Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

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2008: Best and worst songs in ads

January 2, 2009

[embedded YouTube video; if you can’t watch it, click here]

Following up on some previous posts about music and advertising, and doing one last wrap-up for the year that’s just ended…

Ad Age magazine did a nice little roundup of the ten best songs in advertisements in 2008, together with the ten worst (which makes for much more entertaining reading, as you might imagine). Some interesting artists in there, ranging from Ennio Morricone through the Kinks through Liars. The article includes links  to video of all the ads.

(above, a mashup of Esurance ad and a video for Cloud Cult’s “Lucky Today”)

Book of Tens: Ad Songs of the Year

MP3: Liars – Clear Island [buy]

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2008 roundup

January 1, 2009

river burst

Now that 2008 is actually over, time for a quick round-up of some music highlights. This is a highly idiosyncratic list: it’s not comprehensive, it’s not definitive, and it’s not scientific. It’s really just about what I liked enough to spend a lot of time listening to this year. I hope that there’s some stuff in the list that you missed, and that it encourages you to check out something new.

If the artist had a 2008 release, it’s given in parentheses. Links are to z=z posts, most with MP3s. List is in no particular order.

Head Like A Kite (There is Loud Laughter Everywhere) This album is one of my favourite of the year, up there with Massive Attack’s Mezzanine as the perfect music for three am listening.

The Mountain Goats (Heretic Pride): An excellent album, with several standout songs (“Autoclave,” “Heretic Pride”). But my 2008 Mountain Goats experience was mostly about their fantastic live shows.

Destroyer (Trouble in Dreams): I love Dan Bejar, among other reasons, because he strays enough from traditional pop structures that his songs have added interest, but not enough that they become unmemorable or unlistenable.

The Faint (Fasciination): Omaha’s most unlikely musical export. They were really fun live, except for the few minutes where their setup died and the lead singer told terrible jokes.

Billy Bragg (Mr. Love & Justice): While this was his 2008 album, its most important quality was that it gave Billy Bragg a reason to tour. He’s perfected the art of the one-man-with-a-guitar live show.

Freezepop (Futurefuturefutureperfect, 2007): Voted Boston’s Best Live Act, with justification – their March show was one of my peak concert experiences in 2008.

Passion Pit (Chunk of Change): Local band ‘most likely to succeed’ in the brave new world of indie-electro.

Hot Chip (Made in the Dark): The year’s electrorock album, and the raw material for a slew of great remixes, including one of “One Pure Thought” by Dominik Eulberg and most recently (about 24 hours ago) of “Ready for the Floor” by Jesse Rose (a bit of a cruel joke at 1:45 am, a few minutes before last call).

British Sea Power (Do You Like Rock Music?): This album renders its title rhetorical.

Electric Laser People (Straight Talk on Raising Kids, 2007): This is the album that I was listening to when I reached the Lake Washington bridge; I suspect that it’ll always be emotionally time-stamped with my elation at completing the four-and-a-half day drive, solo, from Cambridge to Seattle.

Mother Mother (O My Heart): Missed two opportunities to see them live, once in Seattle and once in Vancouver, and I hope I get to remedy that in 2009.

New Faces (Two Years): My first intro to local Seattle music – I heard about them from a friend before I even arrived.

The Gaslight Anthem (The ’59 Sound): I came to this band late in 2008, but it’s in heavy rotation on my personal playlists.

The Hold Steady (Stay Positive): This album grew on me; I liked it much more by the end of the year than when I first heard it, in June. Two live shows (at the Pitchfork Music Festival and here in Seattle) probably helped with the process.

I Am Kloot (I Am Kloot Play Moolah  Rouge): I am a sucker for Johnny Bramwell’s voice; if The Gaslight Anthem are a homage and throwback to an earlier time in American music, I Am Kloot plays the same role for British music.

Bishop Allen (The Broken String, 2007):  Quirky, charming and infectious.

Good Night, States (Short Films on Self-Control, 2007): They also get bonus points for having my favourite artist website this year.

Now it’s your turn! What are some of the songs and bands that you spent a lot of time listening to in 2008? We’d especially love to hear about lesser-known music, not bands that everyone seems to love (Fleet Foxes, I’m looking at you). Share your suggestions in the comments.

Image: river burst by Flickr user mudpig, posted here under its Creative Commons license.

