
You can't rely on brilliance.
We know that.
Scotland's Primal Scream have been around since 1982, living a chaotic legend of giant ambition and false-starts, morphing and mutating throughout the years from C86 janglists to mainline rock worshipers to ecstasy-addled dance futurists and then onto paranoid dub millennialists, insane political oracles, and, with last year's Beautiful Future, their ninth album, a new brand of optimistic electronic/guitar kraut-pop.
With a band like this, you can only count on unpredictability, not whether or not they're any good.
This is why Primal Scream are brilliant.
Believers of the myth of rock, of music, Bobby Gillespie's gang are forever changing, forever trying to reorient themselves, but always while keeping intact a single, coherent thread over their years. New ideas. Identical themes. Etc.
Think two breathless classics.
1991's Screamadelica, a gorgeous, bursting, and universal indie/dance trip through the birth and butchery of British acid house culture. And 2000's XTRMNTR, where Primal Scream — with the help of Adrian Sherwood, Kevin Shields, Chemical Brothers, and more — lob an apocalyptic bomb of free-form, anti-genre sonic terrorism, hating vowels and prophesying geo-political insanity before anyone else, and ending up, staring out at the world, with one of the most furious records ever made.
There are also some more embarrassing moments, like 1989's Primal Scream, 1994's Give Out But Don't Give Up, or 2006's Riot City Blues. Which oozed from the band's more traditional rockist faults, like pus from a tumor.
Primal Scream, though, are back at it.

While 2008's Beautiful Future doesn't quite hit with as much heat as it should, its attempt to use modern guitar and dance music to both daylight '70s no wave and bring a lightness, a relevance, back to the band, is enough of a healthy and interesting sign of progress that you want to forgive everything again. The stroll of Big Audio Dynamite melody that's "The Glory Of Love" chimes in your head long after it's gone, while the upbeat, peaceful rhythm and bells of the title-track sound like the sun melting away years of shit culture. The artwork is all 'Videodrome,' like it knows something we don't.
In other words, Primal Scream haven't been to America in nearly a decade, and we had to get on a plane to San Francisco to see them before it was too late.
Tonight, you see, the inside of The Fillmore is dark. And appropriate. There's a blue satin backdrop. Low lights. A tape of the band's Irvine Welsh one-off comes on. There, silhouettes. But it begins with 1997's "Kowalski". It should always begin with "Kowalski". Evil as fuck as ever and cracked with effects, where Mani, who joined the band after the break-up of The Stone Roses, employs its central, addictive, dead-eyed bassline, fresh and alive but not full of wank, like no one else. There are strobes. It's very loud.
In comes the new stuff, which is scattered at just the right level throughout the night, from the unfortunately paint-by-numbers "Can't Go Back," but also to the two aforementioned highlights and a long, mesmerizing, strung-out "Uptown," which dissolves into 2002's "Autobahn 66" and gets an unexpected and huge response from an audience who's forced to follow their band by imports.
Bobby Gillespie's voice is a bit raw, and it can always be a bit thin, but his charisma's aged well. He wears tight trousers and a sharp, no-button jacket, and his hair is mid-length. He's intent and looks vital.
Lots of Screamadelica, too. "Moving On Up" fits surprisingly well against the new songs, and when the latter are thrown against XTRMNTR, like the hyper-volatile call-to-arms of "Kill All Hippies" or the nuclear Stooges attack of "Accelerator," the contrast is throttling.

At the end of "Pills," Gillespie shouts with everyone, "Fuck fuck sick fuck fuck sick fuck fuck sick fuck fuck sick fuck fuck sick fuck fuck sick fuck fuck sick fuck fuck sick fuck fuck."
After that it's the welcome after-rave suicide of 1991's "I'm Comin' Down" and you think everything's over, in both ways. But then Gillespie nods, looks at the crowd, and says, "Here," before the band replaces the room with 2006's endlessly enjoyable, better-than-it-should-be, mandolin-fried "Country Girl," the band's biggest chart success and the definition of a band not taking themselves too seriously.
And then, napalm. It's "Swastika Eyes". Military future disco. Backed by "MBV Arkestra". A slither of a thing. A nasty creep of a song. The one that, over about fifteen minutes, ratchets layer upon layer, loop upon loop, of brass and feedback and house and warps of terror and rage and noise, escalating itself, at last, into a fever-pitched hurricane of inescapable and ear-shattering rational collapse.
