Don't you just love this party? Everything's so fancy, and there's some kind of hot cheese over there.

Kaylee ,'Shindig'


Buffista Music 4: Needs More Cowbell!

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.


smonster - Dec 07, 2009 10:15:04 am PST #2101 of 6436
We won’t stop until everyone is gay.

Mr. Iero's latest attempt to keep himself busy

Oh, Frankie.


Cass - Dec 07, 2009 1:18:36 pm PST #2102 of 6436
Bob's learned to live with tragedy, but he knows that this tragedy is one that won't ever leave him or get better.

Oh, Frank...

And I thought that Trohman's Moz cover band got all my yay right now.


Trudy Booth - Dec 07, 2009 1:21:02 pm PST #2103 of 6436
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

I love the looks on the faces of the other dogs. Prof. Buckley looks jealous, Peppers, IMHO, does not approve of such nonsense.

(Raise your hand if you knew the names of the dogs...)


DavidS - Dec 08, 2009 2:35:08 pm PST #2104 of 6436
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

From the Guardian's overview of the Noughties:

******

There is a parlour game you can play to gauge how dramatically rock and pop music has changed in the course of a decade. Imagine a music fan from the start of the decade is transported to its end, and plonked in front of the Christmas Top of the Pops: how confused would they be? In the case of the 1960s, their bafflement would be total: imagine the fan from 1960 – with his Brylcreem, his Tommy Steele albums and his suspicion that trad-jazz might be the future of pop – gawping incredulously at the sight of Thunderclap Newman and Jimi Hendrix.

The same would go for the 1970s: what would even the most forward-thinking "head", their mind recently blown at the Isle of Wight festival, make of the fact that Jethro Tull and the Moody Blues had been supplanted by punk, disco and Gary Numan?

But the fan of 2000, shuttled forward to 2009's Christmas Top of the Pops (handily taken out of mothballs this year), would probably feel weirdly familiar with the show's contents. They might wonder whatever happened to nu-metal, although the rise of emo might have given them an inkling; and they might be bemused by the sheer number of synthesiser-prodding female singer-songwriters, such as Lady Gaga and Little Boots.

In truth, though, the music that's big in 2009 isn't all that different from what was big in 2000. Rock's lingua franca remains the post-Oasis, post-Radiohead big stadium ballad, replete with keep-your-chin-up lyrics, usually suggesting you "hold on". R&B isn't quite as staggeringly strange and futuristic as it seemed at the start of the noughties: in perhaps the decade's solitary example of genuinely odd and innovative music that wasn't by Radiohead finding a mass audience, producers Timbaland, the Neptunes and Rodney "Darkchild" Jerkins competed to see who could make the weirdest-sounding No 1 single. Yet, judging by the sound of Beyonce's Single Ladies (Put a Ring On It), R&B is still the source of the most thrilling pop music.


DavidS - Dec 08, 2009 2:38:06 pm PST #2105 of 6436
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

That seems true to me, but I just chalked it up to being an old fart who wasn't paying attention to all the hyphy and crunk and grime and dubstep.

The late nineties into the new millenium was all about the popstar and that just didn't really change that much over the last decade.

There was never the broad based, generational cultural upheaval in music. In the business and technology the change was huge. By the end of the next decade the music business will be unrecognizable.


Scrappy - Dec 09, 2009 2:23:02 pm PST #2106 of 6436
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

SO, I just spent way too much on my Dh's Xmas present. [link]

It combines two of his main geeky loves, Beatles music and tech--if I could have gotten it to somehow connect to a motorcycle, it would have won the gift trifecta.


Trudy Booth - Dec 10, 2009 3:03:48 pm PST #2107 of 6436
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

The Bouncing Souls have a run of shows after Christmas called Home for the Holidays (I believe they got the practice from the Mighty Mighty Bosstones). For three (this year FOUR!) days they play a different set list every night and have different opening acts. And then there are afterparties with even more bands. It's pretty much heaven.

This year they're having a setlist contest. They'll be picking four. I don't know that anyone 'round here knows the Souls well enough to relate to the following, but here is mine:

• Here We Go
• I Like Your Mom
• The Freaks, Nerds, And Romantics
• The Gold Song
____________________

• Late Bloomer
• So Jersey
• I Think That The World (actually wanted Mental Bits, but its not an option )
• Joe Lies (When He Cries)
____________________

• Private Radio
• Night Train
• That Song
• Kid
• Cracked
• Serenity
• Ghosts On The Boardwalk
• Sing Along Forever
____________________

• Better Things (The Kinks)
• Hybrid Moments (Misfits) (unless it is night four, then this is where you put • Born To Lose (Johnny Cash))
• Fight To Live
• K8 Is Great
• True Believers

This has been so mad fun I don't even care if I win. I went with a big loud opener, a few slower ones to catch their breath, a bit of an emotional rollercoaster, and then some wham-bam in the end.

I'm pretty pleased with it.


Tom Scola - Dec 11, 2009 5:31:00 am PST #2108 of 6436
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

Band names of the year, 2009.


Kathy A - Dec 11, 2009 7:29:42 am PST #2109 of 6436
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I'm thinking about picking up a couple of Christmas cds this year, Tori Amos's Midwinter Graces and Sting's If on a Winter's Night. Has anyone else listened to these and thinks they're worth it?


Dana - Dec 11, 2009 7:34:28 am PST #2110 of 6436
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

I'm curious about Sting's too. I've listened to the samples, and I can't decide if it's weird or just cool. I do like a lot of his choices, like "The Cherry Tree Carol".