SOUNDTRACK: ANTHRAX-The Greater of Two Evils (2004).
I loved Anthrax when they first burst onto the metal scene back in 1983. They were fast and heavy and totally great. As they matured, they got delightfully silly, releasing a couple of novelty hits (with Public Enemy!) and really showing off their juvenile side. (Big baggy shorts and crazy haircuts). Then some time around 1993 I stopped listening.
Whether it was because my metal cred was running out or whether I just didn’t like what they were doing, I’d given up on the mosh kings. Around that time, they switched singers from Joey Belladonna to Jon Bush and the difference is striking. Belladonna had a strong, high pitched, soaring voice that rose above the trash. While Bush has a deeper, tougher voice, and he sort of forces his way on top of the beat.
I haven’t given the Bush-era Anthrax much time, but I recently learned that they (like Kiss) re-recorded songs from their first few discs with Bush now on vocals. Okay, so unlike the Kiss version, these songs sound totally new. A new singer brings a totally new sonic dimension to the disc. But they have also re-recorded the music, which in most cases sounds better: recorded on better equipment, less sludgy. But it also sounds different: different drumbeats or (as is often the case, furious double bass drumming), and the solos mixed into separate speakers and all kinds of other studio tricks.
And yet overall, I’m not that excited by the set. I just don’t like Bush over Belladonna for these songs. Bush’s voice is tough. And their new songs are almost brutally heavy. Some of these older tracks work with Bush’s voice. However, there are a few which relied more on soaring sounds (like “Indians”) or demanded a little more subtlety (like the outstanding “N.F.L” which Bush sounds a little hamstrung by.
Anthrax is definitely a different band, but they still play loud and furious.
[READ: March 26, 2010] Heck
I found this book because someone put it in the wrong place in the library. I was looking for Easy Reader for my son, and someone had put this book at the front of that section. I went to move it, but it looked interesting enough that I decided to read it. Serendipity!
The premise of the book is that Heck is where you go when you die if you’re under 18. They’re not quite sure where you’re going to wind up, so you have to go through Heck, which is basically school, until they can sort out which layer of Hell you’re going to wind up in. Needless to say Heck is full of bad kids (and bad demons).
Our two bad kids are Milton and Marlo Fauster. Marlo is a troublemaker from way back. She is a petty thief and is always up to no good. Milton is a good kid. He never did anything bad in his life, and he always gets abuse from Marlo. As the book opens, Milton and Marlo are sprinting down the corridor of a mall where Marlo has just stolen something. She is planning on wreaking havoc with Grizzly Mall’s centerpiece: The State’s Second-Largest Bear-Themed Marshmallow Statue (that cracked me up).
The kids run to the center of the mall where they are cornered by security. Marlo is trying to think of an escape plan when Milton notices his classmate Damian. Damian torments Milton every chance he can get. And now, he is standing at the top of the marshmallow bear with matches. Milton also notices a fuse sticking out of the bear.
One explosion later, the kids find themselves no longer attached to their bodies, as they are rapidly sliding down to Heck. Marlo deserves to be there, she’s a bad egg. But what about Milton? It turns out that Marlo had slipped an item into Milton’s backpack, and therefore he technically stole something as well. A technicality but true nonetheless.
The rest of the book shows the kids in their gender segregated classes. The boys learn physical education from Blackbeard the pirate and ethics from Richard Nixon (the Nixon bits were hilarious, and yet I can’t imagine many kids getting the jokes). The girls, meanwhile, learn home ec from Lizzy Borden (do kids know who that is) and singing from an angel who is on a teacher exchange program. (more…)

SOUNDTRACK: TORI AMOS-“Juarez” (from To Venus and Back) (1999).
This song was the first that I had heard of what was happening in Juarez, Mexico. In AP Magazine (Oct 99) Tori Amos said:
SOUNDTRACK: BLUE ÖYSTER CULT-Fire of Unknown Origin (1981).
This was the first BOC album that I bought. The video for “Burnin’ for You” was all over MTV (although I don’t remember it at all, now). And I was an instant convert to BOC. I listened to this disc constantly.
SOUNDTRACK: BARENAKED LADIES-Snacktime (2008).
The Barenaked Ladies have always been like naughty kids. So, it seems almost too obvious for them to make a kids’ album. But almost as if they want to continue being naughty, this kids album is quite smart, not just a collection of cute kids songs.
SOUNDTRACK: BLUE ÖYSTER CULT-Agents of Fortune (1976).
After the release of their first official live album On Your Feet or On Your Knees, it’s unsurprising that the band would put a concert photo on the back cover of this disc (On Your Feet…was their first Top 40 disc).
SOUNDTRACK: BLUE ÖYSTER CULT-Secret Treaties (1974).
With Secret Treaties, BOC moved into the stratosphere. The first three tracks are outstanding. “Career of Evil,” again cowritten by Patti Smith, sets the tone: heavier, louder, more guitars and yet, no less of Allen Lanier’s piano. “Dominance and Submission” is an absolutely classic heavy metal song (and live, it gets absurdly long).
SOUNDTRACK: BLUE ÖYSTER CULT-Tyranny and Mvtation (1973).
The album cover is similar to the first disc (a simple black and white), but this one adds a touch of red. Similarly, the music adds a touch of something that makes this disc leap beyond the foundation of their first.
SOUNDTRACK: lions.chase.tigers: To Their Blood EP (2009).
I learned about lions.chase.tigers from the Dromedary compilation
SOUNDTRACK: CUPPA JOE-Busy Work EP (1993).
This EP was one of the first releases on the Dromedary label. It contains 3 songs. Whenever I think of cuppa joe, I think of them being a somewhat lightweight band; charming and fun, but lightweight.
And I think most of this is due to the lead singer’s voice. It’s quite delicate and veers towards, but never quite reaches whiny territory. Comparisons to They Might Be Giants are not unfounded.
[READ: February 18, 2010] “Vagabonds”