Wednesday, July 28, 2010

A holiday post from the wild Irish northwest

I am now on holidays in Donegal, in the wild north-west of Ireland, and the next post or two will be a ramble through some of the listening, watching, reading and other stuff you can catch up with on a holiday!

Music

Holiday listening breaks many rules of normal music-listening habits, as perhaps it should, as hitherto less significant influences such as the presence of children much of the time come to bear, combined with a general feeling that slightly more upbeat material is appropriate for mood modification purposes, and an overall sense of experimentalism and the need to break from all routine, including usual musical tastes. 

So, despite my innate urge to rave about the new National live EP (is 8 tracks an EP?) special on iTunes (will save that for next post), I will perservere with some musical selections more suitable to the occasion and location.  Donegal is the north-western corner of Ireland, and is wild, beautiful, undertouristed (in all the best ways) and where I always believe can be found the purest essence of the Ireland people come from abroad to see but fail to find in the more commercial and developed cities and regions further south; this is where you will find pubs in which people play Irish traditional music not because the tourists expect it but because that is how they wish to pass their evenings, and miles of beautiful Atlantic beaches deserted in July.  Donegal is a secret, which deserves to be tactfully shared, but not to the the extent that it could ever become less so.  Unfortunately, it has rained much of the last week, but there has to be some karmic counterbalance for all that beauty and stillness.

People in Donegal believe they are largely ignored by the rest of the country, and perhaps the world, and this may explain a lack of musical references to the area, but I did find two, the first by Irish senior singer-songwriter Paul Brady (although from a much earlier poem) which is most notable and worth sharing for the accompanying images of the area, including in the first shot the very town in which I am staying:



The second of these themed clips is in a somewhat similar (and equally uncharacteristic) vein, and is by the even more senior denizen of the Irish music scene, Christy Moore, and, while it may be called, somewhat unexpectedly in a geographic sense, 'The city of Chicago', features a line much in my head these days which claims that in said American metropolis, 'as the evening shadows fall, there are people dreaming of the hills of Donegal' (a lovely lovely line):



Room to Roam (Coll)
On perhaps slightly more familiar ground, almost all family holidays for the last many years have been uniformly soundtracked by the Waterboys' 'Room to roam'.  On, and since, its release in 1990, this has been almost universally panned as the unbearably twee pinnacle of Mike Scott's infatuation with all things Celtic and traditional, falling chronologically in between his epic windswept early stuff (of which the twin peaks, for me, were 'The whole of the moon' and 'Red army blues') and his more spaced and far less memorable later noodlings ('Glastonbury song' etc).  However, for me, 'Room to roam' is undoubtedly faily lighweight (and what the hell are they doing in fairground waltzers on the cover?) but is beautifully instrumented and has a gorgeous lightness of touch and overall prettiness which is a perfect soundtrack for any meander around the Irish countryside.  It is perhaps not surprisingly under-represented on Youtube; there is no sign of our favourite 'Spring comes to Spiddal' in which the line 'The lights are on in Stanton's' was somewhat spoiled in recent years by the discovery that said establishment is a craft shop and not a noteworthy pub.  However, I did find 'A man is in love' (one of the two great love songs on RTR, the other being 'How long will I love you'), which is just both lyrically and musically sweet (that word again - blame the holidays):



The final two Waterboys clips do not come from RTR, but from its predecessor 'Fisherman's blues' but undoubtedly belonging there in spirit, are the title track (first) and secondly 'The stolen child' (lyrics by WB Yeats!):





Although I will probably still be on holidays for the next post, I will resume normal musical coverage, and even get around to that blatantly 'National'ist rant.

Books

A Terrible Glory: Custer and the Little Bighorn - the Last Great Battle of the American WestI finished 'The passage' and overall verdict is very positive, even if it ends on a very blatant and slightly too open note to allow what are apparently the next two books in a planned trilogy.  It is also written with a very clear eye to the obvious movie adaptation, which the Internet Movie Database confirms is in production, but yields no secrets on to those mere mortals who do not pay for an IMDB Pro subscription.  Interestingly, there are a whole pile of films with the same name already!

