Posts Tagged ‘The Feds’

If it’s far out, was it ever far in?

May 5, 2008

Friday May 2

The Flaming Lips – “Free Radicals”

Ryan Adams – “Halloweenhead”

Yeah, I’ve been alone on the highway late at night and proudly butchered this song at the top of my lungs. What of it? Mindless idiot-rock from Ryan Adams, of all people. Still, he managed to turn this into a piano ballad when I saw him at Cain’s a few months ago. Unreal.

Hey Mercedes – “Eleven to Your Seven”

The Feds – “Angels & Devils”

Ryan Adams & The Cardinals – “Magnolia Mountain”

Low – “Closer”

Jesse Malin – “High Lonesome”

Islands – “Jogging Gorgeous Summer”

Elbow – “Fugitive Motel”

Mute Math – “You Are Mine”

Watched a couple Mute Match videos on YouTube before a party this weekend (a party at which I am rumored to have set myself on fire, even if I dispute it). Somehow, I think I managed to see Mute Math play a less-than-stellar show at Cain’s a few months back. This isn’t to say I wasn’t floored at that Cain’s show – it was easily one of the most extraordinary and original things I’ve ever seen. That rhythm section is alien, I swear. I only say less-than-stellar now, after seeing the madness that ensues at other shows. This band might just take over the world with its next record, or it might just fade away. Either way, at least I got to see it.

Stars – “The First Five Times”

Guster – “Two Points for Honesty”

RAWK SAWNG OF THE DAY: Injected – “Burn it Black”

Tom Waits – “Blue Skies”

June 23 – Dallas at Palladium
June 25 – Tulsa at Brady Theatre

The Who – “My Generation” 

Ben Folds Five – “Your Redneck Past”

Breakdown: 16 songs, two places

I’ll be working out of the paper’s Capitol Bureau from now until next Friday. This means little-to-no time for tuneage at work. Instead, I’ll be listening to the music of conference committee reports, filibusters, partisan pandering and engrossed bills. May God help us all.

Short playlists ahead, but big news music news for yours truly will make up for it. Stay tuneage-d.

Bombed

April 21, 2008

After finishing one of the best records I should’ve known about three years ago, today’s playlist was:

Rose Hill Drive – “Cross the Line”

Ears were ringing for days after I first saw these guys. I didn’t mind a bit. I’m sure the other 20 people there felt the same way and would gladly brave the sonic assault once again. As badass as the show was, I kept wondering and cursing how a band can open for The Who at Ford Center and be named one of Rolling Stone’s top bands to watch in 2007 only to play for 20 people at Conservatory. Especially when they’re as good as Rose Hill Drive. I blame these clowns, who clearly represent all that is wrong with the universe.

LCD Soundsystem – “give it up”

Hey Mercedes – “A-List Actress”

The Feds – “Juliet”

Wilco – “Misunderstood”

One of the most underrated – and “misunderstood” – choices Wilco ever made was selecting this song as the opening track to Being There. It was a proverbial middle finger to everything everyone ever thought they were, and it pissed off a lot of folks. I’ve always thought the sign of a great artist is the willingness to risk their reputation for art, even if it alienates people. Many of my favorite records have that quality to them, and Being There is a perfect example. 

Guided By Voices – “Gold Star for Robot Boy”

The Flaming Lips – “Goin’ On”

Guster – “Fa Fa”

Foo Fighters – “New Way Home”

Eels – “Teenage Witch”

RAWK SAWNG OF THE DAY: AC/DC – “Back in Black”

Could there logically be any other choice? Absolutely not. Anyone who disagrees gets ten minutes alone in a room with no windows with the maniacs below:

The Land Down Under brings us the RAWK SAWNG OF THE DAY from AC/DC and today’s BEST BAND YOU’VE PROBABLY NEVER HEARD: Skybombers. These guys don’t have a record deal in the U.S. yet, but they’re lighting fires in Australia. I bought their five-song EP a few minutes ago after hearing one verse and one chorus online. Anyone who knows me knows I don’t make up my mind that easily 99 percent of the time. That’s how good these Aussie rockers are. The song that grabbed me isn’t on the EP, but it’s called “Always Complaining” and has more hooks than a tacklebox. After a first listen, the best track on the EP is this ferocious freakout called “Russian Roulette” that’s the RAWK SAWNG I’ve been waiting to hear all year.

