Tag Archives: radiohead

South By Skulldiggery – Band of Skulls Continue To Conquer The US

23 Mar

SxSw was a (not so hot) mess. If you combined the party hounds from the Super Bowl, Mardi Gras and Spring Break and confined them to a six block radius…and then tried to add some showcasing bands to the mix, you get a pretty good idea of the mayhem.

I have a full report on my favorite finds of the festival but the only interview I granted during the whole week is a band I’ve been talking about for a year now…yes the ONLY interview I agreed to do. Band Of Skulls.

These guys knocked me off my stiletto boots in the cramped sweaty back room of Three Of Clubs last summer. And I’ve made sure not to miss their LA performances ever since whether it be at Jimmy Kimmel or the Hammer museum. Their LP release Baby Darling Dollface Honey, doesn’t have a bad song on it and is chock full of dirty sexy soulful riffs -  the way the guitar was intended to be played .

Now boasting a spot on the Twilight: New Moon soundtrack, a Lollapalooza performance, an upcoming Coachella slot and a currently touring with BRMC, it seems that Band Of Skulls is catching on across the nation. Normally that would annoy an uber fan. I’d complain that I saw them first and their popularity means that they no longer hold that special something. But it isn’t so. I’m super excited for the world to discover this bluesy ballsy band.

It’s time to stop giving our attention to the pussy auto tuned acts and start turning our attention to the deserved few who are letting it bleed. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you BAND OF SKULLS:

2010 – The Year in Review…In Advance

1 Jan

It started in September.

I got email after email from publications asking me for my ‘best of the year’ picks and ‘best of the decade’ choices. And then there was an onslaught online, on TV, on the radio, and in print…what’s left of print, that is.

‘Best of the…’ ‘Top Ten’, ‘Top Twenty’, ‘Top Fifty’… the ‘Top of the year’, the ‘Top of the Decade’…ad nauseum.

The year wasn’t even over and we were already rating the songs and films that have been created, comparing apples to oranges. Then it got weirder. Best tweets. Best viral videos. Best broken marriages. Best reality show melt downs. Best political failures. Best new babies born. Best real housewives you’ve never heard of.

If it happened on a grand scale, we can slap a number on it like a pig at the county fair and smugly call ourselves an expert…because that’s what a lot of us journalists, comedians, writers and bloggers are paid to do, right?

But then, suddenly, there were best of lists written by EVERYONE.  I’m glad to know that people all over are enjoying Miike Snow or Radiohead, but when butchers and bakers and candle stick makers are publishing their Best of 2009 lists, it kind of dilutes the magical lists of whatever the fuck Pitchfork or Spin puts out there. If Paste Magazine posts their fifth favorite movie is Amelie and then 20,000 other people tweet the same thing within five minutes, then does precious Paste even make a dent? No wonder magazines are dying.

And then there’s the question that I’ve been aching to ask. Who cares? Your close friends might. If you are a top critic, a few fellow editors might. If you mention something obscure you might earn some “oh yeah, I totally forgot that one!’ points.  If you can write something interesting about your favorites, then you are a gifted writer or comedian and your talents really should be used elsewhere…like on television. Seriously, TV really needs some better writers.

So what’s with all the list making? Must we constantly analyze our past pop culture? Can’t we just box it up and send it into space for other species or our descendants to discover? Can’t we move forward and create the new? The next?

Everyone is entitled to blog, tweet and have an opinion and social media has given everyone a voice. That is the wave of the future. So perhaps it means the death rattle of the ever present Best or Top lists. I mean, hasn’t VH1 beat the living  ‘I Love The’ hell out of it? I was actually assigned a best of list…and then eventually declined to do it. I removed myself from the rabble and decided to once again, look towards the future.

Strangely enough, a few days later, I was contacted out of the blue by Barb Powell, psychic to the stars. Barb doesn’t know me at all, but found my blog and asked if perhaps there wasn’t something we could work on together…like she he had read my mind or something.

Barb Powell is a psychic from Western Canada, who started with a small local client base but is now popular in Los Angeles, and has worked with the cast of shows such as The Ghost Whisperer, Haunting in Connecticut, Brothers and Sisters and The Mentalist…can she predict that Simon Baker and I are meant for each other?

Barb works in a very specific way – she doesn’t need a client to ask a lot of questions, because she gives answers to questions you haven’t even asked. Barb offered to do a mini reading on me and without knowing a thing about me personally, nailed a specific health issue I had been dealing with. Color me impressed.

Before I could ask her questions about the future of music, movies and media,  she already knew what I was looking for. And then some.

Here’s a little bit of what you can expect for 2010:

Good news for people who like their music free…The big labels will continue to get it wrong and eventually cause a big crash!

I think they will get it wrong by pouring money into stopping piracy and legal matters instead of focusing where they should perhaps use subscription type of music channels, etc in order to download.  I think in the next year to two years we will see a crash and they will then HAVE to re-organize.  However I believe that someone will come in and build up independent artists who are good of course but where there is a new way of doing things by subscribing to a site and downloading whatever, whenever they want.  This would be outside the actual music industry or RIAA and how they do things.  In another word..music will be free.


Who will this Indie Robin Hood be? That is unclear. But so far the job is available, so Silverlakers and Williamsburgers apply within!

As far as the Indie film world, Barb sees strides for filmmakers who’s pockets aren’t lined with Avatar type dollars.

We will see an increase with independent films, for sure, what with some of the most popular and cheaper films that have become a success.

Good news for the new legion of Wes Anderson types out there who want to launch their own Bottle Rocket. But they will still have to battle Big Hollywood. However with 2010 studio offerings like Hot Tub Time Machine, it might not be hard for up and comers to win at the box office and beat the majors.

Sigh. Hot Tub Time Machine. Really John Cusack? Next time you’re thinking of doing a movie like this, let me know. I’ll come stand outside your window with a boom box playing a list of reasons of why you will soon be Rob Schneider if you don’t stop this nonsense.

On the topic of music mediocrity, Barb reports:

We will see some upset for the Nickelback lead singer…the band does well but we will see a fall out later part of 2010 due to addictions….but will bounce back in 2011 for an awesome comeback record.

I will wait with baited breath for more from them…people are ready to listen to more pop songs sung by the weird art school girl, whose gender was the biggest mystery of 2009. And her hate spewing internet Svengali will get a reality show – perhaps his crowning glory?

