Current Favorite Album: My Morning Jacket “Evil Urges”

Wow, this album is just great. I wasn’t going to buy it, given my lukewarm (or less than) feelings for “Z”, but Mariko sent it to me anyway and dang, girl, if this isn’t the ONLY thing I want to listen to right now.

Some of it is crazy funkalicious and totally Prince-worthy (or perhaps Michael Jackson when he was good). Other bits are more sexy soul Marvin Gaye jumping in. And there’s even some Southern Rock influence (“I’m Amazed”). It’s jazzy and funky and I’d have to say downright spirited. Love it. LOVE IT.

And if you haven’t bought yourself a copy of Jim James covering Goin’ to Acapulcooff the I’m Not There soundtrack, I’d highly recommend that as well. Him crooning that onstage at the bizarro funeral; his voice just blew me away.

Cover It Up, Baby.

Oh look, I just found a half-written entry from September 13, 2007. I think I’ll publish it now. Just for fun. As one does.
My friend Megan recently posted a list of favorite covers.

Here are some of mine:

  • “Only You” Joshua Radin (covering Yaz)
  • “Baby Got Back” Jonathan Coulton (covering Sir Mix-a-lot, don’t ya know)
  • “Build Me Up [Buttercup]” Rhymefest & ODB (covering…some old song?)
  • “Only Love Can Break Your Heart” Everlast (covering Neil Young)
  • “Faith” Boy Least Likely To (George Michael)
  • “Crazy” Raconteurs (Gnarls Barkley)
  • “Jessie’s Girl” Matt the Electrician (Rick Springfield)
  • “Take It on the Run” The Folk Yous (REO Speedwagon & my favorite karaoke song!)
  • “The Glory of Love” A New Found Glory (Peter Cetera?)
  • “Walk Away” Eliza Carthy (Ben Harper)
  • “True Love Will Find You in the End” Beck (Daniel Johnston)
  • “Tiny Dancer” Ben Folds (Elton John)
  • “Thin Line” Indigo Girls (Gerard McHugh?)
  • “Take Me Out” The Magic Numbers (Franz Ferdinand)
  • “Since U Been Gone” Ted Leo (Kelly Clarkson)
  • “Ms. Jackson” The Vines (Outkast)
  • “Helplessly Hoping” Ride (CSNY – sounds so much like the original, it’s barely a cover!)
  • “Give a Little Bit” GooGoo Dolls (Supertramp – hmmm, same issue as above)

À la Super Eggplant, currently, I am…

Eating: Goldfish. (Original flavor) They just never get old.

Making: One secret thing. Sometimes. Rarely. When lying on the floor gets too boring.

Reading: Neither Dad nor I have finished last month’s challenge book yet (it was too damn big to carry around so I was only reading it at home except when do I read at home? Not often, turns out), but we decided to move on to this month’s for now and go back and finish the other after…. so that means I’m reading Volume 1 of “The Man Without Qualities” by Robert Musil. It’s not laugh out loud funny but there’s sort of a dry sardonic undertone. So I’m enjoying it.

Watching: Firefly, for the zillioneth time (and then Serenity but of course). Since both Carrie and my future husband are watching it right now, I needed a refresher in case they feel like talking about it.

Listening to: Stuff I bought in June like Fleet Foxes and Shearwater and Jakob Dylan and The Fratellis and James Hunter and Lil Wayne and Port O’Brien. Yeah I have this dream that I will review all June & July albums by month’s end and be ALL CAUGHT UP in time to start fresh with the “school year” so to speak. But don’t hold your breath, I wouldn’t want to be the cause of any untimely deaths.

May Album Reviews

Absolutely Love & Adore:

The Kills “Midnight Boom” So I just kept reading about this band everywhere (like here or maybe here) and I kept thinking “I’ve GOT to check them out.” Yeah, well FINALLY my lazy ass did and I’m pretty damn happy about it. Love the beats, love the lyrics, love the energy. They put on a great set at Lollapalooza but I’d love to see them in some smokey dirty hole in the wall where the sound is so loud I fear for the longevity of my eardrums. Wait, did I say “smokey”? Get with 2008, girl, there’s no smoking in bars anymore…

Favorite Singles (not on any of the above albums):

