Archive for 2010

New Pornographers’ “Together” Shows Crash Years Are Still With Us

Posted in Music with tags , on May 6, 2010 by johnbuckley100

It would have been nice if  “Crash Years,” the recently released single featuring Neko Case and a summary in miniature of the New Pornographers’ sound, had referred to an epoch we were leaving behind.  ‘Course, releasing Together on Tuesday, only to have the markets take a vertiginous plunge two days later does make one think the Crash Years will be with us for a while yet. At least we have The New Pornographers to entertain us; you may as well enjoy the best dance band imaginable as the Titanic begins its tilt.

These Pornographers aren’t so new anymore, given they have releases that just barely stay inside the frame of two decades (Mass Romantic came out in 2000.) They are still capable of astonishing, which they do — they really do — with the gorgeous, glorious “We End Up Together,” which rivals Challengers’ “Fortune” as the best final album song in a long, long while. (There are bonus tracks after “We End Up Together,” but they’re not much of a bonus.)

What’s different about their fifth studio album is: we hear the occasional guitar solo (heretofore, with the exception of Kurt Dahl’s drumming, the spotlight’s been on the singing, not on Todd Fancy, or really any particular musician or instrument, ‘cept the occasional cello, which is widely evident here); Dan Bejar seems to have gone soft on us, or at least likes singing songs that are sappy and don’t invoke either Jackie or snakes; Neko is everywhere (yay!); and Carl Newman is a little bit more of an ensemble player.  We can’t say the melodies are as enticing as Twin Cinema, but this is a strong effort, maybe stronger than Challengers.

Somewhere today we read a description of the New Ps as what would have happened if George Martin produced Cheap Trick.  That’s funny, and we wish we could give the writer credit, but we can’t remember where we saw it.

Who cares if we’re broke again, who cares if crawling from the wreckage of the crash years we just got run over again.  At least we’re together with our friends, singing in the chorus.

Enter Here: The New Pornographers’ House Party Awaits

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on May 6, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, Nokton shot into the sun, wide open (f1.1).  Don’t mind the spiders.

Red Letter Day! New New Pornos, And Robyn Hitchcock Is Available To All

Posted in Music with tags , on May 6, 2010 by johnbuckley100

More to weigh in on tomorrow after listening to Together, The New Pornographers’ first new album in three long years.  I mean, The New Pornographers fail to put out an album and by 2008, the whole world falls apart, know what I mean?  So maybe things are now looking up?

And if you have not wanted to go through the hoops of buying Propeller Time, Robyn Hitchcock’s brilliant new one, directly from his website, yesterday it showed up on the iTunes store.  No excuses now.

Yippee.

Not From Nellcote

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on May 5, 2010 by johnbuckley100

From a rather straight place, actually.  The Dumbarton Oaks mansion that sits high above Georgetown, USA.  A pretty swell place on a sunny day.

Leica M9, 35mm Summicron pre-Asph, V.4 — the King of Bokeh.

With Two Weeks To Go Until The “Exile On Main Street” Re-Release

Posted in Music, Uncategorized with tags , , on May 5, 2010 by johnbuckley100

We have been listening to Stones bootlegs.  To the many, many sets we have collected of shows between 1971 and 1973, spanning the era of the Exile band — the Stones with Bobby Keys and Jim Price, and the magnificent Nicky Hopkins.  So let’s call it the bootleg span from Get Your Leeds Lungs Out — British tour, pre-release of “Bitch” and “Brown Sugar” — to Happy Birthday, Nicky — the Perth sets from the 1973 tour just before Billy Preston (unfortunately) replaced Nicky for that year’s European tour.  And of course the best recording qua recording is the Leeds set from ’71, and we just realized why.

You know how when the Franco government refused to let “Sister Morphine” come out on Sticky Fingers, and rather than have it be a blank four minutes of vinyl they put on that version of Let It Rock”?  Well, that song came from the Leeds show.  How do I know?  Because it’s on the Leeds bootleg… from ’71.  It was an official recording!