Lots of great things for Lady Gaga career in 2010 including a TV special. Perez Hilton (famed blogger) will have his own reality show although health will become an issue.

Poor Perez. I’m sure many will come to his bedside to wish him well. After GLAAD came down hard on Perez (himself gay) in ’09 for his anti-gay slurs and his trash talk, perhaps he’ll change his ways?

I’m not holding my breath. I wonder what Perez will draw on Miley’s face when it’s reported she is with child?

More news for the Miley Cyrus fans and watchers.  There will be pregnancy rumors once again and they will turn out to be true in 2010.


Another blight on the small screen will be more Sarah Palin. Not sure this is a prediction as much as most of America unable to stop her PR steamroller, but nonetheless it’s apparently about to happen, times eleventy. Just a warning in case you want to cancel your cable subscription in advance.

We will see more of Sarah Palin on TV in late 2010 early 2011…talk show.

Sarah Palin talk show. I just threw up in my mouth. What will her show’s ‘book club’ feature, aside from her own book? Pop ups?

Barb has predicted a lot of celebrity deaths, both expected and scarily unexpected. I’ve chosen not to list them all, but one, I thought I could safely mention without any tears being shed…

This isn’t a Hollywood prediction but interesting just the same…Charles Manson will die.


Maybe this will clear the way for Roman Polanski to return to the US? And perhaps maybe many of the grizzly man indie guitarists of LA will stop emulating his long bearded look and his quest for a harem? It didn’t work out well for Charlie, guys…

Two major highlights Barb has predicted for 2010 in the media, one uplifting, one disconcerting.

Major media involving China/Japan but more so China in regards to war.

War with China is scary…and 24 hour news coverage by cable news outlets is outright terrifying. Hopefully both diplomacy and real journalism will prevail.

Singers/Actors unite for the environment to promote saving the ocean and rain forest.

If we ever needed a new Geldof (Bob, not Peaches.) to step up and create a new World Aid, the time is now.

French/American company The Hours recently started the Tck Tck Tck campagin to save the environment and there are many others.

Now is the time to unite in this cause. I, for one, would be proud to be a part of this.

Barb has made many other predictions about celebrity career triumphs and failures and marriages and divorces. Seems like it’s going to be a chock filled year. She’s even said I’m going to go against type and get cast in a serious acting role:

There will be an ongoing role in a series that reminds me of CSI or Law & Order type of show where it seems you play a detective or bad ass type of woman who gets the bad bad people.

I’m so looking forward to kicking some bad, bad ass!

So what’s your biggest prediction for 2010?

Follow both Barb and me on Twitter at @aliontheair and @mediumBarbP  and tweet us your top 2010 prediction with the hashtags #aliontheair #barbpowell.

My favorite answer will win a free reading with Barb!

Until then, have a great and list free New Year!


Band Of Skulls – Rock’s New Backseat Lovers

5 Jun

Dammit, I wish I still had my 1974 Chevy Monza. She was an old beater, white, with wood paneled interiors and an 8 track player. I only had 4 cassettes I picked up at a garage sale: Saturday Night Fever Soundtrack, Foghat, Sweet and some musical (Chess?), but it was a bad-ass car. Not that I appreciated it when I was sixteen. Most of my friends got a Beemer or an Mercedes when they turned sixteen, just as they spent winters in Aruba, coming back from Christmas break with cornrows and hickeys.

monza

No, I didn’t appreciate my $200 ’74 Monza beater. I berated it for not being a cool enough car to tool around in with my fellow cheerleaders. It wasn’t a flashy Iroc or a brand new mint Audi. So, I wasn’t that bothered when the Monza met an untimely end at the hand of Mike Ruffino’s station wagon in the high school parking lot…but I mourn the little Monza now. I wish I had it today. The first thing I’d do is cruise down Vine street while listening to UK act Band Of Skulls.

bandofskulls

BOS played two back-to-back shows last night at the Viper Room and the Rumble at the 3 of Clubs. They were rowdy but intimate shows, where I stood close enough to see the rocknroll pores of the players. If you weren’t there, you won’t get to see pores anytime soon…rumor has it their next big US date will be Lollapalooza.

4681_84868182769_776832769_1716693_6296431_nphoto: Quinlan

Of course comparisons to this hard rock trio will undoubtedly mention two pieces like the Black Keys and The White Stripes. Sure, the bluesy rock riffs are similar, but only if Meg White could really sing – and play a mean bass line. There’s something more here than just another searing Wolfmother scorcher too. The songs are more complex, while at the same time being catchy with a classic rock feel. I don’t know why but I imagined making out to this music in the back of my Monza, with Sweet blaring through the open windows.

band-of-skulls

Maybe it’s the dual singer pairing of Russell Marsden and Emma Richardson’s vocals, Emma bringing the Chrissie Hynde/Heart feel while Russell howls a la White. Perhaps it’s the performance level, which is hard and tight but at the same time filled with space and pregnant, rock baby pauses. Perhaps it’s because they’ve recorded their first album at the musical Vatican – Radiohead’s Courtyard Studios. Or hell, maybe it’s because it just rocks – it doesn’t have to be smart or make sense if it moves you. And it made me want to move to the back seat. If you want to get in on their rise to the top, you can download their new Shangri-La Music release, Baby Darling Doll Face Honey.

band-of-skulls-i-know-what-i-am

I tunes had a free mp3 download too, for the broke and hungry. That might hold you over until you can catch them on tour with Brody Dalle’s Spinerette or at the Hammer Museum in July. Otherwise, for more skullduggery, you’ll have to beg me for a ride in my Monza.

This Sex Was On Fire

4 Dec

When a major landmark or institution closes or is destroyed, it’s common for a mourning period to follow. The passing of monument will be an elegiac era of super size proportions which will break hearts and hard ons across the world…yes, early this morning, a fire gutted The Body Shop in Los Angeles.

