Dunce Flash: Short Cuts

in: the press

Pacey-Con photo from Just Jared

  • Pacey Witter is back, looking rogue, scruffy and decidedly more handsome than Dawson Leery. That’s right, folks – Dawson’s Creek‘s Joshua Jackson staged his very own convention mere feet away from the throngs at San Diego’s Comic-Con. The aptly named Pacey-Con celebrated Jackson’s seminal character in all his bumbling glory.

    “Well, it came about because I just thought it was time to remind the world of the greatest character in TV history,” Jackson joked with MTV News Tuesday. “The original concept was, you know, actors are always trying to run away from characters they’ve had in their past. Well, I wanted to do the video that was the exact opposite.”

    Jackson staged Pacey-Con outside of the convention hall, and the whole thing was taped for a hilarious Funny or Die segment (video embedded below) the website released today. Jackson handed out Dawson’s Creek fan fiction while decked in Pacey’s signature bowling shirt, a bit soundtracked by the show’s theme song, Paula Cole’s “I Don’t Want to Wait.” Capeside to San Diego, indeed. [MTV]

Vodpod videos no longer available.

  • Dunce Cap favorite Guster released a new single, “Bad, Bad World,” from their forthcoming album, Easy Wonderful, set to drop October 5 on Aware/Universal Republic. Easy Wonderful will be Guster’s first album in four years. You can grab “Bad, Bad World” for free via the band’s website, or you can stream it below. [HitFix]


Guster, “Bad, Bad World”

"A Space Odyssey 2010" from Mila's Daydreams

  • Holy cuteness, Batman! Frisky writer Adele is on maternity leave after giving birth to her daughter Mila, and she’s maintaining a baby blog at Mila’s Daydreams. During Mila’s naps, Adele likes to imagine what her infant might be dreaming about; she then captures these epic tales in staged photographs like the one above. Gotta love the itty bitty unwitt-y bloggers. [The Frisky]

The Rob Scrawl: The 10 Best Tracks of 2010

in: heavy rotation, in: tens

Hoorah! What a marvelous day – a dual (a double, not a challenge) post. It’s a Dunce Cap top ten, the best tracks of the year (in my personal opinion). It’s a Rob Scrawl with a twist: An in tens (too cheesy?) playlist capturing the best songs of the year (as determined July 19, 2010). And, of course, WordPress still isn’t permitting users to embed 8tracks into a new post, so hosting on the other site’ll have to suffice.

Click the photo or link below to listen.

The best font ever!, courtesy of Core77

The Dunce Cap Special Edition: 10 Best of ’10: It’s a Hollywood summer. You never believe the shitty thoughts I think. We belong in a movie. (listen to mix via 8tracks)

My 10 favorite tracks of the year:

1. “O.N.E.” – Yeasayer
2. “Factory” – Band of Horses
3. “Good to Be” – Magic Kids
4. “Conversation 16” – The National
5. “Someday Soon” – Harlem
6. “Don’t Look Back” – She & Him
7. “Excuses” – The Morning Benders
8. “Crazy for You” – Best Coast
9. “Gold Skull” – Miniature Tigers
10. “Pretty Melody” – Butch Walker

This isn’t a playlist in need of too much explanation, so give the pretty list a whirl. 2010’s been a fair year for music, and a lot of my favorite artists were back in full force. The rest of the year is sure to be kind to my ears, with upcoming releases from Arcade Fire, Wavves, Klaxons, Of Montreal, Belle & Sebastian and many, many more (Pitbull!). And that Miniature Tigers album is going to be bomb. I fell in love with Tell it to the Volcano after seeing the band open for Bishop Allen, and the early sounds of Fortress, which hits stores Tuesday, seem even more mature and catchier than their first full-length.

And speaking of albums, I do, as a matter of fact, have a list of my favorite albums of the year thus far!

Critical darlings The Hold Steady, whose sonorous Heaven is Whenever made my Top 10 list.

