Saturday, December 31, 2022

The White Stripes Live at the Ritz, Raleigh, NC 9-26-99



Listen Here

Direct quote from the tour diary "The 'Ritz' is anything but, although it holds about 2400 people + gave us a $10 buyout. The backstage was spacious + clean + for some reason Jack was fascinated w/ the ceiling tiles...Stripes made $70+ in merch and the show was more tempo consistent but there were some more mistakes than last night." 

Apparently we lied to the front desk of the Comfort Inn on this evening and said that only two people would be staying in the room that night. It was actually four of us in there. The next day we went to five different places in town looking for an A/C adapter (I think for Jack's Whammy pedal) and in the process drove the rented green minivan 20 miles the wrong way. Jack's post-song banter regarding "Wasting My Time" and his dedication of "The Big Three Killed My Baby" to Preston Tucker are both innocently charming here.  The impromptu cover of Earl King's "Trick Bag" via the Gories version of the same song is full of swagger and would be one of only two times the Stripes were captured doing the song. I dig it.


This combination of songs, the manner in which they're played, the overall vibe of the whole thing...it is all entirely unique to the three shows that the White Stripes played opening for Pavement in September 1999. The Stripes never really held this vibe previously and would never land on it again. I guess it's a matter of opinion whether or not that's a good thing or a bad thing.  The fact it was their first-ever time playing three shows in three days feels significant and as the first bout of anything that could even in the loosest sense of the term be called a "tour" should make us all glad that there would be more of such endeavors. I guess there's probably an alternate reality where these gigs are pure disasters and it scares off Jack and Meg from putting themselves out there, maybe they don't hop in the van a year later when Sleater-Kinney asks 'em to open. The entirety of the White Stripes career is a collection of fortunate opportunities leading to even more fortunate and opportune possibilities. In the end, optimism and positivity tends to win out.

I was seventeen years old at the time of this show. Looking back over twenty years later my inclusion in the reindeer games seems and feels kind of unnecessary, yet I am insanely grateful I was there. Most importantly, I convinced the sound guy to record the show on a cassette and now we can all enjoy and dissect what went down in that half-empty room so many moons ago.

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Beat Happening "Our Secret" b/w "What's Important"

Beat Happening

Our Secret b/w What's Important

scum stats: could it be more than 1000 copies? hard to imagine

As gentle an atomic blast as you could ever imagine. The debut vinyl outing from these godheads, it's just SO perfect, from the hand-coloring on the picture sleeve to the "aw shucks" vibe apparent on both sides. The sound that launched a thousand imitators? Possibly.

Years ago a buddy of mine said, in regards to Beat Happening, "Man....don't you just wish you heard this when you were fifteen years old? Like it'd give you permission (encouragement?) to just go out there and be amateur and unprofessional and out of tune and...it's all ok."

While I wholeheartedly agree with all that sentiment, the fact of the matter is that I DID hear this stuff when I was 15 years old and it absolutely inspired me in all of those ways, providing a north star always able to refer to even as I crest into my forties.

I bought a sleeveless copy of this record in a bulk lot of 7"s on eBay back in 2000 or so. I sent an email to Calvin Johnson of the band/K Records and asked if there were any random sleeves that might just be kicking around. In all honesty he said he'd take a look and although he didn't turn up any, the fact that he'd give some punk teenager the time of day (over email) to go and try to scrounge a picture sleeve for a record from SIXTEEN YEARS earlier tells you all you need to know about the magic of taking time, of listening, of not being dismissive of the younger generation that lets this band maintain its relevance nearly forty years after their inception.

"...I had dinner with her family" as the final line of the a-side is just...carries the weight of a thousand suns both in its intonation and the meaning behind it.

All the Beat Happening LP's are newly repressed for like the thousandth time and please do buy any/all of them as you cannot go wrong anywhere in their catalog. An American band as equally as important as the Grateful Dead. Go ahead...fight me. 



Monday, October 31, 2022

Masalla "Burnin' Feeling" b/w "Simple Words"

 Masalla



Burnin' Feeling b/w Simple Words

scum stats: 100 copies splatter vinyl with screen printed mailer and inserts, 400 copies on black vinyl. mine is black vinyl with the mailer and inserts, go figure

If you like Brown Acid obscuro 70's hard rock, this Masalla single is your shit. I first became aware of it back in 2014 when I saw a copy for sale on a Frank Merrill mail order auction list (so archaic) described as "midtempo crude garage, flip VERY heavy guitar, rock psych." Minimum bid was $30. I had NO idea what it was and bid just north of $200. The eventual winner bid well over $400. I have no regrets.

