Wednesday, July 11, 2007

This Evening's Moment of Zen: White Light Riot's Electric Fetus In-Store

It's true; Minneapolis power poppers White Light Riot were in town tonight, promoting both their excellent* new album, "Atomism," and their (what we can only expect will be an) excellent headlining performance at the Festival to End the Violence. The show, which will be held this Sunday at Bayfront Festival Park, is a benefit for Duluth's Safe Haven Shelter for Battered Women = good tunes, good cause.

ANYWAY, here's a shot of the group (well, at least a shot of half of the group) going the unplugged route in my favorite record store. Though it was sparsely attended -- drummer Mark Schwandt even cracked "If you like Brian McKnight, you'll love us" as their set came to a close -- it was a stellar performance.

Kudos to the Fetus for hosting it, and for allowing them to raise awareness for this worthy benefit concert!

*More on this in this weekend's edition of the Budgeteer, as I review it alongside two other (equally) excellent albums: Shelter Belt's "Under the World Awhile" and Justice's "
."

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Don't Tell a Soul, Vol. 36

For the uninitiated, "Don't Tell a Soul" is my ongoing, semi-regular awesome mix tape series.

And this, right here, is the latest installment.

As always, to encourage the consumption of music that doesn't suck, I have provided --
wherever available -- links to free, artist-sanctioned MP3s of the songs.

Enjoy!
Matt

(Questions or comments? E-mail mperrine [at] duluthbudgeteer [dot] com.)

p.s. I'm at the point where I'm just having so much fun making my awesome mix tapes that they're piling up and I'm not getting them to the Web in an efficient manner. Thus, for this here mix tape -- and hopefully only for this here mix tape -- I'm going to use only one word to describe each treasured selection. Let the intrigue begin!

1. Polyphonic Spree - "Running Away"
Sunshine!

2. Justice - "Stress"
Doomsday!

3. Soundgarden - "Zero Chance"
Suicide!

4. Zeph and Azeem - "Play the Drum"
Accordions!

5. Aesop Rock - "None Shall Pass"
Classy!

6. Alkaline Trio - "Trouble Breathing"
Brooding!

7. The Affair - "Andy"
Keyboards!

8. Moth - "Shock City"
Hooks!

9. Captain - "A Day in the Life" (Beatles cover)
Elegant!

10. The Get Up Kids - "Wouldn't Believe It"
Pretty!

11. Steve Miller Band - "Serenade"
Dreamscape!

12. Simple Kid - "Average Man"
Upbeat!

13. Richard Swift - "As I Go"
Wilco!

14. Mates of State - "A Control Group"
Frenetic!

15. Bob Log III - "Log Bomb"
Raw!

16. Scissor Sisters - "Lights"
1977!

17. Ken Andrews - "The 23rd Boy"
Alarming!

18. Get Him Eat Him - "2 x 2"
Jubilant!

19. Sean Na Na - "Hands, Paws and Claws"
Comeback!

20. Wintergreen - "Tomb"
Free!

21. The Anniversary - "Tu-hitt Tu-Whoo"
Cool!

22. Alternative Champs - "Rockingham"
Offbeat!

23. Cloud Cult - "Radio Fodder"
Obscure!

Friday, July 6, 2007

This Week's Shameless Budgeteer Plug: AT&T buys Cellular One, Al Franken, Amnicon Falls, a 'macro' guy and a crazy Southerner*

Wow, what a week!

"Discover Duluth: Amnicon Falls" -- This week I took my photo essay series to my "most favoritest" park in the world, Amnicon Falls State Park. Oh, yeah, it's a gas; you should probably check it out. (This week's "poster" is from those sessions.)

"AT&T Expands with Cellular One Acquisition" -- It's true. Good news for iPhone fans, (possibly) bad news for Duluth's 250 call center employees.

"More Human than Human" -- Great Lakes Aquarium employee Chad Netherland is going for his 10th world record this weekend, and it promises to be a "doozy."

