SOUNDTRACK: MOGWAI-5 Track Tour Single (2001).
I usually am able to track provenance of my discs pretty well, but this one I am only largely certain came from my friend Lar (sorry Lar, the memory is not what it used to be). But where else would I have gotten a CD from a Mogwai show if I’ve never seen them live?
This promotional bauble is a delightful collection of 5 songs (duh). The first three are studio recordings that were pretty much unavailable elsewhere (I read some sit that explained where you could’ve gotten them beforehand, but let’s just say unavailable). And the live tracks were also unreleased.
The three studio tracks, “Close Encounters,” “Drum Machine” and “D to E” are very pretty, rather delicate instrumentals. I would say that they are uncharacteristic of Mogwai, except that Rock Action was a pretty mellow album. Nevertheless, even for Mogwai these are especially mellow and pretty.
The final two tracks are live: “You Don’t Know Jesus” is from Rock Action, and this live version is a bit more dramatic than the album release. The final track is the amazing “New Paths to Helicon (Part II),” a song which never suffers from a lack of drama.
This is a pretty great tour artifact.
[READ: May 30, 2011] “Trade”
I was a little skeptical of this Simon Rich piece because I find that sports metaphors don’t always pan out, especially for a (somewhat) longish comedy piece. But Rich manages to make the whole thing not only funny but also fit within the confines of the metaphor.
For this is the story of a breakup told as if it were a baseball trade.
Josh is traded by his girlfriend Kate. He is devastated; he thought he was doing very well on her team. But when he speaks with his brother Craig (who offers condolences and a trade story of his own), he realizes that his relationship numbers were not up to stuff. But Josh is really devastated when he finds out who he was traded for (when he meets the man to exchange Kate’s apartment keys).
I feared that the end of the story would sort of fizzle out (why am I so afraid for Simon Rich’s stories–probably because I like him so much) but no, he pulls out a wonderful twist about contracts that had me laughing out loud.
Keep up the good work Simon; I’ll try not to worry so much.

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