Sunday, December 18, 2005

The Mix Tape Song

In mid November, I made my first mix tape in years. It made me really happy, putting it together and then listening to it shortly thereafter. Although the last time I made a mix tape was either 1999 or 2000, I did a lot of music programming at WGSU (all of the loop show beginning in the Great Summer of 2003, and never really disappearing to this day).

To keep costs down, I taped over an old tape that was labeled “Fried Phish” on one side and “Baked Phish” on the other. I thought this was really clever back when I was 15. It was a mix of various tracks off of Phish’s studio albums, before I got a small collection of live tapes. I kept the labels on the tape anyway.

Recording on a little boombox, it didn’t come out that clear. Maybe after so long the tape can’t be taped over. During the quiet songs, particularly Explosions In The Sky and Low, you can hear “Guelah Papyrus” and “Split Open and Melt.” I tried to negate this effect by including many loud, punk songs. The punk songs are also there because this tape has one purpose and that is to keep me awake at the wheel. I have been listening to a tape of London Calling, by The Clash, and this was meant to compliment it.

Since I was listening at work, many songs talk about work (Millencolin, Russian Futurists, Bouncing Souls). I also wanted to choose songs that I wouldn’t get sick of, so I chose a lot of old favorites (Promise Ring, Pinhead Gunpowder, Jawbreaker, Get Up Kids). I also wanted to change it up – starting with a country song (B.P.B.), going to a shoegazer song (Stars), then 80s pop, then punk – you get the idea.

Here is the track listing:

Bonnie “Prince” Billy “Agnes, Queen of Sorrow” from Greatest Palace Music
Stars “Ageless Beauty” from Set Yourself On Fire
The Replacements “Alex Chilton” from All For Nothing / Nothing For All
Millencolin “Random I Am” from For Monkeys
The Promise Ring “Best Looking Boys” from Boys and Girls
Explosions In The Sky “Memorial” from The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place
Little Wings “Boom!” from Light Green Leaves
Little Wings “Look at what the light did now” (ut oh left the tape rolling too long – who cares this is a good song too)
Pinhead Gunpowder “Junkpile” from Shoot The Moon
The Lucksmiths “Great Lengths” from Warmer Corners
The Russian Futurists “Let’s Get Ready To Crumble” from a free label mix cd
Summer at Shatter Creek “My Neighbor’s Having a Seizure” from an Absolutely Kosher sampler
The Postal Service “Suddenly Everything Has Changed” (Flaming Lips cover) {IMMEDIATELY CUT OFF!!!}

Side B:

The Bouncing Souls “Kate is Great” from an old warped tour sampler
Kalpana “And They Were Dubbed Assassins” from their new ep
The Mountain Goats “Pigs that ran straightaway into the water, Triumph of” from We Shall All Be Healed
Braid “A Dozen Roses” from Frame and Canvas
Belle and Sebastian “Dirty Dream Number Two” from The Boy With The Arab Strap
Casiotone For The Painfully Alone “Number Ten” from Pocket Symphonies for Lonesome Subway Cars
Jawbreaker “Basilica” from Dear You
Low “Laser Beam” from Things We Lost In The Fire

Novi
Split “Me an Andy” from Keep Moving
The Get Up Kids “I’m A Loner Dottie, A Rebel” from Eudora
The Pink Cammies “The Moon” from Game Over, Baby
Bright Eyes “Easy/Lucky/Free” from Digital Ash In A Digital Urn
Pretty Girls Make Graves “Speakers Push The Air” from Good Health
Superchunk "Pink Clouds" from Come Pick Me Up {IMMEDIATELY CUT OFF WITHOUT MERCY!!!}


I’ve had over a month to listen to this. The Bouncing Souls song is consistently great. With the opening line “I used to have a home with a room and a bed, a porch and a driveway and a big garage, but I traded it in…” how could it not be? The Kalpana song slays and I can’t wait for them to give it a proper release. The biggest surprise on this tape is “Alex Chilton.” This song’s energy gets me every time. The Casiotone song is sweet, short, and perfect. Jawbreaker’s guitars come in like flames, especially at the end. The Pink Cammies fucking rock the boat in a big way, to say the least.