The set isn’t perfect.  They haven’t yet figured out how to incorporate the horns on certain songs (“Street Fighting Man” is a botch.)  But it is an official recording, from the Rolling Stones sound truck.  And for that reason alone, it’s magnificent.  Go track it down.

Sis Boom BAH!

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on May 1, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, Summilux 21.

Heaven-Sent Marriage: Ivan Julian and Capsula

Posted in Music with tags , , on May 1, 2010 by johnbuckley100

In the nick of time, just as my iPod was showing carpal tunnel effects from replaying Capsula over and over, those nice folks in Bilbao who run Bloody Hotsak sent the Ivan Julian & Capsula cd The Naked Flame by meth-jacked carrier pigeons. Man, if ever there were two musical forces meant for each other it’s the former Voidoid and these ex-pat Porteno savants.

If Jimi Hendrix had been born ten years later, if he’d arrived in the States fresh from London in ’77, not ’67, he’d probably have sounded like Ivan Julian.  A big part of the Voidoids sheer propulsiveness came from Julian’s guitar (bisected perfectly by the unearthly skronk of that scruffy lapsed lawyer, Bob Quine, on the other ax(is), truly bold as love.)

Teaming up with Capsula for an album is so cosmically right it’s surprising; life doesn’t usually proceed along such lines as a perfect Ben and Jerry’s mashup. Okay, so The Naked Flame is lacking the pop tunefullness of Martin Guevera’s songwriting for Capsula, but what it does have is Julian, some years after the fact, perfectly channeling Lester Meyer’s vocals from back in the day.  I mean, you’d be forgiven, once you located Julian’s guitar work, for confusing this for Blank Generation Repaired. The B side loses steam, or at least is spottier than the 6-song A-side, but damn, now we have something other than the two Capsula albums we can hum note for note in our sleep.

Louise

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on April 28, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, 21 mm Summilux.

Was Capsula’s “Songs & Circuits” The Great Lost Album of the Aughts?

Posted in Music with tags , on April 28, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Tulip Frenzy’s incredibly hip and extensive readership may have grokked Capsula’s penultimate album Songs & Circuits when it came out in 2008.  It may have made 10 Best lists that year, and the world’s bright young rock crits may have added it to the  fin de siecle roundups that were popular in the last few months of the last year of the last decade, er, five months ago.  But damn, we missed the phenom entire. And of course when we were finally on the case, we naturally first snagged their latest, the incredibly fine Rising Mountains.  Yet boss as that ‘un is, it is an underachiever when compared to its taller, stronger, faster old sib. Our whole world view under assault, and striving not to overcompensate and call Song & Circuits, like, the best punk album since Elastica, the only thing we can think to say is, Song & Circuits is, like, the best punk album since The Clash.

Seriously.  This album is Desert Island good. It is Rocket To Russia good.  Not quite Exile On Main Street good, in part because only time will make that case, partly because declaring it so interferes with one of Tulip Frenzy’s spring narratives, which is that the forthcoming re-release of the Stones’ classic is gonna trigger Jubilee Time, or the End of Days, or something suitably mega.

Back to Songs & Circuits.  If this space has not yet prompted you to sidle over to the iTunes bar to check out Capsula — the real Capsula, not the dopey Israeli electronica outfit that are currently clogging the Amazon listings, but the genuine Buenos Aires-bred, Bilbao habitating trio with their Sonic Youth Meets Brendan Benson dynamic — then may we politely urge you to GET OFF THE DIME AND CHECK THESE GUYS OUT.  And the place to start, actually, is Songs & Circuits. Only after you become acclimated to their immense greatness should you turn to last year’s Rising Mountains.

We had thought our life was reasonably complete without even knowing Capsula was out there.  Now we realize life can never be complete until this band gets HUGE. Do your part.

Sunday Morning

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on April 25, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, Summilux 21, 1/4000 @ f/2.0