It's the sound of losing your mind.
Staggered, no one says a word or moves. Without a pause, though — no encore — you hear it already.
Those vocals. That gospel.
Would they? "Come Together"?
Cripes. Perfect. A sea of hands. This is Primal Scream. Except at their most opposite.
It's joyous. Hopeful. A soundtrack of warm revolution.

Tonight, it's what we needed. It made more sense back in the middle of acid house. And it made more sense back in November. But it'll make sense again, and we'll be lucky if Primal Scream are there to play it for us, to help us out, with all of their contradictions and brilliant unreliability.
And we'll go as far as it takes to feel this again.
Or, to be honest, it might've been like that.
If we hadn't gotten ill and had to cancel the whole trip.
Goddammit.
Sck. Fck.
Photo by ktc19.
Dave, at the Crocodile's pre-party last night before doors opened to everyone at 8:30 pm, the door to the Via Tribunali side of things was open and you could walk through and see the tiled oven (so hot that it only takes 90 seconds to cook those thin pizzas), the rounded black booths with high padded walls (nice work), a strange room hidden at the center of a couple of passageways that's taken up by a long communal table and seems to be built for committing ritualistic murder (seriously, it's weird), and beyond that a hallway to the Crocodile's backstage area, featuring nice green rooms with stacks of fresh towels and, last night, nice people.
Out in the Crocodile's main room, a breathtaking improvement on the old show space, the Tribunali people were bringing out a pizza pie every couple minutes—which looked like a science experiment in how quickly matter can disappear. The pepperoni seemed extra delicious. It took a while to realize that the wall along Blanchard, the wall behind the new bar, now has a long, high, horizontal stripe of two-foot-high windows—which gives the room some depth, doesn't distract from what's going on onstage, reminds you you're in the middle of the city, and gives the crowd some privacy at the same time. The crepuscular light was nice. This build-out is full of touches like that—it's a handsome, strong design. Although the bathroom seems insane. The old Crocodile's men's room was dingy, falling apart, covered in hilarious graffiti and stickers and show posters; the new bathroom looks like the model bathroom you'd find in a showroom of million-dollar condos, all glittering white tile and marble counters and rounded walls. "Oh, it's too pretty in this bathroom," a messy club kid hollered, stumbling in, and then added, "That'll change."
Back out at the foot of the stage, waiting for the Quiet Ones to come out, someone who'd just been up on the new balcony said, "This is a NICE place to see shows." And then he dropped his beer. A big, Pollack-esque splatter on the new floor. A girl in a hat who was documenting everything came up to him and said, "Is that the first spill of the brand-new Crocodile? I got it on film."
Like yesterday with the Coathangers, today with a band I'd never heard or heard of before, Brooklyn, NY's Suckers. The four piece band (drums, bass, guitars, keys), playing on a kind of deck/patio party in the afternoon, summoned vaguely Animal Collective-y vibes—sounds smearing together, choral vocals echoing and indistinct—but with deliberately harder crescendos, the drummer pounding like a machine, the guitarist punching a floor tom with his fist, nearly knocking it over. It was pleasant sounding, and those choruses were fun to watch, but after one listen, nothing sticks in the mind too sharply. Maybe worth checking out again live or on record, though, seeing if anything takes.
The longest line of the day, and of the festival so far: Daniel Johnston's daytime show at Radio Room; that line was crazy long. Commenter rk says the show wasn't even any good:
And biggest disappointment Thursday: Daniel Johnston. Yeah, I know the man's an Austin legend and all that, and yeah the crowd went apeshit, but come on, be serious. Massive pot belly, in stained tshirt and dirty sweatpants, needs the lyrics to his own songs right in front of him the whole set, only played guitar himself on one song and flubbed it badly, pretty serious Parkinson's disease tremor, and kept apologizing for 'not practicing' before the show. If it hadn't been for the decent backing band, it would have been a total mess. Honestly, even legends should know when it's time to retire.
