3.29.2007

happiness, according to Wayne Coyne

my new favorite quote ...

"Happiness is not a situation to be longed for or a convergence of lucky happenstance. Through the power of our own minds, we can help ourselves."
-Wayne Coyne

The quote is from Wayne's "This I Believe" contribution on NPR, titled "Creating Our Own Happiness." It's worth a listen. It's very obvious to me where much of the Flaming Lips goodness comes from.

3.10.2007

for #1 only

Courtesy of Activate, here's an odd photo that caught my eye ...


A man uses a controversial outdoor toilet in southwest China's Chongqing municipality on February 24, 2007. (Reuters/China Daily China Daily Information Corp.)

trent reznor opening for culture club?

Everyone starts somewhere ...

3.06.2007

bright eyes tour

Bright Eyes has announced tour dates in support of Cassadaga, and if you want to see the show in the venue closest to the album's namesake, then you'll spend the evening of May 17 at Hard Rock Live in Orlando. I'm thrilled that Conor and Mike and the always-bored-looking keyboard player and all the rest. Check out Pitchforkmedia.com for the full tour.

There's also a stop at the Tampa Theatre on May 16. That venue is absolutely gorgeous. I caught the band there for the I'm Wide Awake It's Morning tour with Jesse Sykes & The Sweet Hereafter and Neva Dinova. The theatre opened in 1926, and the city of Tampa took it over in the '70s and restored the venue. It's definitely worth the trip just to see the theatre. And then there's the music. :)


3.03.2007

conor's back ... i think

Bright Eyes has a new CD coming out soon, and the new song "Four Winds" is the beautiful, poetic, alt-country anthem you hoped it would be. The video, which you can watch on ifilm.com, is unlike anything they've done before. It's a black-and-white performance video, and the whole band's in it, including Maria Taylor on drums.

But you may not notice any of that, because if you are like me, you're going to be dumbfounded by Conor's appearance and pre-occupied with trying to figure out who he's reminding you of. His long straggly hair is longer than ever, and when he first appeared on my little screen, I thought it was the lead singer of the Arcade Fire. He looks like a completely different person.

The fact that I am even mentioning his hair -- much less focusing on it -- is not something I am proud of. But at least you're not spending these few moments hearing about Anna Nicole Smith.

The new album Cassadaga, by the way, will be out on April 10. The lyrics in one song refers to communing with the dead in Cassadaga. Could it be? My favorite little psychic community??? There's a cool town just north of Orlando that's known for shaking its cosmic thing. I wonder if they traveled through after a show and stopped for a palm reading??? And what's with all these question marks???

I just purchased the Four Winds EP, which includes the first single from Cassadaga and five songs billed as "exclusive B-sides." There are all kinds of amazing guests on the album, including Janet Weiss from Sleater-Kinney, Rachael Yamagata, Ben Kweller, M Ward and a few Saddle Creek folks, as you'd expect. I can't wait to hear the full album.

Oh, look, I found more photos of Conor on Pitchfork, and here's what they said ... "Conor's sporting some terrible hair these days, long and greasy like a bass player in a grunge band circa 1992."

Yikes, tell us how you really feel.

Remember when Michael Hutchence cut his hair so that people would "focus" on his music and not his sexy looks? I think that might be the same rationale Matt Lauer used when he went nearly bald. Doesn't Conor know that his lyrics are just as much of a turn-on as his sad eyes? Whatever. As the new music proves, he's still amazing, and as the pictures below show, he's still hot, and I still want to run my fingers through his hair and French braid it.



3.02.2007

i am not a nugget

I just spent more than half an hour on peta’s very cool Web site. There are lots of fun downloads with vintage-looking artwork and fun slogans, like “Cut class, not frogs,” “I am not a nugget,” (I LOVE that one!) and “Love me, don’t wear me.” You can print them as stickers, magnets and iron-on transfers. I included some of my favorites below. There’s also some kickin’ musicians, like Le Tigre, Peaches and Mates of State making their own cruelty-free statements.

Let’s be honest here, I am not a vegetarian. I wish I could be because, as an animal lover, it just makes sense. I eat very little red meat, but way too much chicken and seafood. I started eating a lot more vegetarian dishes a few years ago when I started getting healthy. I loved it. I felt better physically and mentally.



My mom is Catholic, and she never eats meat on Fridays during Lent. That’s why all the seafood restaurants in New Orleans are especially crowded on Fridays at this time of year. That’s about as close as my family got to vegetarianism when I was growing up.

Be sure to check out peta2.com You can even sign up to get a package of stickers, vegetarian recipes and a DVD with footage of Death Cab for Cutie, Le Tigre and some other bands that support the cause.







3.01.2007

this american life


Hello DVR, and thank you for the increasingly and ridiculously important role you play in my life. I am so excited about the announcement that the “This American Life” show I listen to on NPR is becoming a Showtime series. Below is the description from sho.com.

And who knew Ira Glass was so adorable???

"Compelling stories are explored every day on "This American Life," the nearly 15-year-old, award-winning Chicago Public Radio show that boasts a devoted weekly listening audience of 1.7 million, and is heard on more than 500 stations nationally. The series, created in 1995 by host and executive producer Ira Glass, pioneered a unique way of telling stories on the radio. Its first-person telling of these revealing stories makes the radio series a great fit for television.

"In the same spirit of the radio show, the televised version of THIS AMERICAN LIFE, premiering Thursday, March 22nd at 10:30 p.m. PT/ET, takes 30-minute looks at stories culled from all over the country. Glass and a small team of radio producers and filmmakers spent six months on the road: traveling to Iowa pig farms, following a first-time filmmaker in California, photographing a raucous night at an Illinois hot dog stand. The result is true stories that are dramatic, emotional, and often funny."