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Coldplay drives women to violence
I know I shouldn't laugh, but I'm surprised Coldplay inspired *any* emotion, let alone diving a women to clock a karaoke singer as he goes into "Yellow" screaming "Oh, no, not that song. I can't stand that song!"
Karl at Saturday, July 5, 2008 | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Four music links for today
LATimes: Sunset Strip Music Fest Photo Essay, Night One via tony pierce.
WNEW.com: Founding Father: Howlin' Wolf
Mirror.co.uk: Interview: Iron Maiden: "That's one of the reasons we're now bigger than ever," smiles Bruce, "whereas a lot of bands and people in general worry about what others think of them and change accordingly." "We don't because we've never really cared what others think. We always thought that if people don't like it, that's tough - we'll just have to do it for a smaller audience. But the opposite has proved the case."
Reuters.com: Q&A: Motley Crue still calling its own shots
Karl at Sunday, June 29, 2008 | Comments (0) | TrackBack
The earth sings
Mark Morford, at SFGate, in April, wrote a lyrical, powerful piece about music the Earth itself is generating: "In other words, you love loud punk? Metal? Jazz? Deep house? Saint-Saens with a glass of Pinot in the tub? Sure you do. That's because somewhere, somehow, deep in your very cells and bones and DNA, it links you back to source, to the Earth's own vibration, the pulse of the cosmos. Oh yes it does. To tap your foot and sway your body to that weird new Portishead tune is, in effect, to sway it to the roar of the universe. I mean, obviously."
As he mentions, scientists have been debating the source (or sources) of the 'hum' for a long time, a sampling:
Space.com (2000): Source of Earth's Hum Revealed, Space Symphony Possible (Inaudible sound waves in the lower atmosphere that push and pull on the ground).
NPR: Detecting the Earth's Hum for What It Is (it comes from the globe's largest oceans during winter, apparently the result of powerful winter storms)
New Scientist (2007): Earth's hum linked to coastal waves
LiveScience: Earth's Hum Sounds More Mysterious Than Ever (might be caused by forces shearing across the world's surface, from the oceans, atmosphere or possibly even the sun)
Mark Morford says this is the kind of thing, in our day to day driven world, we don't take a moment to stop and ponder: "This is the kind of thing that, given all our distractions, our celeb obsessions and happy drugs and bothersome trifles like family and bills and war and health care and sex and love and porn and breathing and death, tends to fly under the radar of your overspanked consciousness, only to be later rediscovered and brought forth and placed directly in front of your eyeballs, at least for a moment, so you can look, really look, and go, oh my God, I had no idea."
He's right. My friends shake their heads at me sometimes and tease me for being a bit of a "hippie" for pondering this stuff. But it's these kinds of mysteries that take my heart to flight, sing to me, and lighten my step as I think about the wonderful world we live in.
Karl at Friday, June 27, 2008 | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Bo Diddley joins Stevie, Jimi, in jam of the ages
Attytood: Bo Diddley, 1928-2008
Citizen Mom: The Death of Style
Pitchfork: Rock Pioneer Bo Diddley, R.I.P.
Thank you Bo.
NYTimes profile from 2003: Pioneer of a Beat Is Still Riffing for His Due
Karl at Tuesday, June 3, 2008 | Comments (0) | TrackBack
In Passing: Quiet Riot's Kevin DuBrow dead at 52
Metafilter: cum on feel the noiz - Quiet Riot's Kevin DuBrow dead at 52.
It was Quiet Riot on Solid Gold that introduced me (well.. re-introduced me) to Metal and Hard Rock. His MySpace page is filling up with condolences.
I don't think it's a stretch to say that Quiet Riot deserves the evolutionary credit for 80s Metal, from Ozzy's 80s success, to Guns N' Roses.
Thank you Kevin DuBrow.
NYTimes: Kevin DuBrow, the Leader of Quiet Riot, Dies at 52
LATimes: Singer for 1980s heavy-metal giant Quiet Riot dies
Blabbermouth: Classic QUIET RIOT Broadcast To Re-Air Today - Nov. 27, 2007
Karl at Tuesday, November 27, 2007 | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Top 5 Rock Songs of All Time?
Inspired by Bill's list, here are some of my favorites, in no particular order, because I can no longer put together a short list, and most possibly influenced by my last few posts...
I Believe In Miracles - The Ramones - Brain Drain - video
Jumpin' Jack Flash - The Rolling Stones - Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! - video
Love Song - Tesla - The Great Radio Controversy - video (a video of a Philadelphia concert Richelle and me missed over ten years ago).
The Show Must Go On - Queen - Innuendo - video
Wasted Years - Iron Maiden - Stranger in a Strange Land - video
Gimmie Shelter - The Rolling Stones - Let it Bleed - video
I Wanna Be Sedated - The Ramones - Road to Ruin - video
Sanitarium - Metallica - Master of Puppets - fan video (the band didn't make videos back then)
Heaven and Hell - Black Sabbath - Heaven and Hell - video, Tenacious D!