My 10 favorite albums of the year:

LCD Soundsystem – This is Happening
The National – High Violet
The Hold Steady – Heaven is Whenever
Beach House – Teen Dream
Titus Andronicus – The Monitor
The Morning Benders – Big Echo
Jonsi – Go
Marina & the Diamonds – The Family Jewels
Phantogram – Eyelid Movies
Big Boi – Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty

And a hilarious piece from Saturday’s Wait, Wait…Don’t Tell Me! featuring The Hold Steady’s Craig Finn: Craig Finn of The Hold Steady Plays Not My Job

What do you think?
What are your favorite tracks/albums of the year thus far?

Judgment Call: Slow Club’s Yeah, So

in: under scrutiny

The U.K.'s Slow Club

More Folky Twee Pop, With a Twist
Slow Club manages indie pop that feels both familiar and fresh

The folky twee pop of the U.K.’s Slow Club is not revolutionary or even novel. The band, hailing from Sheffield, England, is a boy-girl indie pop duo whose debut album, “Yeah, So,” is a charming compilation of love songs. Yeah, so? Though the band’s sound nearly replicates the delicacy of its contemporaries, the album is interesting in its penchant for sheer delight and momentary surprises. With only a few slight missteps, “Yeah, So,” is a pleasantly cutesy soundtrack to warm summertime romance, imbued with the occasional wisdom of viewing youth – and all romantic foibles – in hindsight.

Slow Club formed in 2006 and released “Yeah, So” in Europe in July 2009, though the album didn’t officially debut in North America until late March. The band’s folk instrumentation is typical of indie pop but with a twist – the music, silly, fun, sharp and unpolished, incorporates unusual musical instruments into the equation, from water-filled glass bottles to spoons and even the occasional wooden chair. It’s with this small defiance of the norm that Slow Club really hits their stride. The instrumentality becomes a brutish force, a whirlwind of percussion and faster tempos engaging in an excitable playfulness which truly allows Slow Club to thrive in an over-saturated genre.

In its most frenetic, percussive moments, “Yeah, So” plays like a thrash pop album, not an ode to love stories. Charles Watson (vocals, guitar) and Rebecca Taylor (vocals, guitar, percussion), the duo behind Slow Club, produce Beach Boy-inspired delicacies, but when the tempo slows, the tracks meander to dwindling musical theater. “Our Most Brilliant Friends,” the loping and lengthy closing track, features Taylor’s soft and delicate vocals but is, in its first half, a plaintive serenade, sappy and overwrought. Only when, as the song closes, Watson and Taylor employ their usual strangeness (particularly in lyricism, with lines such as “And I definitely want to be a rapper/But I’m just a northern girl from where nothing really happens/And the bones inside my shins are crumbling (x5)/ It’s from all the crunking I’ve been doing”) does the song become original and divergent from the band’s peers.

While these comparisons seem inevitable, the continued change in tempo and vocal timbre makes “Yeah, So” truly interesting. With each track comes another comparison to be made. The first track, “When I Go,” could easily be confused for a “Let’s Get Out of this Country”-era Camera Obscura, while track four, “It Doesn’t Have to be Beautiful,” shares the jangly, loose-lipped qualities of 1970s Buzzcocks. “Apples and Pairs,” one of the album’s final tracks, could readily be mistaken for a Sondre Lerche B-side, but even these comparisons, these similarities to other artists, emphasize the uniqueness of Slow Club. Watson’s voice takes on one sound after another, channeling first the jaunty sweetness of She & Him’s M. Ward and then the gruffness of Chicago’s Horse in the Sea. Each song is independently mixtape-worthy, with the childish chorus of “Our Most Brilliant Friends” effortlessly juxtaposed beside any number of other sentimental pop love songs.

