Tuesday, December 23, 2008

And the Winner for Most Hubristic Tour Name Goes To…

Posted by Dave Segal on Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 9:52 PM

Lil Wayne, for his “I Am Music Tour.” Sure you are, Weezy. Tha Carter III is quite good, but come on.

Wayne will be appearing at KeyArena Jan. 25 with T-Pain, Gym Class Heroes, and Keri Hilson. Presale begins Fri. Dec. 26 at 10 am and ends 12 hours later. The password is “seat.” Tickets can be purchased here.

“Dr. Carter” (with dope David Axelrod sample)

Baby, It's Cold Outside... So Make Some Belle & Sebastian Thai Sweet Potato Soup!

Posted by Megan Seling on Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 3:12 PM

supermarketcover.gifIn this week's Books section, I reviewed two cookbooks that are collections of rockstars' favorite recipes: Lost in the Supermarket and I Like Food, Food Tastes Good.

Of all the things I cooked from these two books, one of my favorites was Belle & Sebastian's Thai Sweet Potato Soup. Surprising, since I hate Belle & Sebastian. The soup was thick and creamy, rich but not too heavy. This soup was warm and wonderful and probably the best thing the band has ever produced.

Ingredients:
1 large onion, peeled and chopped
2-inch chunk of fresh ginger or galangal, peeled and chopped finely
1 tablespoon Thai red curry paste
1 stalk lemongrass, chopped
2 cloves garlic, crushed or finely chopped
2 sweet potatoes, peeled and thinly sliced
3-1/2 cups good vegetable stock (such as Swiss Bouillon)
1-3/4 cups coconut milk
Juice of half a lime
* 4 or 5 dried Kaffir lime leaves [optional]

Preparation:
1. Start by frying the onion with ginger, curry paste, and lemongrass. Fry until soft.
2. Add the garlic and fry for a further minute.
3. Add the sweet potatoes and the stock.
4. Bring to a boil and simmer for 20 minutes, or until the sweet potato is soft.
5. Add the lime juice, lime leaves (if using), and the coconut milk, and liquidize.
6. If you like it hotter, add a red chili (seeded and chopped) at the start (along with the onion).

I had to add a little salt to mine, which could've probably been avoided by adding a little red chili in the beginning to up the spice quotient (see step #6). It's easy and delicious and a great way to keep yourself warm through these 15-degree nights. Or, you know, you could always save the effort and take a cue from Sleeping People. Their "Favorite Chili Mac" is simply one part chili (whatever kind you like best) and one part macaroni and cheese (whatever kind you like best). Cook each separately, then combine and stir.

Not all rockstars are culinarily inclined.

Wallpaper. - "Evrytm We Do It (RAC Maury Remix)"

Posted by Megan Seling on Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 3:10 PM


Wallpaper. - "Evrytm We Do It (RAC Maury Remix)"

Interview With a Princess

Posted by Paul Constant on Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 2:21 PM

PrincessSuperstarPIC3.jpg

The Rumpus has a great interview with the great Princess Superstar. It's nice to see her treated like a writer. Her last album was a goddamned sci-fi musical epic, fercrissakes:

TR: I love the way you’ve rapped about yourself as a writer—the “cunning linguist.” What is writing like for you?

PS: It depends. Most of the time it’s not easy. I am not one of those writers that it just flows out of effortlessly. I have to sit and write and rewrite and sometimes it’s really challenging to get anything good out of myself. But then once I get going I have a good time and even make myself laugh sometimes.

TR: What’s the process like? Do you write on napkins in cafes or do you hunker down at home?

PS: I hunker down at home and stare at the computer for hours and maybe get a few lines out. OK, it’s not that bad. But it feels like that sometimes. I just broke up with a boyfriend so I have a little writer’s block at the moment.

Her new album, New Evolution, comes out early next year and debuts a new persona. I can't wait.

Video Killed the Rock n' Roll Star

Posted by David Schmader on Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 1:59 PM

Billy Squier's video for "Rock Me Tonite" was forced into my brain yesterday by Dave Segal's post on the worst videos of all time (it came in seventh!). I've been lightly obsessed with it ever since.

Some history: This video came out in 1984, when music videos were mandatory. Not only did MTV still play music videos in the '80s, they played whatever videos they had over and over and over (24 hours a day is a lot of time to fill), and many musical acts—from a-ha to ZZ Top—were made exceptionally wealthy through the power of eye-catching videos, which were essentially commercials that MTV ran for free, ad nauseum.

