Archive for the ‘Reviews’ Category

KYDS: Another Replacement for KWOD

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

Another great replacement for KWOD is El Camino High School’s student produced radio station, KYDS 91.5.  They occasionally play death metal, unfortunately, but usually KYDS plays a wide variety of bands, from old standbys like Ray Charles and Led Zeppelin, to more obscure alternative acts like Mates of State, Clap Your Hands and Say Yeah (yeah!) and Sufjan Stevens.  They certainly have better taste in music than I did when I was their age.  The Real McCoy, anyone?  Like Off Air, KYDS is commercial free, other than the occasional public service announcement, usually performed by a student, and the hilariously smarmy and over-the-top station identification by some unknown professional voice talent.  “It’s all KYDS.  All the time,” indeed.  Unlike Off Air, KYDS can be pretty amateurish at times, which is charming, except when they’re broadcasting nothing but dead air, which happens too often.

KYDS also rebroadcasts programming from CSU-Sacramento’s student produced radio station, KSSU, which plays everything from Rancid to Alicia Keys, depending on the DJ.  But how sad is it that KYDS, a high school radio station, has a stronger signal than KSSU, an AM station that cannot be heard beyond the Sac State campus?

Miss KWOD? Go “Off-Air” with Capital Public Radio

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

If you’re only familiar with NPR from Ana Gasteyer and Molly Shannon discussing Alec Baldwin’sSchweddy Balls” on Saturday Night Live, or you think NPR only plays classical music and jazz, you may be surprised to learn that one of the best replacements for the now-gone (but not forgotten) KWOD 106.5 is a program presented by Sacramento’s local NPR affiliate, Capital Public Radio, entitled “Off Air.”

As the title suggests, Off Air is an online-only show, which has its advantages and disadvantages.  For instance, you can’t listen to it in your car, but all of the show’s webcasts are always available for listening online, which means you can sit at your computer and listen to a playlist of great music, lasting an hour or more, for free with no commercials.  The show is hosted by Nick Brunner, a young DJ from Illinois, who speaks with the clear enunciation and confident cadence that is typical at NPR, best exemplified by Ky Ryssdal, in my opinion; it may seem affected, even annoying at first, but this style of speaking will grow on you and become comforting and strong.

Off Air focuses on “up and coming national and local talent as well as established, critically acclaimed artists,” which usually means alternative rock, although there are smatterings of electronica, dance, country and hip-hop as well (just like KWOD!).  In the webcasts I’ve listed to, Off-Air has played music by bands as diverse as Dinosaur Jr., the Yeah Yeah YeahsYACHT, Peaches, Jukebox the Ghost and Edward Sharpe and The Magnetic Zeros.  Off Air also frequently features in-studio guests, such as Starfucker and Boy in Static.  Whether asking insightful questions of his guests, discussing the merits of mashups with volunteer assistant Meg, delivering interesting information about the music he’s playing or notifying listeners of upcoming events and shows, Brunner always comes off as informed and intelligent, but like many NPR personalities he bucks the Schweddy Balls stereotype by being funny and irreverent, too.  The off-air format of Off Air allows Brunner to ignore FCC regulations regarding obscenity, for example, and on one webcast Brunner listed the insulting names fans of alternative rock could be called, such as “nerd,” “dweeb” and “spaz,” but then ended with an audio sample where a guy who sounds like Luis Guzmán says, “a drunk, chain-smoking transvestite, passed out on a couch in Sacramento.”  He’s like a less obnoxious Rubin!  Sigh.  I miss Rubin . . .

All in all, Off Air is a great show and definitely worth a listen.  New shows are posted online every Thursday at 12am.

“Up,” “Up” and Away!

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Audrey and I saw Up tonight; it may be my new favorite movie.  Okay, one of many favorites.  Why have just one?  In other visual mediums, it’s easy to confuse physical or surface beauty with inner goodness, but in animation and the cartoon arts, even the ugly can be beautiful.  For an example, just look at the star of Up.

“I Am an Amanuensis” 51: Justin Kerrigan

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

“Listen to this:  The Emperor wants to control Outer Space.  Yoda wants to explore inner space.  That’s the fundamental difference between the Good and the Bad sides of the Force.”

