Big Black to Play “A Couple of Songs”

Touch & Go Block Party Banner

Well, The Murder City Devils aren’t the only band reuniting to play a block party. Touch & Go Records recently announced that Big Black will be performing “a couple of songs” (their first live performance in nearly 20 years) at their 25th Anniversary celebration. The lineup is already seriously awesome so if you’re around Chicago September 8-10, you better be buying some damn tickets!

Touch & Go has a few MP3s available for your enjoyment.

Sleater-Kinney Add Final Show

Sleater-Kinney Promo Photo

As everyone else has already noted, Sleater-Kinney is going on an “indefinite hiatus”. At the time of the announcement, just five performances remained on their tour schedule, the last being at this year’s Lollapalooza Festival in Chicago. A big festival isn’t anyway to close out an eleven year career though, so one more show in the band’s hometown of Portland, OR has been scheduled for August 11th.

That makes the remaining chances you have to see Sleater-Kinney:
07/29: Louisville, KY @ Mellwood Arts Center
07/31: Philadelphia, PA @ Starlight Ballroom
08/01: Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club
08/02: New York, NY @ Webster Hall
08/04: Chicago, IL @ Grant Park (Lollapalooza)
08/11: Portland, OR @ Crystal Ballroom

Sub Pop has several Sleater-Kinney related downloads for you on the Sleater-Kinney media page.

New Design Hits The PhiLL(er)

Well at least the main news page…

Those of you that have visited the podcast page should probably be yawning right now. This design template has been present there for quite a while now, but finally it is being implemented on the main news page. With it comes a change to the backend content management system which I could start getting geeky about, but I will spare you.

Mainly, it’s just nice to have something fresh to look at. The new design hasn’t been implemented on the review or feature pages yet, but that will be coming soon. Please leave a comment if you notice anything funky (which is highly likely) or if you have any suggestions.

Wordplay

Wordplay PosterAs fate would have it, I was prevented by a contentious Wednesday afternoon sell-out from seeing my first choice of films (the new Leonard Cohen biography) this afternoon in Manhattan; I am a better man for this blockade, for it led me to see what is likely a much richer, informative, and entertaining documentary: first-time documentarian Patrick Creadon’s engaging look at crossword puzzle culture, Wordplay.

Although the film’s first act spotlights puzzle maven and New York Times crossword editor Will Shortz, the film wisely and agilely widens its radius to encompass personalities as diverse as John Stewart, Mike Mussina, and (as he is honorably billed in the credits) William Jefferson Clinton as they expound quite articulately on their relationship with and understanding of the crossword puzzle. With the exception of dome-haired ass-clown Ken Burns (whom Christopher Guest has been unintentionally, retroactively mocking for years), the interviewees’ commentaries are keen and illuminating. In perhaps the most provocative moments of the film, Clinton’s candor and intelligence make our current chief executive officer seem even more the dufus (if that is possible) by contrast. John Stewart is typically amusing in the ironic trash talk he hurls at Shortz through the camera while engaging in the latest challenging grid. Although a variety of puzzle philosophies are offered, one unifying tenet seems to be the unanimous respect and worship of the New York Times‘s crosswords puzzles as the long-standing pinnacle of the art form.

Plenty of hardcore puzzle enthusiasts earn due screen time, especially through the film’s final act, a play-by-play tour through the 2005 American Crossword Puzzle Tournament, held each year since Shortz established the contest in 1978, in Stamford Connecticut. In this aspect, the film most resembles its obvious forerunner in contemporary American language-game documentaries, Jeffrey Blitz’s 2002 hit Spellbound — in this case, the focus is a more relaxed adult pastime rather than adolescent obsession. While Wordplay lacks the wonderfully taught suspense of Spellbound, its portrayal of people like Shortz who have followed their bliss and achieved rewarding success with a hobby is just as vital a glimpse into what sustains human happiness. Shortz, the ultimate example of this phenomenon, claims never to have expected the financial success (with dozens of books of puzzles in print) or minor fame (in the puzzle community he is a demagogue) that followed his graduation from Indiana University with a self-styled degree in “enigmatology” (the study of puzzles), but always expected to be rewarded by making his lifelong passion his line of work.

The film is most brilliant in how it uses innovative but sound tricks to keep what many would regard as banal subject matter consistently stimulating: crisp but unpretentious title sequence, effective and creative editing, and (like any great documentary) the luck to have captured a string of legitimately meaningful human moments on film. Most of all, it manages to be glossy without coming off as slick (or vice versa), insightful without seeming pedantic or condescending. It plays to all audiences, but especially to those already interested in puzzles or in trivia in general. Shortz put it best when he observed his greatest happiness being his privilege to work for both the Times and NPR, to create work for an audience he knows will appreciate and understand it.

Although it didn’t need it, the film’s excellent soundtrack only adds to its appeal. While the Indigo Girls’s affinity for the pastime is featured in the film, tunes from Cake, They Might Be Giants, and a charming cover of The Talking Heads’s “Naive Melody” performed by Shawn Colvin somehow lend even more credibility to the project, in that in choosing to share their craft with the filmmaking process, the musicians likewise submit their genuine approval of its aims and merits.

Anyone who has ever wondered how a crossword is constructed (those who write them are known as “constructors”, not authors), or has ever tried, will no doubt gain some appreciation for the talent and dedication it requires, even as professional constructor Merl Reagle drafts one from scratch for the camera with apparent ease. Like Spellbound and The Stone Reader, Wordplay will surely make any lover of words and language quite pleased. No hard feelings, Leonard.

Chin Up Chin Up Announce New Album

Chin Up Chin Up Promo Photo
If you’ve kept up with this site, you’d know that we simply love Chin Up Chin Up. Their self-titled release and We Should Have Never Lived Like We Were Skyscrapers were nothing short of amazing. Heck, we like them so much we played them on podcast show numbers 5, 8, 10, and 15. I think that means we’re overdue for some Chin Up Chin Up action — I sense the inclusion of a track from their new album on the next one!

So anyway, less about us and more about this great band from Chicago. After signing to Seattle label Suicide Squeeze earlier this year, the band has just complete their new album, This
Harness Can’t Ride Anything
, recorded by Brian Deck. Listening to the title track from the album (MP3 link below), it seems as though this will another ten tracks of goodness.

Here’s the tracklist:
01. This Harness Can’t Ride Anything (MP3)
02. Water Planes in Snow
03. We’ve Got To Keep Running
04. Islands Sink
05. Mansioned
06. I Need a Friend with a Boat
07. Blankets Like Beavers
08. Landlocked Lifeguards
09. Stolen Mountains
10. Trophies for Hire


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