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Plant+Krauss, Replacements, Moby Grape, Crouching Kitty, Hidden Chipmunk   Printer-friendly page   Send this story to someone
Wednesday, January 02, 2008 - 08:00 AM
Posted by: Karl

Karl

ROBERT PLANT & ALISON KRAUSS make rootsy music in a disco-ball filled room (and other sets) in this new clip for "Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved On)."  BTW, Robert Plant has the beard of the year, according to the Beard Liberation Front, an informal network of beard wearers.

LED ZEPPELIN:  Unsubstantiated rumors have resurfaced about the band headlining the next Bonnaroo festival.

THE REPLACEMENTS, Live at CBGB's - October 12, 1984, marks rbally's official return to semi-regular blogging.  You can jukebox the gig via the ol' HM.

RADIOHEAD picked a boutique label for the non-download Canadian release of In Rainbows.  Remember, you can stream the album this week via Spinner, if you didn't do the "pay what you want" download.

JAMES BROWN:  The legal feud over the Godfather of Soul's estate is stalling the release of his final recordings.

IDA MARIA is kinda... intense in the video for "Oh My God."

THE INDUSTRY:  New York magazine has a piece on the record labels' continuing war against file-sharing and album leaks, including the claim that that it is illegal for someone who has legally purchased a CD to transfer that music into his or her computer.  It's enough to get people wondering whether the RIAA will die in 2008.

VICTORIA BERGSMAN -- former Concretes frontwoman and the female voice on Peter, Bjorn and John's "Young Folks" -- gets an audio feature for her solo LP on All Things Considered at NPR.

MOBY GRAPE:  The pop-psych band's decades-long streak of bad luck continues, but you can stream a killer live take on "Omaha" at the link.

PETE DOHERTY has denied that he's going to spill the beans on life with his ex, Kate Moss.

THE McCARTNEYS:  Heather Mills says she will have to sell the £3.25million mansion Sir Paul bought her -- to pay the legal bills for her divorce.  Which would be more believable if she had not thrown a £30,000 New Year's party.

PAMELA ANDERSON tells People magazine that she still has plenty of problems after filing for divorce and announcing a reconciliation with third husband Rick Salomon.  On her website, she asks, "What's the definition of insanity?"  Some define insanity as doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.  Anderson also told People her plans for 2008 are "More of the same. More excitement, more fun."  So expect more train-wreckage this year.

MISCHA BARTON was such a diva as she was preparing to host Saturday's grand opening of the CatHouse Loungerie club at the Luxor in Las Vegas, the owners were happy when she was arrested for DUI last week and canceled her appearance.

KATE MOSS has decided to move her new nanny into her new home in a bid to curb her hell-raising lifestyle.

JUDE LAW has been haunted by the ghost of Frank Sinatra in Cuba.  Law he reportedly saw a vision of Ol' Blue Eyes raiding his hotel mini-bar after celebrating his 35th birthday at Havana's Hotel Nacional de Cuba on Saturday.  So there clearly was some sort of spirit involved in the incident.

JUNO had the second-biggest haul ever for an indie flick last Friday.  Award prognosticator Tom O'Neill thinks that success makes it a heavyweight contender for an Oscar best-pic nomination and that star Ellen Page may be emerging as the best-actress frontrunner.  Fox Searchlight is upping its rollout to 2000 screens this weekend.

PAKISTAN:  In a dramatic U-turn, the government apologized for claiming that former premier Bhutto died of a skull fracture after hitting the sunroof of her car during a suicide attack.  Bhutto was slain just hours before she was to go public with "proof" that Pakistani intelligence and electoral officials were planning to rig polls, an official from her party said on Tuesday.  However, there is no evidence of a causal link.

IRAN:  The L.A. Times reports that no one really knows who is running the country.  Energy Minister Parviz Fattah says Iran is constructing its first homemade 360-megawatt nuclear plant in Khuzestan province.  And Russia continues to resist any further sanctions against Iran for failing to comply with UN resolutions regarding its nuclear program.

IRAQ:  Milbogger Tony Sidoti had a Blackhawk's-eye view of New Year's Eve in Baghdad: "Sure, flying low over the city in a helicopter while people are shootings fireworks and weapons into the air isn't the greatest place to be, but the beauty and energy coming up from the streets far outweighed my fears."  Coalition forces captured the Special Groups recruiter for Karbala Province and 21 al Qaeda operatives during operations in central and northern Iraq. The Iraqi Army arrested 40 al Qaeda fighters, including a Saudi national, in northern Babil and another six in Haditha. Police captured an al Qaeda leader and two aides in Baqubah.