Everybody Knows - Leonard Cohen - I'm Your Man - video
House of Pain - Faster Pussycat - Wake Me When It's Over - video
Gone Away - Faster Pussycat - Ixnay on the Hombre - video
When the Angels Sing - social distortion - White light, white heat, white trash - video
Ride On - AC/DC - Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap - fan video
Black Diamond - KISS - Kiss - video
Take It Easy - The Eagles - Eagles - video
In Your Eyes - Jeffrey Gaines - Cover of Peter Gabriel - video
Karl at Wednesday, October 17, 2007 | Comments (5) | TrackBack
tony pierce: "IS EVERYONE OUT OF THEIR MINDS?"
Poetry. Read the whole thing.
"the rex grossman miss teenage south carolina george bushing of america":
....we allow the lamest people to be the man.repeatedly.
all of us.
and matt good sings
youre gonna get what you deserve
and not a penny lessbible says its easier for a camel to get thru the eye of a needle
than for a rich man to get into the kingdom of heaven.because we are attached to the wrong things.
and we're such liars. saying we're a christian nation
we dont read the bible and we ignore everything in it when its read to us.
then bitch when someone tells us that we're not going to heaven.youre not going to heaven because you hate everything pure on earth
youre not going to heaven because you reject good right here
youre not going to heaven because you dont value loveand heaven is love incarnate. so fuck your whines and fuck your earthly goals.
money is not the way. pretty boy quarterbacks arent the way
dumb blonde beauty queens are not the way.george bush ryan seacrest maroon five dave matthews
those are your gods
you are the doomed generation
dying to repeat the failures of your parents.
Karl at Friday, September 21, 2007 | Comments (0) | TrackBack
From The Donnas to Rick Rubin
I wish more in the newspaper industry would pay attention to their canary in the coal mine - the music industry.
Rolling Stone: "The Record Industry's Decline":
...Overall CD sales have plummeted sixteen percent for the year so far -- and that's after seven years of near-constant erosion. In the face of widespread piracy, consumers' growing preference for low-profit-margin digital singles over albums, and other woes, the record business has plunged into a historic decline.The major labels are struggling to reinvent their business models, even as some wonder whether it's too late. "The record business is over," says music attorney Peter Paterno, who represents Metallica and Dr. Dre. "The labels have wonderful assets -- they just can't make any money off them." One senior music-industry source who requested anonymity went further: "Here we have a business that's dying. There won't be any major labels pretty soon."
...More record executives now seem to understand that their problems are structural: The Internet appears to be the most consequential technological shift for the business of selling music since the 1920s, when phonograph records replaced sheet music as the industry's profit center. "We have to collectively understand that times have changed," says Lyor Cohen, CEO of Warner Music Group USA. In June, Warner announced a deal with the Web site Lala.com that will allow consumers to stream much of its catalog for free, in hopes that they will then pay for downloads. It's the latest of recent major-label moves that would have been unthinkable a few years back...
Newsome.Org: "The Lost Rituals of Music":
I suspect Fred misses the good old days when listening to music was the thing, itself. As opposed to something you do while you're doing something else. These days everything is compressed. Time. Music. Fun. Back in the day, we'd put Frampton Comes Alive on the turntable, sit back and just enjoy the sound. Same with the Allman's At Fillmore East, and the best one of all- Europe '72. We'd read the album covers and the liner notes. We never felt hurried, like we should be doing something else.Our record collections were tangible. We could browse through them like books. The joy of picking out a record, taking it out of the sleeve and putting it on the turntable was a ritual to our passion.
And a huge kick in the head is the news that Rick Rubin is now a co-President at Columbia Records.
NYTimes: "The Music Man":
"That's the magic of the business," he said. "It's all doom and gloom, but then you go to a Gossip show or hear Neil in the studio and you remember that too many people make and love music for it to ever die. It will never be over. The music will outlast us all."
Rick Rubin has been a force in music that has influenced me for the last twenty years. He's now producing Metallica's latest and hopefully will return them to greatness. Can any one 'save' the music industry? No. But it can be re-invented. And Rubin can play a major role.
As Dave Rogers puts it for Paul Potts, that opera singer that Rubin was gushing about, "the love of the art preceded the opportunity to exploit it, commercially" - that's something Rubin has always understood. His pursuit of Hip-Hop, Metal, or Roots Rock (the Black Crowes) acts before they were mainstream always made him stand out. His search for the pure soul of an artist, whether it be Neil Diamond or Johnny Cash, exemplifies it.
Rick Rubin being Co-President of Columbia does mark me as old however. He and the music he's promoted, are no longer on the fringes of the mainstream, and now he's part of the machine.
Lets hope it gets interesting.
Now on to other matters...
tonypierce.com: "do you know why i know life isnt fair":
cuz even the donnas had to form their own label. dropped by atlantic after "fall behind me" only made a few suits rich, the donnas are doing their own thing now, shunning their donna c, donna s., schtict and now using their real names, the donnas rocked the world famous viper room last night for their album release party of Bitchin', which drops today.
Bottom line: The Donnas rock.
