Music News, Reviews and live music video for the aging rocker set
November 29, 2006
The Rock is All Around Us
??!!
November 26, 2006
Tryptophan induced coma leads to overindulgence in a different kind of turkey
With this in mind, it was late Saturday night after Thanksgiving when my Mother and I ended up for at least a half hour watching an infomercial for the "Time-Life Soft Rock of the 70's collection." Why was I drawn in? I must admit that most of these Time-Life infomercials are pretty great, if not only due to the copious clips of rockers of the past delivering versions of their hits on Don Kirschner’s Rock Concert, The Old Grey Whistle Test, or best of all sloppy early ‘rock video’. I mean, really, when was the last time I got to see what Nilsson really looked like? Add to this the allure of seeing of the “hosts” - aging members of Air Supply Russell Hitchcock (the short brunette one) and Graham Russell (the tall guitar playing blonde one) - stiltedly deliver lines about “What fantastic memories these songs bring back…”
The clips recounted many a soggy love song of the past from the likes of Todd Rundgren, Leo Sayer, and America, as well as a wide array of un-memorables like Bertie Higgins, Benny Mardones, Exile, and Player, leading my Mother to demand “Did *any* of these people have a career after these songs?” No Momma. No.
November 23, 2006
Aging Madonna still too damn scary for TV
1) Arrived on stage inside of a giant
disco ball that dropped from the
ceiling,
2) Did an erotic bump and grind on a saddle suspended in mid-air to "Like a Virgin"
and
3) Made a bunch of political statements with her music that probably aren’t really
quite as deep as she thinks they are. But hey, she’s Madonna, what do you want?
The downside of seeing the show on network TV however, was realizing how American culture has become so lame that even a 48 year-old married mother of two (three?) can be easily judged as far too scandalous for the common viewer. The network apparently were the ones who made the decision to not show Madonna rising from the stage nailed to a giant disco ball cross while singing “Live to Tell” and later in the midst of “I Love New York” also cut out her comment which replaces the lyric “Just go to Texas, isn’t that where they golf?” with “Just go to Texas, and you can suck George Bush's dick”
It’s lame enough that NBC is so afraid of some kind of Christian backlash that they knocked out Madonna’s big fat crucifixion scene (as if any of these people had tuned in to begin with?), but why is a network deciding to chop out Madonna’s comments on Bush? Would Fox be so quick to cut out the political views of any of their ultra-conservative commentators (no matter how profane)? Or is that kind of language only OK in Girls Gone Wild ads? Obviously the lady herself doesn’t much care if anyone knows her politics – she changes this lyric at every show she does. Regardless of NBC's censoring, some markets were still just too plain scared to show the show. In Chattanooga, Knoxville, Reno, Ft. Wayne, Bloomington, and Atlanta TV bigwigs too offended by a number of “questionable scenes and content” opted instead to go for footage of the local aquarium among other sure-fire ratings getters.
At the end of the day I guess we can all thank NBC’s censors to be there to save us from Madonna being... Madonna. Even approaching half a century, there’s still something about her that scares the hell out of people. Well that sounds like something to be admired.
November 19, 2006
EMF finds a new way to be associated with cheese
EMF, the one hit wonder who a decade and a half ago brought us the Manchestertastic "You're Unbelievable" have rewritten their one stab at glory to be about cheese. No, real cheese. Kraft Cheddar Crumbles to be exact. Except now instead of declaring that the object of the singer's affection is unbelievable due to the things she says, the tune now declares in an incredibly awkwardly worded refrain that Kraft Cheddar Crumbles are "Crumbleievable" - a word which besides being imaginary, is decidedly perplexing as to its exact meaning. One can only wonder what the ad agency meeting was like where someone suggested locating a band whose relevance expired more than a decade ago and then thought "Ah yes, and let us get them to rewrite their song to be even more completely nonsensical than before".
When Devo rewrote Whip It to be used in Swiffer ads, now demanding we "Swiff it good!" the effect seemed oddly appropriate. I mean, this is the band that back in the day were shilling Honda scooters, so rewriting Whip It to Swiff It seemed less a sell out and more like an inside joke we were all in on. But for EMF, the joke seems firmly on them. I just want to know, was there a moment when singer James Atkin was rerecording the song and recognized what kind of lows had been hit. There's selling out, and then there's rewriting your only hit song to shill cheese. That's scraping the bottom of the cracker barrel.
November 16, 2006
Sometimes young people with their new wave delusions hit the mark
The star is one "Mr. Kane" aka: Kane Chukro, a sweet-faced 20 year-old from Saskatchewan/Vegas/LA who is currently in some kind of video-contest on Yahoo. The video for his home studio recorded pop nugget - which he insists cost all of $30 to make in his garage (that's the spirit!) - is acres more pleasant than anything else in the contest it seems - not to say the competition was anywhere near stiff.
A quick tour of the Mr. Kane website reveals plenty more clever little power pop songs, the kind that would make Jason Falkner, Ben Folds, or members of The Knack surely want to sit down and split a beer, er... Mountain Dew with the gent. Some tracks go too long, but that's the folly of youth; others become too damn slick for their own good - reminding one of a yet unwritten theme song to a show about ironic young people on the WB, but all of this is just splitting hairs. At the heart of it all there's Kane's disarmingly well-honed knack for finding a hook and beating it into your skull until you can't help but sing along. And that means this young mister probably won't be label-free for long.
November 14, 2006
Quote of the Day
- Studs Terkel
93 year old DJ & Author quoted from an interview in The Sun.
November 09, 2006
Homophobia: Cures Middle East conflict, produces crap disco song.
November 06, 2006
A word from the wise about going to see bands...
I came to this epiphany around the time my friend Alex and I had planned to go see Roy Orbison. The time was the late 80's and Orbison was riding high on a tide of post-Blue Velvet resurgent interest in his music. Appropriately, we were ready to see the man with the 3rd largest pair of sunglasses in rock and roll croon "In Dreams" and subsequently get all Frank with ourselves about it. So after much planning and scheming, the day came when Orbison was in our town and what did we do? We lost enthusiasm. "Oh, we'll go see him next time" we naively said. We were young and stupid then. There was no next time. A month later Orbison was dead.
Oops.
A year or so later, a similar thing happened with Screamin' Jay Hawkins. Oops x 2. That sealed the deal for me. So now I have seen Tom Jones twice (he doesn't seem to be going anywhere but I'd still go see him again), and Morphine at their last gig in the US before singer Mark Sandman died (a gig during which I thought "Gee, these guys are great, I have to go see them more"). So believe me, when someone of interest comes to play in your town, don't count on them coming back. Go see them now. Planes crash, people die, bands split, drummers explode,... Take the next morning off from work. As a good friend of mine once said to me - you will never look back and think, "Wow, I am so glad I went to work that day". Too true.