Oh Thank Heaven, The New Pornographers Have Not Forsaken Us

Posted in Music with tags on January 22, 2010 by johnbuckley100

This just in:

The New Pornographers will have a new album out, entitled Together, on May 4th.  12 Tracks, produced by Phil Palazzolo who produced Challengers.

After a long week, good news…


Savoire Adore At D.C.’s Velvet Lounge 1/22

Posted in Music with tags on January 21, 2010 by johnbuckley100

“Leave the winter behind,” sing Savoire Adore, the latest fun pop duo from Area Code 718, and while we can’t quite do that, we can go see a band that reminds us of Dean and Britta, or even the Asteroids Galaxy Tour.  This doesn’t quite do justice to a really original band that showcases confident craftsmanship and oddly beautiful songs that are just enough off kilter, if you pushed them they’d tip over and land in a different, amusing shape each time.  Songs to sing around an electric campfire.  Fun, pretty ditties with plenty of confectioners sugar atop something much grittier.  Nourishment for a winter’s evening.  At the Velvet Lounge, 915 U Street, Friday night.

Mardi Gras Approaches

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on January 21, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, Nokton 50 1.1 wide open.

The Coolest Postage Stamp Ever

Posted in Music with tags on January 20, 2010 by johnbuckley100

The cover of London Calling is now a stamp, courtesy of the Royal Mail.  And we wonder why the U.S. Postal Service is losing money…

New Songs From “Exile On Main Street”?

Posted in Music with tags , on January 16, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Uncut reveals that the remastered version of  the Rolling Stones masterpiece Exile On Main Street will be released on April 12th.  But if that information sets the heart beating fast, consider this:  It will include three previously unreleased songs.  Now, neither “Following The River,” “Plunder My Soul,” nor “Sophia Loren” show up in Martin Elliott’s The Rolling Stones Complete Recording Sessions,” and we don’t seem to have them on any of the bootlegs stored deep in the secure vaults of Tulip Frenzy World HQ.  So this is a very exciting announcement, and we’ve but 90 days or so until we see if this is right.

Fleshtones Greet Their 5th Decade* By Bursting Into Film

Posted in Music with tags , , on January 3, 2010 by johnbuckley100

SnagFilms brain trust, please take note and acquire these rights for your most excellent nonfiction film site: 2010 will see the release of Pardon Us For Living But The Graveyard Was Full, a documentary about The Flestones, only the greatest… well, we’ll leave it there.  The Fleshtones are just the greatest.  And that there’s now a movie about ’em, in addition to the excellent book on them — Sweat, The Story of The Fleshtones, America’s Garage Band — means the ‘Tones Chronicle is now a full-fledged multimedia juggernaut.   I mean after a book and a film, through what medium may we next capture America’s greatest band?  Sculpture?

Can’t wait to see it, and the really fun trailer just whets the appetite.  Happy 201o.

* No, they haven’t been around for 40 plus years (just a mere 34), but having started in the mid-70s, and with this now 2010, we did the math and…

May Old Acquaintance Be Forgot

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

Outdoor fire, celebrating the New Year in a Western town, maybe 15 degrees max.  Leica M9, 50mm Summilux, ISO 800, wide open.

Only 15 Below

Posted in Uncategorized with tags on December 29, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, 50mm Summilux, 15 below zero in the shade of the Tetons.  The interesting thing is, the camera was left overnight in the car.  It still hurts to touch, it’s so cold, but it’s still kicking.

Bob Dylan Was The Artist of The ‘Aughts

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on December 29, 2009 by johnbuckley100

As the year, and the decade, finish up, a great many Top Ten lists have been published, some trying to capture the highlights of the ‘Aughts, such as there were.  We here at Tulip Frenzy World HQ have resisted the urge to compile a top ten list of the decade’s music because we’ve found that while it’s possible to list a given year’s best records, it’s a perilous task to say what the best collection of songs was in a given ten-year span you’re just now winding up. You need to get about halfway through the next one to really decide what were the keepers, the albums you’re still listening to. For example, a decade ago, we listed Whiskeytown’s Stranger’s Almanac the best album of the ’90s, and it is a great album.  But was it better than Luna’s Penthouse, or Spiritualized’s Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space, or even U2’s Achtung Baby? From the hindsight of a decade, the answer is no.

It’s easier to name a single figure who was the Artist of the Decade, and we noted with curiosity and respect that Uncut had given that honor to Jack White.  Now we like Jack White, so much that we even bought, sound unheard, The Dead Weathers.  (Won’t make that mistake again.) Artist of the Decade?  He may have been the most protean and energetic man in rock in the ‘Aughts.  But Artist of the Decade? Not even close.

When you go to see Bob Dylan, the announcer reads off the same embarrassing, sleazy parody each time as the band comes onto the stage.  You hear the same rap about him as the Conscience of the ’60s,  lost in drugs and religion in the ’70s, etc.  The funniest thing is, I believe this has been Dylan’s greatest decade.  And I believe he is, without question, the decade’s greatest musical artist.

He came plowing into the ‘Aughts with all the momentum of a crafty running back hitting the line, powered by his late ’90s revival album, Time Out of Mind. But that album was a glimpse of twilight, of Dylan facing mortality, and what he’s done since has further assured his immortality.  It was the soundtrack to the film Wonder Boys that livened things up with “Things Have Changed,” which won him an Oscar.  But if the shape of our times was set by the events of September 11, 2001, then surely we should acknowledge that an album released that very day, Dylan’s Love and Theft, was from that moment on a contender for the best album of the coming, dreadful decade.  Love and Theft showed Dylan was not easing into that good night, but had hit upon a bluesy attack with a killer band, funny, poignant, and making the most of his diminished voice.

By 2003, when the soundtrack to Masked and Anonymous was released with it’s live versions of “Down In The Flood” and “Cold Irons Bound,” we got a better sense of what was going on.  I think I played “Down In The Flood” more than any other song during the whole decade; Dylan’s band was the tightest combo since the ’69 Stones, and his voice rode roughshod over the whole ensemble, light and quick, given its gravel bed anchorage.  The Never Ending Tour went on and on, by now avoiding the big arenas and playing minor league ballparks across the land.  By the time Modern Times came out, Dylan had proved that he was every bit as vital in his 60s as he had been in the ’60s.  His albums were hits.  He was hipper than ever.  In some ways, he was better than ever.

Tell Tale Signs was a further revelation, with stronger, alternative versions of songs, some first recorded in the late ’80s, all the way to better takes of cuts from Modern Times. I was disappointed that Together Through Life seemed to have settled into a formula — rewriting Willie Dixon songs and bashing them out with the great George Recife on drums — and it was the first Dylan album of the decade not to be honored by the annual Tulip Frenzy Top Ten List designation.  It was also the first Dylan album ever to debut at the top of the charts.  But all was forgiven; Dylan’s allowed an off album.  Let’s face it, none of his peers ‘cept maybe Willie Nelson have put out an album that really mattered since at least the late ’70s, and Dylan’s maybe just beginning to coast a little.

Jack White’s music may stand the test of time.  We’ll see.  But as we look back on this decade years from now, I know that it was the work of a man in his 60s that will have held up, I suspect better than anyone else’s.  Bob Dylan: Artist of the ‘Aughts.

Merry Christmas

Posted in Uncategorized on December 25, 2009 by johnbuckley100

More Christmas UFOs… M9, 50mm Summilux.