"Burnin' Feeling" is everything you could ever hope for. Starting off with an audio snippet warning against the negative effects of drug use (hahahaha....clearly they're joking) the thunderous riff driven vibes just SLAY. Raspy overblown vocals and ripping guitar solo shredding...it's like you can still SMELL these guys 52 years later. Apparently the original was pressed in an edition of 100 copies in Miami in 1970. If this was a Michigan record...I'd probably piss my pants.

The packaging here is exquisite, the Ancient Grease approach with the blind embossed paper sleeve and liner notes booklet and reproduced photo of a pet monkey and the facsimile newspaper clipping glued into the rubber stamped mailer...it is an overall impressive experience. Definitely worth your time checking out anything (everything?) they put out.

Friday, September 30, 2022

Cake "Fashion Nugget"


Cake

Fashion Nugget

scums stats: recent 180-gram black vinyl version...but I would happily trade something of appropriate worth for an original '96 pressing

Man, isn't it crazy what was allowed to become a hit back in the mid-Nineties? I've got the framework of an essay percolating in my head about the insanities of true, top of the chart hits from the era. It's all mind blowing. "The Distance" is such a weird song from a weird band that should have NEVER had a chance in the record business world as I understand it. So obviously, I relish in its existence. 

But it's so damn good. Freshman year of high school me bought the CD stat. And honestly, I've probably grown to the point that "The Distance" is pretty forgettable for me now. I mean, it's alright...but have you listened to "Frank Sinatra"?

Damn. For at least 12 years after this came out I would scribble teenaged sounding "poetry" or "lyrics" that was entirely cribbed from the meter and scheme of "Frank Sinatra." To this day, every time I hear it, I still smile and perk up. The muted, understated organ intro...just stellar in every way. 

Beyond that, my teenaged guitar/drums duo recorded a version of "I Will Survive" in the attic at 1203 Ferdinand back in '97 and just flipping through all these songs, they are all just so solid, timeless really...I mean, is there any other album out there that has covers of Gloria Gaynor and Willie Nelson on it? I don't think so.

Whirlwind Heat told me that they decided to record their "Types of Wood" album at Paradise Studios because that's where Cake recorded Fashion Nugget and is claimed to have the best drum sound in all of the studios in America. On top of that, Greg Brown's guitar tone and playing here just stands alone in regards to what was available and accessible to a young kid like me at the time. It sounded...like a guitar should sound

I've never bought any other Cake records (never even seen any of the 7"s culled from this LP...so all have just been added to my Discogs wantlist) and despite the 8xLP boxset going for A THOUSAND DOLLARS on the secondhand market, I think I'm perfectly content just spending my time with this one. Fashion Nugget has yet to bore me or do me wrong.



Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Calling Out To Ghosts That Are No Longer There: The White Stripes at Sloss Furnaces

    The fact that the word “penultimate” exists exclusively as an adjective for next-to-last situations

feels almost egregious. I mean, did we really need an eleven letter word to describe this

scenario when a three-word combination totaling ten letters does the job just perfectly?

    Because let’s face it…second-to-last things are kinda just whatever. All the penumbra and

history and tall tales sprout effortlessly from every last whisper about the LAST of something,

the finality, the never-again crushing darkness of an abyss of nothingness for the rest of

eternity.

    So for me to roll in and tell you just how good the White Stripes were in their penultimate live

show…I understand the urge to call bullshit. But honestly, truthfully, with all personal bias

removed from shading of opinion here…this show is phenomenal.

    Visits to an Original House of Pancakes, a record store and some antique shops all replay as

relatively ordinary for daytime activities. If anything, my memory of the day sticks out as being

oppressively hot. With afternoon highs in the 90s, temps at Sloss Furnaces - the supposedly

haunted turn-of-the-century pig iron producing blast furnace turned concert venue - would hover

into the 80s well into the Stripes performance that night. Factor in the crush of 2400 bodies

crammed into the rudimentary shed-like structure with unforgiving open air walls and my recall

of the event is overwhelmingly punctuated by the feel, smell and general annoyance of sweat.

    Add in the decrepit, rusted, tetanus-y surroundings of the rest of the campus and the knowledge

that the number of workers who died there was rumored to be in the hundreds, their falling or

being pushed into the red hot fires of the furnaces only to be instantly incinerated and the

unshakable pall that casts on a spot even some five decades after the last flames there were

extinguished…needless to say it didn’t feel like an ordinary show by any means.

    Opener Dan Sartain would play in front of the biggest hometown crowd of his career and the

highlight for me (playing drums for him on this leg) was his inquiry to the crowd “So…how many

genuine Alabama rednecks we got here tonight?” After a strong response from the crowd, Dan

replied “Well, you made my life a living hell for 26 years. Thank you.”

