Thursday, July 17, 2008

Thanks For Almost Getting Me Killed

I think Phoebe hit the nail on the head last night when she told me, "Never pick things up at night." This was while I was on my way home from Newport Beach, where I purchased a new turntable from somebody I found on Craigslist. I'm not lying when I say this, because I've never quite had this sensation before...but I'm pretty sure the guy I bought the record player from wanted to kill and eat me. If that had happened, I would have held all of you responsible.

The night started out innocently with a phone call from the potential serial killer in question telling me that I might want to leave after rush hour, or I'd risk being stuck in traffic for an uncomfortable length of time. I waited until roughly 8:00pm, and it wasn't until I was grabbing some LPs (Hawkwind's In Search Of Space for its rocking-ness, Will Oldham's I See A Darkness for its quietude, and Radiohead's The Bends because I've heard it a million times and have almost every sound on the album memorized). My roommate informed me that it was an unusual time to be driving such a long distance to pick something up from a stranger's apartment, and suddenly I became paralyzed with fear. She was right -- what the fuck was I doing driving deep into the O.C. alone to meet a guy I didn't know? I passed the 45 minute car ride by calling people and telling them that I loved them all very much, but if I died it was my own fault. This might have been overkill, but trust me, it was totally justifiable.

After several twists and turns, I located the guy's condo development. I parked on the street, found the guy standing a few yards away, and we walked maybe 100 yards through a courtyard to a tiny first-level apartment in a far corner of the development. When we got inside, I had a chance to study him. He was roughly my height, a bit stockier, very tanned and with slicked black hair. He kind of looked like an older version of Christian Bale in American Psycho except he was weathered and leathery from living in Southern California. His hand shake was firm. When we got inside, he offered me a beer. He had been watching Futurama, so I momentarily let down my guard and figured he was a normal guy...maybe even a nerd.

My suspicions about the guy were raised again roughly five minutes into our meeting, when he took a phone call in the other room, and spoke loudly about how he had somebody over. While on the phone he said, "Evan, let me get you a Coke or a beer." When I politely declined, he said, "C'mon let me fix you a drink." I told him I had one in the car waiting for me, as images of Jeffrey Dahmer mixing animal tranquilizers or sleeping pills into an unsuspecting victim's drink flashed before my eyes.

At the 30 minute mark, we're sitting on his couch (ugh. don't ask) talking about the speakers that he built himself (and sold a duplicate pair he built for $2,300), his dual monoblock amplifiers ($1,700 each), his preamp, and his subwoofer, and the guy has the gal to complain about having to pay $30 for a Grinderman LP on eBay. That's when I glanced over at his record shelf and realized the guy only had a dozen or so records. I didn't see any CDs anywhere in his living room. What the hell is the guy with the $10,000 audio setup complaining about a $30 record for? That was the first time I saw the weird look in his eye. It wasn't the first time I've seen that glint before, it's just that most of the time I see it, it's while watching a segment of "America's Most Wanted", or a documentary on Charles Manson. I saw the twinkle again while he was talking about driving his motorcycle to Canada in a day, when he talked about partying at clubs in Hollywood, and when he offered to let me see the brown recluse spider he'd caught last night in his bedroom.

I laughed and said that I'd just read an article written by a college professor about how the brown recluse has not established itself in California yet, but the guy smiled and told me to look behind me. It was then that I noticed I was sitting a few inches in front of a pint glass with a good-sized brown spider in it. There didn't seem to be a top on the glass. I looked next to it and saw a small, flimsy piece of Saran wrap sitting on the table next to the glass. He'd gone and removed it a few minutes earlier without telling me.

Forty five minutes into our meeting, I was standing on the far side of the living room, as far as I could get from the spider glass. I was starting to unhook the machine when he began telling me about his method for removing warps from old LPs, and for cleaning them with steam vacuums. Apparently if you place a record on your turntable and use a steam vacuum while the disc is rotating at 45rpm, after a few minutes the disc will begin to warp from the steam. Once the record starts to form a bowl shape, he said to stop the vacuum and let the record return to its normal shape. Because it's resting on a level platter, the record will flatten out perfectly. Or so he said. Afterwards, use a record brush to clean the gunk out of the grooves that the steam helps rise to the surface. He told me it worked perfectly. Then he asked me how I clean records. I told him D4 solution with a brush and an anti-static brush, or ammonia-free glass cleaner with an adult diaper. He said he uses a solution that he invented on his own, which includes equal parts ionized water filtered using reverse osmosis (or something, I forget), "prescription grain alcohol" and urine.

Seventy minutes into our meeting, I was clawing at my skin from the inside, trying to figure out any way I could leave the guy's apartment. I told him I'd heard enough, and was ready to pay him and leave. We packed the record into a cardboard box a few feet from the spider glass, and while he was cleaning out the box he somehow managed to pull a condom out from a clump of Styrofoam peanuts. I don't know if that was his idea of a joke, if he really had a shipment of condoms sent to him in a large shipping box packed with Styrofoam peanuts, or if he had placed the condom in there when he left the room in order to let me know that everything was cool, and he had condoms if I hadn't brought any. I wanted to vomit. Instead, I made a phone call to my sister and pretended I was already on my way home to her. As I did this, the guy pulled a knife and a screwdriver out of his pocket. I stepped over him and moved to the other side of the living room, closer to the front door. He spent a few minutes removing the phono cartridge (he damaged it and cursed himself excessively in the process of removing it). We carried two boxes out to my car, I slammed the door, and seventy five minutes after I arrived at the guy's apartment, I was finally on my way home.

Now that my phone and turntable situations have been resolved, I can begin to create Thank You notes to all those who donated to the website. They'll be in the mail shortly.

***

Living in LA, I haven't really had any interesting celebrity encounters. Maybe it's because I'm a transplanted East Coaster who walks with his head down. Maybe it's because I really couldn't give a shit. Either way, I had a pretty awesome comedic moment today involving a D-list celebrity, so I'll mention it here.

