Thursday, December 30, 2010

The Shape of the Journey









I found this first edition at Half Price Books for $9! It collects all of Harrison's astounding verse from 1965 - mid-1990's. I started last night and read through the first chapter. Harrison has a keen eye (of course he does, he lost an eye as a child) for describing a moment in time, usually nature, or relationships.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

December is almost over *Updated*

Another long Absinthe!

Brief recap:

Saw the 13 Most Beautiful performance by Dean & Britta at the IMA for the Andy Warhol exhibit. Exhibit was cool too.

Went on a backpacking trip to the Linville Gorge in the Pisgah National Forest, near Asheville NC. Me, Adrian, John Veltri & BJ Livingston. We had a wonderful time. If you get the chance to go there, do it. We had quite an adventure.

Saw the reunited GBV again, this time at the Bluebird in Bloomington. They had definitely tightened up since the Vegas show. Have tickets to see them in Nashville on January 19th. Will likely hit Roberts Western Wear during the day, my favorite Nashville hangout!

With Jonny V saw Bobby Bare Jr at a house party in Beech Grove. 2 hours of pure fun. You name it, he played it. Did the great combo-cover of Sister Goldenhair/Where is My Mind! (America/Pixies) Bought vinyl from him outta the back of his car!

Books finished:
Shutter Island by Dennis LeHane
Point Omega by Don DeLillo (This book knocked me for a loop. Need to read again)
Elements of Cooking by Michael Ruhlman
The Whole Beast: Head to Tail Cooking by Fergus Henderson

Poetry Tomes:
Infinity Blues by Ryan Adams
Adult Head by Jeff Tweedy

In Process:
Crazy Heart by Thomas Cobb
The Food of a Younger Land by Mark Kurlansky

More to come.....

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Desolation Row/Champaign, Illinois

Happened to catch Old 97's on Leno last week and they played this great song....

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Friday, October 29, 2010

I've Been Busy
























Thankfully RSS feeds make infrequent posters (posers?) from fading into the vast ether. Quick reading update and a pre-GBV show shout out. GBV @ the Bluebird in Bloomington tonight!

Finished:
Winter's Bone by Daniel Woodrell
First, Break All the Rules by Marcus Buckingham
The Death of Bunny Munro by Nick Cave

Started:
Shutter Island by Dennis LeHane
Addiction and Grace by Gerald May

I'm anxious to see the movie Winter's Bone which just came out on dvd. Also waiting to see this german film White Ribbon. I've read about it and it sounds fascinating.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Books


Finished The Summer He Didn't Die by Jim Harrison. Started Winter's Bones by Daniel Woodrell. Trying to finish First, Break all the Rules by Marcus Buckingham for a job satisfaction project at work. Re-reading Harrison's latest book of poems called In Search of Small Gods. It's brilliant. Also started reading a cookbook called The Food of Portugal by Jean Anderson.

Le Noise

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Saturday, August 21, 2010

13 Most Beautiful.......














This is a wonderful, amazing, cool, strange movie. Dean & Britta were commissioned to sift through 500 of Andy Warhol's 4 minute 'screen tests' that he filmed in the late 60's and write and perform songs for 13 of them. Warhol often used 13 Most... as a theme for many of his performance or artistic pieces. The cd & dvd are both crazy good. I have watched the dvd twice, and you find yourself just staring at it, right into Nico or Edie's eyes as they stare at you. Two of the individuals chosen by Dean and Britta are Lou Reed and Dennis Hopper. The Lou Reed piece features a recently found Velvets unreleased song, I'm Not a Young Man Anymore. If you are unfamiliar with Dean Wareham and Britta Phillips, they were Luna, he was Galaxie 500. Here's Lou's screen test.

Super-Matic Lovers




















Emusic Downloads for August:
Here's to Shutting Up by Superchunk (this one sounds like a Portastatic release to me)

Here's Where the Strings Come In by Superchunk (Going to see them in Vegas, trying to complete my collection)

The Static vs. The Strings vol. 1 by Centro-Matic (Somehow missed this, I think its the follow up to Re-do the Stacks, a top 10 all time for me)

Let Freedom Ring by Chuck Prophet

The Resterberg by Paul Westerberg

Transference by Spoon

Modern Lovers '88 by Jonathan Richman

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Life in Vain

One of my favorite t.v. performances. Enjoy!

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Morel Memory









"When Brown Dog and Berry returned to the car with their leeks and morels they were high in spirits despite being cold and wet. There is something inscrutably satisfying about finding a good patch of morel mushrooms that travels far beyond their excellent flavor, perhaps a trace of the glad hearts of hungry earlier gatherers in the long path of evolution."


