Friday, August 31, 2007

This Week's Shameless Budgeteer Plug: District 5, judge/author Mark Munger and the U.S. Slivovitz Festival ... baby!

While not admiring Verbena's "Souls for Sale" album this week (does anyone else see the connection?), I managed to squeeze in a few stories:

"Three Seek to Unseat Russ Stover in District 5" -- My favorite part about this whole experience was talking to Russ about the police at Beaner's, while the bank less than two blocks away was being robbed -- and the genius thief tried to get away in a taxi, no less!

"Slivovitz Fest Heads to Lakeview Castle" -- According to sources, plum brandy is the new tequila. (Whether or not these sources run the U.S. Slivovitz Festival is just irrelevant, innit?)

"By Dawn's Early Light: District Court Judge Mark Munger Writes Whenever He Sees a Chance" -- I didn't have the heart to tell Mark that I roll into work around 10 a.m....

p.s. I also had a hand in putting together the Budgeteer's "mayoral forum," which Meg Bye and Don Ness have been gracious enough to "attend."

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Don't Tell a Soul, Vol. 45 (DYNO1)

Good day, and welcome to the fold.

What you're about to witness -- the latest installment of "Don't Tell a Soul" -- is a mix tape of the "awesomest" caliber.

I only wish I were kidding.

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

Most of today's tracks were selected for a certain undefinable quality -- they're all kind of halfway between pure, unadulterated escapism and plain ol' surrealism -- so, instead of trying to define them, I thought I'd switch things up and provide each song's opening lyrics.

We probably won't be any closer to a solution (as to what connects these seemingly miles-apart tracks) -- and you're most likely a whole lot dumber for even reading this far -- but, hey, only one life to live, right?

After listening to them, trying pondering this, though: Do the mostly abstract lyrics hold a flame to their respective songs' mind-expanding musical accompaniments?

Don't have too much fun, pally!
Matt

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


1. The Beach Boys - "I'm Waiting for the Day"
"I came along when he broke your heart / That's when you needed someone / To help forget about him."

2. The Who - "Pure and Easy"
"There was once a note, pure and easy / Playing so free like a breath rippling by / The note is eternal, I hear it, it sees me / Forever we blend it, forever we die."

3. Wilco - "Pot Kettle Black" (listen here)
"Crazy rides rockets / Who has a magic wand / Empty out your pockets / Words without a song."

4. Grandaddy - "The Group Who Couldn't Say"
"The tale I'm gonna tell / Is about the group who couldn't say / Together they discovered with each other the perfection of an outdoor day."

5. Antipop Consortium - "Ping Pong" (listen here)
"Watch the ball / Watch the way I climb around your hall / Walkin' up walls sideways and I stall."

6. Atmosphere - "Modern Man's Hustle" (listen here)
"The first time I met the devil was at a Motel 6 / She left hell to spend the weekend on Earth just for kicks / Sexy little bitch, shorter than expected / About 5-foot-5, getting thick in the breast and thighs."

(p.s. Atmosphere's "Sunshine," from the group's latest EP, "Sad Clown Bad Summer," is available here -- as well as tons of other Rhymesayers classics.)

7. Beck feat. Petra Haden - "Rental Car"
"Hey now, girl, what's the matter with me / We're on a back road, driving to sea / Straight as a razor, kicking up dust / Digging through ditches and falling to rust."

8. The Doors - "Take It As It Comes"
"Time to live, time to lie / Time to laugh, time to die."

9. The Beach Boys - "Let's Go Away for Awhile"
Uh, oops, instrumental....

10. Pearl Jam - "Aye Davanita"
Again, instrumental ... oops!

11. George Harrison - "I Dig Love"
"I dig love / I dig love / I dig love / I dig love, in the morning / I dig love, in the evening / I dig love, and I want you to know I dig love."

12. Modest Mouse - "Here it Comes"
"Walked to your house on my lunch break, here it comes / Come inside and pour a drink, here it comes / You'll probably tell me everything you think, here it comes / The place and the time when we knew everything could go wrong."

13. Olivia Tremor Control - "Define a Transparent Dream"
"Look over the surface and into the distance / Constantly showering me with decision / Define a transparent dream."

