Monsters of Folk at Filadelfiakyrkan, Stockholm, 19th November 2009

monsters-of-folk
A ‘supergroup’ is a term describing a music group where members already have made their fame and fortune in other constellations or ventures.

Monsters of Folk is a super consisting of Jim James from My Morning Jacket, Conor Oberst and Mike Mogis from Bright Eyes and M. Ward.

So the concert was a combination of Monsters of Folk, My Morning Jacket, Bright Eyes and M Ward songs. I didn’t count, but the concert lasted for 3 hours, so somewhere around 30 songs where played.

Overall, the concert at Filadelfiakyrkan was a failure. Long queues to get in, delayed, uncomfortable seats, bad sound, at times questionable performances, often they all stood facing the drums instead of the audience and the concert was too long.

But. The concert had a few really really magic moments.
So I’m willing to forgive.

Jim James definitely stood out from the rest. His performance of “Look at You”, “Bermuda Highway”, and “Golden” was superb and those alone almost made the concert worth the trouble. Other hightlights was M Ward magic guitar shredding solo, Bright Eye’s “Soul Singer In A Session Band” and the Monsters of Folk songs “Whole Lotta Losin”, “Dear God”, “Say Yes” and “The right place”.

I tweeted a tweet during the concert (probably after Mr James shone):

At a Monsters of Folk concert. Truly inspiring. Makes me want to take a sabatical and just play guitar…

It’s not an idea that established during the concert. But the seed definitely get a healthy potion of water and sunlight.

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The north.

I just stumbled over an acoustic preformance of the song 1901 by the French band Phoenix. http://hypem.com/track/919796/Phoenix+-+1901+acoustic+. I’ve always found it interesting hearing acoustic interpretations of a song. This was no exception.

I then took the query to YouTube to see if I could find a live performance of the acoustic version. I didn’t find it, but I found this:

Which is also good, but… maybe a bit stale? Kind of lacks any notion of energy. Or joy for that matter.

Then under the title ‘Related Videos’ I found this:

What a change! I was so pleasantly surprised to see a drummer in a robotic manner spending most of his performance trying to beat a hole in the snare drum! Love it. What a legend.

I did a bit of research, and it turns out that my new found hero is called Thomas Hedlund and is from the north of Sweden. Umeå to be more precise. He also plays in The Perishers, Cult Of Luna, Deportees and Khoma. If i’m not mistaken, an acquaintance whom I played with while living in Skellefteå, Peter Melender, is also the drummer of Khoma.

It’s a small world. And it seems like the north part of it rocks it harder than the south ;)

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Lester William Polfuss

les-paul-2

Lester William Polfuss, known as Les Paul, passed away today, aged 94, from complications of severe pneumonia at White Plains Hospital in White Plains, New York.

Mr Paul was a jazz musician and inventor, who together with Gibson Guitar Corporation, are the father of the iconic solid body electric guitar caring his name — Les Paul.

Rest in peace, and may your legacy live on forever.

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Nine Inch Nails releases a iPhone application.

Below are selected quotes from the article: Nine Inch Nails iPhone App Extends Reznor’s Innovative Run

Nine Inch Nails and Radiohead are so in the forefront it’s almost scary. Not just when it comes to music distribution, but digital communication — and they are music artist. I wish that people in the digital industry were as innovative and were less scared of making mistakes. The internet is a playground. So play in it.


Reznor has pioneered a new, fan-centered business model that radically breaks with the practices of the struggling music industry

“Anyone who’s an executive at a record label does not understand what the internet is, how it works, how people use it, how fans and consumers interact — no idea,” he declares. “I’m surprised they know how to use e-mail. They have built a business around selling plastic discs, and nobody wants plastic discs any more.”

“They’re in such a state of denial it’s impossible for them to understand what’s happening,” Reznor says. “As an artist, you are now the marketer.”

“I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: I don’t think music should be free,” Reznor says. “But the climate is such that it’s impossible for me to change that, because the record labels have established a sense of mistrust. So everything we’ve tried to do has been from the point of view of, ‘What would I want if I were a fan? How would I want to be treated?’ Now let’s work back from that. Let’s find a way for that to make sense and monetize it.”

“I doubt I’ll ever pay someone to do a remix again,” Reznor says, “because there’s some amazing stuff just coming out of bedrooms.”

So for the higher-quality offerings, Reznor turned to BitTorrent — “the domain of pirates,” he acknowledges, “but it’s also a great technology that is free.” Pirates are no longer the enemy anyway: “Our battle is against download costs.”

“One of the biggest wake-up calls of my career was when I saw a record contract,” he says. “I said, ‘Wait — you sell it for $18.98 and I make 80 cents? And I have to pay you back the money you lent me to make it and then you own it? Who the fuck made that rule? Oh! The record labels made it because artists are dumb and they’ll sign anything’ — like I did.”

If the labels had tried to connect with fans online instead of dragging them into court, he figures, the music industry wouldn’t be collapsing today. But no matter; he’s moved on.

“My quest in life now is to surround myself with smart, innovative people,” he says, “instead of the gangster types who have exploited artists over the years.”