Started reading another Harrison selection of novella's. The section above reminds me of being a kid in Marshall and at that just perfect time in the spring when dad would grab a handful of bread bags and say "let's go mushroom hunting." We would drive down the road not too far to "the other place." Brett and I would get our own bread bag and by then we knew the gig. Start looking for ash trees, old fallen logs, moist creek bed banks, and just keep your eyes peeled. After awhile you could spot them 20 yards away. Especially the big yellow ones. We ate them dusted in flour and fried in butter. Usually with pork chops or pork steaks at dinner or with eggs for breakfast. Harrison's statement rings true. Although I loved eating them, the hunt is what makes the special memory.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Medium Raw














Finished this before the trip to NYC. Another great read from Tony. A whole chapter on the fish butcher at Le Bernardin. Awesome. Heroes & Villians. Awesome. A wonderful sense of humor and a big heart. Check it out.

NYC, Man!

























That's my black sea bass dish from Le Bernardin! (and the sea urchin risotto is the best thing I've ever eaten. Ever. Really) 3 nights & 3 days in the city for a NERVES Board meeting. Ate well. Went to the Whitney, finally, and saw this great exhibit on Charles Burchfield, see above. Yakatori Totto!! New restaurant idea for Indy. DBGB! (sausage & punk rock soundtrack, perfect? Yes) Momofuko SSam! (Oysters, Greek sardines, pork buns) You get the picture, I like to eat. And of course, Lou singing NYC Man.




Sunday, August 01, 2010

Books and Tunes

Been on a reading drought recently. Many reasons, none good.

But after waking up Friday with lower back spasms that by Saturday rendered me completely bed-ridden, I was able to finish off some reading and start some others.

Finished:

Blue Movie by Terry Southern

A Great American Cook by Jonathan Waxman

Started:

The Other Great Depression by Richard Lewis (the comedian's autobiography and tale of beating alcoholism)

Medium Raw by Anthony Bourdain (I've read half of this in one sitting. Another honest, human and personal piece of work. Tony, at least in his non-fiction writing, stands next to his hero Jim Harrison, in this kind of down to earth, funny & unabashadedly forthright prose.)

New downloads for July:

Shrunken Heads by Ian Hunter
Crazy for You by Best Coast (my current favorite. extremely fun and satisfying)
Chronicles by Verbow (an oldie from the 90's. Jason Narducy missed the bigtime somehow)
Leaves in the Gutter by Superchunk (new ep)
First Bear on the Moon by Jon Dee Graham (live acoustic set. Has the great song Big Sweet Life on it)

Also picked up a couple of cd's:

Dark Night of the Soul - the collaboration of Dangermouse, Sparklehorse & David Lynch. Love it.

Twistable, Turntable Man: Tribute to the Songs of Shel Silverstein

Tin Ears by The Punkin Holler Boys - a 26 song retrospective from Indy's own. They played our company party a couple of weeks ago and it was so much fun. The evening set around an enormous bonfire was the best. Only about 10 of us left to enjoy, but the hits just kept coming!

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Matador @ 21 Update


Amy & I, along with Brian and Jonny V, are headed to Vegas in October for this fantastic lineup.


Bourdain Eulogizes Harvey Pekar, Our Man from Cleveland




















From Tony's blog at Travel Channel


The Original (Goodbye Splendor)
Jul 13, 2010, 10:45 AM


A few days ago, the city of Cleveland lost a truly great and important man. And I'm not talking about LeBron James. A hundred years from now, few--other than a few sports nerds--will remember him as much more than statistics on a long ago basketball court.

They will, however, remember Harvey Pekar, whose life and works will surely remain an enduring reference point of late 20th and early 21st century cultural history. Like those other giants of their eras, Twain, Whitman, Dos Passos, Kerouac, Kesey, the times he lived in cannot adequately be remembered without him.

It is true enough to say that he was the "poet laureate of Cleveland" or to describe his American Splendor as "Homeric", but those descriptives are still inadequate. He was the perfect man for his times, straddling...everything: the underground comic revolution of the 60's, the creation and transformation of the graphic novel, independent film, television, music (the classic jazz he championed relentlessly throughout his life).

He was famed as a "curmudgeon", a "crank" and a "misanthrope" yet found beauty and heroism where few others even bothered to look. In a post-ironic and post-Seinfeldian universe he was the last romantic--his work sincere, heartfelt, alternately dead serious and wryly affectionate. The last man standing to wonder out loud, "what happened here?"

His continuing compulsion to wonder what's wrong with everybody else was both source of entertainment and the only position of conscience a man could take.

After all, Cleveland, the city he lived in and loved, had, he reminded us, lost half it's population since the 1950s. A place whose great buildings and bridges and factories had once exemplified 20th century optimism needed its Harvey Pekar.

"What went wrong here?" is an unpopular question with the type of city fathers and civic boosters for whom convention centers and pedestrian malls are the answers to all society's ills but Harvey captured and chronicled every day what was--and will always be--beautiful about Cleveland: the still majestic gorgeousness of what once was--the uniquely quirky charm of what remains, the delightfully offbeat attitude of those who struggle to go on in a city they love and would never dream of leaving.
What a two minute overview might depict as a dying, post-industrial town, Harvey celebrated as a living, breathing, richly textured society.

