Remembering the music, movies, television and fashion of my favorite decade. But really just the music.



Saturday, July 30, 2011

The Glorious Return of 120 Minutes

One of my most favorite memories from the 90s was staying up late on summer Sunday nights to watch 120 Minutes on MTV.


This, of course, was when MTV still showed music videos, but if you wanted to see the good stuff, you had to wait for Alternative Nation with Kennedy to come on. And if you wanted to see the REALLY good stuff, you had to watch 120 Minutes with Matt Pinfield.

The show enjoyed a long run (1986-2003), but couldn't find a home once the Internet shortened everyone's attention spans and teens only wanted to watch shitty reality shows. Plus, by that time, nearly all the visionary music video directors had moved on to feature films, and with the Napster craze, the music industry had little and less money to promote their product. And the first major casualty was the music video.

However, MTV has come to its senses and reinstated 120 Minutes, complete with host Matt Pinfield, which returns this Saturday, July 30 @ 1am EST/10pm PST on MTV...TWO?!?!! WTF?

Okay, make sure you have MTV2 now. Most cable providers probably carry it, and if yours doesn't, send them an email to tell them how much they suck. And if you're one of the hipsters like me who doesn't have cable...well, you're F-ed. Can someone tape this for me? I'll give you a blank VHS.

Of course, it wouldn't be adulthood without change. Here's what Matt Pinfield has to say about the new show:

"There will be differences: I am no longer sitting on those road cases, because my legs are too short and I can't touch the ground," Pinfield laughed. "I think that the way that people digest music and information now has changed quite a bit ... so the difference will be, we will still and I'm very proud to show full videos -- at least 12 a show -- but there will be a lot more guests and a lot more action and a lot more things will be happening a lot faster."

With the influx of 90's inspired bands - Yuck, Pains of Being Pure at Heart, Joy Formidable, Wye Oak - there will be plenty to show, plus they're going to show old videos. And let's face it, that's all we really want to see - stuff from our childhood.

In honor of the show's triumphant and glorious return, here are a couple links of note:

120 Minutes tumblr, maintained by Phillip Fibiger, an "aggregation of music videos (mostly youtube) that appeared on 120 Minutes during its heyday."

The 120 Minutes Archive, by Tyler C, with a listing of nearly every video that played on the show back in the day.

From that site, here are the videos played 15 years ago, on the July 28, 1996 episode:

Everclear - "You Make Me Feel Like a Whore"
Screaming Trees - "All I Know"
eels - "novocaine for the soul"
Happy Mondays - "Step On"
Butthole Surfers - "Pepper"
Reacharound - "Big Chair"
Sister Machine Gun - "Hole in the Ground"
Rocket From The Crypt - "On a Rope"
Dog Eat Dog - "ISMS"
Butthole Surfers - "Jingle of a Dog's Collar" (live 120 Minutes)
Better Than Ezra - "King of New Orleans"
Republica - "Ready to Go"
Lifter - "Headshot"
Local H - "Bound for the Floor"
Hole - "Gold Dust Woman"
Filter - "Jurassitol"
Patti Smith - "Summer Cannibals"
Imperial Teen - "You're The One"
Fiona Apple - "Shadowboxer"

Great songs, all.

I leave you with this, the best part of my week and the most exciting 24 seconds of the 90s (except for that one night, when Amber Hobbs' parents were away...)



Whatever.

Friday, July 29, 2011

15 Years Ago Today #2 - 7/29/96

All hail The Nearly-As-Great Summer! (Summer '95 being the Greatest)

When we last looked at the charts from the Summer of 1996, the Cranberries had the #1 spot with "Salvation" and Alanis Morisette had snuck into the Top 10 with her poignant drivel, "You Learn". Just a few weeks later an there was a complete change in the charts, with just one song remaining in the Top 10, Dishwalla's near ubiquitous "Counting Blue Cars."

While some might argue this turnaround is indicative of the fleeting nature of tastes and lack of longevity in mid-90s alternative, they would be wrong, as this is more of an testament to the overwhelming quality of the era's music. A new song came out, and EVERYONE loved it. If you examine the current rock charts, you will find extreme polarity in fans' opinions. Tastes were more unified in the 90s, and that was because everything was good.