Dialogue from the British film Human Traffic (1999), written and directed by Justin Kerrigan.  If you’ve ever been to a rave, you will love this movie.  In fact, it’s just a really funny, entertaining movie, like Trainspotting only the characters are far more likable and avoid doing horrible things to each other.

Amanuensisnoun. A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.

To read more “I Am an Amanuensis,” click here.

“I Am an Amanuensis” 6: James Kochalka on Adrian Tomine

Friday, March 14th, 2008

“To me, it seems like you’re not particularly wise beyond your years. Your comics seem very much like they were written by a young person. You don’t seem particularly extra knowledgeable about what makes human beings tick. … To me, it seems you’re as good as you are simply because you work very hard at it. Sometimes it almost seems like you’re trying too hard […]. Rather, it seems like your desire to appear ’professional’ is having a restricting effect on your drawing hand. Please, flow freely into your work.”

James Kochalka in a letter to Adrian Tomine, reprinted in Optic Nerve 2. Montreal, Canada: Drawn & Quarterly, 1995. Back cover.

Drop Distortion like it’s hot!

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

The new album by The Magnetic Fields, Distortion, came out today, and despite advance reviews suggesting Distortion is short on brilliance and heavy on gimmick, I’m excited.  Actually, I was excited; now that I’ve listened to it once my excitement is somewhat tempered.  A few of the tracks are interesting but nothing reached out and grabbed me.  But then, there are albums I used to hate that, after perseverance and multiple listens, became favorites.   So I’m still excited.  Somewhat.

The title Distortion refers not only to emotional distortion but also the fact that, as Jody Rosen puts it on Slate, “[…] with the exception of the drums, every instrument on the record—guitar, cello, accordion, piano—is swamped in feedback.”  If this sounds like a strange gimmick, you’re probably not familiar with The Magnetic Fields and the brooding, witty mastermind behind the band, Stephin Merritt (in another Slate article, John Cook defends Merritt against charges of racism).  All the songs on their last album, I, start with the letter “I,” and half of those with the word “I.”  I knew about this album, but I didn’t know, as Rosen also points out,

Under the nom de guerre the 6ths, [… Merritt] released two “Stephin Merritt tribute albums,” featuring a different lead vocalist on each track. In 2006, another of Merritt’s moonlighting projects, the Gothic Archies, put out The Tragic Treasury, an anthology of “goth bubblegumsongs written by Merritt for the audiobook editions of Daniel Handler’s best-selling children’s stories A Series of Unfortunate Events.

All of which sounds a bit twee and off-putting; at least, it would if I wasn’t already such a big fan of Merritt’s.  69 Love Songs by The Magnetic Fields is one of my all-time favorites, a triple-disc concept album about, you guessed it, love.  While there are a few straight-forward love songs on the album such as “The Book of Love,” the best songs are about frustrated love.  Lost, lonely, frustrated, love.  In “Grand Canyon” the singer laments,  “If I was the Grand Canyon, I’d echo everything you say / But I’m just me, I’m only me and you used to love me that way.”  And bitter, angry, frustrated love.  In “Meaningless” the singer rages, “And if some dim bulb should say / we were in love in some way / kick all his teeth in for me / and if you feel like keeping on kicking, feel free.”  69 Love Songs helped me get through my divorce.

The main critique of 69 Love Songs, however, is that despite its brilliance too many of the songs are duds; for instance, The New Rolling Stone Album Guide says, “The inclusion of a handful of throwaways keeps the set from absolute classic status.”  I was inclined to disagree until I remembered I took several songs from the album off my iPod.  So then I was ready to argue that the good songs would still fill up two albums, until I remembered that when I usually listen to the album now I only listen to my favorites, which would only fill up an album.  But that’s still pretty good!  And besides, 69 Love Songs is just too good a gimmick to pass up!  In comparison, Sgt. Pepper’s and Tommy blow.

“Living Room” by Tegan and Sara is awesome

Monday, January 14th, 2008

Thanks, KYDS!

Rage Gone Girls

Wednesday, May 9th, 2007

On Saturday night I ended up at the dance club Barcode, and unfortunately, so did Girls Gone Wild. The whole experience left me disgusted with the club and the Girls Gone wild “brand,” as the company insists on describing its products. I was going to write an angry post on all of this, but on further reflection I realized my feelings for both the club and the brand are more complicated.