A place so incongruously and uniquely...seductive that I often fantasize about making my home there. Though I've made television all over the world, often in faraway and "exotic" places, it's the Cleveland episode that is my favorite--and one about which I am most proud.

That show was unique among over a hundred others in that everything--absolutely everything--went perfectly and exactly as planned. Unlike every other episode, pretty much everything had been "written" (or at least planned out) in advance: the look, the American Splendor graphics, destinations, subjects and content. In the middle of a blizzard in the dead of winter, we got exactly what we were looking for. We wanted American Splendor and that's what we got.

This is due entirely to Harvey (and the incredible Joyce). Harvey may have had a reputation as cantankerous, TV-averse and difficult but from the very first minute he and his family were a delight. They opened up their lives to us in every way they could. They were exactly as they appeared in the great graphic novels and in the film--only warmer and even nicer.

The look, the tone, the sound, the whole feel of the episode that followed was Harvey's. There was a moment at Sokolowski's I'll always remember as quintessential Pekar--that perfectly encapsulated the way we all felt absorbed in to PekarWorld. We'd just finished shooting a scene with Harvey, Toby Radloff and Michael Ruhlman--and Danielle, Harvey's daughter, who'd been hanging out off- camera, temporarily went missing--out of Harvey's watchful gaze. I remember looking at him, swiveling his head frantically, the very picture of parental concern and exasperation and actually SEEING comic book curlicues, exclamation points, question marks and smoke emanating from his head. He had made the world around him his world. We were--all of us-- just passing through.

A few great artists come to "own" their territory.
As Joseph Mitchell once owned New York and Zola owned Paris, Harvey Pekar owned not just Cleveland but all those places in the American Heartland where people wake up every day, go to work, do the best they can--and in spite of the vast and overwhelming forces that conspire to disappoint them--go on, try as best as possible to do right by the people around them, to attain that most difficult of ideals: to be "good" people.

"Our man" as Harvey often referred to himself in his work, was a good man. An important man. A "great American" is an expression that has been cheapened with over-use, but if these words ever meant anything, they surely describe Harvey Pekar.

He was great. He was American.

For him to have come from anywhere else would be unthinkable. He will be remembered. He will be missed.

=================================================================

Tony's piece on Pekar is exactly what makes me enjoy Tony's show and books so much. Like Pekar, his heart is in the right place. Describing their sense of place was/is a gift both of them have received. Sure Tony is a chef, but his words are what really make a difference in this world. Thanks Tony and we will miss you Harvey.

Wednesday, July 07, 2010

You Learn from Books.....Ringo

Just finished this cool book. Terry Southern, who I knew nothing about, co-wrote the screenplays to Easy Rider and Dr. Strangelove. Not bad. He also wrote several novels and essays. This book collects essays and interviews from the 1960's-1980's. He toured with the Rolling Stones, hung with Ginsberg & Burroughs at the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago, is on the cover of Sgt. Pepper.........on and on.........

Matador @ 21


Most everyone who watches this lil' blog likely knows about this crazy show that Matador is putting on in Vegas. The likeliehood that I will score tickets seems pretty low. But I've blocked my calendar Friday in order to give it my best shot. GBV, Superchunk, YLT, Sonic Youth, Spoon, JSBX ........... amazing line up!

Monday, July 05, 2010

Portastatic/Keith Newton/Phil Morrison

I Wanna Know Girls is one of my favorite songs, maybe all-time. It's by Portastatic, Mac from Superchunks other band. I found this today and haven't been able to find the entire story. I believe the poem, I Lived Among Girls by Keith Newton, overlayed through the video is a response to the song. Powerful. Phil Morrison directed the video.


Monday, June 28, 2010

Backlog


I've been away for awhile. We've had a busy couple of months highlighted recently with a trip to BJ's wedding in NYC. More to come....


Here are the newest EMUSIC downloads for June:


Fred Eaglesmith - Cha Cha Cha

Elizabeth Cook - Welder

The Clash - Black Market Clash

Wreckless Eric - s/t

Box Tops - the letter, soul deep, cry like a baby

The Faces - Stay With Me

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Another Harrison and Bourdain


















































Bourdain's Bobby Gold Stories read very fast. Similar to other novels written by the Chef, the center of the story revolves around the mob and the restaurant scene in New York City. I could see more stories for this character in the future.

Of course, Harrison's 2nd book of food essays, these from the 80's/90's, was extremely enjoyable. I really can't get enough of reading his stories of hunting and eating. I'm hoping to take a fall retreat to Northern Michigan this fall, inspired by Harrison's home state and the setting for so many of these essays.