CROUCHING KITTY, HIDDEN CHIPMUNK:  An epic confrontation.

A BARN OWL is flying in the rings for the bride and groom at a wedding in Denbighshire.  The owl has experience from its day job delivering mail to Hogwarts.

TINK, a Pomeranian-Chihuahua, nabbed fugitives, made them drop their chalupas.

CODY, a Sheltie, treed a mountain lion in San Juan Capistrano.

PTERODACTYL blamed for a one-car accident in Wenatchee, Wash.  I suppose that would be startling.

9870 Reads

New Year, New Releases, Hendrix, Beck, Knut Update   Printer-friendly page   Send this story to someone
Tuesday, January 01, 2008 - 08:00 AM
Posted by: Karl

Karl

WELCOME... TO THE NEW YEAR:  You can stream a live version of Pate's "New Year" (and three others from the 2003 reunion) at PateSpace.

U2:  Crushingly obvious, I know.

NEW RELEASES from Radiohead and Interpol are streaming in full via Spinner.

JIMI HENDRIX plays "Auld Lang Syne," live at the Fillmore on New Year's Day, 1970.

BEST of 2007:  You can listen to KEXP's Top 90.3 Albums of the Year, as voted on by the station's listeners.  You can access the entire playlist, too; just enter Dec. 28, 2007, between 10 a.m.-5 p.m.  If you're not strictly indie, you may want to check Metacritic's 30 Best-Reviewed Albums of the Year; if you keep scrolling there, you'll find even more lists.  And if you're even less strictly indie -- like Friend of Pate Sylvia Hauser -- you can stream tracks from the Top Ten Blues Albums of 2007, according to WXPN.

R.E.M. frontman Michael Stipe says the band's focus is back and razor-sharp on their new album. Accelerate, due in April.  Stipe elsewhere has called it "a big change."

ABBA wishes you a "Happy New Year."  Mildly paradoxical, I know.  Anyway, for a "happy" song its seems a bit downbeat, so I'll toss in "Take A Chance On Me" for your Twofer Tuesday.

BECK has announced the deluxe re-release of his landmark 1996 album, Odelay, due at month's end.

ARCTIC MONKEYS have revealed their 2008 New Year's resolutions to the NME.  Which reminds me...

OTIS & CARLA: "New Year's Resolution."

DECISION '08:  With the Iowa caucuses imminent, I note this WSJ piece on presidential campaign playlists, with mockery from Idolator

OLDSTAND:  SPIN magazine''s July 1989 issue is reviewed at the 'Gum.

MUSIC LAWYERS take a look at major label "360-degree" deals, under which the labels share a piece of most -- if not all -- of the artists' rights in all types of revenue streams, not just record sales, but also concert tickets and t-shirts.

LINDSAY LOHAN was... wait for it... caught canoodling three men in a 24-hour span, as documented by the Daily Mail.  Remember, ex-bf Riley Giles recently told the uber-reliable News of the World that Li-Lo has traded her dangerous drug habit for a manic addiction to sex.

BRITNEY SPEARS faced fresh humiliation as Fed-Ex was spotted cozying up to the French Hotel.  Even funnier, K-Fed dismissed the heirhead... for now.  OK! magazine reports that the pop tart and her two young sons planned to ring in 2008 with her new beau - paparazzo Adnan Ghalib, who, sources tell OK!, happens to be a married man.

JAMIE LYNN SPEARS:  Britney's 16-year-old knocked up sister meets Juno at the Gallery of the Absurd.

MADONNA & GUY RICHIE have sent aides to Cambodia to shop for a new daughter, according to London's Sun.

MISCHA BARTON:  A police source told TMZ that the ex-O.C. hottie blew a .12 on her breathalyzer, and admitted to smoking pot earlier on the day of her DUI arrest.

KEIRA KNIGHTLEY has vowed never to live in Hollywood because it's a city with a one-track mind -- comments well-timed for awards season.  The 22-year-old actress was voted the top beauty icon for women in a UK chain store poll.  Meanwhile, her friends bet on how long it will be before she manages to keep her clothes on before a camera.

J-LO is struggling to control her hormones during pregnancy, and is reportedly planning to follow Scientology guidelines when she gives birth next year.

TOE-SUCKING:  Sting and Nicollette Sheridan are among those following the path of fmr Clinton pollster Dick Morris.

2007 POP CULTURE POLL, courtesy of Parade magazine.  Categories inlcude most annoying celebrity, hottest Jolie-Pitt, hottest Clinton, most shocking celeb story, and more...