    Just…perfect in every way.

    The show kicks off with “Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground” and finds Jack taking liberties (for

the better) in a song where he usually did not. The particularly gnarly first note of feedback

curves into some choice guitar syncopations. As the most-frequent set opener across the

band’s career, it feels odd that this would be the last time the Stripes ever started a show with

“Dead Leaves” as their final gig would begin with a cover “Stop Breaking Down.”

    “Icky Thump” rolls into the fray wildly. To hear the assembled crowd, without prompting,

perfectly nail the patter of twelve “la’s” sung in rapid succession at the end of the second verse,

all mere weeks after the song’s release…it is a great reminder as to how WIDE this record

reached so quickly upon deployment.

    Leading into “When I Hear My Name” Jack, particularly chatty this evening, says “Meg and I

knew we was Alabama bound!” and despite any hammy undertones, it ultimately comes off as

sincere and heartfelt. Leading out from there, “Hotel Yorba” hits as particularly vivacious, Meg’s

accompanying vocals both vivid and spot-on.

    Jack’s unusual beginning to “The Denial Twist” and the improvised divergent lyrics in the

second verse, which seem to say “It’s the way you rock and roll!” leave the Stripes’ final

performance of this song as striking.

    While the extended, elegiac intro to “Death Letter” stands strongly as a haunting slice of slide

guitar, Jack’s improvised lyrics on the third verse delight. Similar to his moves earlier in “Dead

Leaves”, taking a specific part of a song that, to my memory, was seldom if ever switched up,

and reworking it on the spot, it all feels significant. Especially in light of the fact that the song

would essentially run out of its evolutionary runway in another 24 hours. So for him to sing…

It looked like ten thousand

Women around my front porch

Didn’t know if I’d listen to ‘em

Or keep on lookin’ north

I’m just reminded of the fact that no song should ever be considered complete or finished or

beyond reinterpretation.

    Acolytes of St. Francis of Assisi may be surprised to catch Jack’s in-the-moment name drop of

Brother Sun, Sister Moon in the midst of an extended rant toward the end of “Do.” Though it

may bear repeating that “Little Bird” and its “I wanna preach to birds” lyric is explicitly inspired by

the 13th century saint, it should require no leap of faith to imagine the 1972 Franco Zeffirreli film

depicting the life and times of Francis being viewed by Jack as a prepubescent altar boy.

    Eschewing his wealthy upbringing for a life of piety and monasticism, Francis would become

patron saint of Italy, the first documented stigmatic and the creator of the first live nativity scene.

If there’s a Catholic Hall of Fame, St. Francis of Assisi is definitely a first-ballot shoe-in.

    Nuggets like Jack’s borderline goofy drunk introduction of Meg for “In The Cold, Cold Night” with

“Miss Meg White takes center stage!” belies a truly stellar performance while brief, blink-and-

you-missed-it riff inversions on both “Astro” and “Little Cream Soda” are delicious little surprises

to revel in. And I’ll be damned if the organ-driven take on “I Want To Be The Boy To Warm Your

Mother’s Heart” is a welcome reminder that every last live version of this song is worth a listen. It never

fails or disappoints. It always satisfies.

    But the juiciest plum in this set is the unexpected, abrupt abandonment of “Seven Nation Army”

a mere ninety seconds into the song. When Jack says “I don’t know if we should play this song

in America anymore…I guess it doesn’t translate well…lost something in the translation” he

says so without knowing it’d be the last time that he and Meg ever played the song together.

    I remember this happening that night, but at the time I never mentioned it or thought to bring it

up.

    But 15 years later I had to.

    So in an email with the subject line “dumb white stripes question” I reached out to Jack for

clarity on the situation. His response…

oh i think i was just joking because it had become such a soccer chant at the time and that

europeans loved it “more” than americans for a minute there

and they weren’t singing any english lyrics just saying “po po po po” in Italy, so i was joking that

americans didn’t understand the “foreign language” of “po po po po po po po"

    That reads nicely.

    But I cannot help being reminded that in 2007 George W. Bush was still in office and folks were

still wildly pissed about his mere existence AND the ongoing overseas US military boondoggles.

That year would see a total of 904 American armed forces casualties in Iraq alone, the single

highest yearly total in the entirety of said occupation.

    So in Alabama, I dunno…a bunch of self-identifying, sweat-soaked rednecks chanting along…it

had just the faintest twinge of jingoistic misappropriation originating from the crowd…that basso

ostinato chopping along with the sinister Dorian mode overtone. It sounds ominous. “Army” is in

the title. I mean, it’s not a stretch.

