geekent’s stuff’n things

04/06/2009

[...consumed anew #127 - 130/about me #131] !!! (33 bands #7)

Filed under: ...about me, ...consumed anew — Tags: , , , , — Graig @ 1:37 pm

Me And Guiliani Down By The Schoolyard (A True Story) ep
It’s January 2004 and GAK and I are working on a review website “Dirty Monkey Bugspray Fun”, and we’re trying to compile a “best of 2003″ list. There was some cross-over, but not all that much. What was evident, though, was that the absolutely monolithic 9-minute “Me and Guiliani…” was far and away the best song of the year. Released on an ep from the then-obscure - but quickly growing in notoriety - !!! (”Chk Chk Chk”) it’s a deeply grooving track that combines indie rock with vintage disco, dipping its feet into punk and psychedelic. It’s a full-body experience - ears, mind, head, feet, butt - it’s a powerhouse track that perks you up and gets you moving at 126bpm (apparently the lyrics are quotes from Footloose). It’s backed with “Intensifieder (Sunracapellectrohshit Mix 03)”, a perhaps less engaging track, but also clocking in at over nine minutes, it lives up to its name, growing, intensifying over it’s length, gradually building over its repetitiveness. Me and Guiliani… broke !!! (”Chk Chk Chk, or any other 3 repetitive sounds - Pow Pow Pow, Unh Unh Unh, etc” - named after the subtitles on The Gods Must Be Crazy where the native language clicks or pops would be written as “!!!”) out from their dance club scene in California and wide across the globe as leaders in the wave of indie dance music.

Louden Up Now
Their 2004 full release was an exciting prospect. The ep, having delivered two massive tracks, led expectations to believe Louden Up Now would be more of the same. Although the average length of the 10 tracks is about 5 1/2 minutes - ranging from a scant 1:19 and 2:31 to 7:33 and a replay of “Me And Guiliani…” - few of the tracks delivered upon the promise the ep made. My initial reaction, especially by the time the six/seventh track played (the inane 2-part “Shit/Schiesse/Merde” with the final track being an instrumental version) was that the band should stick to releasing two-song eps. The well intending but banal “Pardon My Freedom” is tedious while “Dear Can” is empty sounding (”I know you want more”… yes, this song needs more), and aside from “Me and Guiliani..”
only the opening track “When The Going Gets Tough, The Tough Get Karazzee” even hints at delivering upon expectations. I was almost ready to write !!! off as a one-hit wonder after this. Certainly there was little, if any reason to hang onto the album.

Take Ecstasy With Me ep
But in 2005, !!! returned with another 2-song ep, surprisingly enough both cover songs. The title track, a near-8-minute re-interpretation of the great Magnetic Fields’ track, which somehow expanded its spaciness while also bumping up its dance floor effectiveness, the band citing that studying Stephin Merritt’s song structure inspired them to reinterpret how they look at making music. !!! “Ecstasy” though double the length of the original, stays true to the source, and yet is its own beautiful beast. The backing track, a cover of Nate Dogg’s “Get Up” is surprisingly even more effective, a pulsating bass line and drum machine provide the foundation for a singsong interpretation of Nate Dogg’s rhymes that change tracks completely yet no less effective. It takes an solid club song and turns it into an epic anthem. Just as with “Ecstasy”, “Get Up” stays true to the original in many respects, but !!! build it up, fill it up with instrumentation and even speed the bpm up slighly, bolstering it to something that feels alive, especially when it builds into an orgy of psychedelic noise by way of James Brown. Was !!! back? Sure felt like it.

Myth Takes
The following year, their third album emerged, and I was absolutely hesitant to hop on board. Hadn’t they learned that what we want are two back-to-back powerhouse tracks, not full albums. Was it true, had they learned how to compose songs and not just drift aimlessly over repetitive riffs? The preview track, “Heart of Hearts” not only confirmed it, but threatened to best even the now legendary “Me and Guiliani…” as their greatest song. But the album, with it’s first two tracks at under 200 seconds in length, showed that they weren’t only capable of epics, and that they knew how to make shorter songs work. The opening title track sucks the listener in with an infectious groove, twangy guitars, and inviting lyrics. If anything it proves too short, but the pounding “All My Heroes Are Weirdos” shifts gears so drastically there’s no time to dwell. “Must Be The Moon” at just under six minutes, is a concentrated dancehall floor burner, but can compete with any of !!!’s epics to date. It’s rapidly paced, and doesn’t give itself time to dwell. Throughout the album, there seems to be story within the lyrics, which is instead of novelty the norm. “Sweet Life” turns the !!! style on its head, taking an almost Stevie Wonder-esque, dance-soul turn, while “Yadnus” is a thundering march that seeps sweat through your headphones, and the eight-minute “Bend Over Beethoven” proves that they haven’t lost their epic touch. The final track, “Infinifold” is weak, !!! venturing into ballad territory, which they’re not incapable of moving to, but needs to be carefully tread.

33 Bands: 6
(what is 33 bands?)

Does !!! make “the list”? I’m not sure. I’m certainly capable of succumbing to their infectiousness, but at the same time, I’m not 100% certain of their ability to build upon Myth Takes nor how much longevity they have. I’ll tentatively add them to “the list” and see

Artist: !!!
Albums owned: Louden Up Now (2004); Myth Takes (2006)
Eps owned: Me and Guiliani Down By The Schoolyard (A True Story) (2003); Take Ecstasy With Me (2005)
Album(s) missing: !!! (2001)

Status: On tour

Personal history: Saw them live in 2007, and found the lead singer’s go-go dancing somewhat… unsettling, which actually put me off the group for a while. I got over it.


33 bands (in no particular order):
1. The National
2. Modest Mouse
3. De La Soul
4. TV on the Radio
5. The Futureheads
6. !!!