I was at Costco this afternoon picking up a prescription and munching on free samples when Nicci called me. She thought I was in my car, as we were trying out my new phone's speaker / headphone system. I told her that I wasn't in the car at the moment, so please call back in ten minutes. Right when we hung up, I noticed that guy Dax Sheppard who played Frito in Idiocracy, a film I've seen multiple times and have referenced frequently on this website. If it wasn't for that movie, I wouldn't have noticed him coming right towards me. My comedic wit and timing being as good as it is, I instantly thought of the scene in Idiocracy where he and Owen Wilson and the black girl from SNL "The Un-Funny Years" enter Costco, where they are greeted by a mentally handicapped man who says, "Welcome to Costco. I love you." So, I decided at that very moment to adopt a mentally handicapped dialect (or is it an accent?) and loudly say, "Welcome to Costco. I love you" to him. He didn't seem impressed. If I'd said "Ow, My balls!" he might have laughed, but I wasn't really interested in making the guy laugh, just interested in calling attention to the irony of the situation.

David Rose And His Orchestra - Gay Spirits
Theo Angell - A Backdoor
New Lost City Ramblers - Billy Grimes The Rover
Agitated Radio Pilot - Your Turn To Go It Alone
Blind Boy Fuller - I Want Some Of Your Pie

Wednesday, July 09, 2008

My Trip Downtown

Thank you Lauren from up the street! You are such a wonderful friend for making a donation to the page, and as I said earlier, I owe you and Nick a lunch at Soy Cafe. Thank you Michael from Brooklyn! You are one of the good guys, and good guys always win at life while bad guys always lose. I feel like with another two or three good-sized donations, I'll be within shouting distance of my goal. There are six days left to donate. If you have not already, please do, dear readers. Why? My roommates are moving out and taking their turntable with them, and I don't have money to buy a new one and the new phone/contract I have to purchase next week. If you love the music you hear on this page, and want to continue hearing it (that's not a threat, it just means I will not be able to rip weird, rare, vinyl-only releases anymore), you should donate a few dollars to this page so that I can purchase a new turntable and phone. There is a Paypal link at the top left corner of this page. Or, you can bid on one of my eBay auctions. Or, you can e-mail me and I'll provide you with a mailing address if you want to send a check instead of using Paypal. Thank you. Remember, each donor will be rewarded with a personal "Thank You" gift that I will be tailoring to each person once the web-a-thon has ended (I hope you like disease-ridden needles!).

Today being an off-day from work, I awoke early. I was asked to run an errand for Lindsey's law firm back in New Jersey. After showering and finding clean clothes, I received my instructions: go to the Los Angeles City Offices on Ramirez Street to locate and copy important legal documents. Sounds exciting right? It's not, but when you have an overactive imagination like I do, even the most mundane errands becomes a matter of life and death, where one false step could be the difference between walking through an clearly-marked entranceway and falling down an open elevator shaft. Sometimes I pretend that grocery shopping is a plot twist in my mundane existence, that items on shelves are wires connected to an armed explosive, and if I don't get all the bagels and microwave dinners and beer quick enough my stomach will blow up.

The building was a new one for me; normally the errands I run for Lindsey bring me to Whittier or the surrounding neighborhoods. This time I was going to a part of downtown I'd never before visited. Seriously, the building was like a police fortress. I'm not even kidding -- I was at the very same building with the helipad that services all those bell helicopters that fly around this half of the city. I parked on the roof, right below the helipad, and it felt like I could reach out and touch a police chopper if I wanted to. Good luck trying that. To get into the parking complex you have to go through a security gate, and the complex is crawling with police officers. I guess that's where everyone goes to have their cop cars serviced, and where they pick up all their weapons...at least, I imagine there's a room in there with a huge cache of weaponry. Really crazy shit too, like police-issued crossbows and maces and shit. Oh, and I parked like 20 yards from a fucking mobile command unit. Like in the movies!

It took more than a few minutes to find the room, because the layout was very unusual. When I walked into the office, I announced my arrival by saying, "My name is Evan...you're supposed to be holding a box for me." I could have sworn I saw the girl behind the front desk reach for a hidden silent alarm button, but instead she calmly said that she did not recognize my name, and could I please tell her the box number. Whoops. Forgot to write down the box number. I called Lindsey, who laughed at me for writing down the case number but not the box number. As we spoke, she asked me if everybody was staring at me on the phone. I said yes. This wasn't true, until I nervously started playing with a staple remover on an unoccupied desk. I tried to dislodge a staple from the device, and it shot across the desk and hit a bellhop bell. The ring startled the girl behind the desk. I guess she decided she'd seen enough monkeying around, and took some initiative by calling somebody and asking what the box number was for the case file I was requesting. The first one they brought out was wrong, but the second box contained the file I needed. I quickly removed all the pages that needed to be photocopied, copied them, and paid the receptionist $1 and change for my troubles.

Lunch at Aroma Cafe and now the Mets game (which just became official as they pulled out the tarp for a rain delay. All in all, a good day off! Except for my becoming totally disillusioned with Touch & Go / Quarterstick Records, but that's another rant for another day.

The Dandy Warhols - Boys Better
Sonny Boy Williamson - Got The Bottle Up And Gone
Alice Cooper - Sick Things
Mythical Beast - Coal Is Better Than Diamonds


"This collection compiles a series of instrumentals that were released on Vrroomm, an Italian music library label, during the 1970s. The sound of these tunes is every bit as gutsy as the label's name would lead you to believe: everything here has a strong groove, regardless of the song's tempo, and there is strong emphasis on driving rhythms and stylized "mechanical" effects in the music. Some of the up-tempo highlights include "Honda," a driving rock instrumental that layers fuzz guitar over a hard-hitting drum groove that is further spiced up with jazzy piano, and "Nervosa," a tight, fast-paced jazz instrumental that layers some tasty electric piano riffs over a rhythm section that pits furiously-paced basslines against some rambunctious drumming. The tempo is slowed down on occasion by moodier tracks that manage to maintain the automotive sound despite their gentler tempos: "Bossa Astratta" is a saxophone-driven fusion of jazz and samba rhythms that keeps things moving with a cymbal-heavy rhythm arrangement, and "Saudade De Brasil" is a moody keyboard exploration that is gently nudged along by some acoustic guitar strumming and a gentle but insistent drum beat. The remainder of Vroommm: Funk Cinematique is pretty solid, but some selections fail to maintain interest because they sacrifice rhythm for melody: "Pressing" builds a strong percussive sound, but fails to take it anywhere, and "Ineguale" merely layers some atonal keyboard doodles over an insistent drum beat. However, these occasional missteps manage to stay musically consistent with the other tracks on the disc and the compilation is so generous (the running time is over 70 minutes) that it makes this a minor quibble. All in all, Vroommm: Funk Cinematique is a solid, worthwhile compilation for fans of European lounge music." - All Music Guide

Vroommm: Funk Cinematique
MediaFire Download Link

G. Sorgini - Honda
L. Zito - Bossa Astratta
F. Tamponi - Crisi dell'industria
S. Montori / G. Chiti - Plutone
E. Roncarati - Central Park
R. Ducros - Pressing
Arawak - Shotgun
F. Tamponi - Struble Day
R. Ducros - Saudade De Brasil
R. Ducros - La Rimonta
M. Molino - For Me

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Make A Donation, Receive A Personalized Gift, Rinse, Wash, Repeat!