EMusic and Such





















Paul Weller - Wake Up the Nation

Josh Ritter - So Runs the World Away

Superdrag - Industry Giants

Alex Chilton, Alan Vega, Ben Vaughn - Cubist Blues


Also received some cool vinyl in the mail the last week:


Magnetic Fields - 69 Love Songs (10" vinyl reissue box set)

Velvet Underground - The Quine Tapes (6 LP live from 1969)


I did some shopping at Luna too.


Music from Desparate Man Blues (cd) - love the dvd, 19 selections from the movie

Tall Dwarves - Fork Songs (cd)

Mission of Burma - The Sound, The Vision, The Light (LP)

Gang of Four - Entertainment! (180 gram LP)

Friday, June 04, 2010

The Key(s)
































Finished books 17, 18, 19 for 2010.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Ladies and Gentlemen.. The Beatnix
















I've been following the Burning Wood Blog for awhile. The Beatnix have collected 19 songs that Lennon/McCartney gave away to other artists and recorded them for us. Awesome.


This sight has a tremendous volume of cool stuff. When you have a couple of hours to kill.....

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Just Before Dark























Painting by Russell Chatham


"Life is just what it is. It has no opportunity to be anything else until we make a move and discover how many other things life can be beyond our rather deadening routines." ~ Jim Harrison


Our good friends Jeff and Keri were in Indianapolis from their home, and long winter, in Fairbanks AK. They had traveled from Lawrence KS stopping along the way to take in various sights and experience living history, food, music, old friends and family. Harrison's quote above is personified in their living. My life is always energized, re-booted so to speak, having them around. Thanks, my friends, and hope we can meet again soon.

Their arrival put into motion a 3 week whirlwind for us. That night started at Brian's place downtown, on the rooftop patio, eating some fine Greek fare from Santorini's. The weather and setting couldn't have been better. Just before dark, we crammed into our cars and drove to the Vogue to see Split Lip Rayfield, Cracker & the Rev. Horton Heat. All three bands were tremendous. Cracker especially impressed me with their powerful rock n roll. I was happy to see a big crowd for this sort of show.

The next morning I fixed shrimp and grits and a challah bread pudding for everyone. The bread pudding was a big hit. It's a Cooks Illustrated recipe that I've made only twice. Raves both times. Keeper. The shrimp and grits w/poached eggs was very good too, although I like it better with pink gulf shrimp. Doubt we'll see any of those anytime soon.

The next Friday Amy and I were able to attend the Peyton Manning Children's Hospital Gala downtown at the Indiana Roof Ballroom. It was quite an affair. Great food and top-notch people watching. Of course, Peyton was there and so were his parents. The evening's entertainment was 20 time grammy winner, Vince Gill. A rare and intimate treat for 700 people. Vince and his band played 1.5 hours of pure country, honky tonk, and country rock jams. As you know, Vince is a phenomenal guitar player and once he found the telecaster sweet spot with the crowd, he never put his acoustic back on. The crowd also got to witness Peyton singing Folsum Prison Blues! A very nice evening with Amy.

Then yesterday, me and about 200,000 other crazies enjoyed ZZ Top for the annual Carb Day Concert. I gotta say, it was sublime. Afterwards, I picked Amy up at the airport, then we went to the Old Point Tavern on Mass Ave for a nice al fresco dinner of italian sausage and a taco salad. Brett and Joey joined us before they drove to Terre Haute/Marshall for the weekend.







View this gallery at The Indianapolis Star: ZZ Top Carb Day concert

Thursday, May 20, 2010

May Emusic Downloads




























Roky Erickson with Okkervil River - True Love Cast Out Evil
Rock*A*Teens - Baby, A Little Rain Must Fall
Giant Sand - Provisions
Joe Henry - Blood From Stars
New Pornographers - Together

I'm Just Sayin.....


Sunday, May 16, 2010

Observationally Yours







This being David Byrne's musings and observations on riding his bicycle in cities around the world. Ostensibly a plea to NYC in particular to embrace the urban biker and ditch the automobile. David does not come off strange in this book. I would like to have coffee with him.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Giant Sand - Can I Get a Witness

I was browsing my itunes folder this evening looking for something to pick me up and 1) stumbled across an excellent Dex Romweber song, It's Too Late, from Ruins of Berlin and 2) re-connected with Howe Gelb and Giant Sand. I loved this band years ago but have totally forgotten about them. Funny how those songs never come up on the ipod. I know there are lots that don't, why is that? Anyway I found this new-ish Howe Gelb video on youtube that will make me hunt this dvd down. Enjoy. Also found an old video for Love is Like a Train, the first song of theirs i ever heard back in 198x!




Saturday, May 08, 2010

St Paul's is for soul salvage..






