I have also started the book shown on the left, a new history of the battle of the Little Big Horn at which General Custer took on far more Indians than expected and came off the worse for wear.  As a young lad, I had quite an unhealthy interest in gory military history and have found it quite interesting to read proper histories of such battles as I heard of then (this one, Waterloo, Rorkes Drift and others) and learn the actual story.  This book is highly accessible and well written and avoids heavy military detail (as turned me off John Keegan's recent history of the American Civil War), and so I am enjoying it a lot.  However, it is a very tough battle (pun only slightly intended) against my parallel reading of Bill Bryson's 'At home', which I am absolutely loving, and will talk more about in the next post or two. 

Movies

Spent quite a bit of time immersed in B-movie science fiction heaven, starting with 'Predators', which I saw in the cinema and did enjoy quite a bit; yes it is very reminiscent of the original, but I found the characters interesting (if as deep as a Donegal puddle, and are they the predeators too?) and the action enough to keep me awake.  It did not quite do what 'Aliens' did for 'Alien', proving that just adding an 's' will not a superior sequel make (note, they did not do 'Godfathers', and 'Avatars' is not in development, at least according to IMDB); isn't it lucky there was not a movie called 'Sheep' which needed a sequel, as the creators would surely have been stumpted (and perhaps fleeced)?   I remember reading in The Irish Times last year that there was plans for a movie called 'Pride and predators', and the IMDB (again) suggests it is in development (here) - now that will be the next sequel to anticipate eagerly.  Also, on TV, saw 'Galaxy quest' again (very funny and well done) and found 'Lesbian vampire killers' about as much fun as the title would suggest and far more fun than the title would lead you to expect. 

On a slightly higher plane (no, not an in-flight movie, a DVD), I really really liked '(500 days of) Summer'.  Even if Joseph Gordon Leavitt does come across like a spare Heath Ledger grown in a lab to replace that tragically and prematurely large hole in movies.  It also gives him a sister who serves pretty much an identical function to the main character's sister in the wonderful wonderful 'Gregory's girl', but I liked many thinga about it which perhaps on a different day (i.e., not on holidays) might have annoyed me. I liked the time jumps, the titling, and even the split screen, brilliantly used in the scene where expectation of a particular event is contrasted with reality; I even coped with the song and dance routine, the blatant use of music like the Smiths to lend 'cool' (as in the clip below) and roared laughing at the scene where she tells him her nickname in College.  He seemed identifiably confused and real to me, but really, after it was all over, wasn't she just a bitch?



In a busy movie week or so I also saw 'Young Victoria' which impressed far more than I expected, although a week later I can remember very little bar a general positivity, which can't be a good sign.  I also watched 'The damned united' which made me initially think I could become interested in 1970's English football, against a lifetime of evidence, but then I fell asleep after a while so.....

Finally, I also got to see Toy Story 3 at second attempt (sold out on a howlingly wet day first time around) but will review that next post as this one is getting overlong as it is!

Other stuff

While in Donegal, I went along to something called the MacGill summer school, where various Irish politicians, academics, journalists and intellectuals of various levels of credential assemble for a week in a hall in a small town called Glenties to give and listen to a series of talks about various aspects of the state of trhe country (i.e., moan about, analyse and perhaps suggest how to escape our current wretched state).  I attended talks by historian Joe Lee and Peter Sutherland (whose career it is not possible to capture in a single descriptor) on education, and felt very aware that I was 20 years younger, significantly scruffier, and far less wealthy than the rest of the audience.  However, I still think there is something pretty cool about the fact that anyone can pay a fiver and wander off the street to have access to speakers including many of the current cabinet and ask them questions openly, which is somehow a good sign for a democracy, even one as bust as ours.

Finally, the iPad has been released and I am pretty sure I have talked myself into purchasing one when I get back to Cork; hard to find a clip to fit the moment, but Elvis Costello's wonderful 'Pads, paws and claws' keeps popping into my head when I think about it, so will stick that in instead:



Oh, and I thought this photo millimicronanoseconds from a crash at a Canadian airshow made my jaw drop alarming and rather dangerously (and more can be seen here):

That is more than enough for now, but needless to say lots carrying forward for the next post, including perhaps the final Irish release of the iPhone 4.0 (so many Apple products, so little time)! Click Here to Read More..

