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gio
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...and You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead's Worlds Apart. There are moments of Bohemian Romanticism in the compositions that make me see doves and cobbled roads and corsets in my head. And then the Pink Floydisms kick in and that's a whole other story.
 
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gio
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The Dresden Dolls' self-titled debut release is like a deranged music box. The songs shift from whimsical frenzies to quiet contemplations. The piano work is sometimes playful and other times driven. The drumming is a perfect accompaniment. The lyrics are quirky, intelligent, personal. This duet rocks it like Ben Folds Five used to, only they've got a noir quality about them that adds to their allure.
 
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Quirky!


(still the best) Hated (band in town).....
 
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Te occidere possunt sed te edere non possunt nefas est.

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I heard the Dresden Dolls on NPR and damn. Chick's voice is spooky good. Very "burlesque," if I can use that word.


"The way to see by faith is to shut the eye of reason." -Ben Franklin

 
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gio
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That's a great word to describe them. Burlesque, whimisical, noir, etc. She seems to have a really strong voice. Like the kind that overpowers everyone else at a ball game. She's got quite a range too. She sounds like she could hit baritone even.
 
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The rhythm patterns of some/most of those vocals are straight up Punk Rock!
Cool.


(still the best) Hated (band in town).....
 
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gio
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I have heard the latest one, and yes, I enjoyed it too. I haven't been addicted to an album like this in a long time. I'm having a hard time finding a new favorite album for this week.
 
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Rock and roll! Dammit!

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If you get a chance to check it out, you might really enjoy the Clare Fader album The Elephant's Baby.


Support your local authors. Especially if they're me!
Amazon link
 
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gio
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Dane Cook's Retaliation. As I left the Hastings parking lot, I popped this in my CD player the second I got into my car. I almost cried the whole way home, I was laughing so hard.
 
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gio
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Bjork's Medulla has been out for quite some time now, but everytime I listen to it, I hear something new. Imagery takes up a huge amount of my brain, so something I really like about this album is the musical onamatopoeia. A song called "Submarine" sounds like a submarine. A song called "Desired Constellation" sounds like stars. Another song called "Oceania" sounds like the ocean. There's one cut called "Ancestors" that gives me the creeps what with the moaning, sighing, and grunting. The whole album is laden with beatboxing, dissonant harmonies, effected vocals, and reverb up the ass. Medulla gets my brain working everytime.
 
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Severely Constipated


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Good choice! That's one of my favorite albums. I like Submarine.
 
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gio
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I needed a musical cleansing. Nostalgia is immense today.
 
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gio
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I first heard of Murder By Death when we played at The Hole in Clovis a couple years ago. We hung out at Jon LeBlanc's house and he pulled out the Who Will Survive And What Will Be Left Of Them record and told us the story about the guy seeking revenge against the devil. En Bocca al Luppo is the band's third release. This one is a bit more stoic--simplified, sparse, melancholic. At first listen, I particularly enjoyed the third track, (can't remember the name), which sounds like an Irish Pub Song (what's the word for that, anyone?) This one isn't as striking as Who Will Survive, but it's still engaging, thanks especially to the vocals & cello.
 
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What about a Favorite Food Of The Week? Sometimes I love food almost as much as music.
Sometimes.


(still the best) Hated (band in town).....
 
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gio
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Good idea.

This week: Pomegranates.
 
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Yes!
One of the tastiest, best foods.
Superb choice.


(still the best) Hated (band in town).....
 
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gio
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quote:
The genus name Punica is the name of the ancient city of Carthage. It has been cultivated since ancient times, & was once known as "the Carthage apple," apparently after ancient groves of pomegranates.

In the ancient & medieval worlds, pomegranates symbolized birth & death, being itself capable of bleeding. It was frequently associated with maidens & maiden-goddesses, for its bloodiness was often identified with the menses of an underworld goddess. It had simultaneous positive & negative associations, as cthonic divinities, & in particular Earthmothers, were the sources of Life & of Death, of Health & of Illness, of Fertility & Infertility.

It was the fruit of Kore the Maid, or Persephone, whom even as an underworld divinity was beautiful & kind. In Christian iconographic paintings, the Virgin Mary often holds Persephone's pomegranate, symbolizing Mary's authority over the death of her son, much as Athena in her dark or gorgon-like moods upheld a pomegranate in her left hand.

In ancient Syria the god Rimmon [2 Ki 5:18], whose name means "Pomegranate," was akin to Jesus & Tamuz & Baal Hadad, a sacrificial divinity who passes temporarily through death, & whose resurrection is either instigated by or attended exclusively by women, nymphs, or goddesses. Many biblical personages & locations were named for this very god, who seems to have continued to be worshipped in the lands aportioned to Simeon [Josh 15:32] & Zebulun [19:13]. Rimmon seems for a while to have been a national deity overseeing lamentations for the death of Israel's kings [Zech 12:11]. Rimmon had also a sacred site in Benjamin, where the name Rimmon was associated with the father of killers [2 Sm 2-9]. A Benjamanite sanctuary in time of warfare & extreme crisis was named for the Pomegranate Rimmon & for his consort Shala, whose name means "Bride" or "Rock" [Jg 20:45-47; 21:13].

