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Out with Kelefa...in with Jody Rosen

Mar 20, 06

this is fucking astonishing...

from the article:

    Mayhew's record is just one of several thousand cylinders, the first commercially available recordings ever produced, that have recently become available free of charge to anyone with an Internet connection and some spare bandwidth. Last November, the Donald C. Davidson Library at the University of California, Santa Barbara,  introduced  the Cylinder Digitization and Preservation Project Web site (cylinders.library.ucsb.edu), a collection of more than 6,000 cylinders converted to downloadable MP3's, WAV files and streaming audio. It's an astonishing trove of sounds: opera arias, comic monologues, marching bands, gospel quartets. Above all, there are the pop tunes churned out by Tin Pan Alley at the turn of the century: ragtime ditties, novelty songs, sentimental ballads and a dizzying range of dialect numbers performed by vaudeville's blackface comedians and other 'ethnic impersonators.'

    For decades, these records languished unheard by all but a few intrepid researchers and enthusiasts. Now, thanks to the Santa Barbara Web  site and the efforts of a small group of scholars, collectors and independent record labels, acoustic-era popular music is drifting back into earshot, one crackly cylinder and 78 r.p.m. disc at a time. These old records hold pleasant surprises, but they also carry a larger lesson about gaping holes in the story of American pop.

read more here.  the new york times > how pop sounded before it popped

Godspeed!

Even the NY Times should be citing me

Mar 19, 06

okay, i can't explain it.  but i blogged about amazon.com's "text stats" portion of their site weeks ago.  someone is reading my shit and taking my stories.  to see my write up, click here.

see the times rip me off here.  the new york times > book, how do i love thee?  let me count the words

seriously, kids, where's my contribution check at?  you can send it to the following address:

that dude jeff
c/o i beat you to it! bitches
p.o. box 11674
new york, new york 10001*

godspeed!

-that dude jeff

*editor's note: address not real.  please don't try to mail anything, except drugs, to this address.

Radio, radio

Mar 18, 06

this is what i did today!  thanks shannon, adam, vinnie, sheila, jackie & everyone at electric lady studios

Image hosting by Photobucket
if there is a god, i appreciate this gift

godspeed!

Millions of toddlers now breathing easier

Mar 17, 06

neverland ranch closes its doors

-that dude jeff

The Barometer #2

Mar 16, 06

kelefa sanneh, once the poster-child to my affinity for music journalists being more than glorified "mixtapers", has lost me in this, his latest piece for the new york times, when he tackles such all too important issues in music like the emergence of more and more popularity for the so-called emo bands that are out now.  a sampling:

    They use terms like "sugar" and "honey" to underscore arch lyrics about boys who claim to hate themselves almost as much as they hate their exes. My Chemical Romance writes grand, crashing allegories full of allusions to death and violence. (The video for "Helena" shows a funeral stocked with choreographed mourners.) And Fall Out Boy's current single is "A Little Less Sixteen Candles, a Little More 'Touch Me,' " which matches its ridiculous title (and infectious tune) with hopeful and spiteful lyrics: "I don't blame you for being you/ But you can't blame me for hating it." Deliberately overripe songs like this blur the line between earnest lament and theatrical parody.

read more of his article here.

now, i have NO problem with kelefa sanneh covering the new landscape of american, middle-class, white, youth (sub)culture, but i do have to say that mr. sanneh should have addressed the "re"-emergence of popular music in a different way.  first off, there's no mention in his article whatsoever about the history of emo music as a genre (of course, back then, there was no labelling of the movement).  also, he quickly moves from just mentioning emo, to descrbing how bands like fall out boy and my chemical romance draw much influence from glam rock, eg. david bowie, new york dolls.  i can see this match, mr. sanneh, and i applaud that.  he then goes on to explain how these new bands with "cute emo" boys also owe a debt of gratitude to the 80's bands like motley crue and twisted sister.  okay, so now, we've gotten parallels to 3 different musical genres all that HEAVILY(?) impact today's rock and roll.  i just can't agree with that at all.  i mean, the artistic expression is something i could never argue with (i'm a fan of anyone who can get their messages out, save for the nazis and republicans).  but to think that emo music had anything to do with the genetic musical make-up of pop punk is something that would make any christie front drive fan go insane with dissapointment.  and this article leads any reader who knows nothing of the emo movement to automatically lump a lot of bands into the same categories altogether.  not fair at all.  would bob mould want to share tour stories with nikki sixx?  probably not. 

but don't get me wrong, dear reader, i happen to like pop-punk.  it's a guilty pleasure of mine and has been since i was, like, 12.  and just because music today is more popular than its influences doesn't take away from it.  i just feel like, as a music journalist, kelefa should have made some sort of attempt at plotting out the history of rock and roll between 1977 (the punk year) and 1994 (green day and offspring become mainstream pop-punk's first fathers).  for god's sake, you can't just make mention of certain influences, and then expect a newspaper reader to go and look for themselves.  give them a peek into history, and then let them decide if they want to go further.  don't allude to something, but save copy length by not digging in deeper.  what's another 300 words?

as far as "emo" is concerned, it was basically a movement during the hardcore early 80's.  hardcore was a "harder, faster, stronger" version of punk, and "emo" was a "smarter, in tune, expressive" answer to hardcore.  it gave musicicanship back to bands that otherwise would just be aggressive.  let's just look at three of the bands responsible for the beginnings of punk kids being able to escape the solitary subject matter of angst, chaos and despair:


husker du

embrace

rites of spring

can you see any comparitive qualities to either of these two bands?


my chemical romance


pete wentz from fall out boy

according to allmusic.com, "emo"'s history is like this:

The groundwork for emo was laid by Hüsker Dü's 1984 landmark Zen Arcade, which made it possible for hardcore bands to tackle more personal subject matter and write more tuneful and technically demanding songs. Emo emerged in Washington, D.C. not long after, amidst the remnants of the hardcore scene that had produced Minor Threat and Bad Brains. The term "emo" (sometimes lengthened to "emocore") was initially used to describe hardcore bands who favored expressive vocals over the typical barking rants; the first true emo band was Rites of Spring, followed by ex-Minor Threat singer Ian MacKaye's short-lived Embrace. MacKaye's Dischord label became the center for D.C.'s growing emo scene, releasing work by Rites of Spring, Dag Nasty, Nation of Ulysses, and MacKaye's collaboration with members of Rites of Spring, Fugazi. Fugazi became the definitive early emo band, crossing over to alternative rock listeners and getting press for their uncompromisingly anti-commercial attitudes. Aside from the Dischord stable, most early emo was deeply underground, recorded by extremely short-lived bands and released on vinyl in small quantities by small labels; some vocalists literally wept onstage during song climaxes, earning derision from hardcore purists.

"emo"'s top artists by way of a basic search into the genre from the same site are:

    Braid
    The Get Up Kids
    Jimmy Eat World
    The Promise Ring
    Rites of Spring
    Sunny Day Real Estate
    American Football
    Appleseed Cast
    At the Drive-In
    Bob Tilton
    Cap'n Jazz
    Castor
    Chisel
    Christie Front Drive
    Jejune
    Jets to Brazil
    Joan of Arc
    Knapsack
    Mineral
    764-HERO

in closing, i DARE mr. sanneh to find me any one group from any of the current bands he's researched for the article from yesterday that can claim responsibility for an entire sub-cultural movement like the post-hardcore washington, d.c. scene (rites of spring, dag nasty, slickee boys, fugazi, nation of ulysses, etc.):

    from rites of spring's "remainder"

    Too many situations
    Left with too little to say
    So we try, we try to feel our way
    And if decisions cause divisions
    Tell me who's to blame?
    Pick a target for convenience
    When there are other ways

    So don't
    Tonight i'm talking to myself
    There's no one that I know as well
    Thoughts collide without a sound
    Frantic, fighting to be found

    And I've found things in this life
    that still are real
    a remainder refusing to be concealed
    I've found the answer lies in a real emotion
    Not the self-indulgence of a self-devotion

for further reading, mr. sanneh, on the history and influence of emo, i'd suggest picking up this book.

godspeed!

Again, I blogged this before them!!

Mar 13, 06

is no one paying attention anymore?  i wish more people read my blog (i love you for it, karen).  turns out that the heir to the throne of indie rock snobbishness on the internet, pitchforkmedia, found out about ryan adams's little tiff with the dynamic duo of music piracy, and just had to write about it.   

pitchfork: feds put the screws to ryan adams fans

stay tuned right here at the culture of me, where i beat the shit out of newsies to get the stories first (or a close second if you want to be a dick about it.)

godspeed!

-that dude jeff

Weekend highlights

Mar 12, 06

FRIDAY NIGHT


my lovely girlfriend karen and i joined james, sarah, jessica, et al. for this show at the "highly overrated shit-town bar" R&R and attempted to "enjoy" the show.  here's some things yay/nay about the evening's events.  first off, R&R posted a doors-open alert for 8.   now, i know that that usually means around 8:45-9ish, but nobody saw the inside of the venue until around 9:45ish.  and then, we had to deal with an overly crowded basement-like aura of the venue while getting pushed around by the nazi-esque hipsters trying to get through to the front.  it was worth $10 that i threw away for going to see the band, but not by much.  i'm usually easier on any act that looks like they're having a lot of fun on stage, but if you were in the crowd, you'd have sided with me on this one.  i'd have taken pics of the band, but you couldn't see shit.  we all ended up disliking how it sounded in there (read: get a new fucking PA system) and afterwards we headed to the university diner in union square for a quick end of the evening bite.

SATURDAY


my lovely girlfriend karen and i took advantage of the bright and shiny first day of the upcoming warm season here in nyc and headed out to soho to do some shopping; karen had previously been awarded some gift certificates by my parents and her family alike for being born...so it was as good a reason as any.  after a few hours at flying a and anthropologie, she came away with a new top and some new shorts that are quite cute if i can comment on such things.  then, we went out to dinner with alicia, josh, eve, qian (chan), morris, peter, po, sara and nick in our neighborhood at scottadito, and after wining, dining, laughing, etc., we headed out to patio, this bar/lounge in our neighborhood that's low-key enough for karen and i to feel comfortable, but trendy-chic enough to cater to the varied crowds in park slope.

SUNDAY

today was MoMa day for my lovely girlfriend karen and i.  we met up with our friend wan (pronounced "win") to go and see the museum's exhibit of edward munch's paintings, sketches, etc. and i must say that i hadn't known of his work that much aside from 3 or 4 works that i'd come across before (read: "the scream", "madonna", "mermaid", "vampire").  it was pretty intense.  dude was really varied with his work, but motifs were EVERYWHERE.  i'd have pictures, but you know how museum's are.  instead, i took a few pictures of some other "works of art" we found in MoMa behind the glass:

"the new school"


"the old school"


"my school"

that's all for this weekend.  what'd you do today?

godspeed!

I blogged this before them?

Mar 10, 06

village voice>music>High School Musical

to see how i beat them to the punch, go here

Godspeed!

Did it have to be because of him?

Mar 09, 06

feds bust fans for pirated ryan adams tunes


my thoughts exactly, ryan, my thoughts exactly.

godspeed!

Love - 15

Mar 07, 06


what a psychopath.  only the french, right?

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