Friday, June 19, 2009
The Busking Queen
Read about my busking experience on my XIHA Life blog.
Monday, June 15, 2009
Yello's "Oh Yeah" and Halloween
I decided to Youtube it to see if I could watch the part of Ferris Bueller that features the song. Even better: I found the music video.
I LIKE THIS SONG SO MUCH MORE AFTER THIS VIDEO:
Two guys making those noises and a little girl who is the sun and the moon? Brilliant. My favourite part comes at the end (2:53) where the men's silhouettes are fighting and point at the moon to distract their opponents.
As a side note, if another friend and I don't go ahead with our top-secret ideas for Halloween, I think I might just have to be Pikku Myy from the Finnish cartoon, Moomin. I look enough like her that it's so simple: I put a bun on top of my head, find a red dress, get a bow tie and, ka-ching, Halloween costume.
It's just a shame that no one will understand it in New York.
Monday, June 8, 2009
Phoenix's "1901"
See my blurb on nickydigital.com here.
Chairlift's "Bruises"
Read my blurb on nickydigital.com here.
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Sunday Funday: The Zombies
For extra credit, check out The Zombies performing "She's Not There" live on U.S. television. Gah, nostalgia – and I wasn't even alive then!
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Birdy Nam Nam's "The Parachute Ending"
It’s no surprise that this song is reminiscent of Justice's album Cross, because the French duo produced the song. And just like the famed jams from that album, Birdy Nam Nam's bass-thumping "The Parachute Ending" is sure to move your hips – if you can take your eyes off the video.
Beginning with a hover-craft wielding alien, the video narrates an epic space battle full of neon colors and constant movement.
See my blurb on www.nickydigital.com here.
Settle down now: Helsinki
I am starting to think it was kind of fate that I didn’t get the other apartment, because this one is really ideal. It’s tiny, but lovely. Here is what I love about it:
Read the rest of my blog post on my XIHA Life blog here.
Welcomed to Finland with a scam!
Yap, well it does. And it happened to me, but under other circumstances. I never got to live in my apartment, and I still didn’t get my deposit back. I just moved from New York to Helsinki, arriving in Finland on Sunday, May 31st. I don’t have a job yet, but I had arranged for an apartment in Töölö and it seemed perfect: it was 36 m2 for one person with electricity, water and Internet included in the price.
Read the rest of my blog post on my XIHA Life blog here.
XIHA Life
XIHA Life is the world's first truly multilingual social network.
Targeted at people living outside their home country, as well as multilingual people around the world, XIHA Life makes communication and content sharing easier across cultures and language barriers. Our language recognition and filtering technology enables users to select not only one, but several different languages to communicate with new friends and people they care about.
You can also follow XIHA Life on Twitter! Check it out here.
Why am I forwarding this Web site so much? Why, I write for them, of course! Join and enter this wonderful multicultural community.
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Cat Stevens – I Wish, I Wish
The Brooklyn Paper
An evolution-themed artwork that beautified an ugly scaffolding was ripped down by state officials who claimed the artists did their public service without permission.
On May 8, the artist group De-Fence installed wood cutouts of various flora and fauna on the eyesore scaffold that has surrounded the Empire Stores warehouse in DUMBO for two years. The work depicted a storyline of evolution, moving from small water creatures to a throng of birds bursting into flight. Read the rest of "Art attacked! State park cops reuglify DUMBO building."
Photo by Tom Callan / The Brooklyn Paper
A proposal for a federally overseen clean-up of the Gowanus Canal sounds like something that everyone can get behind, but it’s actually pitting neighbor against neighbor over facts and hearsay that are as murky as the waterway itself. Read the rest of "Superfund showdown on the Gowanus."
One police blotter!
Another police blotter! (This one is funny. I called it "Teenage Wasteland" after that song by The Who. Read it to find out why!)
And finally, a tribute video they did for me. Aw, how sweet.
Let's play catch-up!
Where am I? LIVING IN HELSINKI, FINLAND!
The next few posts are going to be me playing catch-up, hence the sudden boost in posts. Enjoy!
Em
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Cops nab bikers in red-light sting! (Clinton Hill)
Saturday, May 9, 2009
Trader Joe's Song
"It's Aloe Chunk Juice, whatever that is."