Given all this, the general idea seemed to be that a bad video was better than no video at all—but this theory was proven violently false by Billy Squier's "Rock Me Tonite," which finds the power-chordin' guitar-rocker literally prancing around like a prancer, with exceptional gusto. It's an amazing performance, and it effectively wrecked Billy Squier's career. Apparently, fans of power-chord-heavy guitar rock don't like their stars to prance.

Other key fact: The clip was directed by one Kenny Ortega, the choreographer of Dirty Dancing and Newsies, and the director/choreographer of High School Musical. Make of that what you will.

Post-Xmas Tekno Throwdown

Posted by Dave Segal on Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 1:55 PM

UGC.jpg

Kristina Childs & Jerry Abstract, dueting on Aphex Twin's "Come to Daddy"

Need to work off your holiday gluttony/lethargy? Some of the region’s most competent tekno* DJs can help you do that at Re-bar Fri. Dec. 26 (1114 Howell St). The lineup for this Analog/Produkt event features Kristina Childs and Jerry Abstract (tag-teaming under the name UGC), Travis Baron, and Pressha.

All the info can be eyeballed here.

*This brand of techno’s too hard to be spelled properly.

The Best of 206 Hiphop in 2008

Posted by Charles Mudede on Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 12:47 PM

Number one is...
JakeOneCover.jpg
Jake One's White Van Music (Why? For being flawless.)

The rest:
2) Common Market's Tobacco Road (Why? For being a hiphop epic.)
3) The Gigantics's Die Already (For the overflow.)
4) Silas Blak's Silas Sentinel (For being consistent.)
5) Mad Rad's White Gold (For being next.)

A closing note: I organize local hiphop into two great moments. The first is its Eden; the second is its exile from Eden. The first moment is Edenic because there is no real knowledge of a split—the mainstream and the underground. There is only one understanding, hiphop music, and one mode or ethic, innovation. Even "Baby Got Back" was as original as it was commercial. In its time, there was nothing or little to compare with its sound and style. The period of hiphop oneness ends in Seattle with the fall of Sir Mix-a-Lot. After the fall, innovation is banished to the underground. In this moment there are two clear waves and a possible third, which is presently taking shape. That third wave might have Mad Rad as its point of emanation.

#23: "12.23.95" - Jimmy Eat World

Posted by Megan Seling on Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 11:56 AM

Technically, this is not a Christmas song. But it is a song about today, the 23rd of December. And the little bleeps and blops that start at 1:40 sound like snowflakes falling. If snowflakes were actually soft little robots falling out of the sky, which is how I like to think of snowflakes sometimes.


Jimmy Eat World - "12.23.95"

Also, the 23rd of December is my favorite day of the year. Every year. Without fail.

Them Year-end List-making Pazz & Jop Compilation Blues

Posted by Dave Segal on Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 11:43 AM

Every year I keep a running tally of the albums and songs I like, in order to better compile my inevitable year-end lists for polls like the Village Voice’s Pazz & Jop. (Do you remember all that great shit that came out in January and February? I doubt it. Best to be a responsible music nerd and write that shit down.) And every year around early December, I have to scramble to narrow down the dozens of potential winners to a sleek 10 in each category. I know, woe is me.

I seriously don’t understand these people who say they have to struggle to think of 10 releases they liked in a given year. Either they’re not paying attention, overcome with apathy, or have unbearably high standards. I mean, really? With tens of thousands of releases issued in any annum, you can’t find 10 that meet your exacting aesthetics? Huh.

Anyway, I spent much of the Snowmageddon weekend working on my top 10s for Pazz & Jop and was having a helluva time deciding what to include (because [cough] so much is at stake, one mustn’t be hasty with one’s selections). See, I’m not one of those critics who’ll just cut, paste, and rearrange Pitchfork’s favorites; I wasn’t really feeling that whole Vampire Foxes on the Radio(head) hivemindgroupthink. (I never do, for better or worse, no matter which year's consensus reality it is.)

While scanning my notebook for the things I liked in 2008, it occurred to me that although many high-quality new releases wafted through my headspace this year, I ultimately felt more strongly about reissues of old LPs (e.g., Rodriguez’s Cold Fact, David Axelrod’s Seriously Deep, Bernard Bonnier’s Casse-tête, Gal Costa’s Gal, GasNah Und Fern boxed set, Terry Riley’s The Last Camel in Paris, Yoshi Wada’s Off the Wall) and compilations that gathered esoteric music from far-flung lands (Obsession, African Scream Contest, all those Nigerian collections from Soundway, anything with Sublime Frequencies’ name stamped on it; and I’ve also heard great things about Victrola Favorites, a shellac-to-bytes excavation of 78s by Seattle’s Climax Golden Twins), and Steinski’s two-disc retrospective What Does It All Mean?