01/06/2009

[...about me #128] my birthday

Filed under: ...about me — Tags: — Graig @ 2:51 pm

About today:
For my birthday I received: emails, phonecalls, facebook well wishes, a book, I bought myself some socks and underwear, and because the greatest gift is the gift of making my wife happy, I bought her the Magnum P.I. season 1 box set. Thanks to all for acknowledging the day of my birth. Most of my friends and family know by now that I prefer to hide out and or ignore the whole “birthday” thing, and for those that choose to respect that and disavow knowledge thereof and/or intentionally/unintentionally forget, than you as well. It is appreciated.
Is the day over yet?

16/05/2009

[...consumed all new #128] Final Crisis Aftermath: Escape #1

Filed under: ...consumed all new — Tags: — Graig @ 12:09 pm

There are four “Final Crisis Aftermath” books, Run dealing with the Human Flame fleeing from heroes and villains alike, Ink telling the Tattooed Man’s turmoil in reforming himself, Dance continuing the adventures of Japan’s Super Young Team, and this, Escape dealing with… well, I’m not quite certain yet. After the divisive but utterly intriguing work Grant Morrison did in the main event, I find each of these six-issue series appealing, and yet finances being what they are, I can only choose one to follow. I chose Escape based solely on its writer, Ivan Brandon, who impressed me greatly with his Faces of Evil: Kobra one-shot a few months ago (Sean reviewed his new Image series, Viking, in this column last week).

Escape finds Tom Tresser, aka Nemesis, awakening, mildly sedated, in a strange bed, being serviced by three plastic triplets. Even in his hazed state, Nemesis knows things aren’t right, and he flees the room, entering an almost virtual reality corridor where he thinks he sees his former boss Amanda Waller, only to collapse at the feet of a faceless being wearing a leather coat adorned with a GPA (Global Peace Agency) button. Is this Father Time? The Question? Mr. Terrific? Someone else. Nemesis realizes he’s not in his right mind and runs until everything goes white. He’s nowhere, yet somewhere, and his mind starts spinning as he sees things in kaleidoscopic vision. Count Vertigo, Cameron Chase, some guy… equally unknowledgeable of this crazy place. They encounter an Omac (“the” Omac?) and they’re given the opportunity to leave, but an open door leads to somewhere they can’t go. They’re prisoners despite their captors stating otherwise.

The book, from page one, hearkens back to the near-perfect 1960’s Patrick Magoohan series The Prisoner, where a secret agent, having quit his position, is drugged and scuttled off to a strange village on an island of no escape where he participates in dueling mind games with his captors. They want his intelligence, they want to break him. He wants his freedom but not their way. It’s a true man against the world scenario, and Brandon evokes (but doesn’t replicate) the show marvelously, telling a trippy, illogical story that Grant Morrison fans will certainly appreciate. Artists Marco Rudy and Mick Gray handle the visuals as if they were veterans of the The Invisibles, creating an exotic locale, twisted mindscapes, and nailing perfectly the tangible difference between human and plastic beings.

My initial impression of Brandon’s work is that he’s a star waiting in the wings for his big break. I’m not certain Escape (or Viking) will be it, but it’s certainly going to be a pleasure following his work, watching him develop, and waiting for his breakthrough.

11/05/2009

[...learned #128] attic attack

Filed under: ...learned — Tags: — Graig @ 5:05 pm

My attic was insulated with about four inches of rockwool, which is, like, ancient in terms of insulating technology. We braced the sagging roof before buying another 8 bags of insulation to lay down atop the rockwool within the rest of the attic. There was also some venting problems with the bathroom fan which required installing insulated piping and better venting and the realization that there wasn’t much ventilation through from the eaves, which we couldn’t fix and weren’t certain whether we should.

[...about me #113/learned #127/i ate #121-135] snackaholic

Filed under: ...about me, ...i ate, ...learned — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , — Graig @ 4:56 pm

Whilst spending two concentrated weeks with my Mom and Dad, working on the house, making frequent trips to Rona/Home Depot/Canadian Tire, watching hockey, eating meals, and just being a family that I have inherited a lot of traits from my parents, in particular a snacking obsession which it would seem stems from my dad (probably my mom too, but she’s found willpower).

In the time they were here I ate:
121 - Peak Freans Lifestyle Selection Blueberry and Brown Sugar Cookies (with Flax!)
122 - Humpty Dumpty ChedACorn
123 - Doritos - Nacho Cheese flavour (I was originally trying to make a point about the fakeness of dialogue in food commercials and wound up getting suckered into snacktime)
124 - Munchos
125 - President’s Choice Blue Menu Fig Cookies
126 - one dollar Swiss fruit and nut chocolate
127 - Bounty coconunt chocolate bar
128 - peanut M&Ms (Aden’s favourite)
129 - cherry & creame cheese danish
130 - apple & creame cheese danish
131 - Tim Hortons donuts (maple glaze, double chocolate)
132 - day old Tim Hortons donuts (honey glaze)
But the snacking didn’t stop there, carrying into the weekend
133 - meh cherry pie (from the local fruit stand)
134 - more Tim Hortons donuts (their sucky walnut crunch, which I always forget is nothing like the awesome Robin’s Donuts walnut crunch)
135 - apple pie (as made by Aden’s aunt, and about the best apple pie I’ve had in 2 or 3 years)

Thankfully I’d been working my ass off the past two weeks, climbing ladders, pulling cables, sweating it out in monkeysuits insulating the attic, so I didn’t really gain much weight, but that kind of snackiness can’t continue. I’m a snacky guy in general and I try to reserve it for one or two nights a week, but my folks, well, let’s just say they’re enablers. Heh. Love them lots though, and I wouldn’t have gotten much done without them.

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