I think about a world to come where the books were found by the golden ones, written in pain, written in awe by a puzzled man who questioned, "What are we here for?" All the strangers came today and it looks as though they're here to stay.

-David Bowie "Oh! You Pretty Things"

Showing posts with label radiohead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radiohead. Show all posts

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Radiohead Pablo Honey (1993: Capitol)

























1. "You" - 3:29
2. "Creep" - 3:56
3. "How Do You?" - 2:12
4. "Stop Whispering" - 5:26
5. "Thinking About You" - 2:41
6. "Anyone Can Play Guitar" - 3:38
7. "Ripcord" - 3:10
8. "Vegetable" - 3:13
9. "Prove Yourself" - 2:25
10. "I Can't" - 4:13
11. "Lurgee" - 3:08
12. "Blow Out" - 4:40

On Saturday, April 26, the legendary musician Prince took to the main stage at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, California. I am a really big Prince fan, and if my memory serves, this was a period of time in which Prince was only playing concerts in Las Vegas. It was a big news bit to hear that Prince was playing somewhere else. But for me it was still a let-down, because neither Las Vegas nor Indio, California are anywhere near any of the places I've lived in the last several years. Prince was preceded by Morris Day playing both "The Bird," and "Jungle Love," and Sheila E. playing "Glamorous Life." After playing several of his hits - "1999," and "Little Red Corvette," for example - and a few lesser known personal favorites of mine - "Musicology," "Cream," "Anotherloverholeinyourhead" - Prince took stage to perform a whopping eight-minute-long rendition of the infamous song "Creep" by Radiohead.

Shortly afterwards, videos of Prince's cover began popping up all over the internet. I remember going on-line the next day and finding a crappy iPhone video with terrible sound and shaky video, and I remember loving it. Could I make out the words to the song? No. Could I make out any of Prince's signature gestures? No. Did I enjoy Prince's whiny scream during the chorus? Of course. Over the next couple of days, I linked as many friends as I could to Prince's cover of "Creep" - I am part of a strong circle of Prince-loving-friends - while meticulously searching out better videos with crisp sound quality and video. But after a couple of days, this became simply impossible. Prince had taken down all videos portraying him performing "Creep" at Coachella, and I was no longer able to enjoy this convergence of two of my favorite musical influences.

As a Prince fan, I had grown used to the disappearance of most of my favorite videos on the internet. Prince and NPG records are well known on the web for ridding the internet of unauthorized pictures, videos and audio of Prince. I want to say that this was surprising for long-time fans of Prince, but I immediately decided to go back on that statement: For long-time fans of Prince, nothing is surprising anymore. But there was a time - people called that time the '90s - when Prince was using the internet in creative and innovative ways for the sake of distributing music. His 1997 album "Crystal Ball" was released on the internet and by 2006 Prince's use of internet marketing of his material won him a lifetime achievement award with the Webbies. But today the only thing that comes to mind when the words "Prince" and "internet" are uttered in the same sentence is Prince's Draconian attempt at controlling his works and his image throughout the span of the world's largest network. In 2007, Prince used the Digital Millennium Copyright Act in order to take down a YouTube video of of an eighteen-month-old baby dancing to "Let's Go Crazy," leading to a lawsuit by the Electronic Frontier Foundation that was settled in Prince's favor the following year. By the time the lawsuit was settled, Prince had already engaged in several of his own, against Google, eBay, and several torrent web sites regarding unlicensed use of clips of his music, and eventually against his own fans for putting up sites with un-licensed images of Prince.

To some extent, I understand where Prince is coming from. One of the few things that always makes me angry when brought up is when people make fun of Prince for changing his name to "The Artist Formerly Known as Prince," "The Artist," and eventually to an unpronounceable symbol. People never question what drove him to this act. Well, the truth is that the record industry found some way to legally own the rights to the name that "The Artist" was born with. Prince Rogers Nelson was not allowed to use his own first name without having to pay royalties to record executives. Prince certainly went over the top - I don't think anyone would argue against that fact - but he was also right: there is a record industry that thrives on making slaves of talented individuals. This may be the moment in time that people can describe as the beginning of Prince's slippery slope of image protection, but it was also a moment when he was victimized and decided to take a stand.

