The 610 Stamp of Approval

[Beck - Guero] I realized something amazing about this album last week. The inhabitants of 610 Latimer Hall, with their varied musical tastes, have all at one time or another chosen Beck’s Guero for their selection in our music rotation. Usually we’re complaining behind each other’s backs about how this album is awful or how we’ve heard this artist 58 times in the last week. But Guero is the first album that has transcended mere tolerance and achieved universal acceptance and satisfaction. God bless that Beck.

Garbage – Bleed Like Me

[Garbage - Bleed Like Me] Garbage’s first album had a bit of electronica that made them unique in the ’90s alternative scene. The band enjoyed greater success with Version 2.0, dabbling a bit more heavily in the electronic sound, but jumped overboard with their third album Beautiful Garbage. After a four year hiatus, Bleed Like Me gets back to that happy medium of guitar and synth achieved in Version 2.0. The first single “Why Do You Love Me” is clearly the class of the album, but there are a number of solid tracks, including “Bad Boyfriend.” If one were to take exception with any part of the disc, it would be that the band hasn’t really evolved since it’s first two records. That said, Bleed Like Me will easily satiate the Garbage fan that missed their presence for the past few years.

The Fire Next Time (James Baldwin)

[The Fire Next Time]Written in 1964, this is James Baldwin’s analysis of civil rights through his life. There are three main sections: (1) growing up in Harlem realizing that his future seems to be either making a living unscrupulously on the streets or running to the church, (2) conversations with the burgeoning Nation of Islam, and (3) thoughts on race relations in the past, present (i.e. 1963) and future. In the first section, Baldwin shuns God, concluding, “If the concept of God has any validity or any use, it can only be to make us larger, freer, and more loving. If God cannot do this, then it is time we got rid of Him.” While his opinion of humanity isn’t much better, he does believe people can overcome their need to feel superior and achieve equality, not by segregation, but by integration. It was really more optimistic than I expected in the end.

I think the most poignant part of the book was when Baldwin honors the black men and women who endured segregation because the country was not ready to integrate. They made the most of their lives for their children and themselves. He writes, “I am proud of these people not because of their color but because of their intelligence and their spiritual force and their beauty.” We should all be proud.

Bad Religion – Generator

[Bad Religion - Generator] When bands are around for 20+ years, you know they’re doing something right. The seminal band of the SoCal punk scene, Bad Religion has had that type of success with an evolving sound surrounding front-man Greg Graffin’s socially conscious lyrics. My usual complaint with punk bands is that tracks and albums sound the same. The way Bad Religion has avoided this monotony has put them at the top of my punk list.

That said, Generator doesn’t live up to these standards. The 1992 release is a bit too similar to the majority of the ’80-’85 compilation or more recent albums (No Substance/Process of Belief, in particular). It’s not a poor album; every track is solid, but if you were going to own one Bad Religion album, go with No Control, Suffer, or Against the Grain.

Beck – Guero / Abandoned Pools – Humanistic

[Beck - Guero]Here’s a double dose from last week’s “New Music Friday.” First is the latest release from Beck, Guero. The openning tracks will certainly remind you of Odelay, then gets a bit more toned down toward Mutations or Sea Change. This is an unusual album in that way for Beck; it’s not a completely different direction for him. However, it’s solid from top to bottom, so if you like any of Beck’s pre-Midnight Vultures stuff, you’ll like Guero.

[Abandoned Pools - Humanistic] Who’s Abandoned Pools? Abandoned Pools is the current project for one time Eels member Tommy Walter. Naturally, I found them in the ‘See Also’ section of the Eels page at allmusic.com. Humanistic is an alternative/punk-pop type album that isn’t revolutionary by any stretch, but I’ll say it rivals anything heard on the radio. They have a new album coming out this year which I’ll probably check out. Hopefully Walter will show off a bit more of the ‘instrumentalist’ label that intrigued me in the first place.

Elvis Costello – My Aim is True

[My Aim is True] I started a new habit today. It might be a little pricey, but I think it’s worth it. I call it “New Music Fridays.” This plan was inspired by the $2 discount with a student ID on Thursdays and Fridays at Rasputin. They have a ton of used and cheap stuff there, so ideally the discos will be in the $7 range.