What does it all mean, indeed. Either I’m succumbing to a nostalgia for things I’ve never heard or new music isn’t as exciting as old music is to my ears these days. Or maybe it’s a combination of those things.

For years, I’ve prided myself on championing innovative new artists (and I still do); I used to hate those pundits and grouches who would complain about music nowadays not being as good as the music back in their day. But now, to a slight degree, I find myself more often siding with the curmudgeons who treasure the sounds of bygone decades. That being said, I’m just as enamored of Burial’s Untrue and Ricardo VillalobosVasco as I am of the deluxe reissue of Otis Redding’s Otis Blue and LTM’s new edition of 23 Skidoo’s Seven Songs. But it is somewhat troubling to start deriving more pleasure from the past than from the present. (Again, woe is me.)

Another surprising development of 2008 (for me, anyway) was the resurgence of interesting rock releases. For several years, my year-end lists have leaned more heavily on electronic music than on rock, but this year I found myself enjoying several artists striving to redefine rock’s parameters—or at least send tremors through ye olde genre’s structural foundations and tweak its DNA. Said artists include Dominique Leone, High Places, Pit Er Pat, Fuck Buttons, Human Bell, Valet, Thank You, Power Douglas, Growing, Shit and Shine, Grampall Jookabox, the Present, the Chap, Eric Copeland (of Black Dice), Zomes, and Skeletons. Even established vets like the Howling Hex and No-Neck Blues Band went off on rewarding tangents.

I’ll tell you what kind of crazy year 2008 has been: My two favorite records were a reissue of a 1971 LP cut by Bill Cosby (uh-huh) and some LA session-cat friends and a compendium of mad ’70s funk rock from Hungary titled Well Hung: Funk-Rock Eruptions from Beneath Communist Hungary — Volume 1, curated by the British crate-digger Andy Votel.

Cosby’s Badfoot Brown & the Bunions Bradford Funeral & Marching Band really is a revelation. Here’s a snippet of a review I published in another alt weekly: “This is jazz-funk fusion with an explosive sense of purpose. It's powerful and intense enough to make one forgive Cosby for his misguidedly sweeping condemnations of hip-hop—and those dubious sweaters.” (In fact, the Dusty Groove label—which released Cosby’s album—was responsible for loads of great reissues in 2008. Its quality control has been amazing.)

As for the latter, know that anything with Andy Votel’s name on it is pure archival gold. If he suggests that, say, around four decades ago, a little communist nation produced 20 tracks of devastating brilliance, you should take his word for it. If you’re looking for fat, juicy breaks for your next hiphop joints, Well Hung will supply you generously. Who knew Hungarians were so damned funky? But beyond the world-class slaps, these groups also crafted some amazingly catchy melodies that seem simultaneously familiar and exotic, like a bunch of Iron Curtain Os Mutanteses. It’s as if these Hungarians are serving you hamburgers, but instead of cow flesh sizzling between the buns, it’s yak meat.

Well Hung sounded fantastic driving around the streets of Detroit during my last trip home, and I think, if you’ll allow some presumptuousness, that that city’s late, great hiphop producer J Dilla would be bumping it, too, were he still alive.

Anyway, once I finalize my top 10s, I’ll share them with you. Perhaps you can do the same.

Now dig this track off Well Hung.

Meteor & Demjen Ferenc- “Kivanj te is nekem szep, jo ejszakat”

And this 3-minute excerpt from Bill Cosby’s “Martin’s Funeral.”

Tonight in Music

Posted by Eric Grandy on Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 11:06 AM

For tonight, this week's Up & Comings advise you to "haz cozy night at home." But if you want to defy that kind of loltalk, there are a few things you could do tonight (though as always in this weather, you might want to call ahead to confirm):

-Stop Biting at the Lo-Fi with residents Kamui, Hideki, Introcut, Absolute Madman and Sage Nomad

-the War Room X-mas Party with ?uestlove, Four Color Zack, and MC Yameen All World

-Hollyhood at Havana

-Sun Records Revival at the Can Can with Vinca Mira and guests

And there's more, of course—you can see all tonight's music listings here.

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