Monthly Archives: December 2013

Listen: Stream New Burial “Rival Dealers” EP

The Burial music is here. Check out all three songs off the “Rival Dealers” EP.

“Rival Dealer”:

“Hiders”:

“Come Down To Us”:

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Listen: Iggy Pop Destroys “White Christmas”

When we last heard from Iggy Pop, he was working to save the wolves in Michigan. Now he delivers a “Guitar Stooge Version” of “White Christmas” off the new various artists album, Psych-Out Christmas.

Enjoy… or not.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

The Time Machine: Bob Dylan & Neil Young at San Francisco’s Kezar Stadium

This is ragged and a bit of a mess, but wonderful.

Bob Dylan and Neil Young at the S.N.A.C.K. (Students Need Athletics, Culture and Kicks) Benefit Concert at Kezar Stadium, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, CA, March 23, 1975. Young, with the Stray Gators — Ben Keith and Tim Drummond – performs with Dylan, and the Band’s Rick Danko, Garth Hudson and Levon Helm.

They perform “Helpless” which flows right into “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door.”

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Watch: Califone’s New Video for “We Are a Payphone”

Califone. “We Are a Payphone. Directed by Amber Benson and Angela Bettis. From the album, Stitches. Stream the album here.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Watch: Jeff Tweedy Lowballs it in Seattle — “Don’t expect this to be good”

Jeff Tweedy performed solo Sunday night at The Moore Theater in Seattle.

Lucky for us a fan, John L., shot video of nine songs.

After flubbing a chord eight songs into the set, Tweedy says to the audience:

I probably made that same mistake 100 times with the band and no one would ever know. ‘Cause it all sounds like the wrong chords when you’re by yourself. I’m sorry, it’s the best I can do. There’s going to be a lot of that. Just so you know. Don’t expect this to be good. That’s all I’m saying.”

He was wrong of course. It’s very good.

Check out the set list here.

Jeff Tweedy “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart”:

Jeff Tweedy “Kamera”:

Jeff Tweedy “The Ruling Class”:

Jeff Tweedy “At Least That’s What You Said”:

Jeff Tweedy “Please Tell My Brother”:

Jeff Tweedy “Jesus, Etc.”:

Jeff Tweedy “Pecan Pie”:

Jeff Tweedy “Laminated Cat (aka Not for the Season)”:

Jeff Tweedy “Dreamer in My Dreams”:

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Watch: Catching Up with Neutral Milk Hotel

Jeff Mangum performing in January of this year (2013) in Houston.
Jeff Mangum performing in January of this year (2013) in Houston.

Since reuniting onstage in Baltimore in early October, Neutral Milk Hotel have been out on tour. The group just expanded its 2014 itinerary to include dates in March and April. Check out the itinerary here.

Here are some videos from their show at the Mountain Oasis Electronic Music Summit, October 25,2013, Asheville, North Carolina:

This first video is excerpts from the show and includes bits of “Two-Headed Boy,” “The Fool,” “A Baby For Pree,” “King of Carrot Flowers” and others:

“King of Carrot Flowers”:

“In The Aeroplane Over the Sea”:

“Song Against Sex”:

“Two Headed Boy Pt. 2”:

“Engine”

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Best of 2013 Dept.: Flavorwire Picks Top Debut Novels

As Flavorwire notes in its intro to “The 10 Best Debut Novels of 2013,” “In composing their first novel, writers must temper their excitement at being given the opportunity to present hundreds of pages to the public with the discipline to create a story memorable enough to bring readers back for their second attempt.”

Here’s what Flavorwire says about Jenni Fagan’s “The Panopticon”:

Told in the lively slang of Anais, an orphaned 15-year-old Scottish girl who’s being hauled off to an unusual home for juvenile offenders over a violent crime she can’t recall whether she committed, The Panopticon is a dreamy document of friendship among young people who society has not only failed but scapegoated. Yet Fagan — an author whose experience as a poet comes through in her evocative prose — doesn’t sugarcoat her story or turn it into a tale of a bad girl gone good. There are moments of triumph for Anais, but there’s no panacea for her lifetime of terrible luck and systemic oppression.

The list:

1 Necessary Errors, Caleb Crain
2 The Love Affairs of Nathaniel P., Adelle Waldman
3 You Are One of Them, Elliott Holt
4 In the House upon the Dirt between the Lake and the Woods, Matt Bell
5 The Facdes, Eric Lundgren
6 The Panopticon, Jenni Fagan
7 Tampa, Alissa Nutting
8 The Twelve Tribes of Hattie, Ayana Mathis
9 Mira Corpora, Jeff Jackson
10 Elect H. Mouse State Judge, Nelly Reifler

For comments about each novel, head to Flavorwire.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Time Tripping Back to 1970 with Neil Young: “Live at the Cellar Door”

“Opening up and finding what’s inside me to write.”

By Michael Goldberg.

Neil Young bangs away at the chords. And there’s such sadness in his voice. He’s playing an acoustic guitar. He’s nearly finished his third song of the night. Banging away too hard. Or maybe the way he’s banging at those chords is perfect. And oh, the sadness.

In that quavering voice he sings:

Yes only love can break your heart, What if your world should fall apart?

Love broke my heart, and my world fell apart. I was 17. When you’re 17 you don’t know you’ll recover. When you’re 17 everything about love is the first time, even if it’s not the first time.

When you were young and on your own, How did it feel to be alone?

She had long brown hair, almost down to her waist. She wore white peasant blouses and worn denim overalls. It was 1970 and the world was so different. There are a lot of clichés about the ‘60s, which actually didn’t end until the early ‘70s (countercultural movements don’t conveniently end as a new decade begins), a lot of misunderstanding about what it was like back then.

There was a day in 1970 when we sat together, her and I, in the swing that hung from a huge tree in her family’s very private, very large front yard, and the wind was making the leaves in the trees shimmer, and the future seemed wide open, full of possibility, I mean anything was possible. Her body warm against mine as we swung back and forth. The whole world about to be remade, I just knew it.

I am lonely but you can free me, All in the way that you smile.

Yes, that was exactly it. Exactly.

Neil’s music was part of my soundtrack during the ‘60s and the ‘70s. He sang the sad songs and as a teenager I didn’t want to know the pain I heard in his voice. But I did know it. Every time her and I were apart, I knew it. Still I loved to hear Neil’s voice.

And later, after it was over, when we just couldn’t make it together — that girl and I — I knew for real how true Neil’s words were, and today they’re still true.

Neil’s new album, Live at the Cellar Door, was recorded in 1970, 43 years ago, at the Cellar Door, a club in Washington, DC. Listening to it I see, hear, feel, smell those days, a rush of moving images, as if my life was captured on film and these old recordings are the key to starting up the projector. All the ways I blew it, and how crazy it got. And she wouldn’t take my calls, wouldn’t see me when I came to her door, and I thought I’d explode.

Yes, love can break your heart — a cliché and so what, ‘cause it’s the truth.

Hearing Neil sing those old songs in that tenor voice, the tenor voice of a young man, it breaks my heart all over again. Neil was 25 when he played those songs at the Cellar Door.

For the rest of this column, head to Addicted To Noise.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-