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Thursday, May 7, 2009
Review: Patrick Wolf at (le) poisson rouge
But it was more than just a concert; it was a conversation. It was a night of storytelling and music, with Patrick Wolf. Wolf shared family stories, inspirations for certain songs, funny anecdotes, and more. The crowd interacted with him enthusiastically, applauding and cheering at every opportunity, and there seemed to be an equal exchange between Patrick and his audience. (He even got two—count ‘em—two standing ovations!)
This was Wolf’s first live acoustic performance in New York in years. He played without a set list, which he said he missed being able to do. He opened his set to requests, which incurred a barrage of Patrick Wolf song titles. He played the ones he could do with his acoustic set (and even pulled out his dulcimer for one song).
Read the rest of my story for the New York Press here.
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Review: Lady Sovereign & Chester French at Highline Ballroom
You could see it on Lady Sovereign’s face, as she rhymed her Brit-rapper heart out – she was annoyed. She kept trying to pump the crowd up with her hilarious stage antics: flipping the Sovereign-goers off, grabbing and caressing her boobs, and even splashing beer all over the kids right in front, à la Gallagher. She handed beers out, too, and went around the stage pouring Heineken in fans’ mouths. Who cares about swine flu?
In fact, the sharing of the booze sparked a “Swine flu, Fuck you” chant during her hit song “Love Me or Hate Me.” A few enthusiastic admirers reveled in the messy beer fountain, and these people were generally the ones with their arms pumping at all times. There were a handful of people rocking out to her electro-grime music, but the majority of the audience refrained from dancing and cheering. When Lady Sov left the stage the first time, she looked back at the crowd members and indicated that they should go nuts in about two minutes (just in time for her encore).
Read the rest of my review for the New York Press here!
Sunday, May 3, 2009
Moby-Dick: Smoke on the Water
And, as I am a music person, I generally title my essays with music references. (I have used "This Modern Age" by The Strokes for a paper about Zoroastrianism in modern culture and "Bad News on the Doorstep," a lyric from Don McLean's "American Pie" for a journalism essay.)
This paper is now called "Smoke on the Water," after the song by Deep Purple. In the course of procrastinating and watching various live performances of the song, I found this:
That's amazing, and that's all.
You Can Haz Party too, at Hope Lounge in Williamsburg
But this weekend, I found myself at bars and parties that I rarely attend. And what do you know? My friend Nicky Digital, urban culture photographer extraordinaire, was at those places too! It reminded me how fun parties in New York can be.
Last night I moseyed over to Hope Lounge, which was having its grand Can Haz Party party – something Nicky Digital plays a big role in.
The party celebrates summer because of Hope Lounge's open Williamsburg patio – equipped with a grill (hence the name of the party, of I can has cheezburger fame). The bar, located at 10 Hope St. near Roebling, has musical guests like Kids With Snakes and The Bad Decision DJs, while bartenders make the liquor flow.
There's a bar at the patio outside, where you can order up your favourite grill item (whether its a cheeseburger or hotdog or whatever), with a side of chips. A table has all the condiments you need, but beware: the pickles aren't that great.
The event is perfect for a warm summer's night. Yes, you can haz party – and you can have a cheeseburger at the same time.
Keep in touch with this and other great parties by following Nicky Digital on his Web site, Myspace and Facebook. Follow his Twitter to know where to be and when for some of New York's best nightlife.
Sunday Funday: Elegant Extracts (Moby-Dick)
You might ask why I would do such a thing, and why I am even reading it in the first place. I read it two years ago for a class, and I did a shabby job of it. I now have the same professor and I am required to, once again, read this daunting novel. But I actually love the book. I'm reading it slowly since I want to take it all in.
And listed below are some choice quotes. I selected them for their elegance, their humor, the brilliance of Herman Melville, or for any other of the million reasons this book is so damn good.