    At the time I remember just having half the half-second thought along these confused political

lines and then literally have not thought about it since. The only contemporaneous review I can

find of the show, written by Andy Smith, attributes the scuttled “Seven Nation Army” as an effort

to prevent “the righteous and violent rigor of the lyrics (to) be misinterpreted as condoning an

unrighteous war.”

    So even if we do take Jack at his word here (which I think we should), what he says his intention

was, it’s worth noting that the perceived notion in the air that night, at least to some, was of an

entirely different tone. These are the shortcomings of interpretation. They will never rectify

themselves.

    So for Jack to switch the opening “Ball and Biscuit” lyrics to be…

Yes I am the Third Man, woman

But I am also the seventh son

…to me it reads as almost stentorian “LET ME SPELL IT OUT FOR YOU”-level of painting a

picture just perfectly clear in light of the supposed confusion or misinterpretation of anything

earlier in the set. With gusto.

    Yet the impromptu lyrics on “300 MPH Torrential Outpour Blues” are deadly…

There’s all kinds of emotions that a phone call ain’t gonna fix

You took me to the brink woman, took me everywhere I didn’t want to go but I went anyway

I never want you to question where I was headed, yes that’s where my head is nowadays

The complexity and grasp of human condition displayed in an off-the-top-of-the-head

exclamation, deftly cramming all those syllables into precise meter and landing on the rhyming

couplet, all while giving off the impression that the severity and pathos contained therein surely

must’ve been labored over intensely for hours, days, weeks even…well, isn’t that just the way to

knock us all over?

    Ending with “Boll Weevil” just a short trip up I-65 from the actual boll weevil monument in

Enterprise, Alabama, and some on-mic praise of Sartain is a perfect way to put that specific,

local, “we know exactly where we are” stamp on the entire evening. When Jack implores the

crowd to not go looking for any ghosts on the property after the show, you have half a mind to

respect those wishes.

    We in the touring party would not respect those wishes. After the show, a bunch of us (including

Meg, but not Jack) climbed the stairs, single-file, to a precarious perch overlooking the vast,

murky stretches of the complex. From above the entirely insufficient artificial light dappled the

tiniest spots and failed to make a dent in the existentially overpowering void.

    Even more dread-inducing was the spectre of a pitch-black decommissioned railroad tunnel.

From entry to exit, the path we were led to couldn’t have been more than 200 yards at most. But

I do not exaggerate when I say there was a complete absence of any outside illumination in this

stretch. Pure, unadulterated emptiness. Cannot see your own hand in front of your face insanity.

The shit that so many horror film plots are predicated on and has kept the night light business

booming since the passing of the torch from candle to light bulb.

    We got our hands on a single, meager flashlight, yet between the 8 of us (or so) that were on

the endeavor…it felt wildly inadequate to the point of palpable, impending fear.

    But there’s a funny little thing that happened within this little group of friends upon venturing into

the ghastly, haunted space. We were all still buzzy from the after effects of such a stunning live

concert in such unconventional environs. Simply put…we laughed our fucking asses off.

Hysterically. The entire time. What took us maybe five minutes to traverse passed in seemingly

five seconds. No one seemed like they could even be bothered with being scared. In the face of

the uncertain, of the overwhelming chasm…one light and each other was all we needed to lead

the way. To illuminate. To get us to the desired destination.


    In the end, we’re just calling out to ghosts, listening closely for any sign of a response.

Sunday, July 31, 2022

Willie Nelson "No Place For Me" b/w "Lumberjack"

 


No Place For Me b/w Lumberjack

scum stats: estimated 300 copies pressed, supposedly 3-5 known in collections

Gotta say I was pretty wowed to find out that Willie Nelson's first record came out of Vancouver, Washington. Not Texas? Not Nashville? I'd known that Loretta Lynn's career had started in the Pacific Northwest, but I thought that was an anomaly, not something that had any parallels.

Kinda goes without saying that this single is hard to find. Rumor has it that the disc wasn't even available for purchase back when it was made in 1957. Supposedly people had to write in to the radio station KVAN where Willie was a DJ at the time (Vancouver which is right across the river from Portland, Oregon) and say how much they loved the record and then a copy would be mailed to them.

Damn...doesn't that just sound crazy thinking about? It certainly doesn't happen like that any more.

The a-side "No Place For Me" feels like a pretty solid, of-the-era country tune, Willie's voice rich and sonorous and strengthened by reverb, buoyed by picky guitar and with some fiddle buried deep in the mix. Before you know it, the damn thing is over in less time than it takes for me to microwave popcorn. That feels a little bit strange, could be good or bad depending on your mood or the day I suppose.

