Tag Archives: Music

Love (still) Hurts: Elvis Costello and Emmylou Harris

14 Jun

I still prefer the Gram & Emmylou version (see my previous entry here) but this is pretty amazing.

It has probably become clear to anyone following this blog that my obsession with Elvis Costello grows by the day. In fact, i’d say it’s verging on unhealthy.

Tenuous Links: An Adventure in Wikiland

14 Jun

n16780As the starting point on my voyage of discovery I have taken the article on the novel ‘Less Than Zero’ by Bret Easton Ellis (who also authored ‘American Psycho’). ‘Less Than Zero’ was Easton Ellis’ first novel and was penned at the tender age of 19. The novel follows Clay, an upper middle-class college student who has returned to L.A. for winter break only to re-enter “a landscape of limitless privilege and absolute moral entropy, where everyone drives Porches, dines at Spago,and snorts mountains of cocaine.” It takes its title from the Elvis Costello song of the same name. ‘Less Than Zero’ is the eight track from Costello’s debut album, My Aim is True, released in 1977.

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antique_radios_25Costello and his band were set to perform on Saturday Night Live. Conflicting explanations have been offered for the series of events leading up to what was to eventually occur on live television that night. Most sources suggest that NBC had put pressure on Costello’s record label to prevent him from playing ‘Radio Radio’ as they had concerns for its obviously radio industry critical sentiments. On the night of the performance the band played no more than a few bars of ‘Less than Zero’ before Costello stopped them and ordered them to play ‘Radio Radio’. As a result of this stunt he was banned from appearing on the show for 12 years.

On the 25th anniversary of Saturday Night Live, the Beastie Boys appeared on the show. They begun to play ‘Sabotage’ only to be stopped after a few bars by Costello who proceeded to re-enact his stunt from ’77 and went on to play ‘Radio Radio’ with them. Apparently “Weird Al” Yankovic had been known to do a semi-tribute to Costello’s stunt during his live concerts. If his band buggers up a song he quickly stops the show, saying “I’m sorry, there’s no reason to do this song here” (just as Costello did) before launching into a cover of ‘Radio Radio’ (I didn’t believe it myself until I saw this).

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fascistflagCostello’s song ‘Less than Zero‘ was an attack of the politics of Oswald Mosley, a British politician who was the founder of the British Union of Fascists. He resigned from the Labour party in 1931 when his ‘Moseley Memorandum’, a set of policies designed to combat unemployment, were rejected by the party. He went on to form the ‘New Party‘. After an abysmal failure in the 1931 general election, Moseley went on a ‘study tour’ of Europe, and returned to Britain convinced that the way forwards was fascism, prompting him to amalgamate a number of existing fascist organisations and the New Party in order to form the British Union of Fascists. The party was heavily involved in violent confrontations, particularly with Communist and Jewish groups in London and was responsible for what would come to be known as the Battle of Cable Street. This confrontation between Moseley’s ‘Black Shirts’, police and Jewish, socialist, anarchist and communist groups led to the passage of the Public Order Act 1936. This Act forbade the wearing of political uniforms in public and required police consent for any political marches. The Act has been used extensively against IRA and Sinn Féin demonstrations in the 1970s.

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171px-CodeOfTheWoostersP.G.Wodehouse in his 1938 novel entitled ‘The Code of the Woosters‘ parodied Mersley and his Blackshirts in his character Roderick Spode, 7th Earl of Sidcup who was the leader of a London fascist group named the ‘Black Shorts’. Spode’s choice of uniform was attributed to the fact that “[b]y the time [he] formed his association, there were no shirts left.”. The black shirts were taken by Mussolini, the brown shirts claimed by Hitler, the blue shirts by the Irish, the grey by the South Africans, the gold by Mexico and silver by the United States.

In the 1990 television adaptation of  Wodehouse’s Jeeves novels, the main characters Bertie Wooster and his man-servant Jeeves are played by the comic duo Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry respectively.  The pair met in 1980 through mutual friend Emma Thompson and have since appeared together in many shows including The Young Ones, Blackadder and A Bit of Fry and Laurie. They both make cameo appearances in the Spice Girls 1997 movie Spiceworld (as does Elvis Costello).  Here is a link to Hugh Laurie’s cameo. Unfortunately I couldn’t find the other two.

Take-Away Shows: Department of Eagles

14 Jun

camera,machine,movie,retro,video,videocamera,vintage-7674da99905fb5cf40c03b17489d6a3a_mSo, I am probably ridiculously slow on the up-take but I stumbled upon a clip on youTube of Beirut performing ‘Nantes’ for something called the Take-Away Shows. Upon further investigation I discovered that the Take-Away Shows (or ‘Les Concerts a Emporter’ in French) was a collaboration of sorts between French blogger, Chryde of ‘La Blogothèque’ and French film-maker Mathieu Saura, better known as Vincent Moon. The shows consist of (mostly) single-take recordings of bands performing their songs in unusual settings. So far Moon has recorded 97 shows for La Blogothèque with artists such as Jens Lekman, Grizzly Bear, Arcade Fire, Elvis Perkins, R.E.M and Bon Iver to name a few.