PEOPLE WHO DIED, courtesy of AOL News.

FOREIGN POLICY GOES GLAM:  Daniel W. Drezner, bogger and associate professor of international politics at the Fletcher School at Tufts University, asks, "Should celebrities set the global agenda?"

PENELOPE & MONICA CRUZ dub scenes from a lesbian pr0n film into Spanish in their brother's latest music video.  NTTAWWT.  Yes, it's Gratuitous Tuesday.

THE STATE OF JIHAD, 2007 is surveyed by Bill Roggio at the Long War Journal.

PAKISTAN:  An American Arms Control Association report concludes that there is little reason to worry about Pakistan's nuclear weapons.  But just in case, US special forces snatch squads are on standby to seize or disable Pakistan's nukes in the event of a collapse of government authority or the outbreak of civil war following the assassination of Benazir Bhutto.

IRAN's first nuclear plant will start operating in mid-2008, Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said on Sunday.  Turkmenistan has stopped natural gas exports to Iran, causing winter shortages in some parts of the country, Iranian officials said on Monday.  The major Central Asia producer blamed technical problems but some Iranian media reports suggested it had halted deliveries because it wanted to raise the price of gas.  The latter seems plausible in light of Iran's soaring inflation.

IRAQ:  As 2008 arrived in a less-violent Baghdad, residents said it was the first real party they had seen in years.  US forces captured a wanted AQ leader in Kirkuk.  Sunni tribal and political leaders singled out as "traitors" by Osama bin Laden have hit back, accusing him of being un-Islamic and mocking him as being weak.  The Marines' accused leader in the 2005 killings of 24 civilians in Haditha will face voluntary manslaughter charges but not more serious murder charges.

KNUT UPDATE:  The once-cuddly polar bear cub is to star in an animated Hollywood movie by the maker of the Garfield films in a deal that could net Berlin Zoo €3.5 million.  However, my favorite part of the story concerns Knut's ongoing relationship with his keeper, Thomas Dörflein: "Media speculation that Knut may eventually eat Dörflein has so far proved unfounded..."

THE SQUIRREL THREAT:  Militant squirrels (and pitbulls) are getting their own suits of armor.

A FISH FANATIC has become the first man in the world to breed rare stingrays in his living room.

BRITISH BADGERS may be whacked en masse to curb a tuberculosis epidemic in cattle.

A BEAGLE and TWO LAB MIXES inherited an 800K estate, and look forward to spaghetti night.

3076 Reads

Raveonettes, Okkervil River, St. Vincent, Cheating Greyhound   Printer-friendly page   Send this story to someone
Monday, December 31, 2007 - 08:00 AM
Posted by: Karl

Karl

THE RAVEONETTES:  Sune Rose Wagner talked to AFP about getting back to the band's minimalist roots, and it doesn't get much more minimal than he and Sharin Foo playing "Dead Sound" in a Black Cab Session.  (Thx, Chromewaves.)

BEST of 2007:  The Times of London lists Songs of the Year in several genres.  NPR is streaming tracks from the Top 10 Great Unknown Artists of 2007 (though regular visitors here will recognize a few).  At Sound Opinions, you can stream 2007 mixtapes from Windy City music critics Greg Kot and Jim DeRogatis.   And don't forget Largehearted Boy's updated list of lists.

2008:  The NYDN looks ahead to notable future releases, including an album from the North Mississippi AllStars, produced by Jim Dickinson.

OKKERVIL RIVER did a chat and mini-set (incl. a John Cale cover) at KUT's Studio 1A, which you can stream on demand via NPR.

CONCERT TICKET GENERATOR... and timewaster.  (Thx, Ken King.)

ACE FREHLEY showed his true face to DC's Express, which was probably a mistake.  But Pate bassist Mike Kelly should enjoy it.

THE APPLES IN STEREO have a new video for "Eyes Open" that combines live footage with recent advances in aviation.  It should be right up Craig O'Neill's alley.

BLACK REBEL MOTORCYCLE CLUB:  Robert Been talks to the Sydney Morning Herald about touring, playing with the Jesus & Mary Chain, heroes and more.

ST. VINCENT:  I forgot to post Annie Clark's in-store performance at Other Music last month, but it's still just as good today.

LILY ALLEN has turned down the chance to launch her own range of maternity wear because she thinks it will send out the wrong message to young girls.

AMY WINEHOUSE jetted off to the Caribbean for an impromptu holiday to see in the new year, but will appear in a Norwegian court to appeal her drug conviction on Leap Day.

