January 2010 Archives

And so it begins...

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One down, 29 years 11 months to go. Ah, the American dream -- indentured servitude to your mortgage. I mean, home ownership! Hooray! Totally worth it, I mean it. Really, I'm psyched.

 
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Bonked, 25:40

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OK, I'm sure I'm supposed to see the bright side. I mean, I did actually strap on running shoes, raise the heart rate and sweat a bit. But, the seemingly magical time of +/- 25 minutes again was my current running barrier. According to Map My Run, I hadn't saved a running workout since October 5 (you do the math), and while I have ridden my bike since, I very well may not have run since then. So, 25 minutes should be a cause for minor self-congratulations, no? No, not so much. Route below, no I didn't finish it without walking.

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The Year of Spending Dangerously

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OK, I know 2009 is over, but I'm not quite ready to put it to bed, blogolistically speaking. And still to type are my thoughts on the last decade, musically speaking.

But if there was some theme to the last year, spending my hard-earned Benjamins seems to have been it. Off the top of my head, sort of chronologically:

Also in the "low three figures" were a new MP3 player and a new suit, but those are going linkless.

So, 2010, the year of frugality? You'd think I'd slow down with the turning of a calendar page and a 6-figure mortgage, but the new started like the old with a new (well, new to me but really vintage) coffee table and dining table. Eh, it's only money. It grows on trees, right?

One part amusing, fifteen parts frightening

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I suppose I should be flattered at the promotion; didn't know the dreaded middle management qualified as being an "executive." As was suggested to me, I should share this with my father, I'm sure he'd be proud.

But, more to the point, it was shocking and not a little bit frightening to see a "news story," or at least a short brief with a byline, about me and my recent home purchase published on BlockShopper. I've tried to formulate a reasoned opinion around the two-faced beast that the internet is and here's some more empirical evidence.

No, I'd never heard of BlockShopper either, but on their About Us page, they claim to provide "original news and data" as they are run by "experienced journalists." And the kicker: "For us, this is a journalistic exercise; we aspire to be part of the 'next generation' of local media companies, taking local news gathering to an entirely new level."

What makes this whole bit amusing is the lack of journalism involved. Shania Sampson took public record information -- my purchase of a house -- and coupled it with my LinkedIn profile. She turned bullet points into sentences, but that was extent of the journalistic exercise. She/they even copied the shitty little jpeg profile picture of me. So, do I and the photographer get a share on any ad revenue?

A quick look back at 2009

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Five days into the new decade. Anyone still remember 2009? Herewith, a quick look at some of my favorite spins. For a while this last year, a long while, I thought I was going to make good on my oft-threatened promise at having a top 10 list with three #3s and no #1, but some good music and a sense of not wanting to upset the DAA applecart won out.

Annual award winner for most overhyped album that I just don't get at all:

Small Band category: Grizzly Collective Animal Bear
Yes, I know these are two different groups, but their records seemed to be released simultaneously, the foaming-at-the-mouth was nearly unanimous, and while there are interesting moments on each, I can't even put together a good 5-song EP from both combined.
Medium Band category: Wilco -- Wilco (the album)
I have to admit I've never "gotten" Wilco. My favorite of theirs is Mermaid Avenue, songs they didn't write played with Billy Bragg.
International Conglomerate category: U2 -- No More Eno/Lanois Behind the Boards

Almost but not quite:
Florence & the Machine -- Lungs
Silversun Pickups -- Swoon
Lily Allen -- It's Not Me, It's You
Sloan -- Hit & Run ep

And, here we go...

10. Green Day -- 21st Century Breakdown

61EAItkOLYL._SL110_.jpgWent to the well once too often. A second overly ambitious song cycle is something of a misfire, but I applaud the attempt and there's enough solid material here worth listening to again and again. Was going to be extraordinarily hard to top American Idiot and the safe route might have been to re-issue Dookie, but they went big and tripped. But just some minor scrapes, the kids will be alright.



9. Franz Ferdinand - Tonight: Franz Ferdinand
51sEc3WBJaL._SL110_.jpgThe Glaswegians' third outshone Arctic Monkeys' disappointment this year. The dapper lads could have continued to remake their successful formula; instead they offered some new twists (an eight-minute track that borders on house music, for instance) while not totally abandoning the darkly clever and seductive sounds that got them this far. A top-notch live act, to boot.


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8. Anouar Brahem - The Astounding Eyes of Rita
Released on ECM, need I say any more? The astounding sounds of North African jazz is probably the only way to describe it.




7. Gossip - Music for Men
51rA4RQlEaL._SL110_.jpgWith the dissolution of Sleater-Kinney, Gossip may be the best live band going right now. The downside of that reputation is that studio efforts don't nearly measure up. Music for Men comes close. No doubt Rick Rubin is to credit for that. And, well, Beth is worth every drop of ink spilled about her.



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6. Manic Street Preachers - Journal for Plague Lovers
The back story only adds color; stick with the solid rock sound and fascinating lyrics.





5. BLK JKS - After Robots
61q35sXlOQL._SL110_.jpgAfter Metric, I think I listened to this record most often this year. If the compilation Indestructible Beat of Soweto was the gateway to African sounds for many 20 years ago but you haven't listened since Graceland, let BLK JKS introduce you to 21st century South African rock.



41HAQotTZ7L._SL110_.jpg4. Yo La Tengo - Popular Songs
Recent releases had a bit too much filler for a band so talented. Yes, the two songs that fill over 25 minutes to close the album probably wouldn't be noticeably different if they were cut in half, but they feel right in this collection. The groove also feels organic and natural not the forced sounds on recent-ish releases like And Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out.


3. Sonic Youth - the Eternal
Gerard Cosloy, the Youth finally paid you back. After leaving Homestead for SST in the mid-80s, and then releasing the titanic Daydream Nation on Blast First!, the
Youth de-camped 51ueNya7SFL._SL110_.jpgfor the majors for more than 15 years. On their first record songs to be released on an indie, albeit the well-funded Matador, (an yes, I'm discounting the purely experimental SYR releases), Sonic Youth drop one of their career's finest.

My theory on the Youth posits that when Kim is engaged and less hippy-dippy, the album holds. Thurston's and Lee's contributions are givens; Kim is the wild card. Like Daydream Nation, she and Thurston are sharing vocals on songs more so maybe she just needs to write more songs with her husband. No more dissecting, just listen.


31z+KQxY4zL._SL110_.jpg2. Metric - Fantasies
I really thought this was going to be #1 for me as it was played early and often and loudly by me all spring and summer and fall. Infectious, rollicking, danceable, hooky, fun, solid from start to finish. If not for a ridiculously ambitious success, it would have stayed #1 for me on December 31st too.



1. The Decemberists - The Hazards of Love
I've had my moments (in a bad way) with the Decemberists in the past. I believe
they won or shared my "Record That Everyone Seems to Love and I Don't Get in
the Least" award one year. Colin Meloy has already looked at song cycles
 or a sole source of inspiration (The 516cXjbc6tL._SL110_.jpgCrane Wife) and come up lacking, but the Hazards of Love absolutely nails it.

"The Wanting Comes in Waves/Repaid" wouldn't feel out of place on a P.J. Harvey record. (Pete(r), ahem.) "The Rake's Song" is a delicious musing on murder. Why folk rock lends itself to storytelling so well is beyond my simpleton ways. But I can say this collection is the best folk rock song cycle since the Rev Hammer's Freeborn John about the life of John Lilburne. (Look it and him up; well worth it.) In the interim, I'm going to have another listen to Margaret's fate.




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