Madlib Remixes Madvillainy, Curates BBE Comp
We don't want to call MF DOOM an unreliable guy. We like to imagine that instead of recording music he is sneaking around doing important stuff like hunting down Osama bin Laden or building seal habitats. Either way, the fact remains: The rumored follow-up to Madvillainy, DOOM's 2004 collaboration with Madlib, remains unfinished.
While we wait for the album, Madlib has stepped in to make up for his Madvillain partner's absence with the release of a record called Madvillainy 2: The Madlib Remix. Madvillainy 2 shares no song titles with Madvillainy, but that just makes it easier to treat this reworking as a new entity.
The digital version of Madvillainy 2 is available exclusively from Stones Throw's online store right now, but still forthcoming is a souped-up edition of the record called Madvillainy 2: The Box. The Box includes the Madvillainy 2 CD, a 7" featuring "One Beer (Drunk Version)", a cassette featuring The Madvillainy Demo Tape which leaked online prior to Madvillainy's release, a Madvillain t-shirt, and a comic book continuation of the "All Caps" video. All of this comes in a box "wrapped in silver like a mask," according to Stones Throw's description.
Stones Throw is manufacturing copies of Madvillainy 2: The Box based on pre-orders, so anyone who wants one should order by August 15 to receive a copy after the guaranteed ship date of September 15. The cost of The Box is steep-- $124.99 plus shipping-- but such is price of so many goodies.
And you know that's not all Madlib's up to. On September 30, he'll unveil his contribution to BBE's series Beat Generation. Titled WLIB AM: King of the Wigflip, the compilation includes tracks from Guilty Simpson, J.Rocc, Murs, Madlib himself, and his thing with Oh No, the Professionals. WLIB AM is anchored by a bunch of offerings from Madlib's Beat Konducta guise, and will bear the stamps of both BBE and Rapster Records.
Speaking of Beat Konducta, Madlib plans to re-adopt the moniker for a fifth volume of instrumental head-nodders called Dil Cosby Suite. That disc may surface as soon as next month. Also in the pipeline: a record called Miles Away from Madlib's Last Electro-Acoustic Space Jazz & Percussion Ensemble.
As for DOOM, if we cross our fingers extra hard, maybe we'll see his ages-in-the-making Ghostface collaboration Swift & Changeable before the year is out?
New Music: Grizzly Bear: "Two Weeks" (Live on "Late Show With David Letterman") [Video/MP3]
Grizzly Bear's Ed Droste has been hinting at a poppier mood for the Brooklyn experimental combo's forthcoming follow-up to the masterful Yellow House and Friend EP releases. As performed last night on "Late Show With David Letterman", new song "Two Weeks" is indeed "sunnier," as Droste had suggested, but it's also full of the soaring harmonies and sylvan intricacies that have made Grizzly Bear's previous works smarter (and awesomer) than the average. Accompanied by Thomas "Doveman" Bartlett, Droste & co. put bouncy Zombies keyboards over atmospheric guitars and clickety-clack drumming. "A routine malaise," Droste croons, a sentiment that's sunny only for a city where the building next door blocks out all your bedroom's natural light. Big thanks to ryann7739 and ratsnratsnrats! of atease web for the tip.
MP3:> Grizzly Bear: "Two Weeks"
Update: Here is the video:
Video:> Grizzly Bear: "Two Weeks"
Liz Phair Bringing Guyville to Philly, D.C., Boston
When Liz Phair's Exile in Guyville shows in San Francisco, New York, and Chicago were announced last month, we were told that "no additional shows" would be announced. That, as it turns out, was a goddamned lie, which is good news for residents of three East Coast cities.
Liz and band will tackle Guyville three more times towards the end of August over consecutive nights in Philly, D.C., and Boston. All this, of course, comes in the wake of the deluxe reissue of Guyville from Phair's new label ATO. Let's just hope the Chicago show was an outlier, yeah?
Okkervil River Extend Tour
Photo by Shannon McClean
Man, after this long on the road, Okkervil River's gonna need a few Stand Ins of their own. The ardent Austin band, soon to release a sorta-sequel to last year's fine The Stage Names LP, have thrown a bunch of dates onto the back end of their tour itinerary, which now sees them on the road at least a little (and mostly a lot) every month from this one through November. A set at Lollapalooza next weekend in Chicago gets things started.
The Stand Ins is due from Jagjaguwar September 9 in North America, October 13 in the U.K., September 1 in France, September 12 in Germany, September 17 in Japan, and September 8 throughout the rest of Europe. Got all that?
