SOUNDTRACK: FRIGHTENED RABBIT-Midnight Organ Fight (2008).
My friend Jarrett introduced me to this band. He rather casually called it his favorite album of the year, so I figured it was worth checking out.
Frightened Rabbit are a group from Scotland, and they play a sort of disaffected folk. Although that’s not a wholly accurate description because they do kick in the drums and louder guitars. So, yeah, they don’t sound anything like Belle and Sebastian. This is complemented by the lyrics which are somewhat bitter or aching.
And speaking of lyrics, the first song that I wanted to sing along with most was “Keep Yourself Warm” and then I realized that the chorus is “It takes more than fucking someone to keep yourself warm.” There’s also a very pointed use of the mother of all C words, in another song, too. And I’ve had that song in my head for about three days now. But I absolutely cannot sing the song at work or at home, or, well, anywhere except in the car when I ‘m by myself.
This all leads me to wonder, Do bands save their best songs to fill with curses or am I just 8 years old and I listen to the song with curses the most?
The one thing that has troubled me about the record is that at times the singer can sound like the guy from the Counting Crows. And the Counting Crows are probably the band I hate the most in the universe. But I just focus on the Scottish burr which lessens the Durwitz effect, and then I can enjoy the disc again.
[READ: Summer 2008] The McSweeney’s Joke Book of Book Jokes
This is a collection of humorous vignettes that are, if not about books exactly, certainly literary in nature. If you like your humor to be bookish, then this is a great, funny collection. It starts with the cover itself, as it is printed backwards and upside down w(the cover above is actually on the back).
Many of these pieces are very short (some are a page, even some more are just a few sentences.) Plus, there are so many pieces that I’m not willing to write all that much, just a one-line summary (that I will try to make funny without giving away the punchline).
I thought about indicating in some way which ones I liked best or some kind of rating system, but that just seems extensive and cruel.
Most of these pieces came from McSweeny’s online, and I’m sure many of the pieces are still available there, but I’m not going to do all the work for you. And it’s funny how many jokes there are about: James Joyce, Kafka, Homer and children’s books!
Oh, and authors: I started to include all of your names in my Categories, and then it just got too overwhelming. But if you want to be added, just drop me a note!
Click here for the egress: (more…)

SOUNDTRACK: HÜSKER DÜ-Zen Arcade (1984).
When I was younger and more amused by things like this, it amused me that Hüsker Dü’s first three records were a live album an EP and a double album. They just couldn’t put out a regular old LP?
After the insane hardcore mess of Land Speed Record, this EP is a bit of a change. It’s still pretty hardcore, but now you can tell that the noisiness of the guitar is deliberate. Bob Mould is playing around with multiple layers of feedback and distortion to create a wall of noise that sometimes hides, sometime accentuates the overall sound.
SOUNDTRACK–THE REPLACEMENTS–All Shook Down (1990).
And here we come to the end of the recorded history of the Replacements. 7 albums (and an EP). 4 and a half hours of recorded music. And a steady maturation from drunken punks to elder statesmen. Or really statesman (Paul Westerberg at the ripe old age of 31!). All of the reviews state that this was originally designed as a Westerberg solo album, and that the band barely played together on it at all. And it shows.
SOUNDTRACK: THE REPLACEMENTS-Hootenanny (1983).
This is the second full length from The Replacements. For a band that just released two punk albums (one’s an EP), naming your new one Hootenanny is pretty ballsy. As is the fact that the first track sounds like, well, a hootenanny (even if it is making fun of hootenannies.)
Colin Meloy is the lead singer and songwriter for the Decemberists. This is a recording of Meloy’s solo acoustic tour from 2006. The recording is from several venues on the tour, although it is mixed as if it were one concert.
This album seems to get overshadowed by the anti-George Bush track “Bu$hleaguer.” Evidently many people were turned off by this track, and that may have had an impact on sales. Of course, I’m sure many other people were introduced to the band by this song, too. Regardless, the rest of the album shouldn’t be judged by this track, as it is rather unusual.
SOUNDTRACK: PEARL JAM-Binaural (2000).
Binaural bursts forth with the rampaging “Breakerfall” and “God’s Dice.” The latter pauses only briefly for a chorus break. They are followed by “Evacuation,” a song that sounds a bit off kilter in this studio version but which blasts off on the live version. It’s got a great shouty chorus too.
SOUNDTRACK: PEARL JAM-No Code (1996).
I’d always sort of liked this disc because of its principles–I believed that the title came about because there is no barcode on the disc. Pearl Jam is always tilting at some windmill or another, and I can support that.
SOUNDTRACK: PEARL JAM-Vitalogy (1994).
I always think of this as the “weird” Pearl Jam disc. Mostly that’s because the contents are certainly weird (in that it’s made up like an old book, including excerpts from the book in the liner notes). But also because it has some of Pearl Jam’s strangest songs on it, especially “Hey Foxymophandlemama, That’s Me,” easily one of the weirdest songs in their canon, and possibly the weirdest song on a major label. It’s 7 minutes of samples and scratchy guitars. And it’s more than a little creepy. The disc also contains “Bugs” an accordion-based rant about, well, bugs. and “Aye Davanita” a sort of Eastern chanting type piece.