Al Seib

photo credit: Al Seib

There are four men in particular who are probably at this moment, dabbing their eyes with black lacy g-strings. These are the stalwart citizens who immortalized the establishment in their song, Girls, Girls, Girls. In a way, Motley Crue are both artists and patrons of the arts. For their tribute to dancing girls undoubtedly raised the profile of the oft scorned art of totally nude strip dancing.

patrons of the arts

The Body Shop has graced the Sunset Strip since the 40s where it once was a burlesque club. Luckily, it was transformed into an all nude dancing theater just in time for the hair metal stampede down the Sunset Strip. It even paid the rent of many budding, hungry ‘actresses’, Courtney Love being one. I never had the pleasure of frequenting this particular establishment. When I was researching the art of stripping for a play I had written, my cast mates and I kept to Crazy Girls and Cheetahs, which was titilating enough to mess with our heads in a method acting sorta way. So, I can’t properly relate to the loss of this mecca of culture, but I realize the pain is deep.

Theater of the absurd

Theater of the absurd

There is no exact word on how the fire started, though my money is on someone ‘smokin in the boys room’ (sorry, had to). There are plans to rebuild the Shop, but it will remain shuttered until those renovations are done. Where, o where, will these generous men go to appreciate bodies in motion? Where will they find long legs, burgundy lips, red lips and fingertips? How will they keep fledgling models ‘over-employed’? Where can these doctors go to feel good?

model/actress/nameless

model/actress/nameless

These patrons need to look no further than the dulcet tones of Vince Neil’s humble suggestions. How about a trip to sunny Florida? The Dollhouse in Fort Lauderdale could cure your blues. If humidity isn’t your bag, Hotlanta has Tattletails AND a Waffle House. Two treats in one! If you’re up for a ski lift, Vancouver’s Marble Arc will fill your need for tats and ass. Gay Paree seems like nothing of the sort, if you take in the double ‘D’s at the Crazy Horse. Or in French, Le Cheval Fou.

benjamins and booty

benjamins and booty

Of course Los Angeles is a veritable cornucopia of sin dens. There’s Jumbo’s Clown Room. That is the premiere place to watch greasy hipsters watch a broken anorexic sadly strip to Radiohead’s Karma Police. Cheetahs is more of the rockabilly girls scarred with cigarette burns, vibe. And the Crazy Girls are all about the benjamins waiting to lap dance a benefactor. I’m sure if Vince and Tommy are in town you can still find them raising ‘hail’ (hell) at the Seventh Vail.

Too fast for love

Too fast for love

I know, I know…they’re just not the same as the infamous Body Shop. Again, my heart leaps out of my 34 C chest for all of these philandering philanthropists. These are tough times. They are times of change. They are times of joining hands and helping your fellow man.

I suggest that all ladies out there be kind to their fellow man. In fact, you can help your favorite fellow man, just by doing a strip tease in the comfort of your own home. Think of it as a form of physical therapy to get him through the night…and the many nights to come, without the Body Shop.

The Rules Of Britannia – An American in London

3 Nov

As a best selling British novelist once said, It’s been the best of times and the worst of times. I’ve been kicking ass up and down each coast of this big country…but it’s the country that has me worried. It seems like we’ve just done lost our collective minds. Sarah Palin? Really? Fuck.

Los Angeles, in particular can be one long Groundhog Day of ignorance. The weather is almost always the same and if there’s any pressing matter, there is an abundance of sunshine, drugs, shops or hotties to distract you from working it out. No wonder most of our movies are shit.

I’ve always had a thing for the UK. I love the music and literature. I love the people and the countryside – I only need 265,879 distant relatives to die before I can claim my castle in Scotland. Even my sense of humor (or humour, if you will) tilts quixotically towards the wit and wordplay of the British. It’s more cunning than slapstick. The very American pie-in-the-face has never made me laugh.

I miss cloudy skies and foliage. I miss crunching leaves on cobblestone streets and taking simple public transport. I miss meeting people who read…I need to get the hell out of here and pop across the pond! Passport, check. Pounds, check. Ready or not, England, here I come.

double decker bus

double decker bus

There are some unofficial rules and lessons about the land my ancestors once migrated from. Some may want to heed my advice when they hear London calling. Here are my Rules of Britannia…

1. Fly Virgin Air

It really does make you feel touched for the very first time. Touched in more ways than one – they actually care about your comfort. Seduction starts with a bottomless glass of wine. Next up is dinner and a movie if you want to watch…or just watch the hot guy across from you and flirt with him via on-plane texting. To keep you sighing in bed, you are given socks and a sleep mask. And after taking a ride on them, they’ll bring you breakfast in bed when you wake up. Delicious.

breakfast in bed - London is so totally calling

breakfast in bed for a Virgin rider

Oh how I love London. Arriving on UK soil always makes me sigh as if I’ve come home, in some cosmic, past life sense. I don’t know the country like the back of my hand, but I have explored it a bit. Dating a Brit in the film industry afforded me the opportunity to roam the countryside and see the lush rolling hills and chalky cliffs. And going out with a titled soldier in the Royal navy afforded me a peek into how the upper crust live.

However, this time around was all about the music. A series of meetings, plus some friends on tour coming through, ensured that I’d be sticking to a rock n roll week in the city of London. I was ready to turn it out, tricks and all.

2. Depend On The Kindness Of Strangers

Now, if you take Blanche Dubois’ advice in most large American cities, you will be (as the Brits say) buggered. Asking someone I’ve never met for help isn’t something I’d normally do. Strangers in America will ignore you or scowl at you, if you’re lucky. They’ll rob you blind or take your life, if you aren’t. So, I don’t do the ‘damsel in distress’ thing very well. But after getting scammed and stranded with both a mobile phone AND a laptop that wouldn’t work, I needed some assistance and fast.

I tried calling Film School who were touring the country, but couldn’t reach them. I gave a shout to Dan, the manager of Passenger, who declined with the best excuse I’ve ever heard: he was on his way to the hospital with a burst appendix. I told myself to remember to ask to see the scar for verification.

I was, essentially, buggered.

Well, many strangers in London allowed me to depend on their kindness. A taxi driver at Heathrow lent me his cell phone. A film producer named Frankie offered me a place in his flat, as did a tour manager named Paul. And not the sleazy ‘hey honey come sleep in my bed’ offer – a legit place to lay my head. My eventual landlord even gave me a reduced rate to let his flat, because he felt sorry for all I had gone through. People all over the city offered to carry my bags, give me directions, buy me a pint – it was so very anti-NYC.