There was a moment when Prince's weirdness, which has become a normal kind of weirdness by now, a socially accepted weirdness that is part of pop culture's canon, took a strange turn. Radiohead's Thom Yorke received a text message a couple of days after Prince performed "Creep" at Coachella. He said, when interviewed, that he thought it was hilarious that Prince would cover one of their songs live. Also hilarious to Thom Yorke was the fact that guitarist Ed O'Brien couldn't access the YouTube videos of Prince performing their song. Yorke and Radiohead went public saying that they should be the only ones with the right to block their song on the internet and since Prince had, as some of us might say, overstepped his bounds, Thom Yorke added, "Well, tell him to unblock it."

Like Prince, Radiohead has experienced their fair share of legal trouble. In fact, their best known public legal battle actually surrounded the very song that Prince was trying to have wiped from the internet, "Creep." While I have had a lot of trouble finding actual data regarding the lawsuit, it was decided in court that Radiohead's "Creep" borrowed extensively from the song "The Air That I Breathe" by The Hollies, so much so that Albert Hammond and Mike Hazlewood of The Hollies are now credited as co-writers of "Creep." Radiohead took a hiatus from performing "Creep" that lasted nearly a decade, and rumor was that they no longer played the song because they owed Hammond and Hazlewood royalties every time it was performed.

The question that is raised by Prince removing his cover of "Creep" from YouTube is whether or not the performer has any right to bootlegged copies of his/her performance when the performance is a rendition of music copyrighted by another individual. When I heard of this clash of musical titans, I was immediately on Radiohead's side. For one thing, Radiohead has had so much trouble with people trying to claim this song that they deserved a little bit of a break; they deserved for someone to decide that "Creep" was, in fact, their song. For another thing, I wanted to be able to watch Prince perform "Creep" on YouTube just like Thom Yorke wanted to watch Prince perform "Creep" on YouTube. That lovable nut would just have to give some ground to someone else for once, I thought. But according to the Bootlegging Provision of the Copyright Act, Prince was in the right to have this video removed on his behalf. Basically, this provision suggests that bootlegging of live performances is against the law. While it does not grant copyright of the song to Prince, it does grant Prince the right to have his performances removed since he was, in fact, the person performing them.

I read a blog article where the author took the position that Prince's rendition of "Creep" was actually an entirely new song. Whereas Radiohead's original song had to do with alienation and fear from love revoked, Prince's "not-cover" spoke of sexual revolution and belong through being a freak, essentially binding people together through love, sex, and orgasm. Were this the case, however, I think The Hollies would tell you that Radiohead might have an easy-to-win lawsuit on their hands. The lyrics may be the same, but the chord progression, the general sound, and the song structure are the same. "Creep" does not belong to Prince, regardless of whether or not the rights to his cover performance do.

In 2010, Prince declared that the internet is over. He spoke of the inherent evils surrounding computers and advanced machinery, that the data just fills your head with numbers and disrupts your consciousness. I agree that attention, understanding and even ones concept of self are besieged by technology, and that there are terrible consequences that follow all of the greatest innovations, but I cannot agree that the internet is done with. There was a time when Prince was able to make more money than most in the business by giving away his music on the internet. When Radiohead released In Rainbows on the internet, customers were given the choice of paying any price they wanted to for the album. Basically, anyone who wanted to could get the album for free. Continuing with the notion that Prince innovated and then abandoned, Radiohead has realized that you can give away music for free and still make more money than anyone else in the industry. A lot of the reason for this is because the album teases forthcoming tours, and few people in the history of music have been so successful at touring as Radiohead. Is Prince using lawyers to make him money because he fears that he will soon be unable to raise money by touring, or, as I mentioned above, has he simply gone off the deep end regarding the consequences of his legal battle over his name? I don't suppose I can divine the answer to that question.