Los Campesinos!, Wedding Present Play Indietracks
Indietracks is sort of an awkward name for a thing, sure, like Dijonnaise. Then again, just like there's no more appropriate term for the intersection of dijon mustard and mayonnaise, what the hell else are you gonna call a festival where indie bands perform on real live trains? Exactly.
So, Indietracks it is. Taking place July 26-27 at the Midland Railway in Butterley, England, the fest packs a mess of indie pop bands onto three boring old static stages, plus, as we cannot possibly mention enough, one stage on a moving train.
The likes of the Wedding Present, Los Campesinos!, Manhattan Love Suicides, Airport Girl, the Wave Pictures, Comet Gain, Ballboy, Red Pony Clock, Milky Wimpshake, Shrag, St. Christopher, the Smittens, and oh so many others will slide into the station this coming weekend.
Strap-On Micro Hats - Fatima Lopes S/S 2009 (VIDEO)
Male Bridal Gowns - Men In Wedding Dresses (GALLERY)
The Fall of Paper (UPDATE) - Cosmo Girl Bites the Dust (VIDEO)
Limited Edition Halloween Branding - From Spooky Soda to Pumpkin Ice Cream (GALLERY)
Modern Pet Mummification - Summum Gives Dead Pets the King Tut Treatment (VIDEO)
I Started a Joke (or Careful: MGMT at Play), Vol. 1
There have been many days, more than I care to remember, when the Bee Gees' 1968 ballad "I Started a Joke" (written and sung by Robin Gibb) was the only song that made any sense of a world that seemed hellbent on shoving overblown, insincere nonsense down our throats and making us pay for the privilege with a tragically forced Olan Mills smile.
While a lute-like acoustic guitar rustles and a cymbal tinkles, Robin emotes (as if John Lennon were being lightly choked with a scarf): "I started a joke, which started the whole world crying / But I didn't see that the joke was on me, oh no / I started to cry, which started the whole world laughing / Oh, if I'd only seen that the joke was on me." (The joke was really on Robin when he left the group after continuing to battle with older brother Barry for lead-vocal leadership; his immodestly titled 1970 solo debut, Robin's Reign, was soon deposed from the charts and he skulked back to the family business.)
More on SPIN.com:
>> Breaking Out: MGMT
>> MGMT Play at Abbey Road Studios
>> MGMT to Collaborate with the Chemical Brothers
I was reminded of "I Started a Joke" when I saw preliminary copies of SPIN's November issue with 2008's cryptically waifish, alt-rock prom kings Ben Goldwasser and Andrew VanWyngarden of MGMT peering quizzically from the cover, draped in rented tuxedos. Going back to when everyone still called them "the Management" or "those two stoned Wesleyan doofuses who think they have a band" or "those clowns who think Brooklyn is Great Adventure for liberal-arts majors in headbands and '70s gym shorts," it's always been an essential part of MGMT lore that they started their so-called career as a "joke" and that things just sort of haphazardly spiraled out of control from there, until they became widely respected and well-compensated songwriters/producers/international pop icons with a cadre of spiritual followers.
Of course, this is a common rock conceit, and whether it's true or not doesn't particularly matter. What really matters is whether the illusion of happenstance is convincingly maintained. Do you keep asking -- despite all evidence -- did they or didn't they? And MGMT seem to have a preternatural ability to keep the illusion going.
Some of my biggest musical obsessions -- the Monkees, John's Children, Devo, Butthole Surfers, the KLF, the Pooh Sticks, Unrest -- began with nagging questions: Is this all an elaborate goof? Who's really in the band and who's making the music? Are they kidding or winking or serious? And if it's a joke, who's it on?
The fact that these bands went on to write or perform songs that were deeply, emotionally affecting just intensified the obsession. Teetering between laughing and crying and just plain fucking with you, certain bands keep the tension and mystery growing and growing, and when a truly great song suddenly appears, like, for instance, MGMT's inexplicably heartbreaking and hopeful rite of passage "Kids," it can send you off on endless, blissfully meaningful/meaningless tangents.
