SOUNDTRACK: SERENA MANEESH-“Sapphire Eyes” (2005).
I used to keep a list of songs and albums that I would try to find. On this list was a single or a B-Side by Serena Maneesh. I’ve lost the list, but someone just donated their debut album to our library. So I’m excited to check it out. In the meantime, I found the video for this track so I’ll start there.
For years people waited for the follow up to My Bloody Valentine’s Loveless. And if David Shields ever does release a disc under that name again, it will be more scrutinized than Chinese Democracy (and possibly less inspired).
So, why not let someone else take up the reigns of shoegazing music some fifteen years later.
This track displays many traits that made MBV so great. It opens with a slightly distorted female vocalist. She starts singing before a throbbing bass and noisy, distorted (seemingly backwards) guitars bring in a wall of noise. But that wall only lasts for a short time before it breaks away and the song builds again, slowly, with more and more parts (the video shows a violin although I can’t hear it).
And then about half way through the song it does what MBV always made me do, pick up my head and go, yes, this is great. A mildly distorted amazingly catchy bridge peeks out through the noise and grabs on to you. Then more noise and a little backwards vocals and its over.
Other reviews of the album suggest that this isn’t the only kind of music they play, that they are also heavier and darker; I’m looking forward to the rest of the disc. First impressions (five years late) are very good here. Check it out here.
[READ: June 25, 2010] A Reader’s Guide
Despite my fondness for Infinite Jest, I had not read any of the supplementary books about it. I’d heard of them, of course, but I didn’t feel compelled to get any of them. Then I saw that this one was very cheap. And I decided to get Elegant Complexity while I was at it (a few cents to the Fantods). Complexity is a big honking book, and I don’t have time for it right now, but this reader’s guide is very short and a very quick read.
I had an idea of what to expect from the book, but I didn’t really know who the intended audience was. So, I was very surprised to see the way it was set up. The first chapter is a biographical account of DFW including his place in the new writers anti-ironic camp. It was a good summary but nothing new, and I worried about what I had just bought. (more…)





SOUNDTRACK: THE GUTHRIES-“Coax Me” (2009).
I don’t know
SOUNDTRACK: THE WARPED 45’s-“It Takes a Toll” (2010)
The Warped 45’s were being interviewed when I turned on
SOUNDTRACK: THE BEATLES-A Hard Day’s Night (1964).
Despite my CD player trying to eat this disc, I still managed to listen to the whole thing.
SOUNDTRACK: FUGAZI-13 Songs (1990).
I was so blown away by that first Fugazi disc that I immediately ran out and got this collection of their first two EPs.
SOUNDTRACK: New Moon Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (2010).
Back in the 90s, it seemed like every week there was a new soundtrack featuring an unreleased song from some great alt rock band. This meant huge sales for soundtracks, even if for the most part they weren’t solid start to finish. In fact, mostly you got three great new songs, three pieces of rubbish, one great song by a band you’d never heard before and two or three okay tracks.
SOUNDTRACK: FUGAZI-Repeater + 3 Songs (1990).
This was Fugazi’s debut album and my first exposure to them. They’d put out some singles before this but I missed them. Listening to it now, it sounds great, but not revolutionary. And yet, I remember back then, this was a pretty mind-blowing album. It’s full of heavy chunky guitars and yet it is underscored by a punk vibe (that comes from the source: Minor Threat).