Music, Art, Politics and Stuff.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Street Composites




Amazing Street photography by Peter Funch. This was pointed out to me by my brilliant student Greg Ruben. See the rest here

I'm a terrible blogger

I have been doing pretty poorly at updating my bloggy here. I apologize to all you non-existent readers out there. Its a busy world, and I'm easily distracted...

Friday, April 17, 2009

Your Weekly Logical Conclusion


Can't hear this one, but its a nice color!

Friday, April 10, 2009

Bjork - Nattura (switch remix)


Amazing remix of Bjork's noisy collaboration Nattura, an activist song for the environment of Iceland. You can download the song here. And you can get more info about Nattura the project here.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Photography - Koreatown at Night


I love this image, taken in December with my crappy iPhone camera.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Vermont REALLY Embraces Equality: First Legislature to do so

Wow, two states in one week! Vermont's legislature passed a full gay marriage bill, which was vetoed by their governor. This morning they voted to override the veto, making Vermont the first state to allow gay marriage thanks to its elected law-writing body.

Here's a link to a local paper.

Fundies will explode because this contradicts their "activists judges" meme. They'll have to come up with something else I guess!

Now if only CA would follow suit like it should have done years ago!!

Moribund Newspapers

Does anyone else think the LATimes sucks lately? Yes, actually... Stu Kreisman at Huffpo does, and LA Observed gets into the action as well.

While I'll admit that I read the paper itself very infrequently, I do consume a lot of news online. The LATimes website is also in a bad way, and its free for god's sake. I tried to make an effort to read it over NYTimes, but its just getting thinner and thinner.

Years ago, when the death of the newspaper industry started, I thought they were getting what they deserved for being so "out dated". After facing nearly a decade of bad news, corrupt government and now financial ruin, we need newspapers to be as strong and vibrant as ever. Bloggers cannot be expect to have the resources or time to do real investigative journalism. Not to mention that MANY people don't have computers, or read blogs.

Being from Seattle, I'm thankful that the Seattle Times still lives, but how long will it be before we have a major city in the US without a print paper? This is an increasingly scary thought.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Friday, April 3, 2009

Iowa Embraces Equality

The supreme court of Iowa ruled in favor of giving full and equal marriage rights to gay and lesbian couples today. From the state that brought us Obama's momentous run in the Democratic primary. A great analysis of the decision is here.

List of people who's head is likely to explode: Tony Perkins, James Dobson, powerful mormons, Rush, The Men at the Concerned Women for America, Fox News and most of all Peter LaBarbera.

Update: Iowa Rep Peter King thinks Iowa is going to become a gay marriage mecca, whatever that means. These jerks never seem to realize that gays are living their lives all around them ALREADY! Their failure to realize this can be attributed to their bigotry, or ignorance, or both. HT Pam's House Blend

Music Review: Grizzly Bear - Vekatimest


Score: 90 out of 100

To say that I have had high expectations for Grizzly Bear’s follow up to the hauntingly successful Yellow House, is an understatement. I became a convert to Grizzly Bear when I saw them perform, co-headlining with the Los Angeles Phil at Walt Disney Hall in 2008 (yeah, I was officially uncool until then). That night I couldn’t peal my eyes from their performance. They were a captivating construction of folksy choral arrangements and washes of experimental sounds and loops. Compelling at worst and absolutely moving at best. They revealed a few songs from their new LP Vekatimest. Some songs took a shape similar to songs like He Hit Me and the mix of Little Brother found on the Friend EP, with bursts of guitar, and plaintive lyrics.

Now hearing the new album,Vekatimest retains the haunted atmosphere that defined their breakthrough album, but in a much more controlled way. The sound is more transparent, and its psychology seems less clouded. Where the landscape is obscured in Yellow House, the horizon line is clear in Vekatimest. Songs like the opening Southern Point, Two Weeks, and Cheerleader certainly won’t disappoint fans and may even surprise them.

For me the highlight of the album is the track Ready, which begins with a thumping base rhythm which reminds me of something from PJ Harvey’s Rid of Me, (without the wailing angst, of course). This boiling is punctuated by washes of guitar and Ed Droste’s melancholic calls to a lover in transition. He sings “make a decision with a kiss” and about walking home alone through the snow (appropriately dramatic). About half way through the track, the song shifts to something new. Waves of harmonies, starry synths and downright soulful vocal effects cascade the emotional content to new heights, reinforced by roaring guitars at the song’s finish.

All We Ask, is another spooky tune, in which the dynamics of a relationship are described through the subtle details of domesticity, where tiny gestures are magnified sonically and emotionally. The ballad shares its slower pacing with a few other songs on the album. Where some of these songs tend to harmonize into oblivion, All We Ask is intimately toothy. Its sonically smooth surface does not obscure the desirous swells and aching romanticism that bites as much as soothes.

While You Wait for the Others is another high point, a great example of the wonderful confluence of the groups 4 vocalists. The song rocks through Daniel Rosen’s calm and collected verses to be broken by the energetic calls of the entire band. The nostalgia that pervades all of Grizzly Bear’s music weighs heavy upon this song, with its warbled retro synth notes, and its mid-century poppy structure. This sense of age and history, while at the same time feeling experimental, fresh and expansive is descriptive of the entire LP.

Vekatimest is a success for many reasons. It solidifies the type of work that Grizzly Bear does, but does not type cast; they managed to expand while still refining. The songs are familiar and alien at the same time. Vekatimest is an accessible collection of music that is relentless in its detail, and holds layers of surprise upon each listen.