Do I want to watch Prince perform "Creep" on YouTube? I think you can answer that one for me. Something's gotta give.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Radiohead "Paranoid Android" (YouTube Artist Mix)



CREDITS in order of appearance:
0:07 http://y2u.be/wQXHXM-HnbU DRUMS: Alberto, Italy
0:10 http://y2u.be/w9Q79nt6NpA A. GUITAR: goljadkin, Italy
0:18 http://y2u.be/knqZmyGlAQE E. GUITAR: VIwavesofmusicIV, USA
0:25 http://y2u.be/1p9sH-uMnKI VOCALS: Yvette, USA
0:43 http://y2u.be/FsD4921LBWE VOCALS: Nycholas, France
0:53 http://y2u.be/8UgVXRafO3Y BASS GUITAR: Nick, England
0:53 http://y2u.be/AwhtVlVAx1s MARIMBA: Gregory, Canada
0:56 http://y2u.be/5Hh_iYzfIIM A. GUITAR: ComradeNu, USA
1:03 http://y2u.be/QLKxzFLLyp8 STEEL DRUMS: turtlepan101, USA
1:05 http://y2u.be/dMdlFRixaiQ A. GUITAR: Drew, USA
1:15 http://y2u.be/NVvdjEb0QdA VOCALS: Mike, USA
1:25 http://y2u.be/-lNp9qW3jLw E. GUITAR: Paul, USA
1:44 http://y2u.be/i5p9UJjhO_E VOCALS: Lore, Belgium
1:44 http://y2u.be/0RfGf8KLWZI E. GUITAR: Rick, UK
1:54 http://y2u.be/IUer5TjL1oQ E. GUITAR: Anne-Sophie, France
2:10 http://y2u.be/-2e3WcsCHQY A.GUITAR & DOUBLE BASS: Tosin & Matthew, USA
2:16 http://y2u.be/56Fd66DKX_g E. GUITAR: Michael, USA
2:20 http://y2u.be/VkUTofxUJLM BRASS INST.: UW Jazz Orchestra, USA
2:27 http://y2u.be/TcgvoOex0-0 VOCALS: Egle, UK
2:40 http://y2u.be/b9H-EhxfBCA E. GUITAR FX: alienxists, UK
2:51 http://y2u.be/yitFx3sIMTM VOCALS: Nathan, UK
3:02 http://y2u.be/Qjpn_eslQTE E. GUITAR: murphopolis, USA
3:12 http://y2u.be/VS98b5tD8GM E. GUITAR: Matias, Chile
3:17 http://y2u.be/rxlW-Qiivbg E. GUITAR: Tyler, UK
3:40 http://y2u.be/ydF5E60PVCk BACKING VOCALS: Dennis & Tiago, Brazil
3:45 http://y2u.be/oenuDQl4Ofw E. GUITAR: Glenn, Belgium
3:48 http://y2u.be/WGPqnpkrX9M OBOE: Lisa, USA
3:54 http://y2u.be/Cv2lPfffkfU FLUTE: Morristown Colonial Symphony, USA
4:07 http://y2u.be/Ni8SIx1wWZw ELECTRIC GUITAR: Marty, USA
4:11 http://y2u.be/kyjB8mnB5vw VOCALS & PIANO: Simon, Australia
4:26 http://y2u.be/njwDWIrKMU4 WIND QUARTET: Katie, Suzanne, Marc & Thomas, USA
4:42 http://y2u.be/0Cc3CPfPEeQ BASS GUITAR: Nicola, Italy
5:03 http://y2u.be/v5Q135486zA STRING ORCHESTRA: The Section Quartet & FZE
5:12 http://y2u.be/u6oD9FO_T-U VOCALS: Rock 4, Netherlands
5:13 http://y2u.be/IZldpJUpgI4 BRASS ORCHESTRA: Pride of Arizona, USA
6:04 http://y2u.be/uzClwjkoUjo A. GUITAR & BEAR SUIT: jamontoastst, Australia

