SOUNDTRACK: PETER BJORN AND JOHN-Live at KEXP May 10, 2011 (2011).
Peter Bjorn and John play KEXP every couple of years. This set is promoting their most recent album Gimme Some. I haven’t heard much of Gimme Some. I found the last album to be kind of dark, but this one seems to have upped the poppy quotient a bit. I was surprised when they opened the set with “Second Chance” which is the theme from 2 Broke Girls (and is the best thing about the show, I hope they get a ton of cash from that!). If you ‘ve seen the show, you may be surprised that there are lyrics, but there are, and it works as a full length song, too.
“Dig a Little Deeper” has a kind of reggae feel and an amusingly long drum opening because “Peter dropped his guitar”. It’s a poppy catchy singalong with lots. “May Seem Macabre” is a funny title for a song that is as poppy and danceable as this one. “Eyes” continues that upbeat poppy flavor. This is a very fun set and I’m going to have to check out the album as well. Peter Bjorn and John have proven to be a consistently great band where every album sounds different. You can listen to this show here.
[READ: December 5, 2012] “Nighthawk”
Tony Earley’s essay in the food issue differs from the others because it is not about a specific food, but about cooking. Or, lack of cooking. It’s a pretty funny essay about a boy of a certain age and time who was, if not spoiled exactly, simply waited on–by his mother and his grandmother.
His mother would make on demand fried bologna and onion sandwiches (wow, that sounds gross but I’ll bet it’s pretty good), and his grandmother would have waiting for him anything he desired when they visited. Even when he went to college, he lived close by so he just went home for meals.
It wasn’t until he moved to Tuscaloosa that he realized he had no idea what to do in the kitchen (the description of the muffin tin and his inability to even conceive of its use is very funny). And then, like other students, he subsisted on frozen meals and whatever else he could whip together with his meager skills. His point though, is that eating alone is okay, but it really takes a toll on the taste of food–no matter how much cheap wine you drink with it to appear sophisticated. (more…)















