Why yes “Invisible Girl” off Invisible Girl (November 3, In the Red)
I dig. It’s a 9.7
Listen, download, have a good time: http://www.cpbn.org/tnd/The%20King%20Khan%20and%20BBQ%20Show-%20invisible%20girl.mp3
Just really really catchy stuff.
Why yes “Invisible Girl” off Invisible Girl (November 3, In the Red)
I dig. It’s a 9.7
Listen, download, have a good time: http://www.cpbn.org/tnd/The%20King%20Khan%20and%20BBQ%20Show-%20invisible%20girl.mp3
Just really really catchy stuff.
A dissection of Pitchfork’s shit review (a grade of 4.2 out of 10):
Supergroups: Sometimes you get Cream, and sometimes you get a bunch of people who spontaneously engage in a slapdash recording session that may or may not involve absurd conceptual pseudo-alter-egos. One of the end results of the Black Lips’ possibly kicked-outta-India incident back in January, aside from a deluge of some of the most breathlessly manic press-release freakouts I’ve ever read, was an emergency stopover in Berlin to recuperate/decompress with King Khan and Mark “BBQ” Sultan. Apparently the mood was so charged and jubilant in the aftermath they celebrated by spending eight days recording an “evil gospel” album. Well… shit, why not?
Four days. Not eight.
It’s important to keep this narrative in mind when listening to The Almighty Defenders, because it definitely sounds like it took no more than a week to exist from conception to completion, even if it’s probably more likely that the group’s actually a culmination of a more long-stewing collaborative interest. It’s a hasty sounding album in pretty much every sense of the word, with spontaneous-sounding takes and muddy recording that sounds almost surreptitious. It’s like listening in on a bunch of like-minded friends screwing around in a jam session, which it technically pretty much is.
Probably more likely? Almighty Defenders IS a culmination of a “more long-stewing collaborative interest.” Surreptitious? How does that even make sense in this context? A stealthy recording? You can’t just come up with this kind of brilliance in your average jam session.
The album contains 10 originals and a cover of the Mighty Hannibal’s “I’m Coming Home”, all of which fall pretty strongly in line with what you might expect from a Black Lips/King Khan & BBQ Show hybrid, only messier and more incoherent: lots of garage-soul wailing, drums that sound like they’re being hit with a stake-driving hammer, snarling guitar riffs lathed into crude, shambling catchiness, and the occasional UHF station Horror Chiller Theater organ. Both bands’ propensity to run the wider gamut of pre-psychedelic rock’n’roll is bolstered a bit by the gospel underpinnings, though many of the songs– sludgy vintage rhythm & blues (“Bow Down and Die”), amped-up doo-wop (“Cone of Light”), goonish blues-rock (“Over the Horizon”)– don’t need too far of a push to get there. It’s a shame that the on-the-fly nature of this album dampens what could’ve been a superb collaboration given another month’s worth of studio time, though there’s moments where they manage to pull through anyways; leadoff track “All My Loving” isn’t all that complicated, but it gets its hooks in you quick.
None of your description makes even the slightest amount of sense. Your editor told you to use as many adjectives as possible to confuse the reader AND make them believe that this record sucks.
Now if only I could figure out what they’re singing. The biggest downfall of The Almighty Defenders is that most of the vocals seem to be miked sloppily, so while you get a nice fuzzed-out quality to the call-and-response chants and the wild-assed choirboy choruses, the actual lyrics often get subsumed into this big swirl of noise. It’s especially bad on “Cone of Light”, where Mark Sultan’s amazing deranged-Sam-Cooke voice, strong as it is, still winds up smothered under percussion. When the irreverent-gospel theme is decipherable, it can be pretty striking, if frequently a little too prone to self-aware, button-pushing edginess: “Jihad Blues” is a demented sweet-chariot-ride song that invokes exactly what you think it does (“just gimme a boxcutter and a one-way ticket”), and I’m banking on “The Ghost With the Most” being the first time in recorded history that the Holy Spirit is invoked using a catchphrase from the movie Beetlejuice. But maybe the spirit’s more important than the letter anyways: there’s two tracks in a row (“30 Second Air Blast” and “Death Cult Soup n’ Salad”) that are mostly just incoherent howling and mumbling and the occasional Three Stooges imitation, and they might be the most ecstatic moments on the album. Maybe the most profound, too.
Okay we get it! You hate lo-fi and you love using spicy adjectives to degrade quality music. You like making comparisons and you have a hearing problem so you don’t understand what the fuck is being said. That’s what sitting front row at Insane Clown Posse concerts will do to you. Also, what most likely happened: you have listened to the Black Lips or King Khan and BBQ once or twice in the past, hated it, and were given the privilege to listen to and review this recording, which you did, but only once because you had to hurry up and run to Best Buy to get the one Nickelback album you don’t have.