WEEKEND BOX OFFICE:  National Treasure: Book of Secrets remained atop the chart in its second weekend, but the real story this weekend is the adorable Juno, which vaulted into fifth place after expanding to 998 screens, and had the highest perscreen average in the Top Ten.  Juno has already made 25 million, which has to be a multiple of its cost.  Other winners this week included the unacclaimed Alvin and the Chipmunks, as well as Charlie Wilson's War, P.S. I Love You, and Enchanted -- all of which increased their receipts over last weekend.  This was especally important for Charlie Wilson's War, which may now be profitable if award nominations keep folks coming.  The news was less good for Alien Vs. Predator - Requiem and The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep, which debuted in sixth and seventh places, Sweeey Todd, which dropped from fifth to ninth, and Walk Hard, which dropped out of the Top Ten.  I saw Atonement and Paul Thomas Anderson's There Will Be Blood over the weekend, so I'll be blurbing them post-holidays, as traffic returns to normal.

ANNUAL BOX OFFICE:  Hollywood's revenue incread on higher ticket prices, but ticket sales were flat, and down 12 percent from the record of 1.61 billion in 2002.  Sales and attendance both were up through Labor Day, boosted by 14 summer sequels, but tanked afterward.  It turns out there were not huge audiences for anti-war movies or The Golden Compass.  Who'da thunkit?

WRITERS' STRIKE:  The Late Show With David Letterman and The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson, will return to the air on January 2nd fully staffed with scribes, but the controversy has already started.  BTW, I wonder whether -- if the strike drags on long enough -- that people will move on to cable, Netflix, etc. to a degree that the writers' strike ends up like the last baseball strike.  How would Hollywood recover?  Baseball did it with steroids, so maybe Hollywood will do it with unnaturally large breast implants.

CLOVERFIELD:  J.J. Abrams has put several minutes from the "Blair Godzilla" movie online.  And the trailer for his Star Trek reboot will run before the pic when it opens on 01-18-08.

BRADGELINA:  Jolie tops a Reuters poll of the best celebrity humanitarians of 2007.

NICOLE KIDMAN & KEITH URBAN are expecting their first baby, accrding to the Daily Mail.  Kidman's rep rubbishes the report: "It is incorrect . . . she must have had about 30 babies by now."  Kidman ceratinly won't give it away until she's showing; that Botoxed brow gives the perfect poker face.

JIMMY FALLON:  The former SNL funnyman married girlfriend Nancy Juvonen, a Hollywood producer who worked on Fallon's 2005 romantic comedy Fever Pitch.

MARILYN MANSON:  Officially divorced from burlesque dancer Dita Von Teese.

HAYDEN PANETTIERE & MILO VENTIMIGLIA:  The Heroes co-stars are officially a couple.  She's 18; He's 30.  NTTAWWT.

JENNA FISCHER & DAVID SPADE:  Unofficially dating, according to the ever-reliable Star magazine.  She's 33; He's 43.  Don't underestimate the power of funny.

SEAN PENN:  Unofficially dining with a mystery brunette four days before filing for a divorce from Robin Wright Penn.  She's "very young, very attractive"; he's 47.

JIB-JAB rolled out its 2007 Year In Review, albeit with a soundtack that is so last century.

PAKISTAN:  Dramatic new video of the assassination of fmr Prime Minister Bhutto emerged Sunday, showing her slumping just after gunshots ring out.  The Pakistan government already offered to exhume her body.  Get your grassy knoll on.  Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party chose her 19-year-old son and her husband as co-leaders of the party.  The other main opposition party, led by Nawaz Sharif, another former prime minister, also decided Sunday to call off his previously announced boycott of the upcoming election.

IRAN has witnessed more than 240 protests during the past month, organized by various groups and segments of society against the policies of the Iranian government.

IRAQ:  At the start of December, the AQ-linked Islamic State in Iraq ordered a renewed bombing campaign against Iraqi security forces.  At month's end, we find that there was a slight uptick in suicide bombings, but that overall violence in Iraq has dropped to levels not seen on a sustained basis since the summer of 2005.  Iraq's interior ministry spokesman claimed that 75 percent of AQI's terrorist network had been destroyed this year, but that claim could not be independently verified and he did not elaborate on how the percentage was determined.  The Baghdad Zoo has been revitalized by US support troops.  General David Petraeus was named The Sunday Telegraph's Person of the Year.

GREYHOUND cheats at the track.  Let's go to the video.