"Mike Nordin: The King of Close-Up" -- If you like macro photography, you'll love Mike's new show at Beaner's. (It doesn't open until Thursday, so don't get too excited there, buddy boy.)

Finally, while I didn't technically write "Franken on Politics, Being Minnesotan and More," I was there at Lakeview Coffee House with the big man, sippin' a latte (like a little girlie man) and asking a few questions ... OK, I can't hold in my excitement anymore: We're living in the second Al Franken decade, baby!

(Please excuse that little outburst ... it's almost quittin' time!)

*Who just happens to be living in Duluth.
**OK, more photo than essay ... but I digress.

Thursday, July 5, 2007

Don't Tell a Soul, Vol. 35: I met my new neighbor / Had a drink on her veranda

For the uninitiated, "Don't Tell a Soul" is my ongoing, semi-regular awesome mix tape series.

And this, right here, is the latest installment.

As always, to encourage the consumption of music that doesn't suck, I have provided --
wherever available -- links to free, artist-sanctioned MP3s of the songs.

Enjoy!
Matt

(Questions or comments? E-mail mperrine [at] duluthbudgeteer [dot] com.)


1. Jason Falkner - "Do Ya" (Electric Light Orchestra cover)
Jason Falkner? Rocks. ELO? Definitely rocks ... what's not to love?

2. Logan Whitehurst and the Jr. Science Club - "Me and the Snowman"
For this selection I'd like to thank Superior's Globe News for always keeping me in a healthy supply of low-cost compilations and samplers. <- Without them, sadly enough, I don't think I would have ever come across this terrific music makin' machine.

3. The Doors - "Love Street"
Not to get too gushy or anything, but this track's another "thank-you selection." This time it's HBO's "Entourage," for helping me "reconnect" with my Doors collection.

Because of Jim Morrison, the only poetry I enjoy is drunken poetry.

Naysayers be damned.

4. John Vanderslice - "White Dove"
I don't want to speculate too much, but from what I'm hearing here, John Vanderslice might just have the 2007 album of the year on his hands: This is powerful stuff.

(p.s. JV probably has the best selection of free MP3s of any artist on this here awesome mix tape.)

5. Scissor Sisters - "I Can't Decide"
What's with bouncy rhythms and twisted lyrics producing the best songs these days? (Need more proof? Check out Aqueduct's "As You Wish" -- which, by the way, is the other record of the year. Strangely enough, like John Vanderslice's "Emerald City," it was also released on Barsuk.)

6. The Talks - "Any Other Saturday"
Recommended if you like Rasputina (with half the goth posturing), Guano Apes (with 50 percent more goth posturing) and/or mix tapes made by Kristi Lang. (Hey, she's good.)

7. Oasis - "The Meaning of Soul"
R.I.Y.L. bands which are A) somehow still making great records and B) somehow still alive.

8. Alien Crime Syndicate - "Ozzy"
Sure, this probably could've been on an "American Pie" soundtrack or two, but, dammit, I like it.

9. The Buggles - "Video Killed the Radio Star"
When's the last time you actually heard this classic from 1979? It's become such a "stat" in the MTV universe that many regrettably never actually take the time to sit down and enjoy it, the grandiose UK pop oddity that it is.

10. Oxford Collapse - "In Your Volcano"
R.I.Y.L. the Plastic Constellations' lust for life, faux rockabilly intros, (damn) good times.

11. Queens of the Stone Age - "Turnin' on the Screw"
This shit is epic -- like Led Zeppelin-wandering-through-a-desert epic ... I'm still surprised they're going to be gracing us with their presence at the DECC Aug. 1. <- Less than a month away!

p.s. Who the hell are the Vultures of Culture?

12. Low - "Just Stand Back"
"I could turn on you so fast."

...

Is anyone else scared?

13. John Doe - "The Golden State"
Like Frank Black, John Doe's solo career is excellent; but it's even better when he shares singing duties with equally-as-competent female vocalists.

(p.s. I love his new home, Yep Roc Records. Check out this out-of-office reply from James Bailey, one of the label's PR guys: "I'll be out of the office July 4th & 5th enjoying an extended celebration of America's birthday. Yo go America! You don't look a day over 229!!")