Taylor and Watson often sing in unison, and their voices melding together make for the most rockabilly sing-a-longs, set to the raucous percussion of the majority of tracks on “Yeah, So.”  More than anything, “Yeah, So” and the persona of Slow Club is adorable. This quality, the ability of the band to sound simultaneously wise and youthfully earnest, is the album’s biggest charm. The album progresses from cheery optimism to a reverent kind of resignation, from the opening plea to make a pact to spend their lives together on “When I Go” to the realization that a partner “was hard to please,” in the album finale, but it remains always pleasing. The familiarity of these sentiments, and of Slow Club, make “Yeah, So” feel cozy and well-worn, but the pop ditties are optimistic and catchy enough to make any similarities to other acts negligible. Slow Club achieves romanticism and vulnerability without being melodramatic, and the percussive rowdiness makes the album just fun enough to forget any purported lack of innovation.

Press This!: From WBEZ’s Eight Forty-Eight

on: journalistic writing

Chicago's street performers are more than just the Bucket Boys

Look, ma! I made something for the radio.

My final project, made with two partners for an Audio Documentary course in the spring of 2010, aired on Monday, July 19, 2010, on Chicago Public Radio, WBEZ 91.5. Give it a listen!


via Eight Forty-Eight – Street Performers Follow the Law.

The Dunce Cap: July 19, 2010

in: heavy rotation

get yer eyes checked!

The Dunce Cap, Vol. 17: The room is on fire as she’s fixing her hair. (listen to mix via 8tracks)

1. “If You Find Yourself Caught In Love” – Belle & Sebastian
2. “Congratulations Smack and Katy” – Reggie and the Full Effect
3. “I Met a Girl” – Wheat
4. “Spitting Games” – Snow Patrol
5. “Down” – Blink-182
6. “Reptilia” – The Strokes
7. “Naive” – The Jealous Sound
8. “So Says I” – The Shins
9. “Amsterdam” – Guster
10. “Chicago is so Two Years Ago” – Fall Out Boy
11. “California Waiting” – Kings of Leon
12. “Mexican Wine” – Fountains of Wayne
13. “The Sound of Settling” – Death Cab for Cutie
14. “Shiny” – The Decemberists
15. “Toxic” – Britney Spears
16. “My Favorite Accident” – Motion City Soundtrack
17. “Shakin’” – Rooney
18. “Such Great Heights” – The Postal Service
19. “So Long, Astoria” – The Ataris
20. “My Coco” – stellastarr*

Four score & seven years ago…

The year is 2003. Ariel Sharon is the newly elected Prime Minister of Israel. I am only nominally Jewish. The war in Iraq has just begun. 100 people have lost their lives in The Station night club fire, as pyrotechnics from Great White’s stage show set the insulation foam ceiling alight. The O.C. premieres on Fox.

I am in seventh grade. I no longer have braces, and my hair is just growing out of its yield sign phase. I carry a tin Weezer lunchbox to school, and I still listen to Good Charlotte mostly unabashedly. This is the summer of my musical discontent, and it is, in response, the spring of my musical awakening.

Seven years ago, I was in seventh grade. I had just recently discovered that all music did not come from boy bands and teen queens, and I had also become incredibly engrossed in Josh Schwartz‘s The O.C. I was obsessed with Weezer. My taste in music was rapidly expanding, and 2003 was certainly the year my music repertoire really took shape. It was the heyday of pop-punk and my real transition into indie. In the hopes of avoiding sounding even sappier than I do now, this should suffice: 2003 was the first year I really, truly started to love music. Music by musicians with musical talent. And, man, the new material that came out of 2003 continues to astound me and occupy my iPod with some regularity. It may be a bit melodramatic to say that 2003 was the year I came into myself, as that’s an exaggeration, but it was certainly the year I began a great passion for music.

