New video from Haim for “If I Could Change Your Mind” off Days Are Gone. Directed by Warren Fu.
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
New video from Haim for “If I Could Change Your Mind” off Days Are Gone. Directed by Warren Fu.
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
The Horrors have a new album Luminous set for a May 5, 2014 release.
Here’s a really cool track off it, “I See You,” released today.
Here’s the track listing for the album:
01 Chasing Shadows
02 First Day of Spring
03 So Now You Know
04 In and Out of Sight
05 Jealous Sun
06 Falling Star
07 I See You
08 Change Your Mind
09 Mine and Yours
10 Sleepwalk
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For Record Store Day this year a live Neil Young and Crazy Horse show, Cow Palace 1986, will be released on vinyl, according to Music Times and exclaim.ca.
Record Store Day takes place April 19 this year.
The November 21, 1986 performance took place at the Cow Palace in Daily City, California, just south of San Francisco.
The show was recorded for radio broadcast by KLOS FM in LA, and has previously been released as a bootleg.
I don’t have a list of the songs being included on the Record Store Day release, but below is the track listing from one of the bootlegs.
Mr Soul (Live)
When You Dance, I Can Really Love (Live)
Down By The River (Live)
Too Lonely (Live)
Heart Of Gold (Live)
After The Goldrush (Live)
Inca Queen (Live)
Drive Back (Live)
Opera Star (Live)
Cortez The Killer (Live)
Sample And Hold (Live)
Computer Age (Live)
Violent Side (Live)
Mideast Vacation (Live)
Long Walk Home (Live)
The Needle And The Damage Done (Live)
When Your Lonely Heart Breaks (Live)
Around The World (Live)
Powderfinger (Live)
Like A Hurricane (Live)
Hey Hey, My My (Live)
Prisoners Of Rock ‘N’ Roll (Live)
Check it out.
Part One:
Part Two:
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On June 19, 2010 Bob Dylan performed at the Messestadion in Dornbirn, Austria.
Some of these are really great.
The entire setlist is here.
Here are some of the performances:
“Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right”:
“Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues”:
“Desolation Row”:
“Ballad of Hollis Brown”:
“The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carol”:
“Honest With Me”:
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I’ve long been a fan of Olympia, Washington’s Justin Trosper. His band Unwound made some superb albums. I’ve previously posted tracks from Trosper’s latest band, Survival Knife.
The group has a debut album due April 29 called Loose Power.
Here’s “Fell Runner,” the first track off it:
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This past weekend Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood performed with the London Contemporary Orchestra at the Wapping Hydraulic Power Station in London and debuted a challenging new song, “loop.”
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Linda Perhacs’ 1970 album Parallelograms was brought back from the dead by Devendra Banhart.
Now Perhacs has a second album, The Soul Of All Natural Things, and it’s as unique as her debut.
You can listen to it now at NPR’s First Listen.
Check out Parallelograms:
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Miley Cyrus and the Flaming Lips’ Wayne Coyne and Steven Drozd performed the Lips’ “Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots Pt. 1″ at the Staples Center in L.A. last night.
Enough said.
Thanks Stereogum!
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Another day, another song from Bob Dylan’s 1976 S.I.R rehearsals with the Rolling Thunder Revue. Today a partial run-through of “Lay Lady Lay,” and then a full run-through of the same song were uploaded. And so here they are.
The full run-through lasts over five minutes.
You can check out my two previous S.I.R. rehearsal posts: Post one and post two.
“Lay Lady Lay”(Take 1):
“Lay Lady Lay” (Take 2):
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It’s one hundred years after William S. Burroughs’ birth. To celebrate, the New York Times has published two intriguing essays regarding what the Times calls the “so-called literary bad boys.”
James Parker writes:
It’s the question every writer faces, every morning of his or her life: Am I Malcolm Gladwell today, or am I Arthur Rimbaud? Do I sit down with my pumpkin latte and start Googling, or do I fire a couple of shots into the ceiling and then stick my head in a bucket of absinthe? Which of these two courses will better serve my art, my agent, my agenda? Old hands are ready with the answer: If you want to stick around, kid, if you want to build your oeuvre, you’ve got to be — in the broadest sense — sober. You’ve got to keep it together. There’s no future in going off the rails. “You go in dutifully, slavishly, and you work,” commanded Norman Mailer, his head-buttings long behind him. “This injunction is wholly anti-romantic in spirit.” But his sternness communicates the strain, does it not, the effort required to suppress the other thing: the room-wrecker, the Shelley inside, the wild buddings of Dionysus.
This is where the literary bad boy lives today, at any rate — in the mind of the writer…
Rivka Galchen writes:
In the seventh grade I admired a charismatic, witty girl who had a particular way of writing her lowercase a’s. After some practice, I took to writing my lowercase a’s in the same fashion. Sometimes we find ourselves emulating a trait that’s merely proximate to something wonderful — you can wear a white suit every day, but it won’t get you any closer to revolutionizing American journalism. Emulating that girl’s charisma or wit would have involved much more work, and trying to think and write like the best of the “literary bad boys” can be near on impossible. The handwriting, or the suit, are manageable.
And I would argue that certain traits we associate with the “literary bad boy” — traits we spend the most time excoriating or lauding, with excoriation and laudation amounting to almost the same thing — are more like the handwriting or the suit than the essential substance. They have little to do with the genuinely countercultural thinking or the intelligently transgressive prose. Instead they are, upon inspection, just the fairly straightforward qualities of persons with more financial or cultural or physical power who exercise that power over people with less. There’s nothing “counter” about that, of course; overpowering in that way implicitly validates things as they are, and implies that this is how they ought to be. So I presume that when we value literary-bad-boy-ness — and there is a lot to value there — those traits wouldn’t be, if we thought about it, the essence of bad-boy-ness; those traits aren’t even distinctive. They’re just trussed-up versions of an unfortunate norm.
Even William Burroughs mocked that idea of a literary bad boy. In his oft quoted short story, “The Lemon Kid,” he wrote: “As a young child Audrey Carsons wanted to be writers because writers were rich and famous. They lounged around Singapore and Rangoon smoking opium in a yellow pongee silk suit. They sniffed cocaine in Mayfair and they penetrated forbidden swamps with a faithful native boy and lived in the native quarter of Tangier smoking hashish and languidly caressing a pet gazelle.” The passage is funny, hyperbolic and also somehow psychologically accurate. Audrey dreams of the trappings of a writer, not of writing. Burroughs’s language illuminates the covert dream within the dream: the moneyed associations of Mayfair and the yellow pongee silk suit, and the de facto purchasing of a person whitewashed into the term “a faithful native boy.” The transgression in the fantasy is revealed to be a self-flattering illusion; the real fantasy, nested inside the manifest one, is the standard and childish desire for dominion….
Read both essays here.
Plus a review of Barry Miles’ “Call Me Burroughs: A Life” here.
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