SOUNDTRACK: THURSTON MOORE-“Patti Smith Math Scratch” (1995).
I couldn’t find any archives of Patti and Thurston playing together, so the next best thing is this song named after her.
For a band as dissonant as Sonic Youth and a guy who plays as chaotically as Thurston Moore, it’s amazing how he/they are able to recreate their studio noise live. There are dozens of versions of this song available on YouTube and while they don’t sound identical, they all sound reasonably close to each other. And they sound reasonably close to the original studio version.
This is a pretty straightforward song: a simple riff repeated. It doesn’t have too many crazy guitar pyrotechnics although the solo is pretty awesome. Especially live. No idea what the lyrics are about–much like with Patti Smith.
[READ: July 3, 2012] “Patti Smith”
This article just solidified the coolness of my job. I’ve always enjoyed the JSTOR articles that get passed around here. Mostly they’re esoteric studies of unexpected topics. But this one, from BOMB magazine–who even knew JSTOR saved BOMB magazine?–has just boosted JSTOR’s coolness cred by a magnum.
This is an interview with Patti Smith conducted by Thurston Moore. Already that’s pretty awesome. What’s even more awesome is that the interview is done in the car while they are driving back from a show in Massachusetts–it’s just Thurston and Patti talking (although obviously edited).
The opening of the article is an introduction by Thurston, which is interesting in and of itself. He talks about how he got to know Patti’s music (he grabbed her ankle at a concert when he was a teenager) and then how he got to know her . I didn’t know she was from South Jersey or that she was Robert Mapplethorpe’s lover. I also never really put together that she married someone with the same last name as her.
First off, it’s very cool to be reading an interview from fifteen years ago in which both musicians are still alive and producing great work. (more…)





SOUNDTRACK: A CAMP-Colonia (2009).
This is the second album from the side project of The Cardigan’s Nina Persson. This disc was created with her husband Nathan Larson from Shudder to Think. Their first album had a country flair to it, but this one eschews that entirely for a pop feel that is entirely different from The Cardigans’ two main styles: the “cheesy” happy pop of “Lovefool” and the bitter guitar pop of their later discs.
SOUNDTRACK: The Believer June/July 2007 Music Issue Compilation CD: Cue the Bugle Turbulent (2007).
The 2007 Believer disc smashes the mold of folkie songs that they have established with the previous discs in the series. The theme for this disc is that there’s no theme, although the liner notes give this amusing story:
SOUNDTRACK: THE FLAMING LIPS-Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (2003).
How do you follow up the fantastic Soft Bulletin? If you’re The Flaming Lips, you simultaneously pull back and push forward. I often thing of Yoshimi as Bulletin part 2 but that’s really not right or fair. Yoshimi has a more Pink Floyd vibe: it’s quite mellow and folky. But nothing the Lips do can be completely commercial, so you get things in every song that add immensely to the sound, yet prevent it from complete accessibility.