SOUNDTRACK: BLACK ANGELS-Evil Things (2013).
This song has a 70s era metal sound (with a heavy early Black Sabbath feel). It opens with a big riff and surprisingly quiet vocals (the vocals are not really sung loudly, they’re almost whispered, and they are very clean–it’s a nice contrast to the big buzzy guitars). But for al the buzzy guitars (and the wonderfully dated to 1967 keyboard sound), there are passages that are quiet and almost gentle. Indeed, there’s a lot going on in this song. It’s a nice marriage of heavy metal and psychedelia.
I love the way the end seems like it’s uncontained–like they couldn’t control the feedback. It’s interesting that Bob and Robin on NPR relate this more to psychedelic bands of the late 60s and yet I hear more Black Sabbath–of course, Sabbath was a lot more psychedelia than we let on.
I’d like to hear more from these guys
[READ: May 16, 2013] “Cats Robo-Cradle”
The five brief pieces in this week’s New Yorker are labeled as “Imagined Inventions.” And in each one, the author is tasked with inventing something.
Since Atwood wrote Cat’s Cradle, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this piece—the title of which was just kind of odd. As with many magazine titles, I feel like perhaps she didn’t come up with the title because that’s not what she calls her invention–someone just tried to tie it into her famous novel.
Anyhow, she begins her piece by talking about the fascinating-sounding Museum of Failed Products in Ann Arbor, Michigan. She says that there are so many interesting things there, some of which she feels must be better than her own invention, and must be better than Pop-Tarts. She says she predicted the failure of Pop-Tarts because when her family first tried it, the jam exploded all over the toaster. So she knows from good and bad ideas.
Her idea has to do with the death of so many birds and rodents from feral cats. Recall that birds are predators of insects so their dwindling number is affecting forests and garden. When cats kill the birds (and the rodents that larger birds eat), they are permanently impacting the climate. Her idea is for a safe (to the cats) trap which she calls the Robo-Coyote.
The Robo-Coyote is machine that zips around the forests and parks emitting a mating hormone to attract all manner of feral cats. Once the cat had been lured into the trap it is full of food and playthings to make the cat happy–she knows that if any harm comes to the cat people will boycott her very quickly. Then it races back to a central area where the cats could frolic o their heart’s content. She even imagines a tie in with cat food companies who will be seen to be doing a good deed by feeding these cats for free.
My favorite part of this is the idea of seeing one of these things zipping along the park (and her image of a child pointing at it in wonder).

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