Audiologue


Stay Out of the Love Potion: Good Shoes
May 11, 2011, 11:11 pm
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I once saw a female bodybuilder at a pizza restaurant in Georgetown. She had the face of Jason Gedrick and looked like she could squash walnuts with her bare hands. (Video – Good Shoes, “Under Control”)



Tour Guides

Kudos to Zombie Surf Camp for posting Atom Goren’s (of Atom & his Package) “11 Tips for Touring,” published in Philly’s City Paper. I surely didn’t expect the advice about getting “very comfortable with shitting in weirdly laid-out bathrooms” (Tip #8).

Though after reading the fabulous tour zine produced by the Vancouver duo, The Pack AD (they distribute this at their shows and will hopefully have another following their recent European and current Canadian-side tours), which included many entries about spectacularly cheap food (but delicious in that corn-dog and taco lifestyle kind of way) and watching lots of Project Runway during the down time, the list might need to include a bit more to really prepare bands for surviving life on the road.



Seductucation: Ida Corr and Fedde Le Grand
May 3, 2011, 11:24 pm
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I’m not all that crazy about Danish singer Ida Corr and Dutch DJ Fedde Le Grand’s song “Let Me Think About It,” but I love the video. And, purely for the movement. It’s like an editor’s wet dream, and might have been for a choreographer, too, had the girls mostly been better timed. The unfortunate interference is the guy who shows up at the end (a dancer who was hired for the video), as he seems to just interrupt all that momentum.



This IS Your Parent’s Rock N’ Roll: Junior Walker & the All-Stars
May 3, 2011, 11:10 pm
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It may be your parent’s rock n’ roll, but you 80s fans may already recognize it from the Desperately Seeking Susan soundtrack: Motown’s Junior Walker & the All-Stars performing “Shotgun.” It was one of those oddly violent, but incredibly catchy songs out of the 1960s. Kind of like “Stagger Lee” (of which Lloyd Price did a version in ’59). Here, the singer is telling a girl to grab her red dress, high heels, and a shotgun to shoot a “jerk” (I assume that’s code for cheater).



Mouth Full of Wire, Music Full of Soul: Poly Styrene

Former X-Ray Spex frontwoman, Poly Styrene, died of breast cancer yesterday at the age of 53. The band’s most well known song may be “Germ Free Adolescents” but this one, “The Day the World Turned Day Glo” is my favorite. It’s such poetic angst. This was sad timing for Styrene who, along with the Spex, made a minor comeback in 2007 when the music mags reunited some of the old timey punks that were still living for the 30th anniversary of the Sex Pistol’s album, Never Mind the Bullocks.

The Spex formed around the later half the 1970s after Styrene caught a Sex Pistols performance and was inspired to start a band which seemed to be the case for a lot of bands that followed the Sex Pistols. This video goes to show you just how young they were at the time. A teenager runaway who traveled around music festivals, Poly Styrene was a kind of hippie. She made her outfits, had a mouthful of braces, and curly hair. Lora Logic was the other girl in the band, and for a time, played saxophone. So the band was one of the more unique ones at the time. I tend to think of them less as punk and more in that post-punk, experimental phase that came later. Her performing cut short, though, when they diagnosed her as schizophrenic, and later, as having bipolar disorder. And by the early 80s, she joined a religious cult. It was years before she was back on the scene again, touring and making new music, culminating in the release of a solo album called Generation Indigo  only just last month.



Look-a-likes: Ian Dury

Sex, Drugs, and Rock n’ Roll, the 2009 biopic of the frontman for British post-punkers Ian Dury & the Blockheads, was recently added to the Netflix Instant Queue. Andy Serkis takes the lead and looks remarkably like Dury, who died of cancer in 2000. The movie, which is as deliciously bizarre as Dury himself, gives a bit of insight about his collaboration with Chaz Jankel (who might be better known for his soundtrack work for the 1986 comedy, Real Genius), his relationship with his son and future musician, Baxter Dury, and years of his childhood spent in an institution after he contracted polio.



Track One: Edward Sharpe & His Magnetic Zeros

I’m getting married next month. Girls will take a lot of stock into planning the details of a wedding, but for me, I see the wedding as basically a big party that you invite your family and friends to, so what’s the point of being so exceedingly formal and letting it become too much of a headache? This is an afternoon/evening to enjoy the company of the people you’re with. With that said, I’m pretty much content with just having a say in the playlist and alcohol selection!

Planning the playlist is what I’ve been doing for the past week. The dance songs are easy, but it’s tricky trying to find some flow in the non-dance songs that will be played during the dinner. So far, it’s a mix of traditional (a little Marley, a little Etta, some Chuck Berry, Billie Holiday, Al Green, for example) and the nouveaux (some Santogold, Noisettes, Pomplamoose, Bird and the Bee, Dent May, and more). Maybe I’ll publish the list after the wedding.

My fiancee had requested adding this one: “Home,” by Edward Sharpe & his Magnificent Zeros, and I think it makes the perfect starter song for the reception. Especially if our guests eventually started singing along with the chorus.



Art Class Heroes: Darwin Deez
April 18, 2011, 10:09 am
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While recently visiting the kids in Cleveland, Aliburg played a few songs from her new favorite Brookyln band (aren’t they always from Brooklyn these days?!!), Darwin Deez. As the story goes, she was out in Seattle with a fellow resident (as in contractual medical labor) watching another fellow resident’s band and when the set was over, everyone but Aliburg and her friend left before the start of the next band, which turned out to be Darwin Deez, the sweet-natured goofies from the East Coast. And, they didn’t let a little thing like wee audience numbers ruin their good time. Aliburg gave high ratings for the show, and mentioned that in between songs, they did little dances.

The band made the rounds at SXSW earlier this year, and are now touring overseas for the summer. Hopefully, it’s not long before they do another run around the states. In the meantime ladies and germs, I give you, Darwin Deez and the video, “You Are a Radar Detector.” If it were any longer, there might have been time to throw in a unicorn or two.



Lost in Your Words: Cat Power
April 16, 2011, 11:36 pm
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Cat Power (aka Chan Marshall) is one of those performers that did a slew of wonderful covers (Bird and the Bee and Nouvelle Vague are two others that come to mind). This is her version of Oasis’s “Wonderwall.”



The Soph Effort: A New tUnE-yArDs Album

Many thanks to Philippe for spreading the word about the review of the new tUnE-yArdS album, w h o k i l l on NPR’s “First Listen” series this week. You can listen to the entire album over there. It isn’t as stripped down and tribal as Merrill Garbus’s 2009 debut, BiRd-BrAiNs, but this is a woman who toils in unpretentious simplicity, so it isn’t a grossly polished studio album either. I’m psyched to see “Gangsta” included on this album after hearing it at the tUnE-yArDs show at DC9 last year, but I think my new favorite is “Bizness,” which is flush with layered sounds and Garbus’s powerful vocals chops.

If you’re in the DC area – look out! Her summer tour includes a stop at the Red Palace on H Street on May 19.