SOUNDTRACK: CITY AND COLOUR-Live (2007).
City and Colour is the solo project of Alexisonfire singer Dallas Green (get it?). I was really impressed by Dallas’ voice within the noisy metalcore of AOF. And I wondered what his solo stuff would sound like without the dissonance of the rest of the band. I saw this disc was available from Maplemusic and it was considerably cheaper than on Amazon. A live record isn’t always the best venue to check out an artist but in this case, I figured his solo stuff probably translated fine live as well. (Still haven’t actually heard a solo record so I can’t say). The set is also not entirely solo, as he calls out an accompanist for a few tracks (the DVD gives more information about who he is).
In AOF, Dallas’s voice is strong and powerful and yet totally catchy. His voice is the reason that I like AOF so much. So I was a little disappointed in the live release because he seems to be holding back. As I said, I haven’t heard the original discs, so I don’t know how it compares. But on some of the songs, he seems too restrained.
The songs are all very catchy, and the between-song banter is fun (it was excised from the CD but is available on the DVD) . But as I said for some of the songs it’s almost as if he’s inhaling rather than exhaling when he sings. I guess I find it weird for a punk rocker to be so restrained. Despite that, several songs do stand out as excellent. “Comin’ Home” (there are two versions on the disc), “Save Your Scissors” (the second version on the disc is especially fun because the crowd sings along). And lyrically Green is very interesting. “Comin’ Home” has some nice name-checking of cities around North America (poor fans in Lincoln, Nebraska, though).
Despite my reservations about his singing, his voice still sounds great. I’m interested in checking out a studio release to see how it compares.
[READ: December 18, 2008] The Tales of Beedle the Bard
There’s two funny stories about this book:
1) At my library, we received a notice from Scholastic Books that this book COULD NOT be put out before the release date of December 4. We had to sign a release form promising it would not go out any sooner. We all laughed about that because, while we knew that Book 7 of the Harry Potter series was going to be HUGE (and we had the same release form to sign for that book) we also knew that this was, at best, an esoteric addendum to the series for die-hard fans only. (As of this writing our copies haven’t even arrived yet, and there are only eleven holds in our entire system). (more…)

SOUNDTRACK—FLAMING LIPS-Christmas on Mars (film & soundtrack) (2008).
I’ve been a fan of the Flaming Lips for a pretty long time. I first heard them with “She Don’t Use Jelly” (a novelty hit from 1993…who would have thought they’d have become so amazing) but I really got into them from the time of The Soft Bulletin (and Zaireeka). Since around this time, Wayne Coyne and the Lips have been working on Christmas on Mars. It is a “home movie” of sorts that the Lips and some special friends made in their home town (and their backyard). They recently released the film on CD/DVD.
Christmas on Mars sounds like a cheesy/funny movie about, well, what Martians do for Christmas. And seeing Wayne as a Martian seemed to confirm my suspicion. But rather, what you get is a much less joyful celebration.
This is the long awaited follow up to Mike Ford’s first Canada Needs You CD. Volume Two covers Canada’s history in the 20th Century.
I am Canadian. Okay, I’m not, but I’ve had the beer, and I’ve seen the 



SOUNDTRACK: WEEZER-Weezer (Red Album) (2008).
SOUNDTRACK: PAUL F. TOMPKINS-Impersonal (2007).