Play Like A Girl: "Clean sweeping arpeggios for guitar":
Oh dear. Two weeks is nowhere near enough time to master a challenging new technique. Our fast-paced culture of instant gratification leads many people to expect to totally kick ass at new skills within an extremely short time. If they can't manage, they think they either don't have the "talent" for it or that they must be doing something horribly wrong.Some skills just take time to develop. And beware: there are plenty of guitarists out there who will lie about grossly underestimate the amount of time and effort they need to master a given technique, just so they will appear more "talented." This is total bovine excrement. So cut yourself some slack, realize that any skill takes time to develop, and don't compare your own progress with other people's.
From my favorite musician's blog.
Karl at Wednesday, September 19, 2007 | Comments (2) | TrackBack
Tim O'Reilly == Tipper Gore?
No of course not.But this
still looks like
to me.
The push to have blogs adopt a 'Code of Conduct', including content warnings for visitors, reminds me of the P.M.R.C. and the "Warning, Explicit Content" stickers that are smacked on on just about every album worthy to buy.
I wonder what Frank Zappa would have to say?
Watch the whole Frank Zappa video. Then read Tim O'Reilly's post and comments about the proposed 'Code of Conduct'. Then revisit the conversation taking place about it (more links later). The overtones are there.
Question... where can I find the blogosphere equivalent of the "Filthy Fifteen" so I can subscribe to their RSS feeds?
Update: Frank Paynter has a way forward that sounds right to me - and I think it can still be effective.
Update: I'm not alone in seeing the similarities. I like that icon :)
Update: Additional links and commentary:
Jeff Jarvis: No twinkie badges here.; "This effort misses the point of the internet, blogs, and even of civilized behavior. They treat the blogosphere as if it were a school library where someone - they’ll do us the favor - can maintain order and control. They treat it as a medium for media. But as Doc Searls has taught me, it's not. It's a place.
deep jive interests: Why Are We *Still* Confusing "Blogging Code of Conduct" With "Having a Comments Policy"?: What we really mean to discuss is the more mundane aspect of blogging, which is to merely having a comments policy.
Shelley Powers: badges: I've seen as many vicious comments in men's weblogs, as I've seen in women's. I think the perceived 'threat to all women' supposedly inherent in weblogging has been exaggerated-not to our benefit, either.
Boing Boing: Blogger "code of conduct" trades freedom for politeness: Tim O'Reilly's well-intentioned Blogger Code of Conduct is an attempt to come up with a voluntary set of behavioural norms that will keep blogs civil and honest. However, I was very uncomfortable with Tim's draft, as it seemed to preclude real anonymity and invite censorship.
Dan Gillmor: In Blogosphere, Honor Should Rule: They're creating a bit of a monster, as they discuss asking people to put logos on their work defining various categories of behavior. Who'd be the judge of it? The government? Libel lawyers? Uh, oh.
Nicholas Carr: Thanks, Tim and Jimbo!: In the future, blogs that can safely be ignored will be marked with a cute little badge..
Dave Winer: O'Reilly's code of conduct: We all seem to be speaking with one voice today, this code of conduct idea is not a good one.
Robert Scoble: Code of conduct or not?: So, for now, I guess I'd have to wear the "anything goes" badge.
Seth Finkelstein: "Blogging Code of Conduct" - WHO ENFORCES IT?: I am simply shouting to the wind here out of frustration with the failure of blogging to provide any defense whatsoever: WHO ENFORCES THE CODE-OF-CONDUCT?
TNL.net: Blogger's Code of Conduct: a Dissection: Because of such lapses and because I believe that "the interest in encouraging freedom of expression in a democratic society outweighs any theoretical but unproven benefit of censorship," I have to say that this code is not only a bad idea but one that should strenuously be rejected by members of the blogosphere.
A comment I left on Tim O'Reilly's post:
"I think I'm still very concerned that saying you take responsibility for the comments on your blog means you actually take *legal* responsibility for them.
The only people who can take such responsibility are those with time on their hands - with money and resources.
Which leads to thinking that only those with money should enable comments on their blog.
Maybe I'm the only one concerned about this angle because I'm the rare exception of someone still in touch with poverty and being poor and folks that aren't tech savy - in this discussion mainly filled with technologists and such.
I'm sorry but that and the addition of the badges make this feel like a form of self-segregation - just another way of identifying 'us' against whomever 'them' is.
Aggregators will be able to use such badging to further filter the Web, keeping other voices from its edges from being heard.
Having commenting policies makes a ton of sense. That's obvious. But what this is evolving into....
I'm sorry, IMHO it's reactive and needs a re-think."
Karl at Tuesday, April 10, 2007 | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Music Video of the Year: Brian Posehn's "Metal By Numbers"
Cookie! Cookie! Cookie!
Brahahaha :)
Karl at Friday, September 1, 2006 | Comments (0) | TrackBack
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Wednesday, December 15, 2004: I haven't been called a barbarian in a while
Monday, December 13, 2004: "because they are not parents"
Saturday, December 11, 2004: Eminem Is Right
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Thursday, December 9, 2004: "Cemetery Gates", Pantara (1990)
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