Devo, Dead Kennedys, Super Mario Bros

New 33 1/3 Books on Devo, Dead Kennedys, and Super Mario Bros Are Criticism Done Right

There's an old, dismissive joke about music criticism: "Writing about music is like dancing about architecture--it's a really stupid thing to want to do."

That's funny, sure, but good music critics can dance like motherfuckers. Dancing is fun, it's stimulating, it's potentially generative. When people can dance as well as they do in the 33 1/3 series, that's something that should be celebrated. (Here I am, dancing about dancing.)

The 33 1/3 series began publishing pocket-sized books of music criticism in 2003, each focused on a single album, each a sustained work of long-form criticism. The best entries in the series are exceptional culture writing. Some of the standouts include Celine Dion's Let's Talk About Love: A Journey to the End of Taste by Carl Wilson, James Brown's Live at the Apollo by Douglas Wolk, David Bowie's Low by Hugo Wilcken, Public Enemy's It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back by Christopher R. Weingarten, and Television's Marquee Moon by Bryan Waterman. (Waiting on my shelf to be read: Big Star's Radio City by Bruce Eaton and a novella about Black Sabbath's Master of Reality by Mountain Goats frontman John Darnielle.)

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Three of the recent 33 1/3 books focus on seminal works of the early '80s: Devo’s Freedom of Choice by Evie Nagy, Dead Kennedys’ Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables by Michael Stewart Foley, and, the first entry on videogame music in the series, Koji Kondo’s Super Mario Bros. by Andrew Schartmann. Each of the books are fine additions to 33 1/3. In other words, they dance like motherfuckers.

Form and content are the most basic aspects of aesthetic criticism, and while that's part of the discussion in each of these three new books, the authors also find ways of exploring the time and the place that gave birth to each album. If it's questions of form and content that determine the relative success of individual works of art, it's questions of time and place that help fashion the form and the content, and it's the intersection between the elements of form, content, time, and place that help determine the enduring legacy of the art.

Let's give each of these new 33 1/3 books a quick look. For more information on the books and the series, visit the 33 1/3 site.


Taste of Chicago, July 2015. AngieStarPhoto

[RH Photos] Erykah Badu Headlines Taste of Chicago

Photos by AngieStar Photo

Day two at the Taste of Chicago brought in warm, sunny weather, and new wave of more people to enjoy the fest. Aside from all the food, Grammy Award-winner Erykah Badu set the tone for the evening as the night's headliner to a sold out show, and it was amazing.

Opening the night was Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue, who brought the crowd to their feet in true New Orleans jazz fashion. Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews and his long time band, Orleans Avenue, brought a charismatic and relentless drive to continually bridge music's past and future to the stage, including new tracks from their third album, Say That To Say This, out September 10. Co-produced by Andrews and Raphael Saadiq, it truly sounded like nothing else out there, as Andrews, guitarist Pete Murano, bassist Mike Ballard and drummer Joey Peebles stride forward in their unique musical evolution. In a smooth transition, Erykah Badu came to stage with an instrumental rendition of "The Healer", easing into "Out My Mind, Just In Time". Badu continued on with so many of her most classic songs, along with live beat making, and an often witty commentary in between tracks. Ending the night with "Window Seat" at dusk brought the night to close gently and ever so entertainingly.

If you missed the show, and Badu's signature unique attire, check out some photos here:


Weezer, Taste of Chicago, July 2015. AngieStarPhoto

[RH Photos] Weezer Headlines at the 35th Annual Taste of Chicago

Photos by AngieStar Photo

The 35th annual Taste of Chicago kicked off yesterday in Grant Park's Petrillo Music Shell, with Weezer as their first headlining band. The 2015 Taste of Chicago is featuring over 100 menu items from 60 food trucks, pop-ups and restaurants representing Chicago’s diverse culinary community. But of course, the food isn't the only thing, the live music has been well known at the festival and this year is no different.

From beginning to end, Weezer performed smash hit after hit such as "Say it Ain't So", "Beverly Hills", "Hash Pipe", and many more. They even introduced a newer track titled, "Go Away", from their fourth album Everything Will Be Alright In The End. As it began to rain, the night ended with an encore performance of "Buddy Holly" that turned the crowd way up.

Yesterday was only beginning as Petrillo Music Shell still has a few more headliners still to go:
July 9, 5:30 p.m. ERYKAH BADU, Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
July 10, 5:30 p.m. THE CHIEFTAINS, Special Consensus
July 11, 4:30 p.m. SPOON, Houndmoth, Madisen Ward & The Mama Bear
July 12 4:30 p.m. MAZE featuring Frankie Beverly, DJ Duane Powell

Reserved seating starts at $15 and the lawn is FREE. To purchase tickets visit the Taste of Chicago website.

In case you missed their set, be sure to check out these photos:


Classic photo of Bruce Springsteen

[Playlist of the Week] 10 Songs for America

Beers, burgers and the good ol’ US of A. While it’s obvious these past couple of weeks have been filled with both good news and bad news in our country, last weekend marked the 239th birthday of the United States. Country songs would be a cop-out for an Independence Day playlist, so we’ve compiled 10 songs that don’t involve trucks, tractors or whiskey to commemorate a fantastic 4th of July.


Darby Crash of The Germs

The Decline of Western Civilization: To Live and Die in LA

Penelope Spheeris' The Decline of Western Civilization is one of those seminal music documentaries with a great reputation despite being rarely seen. Ditto its two sequels. Never available on DVD or Blu-ray, The Decline of Western Civilization trilogy is finally being released by Shout Factory at the end of the month. In addition, the first two films of Spheeris' Decline trilogy will screen at The Music Box Theatre in Chicago on Saturday, June 27th, with Spheeris in attendance. (For more information about the Music Box screening, click here.)