The flip is written by another DJ at KVAN at the time, Leon Payne, supposedly written about a local timber faller named Ray Norris. The stop-and-go, gas-and-brakes chug of this song feels pretty remarkable and noteworthy. The verse vocals presented largely without any accompaniment, the heavy-breathing intro and outro...just feels like there's something beyond the "old hat" vibe that most independent, Starday-pressend country singles from this time. Almost bordering on spoken jazz, Ken Nordine vibes. Heady stuff for '57, at least for me looking back 65 years later.

While it might be absolutely NO indication of what Willie would do come the rest of his career, man, first records with tales like this behind them just get me excited. Good times and good vibes.




Thursday, June 30, 2022

The Last Thoughts Of My Thirties

minivan window 

already down

Detroit wind whipping

my hair against

my face

the cool

interstate seventy-five air

chills my cheeks

sunburned by baseball

just a reminder

that I am alive

Lord,

I just can’t keep from 

smiling

sometimes

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Cybotron "Alleys Of Your Mind"

 Cybotron


"Alleys Of Your Mind" b/w "Cosmic Raindance"

scum stats: at least three pressings...red/white labels with black printing, red labels with black printing, white labels with black printing. Anecdotally red/white labels are likely the first pressing, as those seem to turn up the least frequently. I'd venture the red label is the follow-up pressing and the white labels seem to relatively ABOUND in quantity. At one point 30 years after the fact Juan Atkins claimed that the white label was a bootleg, but I think that's the fog of the decades. Original pressings plated and pressed at QCA in Cincinnati, pretty sure that white label ran at Archer a few months later.)

The beginning of Detroit techno. Never mind that it's a wholesale lift of the hook from Ultravox's "Mr. X", all you need to know is that this is the shit.

Something shifted on my cell phone in the past week where the first thing to play when I plug into the car is no longer Mike Birbiglia's "Abby" but instead, Cybotron's "Alleys Of Your Mind."

This. Makes. My. Day. Every. Day.

I first heard this song on an "Old School Sunday" Detroit radio show...seemingly each one of the R&B stations in town sets up at a local spot with a club (read: not radio) DJ spinning live. None of the tracks get announced or even identified. 

Anyway, I was driving on Vernor headed west bound at the Gratiot intersection and this one drops. Sounding like nothing I'd ever heard before. Sounding like a BAND, a vibe I'd never thought I could gather from a techno record.

And...nothing. No idea what the song was or how to even try to find it.

A day or two later a call to dear band mate Mick Collins had the question answered in about ten seconds. Imagine my delight in finding out it was a DETROIT record.

In a few weeks one of those white label copies would be procured from People's Records. To later discern the story that Atkins and band mate Rick Davis self-released the record, essentially selling it out of the trunks of their cars and moving roundabout 25k copies in that manner.

As Atkins debut release, it's INSANE that the first lyrics he ever unleashed into the world (at a mere 19 years old!) are "Who'll cry for modern man?" I think about this line ALL THE DAMN TIME it's soo stupid good. 

To hear Mick talk about how it hit in Detroit...everyone heard it...and everyone freaked the fuck out. To the point where EVERYONE was bumping this song and loving the hell out of it.

Oh to have been around Detroit in 1981.
Photo on 5-20-22 at 4.40 PM.jpg

I've not stopped loving this record since. The Dirtbombs covered it on our Party Store LP back in 2011 and it's one of my happier full circles having made that happen. 

I've made a habit of grabbing any copy of this record I ever run into. So I've got some extras floating around here. They are all usually HAMMERED...a sign that a disc was a TRUE party record, getting played all the time, not kept in a sleeve, folks dancing so hard they bump into the turntable. Every copy of this disc has lived a full life no doubt. And that, more than anything, is the sign of the most important kind of records.

Saturday, April 30, 2022

More Trivia Questions


1.Richard Edson, Jim Sclavunos, Bob Bert, Steve Shelley. All were drummers in Sonic Youth. Match their name with the appropriate description

 

Who had a role in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off”?

Whose dad won the Heisman Trophy?

Who was in a band called the Crucifucks?

Who plays drums on a Nick Cave and Kylie Minogue duet?

 

2. Spell Fela Kuti. Bonus points if you can spell Anikulapo

 

3. Which one of these people is NOT thanked in the liner notes to Nirvana’s In Utero?

Quentin Tarantino, Bobcat Goldthwaite, Pat Smear, James Osterberg. 