MP3: Electric Laser People – Yer So Confident [buy]

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Cruisin’ with the Mountain Goats

December 31, 2008

Norwegian Jewel

Go on a cruise with the Mountain Goats, the Weakerthans, Sloan, and many more. The Barenaked Ladies have organized a six-day trip, Ships & Dip V, on the Norwegian Jewel [pictured], with you and whole slew of artists. It’s the first week of February, starting from Miami and going to Cozumel and the Grand Stirrup Cay. Part of me thinks, “Ooh, a week  with John Darnielle and John K. Samson” and then the rest of my higher brain functions kick in and remind me that it’s a cruise, and not even a cool cruise.

However, if it sounds like a fun- and music-filled vacation to you, you can find full details here. Book fast – there are only a hundred cabins left (of course, it’s also just a month away).

MP3: The Weakerthans – Left and Leaving

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Upcoming: microDecibel Festival

December 30, 2008

Alex Smoke

The Decibel Festival is hosting a two-night end-of-year blowout at Neumo’s in Seattle. Night one, on Tuesday, December 30th, is “Best of Bass,” with variants of house, in the persons of Jesse Rose and Kilowatts, at the top of the bill. Night two, the 31st, is “Dirty Dancing: NYE” and focuses on techno, with live performances from John Tejada, Alex Smoke [pictured above], and more. I saw Alex Smoke in late 2007, and he was phenomenal – definitely one of the best performances that I saw that year.

Full details on udB can be found at the Decibel Festival Myspace page, and a Stranger article is here.

Image: Alex Smoke by Flickr user couchetard, reposted here with permission.

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Upcoming: Anarchy Evolution

December 29, 2008


[embedded YouTube video; if you can’t watch it, click here]

Bad Religion frontman and UCLA biology professor Greg Graffin is working on a book, Anarchy Evolution, that’s scheduled for release on Harper Books in 2010. It’s supposed to be about naturalism and atheism as well as (one presumes) anarchy and evolution. Graffin (looking extremely professorial in the video) describes it as a personal narrative about ‘how to be a more interesting atheist than has been [cough] advertised by popular books of the last three years, by calling yourself a naturalist instead.’ [my links, of course]

No Amazon pre-order link yet – stay tuned.

MP3: Bad Religion – Sorrow [amazon]

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Video: Goldblade, “City of Christmas Ghosts”

December 26, 2008

[embedded YouTube video; if you can’t watch it, click here]

Rounding out our week of alternatives to traditional Christmas music, we have this new song by British punk band Goldblade, featuring the legendary vocalist Poly Styrene. As befits a punk Christmas, it’s an elegy for lost friends coupled with distinctly anti-consumerist sentiment.

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Merry Christmas from Chiron Beta Prime

December 25, 2008

chiron-beta-prime[Image credit : Len from the Jawbone Radio Show]

As you may have gathered from an earlier post, I’m not so much about holiday music (hey, it’s a secular democracy, deal with it). So it’s perhaps unsurprising that “Chiron Beta Prime” by Jonathan Coulton is one of the very few Christmas songs that I like. This live version features zed equals zee’s very own guest blogger Scott in a cameo as the robot voice.

MP3: Jonathon Coulton (and Scott) – Chiron Beta Prime (live)

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Working on Christmas

December 24, 2008

work-on-christmas

It’s Christmas Eve, and I’m in my office, even though I probably shouldn’t be, so I can use my printer and my big monitor. I actually find it kind of amusing to send out letters time-stamped on Christmas Eve – doing my bit to remind people that our culture is pluralistic, not a monolith. But I know that working on Christmas, for many people, is not voluntary. I’m streaming KEXP and they just played this  Seattle-centric song by Harvey Danger. Even for an occasionally snarky non-Christmas celebrant, it captures some of the melancholy of working on the holiday.

This song is for my friends Erich, Scott and Ken, none of whom could go home to see their families because they had to work around Christmas.

MP3: Harvey Danger – Sometimes You Have to Work on Christmas [amazon]

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Christmas songs for non-Christmas people

December 23, 2008

crucified-santa

So, as you could probably tell from yesterday’s post, I’m not a big Christmas person. My family doesn’t celebrate Christmas, never has. Jonathan Trigell puts it well: “I went to a Christian primary school. We all did back then; it was called “school”. At Christmas time, we prayed little-children prayers and sang jolly songs about Jesus. We were credulous children and we believed what the teachers told us.”  But it didn’t take. (Nor did the other religions I was raised with.)

Perhaps as a result of this early attempt at indoctrination, my taste in Christmas songs definitely runs towards the twisted, cynical, funny or, really, anything that isn’t religious or heartwarming. “Fairytale of New York,” originally by The Pogues and Kirsty McColl, squeaks in because any Christmas song that includes “Happy Christmas, your ass/I pray God it’s our last” fits the bill. And Pansy Division – well, they’re Pansy Division, and they sing about what they always sing about, with a holiday veneer.

