Buffy: I was regrouping. Spike: You were about to be regrouped into separate piles.

'Potential'


Buffista Music III: The Search for Bach  

There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.


sumi - Mar 27, 2006 7:11:28 am PST #2745 of 10003
Art Crawl!!!

Almost everytime I post here it seems I've got some depressing musician death news. I only hope I don't get banned from the thread.

Well, based on this blog entry Sudden's death probably wasn't much of a surprise.


DavidS - Mar 27, 2006 7:40:20 am PST #2746 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

This cracks my shit up. Also, David, as someone who feels completely intimidated by VV crypto-candid patois, I appreciate your mockery.

I grew up on the Voice's music writing (and considers it to be the Newsweekly of Record for the 70s and 80s when it had NY Punk and the birth of Rap to document). This is hard for me to stomach. I am sympathetic to the plight of the music writer. It's tough to find a decent angle on it, and match your prose accordingly. But this stretches Bob Christgau's quirks into something grotesque. It's like he's created a bad house-style.

Crypto-candid! Crypto-candid!


Hayden - Mar 27, 2006 7:42:06 am PST #2747 of 10003
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

I'm going for transparently oblique, myself.

Shame about Nikki Sudden. Shame that both he and Epic Soundtracks died at relatively young ages, too.


DavidS - Mar 27, 2006 7:46:38 am PST #2748 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Well, based on this blog entry Sudden's death probably wasn't much of a surprise.

The Replacements ode "Johnny's Gonna Die" was part of the long-term Johnny Thunders death-watch. Nikki was the same junkie flavor of self-destruction. I'll post "Jangle Town" tonight. He was still an interesting musician.

There's a whole class of musicians who took that Keith Richards idolatry to heart. It always seemed kind of funny to me. Not that Keith isn't worth adulation, but the Keith wannabees (Nikki, Peter Perrett, Miami Steve, Johnny Thunders, Steve Tyler and Joe Perry, all of Guns n' Roses...) just seemed to not get it, because they were trying so hard to be that thing. The point of Keith Richards is that he didn't try hard to be Keith Richards.


joe boucher - Mar 27, 2006 10:24:05 am PST #2749 of 10003
I knew that topless lady had something up her sleeve. - John Prine

From the 33 1/3 site:

NMH chat on WNYC, Monday March 27th

Kim Cooper, author of our Neutral Milk Hotel book, will be discussing the book and the album on WNYC's Soundcheck radio show on Monday afternoon, 2-3pm Eastern Time. 93.9FM if you're local, online if you're not.

I only caught the last couple minutes. Should be archived within the next couple hours.


DavidS - Mar 27, 2006 1:49:04 pm PST #2750 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

In recent articles about Morrissey and Wayne Coyne I was reminded that they are about my age. So I checked in wikipedia for people born in 1961 to find people born the same year. Here's some of my cohort.

Todd Haynes
George Clooney
Lloyd Cole
Henry Rollins
Camryn Mannheim
Don Mattingly
Wayne Gretzkey
Chris Meloni
Tim Roth
Enya
Melissa Etheridge
Boy George
Princess Di
Laurence Fishburne
Heather Locklear
Dave Mustaine
Scott Baio
Dan Marino
Dylan McDermott
Larry Mullen Jr.
The Edge
k.d. lang
Meg Ryan
Ann Coulter (ptooie)
Eddie Murphy
Peter Jackson
Douglas Coupland

They don't feel like they fit together because they peaked at different times.

Side note: Neil Gaiman is one year older and Eddie Izzard is one year younger.


msbelle - Mar 27, 2006 3:02:59 pm PST #2751 of 10003
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

huh, I thought Larry was a good 4-5 years younger than everyone else in the band.


Sue - Mar 27, 2006 3:13:57 pm PST #2752 of 10003
hip deep in pie

He was a year behind them in school msbelle. I thought he was born in 1962, but my sources confirm Wikipedia.


katefate - Mar 27, 2006 4:45:32 pm PST #2753 of 10003
Frail my heart apart and play me a little Shady Grove

Hello, Musicistas! I have been consigned to lurkage through the magic of threadsuck the last week or so. Luckily, auditioning cuts for the Buffistamix is much more low-profile work-wise than merrily posting here. I think I have mine finalized and am working on liner notes.

Corwood, I would like to throw my name into any mix slacker list you may be considering.

Kate, you were a big help in finalizing my mix! "Who Is He And What Is He To You" was a strong finalist for the bassline category, and now I can indulge myself with a cut from a local band. Plus, everyone still gets to hear that sexay song. Also, your comment about mandolins cemented my choice for the non-guitar cut. It was too tough until then - I have so many non-guitar, non piano things to choose from.

Tina, sadly, it is not all-Winfield, all the time. But I've got a few campground recordings on there. Whee!

DX, just when I think it's not possible to love you any more, you go and add Benny Goodman to the mix. As soon as I read the song title, I was hearing the drums in my head. Made me think of my Dad - he would put a stack of Benny and Glenn and Fats on the turntable to do dishes by - I can't hear those drums without seeing him at the sink, snapping his fingers with the soapsuds flying. t mwah! and that's a tag that just won't seem to close


Jesse - Mar 27, 2006 5:00:37 pm PST #2754 of 10003
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

I have to confess I am really close to putting together a track list, if not an actual mix, of cheesy R&B songs in all the mix categories.