The biggest disappointments on this mix are the emo tracks, which were the ones I didn't think I could go far wrong with. The Get Up Kids rather flop on bringing me back to 2001. Off of their Eudora comp, the last two tracks would have been better. Braid, too. I don’t know what possessed me to put one of my favorite songs ever on a mix tape to myself. I would have been better off with a less-played Hey Mercedes track. The Bright Eyes song was my attempt to stay current, yet party like 2002, which is impossible.

The Novi Split track is dead on, though. I like to stay positive with music, but man that new Death Cab blows. Sell it and head over to Redder and buy this (it’s on sale) instead. This is inventive, spontaneous, and great – a project of Death Cab’s friends David J and Ben Barnett (Kind of Like Spitting). It’s a great car listening track, you’ll know when you hear it.

Here is a link to that song: Novi Split - Me an' Andy
Cloak and Dagger also has more on this release: link
Redder Records has it for sale: link

The trick to this is finding tracks that are both familiar and not familiar. Music listening is a paradox in this sense. You have to know what’s going on, but you have to be surprised. When making a tape like this – pick the third best song on the cd, pick your friend’s favorite song on the cd. You have to change it up. That’s what I miss about WGSU, and what I was trying to revive a bit with this tape.

I love the last track, though. “Speakers Push The Air” asks me if I remember what the music meant. With this mix tape, I think I do.

Friday, December 09, 2005

That's when I reach for my Volvo.

So, I finally got my own car. I would have been peeing my pants with excitement had it been like six years ago, but I’m still more excited than I have been in a very long time. I received a prime example of the Volvo 740. It is a sedan, it’s Swedish, and it’s buried in the snow in my yard. I drove it home last week from Albany to my house at night. It drives incredibly smooth. I will post here detailing my ownership experience of the rolling wonder.

There are two things you need to know about my Volvo, so far. First: It has heated front seats. These are handy in this upstate tundra. Second: It has an NRA bumper sticker on the back. It is mostly peeled and worn off, but still visible. Although I am 100% supportive of the constitutional right to bear arms, when I think of the NRA all I can think of is Charlton Heston’s “over my dead body” scene from Bowling for Columbine. - that and The Planet of The Apes. Thus, I have covered up the NRA sticker with a “!!!” sticker, which is more my speed.

Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Rockets and Bluelights (Close at Hand)

Rockets and Bluelights may go down as my favorite band of all time. They have everything I am looking for, mostly because I know so little about them. I have been scouring google.com trying to find more about them – mentions of them in lists, bands they played with, hopefully a concert review – but I have found very little. There are only scattered facts.

First, they take their name from a painting. This is that painting:


The painting’s full title is “Rockets and Blue Lights (Close at Hand) to Warn Steamboats of Shoal Water.” It was done in 1840 by a British painter named Joseph Mallord William Turner. Turner lived from 1775 to 1851, and “Rockets” was done in oil on canvas. Here is a description of the painting I also found:

This dramatic painting is an excellent example of Turner's interest in the sea and its uncontrollable power. On the left of the painting waves crash onto the shore and up against a harbor wall while exploding rockets and blue lights warn passing ships of the dangers they might encounter in these treacherous conditions. On the far right we can just make out the frail-looking mast of a sailboat in trouble, battered by the waves. In the center of the canvas another vessel can be seen, a steamer whose funnel belches smoke that curls up like a tornado into the stormy sky. Turner focuses our attention on the waves and the smoke and the spray, but on the left-hand edge of the painting he has also included two groups of figures -- a line of men struggling to salvage something from the waves and a ragged assortment of onlookers staring anxiously and helplessly at the approaching storm.