THE SQUIRREL THREAT:  A militant squirrel is to blame for a quiet Midway, FL, neighborhood being awakened Thursday to cop cars and an armed SWAT team.

LUCKY KITTEN saved by mouth-to-mouth and heart massage from nurse mandy Wood.  The pic at the link suggests Lucky could be a candidate for the Cats Who Look Like Hitler website.

ALFIE the AFGHAN:  Saved by a shearing.

MONKEY in a HAT on a PLANE dies in quarrantine.

YEAR-END WEIRD QUIZ, courtesy of Metro.  BONUS:  Top 11 Weird Stories and poll, according to AOL News.

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JB, Kinks, Iowa Comps, Jens Lekman, Cutout Bin, Sheep-Pig   Printer-friendly page   Send this story to someone
Friday, December 28, 2007 - 08:00 AM
Posted by: Karl

Karl

THE WEEKEND STARTS HERE:

...with JAMES BROWN!  The Godfather of Soul took his final curtain call last Christmas, so what better way to get ready for a new year than to watch him Live at the Olympia Theatre - Paris, France March 8th, 1971.  Or the 1987 British TV documentary, "The Story of James Brown" (Part 2 - Part 3 - Part 4 - Part 5 - Part 6), if you prefer a variety of performances over the decades.  Funk legend William "Bootsy" Collins is staging a tribute concert to his mentor near Cincinnati on Saturday, so I thought you might want to check out JB and Bootsy together on "Sex Machine."   "Dean of Rock Critics" Robert Christgau spoke about JB at a scholarly memorial at Princeton, which you can stream via NPR.  BONUS:  JB's "Funky Drummer" is probably the most sampled drum loop of all time; Sample Spotters has an admittedly incomplete listing of just how pervasive even a few seconds of JB can be.

THE KINKS' original lineup plans to play together for the first time in nearly four decades in 2008, according to frontman Ray Davies.

OF MONTREAL, coincidentally, covers The Kinks' "Days," which YANP has posted along with an embedded concert video.

JENS LEKMAN did a three-song Take-Away show for La Blogotheque in Portland.

THE IOWA COMPILATIONS -- including tracks from Pate, The Eclectics, The Dangtrippers, Moveable Feast, and more --have been posted at Nothin' Sez Somethin'. (Thanks, Ken King!)

RADIOHEAD will be webcasting "a pre-recording of some songs and other bits" on New Year's Eve.

THE WOMBATS are "Moving to New York."  They're from Liverpool, but don't call it an invasion.

THE WEAKERTHANS frontman John K. Samson talked to Canada's JAM! about winter, work ethics, and his love affair with Winnipeg.

FIERY FURNACES are premiering a new video for "Duplexes of the Dead" over at the 'Gum.

PATTI SMITH:  The always outspoken poet-singer-songwriter talked about the selections on her covers album with DC's Express.

REST of 2007:  The A.V. Club lists "The Least Essential Albums of 2007."  The NY Press takes potshots at Ten Overrated Critical Faves of 2007 (a list with which I generally disagree, but it's still funny).

CUTOUT BIN:  This Friday's fortuitous finds -- from Moldy Peaches to the 'Mats, from The Jam to the Jackson 5, from Arcade Fire to ABBA -- can be streamed individually or jukeboxed at the new Pate page on the ol' HM.

MISCHA BARTON, formerly of The O.C., is the latest Hollywood hottie to be busted for DUI, possession of narcotics and driving on a suspended license.  US Weekly asks the obvious question and gets an interesting answer.

REBECCA DeMORNAY, the hooker with a heart of gold from Risky Business, was charged with two counts of misdemeanor DUI, stemming from her October 30 arrest.

JAMIE LYNN SPEARS:  The anonymous "entertainment lawyer" who had the 16-year-old's rumored pregnancy in a blind item in October claims Britney wants the 100K currently being offered for new photos of Jamie.

LINDSAY LOHAN, meanwhile, has her ex-bf selling photos he took of her while they were together.  Classy!  Li-Lo denies consuming alcohol or any type of drug before her 2005 Beverly Hills car crash.

JESSICA ALBA is set to wed her longtime boyfriend Cash Warren, according to her her rep.  Cue Vader again.

JENNIFER ANISTON knocked up by Jason Lewis?  Inquiring minds want to know.

NOW SHOWING:  This weekend's wide releases mostly opened on Tuesday, including: The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep, which is currently scoring 71 percent on the ol' Tomatometer; Alien Vs. Predator - Requiem, which is currently scoring 13 percent; and Denzel Washington's The Great Debaters, which is scoring 76 percentJuno, which I raved about yesterday, has expanded to 998 screens, so let's call it wide to remind you of its 94 percent score.

