So it turns out wordpress isn't viewable in china either, but I already put a lot of time moving all of this content over there, and I kinda like the look of the other one better, so I'm going to stay over there.
new url: http://blagomurch.wordpress.com
hope to see you all there, comment on posts! let me know you're there!
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
uh oh
It seems that blogger is not viewable by users in the the People's Republic of China. Since that would mean that my family couldn't read it and I couldn't post anything from China this fall, I'm probably switching over to wordpress. I'm in the process of setting that up, and i'll link there as soon as I get it together.
Monday, June 18, 2007
Watch Out For That Snake!
Some guy I know (respecting anonymity) has a podcast. He's a pretty cool dude. He goes by the name Dreadful Snake Guy. He combines blues and folk with rare and odd little segments. Its a darn good listen.
Album Review: You're My Lover Now
Philadelphia area band The Teeth just put out full length You're My Lover Now, in which they tried to capture their "fierce" live energy as well as their more often laid back recording style. It's been two years since their EP Carry the Wood, which was the first I'd heard of them, and a while longer since their last full-length. They are currently signed with record label Park the Van.The Teeth play rock and roll. While indie's typical instrumentation is including more and more synth these days, the Teeth play grainy, piercing lead guitar and chopping rhythm. Its refreshing to see guys committed to the aesthetic of guitars(2)/bass/drums, with occasional keyboard, who play new-sounding stuff. Well, not entirely new.
Reviewers have compared their music to Queen, Bowie, early Kinks, Pavement, the Muppets, as well as movies Punch Drunk Love, Rocky Horror Picture Show and a Clockwork Orange. A review in Rockpile (?) said to "think Pavement and the Kinks penning sea shanties," of Carry the Wood. But remember, these shanties are not like the gentle Colin Malloy's, which try to scare you with big words and violence. The first half of "Mercy Mercy Pudding Pie" scares you just listening to it.
The new album has songs which compare to some of these bands in a much less convoluted way. The most accessible, bopping song on the album, "Ball of the Dead Rat," sounds quite literally like "Let it Be"-era Beatles. One of the best songs on the album, "Coolest Kid in School," sounds like it came right off of "Village Green Preservation Society." Most, however, are a dramatic stripping and mangling of sixties rock with the scary folk (complete with the copper-colored plinking and plunking of old pianos) from the soundtracks of old horror movies thrown into the mix.
Some of their songs sound much better live than on the album and vice versa. Track "Coolest Kid in School" has a steady swinging pace and acoustic instrumentation. Live, however, Aaron and Brian never put down their electric guitars unless there is a keyboard part in the song. I feel like this is a band who performs in front of crowds that, for the most part, don't own their albums and know them back to front like I do. I love these songs live, but I'm not sure that the average listener gets as much out of it.

For the most part, their songs sound great across formats. Their acoustic renditions of faster songs found on their dvd Bones Grow are fantastic, and both Carry the Wood and You're My Lover Now include two versions of the same song, one slow and acoustic, the other electric and raw. They're very comfortable varying the format of any particular song, but not varying the gear they use on any given night. They play the slower songs slow and quiet live like the album and even the middle paced songs like "Coolest Kid" and the jangly opener "Molly Make Him Pay" are played at the appropriate pace, but the instrumentation on these incredible songs feels off. I think that if Aaron picked up an acoustic guitar for these mid-paced songs it would really draw in the crowd, clue them into a change in aesthetic, and create some better flow to their sets, which leads me to the last area for potential negative criticism. The Teeth have not created a cohesive album as a whole, but rather a collection of songs with a similar feel. This disjointed quality could throw some people off, but I've never minded that in an album. I have no problem appreciating an album song by song.
Regardless, I'd say they certainly succeeded at giving the listener a much better idea of what its like to see them live. According to drummer Jonas, this was one of the big things they were really trying to achieve. With this in mind, they bring the second and third tracks "Trumpets Blared" and "Shoulderblade" up tempo and just walk all over you. Even having recorded again almost entirely by themselves, they sound much more professional than they did on Carry the Wood. Unfortunately, the vocals are a bit thin and flat on fast songs like "Your feelings on Life," but its not too much to complain about. On the whole, solid recording.
The title track is perhaps my favorite, as frantic before and after sections surround an explosive and passionate midsection with Beatles-esque harmonies answered by Peter's central high vocals and multiple series of launching chord changes.
Overall, this is a great album by a awesome group of guys. Never turn down a chance to see them perform.
Sunday, June 17, 2007
new camera

I just got the Sony alpha 100 digital SLR as a graduation present, thanks mom and dad! I will be experimenting with this camera all summer before I take it on the road. I just upgraded my flickr profile to "pro" status, so I will be linking there pretty often.
According to the internet, as well as the guy at Ritz, this is overall a better camera (and a boatload cheaper) than the Canon EOS 30D I was looking at. It came with a Quantaray 18-200mm lens (not pictured), which gives me quite a range. Now I just have to figure out how to use it. Results so far: blurry.
blagoblag
For the last few years I've been very much of this camp.
As it turns out, I am not cooler than blogs.
Welcome to my blag. It will be my outlet on the interweb. Posts will be about comics, music, maybe some ultimate, and travel. The name of my blog comes from a wonderful webcomic called xkcd. Particularly this comic.
Now, I can be cool like you, seabass.
As it turns out, I am not cooler than blogs.
Welcome to my blag. It will be my outlet on the interweb. Posts will be about comics, music, maybe some ultimate, and travel. The name of my blog comes from a wonderful webcomic called xkcd. Particularly this comic.
Now, I can be cool like you, seabass.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
