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.
Just click on the link, msbelle, & it will start. Or right click & choose save as.
My favorite GHP mashup is the Tweet/XTC one (it's a couple above the Aguilera/VU one).
Tom, if you're still looking in, Mr. GHP himself, Mark Vidler, was on the Brian Lehrer show a couple months back.
I like Miss Frenchie, too, especially her Peaches/Clash mashup (from the London Booted project) "Fuck 'em, Boyo". I'm sure you can guess from the title that this is not a work-friendly mp3.
Everything I need to know, I've learned from Iron Maiden
Nabbed off of one of my email lists:
24 is the kind of TV show that begs endless questions, but those familiar with the Go-Betweens -- a semi-obscure '80s Australian pop band -- are fixated on one in particular. Did the Fox drama name a shady company McLennan-Forster as a wink to the group's co-frontmen, Grant McLennan and Robert Forster? "Frankly, it has a great ring," says 24 exec producer Evan Katz. "It seemed like a good opporunity to pay homage to a very talented cult band."
Heh. I saw that. Between me getting NPR to play "Rock and Roll Friend" and 24 there's been a slow seepage of Go-Betweens in the mainstream media.
That's the Lord's work you're doing there.
That's the Lord's work you're doing there.
I
do
feel an evangelical responsibility to spreading good music around. St. Peel is our exemplar.
In the vein of St. Peel, I offered a few custom burnt CDs to the co-worker who won the betting pool on Li'l Jandek's birthday (that's my oh-so-clever nom de Internet for my kid). She indicated that she loves Nirvana but has never explored that kind of music. Not wanting to alienate her, I went with slightly more cuddly punk and post-punk.
1. Husker Du - "Love Is All Around"
2. Ramones - "Sheena Is A Punk Rocker"
3. Cramps - "Human Fly"
4. Pixies - "Where Is My Mind?"
5. Raincoats - "Fairytale in the Supermarket"
6. Palomar - "Knockout"
7. McLusky - "She Will Only Bring You Happiness"
8. Television Personalities - "Look Back In Anger"
9. Buzzcocks - "Everybody's Happy Nowadays"
10. Slits - "Heard It Through The Grapevine"
11. KaitO - "Try Me Out"
12. Liars - "Mr. Your On Fire Mr."
13. Minutemen - "The Glory of Man"
14. Meat Puppets - "Swimming Ground"
15. Dinosaur Jr. - "Freak Scene"
16. Liliput - "Ain't You"
17. Sleater-Kinney - "You're No Rock & Roll Fun"
18. Mission of Burma - "That's When I Reach For My Revolver"
19. Feelies - "Fa Ci-La"
20. Television - "Venus"
21. Replacements - "Unsatisfied"
22. Talking Heads - "Don't Worry About The Government (live)"
23. X - "Adult Books"
24. The Jesus & Mary Chain - "Just Like Honey"
25. Wire - "Three Girl Rhumba"
26. Clash - "White Man In Hammersmith Palais"
Good set, Hayden! Very listenable - no spinach whatsoever. Though I don't know a few of those cuts (McLusky, Palomar, Liars...). I love that version of "Grapevine" - was Budgie playing on that? I think he was. "Grapevine"'s one of those indestructible songs. I know at least four versions that are great.
Thanks! I don't know if Budgie was on that version of Grapevine or not, but I'd guess yes. It could be Palmolive, but it's a little more advanced than her usual drumming technique. But man, do the Slits burn that song down!
McLusky are a more recent band for me. They play post-Pixies punk (lots of highs & lows) with a rare sense of humor (for instance, the two albums I have are McLusky Does Dallas and The Difference Between You And Me Is That I'm Not On Fire). I read on Pitchfork that they broke up last month, though.
You'd love Palomar. They're bouncy like the Raincoats and early Talking Heads and have tasty girl-group vocals. Misha & I saw them open for the Mekons back in ought-2.
And the Liars are one of the smartest bands around today who aren't the Fiery Furnaces. That track is from their Gang of Four-ish first album, They Threw Us All In A Trench And Stuck A Monument On Top.
t babbling about music from my childhood
This weekend I had (another) one of my
omigod iTunes is soooooooo cooooooool!
moments. We had taken my parents out for dinner, and Dad casually mentioned that The Point! was out on DVD. Now, The Point! was a huge, HUGE part of my childhood. Some of my earliest memories are of laying on the floor of the living room and singing along with the soundtrack LP. (In later years, when I would talk about The Point!, people would look at me like I was nuts, because they'd never heard of it.)
So when we got home from dinner, I opened the iTunes store. Ta-da! For $9.99 I could have part of my childhood back. Blessed, blessed iTunes store. (Yes, I'm going to buy the DVD. But the notion that I can sit at my desk and listen to The Point! over and over and over makes me even more of a Perkygoth than normal.)
t b-a-m-f-m-c