I wonder, is the process required to elect a Pope ISO 9001 certified ?
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Cassandra

Cassanda Wilson, at NC State
Ma'am, we're not going to go down there and escort your Western bacon cheeseburger
Here's a woman who called the sheriff because Burger King wouldn't give her the right hamburger.
It sounds like a Crank Yankers call, but I doubt they'd call the sheriff as a joke. I could be wrong. I hope so...
Moo
Meet Lurch.
Oh, Cherry

Cherry Cherry

And after Bradford Pear season, comes Sand Cherry season. These guys used to live in our back yard. Now they're going to die in a vase in our kitchen.
Tea leaves
Instead of just reporting the iPod's first ten songs of the week, let's see if we can use them to predict how the rest of the week's going to go.
- John Coltrane - Good Groove. Groovy little tune from Coltrane's dance band days. If you ever need a good intro to John Coltrane, check out the compilation called "The Last Giant" - it spans his whole career, from dance bands of the 40s to his "free jazz" freakouts of the late 60's.
- Soundgarden - Sub Pop Rock City. Reworking of Kiss's Detroit Rock City as a tribute to the Sub Pop record label. It appears on the "Sub Pop 200" compilation. When this came out, in 88, "grunge" hadn't escaped Seattle, and the bands featured here, like Nirvana, Soundgarden and Mudhoney, were practically unknown anywhere else.
- Elliot Smith - Pitseleh. Quiet little chunk of depression from Smith's best album:
- the first time I saw you I knew it would never last
I'm not half what I wish I was
I'm so angry, I don't think it'll ever pass
and I was bad news for you just because
I never meant to hurt you - Colorblind James Experience - Considering a Move To Memphis. This is the quintessential CBJE song. It's one bar repeated for 6 minutes, with various instruments taking tasteful solos over the top. Every once in a while, for the choruses, the music stops and the members chant, "I'm considering / I'm considering / A move to Memphis / A move to Memphis / I'm considering / I'm considering." The rest of the lyrics are a spoken-word tale of why the singer wants to move to Memphis:
- Memphis isn't all that big
It isn't all that wide
Still it is the kind of place
Where a country boy can hide - Spoon - Jealousy. One of Spoon's perfect little songs. The handclaps and the reverb-soaked piano break reminds me of the Beach Boys.
- Leon Redbone - If We Never Meet Again This Side Of Heaven. The sound of the mythic elegant South.
- Robert Johnson - Me And The Devil Blues. That other mythic South.
- Pixies - Build High. Strange little country-fied B-side. Kim Deal and Frank Black... what a pairing.
- Rolling Stones - Sweet Virginia. Not one of my favorites, especially out of context like this - I much prefer it smack in the middle of Exile.
- Velvet Underground - Heroin. Fantastic song. The proper setting for hearing this one is sitting alone in a dark room, eyes closed, empty headed, riding that one organ note. The opposite of the proper setting: sitting at a computer in khakis on a Monday morning, wondering how much longer you can keep working at something you hate just because the money makes it easy to enjoy the four hours a day you don't have to think about the job.
So, what does that tell us about the upcoming week ? I think it says: I'll hate my job and not do anything about it.
Bradford

It's Bradford Pear season in NC. These white flowers are everywhere right now, covering the smallish trees like snow. While they look nice, they smell exactly like the air from the inside of a tire.
(this image has been resized and re-saved so many times, it's lost most of its fine detail. but, i'm too lazy to re-scan the slide. sorry.)
The Missing Link
Somehow, except their unavoidable hits, I managed to go 34 years completely ignoring the Kinks. I blame it on their mid 80's stuff - that song about tearing down the dance hall, especially - I couldn't stand it. Hated it. Lumped it in with Tina Turner and Wang Chung and the rest of the cheese-encrusted 80's pop abominations.
A few years ago, I got the Rushmore soundtrack, which had a couple of really good, old, Kinks songs on it, and my interest was piqued - but only a bit. They were no longer just That Band With A Bunch Of Hits That Turned To Shit (no, not the Rolling Stones) - I got a hint that there might be some depth to this band. And, finally, disgusted with the state of new music these days, I turned to the past: Pink Floyd (got "Wish You Were Here", to replace my beat up vinyl copy) and the Kinks.
So, I just got my first Kinks album: "The Kinks are the Village Green Preservation Society". I'm four songs into it and I realize now where the Lilys, Big Star and Guided By Voices come from: they are direct descendents of the Kinks. Especially the Lilys. It's not that they kinda sound like they heard the Kinks and nicked a bit of the sound on a lark; it's more like they sprouted fully-formed from Ray Davies' forehead. I really like the Lilys, but they sound so much like The Kinks that I'm thankful I heard them first, else I would've dismissed them immediately as mere rip-offs.
The slow painful throttling of humanity
If he could, he would demonstrate his loathing of monsters by acting monstrously! Behold his righteous savagery !