I started to make mixtapes for friends and boys, and these artists really became staples of my playlists. There was The Postal Service’s Give Up, Belle and Sebastian’s Dear Catastrophe Waitress, Death Cab’s gorgeously lush Transatlanticism, The Shins’ Chutes Too Narrow. There was the catchier-than-the-common-cold Yellowcard, a maturing Fall Out Boy, an aging Chris Carrabba in Dashboard and an Alkaline Trio album that was just melodious enough to shout out loud. There were two hilarious videos for Motion City Soundtrack’s “The Future Freaks Me Out” and Reggie and the Full Effect’s “Congratulations, Smack and Katy.”

There was a White Stripes album that nearly overshadowed the brilliance their fans had come to expect with De Stijl and White Blood Cells. There was a disappointing Saves the Day follow-up to an album (Stay What You Are) as they drifted away from a record label, Vagrant, that would come to define my early interactions with music. That’s not to mention The Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Stills, The Long Winters’ brilliant photograph of adolescence, When I Pretend to Fall, or even The All-American Rejects eponymous first album, a CD I bought the day it was released.


The Long Winters, “The Sound of Coming Down”

So much of who I was in school was defined by my ownership of these and other albums. I had a fervent passion for music, and 2003 was really the year that fueled my musical ravenousness. So this is an epic tribute to the year 2003, to seven years ago, to the music of the year and the efforts that would come subsequently.

Not as interactive as the last Dunce Cap, certainly, but a fair tribute to a year that changed music – for me, at least.

And I’ve still got that Weezer lunchbox.

Happy listening.

The Stills

Alkaline Trio

Dashboard Confessional – A Mark, A Mission, A Brand, A Scar

Pete Yorn – Day I Forgot

Vendetta Red

Adam Green

The Darkness

Yellowcard

AFI

Relient K

Saves the Day

A Perfect Circle – Thirteenth Step

Story of the Year

Outkast

Kill Hannah

Jamison Parker EP

Something Corporate – North

White Stripes – Elephant

Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Fever to Tell

The All American Rejects – Self-titled

Open Season: A Letter to Rob Thomas (the other)

in: big words

Matchbox Twenty

Dear Rob Thomas,

Your band sucks*.

Sincerely,
Coco, the girl with the dunce cap

*Yourself or Someone Like You is good. Really, really good. I’m happy to give you credit for that. But that was the ’90s, and Adam Duritz still looked okay with dreadlocks, and your sadsack melodramatic act worked. And Jakob Dylan was winning Grammys, and I was 6. It was kind of all downhill from there. I can’t listen to “If You’re Gone.” I mean it. I change it every single time. For my birthday one year, my mom woke me up by playing that song. As a joke. To ring in my birthday in the worst way possible. Stop now.

**”Smooth”  is also really good. I made up an interpretive dance to it, and sometimes I still whip out the moves. But that was just you, and Santana can make even Michelle Branch melodious.

***Just kidding. I like Michelle Branch.

****Your band still sucks.

Open Season: A Letter to Rob Thomas

in: big words

Oh, Veronica Mars.

remember this track?


The Dandy Warhols, “We Used to Be Friends”

Okay, so I’ve been kind of absent from the blogosophere these past couple days, and, in full disclosure, I’m starting to look pasty and kind of crunchy like Kristen Stewart – except with facial expressions. I spent an absurd four days straight on my couch/in my bed, engrossed in the three seasons of UPN/The CW’s all-too-short Veronica Mars. That’s right – I watched all 64 episodes of Veronica Mars in the span of one long weekend. Needless to say, I was more or less a shut-in for those few days, but I remain unashamed. The show? Completely worth it.

I watched Veronica Mars off and on when it aired initially but never really regularly. And what a freaking shame. The show is one of the most brilliant pieces of small screen cinema I’ve ever seen. For those of you held captive beneath a rock for the last five years, Veronica Mars ran from late 2004 to mid 2007 and followed a female amateur private eye through the end of high school and the beginning of college. It was, by all CW estimations, a commercial failure – but it was a critical darling. And, within the first ten minutes of the pilot episode, I was utterly in love.