Caught Memphis, TN country rockers Lucero just in time to see them play their country-fried version of Jawbreaker's "Kiss the Bottle," chorus at halftime, singer Ben Nichol's ragged drawl backed by session-smooth guitars, organ, and drums. That song which was just born to be redone in the roadhouse style, being as it is a sad sack lonely man drinking song, about "kiss[ing] the bottle" when the singer "should've been kissing you." After the song, Lucero singer Nichols repeated, "Jawbreaker," to the applauding crowd, giving due just in case the crowd didn't know. Inside, Brother Reade was sporting the Most Stoned Looking Percussionist I have ever seen: a dude playing some maracas or shakers, eyes drooping, mouth fixed in a dazed grin, head lolling around like a bobble-head doll. The many-membered band played an appropriately stoned but ably held together brand of funk, with Spanish vocals, and lots of percussion. Nothing spectacular, but well groovy enough to soundtracking drinking afternoon Tecate. They ended their set marching out through the crowd (to the bar) led by a conga player and chanting a chorus.
Hold Steady were, like the Hold Steady always are, awesome. The festival atmosphere really flatters these guys, and the feeling seemed to go both ways. They played "Sequestered in Memphis," with its chorus of "subpoenaed in Texas" and its closing refrain of "I went there on business," a perfect anthem/alibi for SXSW (we're all down here on business, right). They were playing to a packed patio crowd with lots of folks clapping and singing along as Craig Finn spazzed out, grinning and gesticulating wildly in his usual, adorable way, while the band churned their songs out with seasoned professional ease. They played "Navy Sheets," during which a girl went crowd-surfing in sandals, something you don't see in Seattle too often. They played "Banging Camp," "Cheyenne Sunrise," "One for the Cutters," and "Chips Ahoy" before I decided to duck inside to catch No Age.
No Age were the loudest band of the fest so far. I came in just in time to catch drummer/singer Dean Spunt asking Austin if they were ready to fuck shit up, after which he launched into maybe my favorite song of theirs, the scathing anthem "Teen Creeps." Randy Randalls guitar—echoing, distorted, looped, and clean—sounded great on the big stacks, but Spunt's vocals were clipping all to shit (presumably how he wanted them), and man can cipping sound bad on a big-ass sound system. Despite that, though, I thought they kicked ass. I realized watching them that I know all their songs, and I know all their song titles, but I have a hard time drawing connections between them—because the vocals are so blurred in the mix, I mostly remember melodies and for whatever reason it's harder to connect just a melody to a name. Still, I believe they played (not in this order) "Miner," "Eraser," "Cappo," "Sleeper Hold," and "Brain Burner." They started one song with a loop of distorted guitar stabs sounding out a tango rhythm. Spunt introduced another saying, "Let's live a little. I feel good. I feel great." When the sound guy told them they had time for a couple more songs, Spunt kind of snapped back, "I'm throwing the party later, I think I can run into my own shit," and then proceeded to play like five more songs, including one new one and one in which Randall did a little crowd surf with guitar. That new song really reminded me how much similarity I hear between Spunt's vocals and those of Doug Martsch of Built to Spill (I might be totally off here, but something about the straining tone of his voice just reminds me of Martsch). As always, a great show from these guys.
Next, cut across town to (finally!) see the Pains of Being Pure at Heart for the first time, arriving just in time to hear "This Love is Fucking Right!" floating up the street from the patio stage as I rushed to get inside. I've gushed about the band here before, so I'll spare you any labored introductions, but let me just say they easily lived up to that early appreciation and anticipation. They were every bit as shy and nerdy onstage as you' hope, keeping the banter minimal, saying that they looked up to headliners Matt + Kim as "everything a band should be and everything good in the world" (it's weird to think of any band young/new enough to look up to Matt + Kim like that, but okay). They played library romance "Young Adult Friction," with its coy double-entendre refrain of "don't check me out." They played the swoony, sleepy-head's love song "Come Saturday," with its heartbreaking line about, "who cares if there's a party somewhere/we're gonna stay in" (one of these days, I might dig further into why that line kills me, but let's say for now that sometimes I wish I was/had been better at staying in). They played "The Tenure Itch," their song about a student/professor tryst (collegiate!); they played a new song called "103," which they joked was the number of showcases they were playing at SXSW (they really are playing like a dozen or something). They played "Everything With You" and album closer "Gentle Sons."
