Best of November

The best movie I saw in November was Milk and it was EXCELLENT. My No. 2 movie for the year. So good.

The best book I read in November was “The Way of Shadows” by Brent Weeks. It was a slow month reading-wise but I did really enjoy that book.

The best gig I went to in November was….some gig that I didn’t go to! First month all year with no shows. Am I slowing down? I’m certainly feeling old and decrepit but it may just be I wasn’t paying attention to what was coming up so I missed out on tickets I would have wanted. Who knows!

My favorite tunes in November were new albums from Jem, and The Killers, and Matt White, and Vancougar, and Ryan Adams, and Pink, and Kanye, and Winter’s Fall and…some others. I bought a ton of music over the month (click on the link and you’ll see!).

Random personal highlights: HuffenCooper Halloween party; “HOLY FUCK OBAMA WINS!” is what it says on my calendar for November 4. Certainly a day that will not be forgotten; did some serious shopping in the burbs with Sara; I hung out with my nephews for the first time in ages; beers at Guthrie’s with Lauren; bought some cool shit at the DIY show; I visited my “second (or third, really) home” in Milwaukee for Thanksgiving; and Michelle was in town for a day. There was a lot going on (hence the aforementioned lack of reading!).

Lowlights? Fallout at secondary browsing location continued. Missed seeing Francine Prose & Anne Carson speak, both of which I had tickets to but I’m too dumb to look ahead in my calendar when the month rolls forward. Was very tired.

November Album Reviews

Absolutely Love & Adore:

Jem “Down to Earth” – There’s a lot to like here, even though this doesn’t sound like your typical Jem album. Actually sounds more like a set of remixes, and the dance-y backgrounds are a great backdrop for her voice. Love “Crazy”, “Keep on Walking”, “I Always New”, “Forever and a Day”. And “It’s Amazing” has gone on every mix I’ve made over the past several months.

Matt White “Best Days” – I tried not to love this album. And then it became all I listened to for days on end. Ah well. Particularly love “Moment of Weakness” and “Paradise”.

Ryan Adams & the Cardinals “Cardinology” – Doesn’t sound much like a Ryan Adams album to me but I really like it nonetheless. I love the folky swoons of “Natural Ghost”, such a romantic feel. And “Fix It” is another fave. (I could do without “Magick” however.)

Vancougar “Canadian Tuxedo” – I wish I could remember what made me check this out. I think it was a post on either Monitor Mix or the Three Imaginary Girls blog but I can’t seem to find it. They’re punk sassy girls (think the Go-Gos, before the industry prettied them up, and if they had already been musicians when they started), but every once in a while they throw in a total ’60s girlgroup vibe (listen to “Obvious”). Great album.

The Killers “Day & Age” – I never bought their second album so I hadn’t listened to these guys in a loooong time. I love the emphaticness here. It’s rocking. It’s all big and dramatic and overarching and it just sweeps me right along with it. Faves are “Spaceman” “This Is Your Life” and I love! the chorus on “The World We Live In”.

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

  • “Raise Today” Peasant (old but on constant rotation)
  • “Don’t” Rachael Yamagata (srsly. don’t.)
  • “Colors” Kira Willey (damn you iPod commercials)
  • “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)” Beyonce (all carrieoke’s fault)
  • “Glamorous” Fergie (ditto)
  • “Cathedrals” (cover) Joan Osborne (can’t go wrong covering this song)
  • “Home in the Woods” Cory Chisel & the Wandering Sons (from a paste sampler)

Other Albums I Liked:

  • Pink “Funhouse” – I lovelovelove all the fast(er) songs on this album. “So What” and “Sober” as one & two are great. Some of the slow ones I get bored by though. (Hence the Like not Love.)

  • Kanye West “808s & Heartbreak” – Dear Kanye, you really crack my shit up. There is so much “woe is me” in some of these lyrics and I’m sure this is not the reaction you were looking for but it is damn funny to hear. “My friend showed me pictures of his kids and all I could show him was pictures of my cribs / he said his daughter got a brand new report card and all I got was a brand new sports car.” Yeah, times are tough for single Kanye. Gold records are NOTHING. Who cares about that. OK, Goofus! Get back to me when you’re my age and single, dude. Not that there is a chance in hell of that happening. Faves: “Heartless” and “Robocop“.