The whole article: Nine Inch Nails iPhone App Extends Reznor’s Innovative Run

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Classic

spotify-icon Since my reading audience is extremely web savvy, I assume most of you have heard about the music service called Spotify. In short, Spotify is a bit like iTunes Music Store but with the difference that you don’t have to buy the music. You can listen to it for free (with some advertising) or pay a fee and be blest from brainwashing. So, a bit like a radio but with more controls.

My… hesitation, is the 18 available genres when browsing the ‘Radio’ section: Alternative, Blues, Country, Disco, Funk, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, Hip-Hip, House, Jazz, New Wave, R&B, Pop, Punk, Reggae, Rock, Soul, Techno.

Is classic music not a worthy option in the 21st century?

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Memories

joey-cape-tony-sly-acoustic-large

For the hard-core punk rock fans this is probably nothing new. But for some of the people of my generation, who have stopped keeping up to date with the latest releases from our teenage punk favourites — this is a true gem.

Joey Cape and Tony Sly, the lead singers from Lagwagon and No Use For A Name, released an album back in 2004 called Acoustic. I reckon the title of the album explains the nature of it.

Even though I already appreciated the album on first listen, I just kept wanting to hear the original version of the songs. When I reached the 8th song, Violins, the urge just grew too much and I switched to the original. And my oh my. I’d forgot how damn good they are.

Even if these songs are good, they are still a mere shadow of their true self.

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Purchase for life.

About 6 years ago I sold a black American Fender Telecaster and a white Japan Fender Stratocaster which left me with my Gibson Explorer and the promise that I would never ever sell or trade a guitar ever again. Guitars I bought would be for life and the birth right for my future children.

With this sort of promise a guitar purchase gets… harder in some ways, easier in others and, overall, not a very common activity. The hard part is that you need a good motive and there is no cutting corners. The easier part is narrowing down what you actually want to get. If it’s not something really special that’s worth saving for a life time — sorry, not an option.

So yesterday was a very special day for me. Yesterday was the day I bought myself a Martin D-28; the last steel string dreadnought body-shaped acoustic guitar without microphone that I will ever own. She’s truly an amazing guitar. Everything you read about her sisters is true. By appearance she looks just like any other guitar and the design of her is almost unchanged since 1934 when it was introduced. The sound, size and feeling of the guitar is something else. Truly spectacular. Will be nice to see if she wears well with age.

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Some music suggestions to keep you company during the up coming winter darkness

During the last couple of weeks a few new albums (some new to me and some new to the world) found their way to my ears and I though it would be a good idea to share my thoughts on these with you.

  • Only by the Night by Kings of Leon

    This album turned out being a big surprise. It’s amazing. Sitting here now, i’m willing to say it’s among the top 10 albums released in the last couple of years. Listening to it, I draw similarities from all sorts of albums and artist; R.E.M (mainly New Adventures in Hi-Fi from ’96), Nine Inch Nails and David Sandström, to name a few, and they have somehow manage to find some sort of magic middle ground between this wide spectrum of amazing artists and and composed an album that touches emotions awoken across all the different genres they coincide with.

    There is an enormous amount of hidden energy within all the songs. I don’t know how they are live (a quick search on YouTube confirms they seem quite boring), but if I were to play these songs for a live audience I would break bones, lose limbs and most probably faint half way through the set due to exhaustion. In some aspects I can almost feel that the producers (Angelo Petraglia and Jacquire King) hide some of the true drive and energy of the songs. But, at the same time, it’s part of the charm of this album. But these songs in the hands of a producer with a longer history of creating rockier rock albums would be completely different.

    I haven’t really listened much to the other three full length albums by Kings of Leon, so I actually don’t know if this album is good or bad in comparison. Maybe it’s one of those odd cases where all the fan’s hate it and it’s more appealing for a new audience (such as me).

  • Hymns In the Key of 666 by Hellsongs

    Hellsongs is an acoustic three piece from Sweden (vocalist Harriet Ohlsson, guitarist Kalle Karlsson and Johan Bringhed on keyboards) that plays what people seem to describe (I believe it’s self acclaimed genre by the band) as Lounge Metal — old metal classics performed with startingly clear and crystaline female vocals, soft guitars and organ and two male choir-boys. Hymns In the Key of 666 is their debute album.

    So, simply, it’s a album featuring new interpretations (cover songs) of old classic metal songs sang by a female and performed in a folk/singer-songwriter fashion.

    Now I can easily see how this album can be hated by metal fans. And we can’t really blame them for it. Somehow we need to understand that some have strong emotional feelings tied to these classics and that what some people love about these songs is the way they are, as originals.

    I’m a metal fan. I even appreciate what people label as death metal (ooooooooo). But even though I can see why people don’t like this album — I do love it. Partly probably because I myself have composed a few songs where I transform songs of a heavier nature to a softer genre.

    It’s a very pleasant and in many ways unchallenging process. It’s more a matter of reinterpreting and analysing than walking around in darkness trying to create something unique and special. But even if it’s relatively easy to bosh out new variations of all these endless number of classics songs, it’s quite hard to recreate them into a song of high quality.