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Art for pop's sake


This is going to be an unusual post, to say the least, focussing on a single topic, an exhibition at the lovely Glucksman Gallery in Cork which explores the relationship betwen pop music and art, and hence was of great interest to me beyond that which an average art exhibition tends to stir (although I have previously spoken of some finer forms of art here).  Anyway, somehow it didn't seem appropriate to mix such culture with, for example, a review of 'Predators', which will have to wait for the next post, so I will stick to the single topic for now.

Joy Division Love Will Tear Us Apart Poster
I guess I haven't thougtht too much previously about art and music, although certain album sleeves always to me showed an artistic sensibility, for example the classic covers Peter Saville designed for Joy Division's 'Closer' (what a gorgeous sepulchral image) and 'Unknown pleasures' (apparently a graphic representation of a radio-astronomy capture of the sound from a supernova - how bloody cool is that?), as shown below.  While in university in Dublin, I had a huge poster on my bedroom wall for their 'Love will tear us apart', very much in the spirit of 'Closer' (as shown on the left), just to keep me cheerful!

Unknown PleasuresCloser (Reis) (Exp)

 Around the same era, I also always had a fondness for the sleeve of 'A broken frame' by Depeche Mode, which I posted about previously here.  In more recent years, as albums gave way to CDs and thence to downloads, the art aspect progressively shrunk and had to work harder to grab one's attention, but ones which grabbed my attention included Tindersticks (the first abum) by Tindersticks the band (which I wrote about here) and selected others like 'A rush of blood to the head' by Coldplay (perhaps their finest moment, the graphic art not the music) and 'High violet' by the National (of course I am biased towards this album, as shown here, but it is a very cool and modern image on the cover):

A Rush of Blood to the Head
High Violet

Anyway, this brings me somewhat circuitously to the exhibition which this post is meant to be about the exhibition, called 'Mixtapes' in Cork's Glucksman Gallery (whose website is here). 

The Glucksman is a beautifully sited building in the leafy lower grounds of University College Cork, built on the footprint of two old tennis courts which it was apparently designed to fit within, leading to it having a somewhat tree-like appearance (in perfect harmony with its surroundings), with a slender base blossoming above to a curved wooden block housing two floors of gallery.

In November 2009, a catastrophic flood ensued from the release of a huge volume of water from a dam around 10 miles from the Gallery, and the river which flowed through the University grounds, right beside the Gallery, briefly but dramatically turned into a torrent carrying the apparent volume of the Mississippi for a few midnight hours.  While the shape of the gallery meant that the current collections were held high out of the waters, the basement, housing the art collection store and restaurant were, like many other university buildings, filled with dank destructive water.  It has been a long road back for all affected buildings, but thankfully the gallery is in business and well worth a visit.

The exhibition called 'Mixtapes' (see programme here) runs from June to October, and I visited one quiet Sunday afternoon, and with my son got a personalised curatorial tour from one of the gallery staff.
The entrance to the gallery leads directly onto a concrete and metal stairway which is in perhaps deliberate stark architectural contrast to the bright light and pale wood of the upper floors, and the first sight at the top of the stairs is a Marc Bijl piece called 'Teenage kicks', about which there is an article here.  This is a very visually arresting opening, with a black-painted drum kit adorned with roses and a fake human skull and the backdrop painted with the fairly cliched rock'n'roll slogan seen below (leaving unsaid the code about leaving a good looking corpse).  It is a nice piece, the drum kit (from which the sticks had to be hidden, apparently, to avoid life beating art too loudly), dramatic, and an interesting approach to rock sculpture, like the 'tomb of the unknown Spinal Tap drummer' (bizarre gardening accident suggested by the roses? spontaneous combustion suggested by the coating of carbonised ash? did that skull look like it choked on someone else's vomit?).  Anyway, art is supposed to be for the viewer to interpret, and I may have got a tad carried away that time, but I liked the drama and unsubtelty of it, just as rock should be.