In the case of Barcode, which until recently was called The Rage, my feelings for the club mirror my feelings for Sacramento in general: contradictory mixtures of comfort and embarrassment, love and loathing; the sort of feelings usually reserved for members of one’s family. It is, after all, a dance club in a strip mall in Sacramento County, so it attracts low- to middlebrow day-working suburbanites from the culturally vibrant regions of Arden-Arcade, North Sacramento and Carmichael, ready to buy their party experience the way they would a new outfit at Mervyns.

But then, I too am part of that great unwashed mass, and have many good memories of the club. Back in my Raver days I went on Tuesday nights for “Pure” to hear the DJs spin House and Trance. I’ve been Thursday nights for what is popularly known as “Asian Night,” when those of the Asian persuasion claim the club as their own. I’ve even been on Sunday nights for “Asylum,” or Goth night, where every weekend is Halloween, and although some of the music and outfits are ridiculous, the island of misfit toys vibe is endearing, the knowledge that no one will start a fight is comforting, and it’s one of the few places in Sacramento where you can dance to a mash-up of The Cure’sClose to Me” and George Michael’sFaith“.

So after a raucous session of Karaoke with friends Saturday night at Zigatos, going to Barcode for some dancing didn’t sound like that bad of an idea. Plus, we had to drop some of our party off at home in the Arden area, and since it was already after 12:30 we didn’t really have time to drive downtown. So, to the nearest club we went, which also happened to be the location Girls Gone Wild had chosen to film their subject in its natural habitat. When we got there, various “hot” girls were going in and out of the notorious Girls Gone Wild tour bus, where the most racy footage is shot. I put “hot” in quotation marks because I don’t really go for that stereotypical ideal of beauty; the way I see it, if you need that much makeup, hair dye, fake nails and surgical enhancements to look good, you might be a man. We got inside and one of the modern world’s most grotesque tableaus was displayed before us: three skankily clad girls giggling nervously under the hot light of the Girls Gone Wild camera crew, unsure of whether to make out or undress or run as an ever-tightening knot of horny boys pumped their fists in an unconscious simulation of masturbation, chanting, “Tits, tits, tits, tits, tits, tits!”

I was disgusted, of course, but moral outrage at Girls Gone Wild has become something of a cliché. One obvious example is the never-hypocritical Dr. Phil’s coverage of the phenomenon, which damned the show for being immoral while also unabashedly airing some of its most salacious moments. Another is Tyra Banks’s disingenuous, or delusional, denial of Girls Gone Wild creator Joe Francis’s argument that there are similarities between what his company does and what goes on in the fashion industry. Even the current controversy over the underage girls filmed by Girls Gone Wild while in Panama City feels somewhat dishonest; after all, didn’t everyone like Britney a whole lot more when she was not yet a woman?

There are obvious and serious problems with objectification, exploitation and sexism in Girls Gone Wild that I don’t want to diminish, but even honest and intelligent exploration of these problems must take into account their complexity. Ariel Levy does exactly that in her “Dispatches” for Slate on the subject, saying that although these girls “[…] are embracing raunchy aspects of our culture that would likely have caused their feminist foremothers to vomit,” she wonders, “But what if I’m just uptight? What if this is actually fun and these girls get a genuine kick out of being porn stars for 15 minutes?” Certainly, everyone wants to feel sexy in some way, if not to the porn buying public than at least to his or her partner. This seems to be borne out by the brother of Girls Gone Wild, Guys Gone Wild, in which buff, manscaped straight guys cavort sexually before the camera, even though most of them admit their audience is probably made up of gay men. Certainly these guys are embracing raunchy aspects of our culture that would likely have caused their heterosexual forefathers to label them faggots.

And as anyone who’s ever read Andrea Dworkin knows, the most extreme feminist arguments against pornography resemble the most extreme Christian arguments against pornography: sex is bad. A recent “American Voices” feature in The Onion on the finding that “Abstinence Education Doesn’t Work” hilariously undermines these arguments. Construction worker and average American Xander Griffey says, “I find it astonishing that our public schools were unable to beat out the most basic human instinct that perpetuates our species.”