Monday, April 18, 2011

Radiohead The King of Limbs (2011: Self-released)

























1. "Bloom" - 5:15
2. "Morning Mr. Magpie" - 4:41
3. "Little by Little" - 4:27
4. "Feral" - 3:13
5. "Lotus Flower" - 5:00
6. "Codex" - 4:47
7. "Give Up the Ghost" - 4:50
8. "Separator" - 5:20

You're probably heard that The King of Limbs is a let down, that it is criminally short, that the songs themselves are weak. If this is what you've heard, then you've heard wrong.

If you've heard the album then you know that on your first listen the album just seems too different. But what Radiohead album hasn't been "too different" from the one before? And since when is difference, in and of itself, a problem?

The strength of the last two tracks, "Give Up the Ghost" and "Separator" demands that you give the album a second listen, and on your second listen you begin to realize the genius of The King of Limbs. You know that this album is on par with every other album they've put out, perhaps even above par.

And you know that if Radiohead makes an album that people think is really short, then short albums are going to be an industry standard within a couple short years.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Hanson "Optimistic" (Radiohead Cover) Live



I gotta say, this is one of the best Radiohead covers I've ever heard. If those kids had slightly better direction I'd be behind them 100%.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Radiohead The King of Limbs on If It Bleeds...


I believe that Amy Bolan's If It Bleeds... can stand on its own without my promotion, but any truly egotistical blogger is going to jump to promote a blog that he or she is referenced on. Such is the case with Amy's review of Radiohead's new album The King of Limbs. Not only has Amy posted a great review of a fantastic album, but she's also managed to include me in the post. When Amy writes, "My boyfriend," feel free to read it as, "Justin Tiemeyer, of Cavemengo," "Justin Tiemeyer, voice of our generation," or my personal favorite, "Justin Tiemeyer, boyfriend trying to compensate for the fact that his girlfriend is more attractive and talented than him." However you read it, just make sure you hop on over to If It Bleeds... and read Amy's review. Here is a direct link.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Friday, January 28, 2011

Radiohead In Rainbows (2007: Self-released)
























1. "15 Step" - 3:58
2. "Bodysnatchers" - 4:02
3. "Nude" - 4:15
4. "Weird Fishes/Arpeggi" - 5:18
5. "All I Need" - 3:48
6. "Faust Arp" - 2:09
7. "Reckoner" - 4:50
8. "House of Cards" - 5:28
9. "Jigsaw Falling into Place" - 4:09
10. "Videotape" - 4:42

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Radiohead Hail to the Thief (2003: Parlophone)

























1. "2 + 2 = 5 (The Lukewarm.)" - 3:19
2. "Sit Down. Stand Up. (Snakes & Ladders.)" - 4:19
3. "Sail to the Moon. (Brush the Cobwebs out of the Sky.)" - 4:18
4. "Backdrifts. (Honeymoon Is Over.)" - 5:22
5. "Go to Sleep. (Little Man Being Erased.)" - 3:21
6. "Where I End and You Begin. (The Sky Is Falling In.)" - 4:29
7. "We Suck Young Blood. (Your Time Is Up.)" - 4:56
8. "The Gloaming. (Softly Open Your Mouths in the Cold.)" - 3:32
9. "There There. (The Boney King of Nowhere.)" - 5:23
10. "I Will. (No Man's Land.)" 1:59
11. "A Punchup at a Wedding. (No no no no no no no no.)" - 4:57
12. "Myxomatosis. (Judge, Jury & Executioner.)" - 3:52
13. "Scatterbrain. (As Dead as Leaves.)" 3:21
14. "A Wolf at the Door. (It Girl. Rag Doll.)" - 3:23