Hey, I've got more eBay auctions running this month because I need to buy a new turntable as soon as possible. My roommates are leaving, and what good is being a record collector without a turntable? I also have to get a new cellphone because Verizon has no coverage where I work or where I live. If you don't have an eBay account, you can always make a donation to the website -- normally they're used to cover hosting fees, or to get drunk -- by using the PayPal link at the top left column of this page. If not for me...do it for yourself? Otherwise you're surely going to hell. My goal is $350, which is a bit of a reach considering my best month ever for donations brought me thirty-five dollars...but maybe if I sell out a little bit and post more popular MP3s, it won't be such a reach! I guess I'm really going to have to step up my blog entries for the next few weeks. It's time to get back to basics: vulgarity, uncouth social remarks, top ten lists and unabashed hatred for all things pop-culture. Without question, I will personally be sending special 'Thank You' gifts to everyone who donates. Even if you live in Lithuania or Sri Lanka. For serious this time, Mike M. Cost be damned! I'll be keeping track of my progress on this handy dandy chart I just created in Photoshop:


Here's a weird one for you. I received an e-mail from Podcast Jack yesterday containing a re-sequenced version of the first official Obscure References album Carpal Tundra. This is not to be confused with the ??? CD-r, which is limited to 27 copies, each one being untitled and uncredited (I don't even think they have ID3 tags attached to the sound files). The ??? CD-rs will be available only at top secret locations (try east-side hipster coffeeshops or record stores) in Los Angeles. Carpal Tundra, on the other hand, will be packaged beautifully with artwork, inserts, and even pun-filled song titles! Why? Because that's what we decided on that one time when we were really high watching [Adult Swim] cartoons in my basement. Yup...those were the good old days. In any event (or maybe in every event) Carpal Tundra will be available through this website (only 100 copies) in the next month or so. More details as they emerge from the ether...

Boris - Hama
Einsturzende Neubauten - Halber Mensch
Comets On Fire - Return To Heaven
Danielson Famile - Two Sitting Ducks
Aphex Twin - Fingerbib


"Originally released in 1967 on the BDS label. Mario Schifano (the amazing painter and sculptor from the Italian pop scene) recruited four young and unknown musicians to record this innovative album. Features Peter Harman and beautiful cover artwork by Schifano himself. Previously carried on the dubious Mellow label, this version has got to jump one giant step forward in the great Italian label scramble for legitimacy! Starts out with a killer side-long track that almost makes this one out as the Italian answer to Love Live Life +1: flying freak-out stuff, stumbling percussion, screaming organ waver, screaming female vocals, screaming, heavy lead guitar all add up to a first class psychedelic cacophony. The remaining four tracks are fine, in a shorter psych/pop vein. Unknown and good-to-astounding, depending on your relationship to the psych universe." - Mutant Sounds

Le Stelle Di Mario Schifano
Dedicato A
MediaFire Download Link

Tracklist:
01. Le Ultime Parole Di Brandimante, Dall'Orlando Furioso, Opsite Peter Hartman E Fine (Da Ascoltarsei Con TV Acessa, Senza Volume)
02. Molto Alto
03. Susan Song
04. E Dopo
05. Intervallo
06. Molto Lontano (A Colori)

Saturday, June 21, 2008

The Day I Spent With My Mother, And Other Stories. Plus, UFO Encounters!


Nothing beats a day at the beach when one would ordinarily be hovering over a cash register trying to smile at dozens of expectant customers. I awoke early this morning, because it was 100 degrees in my room last night, and I needed to sleep with the shades open in order to best utilize the large box fan wedged into the frame of my bedroom window. I stopped at Yellow Mart to buy a bottle of soda, and since I wasn't wearing my glasses (I'm growing tired of being one of the bespectacled) I accidentally grabbed a Diet Coke instead of Cherry Coke. Neither Sunny nor Jin-Ju warned me as I approached the cash register that I was straying from my normal soda of choice, but then again they barely speak English. Although, Jin-Ju sometimes says, "Heyo Eban" to me as I exit or enter the store. The drive to Santa Monica was bitter (like the unpalatable crispy bitterness of a diet soda), but quick. I picked my mother up outside her hotel and we drove to the Lazy Daisy on Pico for breakfast. I considered ordering the french toast but settled for a bacon egg 'n' cheese sandwich on a plain bagel, because to stray from the norm would unlock a whole series of potential "what-if" scenarios that would last through the remainder of the day. But then again, you can't possibly comprehend the neurotic thoughts that run through my mind on even my sanest days. I'm like a mix between an autistic child and a paranoid schizophrenic with my adherence to routines.

Then I got my car washed. It was more exciting than it sounds. Some Arab-looking guy driving a silver mini-van was hitting on my mother. Apparently the color of my Volvo is red, which was a big surprise to me considering the car has been perpetually looked brownish in hue due to a combination of pollen, mud and tar that has settled into the finish over the course of the last six months since I've visited a car wash. Also, you'll be happy to hear that all the bits of rice that fall out of the Qdoba burritos I can't seem to not-eat until I get home from the fast food joint have been vacuumed up by a pair of overly-nice, unusually-quiet Mexican dudes at the car wash (also located on Pico, a few blocks north of Lazy Daisy and the Farmer's Market).