It was a short set, but it was so, so sweet. The sound was maybe not great—there was practically no definition to either the guitar or the keys, such that certain notes or melodies that were crystal clear on the album were just a smudge live—but I am enthused enough about their songs to forgive any lackluster mix. And the vocals were perfect, and even the indistinct blurriness had a kind of evasive, feinting charm. A friend of mine, who's seen the band twice at SXSW and who used to work in marketing, doesn't like them at all, and says he thinks it's all just a great marketing campaign. I don't know what kind of marketing campaign they've run—I just got their promo cd like any other, and even stupidly let it sit idle until after the release date—but I think they have a hell of a product that pretty plainly speaks for itself (not that I intend to shut up about it any time soon, though).
Across town again to post up for this year's other hype-darling, Wavves, and Max Tundra, playing a patio/parking lot overlooking the freeway and a gas station. Before them, though, caught a few songs from Danish outfit Casiokids, aka The 5 Next-Whitest Boys Alive. The band apparently has two types of songs: synthy, cowbell-driven dance jams; and fey, choral pop numbers. Both styles are highlighted by their goofy, mugging keyboardist, who looks a bit like a grinning Chris Kattan in a black Prince Valiant wig (it must have taken them all of one show to decide to put that guy up front and center and the lead singer to the side). They played a song called "Darling, Will You Marry Me Twice," by Ivor Cutler; they apologized for a wonky start to another song by saying they hadn't slept for 50 (?) hours and that they were "over-tired." They were cute, and the dance jams were fun (and similar in sound to moments of last night's Shout Out Out Out Out show), but nothing too memorable.
I reviewed Wavves new album Wavvves in this week's issue, so you might wanna read that before moving on here. Wavves mastermind Nathan Williams is short and very young looking, with died black skater bangs flopping out from under a baseball cap; he took the stage and asked the soundguy for "as much reverb and echo on my vocals as you can give me." He asked someone to "use your drink ticket to get me a beer." He played backed by a drummer, guitar running overdriven through a full size guitar cabinet, and their sound was remarkably clean and clear compared to the tape static and clipped fuzz of the album (if he recorded an album that sounded more like his live set and less like farting into a boombox, it'd be worth the hype). The songs are simple fun punk pop numbers, with Williams sliding power chords up and down his guitar and backing up his monotone lead vocals with falsetto backing vocals. He opened with "Beach Demon," with it's downer chorus about "going nowhere." He explained that Wavves was playing "953 showcases, so this might be a short set" (take that, Pains of Being Pure at Heart, with your measly 103). He chugged a beer and burped into the mic, with maxium echo and reverb. (From inside, a hardcore band could be heard growling; I think I caught the word "establishment" spat out with considerable scorn.) People compare Wavves to No Age I guess (and Times New Viking, which makes a little more sense), but something about his adolescent themes and delivery reminded me a little bit of Japanther also. He played a few more songs from his self-titled album, the highlight of which was, live as on record, the rippin', insanely catchy anti-anthem "So Bored" (still stuck in my head this morning).
As much as I love the Pains of Being Pure at Heart, the best set of the day easily belonged to British electro pop weirdo Max Tundra. His solo set up included three keyboards (for the nerds: a Juno-D, a Yamaha CS-01, and a Casio VL-1), a glockenspiel, two kinds of melodica, a toy microphone, a real microphone, a guitar, and a thumb piano. He warmed up/sound-checked by dashing off melodies from Foreigner and Van Halen, asking the sound guy multiple times to turn everything down in the monitors and take the echo/reverb off his voice. He launched his set with the pop genius of "Which Song," which was one of my absolute favorites of 2008. He sang and played keyboards, fluidly improvising, over a backing track; and when he had his hands free for even just a beat or two, he would jerk his body and fling his arms about in high spazmodic fashion (did I also mention that Mr. Tundra, who has an erudite British accent, is a tiny, tiny man?). Contrasted with this bad/amazing dancing, was Tundra's pitch-perfect R&B crooning and pretty dazzling keyboard playing. He's also funny. "This is the first concert I've ever played where I've been completely aware of current gasoline prices," he said, looking out over the crowd at the lit-up gas station signs across the street.
