Sometimes when looking through my CDs, I realize that hardly any of the albums I own were released after the year 2000. I'm not sure if it's because I was going to college around that time and didn't have enough money to buy CDs...or because I started liking Pittsburgh local bands more than anything I could buy in a store...or because I stopped getting music magazines...or because now the CD player in my car is broken, so I use an MP3 player. Eh, it's probably a combination of those factors.
Either way, because I'm delusional, I have an imaginary friend inside my head who cares about my opinion and asks: "But Ricki, don't you like any music that came out past the year 2000, and don't you want to post on your blog about it?" And my answer to that is: yes. Here are some videos:
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1.22.2011
1.11.2011
Top Ten Favorite Cover Songs
I can’t say that cover songs are my favorite things in the world—most of them are sacrilege because of how embarrassingly bad they are. Most of the cover songs I hear sound stolen and recrafted for the purposes of getting more mass appeal, rather than being respectfully covered. However, there are some good cover songs out there.
When working on independent music projects (and when I was in a band) I’ve often been tempted to cover certain songs because I felt like the lyrics spoke to me, or that the song really embodied a part of my life in a very personal and touching way. So I can definitely understand why a band would cover another band’s song. I think a good cover song tackles the difficult task of sounding like it still belongs to the original artist, but also to the artist who is covering the song.
Here is a list of my top ten favorite cover songs:
“The Blood” covered by Fahrenheit 451 (originally by The Cure)
“I Wanna Be Your Dog” (banjo version) covered by Uncle Tupelo (originally by The Stooges)
“In Every Dream Home a Heartache” covered by Jared Louche and the Aliens (originally by Roxy Music)
“Hurt” covered by Johnny Cash (originally by Nine Inch Nails)
“Baby Doll” covered by Laether Strip (originally by Soft Cell)
“I’ll Come Running” covered by The Murder City Devils (originally by Neil Diamond)
“Age of Consent” covered by Grant-Lee Phillips (originally by New Order)
“Fear of Trains” covered by Love, Execution Style (originally by The Magnetic Fields)
“The Choke” covered by Element (originally by Skinny Puppy)
“A Hit” covered by Sebadoh (originally by Smog)
"Age of Consent" by New Order
"Age of Consent" covered by Grant-Lee Phillips
Note: I had a really hard time finding the music videos I wanted to display on this blog for both the original and cover songs. I really want to show the Roxy Music video for "In Every Dream Home a Heartache", even though the cover version of this song performed live by Jared Louche isn't downloading properly from youtube. Despite being anal and only wanting to display videos for original-cover pairs, I love the original version of this song so much, I just have to post it, even without its accompanying cover song...
1.06.2011
My Love Affair with Industrial Music
Today I'd like to travel back in time--back to the Saturday nights of my life in the mid-to-late 1990s. During this time I was in high school, listened to industrial and goth music, wore stripey tights, and hung out with guys who had reverse mohawks, as well as people who had nervous ticks and played Magic: The Card Game. Every month I'd look forward to getting my free Wax Trax, Projekt, and Cleopatra Records catalogs in the mail.
On Saturday nights I stayed up until the sun rose, drinking powdered "international" instant coffee, and listening to music until my headphones made my ears feel like they were full of itchy water. One of my favorite things to listen to was "The Mutant Dance Party"--a radio show featuring electronic and industrial music hosted by Zoltar on 99.1WHFS. I discovered a lot of cool bands from that radio show, but I also had my all-time favorites as well.
Here we go back in time...woooooo...............................
On Saturday nights I stayed up until the sun rose, drinking powdered "international" instant coffee, and listening to music until my headphones made my ears feel like they were full of itchy water. One of my favorite things to listen to was "The Mutant Dance Party"--a radio show featuring electronic and industrial music hosted by Zoltar on 99.1WHFS. I discovered a lot of cool bands from that radio show, but I also had my all-time favorites as well.
Here we go back in time...woooooo...............................
Time machine image from colemanzone.com
Hooray!!!......I think we have arrived. Strap on your irrelevant welding goggles now.
And because they are freaking hilarious, I have to include these next videos, which are industrial genre parodies titled "League of Extraordinary Industrial Retards".:
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