I was informed that I was inappropriately dressed for dinner, so we had to go to the store and buy me a collared shirt. That's always a big (what's the opposite of boost?) to my self-esteem. Why not just tell me I look like a vagrant? Whatever, we bought me a new shirt and then we decided to spend a few hours relaxing by the pool. Two of my all-time favorite hobbies, back-to-back: clothes shopping and swimming. Luckily for us, the pool provided enough entertainment to make it slightly more than unbearable. There was a woman who was clearly high on heroin struggling to keep her head above water while her rich, older-gentleman companion read a magazine and worked on his typical L.A. tan. Her eyes were rolling back in her head, and her tits were not even close to contained inside her bathing suit, but she didn't seem to notice or care. I haven't seen anyone that smacked-out since...well, I shouldn't name names. Also, much to my delight, there were three super-hot French girls sunbathing near the pool's entrance who looked like they just stepped off the set of Gossip Girl or one of those chick programs. Now, I don't speak too much French, so does anyone know what "quatorze" means?

In the shower, before dinner, I had a hard time closing the hotel's complimentary shampoo bottle. It slipped out of my hand like a condom water balloon and somehow propelled itself over the shower curtain and halfway across the bathroom. As I stared for an uncomfortably long amount time at the orange rubber fish bath toy laying on its back near the shower drain, I realized that I was taking way too long to shower. I felt like Batman in that movie where he played the serial killer. Then I slipped and almost died getting out of the shower. Imagine that: someone under the age of 85 falling to his death in the shower. What a fucking embarrassment. I think the only death less dignifying than that would be if I had a stroke while jerking off and the cerebral bleed killed me before I could pull up my pants.

Dinner went off without a hitch. The moms seemed to enjoy each other's company, everyone got a kick out of Corey's fast-talking East Coast attitude, and my penne and vodka sauce with bacon was just about the greatest, bacon-y-est thing I've ever tasted. Il Fornaio is highly recommended for anyone who enjoys really good pasta dishes. The fried calamari was also quite good. After dinner I returned to my mother's hotel room, grabbed my belongings and left. Her last words to me were, "Make sure you get your headlight fixed this week!" I love you too, mom.

Jack Rose - Flirtin' With The Undertaker
Pere Ubu - Montana
Electrelane - The Boat
Tengir-Too - Kambarkan
Alexi Murdoch - Dream About Flying


Incredibly rare 1978 2LP set detailing the history of UFO sightings and encounters, including recordings of former abductees under hypnosis. It's narrated by Walt Peters, and the music is courtesy of DeWolfe, who -- if you're unaware -- is an awesome music/sound effects library who has been churning out innovative sounds for almost 100 years. We have some of their library's LPs at the store, and they're all a treat to listen to -- especially the electronic ones.

Anyway, I always post a lot of news stories related to UFOs and aliens and shit, so if anyone has found this page because of the alien/UFO bullshit, I'm sure you'll enjoy this recording. It's been heavily sampled by Obscure References, but that's for another post in another future in another dimension.

Factual Eyewitness Testimony Of: UFO Encounters:

Side 1
Side 2
Side 3
Side 4

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Live-Blogging The Top Chef Season 4 Finale: DRunk


8:10pm - As I sit down on the couch at Nicci's with my first beer of the evening (Lagunitas Lucky #13), I recall the last time I tried to "live blog" an event: WMFU's Request-A-Thon with Yo La Tengo. God, was that boring. At least this time I'll be drunk. Today at 711 I actually gave the store manager my phone number so that he can call me when the next batch of rare beers arrive. He's by far the shadiest character I've ever willingly traded phone numbers with, but there's something entertaining about mingling with weirdos. That guy is definitely a weirdo. Anyway, it's time to start drinking, there are still roughly two hours left until the new episode.

8:18pm - Nicci has poured herself a one-serving bottle of White Zinfandel. I'm having some difficulty getting her to give herself up to the dark side of geeky craft beers.

8:22pm - Ass Face opens her mouth for the first time, and all I hear is shit.

8:23pm - Nate comes home from a 13-hour work day and drops a bombshell. He says his "industry insider" friends in reality TV told him that Lisa won the whole thing. Just as I am about to hurl my laptop across the room, he tells me he was "just bullshitting." Thanks a lot, dick.

8:49pm - Gail Simmons of Food & Wine Magazine has alien eyes and a massive chest. She's a full-grown woman, and looks like she could take a big dick.

9:00pm - With one hour to go until the finale part two, Nate, Nicci and I are constructing our "top five" lists of people we're allowed to sleep with even if we're in a committed relationship. Our lists consist entirely of Gossip Girl cast members. That little blonde girl ranks as number one for both Nate and I, but Nicci informs us that she was born in 1993. Depression sinks in as I realize I couldn't even potentially ask the girl, "Remember Nirvana?" without her questioning what the hell I'm talking about. Creepy.

9:22pm - In honor of Ass Face Lisa, Nate has prepared his dinner using the much-maligned top chef contestant's favorite ingredient: rice. The rice will be served in the same manner in which Lisa serves all her rice dishes: wrongly cooked. Whether or not Nate chooses to under or over-cook his rice will remain unknown until the dish has been plated.

9:25pm - Nicci and I judge Nate's rice to be undercooked, and Nate responds by crossing his arms, making his best ass face, and telling us, "Thanks for congratulating me for still being here." Nicci and I laugh and congratulate him on winning the bronze meta ("So there")l. Top Chef inside jokes are the best jokes. Actually, LOST inside jokes are the best inside jokes. And now, if you will, a moment of silence for the passing of Season Four of LOST.

9:28pm - Nicci decides on the first rule of the Top Chef drinking game. We should drink every time Lisa pisses us off. All three of us immediately reach for our drinks, even though Dale and Stephanie are currently on-screen.

9:39pm - While researching who of the three finalists faced the most eliminations, I think I just saw who won. Fuck you Wikipedia! Fuck you in your fucking ass!

9:54pm - Mark arrives while the three of us are discussing elephant walks and the rules of the popular masturbatory game "Ookie Cookie". Also, Nate and I have decided that if you you realize you can suck your own dick and you do it, you're not gay. But, if a clone of you suddenly appears and you suck your clone's dick, you're gay. Six minutes until the finale begins. I'm trying to drink faster so I forget all about what I just saw on Wikipedia.

9:58pm - It's time.

10:04pm - Padma's nipples are hard as she briefs the contestants on the rules of the final challenge. She's a great looking lady (nasty scars are "in" these days), but I'm kind of wishing it was Gail Simmons Food & Wine Magazine whose nipples were hard. Nicci made me promise that if I ever had the chance, I would motorboat Gail Simmons Food & Wine Magazine's boobies. And, well, what the girlfriend wants...

