This couple was happy they could be there when the sun was bright and the weather warm, before winter came back and scattered buds everywhere. Leica M, 50mm APO-Summicron-ASPH, ND filter.
Archive for April, 2014
At Home In The Cherry Blossoms
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Cherry Blossom Time, Leica 50mm APO-Summicron-Asph, Leica M on April 16, 2014 by johnbuckley100Woods’ “With Light And Love” Bends Just Slightly Beyond Their Prior Masterpiece
Posted in Music with tags "With Light and Love", Jeremy Earl, Woods on April 16, 2014 by johnbuckley100Last time out, in 2012, Woods’ Bend Beyond shocked the Western world when it beat out Ty Segall to take Tulip Frenzy’s Album of the Year honors. Maybe their amazing show at DC’s Red Palace helped sway the judges. But as we noted then, Bend Beyond was one of those mythical Perfect Albums, as rare as a pitcher’s Perfect Game, with an astonishing sound and not a note out of place.
We saw them again in the summer of 2013, and they gave hints at what a good album With Light And Love, released this week, would turn out to be. It is a bright, confident follow up to a masterpiece, and there is no let down, no disappointment. Does that automatically make it, too, a masterpiece? Not necessarily, though it means we have come to expect the extraordinary with Woods, and they seem perfectly at ease in delivering it.
With Aaron Neveu now a full-fledged member of the band, and we presume that’s Kevin Morby on bass — their photo on the Woodsist website does not have Morby, whose excellent solo album, Harlem River, was released late last year, but we think that’s him — the twin-guitar sound of Jeremy Earl and Jarvis Tavaniere continues to ply the line between the best Topanga Canyon 12-string chimes and the sonic-rocket-to-the-moon psychedelia for which their lives shows are so notable. And Jeremy Earl’s voice continues to be a sui generis marvel, causing Robert Plant, Al Green, and the Dean Wareham of Galaxie 500 to all stand back, their mouths agape.
What’s different here is evident from the start, wherein album opener “Shepherd” has a pedal steel and Nicky Hopkins piano sound, a postcard from whatever country locale Woods has arrived in, far out of town and in touch with their Flying Burrito Brothers. We suppose that Woods — a Brooklyn band that records Upstate — has a shorter distance to travel than Darker My Love did when they veered into chiming ’60s country rock with Alive As You Are ( another Perfect Album that took Tulip Frenzy Album of the Year honors. And in fact, Tim Presley plays on this ‘un.) The country vibe sure is lovely, but better yet comes the Dylanesque “Leaves Like Glass,” whose instrumentation sounds like the tape was left rolling during the Blonde On Blonde sessions. We would dare anyone to listen to “Twin Steps” and not immediately plan on proceeding, with the missionary zeal of a programmed zombie, to catch this band live. And while the 9:07 title track sums up this band’s virtuosity and complexity in spades, it’s “Moving To The Left” that harkens, ironically, to the right of the radio dial, where in a perfect world it would remain, being played over and over throughout the summer months.
This doesn’t mean we expect Woods to storm the record charts. We’re both realistic and at completely at odds with the way hits are manufactured to by this time have hope that a band this fine will be properly rewarded in this lifetime. We should note, however, that there is not an insurmountable difference between With Light And Love and a Broken Bells record; we could actually imagine a radio programmer listening to “Moving To The Left” and being inspired to do the right thing, his corporate masters notwithstanding.
Perhaps, you say, it is too much to expect that even a band that creates Perfect Albums can rally the masses. Perhaps we should think of Woods like that restaurateur that has foodies flock from across the globe to eat in his 32-seat epicurean marvel, the strange combination of sea urchins and wholesome grains utterly beguiling, with a smallish but knowing army of disciples certain they’ve discovered something special, even if it would be hard to get everyone to understand.
No, we reject that concept. Woods are a marvel, worthy of superstardom, and if you’ve yet to understand this, start here, With Light and Love.
And go see them next weekend, with Quilt, at The Rock and Roll Hotel in D.C.
Quick, Follow That Butterfly
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 21mm Summilux, Leica M, ND filter, Nik Color Efex Pro4 on April 14, 2014 by johnbuckley100Juxtaposition In The Nation’s Capital
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 21mm Summilux, Cherry Blossom Time, Leica M on April 13, 2014 by johnbuckley100Seeing The Cherry Blossoms Was Like Being In A Smartphone Commercial
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Cherry Blossom Time, iPhoneography, Leica 50mm APO-Summicron-Asph, Leica M-240 photos on April 11, 2014 by johnbuckley100
Good Lord, is there anyone in America buying a compact camera these days? Last night, in what amounts to our first annual People Taking Pictures Of People Taking Pictures Of People Taking Pictures Of… Themselves, we saw a fair number of folks out with their Canons and Nikons and, interestingly, Fuji cameras. But where even three years ago we would have seen some tourists with compact cameras, last night all the action was in the Smartphone category.
