Mustard On A Lonely Highway
A classic garage band I first became aware of in Philadelphia circa 1986.
They played Oakland’s Stork club on November 11 to a very large audience. In fact, we couldn’t get in to see them, which was okay because we ended up going to (see #2)
Great Seasonal Music, accepting of the pressure and despair, yet also soothing in a way
from his 1974 album Free Beer And Chicken (especially “A fortuituous concatenation of events”)
Not his best film by a long shot, but a one man show with a weird take on Richard Nixon, from 1985, in which Altman basically seems to identify with Nixon’s fall, at the nadir of his career before his big comeback in the late 1980s. R.I.
Amazing new release showing that contemporary female passionate gospel performance is alive and well. For those not inclined to the “Jesus” message, just listen to the voice, it transcends the sectarianism of religion.
You needn’t be a fan of The Mountain Goats, though that certainly wouldn’t hurt, to appreciate the debut postcard in Sarah Wintz’s The Pretty Panicks Press (www.myspace.com/prettypanicks), which includes a rough draft from one of Darnielle’s notebooks which documents “the exact moment when” he became convinced his songwriting was going to yield something “worthwhile.” In this case, “Moon Over Goldsboro.”
Regardless of whether you agree with his conclusions, this book is a well-researched investigation of Bush’s Green zone palace in Baghdad.
A must read for any of the freshman democratic congresspeople, as they try to figure out how to undo the mess Bush made. Send a senator one as a stocking stuffing
Mr. Eichert conducts a great interview with Ms. Cervenka in the newly released _Enclycopedia, edited by T. Bryant, M. Mellis, and K. Schatz. Especially great is toward the end when Cervenka turns the tables and decides to ask Eichert some questions.