I’m going to post my very favourite holiday song on Christmas Day. But in the interim, I want to hear from you – what are your favourite examples of non-traditional holiday songs? Please post in the comments.

MP3: Pilate – Fairytale of New York

MP3: Pansy Division – Homo Christmas [very NSFW! Also not safe for straight men who are insecure about their sexuality.]

Image: Full story is here.

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In the bleak midwinter

December 22, 2008

"Snowy" by g93dotnet

I’m not normally about holiday music. But both Seattle and Boston just celebrated the winter solstice by getting positively hammered with snow, and that made me think of this Pipettes version of “In The Bleak Midwinter.” It’s always kind of tickled me because it’s up there with ‘Do They Know It’s Christmas?‘ as an egregious example of seeing the world through cultural blinders – I mean really, Ms. Rossetti –  I don’t think midwinter in Bethlehem is exactly characterized by “…water like a stone/snow had fallen, snow on snow, snow on snow.”

Having said all that, the Holst tune is lovely, and I have a soft spot for this version.

MP3: The Pipettes – In the Bleak Midwinter

Image: Snowy by Flickr user g93dotnet, reposted here with permission.

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Advance warning: Mission of Burma

December 19, 2008

mission-of-burma

zed equals zee faves Mission of Burma, together with Faces on Film and The Neighborhoods, are doing a show at Somerville Theatre on January 24th. The show is a benefit for Arts at the Armory, a nonprofit arts and culture group in Somerville that offers after-school classes, adult classes, and performances in the visual arts, theatre, dance and music. Tickets go on sale on Saturday, December 20th at 10 am at the Somerville Theatre or the Middle East box office (or, well, TicketBastard, if you must).

MP3: Mission of Burma – Spider’s Web [amazon]

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Matador’s year-end anti-list

December 18, 2008

matador

Bored of almost-identical year-end lists? Can’t stand the arbitrary nature of exactly 10, or 20, or 100 items? Has Matador got a list for you! The record label sent an e-mail to its artists, staff and associates, asking for their ‘favorite people/places/things/records/memories from the year about to conclude.’ They then concatenated all the responses into a giant blog posting of 2008 goodness – pages and pages worth. Given the rather vague specification, the posting includes the usual lists of albums and movies, as well as highlights like:

  • ‘Top Ten times I wished I was dead on tour this year’ (Jonah Falco of Fucked Up)
  • ‘Gladly having to cut short a tour in the spastic fuckhole that is America, thank fuck for drummers with serious heart issues’ (Barry Burns of Mogwai)
  • ‘Fried asparagus rolls from the venerable E. Village sushi haunt Sapporo East’ (Jeffrey Jensen)
  • ‘Seeing Eddie Izzard perform live twice. The man is a genius in heels.’ (Annette Lee of 4AD)

Head on over and check out the Matablog list for yourself, and feel free to share highlights or your annotations in the comments.

MP3: Fucked Up – No Epiphany [Daytrotter Session]

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Video interview: Freezepop

December 12, 2008


[embedded video; if you can’t watch it, click here]

Speaking of Freezepop, the above is a short interview they did for WePC.com (it’s an Asus/Intel vaguely astroturf-y ‘community-building’ site). The video is pretty much worth watching just for the Duke’s barely-restrained sarcastic understatement as he explains the relationship between the band and music videogames and what being a musician was like in the bad old days.

For a different facet of Freezepop, check out this webcomic.

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Upcoming: AC Newman, Get Guilty

December 10, 2008

acnewman_getguilty

Speaking of the New Pornographers, their head honcho A.C. Newman‘s second solo album, Get Guilty, now has a release date – January 20th – and a tour schedule. He’ll be hitting Neumo’s in Seattle on February 21st and the Paradise in Boston on the March 14th (full tour schedule here). Nicole Atkins and Jon Wurster – better known as the drummer for the Mountain Goats – do guest stints on the album, so I am extra-psyched about hearing the whole thing. Here’s a taste to keep you going until then.

MP3: AC Newman – Submarines of Stockholm [preorder]

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Video: Moshcam

December 9, 2008

newpornographers

Charmingly-named Australian website Moshcam is the go-to source for concert footage down under. They just posted video of a New Pornographers [pictured above] show at the Annandale Hotel in October, and you can also check out video of The Faint, Australia’s own Youth Group, and more. The site includes two excellent features: a clickable playlist, so impatient types can jump straight to their favourite track, and an audio-only option if you are on a low-bandwidth connection.