So after considering several options from my list, I finally settled on Elvis Costello‘s My Aim is True. I realized at the concert the other day that I don’t have nearly enough of his music. With Alison, Watching the Detectives, and Red Shoes, it’s generally hailed one of his best. This album was the first of 12 in a ten year period (1977-1986), which I consider an amazing accomplishment.

Candide (Voltaire)

[Candide]We must cultivate our garden.

A book dripping with satire? I think I’m going to like it. But only if it’s 100 pages and not 1000, which is why I read Candide and not Don Quixote. Voltaire seems like an interesting guy. He’s quite pragmatic, which I like, but his ideal government would be a benevolent monarch, which I don’t. It’s not so much the benevolent monarch I’m worried about as much as the subsequent malignant one.

Something that came to mind while reading Candide is that I don’t think authors criticize their adversaries so openly anymore. Maybe it’s that I just don’t read philosophy. It could also be that today nobody has writing ability required, or takes the time, to denounce their enemies in a novel. It’s easier to just call your book Michael Moore Is a Big Fat Stupid White Man or Rush Limbaugh Is a Big Fat Idiot.

Elvis Costello (Paramount Theater, Oakland)

In the fashionable nightclubs and finer precincts
Man uses words to dress up his vile instincts
Ever since we said it
He went and took the credit
It’s been headed this way since the world began
When a vicious creature took the jump from Monkey to Man

– Monkey to Man (The Delivery Man)

Elvis. The Paramount. It doesn’t get much better than that. The other time I saw Elvis was at the Greek Theater, and it was touted as a greatest hits tour, so I knew almost every song. This was definitely an album tour as the first 5-6 songs were off newer albums, none of which I had heard. Sporting trademark black plastic framed glasses and silver reflective shoes, he then pulled out a couple of classics with “Oliver’s Army” and “I Don’t Want to go to Chelsea.” The band played for two hours with essentially no stops. Only twice did Elvis really make any sort of statement, and the time between songs ranged from zero, as in the transition into “Watching the Detectives,” to 5 seconds as he’d run to pick up the next guitar from the crew. They sent us home with “Peace, Love, and Understanding” and “The Scarlet Tide,” which was uplifting for me in these politically inane times. There was no encore, but none was necessary. Great show.

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Cannery Row (John Steinbeck)

[Cannery Row]

He never forgot anything but he never bothered to arrange his memories. Everything was thrown together like fishing tackle in the bottom of a rowboat, hooks and sinkers and line and lures and gaffs all snarled up.

This is Odie’s favorite book. He described it as 3A Keough Hall, our dorm section at Notre Dame. It’s tough for me to compare the marginalized cast of Cannery Row to the middle/upper class residents of Keough, but I see where he’s coming from. They’re a group of people thrown together essentially by chance. Each has a pretty distinct personality, but they coexist in harmony, for the most part. Furthermore, they’re looking out for each other, sometimes failing, but always with the best intentions. Hopefully Odie will comment to see how close I am to the mark.

One other line that I loved:

There is no term comparable to green thumbs to apply to such a mechanic, but there should be.

1984 (George Orwell)

[1984]

Who controls the past, controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.

I set out to read Orwell’s classic to compare to Jennifer Government. This battle of negative utopias pitted all-powerful government versus all-powerful corporate structure. In the final analysis, they’re remarkably similar. Consider:

  • Ability to eliminate individuality. In both societies, the power has effective control of the middle class. Interestingly, in 1984, the lower class (the proles) have the most individual freedoms. They have no power other than their numbers, and little inteligence, so the government spends little effort controlling their thoughts. In Jen Govt, freedom seems to stem from the ability to pay for it.
  • Demonization of foreign ideas. In Jen Govt, people are taught that the strong governments of western Europe are evil because they tax the workers to give money to the lazy. The people in 1984 essentially don’t know anything about the other two superpowers of the world, but their homeland of Oceania is perpetually at war against them, so they must be evil.
  • Get ’em while they’re young. Children are infused with the ideals of the prevailing power in school. The children of 1984 are brought up to be agents of Big Brother, spying on their parents for any incidents of thoughtcrime. The schools of Jen Govt are sponsored by Mattel, McDonald’s, and other companies and teach the virtues of capitalism/consumerism while advertising their wares.

I could find more, but you get the point. Extremism is bad. Of course, these are both works of fiction, and our world is a bit more in the middle, but it’s good to keep an eye out for the symptoms on both sides.