The video I chose to share is Department of Eagles performing ‘No One Does It Like You’ whilst conducting a walking tour around Chinatown. Daniel then plays ‘Deep Blue Sea’, a beautiful song which his other band, Grizzly Bear, recorded a version of for the Dark Was the Night compilation which was released earlier this year.

The Hold Steady & Malcolm Middleton on Colin Murray

10 Jun

673px-The_Hold_Steady_by_David_ShankboneThe other day when perusing the website of The Hold Steady I came across a link to an archive containing MP3s of gigs and radio appearances. One of the gems I found there was an interview with The Hold Steady and former member of Arab Strap, Malcolm Middleton, on Colin Murray show on BBC Radio1. Although the combination of the Brooklyn rockers and the Scottish singer-songwriter seems an unusual one at first, the interview reveals more similarities than differences between the two.

They initially met through the Full Time Hobby record label who put out their records in the UK. During the interview, Craig from the Hold Steady recalls returning to Brooklyn after meeting Malcolm to discover that the bar tender at his local was a massive fan of the Scottish singer.

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Craig attributes his fondness of Malcolm to his lyrics while the Scot said he enjoys the energy and ‘youthfulness’ of the Hold Steady. Interviewer Colin Murray identifies a combination of dark lyrics and ‘breezy’ music as a common thread between the two while Tad from The Hold Steady mentions that although both Craig and Malcolm have limited vocal range, their voices make their sound unique and identifiable.

They teamed up to record versions of a couple of Malcolm’s songs  including ‘Red Travellin’ Socks’ and ‘Kiss At The Station’ as well as a cover of Zeppelin’s ‘Your Time is Gonna Come’ and The Hold Steady’s ‘Lord, I’m Discouraged’ but my personal favourite would have to be their cover of the Bryan Adams hit ‘Run To You’.

The interview and tracks are available to download here.

On a separate note, I have to say that Malcolm is possibly THE most Scottish looking person I have ever laid eyes. This has more than a little to do with the pasty complexion and orange hair. I can only wonder what his teeth are like…

His fifth album entitled ‘Waxing Gibbous’ was released on the 1st of June on Full Time Hobby. It is available on CD, MP3 and LP here.

I’ll leave you with what may well be one of the cheesiest lines in popular music courtesy of the ‘Groover from Vancouver’- “It’s so damn easy makin’ love to you”.

Newsreader Chic + Seedy Motel Room = Sweet Music Video

7 Jun

The Hold Steady are one of those bands that I didn’t take an instant liking to. In fact, I had to put in the hard yards with these. After some solid listening sessions I can now say that they have definitely managed to win me over.

This film clip for ‘Chips Ahoy!’ is ridiculous. The band are sporting matching newsreader-esque suits, sculptured moustaches and the nerdiest looking 80s glasses. Add to this a guy dressed as Zorro playing the organ, a seedy motel room and a scene where the entire band are lying fully clothed in bed with an entirely unimpressed girl and you have a great film clip.

Rolling Stones ‘Under My Thumb’

4 Jun

‘Under My Thumb’ has officially replaced ‘Dear Doctor’ as my current favourite Stones tune. Although the lyrics are absurdly misogynistic (try these on for size: “Its down to me/ The way she talks when shes spoken to”) I can’t resist this song. I think the zylophone is the clincher.

WARNING: Mick is sporting a particularly enviable jacket in this clip.

Gig Posters

2 Jun

I have developed a mini-obsession with prints and more specifically band posters. If I wasn’t trying so hard to save my pennies I would probably be spending them on some of these.

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My Morning Jacket poster from The Bird Machine

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Rilo Kiley poster by Clinton Reno

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Dr. Dog poster by Dog & Pony Prints

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Mates of State poster by Cricket Press

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M. Ward poster by Nate Duval

Raiding my parents’ vinyl collection

19 May

I recently acquired a lovely Dual 510 turntable from eBay. This model was manufactured from 1975-76 and apparently sold for USD$210.00 new. Mine is perfect working order and I got it for a steal! At the moment I am using it with a shitty amp from our old surround sound system and some rubbish speakers. Even when I crank it to full volume it is only just a reasonable listening volume. All I need now is a decent amp and a set of good speakers. Oh, and some more records would probably be good too.