In fact, every time I found myself in a bit of a predicament in London, there was always a kind stranger willing to go out of their way to help me. Now, I could be jaded and chalk it up to my blond Americaness, but I truly think it’s a core part of their culture. After months of feeling down on my fellow man, this restored my faith in humanity.

my London room with a view

my London room with a view

3. Watch MTV UK If You Actually Like Music

Or MTV2 UK, to be exact. I was raised on MTV, and I’ve worked there on and off for most of my adult life. I’m not fazed by the prestige – mainly because there isn’t much anymore. A network that once propelled me into wanting to host music shows and direct music videos, now makes me yowl with disgust. It’s been some time now that MTV has been letting me down, whether it’s Johnny Knoxville swimming in a vat of poo, or spoiled kids complaining about their privileged lives – poo is poo.

But MTV UK! MTV UK is a beacon of hope. They have the Gonzo show with Zane Lowe which plays a lot of indie rock and covers events and festivals like Glastonbury. A day before my meeting they had managed to get Oasis into their office for a live performance, and better yet, the staff members were excited by this. No jaded production people here. They seemed to be honest-to-god music fans. Plus their lobby cafe made me such a nice little latte.

MTV UK

The lobby at Hawley Crescent: MTV UK

It seems to me that the Brits take their music a bit more seriously than we do. They still have Jules Holland on the air, which is truly all about the music. Their BBC channels champion new music and seem to want to push the boundaries. No offense to good old American rock n roll, it just seems less crassly corporate in the UK. The MTV UK offices are even in Camden Lock, where the streets are lined with vinyl pants, sex pistols shirts and doc martens. As opposed to the MTV Ship in Los Angeles, which floats in a yuppie office park and is built on a toxic waste dump.

BBC television seems to have an interest in televising music – all kinds. The BBC puts on Electric Proms, a series of live shows which feature a rock band and some form of classical or world music mixed in.

After my MTV meeting I went to the famous Roundhouse to meet up with my friends in Film School. I arrived during sound check and caught a BBC camera crew setting up. Tonight they’d be filming the show for when British Sea Power were joined on stage by the London Bulgarian Choir. How cool is that?

As the time for the beginning of the show approached, there was an excitement in the air that is usually missing at the average Angelino gig. The show itself was electric, and the capacity crowd hung on every note. Clapping and cheering seemed to increase when the choir appeared on stage. If a choir came on stage at Spaceland in LA, I highly doubt anyone would bother to raise their heads from their lighters or peer out from under their long hipster bangs.

the London Bulgarian Choir onstage with British Sea Power at the Roundhouse

the London Bulgarian Choir on stage with British Sea Power at the Roundhouse

Maybe it was the fact that the Roundhouse is a fantastic venue. Perhaps it was the excitement of BSP and Film School’s final show of the tour. Or perhaps it was the backstage shenanigans before the show that brought on my goosebumps. But the show was amazing. For a major television station to want to film a unique musical event like this gives me hope. There are people out there that want to see good music. Music without a cheesy hook. No Cyrus or Simpson girls being followed by a ‘documentary crew’. No Hinder/Seether corn field rock blocks. No crap. Just pure beauty and good music. I know that TV has a bad reputation, but I could stick up for TV like this. I could work for a place that makes television like this. And I would even show up on time.

packed house at The Roundhouse

packed house at The Roundhouse

4. British People Don’t Have Therapists…They Have Pubs

America has a lot of problems. And for every problem, we have seventeen possible solutions. Which basically causes more problems. Who can really fix your problems: Your therapist? Your yoga instructor? Your pastor? Your colorist? Scientology? Oprah?

The British have seemed to narrow it down to one solution they keep going back to over and over again…sometimes on the same day. The pub.

The pub is not just a bar that serves alcohol, though that seems to be the main appeal. It is a meeting place, a town hall, a diner (if you dare), a respite from the cold and rain, and most often than not, a mating service. Now, I’m not trying to downplay the charm of the pub’s overflowing tap. Where else can the lads go to drink eleventy beers? And by the way, they will drink more than a case per person, per night here. What would make frat boys at a kegger party blanch with horror, is a typical night out at the pub for most British guys. They can get their drink on. And on. And on.

Oh and a word to the wise for the ladies – these men are often like goldfish. They won’t stop until the pub throws them out, or until their stomachs’ burst. So if you’re hoping to get a bit of ‘rumpy pumpy’, then you’d best do so before you nip out to the pub. A ‘nip out to a pub’ isn’t a quick drink. It’s an all night drink fest which will leave sex virtually impossible until the next morning.

I, personally, don’t drink beer. I am allergic to it. Oh hell, I guess I’m allergic to most alcohol as it seems to make me very drunk. But for me, beer brings on a head cold with the fury of a three headed harpy. When I happen to mention this at various establishments in London, i.e. the Defector’s Weld, the King George, The Lock Tavern, Barfly Camden, The Monarch, Punch and Judy, Fuel Bar, The Social, The Masons Arms, Cro Bar, etc., you’d think I had admitted to the Myra Hindley murders.

the answer to all your problems

the answer to all your problems

I actually don’t drink much at all anymore except a glass of red wine here or there. And though I’m enough of an individual to always scoff at peer pressure, while in London, I found myself trying to keep up with the Brit boys at the bar. It wasn’t really to save face, I just wanted to join in on the fun.

I even trying to stay up to par with my Irish friend, Stephen’s, historic drinking abilities. This is the same man of iron-clad tolerance, who rolled with laughter when I asked whether I should order him a half (pint) or a pint. I seriously don’t know where he puts it. He’s like a beer camel.

One night, the two of us went for a pre-drink at a pub before going to see Film School play the Sonic Cathedral at The Social. A pre-drink turned into three or four, and we were both drinking on empty stomachs. We had a brief reprieve as we walked to The Social, but then consumed several more rounds. I stopped drinking at some point, mostly because my mouth muscles became incapable of sipping liquid and swallowing it. But the more I slurred and drooped, the more Stephen seemed stimulated by his hops. He kept drinking, loooong into the night. In my drunken stupor, I began picturing him as a pub version of Popeye. Yet instead of spinach, Stephen’s superhero alter ego was energized by pints of ale. The beer gave him magical powers; he was able to vault over tube turn-styles or climb drain pipes with a single bound.

