on mixtapes

jer and i were playing tennis today, and our conversation revolved around the topic of Semisonic’s last CD, “All About Chemistry.” That CD, if you haven’t heard it, is a debacle of catastrophic proportions. Gone was the Semisonic of such terrific albums as “The Great Divide” and “Feeling Strangely Fine;” here was a new Semi with a horny Dan Wilson. And you know, horny lead singers aren’t a bad thing necessarily, but not when they gross you out. Track by track, Semisonic had gone from “Closing Time” and “Singing in My Sleep” (tracks 1 and 2 on FSF) to “Chemistry” and “Bed” (respectively 1 and 2 on AAC). Chemistry is passable, demonstrating Dan Wilson’s knack for melding together the rhythmic lyric and the pop hook, although the words are juuuust a little bit contrived, even for him. It’s on “Bed” where he makes the great, and tragic, mistake of taking things too far:

“Well show me a friendship that’s pure and chaste/
And I’ll show you and engine that’s dying to race/
Well the time has come for me to find/
Another way to get my soul fed/
I know we could be the sweetest friends/
But if that’s where it ends/
Then I’ll find someone else to bed/
Bed/
Find someone else to bed.”

so you know, with Dan Wilson’s less-than-sexy-man voice, that kind of seductive come-on is not particularly effective.

His voice is much better suited to tracks like “FNT” or “Secret Smile,” where his geekiness is sweetness, and becomes a strength rather than a liability. I mean… listen to “Singing in my Sleep” and tell me that his voice works so well with the attitude of the song. That is completely gone in AAC. :( it makes me sad.

Anyway, “Singing in My Sleep” is all about (cue fanfare here) the mixtape. This isn’t the only piece of pop art that’s done this sort of thing — High Fidelity, anyone? Anyway, it got me thinking about the mixtapes i’ve made for people (none, actually, although i’m thinking of putting one together now), those people have made for me, and those people have made for other people.

Mixtapes are possibly the most wrenching way to get to a person’s heart. Well, at least they are if you’re the kind of person who is aurally inclined, at least, and i suspect many of you are. anyway, i’m one of those people, and i’ve been lucky enough to be have been the recipient of one of thoooose kinds of mixtapes once and only once. i’m wary of spelling out who this person is — i know he used to read my blog, but since i think he thinks i’m ignoring him for some reason (i’m not ignoring him) i’m not sure if he stops in at any time. so i’ll just leave him anonymous, but i’ll say that every once in a while i think back and wonder how it could have been. it’s one of those things.

the tracklisting on it was masterful. it included such songs as…
top gun theme
omd – dreaming
yaz – only you
james – sit down
pet shop boys – always on my mind
baltimora – tarzan boy
… and a ton more i can’t think of right now.

but i remember it made me weep, and i think a piece of my heart will always go out to that person who made it for me….

it’s funny how people manage to burrow their ways into your heart.

Friendster

I haven’t said very much about Friendster as of yet since i haven’t had much time to play on it, but having spent a little time this weekend having my email inbox inundated (and by inundated, i mean getting like, 2 emails!! woohoo!!) with “approve me as your friend!” messages, i got to kind of surf through a few people’s friend networks. it’s weirdly interesting seeing how you’re connected to folks.

i think it’d be neat if someone met someone through something like Friendster. it’s possible. hey, the best dating pool a person could have is a good friend’s friends, right? 0_o

muuusic

lots of music in my head.

current winamp playlist:
who da funk – shiny disco ball
fanny pack – cameltoe
missy elliot – gossip folks
50 cent – in da club
beatnuts – watch out now
nas – i can
liz phair – extraordinary
rufus king – just what i need
ben kweller – ice ice baby
crush – jellyhead
yaz – only you
the flaming lips – race for the prize
buddy holly – that’ll be the day
cooler kids – all around the world (punk debutante)
darude – feel the beat
daft punk – one more time
di tiesto – touch me
paul oakenfold – southern sun (tiesto remix)

currently spinning:
the bats
the flaming lips
blur
stone temple pilots

computer back online

last week, jer’s video card seemed like it went out on him, and, thinking it was a hardware conflict of some sort, he swapped out his Hercules card for my ATI, and swapped his sony flat panel for my hitachi, since the hitachi has dv out and his sony one doesn’t. anyway, the monitor-card switch seemed to work for a couple of days. then the hercules/sony combo went out on my machine, and we thought we were S.O.L.