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Radiohead Amnesiac (2001: Parlophone)






















1. "Packt Like Sardines in a Crushd Tin Box" - 4:00
2. "Pyramid Song" - 4:49
3. "Pulk/Pull Revolving Doors" - 4:07
4. "You and Whose Army?" - 3:11
5. "I Might Be Wrong" - 4:54
6. "Knives Out" - 4:15
7. "Morning Bell/Amnesiac" - 3:14
8. "Dollars & Cents" - 4:52
9. "Hunting Bears" - 2:01
10. "Like Spinning Plates" - 3:57
11. "Life in a Glasshouse" - 4:34

Friday, November 19, 2010

Radiohead Kid A (2000: Capitol)























1. "Everything in Its Right Place" - 4:11
2. "Kid A" - 4:44
3. "The National Anthem" - 5:51
4. "How to Disappear Completely" - 5:56
5. "Treefingers" - 3:42
6. "Optimistic" - 5:15
7. "In Limbo" - 3:31
8. "Idioteque" - 5:09
9. "Morning Bell" - 4:35
10. "Motion Picture Soundtrack" - 6:59

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

When They Were Cool: Eddie Murphy

In the 1980s, cool was still cool. In successive decades being uncool defined what was cool. Grunge made the high school loser into the heroic icon of cool. An anti-pop movement started, probably influenced by Radiohead's growing control of what is accepted as cool in music, and it was no longer cool to like anything on mainstream radio. By the turn of the Willennium, the heroes of the modern movie were incredibly skinny or incredibly overweight awkward boys who like eclectic music from the 70s and 80s like Michael Cera. If asked, "When was such and such cool?" the likely answer is, "the 80s." Some have posited that this is related to the death of Miles Davis, the inventor of Cool, in 1991.

Eddie Murphy used to be cool. What? You don't remember him ever being cool? Well, he sure was. When?

Pay attention. The answer is the 80s.

Murphy's appearances on Saturday Night Live and his comedy special Delirious (1983) made him into an overnight sensation, and quite frankly, his influence on the acceptance of blacks in show business is probably largely overlooked. In a world without Richard Pryor, one might even go so far as to say that Murphy is the most important black figure in comedy movies, commanding America and setting the tone of comedy to follow. That's something that you can't take away from Murphy. Unfortunately, Murphy is not allowed to rest on his laurels. You have to keep performing. Eddie Murphy is important, but he sure isn't cool anymore.

In the 80s Eddie Murphy talked about flatulence, and it was cool. He didn't call it farts. He said "fahts." And it was cool. He was homophobic. He wasn't politically correct. He's probably part of the reason that everyone became so hyper-PC in the 90s. But regardless of what you think about this, he made it cool. And that made things difficult for 90s politicians. Murphy also had glorious teeth and an impressive body, so women loved him. And women loving you makes you cool.

Maybe you disagree. Here's an indisputable proof. The Golden Child and Coming to America. You don't get it yet? IN The Golden Child (1986) Eddie Murphy and a little boy get chased by a giant flying demon. A GIANT FLYING DEMON! In Coming to America (1988) Murphy is a king from an African nation who really doesn't get American customs. He's basically a wealthy black version of Uncle Travelling Matt from Fraggle Rock. Many of his films are even socially aware and sensitive to ideas of class and race, especially Trading Places (actually, that movie may just be about Jamie Lee Curtis's breasts... Can you remember anything else about Trading Places? Hmmm...).

 A decisive end to Eddie Murphy's coolness is not completely clear. Remember that Miles Davis died in 1991, so it must have been pretty close to that time. Tom Cruise survived until 1992 as a cool dude, after all, so its possible to be cool in a world without Cool. Murphy's dignity was certainly gone by the time he did Nutty Professor (1996). The combination of putting on a fat suit and playing multiple characters is the epitome of lame comedy, a fact that some people really don't understand (ahem... Martin Lawrence... Tyler Perry...).