I was less entusiastic about the glittery turntables next to the drum kit.  The first floor is also dominated by a very odd assemblage of wood and mirrors into which one can wander, with speakers and video clips capturing the sounds of the start of a gig or soundcheck, which is, uhm, interesting and certainly different, and apparently designed especially for the exhibition.  There are also a very cool set of stylsed shots of Robbie Williams fans before a gig, in which the photos have been digitally dissembled until they look like pointillistic or charcoal shots, and lose their identity, which is apparently the idea (loss of identity compounded by their own wearing football tops) and I think works pretty well.
On the stairs to the upper level one encounters Alejandro Cesarco's 'Ramones: an autobiography' (artists homepage here), which is a set list of Ramones songs all beginning with the word 'I', building a sort of life story like a list of things teenagers might say, and which is pretty cool.

The image below presents a panorama of the upper floor, including in the middle distance on the left a large black ball hanging in a grotesque parody of a disco ball (looking more like Spinal Tap - again - meets the Death Star), and which I also thought was an interesting piece.  In the middle against the wall is one of two pieces which are Husker Du singles presented in display cases like artefacts in a museum - music to be preserved and studied.  Considering the acres of paper which have been written about modern music (even that of Husker Du) much music is very much a subject of scholarly attention, and thus this makes sense.  Maybe in 500 years a future museum on Phobos will feature actual Husker Du records and accompanying interprative babble about what they might represent.....

The Metal Ball is by Baldvin Ringsted and there is an article about it here.  On the right of the photo is a second set of photos of fans pretending to be rock stars, the first appearing on the first floor and being from the 70s, while the ones upstairs feature the same subjects 30 years later, older but certainly no wiser.

The final two pieces I really liked were by the same artist, Anne Collier, and were (from the top) 'Crying' (apparently an image of Ingrid Bergman) and 'Anything you want' (the darker one with the single eye).  Both take a pile of record sleeves as their central motif, in the upper one against a simple backdrop of black and white, and in the second an eye on the front cover stares from encroaching blatant blackness, as if through a keyhole from another dimension.  I think these are really simple yet dramatic pictures, and the classic pride and power of the stack of albums deserves monuments such as these to remind those who now now only the iTunes library where these stacks would once have leaned against their walls.  Its a bit of an old recherche of times perdu, as it were.

One last mention must go to the admirably daft piece by Merdeyth Sparks 'History' (see article on her here and here), which I left the gallery with a piece of.  No, I did not steal it, but it consisted of two piles of paper album sleeves with the words 'You can't erase history' on one side and 'You can erase history' on the other, and they were meant to be taken away.  Apparently they have lots in stock in case they run out.  I guess it says something about the disposable mass-produced nature of modern music, the classical A-side/B-side duality of the single, and possibly illegal file-sharing, which are of course points worth making.

I enjoyed my trip to Mixtapes, and it made me think about music (and maybe even art) in a different way, and the building is always worth a visit and our support given its rough recent history, so I can only recommend it highly for all these reasons.

I guess the overall theme of the exhibition was, for me, somewhat nostalgic for a different era of music fandom, not that long ago but yet might years before iPods evolved to rule the world, and when the predecessor of the playlist in the fan's life was the mixtape, carefully assembled on C60/C90 cassettes far more laboriously its moden usurper; the spirit of this arcane art was best captured in Nick Hornby's wonderful 'High fidelity' (I previously talked about my love of that book here).  I loved mixtapes, and made many in my day, which lends the name of the exhibition a particular resonance for me.  My favourite was cheerfully entitled 'The darkest night' from around 1990 (well, what would you expect from the kind of melodramatist who had a huge gothic Joy Division poster on their wall at the time?) - I am still waiting for the royalty cheques after the releases of both 'Dark was the night' (my review here) and 'Dark night of the soul' (my article on which is here) in the last while on the grounds of that one!

Anyway, back to the point.  'Mixtapes' celebrates and ruminates on things which remain important to anyone who ever made their own mixtape.  Go, see, think, be the fan.
Click Here to Read More..

