Month: August 2009

Marianne Faithfull Retrospective

  In 1964 Marianne Faithfull made a rather innocuous decision that would forever change the course of her life.  Marianne accepted an invitation to a swanky shindig in London one night and very soon after arriving she’d attracted the attentions of one Andrew Loog-Oldham who wanted to know if the pretty young lass could sing.  Andrew was the manager of The Rolling Stones and after hearing the young Faithfull sing he wasted no time in having her singed to the Decca label.  The first few years of Faithfull’s career were pretty tame to say the least.  She was the darling…
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Keeping Up (Vol. 24)

Here are another 5 quick picks for you, the loyal reader: MUSIC: Maplewood / Yeti Boombox – Self-described as “canyon rock from Brooklyn,” Maplewood is a New York quartet comprised of members of Nada Surf, Champale and Koester. Their first new album in five years, Yeti Boombox, brings more of the familiar Bread and America-influenced sounds that fans heard on their debut. In fact, not only did America opt to cover Maplewood’s “Indian Summer” on their 2007 comeback album, but America’s Gerry Beckley can be heard on Yeti along with Sparklehorse’s Alan Weatherhead. A lot of name-checking, sure, but of…
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Mixtape Mondays: Remembering First Love

[Editor's note: Cover images of albums previously reviewed on the DV have been linked to the review.]First love: it’s one of those things, like death and taxes, that none of us are immune to. It’s messy and fleeting, but it’s enduring, too, carving out a slice of your heart in such a way that you can never be made whole again, not quite. Or, as author Joyce Carol Oates wrote in her 2002 novel I’ll Take You There, “Your first love you’ll never outlive. After that first love you will never love another in that way.” It’s more bittersweet than…
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Keeping Up (Vol. 23)

Here are another 5 quick picks for you, the loyal reader:MUSIC: Jenny Dee & The Deelinquents – Previously known for fronting The Downbeat 5 and The Dents, Jenny Dee is a Boston indie icon. Ditching her punk past for a “girl group” soul direction, her debut EP has already made waves in Spain, where her and band has already toured. Produced by Matt Beaudoin and Q Division’s Ed Valauskas, the recordings are sonically-fitting to tracks like “Let Me Go” and “Keeping Time,” which are presently posted for streaming on MySpace. (myspace.com/jennydeemusic) BOOK: Jerry Heller / Ruthless – Jerry Heller first…
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Dark Progression DVD Delves Deep Into Depeche Mode

As an official documentary, not authorized by Depeche Mode or their record company, The Dark Progression is stripped-down and dry – no band interviews, no fancy information booklet (in fact no booklet at all), no extra music. This documentary analyzes the progression of the band through the string of four key records – Some Great Reward, Black Celebration, Violator, Songs Of Faith And Devotion – that shaped their career and made them the greatest electronic band of all time. In the absence of band interviews (barring snippets from archived interviews of Martin Gore and Alan Wilder), the story is told…
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Mixtape Mondays: The Black Book Mixtape

[Editor's note: Cover images of albums previously reviewed on the DV have been linked to the review.]Flicking through my iPod the other day, the landslide of tracks titled with a name caught my attention. Trying to piece these together for a mixtape, however, left me obstacled with an obvious gender imbalance. Save for a handful of tracks, the majority of songs were about some girl or other, and were sung by a male artist. So what causes the gaping divide? It’s really hard to put into words without sounding tyrannically feminist or, oddly enough in my case, misogynistic. Even looking…
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Woodstock At 40 Retrospective

  Forty years ago this month, for three epochal days a farm in upstate New York became the center of the musical and cultural universe, hosting a seminal music event for the generation of youth who came of age during the 1960’s -- no, the seminal event -- Woodstock. The summer of love in San Francisco, the philosophy of the so-called hippie generation, the rise of recreational drug use, the escalation of The Vietnam War, and the change from the simple music of The Beach Boys, The Four Seasons and many of the British Invasion artists to that of Jimi…
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Trapt In Cedar Rapids With A Four-Band Lineup

As I walked towards 1st Avenue Live in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the venue that hosted Trapt, Framing Hanley, Since October, and Inept on Friday, July 17, I was greeted by Since October's road manager. "Are you Paul?" He had caught me geeking out, carrying a Since October CD and a small notebook, and brought us inside to greet Since October's drummer, Audie Grantham. Grantham is an intimidating guy. He's 6'4, around 280 pounds with tattoos up and down his arms and neck. Beyond that, he’s a humble, thoughtful, talented musician who is a member of a band that is on…
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Keeping Up (Vol. 22)

Here are another 5 quick picks for you, the loyal reader:MUSIC: Reel Big Fish – Few bands survive having a hit major label album, let alone lasting more than another decade beyond that. Reel Big Fish can not only be heralded for survivors in the music field, but for also remaining consistent as a good times party band. In fact, when seeing them live, even a casual music listener may actually realize they know a lot of songs that Aaron Barrett crew are performing. Presently on the road with the also-legendary Dave Wakeling-fronted The English Beat, Reel Big Fish is…
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