Archives for category: music

And for free!

Indie heroes, +/- (with their clever domain hack website address), have a new album coming out soon.  +/- make good, honest indie rock (which is a breath of fresh air in today’s hypercommercialized, schock-rock, screamy/weepy scene).  You can listen to (and download!) their new song, Snowblind over at Stereogum.

Perhaps signaling a new musical direction, Kanye West is streaming his new song, Love Lockdown over at his blog.  Can’t say I’m the biggest hip hop fan (my tastes tend to be kind of stuck in the 90s… A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, Guru, etc… which probably explains why I like The Cool Kids so much), but I really like Kanye’s work.

And, just for good measure, you can find a new Deerhoof track, Offend Maggie, at My Old Kentucky Blog.  As always, expect the eclectic from Deerhoof.  After listening to it, I kind of feel like riverdancing.  Go figure.

… I’ll happily settle for a Rival Schools reunion!

I just missed the Polvo show here in SD, but I’m going to do my darndest to see Walter and company on October 10th.

Rival Schools! Live!

*sigh* Quicksand, where art thou?

You know how some people carry around those little tip charts in their pockets? I’m thinking I could hit it big if I could make a pocket-sized “Christian equivalency” chart for people to carry around so they can steer clear of secular territory.  For example, this safety chart might have things like:

  • Mountain Dew t-shirt = “Jesus Meant to Die” t-shirt
  • Altoids = Testamints
  • Scattergories = Bible Scattergories
  • Dance Dance Revolution = Dance Praise Dance Game
  • Hootie and the Blowfish = Third Day, Casting Crows, MercyMe, et al.

…all of this was spurred on by the recent announcement that, for those of us who could not bear the thought of allowing face-melting heathen music like DragonForce or Iron Maiden into our homes but are still itching to play Guitar Hero, relief has finally arrived!

Say hello to Guitar Praise!

Unfortunately, although they do have a Petra song in the track list, I do not see any Stryper.  For real, no To Hell with the Devil or Honestly?  That’s a dealbreaker right there.

My latest television watching obsession, other than the Olympic coverage of Korean team handball and America’s Best Dance Crew (big ups to SuperCr3w!), has been JCTV.

JCTV (yes, apparently, it’s Jesus’ television) is a channel started up by the folks at TBN (yes, that TBN) to reach the “extreme” generation. Or something like that.

I’m not 100% sure why I keep on watching. It’s not that I enjoy the videos or programming (lots of old school skateboarding, loud music videos and, for some reason, an almost endless loop of something called “Cruise for a Cause”). And it’s not because I’m mocking it, although I do have some skepticism about it. I think it’s because I’m trying to figure out why JCTV exists.

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Some of my favorite music comes from the late 80s/early 90s. The whole DC/Dischord movement was highly influential not only for the music, but for the ethic (see an article I wrote with Jason Evans over at the Ecclesia Collective site, What Would Ian Do?).

Indie labels like Merge (current home of Arcade Fire), Caulfield, Simple Machines, Gravity and Touch and Go documented regional scenes from far-flung places across the country — allowing a land-locked Michigander kid, like myself, to be connected in some way to places like Chapel Hill and San Diego in the pre-internet Stone Ages.

For my birthday, I just purchased an old album by seminal Louisville powerhouse Rodan. After all these years, it still sounds amazing! And, I finally picked up that Sonic Youth shirt I’ve had my eye on! Happy mid-90s indie rock birthday to me, indeed!

At the end of August, one of my favorite noise-rock bands from back in the day will be playing in SD — the mighty Polvo has reunited for a short summer tour. While I would like to catch this show, it does make me wonder about all of the reunion shows that are happening.

Coachella has practically become a “Name That Reunion” event [h/t: Brooklyn Vegan for compiling a nice list of Coachella reunions shows here]; the “Don’t Look Back” series from All Tomorrow’s Parties has bands performing entire albums of vintage material. When does one cross the line from nostalgia into blatantly cashing in? And does the Spinal Tap performance from Live Earth count as part of this trend?