10:09pm - Ass Face says something about how she's a simple chef who doesn't "over-think" things like Richard does. The line is delivered in a condescending tone. Doesn't she know that he's the best chef on the show? And maybe what she perceives as "over-thinking" is just thinking? I mean, I know he likes to smoke things and use liquid nitrogen, but if preparing good meals is "over-thinking" and constantly fucking up is a good thing, then I guess Lisa should be crowned Top Chef. It's not rocket science. The guy is simply smarter than she is; he's a smart chef and she's a fucking moron.

10:11pm - First commercial break. The beer I'm drinking now is Black Flag Imperial Stout. It's good, but a lot of hops and a lot of coffee in the flavor. The 11% ABV certainly feels nice in my buzzed bones.

10:21pm - First sighting of Gail Simmons Food & Wine Magazine. The establishing shot showed her wearing a green dress, but we have yet to see her massive boobs. I'm sure they look totally motorboat-able.

10:22pm - Second commercial break. Stephanie and Richard both said they feel tense and nervous, while Lisa said she feels cool and confident. I'd say she's finally realized that she knows she's not winning, but to do so would be to underestimate Lisa's complete fucking idiocy. That seems like a really long and confusing sentence, but I've been drinking, and the beers are just now starting to take their effect on my cognitive abilities.

10:24pm - Nicci says something about the old, fat, bald guy at the judge's dining table being her "number one" (see: 9:00pm), to which I feel like responding, "Alright then, the 13 year old girl from Gossip Girl is back in play!"

10:26pm - And we're back! Only one more commercial break!?

10:27pm - Ted Allen is there, and I guarantee right now that his vote for best dessert is for Richard's bacon ice cream. That guy enjoys anything with bacon. Ted Allen is the "me" of Top Chef. And by "me" I mean he loves bacon. Bacon.

10:31pm - Richard's second course is a bust, and everyone loves Lisa's. The fat guy from Zagat's asked for seconds. Gross. Great, and everyone disliked Stephanie's second course. It's looking like a choice between Lisa and Stephanie. What a fuck? Also, why the hell is the Zagat's guy even there? Aren't those guides written entirely by outside reviewers? What other qualification does he have that you or I don't have?

10:33pm - The judge who looks like a pedophile (he was paired with Richard the day before) likes Lisa's third course. But Tom just called it "pedestrian". Ha! Nate and I think pedophile chef is a tool, but Nicci likes him because he looks like a "finger puppet master". I think she means he talks with his fingers all the time. Lots of air quotes.

10:36pm - Service is done, but Ted Allen chooses not to comment on the bacon ice cream. The rumor on this couch is that all Ted Allen said throughout the dinner was "bacon", but they cut it in post. I guess that's the sort of joke that gets laughs when you're hanging around with television industry workers.

10:37pm - The final commercial break before judges table. The general consensus seemed to be that no one is a clear favorite. The fact that any of the judges enjoyed a single dish prepared by Ass Face completely justifies our argument that the producers are trying desperately to make us think there is parity amongst the contestants.

10:39pm - I just saw a commercial for a P'zone, and it made me very angry because P'zones are made by Pizza Hut, and I fucking hate Pizza Hut. By the way, I called the other day to get one of my six free pizzas, and I was informed that I no longer get six pizzas, I could only get one. I almost threw a shit fit, but decided I would silently eat my one pizza and then never order from Pizza Hut again. But guess what? Pizza Hut screwed up the order!!! No joke. I fucking hate Pizza Hut and will never eat there again. But God...what I wouldn't give for one last P'zone.

10:41pm - We're back! Judges table! The last of my beer!~\\

10:43pm - First shot of Lisa with her arms crossed.

10:45pm - First shot of Lisa's ASS FACE actually being an ass face.

10:47pm - Lisa 2. Stephanie 2. Richard 0. Richard says he "choked". God, I hope he finishes in front of Lisa.

10:50pm - TED ALLEN ASKS WHEN HAAGEN DAZS OR BREYERS WILL START PRODUCING BACON ICE CREAM!

10:52pm - Last commercial break before we have a new Top Chef. Our prections are:

Nate - Stephanie, Lisa, Richard.
Nicci - Stephanie, Lisa, Richard.
Evan - Stephanie, Richard, Lisa...I just can't give Lisa 2nd. I can't. I CANT'T!
Mark - Stephanie, Lisa, Richard.

10:57pm: Before we hear who the winner is, I'd just like to tell you that tonight's blog entry is brought to you by the Glaad family of products.

10:59pm: Stephanie is the winner, but this could have ended better. They did not announce an order for the runners up, so technically Lisa and Richard tied. I would have liked for there to have a been a bronze medal, and I would have liked to see Lisa win that bronze medal. I would have liked to hear a judge tell her, "you did not belong here with Richard and Stephanie", but this will never be the case. Usually we move on, forgetting the runners up. This year, though, it's going to be different. As hard as I try, I will never be able to wipe Lisa or her ASS FACE from my memory. I have been branded. No, wait. I have been scarred by her. Here's hoping next season goes better than this one did.


For some reason this self-released, tour-only CD was marked at $7 when I went to Amoeba today in search of news items with which to stock my Amazon.com store. Considering it sells for almost ten times that on eBay, it was a pretty good deal. Nine tracks, only one of which was made available ("Virginia", which was released by Trance Syndicate on the Stars Of The Lid/Labradford split The Kahanek Incident Volume 3, which I once owned but have since sold). The rest are out-takes and previously unreleased material. "JPRIP" has been posted on this blog before, as it is not only a stunning track but a dedication to the memory of John Peel (get it? JP RIP?). The track includes a snippet of a radio broadcast where the famous DJ lauds the band copiously. "Virginia" is another standout, a twenty-minute, slow-as-molasses epic. I don't know whether the most apt descriptor would be "post-rock", "ambient" or "modern classical", but whatever you call it, it's harrowing and beautiful. Perfect for late nights and long drives through open spaces. Recommended if you like mixing sleeping pills with wine.