Listen to "I Started A Joke" and "Kids"
It's like that moment in JFK, when Kevin Costner, as Kennedy conspiracy bloodhound Jim Garrison, addresses his plainly freaked-out minions in his under-siege District Attorney's office and finally floats the idea that Lee Harvey Oswald really may have been a patsy. Pumped full of Costner's fading, delusional gravitas and Oliver Stone's overheated, lunatic direction, the Garrison character announces, "We're through the looking glass here, people," with a desperate, Am-I-fucking nuts? lump in his throat and an arrogant, I'm-fucking-Eliot-Ness glint in his eye. Every time I see it (which is as often as possible), my blood races, I get a chill, I wonder what I'm doing with my life, and then I bust a gut laughing (see also Millhouse in The Simpsons' episode "Grampa and Sexual Inadequacy"). It's rare when any band reaches a Through the Looking Glass Moment.
In his book The Accidental Evolution of Rock'n'Roll: A Misguided Tour Through Popular Music, Chuck Eddy muses wisely: "Rock seems to work best when greedy kids on the make, ones who don't mind looking like they're on the make, contemptible bastards who'll serve up any tossed-off perfunctory garbage their audience will swallow, inadvertently let their humanness leak out."
With all due respect to Messrs. VanWyngarden and Goldwasser, this could certainly apply to MGMT, but there's also another possibility: That rock works best when insecure, smart-aleck kids decide they're fed up with how stupid and degraded music has become and wanna turn the whole self-righteous mess into a ridiculous charade that will reveal the true nature of our bullshit existence, and…well…um…uh…then they finally have to sit down and actually write a song (or two) or they'll be revealed as even worse charlatans than the people they originally hated. They may have a nervous breakdown -- but it'll be the best, most important one they'll ever have. And then they're through the looking glass.
Then they write "Kids."
Or so I like to imagine it. More likely MGMT went back to their dorm room after a raucous night of beer pong, smoked a bowl, and knocked out a sketch of the melody and lyrics on a laptop in 20 minutes.
Who knows -- or cares? It's all in the imagining.
And so how does the Bee Gees' "I Started a Joke" end? With Robin Gibb warbling away, maintaining the illusory mood, like a solid professional pop star, but voicing words that are, frankly, excruciating: "I looked at the skies, running my hands over my eyes / And I fell out of bed, hurting my head from things that I said / Till I finally died, which started the whole world living / Oh, if I'd only seen that the joke was on me."
Rumor had it that he was singing from the point of view of the Devil. See what your imagination can do with that.
Next week, in I STARTED A JOKE (OR CAREFUL: MGMT AT PLAY) VOL. 2, Charles Aaron will compile some of the best (and worst) MGMT remixes, mash-ups, alternate versions, and various errata for your downloading bemusement. And yeah, he thinks the "Kids" version from the We Don't Care EP is way more poignant than the Time to Pretend gloss. FYI.
Gomez
What? Originally released to rave reviews -- including SPIN issuing 8 of 10 stars, calling it a "a damn beautiful album" -- this adventurous Britpop quintet's 1998 debut, Bring It On, has become a timeless entry in the '90s Britpop oeuvre. Winning Britain's esteemed Mercury Prize in '98, the album -- from its psychedelic, bluegrass-tinged first single, "78 Stone Wobble," to the somber acoustics and whispers-in-a-tin-can vocals of "Tijuana Lady" -- drops yet again Oct. 14 as a reissue with extra live takes and B-sides to honor its 10th anniversary. As a stepping-stone, Bring it On helped launched the band's career, which today encapsulates five full-length albums.
Who? Formed in '96 by frontman Ian Ball and drummer Olly Peacock -- who had played together in heavy metal band Providence -- before joining with Ben Ottewell (vocals, guitar), Paul Blackburn (bass), and Tom Gray (vocals, guitar, keyboards), Gomez signed with Virgin offshoot Hut in '97 on the strength of their demos -- which would soon become Bring It On. Three more albums followed -- including 2002's Liquid Skin -- before they were dropped by Hut in 2005. A deal with Dave Matthews' ATO Records ensued, as did a new album, 2006's How We Operate, their most recent as a band. Luckily for fans, singer/guitarist Ian Ball has since struck out solo; his latest collection, Who Goes There, dropped in October 2007.
Fun Fact: Even in the music world, Brits are extremely passionate about their soccer teams. Both Ball and Gomez singer/guitarist Tom Gray share a strong love for the Liverpool-based "football" team, Everton.
Now Hear This: Gomez, "Here Comes The Breeze"
SPIN.com's Best of the Week, October 6-13
As you get ready to celebrate Columbus Day, check out our scoop on Green Day's next full-length and Metallica's upcoming tour, and listen to exclusive new tunes from Manchester Orchestra, Minus the Bear, and others. Plus: Get more of the best from the past week:
What We Learned...