_______________________________
Talk not to me of blasphemy, man; I'd strike the sun if it insulted me. –Chapter 36, "The Quarter-Deck"
"He's killed himself," she cried . . . "it will be the ruin of my house. Has the poor lad a sister? Where's that girl?–there, Betty, go to Snarles the Painter, and tell him to paint me a sign, with–'no suicides permitted here, and no smoking in the parlor;'–might as well kill both birds at once. Kill? –Chapter 17, "The Ramadan"
For small erections may be finished by their first architects; grand ones, true ones, ever leave the copestone to posterity. God keep me from ever completing anything. This whole book is but a draught–nay, but the draught of a draught. Oh, Time, Strength, Cash, and Patience! –Chapter 32, "Cetology"
Better sleep with a sober cannibal than a drunken Christian. –Chapter 3, "The Spouter-Inn"
Finally, I always go to sea as a sailor, because of the wholesome exercise and pure air of the forecastle deck. For as in this world, head winds are far more prevalent than winds from astern (that is, if you never violate the Pythagorean* maxim) . . . –Chapter 1, "Loomings"
*The Greek philosopher Pythagoras (6th century B.C.E.) advised not eating beans because they cause flatulence. Melville jokes about the location of the tiny privies on the sides of whaleships–toward the bow, while the captain's quarters are at the stern.
It was our business to squeeze these lumps back into fluid. A sweet and unctuous duty! No wonder that in old times this sperm was such a favorite cosmetic. Such a clearer! such a sweetener! such a softener! such a delicious mollifier! After having my hands in it for only a few minutes, my fingers felt like eels, and began, as it were, to serpentine and spiralize. –Chapter 94, "A Squeeze of the Hand"
And one of my absolute favourites:
We felt very nice and snug, the more so since it was so chilly out of doors; indeed out of bed-clothes too, seeing that there was no fire in the room. The more so, I say, because truly to enjoy bodily warmth, some small part of you must be cold, for there is no quality in this world that is not what it is merely by contrast. Nothing exists in itself. If you flatter yourself that you are all over comfortable, and have been so a long time, then you cannot be said to be comfortable anymore. But if, like Queequeg and me in the bed, the tip of your nose or the crown of your head be slightly chilled, why then, indeed, in the general consciousness you feel most delightfully and unmistakably warm. For this reason a sleeping apartment should never be furnished with a fire, which is one of the luxurious discomforts of the rich. For the height of this sort of deliciousness is to have nothing but the blanket between you and your snugness and the cold of the outer air. Then there you lie like the one warm spark in the heart of an arctic crystal. –Chapter 11, "Nightgown"
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Claire Suddath from TIME Magazine is hilarious
How Not to Be Hated on Facebook: 10 More Rules
Facebook: 25 Things I Didn't Want to Know About You
25 More Things I Didn't Want to Know About You
Hahahahahahahhahahahahhahahahahahha. Ace.
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Awesome Music Videos: Deciding my Top 20 on a whim
He sent Pearl Jam's "Evolution" to me, which is absolutely brilliant.
That prompted me to look for my personal Top 20, which I created on a whim, sort of. If I went through all of the music videos made to date, I might die. So this Top 20 isn't the be-all and end-all of music videos, but ones that I remember and love, whether they're fresh from the 2000s, or from before I was born. Finally, here is that list:
20) M.I.A.'s "Boyz"
This video is a surefire headache if you watch it too often, but it's so colorful and crazy that I cannot discount it. Not only is the song a great dance hit, but I want every single one of M.I.A.'s outfits in it, especially the weird, pink overall onesie.
19) Dr. Dre's "Nuthin' but a G Thang"
The cars, the women, the guns – I mean, c'mon. Priceless. But this makes my list purely for the scene at 2:39 when the toddler dances perfectly in beat with the "that" and slams his hand down, and with the "this," when he slides it like a true player.
18) Missy Elliott's "Work It"
This video is full of awesome. I love the memorials for Lisa Left Eye and Aaliyah, and the little kids dancing. Some random individual scenes are great. The Prince bit is ace. The four dancers when she sings about her "ka-dunk-a-dunk-dunk" are the reason men like jiggly butts. And my favourite is the slave slapping the white out of his "mas'r." I won't lie, though. Missy's face on that kid with the dunce cap still creeps me out.
17) Prodigy's "Smack My Bitch Up"
This uncensored version is just fucking crazy – and hey! You weren't expecting that ending, were ya? No one was, and that's what makes it so much better.