.....9th street for my fennel and leek. A great line from Marah's Kids in Philly record, a Philly band and record that I like alot. Spent 3 nights in Philadelphia recently meeting with neurosurgery administrator's from around the country. With Mrs. C's company, stayed at the Four Seasons. The location was great, right on Ben Franklin Pkwy. The Art Museum is the western terminus of this mall, where the Rocky statue resides. We had just enough time to walk the mile to see it. We were able to "see" the Liberty Bell through a window and walk around Independence Hall. Otherwise, it was a busy meeting schedule. The two of us ate together the first night at Osteria, Mark Vetri's famed restaurant. (the award winning Vetri was booked 2 months out) Amazing meal. I had the suckling pig special and Amy had an asparagus lasagna. On Friday night we ate at the Fountain Restaurant at the Four Seasons which happens to be rated one of the top in Philly. Wow. Best lamb I've ever had. 4 of us at the table had the lamb and all said it was out of this world. Also had some oysters and foie gras. Big night. My gout is back. Oh well.


We did walk back from Independence Hall to the Four Seasons. That was a nice walk and we ducked into a couple of old ale houses. At a friend's recommendation we found Monk's Cafe. Another great spot. The back bar was cozy and friendly. Well worth finding if you ever travel to Philly. NO CHEESESTEAKS!!!!!! Argh. I really wanted to hit Geno's or Pat's. Didn't have the time. Wouldn't mind spending time in Philly to see more of the museums and history.

Killing Yourself to Live




























Another fine journey. What ostensibly starts out as a road diary, turns into self-introspection about the loves of his life. Klosterman's style and viewpoint are like a fastball down the middle for me. Highly recommended for those born between 1964 and 1975.

Currently reading David Byrne's two-wheeled travelogue Bicycle Diaries.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Ratio





























Finished Ratio by Michael Ruhlman. (that's 14:36) This book has opened my mind to how simple cooking should remain. Ruhlman doesn't give us a recipe book here, it's a textbook to help us understand the dna of cooking. Highly recommended if you have any interest in cooking/food. The Ratio iphone app is worthwhile as well. I'm going to make popovers for breakfast tomorrow.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Happy! EMusic for April























Downloaded these gems today:

Wye Oak - The Knot
Robbie Fulks - Happy! (Michael Jackson songs)
Bill Janovitz and Crown Victoria - Fireworks on TV
Jason & The Scorchers - Halcyon Times (new! and sounds great)

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Books






















Started and finished the following:

Radio City by Bruce Eaton - 33 1/3 series on Big Star's classic record

Daniel Johnston - Big book of Daniel's artwork with essays from Jad Fair and others


The 1893 Chicago World's Fair by Stanley Applebaum - this is a building by building account of architectural wonder of this world's fair. I have been fascinated by this since reading The Devil in the White City a couple of years ago.


April 1 -10




























In the span of ten days I was lucky enough to see Alejandro Escovedo and the Sensitive Boys, the Japandroids and the Drive-by Truckers each perform their unique brands of rock and roll. The AE show was special in that it was held in an old theater on the square in Danville IN. There likely weren't more that 150 people in attendance. Al played a range of old and brand new in the 4 piece rock combo format. He took a 4 song acoustic interlude in the aisles of the theater during the middle of the set. I was stricken emotional during the back to back renditions of Broken Bottle and I wish I was Your Mother, two songs I used to play on the guitar during a particularly dark period of my marriage. I cried like a baby listening to these two songs. Al ended the night with Sway and Beast of Burden. A great, great show.

Exactly a week later I ventured out to see the Japandroids at Radio Radio. Oddly enough, there were more people at this show. I guess not, Al's pushing 60 and these punks are likely in their 20's. This one surprised me with raw rock power. Another great, great show.

Two days later, Jonny V and I drove to Lexington for to see the DBT. We stopped over in Cincy to hit Shake It records. A must see destination for any music lover. I bought an Adam & the Ants and a Cheap Trick record. I also bought the new Daniel Johnston book highlighting his otherwordly artwork. The big rock show that night did not disappoint. Two and 1/2 hours of full throttle rock and roll, baby.

Lastly, today was Record Store Day. I lucked out and was able to get my hands on the vinyl release of Flaming lips cover of Dark Side of the Moon. One listen and I'm a believer. Also bought Skip Spences' classic Oar release on vinyl. Also picked up a curated Sonic Youth 'greatest hits' double vinyl. All very cool. Lunch with Brett, Ethan and Joel at Harold's Steer Inn on East 10th. Dinner at Pancho's with Amy while Katie is off to Prom. A crazy day for Big D.

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

Yesterday

Check out this cool link for the This Day in Music website. What was #1 on the U.S. charts the day I was born??







==================================================================

Katie and I spent a couple of days in Chicago. Highlights: toasted ravioli at Harry Caray's, views from the Hancock Observatory, our room at the Drake, dinner at Riccardo's Trattoria, Henri Matisse and Wm. Eggelston exhibits at the Institute of Art. Eggleston's picture 'the red ceiling' adorns Big Star's lp cover for Radio City. Eggleston and Chilton were friends in Memphis. Eggleston was also commissioned to photograph Graceland sometime after Elvis died. The photo's were never widely published. The ones shown at this exhibit were very strange.