Whether it was stalking the desired image with a Smartphone…
Or reviewing the image just taken with a Smartphone…
And whether one was taking a selfie…
Or trying to get everyone to cooperate with the family photo…
It was an exercise in iPhonography. We can certainly accept that. iPhones are excellent cameras, and the best camera is the one you have with you, right?
But we’re not sure we can go along with this…
All images Leica M with 50mm APO-Summicron-ASPH.
Happiness Is: Sunset In The Tidal Basin When The Cherry Blossoms Are Out
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 50mm APO-Summicron-ASPH, Cherry Blossom Time, DC, Leica M on April 11, 2014 by johnbuckley100The Cherry Blossom Frenzy Fast Approaches
Posted in Uncategorized with tags 50mm APO-Summicron-ASPH, Cherry Blossom Time, Leica M on April 9, 2014 by johnbuckley100Philip Parfitt Is Not The Man He Used To Be
Posted in Music with tags Josephine Wiggs, Lou Reed, Oedipussy, Philip Parfitt, The Perfect Disaster, The Velvet Underground on April 9, 2014 by johnbuckley100It may have been a heartfelt stroke of honesty, it might have been an effort to inoculate against the facile criticism he expected, but whatever it is that prompted Philip Parfitt to call his first album in 20 years I’m Not The Man I Used To Be, it certainly seems accurate. For this album is very, very different from what Parfitt has done in his prior lives, his prior bands.
It’s no disgrace if you don’t know who he is. Parfitt’s last album came out before, oh, Oasis hit the scene. The Perfect Disaster may be best remembered now for having given Josephine Wiggs to The Breeders, but to those of us who remember the late 1980s, they gave us an enormous amount of pleasure. Some of that pleasure, to be sure, was what a great guitarist Dan Cross proved to be, but it was Parfitt’s singing and songwriting that made The Perfect Disaster worthy of being spoken of in the same sentence with the Velvet Underground. Here’s how we described them in 2009:
“The Perfect Disaster were an interesting, sometimes thrilling late ’80s British band headed by Parfitt, with the glorious Dan Cross on lead guitar, what had to be Mo Tucker’s illegitimate son Jon Mattock on drums and, before she left for The Breeders, Josephine Wiggs on bass and vocals. Their album Up is what got me started, especially “Time To Kill.” They had a chugging, Velvets sound, had spent plenty of time listening to the Buzzcocks and Modern Dance-era Pere Ubu, and Parfitt was a wonderfully sneering front man, limited in vocal range, but of course that made sense, since the model was Lou Reed. Heaven Scent came out in 1990, and to my ears was stronger than Up (though britcrits seem to prefer the former.) It had a little less urgency than its predecessor, but by now Parfitt’s songwriting craft had more facets and dimensions, yet was more contained. Great things seemed in store, and … poof. They disappeared.”
But then came Oedipussy, whose 1994 album Divan we called “the great lost album of post-punk British rock.” It was more dynamic, more explicitly commercial than The Perfect Disaster, and while their (his?) lone album was incredibly different from what had come earlier, it was no less satisfying. Two years after we posted our piece on Oedipussy, this comment suddenly appeared:
““thank you ladies and gentlemen. I am well.its very very lovely that people appreciate my work. i’ve not stopped writing or recording since Divan, just haven’t got ruond to releasing much; I am though planning to get a new album out this year 2011. there! I’ve said it! one step follows another step, even when you are walking backwards.”
It was signed, simply, “philip.” And for three years, these two Tulip Frenzy posts have gotten steady traffic, as the world hasn’t forgotten about Philip Parfitt.
And then two weeks ago, someone tweeted us that Parfitt had a new album out, and sure enough, I’m Not The Man I Used To Be hit the iTunes store.
When you listen to the opener, “Big Sister,” it’s not Lou Reed that comes to mind so much as Nick Drake. This is a quiet album, handcrafted before the fireplace, as rain hits the window. It is no less the beautiful for it. Whether or not Phil Parfitt has changed — and let us simply assume that he was writing in character when, on Up‘s closer, “Time To Kill,” he announced it was “time to pull the trigger and/time to die” — this music is lovely. And every bit as special as anything he did in his harder rocking past.
The Perfect Disaster has gotten us through many a late evening: car rides, plane rides and the like. I’m Not The Man I Used To Be is that next album to play on a rainy Saturday after Beck’s Morning Phase is over, you’ve just poured another cup, and the dog is snoring at your feet. To say this is a quiet album is the finest praise. We’re glad he’s back.












