SOUNDTRACK: SUPERCHUNK-1,000 Pounds (2000).
This EP has four tracks: an acoustic version of the title song and, for the first time that I’m aware of, a cover track.
“1,000 pounds” is another great Superchunk single. It’s boppy and catchy and there’s more and more instrumentation thrown into the mix–acoustic guitars, more strings, a crazy sounding guitar solo with effects I don’t recognize. It’s also another song where the title is sort of thrown into the chorus without making it sound like the focus of the chorus–another fun Superchunk trick.
The acoustic version subverts the original somewhat with a strange swing vibe. And speaking of vibes, there are actual vibes in the song. It almost sounds like a different song entirely.
The second song, “White Noise” is a no longer novel twist to a Superchunk song (they’ve been throwing in so many twist to their sound that it’s impossible to pin them down to anything). There’s a cool guitar and bass line that sound, somehow, unlike anything else they’ve done. The soloing is also pervasive, running throughout the verses. It’s a very cool song.
The big surprise comes in their cover of David Bowie’s “Scary Monsters.” Their version is noisy and feedback-filled with crazy guitar solos throughout some of the choruses. It’s full of reckless abandon and is one of their craziest track in some time. And really it sounds almost nothing like the original.
It’s a great EP and worth tracking down.
[READ: October 10, 2010] “The Volunteers”
Chang-rae Lee is the next writer in the New Yorker’s 1999 20 Under 40 collection.
This story is set during World War II. However, unlike most WWII stories that I have read, this one is told from the point of view of Japanese soldiers (specifically, it is narrated by a Korean-born, Japanese-raised medic).
The narrator, Lieutenant Kurohata, is friendly with an inferior soldier, Corporal Endo. He and Endo are from the same town so they have a friendship which, when they are alone, supersedes their ranking differences (although Kurohata is a little uncomfortable about that). Endo, like many soldiers, is somewhat obsessed with a series of photos of naked women. He is constantly trading for new ones and then showing them (surreptitiously) to Kurohata. Kurohata is not terribly impressed with the behavior–he seems more mature in general–although he also implies that he is not very sexual–and he finds the whole proceedings somewhat beneath him.
Morale is down because the Americans have been gaining and a new attack is imminent. And so as a nod to the hopelessness of the situation, the soldiers are given five volunteers: young women (virgins) whose sole role is to have sex with the men (officers first, of course). As the story progresses the details are more and more horrible as these five women are objectified and desired by the entire company of men.
Fortunately for us, the story ends shortly after the women arrive so we don’t get to see too much degradation (although what we do see is quite enough thank you). And it’s hard to know if this is an indictment of the military in general or the Japanese military in particular. Unfortunately, the culminating plot revolves around Endo and the women. It is a surprising and disturbing story, remarkably well told.
If even a portion of the story is based on truth, then there are a lot of people who should have a lot to answer for.
A very powerful story.

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