we tried it again tonight, and thankfully, it looks like it might be a cable issue rather than a card issue. the hercules-sony combo is working all right for now; we’ll look for a new cable tomorrow to replace this possibly faulty one.

so anyway, i had some stuff i wanted to record from this weekend:

– bumper sticker spotted on a ford explorer: “AMERICAN: NON-HYPHENATED!” complete with an American flag in one corner and a bald eagle in the other. now, there’s nothing inherently wrong with the statement, because you could also use it to mean “We’re all American, regardless of what color we are.” But in this instance, paired with Harley Davidson and NRA stickers, it’s clearly intended to reserve non-hyphenated Americanism for the rednecks of this country. I mean.. what’s that supposed to mean? as if you’re not white, then you’ll never be American? There are some fourth generation Japanese people living in this state, longer than some European immigrants who consider themselves “white” and “American.” Will these 4th generation immigrants ever not be looked at by skin color and be considered “American” because they look Asian? And who says these European immigrants should lose their ethnic identities and be automatically assumed to be American? It’s just not that simple.

– spotted while driving along the 110 freeway: bulletholes in a ford windstar minivan. we’re pretty sure they were real. they didn’t look like the applique ones you can buy in a store.

… and that’s all i can think of for now.

The Flaming Lips at the Hollywood Palladium

we’ve got confetti everywhere!!!

jer and i went to the flaming lips show last night at the palladium. openers were the starlight mints and liz phair. we missed the starlight mints, but liz phair (whom i was pretty excited to see) was pretty darned cool. i have to say though, her new stuff with The Matrix (Avril Lavigne’s producers) is radically different from her old stuff. The song of hers radio stations are playing, “Why Can’t I,” has a part that really reminds me of “Complicated,” and as a whole reminds of of “Complicated”s annoying repetitiveness. I like the other lead off single from her album (song: “Extraordinary,” album: “Liz Phair”) much better.

The Flaming Lips, as expected, were gloriously quirky. they threw confetti at the crowd, featured audience members in animal costumes and the like dancing on stage, and bounced big giant ballons through the audience. hehe, it was like a birthday party! They even led the crowd in singing “happy birthday” to a few birthday folks in the audience. pretty sweet.

So anyway, jer and i were covered in confetti cuz we were so close to the stage. We left some of it in the car, at Denny’s, and a ton all over our apartment. :)

i’ll post pictures up from the show soon, as soon as i have my computer back up. (I’m on jer’s right now… my video card died.)

FCC Ruling

this is something i’m really really angry about.

The three largest local phone companies control 83 percent of home telephone lines. The top two long distance carriers control 67 percent of that market. The four biggest cellular phone companies have 64 percent of the wireless market. The five largest cable companies pipe programming to 74 percent of the cable subscribers nationwide.

This is why Verizon can get away with operating on “suck” mode for the phone service in Westwood. This is why your cable bill is ridiculously high, and you can’t get all the channels you want anyway. This is why you can see the same newscasters on Channel 2 and 9 in Los Angeles. This is why your DSL provider can get away with giving you crappy service because there really are no other providers anyway. This is why radio is so terrible. Competition in telecommunications has been nearly eliminated in the rush to deregulation in 1996, and it will be completely eradicated if the FCC gets its way June 2.

The FCC is going to decide next week to raise the cap on media ownership to 35% and allow media companies to own both television stations and newspapers in most markets, effectively enabling one corporation to control all the major information sources in a region. Is this a bad thing? Well, ask yourself why you haven’t heard much about it from the standard tv and print outlets. The story is being buried at the expense of the public, and if that isn’t enough sign that media conglomerate control is a bad idea, then i don’t know what is. FCC chair Michael Powell is quite adamant about pushing this through, and unless there is major public outcry, he will succeed.

so here are some links to a few articles to get you started on the outrage. here, here, and here.

and that’s just the beginning. do a search with google news. write your congressman, write your newspapers… corporate domination of media needs to be stopped!! If this continues, can you imagine what can happen next? I’m too scared to. :(