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Since 1999, IX Ed.

Archive for the ‘Entertainment’ Category

Sound Opinions

Tuesday, August 22nd, 2006

Sound Opinions - Listen Critically - I can’t find now where I got a link to these guys, but Sound Opinions is a rock and roll *talk show* (sweet!) on Chigago Public Radio. It’s excellent, geeky stuff, and it’s a nice antidote to most music radio.

Particularly good (and this was the topic of the aforementioned lost link) was the show with producer Jon Brion, who demonstrates on piano a fascinating comparison between Nirvana’s “Lithium” and Gershwin’s “Someone To Watch Over Me“.

Mashuptown Is Dead. Long Live Mashuptown

Friday, November 18th, 2005

A while back I blogged about Mashuptown, the awesome site and podcast that has been showcasing mashups (two unrelated songs mixed together in some clever way) for the last, oh 8 mos, or so.

Recently Art announced that Mashuptown is closing it’s doors, and taking down all the music it’s been hosting. This is a real shame, and is probably due to some (heh - I first typed “sue” there - Freudian slip?) cease-and-desist letter from the usual suspects.

Art was kind enough to stop by a while back and wish Jodi and I well in our process to adopt Adelina. I wish Art the best of luck, and hope that there are more mashups in his future!

Want It That Way

Thursday, October 27th, 2005

A co-worker just sent me this: BSB Want It That Way.

These Guys Really Want It That Way

I’m crying it’s so funny. Awesome.

Don’t Just Stand There, Dance

Monday, October 17th, 2005

Ok, I finally got around to combining my love of music, particularly R.E.M., with my love of tinkering, in this case with GarageBand:

Don't Just Stand There Dance

Update: I’ve expanded the composition and done (I think) a better job mixing:

Don’t Just Stand There, Dance (Where You Live Mix)

Own Nothing, Have Nothing

Saturday, October 15th, 2005

I just saw one of the new Napster commercials. Slogan: “Own Nothing, Have Everything”. They even do that cliche’d “brain-washing” Outer Limits thing.

Another version: “Hello friend. You don’t need to own music to discover music. To love music. To enjoy music.”

Interesting. This is the world the music industry wants us to live in.

Mashuptown

Friday, July 22nd, 2005

I’m a total sucker for song covers. I’ve suffered this affliction for years, but it’s only been since discovering various… *ahem* alternative *ahem*… sources of music 1 that I’ve been able to fully enjoy my addiction.

I recently discovered another twist to the theme: mashups. A mashup is where an artist (usually a DJ or other audio-hacker) takes two or more (preferably from different genres) songs and mixes them together, producing something that is altogether different, while paying homage to and often enhancing the source material. For example, Wil Smith vs. The Beegees, Lyrics Born vs. AC/DC, or even (am I saying this?) Nirvana vs. Destiny’s Child. Wow.

I am, of course, linking all these from MashupTown, my new favorite podcast.

1. By alternative, of course, I mean Coverville. What?

War of the Worlds: Extermination

Thursday, June 30th, 2005

|Jodi| and I went to see Spielberg’s new movie, War of the Worlds last night. I wasn’t sure what to expect, and had tried to stay away from spoiler sites (which are generally a guilty pleasure of mine). I read the original novel by H. G. Wells in an anthology I got as a kid, and also had heard the Orson Welles ‘Mercury Theater on the Air’ broadcast on cassette tape as a teen. Speilberg’s vision borrows from both, and exudes the hopelessness and desperation that Orson Welles’ interpretation captured so brilliantly.

This is not a summer blockbuster movie, though it’s running in June and probably cost a gazillian bucks. This is an intense, visceral film, shot almost exclusively from street level. There are few, if any, of the wide, panning “money shots” that populate your typical “Independence Day”-type blockbuster.

The film follows deadbeat dad Ray Ferrier (Cruise) and his two kids as they make their way from New York to Boston during an alien invasion, and because of the intimate POV the audience almost never sees anything the main characters do not experience. Several times we see the military heading off to do battle with the alien tripods, but the action that typically fills our view and overwhelms the audience instead happens off screen. In Spielberg’s vision, we instead experience the terror of the unknown - the frozen grip of the knowledge that “just over that hill” indescribably horrible things are happening, and there’s nothing we can do about it. There are several scenes that rival the basement scenes in Signs - horror and dread at the inexplicable lights, sounds and violence taking place outside.

The film is not without its weaknesses, including the ending. We do get to see the aliens, which in a small way diminishes the “cold, unsympathetic, vast intelligences” described in the introduction to both novel and movie. But nevertheless I was glued to my seat the whole film, and was pleasantly surprised at the character arc given to Cruise, as well as what he does with it. The highlight of the film has to be the performance from Dakota Fanning (”Taken”, “Man On Fire”) as Ferrier’s daughter Rachel. She is a scarily amazing actress - flawlessly portraying the innocent but mature-beyond-her-years child, then the confusion, denial, terror — even the vacancy of a mind overwhelmed.

All in all, I would completely recommend the movie, with the warning that this is an intense, and intensely personal, film. Enjoy, but take the PG13 rating seriously - it’s not a kids movie.