This article ought not to end on a negative note. After all, its very possible that Murphy passed the torch of coolness to Will Smith. In 1990, the Fresh Prince of Bel Air premiered on NBC. As we all well know, Fresh Prince set Will Smith up for Blockbuster Independence Day films, and these films set us up for the Willennium. It's Thanksgiving, so let's be thankful for all that Eddie Murphy has given us, thankful for the dude who hasn't been cool for two decades.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Radiohead OK Computer (1997: Capitol)






















1. "Airbag" - 4:44
2. "Paranoid Android" - 6:23
3. "Subterranean Homesick Alien" - 4:27
4. "Exit Music (For a Film)" - 4:24
5. "Let Down" - 4:59
6. "Karma Police" - 4:21
7. "Fitter Happier" - 1:57
8. "Electioneering" - 3:50
9. "Climbing Up the Walls" - 4:45
10. "No Surprises" - 3:48
11. "Lucky" - 4:19
12. "The Tourist" - 5:24

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

The Internet Pirate Manifesto

The public will put up with a lot of terrible things, but if you suggest that an elected official is hiding secrets from us the response is uproar. Democrats point to Nixon's Watergate cover-up as a great crime against the people. Republicans similarly point to the fact that Bill Clinton had the audacity to lie to America about his sex-life, America of all people! Every year we learn of some insertion of the public eye into the private lives of citizens, always justified by some event that calls attention to National Security and the fact that this event could have been prevented if we'd just had access to the right information. (Someone up on the hill sure seems to have watched Minority Report a few too many times, nyet?)

The voices of recent history, unanimously so far as I can hear, speak that information belongs to all. Not only is it free, but it is freedom, and that's what we stand for as Americans. Isn't that the great evil of China, that their postal and internet policy keeps so much of their people's information from being shared?

The problem we are facing is that in the last thirty years we have seen all that we hold dear, our television programs, books, music and movies, translated into information, into 1s and 0s. Today we deal with a dilemma of contrary feelings. I'm going to use music as a specific example of this process in order to avoid confusion, but with the understanding that any of these other media can be understood in its place. When music was bound to matter, to records and cassettes and discs, it was property, it was a singular object that belonged to a particular person, and its theft, we believed, deserves punishment. Music is now ethereal. It is repeatable. Like some kind of riddle, you can give it to someone else and keep it at the same time. It is information, and information holds to a different rule than property. Our contrary feelings stem from the fact that we recognize an MP3 as information, but the old ways from a different time and their good friend the recording industry recognize it as property, neither different from a CD nor free from policies of control.

What we are experiencing is the birth pangs of a new way. When a woman gives birth to a child she experiences great pain. But the result is a new life, a child, but also a woman transformed, a mother. The recording industry is getting less of our money, and sadly, some musicians aren't going to be able to make it in this new age. But it's not all sad stories on the end of the music industry: they are finding both new ways to market music and new markets for music. Bands like Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails are releasing significant works for free. According to the old way, this should result in their demise, and yet Radiohead made money hand over fist on In Rainbows, an album offered to the entire world for free. Radiohead tells us that these pains will end, and when they are over the consumer and the producer alike will benefit so long as we allow this difficulty to activate our creativity rather than simply calling those lawyers you have on retainer.

In another age, creativity was expected of artists. I hold it as a self evident truth that those musicians who stand so strongly against free music sharing services, the Lars Ulriches of the music world, say nothing with their protests but "This is not about art and we are not artists. We would record farts and farts alone if we believed you would buy it. You, the masses, on average much more poor than us, exist to give away the little money you have, and you exist to give it to us. I, Lars Ulrich, am here to say that I, and those like me, are only in it for the money."