MP3: The New Pornographers – Sing Me Spanish Techno [amazon]

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Video: Kermit the Frog, “New York I Love You But You’re Bringing Me Down”

December 4, 2008

[embedded YouTube link; if you can’t view it, click here]

This one’s for Scott. Make sure you watch through the end for a surprise.

EDIT: YouTube pulled the video at EMI’s request; you can see the video here. Thanks to Scott for pointing this out in the comments.

[via Brooklyn Vegan]

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Neophile: The Waking Eyes

December 4, 2008


[embedded YouTube video; if you can’t watch it, click here]

Some music from above the 49th parallel as a soundtrack to the currently-unfolding constitutional crisis. The video is of Winnipeg-based The Waking Eyes—paying homage to their fellow Manitobans The Weakerthans—busking for charity in front of the El Mo in Toronto, ON, filmed earlier this year. The band just released their second album, Holding On To Whatever It Is, along with a 3-CD set of B-sides and rarities (outtakes?), which probably explains why the album itself is a tightly-focused slice of 70s garage rock that makes for fun listening.

The Waking Eyes: website myspace

MP3: The Waking Eyes – All Empires Fall

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Music and advertising

December 3, 2008

appleipod

Here on z=z, we’ve written previously about the alliance of independent music and advertising. Bethany Klein, now a lecturer at the University of Leeds, wrote the book on it, literally –  her book As Heard on TV: Popular Music in Advertising, is scheduled for release in April 2009. It’s based on the research in her dissertation, and a paper that was just published in Media, Culture and Society, “The New Radio: Media Licensing as a Response to Industry Woe,” gives us a taste of her work.

As the title suggests, she suggests that the rise of music licensing (providing soundtracks for commercials and TV shows) is one way in which the music industry is hoping to hedge against the widely-feared, quite hypothetical revenue loss due to filesharing. Klein paints a portrait of cultural mores in transition: licensing one’s music for advertising has gone from being construed as ‘selling out’ to being widely considered a good way to get exposure. She suggests that this change in perception is a consequence of the deregulation and consolidation of commercial radio, and the subsequent loss of diversity in playlists. As Joe Pernice says, ‘It’s almost like commercial and television placement are the new radio.’ But as with commercial radio, Klein argues, the commercial imperative of corporations and TV shows is fundamentally at odds with artistic goals (even if music supervisors present themselves as saviours of independent music). And as licensing becomes increasingly accepted as a way for new bands to get exposure, it’s going to start looking a lot more like radio, with minimal licensing fees paid to the artist or even a pay-to-play model. Unsurprisingly, perhaps, MTV is leading the way, and Klein describes their astonishingly sleazy policy: if you submit a video to be considered for airplay, they reserve the right to strip the visuals and use the music as a soundtrack to its shows, without even paying a synchronization fee.

There’s a lengthy interview with Klein at policy website Miller-McCune, which also has a sidebar on ten famous (or infamous) uses of songs in advertisements. Klein’s paper is behind a paywall, but you can read the first page here and you might be able to ask a friendly neighbourhood academic for a copy of the PDF if you’re interested.

MP3: Iggy Pop – Lust for Life

[via Boing Boing]

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Counter-programming: indie music vids

November 28, 2008


[embedded YouTube video; if you can’t see it, click here]

If your family holidays are characterized by everyone gathering in the living room and watching large, heavily-armoured men crash into each other (that would be American football, for our non-US readers), and that’s not exactly your speed, I commend to you some counter-programming.

On opposite sides of the English Channel (known by the rather less possessive La Manche on the other side), two groups are making short videos of indie music that are characterized by a common bare-bones aesthetic. In London, there’s the Black Cab Sessions – as the name suggests, it’s all bands filmed playing a song in the back of a black cab (given the rather stringent space limitations, sometimes it’s only part of the band, like the Spoon video above that is just Britt Daniel). In France, La Blogothèque has a video podcast called Les Concerts à Emporter (The Take-Away Shows, better translated as ‘The Take-Out Shows’ on this side of the Atlantic). There’s masses of cool stuff in both sets, including The National, The New Pornographers, and Amanda Palmer.

So gather up your like-minded relations, ignore the cheers coming from the living room, and huddle around the glow of the LCD screen to watch some great indie music unfold.

MP3: The New Pornographers – All the Old Showstoppers

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Happy Thanksgiving!

November 26, 2008

hand-turkeys

Happy Thanksgiving to all of our US readers!

If I were going to list everything and everyone I’m grateful for, I’d have to start another blog.

MP3: Loudon Wainwright III – Thanksgiving (live)

Image: “hand turkeys” by Mitra Farmand, who kindly agreed to let me use it. Check out more of her hilarious cartoons at her Flickr site or her blog.