THE WRITERS' STRIKE:  Though I am generally sympathetic to the writers' plight, a recent piece by Steve Boriss at PJM explains why the studios are hanging tough.

SEAN PENN & ROBIN WRIGHT PENN:  Dunzo, after 11 years of marriage.

MICHELLE WILLIAMS & RYAN GOSLING were spotted enjoying a romantic meal in NYC, according to the ever-reliable Star magazine.

THE HILTONS could be likely to contest the will of Hotel magnate Barron Hilton, after he announced that he's leaving 97% of his wealth to charity.  Of course, they really cannot do that before he dies, can they?

VANESSA HUDGENS & ZAC EFRON ate still making High School Music with each other, most recently at Hollywood's hottest hole-in-the-wall, Lola's, which apparently forgot about the drinking age being 21.

BRANDY:  According to TMZ, the hang-up in deciding whether to file vehicular manslaughter charges against the singer-actress is that Brandy may have been a victim, not a culprit.

GRATUITOUS FRIDAY:  Having behaved myself for the holidays, it's time for six naked Victoria's Secret supermodels.  And all sorts of Marisa Tomei nudity fdrom Sidney Lumet's latest movie, Before The Devil Knows You're Dead.

PAKISTAN:  Benazir Bhutto was assassinated, icymi (though that would have been tough to do).  A spokesperson for the al-Qaeda terrorist network has claimed responsibility for the murder.  US intell officials say they cannot confirm the report, but Russia's Foreign Ministry called Bhutto's death a terror attack.  You can read varying obituaries from London's Telegraph and Christopher Hitchens.  Nawaz Sharif, an Islamist sympathizer and opponent of Pres. Musharraf -- who one might expect to benefit from Bhutto's death -- announced his party was boycotting next month's elections.  Earlier Thursday, at a different political rally in the same city, a rooftop sniper opened fire on supporters of Sharif, leaving four people dead and at least five injured.  Given the tense relations between Pakistan and India, you can find lots of coverage at NDTV.  Author Aaron Mannes argues that a real investigation of the assassination is needed, while recognizing it likely will not happen.  Meanwhile, US Special Forces were already set to increase their presence in Pakistan amid assessments that the country is to become the central battlefield for al Qaeda as it is driven from Iraq.

IRAQ:  The Washington Post reports on competing Shiite factions in Iraq, while IraqPundit notes the elephant in the story.  The L.A. Times reports on the US nudging Iraqi officials to stop turning to US forces for services and logistics such as fuel deliveries and clinic construction, and to begin working through the relevant ministries in Baghdad.  Michael Yon has a new dispatch from Anbar, as well as a thank-you letter to America from LTC Jim Crider, the commander of the 1-4 CAV soldiers based at FOB Falcon in southern Baghdad (one of the more restive areas, iirc).  The Iraqi Army claims to have captured the minister of defense of the Islamic State of Iraq, al Qaeda's political front organization.

SHEEP-PIG:  A shaggy hog story.  Does whatever a sheep-pig can

PEACHES the WOMBAT was a little too tubby for a flower pot at an Aussie wildlife rehabilitation center.

THE SIBERIAN TIGER that mauled three visitors at the San Francisco zoo, killing one, may have had inside help escaping from its den,

A DOG OWNER is taking on China's 30000 web censors by attacking the Beijing municipal government's regulations barring any dog over 14 inches high and restricting each family to only one dog.

THE TOP TEN NEW ORGANISMS OF 2007, courtesy of Wired magazine.

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Beatnix, Zep, Stu Murdoch, Smithereens, Movies, Pig Spleens   Printer-friendly page   Send this story to someone
Thursday, December 27, 2007 - 08:00 AM
Posted by: Karl

Karl

THE BEATNIX play "Stairway To Heaven."  This is today's must-click selection.

LED ZEPPELIN:  Speaking of which, Captain's Dead has the reunion concert, which you can jukebox via the ol' HM.  Not great quality, but alright.

SHOUT OUT LOUDS did a chat and mini-set at the World Cafe you can stream via NPR.

BEST of 2007:  At I Am Fuel..., Heather Browne is streaming tracks from her fave albums, which she'll be discussing at the World Cafe on New Year's Day.  New York magazine's Vulture blog has posted Pitchfork's Top 100 Tracks as a Pie Chart.  The Rawking Refuses To Stop has posted the Best (and the Rest) of the Songs of 2007, which you can jukebox via the ol' HM.