16) Twisted Sister's "We're Not Gonna Take It"
"Take that, Dad!"
15) Lordi's "Hard Rock Hallelujah"
It's the a-rock-alypse! A cute punk chick befriends the monster band and leads her cheerleader-turned-zombie gang to wreak havoc on the school. Um, awesome!
14) 2Pac and Dr. Dre's "California Love"
Big money leads to big productions. This is one of those mini-movie type music videos. How fun would have this been to film? And, I'm actually from LA, and I have to agree with them. California does know how to party.
13) Ungdomskulen's "Modern Drummer"
Just . . . what? Cool.
12) Ratatat's "Mirando"
Good song. The video plays on repetition (Hey! Just like their music!), and it's an interesting abstraction of Ratatat's music. Even better: One of the members of the band (Evan Mast) makes the videos on his own (under his pseudonym/other project, E*VAX).
11) OK Go's "Here It Goes Again"
I know, I know. Everyone has seen this video. But you can't deny that it's amazing! The coordination is flawless. This video makes me want to 1) dance with them, 2) drink with them, and 3) be in their next masterpiece.
10) RJD2's "Work It Out"
"The vid features Bill Shannon who was born with a degenerative hip condition. His legs cannot carry his own weight and so he has lived a life on crutches. He has developed a new way of moving through life on his skateboard and the crutches. Though this may look like a recreational hobby or a debilitation, it is simply how Bill maneuvers throughout the day . . . RJD2 plays several extras which you can try to spot as well." –Beggars Group
Sweet moves.
9) Bat For Lashes' "Daniel"
She is undeniably cute. The video is so enigmatic with the black things in contrast with the little lady.
8) CSS' "Alala"
The entire video is a fight scene in reverse. Check out the sweet wounds throughout. It was directed by the amazing Cat Solen, who does fantastic things with music videos. Check out other videos directed by Cat, like Miles Benjamin Anthony Robinson's "Buriedfed" (which has my best friend Ashley in it), Sea Wolf's "Winter Windows," and Bright Eyes' "At the Bottom of Everything." Go Cat!
7) The Teenagers' "Homecoming"
The band that manages to make fun of indie culture while being so remarkably indie themselves. Who doesn't like indie girls in short shorts eating cupcakes and playing with pom-poms? And the fact that the video is so ego-centric (because all the girls are basically in love with the trio – Quentin, Michael and Dorian) goes along perfectly with their image. I have met these guys several times, and I just love every silly little element that pairs this lightly misogynistic video with the lightly misogynistic song. Hooray misogyny!
6) Foals' "Mathletics"
Even though the academic tinge on this video is probably prompted by the title of the song, it's entertaining to know that the lead singer, Yannis Phillipakis, once went to Oxford University in England. He dropped out for the band. They're nice fellas, too.
5) Talking Heads' "And She Was"
Reminds me so much of Monty Python, for one reason or another.
4) Metronomy's "A Thing For Me"
This video is hilarious because the band brings the bouncing ball to life. You'd think that the concept gets boring after a while, but it doesn't! They get innovative with the idea: At one point, one guy pushes the lyric over to another so he doesn't get hit in the head. And they make fun of their own lyrics: "hive goth my mind made up. you goat maya art uno."
3) Lily Allen's "The Fear"
I wish life was actually like this: balloons and cupcakes and giant presents! Lily's fantasy worlds are always amazing, like the one she creates in "LDN."
2) Hot Chip's "Ready For The Floor"
These nerds make some fucking great dance music. And the funny thing is, they suck at dancing themselves. (I know this first hand.) This video plays with colors, like when they splash paint on people you didn't know were there. The band members also play a version of Human Tetris. They're adorable, and this video belongs at the top of this list.
And, in this whim, this wonderful wonderful whim, of looking at music videos, my number one for today (because it will probably change by tomorrow) is:
1) Justice's "D.A.N.C.E."
I don't care how played out this song is. The video is glorious. The animation is perfect, and each T-shirt would actually be cool to wear.
Whew. That took a lot longer than I expected. And looking back on it, the best part is that I realized I have met/hung out with/photographed five of the groups that are in my Top 20.
But as for this Top 20, it is likely to change, especially after I attend Northern Transmissions 2 at Scandinavia House tonight. (See below.)
