Archive for the ‘Tunes’ Category

Gaines

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Mogwai – I Know You Are But What Am I?

Gaines started collecting aloe vera plants after returning from his year with the peace corps in Bolivia.

It started small, like all life’s obsessions do. A few days after moving into his tidy two-bedroom apartment, a frumpy old lady from next door showed up and knocked on the door. She didn’t say much beyond “Hello” before shoving a small aloe plant out from her squat frame into Gaines’ arms. Then she turned briskly and walked away, presumably to scold school children.

Gaines looked at his house-warming gift, flicked the rosette idly, and put it in a window where it would get plenty of sunlight.

As the months passed, his windows filled with more aloe, some pots hanging from hooks he drilled into the ceiling.

When the frumpy lady moved away, Gaines bought that apartment too. The neighbors saw the sunlamps and honestly just assumed he was growing pot in there. Instead he grew rows and rows of aloe.

Whenever anything bad happened, Gaines had a tendency to write it off, saying, “Well, that’s life I suppose.” He said ‘suppose’, but he knew. Sometimes for all the tenderness and care you gave a plant, it just wanted to wilt. Some plants wanted to live and some wanted to die, and all he could do was let those that wanted to live thrive.

As Gaines’ bushy eyebrows grew white and wild, drooping down the sides of his face, the rows of aloe grew straight and strong. Thick leaf-stems reached bravely toward the ceiling, like the arms of Christians eager to touch the face of their creator.

Gaines used aloe for everything. He made aloe toothpaste (good for the gums!), he devised an aloe bubble bath formula, he rubbed pure aloe onto his face every morning in lieu of moisturizer, he jotted down several dozen recipes that called for healthy doses of aloe.

Every morning, Gaines wakes up and stretches his sinewy arms and stalky legs, walks around both apartments with his upright posture, and waters the plants. Each has a name, which Gaines repeats in greeting with the familiarity of a Hail Mary.

He isn’t sure who will take care of his plants when he dies, which can only be a few more months now. But he’s sure that whatever really wants to live will keep on doing so, with or without him.

[Buy the newly-released live album, Special Moves, which reminds me of one of the greatest concerts I have ever attended.]

[Picture by Glenn Jones.]

You should hear the wind at my window

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Sunset Rubdown – Three Colors (Daytrotter)

I want a girl who’s excitable and quits her job suddenly and bites my earlobe in public and lets me take pictures of her topless and calls me ‘Dahlin‘ and fucks up her haircut on purpose just to see if strangers on the street will say anything and has an obnoxious laugh which she unleashes without self-consciousness and never turns down a triple-dog dare and plays a few bars on every piano she sees and leaves notes in between the pages of library books and listens to Sunset Rubdown.

[Buy Sunset Rubdown albums and become that girl.]

So what about Breakfast At Tiffany’s?

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Deep Blue Something – Breakfast At Tiffany’s

Watching that cab meter ticking ten cents on top of every dollar is enough to let you know your night wasn’t worth the fare. Eagerly asking “What was that?” when the driver is just talking into his hands-free headset is around that same sort of vibe. Dead skin and drooping eyes and not a lick of decent alcohol swirling in your system. And then this kind of song comes through the radio and you remember how the city used to be this incredible twist of lights and buildings and unexplored streets when you were a kid sitting in the backseat with your pops maneuvering along the dotted-line tar. [Buy 11th Song.]

(illustration by Céline Meisser)

This isn’t about you.

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The National – Sorrow

…remember that time we walked past each other outside that concert last year? It was pretty awkward, pretending not to know who you were. With our history, it was probably the best response at the time, no? But it’s funny how the best response makes us feel guilty, then regretful, then nothing – civility is best achieved through numbness. Anyway, the thing is this. I always wanted to tell you how beautiful you looked that night, for those few seconds when I saw you. In that jacket, with no makeup on, your hair making light of the winter winds. It’d been such a long time since I’d seen you too. I always told myself you looked your best in January. At least I was right about that. That’s all I wanted to say, really. Oh right, the other thing. I saw your short story in the paper a few weeks ago, and finally found the time (no, fuck that – worked up the courage) to read it. Thanks for going easy on me, I thought it was really funny for a first attempt – announcing your talent, as they say. Of course, Sandra didn’t agree. Whatever. You’re a terrific woman, and I’m lucky to have had you when we were younger. Headache’s coming on pretty strong again, so I think I’ll stop here. Come to think of it, it might not even have been you that night – my memory is funny like that now. But I do remember how I feel.

[Buy High Violet. Amazon says it’s good for you.]

(photo taken by Veronika Langerova)

I’m sorry about making a pass

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Camera Obscura – Suspended From Class

Camera Obscura writes the soundtrack for PostSecret.com

[Buy Underachievers Please Try Harder.]

(I heard them stirring.)

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Fleet Foxes – Heard Them Stirring

Peeling oranges on the countertop. Rubbing the soles of my feet against the kitchen tiles, feeling the stray crumbs and the sticky remnants of spilled apple juice from days earlier binding with the fleshy underside. Wearing a tattered bathrobe on top of some borrowed shorts that are both too big and too small. The morning is goosebump-ridden, tickling forearm hairs with its chill. The afternoon promises more of the same. Citric juices on my fingers. Forgetting about this. Rubbing my eyes. Feeling the burn. Open mouth and wide expression, waiting for the sting to settle. Something feels good. [Buy.]

(artwork by Tom Bennett)

I hope she takes me home tonight

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Two Seconds To Midnight – Op1m1sm

Here is an exhaustive list of the things war is good for:

  • – Invigorating a slouching economy
  • – Cultivating patriotism
  • – Curbing overpopulation
  • – Fostering technological advancements

[Buy Architecture]

“…but I’m not the only one.”

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Imagine (orig. John Lennon) – Antony & The Johnsons

It’s a compelling discomfort that comes with writing alongside songs that speak for themselves, like telling a beautiful woman that she is exactly that: beautiful. She already knows. Telling her is a soft rustle in the leaves of her trees, passing by.

Covering John Lennon’s “Imagine” is something like that. Futile. And it’s not that Antony soaking his honey-heavy vocals in it isn’t comely – it is – but telling you that is pinching time that could be better spent listening.

[Thank You For Your Love falls on the 30th of this month. Pre-order here. Their next full-length album follows in October. Pre-order that, too.]

So with her sister, she did go.

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Elephant Micah – The Story Of My Expatriate Friends

“What are you thinking about?” “Stop asking me what I’m thinking about. I don’t know. Nothing.”

[Download Elephant Micah and the Agrarian Malaise in its entirety.]

When we were five.

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Ceremony tingles. Pre-determined weight. Scales of something and often wrong waiting at the gates. “Come in, darling,” she crooned. “I’m waiting for the taste.” Worried for the consequence of desires I’ve come to sate. Laughing at the breathlessness. Sitting on the fence. Typing all these syllables, I’m tired of your friends. Inebriated honesty. Maybe. Save me from the trends. I’ll leave this sentence to you ’cause the rest won’t mean a thing.

[Soraia’s When We Were Five fell from the grinding gears on the 9th. Three-hundred and ninety seconds for ninety-nine cents.]