(p.s. You wouldn't believe how many Elephant 6 MP3s are available for free online....)

14. Radiohead - "Everything in its Right Place"
"Everything / Everything / Everything / Everything / In its right place."

15. The Postal Service - "Such Great Heights"
"I am thinking it's a sign / That the freckles in our eyes are mirror images / And when we kiss they're perfectly aligned."

16. Tripping Daisy - "Your Socks Have No Name"
"It's all that you do that carries you through / And the power that you receive destroys you / So you take little guns and you zap 'em / 'Cause all you ever wanted was the truth."

17. Both - "Becoming Un-Plastic"
No lyrics, per se. (Just a lot of cool samples!)

18. Cloud Cult - "Brain Gateway"
"I'll turn my stupid brain into a gateway / Meet me in the place where life comes to get away."

19. Outkast - "GhettoMusick"
"Turn me up, don't turn me down / Cut me up, don't let me down."

20. Download - "Possession"
OK, so the lyrics here are all but undecipherable, so good luck with that one....

21. Cypress Hill - "Spark Another Owl"
"Once again the powers of the herb open up the mind / Seek deep inside, tell me what you find / Come on, come on, come on...."

22. The Chemical Brothers - "Music:Reponse"
"Music / Reponse / Music / Reponse / Music / Response." (It continues on this way for awhile....)

23. R.E.M. - "Summer Turns to High"
"Mercury is rising still / Turn the fan on high / I won't step on my own shadow / No one wants to cry."

Friday, August 24, 2007

This Week's Shameless Budgeteer Plug: District 3 candidates, Hog Island pics, (almighty) photographer Bruce Ojard and Brenda Weiler's marvelous new CD

I'm spent -- journalism is hard... (ha!) -- so let's shake a little Budgeteer action already:

"Three Seek to Represent Diverse District 3 on Council" -- As expected, I chatted with District 3 candidates Sharla Gardner, Heather Rand and John Rathe. It's quite the diverse district (as noted in the headline he he he), so the race is definitely one to watch.

"Discover Duluth: Hog Island" -- My photo essay series finally gets around to one of my favorite places in Superior, Hog Island -- a former Wisconsin DNR "toxic hot spot." (Yowsas!)

"The (Secretly) Genius World of Bruce Ojard" -- It's funny* how I came across Duluth photographer Bruce Ojard's 1979 masterpiece "Jesus is Lord." It was at this year's Park Point Rummage Sale,** where some very generous (read: quite foolish) man give it up for a pair of quarters -- yeah, 50 cents for the coolest image I've seen in ages!

"CD Reviews: New Releases from Brenda Weiler and Nordic Angst" -- Brenda is unstoppable. Nordic Angst, on the other hand ... well, let's just say I'm about as welcome at one of their shows as I am at one featuring the Very People....

*Well, at least it is to me and ... oh, come now, would it really kill you to humor me? Really, you're already dying a little inside? Well, I'll be [EXPLETIVE DELETED]....
**Which is, by my own accord, almost as much fun as getting a full paper grocer's sack full of CDs for only $3 at the library's crazy "book" sale.

Today's Moment of Zen: "Photoshop Hero"! (Courtesy of Penny Arcade)

(Courtesy of Penny Arcade, with a special thanks to Adam on Perfect Duluth Day for introducing me to this marvelous spoof of my beloved "Guitar Hero" video games.)

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Don't Tell a Soul, Vol. 44: If you lose me, girl, you lose a good thing

Good evening.

What you're about to witness -- the latest installment of "Don't Tell a Soul" -- is a mix tape of the "awesomest" caliber.

I only wish I were kidding.

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

Tubular! Bells!
Matt

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


1. Rancid - "Tropical London"
I love Rancid to death, but how can they still be considered punk? This is some of the shiniest pop I have ever heard.

2. Daft Punk - "The Brainwasher"
This brash "aggro-techno" number is like Black Sabbath's "Iron Man" soaked in Justice's face-melting sauce and ... acid, I guess.