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It’s been at least 15 years (but probably closer to 20 years) since anyone in my family has owned a working turntable so my Dad was very excited by the prospect of getting out his vinyl collection and giving some of them a spin. It was a mixed bag to say the least. Not a particularly comprehensive collection by any stretch of the imagination but definitely a few gems in there and quite a few duds. Here is a brief synopsis;

HIGHLIGHTS

  • The Beatles ‘White Album’
  • Bryan Ferry ‘Let’s Stick Together’
  • Jeff Beck ‘Blow by Blow’
  • Various James Taylor
  • Various Joe Cocker

LOW-POINTS

  • John Farnham ‘Age of Reason’
  • Lionel Ritchie ‘Can’t Slow Down’

WTF!?

  • ‘There’s a Bear in there… Songs from ABC’s Play School’

It looks like I will have to be pinching a milk crate in the not too distant future so that I have somewhere to house my records.

LIST: Songs that make reference to war

14 May
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1. ‘Oliver’s Army‘ by Elvis Costello & The Attractions:

This track from the 1979 record ‘Armed Forces’ which consists of songs is thought to refer to Oliver Cromwell’s army of mercenaries. Of the song’s meaning, Costello himself has stated:

“I made my first trip to Belfast in 1978 and saw mere boys walking around in battle dress with automatic weapons. They were no longer just on the evening news. These snapshot experiences exploded into visions of mercenaries and imperial armies around the world. The song was based on the premise ‘they always get a working class boy to do the killing’. I don’t know who said that; maybe it was me, but it seems to be true nonetheless. I pretty much had the song sketched out on the plane back to London.”


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2. ‘Land Locked Blues‘ by Bright Eyes:

Conor Oberst has been known to make his political views apparent. In fact, during a 2004 appearance on the Late Show he dedicated his performance to the (then) President and the Governor of California saying they were two men he admired for their ‘biceps and their creepy, fascist agendas’. He then goes on to shout ‘M. Ward for President!’ during the refrain. Just quietly, as much as I like M. Ward I think Obama is probably slightly better qualified.

In a similar spirit, this song makes no attempt to couch it’s clearly anti-war sentiments.

“We made love on the living room floor
With the noise in the background of a televised war
And in the deafening pleasure I thought I heard someone say
‘If we walk away, they’ll walk away’

But greed is a bottomless pit
And our freedom’s a joke
We’re just taking a piss
And the whole world must watch the sad comic display
If you’re still free start running away
Cause we’re coming for you!”

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3. ‘I Saw Her in the Anti-War Demonstration‘ by Jens Lekman:

This song is far more light-hearted than the first two. Basically, it tells the story of a boy who meets a punk girl at an anti-war demonstration and proceeds to fall in love with her.  I like the song because it has fun lyrics and beautiful string arrangements. The link to the live performance of this is worth checking out even if it only to witness Jens’ sombrero and some excellent standing-up-drumming. That’s about it really.

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4. ‘It’s a Hit’ by Rilo Kiley:

This song (from the 2004 release ‘More Adventurous‘) delivers a scathing hit to George W.

“Any chimp can play human for a day.
Use his opposable thumbs to iron his uniform
and run for office on election day
fancy himself a real decision maker
and deploy more troops than salt in a shaker.

But it’s a jungle when war is made,
and you’ll panic and throw your own shit at the enemy.
The camera pulls back to reveal your true identity.
Look, it’s a sheep in wolf’s clothing.
A smoking gun holding ape.”


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5. ‘Weaker Soldier‘ by Bonnie “Prince” Billy:

To be honest, when you read the lyrics in isolation from the music they sound a little wanky and contrived. That is why you should watch the video. The live performance is brillo although I must admit that the way his beard flops as he sings can be a little distracting.

“I once was a weaker soldier hanging in the war
But I left, like an ape, folded neatly in four
And silently played for a moment slow and bled
On a sandalwood bust I had
Where was the field where I had pressed another down
Where I had revealed myself by crying and shouting ?
I turned away from that and into this black kettle of one-ness”

Yellow Bird Project

6 May

I really admire musicians who are not only excellent at what they do (make music) but also use their status and influence to promote worthy causes. The Yellow Bird Project is selling tshirts either designed or inspired by various bands and donating the proceeds of those sales to a charity of the band’s chosing. The charities supported include; Amnesty International, World Wildlife Fund and the Elliot Smith Memorial Fund. For those of you who are concerned about sweat shops, fear not! The designs are printed on American Apparel shirts. All the designs are great but the following are my favourites.

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Bon Iver for Interval House

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Rilo Kiley for the Elliot Smith Memorial Fund

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Elvis Perking for the World Wildlife Fund

To make the whole project even more incredible, they have a theme song written and performed by The Tallest Man On Earth. It is called ‘A Field of Birds’ and you can download it for free here.

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