He played the stuttering, ebullient micro-sampled pop song "Orphaned." He played the outre R&B ballad "Lights" ("the colors of the lights in my studio are the same ones you conjure in my mind"). He played his "indie pop hit single" "Will Get Fooled Again"; a couple crusty dudes had hopped up on the side of the stage and were doing goofing an Tundra a bit by dancing funny, but Tundra, during an instrumental break out-danced the fuck out them, after which security gingerly removed the guys from stage. On any given song, he cycled from keyboard to keyboard to guitar to melodica and back, always just on time over his own confusing, off-kilter backing beats. He played "The Entertainment," with its cutesy verse about shooting Maya Deren student films in Manchester, it's big trancey synths chorus, and it's climactic declaration, "I was born to entertain." Proof. "Who here remembers old rave?" Tundra asked, before launching into his cover of the KLF classic "What Time is Love?," playing the jacking synth hook on melodica and then keyboard. He instructed the crowd to "turn to page 32 of your hymnals," pulled out and opened a notebook of his own, and then sang and played keyboards to a version of the Sound of Music song "So Long, Farewell," bidding us all goodnight.

First lesson learned by the newly pre-reopened Crocodile: You run out of booze, you lose… three-quarters of your crowd.
Tragedy [/hyperbole] struck before 10 pm last night when the near-capacity turnout depleted the Croc’s bars of their entire stock of beer and wine (the club had just gotten its liquor license earlier in the day and didn’t have time to stock other kinds of alcohol, according to talent booker Eli Anderson). “I guess this is a test to see who the real music fans are,” Anderson observed, as punters streamed toward the exits after the Quiet Ones’ set upon discovering dry bars.

The night started promisingly, however. We arrived at the refurbished Crocodile at 9 pm to a pretty packed, happy throng of Seattle music-scene glitterati (well, those who weren’t in Austin for SXSW, anyway). Fellow club/bar owners, music journos, DJs, John Roderick of the Long Winters, Lucy Atkinson of Kinski, a few curious electronic-music heads, avid music fans of several stripes, record-store employees, KEXP listeners, and the stinkin' drunk, old-hippie transient who reeked of bottom-shelf wine were in the house for this historic occasion. And Slats… who, upon learning that all the beer had been consumed, stoically moved on to another watering hole. The bars along 2nd Ave. did booming business.
Entrance to the Croc is now on Blanchard St. Customers walk down a longish corridor straight to the long, attractive bar; once there you glance right to view the stage, which is much larger than previously. The sight lines are great. The ceiling’s much higher. A dark burgundy glow suffuses the room. Wood paneling lends it a ski-lodge aura. The balcony is smallish but has its own bar and its walls are lined with artful show posters. The sound up there could be better, but it was robust on the main floor (soundman supreme Jim Anderson is back at the controls, so all should be awesome very soon). The bathrooms looked way fancier than expected, but the men’s room already had piss and beer on the floor by 9:30 (some things never change). Via Tribunali restaurant is on site, but I couldn't locate it, though I did see a window where orders could be placed. Whatever the case, the feng shui of the entire joint seems to be greatly improved. You'll be shocked to learn that nobody here mourned the loss of that huge-ass post. You have to try hard not to be happy to be there.
Word was, Peter Buck, Robyn Hitchcock, and Scott McCaughey christened the stage for friends and family before the official 8:30 start time. For the show proper, local quartet the Quiet Ones ran through their straightforward, alternately brooding and tempestuous rock to a crowd of around 450 (capacity is 560). One song recalled early, vital R.E.M., many others the solid but unspectacular fare issued by indie labels like Secretly Canadian and Jagjaguwar. Near the end, the Quiet Ones kicked into a klassik motorik rhythm and the guitarist channeled Michael Rother of Neu!'s spangly, spare tone. As an eternal sucker for this m.o., I say, more, please.
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By the time the Kindness Kind settled into their Dresden Dolls-y cabaret/new-wave rock, the audience had thinned considerably. Had I no journalistic obligations, I would’ve joined the exodus. The Seattle quintet are competent at what they do, but this style—with Alessandra’s overly dramatic vocals, Nicolas’ hamfisted Alesis/Nord synth pounding, mostly lumbering rhythms—just doesn’t click with me. Sorry, the Kindness Kind.