Monday, March 22, 2010

Weekend Playlist

In the Modern World - Jesse Malin
How You Like Me Now - The Heavy
Don't Ever Promise - American Princes
Want - Tommy Flake
Livin Was Easy - The Glands
Real Long Distance - Josh Ritter
You Blanks - Portastatic
Slow Descent into Alcoholism - The New Pornographers
Some Kinda Love - The Velvet Underground
Working Girls (Live) - The Perniece Brothers
The Good Slot - Grand Champeen
Heaven Help the New Girl - The Long Blondes
Sugar Cane - Sonic Youth
Watch Out for Me Ronnie - Yo La Tengo
More Than I Can Talk About - The Mice
Street Lights - Josh Rouse
Coma Girl - Joe Strummer & the Mescaleros
Come Anytime - Hoodoo Gurus
One Man Guy - Rufus Wainright
Polyanna - Patterson Hood
Painted Shut - Jay Reatard

While My Guitar Gently Shrieks

I found this on Buffalo Tom's Bill Janovitz' blog. Enjoy.

Cry Like a Baby

Op-Ed Contributor
Beyond the Box Tops
('A reflection on Alex Chilton, the soulful singer of the Box Tops and Big Star, by the man who wrote the song “Alex Chilton.”')
By PAUL WESTERBERG
Published: March 20, 2010
Minneapolis

HOW does one react to the death of one’s mentor? My mind instantly slammed down the inner trouble-door that guards against all thought, emotion, sadness. Survival mode. Rock guitar players are all dead men walking. It’s only a matter of time, I tell myself as I finger my calluses. Those who fail to click with the world and society at large find safe haven in music — to sing, write songs, create, perform. Each an active art in itself that offers no promise of success, let alone happiness.
Yet success shone early on Alex Chilton, as the 16-year-old soulful singer of the hit-making Box Tops. Possessing more talent than necessary, he tired as a very young man of playing the game — touring, performing at state fairs, etc. So he returned home to Memphis. Focusing on his pop writing and his rock guitar skills, he formed the group Big Star with Chris Bell. Now he had creative control, and his versatility shone bright. Beautiful melodies, heart-wrenching lyrics: “I’m in Love with a Girl,” “September Gurls.”
On Big Star’s masterpiece third album, Alex sang my favorite song of his, “Nighttime” — a haunting and gorgeous ballad that I will forever associate with my floor-sleeping days in New York. Strangely, the desperation in the line “I hate it here, get me out of here” made me, of all things, happy. He went on to produce more artistic, challenging records. One equipped with the take-it-or-leave-it — no, excuse me, with the take-it-like-I-make-it — title “Like Flies on Sherbert.” The man had a sense of humor, believe me.
It was some years back, the last time I saw Alex Chilton. We miraculously bumped into each other one autumn evening in New York, he in a Memphis Minnie T-shirt, with take-out Thai, en route to his hotel. He invited me along to watch the World Series on TV, and I immediately discarded whatever flimsy obligation I may have had. We watched baseball, talked and laughed, especially about his current residence — he was living in, get this, a tent in Tennessee.
Because we were musicians, our talk inevitably turned toward women, and Al, ever the Southern gentleman, was having a hard time between bites communicating to me the difficulty in ... you see, the difficulty in (me taking my last swig that didn’t end up on the wall, as I boldly supplied the punch line) “... in asking a young lady if she’d like to come back to your tent?” We both darn near died there in a fit of laughter.
Yeah, December boys got it bad, as “September Gurls” notes. The great Alex Chilton is gone — folk troubadour, blues shouter, master singer, songwriter and guitarist. Someone should write a tune about him. Then again, nah, that would be impossible. Or just plain stupid.

Paul Westerberg, a musician, was the lead singer of the Replacements.



Sunday, March 21, 2010

Movie Night








"Is that what you wanna do with your life? Suck down on peppermint Schnapps and call Morocco at 2AM? That's senseless. But that's what happens, man." Mark Borchardt, American Movie

Didn't call Morrocco last night, I don't think. But had a great time and really good dinner.

Hot Pepper and Cheese Chicken over rice from Paul Prudhomme's classic Louisana Kitchen
Momofuko Hanger Steak Saam with ginger scallion sauce and spicy kimchee from David Chang/Momofuko
Crispy Corn Bread from the Hot & Hot Fish Club Cookbook
Pork Liver Pate and Blue Cheese & cranberries provided by JZ

Movie Night last night with Brett, Joel, Dawg, Brian D., Scott. More like Movie Festival since we watched 3 films!!