-- Green Day's next record: It looks like the boys have impeccable taste in producers. Click here to find out which musical maestro is manning the boards.
-- Metallica's upcoming American tour: We hope you like Death Magnetic -- not to mention lights and, uh, shit that blows up. Click here to prepare yourselves accordingly.
Listen To The Week In Music:
Audio/Video:
-- Exclusive: Download a New Minus the Bear Song
Grab the previously unreleased "Guns & Ammo" from the indie prog band's new acoustic EP -- for a limited time only!
-- Exclusive: Download Unreleased Song from Manchester Orchestra
Frontman Andy Hull tells SPIN.com the story behind the stirring "I Was A Lid," a tune from the budding rockers' upcoming EP.
--'SNL': Tina Does Palin, Killers Perform
VIDEO! The comedienne returns to applause aplenty, while Brandon Flowers and Co. unveil two dance-y tunes off their new album.Features:
-- 'Twilight' Soundtrack Tracklisting Unveiled
A new song from Perry Farrell plus 11 other tunes from various artists make the album. Click here for details!
-- Death Cab Triumph at Radio City
On top of their game, the Seattle quartet uncorks a sublime, career-spanning set while selling out the landmark venue.
-- SPIN.com's Top 5 Up-and-Coming Montreal Bands
Our intrepid reporter hits the underbelly of Pop! Montreal to discover the new Arcade Fire.
-- Ben Kweller Reviews S.F.'s Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Fest
Think you don't like country music? The Texas indie-rocker explains why you're wrong -- and offers his favorites from the event.
-- Franz Ferdinand Debut 6 New Tunes
For SPIN.com's definitive "first listen" of the Scot quartet's new album cuts click here!
-- Exclusive: Franz Ferdinand Tell All About New Album
VIDEO! Watch frontman Alex Kapranos and drummer Paul Thomson reveal new details about the band's much-anticipated third record.
-- Rage Against the Machine to Record New Album?
Guitarist Tom Morello sounds off on rampant web speculation claiming the reunited rockers are going into the studio.
-- Led Zeppelin to Recruit New Singer?
Twisted Sister's Dee Snider claims the rock legends may replace Robert Plant. Click here to find out more!
-- Stream the Pretenders' Complete New Album
Frontwoman Chrissie Hynde and Co. return with the SPIN-praised set Break Up the Concrete . Hear the whole record here!
-- Travis Barker Talks Plane Crash Recovery
Just over one week after his release from a Georgia burn center, the ex-Blink-182 drummer finally speaks.
-- My Morning Jacket's Jim James Hospitalized
The Southern crooner suffers injuries -- and upcoming shows are cancelled.Editors' Blog:
-- Why America Needs Oasis
Coldplay may be bigger, but Chris Martin can't touch the Gallaghers when it comes to being a rock star, says SPIN's David Marchese.
-- Who Could Fall in Love to These Songs?
Movie music matters. But in Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist…oddly, not so much, says SPIN's Phoebe Reilly.
-- Music to Lose Your Freakin' Life Savings By
What do Lil Wayne, Joey Ramone, and CNBC's Maria Bartiromo all have in common? SPIN's Steve Kandell explains.
-- End the Trend: The Lumberjack Look!
Is the Brawny paper towel mascot to blame for music's most tired fashion trend? SPIN's Ellen Carpenter investigates.
-- Welcome Back: Echo and the Bunnymen & Good Rats!
SPIN editor Doug Brod riffs on this week's rare concerts of two longtime favorites -- and tells you why you should care, too.
-- What's Up With Guy Bands Who Call Themselves 'Girls'?
We've noticed a disturbing new trend in gender reversal -- but what can it mean? An investigation (um, kind of), by SPIN's Abigail Everdell.
Reviews:
-- The Pretenders, Break Up the Concrete (Shangri-La)
-- Oasis, Dig Out Your Soul (Big Brother/Warner Bros.)
-- Tindersticks, 'The Hungry Saw' (Constellation)
-- Marnie Stern, This Is It and I Am It and You Are It and So Is That and He Is It and She Is It and It Is It and That Is That (Kill Rock Stars)
-- Deerhoof, Offend Maggie (Kill Rock Stars)
Why America Needs Oasis
Following their mega-successful debut double shot of 1994’s Definitely Maybe and 1995’s (What’s the Story) Morning Glory?, Oasis were poised to rule the rock game. But 1997’s underwhelming Be Here Now put an end to that.