Stars Of The Lid
Carte-De-Visite
MediaFire Download Link

Tracklist:
01. The Mouthchew (Part 2)
02. JPRIP
03. Requiem String Melody
04. Porch (Version #28)
05. The Kraut
06. Slight On The Childproof
07. Virginia
08. Hunting For Pops
09. The Funereal

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Contractual Obligation Blog Post

I was contemplating maybe transferring audio from my cassette recorder to my hard drive today, but it would take way too long and I have things to do. The other night I fell asleep listening to 90 minutes of tape featuring drunken Matt, Evan, Jack, Ken, Katie and I from one night in Jersey, and I couldn't stop laughing. It's...uh...entertaining, in a somewhat pathetic way. You can't hear it today, though, I have the day off from work, so I want to make sure I get the most out of it I possibly can. You know, "sucking the marrow out of life" and all that shit. What will I be doing today? Well, isn't it obvious from my lack of attention? I'm going to Cosco to pick up a prescription (the tropane alkaloids that ease my inner pain and me not want to die every time I eat a morsel of food), and sample all the free foods they usually hand to customers. Then I'm going to explore the labyrinth at that cemetery in Glendale. I'll post some pictures later today. The Mets game starts relatively early (3:30pm PST), and then there's the Top Chef finale at some point. Maybe something else can be squeezed in between if money is not an option. In all likelihood, I'll eat more than just food scraps at Cosco. But hey, you never really know. I'm getting really depressed about the Mets. I don't want to talk about it. The head blogger over at Amazin' Avenue seems to echo my sentiments each and every day. With post titles like, "Suck It, Bright Side", "I'm Just Keeding", "What's The Point Of All This" and most recently "Apathy Rising", I can only count my lucky stars this isn't a sports-themed blog.

Stay tuned for tomorrow's Top Chef recap, which I will be "drunk-live-blogging" tonight (that is, drunkenly describing the events in real-time), complete with hoity-toity food words and names of dishes I cannot pronounce that I will have to pause the DVR in order to spell correctly. In case you're wondering, my predictions are thus: Stepahine will win (the producers want a female winner, hence three females in the finale and no Dale), Richard will finish second (and probably put forth more challenging and intricate dishes), and Ass-Face will finish third. Will she receive a long-overdue reaming from the judges? Will someone go so far as to say she did not even belong in the finals with the other two chefs? We can only hope. Also, maybe an Anthony Bourdain appearance? ... Stay tuned.

Two notes: Jojoblog re-posted my little recap of the Jonathan Richman in-store performance Saturday, and even included two pictures, neither of which feature the prominently hideous visage of yours truly. I was too busy "infiltrating" the crowd in order to watch and ensure no one stole all our valuable memorabilia during the performance. I wanted to wear a fake mustache, but I was not allowed. The photos are courtesy of someone named "pneyu", who has a handful of shots posted on a Flickr album. Anyway, check it out.

Also, has anyone noticed the favicon I made for the blog all by myself? Doesn't it suck? Want to design a newer, easier-to-see favicon? If you do, I'll send you a copy of the new Dennis Wilson Pacific Ocean Blue deluxe CD edition, courtesy of Sony/BMG, who actually are very nice when it comes to dedicating CDs and DVDs to these useless little blog contests I run.

This concludes my contractual obligation to post one blog entry every day.


"Now see I've just made a typical critics' faux pas and none of you stopped me. So now I have to stop myself and explain my error. Flipper were NOT a slow band. They played punk speed, like the Sex Pistols. They just didn't play HARDCORE speed like all the other punk bands in California in the early '80s. Plus every once in a while they'd throw in a jeeper creeper where'd you get those peeper like "I Saw You Shine," a 15-year-song about banging your head against a wall. The sound of Generic Flipper is as follows: loud, heavily reverbed drums that sound like they were played in a dungeon, topped with a dull, dead sounding bass playing really catchy anthems, a guitar just making a bunch of feedback and noise and a couple of goofy louts shouting on top of the noise. Why does it work? (A) As I just FUCKING SAID, the bass lines are really catchy, (R) the lyrics speak to the experience of the everyman in a way not heard of since Pink Floyd's popular Dark Side Of The Poon LP released seven years earlier TO THE DAY! (okay, I made that up) and (A) the trashy noise makes you feel drunk..... even when you're only high! The songs alternate between joyfully stupid ("Sex Bomb"!) and cryingly giveuppable ("Life Is Cheap"), but always with a "We Give A Shit About You But Not About Music" air about it. If you can handle the noise, you need to buy it now. If you can't, you're a faggot. Ha! All I meant was that you're a "bundle of sticks meant for burning"! (that has sex up the ass with other bundles of sticks meant for burning)" - Mark Prindle

Flipper
Album - Generic Flipper
MediaFire Download Link

Tracklist:
01. Ever
02. Life Is Cheap
03. Shed No Tears
04. (I Saw You) Shine
05. Way Of The World
06. Life
07. Nothing
08. Living For The Depression
09. Sex Bomb

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

A Scribe On Daily Life


Ah, Tuesdays. My Fridays. Ever since I started working at the record store five days a week, I look to Tuesday the way many regular working stiffs do Friday. For me, a weekend is Wednesday/Thursday. Next to the pay, it's probably the thing I dislike most about my job. Still, I push on; I endure it because I pretty much have to. Also, I like the fact that I get to see a lot of very weird artifacts that -- as a music obsessed individual -- I would otherwise never get to see, no matter how long I live. Like, stuff that I probably couldn't even write about even if I wanted to. To say that we get rare items in the store would be a gross, gross understatement.

Although I did not write about it earlier, Saturday we had an In-Store performance by Jonathan Richman. It was supposed to begin at 1:00pm, and fifteen minutes before that time he was nowhere in sight. I was in charge of watching the back door to grant his vehicle access to a spot near the shipping department. The car rolled up just as the store was starting to become cramped with people. I met him and his percussionist behind at their car and showed them inside. My first impression was that Jonathan was a very slight fellow, and I wondered why when he introduced himself he was speaking with a weird accent. At Jonathan's request, we turned off the air conditioning just before he got on the makeshift stage we made a few days earlier. The general manager said a quick word or two about turning off cellphones, not using flash photography, and not speaking during the performance. Jonathan then performed maybe five songs, delivered a monologue or two, and hung around for about an hour afterwards to talk to fans and even and old friends (like Allan Mason and Elliott Roberts) who had come out to see him. As I walked back and forth between the front and rear of the store, performing my regular duties, I was struck by his demeanor whenever I walked past the group conversing at the back of the room. He was kneeling on the ground, lightly picking flamenco patterns on his nylon-string guitar, and staring off into space. His smile was very unusual. Even if he glanced in my direction, it seemed as if he was looking through me and smiling at something far beyond. Very cool, and very weird.