Hypatia Lake came on around 11:15 to a sparse gathering of die-hard music heads. The Emerald City foursome seemed somewhat deflated by the meager crowd, but put their heads down and mustered some intensity. The opening song was a fibrillating wall of psych rock, setting the tone for the rest of the performance: dense, snarling, furrow-browed, heavy rock with transcendent aspirations. One track sounded like ’80s Brit trance-rockers Loop covering Ted Nugent’s slow-boiling “Stranglehold.” Hypatia Lake appear to have everything under control, but it would be cool to see them loosen the reins sometimes and really rocket into deep space. I hope they get another chance to flex their muscular yet cerebral psychedelia here soon.
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Tonight Akimbo, Brothers of the Sonic Cloth (Tad Doyle's latest project), and Patrol play another free show at 8 pm (21+). Saturday, the Crocodile officially opens for business with Hot Buttered Rum and Everyone Orchestra playing [see Paul Constant's blurb on the former here]. Croc staff will work out some kinks, undoubtedly, and if all goes well, thirsts will be quelled with the same thoroughness as aural desires.
All photos by Alex Crick.
(More photos by Kate Coffee after the cut.)
Says Mike from Asian Man Records.
In a recent newsletter, he says the first show's August 19th, but on the Screeching Weasel MySpace they have it listed as June 19th. No word on what the line-up will be yet, but Ben Weasel has still been playing with Dan Vapid as recently as last year.
(ht Punknews.org)
KHV, Partman Parthorse, Mad Happy, the Geese, Sam Rousso Soundsystem
(Sunset) It's strange that Shannon Perry, singer of lo-fi pop trio Katharine Hepburn's Voice, is such a wilting presence on the band's new record, Stand Up, given that she's such a character in person (cf. her general outspokenness and now-retired granny glasses). It's like the reverse effect of KHV's tourmates Partman Parthorse, whose (Mr.) frontman Gary Smith is a nice, quiet guy in person and a rage-aholic asshole onstage and on record. As with Perry and drummer DW Burnam's previous band, electro-punk thrashers Dalmatians, KHV keep things decidedly DIY—but where the former band's dance-y racket benefited from such an approach, KHV's cutesy bedroom ditties could use some glossier production. As it is, the album sounds unfortunately like it was recorded directly out of/into a Casio keyboard, Perry's languid vocals mired in midrange-heavy murk. Still, there might be something to these songs underneath all that, and their live show, invigorated as it is by Burnam's highly energetic drumming, looks like good fun. ERIC GRANDY
Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti, Duchess Says, Catatonic Youth
(El Corazón) Los Angeles's Ariel Pink ranks near the top tier of American songsmiths. Yes, his production values bespeak of poverty and/or deliberate perversity, but his actual tunes are weirdly, wrongly sweet, like a juice consisting of watermelon and cinnamon flavors. Mr. Pink's melodies embed themselves in your mind like cherished memories of your most inebriated/stoned shenanigans, the WTFness of them ripening with time. Released on Animal Collective's Paw Tracks label, his albums abound with alternate-reality radio blockbusters that flirt with straight-up poppiness, but keep corkscrewing left when you least expect them to. Ariel's Haunted Graffiti band consist of drummer Aaron Sperske (Beachwood Sparks, Lilys), bassist Tim Koh (White Magic), keyboardist Kenny Gilmore (Lilys), and guitarist Cole G.N. (the Samps). Expect a more, um, "professional" stage presence than past Ariel Pink gigs have indicated. DAVE SEGAL
Broken Disco 2.0: Hookerz & Blow, Deepchild, Ctrl_Alt_Del vs. Awggie, Michael Manahan, Robb Green vs. Recess, Skoi
(Chop Suey) San Frandisco's Hookerz & Blow (DJ/laptop mechanics Mozaic and Eprom; oy, guys, that name) smash together the unlikely atoms of filthy-low-ended electro with trance's fromage-laden, high-end synth frippery. It's kind of like eating pork rinds dipped in some rich French sauce whose name you can't pronounce. They also engage in what they call "psyphy," a hybrid of psychedelic and hyphy—sounding like E-40 on acid, maybe? Hmm, interesting concept. Sydney, Australia's Deepchild—who records for Get Physical and Freerange—creates tracks that fall into that lubricious crevice between house and disco. Low-slung, bedroom-eyed dance music for lovers; it's a gimmick that just might have legs. DAVE SEGAL
There's more! It's Friday night! Do something awesome!