SPECIAL FILM EVENT
Northern Transmissions 2
Thursday, April 30, 7 pm, $9 ($6 ASF members)
Scandinavia rocks in this program of music videos from across the Nordic region. The lineup presents a cross-section of Scandinavia’s geographically, aesthetically, and aurally diverse output. From Sweden’s macabre dark-wave to upbeat Norwegian pop, and on to the pastoral digital bliss of Iceland, Finland and the next wave of indie rock exported from Denmark, these videos will delight the ears and eyes. Featuring videos by Raveonettes, Efterklang, Seabear, Leoncie, Sigur Ros, Lykke Li, El Perro del Mar, Tvarvagen, Bjorn Kleinhenz, Whitest Boy Alive, Ane Brun, Lau Nau, Eleanoora Rosenholm, and others.
Maybe I will find some new favourites!
Gowanus Canal: To Superfund or Not To Superfund?
Story teaser:
A proposal for a federally overseen clean-up of the Gowanus Canal sounds like something that everyone can get behind, but it’s actually pitting neighbor against neighbor over facts and hearsay that are as murky as the waterway itself.
Posters clamoring for the Environmental Protection Agency to list the infamous canal as a federal Superfund site have materialized on storefront windows in Carroll Gardens and outside nearby brownstone homes almost overnight — even as anonymously written fliers have started showing up in area mailboxes claiming that such a designation would depress home values and not actually speed the clean-up of the fetid corpse of water.
While the activists fight it out, residents are caught wondering who — and what — to believe.
Read the rest of my story for The Brooklyn Paper here . . .
Above: The poster, designed by Anna Martin, that some residents and businesses are hanging in windows.
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Lou Reed – Perfect Day
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Police Blotter
One crook takes 238 packs of cigarettes, another takes diamonds, and there are some pretty horrible beatings this week . . . Enjoy?
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Review: Ratatat at Terminal 5
The show itself was a spectacular display because of Ratatat’s always awesome stage production. The two main guys – Evan Mast and Mike Stroud – used to play with a third member, but they seemed to replace him with even more strobe lights, which made the concert quite literally electrifying. This was a good choice, however, because the light show was perfect: the strobe lights burst out, declaring the peaks of each song, while not distracting from the projection of videos behind the duo. (The projection works well with the group because of Stroud’s tendency to walk in front of it, leaning back or headbanging or whatever he decides to do, casting a massive shadow that mimics his movements.)
And seeing Ratatat live is spicy, like the hot sauce on the rim of your Tecate (which they were drinking onstage). Because they dropped the third stage member, Ratatat had to rely on lots of pre-recorded stuff. But the things they do live make up for it, like fast-paced drum solos lit up by a flood of red or blue light. The beats are bass heavy, with glittery synth chimes and spicy guitar riffs. Once the bass kicked in, as with any good dance music, the crowd started grooving. When the synth flickered in, the dancing intensified. But all of that is just set up. The bass and the synth combine in anticipation of something more intense and somehow abstract, and that’s Stroud’s guitar. It cuts the repetitive nature of each song with its irregularity, making it the real hot sauce to the equation. And playing classics (har har) like “Wildcat” and “Seventeen Years” interspersed with newer tracks like “Flynn” and “Shempi” ensured a pleased audience.
All photos by me
See my original article on the Washington Square News blog.
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Simian Mobile Disco – Love
Event: "Glass on Glass" at St. Ann's Warehouse
In this corner, weighing in at 11 operas, seven string quartets, eight symphonies and one Golden Globe award is Philip Glass, quite possibly the greatest living American composer.
In the far corner, weighing in at one comic book, one radio show and one reputation as the thinking mommy’s George Clooney is Ira Glass, host of Chicago Public Radio’s “This American Life.”
Photo by Pavel Antonov
Let the banter begin!
That’s the premise of “Glass on Glass,” a night of storytelling and music featuring the cousins Glass at St. Ann’s Warehouse on April 28.
Read the rest of my story for The Brooklyn Paper here . . .
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Micachu – Golden Phone
Event: Sakura Matsuri at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden
This year, the annual cherry blossom festival isn’t just about looking at pretty flowers. And it’s not just about traditional kimonos and samurai that one might imagine, either.
The Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s annual celebration of all things cherry will also feature performances by Japanese pop stars and DJs, and a panel discussion with the country’s best anime voice actors. It’s a fusion of new and old, with a pretty pink-and-white background!
Read the rest of my story for The Brooklyn Paper here . . .
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The Jackson 5 – Who's Lovin' You
Pete Hamill V3.0
I reviewed his book Downtown: My Manhattan earlier this year, and also chronicled an interview my class had with the dude. He's great, and I wish he was my grandpa. Thanks for everything, Mr. Hamill!
Sunday, April 26, 2009
Second Stop should be your first stop / Meet Craig Kafton
He is quite a character, too. He’s unmistakable in his Buddy Holly-ish glasses, with a gray ponytail hiding coyly behind his head. He busies himself with making coffee and working the register at the café, located on Lorimer and Ainslie streets, which he opened two years ago.
Kafton is from Howard Beach in Queens, but he hasn’t always lived in New York. He lived in Holland, Berlin before the Wall came down, and he still has a house in France. But he settled down in Williamsburg, and he lives directly above the café. When he and his partner, who owned the building, finally got a rid of a bad tenant, they decided to open up a café.
“Boy, this neighborhood needs a café,” Kafton had thought.
Forming the café was the main project. “I think we saw it more as an art project, building it,” Kafton said. This is because the inspiration for the building’s restoration came from the original photos of the building at the turn of the century to the 1940s. The façade of the building, which was a grocery store owned by Kafton’s partner’s grandfather, is rebuilt from a 1929 tax photo.
“There’s a bit of every period represented in there,” Kafton said. They got that old-timey effect because the two owners are collectors of stuff. There’s a wooden carving of Abraham Lincoln (wearing an Obama pin) in the front window, many different dangling lamps, a white rusty chandelier, old wooden box speakers and a ceiling fan.
Then, during the building, Kafton became a sort of coffee aficionado, without any other café experience. Now, Second Stop features Stumptown Coffee and in-house baking. They have assorted muffins, from plain to blueberry glaze to the "donut muffin," all of which are delicious because of their home-baked goodness. The café also serves special bagel sandwiches, in which you can get avocado, turkey, cheese, and other great fillings. These items don't come cheap, as a simple iced coffee can cost you over three bucks, but the quality justifies the prices.
Kafton loves the neighborhood, and in between his busy shifts, he manages to say hello to prominent locals, like the woman who owns Hotel Delmano and Union Pool, two notable Williamsburg establishments and popular bars.
As welcoming as he is, he knows who his good customers are.
“Are you a regular?” he asked me. When I said that I’m not, he replied, “Right, I didn’t think I recognized you.”
Kafton imbues the cafe with a warmth that a lot of cafés lack. And the customers are like a community, leaving bags at tables knowing that others wouldn’t steal, and would watch out for them. And even if the customers don’t watch out, Kafton will. He’s always got his eyes out for his customers – even in the bathroom.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Buy Hipster Grifter Kari Ferrell's matchbook note!
Forget Madonna's used napkin or Britney's gum; you can now buy a matchbook note written by Hipster Grifter Kari Ferrell.
Don't know who she is? Oh you should. Below is the Salt Lake City Police Department's Most Wanted Poster for the sweet swindler.
Read the original story in The Observer here.
And here is Gawker's coverage.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Sunday Funday: British celeb news, upcoming concerts and Sigur Ros videos
Many people are now familiar with "singing sensation" Susan Boyle from Britain's Got Talent, and yeah it's a great story, blah blah blah. It's heartwarming and surprising and funny, just like a reality contest show should be. Whatever. But check out this kid, also performing on Britain's Got Talent. I mean, I have been listening to Michael Jackson all day now and this kid is spot on. He's 12!
After reading articles about those two, I got a little carried away looking at the Daily Mail Web site. I never read trashy celebrity news, but Sunday Fundays (more like Sunday hangover day) are perfect for this.
Look what else I found!
Sir Richard Branson kite surfing with a naked model on his back and Peaches Geldof, who just recently got divorced at the age of 20, plans to record an album. Ha! I feel bad for Max in this divorce – no one is quoting him! I've met him before and he's a really nice person. I have also met Peaches, but I can't say the same for her. At least his band will be opening up for Lady Sovereign soon, which is good news for Chester French.