So, to kick off a brand new feature, Open Season, I’m writing an open letter to Veronica Mars‘ creator, Rob Thomas. Open Season will be an open letter to someone prominent in popular culture (or not, I suppose) about an issue that concerns or intrigues me. I’m maybe three years too late with this one, but I figure it’s never too late to write a love letter.

The Dunce Cap: July 12, 2010

in: heavy rotation

Ralph Wiggum - Image courtesy of Fox

The Dunce Cap, Vol. 16: I’m a pop sensation! I’m a pop sensation! (mix via 8tracks)
^^Click the link to listen to the mix.

Names
1. “Jason Lee” – All Girl Summer Fun Band
2. “Michael” – Franz Ferdinand
3. “Ralph Wiggum” – The Bloodhound Gang
Cars
4. “Bitchin’ Camaro” – The Dead Milkmen
5. “El Caminos in the West” – Grandaddy
6. “Survival Car” – Fountains of Wayne
Colors
7. “Sixteen Blue” – The Replacements
8. “Everything is Green” – The Essex Green
9. “Red” – Elbow
Numbers
10. “Thirteen” – Big Star
11. “83” – John Mayer
12. “#27” – Marvelous 3
Places
13. “New York, New York” – Ryan Adams
14. “ATL” – Butch Walker
15. “Chicago at Night” – Spoon
Careers
16. “Rich Wife” – The Long Winters
17. “Heavy Metal Drummer” – Wilco
18. “Fred Jones, Pt. 2” – Ben Folds
Homes
19. “House of Books” – The Pop Project
20. “Treehouse” – I’m From Barcelona
21. “Love Shack” – The B52s

Book Club: Summer music

in: on queue

Jason Harwell

Men with(out) sunglasses

It’s sweet, sweet summertime, and that means a many splendid things: heat, sunshine, sweat, swimming pools, swimsuit, chaise lounges and sunglasses. And, it seems, in music, there are two primary camps. There are the Corey Harts and Tracey Ullmans, donning sunglasses both during the day and the night, and then there are these guys. And they’ve got a message for you. Take off your damn sunglasses, square!

Pretty melody:

1. Ezra Furman & the Harpoons, “Take Off Your Sunglasses”

I became intimately familiar with Ezra Furman & the Harpoons during my internship at SPACE my freshmen year. I guess plastering their faces all over our promos worked – I can’t help but sing along.

2. Jason Harwell, “Why Do Girls Wear Big Sunglasses?”

Jason Harwell is such a doll. The Athens musician and artist stole my heart with “Katie Secretly Married at 8,” but this track is just as wondrous.

Dunce Flash: Spencer Plays Dress-Up

in: the press

Courtesy of The Frisky, sweet redemption! I was, as per my Twitter status yesterday, right. The soon-to-be former Mr. Heidi Montag (unkempt Ken) is a crazy homeless man! Or, per a gag with the equally as classy Perez Hilton, merely dressed as one. Not-so-brutally rebuffed from The Hills series finale party, Spencer Pratt (excuse me, King Spencer, as he’d like to be addressed) added himself to the guest list. Sort of.

Spencer Pratt, le brat

Spencer, the clear villain of The Hills – yes, even more than Brody Jenner – must have lost his invitation to the big celebration, but Hilton suggested he find his own way in. Dressed like a poor Albert Einstein impersonator, Pratt stormed the Hills crowd with a renewed fervor of douche baggery. Wearing body padding, aging face make-up and a bushy white beard and wig, Pratt vowed to air his “obnoxious mouth” even louder than before. Oh, dear God. The world isn’t ready for that. And the outfit? It didn’t fool anyone – The Roosevelt canceled his reservations, but he liked it so much he wore it to the Inception premiere too. Odds are – he wasn’t invited to that one, either. Pathetic. [The Frisky] [NY Daily News]

Why is “Runaway Train” playing during a Heidi-Spencer montage? Is this a revelation that Spencer is indeed a homeless man? #thehills 10:38 PM Jul 13th via web

cckeevan @ Twitter