Pain Jerk Live at No Fun Fest 2007 (No Fun)
- Prodigy Return of the Mac (Koch)
- WZT Hearts Threads Rope Spell Making Your Bones (Carpark)
- Kites Hallucination Guillotine/Final Worship (Load)
- Animal Collective Strawberry Jam (Domino)
- Deerhoof Friend Opportunity (Kill Rock Stars/5 Rue Christie)
- The Fiery Furnaces Widow City (Thrill Jockey)
- Fall Out Boy Infinity On High (Island/Def Jam)
- Heavy Winged Enough Rope (Cut Hands)
- Arbouretum Rites of Uncovering (Thrill Jockey)
- The Twilight Sad Fourteen Autumns & Fifteen Winters (Domino)
- El-P I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead (Def Jux)
- Blitzen Trapper Wild Mountain Nation (self-released)
- Dinosaur Jr. Beyond (Fat Possum)
- Bring Back The Guns Dry Futures (Feow!)
- Borbetomagus & Hijokaidan Both Noises End Burning (Victo)
- John Weise Soft Punk (Troubleman)
- Various Artists Benefit CD for Olivia Zofia Strama (MT6)
- Lil Wayne Da Drought 3 (no label)
SINGLES
1. M.I.A. "Bamboo Banga" (Interscope)
2. Radiohead "15 Step" (self-released)
3. Robin Thicke "Lost Without U" (Interscope)
4. Blitzen Trapper "Wild Mountain Nation" (Lidkercow Ltd.)
5. Fall Out Boy "Thriller" (Island/Def Jam)
6. Khate "Riesling" (self-released)
7. Deerhunter "Cryptograms" (Kranky)
8. Magik Markers "Axis Mundi" (Ecstatic Peace!)
9. Amy Winehouse "Rehab" (Universal)
10. The Smashing Pumpkins "Tarantula" (Reprise/Martha’s Music)
Saturday, November 03, 2007
#996 50 Cent "Poor Lil Rich (Shady/Aftermath/Interscope, 2003)
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Just Add Water: Notes for an Unwritten Essay About Early-Adult Hip-Hop Fandom
2. Sly or derisive allusions to Bill Cosby, Don Imus, Bill O’Reilly, Richard Pryor, Jesse Jackson, and Al Sharpton – these are givens.
3. Extensive discussion about Kanye West, who author wishes more rappers would emulate conceptual (nonetheless, author concedes that if this happened hip-hop would be more boring and drab than it already is at the moment).
4. A drawing of paralells between rap and noise music, or rap and extreme metal. (Note to self: might not work because the public at large is less exposed to extreme metal and noise, though if it were, it would reject those genres with the same vociferousness it shuns rap, if for totally different reasons, many of them having to do with race and “otherness”.)
5. Rap enjoyment as largely private ritual; parents and wife generally not down with hip-hop. Youthful anecdote: mother insisted that author play rap at low volume, before 9 p.m., and not own more than a handful of genre albums
6. Author’s first hip-hop record: He’s the DJ, I’m the Rapper, by DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince, a cassette copy.
7. Flashback: unpacking in a dorm room, autumn 1995, to the beat of Nine Inch Nails’ Closer ep. Hick roommate from Delaware remarks to author: “You know, black people don’t usually listen to Nine Inch Nails.”
8. Evenhanded look at gaping divide between gangsta rap’s values and author’s own, buttered in light sarcasm. Concession that author would feel very uncomfortable with his son growing up to a soundtrack of Clipse, Ghostface, and Lil Wayne records. Digression into awkward take on tired “blackness vs. whiteness” debate; should include admission from author that he never qued up for Cross Colors gear or other urban fashions because, well, because they simply didn’t seem to have anything to do with who he was.
9. Hosannas for the creative, inventive (cinematic? No, overused trope, avoid) nature of some rap lyricism, which helps author and his crit peers get beyond the narcissism, violence, sexism, and glorification of drug hustling that typifies much of its content.
10. Eminem; also, Elvis. Race.
11. Is 50 Cent serious, or is he camping? (Side note: it might be fun to scrap this project and pull off a parody of/homage to Susan Sontag’s “Notes on Camp” about rap, mostly parsing Dipset.)
12. Maybe hustling is just an overarching metaphor for success; everyone wants to be successful; hip-hop dominance circa late 99s/early 00s as achievement life accessory, i.e. coffee, No Doz, rims, etc.