If you're not already aware, I'm trying to justify a crime. I wish to perpetuate crime and I wish to do so in a way in which the criminals are not caught. I also wish to tell you that the law that those criminals are breaking is unjust and we all know that it is unjust. If you remember your history then you know that this is exactly what the good things about America are founded on. It was illegal for us to have freedom from the Brits. The founding of this country in any other name than that of a king on an island far away was illegal. We won that battle and made freedom legal. Since freedom is in such high demand, however, there's always someone who wants to control it and tax it and make it legal for some and illegal for others. So we keep battling to free freedom. When we download, upload, share, transfer, seed or leech, we share information, information being thoroughly understood as free, freedom and belonging to all. When someone like NBC / Universal sends a letter to your internet service provider and they shut off your service because you think its stupid to pay $15 for a movie that is most likely a disappointing adaptation, remake or sequel, wouldn't it be nice if you could write back and say, "Nice try, but information belongs to everyone. I foresee a future and you're going to be swallowed whole by it."

I wish to close by citing the motto of most downloading sites and downloaders: "If you like it, buy it." Support artists by buying good movies, albums, books and comic books. Promote what is good on your Myspace, your Facebook, your Twitter, your blog, in your daily life. Go to concerts. Re-watch a good movie on the big screen if you get the chance. The high definition projector technology these days, especially at Rave Motion Picture Company, is magnificent. Find your own way to support what is good, especially if it is both good and unpopular. We too need to exercise our creativity in the way we pay back those few artists who are creative and support their fans.

Support always good art, but do so recognizing that information is free and belongs to all.

Radiohead The Bends (1995: Capitol)






















1. "Planet Telex" - 4:19
2. "The Bends" - 4:06
3. "High and Dry" - 4:17
4. "Fake Plastic Trees" - 4:50
5. "Bones" - 3:09
6. "(Nice Dream)" - 3:53
7. "Just" - 3:54
8. "My Iron Lung" - 4:36
9. "Bullet Proof..I Wish I Was" - 3:28
10. "Black Star" - 4:07
11. "Sulk" - 3:42
12. "Street Spirit (Fade Out)" - 4:12

Monday, October 11, 2010

Art of Stanley Donwood

Stanley Downwood is the man who designs all of the album art, DVD art, posters and propaganda issued by the hit band Radiohead. I remember recently telling someone that Radiohead is a band that just offers a whole lot of things to the public. For example, you can feel free to hate their music for whatever reason, but love the art work on their albums. The reason this is possible is because of Stanley Downwood. But you don't have to take my word for it. See for yourself.







For more information, check out DEAD AIR SPACE (Radiohead's home page) or SLOWLY DOWNWARD (Donwood's home page).

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Geek Chic: How The Concept of Cool Was Turned On Its Head

What is the deal with Michael Cera? I mean, everyone loves this kid. Everyone. It's not just little kids. It's everyone. And the strange thing is that women really love him. Not in that, Awe-he's-adorable-because-of-how-poorly-adjusted-he-is kind of way. No. Women want to have sex with Michael Cera.

This essay explores how it came about that someone like Michael Cera could become a sexual icon. In the next several paragraphs, I will investigate the series of events that were necessary in order for geek to become chic.

In 1988, in the town of Brampton, Ontario, a son was born to Linda and Luigi Cera. They gave him the name Michael and began to dream of a bright future for this boy. I could go into more depth about Cera's childhood and acting success, but these facts have surprisingly little to do with Michael Cera's popular appeal. It was not the Canadian birthing scene in the late '80s that set the stage for the rise of Michael Cera, but rather, I contest, a completely different scene that was beginning to form in the Pacific Northwest town of Seattle. You may have heard it called grunge.