Matching my mates drink for drink is one thing…but there’s also the ‘kindness of strangers’ factor. If a blond woman raises her voice above an audible whisper in an English pub and her American accent is detected, a round of drinks invariably appears at the table. I wouldn’t dare decline a free drink here, in case it might cause some type of international incident. Americans have much to overcome and live down when it comes to our ‘ugly’ behavior. To refuse some British kindness would be, well, rude. Right?

free drinks courtesy of some British blokes

free drinks courtesy of the British blokes at the table over there

Despite the liquid gluttony, most of these people seem to be happy drunks. At least they seemed to be at the pubs I went to. Any muttering of the term ‘AA’ in their presence would garner either a whoop of laughter or a rather withering recount of how Americans don’t know how to enjoy their lives.

If you had asked me prior to my first trip to England, I would have whispered about British emotional repression and tried to introduce them to Bill W. But I now know better. No matter how much damage they do at night, they seem to be perfectly well adjusted the next morning. It’s an amazing phenomenon that doesn’t seem medically possible. I don’t know if I can chalk that up to British stoicism or just fattier livers with more powerful enzymes, but on many morning afters, as I struggled to drag my sorry ass around the city, my UK counterparts seemed un-fazed by the previous evening’s deliberate alcohol poisoning.

Drink number one - still sitting upright

Drink number one - still sitting upright

5. Keep A Stiff Upper Lip

The stiff upper lip is the quintessential British quality to have, along with the demure self-deprecation quirk. These people live in constant rain and cloudy skies. Many of them come from ancestry that featured cold, harsh weather conditions, peasant uprisings and possibly disembowelment. Comparatively, modern day for them is a breeze. It is just an innate quality that they don’t complain much. In fact, it’s their downplaying of the most heinous events which makes me find them so comical. Conversely, Americans complain about everything. I was once challenged to go a day without complaining. I can be a rather stoic individual sometimes, but even I couldn’t do it. I think it comes from the American ideal that we can do anything, have anything, be anyone. If things don’t work out to be god-damned perfect, we open our mouths and voice a loud, brawling dissatisfaction. There are, however, some things that the British use get by…

a. Tea

Over in the UK, major issues can be solved quite easily. The pub is one solution. Tea is another. Previously when visiting a UK boyfriend, I contracted pneumonia and had a fever of 104. For days I couldn’t keep down ice chips and my throat was filled with pus. My boyfriend suggested I have some tea.

It’s not that he was an unfeeling lout, it’s just that he honestly thought tea would fix me. Tea is used as a medicinal property for just about everything: the flu, broken bones…brain cancer. And not a special type of Chinese herbal root tea or Native American peyote laced, spirit journey tea. No. They offer up normal, garden party variety Earl Grey tea to cure everything.

When I insisted the boyfriend take me to the hospital, the professionals there didn’t sound that much different from him. These med school graduates didn’t do a throat culture or blood work. They didn’t attempt to get my temperature down or keep food in my stomach. Even though I tried to explain to them what strep throat was and how dangerous it could be, they didn’t seem that concerned at all. They just patted my hand, prescribed me paracetamol and hot tea and sent me on my way. I later found out that paracetamol is basically Tylenol. Tylenol and tea. That’s what I take daily, when I’m in the prime of health, and I here I was most definitely dying of some mad cow disease.

the British antibiotic

the British antibiotic

b. Marching Shoes

The idea of complaining of discomfort is simply not done in ‘jolly’ old England. It didn’t go unnoticed that the man in the hospital stall next to me complained far less, even though he was suffering from multiple stab wounds. I suppose you could say that everyone’s pain is relevant, but pain you cause yourself is inadmissable. Which is probably why every single British bloke I’ve known looks at me blankly when I complain about walking far in punishing shoes…as Frankie told me on day one of my trip: “better buy a pair of good marching shoes, love.”

Now, this isn’t news to me or any other woman in the US who has fallen prey to the Sex In The City trap. The fictional thing about that television series was not the abundance of casual sex. It was the idea of four women in Manhattan running around in sky high Jimmy Choos heels. It’s not practical and it’s nearly impossible. Yet there is a vanity (or insanity) that keeps us mortal women trying to attempt it.

I wore my most comfortable boots to London, but they weren’t hiking boots or nursing shoes, therefore, they were impractical. The boots in question are normally only good for a few hours at a time in the best of circumstances, which is fine because nobody walks in LA. But wearing these boots to criss-cross London from meeting to meeting, on and off the tube, and then into the clubs for hours of late night gigging and partying – they were the equivalent of metal spikes in my soles.

No one felt sorry for me.

In an attempt to defend myself, I must point out that a rock n roll woman, such as myself, has the responsibility of looking both effortlessly cool and somewhat dangerous. However, after a few days the only danger I was really conveying was the possibility of becoming a double amputee.

walking the streets of London

walking the streets of London

One enchanted evening, one of my tour guides decided it would be fun to take the long route back to my flat. Why? To see the city at night. The streets seemed to glow and the shop windows beckoned. The night air was the perfect crisp temperature and my walking partner was dashing and witty. It was like a scene from some Audrey Hepburn movie…except each step I took was complete agony. Add to that the wobble of cobblestones, and I had tears welling under my boho fringe.

I didn’t dare say a word which would inevitably cut our lovely jaunt short. The upper half of me was completely enjoying myself, so I kept my upper lip stiff. I must’ve seemed like a super slow poke the way I stalled at corners and feigned interest at snapping pictures of street signs and lamp posts. Or possibly my guide thought I was trying to lag behind and lure him into a very public, moonlit snog. Really, whatever worked was fine with me…anything to get off my feet and ease the pain.

Now I know why Sienna Miller goes on and on about the Terry De Havilland wedge shoe – the benefit of added height with no stabbing pain. Heels are no good for the city of London. And if you must wear it, you must bear it.

pretty, not practical

pretty, not practical

c. Quease-ine

Another thing to bear in mind is the food situation. Bring power bars, luna bars, balance bars or any other type of meal replacement bar with you if you can. I wish I was the type that could eat anything, whenever. It’s not very rock n roll to be a picky eater…I’ve always fought hard against being labeled as high maintenance, but here, I am officially going on record: Yeah. OK. I’m sorta high maintenance. I need a bed to sleep in, a shower to wash in and I need food that is good for my body.

There. I said it.