The painting is owned by The Clark Art Institute, which is somewhere in Massachusetts – suspiciously close to the band’s hometown, of Albany, New York. This painting is the first interesting thing about Rockets and Bluelights.

I can’t find a lineup for Rockets and Bluelights anywhere, although I am sure their lead singer (?) is named Enoch and another member is Dave. I believe them to be a four piece group. They had a website at www.rocketsandbluelightscloseathand.cjb.net (linked to www.geocities.com/rocketsandbluelightscloseathand/)– which is now defunct. They have only one official release: a 10” red vinyl EP, released in 2003. From online searches I have found they played shows with Rainer Maria, Q And Not U, and others.

I have only come in contact with them twice. I met them at a party once, before I had heard their record. Then, I met them at the Redder Metaphysics for Beginnners release show at the Bug Jar. At the Bug Jar, they showed up really late. Kalpana, the Pink Cammies, We Ragazzi, and the Tight Phantomz had already played, but Rockets pulled up in their dilapidated shortbus, unloaded and played a set on the floor, down with the people.

Luckily, I had some money that day. I bought their 8 song CDR. It was handmade, with music notes stenciled in red on the disc, furnished in a paper stapled sleeve with an airbrushed painting of a canoe on the cover. The liner notes were a scrap of paper photocopied, in punk tradition.

They also sold me a beautiful patch, with the picture of a piano scribbled on to it, although it was carefully screen printed. The band’s name is scratched into the design, with hand being crossed out the first time and then written again.

They then sold me a cassette tape, billed as an “acoustic performance.” The tape came in a small plastic case with a seven pointed star painted on it. Oddly, the tape is a dermatology lecture. It says “Audio Digest Foundation: Practical Dermatology Part II – Internal Medicine Vol. 34 No. 1 C.1987.” The liner notes for this appear to be a scrap of wallpaper. On one side it says “bluelights-tour hotmail” which presumably was their email address (I found it to bounce). The other side is a track listing: estes pic, crimson red, storms at bay, unkabuh (?), music box, wintermission. WRPL Troy 1.25.2004: bow wow, snow, estes pic.

The CDR is fantastic. The first four songs are unique to the CDR, while the last four are their “A Smashed City” 10” as released on Redder. The track listing is: Apples, Henchmen, What They Made You Mean, Now This Year, Midnight Blue (aka A Smashed City), Andee, Forrest Green and Autumn, We Bleed This In The Winter. The tracks fit together so well, going and stoping. They are vary in length and dynamics.

It is emo in the traditional sense. It is emo music circa 1994, sadly almost out of date. And this is another thing about Rockets and Bluelights – there is a sense that the band is obsolete before it began. They don’t play emo as it is known today and will be known in the future (read the wikipedia.com listing on emo music and its tragic endnote that history will be defined by the victors, the new Dashboard Confessionals and new My Chemical Romances, not remembered for Still Life or Fugazi).

But the band wanted it to be like this. They refused to let Adam from Redder run ads for their record. Despite the records’ beautiful cover and liner notes, they were unsatisfied with it. They wanted their note design to be screen printed on the inner dust sleeve. They preceded to hand-screen their first copies given by Adam. Because of this disagreement, and perhaps other factors, they wrote off the possibility of future Rockets releases on Redder, speaking of releasing a full length elsewhere. Of course, their 10” was Redder’s and Rockets’ first. Redder has gone on to release Kalpana, Summer at Shatter Creek, and The City on Film, while Rockets’ LP never materialized.

However, it worked. Honestly, I feel like I have two separate music collections now. One collection sits in a case: Sunny Day Real Estate, Jawbreaker, Built To Spill. Those albums are polished and commercial. Their covers are glossy. My second collection is my CDR, my 10”, my dermatology tape, and my scrap of cloth turned art piece. This is my real music collection. While Rockets deliberately wanted it to be like this, they wanted to be apart and special. I fell for it completely.