American Movie - Amazing documentary about Mark Borchardt's endless desire to make a movie. Hysterical and poignant. I've seen this 5 or 6 times now.
Too Tough to Die - Tribute to Johnny Ramone
It Might Get Loud - Jimmy Page, Edge, Jack White talk about guitars

March EMusic:
Quasi - American Gong
The Heavy - The House that Dirt Built
Rodney Crowell - Sex and Gasoline
Josh Rouse - Nashville
The Gits - Frenching the Bully

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Alex Chilton, R.I.P.



























I've spent a lot of time with this man's songs in my head. Chris Bell went a long time before him. I've been listening to the 3rd/Sister Lovers record lately. I only have this on vinyl. It's one of those records the evokes a place, a time and an emotion all at once. Needle drop. "Dreams and wishes and shooting stars..." Guitar riff. This album was really post Big Star, but in my opinion is Alex's masterpiece.

Amy and I saw Chilton open for Counting Crows(!) right when they first hit it big and were still playing club shows. This was at a short-lived place down on Shadeland here in Indy. My greatest memory of Chilton's set was his overt pandering to the ladies in the crowd. He looked old then I remember. Unfortunately, the pyschic trauma inflicted by Adam Duritz during the next set has erased any memory of what songs Alex played that night.

That's now 3 extraordinarily talented songwriters dead in the last 3 months. Vic Chesnutt, Mark Linkous(Sparklehorse) and now Chilton.

Monday, March 15, 2010

The Power and the Glory

Reading this Graham Greene classic right now. Had to pass this passage along. Brilliant.

"The glittering worlds lay there in space like a promise - the world was not the universe. Somewhere Christ might not have died. He could not believe that to a watcher there this world could shine with such brilliance: it would roll heavily in space under its fog like a burning and abandoned ship. The whole globe was blanketed with his own sin."

Sunday, March 14, 2010

No Reservations. None Whatsoever!






















Most of you know that I love Anthony Bourdain's show No Reservations. It's a travel show with a food/cuisine emphasis. Deep down though it's a show about people, heritage, understanding, reverance and humor. Tony has the uncanny ability to whittle away the glossy sheen of travelling to locations all over the world and finding the heart of the people through their connection with food. He's not always able to pull off his magic; where the heart and soul of the people are tied together through the local cuisine (Romania episode). Although the Romania episode is outrageously funny. He never takes the easy way out, avoiding cliche at every turn. Check out Tony's blog for the latest behind the scenes comments on a trip to Liberia and other archived commentary. Also check out Tony's alternate universe video section. Funny. Irreverant. Awesome.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

The Boys are Back in Town






Last Saturday, Phyllis, Brian Deer and the Achievers & a re-united Watership Down, including Sean Fogarty on drums, hit the Haute like a tsunami of big hooks, big licks and big star(s). The Speakeasy was pretty much packed and the sound was decent for the volume at which it was played. Phyllis started the night, but weary-voiced Brett, beginning a nasty sinus infection, cut short after 7 or 8 of their many hits. The boys left everyone wanting more. Brett threw on a bass and played with Brian, Matt & Leroy in the Achievers set. Wow, hadn't seen them in a while and they were great. Love those songs. The crowd was enthusiastic as well. They TH equivalent of Wrigley's Ronnie Woo Woo enjoyed the set. Finally, Watership took the stage and peeled off pop gem after gem. I gotta tell you those songs hold up really well after all these years. I need to figure out a way to get those digitized for posterity. Anyone???

Many people left with a smile on their face that night. Scott Hart came over from Newcastle. A crew from Indy rolled in. Bro-in-law Jim was in town from St. Louis.

Friday, March 05, 2010

Miracle X 3


The new picture above is one I took of Steve Wynn with my iphone at the Southgate House gig we went to see last fall. It was a triple bill, with no personnel change. Steve Wynn, Peter Buck, Scott McCaughey & Linda Pitman. Minus 5, The Baseball Project & Steve Wynn IV. It was a rock'n'roll songwriter in the round type of thing. These guys put out a record together in 2008 called the Baseball Project, all new original songs about baseball. Peter works with Scott in Minus 5. Steve and Linda are married and play together in Steve's Miracle 3 band. My favorite show of 2009. Double bonus for me?? I took a leak between Peter Buck & Steve Wynn. That's my rock n roll brush with greatness.

Monday, March 01, 2010

New playlist

The playlist from two weeks ago:

Go Tell the Woman by Grinderman
Am I the Manager or Am I Not? by Centro-Matic
Annie & Me by Steve Wynn
Twilight Distillery by Minus 5
Come Back from San Francisco by Magnetic Fields
Sukie in the Graveyard by Belle Sebastian
Lloyd, I'm Ready to be Heartbroken by Camera Obscura
The Seed by Cody Chesnutt
Treat Me Like Your Mother by the Dead Weather
Resonate With Me by United States Three
The Wait by Built to Spill
Remain Yr Strange by Superdrag
Hanging on the Telephone by Blondie
In the Dreamlife You Need a Rubber Soul by The Clean
A Whole Lot Better by Brendon Benson
June Salutes You! by Guided by Voices
Do It Better by Imperial Teen
Broadripple Nightclubs by Gentleman Caller
To Go Home by M. Ward
Stop Thinking by Mysteries of Life
I Turn My Camera On by Spoon
Beulah, You Rock by Born Again Floozies