The number one song was the Primitive Radio Gods' smash hit, "Something About a Phone Booth". While not at all rock, with it's mellow end-of-summer groove, chill vocals and BB King samples, the song was DEFINITELY alternative, especially when comparing it to the guitar-based groups that made up the rest of the chart.



Furthermore, could there be a Top 10 that is any more representative of what bands were popular in the 90s? Stone Temple Pilots, Smashing Pumpkins, Beck, No Doubt, Garbage, Oasis, even the Butthole Surfers all had songs here. It was a magical summer, and the music was amazing. The only thing that topped it was the release of Roland Emmerich's cinematic masterpiece Independence Day. I say that without a single trace of irony or sarcasm - it's a PERFECT movie.

Here's the Top 10:

1. Primitive Radio Gods - "Standing Outside a Broken Phone Booth With Money In My Hands"
2. Butthole Surfers - "Pepper"
3. Stone Temple Pilots - "Trippin' On a Hole In a Paper Heart"
4. Garbage - "Stupid Girl"
5. The Smashing Pumpkins - "Tonight, Tonight"
6. No Doubt - "Spiderwebs"
7. Beck - "Where It's At"
8. Porno For Pyros - "Tahitian Moon"
9. Dishwalla - "Counting Blue Cars"
10. Oasis - "Don't Look Back In Anger"

Whatever.

20 Years Ago Today #2 - 7/29/91

Looking back at the Billboard Modern Rock (now Alternative) charts of this week 20 years ago, we see that the music of that summer was still less "rock" and more "pop" oriented, with Siouxsie and the Banshee's "Kiss Them For Me" holding the top spot, with Seal's "Crazy" and R.E.M.'s most pop song, "Shiny Happy People" also found in the Top 10. Even Big Audio Dynamite's "Rush" with its incongruous samples and pastiche song structure was more pop than most everything that would chart just a few years later.



I still don't know what she was singing about, but watching Siouxsie Sioux dance around in this video brings back a certain special feeling.

Here's the Top 10

1. Siouxsie & The Banshees - "Kiss Them For Me"
2. Big Audio Dynamite - "Rush"
3. Crowded House - "Chocolate Cake"
4. Psychedelic Furs - "Until She Comes"
5. Kirsty MacColl - "Walking Down Madison"
6. Electronic - "Tighten Up"
7. Seal - "Crazy"
8. House of Love - "Marble"
9. The Candyskins - "Submarine Song"
10. R.E.M. - "Shiny Happy People"

Whatever.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Happy Birthday, Thurston Moore!

A very Happy 53rd Birthday to one of the coolest people to ever walk this planet, Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore!

I dare any of you to be that awesome at 53. I know I won't be.

Here's Sonic Youth performing my favorite song of all time, "Teenage Riot."



Here he comes, now stick to your guns and let him through.

Whatever.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Free Nevermind Tribute Album Available Now

The good folks at SPIN magazine (remember those?) have put together a tribute to Nirvana's Nevermind and are offering it for FREE if you like their Facebook page.


So how is it? Like most tribute albums, some covers are inspired, some are just fun and some deserve to be dragged behind a horse for a few miles. Here's my thoughts:

01 Meat Puppets: "Smells Like Teen Spirit"
The Brothers Kirkwood bust out the acoustic guitars (presumably the same ones they used on Nirvana's Unplugged) to put a quieter take on this song. Not an easy song to cover, as NO ONE can replicated Kurt's vocal on the chorus, the Brothers Meat were wise to tone it down a bit. Easily the best cover of the song ever and the creepy backing vocals in the pre-chorus (Hello? Hello? Hello? How low?) are a nice touch.