I posted once, a few months ago, to an Albany area punk message board. I asked how I could get in touch with Rockets. The most illuminating response, although I can’t remember it verbatim, directed me to attach my written message to a pigeon, wait a few days, and receive the response in the form of graffiti on the back wall of a Price Chopper in northern Albany. It wasn’t what I was expecting, but it was perfect.

But of course, with all this talk of the members of the band, how is the music? In a word: gorgeous.

Their 10”, which I just realized recently is called “A Smashed City With Flames And Music In The Air,” stands as great listening. And the vocals, I forgot to mention the vocals. They are lost in the music, but meant to play at high volume. They are crooned and screamed in a manner that seems easy, but on closer investigation exists only in a small margin of perfect. Actually, their use of vocals is rather similar to the way their labelmates, Kalpana, use vocals.

So, hear for yourself. Here is one song – track 5 on the CDR and track 1 on the 10”:

Rockets_and_Bluelights - "A_Smashed_Piano"

I would really love more information about Rockets and Bluelights. The former WGSU leader, Mike DiCaprio, a high school friend of the group who introduced them to Adam of Redder Records, once spoke of an acoustic side project of the band. I would love to hear that. I would also like some more show reviews, or an email address for the band members.

If there is no more Rockets and Bluelights, I will probably play this over and over again, then reach for their sonic peers: Braid, Boy’s Life, The Pine, The Promise Ring, Rainer Maria. The band will likely be forgotten. There will be no Propeller-esque registry of who has which chapter of the dermatology tape. Unsold boxes of Rockets 10”s will likely be crossed with boards to make a table to organize Redder releases, somewhere in Adam’s future apartment.

The latest word on Rockets is that they are on hiatus, but if the members of the bands are all present at an Albany-area show they can be coaxed into taking up instruments and playing a few of their songs. Perhaps if they reform they can release another 10” of their first 4 songs, to complete their composition. Additionally, if I find out more about them, I will update this article. I was hoping to write a less personal account of the band, but I figured I would never complete it. (Wait for my print zine!)




Buy their 10” and/or the Metaphysics for Beginners comp, which includes “Forrest Green and Autumn” at: www.redderrecords.com


Here are pictures of them from the Bug Jar show of May 2004:



Sunday, November 27, 2005

Kind of Like Spitting - “A Song For Annie’s Harmonica”

Up to hearing this song, I had two other favorite Kind of Like Spitting songs. One was “March 25, 1998,” a song that’s lyrics I can still not untangle. Sure, I can see them. I recognize the words, but what they’re saying is yet beyond me. The second was “You Got Served,” featured on Redder’s Metaphysics for Beginners compilation. That one built on the same style. The most misunderstood thing about “emo” music is that it is not topical. It is not about a boy or about a girl, it is about a feeling. The songs are not ballads, but movements. Things are not spelled out, and there are no narratives. This song isn’t spelled out, and it has me listening again and again. Here is a demo version of it. I haven’t heard the record yet, but it has just been released on Hush.

Slid right through the turn style and off the loft we went, We were taken in by strangers called out by coil and kin. Oh concentrate on as far back as you can go, When we would put a bullet in it’s belfry to prove it’s all a hoax, So what we don’t impress the fireworks with the strumming of our smiles But you can look up how high heaven is and try to count the miles, Keeps us busy for a while. Said the cradle to the kick drum that life begins again, Smoke butts like spent bullets, street sweepers home to sleep again And when he put his arms around me his hoody smelt like gasoline, So here’s to all lost fragrances… To a future with some balance, To a future without judgment, To a future with my family, To a future without anger To a fate of more than damaged fits To a future worth remembering.

Kind of Like Spitting - "A Song For Annie's Harmonica" (demo)

ps - check out this site www.cloakanddaggermedia.com - it's great and i met one of the kids who runs it once and he was really nice.

Sunday, November 20, 2005

If you haven’t yet experienced love at first sight, now is your chance.

