SOUNDTRACK: QUASI-“Beautiful Things” from Score! 20 Years of Merge Records: The Covers (2009).
I’ve had this CD for a pretty long time just waiting for me to devote some time to listening to it. The collection is a compilation of non-Merge label bands covers songs by Merge bands.
Quasi was a great band (I guess they are still together, so they are a great band). I have their records from around the turn of the century (I love writing that!). Sam Coombs and the wonderful Janet Weiss comprise the band (there’s a bassist, Joanna Bolme, added in 2007). And they sing wonderful, political alt-pop.
This is a cover of a song by the New Zealand band The 3Ds. I don’t know the original (although I do know (and like) a few songs by them–mostly from the Topless Women Talk about Their Lives soundtrack. This version has heavy keyboard prominence, but he sweet verses (sung largely by Janet with Tom doing backing vocals) are interspersed with some cool buzzy guitar solos.
I just found the original online, and the cover is pretty accurate–although the Quasi version is a bit more dynamic. Nevertheless, it makes me want to listen to The 3Ds a bit more.
[READ: March 15, 2012] “A Cup of Hot Chocolate, S’good for What Ails Ya”
Have you ever wanted to read about the history of hot chocolate? No, of course not. No one has. And yet, when I started flipping through this article, Theobald introduced plenty of ideas that I found not only interesting but compelling.
Theobald explains how the Aztecs called this (at the time) very hearty, spicy and bitter) drink cacahuatl. The Aztecs got the drink from the Mayans, who got it from the Olmecs. The first Europeans to try this drink loathed it (one even called it a drink for pigs).
It was the conquistadors who mixed cacahuatl with sugar to make what we now know as chocolate. Chocolate was a luxury back then–time consuming and difficult to make.
The Spaniards found the drink very hearty–hearty enough to be considered a meal. This put Catholics in a tizzy about the state of the item. They feared that if it was food it could not be consumed on fast days–it was ultimately deemed a drink. The drink made its way through Europe and into England. The first known English recipe called for sugar, long red pepper, cloves, aniseed, almonds, nuts, orange flower water and cacao. (more…)

SOUNDTRACK: TOPLESS WOMEN TALK ABOUT THEIR LIVES soundtrack (2006).
I learned about this soundtrack from a very cool article in The Believer (the beginning of which is online