02 Butch Walker & the Black Widows: "In Bloom"
Butch Walker is great with other people's songs - having seem him play Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" 3 or 4 times live - and this is no exception. The band puts a cool groove in the verse along with some surprisingly appropriate ukelele (the hippest instrument in the world right now) and add a bit more melody in the chorus backing vocals. Additionally, Walker is a hell of a guitar player and he lets it rip during the solo, which is night and day different from the original. Probably the most fun cover on the album. (Ed note: This was before I listened to the Foxy Shazam cover)

03 Midnight Juggernauts: "Come as You Are"
Just awful. A bunch of bleeps programmed with the same notes but none of the spirit of Nirvana. Though it can be argued that "Come As You Are" was always the limpest track on Nevermind, this take does nothing to counter that. Furthermore, the verse vocals sound like stoned Chipmunks. Skip.

04 Titus Andronicus: "Breed"
Definitely inspired, their track stays in spirit with the original, and without Butch Vig's layered production, brings it back to Nirvana's punk roots. This is probably what Nirvana wanted Nevermind to sound like, given their later misgivings about the album's sound.

05 The Vaselines: "Lithium"
One of two bands on this compilation to be covered by Nirvana (the other being, of course, The Meat Puppets), The Vaselines pretty much have license to do whatever they want to the Nirvana catalog. Their cover of "Lithium" is a reverential one, though and the synth and acoustic guitars complement the sparse vocals nicely. Grunge, punk or alternative it's not, but it's still cool and nice to see The Vaselines return the favor, for let's face it, without Nirvana, they are nothing.

06 Amanda Palmer: "Polly"
"Polly" was always Nevermind's creepiest song, and Amanda Palmer keeps that going here with soft, delicate vocals, some cacophonous vibes and, of all things, a banjo. Don't fret, though. The bass solo remains intact.

07 Surfer Blood: "Territorial Pissings"
Florida's alt-rock saviors contribute a pretty accurate cover here, complete with excerpt from The Youngbloods "Get Together". While the track isn't necessarily a disappointment, their choice of song kinda is - after seeing their involvement, I had hoped they would be taking on one of Nevermind's more complicated songs (particularly the next one) instead of it's simplest. Still, no matter who plays this song - Surfer Blood, Nirvana or even The Offspring - it's still punk as all get out.

08 Foxy Shazam: "Drain You"
Hoo boy. At first listen, this was instantly my least favorite song. Not only on the album, but EVER. "Drain You" has always been my favorite Nirvana song (Kurt's as well) and not being at all familiar with Foxy Shazam's music, I was put off from the start. False crowd noises, grand piano - it sounds more like "Bennie & The Jets" than anything Nirvana would have ever done. But the more I listened to it, the more I began to appreciate their take on the song. Foxy Shazam are a big, showy band, as if The Darkness had half an orchestra, but that does not mean they are not reverent. While most bands would have just skipped over the unforgettable interlude, Foxy Shazam owns it, throwing in wayward trumpet lines like Kurt did with guitar feedback. "Drain You" was always Nevermind's sweetest song, a love song wrapped in a lot of obtuse imagery and Foxy Shazam make this as big and as awesome as loving and loveable as any band's encore staple. It might be Nirvana's song, but Foxy Shazam makes it their "Freebird". A+.

09 Jessica Lea Mayfield: "Lounge Act"
Holy shit, this is it. Jessica Lea Mayfield is a star in the making, and her voice has such a quiet intensity, it's perfect for any Nirvana song, but especially for what could easily be argued as Nevermind's finest track. Having seen her live, I can attest that Jessica is the real deal and this cover is no exception. Stripped down to bare bones, her voices creeps over every word, while Richie Kirkpatrick's slinky guitar just sizzles, especially when it's countered over the murky single-note lines before the 3rd verse. I can't say enough about this song - just awesome.

10 Charles Bradley and the Menahan Street Band: "Stay Away"
This compilation is nothing if not imaginative. Similar to the Foxy Shazam track, 62-year-old Charles Bradley puts a completely different spin on "Stay Away", turning it into a simmering soul track, with some pretty hot 60's-esque tremolo fuzz guitar in the background. A cool take on this song, and unrecognizable as Nirvana.


11 Telekinesis: "On a Plain"
Back to the rock. Seattle's own Telekinesis take on their (his) hometown heroes (presumably) on a relatively straight-forward cover. But apparently this was a last minute fill-in for the original artists, Wavves, who apparently went AWOL. Or collapsed in fear of trying to measure up to Nirvana.