Has anything ever changed your life just from a moment’s glance? I mean, like, the entire course of it? If not, how come? Can a design change everything? How different can you get? Are we asking the right questions? How far can we take this? Does thinking big really entail thinking small? Does everything have to look the same? How come nowadays they just copy each other? In a utopia, how would we roll? Take the virtual tour. If something doesn’t turn over, deep inside your self, perhaps you are one of these cars already!

Jawbreaker – “Indictment” (live)

This song is immediately set apart from the mass of other songs by this band, not to mention the world, by one thing; it is self-conscious. Witness the first line “I just wrote the dumbest song.” I immediately presume that THIS is the song just authored.

I wanted to showcase the live performance of this song from the May 18, 1996 show that begins with “So, see, you might want to hear a story, but instead we’re just going to rock.” Instead, this version from March 10, 1994 begins with members of the crowd yelling all sorts of obscenities, threats, and requests. Blake steps in to calm them, with “Hey – what’s the matter – take it easy.”

The thought from this song is that the band is an accessory to the songs and the songs are all you have in the end. For a band synonymous with personal, journal-entry-turned-lyric songs, this is the antithesis of that.

Of course, there’s more than that happening. The band is writing a song about signing to a major label, which the band then did. (It was originally titled “Scathing Indictment of the Pop Industry.”) Jawbreaker recognizes that they are separated, yet inseparable from their songs. The 1994 performance compliments the former position, while the 1996 performance compliments the latter. Or maybe it’s the other way around. In any event it will have me coming back for more interpretation, and thus more enjoyable listening!

Jawbreaker - (the rest of this show)

Indictment
Studio version appears on the LP "24 Hour Revenge Therapy"

I just wrote the dumbest song.
It's gonna be a sing along.
All our friends will clap and sing.
Our enemies will laugh and be pointing.

It won't bother me,
what the thoughtless are thinking.
I am more concerned
with what we're drinking.
They'll laugh about it at the warehouse,
saying I'm so lame.
It wrote itself,
you can keep the blame.

It'll be a happy song,
not unlike some other ones.
While everyone's depressed and broke,
I get high off your sick jokes. (Ha, ha, ha.)

They're colossal.
They're tousling
all the worried hair.
Stay up there.
So crazy it just might work.
Then we'll quit our jobs.
We could be
the next group that you rob.

There are times for being dumb.
This must be one of them.
I'd like to know what's so wrong,
with a stupid happy song?

It says many things
in its nothingness.
It gives me space to think, I guess.
To think less. And less. And less. And less.
Moving units and tracking charts.
Will they ever learn?
It isn't who you know,
it's who you burn.

It means nothing. Selling kids to other kids.
If you think we changed our tune, I hope we did.

Enchante - "When You Sleep"

I bought the album “Loveless” by My Bloody Valentine many years ago, in the summer of 2000 on a trip to Canada. I listened to it, and it sounded like nothing else I had in my measly CD collection, but then it somehow disappeared. I don’t know where it is now. But, that doesn’t matter now. We have this recording. Brad and Russell from the now legendary Geneseo, NY band The Pink Cammies recorded a cover version of the track “When You Sleep” from that album. It sounds nothing like the original. It’s probably the opposite of the original. It is a perfect companion piece to “Game Over, Baby,” the Pink Cammies’ sole release (if you don’t count the tee shirt). Brad sings first, and then Russell comes in. I can’t remember if I participated in the clap along, but I was around when they recorded this, as they recorded it in Brad’s room and he and I were housemates. Add this to your playlists and let it under your skin.

Enchante - "When You Sleep" (My Bloody Valentine cover)

start yr engines!

I have decided to start a blog to document three types of things: politics, music, and wheeels. I want to keep things more topical and less personal. There will probably be mostly music, but I want to talk about my projects too. The projects will be motorscooters, but also some cars. I will include commentary. I would also like to comment on political things, but since so many better people already comment on that, those posts will probably be fewer.

Thursday, August 04, 2005

the day you called me pretty



this was the day we never went home - castawaves