  • The Knux “Remind Me in 3 Days…” – Weirdly I really have not bought very much rap this year. This album is a lot of fun with sassy smart lyrics and great beats. There was one song I had to delete from iTunes however. Just toooooo much pussy or hos or bitches or something, I can’t remember exactly what but I really couldn’t stand to listen to it. On the other hand, faves: “Cappuccino” (“fresh cappucino with a mocha twist“), “Roxxanne”, “Daddy’s Little Girl”, “Playboys” and “The True.” Lots of fun.

  • The Gaslight Anthem “The ’59 Sound” – If Bruce Springsteen was the lead singer for the Hold Steady but Craig Finn wrote his lyrics and sometimes Tom Petty helped with the harmonies. That’s my description of this band. Pretty rockin’.

  • The Go-Betweens “16 Lovers Lane” – Really old. (1988?) Pretty sure I bought this based on this Monitor Mix post. I really like this, but I can really hear the years between then and now. It fits perfectly into my “Colleging It Out” playlist with The Smiths, The Replacements, The Cure, New Order, Cocteau Twins… “Dive for Your Memory” really brings old, old Mick Jagger (back when he could actually SING, right?!?) to mind as well.

  • The Weakerthans “Left and Leaving” – Bought due to this Fuel/Friends post. I like the snide feel of “Everything Must Go”, the rock of “Watermark” and the Shins/Death Cab feel of “This Is a Fire Door Never Leave Open”. But my favorite track is “Left and Leaving.”

  • Winter’s Fall “Winter’s Fall” – Much more Southern/country-esque than I was expecting after reading about it on some indie/alternative site. Think Jason Isbell or My Morning Jacket’s latest. Love “Blame” and “On Wisdom”. But really need to listen to it more, it was the last album I bought in November and it hasn’t gotten the attention it deserves.

Mixed Feelings

  • Travis “Ode to J. Smith” – This is the album that’s the most like their live show (which is awesome) but somehow that makes it not work very well as an album? I was bummed to see all the bad reviews and more bummed to find they weren’t far off. I like a couple songs (“Sarah” and “Last Words”) but overall this is not the Travis that I love. Their other albums are so much more melodic and lyrical. And yes, they turn them into total rocking out songs in concert, but somehow starting from a more lively place did not make them write better songs. It kinda bums me out frankly. But I have liked it more in the past week than on the first few listens. So there’s that.

Not really for me / but maybe for you!:

The Kin “Rise and Fall” – Too arena rock/cheeseball for me. Although I dig “Together” (until the chorus) and “See” and “Romeo” aren’t bad either. There are some (need I even say scary) religious lyrics on here though (“Abraham”) and you know how that makes me run for the hills.

Chad Van Gaalen “Soft Airplane” – I like some individual songs here (“TMNT Mask” and “Bare Feet on Wet Griptape” the chorus of which sounds like old Rolling Stones to me) but overall I find this album so stylistically scattered that I can’t figure out if I’m listening to an album or shuffle when it comes on. (And I really don’t like “Frozen Energon” at all. Ick.) Sometimes falsetto, sometimes not, arrangements all over the place. I’ve seen mentions of this album lots of places but I just can’t find my way into it.

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:

Brendan Canning “Something for All of Us” – My general impression of this is a good one. But I really haven’t listened to it more than once or twice so far. The title track is nice, dark and dirty (like Joseph Arthur).

DVD: Death Race

Nothing more than an action movie chockfull of explosions and car chases. But for what it is? Pretty entertaining. (Far more entertaining than the movie I watched yesterday.) Maybe not enough hand-to-hand fighting for a prison movie (not enough shirtless scenes, certainly).

A combination of Mad Max, futuristic prison scenes, and The Fast & The Furious stylized car races/chases. It did a nice job of whiling away two hours for me and I certainly wasn’t bored, even though I was sometimes laughing when I maybe wasn’t supposed to be.

Really, my only question is: What the fuck is Joan Allen doing in this movie?

DVD: Pineapple Express

My conservative estimation would be: 90% stupid, 7.5% ludicrous and 2.5% occasionally funny. James Franco was good, for what the part was worth, but Seth Rogen seemed like he was just going through the motions, and all the yelling during the first half? Boring. Most of the other acting was bad, and one guy was so incredibly bad that every time he came on screen I felt like I was watching someone’s bad “home audition” movie.