14. Treble Charger - "Ever She Flows" (live on Rock 100.5 - NYC)
This one gets under your skin. Kind of sad, kind of introspective ... more sad than introspective, though. (I want to carry out all future music reviews in this fashion....)

15. Phonograph - "In Your Mind"
R.I.Y.L. Wilco (just before "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot").

16. Adam Levy - "Too Close to the Sun" (live at the Minnesota Zoo)
Do you think the chimpanzees were welling up when they first heard this, too?

OK, kidding ... totally kidding.

17. Tom Taylor - "King of July"
R.I.Y.L. Storyhill. In fact, it's almost scary....

18. The Alternative Champs - "Set Your Face on Fire"
R.I.Y.L. song titles that fucking rock!

(p.s. Some MP3 "freebies" are available here.)

19. Harrydash - "Tank"
R.I.Y.L. Pilot to Gunner and other post-hardcore outfits that I can never recall off the top of my head. It's great music, but it's all kind of same-y ... no?

20. The Rogers Sisters - "I Dig a Hole"
I thought I'd bring back this DTAS classic because, well, this group is damn cool: Check out their Web site and you can get this song as a free ringtone. (How modern of me! HA HA HA)

21. Pawns - "All My Dreams are Ghost Towns"
R.I.Y.L. the Wrens. (No joke, this group will blow you away.)

22. Ryan Rapsys - "Aperture"
Let's hear it for the hometown techno. Oh, right ... electronica. Either way, this is nearly seven minutes of mind-altering ethereal soundscapes.

(p.s. Many Ryan Rapsys MP3 "previews" available here.)

Today's Moment of Zen: Maria Bamford takes a shot at the Budgeteer!

Monday, July 2, 2007

Today I whore out my blog to ... A-Plus Electronics!

Come on, just look at those prices -- if you were to go to any turntable accessories Web site, you'd be paying that for just one needle. So wise up and take your business to good ol' Ironton, Minn. A-Plus has been my needle hookup for years, so go right ahead and mention my name. (It won't get you anything, but, damn, doesn't it feel good to know a fairy just got its wings?! LOL)

Sunday, July 1, 2007

Don't Tell a Soul, Vol. 34: Paperfaaaaaaaaaaaaaace!

For the uninitiated, "Don't Tell a Soul" is my ongoing, semi-regular awesome mix tape series.

And this, right here, is the latest installment.

As always, to encourage the consumption of music that doesn't suck, I have provided --
wherever available -- links to free, artist-sanctioned MP3s of the songs.

Enjoy!
Matt

(Questions or comments? E-mail mperrine [at] duluthbudgeteer [dot] com.)


1. Bob Log III - "Clap Your Tits"
If you can't already tell from this song's title, Bob Log III is nothing if not a gentleman. (And certainly not a drunk-and-disorderly "blueshound"....)

2. Queens of the Stone Age - "Another Love Song"
In celebration of QOTSA's Aug. 1 taking of Pioneer Hall.

3. Wilco - "Shot in the Arm" (live in Chicago)
Not to sound too redundant or anything, but this one's in celebration of Wilco's Aug. 14 taking of Bayfront Festival Park.

(On the other hand, what's with a bunch of "hip-hop" has-beens invading Bayfront Sept. 2?)

4. Simple Kid - "Kids Don't Care"
Is this song offensive to "slow" children? I sure hope not, because it has a certain "Feel Flows" ... well, flow.

5. Hum - "Comin' Home"
Ahh, yes, my first-ever show at the legendary "danceteria" First Ave. Precious, precious memories!

6. CJ Bolland - "Sugar is Sweeter" (radio edit)
Once upon a time in Spokane there was a low-power FM "barnraising," and yours truly was there representing North Dakota State University's Thunder (Web) Radio.

This is true.

(I promise to finish this story later....)

7. Alien Crime Syndicate - "Take Me to Your Leader"
Recommended if you like big, bombastic pop/punk in the key of Moth and, to a lesser extent, Motion City Soundtrack.

