Friday, May 28, 2021
San Jose 2121
Tuesday, May 25, 2021
Bands I've Taken for Granted – Neil Young & Crazy Horse
"Can you smell the horse?" asks crazed-but-still-in-control, band leader Neil in the hissing, smoldering wake of another feedback cannonball war between the guitars, bass, drums and voice of Neil. A rusted orange singing voice that careens above the wreckage like the falcon that has departed the falconer. Hearing "Rust Never Sleeps" on the family stereo in the late 70s, Crazy Horse's music sounded as the chugging engine of a battered Oldsmobile... which to me, at the time, was the sound of no-time or eternity.
Thursday, May 20, 2021
A World In a Grain of Sand: On No "Milwaukee Sound"
My favorite/most personally important and influential Milwaukee bands off the top of my head at 4:58 PM on a Tuesday afternoon in May 2021: die kreuzen, the blowtorch, a movement, plasticland, ghostly trio, well, violent femmes, those x-cleavers, f/i, couch flambeau, voot warnings, cherry cake, ward and his troubles, atomic kroutons, mook, joker's henchmen, blue room, mcme, dummy club and bamm bamm, of course. It is striking that my relationship to these artists' music is predominantly through seeing their live shows. I never even owned music by several of these bands, but their influence and importance to me what was/is vital.
Sunday, May 16, 2021
Them 70s Bands: Bong Store Baroque, Mayonnaise Jar Edition
Bands such as Kansas and Styx depressed me (literally, physiologically) then and now with their portentous playing, the particular way that they, especially Styx, fused classical music into pop rock and with their lyrics - which borrowed from fantastic tales of world mythology but somehow managed to make them sound boring or even kitsch. Interestingly (or not), Supertramp didn't have that effect on me. There is a brightness and a lack of excess in some of their songs that kept them from sounding morally defeating to me, as so many other bands from that era did. They did, however, suffer from what I might call "the alienation of mass scale.” It seems like they only existed as stadium rock. And I don't just mean where they performed, but that it was part of their essence – you could almost feel the music industry enveloping them, projecting them out into the public. I find that scale and that identity to be incredibly alienating.
Soft rock (not at all an oxymoron) also emerged from the detritus of the 60s and bands such as Air Supply provoke actual physiological depression in me for different reasons than the bong store baroque of the bands mentioned above. Soft rock provokes in me feelings of claustrophobia, lightheadedness, an inability to breathe properly. It mimics the feeling I used to get when my mother would take me to fabric stores, whose towering bolts I could never hope to see over when I was only about 3 feet tall. I think the feeling comes from the arrangement/production design of the songs. Everything sounds quite saturated. Add to that, the reduced tempo of the music and you begin to feel like you’re hearing the music from the inside of a full mayonnaise jar.
Friday, May 14, 2021
Zuck and Jeff
I think the thing that most strongly indicates that we are living within very disturbed systems globally is that the worst among us rise to the positions of greatest power. Trump, Bush the Lesser, Bolsonaro, Netanyahu, Modi, Vladimir Putin -- these are execrable men, men who you would not trust to dog sit for you while take a weekend out of town. Yet it is them and men like them who so often run the show, in country after country.
Wednesday, May 12, 2021
some bands
Thursday, May 6, 2021
What Do You Wanna Be When You Grow Up? (1-minute play)
A: What do you wanna be when you grow up?