Showing posts with label Kara's Music Taste. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kara's Music Taste. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Confusion Is Next: The Sonic Youth Story by Alec Foege (St Martin's Press 1994)

Sonic Youth, too young to be punk and too old to be alternative, is the key to understanding and appreciating what happened between then and now. In 1981 Sonic Youth formed amid the burnt embers of punk's explosion and No Wave's fizzle. In 1990 the band enjoined Geffen, its current label, with Nirvana, the group who changed it all. This book is an attempt to tell the story of the last fifteen or so years in rock-music history through a band that, although it has yet to sell a million albums or become an MTV or commercial-radio mainstay, somehow embodies a sea change in American popular-culture tastes.

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Searching for the not so young soul rebels

[on whether punk music started in England or America]

Stevo: "I don't know who started it and I don't give a fuck. The one thing I do know is that we did it harder, we did it faster, and we definitely did it with more love, baby. You can't take that away from us." [SLC Punk!]
  • Patti Smith - 'Gloria' mp3
  • Richard Hell & The Voidoids - 'Blank Generation' mp3
  • The Damned - 'New Rose' mp3
  • The Outsiders - 'Calling On Youth' mp3
  • Tuesday, March 25, 2008

    Thought I'd write a post to annoy someone

    I was going to write a short blog about Simple Minds, but whilst undertaking my extensive research to flesh out the piece I spotted this instead via the original - I guess, the working - script of High Fidelity:

    A few minutes later - ROB AND DICK stand behind the counter. ROB holds a CD in his hand, and surveys the roaming customers with a semi-serious air of authority.

    ROB: I will now sell four copies of Cats and Dogs by the Royal Trux.

    DICK: Do it. Do it.

    ROB pops the CD in and it begins to play... He stands there with his arms folded, waiting. After a moment, a Customer approaches.

    CUSTOMER: (re: music) What is this?

    ROB: It's the Royal Trux.

    CUSTOMER: It's great.

    ROB: I know.

    Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know that Royal Trux's 'Inside Game' is featured later on in the film but it's not the same, is it? The Beta Band will always be associated with that film, whilst for most of us it will always be Royal who?