Get up...get up, you stupid piece of... What did you do that for? What's wrong with you? Didn't you hear a word he said? All of you! You think there's someone just going to drop money on you?! Money they could use?! Well, there ain't people like that. There's just people like me.

Jayne ,'Jaynestown'


Buffista Music II: Wrath of Chaka Khan  

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 - Mar 27, 2004 9:32:41 pm PST #1858 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Btw, Hec, I love the comp CD lots.

It's fun, huh? Worth it for me, just to find such a classic glam track as "Roxy Roller" which I'd never heard before though apparently both Nick Gilder and Bryan Adams re-recorded it. It's Nick's composition, and he originally did it in his band Sweeney Todd. When he left that band, the sixteen year old Bryan was recruited to be in it. Weird, huh? All kinds of odd corners of Canadian rock and roll to explore. (Nick Gilder, of course, is best known for his solo hit "Hot Child In the City.")

That's a great geography lesson mix, tina. I think you're eager for a road trip.


esse - Mar 27, 2004 9:46:01 pm PST #1859 of 10003
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

I really dig Belle and Sebastien.


tommyrot - Mar 27, 2004 9:47:44 pm PST #1860 of 10003
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

I really dig Belle and Sebastien.

It took me a while to get into them... but now I love 'em.


esse - Mar 27, 2004 9:50:22 pm PST #1861 of 10003
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

I heard em on RadioIO eclectic a lot, but they're used on all the teen dramas and genre shows I love, so I've heard them before.


tina f. - Mar 27, 2004 9:59:17 pm PST #1862 of 10003

I think you're eager for a road trip.

Yeah. It's the not having to work plus it being spring break at KU. It's great because us townies get the bars back for a bit - but it still does trigger the road trip lusting reflexes. (Also that is soo weird about Bryan Adams.)

I really dig Belle and Sebastien.

Almost all of their albums are available on emusic. And I downloaded them all and then promptly forgot which server I stashed them on at work (that'll be a fun surprise for some future IT guy). So I've been recollecting the albums all week (with dial up. sigh). I didn't plan for them to bookend the mix like that - but it seemed to work.


DXMachina - Mar 28, 2004 4:33:41 am PST #1863 of 10003
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

I stumbled across Belle & Sebastian's Dear Catastrophe Waitress a while back, and I really liked it. I still need to get some of their other albums.


Jon B. - Mar 28, 2004 7:19:29 am PST #1864 of 10003
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

"Tigermilk" is by far my favorite B&S album.


meara - Mar 28, 2004 8:02:10 am PST #1865 of 10003

I admit, I've been v. bad about forwarding on the mixes I got. I got a couple in a batch, and haven't sent them on lately. I suck.

I threw all the songs from them on my iPod, and have been listening as they come up. (It always startles me--I'm listening for a moment, and then go "wait, I don't KNOW this song! What is...oh, a buffista song...").

Recent "Ooh I like this!": from Erinaceous' mix, "Welcome to Chicago, Motherfucker". Heh.


Steph L. - Mar 28, 2004 8:09:58 am PST #1866 of 10003
I look more rad than Lutheranism

meara, stop bogarting the mixes!

t shaking tiny fist DC-ward....


DavidS - Mar 28, 2004 12:11:55 pm PST #1867 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Aquarius Records rave of the week:

IRON & WINE "Our Endless Numbered Days" (Sub Pop) cd + cd ep/lp + 7" 14.98/13.98 So here we go again! Iron And Wine's The Creek Drank The Cradle was an AQ record of the week last year, was a unanimous staff favorite, and made most of our top ten lists for the year. Rightfully so we might add. A more beautiful and perfect record we hadn't heard in forever. And a lot of times we try not to make another record by the same band a record of the week, since usually it's hard for a band to deliver another record as good as THAT record, the one that blew us away and convinced us it had to be record of the week. But of course sometimes we do, and sometimes a band does, and this new Iron And Wine just happens to be that record. Sam Beam, who pretty much IS Iron And Wine has upped the ante, somehow navigating the precarious course of trying to progress and grow and explore, without ruining what was already basically perfect. And somehow he's done it. All of the things we loved so much about the first record are still present: gently fingerpicked guitar, sweetly breathy vocals, gorgeous harmonies, melancholy melodies, twangy banjo, slippery slide guitar, wistful and cryptic lyrics amd songs. The songs! So perfectly sweet and instantly classic. Songs that you find yourself humming to yourself even after only one listen. So what is it about this new record that makes it worthy of record of the week status? Hard to say. In fact we weren't sure if this record was actually better, or if we were just so excited to have more Iron And Wine! Because on first listen, Our Endless Numbered Days sounds like the perfect part two of The Creek Drank The Cradle. Which is a good thing. A very good thing in fact. We were all wishing The Creek was twice as long or even ten times as long. One of those records you want to never end. But the more we listened to Our Endless Numbered Days, the more it revealed itself as an entirely new record. But subtly so. It's a little more aggressive, and propulsive, the drums play a bigger part, and there are some distinctly intense bits, where the guitars are rough and the drums kind of rock. But only kind of. The core of the record is still Beam's perfect pop songs, twangy and folky, but sweet and lush, with melodies that while totally memorable and unforgettable, are so unique and fresh to your ears that you just have to sit and listen and let the sounds and songs envelop you. Some obvious reference points are Elliott Smith, America, Bread, Palace, Songs:Ohia, but the more you listen, and the more we hear from Iron And Wine, the more we realise that Beam occupies a singular place in popular music, referencing all sort of other musics, but existing totally and completely in his own sonic space. It's a rare performer who can pull that off, especially nowdays drawing from a century of recorded music. The only complaint we have, and it may not bother you if you don't mind buying the same record twice, is that both formats, cd and lp, come with different extra music. The cd comes with a bonus disc that includes two demo versions and two unreleased tracks. The lp comes with a bonus 7" with two entirely different bonus tracks. Argh. So to get it all, you have to buy both, but if you had to buy one record twice, it might as well be one as good as this!