  • “Graveyard Girl” M83
  • “Be With Me” Foy Vance
  • “Late Last Night” Robby Hecht
  • “The Hardest Thing” Patrick Park
  • “Measure of the Same” Birds of Avalon
  • “Circles ‘Round the Moon” Nana Grizol
  • “Take a Bow” Rihanna
  • “February 5th, 2008” Telekinesis!
  • “Coast of Carolina” Telekinesis!
  • “Good Things” Sounder
  • “U and Me” Trina
  • “The Last Thing on Your Mind” Lights

Other Albums I Liked:

  • The Long Blondes “Couples” – Feels very “college” to me as it alternately reminds me of Berlin and Blondie. Can’t get enough of “Guilt”, “Too Clever by Half” and “I’m Going to Hell”. Lots of fun. And their live show is definitely worth it.
  • Saving Jane “SuperGirl” – Not really sure what impulse made me buy this. Have to be in the right mood for it. But when you are, it’s perfect angry girl music. And “Better Day” has a total Sixpence None the Richer vibe, if that’s your thing.
  • Death Cab for Cutie “Narrow Stairs” – Nothing on this album quite blows me away the way “Marching Bands of Manhattan” did on the last one…but I think it’s a solid follow-up and the more I listen, the more I seem to like it. I am not into the long jam sessions, however, so I actually prefer the radio edit of “I Will Possess Your Heart”.
  • Bob Mould “District Line” – There was definitely a period of time when Mould had really fallen off my radar. But then there was a great single out (“Circles”) [doh, in apparently 2005] and then I went to hear him at Old Town and I find myself back on the Mould bandwagon. Maybe not that exciting, but always solidly rockin.

Not really for me / but maybe for you!:

Nelo (self titled) – No idea where this one came from, did I hear a single from it somewhere? Who knows. I like the song “Walkin’ Around” but otherwise it’s all way too Dave Matthews for me.

Duffy “Rockferry” – I can see why people like this non-boozed-out-of-her-gourd Amy Winehouse-type, part of the “British birds do R&B” crowd. She’s got a very distinctive voice. But it’s just not a style of music I often get the urge to listen to. I don’t mind when these songs come up on shuffle, but I don’t go lookin’ for them either.

Shamefully have either not listened to at all, or not all the way through, or so few times that I can’t legitimately offer an opinion:
Seems like a kinda slow month for buying music (did I just not spend money that month? Or did I spend a lot of it just on other things?), doesn’t seem to be anything I didn’t at least listen to a few times.

Best of July

The best movie I saw in July was also the only movie I saw in July (or the only one I saw for the FIRST time anyway…). It was The Dark Knight and it was pretty fantastic. I had reservations, but they weren’t “I don’t love you” reservations. More like “I do love you, but I probably wouldn’t marry you, because I know you’ll only hurt me in the end.”

The best book I read in July was Absurdistan by Gary Shteyngart, which was just outrageously fucking funny.

The best gig I went to in July was either the Fleet Foxes set at Pitchfork or the Earlimart show at the Hideout. Probably have to tip the hat to Earlimart since the sound was better (purely by locational happenstance), but I remain equally entranced by both.

My favorite tunes in July were Fleet Foxes and (more) Joseph Arthur and The Kills and Nana Grizol “Love It Love It”(which you sooo need) and this totally awesome mixdisc/playlist I made for Juno. My question for you is*: What would you give me to get a copy of that?

Random personal highlights: Visit from the Nipper. Secret Family Craft Project.

Lowlights? Long slow stressful month. This summer has sucked some fucking rotten ass, let me tell you. I mean, except for that it’s all shit I can’t tell you.

*Do you remember when I used to use this phrase ALL THE TIME? Dang, I miss it.

In Concert: Earlimart

It’s almost dangerous seeing a band you like this much at a tiny place like the Hideout.

Dangerous like you might accidentally touch them or start raving about how awesome they are and do they need groupies because you could quit your d-a-y-j-o-b at ANY TIME. (No, I didn’t. Ask or quit.)

Mentor Tormentor kept me under its dreamy seduction for many, many months. The new release Hymn & Her is a bit subtler. Sparser in arrangement, tauter.

Comfortable stage banter, lovely harmonies, introspective lyrics. What a wonderful evening.

Note: Opener billed as “Peter & the Rabbits” was actually “The Office” a much buzzed-about Chi-town band. And they were good!