And now, to get us out of the rut of disgusting celebrity news, here are some videos you should watch if you want to feel happy and sentimental and a little bit artsy. Here is one of Icelandic band Sigur Ros playing a Take Away Show in a cafe in France. A friend of mine who lives in Paris said the guy who makes those videos is a dick, and I believe him, but the video is still pretty good.
Also, even though this is another Sigur Ros song, it may be one of my favourite music videos ever. It always makes me happy:
If that's not your thing, check out Chew Lips, a London-based band. (Think poppy, think indie, think electro.)
To close the post, here are a list of shows in the New York area that you should try to see:
04/21 – Ratatat at Terminal 5 (Check out the photos I took of them at the Guggenheim in 2006 on the Ratatat Web site!)
04/23 – Simian Mobile Disco at Highline Ballroom OR Lou Reed at Gramercy Theatre OR Suckers at Glasslands (who will soon be opening for MGMT)
04/24 – Julie Doiron at Cake Shop OR DJs SNOB and HOMO at Sweet Ups
04/26 – Gang Gang Dance at Barnard College
04/30 – Bat For Lashes at Bowery Ballroom
05/02 – The Kills at Webster Hall OR Bat For Lashes at Music Hall of Williamsburg
05/04 – The Kills at Music Hall of Wiliamsburg
05/05 – Lady Sovereign and Chester French (Peaches Geldof's ex-hubby) at Highline Ballroom
05/06 – Patrick Wolf at le poisson rouge
05/13 – Animal Collective at Terminal 5
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Bushwick Country Club and Photobooths
P.P.S. Be sure to get your hands on a basket of cheese puffs. They're like the peanuts that an ordinary bar would serve to guests as finger food, but this isn't an ordinary bar. That's part of the reason The Teenagers loved it so. Dorian from the band had never tried cheese puffs, and he became addicted.
But the best photobooths I have ever done (by far) are the ones we got in Japan. Take a look:
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Police Blotters
Thursday, April 9, 2009
A talk with Pete Hamill is serendipitous
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind is a reality
Check this out. Sciiiiience.
The world forgetting, by the world forgot.
Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind!
Each pray'r accepted, and each wish resign'd . . . "
–Alexander Pope, "Eloisa to Abelard"
Friday, April 3, 2009
Review: Asobi Seksu at Bowery Ballroom
Last night, I went to see Asobi Seksu play at Bowery Ballroom. It was a fantastic show!
You can read my review on the New York Press blog here. Be sure to browse my other photos below the story!
I went to the show alone, since I was covering it, so the beginning was kind of boring. Me and a beer and my cell phone, at least in between bands. Then the show came on, and I was blown away. My favorite part was when the band was about to leave stage for the first time. Yuki, the lead singer, took off her necklace, placed it on the mic stand, and went to tackle the drums. She took control of them and banged out the same heavy indie-rock beats that had been playing only moments before. To put it concisely, it rocked.
And of all people for me to casually start talking to, I pick the NYU grad student who used to be in the band. After the venue cleared out, he introduced me to the current lineup, who are all so nice and humble. Yuki's boisterous laugh is completely antithetical to her small figure. Billy was really polite and interesting. James was hilarious, and I hardly spoke with him because I couldn't think of any witty retorts. I, unfortunately, did not meet the drummer.
Several of the band members' families were at the show, so people lingered around for a while. Quite a few ex-members were there as well, so it was like one big happy reunion – and me. No one opposed to my presence, though. In fact, everyone was quite welcoming. A few hours and a beer later, it was time to go home.
All in all, good night.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
My latest Police Blotter for The Brooklyn Paper + Japan photo
Tomorrow night, I will be seeing Asobi Seksu play at Bowery Ballroom! Keep an eye out for my review on the New York Press blog! (I'll most likely link to it from here . . . )
And to close this post, here is a random photo from my trip to Japan. This is an action shot of me eating takoyaki (octopus balls) for the first time ever. Thrilled Japanese schoolgirls offered it to us!
