I heard this track on NPR’s All Songs Considered. Great stuff.
What a beautiful buzz, what a beautiful buzz
Rolling Stones - Loving Cup (Alternate Take)
I’m finally digging into the Exile reissue. Love this alt take on one of the greatest Stones songs on record. The guitar (in place of piano) gives it more grit and the lazy pace is dirty. I think this may outdo the original. No small feat.
“ If I ever need to remind myself what I was reading or mulling over at various points in my life I have only to look in this scrupulously researched and uncannily on-the-money book. Would that we all had references like this! It is for me a beautiful and narcissistically bizarre experience to re-experience my life through the series of ideas and the flow of connections I have made as they are reported and interpreted by Sytze Steenstra. The book is delightfully and unusually free of gossip and psychological assumptions and explanations (not that those don’t also contain some truth); instead it focuses almost exclusively on what I’ve done, said or written—and comes to some conclusions that are (to me) surprising and unexpected. Sytze finds connections I wasn’t aware of, and continuity and patterns where initially one might see randomness and chaos. This book makes me seem both smarter than I am and possibly stranger than I am. ”
David Byrne’s back cover blurb for Song and Circumstance: The Work of David Bryne, which is being published next year by Continuum. Imagine for a moment that we all actually had references like this, and how many of these books would be unreadable and dull. (via perpetua)
“ It is not easy to categorize the Beatles’ music; more than any other group, their sound can be described as “Beatlesque.” It’s akin to a combination of Badfinger, Oasis, Corner Shop, and every other rock band that’s ever existed. The clandestine power derived from the autonomy of the group’s composition—each Beatle has his own distinct persona, even though their given names are almost impossible to remember. There was John Lennon (the mean one), Paul McCartney (the hummus eater), George Harrison (the best dancer), and drummer Ringo Starr (The Cat). Even the most casual consumers will be overwhelmed by the level of invention and the degree of change displayed over their scant eight-year recording career, a span complicated by McCartney’s tragic 1966 death and the 1968 addition of Lennon’s wife Yoko Ono, a woman so beloved by the band that they requested her physical presence in the studio during the making of Let It Be. ”
Animal Collective I’ve Got Mine (via tinysalmon4)
Bon Iver - For Emma (Myspace Transmissions) (via quietwiser)
Wow.
WILCO - HATE IT HERE (via wilcoclub)