 

4. Produced by Kanye West, “Izzo” by Jay-Z features a sample of which classic Jackson 5 song?

 

5. Which sold more copies in week of release, Use Your Illusion I or Use Your Illusion II? Bonus points, what was the differential between the two within 10 percent?

 

6. Charlie Haden played bass on Ornette Coleman’s “Shape of Jazz to Come”. Two of his triplet daughters were members of which mid-Nineties Los Angeles band signed to DGC records? 

 

7. Animal Collective’s breakout album is titled “Merriweather Post Pavilion” after a well-loved concert venue. Which state is Merriweather Post Pavilion located? Bonus points…what city is Merriweather Post Pavilion located?

 

8. What was released first, Radiohead’s Pablo Honey or Smashing Pumpkin’s Siamese Dream?

Bonus points, name the exact date either of them were released:

 

9. “I’m eating mangoes in Trinidad with attorneys” is a lyric from which 1997 hit that samples both Audio Two’s “Top Billin” and the Bee Gee’s?

 

10. Originally recorded by Solomon Linda in South Africa in 1939 and released under the name “Mbube” which song seems to be resurrected every ten years or so in some movie or television commercial seeming kinda like some bullshit, but, you know, whatever, it’s cool, I guess. Pete Seeger with the Weavers and the Tokens are usually the versions you hear, but Ladysmith Black Mombazo, REM and a duet with Seth Rogen and Billy Eichner are also versions out there.

 

 

 

11. Which was released first…Nirvana’s “Nevermind” or Pearl Jam’s “Ten”? Bonus points, name the exact date either/both of them were released.

 

12. The video game Journey Escape features which rock and roll band?

 

13. The title track on Spiritualized’s 1997 album “Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space” is the only song on the album NOT entirely written by band leader Jason Pierce. A hit for both Elvis Presley and UB40, what song, originally edited out of the initial release of “Ladies…” was incorporated into this first song on the album?

 

14. Within 5, what is the BPM of Outkast’s “Bombs Over Bagdad”?

 

15. In the chorus of her song “Nude as the News” Cat Power mentions Jackson and Jesse, the names of the children of which of her musical idols?

 

16. What is the name of the Harlem Globetrotters theme song?

 

17. What is Stevie Wonder’s birth name?

 

18. The Black and Brown Trading Stamp Corporation was founded in Oakland, California in 1969, inspired by traditional “green stamp” booklets but instead focused on driving business to black-owned establishments in California. Who was the soul and funk singer who was depicted on the Black and Brown stamps, in addition to being the person who put up the money to start the company?

 

19. What year did the Fisk Jubilee Singers form?

 

20. According to “7 Rings” what are some of Ariana Grande’s favorite things?

 


21. What one specific thing do the bands the Fluid, the Melvins and the Jesus Lizard all have in common? 

 

22. True or false: every member of the Strokes has released a solo album.

 

23. Buju Banton, Louis Farrakhan and Ramadan are all mentioned in which Fugees song? 

 

24. Based on the gameplay of Terminator 2: Judgement Day, Revolution X is a 1994 video game “starring” which rock and roll band? 

 

25. True or false: The chorus of Vanilla Ice’s “Ice Ice Baby” originates from the signature chant of the African American fraternity Alpha Phi Alpha? 

 

26. Europe, Alabama, Boston, America, Kansas - which one of these bands was not formed in the place where they took their name from? 

 

27. How many times has John Frusciante joined the Red Hot Chili Peppers? 

 

28. The band Toto backs Michael Jackson on which song from his Thriller album? 

 

29. Ravi Shankar has two successful musician daughters. Name them. 

 

30. In 1997 Jimbo Mathus of the Squirrel Nut Zippers released an album titled “Play Songs for Rosetta” as a means to help raise funds for his childhood nanny, Rosetta. Who was Rosetta’s father?

Thursday, March 31, 2022

You Like Trivia Questions?

 Round One:

What is the b-side to Nirvana’s first single?



A copy of which album, numbered 0000001, sold for over $790,000 at Julien’s Auctions in December 2015?



In which city was Aretha Franklin born?



Whose 1979 album “Pink Cadillac” features two songs which were the last music ever produced by Sun Records founder Sam Phillips?



Who played the guitar solo on David Bowie’s song “Let’s Dance”?



Everyone knows Lou Reed, Mo Tucker, Sterling Morrison and John Cale. Name anyone else who was a member of the Velvet Underground.



Pitchfork’s review of the 2006 “Shine On” album by rated 0.0. There was no written review, instead, just a link to a 10-second YouTube clip of a monkey peeing into its own mouth. What band released “Shine On”?



An RIAA “diamond” award signifies album sales in what amount?