Plenty of bands like to brand themselves as Clash / Kinks / Stooges hyrbids, but more often than not those bands are putrid embarrassments. Not Skybombers. They can actually claim those three as peers without sounding like pompous hipster knobs. The songs on this EP swagger and swing with that confident recklessness the aforementioned bands had, only the hooks are bigger. That’s a dangerous cocktail and I love it. Hell of a find for a Monday night.

Point of the gushing is: Don’t be surprised if Skybombers blow up like Hiroshima.

Weekend starts when?

April 15, 2008

Hey Mercedes – “Our Weekend Starts on Wednesday”

Jay Farrar – “Damn Shame”

The Clash – “Clampdown”

The Clash – “Lost in the Supermarket”

The Feds – “Tonight Inside”

Jay Farrar – “Vitamins”

Ryan Adams – “29″

The Fags – “Greatest Movie Ending”

RAWK SAWNG OF THE DAY: Big Wreck – “The Pleasure and the Greed”

Kenna – “Out of Control (State of Emotion)”

The Used – “Sound Effects and Overdramatics”

The Coral – “Spanish Main”

U2 – “Trip Through Your Wires”

BEST BAND YOU’VE PROBABLY NEVER HEARD: Elbow – “Not a Job”

Best song on this band’s second record, A Cast of Thousands. Patient, moody Brit-rock. Anyone who can make a harmony out of dreary lines like this gets my respek: “The dream again nobody understands / Walking through the long grass on your hands / It’s not a job to do today / Sleep it off.”

Kill Radio – “Do You Know (Knife in Your Back)”

See below.

Kenna – “Hell Bent”

Strange pairing of Kenna and Kill Radio. A couple years back, some major label types convinced the band I once worked with to drive out to Los Angeles for a showcase at The Viper Room. Being the naive little bastards we were, we accepted and blew all the money we had to get out there. The band Upside played with at Viper Room was Kill Radio. The other act Upside’s manager at the time managed was Kenna. Both went largely unnoticed, but are two of my favorites to this day. Another strange connection: the guy who signed Kill Radio to Columbia Records was former MTV VJ Matt Pinfield, who seriously considered signing Upside to Columbia after the band once again blew all their money to make a trip to New York to showcase for more label types at Knitting Factory. A good line from the Kill Radio song in today’s playlist: “In the night they stole it, left you skin and bones and a knife in your back.”

Bernard Butler – “Smile”

The Stills – “Changes are No Good”

Sloan – “Back Stabbin’”

Queens of the Stone Age – “Do it Again”

Queens of the Stone Age – “Go With the Flow”

Spoon – “This Book is a Movie”

The Arcade Fire – “Crown of Love”

Bloc Party – “Banquet”

Islands – “If”

The Thrills – “Whatever Happened to Corey Haim?”

Ben Kweller – “Family Tree”

Built to Spill – “The Weather”

Ryan Adams – “Magnolia Mountain”

First time I saw Ryan Adams at Gypsy Tea Room in Dallas, this was the only song he played that could’ve passed for an actual performance. The man was a complete and utter disaster. I couldn’t listen to him for months. Luckily, Daily Tuneage comrade Redbee and her man convinced me to see him again at Cain’s a few months ago. Like night and day. I can’t even remember if he played this song. I just remember everything was perfect.

Breakdown:

29 songs

3 during commute to work

25 at work

1 during commute home

Short on time. No diatribe today.

A sewer song

April 9, 2008

Ryan Adams – “Is This It?”