Monday, July 12, 2010

What makes deer tick anyway?


Music

The Black Dirt SessionsThis week I have been listening to 'The black dirt sessions' by Deer Tick a lot, mainly following a very good review in Uncut here.  It is really good, and a blast of classic alt-country but yet shot through with something rougher than many of that ilk (as opposed to elk, as opposed to deer), perhaps largely due to the singer's rasping croak which yet captures a softer side quite wonderfully on songs like the quite brilliant piano eulogy 'Goodbye dear friend', the lovely 'The sad sun' and 'Hand in my hand' which opens on a disarming falsetto after the growls that prowl through the rest of the songs.  Opener 'Choir of angels' sets the scene well, with a fuller sound and a lovely melody, as seen below:


While the following track '20 miles' has not surprisingly drawn comparisons with very early REM, not a bad or shameful reference point:


All in all, a very good album, even if some of the later tracks are a little more noisy and less to my immediate liking. 

I also just downloaded 'Dark night of the soul' by Dangermouse and Sparklehorse, and 'The place we ran from' by Tired Pony, Gary Lightbody's side project.  I have written before of my ambiguous feelings about Snow Patrol, but another positive review in Uncut drew me to this, and it sounds quite good so far.  I think the tinge of American in Snow Patrol has been what has drawn me to some of their stff in the past, so hoped this would be more distilled essence of that.  Among the more notable tracks are 'Point me at lost islands' and 'Get on the road' (with Zooey Daschanel, although it is so reminiscent of 'Set the fire to the third bar' as to be a handy back-up in case that one ever gets lost), while Tom Smith from Editors (another band I have occasionally ruminated ambiguously on, for example here, but there is no denying the man has a class voice) gives 'The good book' a chilling and classy vocal.  I am also interested in Iain Archer who has not appeared much in the press about the album but contributes a low-key Mike Scott vocal to 'I am a landslide'.  'Held in the arms of the world' doesn't wander off the snowy patrolled path, but has a nice chorus and building harmonies, but 'Northwestern skies' with its 'ooh, I'm in a big echoey americana barn' vocal seems a bit too efforty for me.  I found a video clip sort of trailering the album below.



Next I need to listen some more to 'Dark night' and see if my impressions have evolved since I listened to it in its previous online incarnation last year here.


Books

Cyber War: The Next Threat to National Security and What to Do About ItI am continuing to read 'The passage' and am actually really enjoying its second section where it leaps forward 100 years to a Mad Max meets New England pilgrim colony settlement (but surrounded by vampires) vibe, although the 100 year timeslip seems a little stretched, given the amount of relics of the older time which still seem to be workable alongside the crossbows and blades.  As usual, I am parallel processing another (on kindle), this week 'Cyber war' by former counter-terrorism czar Richard Clarke, which scares the crap out of me by explaining patiently how our increasing daily dependence on the web for just about everything could all come crashing down if any of a number of scenarios he outlines in highly readable fashion come to pass.

I found an interview with him on the subject here:


TV and movies

Not much on TV bar the World Cup, but lets' face it, drama like that at the end of the Ghana/Uruguay match (below) is far better, even for a sports footballiterate like me, than most of what screen-writers can come up with.


What I did watch of the World Cup was on Irish RTE television, and their post-match sketch slot, 'Apres match', really outdid themselves last night with their dubbing over several well known and unexpected faces from Irish sports commentary and politics:



In terms of movies, I did watch some taped movies: 'Last chance Harvey' (melodramatic and not particularly believable yet watchable as Dustin Hoffman and Emma Thomson are, for me, both huge watchable in just about anything) and 'Swing Vote' (almost the same comments, substituting in Kevin Costner, another actor I have always had a soft spot for ever since first encountering him in 'The Untouchables', after-shocks of the magnificence of which will always lend him a favourable air in my eyes).  I also saw bits on TV of Jaws and Raider of the Lost Ark on TV, and was struck again by the incredible 'Indianapolis' scene in the former and for the first time by the amazing sky-scapes in the latter, which I never noticed before.