I *think* this wanted to be to drug movies what Hot Fuzz is to cop movies. But it so was not.
I am completely baffled by its lack of funniness, given the reviews it has gotten.

Dad’s and My Reading Challenge for 2009 [Updated]

Alternating 19th century and/versus contemporary novels.

January: “Tale of Two Cities” by Charles Dickens

February: “The Broom of the System” by David Foster Wallace

March: “Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde” by Robert Louis Stevenson

April: “Then We Came to the End” by Joshua Ferris

May: “Dracula” by Bram Stoker [this is a re-read for me]

June: TBD/Contemporary “Motherless Brooklyn” by Jonathan Lethem

July: “Vanity Fair” by William Makepeace Thackeray

August: TBD/Contemporary “Netherland” by Joseph O’Neill

September: “A Pair of Blue Eyes” by Thomas Hardy

October: TBD/Contemporary “The White Darkness” by Geraldine McCaughrean

November: “Nostromo” by Joseph Conrad

December: TBD/Contemporary “Undiscovered Country” by Lin Enger

Upcoming Albums to Buy in 2009

Jan 20: Bon Iver “Blood Bank” (EP)
Jan 27: Franz Ferdinand “Tonight”
Feb 3: Ben Kweller “Changing Horses”
Feb 3: Nous Non Plus “Menagerie”
Feb 17: Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit (self-titled)
Mar 3: U2 “No Line on the Horizon” (we’ll see if I actually buy this)
Mar 3: The Boy Least Likely To “The Law of the Playground”
Mar 24: The Decemberists “Hazards of Love”
Mar 31: Great Lake Swimmers “Lost Channels” (or just “Channels” acc. to some sites)

Best of October

The best movie I saw in October was a three-way tie between Zach and Miri Make a Porno, Let the Right One In, and Hunger, all of which I saw at the Chicago Film Festival. In regular movie releases, I also really liked The Duchess.

The best book I read in October was The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, by Stieg Larsson. I also really liked Conversations at Curlow Creek, by David Malouf, my favorite Aussie author.

The best gig I went to in October would be Fujiya & Miyagi. I didn’t write up any of the October shows so here’s the quick and dirty: Liam Finn, was completely unlike his album, super into experimental, extemporaneous, and jam band-type style if you can be a jam band when there are only two people on stage; Catie Curtis sang some really nice sweet songs, but also some goofy stuff that isn’t really my thing. And Fujiya & Miyagi was good, they sounded great, people were into it, the beats were hoppin’….but at some point all the songs start to sound the same. Felt like we heard an hour of one long song with a great beat.

My favorite tunes in October were the latest albums from Keane and Ray LaMontagne and my top two favorite songs were “Honey Let Me Sing You a Song” Matt Hires and the First Aid Kit cover of Fleet Foxes’ “Tiger Mountain Peasant Song”.

Random personal highlights: My dad came to visit and joined wholeheartedly in my 365 project and it was outstanding.

Lowlights? Fallout at secondary browsing location continued. My Morning Jacket concert cancelled and then I wound up blowing off a Joseph Arthur concert as I just didn’t have any energy that day. Also had a weird shiatsu massage that bruised/hurt my back so badly I could barely sit in a chair for two days afterward

À la Nick Hornby, books in/books out for December.

Bought:

  • Disquiet, by Julia Leigh
  • Among the Thugs, by Bill Buford
  • Shakespeare Wrote for Money, by Nick Hornby
  • Shadow’s Edge, by Brent Weeks
  • Throne of Jade, by Naomi Novik

Read:
  • The Lover’s Knot, by Clare O’Donohue
  • Deaf Sentence, by David Lodge
  • The Trial, by Kafka
  • Tender Morsels, by Margo Lanagan
  • A Circle is a Balloon and Compass Both: Stories about Human Love, by Ben Greenman (stories)
  • A Spy in the Family; An Erotic Comedy, by Alec Waugh
  • Black & White, by Dani Shapiro
  • If the River Was Whiskey, by T. Coraghessan Boyle (stories)
  • Silver Wings for Vicki, by Helen Wells
  • Disquiet, by Julia Leigh
  • The Scarecrow and His Servant, by Philip Pullman