The Beatles – “Honey Pie”

To quote a regular customer at the record store where I once worked: “Listening to album tracks by The Beatles is like discovering your woman has another hole to stick it in.”

I’ll never forget that line no matter what degree of Alzheimer’s I suffer from or what type of anvil dents my skull.

Elvis Costello – “Tear Off Your Own Head”

The Clash – “Brand New Cadillac”

Blue October – “Into the Ocean”

Led Zeppelin – “No Quarter”

Jimmy Eat World – “Kill”

Injected – “Misunderstood”

And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead – “Homage”

The Feds – “Face Down”

Stone Temple Pilots – “Daisy”

They’re back. Screw Slash. Long live DeLeo.

And You WIll Know Us By The Trail Of Dead – “Days of Being Wild”

Starlight Mints – “Pulling Out My Hair”

Flickerstick – “Catholic Scars and Chocolate Bars”

Ryan Adams – “The Drugs Are Not Working”

The Flaming Lips – “Free Radicals”

Radiohead – “Sulk”

This was once my favorite song. I tried to remember why this afternoon and failed. The Bends remains one of the ten best albums ever made, even if I’ve divorced “Sulk.”

Uncle Tupelo – “Grindstone”

Wilco – “Hummingbird (live)”

Didn’t care much for A Ghost is Born the first time I heard it. Or the second. Or third. I pretty much gave up on the album for about six months until I heard some bootlegs of the songs live. This was one of them, and it completely changed everything. Now I worship Ghost just as much as the rest of the Wilco catalog.

Led Zeppelin – “The Songs Remains the Same”

Clearly the best opening songs in the history of rock and roll. If you want to argue about it, I’ll sick the hounds on you.

Shuggie Otis – “Happy House”

Rewake – “Homeless Genius”

Stevie Wonder – “You’ve Got It Bad Girl”

Wilco – “I’m Always in Love”

The Fags – “Rockstar”

Paul McCartney – “Only Mama Knows”

Never cared much for Wings, but this song is what I wish they would’ve sounded like.

Golden Smog – “5-22-02″

Breakdown:

27 songs

8 during commute to work (had a morning assignment)

16 at work

3 during commute home

I spent most of the morning with a city sewer worker for a profile story. Once we got all the sewer chatter out of the way, we wound up talking tunes. It was refreshing to hear such a simple man talk so passionately about the music he’s loved his whole life. There wasn’t a bit of pretense or cynicism coming from this guy. He loves music unconditionally. Wish I knew more like him.

 

 

Attack of the singer-songwriters

April 8, 2008

Valve – “Forever More”

Lucero – “San Francisco”

A breezy, booze-stained night at SXSW 2008. Free beers everywhere. Whiskey, too. A sloppy crowd of tattooed cowpunk types was piling into the backyard amphitheater at Red Eyed Fly. Seemed like the perfect storm for my first Lucero live experience. I was pumped.

We dropped anchor in front of a pool of 24 oz. Lone Star beers and plowed through a few of those suckers before Lucero hit the stage (later, the bass player would literally hit the stage). I was nice and numb by the time Ben Nichols and Co. stumbled in, but I’d soon witness a staggering debacle of drunken chaos that would make every booze-fueled embarrassment of my short life seem like child’s play.

Nichols made it through about two songs (and took three shots) before his voice gave out. He knew it was gone, so he didn’t bother trying to sing. Just cracked an “I’m guilty, but I don’t care” smile and shook his head at the rest of the band. They found his sorry condition equally hilarious, even as the guitarist swayed back and forth like a seesaw and drooled. Yeah, drooled. What a mess of a man. The bass player knew he was in a worthless state and had propped himself up against the back wall of the stage as a precaution. But he’d still stumble forward from time to time for no apparent reason. Eventually, he fell face down. Twice. The drummer was actually pretty solid and was clearly the only remotely sober one of the group. Nichols couldn’t sing, but he managed to to tell the crowd at least half a dozen times that he’d been “drinking since two in the afternoon.” And then he’d take another shot and light another cigarette. Completely shameless. The trainwreck was twice as entertaining as the few moments they actually hit stride, for better or worse.