Shala the Bride or Rock was possibly the same as the maidenly Side ("Pomegranate") who in Greek myth vied with Hera in a competition of beauty. She was a very ancient divinity of Boeatian origin. As the wife of Orion she was, like Orion, both a stellar & cthonic divinity, though dwindled in Greek myth to little more than a failed rival of Hera. For her audacity she was punished, being made to believe she had caused the death of her own children. In consequence she threw herself from a high cliff upon a rock. Where her blood spilled upon the rock, the first pomegranate tree arose. In another version, she was cast into Hades for pretending to the beauty of Hera, & lived as a gloomy nymph of an underworld pomegrante forest from which Persephone's only winter meal was plucked.

Side's association with the death of children is something that recurs in pomegranate lore of many nations. In Buddhist lore, the demoness Hariti was originally a child-eater like Lilith. The Buddha cured her of child-eating by teaching her to sublimate her forbidden desire by eating, instead, crunchy bloody pomegranates. She became thereafter a protectress of little children. In Japan, where she was called Kishimojin, she was called upon by infertile women to bring fertility to their wombs. She is depicted as suckling an infant & holding a pomegranate aloft.

Pomegranate as Forbidden Desire was also a component of its meaning within Athena's Parthenon, but the forbidden desire to eat of the fruit also underlays the Persephone myth & numerous Pomegranate legends.

To ancient Persians the pomegranate symbolized invincibility in battle, extending the fruit's authority over death. In India, Kali & Durga after devouring demons was said to have teeth like pomegranate flowers, which is to say, red with blood. But in her quiescent mood Mahadevi sat beneath a pomegranate tree distributing wealth to the world. Kali's son, elephant-headed Ganesha, or Ganapati, is frequently seen holding a pomegranate in one of his many hands or in his elephant trunk.

In Jewish lore it was again the fruit of things forbidden, growing upon the Tree of Knowledge (of sexuality & death) forbidden to Adam & Eve. For the mystic Moses Cordovero, pomegranates represented the divine emanations of God such as dwelt upon the Sephiroth Tree, with both dark & light aspects. In the Song of Songs Rabbah, we are told that the seeds of a pomegranate represent children studying Torah, which may bear some relationship to an idea from Islamic legend, that each seed of the pomegranate is capable of producing a different fruit from paradise.

Another Jewish legend associates the pomegranate with death & with the menstruant or polluted woman, a Lilith or a harlot. The Talmud tells us of a time when the wife of Rabbi Hiyya ben-Abba disguised herself as Harutha the Forbidden Maiden to test her husband's will-power. When he saw the gorgeously bedecked demoness, he became most excited, & cried out, "Who are you?" She replied, "I am Harutha. If you desire me, you may have me for the price of a pomegranate. Fetch me the one at the highest bough of that tree." Rabbi Hiyya hurried to climb the tree & obtained the pomegranate, but upon his return, he found only his wife, who reassured him, "You were only tempted by me." But her husband felt so guilty, he said, "Nevertheless, I would have done evil," & he fasted unto death.
 
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Droppin' Science!


(still the best) Hated (band in town).....
 
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So what was/is this week's fave?


(still the best) Hated (band in town).....
 
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gio
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oops! I've been slacking!

Food of the week: Tacos. I'm making some tonight.



Jon's dad found Feels Like Sunday'sTedious Bliss in a pile at their house, so I bogarted it and have been listening to it non-stop this week. The first four tracks knock me off my feet. Joni jazzes it up on a lot of the songs and it makes me smile everytime I hear "Photographs". This was their first release, recorded at Stepbridge. The 4/4 to 6/8 and back again switch ups that got me really into them back in the day are all over this thing. Killer.

ps. I made that image on paint real quick-like. From memory too.
 
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Hey Gio, it's Bryan C., Ha Dane Cook is funny as shit. I think the album of the week should be Arch Enemy's Doomsday Machine!
 
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gio
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I've listened to Muse's Absolution many many many times, but still haven't gotten tired of it. Their latest, Black Holes and Revelations just didn't hit me like Absolution did, but it is growing on me. These guys aren't another wussy Brit-band a la Coldplay or Snow Patrol (whom I actually dig), but they aren't spit-in-your-face limeys either. The album is laden with fuzz bass, hyper melodic and driving guitar figures, cool organ and synth sounds and sequences, and a grandiose piano solo thrown in to boot. Tracks like "Hysteria", "Stockholm Syndrome", and "The Small Print" kick ass. "Endlessly" and "Absolution" are beautiful in all their atmospheric, romantic glory.

I don't think I can get sick of this album.
 
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gio
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One of my most favorite bands, Blindside, released About A Burning Fire like four years ago, but it still engages me in ways no other band could. I was lucky enough to interview Simon (guitar) and Thomas (bass) the last time they came through Albuquerque. The guys are down-to-earth, approachable, and we talked for close to an hour about their homeland Sweden, going from major label to small indie label, touring America, music influences, Norwegian death metal, etc. This record in particular strikes me because of my love for interesting rhythm, beautiful lyrics, and catchy melodies. I've seen this band live twice and both times, it was a spiritual experience.
 
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Hey Gio, Blindside is VERY VERY amazing. About A Burning Fire is their best cd, even though their newer one (Great Depression) was really good as well. I saw them in Phoenix a few years back with P.O.D. and Lacuna Coil... you can imagine the experience!
 
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