    I don’t think Hellsongs hits the nail on the head with this album. But it’s definitely good and I definitely enjoy listening to it. And it’s quite clear that at least one of the band members (99% sure it’s the guitarist) has a passion for metal music.

    One thing that this album does enable you to do, is enjoy “metal” songs in cooperate office environments. You just need a pinch of imagination and you can hear Angus’ guitar or Harris’ galloping bass strum.

    1. The Trooper by Iron Maiden, ’83
    2. Symphony of Destruction by Megadeth, ’93
    3. Rock the Night by Europe, ’84
    4. Seasons in the Abyss by Slayer ’90
    5. We’re not gonna take It by Twisted Sister, ’84
    6. Blackened by Metallica, ’88
    7. Thunderstruck by AC/DC, ’90′
    8. Run to the Hills by Iron Maiden, ’82
    9. Paranoid by Black Sabbath, ’70
    10. Princess of the Night by Saxon, ’81
  • Black Ice by AC/DC

    I’m a huge fan of AC/DC. My admiration stretches over many levels; the sound, the songs, the music, the constant high quality they have maintained over all the years, stage performance, Angus’ solos and energy, Malcolm’s rhythm, Brian’s charisma and voice, Cliff’s anonymousity and Phil’s steady and simple way of beating polyester and finally their combined ability to produce music that gives you an after taste of nose blood. They are living rock legends and you can’t compare them with anything or anyone else. ‹- full stop

  • More Modern Short Stories from Hello Saferide by Hello Saferide

    ‘More Modern Short Stories from Hello Saferide’ is Annika Norlin’s second album as Hello Saferide but her third album since her debut album ‘Introducing…Hello Saferide’. Besides Hello Saferide, last year she released her Swedish-language debut called ‘Säkert!’, with which she won two Grammis awards (Swedish equivalent of the Grammy Awards), for best female pop act and best lyrics.

    What sets Annika Norlin’s music a part is her lyrics and her way of telling stories. The songs make you smile. They are flirty, cute and a bit childish. I saw her live about two year ago which just added to my admiration towards Annika and her music.

    The debut album was overall a bit happier but that doesn’t necessarily make this a sad album. I recommend all of her albums as well as to go and see her if she’s playing in your area.

  • Say I Am You by Weepies, The

    This album is from 2006, which makes it 2 years old. I stumbled over it while listening to the singer-songwriter radio channel on last.fm. It’s one of those albums that you can have running on repeat for a few hours without getting annoyed on it. And, when you don’t have it running on repeat you miss it and want to run it on repeat. It’s simply a very ok album.

  • Death Magnetic by Metallica

    I (like may others) split Metallic’s different eras into the period before the self titled black album and the period after. The pre-black and post-black both have pros and cons and I (unlike most) don’t really have a preference over which is the best. They are different.

    The latest album, Death Magnetic, is a turning point in this pre-black/post-black approach since it’s released post-black but has at least one foot on the other side of the black album. The new songs are faster, longer and has moved away from the radio friendly song structure (verse/chorus/verse).

    So unlike the band’s previous album, St Anger, that was very anonymous and mediocre, Death Magnetic is a proper mark in Metallica history and sets an interesting direction for the future.

There we are. Hope some of you enjoyed reading and that my words encourage you to give the above albums a spin.

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If your happy talking… then why did you come here?

The above video is Jeff Tweedy in an attempt to understand why people go to a concerts and then just talk to their mates instead of listening and taking part in the experience.

I think most of us have experienced it.
Jeff put’s it really well.

It’s really really cool, if you just, if everybody was really quiet for just one second. You feel yourself being in a room full of people. With all their hearts beating. And all of their thoughts and feelings and you’re part of it. You’re not just you. You’re part of a group of people. In a really beautiful way. It’s a really wonderful thing to be part of. But you have to pay attention to it.

It’s not just me. I’m not just being some pissy artist. It’s what you do when you go to a concert. You’re being a part of it.

You don’t set yourself apart from everybody.
You’re part of something.
It’s wonderful.
It’s joyous.

Via Joakim Jansson’s last.fm journal

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MuxTape

Almost back to back to my post about a USB MixTape Stick, here’s a post on online mixtapes. Recently two websites have reached the echo chamber known as the blogosphere; Mixwit.com and Muxtape.com. I don’t like many things about Mixwit (if any), but the simplicity of Muxtape struck a chord.

My first compilation, titled, ‘nuzzaci’s small compilation of compelling cover songs’, is a set of 12 cover songs from various artists. Listen to it on nuzzaci.muxtape.com. The playlist is:

  1. Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – The World’s Greatest
  2. Florence and the Machine (featuring Kid Harpoon) – I’m Goin’ Down
  3. Mat Weddle – Hey Ya
  4. Ben Gibbard – Complicated
  5. Sinead O’Connor – All Apologies
  6. Streets, The – Your Song
  7. Sick Anchors, The – Whole Again
  8. John Mayer – Kid A
  9. Nick Cave – Disco 2000
  10. Zwan – The Number of the Beast
  11. Iron & Wine – Such Great Heights
  12. Beck – True Love Will Find You in the End
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