A recent switch to organic foods and gluten-free this and that, not to mention changing from soy to the further elusive almond milk, makes me a pain in the ass to dine with. I’m owning it, okay? Now, I’m not always strict about it, and traveling is always a time to bend the rules a bit…but, Holy Krishna the comfort food here is out of control! If you want to eat something that has not been deep fried or made in butter in London, then get thee to a Japanese noodle house. Seriously, if you’re thinking about eating even 1% healthy, then Wagamama is your only friend.

Now, I will grant, some of the food is delicious. Scones and clotted cream or fish and chips are a nice little treat and a one time must when in the UK. But I dare you to try to eat healthy on a daily basis…I did manage to dine at one of the better vegetarian restaurants, Food For Thought, in Covent Garden, but even that food seemed to be laden with carbs.

This is a land where the concession stand at the Roundhouse venue features gravy on the menu. Gravy gets it’s own freaking headline on the big sign. And it’s free! Now, in America, we certainly have our fatty foods, processed sugar turds, and fried crapola at our venues and ballparks. In abundance. But I can also get sushi at Dodger stadium if I so choose. Am I spoiled? You bet.

gravy is free at the Roundhouse

gravy is free at the Roundhouse

One Sunday, while poking around Portobello market, Lorelei and I stopped in to a cute pub for Sunday Roast. Being a pescetarian, and seeing as the vegetarian roast wasn’t available, I decided to go with the fish and chips. A plate arrived piled high with fried things that seemed worthy of a Dr Seuss cartoon. It was quite a feast…for five. Someone took Oliver Twist’s plea for more way too seriously over here. Lorelei and I were overwhelmed as we contemplated trying to finish our plates.

I’ve heard over and over again from our British buddies that America’s super size portions are ridiculous…but this was just absurd, unless we were lumberjacks training for a decathlon.

fish n chips for five

fish n chips for five

Despite any set backs on your English adventure, whether it be fried foods, fucked up feet or the bubonic plague, make sure that you don’t seem like an American ingrate. Whatever problems you have can be saved for your therapy session when you return to the States. Until then, make a self deprecating joke about your mini to horrible situation and keep a stiff upper lip.

***********

As the song goes, ‘she had to leave Los Angeles. All her toys had worn out…and her boys had too.’ True dat. Plus, I was completely mental over the state of the presidential campaign and not feeling the parties or gigs I was getting. I needed a respite from the daily frustrations of traffic and being trampled by the less evolved. London seemed like the perfect spot.

6. Heartbreak Is Commonplace.

If you’re coming to London to forget your troubles, you’ve come to the right place…in the sense that you’ll be in great company. Whomever you meet here has had your troubles in spades.

Londoners are people of hearty stock. Some you meet can remember the Germans bombing the hell out of the city. Others remember more recent IRA bombings. And if that’s not scary enough, most have hoses plugged into faucets, which they humorously call a ‘shower’. These are people who don’t live with their heads in the clouds. And to them, heartbreak is completely commonplace. Sure, you can warble on about your broken dreams or lost love here, but don’t even try to one-up anyone. After all, this is the birthplace of Morrissey, and heaven knows how miserable he is.

A visit to the awe inspiring British Library will prove that they’ve had heartbreak for centuries before our little colony even existed. From the Magna Carta fight for simple human rights in the 1200s, to Shakespeare’s sonnets on unrequited love, to Jane Austen’s pining for men with titles, these people know all about the heart being a lonely hunter.

Hell, even the music that pours out of the UK today points towards a society that has seen it all. Case in point: David Ford’s attempt to lighten things with “Cheer Up You Miserable Fuck”, or Snow Patrol’s constant request for us to lay by their side to ‘just forget the world’. You can even look to Chris Martin’s Schroeder-like banging about on the piano, or my beloved Radiohead’s bleak take on the future for mankind…the UK does sad romanticism very well.

it was all yellow

it was all yellow

And even though I can hear the British male population rolling their eyes as I type this…the struggle and the heartbreak, not to mention the struggle not to show their heartbreak, is most palpable in their movies. Their films are teeming with tough, uptight men, hiding soppy souls underneath…the Mr. Darcy complex is conveyed over and over, in almost every way possible, in almost every role…save for any part Jason Statham might play.

Sure, we have our Elliot Smiths, and many bands under the influence of the Emmit Rhodes California frown. We have our Love Story tear jerkers and our bleak beat poets. But the Brits cornered this market long before America popped up with ‘shiny, happy people holding hands’.

So that must be why that saying about going to London seems so profound. You know the one: Find a lover, pick him up. All your trip you’ll have good luck.

It’s true. Finding a UK man who can voice his feelings of affection is like finding a four leaf clover. Think about it: all the lovelorn books their headmasters forced them to read, all the films where the girl dies of consumption, all the sad songs that say so much…If after being raised on all of that, they can still risk looking soppy for you, they’re golden. If they can demonstrate it in public, especially when bad ass Daniel Craig lives around the corner, then you’ve found a gem.

London's resident bad ass

London's resident bad ass

Alas, if they aren’t the type to let down their guard, or if they dash your hopes with Darcy snark, don’t worry. You are not alone. No, really. If you raise your voice a bit, a group of hungry Brit blokes will send over a round of drinks. The new boys will tipple with you and tell you, to ‘boot the grime of this world in the crotch’ while hoping you’ll put your hand on theirs. If misery loves company, then the British provide some of the best.

7. Top Shop

Go.

I don’t really need to explain this one, do I? Top shop is a fashionista girl’s mecca. In a jam packed week with not enough time to see every show, play or museum planned, Lo and I managed to go to Top Shop twice. This place is a Wonka-esque factory of shoes, accessories and threads. It’s a nirvana of dresses and jackets. It’s a salon. It’s a restaurant. It’s a lifestyle choice. And it makes Fred Segal look like a white trash meth lab.

Mecca via Oxford Circus

Mecca via Oxford Circus

Why would I blog about this place here? Two words: Kate Moss. OK, so you may not be impressed with a supermodel and you may be surprised that some one with my brain cells would be…well from the former Pete Doherty and Oasis sidekick, and the future Mrs. Hince of The Kills, this girl has made her sleepy headed, bohemian slap dash style into a freaking empire. She’s brought back the Janes (Asher and Birkin) and Anita Pallenberg in one fell swoop. Kate’s Top Shop collection continues to sell out even when she’s placed next to collections by Ossie Clark collaborator Cecelia Birtwell and Aussie party gals Sass and Bide.