This Summer at Ravinia

Robert Plant & Alison Krause. Turns out I felt the same way about the concert as I did about the album. I like individual songs, some are really pretty, but as a whole I just feel kinda “eh, OK” about it. Nothing that really grabs me. Good Ravinia music, since (for me, anyway) Ravinia is soooo not really about the music. It’s about the food and the drink and the friends and the conversations and the candles and the trees and… Yeah, it’s just kindof a “thing”. If there’s good music in the background, it enhances it. If the music is bad, you just ignore it and carry on with your night.

Lyle Lovett and His Large Band. This is our “must buy” for Ravinia, we go see Lyle every year. I don’t even own any of his albums, but there are songs I recognize now. Always enjoyable. Gets people moving. Kindof a real “family” night at Ravinia. Fun.

Feist. You know, she just doesn’t have THAT MANY SONGS. And the horrific Metra commute there and back just really blew the night. I guess they weren’t prepared for every 20- and 30-something in Chicago to be going to Ravinia since that’s not the usual crowd. Didn’t get home until after midnight (maybe even 1:30? can’t quite remember now, thank goodness) from a concert that ended before 10. Sure “1, 2, 3, 4” sounded good. But that wasn’t enough to overcome the transit issues. We were ALL very annoyed.

I was supposed to go to Aimee Mann and Squeeze in August but turns out I’ll be giving my ticket up as I have to go meet my future husband that weekend. Priorities, people, priorities.

Big Screen: The Dark Knight

I liked it a lot, it definitely lived up to the hype for me, which these days is almost harder to do than to just make a decent movie.

  • Loved Bale despite his (as always) weird gray all-the-same-length-across the-top front teeth. He continues to invest this character with an amazing sense of grim grief. It was just etched onto his face from scene 1.
  • Loved Heath Ledger. Loved. Outstanding performance. Certainly worth the praise it is getting. No question. On the one hand, it makes it even sadder that he’s dead now; just think what he could have done. On the other hand, to go out on the back to back performances of Brokeback and this? Wow. Talk about going out on a high note. Overall the performance just blew the fucking top off, but I have to say his mannerisms when he visits Dent in the hospital were just pitch fucking perfect. And when he walks out and is waiting for that last explosion? The move he makes with his arms there? Oh, Heath.

But I thought the last half hour dragged, too much time setting up the Two Face character. If he lived to be the villain of the next movie then it would make sense to me. But since he didn’t, it made it feel long. I thought they could have edited some of that down. Yes, I understand that bringing him down was certainly one of the Joker’s goals, but I thought the whole bit with the bombs on the ships just lagged. Didn’t need it, we already KNOW the things that pointed out to us (or we should) and it just seemed like wasted time. While neither Iron Man nor Wanted made me get shifty in my seat, the last half hour of this had me really feeling the time. There was stuff they could’ve cut (and I think should’ve). Coulda been a little tighter.

That said, still tremendous. Super dark and delightfully so. Really a tour de force in the sequels department; takes the first movie and ratchets up quite a few notches. The additions of Ledger and Gyllenhaal really sent it over the top. Kudos. I’ve seen it twice already, I wouldn’t be reluctant to see it again. But then that’s nothing new for me and good movies; I am a repeat big-screen viewer and proud of it.

Pitchfork: Day Two

The Dirty Projectors: Didn’t hear their whole set but what I did hear sounded good. Might have to do some research on this band!

Boris: Thrasher metal = so NOT for me.

The Apples in Stereo: Awesome! Probably my #2 favorite of the weekend, definitely Jenn’s fave and was Tracy’s fave as well. Lots of fun. Upbeat, good banter, nice set.

Ghostface Killah & Raekwon: They seemed a little worn out and apparently came straight to Pitchfork after a 9 hr flight back from Europe (“Our balls are still smelly!” was one comment). Some of it sounded really good, but I was too tired to move and get to a better spot. So I just enjoyed it from afar.

Occidental Brothers Dance Band International: Not for me. But I was too tired to move.

Bon Iver: Too tired to move closer/further (recurring theme, eh) but since this is my third Bon Iver concert in 2008, I was OK with that. What I could hear: sounded just as fucking beautiful as ever. But there was a LOT of noise competition from the other stage. Don’t think outdoor fests are a great venue for these dudes.

Spoon: These guys played two or three Lollapaloozas in a row so I didn’t really feel the need. We stayed for a few songs and then headed home before the crowds.