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Weekend Playlist

I've been making playlists, burning them to cd and listening in the car. I've commented before that the ipod changed the way I listen to music, a constant shuffle. Pre-ipod, that's all I wished for; some magical station that only played the songs I liked. My Music. "Your music," as my family calls it. Well, careful what you wish for. I've been listening to more cd's/lp's and making playlists recently. The randomness has lost some of its luster and the deep enjoyment of picking the perfect song(s) for the moment has made the past couple of weeks enjoyable for this music lover. Here is last week's list, it's a good one:


Take the Bench by Sloan

All World Cowboy Romance by Mission of Burma

Answer to Yourself by the Soft Pack

Down on the Street by the Stooges

House of Cards by Radiohead

I Saw the Light by Todd Rundgren

I Wanna Destroy You by the Soft Boys

Old World by Modern Lovers

I'm Stranded by The Saints

Near to You by Jad Fair and Teenage Fanclub

Time Enough for Rocking When We're Old by Magnetic Fields

Right Hand on my Heart by The Whigs

The Wait by The Pieces

Courage the Tack by Tobin Sprout

King of Carrot Flowers, Pt. 1 by Neutral Milk Hotel

See No Evil by Television

Don't Come Close by the Ramones

Animal Shapes by Silver Jews

Can This Be by the Wipers

Not Like You by Poster Children

I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight by Young Fresh Fellows

Supernatural Car Lover by Robert Pollard

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Cool Links



Michael Azerrad's Blog - You and What Army





For the Sake of the Song Blog



Bought my ticket for Drive-By Truckers in Lexington KY on 4/10. So far it's me and the V-Man for the road trip. DBT also opening for Petty at Verizon in July, 5 minutes from my house.

Other upcoming live shows: Phyllis/Deer/Watership Down in TH(3/6), Alejandro at Royal Theater (4/1), Japandroids at RadioRadio(4/8).

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Encore

I post this for the enthusiasm shown by Dave. Haven't heard of these guys but will check them out. Cool song.


Saturday, February 20, 2010

Lee Bros. Cookbook

Matt & Ted Lee wrote this crazy southern cookbook a couple of years ago and it won the James Beard award for writing about food. I have this 'thing' about certain cookbooks. If you like food, you must own this cookbook. They also have a catalog called The Lee Brothers Boiled Peanut Catalogue. I found this video on Oxford American's website. Their annual music issue is out by the way. Mine's in the mail.

SoLost: The Lee Brothers and their Boiled Peanuts Catalogue from Oxford American on Vimeo.

I enjoy...


I've spent a considerable amount of my life surrounding myself with music. What do I mean by "surrounding" myself with music you ask? Let's make a list, shall we?


I enjoy listening to music

I enjoy reading about music

I enjoy discussing music with other people

I enjoy searching for music

I enjoy buying music

I enjoy a variety of styles

I enjoy alphabetizing music

I enjoy 45's, LP's, cd's, mp3's

I enjoy going to see music played live

I enjoy trying to play music on a guitar

I enjoy lyrics

I enjoy melody

I enjoy dissonance

I enjoy the artwork on the cover

I enjoy reading liner notes

I enjoy sharing music with others

I enjoy having others share music with me

I enjoy scouring ebay for lp's and 45's

I enjoy watching music-related movies


Sounds like a Tom T. Hall song.


On no other subject could I create such a list. What does this mean. I don't feel like an obsessive person. Except that I continue to buy everything Robert Pollard puts out on both digital and vinyl. I dream about finding Half Japanese's first lp release, a 3 record set, 1/2 Gentlemen, Not Beasts. I spend hours looking at you tube live music clips. I've read more books about music in the last two years than anything else. (Reading Fargo Rock City right now. A treatise on 80's Metal Bands and their impact on one young author and pop culture.) I'm listening to a live Bob Mould cd while I write this.
Honestly, I'm tired. My hobby could be the benefits of artificial insemination in Semmintal cattle. That would lead to a few less interesting conversations.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

31,000 songs

After adding this month's emusic downloads, I noticed my itunes now has 31,000 songs loaded in it. 110Gig's!! Somewhat freakish.

Emusic Downloads for January & February






January's Selections:

Neko Case - Middle Cyclone

David Bazan - Curse Your Branches

Peter Holsapple & Chris Stamey - Here and Now

Big Star - Live at Columbia Missouri

February's Selections:

Young Fresh Fellows - I Think This Is

The Soft Pack - s/t

The Microphones - The Glow, Part 2

Leadbelly - Where Did You Sleep Last Night

Bobby Charles - s/t