Small. Slight. Dismissed. Imagine you’re a megaton bomb born to look like just a firecracker. Juliana Hatfield imagines that the world wrote her off as a riot grrl from the 90s and that she’s permanently afflicted with Lilith Fairitis. She plays guitar, writes songs about jerk boyfriends, comes from Boston, and has a naturally girly voice. She is so pissed off about that last detail that her throat gets unfairly abused and a lot of guitar amps regret being born. She’s tried chain smoking and thrashing her vocal chords to grind off the sweet sheen of her voice, but all she needs to do is hear herself for once and see what a big stick she carries. Continue reading
Lock in Coordinates. Engage!
My earliest memories of listening to a record was on an 8-track tape. You could click between the 4 channels of the narrow band of magnetic tape and take it with you on the road encased in a plastic package. I’m sure back in the 70s there was still some serious thought going on about how to take a vinyl LP with you to the car dashboard. Imagine trying to flip to the B side on the freeway without wrecking your needle or your car. I am not doing much better now dialing in my playlist whims with my iPod. I won’t be surprised to see a factoid statistic roll across the bottom of Headline News of traffic fatalities directly related to motorists distinguishing between Radiohead and REO Speedwagon on their iPods. Continue reading
Back Seat Producers
I still suffer from this bad writing habit of starting with a clear objective and then wandering off to a completely different topic. Just like when I went out for a walk today. I thought it would be great to walk directly southwest to the lake, but through a series of random turns I ended up directly northeast, almost at BYU. If this were an essay exam for English Composition or Western Civilization it might matter, but I think I finally have the liberty to turn left when I say right. The only red mark on my paper is that this topic is still pent up in my mind; I put all that effort into my last post about being a U2 fanboi when I should have been telling you about Trevor Horn. (So, now my tastes in music are pinpointed to the 80’s. Should be obvious already.) Continue reading
“And It’s Been All Over You”
Knee jerk. I get an email from Plan 9 Music every week with the New Releases. I spent some time in Virginia in 2000 and I signed up for their newsletter, lingering like a chronic itch. With my rapid scan across the list certain bands trigger my post-hypnotic suggestion to drop what I’m doing and load up amazon.com and add to my wish list; on bad days I shake off my stupor and wake up at the record store with a bag full of CDs. At some point I no longer have a choice when it comes to buying new records that come out. That doesn’t always work out as far as actually enjoying the music, but sometimes I’ll catch myself in a “Ooh, this is… actually… really Good!” Continue reading
“SO”
Who is going to read this? Probably just me. I get a kick out of my own writing. Some day I’ll show my mom, and it will be like declassifying the top secret memos of my cryptic adolescence. I’ll just go on trying to describe things that don’t come across very well with words and that don’t seem to relate from one person to the next. If I’ve ever tried to convey my experiences with some really interesting (to me) record it always falls flat. Sure I have some intense feelings or imagery about it, but the words I come up with can never build the significance and the other person can’t possibly get it the same way I did. An interpretation of art (notice how I didn’t say music, because you might inappropriately include corporate top 40) is unique to every person’s background and tastes. Continue reading