Games

I have spent a few scattered hours playing 'Half-life 2: episode 1' and did not remember from before the wierd opening level (a bit tedious really) but the ensuing scenes in the dark remain very cool and scary. I actually found a trailer for it on-line below:



So, that's it for this week - hope to get to 'Predators' this week, and still waiting to hear the release date for the iPhone and iPad in Ireland, which now look like they may not be July after all.  Steve Jobs, why do you tease me so! Click Here to Read More..

Saturday, July 3, 2010

More anthems by gaslight and others

Music

My main musical accompaniment this week has been the Gaslight Anthem, and I have as planned gone back to the '59 sound' album, and found it rather good indeed.  I really like 'Miles Davis and the cool', as seen below, which has a great drum intro:



Obviously, much has been written about their patronage by Bruce Springsteen, and there is some well-seen footage of them playing the title track with the man himself, from London I think, here:



I have also been hearing good things about the new Arcade Fire album, but of course good things were said about their previous two and I have blogged before about my failure to 'get them' or see what the fuss is all about (for example, see here).  I do like the sound of lead track 'Suburbs' below, particularly the piano line rolling through it:



I was also happy to hear that the album made by the late lamented Mark Linkous of Sparklehorse and Dangermouse, 'Dark night of the soul', will finally see the light of day; I wrote about it last year here.  The Irish Times website is currently streaming it live here.

Uncut magazine for this month features what appears to be an old style new release compilation for the first time in ages, which I am going to listen to with interest (it features bands I am interested to check out like Deer Tick, The Acorn and Blitzen Trapper), aand their reviews include a few few leads to follow up, in particular Tired Pony, a band which features Gary Lightbody from Snow Patrol, REM's Peter Buck and M Ward among others, a very promising mix. I found a track from it ('Dead American writers' - good title) here:



While doing some driving recently, I have been listening to a playlist of some recent downloads, including of course the National and Gaslight Anthem, but also McAlmont and Nyman, AA Bondy, Josh Ritter, Stornaway, Tracy Thorn and John Grant.  However, the one set of songs which keeps catching my ears and make me check who it is in excitement is Phosphorescent, which must be a good sign if it passes the audio equivalent of a blind taste test.  I will finish this extensive music post section with a live clip of them playing 'Tell me baby (have you had enough)':



Books

From dead American writers to live ones, I have read the first 150 pages or so of 'The passage' and am enjoying it, and also the relative novelty of feeling the authentic heft of a large book in my hands rather than my iPod for a change.  I like his writing and the plot is good (although not quite matching the set-up on the back cover, strangely), with a strange eerieness and casual brutality running through the set-up of incipient vampires, viruses, mysterious little girls, rogue FBI agents and (of course) nasty government agents up to nefarious plans.  I found the author talking about the book here:



I also finished 'Confessions of an alien hunter', discussed in my last post, which was hugely enjoyable and thoroughy recommended in anyone interested in alien life from with a science fiction or a science non-fiction perspective.

Movies

Watched and loved French thriller 'Anything for her': short, snappy, tense, unusual and very cool, highly recommended overall, and trailered as below:



Not much else to report.  The World Cup is effectively keeping me away from DVDs and movies, although I did watch Battlestar Galactica movie 'Razor' last week (a good refresher on the series, and pretty taut and brutal).  The football is certainly keeping quality films from the cinema, but I am certainly going to see 'Predators', probably irrespective of what the critics may well opine, and I guess the next one will be 'Toy Story 3'. 

In movie news, I was quite pleased to hear the (perhaps not terribly shocking) news that Peter Jackson looks like he may be going back to direct 'The hobbit' after Guillermo Del Toro pulled out; old hands may be most reliable on this one.

I also note that iTunes has started selling movies for €3.99 (currently a small range of old blockbusters including 'Independence day' and 'Terminator 2', and if they consistently keep some older interesting movies at that price I will certainly start a collection of same.


That's about enough for now, with not much else to report.  No release date for the iPad or iPhone 4.0 in Ireland yet, and definetely getting the latter and thinking more seriously about the former.  Will just have to wait for news! Click Here to Read More..
 
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