Oh, right. I didn't write about this earlier because I did not take any pictures, and I did not take any pictures because I left my camera at home upon being warned that Jonathan hates both cameras and cellphones. I guess the whole story is useless without pictures.

And another thing about work. They're building a library next door, and the structure is the absolute perfect height to completely block my cellphone from getting any reception. So now I don't get any reception at two of the three locations where I spend most of my time. I think I'm going to cancel my phone service and start anew with another company. Just in time to get one of those newly-priced iPhones I've been reading about for the past forty-eight hours. Whatever, I know I mocked them in the past. I know I wanted the first iPhone to be a bust. I also made fun of Peter Gammons for an article he wrote on ESPN's website, even though he'd just recovered from a massive stroke. But now things have changed. I need a new phone, I actually have some purpose for the added features, and it's not fucking $600 this time around. We'll see what my bank account looks like on July 11th, or if I can even find one at a local AT&T kiosk.

In conclusion, tomorrow is the Top Chef finale, and you can be sure that I, the distinguished gourmand, will have plenty to say leading up to and following the episode. Why do I care so much about a food-related television program? I'll tell you why...because deep down inside I envy the contestants (except for Lisa and her ass face). Not because they're talented and make delicious-looking dishes seemingly on a whim, but because I so deeply loathe food, the fact that they have more than just a passing interesting in it makes me wonder if I will ever care about eating at any point in my life. By watching the show, I feel like I'm trying to accept food into my life as something that is to be admired and enjoyed, and not outright hated.

And now, I will go to the store and get a plain bagel (un-toasted, with nothing on it), a can of Coke, and a bottle of water. That should hold me over for the day.

Lungfish
Rainbows From Atoms
MediaFire Download Link

Tracklist:
01. Instrument
02. Mother Made Me
03. Abraham Lincoln
04. Animal Man
05. Fresh Air Cure
06. Creation Story
07. Axiomatic
08. Open House
09. 8.14.2116
10. You Might Ask Me What
11. Seek Sound Shelter

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Sunburned Leg Of The Man


Here's how fucking retarded I am. Are you ready for this? I decide -- for the first time in maybe five years -- that I'm going to take Nicci up on her offer to spend the day on the beach in Santa Monica. I despise the beach. I hate having to wear a bathing suit because I'm an insecure piece-of-shit pussy, sitting out in the sun makes me dehydrated (and I have suffered from sunstroke at least twice in the past), and somehow I always manage to get burnt.

My worst sunburned experience happened in July of 2005 when I was right in the middle of my cross-country book-writing excursion. I spent three or four days in Austin, Texas. I've been trying to locate the daily weather reports for those days online, but I can't find it. All I remember is, it was fucking hot. I was waiting for Craig Stewart to call me about an interview, and I decided to wait out by the Hampton Inn rooftop swimming pool. I was reading Aldous Huxley, writing in my journal, and listening to my iPod. Before I knew it, a few hours had passed. I never thought to apply any suntan lotion. It was a dumb mistake, and it was entirely my fault, but I wound up with some of the worst burns imaginable. I couldn't wear a shirt or shower for three days, and by the time I reached Matt's house in Tucson the peeling of my shoulders resembled a snake shedding its skin. It was fucking gross. I was pulling three or four inches of skin off at a time. Before that, it hurt to just sit in my car, or sit in a chair, or lay in bed, or do anything, really. I was red like an apple for almost a week, and in near-constant pain. No aloe, no soothing balms or ointments, just a charred husk of a man. I vowed from that day on I would always...always wear suntan lotion. That is, if I ever decided to even venture out into the sun again.

Nicci has been talking about going to the beach with me for some time now, so I figured (as someone who doesn't enjoy the beach), the quicker I got it over with, the better I would feel about requesting our next day off be spent...I don't know...out of the sun somewhere. Maybe in a dank basement, listening to moldy records.

I guess that's sort of a lie. I wanted to please the girl, so I cast aside all my insecurities and tried my hardest to forget about the bad sun-related experiences I've had, and agreed to spend the day in Santa Monica.

We set down our blanket and towels a few yards from the shoreline, and spent five minutes or so applying copious amounts of sunscreen. Sort of. At one point, Nicci mentioned how her legs never burned, so she never saw fit to apply any lotion on her legs. I took this as meaning that nobody's legs ever had burned before, in the history of sunbathing. So, I ignored my legs. What a mistake.

As I was driving back to Echo Park just thirty minutes ago, I started to feel like maybe I was sitting next to a radiator, or someone had snuck a space heater under the driver's-side seat of my car. When I got inside the house, I was shocked to see that a huge chunk of my right leg was bright pink. I don't know how the fuck I managed to only burn one half of one of my legs, but it's really annoying me right now, and it's making me wish that I wasn't literally retarded when I was processing the information about Nicci's legs never burning. I feel like a Goddamned moron, and I deserve it.

So, once again, for the second time this decade, I've decided that I'm never going out in the sun again. I'll just stay in my dank basement listening to moldy records all day, all summer long. And I don't even have a basement. Maybe I'll just stay in bed all summer and listen to the sounds of local kids having fun running through sprinklers, and the songs of the various neighborhood ice cream trucks screaming up and down the street. Fuck those people and their high tolerance to UV radiation. I hope they burn in hell.

Or in Santa Monica.

Or Long Beach. Or Laguna. Or Redondo. Or Huntington. Or Venice.

Or anywhere outside, on any planet that claims at least one sun.

Muse - Sunburn [acoustic] - (buy this album)
Sunburned Hand Of The Man - Adult Costume - (buy this album)
Sunburned Hand Of The Man - The Parakeet Beat - (buy this album)
Sunburned Hand Of The Man - Gather 'Round - (buy this album)

I don't know if anybody actually followed through with my request to sign the petition to oppose the Chicago promoter's ordinance, but if you did...thank you. The ordinance has been tabled, for now. The city council will not vote on legislation until after they have engaged the music community so their concerns can be heard. Hopefully the council will retool the negative attributes of the law and make the recommended changes in order to ensure Chicago's underground and independent communities can continue to thrive.