Carnaby street move over. Kate has helped make Top Shop the place for the rock and roll chicks to get their frock on before hitting the gigs. We ladies know how the men love us in our little dresses with eyes rimmed in raccoon eyeliner. We also know that many men don’t want to try to understand why.

That’s OK, boys. We won’t force you to come with us to Top Shop. All that we ask is that when you are peeling the rocking frock off us at the end of the night, don’t throw it in a ball on the floor. Treat the Top Shop with the same reverence you would our heavenly bodies and the rock gods will shine upon you.

Anita Pallenberg

Anita Pallenberg - rock chick goddess

***********

With several gigs, drinks and museums under my belt as well as a suitcase full of frocks in hand, it was time to say good bye to my soul home and head back to America to Barack the vote. After all, I can dream of being an ex-pat, living and loving in London, but I still feel the need to defend my country’s future with my single ballot. Though the thought of moving to the UK is tantalizing, I’d still like to be from a country that doesn’t prompt Europeans to point to a newspaper headline and say “WTF?”.

I will be back, dear London, for another lengthy visit. Or, depending on the election, perhaps to stay if you’ll have me. I’ll even try to follow my own rules of Britannia. Like a really popular British author once wrote: Whether I shall turn out to be the hero of my own life in London, or whether that station will be held by me in the States, this blog must show…

Honest To Prog – The Secret Machines Go Dark.

1 Nov

It’s a bit difficult for someone with a hearing problem, such as myself, to try and explain my love of prog rock to others. Especially when the math rock co-title gets bandied about. Several high school tutors and a SAT prep teacher can attest to the fact that I sucked at math. My brain doesn’t really think in linear terms. I’m bad with numbers, negligent with bookkeeping, and will take twice as long as any normal gimp to put together a piece of Ikea furniture.

malm1

So perhaps that’s why the recent faces of current prog rock make me feel at home. Though a verse chorus verse song is easily digested, the meandering and epic songs of Radiohead, Muse and The Secret Machines transport me to a science fiction world where rules of mathematics need not apply.

Ok, yes, I realize there’s a lot of synthy math involved here. But to me the sound is more like freedom and space; an ethereal musical landscape rather than constrained strains of notes forced to fit in a 3 minute ditty with a hook.

I was an enormous fan of Secret Machine’s Now Here Is Nowhere album. It accompanied me on long road trips up the California coast line and seemed to quell any travel squabbles my boyfriend and I were having.  Their second effort, Ten Silver Drops, while not as beloved to us as their first album, was a psychedelic way to start our Sunday mornings. Tickets for their fantastic live shows, would hang on our fridge, urging us to keep it together until the concert, so we could rock and sway at the show together.

The brothers Curtis and drummer Josh Garza sort of held our relationship together, at least in my mind. I was even once invited by TSM to go to a party with them after a show. I demurely declined, thinking of my boyfriend sitting at home waiting for me…and all of the TSM songs he and I had listened to together. Even when tempting the party girl within, The Secret Machines had solidified the bond with The Boyfriend and me.

But then there was a gap in space rock continuum. The departure of guitarist Ben Curtis panicked Warner Brothers, TSM’s label, creating somewhat of a rift and a recording delay. It also left The Boyfriend and I trying to hold it together with records by Leon Russell, Bowie, and Gang Of Four. Not to mention fighting over Jethro Tull…I’m of the staunch opinion that my home is my haven, and that means it should be a Tull-free zone.

With the wars of the record label, the war in Iraq, and the Tull war on the home front going on, the future seemed bleak. When former fellow Tripping Daisy member Phil Karnats was inducted to support vocalist Brandon Curtis and drummer Josh Garza, TSM was up and running again.

The latest album, the eponymous The Secret Machines, just dropped on my birthday - a sort of cosmic gift for me. Knowing that TSM was released on their new indie imprint TSM Recordings through World’s Fair, made me proud of the lads for getting all mavericky on WBR’s ass. And hearing that the album was supposedly a lot more dark and moody only excited the gothic girl in me that much more.

secretmachines_print1

Upon arriving at the Key Club, we were handed a hot pink pair of 3D glasses. Was this going to turn into a weird Floyd laser show? Though I enjoy prog, I’m not the burn out, black light poster type. The set, designed by Kanye West’s set creator Es Devlin, was being quickly erected with twisted white ribbon tape, winding around the stage like an MC Escher painting. I was beginning to get concerned that there might be a geometry pop quiz after their set.

mcescher

As the Machines took to the stage, they set up in their usual triangle formation, which allows the audience to focus on each part of the musical blend and gives the drummer a chance to come out from the back of the stage and be heard and seen by crowd.

psychadelic-sm2

The lights dimmed to almost pitch dark and I popped my psychedelic shades on. A beam of light bounced off the tape, setting off a blaze of starburst streaks. Smokage was pumped out in mass quantities and gelled spotlights silhouetted the trio against the neon strips of ribbon. I was at a light show all right, but this time no drugs were needed.

smokey-close-up

Karnats, standing statuesquely in the center, seemed more than up to the task to fill Ben’s shoes. He ripped through crunchy Zeppelin riffs that crescendoed into a mind blowingly loud implosion, perhaps rivaling the now infamous My Bloody Valentine reunion shows.

gold-n-black-phil

The fact is, there was very little about the new songs that fell into the ethereal category. No, this was more like the math rock version of Mastodon. It was so loud and crunchy that my friend and I risked admitting we were too old to rock, by moving from the floor -front and center- to seats in the upper balcony. We could still enjoy the multi colored lights with our 3D paraphernalia and our ear drums were less likely to burst.

I’m not saying I didn’t enjoy it. It’s just that The Secret Machines have changed. I guess that is the current climate of the country…no more 2004. We’ve all prog-ressed. The Boyfriend and his Tull records are long gone and nearly forgotten. The nation has come out of it’s reality TV induced coma to get involved with it’s government once again. And the luscious, hypnotic aural landscapes that TSM once painted, are now more of a Goya-esque sound, spiked with punky Gary Numan slivers and metallic Jackson Pollack riffs.
dark-sm

They say it gets darkest before the light…perhaps that means that the TSM future will be bright. Even with out those shades.