More on SPIN.com:
>> The SPIN Interview: Noel Gallagher
>> Review: Oasis, Dig Out Your Soul
>> Oasis Call Police on Crazed Fan
>> Oasis' Noel Gallagher: "I'm on Painkillers"
>> Oasis' Noel Gallagher: "I Tried to Kill Liam!"
>> News Alert: Noel Gallagher Has a Sense of Humor!Ever since, the band has been stuck in rock'n'roll Triple-A. Not quite major leaguers on par with Coldplay, the Chili Peppers, or Radiohead, but able to fill arenas nonetheless. And even though the new Dig Out Your Soul is a welcome return to the supersonic guitars and straightforward songwriting of those early albums, Oasis’s cultural moment has passed. The brothers Gallagher won’t be getting called back to the bigs anytime soon.
But for sheer entertainment value, they deserve better. It doesn’t matter that Noel has no longer got a multiplatinum platform, he still talks like everyone’s listening, whether that means beefing with Jay-Z or ragging on Radiohead.
I love it.
And Liam is no quote slouch either. Take, for example, the following Wildean zinger, leveled at the fool who tackled Noel in Toronto: “If it were up to me, I’d have cut his dick off and made him eat it.” Not exactly something Chris Martin would say. Come to think of it, what is something Chris Martin would say? Only Gwyneth knows for sure.
And that’s why we need Oasis. Slagging people in the press, public intra-band squabbling, releasing albums of tunefully kickass guitar rock, speaking in a British accent -- this is what rock stars are supposed to do! Now, it just so happens that rock stars are a little like dinosaurs these days, but guess what? Dinosaurs are awesome.
First Look: The 'Twilight' Movie Trailer!
We've heard Paramore's new theme song "Decode," had a peek into author Stephenie Meyer's musical world, and even studied the tracklist for the teen vampire series' eyebrow-raising soundtrack. But where's the drama? The action? The romance? Look no further, dear Twilight fans -- the official trailer has finally arrived and it's jam packed with all the gushy stuff!
More on SPIN.com:
>> 'Twilight' Author Reveals Musical Inspirations!
>> 'Twilight' Soundtrack Tracklisting Unveiled
>> Listen to Paramore's New 'Twilight' Song!
Sink your, ahem, teeth into the video below. And sound off in the comment section below. Bubbling with excitement? So is Paramore's Hayley Williams. Aren't you, Haley?
Twilight Movie Trailer:
Save the Children and AmeriCares Bring Vital Medicines to Storm-Ravaged Haiti
WESTPORT, Conn. (Oct. 7, 2008) — Save the Children is working with the government of Haiti to ensure that lifesaving medicines and medical supplies reach survivors of four recent tropical storms, which left nearly 800 dead after widespread flooding and destruction on the western third of the island of Hispaniola.
Global Leaders Called on to Accelerate Action to Improve Children's Health and Education
WESTPORT, Conn. (Sept. 25, 2008) — While noting advancements made since 2000 in saving young lives and educating children in developing countries, Save the Children today called on global leaders participating in the United Nations World Summit to accelerate the pace of action to reach millions of children still dying needlessly and millions more still missing out on school due to lack of resources.
Save the Children, PATH and Johns Hopkins University Launch Newborn Survival Project
Two of the nation's top political leaders joined a Minnesota teenager today to help save the world's babies and ask Americans to pick up their knitting needles and crochet hooks for the cause.
Mets Fans Knit Caps to Help Newborn Babies Survive
Newborn babies in Africa and Asia next year will be sporting blue and orange baby caps to keep them warm, thanks to the efforts of New York Mets fans this Thursday night.
Actress America Ferrera Joins Save the Children to Promote Global Education
Emmy- and Golden Globe-Award winning actress America Ferrera, star of ABC Television's popular series Ugly Betty, is Save the Children's newest Artist Ambassador.
Invisalign Teeth Aligners
Want to straighten your teeth with suffering from metal mouth? Well, then you need to try Invisalign.
Burberry Peacoat
Youll be waiting for temperatures to drop just so you can throw on this Burberry peacoat for a fashionable walk in the park.
Black Dice Hustle Asymmetric Watch
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Endovanera Pull Back Jacket
This sleek and stylish raincoat from Endovanera will keep you fashionable on those brisk fall days.
Urwerk 202
With only 200 of these babies in existence, you'd better haul ass and grab your very own before it's too late.