Only took about three songs for us to proclaim Lucero the Drunkest Band of All Time. That’s a dubious distinction considering the folks I was with at the show. Until then, the Drunkest Band of All Time title was held by The Feds thanks to a show they put on a few years back that we all attended. It ended with a droning encore that included no actual songs but was highlighted by Matt Wright playing his guitar with the penis of a Bowling For Soup roadie who had wandered onstage.

We stumbled out of the venue midway through the Lucero set (but not until one of my comrades smoked some hash with an attorney in plain view of 500 people – ah, Austin) and saw the Ludo clan on the street. We mobbed them, and I mumbled some hogwash about Wilco to Tim Convy (fellow Wilco obsessive and Ludo Moog man). That’s pretty much the last thing I remember about the Lucero show, aside from hijacking my buddy’s Ford Contour and driving to Jack in the Box to order ten tacos at 4:30 a.m.

Thanks, Lucero. See you in Arkansas on May 1.

Fugazi – “Suggestion”

Smashing Pumpkins – “Luna”

Doves – “A House”

Head Automatica – “Please, Please, Please (Young Hollywood)”

Jesse Malin – “Lucinda”

Tom Waits – “So It Goes”

Glassjaw – “Trailer Park Jesus”

George Harrison – “Thanks for the Pepperoni”

Head Automatica – “Laughing at You”

Lots of Daryl Palumbo in the shuffle today…

Pete Yorn – “Just Another”

It’s 11:12 a.m. and I want metal. I get Pete Yorn instead. I get a Pete Yorn song I hate. Not wise to deprive a man of his metal, you pansy anti-metal iPod. Grow balls.

Josh Rouse – “Carolina”

Damnit to hell! I’m in no mood to listen to a song that begins: “Down in Tennessee / sits a girl alone.” I love this song, just can’t stomach it right now. But I’ll suffer through it; maybe I’ll calm down.

Damnit again: “In the Nashville sky / sits a diamond bright.” Fuck that nonsense. Next.

Jeff Buckley – “Back in N.Y.C.”

Singer-songwriter invasion 2008. Oh well. At least this song has some nuts to it.

The Thrills – “Saturday Night”

Attention all Affliction-shirt-wearing, Jagerbombing dudebros: “Broken beer bottles / thrown like American footballs / Hey, it’s just jocks high on hormones / Is this what they call hate on a Saturday night?” Yes, yes it is.

Social Distortion – “Ring of Fire”

Pearl Jam – “Glorified G”

AC/DC – “You Shook Me All Night Long”

Minus the Bear – “Pig War”

Mastodon – “Bladecatcher”

Finally. 1:40 p.m. is the best moment of the day thus far. Metal makes me happy when I’m stuck at the little gray desk in the big black tower.

AC/DC – “Back in Black”

Blue October – “You Make Me Smile”

Big Star – “In The Street”

The Jayhawks – “Smile”

Danny Grady – “Stay Gold”

Yet another D Grady song that’ll never see the light of day. Depressing. One of the best songs I’ve heard in the past year, and I’m one of a dozen people who has heard it. Not right.

Kill Radio – “Raised on Whip Cream”

Rose Hill Drive – “Off to the Games”

Little League Hero – “The Trick”

LLH’s last show ever is this weekend. I’ve been going to way too many “last shows” lately, it seems.

Starsailor – “At the End of a Show”

Okkervil River – “Missing Children”

Band of Horses – “Is There A Ghost”

Breakdown:

30 songs

2 during commute to work

26 at work

4 during commute home

There are four dead people (that I know of) in this playlist. Two died of cancer, one drowned in a river and the other drowned in booze. On that note, I’m off for a night of second-hand smoking, swimming and heavy drinking. A moron once told me the only way to beat death is at his own game. Apparently, I listened.