Only two songs from Disney animated films have reached number 1 on the Billboard hot 100 chart. Name either of them.



The band named MC5…what does “MC” stand for?




Round Two:


Jake and Jamin Orrall are best known for their group Jeff the Brotherhood. What was the name of their band before Jeff the Brotherhood?



Eric Stefani is an original member of No Doubt as well as Gwen Stefani’s older brother. Name one of two different television shows he worked on after leaving the band.



What is the name of the Hannah Montana theme song?



Sun Ra plays on a 1966 album dedicated to what crime fighting duo?



Who currently owns Hank Williams 1941 Martin Acoustic guitar?



The Who released an early single of the songs “Zoot Suit” and “I’m The Face”. What was the band name credited on that single?



The Church of John Coltrane is located in which city?



Pink Floyd derived their band moniker from the names of two different blues singers. Name either of them.



Kurt Cobain shares songwriting credit with Dino Valenti on one song. Name that song.



What song starts out with “Fuck all you hoes…get a grip motherfucker”?



Round Three:


There are two proper nouns mentioned more than once in LCD Soundsystem’s song “Losing My Edge” name them both.



What country is William Onyeabor from?



Who is the only person to have played in both Nirvana and Soundgarden?



Which one of these groups has not released a single on Sub Pop - Beach Boys, Melvins, Shonen Knife, Smashing Pumpkins, the White Stripes?


Brendan and James are brothers. Brendan played in Fugazi and James played in the Make-Up. What is their last name?


What is the name of the founding female member of Os Mutantes?



Under what name was Jandek’s first album “Ready For the House” originally credited?



Properly spell “Les Rallizes Denudes”


What country are Boards of Canada from?



Beyonce, Allison Krauss, Henry Mancini or John Williams. Who’s won the most Grammys?




Friday, February 25, 2022

My Briefest of Interactions With Mark Lanegan

I'm pretty sure I said "hi" to him backstage at the Queens of the Stone Age gig at St. Andrew's Hall on September 13th, 2002. But that's inconsequential.

August 20th, 2004 the Dirtbombs played the Pukkelpop Festival in Belgium. We took an overnight ferry from Brighton, UK where we'd performed the previous evening. We arrived on the festival grounds pretty early. I set up my drums as soon as I was allowed so I could go and check out Joanna Newsom's even-earlier-than-ours set on the other side of the grounds. Her opening with an a cappella, not even singing through a microphone version of "Yarn and Glue" in the middle of a mostly empty tent in this empty Belgian field still sits with me as one of the most unafraid performances I have ever witnessed.

Anyway, our set time was during a very un-rock and roll daylight, we're not a big draw and there's not too much of a crowd watching us. But the stage was HUGE...maybe the biggest one we'd ever play. With tons of overhead space, room for Troy to stomp around with a festival length cable...I mean, it really felt like we were probably just a little too small to be included in such an affair but we were going to our damnedest to make sure we took full advantage of our inclusion in such reindeer games.

We played hyper fast and found ourselves walking off stage with 10 minutes still left in our allotted time slot. As a total anomaly, bad form even, we say "fuck it" and go back to do an encore.  Bands our stature do not garner festival encores. According to my hand-written tour diary "...at the end of By My Side I did a headstand on my bass drum, stood on it, then started tossing shit like it was salad. I noticed Greg Dulli stage right mid-set and was trying to see how close I could get the drums to him. Troy swears the rack tom was twenty feet in the air. I threw the bass drum over my head backwards (not before a quick cursory saftey check" and snapped bits off the rim."

Looking back 18 years later and I still feel the adrenalin rush in my chest reminiscing. It felt unhinged in the best way. Throwing and destroying equipment is 100% patently dumb and played out...but it is so fucking fun and the crowd eats it up every damn time.

I am being completely honest and serious when I say that I must've thrown my bass drum at least twenty-five feet from where I was situated on the drum riser. Never before and never since would I be given an opportunity to so wonderfully transform potential energy into kinetic energy via the destruction of the tools I needed to make money.

When I finally walked off stage, I was hit with an instant wave of feeling like I needed to vomit. I had pushed myself SO hard that it only caught me the second I stopped doing it. Right at that moment, a guy walked past me and said "Good show, I grabbed one of your sticks!" to which I had to awkwardly ask for it back, as I wasn't sure if I'd be able to find the exact ones in Europe and it was still the beginning of the tour.

Soon thereafter Greg Dulli came by and said of the five times he'd seen the Dirtbombs, this had been the best. He then introduced everyone standing around and my mind was blown when it became clear that the guy who'd grabbed my stick, whom I'd assumed was just a rabid fan, was actually Mark Lanegan. He and Dulli were playing later in the day as the Twilight Singers.