It's kind of hard to trace the beginning of grunge. Soundgarden was formed in 1984, followed by Nirvana and Alice in Chains in 1987, and finally Pearl Jam in 1990. These were the heavy hitters. While grunge was forming as early as the mid-1980s, it wasn't until the early '90s that this strange fusion of hardcore punk, heavy metal and indie rock became commercially successful. This is largely due to the success of Nirvana's second studio album Nevermind and Peal Jam's debut album Ten in 1991. Some might declare that grunge died on April 5, 1994, the day Nirvana front man Kurt Cobain committed suicide at the age of 27, but the fact is that it existed in some form for the next several years.

What does grunge have to do with Michael Cera? To explore this connection, we first have to understand how previous decades imagined the concept of coolness. From the 1950s through to the beginning of the grunge era, the single most important artifact of cool was the leather jacket. The tough kids in rockabilly bands wore leather jackets. And sometimes they had knifes! The jocks wore them when they got older and started realizing that it was just sad to continue wearing a letter-man jacket at the ripe age of 40. People like Springsteen and Arthur Fonzarelli wore leather jackets. And they rode motorcycles.

The leather jacket wearing public was not Cobain's demographic. In fact, Cobain was looking to light up a fire inside of everyone else. The freaks who didn't go out to parties. The losers who got their butts kicked for listening to Pixies records. These were Cobain's bread and butter. Cobain poked fun at cheerleaders in the music video for "Smells Like Teen Spirit," whereas pre-Cobain cool kids were happy just to poke the cheerleaders. Cobain was a freedom fighter, a Robin Hood of sorts, robbing from the leather jacket and giving to the flannel.

As grunge's influence in America began to dissipate, its response in England began to grow in strength. The second step in the creation of Michael Cera's sexual appeal is the rise to power of Radiohead as the most popular band in America. The world first met Radiohead with the release of the single "Creep" in 1992, followed by the album Pablo Honey in 1993, early work that had not yet distanced itself from popular influences such as U2 and REM. But the band got its name from a Talking Heads song, and perhaps it was the spirit of David Byrne himself (still living) that brought about Radiohead's turn away from pop.

Starting with the 1995 album The Bends, Radiohead's trend was to stray further and further away from popular sounding music with each album. Some critics had even begun describing Radiohead's music as anti-pop. Strangely enough, every time the band took another step away from popular music, Radiohead became more and more popular among listeners. As a result, Radiohead was capable of doing much more toward turning the concept of cool on its head than the entire grunge movement. Grunge questioned and protested old forms of coolness, but Radiohead made it so coolness was defined by its exact opposite: uncoolness. Cool now means "interesting and obscure, different from the rest." It's no wonder that the '90s gave rise to such an intense surge in indie music in the 2000s.

Why is Michael Cera a sexual icon? Because the '90s primed us to view everyone who doesn't fit in as the epitome of cool. Throw in the story of Bill Gates' rise to fame and it's obvious. Geeks, freaks, nerds, dweebs and losers, the world belongs to you. Michael Cera is scrawny, soft-spoken, nervous and introverted. He likes music that other people either haven't heard of or stopped listening to decades ago. He's the definition of dork and yet women want ot throw their panties at him like he's Justin Bieber. (I don't know if I'm more unsettled by Michael Cera as a sexual icon or Justin Bieber, but that's another discussion.) And it's not just Michael Cera. There's Seth Rogen and Jay Baruchel. There's Jonah Hill. There's McLovin, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, a nerd that we chose for stardom. And if you include brilliant actors, there's Jesse Eisenberg and occasionally Joseph Gordon-Levitt. (I recently saw J G-L listed as one of the most important geeks. I also recently saw him being all debonair and well-dressed in Inception. I, for one, am not convinced for a second that he's a geek.)

Should Michael Cera be a sexual icon? By all standards and measures, definitely not.

Do I have a problem with Michael Cera being a sexual icon? Of course I don't.

I'm writing a blog about Michael Cera, for God's sake. It's posted on a blog that caters to comic book readers and video gamers. Of course I think women should love the geek.

Geeks deserve love, and I should know. I'm a full-on geek myself!