SOUNDTRACK: THE AVETT BROTHERS-“Live and Die” (Field Recordings, August 22, 2012).
This Field Recording [The Avett Brothers: Hot Tea And Honey] takes place at the XPoNential Music Festival (now XPN Fest–the only Fest I’ve been to (although not in that year).
At the time (2012), I didn’t know the Avett Brothers, but since then I have come to really like them a lot and have seen them live. This song in particular is simply terrific.
Seth and Scott Avett spend a good chunk of their lives on one tour bus or another, so asking them to perform in one isn’t all that different from asking them to perform in one of their own living rooms. They may be far away from their native North Carolina but the setting is cozy enough for Seth Avett to brew tea before performing.
I think that Seth Avett’s voice is just wonderful, especially on this song. In one of those weird eye/ear moments, I never imagined that the guy with the long hair and mustache could produce this voice–which sounds fantastic in this recording on their tour bus.
The Avett Brothers will soon spend a lot more time on that bus: The band’s new album, The Carpenter, comes out Sept. 11. Naturally, when asked to play a song from the record, the Avetts picked its first single, “Live and Die” — a sweetly hooky jam which lends itself perfectly to the pair’s acoustic-guitar-and-banjo interplay.
Scott plays a lovely lead banjo and Seth’s guitar complements it perfectly. This version is just as pretty as the recorded version with the extra treat of Seth’s tired voice cracking here and there.
[READ: January 25, 2017] “An Honest Film Review”
This should complete all of the already-published Jesse Eisenberg pieces. He does this type of humorous piece very well. Taking something fairly simple and turning it into something else entirely.
This week he’s reviewing Paintings of Cole. His first complaint is that the screening was all the way uptown. Also, the premise is that a young man brings down the Italian mob by using paintings to send secret codes. He complains that in grad school he wrote a story with that exact same idea. He failed the class but Kern, the director, is getting Oscar buzz?
There is a huge plot point that is very confusing. And it’s either Kern’s fault or its his own because he went to pee half way through the movie.
Then the reviewer goes in a slightly different direction–the studio girl smiled at him and while he was trying to decide if he could sleep with her and avoid a conflict of interest he missed her name.
He was sitting next to a reviewer from the Times (pretentious jerk) and you know he’ll love it because they love everything. Well, except him when he applied to work there.
After criticizing the movie in great detail her says: Nevertheless, Paintings of Cole is easily the best movie of the year “I’m saying this only in the hope that the studio might print my name after a blurb on the movie poster.”
Pretty honest.

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