Also, some eBay auctions are ending soon. Bid now.

Monday, May 12, 2008

On Flying First Class


So, not only was my experience flying first class from Newark "Liberty" Airport to Los Angeles kind of shitty, I apparently caught an illness along the way! Although I've flown first class (what about me doesn't say "first class citizen"?) between Newark and Seattle twice before, this time was easily the worst. The seat configuration was two-and-two, which sucks because having only ten people in the section made the plane (which is already a claustrophobic place) seem that much smaller. The added leg room was nice, but who gives a shit, right? I was seated next to some I-banker fag who wore a turtleneck and kept his fingers in his ears to stop the roaring of the engine outside my window from causing him to go deaf. That's another thing -- I thought the engines were closer to the rear of the cabin? Why was that one right outside my window? Do you really think that I, as a first class traveler (not to mention a world class blogger, right guys?) should be rewarded for my tens of thousands of Continental frequent flyer miles by being placed right next to a roaring jet engine? That kind of second class treatment just does not befit a first class man like myself.

And then I got fucking sick.

I don't know exactly how it happened, but I noticed yesterday that I had a slightly sore throat. Today I woke up very congested, with awesome, green-and-yellow splattered mucus oozing from my nasal cavity. By the time I was less than halfway through my shift at work, I felt like complete shit. I wanted to go home early, but to be honest I need the money. All of this, of course, raises yet another problem my first class adventure. Shouldn't I be getting honored for my "elite" flying status? If your airline is going to infect people with gross illnesses, why don't they just infect the second class (sorry, "coach") passengers. There should be some kind of individual quarantine unit -- like an incubator, maybe -- that keeps all the good people (and by good people I mean first class folks like me) safe from the evil sick people. I bet I caught my sickness from a coacher (that's what we elitists call the "others" on-board our flights) trying to sneak into our bathroom. That's the only way I've conceived my being close enough to one of those fuckers to catch whatever third-world plague I've been stricken with.

What we need is a society with more clearly defined classes. There should be the first class, which includes people like me, who can afford to fly around the world eating lump crab meat, shrimp, and potato-and-truffle-stuffed pasta, and then there should be the second class, which includes people who can't afford to fly first class. Maybe we can even devise a way to easily identify those second class "coach" citizens...like a patch we could sew onto their clothing, or something? It would also help if there was some sort of firm barrier separating us, allowing the good first class people more...what's the phrase I'm looking for...living space? I think in German they call it "Lebensraum." Whatever, this really is the first I've thought about such a program, so there's still a lot of room for improvement in my plan.

Got any ideas? Let me know!

Blues Magoos - Tobacco Road
The Leaves - Hey Joe
Sagittarius - My World Fell Down
The Strangeloves - Night Time

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Record Store Day


I've just returned from the store, where I put in a modest nine hours of work today. I've worked in retail before -- in fact, I've worked in retail since the age of 16 -- but I've never seen pandemonium like what occurred on the much-ballyhooed (if you read the Pitchfork News section or the New York Times (thanks for the link Mr. Collins)) Record Store Day.

Although I wasn't there in time for the front door to open, I was told there was a line extending from the parking lot side of the building, around the corner, and down the front of the building along Glendale. I arrived about thirty minutes after opening, and the aisles were crammed with customers. The 20,000 or so 45rpm's I helped price and organize this week, which were delicately placed in the back corner of the store last evening, were strewn all over the place. Customers were seated on the floor looking through tray after tray of records. Many brought portable players with them to test for quality. The first thing one might have noticed upon entering the store was the smell. Let me tell you -- old man record collectors smell awful. Many of them, I think, don't shower. It prompted some of us at the front counter to declare that next year our free giveaways would not include CDs, LPs, buttons, stickers, or calendars...but travel-sized deodorants and mouthwash.

A photographer captured many images of the store at its fullest. I'll post them when I find them. For an hour or two, my job was just to keep customers in line before they paid and direct them to the nearest open check-out location. When lunch arrived for the employees, I took over at the register. The first few minutes were definitely daunting. There was a small crib sheet detailing all the different discounts for various items, which ranged from 15% - 50%. Literally everything in the store was on sale, even the numerous Beatles "butcher covers" and that homework assignment of Buddy Holly's that no one will ever want to buy. Surprisingly few high-value items were actually sold, I think. I watched maybe four collectible or high $$$ records leave the premises. Instead, most people opted for quantity over quality. It wasn't unusual for someone to approach the counter with a basket or two filled to the brim with $1.99 and $2.99 CDs.

As the day wore on, the clientele slowed from an overwhelming amount of bodies to a steady roar. It seemed like there were always at least 40 people in the store, if not more. I found myself running around performing sundry tasks, such as cleaning up the piles of CDs and 45s that were growing in various nooks and crannies throughout the store, helping bag sales for busy cash register operators, pricing new records, CDs, and DVDs to keep the shelves filled with as much product as possible, and generally running around asking if anyone needed assistance with anything. Then I did some work in the back for a while filing online orders, which is not worth detailing. Then I handled one of the register drawers for the final three hours of the sale. All told, it was a very busy and very tiring day. It was also an amazingly profitable day for the store, which I imagine was the purpose of having this sale coincide with Record Store Day.

Before closing up shop, I made sure to get the most I could out of the sale by purchasing a slew of records. I figured I deserved it for working so hard. I got half-a-dozen or so good albums and didn't spend but twenty-seven dollars. Finally procured AC/DC's Back In Black, a Hella EP, an XTC LP, a couple compilations (16 jazz songs about marijuana, Nuggets, etc)... I even got a super-cheap, clean copy of T. Rex's The Slider to replace my old, dirty copy. If anyone wants that (there's some surface noise), let me know and I'll send it to you. I also walked out with half a pizza pie and a congratulations from the general manager on a job well done. That was cool. Plus, I found out the Mets won their game this afternoon. Hard to beat that day.

Did any of you help your local record stores celebrate Record Store Day? What kind of swag were the stores giving away? What'd you buy? Nothing? Well, you should spend your money on one of my two LPs that I'm auctioning off on eBay. The proceeds from the auction will be donated to me, because I have to pay rent in a few weeks, and I'd like to be able to for the renewal of my domain (read: this website), which is going to cost a few bucks. So, yeah...If you want to keep reading this website you should either make a donation or buy an LP from me.