BRIAN WILSON talked with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette about being awarded one of this year's Kennedy Center Honors (telecast last night on CBS), favorite songs, meeting great people, etc.

BELLE & SEBASTIAN frontman Stu Murdoch has been scoring a movie titled God Help The Girl; you can stream a few songs from the soundtrack via the film's page on MySpace.  (Thx, Chromewaves.)

THE CAPSTAN SHAFTS:  Lo-fi, melancholic pop rocker Dean Wells is profiled in Crawdaddy! (Thanks, LHB.)  You can stream a few tracks online, too.

WILCO play "What Light" and "Impossible Germany" from Sky Blue Sky in their loft, because we did not have Twofer Tuesday yet this week.

SUFJAN STEVENS talked to the Sydney Morning Herald about being a youngest child, trying to control his output, and the effect of technology on humanity, among other things.  Yopu can watch him play and talk literature in Brooklyn via the 'Gum.

CAN'T GET IT OUT OF MY HEAD:  The IHT has a piece on earworms and musical memory.

THE SMITHEREEENS played some Christmas tunes and some of their hits at the World Cafe last week, now streaming on demand via NPR.

CHIP KIDD:  The acclaimed book cover designer (and author) is getting good reviews for his new band, Artbreak.  Kidd is best known for designing the iconic Jurassic Park cover and logo, but his designs for books like Naked (by David Sedaris) are equally striking in their own way.

SHANE MacGOWAN of The Pogues was profiled in the Guardian to mark his improbable 50th birthday on Christmas.

CHARLIE WILSON'S WAR is one of several movies I saw over the weekend, and was possibly the best of the lot.  Directed by Mike Nichols from a screenplay by Aaron Sorkin, this tale of the Afghan War against the Soviet Union plays even more like a screwball comedy than Primary Colors or The American President... and probably hits closer to the mark of how the US Congress works than many more serious pics.  Tom Hanks is not a particularly convincing Texan, but he is funny, which is more important here.  Julia Roberts is not given much to do as Wilson's conservative ex-fiancee Joanne Herirng, but Philip Seymour Hoffman is given plenty of scenery to chew as Gust Avrokotos, the Orthodox, but unorthodox CIA agent who supervised America's biggest covert war ever.

Some movie critics, like Roger Ebert and Newsweek's David Ansen, have criticized the movie as not stressing that the Afghan "freedom fighters" would later become the Taliban, but they are mistaken about this.  The Taliban were not on anyone's radar screen before 1994 - significantly after the events depicted in the movie. The screenplay misleadingly suggests that US support went only to the Tajik faction led by Ahmad Shah Massoud, when much more went to the virulently anti-American Pashtun, Gulbaddin Hekmatyar.  However, the story at the last link incorrectly claims that Hekmaytar established terrorist training camps in Afghanistan and Pakistan with Osama bin Laden and Abdul Rasul Sayaf.  To the contrary, Hekmaytar had become Prime Minister of Afghanistan, but was forced out of power by the Taliban in 1996 and went into exile in Iran until 2002.  OBL returned to Afghanistan in 1996, and cemented ties with the Taliban after they seized power; the camps came later.  So the story of Afghan "blowback" is considerably more complex than either the movie or its critics suggest.  The movie stays on solid ground by suggesting that the US erred greatly in leaving Afghanistan as a failed state.

JUNO:  Jamie Lynn Spears aside, if you think the story of a 16-year-old getting pregnant can't be as funny as it is poignant, think again.  Done badly, this could have turned into a low-budget after-school special, but Juno hits all the right notes -- primarily on the strength of the title performance by Ellen Page, but with really good support from almost all involved, particularly Jason Bateman as a putative adoptive father and J.K. Simmons as Juno's father.  The delightful indie soundtrack is just the icing on the cake.  This movie did not reach Top Ten on just 304 screens for no reason, so if it's playing near you, I highly recommend it.

WALK HARD: THE DEWEY COX STORY may disappoint at the box office, but that is all the worse for it being an enjoyable, if not gut-busting, send-up of music biopics like Walk The Line and Ray.  Indeed, you need not have seen these movies to enjoy Walk Hard.  John C. Reilly may not be a big enough name to open a movie (yet, anyway), but he sure can carry one, as he has to hit the dramatic notes of a biopic within the comic package... and sing.  Fortunately, the music is also up to the task; the title track was penned by early pate fave Marshall Crenshaw.  The downsides?  Too many of the jokes are too obvious, and Jenna Fischer is not given nearly enough to do (Kristen Wiig gets more as Cox's first wife and makes the most of it).