3. Luscious Jackson - "Naked Eye"
And, on the sweeter side....

4. Atmosphere - "The Keys to Life vs. 15 Minutes of Fame"
Guess who's launching their lengthy national tour with a two-night stand at the little ol' pizzeria on the corner of Superior and Lake?

5. The Rentals - "Life Without a Brain" (live version available here)
After a lengthy hiatus -- and some musical missteps courtesy of frontman Matt Sharp -- everybody's favorite Weezer-is-old-news project is back on track.

6. Brother Brick - "See You Tonight"
I just heard this the other week, but it feels like I've been listening to it for ages -- almost like I was raised on it. <- And that's a quality more songs should have.

7. Rogue Wave - "Lake Michigan"
What a great year for records -- not just here in Duluth, but all over the world! The New Pornographers just dropped their fourth masterpiece, "Challengers," today, and both Rogue Wave and Hot Hot Heat will soon also have contenders (for the crown*) on the shelves. (Preorder Rogue Wave's "Asleep at Heaven's Gate" here to get a free 7" or download another track, "Chicago X 12," here.)

8. Black Lab - "The Real You"
Do you like your rock "earnest"? Step to it. (CAUTION: If you're offended by inoffensive "naughty" artwork, don't follow the above link!)

9. Jeremy Enigk - "Oh John"
Hey, remember the Fire Theft? Probably not, but you most likely remember Sunny Day Real Estate and all the joy Enigk brought to us with that outfit. (And a special thanks to him for his original compositions throughout "The United States of Leland.")

Recommended if you like all of the above and the Pumpkins' quieter moments, like "Disarm."

10. Cheap Trick - "Scent of a Woman"
Misheard rock 'n' roll lyrics have always made for interesting conversations (Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Bad Moon Rising," for one), so, on that note, I humbly present this song's half-muttered line "A man ain't a man in a one-night stand."

What do you hear?

11. Dropkick Murphys - "Hey Little Rich Boy" (Sham 69 cover)
Speaking of songs fun to sing along with, more dive bars should have this one on their karaoke machines.

12. Garbage - "#1 Crush"
I can't say much for Shakespeare at the cineplex, but I certainly support a certain soundtrack in 1996.

13. Dressy Bessy - "Tag"
I miss Denver.

14. Basement Jaxx - "Jump N' Shout"
And I miss working at Disc-Go-Round. (If just for blowing my paychecks on shiny pieces of plastic and unleashing hours and hours of Basement Jaxx on unsuspecting Sunday shoppers....)

15. MF Doom - "Potholderz" (listen here)
Speaking of record releases (see No. 7), it's also been a great year for hip-hop: a MF Doom reissue, Grayskul (soon enough), Aesop Rock and two superb Atmosphere EPs.

16. Cadillac Blindside - "True and Cold"
Don't hold any association with Fueled by Ramen against Minneapolis' (now-defunct) Cadillac Blindside: This is some catchy stuff. (Another Cadillac Blindside track, "The Bottom Line," is available here.)

17. KISS - "Strutter"
I can't say I've ever been drawn to any of KISS's "masterworks," but, dammit, "Guitar Hero" is getting to me....

18. Robbers on High Street - "Crown Victoria"
Enjoyable, for sure, but not nearly as saliva-inducing as anything on the group's last effort.

19. The White Stripes - "You're Pretty Good Looking (For a Girl)"
Funny stuff!

20. Okkervil River - "Plus Ones" (listen here)
Right here's a solid track, but I struggle to hear anything more than "second-rate Golden Smog."

21. MK Ultra - "Red Cross"
I love John Vanderslice. Not only is he an unparalleled talent, but he's posted nearly everything he's ever done for free online -- including the work he did with MK Ultra.

22. The Who - "Getting in Tune"
Masterful -- yet sweet and "lofty" -- bass playing on this here classic.

23. The Jayhawks - "What Led Me to This Town"
Does it get any better than this? (If you answered "yes," then, well, sorry to break it to ya, but ... you're an asshole!)

*For Matthew R. Perrine's No. 1 album of the year, of course! (Look for my annual year-end list in the Budgeteer come December.)

Today's Moment of Zen: And this is why rock critics play 'Guitar Hero'