And so, like the rest of the world, my feelings on Girls Gone Wild are also complex. As distasteful as I find it, I can’t deny that their late night commercials raise my prurient interest. I can’t even deny that I watch and enjoy pornography. So is my loathing of Girls Gone Wild partially based in my fear of the new? Probably. Back in my day, we didn’t have Girls Gone Wild. We had something called Playboy, and it was pure: we only allowed sluts and the attention-starved to participate, not the girls next door. Or did we? In their excellent review of The Playboy Book: Six Decades of Centerfolds, The New Yorker quotes magazine founder Hugh Hefner as saying that the ideal Playmate of the Month was “‘the girl next door with her clothes off.’” Perhaps the only objection I can make to Girls Gone Wild and the continuing rise of raunch culture with any certainty is its ubiquity and the media’s repeated insistence that it tell us, as Alan Moore put it, “[…] who to think of when we masturbate. They are the engines of our exhaustion.” They stand about me in an angry ring, pumping their fists and demanding to see my dick and prove that it’s hard.

DJ Shadow

Thursday, May 3rd, 2007

DJ Shadow’s show last week was like his latest album The Outsider, only in reverse: he started with a set of his heaviest psychedelic electronica, then stopped half-way through and brought out his friend Lateef The Truth Speaker for a set of danceable hip-hop and party music. I love both sides of Shadow’s personality, and the show was amazing. The tacky venue seemed a poor choice for the first set; I wanted to be sitting in a dark room in a comfortable chair to better follow the trip of shadows through my mind. But when Shadow and The Truth Speaker rocked the house, almost everyone was dancing.

Of course, I’m not doing DJ Shadow justice by describing him as some kind of genre schizophrenic. The fact that he’s an accepted, even celebrated, white DJ in the world of hip-hop is just one of the ways he crosses boundaries. Shadow says The Outsider is so named because he doesn’t fit in anywhere, and on albums like UNKLE’s Psyence Fiction he combines the best of two worlds into a seamless blend, countering electronica’s tendencies toward navel-gazing and fantasy with the reality and power of hip-hop, then countering hip-hop’s tendencies towards vapidity and excess with electronica’s bite and intellect. And I’m just talking about two genres here: The Outsider also explores spoken word, soul, blues, punk and guitar-driven pop.

In the fourth edition of their Album Guide, Rolling Stone says, “Shadow’s grooves are all slow-motion tension and release … his best tracks take their time to let the momentum build.” That’s also true of his shows. Rather than just playing his songs straight, the way you’d hear them on his albums, he re-mixed his own work, guiding the audience, Moses-like, through 40 years of wilderness, then finally setting us free in the land of milk and honey with dancing and rejoicing. For his encore, he waited until it seemed we couldn’t clap and cheer for him anymore, then came back out and rewarded us by mixing together two of his most sublime songs, “You Can’t Go Home Again” from The Private Press and “Nursery Rhyme / Breather” from Psyence Fiction. And I mean sublime in the Romantic sense: the songs are as beautiful as they are terrifying, and like the end of a good novel, they closed the concert on a note of hard-won transcendence.

But maybe you can go home again. Shadow, who’s from the area, explained that he was on tour without new material because his last tour didn’t stop in Sacramento. “I used to hang out in Arden Fair mall back when it was just one-story,” he said. “Anyone remember that?” I do.

APE 2007

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2007

I managed to get sick the Friday night before this year’s Alternative Press Expo, so exhibiting Saturday and Sunday turned into a test of physical endurance. However, I’m happy to report that not only did I make it but that I also had a lot of fun. And then I vomited on myself on the way home.

Even though this was my second year as an exhibitor, I was there first and foremost as a fan. There’s always new, hard to find stuff (at least in Sacramento) at the Drawn and Quarterly table, so I picked up the latest issues of Peepshow by Joe Matt, Optic Nerve by Adrian Tomine and Atlas by Dylan Horrocks, three of my favorite cartoonists. They also had a new collection of Kevin Huizenga’s short stories, Curses, which, along with the three comics listed above, I bought as soon as I could. Huizenga was actually there as one of APE’s special guests and gave a presentation Saturday on his work. Since I had a table I couldn’t go, but I did manage to catch him before he went in and got him to sign my copy of Curses and Kramer’s Ergot 5, which contains his excellent short story, “Jeepers Jacobs,” about an older religious man who becomes concerned with the eternal welfare of a younger man who has stopped going to church. I asked Huizenga about it, which prompted him to ask me what I think happens to the damned after death, and this sketch in my copy of Kramer’s:

