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06 Feb 2010 22:17

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Music: Cymbals Eat a Soft Pack of Guitars on our Saturday Mixtape

  • 1. Remember 2004, when the Von Bondies’ “C’Mon C’Mon” became an unavoidable hit after singer Jason Stollsteimer kicked Jack White’s ass? Yeah, neither do we. Anyway, six years later, we have The Soft Pack, who lose a “C’Mon” but keep the basic elements of what made that song pretty cool. But disinterested vocals push it over the edge.
  • 2. “I think we need more post-coital, and less post-rock.” It’s a dirty joke, sure, but a good one. And in the hands of Los Campesinos! (on track “Straight in at 101”), it comes off as a little funny and a little sad, like an Art Brut song. OK, more funny than sad.
  • 3. Back in September, we saw up-and-coming indie rockers Cymbals Eat Guitars open up for The Pains of Being Pure at Heart, and were super-impressed. Their somewhat traditional take on indie rock is nonetheless exhilarating, as “Some Trees (Merrit Moon)” shows. It has at least five clumps of songs mixed into two minutes, yet somehow they all work.
  • 4. Speaking of somewhat traditional indie rock, Lou Barlow is kind of the king of that, and “Ocean” is the closest his baby Sebadoh got to a hit. (Granted, Barlow is a former-and-current member of Dinosaur Jr. and side project Folk Implosion did pull off a hit of its own.) But it’s got a killer hook on it and it’s done in three minutes. You should love it.
  • 5. Keeping with our trend of of guitar-driven indie rock on this week’s mixtape, we present you with Sonic Youth’s “Teen Age Riot” – perhaps the best guitar-driven indie rock song of the last 25 years. Makes sense. Think of it as a love letter to noisy electric guitars.

03 Feb 2010 21:43

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Music: It was drugs: Jay Reatard’s cause of death finally revealed

  • He died from “cocaine toxicity,” and alcohol was in his system. The plot to this film has been written way too many times. Live fast, die young, take in lots of sex, drugs and rock’n’roll in-between. And a medical examiner confirmed that this, too, was how Jay Reatard died last month. On the plus side, his legacy will be put on wax once again for more to hear: Albums by his bands The Reatards and The Lost Sounds will be re-released by two of his former labels. Sob. He was one of the greats. source

02 Feb 2010 19:09

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01 Feb 2010 20:40

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Music: Surprisingly, people actually watched the Grammys this year

  • 35% increase from 2008; 26.6 million watched source

01 Feb 2010 09:10

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Music: Every time we see Michael Jackson’s kids, it’s a big scene

  • Prince Michael Jackson did a great job of speaking in front of a massive crowd, all the more impressive because we don’t think we’ve ever actually seen the dude. Paris, who you remember from Jackson’s funeral, holds up well. Either way, this moment (where they accept Jackson’s Lifetime Achievement Award) is, again, great television. source

01 Feb 2010 09:01

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Music: A handful of quick numbers from last night’s Grammy adventure

  • six the number of awards Beyonce took home; that’s better than everyone else
  • 20 the age of Taylor Swift, the youngest winner of an “Album of the Year” honor, ever
  • 2004 the year the Zac Brown Band released its debut; they won Best New Artist source

31 Jan 2010 09:47

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Music: Lady Gaga: An example of how the music business goes forward?

Gaga’s odd sound and image has ruled music. How? Credit her business model, where, for more promotion, a cut of EVERYTHING goes to the record company. source
 

30 Jan 2010 17:41

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Music: Our Saturday Mixtape plays Delilah with your soft-rock favorites

  • We know, we know. This isn’t the indie rock that we usually put in this space, but after listening to Phil Collins again earlier this week, we felt it was high time to give into our guilty pleasures. Julius is extra guilty about the Cutting Crew, by the way. Here’s this week’s list:

  • 1. “Against All Odds,” this song is a stone-cold classic. Somehow, a song drenched in cheese and epic hugeness like this Phil Collins classic became something of a cultural touchstone, and Collins himself – a drummer for one of the weirdest bands of the ’70s, Genesis – a pop star of the MTV era. In the process, he also neutered Genesis, but you can’t win ’em all.
  • 2. Cutting Crew just died in our arms. We were trying to resuscitate them, but for some reason the crew wouldn’t move anymore. The band, strangely enough, is still around, although nobody knows any of their songs besides this one.
  • 3. It’s pretty funny that Todd Rundgren, that oddball of ’70s rock, started out his career sounding like a Carole King wannabe. (OK, he did have a couple of years in the Nazz, but that doesn’t count.) He hasn’t been this remotely good since, not even when he released a song called “I Hate My Frickin’ ISP” back in 2000.
  • 4. Everything about 10cc doesn’t suggest this song. The airy pop of “I’m Not In Love” is kind of an anomaly in the band’s career. They were an art-rock band through and through, with periods (before this hit) of playing bubblegum pop and (after this hit) creating some early music video breakthroughs – both under different names.
  • 5. Hall & Oates is the cheese-pop band of choice for indie rockers, with its pop-drenched Philly soul somehow standing out above the fray from its era. Sure, it’s dated, but the falsettos on “Sara Smile” are less dated than Michael Bolton and Richard Marx.

26 Jan 2010 23:13

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26 Jan 2010 10:34

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Music: Pitchfork throws out a make-them-famous rating for Beach House