Kaylee: So, uh, how come you don't care where you're going? Book: 'Cause how you get there is the worthier part.

'Serenity'


Buffista Music III: The Search for Bach  

There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.


DavidS - Oct 28, 2005 6:10:37 am PDT #943 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Dave Mattacks

The great Fairport Convention drummer.


joe boucher - Oct 28, 2005 6:24:48 am PDT #944 of 10003
I knew that topless lady had something up her sleeve. - John Prine

[edit: Dave Mattacks]

Color me envious! Dave Mattacks is one of RT's decades-long collaborators, dating back to Fairport Convention. Or as Thompson once quipped, "This song is so old that Frank Sinatra had hair. And so did I." He was the drummer on much of Richard's material from the late seventies to mid-eighties, including Shoot Out the Lights. Had Mattacks joined them at Town Hall I might have had to grit my teeth and join the obnoxious insane guy in yelling for "Hand of Kindness" as it is my favorite Mattacks performance.

By coincidence Mattacks also has a credit on Still Crazy After All These Years, though my guess is that he couldn't answer erinaceous's question about country covers. I think Steve Gadd (yay Rochester!) was the main drummer on the album. He plays the famous intro to "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover."

David, Christgau was underwhelmed by the Arthur Kane film. Then again, since he was writing about them before they were signed, and knew about and perhaps even saw them before David Jo was in the band, what's old news & shoddy execution for him could be fun new stuff for me, so I'll probably see it anyway.


tina f. - Oct 28, 2005 6:32:22 am PDT #945 of 10003

You're Invited

Who: tina f. Where: Chicago When: tonight What: my pity-party

::sob::

It looks like I am most likely going to miss tonight's Hold Steady show because of crazy-roommate drama and having to move and having to do it tonight. SUCKS. I sold my tickets to a co-worker and I doubt the show will sell out - but I also doubt it will be possible for me to make it there.

Everyone can feel sorry for me now.

In Best of 2005 news: Lou Barlow's EMOH was an album that has snuck back into my heavy rotation that may just make it on the Top Ten list yet. I got the new Wolf Parade last week and the reviews I've read got it right: at first it does sound a bit like a Modest Mouse ripoff (it was produced by Isaac Brock) but further listens reveal a unique sound, great lyrics and a beginning-to-end good album. Not sure it's Top Ten material though.

Two-second album reviews:

M. Ward Transistor Radio: love it

Robbie Fulks Georgia Hard: annoyed now


Fred Pete - Oct 28, 2005 6:39:36 am PDT #946 of 10003
Ann, that's a ferret.

Many sympathies, Tina. Feel free to vent if you need to.


lisah - Oct 28, 2005 6:46:01 am PDT #947 of 10003
Punishingly Intricate

It looks like I am most likely going to miss tonight's Hold Steady show

Well supposedly they're going to be on an upcoming episode of Lost if that's any consolation...(sorry about the roommate drama! I hope you have smooth housing sailing from here on out.)


tina f. - Oct 28, 2005 6:47:11 am PDT #948 of 10003

Many sympathies, Tina. Feel free to vent if you need to.

Aww - it's fine. What's life without a little crazy-roommate-grows-intense-cat-fear and kicks-you-out drama? Missing a show because I was being swept away to a romantic Italian villa by some rich guy would be better though.

For a second I thought I had gone to the Onion instead - but was it yesterday that I posted the thing about five new Ryan Adams' albums? [link]

I guess that's not a prediction you're likely to ever be wrong about though. They also mention a new Neko Case album coming soon. Woot!

ETA:

sorry about the roommate drama! I hope you have smooth housing sailing from here on out.

Thanks. I heard about the Lost thing, too. Craxy!


lisah - Oct 28, 2005 6:53:39 am PDT #949 of 10003
Punishingly Intricate

I heard about the Lost thing, too. Craxy!

so funny! Evidently they have a friend on the writing staff or something.

I had a roommate who got a girlfriend with a cat phobia and she was terrified of my tiny and awesome (very lamented now). As much as I tried to be symbathetic about her having an actual fear she couldn't control I just couldn't help but think it was a ploy on her part to get attention for herself. Fortunately she had no say over what happened in our household so I didn't have to move or get rid of the cat or anything. When she came over she'd literally walk down the hall hiding behind her boyfriend and they'd hole up in his room.


sumi - Oct 28, 2005 7:14:19 am PDT #950 of 10003
Art Crawl!!!

tina - that so sucks!

But at least your living situation will be resolved.


DavidS - Oct 28, 2005 7:51:01 am PDT #951 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

erika sent me a review of Peter Guralnick's new bio of Sam Cooke. Sam Cooke was a badass:

The horrors and humiliations of the road might have been enough to impress themselves on anyone. Cooke's upbringing ensured they did. Cooke was the son of a conservative preacher, so it might be supposed that Cooke -- who gave up sacred music for secular, who loved his women, who enjoyed all the advantages that money and being a truly beautiful-looking man brought him -- was a rebel. In truth, he took his father's advice to heart. "Respect your elders, respect authority," Guralnick recounts it. "But if you were in the right, don't back down for anyone, not the police, not the white man, not anyone." It's possible that what protected Cooke in some confrontations was the astonishment he provoked in others by being a black man who did not back down. Guralnick tells a story about Cooke's running out of gas on tour in Memphis. Waiting for Charles to come back from the service station, Cooke was approached by a white cop who told him to move the car, to push it if he had to. "His name was Sam Cooke, and he didn't push cars," is what he told the cop, before finally saying, "You push the fucking car. You may not know who I am, but your wife does. Go home and ask your wife about me." The unmistakable sexual nature of that taunt makes you gasp, as does the fact that Cooke got away with it.


erikaj - Oct 28, 2005 8:21:26 am PDT #952 of 10003
Always Anti-fascist!

Wow, you hadn't seen that? Impressed with myself now. And may I say "Damn!" about that last quote(although we white folks don't quite make that word say as much as most black people do, ime. I'm sorry...don't have as many inflections) No wonder there are so many rumors about people deciding he had to, well, "get got." and, shall we say, inadequate investigation.