Thursday, 20 September 2012

Neil Young: Waging Heavy Peace

Driving down the hill above his ranch in the Santa Cruz Mountains, south of San Francisco, Neil Young took a deep whiff of the redwood forest momentarily serving as the canopy for his 1951 Willys Jeepster convertible.
“I can still remember how it smelled when I first pulled in here — I was driving this car,” he said, recalling the trip in 1970 when he bought the place and named it Broken Arrow, after the Buffalo Springfield song.
The author of some of the spookiest, darkest songs in the American folk canon seemed jolly on this late-August day. Even if he was accompanied by a reporter, generally not his favorite species of human, the motion soothed him. “I’ve always been better moving than I am standing still,” he said.
Young, 66, spotted this land out the window of a plane banking out of San Francisco four decades ago and now owns nearly 1,000 acres of it. His song “Old Man” is a tribute to the caretaker who first showed him the place.
“I ran out of money, so I had to sell some of it,” he said. “That’s O.K., because it was too big. Everything happens for a reason.” He kept his eyes on the narrow road through the giant redwoods.
It was hard to reconcile the affable guy motoring along on a sunny day with his past incarnations: the portentous folkie of “Ohio,” the rabid anti-commercialist who gave MTV the musical middle finger with “This Note’s For You,” the angry rocker who threatened to hit the cameramen at Woodstock with his guitar. He was happy partly because he was here.
“For whatever you’re doing, for your creative juices, your geography’s got a hell of a lot to do with it,” he said. “You really have to be in a good place, and then you have to be either on your way there or on your way from there.”
We would spend a few hours creeping along — he drove slowly but joyfully, as if the automobile were a recent invention — on our way there or on our way from there, the ranch where Young lives with his wife, Pegi, and their son, Ben. His longtime producer and friend, David Briggs, who died in 1995, hated making records here, deriding the hermetic refuge as a “velvet cage.”
In addition to the studio, where more than 20 records have been made, there is an entire building given over to model trains, another where vintage cars are stored and another piled with his master recordings. Llamas and cows roam under cartoonishly large trees. It seems like a made-up place, an open-air fortress of eccentricity meant to protect the artist who lives there. But what it has most of all is not a lot of people.
“I like people, I just don’t have to see them all the time,” he said, laughing. David Crosby, his bandmate in Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, used to describe the complicated route into his ranch as “my filtering system,” Young said.
He made a bunch of rights and lefts through the forest before getting out to unlock the gate. Others might have an electronic gate, but Young likes the mechanical experience of slipping a key into a padlock and swinging something open. He is fundamentally analog, despite the occasional electronic excesses in his music. He likes amps with knobs that go to 12 and things that click when you touch them.
I made it past the filtering system because Young was promoting his autobiography, “Waging Heavy Peace,” which comes out next week. The book is elliptical and personal, with little of the period poetics of “Just Kids,” by Patti Smith, or the scabrous detail of “Life,’’ by Keith Richards...
Continue reading
David Carr @'NY Times'

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Neil Young: Journeys (trailer)
Released Oct 16

Neil Young & Crazy Horse: Psychedelic Pill (Review)

Romney Embraces ‘Grandfather Of Obamacare’ Title: ‘I’ll Take It’


The Story of Ziggy Stardust: How David Bowie Created the Character that Made Him Famous

Bonus:
Starman (Unreleased Promo)
Filmed by Mick Rock. Afternoon rehearsals and concert at Rainbow Theatre 19th August 1972. with Lindsay Kemp (!!!) and the Astronettes

Girlz with Gunz #59390

(Thanx Mark!)

Martina Topley-Bird & Mark Lanegan - Crystalised (The xx cover)


Last week, UK singer/Tricky collaborator Martina Topley-Bird shared this fine new cover of The xx’s “Crystalised” on her Facebook page. While details on collaborators (or the project it might be previewing) were left rather scant, it’s clear her past duet partner Mark Lanegan is taking the Oliver Sim part here. And given that the track first appeared on the SoundCloud stream of Massive Attack, whose 2010 LP featured Topley-Bird on vox, it sounds like they have that British trip-hop duo producing or performing as well.
“More to come soon,” Topley-Bird writes, so perhaps this is set for Lanegan’s forthcoming covers album or her own follow-up to Some Place Simple. Either way, it’s a great groove and their voices make a perfect frayed/silky match.
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Wednesday, 19 September 2012

Charles Bradley - Live On KEXP (17/3/11)







Charles Bradley, backed by The Menahan Street Band, live from Mellow Johnny's Bike Shop in Austin, TX, during KEXP's broadcast at SXSW. Recorded 3/17/2011
Heartache and Pain
No Time For Dreaming
Lovin' You Baby
The World (Is Going Up In Flames)
Why Is It So Hard?
Golden Rule
Bonus:
Charles Bradley: Soul of America (trailer)

(Thanx Consuela!)

International speak like a pirate but not really a pirate day

Forty seven per cent

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Still as relevant as ever really...

Info
Soulé Man

HA!

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Mitt on the Mideast


To ensure Israel’s security, Mitt Romney will work closely with Israel to maintain its strategic military edge. The United States will work intensively with Turkey and Egypt to shore up the now fraying relationships with Israel that have underpinned peace in the Middle East for decades. The United States must forcefully resist the emergence of anti-Israel policies in Turkey and Egypt, and work to make clear that their interests are not served by isolating Israel.
With regard to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Mitt’s policy will differ sharply from President Obama’s. As president, Mitt will reject any measure that would frustrate direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians. He will make clear to the Palestinians that the unilateral attempt to decide issues that are designated for final negotiations by the Oslo Accords is unacceptable. The United States will reduce assistance to the Palestinians if they continue to pursue United Nations recognition or form a unity government that includes Hamas, a terrorist group dedicated to Israel’s destruction. The United States needs a president who will not be a fair-weather friend of Israel. The United States must work as a country to resist the worldwide campaign to delegitimize Israel. We must fight against that campaign in every forum and label it the anti-Semitic poison that it is. Israel’s existence as a Jewish state is not up for debate.
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Jonas Mekas: Scenes from Allen Ginsberg's Last Three Days on Earth as a Spirit, 1997 (excerpt)


This is a video record of the Buddhist Wake ceremony at Allen Ginsberg's apartment. You see Allen, now asleep forever, in his bed; some of his close friends; and the wrapping up and removal of Allen's body from the apartment. You hear Jonas' description of his last conversation with Allen, three days earlier. You see the final farewell at the Buddhist temple, 118 West 22nd Street, New York City, and some of his close friends: Patti Smith, Gregory Corso, LeRoy Jones-Baraka, Hiro Yamagata, Anne Waldman, and many others.
Bonus:
This Side of Paradise, 1999 (excerpt)

Frank Ocean – Thinkin Bout You + Pyramids (LIVE on Saturday Night Live)



Bonus:
Pyramids

The music video for the 10 minute single Pyramids by Frank Ocean spontaneously debuts tonight, shortly after his performance on the season premiere of Saturday Night Live. Nabil, Australian director and frequent collaborator with Frank Ocean helms the production once more and follows Mr. Ocean’s drunken stumble across desert scenes, a strip club, and a final encounter with John Mayer to conclude the visuals. Listen closely and you’ll hear snippets of other songs from Channel Orange scattered across the video.
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Ironic eh
Much of Romney’s View on Taxes Conflicts With Longtime G.O.P. Stand

The 47%: Who They Are, Where They Live, How They Vote, and Why They Matter