The Walkmen and Me, or How ‘You And Me’ turns me into an emo scribe

22 Aug

I suppose I should preface all of this by admitting – I am emo for The Walkmen. By now, I’ve seen them play in every possible scenario: Large Los Angeles concert hall, cramped Austin 6th street bar, alongside the Queen Mary at the All Tomorrows Parties festival, at an all night warehouse rave somewhere in the plains of Texas, various festivals and smoky clubs. I’ve seen them more times than I’ve seen my beloved Radiohead. Hell, I’ve even paid to see them. I have them on I tunes. I have them on CD. I have them on vinyl. I don’t pay for music unless I really, really love them. I love the Walkmen so much I’d marry them (my dowry offer to Ham is ready for review).

Hamilton at All Tomorrow's Parties

Hamilton at All Tomorrow

Coming from a rock chick such as myself, this might surprise you. If you looked at the boys, you wouldn’t even suspect that they can play in a band. No, with their unassuming and sweet looks, you’d think that they work in your office, down the hall in the graphics department; Button down shirts, neatly tucked into jeans and chinos, with a belt of course. Nothing flashier than a simple wedding band or old class ring as bling. No bravado or swagger. But don’t let their prep school appearance fool you. You will be transformed.

Hamilton Leithauser

Long before Vampire weekend or Chester French made preppy chic again, The Walkmen rose from the ashes of two great bands. Hamilton Leithauser, who could be perfectly cast as a‘soc’ in the Outsiders though he has the angst of a greaser, had formed the Recoys in Boston and then joined up with former classmates from the defunct Jonathan Fire Eater. The band members remain close, churning out more than an album’s worth in any recording process, and still finding time for side projects such as recording a cover of Harry Nilsson’s Pussycats, recording a staged reading of Sex And The City (seriously), and co-writing the Great American Novel. Apparently the novel seems to be taking a lot more time than they thought to finish – tell me about it, boys. Tell me about it.

The Walkmen

With BOWS AND ARROWS, they had a break out hit with ‘The Rat’, a blistering account of a soul broken by a split. I’ve even heard that it was written about a mutual friend in the Brooklyn indie rock circle, but I decline to name him. Perhaps you can figure it out when you read my forthcoming book (shameless plug).

YOU AND ME, the latest album, unofficially dropped in July in a unique way. With their creative contemporaries such as Radiohead and Trent Reznor offering the music online as a pay what you can scenario, The Walkmen teamed up with Amie Street and offered a download for a $5 donation to Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. So now, if you were going to even think about downloading it illegally, bear in mind that the boys are donating the proceeds to a cancer charity. Even I, who gets her music for free, clicked on paypal for this. An advance of one of the greatest albums of the year – AND I get to help fight cancer? Winner, winner, chicken dinner.

But what exactly is it about The Walkmen that captures my fancy? It’s hard to put a finger on it. Once when posed with the task of describing the sound of The Walkmen, a friend said it sounded like drunken fairy saloon music. I think that is far too passive and sweet a description. It’s more like elfin mad scientists drunk on absinthe turning wooden knobs at a Narnian console.

Their dirge-ish songs alternate in flavor. Sometimes big band, sometimes calypso or country, you are listening to the soundtrack to a weekend in an Irish pub or a stormy Caribbean vacation. Or perhaps this is the music of the underworld that Orfeo’s true love heard when she was stuck on the other side. Lest the sounds get too sweet, the lyrics can be like a thousand little cynical papercuts. “What’s in it for me….I heard you the first time.”, “You’ve got a nerve to be asking a favor…we’ve been through this before.” “I don’t get some people, but I don’t really try.”, and titles like “Revenge wears no wristwatch”, “This job is killing me”, “Everyone who pretended to like me is gone” These reveal a certain callous and unsympathetic look at what once was happy times. I suppose it’s the duality which resonates with me. The inner idealist wrestling with the voice who has seen disappointment – a ‘fuck you’ to over-sentimentality, which by nature is somewhat sentimental.

Ham at SxSW

Ham at SxSW

The show at the Troubadour was all of this and more. The guys, armed with a horn section, took the stage in an un-assuming, modest way, but hit the crowd confidently with a beautiful, ethereal, punk wall of sound. The performance was so startling and arresting, and then lulling and then engaging.

Paul Maroon of The Walkmen

Ham’s voice, an odd yelping cry which wavers between a Bob Dylan call to arms and a raspy Rod Stewart growl is an unique layer a top the swirling Wurlitzer and big band orchestrals. His fist over the mic like an MC, with the cord wrapped tightly around his arm, pulling on it, tourniquet style, he howled and yelped in epileptic fits, accessing and channeling some type of Brando rage.

Hamilton as Brando

There’s a sense of hearkening back when you’re listening in on them. Maybe it’s the vintage gear, or their somewhat formal and almost polite appearance. But one does feel like Hamilton is yearning for a time when people respected each other and did the right thing.

The Walkmen at the Troubadour

Of course nostalgia can be dangerous – looking at the past for those golden moments, and glorifying a time which was most likely the same mix of heaven and hell, is not an enlightened place to start from. But it is the stuff that bar dirges are made of. And old Hollywood movies. And sweeping novels. It is this magical lightning in a bottle, that the Walkmen capture for me. A bit of gilded memory with the somewhat sour taste of the present.

In fact, while listening to their set, this is what the music made me imagine:

The smell of library books. An empty field at twilight. A pork pie hat with a madras plaid band. Mass held at an all boys Catholic boarding school. A black and white Robert Doisneau photograph. The first time reading JD Salinger or Mark Twain. An old Frenchman covering Bob Dylan. A 400 year old pub on the cliffs of Dover. The ignited sugar cube dropped into a glass of illegal absinthe. Dickie Greenleaf in a late night jazz club. A flamenco dance on a honeymoon.

I can only blame The Walkmen and their gorgeous music for making me emoscribe like this. I want to go for a walk in a rainstorm. I want to smoke cloves while watching the sun set. I want to go plant a freaking tree. See? YOU AND ME has turned me into a mushy mess of flowery prose. Who knows? If I keep listening, perhaps I may just finish my Great American Novel.

The Walkmen perform at the Troubadour Friday, August, 22, 2008. Their latest album, You And Me was released on August 19th.

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