8. Weezer - "Paperface" (demo)
I really wanted DTAS34 to have a song from Weezer's latest studio album, "Make Believe," but I just couldn't do it. What has become of Rivers Cuomo?

The outlook for the future of Weezer looks even more bleak when you go back -- way back -- to this demo recorded before the "blue album" made them household names (well, at least in the homes of good people like you). This actually rocks.

9. Moth - "Sticks and Stones"
Wow, Moth ... again, on DTAS -- what a surprise!

R.I.Y.L. being the only one in the room (besides my darling wife) who knows just who the hell Handsome Devil is, and why you should actually care.

10. Kelley Deal 6000 - "Box"
Another "find" at Four Thousand Holes in Spokane. Good stuff.

... And damn them for having so much good stuff. I nearly broke the bank on that shopping excursion!

11. The Strokes - "Last Nite" (demo)
I know, I know -> "What, you mean the songs they release on their albums aren't just demos?"

No, I'm pretty sure the Strokes pay a lot of money to make their tunes sound like really, really ridiculously good demos.

12. Built to Spill - "Fling"
Doug Martsch has a knack for crafting the most beautiful tunes this side of George Harrison.

13. Imperial Teen - "Our Time"
I burned through the IT records so fast during DTAS's inaugural "radio" run that I'm finally coming around to them again. For this group, there are no "B-sides."

14. Vegetarian Meat - "Trip"
R.I.Y.L. Stephen Malkmus/Pavement and the best the immortal Velvet Underground had to offer (no joke). <- I find this kind of interesting, actually, as Charles Douglas (one-half of Vegetarian Meat) went on to record a solo album, "The Lives of Charles Douglas," with VU's Maureen Tucker. (Oh, yeah, it's fantastic; check it out.)

15. Sloan - "The Other Man"
Dirty dirty dirty.

16. Cloud Cult - "Pretty Voice"
Like Built to Spill's Doug Martsch, the world of Cloud Cult's Craig Minowa is one of supreme beauty.

17. Ryan Adams - "Everybody Knows"
I know it's "so passe" to express your undying love and devotion to the records of Ryan Adams, but I truly liked "Easy Tiger" in its entirety -- and here's proof.

18. The Handsome Charlies - "Makes Me Love You"
The second coming of the Beatles? This is some quality stuff right here. I shall try to dig up some more.

19. Spoon - "The Underdog"
Our Spoon is back and they've got another record....

20. Blind Melon - "2x4"
"I'm talkin' / I'm talkin' to myself more."

R.I.P. Shannon Hoon, I still remember the day.

21. Citizens Here and Abroad - "Stranger"
CHAA combines the best aspects of Dealership (aka my favorite band*) and that of their buddies in Secadora. I'm sure you probably have no idea what I'm talking about, but you should trust me ... this is my life. ("Stranger" isn't available for free, but numerous others -- including tracks from CHAA and Dealership -- are here.)

*Tear?*

22. The Afghan Whigs - "I'm a Soldier"
I've been told not to call it a comeback, but, hey, wouldn't that be nice? (As nice as the "Twin Peaks" pilot finally getting a proper DVD release in the "Nifty 50"!)

23. Mark Mallman and Vermont - "Too Hot"
It's all too beautiful.

Oh, God, it's insatiable.

24. Elliott Smith - "Either/Or"
Like Shannon Hoon....

*To be fair, this is a title shared with a number of other groups, including -- but certainly not limited to -- ELO, the Pixies, Marah, Atmosphere, the Who, Cheap Trick, Roy, Best Friends Forever, Cordalene, Cloud Cult, My Diet Pill, Pearl Jam, Mason Jennings, everything in Duluth, Beulah, the Impossibles, Self, the Plastic Constellations, Valet, anything Charles Douglas touches and so many more** that it's becoming impossible to be me.
**If your band isn't listed above, there is a standard form to fill out to become "One of Matthew R. Perrine's 12,000-odd Favorite Bands."

...

You should really think about applying....