Fleet Foxes – In The Hot, Hot Rays
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Bloomberg's automated water meters and The Brooklyn Brewery's new plans
The mayor claims that the initiative will save city dwellers and businesses money because the new machines will more precisely measure water use and provide faster news about leaks or problems. The meters will contain transmitters that, every six hours, will identify water usage.
The Brooklyn Brewery, which already pays about $12,000 a year for its water usage, does not expect its water costs to go down, however. Founder Steve Hindy says that he is looking to expand the business by moving to a larger facility (while also escaping the rising costs of its current location on North 11th Street, near McCarren Park). Another possibility for The Brooklyn Brewery: a possible beer garden.
If Hindy puts forth the water dough, I’ll pitch in by visiting his beer garden.
DJ Hardcore Makeout and DJ Skinny Naked Baby: Every Other Friday at Sweet Ups
DJ Hardcore Makeout, otherwise known as Kristen Mukai, performs with her partner, DJ Skinny Naked Baby, every other Friday night at the Williamsburg staple. Sweet Ups, located at 277 Graham Ave., is well known throughout the ‘Burg of the borough. The two DJs have made it a home for their bi-monthly gigs.
“My friend and I made up our names one night as a joke, but then we actually became DJs,” DJ Hardcore Makeout said. “And we have shorter versions too. I’m DJ Homo and she’s DJ Snob.”
The two girls play everything and almost anything. You might hear some Joy Division, maybe a Beyonce song, some old punk or blues, indie-rock, classic rock, a French chanteuse, some random Italian pop song, or whatever they happen to be into that night. One thing is for sure: they always play Mariah Carey.
“Oh, we love Mariah,” DJ Hardcore Makeout said. “We generally play her ‘Fantasy’ remix with [Ol' Dirty Bastard] because that’s a crowd pleaser. There are some artists we play every time, like Metronomy or Late of the Pier. And Snob loves Aaliyah.”
Is there anything they won’t play?
“MGMT,” DJ Hardcore Makeout said. “We will never play MGMT.”
Why not? DJ gig regular Anita Stahl clarifies: “You can hear MGMT at any club in Manhattan. People love it, but everyone plays it. DJs Snob and Homo like to play stuff that you haven't heard, or something you may have forgotten about. But they always play music that is sure to get the crowd moving.”
According to DJ Hardcore Makeout, the two girls got the gig one night when the bar was empty. DJ Skinny Naked Baby took out her iPod and requested that the bartender play it for them and their friends – the sole customers. Turns out the bartender was really into their music and offered them a trial performance. Since then, they have established their every-other-Friday set and have become part of the Sweet Ups family.
“It really is a family here,” Stahl said. “People come from Manhattan to Sweet Ups, just to revel in the culture that this tiny place has established. DJs Snob and Homo pull a lot of normal Manhattanites out here. It’s a great place to be.”
And on those Friday night gigs, DJs Skinny Naked Baby and Hardcore Makeout sit at the end of the bar with their mixer and their iPods, bobbing their heads and shouting when a personal favorite comes on next.
“We know what people like here, but we don’t cater to anybody in particular,” DJ Hardcore Makeout said. “We just play what will sound good next, or what will keep the bar pumping. It just so happens that people love what we do.”
The bar itself is a gem, too.
The wallpaper is dimly lit, and a red-wine colored pattern that looks half-Victorian and half-grandpa’s den brings out a deep maroon glow to the entire scene. Employees scatter candles across the bar to extend the glowy effect. Maybe it’s the lighting, or the liquor serving as a social lubricant, but everyone seems to get along here.
“It’s our music,” DJ Hardcore Makeout said, half-joking. “Our music puts everyone in a good mood. I hope! I mean, beats. We got ‘em. You want ‘em!”
Photo from www.jaunted.com
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Brooklyn in Tokyo
I left my mark on Tokyo! BROOKLYN, NEW YORK
Independence has cheap beers – at least in comparison to the other parts of the city. Happy hour runs from 10-12 and the two lovely little Japanese girls who own/run the place will churn out both good and bad hip hop until dawn. Hell, they'll even let you DJ off of youtube if you want. They asked us to tag their billboard and the huge barrels they had. So, I did. Several times.
If you ever go there, tell them I say hi.
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