Even though I've only seen the first Decline, I'm excited for the trilogy's release in general. Maybe the lack of availability has increased the potency of the material and my desire to see it. (Absence makes the heart of the LA scene grow dismaler.) In the first Decline, Spheeris hung around LA punk bands like Black Flag, The Circle Jerks, X, and The Germs and included live concert footage; she caught the daily grind of music mag Slash; she interviewed kids at punk shows. In the process, her documentary captures the spirit of the scene as a whole: an aggressive sneer looking out over the ugly void of the 80s, the logical conclusion after the disillusionment of the 70s and the dashed hopes of the 60s.

Titling the documentary The Decline of Western Civilization seems cheeky, but it's fitting since the story of the movie is the quintessential American tale of the California bummer.

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Think about it. Before westward expansion was over, the possibilities must have seemed limitless. Land, far as the eye can see, untouched, unspoiled, and with a little genocide, eventually ours. When gold was discovered, the west had riches untold, though only for a few; the rest were ripped off or died trying to eventually get ripped off. With the motion pictures there was the promise of fame rarely achieved, and during the Depression there were jobs that weren't worth the trek. For the generation of love, places like San Francisco seemed utopian, but the promise of the 60s was dashed by political assassinations capped by hippie bloodshed (i.e., the Manson murders, Altamont) that revealed a naive kind of hippie bullshit.

Early in The Decline of Western Civilization, the owner of a punk club stands atop a hill with the LA skyline muggy with haze. Cars on the freeways beneath churn out more and more smog. To paraphrase him, everyone went west expecting paradise, but when they got there, the air sucked.

To put it another way: In Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, the summation of the counterculture's failure was the refrain "We blew it"; the equivalent in The Decline of Western Civilization is a disaffected teenager staring at the camera and sighing "Fuck."

The Decline of Western Civilization

While the punk scene seems like it ought to be about community, the film seems to chronicle a form of punk cannibalization. From interviews with punk show kids, they talk about an aggressive and violent streak. In one particular interview, Pat Smear--then of The Germs and later of Nirvana and Foo Fighters fame--admits to beating up girls just because; in the concert footage, pits open up and swirl, full of punk kids and punchy suburban bros and spit. Adding to the vibe of society's lawless decline, the security at the shows are decked out in leather jackets, like the lawmen from the original Mad Max.

It's not just punk-on-punk cannibalization, but in some cases self-cannibalization. Darby Crash of The Germs embodies the latter. He harms himself at shows, scratching his skin and drawing blood. Spheeris catches him on camera zonked out of his gourd. There's permanent marker smeared all over his face and body like he's part poster-child for disaffected youth and part punk-parody in the form of horse hair pottery. Crash slurs out all of the lyrics in a daze while beneath him are subtitles with the proper lyrics. It's funny and sad all at once, though maybe sadder than funny given Crash's eventual suicide from a heroin overdose.

From the clips I've seen, 1988's The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years is less like the first Decline and more like This Is Spinal Tap or the cult short film Heavy Metal Parking Lot. (Spheeris declined to direct This Is Spinal Tap.) The excesses of the second film are about rock star cliches, which might seem like the high-life or a dream fulfilled, but it seems like a steeper fall given the vapid nature of the rock and roll dream. Maybe the focus of The Metal Years was anticipated by the emptiness delineated in X's "Sex and Dying in High Society." 1998's Decline Part III (never released on home video), is all about the homeless gutterpunks of LA and their daily struggles to get by. It's a continued drop headed into the 21st century, because one of the constants of America is the California bummer.

Though not part of the LA punk scene, Johnny Rotten may have succinctly summed the trajectory of the decline of western civilization back in 1977: "No future." The rudderless world continues into the void of the 21st century. West isn't an option anymore, and the only direction left is down. It's fitting that Spheeris would end The Decline of Western Civilization with footage of the band Fear.


Ted 2

[Playlist of the Week] 10 Blockbuster Hits of the Summer

With summer right around the corner, film buffs everywhere are gearing up for the soundtrack releases. While most people aren’t interested in scores, we’ve found the small light with familiar songs being featured on each film's respective OST. In no particular order, here are 10 songs featured on blockbuster soundtracks of movies being released this summer.


Sonic the Hedgehog title screen

[Playlist of the Week] 5 Retro Video Game Themes for E3

Video games have played a large role in my nearly 30 years of life; so, too, has music. While video game OSTs (Original Soundtracks) don't get the acclaim and recognition they often deserve, the right soundtrack can easily be replayed countless times without the context of a boss battle or stage selection screen.

With this year's Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) taking place this week, I figured it'd be as good a time as any to curate a playlist of five iconic, retro video game themes for this week's installment of Playlist of the Week. I capped my selections to only include video games released before 1993 to get that extra retro, MIDI feel... and to keep the door open for even more in the future.

I hope you enjoy my selections! We'll also be covering the major video game announcements from E3 this week, so if video games tickle your fancy, we'll have you covered!


Logo for Jurassic World

[Playlist of the Week] 5 Songs About Dinosaurs

Oddly enough, there are more songs about dinosaurs than you’d expect (we expected zero). In preparation for the upcoming blockbuster hit of the summer, Jurassic World, we’ve compiled a short list of five songs related to dinosaurs. We definitely ran the spectrum of genres to compile our list. Of course, we definitely left some off. If you have a favorite dinosaur-related song we missed, let us know!