We'd see Blanche and the Kills and the MC5 and Franz Ferdinand and the White Stripes the next night at the festival and my overwhelming take away from it all was that I just felt so lucky to even be there. As a fan, this was just about the most fun I could ever ask for. And the fact that, even if only for a second, it seemed like Lanegan was a fan of what I was doing, all these years later, is still humbling.

Monday, January 31, 2022

Liner Notes For "Arise, Dan Sartain, Arise!"

    

    The first time I met Dan Sartain I left my grandfather’s funeral early to make it happen. I was

wearing a suit.

    I ran to the show straight from the service, clearly not in my usual duds, but respectable and

tailored enough that I didn’t feel like I was sticking out at the suburban Detroit club on a Sunday

night.

    I’d been hipped to him by the British mag Careless Talk Costs Lives. They hyped the fact that

by the release of Dan Sartain vs. the Serpientes he had already self-released three albums.

Something about that review, the portrait it painted, just made me feel like I HAD to meet Dan.

    This guy was my age at the time (21 years old, give-or-take) and I couldn’t wrap my head

around someone so young had enough material to even fill three full-lengths, let alone the

gumption to ACTUALLY release them.

    Nevermind those self-releases were micro-editions and that it would take me YEARS to track

‘em all down, when you’re dropping a lyric as deadly as “You don’t know what it’s like to be

alone...You don’t know how it feels, to have the cobras snapping at your heels” you are clearly

wise beyond your years or distribution reach.

    Seems like the first dozen or so times I caught Dan live, he never had the same backing band.

Always hustling, always moving, don’t have the time to run tour dates past the bass player, if he

can’t do it, oh well, there’s some other dude who can figure it out and is ready to roll. Shit, that’s

how I got dragooned, happily, into drumming for him back in 2007 and again in 2008.

    To know Dan is to ALWAYS be intrigued and to never be surprised. His is a personality where

anything seems possible at any time. Like on that ‘07 tour, there was the faint possibility we

would play Dan’s local hometown Birmingham, Alabama morning television talk show. Local kid

done good, playing the big venue in town...it all made sense to me why it might happen. And

when Dan said “If it actually goes down, I think we just play ‘Where Eagles Dare.’” You know,

the Misfits’ song with a chorus of “I ain’t no goddamn son of a bitch!”

    In a vacuum, the idea seems self-defeating and ludicrous, just bad all around. Career-killing. But

to hear the thought coming directly out of Dan’s mouth...it was the most sensible, clear-headed

thing I had ever heard. It made perfect sense to me. Much in the same way he gently unfurls the

lyric here “There’s a rooster in the henhouse...with a big ole dick.” Of course the rooster in the

hen house has a big fucking dick. That’s WHY he’s in the hen house. Shit, do I have to spell it

out for you? Don’t you get it? How clear does it have to be?

    Consistently varied and predictably unpredictable...no matter WHO is backing him...the shows

are always flat out great. Because DAN is always great. Because people, like myself, are eager

to get behind him and help spread the word. He garners enthusiasm. He makes you want to do

whatever you can to help evangelize his work...his music, his lyrics, his personality...because

you feel like the world is a better place with more people knowing about him.

    Some say this record is a “return to form” and to that my simple response is...Dan has NEVER

lost his form. While stylistic dalliances have come and gone and inspirations and muses have

been chased and abandoned, the quality of his output has NEVER suffered.

To me, that is the truest form of artistry. Warhol was churning out silk-screens until his dying

breath, however bored he may have been of the experiment, because that’s what people

WANTED from him. Were he alive today they would STILL be asking him for silkscreen

portraits.

    But a musician? What a tight-rope one must walk. You can’t ignore your past, yet you can’t

wholesale regurgitate it either. How does one conjure something that is both familiar yet new

and engaging all at the same time?

    I don’t have the answer. I don’t know how to do it. But I know that’s what *I* want and suspect

that’s what most others look for in the music that grabs them, that captivates their minds, that

moves their souls, that sits with them after months, years, decades.

    All of that encapsulates how I feel about Dan Sartain and not just this album, but life entirely. In

his own unique way, Dan holds a mirror up for us to look at ourselves. You recognize a visage

from the past, with memory of how things used to appear. But the focus of attention goes to the

changes...the wrinkle, the fade, the signs of time passing. Therein lies the truth, therein lies the

message, when at its deepest, provides the listener, the viewer, life, with the most pure

meaning.


Ben Blackwell

Psychedelic Stooge

December 2020