Slate.com
In fact, a statistical trace of what I’ve taken to calling the “puff daddy” movement emerged a few years ago, when researchers at the National Institutes of Health compared national drug surveys conducted over two-year periods beginning in 1991 and 2001. Their analysis, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, found that the percentage of people who say they smoked marijuana in the past year had remained fairly stable over the 10-year stretch. (That is to say, it ended where it started.) But they found a very different pattern among those between the ages of 45 and 64: As my parents’ generation matured, the number of smokers in that group had nearly tripled.The baby boomer drug uptick turns up again in the recent data. According to the 2007 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, almost 6 percent of all adults between the ages of 50 and 59 reported smoking marijuana in the past year. That’s up from about 3 percent five years earlier. Meanwhile, the number of recent users over the age of 50 has climbed to 2.65 million people nationwide (and we can assume the real prevalence is somewhat higher, since these figures are based on self-reported drug use). Here’s something to think about: There are about as many boomers using cannabis today as there are high-school students doing the same.//
Still, it’s not easy to get an accurate picture of who these puffing oldsters are and how their drug habits have evolved over the last few decades. (It’s also not clear to what extent the legalization of medical marijuana has been a factor.)
Hahahahahaha.
This is the first single off of Editor’s highly anticipated third studio album In This Light and On This Evening.
This is just to assign grades to individual songs on these albums, that as of September 13 are in the running for album of the year. When it comes down to it, MPP is not a perfect album. I feel like that just by slapping the “10” designation on it, justice isn’t done. It’s been my thing, at least for the majority of 2009, to grade an album based on songs only. This system doesn’t work too well and doesn’t take much into account. I’ll be changing it (most likely) in 2010. But for now:
Merriweather Post Pavillion (Animal Collective)
1. “Guy’s Eyes” – 9.5
2. “In The Flowers” – 9.8
3. “My Girls” – 10.0
4. “Also Frightened” – 9.8
5. “Summertime Clothes” – 10.0
6. “Daily Routine” – 9.6
7. “Bluish” – 9.9
8. “Taste” – 9.8
9. “Lion in a Coma” – 9.8
10. “No More Runnin'” – 9.7
11. “Brothersport” – 10.0
Grade: 9.7
————————————
200 Million Thousand (Black Lips)
1. “Take My Heart” – 9.4
2. “Drugs” – 9.8
3. “Starting Over” – 9.9
4. “Let It Grow” – 9.2
5. “Trapped in a Basement” – 9.6
6. “Short Fuse” – 9.8
7. “I’ll Be With You” – 9.7
8. “Big Black Baby Jesus of Today” – 9.3
9. “Again and Again” – 9.7
10. “Old Man” – 9.6
11. “The Drop I Hold” – 9.4
12. “Body Combat” – 9.4
13. “Elijah” – 9.7
14. “I Saw God” – 9.6
15. “Meltdown” (Hidden) – 9.8
Grade: 9.6
Physics Central
When today’s soldiers enter combat, they’re better protected from explosions than the military personnel of any previous war. Ultra-strong helmets shield them from the flying shrapnel of homemade bombs; high-tech cushioning cradles their skulls during sudden impacts with the ground. But because modern soldiers are surviving explosions that would have taken the lives of Vietnam-era infantrymen, army hospitals are seeing a rise in a particularly painful war wound—traumatic brain injury (TBI).TBI can range from a simple concussion to damage with long-term effects, including impaired cognitive abilities and even anxiety and depression. New research is helping to explain how those injuries come about, potentially pointing the way to helmet designs to reduce brain damage. Using code originally designed to simulate how a detonated weapon rattles a building or tank, physicists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California and the University of Rochester in New York modeled an all-too-real situation: a 5-pound bomb exploding 15 feet from a soldier’s head. Their goal was to understand the effects of the high-speed shock wave that follows an explosion.
This makes sense:
(BBC NEWS)
Only one crime was solved by each 1,000 CCTV cameras in London last year, a report into the city’s surveillance network has claimed.The internal police report found the million-plus cameras in London rarely help catch criminals.
In one month CCTV helped capture just eight out of 269 suspected robbers.
David Davis MP, the former shadow home secretary, said: “It should provoke a long overdue rethink on where the crime prevention budget is being spent.”
The Metropolitan Police has been extraordinarily slow to act to deal with the ineffectiveness of CCTV
David Davis MPHe added: “CCTV leads to massive expense and minimum effectiveness.
Probably the best song off his new album. Everything about this song is really awesome. I highly recommend watching this to everyone no matter what your musical interests may be.
This is one of the most screwed up songs I have heard in a while.

Band: The Big Pink
Label: Rough Trade
Release: 2009
1. “Crystal Visions” – 9.5
2. “Too Young To Love” – 9.2
3. “Dominos” – 9.4
4. “Love in Vain” – 8.7
5. “At War With The Sun” – 8.9
6. “Velvet” – 9.7
7. “Golden Pendulum” – 9.2
8. “Frisk” – 8.8
9. “A Brief History of Love” – 9.5
10. “Tonight” – 9.3
11. “Count Backwards From Ten” – 9.4
Comment: I’m not sure how I actually came in contact with this band or this record. I found it just today in My Library. It’s due out on Tuesday? This situation confuses me. I’m pretty sure this band is from the UK. They sound darkish noise-punk/shit gaze. What I mean is the music is loud, distorted, lot of shit going on at one time, etc. You can’t really groove, but rather nod your head slowly. If I had to compare The Big Pink to some modern day bands I would compare them to The Morning After Girls and The Warlocks. Louder though. Add a drum machine, too. I hear some Humbug-era Arctic Monkeys too, but much much louder is The Big Pink. This CD is highly impressionable yet I question whether it has any lasting appeal. In certain areas (the green tracks!), this is really really catchy!
Final Grade: 9.2