12 JEFF the Brotherhood: "Something in the Way"
The Nashville duo made up of actual brothers - neither named Jeff - put a pretty grunge spin on this decidedly non-grunge song. Rumor has it that Kurt Cobain wanted to get more into acoustic music as Nirvana went on, so there's a touch of irony that this song kinda works better with some sludgy distortion. Save for the vocals, it sounds like pre-Badmotorfinger Soundgarden.

13 EMA: "Endless, Nameless"
Surely the only recorded cover of this song in history, EMA does it justice, but not by much. Recording riffs, noise and screams is easy, but the spirit of the track is missing. "Endless, Nameless" was Nirvana trying to stay connected with their roots in the midst of the dozen more pop-tinged songs that came before it. While I'm sure EMA tried to recapture that sentiment, it's difficult without being more familiar with their regular material. Oh well.

Whatever. (Nevermind).

90s Live Now - #3 Smoking Popes

During my teen years, specifically the second half of the 90s since I wasn't allowed to go to shows before I was 16, I tried to get to every concert I could. Of course, with the limited discretionary income that came from my minimum wage grocery store job, this wasn't near as many as I would have liked, and I missed some great shows (Dandy Warhols with special guests Treble Charger and the Longpigs in the 400-person-capacity Sapphire Supper Club comes to mind).

One such show was the Smoking Popes, who were on tour as openers for Tripping Daisy, and played the Embassy in Orlando. For $5. I am kicking my 16-year-old self as I write this. Regardless, the band was a more recent discovery at the time, but buoyed by their insanely great single "Need You Around", I took a chance and got their album Born To Quit as one of my Columbia House free selections.

This ended up being one of the best decisions I have ever made.

The album immediately resonated with me, as their songs of unrequited, near-obsessive love fit perfectly with the unrequited, near-obsessive attraction I felt to a certain lovely young lady at the time. Unsurprisingly, these same feelings emerged while listening to their follow-up album, 1997's Destination Failure, though by that point they were for a different lovely young lady.

By that time, Capitol Records was on the verge of dropping the band and lead singer (and one of three brothers in the band) Josh Caterer began to focus on his Christian faith and the band split up, leaving me having never seen Smoking Popes live.

Until tonight, naturally.

Smoking Popes Live! Tonight! Sold Out!

Once again an opening act, though no longer $5, tonight the Popes played the still-legendary Troubadour in support of Alkaline Trio. (Despite having formed in 1996, the Alkaline Trio didn't really garner a ton of attention until the early part of the 2000s and therefore will never be mentioned again on this blog.) Sixteen years of waiting paid off immediately as they opened with "Before I'm Gone" from Destination Failure, following it up quickly with "Rubella" the second single from Born to Quit.

Though it was a shortened opening set, the Popes flat out brought it as Josh Caterer connected with particular fans in the audience, something that is so very rare at rock shows. On top of that, they were having fun, which is something equally as rare in rock these days.

The easiest way to kill a crowd's enthusiasm is the simple phrase "here's something from our new album", but the Popes kept it short and sweet, playing "Wish We Were" from this year's This Is Only a Test, which fit in perfectly with their older material. Finally, they wrapped up the show with the crowd pleasing, beautiful song "Megan", "Need You Around" and "I Know You Love Me" featuring the second sing-along of the night (the other being "No More Smiles").

Too often, delayed gratification for something you have wanted so badly for so long, but seeing the Smoking Popes was not one of them. I only wish it could have been in 1995 with another band I never got to see, Tripping Daisy.

And for $5.

Whatever.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Happy Birthday, Tanya Donelly!

Happy 45th Birthday to the beautiful and super-awesome Tanya Donelly!

Here she is with Belly giving an awesome performance of one of my favorite 90s songs, "Super-Connected" on Letterman. Video quality isn't great, but the sound is superb.



Have a great birthday, Tanya!

Whatever.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Turntable.fm

For those of you who have Turntable accounts, join me as I spin here:

90s? Whatever room @ Turntable.fm

For those of you who haven't tried this website yet, do yourself a favor and join. 

Whatever.