13. Real talk on why progressive, posi-rap doesn’t move units or play into public perception of hip-hop as a whole. Author admits a grudging respect for the sub-genre but isn’t as stoked as he is by, say, Dr. Dre. (Native Tongues alums and Kanye pre-2007 excepted)
14. A corrolary: why can’t contented, sincerely top-of-the-heap rap swing, slam, and command respect? (i.e. Kingdom Come) The argument that hubris, threats, and degradation draw the masses is a familiar one and not without merit, but would Jay-Z’s last record have struck more of a chord if the Def Jam prez spent it rapping about the trials and tribulations of being filthy rich? Bad service at 5-star eateries, a coveted invite to a premiere that arrived a day too late, inept valets, management-office snitches, overly chatty tailors seeking autographs, LAX losing designer luggage full of Louis Vuitton outfits, A-list jewelers and their shoddy workmanship, the sheer indignity of being snubbed by Diddy or Robert De Niro at a Grammy party, and so on?
15. A defining flashback: sophomore year of high school, in sedan being driven around the McDonogh School’s parking lot by Tony Solomon after the author’s school played theirs in water polo. Tony – second or third generation Lebanese, I think – is showing off, because it’s an early fall evening and he is able to pilot the car using only his knees. Blasting from the stereo? Doggystyle.
16. Grumbling about the hoops and hassles associated with acquiring – or attempting to acquire, anyway – major-label rap promos for review, and some insights as to why doing so is considerably more arduous than securing indie-rock promos.
17. Author shouldn’t preach; nor should he cheerlead.
18. What does it mean that Vibe ran a Barack Obama cover story?
19. A detached yet concerned tone should be maintained throughout, if author wants to be taken seriously and not dismissed as a “hater,” “stan,” or “Uncle Tom.”
20. This essay will never be written.
Sunday, October 28, 2007
Off-the-wall ideas unpalatable to V. Voice = kill fees + YOU (and only you) reading this nonsense first
By Ray Cummings
Clockcleaner
"Divine Hammer"
From Clockcleaner/Deerhunter split 7-inch (Hoss)
Philly’s Clockcleaner so heart La Deal that their cover of “Divine Hammer” is twice as long as the Last Splash original. This trio’s gender-flipped take is more sexually charged. Singer John Sharkey could work as a voice double for Calvin Johnson; when he makes it known, all gravelly bass, that “I’m just looking, just looking for a way around/It disappears this year” amidst an avalanche of sputtering sonic M80s and rusted riffs, one is inclined to believe his frustrations are more obliquely carnal than innately religious (which may account for the relatively tantric length).
Health
"Perfect Skin"
From Health (Lovepump United)
In apparent homage to “Breaking the Split-Screen Barrier” – a starch-y vamp from Deal solo album Pacer, cut as The Amps in 1995 – L.A.’s Health scuzz up the works slightly as they ease into that discontinuous, forest of staunch, two-note guitar blasts. Following some quickie high-wire ax orgasming, the trees thin out somewhat and “Skin” ends more or less the way it began – in sharp contrast with “Barrier,” which coalesced into a real rock song at midpoint then ultimately “culminated” with a disconcertingly sustained, tape-skipping voice sample and came equipped with lyrical content one could actually, like, discern, use as senior-page yearbook quotes, etc.
The Magik Markers
"Circle"
From BOSS (Ecstatic Peace!)
Kim: What the fuck, Kurt? You want me to rap this cryptic poem – emotionlessly – over... that?
Kurt: Yeah! It’s, you know, it’s gonna be the obligatory hidden noise track. Krist, Dave, and I were smoking raw opium at the Laundry Room back in ’95, there was a tropical storm raging outside, and I guess some evil spirits took control of our bodies or something, because when we came to we were wearing cochineal facepaint and had this sinister session tape nobody can remember making, even to this day.
Kim: It’s totally swirling-vortex-of-ghouls creepy, The Ring creepy, drunk-on-absinthe creepy. I played it for Kelley when she was coming down yesterday, she freaked out! I dunno – might be too heavy to close an acoustic Nirvana reunion disc, man.
Kurt: Yeah, but –
Kim: “You chew and jaw and then you’re dead”? “Open your arms as you leave the shore”? The bloggersphere will be all “Cobain’s fixin’ to attempt suicide again” –
Kurt: See –
Kim: Irony can’t neutralize or re-contextualize everything, Kurt.
Kurt: Kim, Kim – Lil Wayne’s gonna rap about his conflict diamond-encrusted shotgun over the final mix for a Carter III bonus cut! So it’s cool.
Kim: Oh, word?
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Because the previous (now deleted) “fake-not-funny-story-as-link-fest” post was an experiment and (in retrospect) a massive, transparent mistake
Also: another stupid critical “debate” that will wind up nowhere fast takes flight. Ah, tired "rockism/rockist/rocktastic" debacle - we hardly knew ye.
Why not download an album by a famous and usually awesome band, legally, for free, if you so wish?