SWEENEY TODD:  I tell you right up front that most musicals leave me cold.  However, I do like Johnny Depp and Tim Burton, and this was playing across the corridor immediately after Walk Hard, so I made it a double-feature.  I would say the movie succeeds in what it sets out to accomplish; there's plenty of Sondheim, dark humor and fake blood.  I was unmoved, but if you're the sort who likes musicals -- and doesn't mind plenty of gore -- you might well enjoy it.

JAMIE LYNN SPEARS:  Multiple friends and family say the pregnant 16-year-old actress never wanted to be a star, with one family friend telling US Weekly that mama Lynne "treats her girls like a piggy bank."  The ever-reliable Star magazine insists that Casey Aldridge may not be the father.  Family members reportedly told Star that they believe the real father is a much older executive at her children's TV show, Zoey 101.

BRITNEY SPEARS could be fined or even jailed if she skips out on next week's court-ordered deposition in her ongoing child custody war with Fed-Ex.

EVA LONGORIA & TONY PARKER:  It looks increasingly like the paparazzi at X17 were taken by a hoaxer who accused Parker of cheating on Longoria and even fabricated herself.

THE FRENCH HOTEL:  The Hollywood heirhead's potential inheritance plunged after her grandfather Barron Hilton announced plans to donate 97 percent of his 2.3 billion dollar  fortune to charity.

BRADGELINA got their Christmas dinner at the McDonald's drive-thru window.  Jolie is reportedly treating the bulging veins on her arms, hands and forehead with caviar.

FERGIE & JOSH DUHAMEL are engaged?

QUEEN ELIZABETH II is the current star of the new Royal Channel on YouTube.  You can compare and contrast this year's Christmas Broadcast with her first such broadcast 50 years ago.

THE STANS:  In Afghanistan, the Brits and Afghans seem to be holding Musa Qala, which for 10 months until last weekend had been the most important stronghold of the Taliban in North Helmand.  More than 4500 Taliban insurgents have defected since 2005 and up to 4000 others have been killed in action against British and Canadian forces in southern Afghanistan, according to military intelligence sources.  Agents from MI6 entered secret talks with Taliban leaders despite Gordon Brown's pledge that Britain would not negotiate with terrorists, according to the Daily Telegraph.  Canadian Defense Minister Peter Mackay has accused Pakistan and Iran of supplying weapons to insurgents.  Suicide attacks are part of al Qaeda's plan to disrupt Pakistan's elections on Jan. 8.  Pakistani police stopped a 15-year-old boy they say was carrying a bomb made of dynamite and nails from gettnig into a rally by opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.

IRAN:  Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Russia's delivery of nuclear fuel to the Bushehr power station makes it unnecessary for Iran to pursue its enrichment program.  Nevertheless, Iran intends to continue its enrichment program, for the 19 nuclear plants it now claims it intends to build.  And Russia has agreed to sell Iran a surface-to-air missile system.  Meanwhile, the former commander of Iran's Revolutionary Guards has become the latest leading "conservative" to attack Pres. Ahmadinejad over the country's high inflation.

IRAQ:  Though violence is down significantly this year, AQI is continuing to target the local security forces formed by the Awakening movements in the Sunni regions in the central and northern regions in Iraq.  The Times of London reports on the Diyala Rescue Council, a mixed Sunni-Shiite force fighting AQI that so far is not part of the Concerned Local Citizens or Awakening militias.  Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, the commander of US forces south of Baghdad, warned Tuesday that Sunnis who fight AQI must be rewarded and recognized as legitimate members of Iraqi society -- or Iraq risks losing the hard-fought security gains of the past six months.  The NYDN has video of a carload of important AQI terrorists being shown to Allah by US Hellfire missiles.  A safer Baghdad rolled out the Baghdad Film Festival... though directors of the 40 foreign films at the festival stayed away.  Moreover, hardline Muslim extremists have forced many beauticians to move their trade underground.

CHARLIE the YORKIE swallowed a star-shaped Christmsas decoration.  X-Ray at the link.

WHITE RHINOS in Dublin swallowed holiday glitter to aid their fertility tests.

PIG SPLEENS confirm the National Weather Service three-month forecast for North Dakota.

MARCELLA the ELEPHANT assisted a marriage proposal at Blackpool Zoo, Lancashire.

SANDLER, a six-year-old border collie, saved his family from a fire, but perished trying to save the family's 17-year-old Australian shepherd.  Raja the cat escaped unharmed.

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