I also got to meet the legendary Art Spiegelman and have him sign my copies of Maus, In the Shadow of No Towers and, along with Francoise Mouly, Raw Vol. 2 No. 3. Spiegelman was at the Fantagraphics table signing autographs at $5 a pop for the their legal defense fund against Harlan Ellison’s pending libel suit. Despite the long line and the harried look on his face, Spiegelman was very polite and professional, and meeting him was a real pleasure. In the past I wondered if I would ever meet him since he seems so planted on the East Coast and I on the West Coast (I’ve only been to NYC once, Boston and Washington D.C. never), so I suppose at least one good thing has come out of the lawsuit, right?

In the past I’ve been somewhat blinded by all the bigger names, publishers and books at APE, so this year I spent a lot of time looking around, buying as much one-of-a-kind material as I could. I haven’t finished reading all the comics I bought or traded for my own comics, so I’ll save my reviews for another blog. I will say, however, that I can now live in hope of avoiding grown-up clothes by dressing entirely in super cute cartoon tees, and avoid grown-up home décor by stocking my shelves with hand-made dolls and covering my walls with awesome posters.

But the best part of APE, or any convention, for that matter (besides people buying my comics and merchandise), was making new connections and strengthening old ones. At the Last Gasp mixer Friday night I met Alec Toczynski and his friend Zora, who were exhibiting at APE for the first time. I was surprised to learn he’d read my comics, but never bought them, at Comic Relief! Zora did so well on Saturday selling her handmade couture that, rather than going out that night as they planned, she went home to make more! I was also lucky enough this year, just like last year, to be surrounded at my table by talented, fun people. I shared a table with Mike Galande and Argel Brown, creators of I Heart Mitch. This was also their first year at APE, but they proved themselves worthy by bringing candy, booze and jokes. You can read Mike’s APE reports here and here. The tremendously talented Woody Miller and his super fun wife Jessica were at the table next to me, constituting the first of many Sacramento (area) connections I made at APE (he’s from Grass Valley, and they’re planning to move back there soon). Woody’s skills made me jealous, but he and Jessica made up for it by sharing espresso beans and lending emotional support when I needed it most (see first paragraph).

As for strengthening old connections, Sacramento’s own Aaron “I hate you with the fire of a thousand suns” Winters was there, and he dragged the Abide Visuals Multimedia Juggernaut down with him, including Sacramento artists Skinner and Sandor. I already knew Skinner and Sandor, but not well, so sharing a hotel room with them and Aaron Saturday night gave us all plenty of time to get to know each other. We slept in shifts, one of us asleep and snoring with the other three awake and exhausted. There was also a State Hornet cartoonists’ reunion: I finally got to meet the hilarious Avery Monsen and Jory John, creators of Big Stone Head. When I was variety page editor at the Hornet we syndicated their stuff, even though they didn’t go to Sac State. Cody Frost was also there. Although he wasn’t a Sac State student either when I published his comics, he did at least work for the Hornet as a graphic designer at the time.

From out of town, the Foxy Moron himself, Travis Fox, had a booth this year. He lived up to the “moron” part of his name by flying in and out of San Jose, rather than the much closer airports in Oakland and South San Francisco (I shouldn’t tease: I’m so directionally challenged I get lost in my own neighborhood). I got to spend some time with him at the con and at the Ink Pusher’s Ball, which was wild: not only was Matt Furie there doing live drawings of spectacle wearing vagina-testicles, but there was also a comedienne who ended up on all fours wearing a dog collar while getting spanked by a random member of the audience. I heart San Francisco! The Ball was put on by Travis’s pal and my new friend, the talented Matt Leunig, who shared a table with yet another Sacramento artist, Noir Amadeezy.

Like I said, I still have tons of comics to read, plus business cards, postcards and web sites to check out, so even if I didn’t talk about you here you’ll probably get an email or a myspace friend invitation from me in the next week or two, so watch out! Thanks to everyone who put APE together, everyone who exhibited or attended, and especially to everyone who stopped by my table. See you next year!