Friday Music

….and here we go: The first Friday Music post of 2010!

We recently finished watching the UK series Misfits, about a group of young offenders in a work crew who get struck by lightning during a strange storm, and develop superpowers. Fun stuff, and some really excellent music as well. The theme to the show, for example, is this track: The Rapture – “Echoes.”

One of the episodes featured a club scene, spotlighting this great example of Grime (the UK’s home-grown electronic/dance-music based variety of hip-hop, which I’ve posted about before): Skepta – “Rolex Sweep (Vandalism Mix).”

Excellent series — give it a go if you haven’t seen it yet.

Track from the Canadian band You Say Party! We Say Die!, from their third album, XXXX, released in late September. Twin Peaks reference, retro-80s sound (seriously — very OMD), and a female vocalist — Sign me up! You Say Party! We Say Die! – “Laura Palmer’s Prom.”

Speaking of retro — for a new year, I’m doing an awful lot of listening to old music. Over the holidays, I picked up a real gem — A 4-CD set of music from the immortal Stiff Records, the label responsible for ushering in the late-70s/turn-of-the-80s post-punk/new-wave movement in the UK. A lot of great stuff on this collection: Elvis Costello, Ian Drury & the Blockheads, Lene Lovitch, Madness… and several brilliant pieces by Stiff’s live-in producer and occasional solo act: Nick Lowe – “So It Goes.”

This is new, but it sounds old — another “super group” has reared its head: Them Crooked Vultures, a three-man jam formed by Josh Homme (Kyuss/Queens of the Stone Age), Dave Grohl (Nirvana/Foo Fighters) and John Paul Jones (Led Zeppelin). Straightforward 70s-esque quasi-psychedelic cock-rock — for example, check out this VERY Cream-influenced track: Them Crooked Vultures – “Scumbag Blues.”

Listening to that reminded me of the very Led-Zep influenced track from one of my favorite “almost-was” bands of the 80s, Zebra. I really expected these guys to be much, much bigger. I still regularly listen to their first album, which featured “Tell Me What You Want”, “One More Chance” and this track: Zebra – “Who’s Behind The Door?”

Lastly, here’s a symphonic metal track from the Dutch band Within Temptation — I have to admit that I have a soft spot for this genre. It’s almost genetically designed to be the background music for the most Awesome D&D campaign EVER! Within Temptation – “Ice Queen.”

There you go, kids. Copy-and-paste the links if they give you any trouble.

More next week….

Don’t You… Forget About Me….

“”Dear Batman:
We accept the fact that we had to sacrifice a whole Saturday in Bat-detention for whatever it is we did wrong, but we think you’re crazy for making us write an essay telling you who we think we are. You see us as you want to see us: in the simplest terms, in the most convenient definitions. But what we found out is that each one of us is an archer, and a speedster, and a swimmer, a princess, and an acrobat. Does that answer your question?
Sincerely yours, The Teen Titans.”

Comic-Album remix image by the amazing Cliff Chiang — click the link to check out a couple of other brilliant mash-ups. (My fave — Batgirl in Purple Rain: “maybe im just like my father 2 bold.”)

My DW:AITAS Campaign….



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EYES ONLY
DIAMOND ALPHA CLEARANCE

TO: S.G. BAN KI-MOON
FROM: GENERAL SIR ALISTAIR GORDON LETHBRIDGE-STEWART, UNIT D-OPS

RE: CRASH TEAMS

Following on from our previous discussion of 28 DEC (ATTACHED FILE REF: “NAISMITH/SAXON INCIDENT”), I am officially recommending the formation of specialized investigation and containment teams operating under UNIT direction, yet distinct from its command structure. These Critical Response And Special Handling teams (hereafter “CRASH Teams”) shall be UNIT’s first responders — tasked with investigation of potential incidents.

UNIT’s most successful period of operation came during The Doctor’s tenure as our Scientific Advisor (ATTACHED FILE REF: UNIT UK OPERATIONS, 1970s/80s), and I believe that more a personalized operational approach similar to that carried out during that period may lead to interdiction of threats before they reach the level requiring mobilisation of our full forces. In the case of the Naismith/Saxon incident, I am sure than an investigatory team would have been able to circumvent the acquisition of alien technology by the Naismiths, for example.

In short, Mr. Secretary, not every incident can be met by The Valiant.

To this end, I recommend the immediate recruitment of suitable individuals, and formation of up to 6 teams with worldwide jurisdiction. I have attached a list of potential candidates — all extraordinary in their own way. I feel that drawing candidates from outside the pool of UNIT personnel may provide the same sort of iconiclastic approach that our former Scientific Advisor brought to proceedings.

It is a new century, after all, and perhaps a new approach is needed — or perhaps, sir, it is an old approach.

Yours in service,

GENERAL SIR ALISTAIR GORDON LETHBRIDGE-STEWART

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