Monthly Archive for November, 2008

The Weekly Check In With Heather Brantman

(Part of The Weekly Check In series)

I met Heather when I was in 6th grade when I gave her a copy of the 4 Non Blondes record. That was during the time I was hanging with brother Tom playing Blind Melon covers in their basement. We’ve kept up during the years and she also said I took the above photo in 2002 for her senior portrait, which I don’t remember, but it’s amazing if I did.

RR: What are you currently working on or just finished that you’re excited about?

Brantman: I just finished working on the VFX and main title sequence for the recently released James Bond movie, Quantum of SolaceMK12, the motion graphics studio I work for, has been working with director Marc Forster for his past 2 movies and he decided to use us yet again.  Whatta guy.  Let me know what you think of the typography in the main titles - it was my baby.

RR: Where have you traveled so far this month?

Brantman: I went to London for the Bond premier.  People in London are so friendly, the city is (mostly) clean, and the architecture is fantastic.  Good times, great oldies.

RR: What’s your favorite music right now?

Brantman: I like to indulge in the complete randomness of iTunes shuffle…  I like getting hit with a Serge Gainsbourg song and then immediately after hear Ray Charles.  I was listening to a lot of Delfonics for a while. Once the winter season progresses, I will be listening to more Louis Armstrong, Max Roach, and Cal Tjader.  Music to enjoy a toddy alongside.

RR: Best food you’ve had in your neighborhood lately or while you were traveling?

Brantman: I just moved into an amazing house that has a superb kitchen, so I have been eating in a lot.  Warm, home cooked meals with loads of veggies.  YUM.  However, in London, all the Portobello Road street vendors’ food was scrumptious!  I had crawfish, a fresh fig, and a mushroom swiss crepe.  We also ate at a place called “The Cow” which I would suggest to any and all that venture to the land of Mary Poppins.

RR: Anything Else You Want To Mention?

Brantman: To those I know and those I don’t, a warm hello.  A Churchill quote has been stuck in my head for the past few days - “We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.”

Flashback Friday w/ Kill Creek

I found out about Kill Creek when my friend’s brother had a copy of Loaded In Lawrence (Live At The Bottleneck,) that we found in his room when I was in 6th grade. Didn’t even know what the Bottleneck was, or any of the bands on it, I think that comp came out in 1993. Little did I know I would fall in love with their record Proving Winter Cruel that came out in 1995. An amazing Lawrence, Kansas band that I’m glad I discovered.

Though their older records are out of print my friend Dan’s label Second Nature Recordings put out their most recent full length Colors Of Home and The Will To Strike, which is a document of Kill Creek’s unmistakable catalog, and a testimony to 17-years of music.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

(MP3)

Purchase Kill Creek records at Amazon.
Learn more at Kill Creek’s website.
And even more at Second Nature Recordings.
Listen to more at Myspace.

Raoul Gatepin - Photography

View the work of Brooklyn, NY based photographer Raoul Gatepin. I love his pL.A.nes series. (found via Booooooom.)

Matt Pond PA - The Freeep

Just as most places are getting colder and Thanksgiving just a few days away, Matt Pond PA releases a great free EP called The Freeep which is perfect for this time of year. I was just wondering what they’d been up to. Read on their blog why this EP is free and watch a new video for their song People Have A Way.” (thanks m.o.k.b.)

You can download The Freeep directly here.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

(MP3)

An Awesome Book! - By Dallas Clayton

My buddy Dallas Clayton wrote and illustrated a new childrens book (also enjoyable at any age) titled “An Awesome Book!” that came out over the weekend.  After reading it, I was inspired to reach for the stars and follow my dreams, I hope it can do that for you too.

Since it’s holiday time, this is great gift, it’s only $15 bucks and you can buy it here and preview the whole thing here.

About the book: “Based on the simple concept of dreaming big “An Awesome Book” is the inspiring debut work of Los Angeles writer/artist Dallas Clayton. Written in the vain of classic tales by Dr. Suess, Shel Silverstein, and Maurice Sendak it is a sure hit for all generations young and old.”

You can also keep up with Dallas at his new blog http://www.dallasclayton.com.

Little Paper Planes - Holiday Gift Guide

Over at Little Paper Planes, they have combed through the site and made links to their favorite products to help you find some gifts for this holiday season. You can click each of theirs names at the top to see what they’re recommending. It’s a nice place to start on a site with a lot of amazing stuff.

View the Holiday Gift Guide.

Pictured above is a 2009 Calendar by Mareike Auer which looks really good and I want it. Check it out here.

Flashback Friday w/ American Football

Though a short lived project, American Football put out an EP and a full length that I still think about daily. Their first EP came out on the Polyvinyl Singles Series in 1998 and that’s how I discovered them knowing that it was a project of Mike Kinsella.

Quick Bio:
American Football was a rock band from Urbana, Illinois, active from 1997 to 2000. The band was formed by guitarist/bassist and singer Mike Kinsella (formerly of Cap’n Jazz and Joan of Arc and currently of Owen) and drummer Steve Lamos (formerly of The One Up Downstairs, one time member of The Firebird Band, and currently of The Geese and DMS), and also included guitar player Steve Holmes (also of The Geese).”

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

(MP3)

Purchase American Football at Amazon.
Learn more at Polyvinyl.

The Weekly Check In With Norman Brannon

(Part of The Weekly Check In series)

photo by: Emmett Shine

I found out about Norman in 1997 when my friend Brett let me borrow a few copies of the zine Anti-Matter (that I kept,) then I got into the band Texas Is The Reason (that he played guitar in,) and he released one of the most amazing comps of that time, The Anti-Matter comp that was made up of bands that he’d covered in his zine. That comp is a mix tape of everything I liked when it came out. It was life changing. (Thanks to Curtis for connecting us.)

Keep up with Norman on his blog http://nervousacid.org, Purchase the Anti-Matter Anthology book, and check out the Anti-Matter comp CD.

RR: What are you currently working on or just finished that you’re excited about?

Brannon: I’ve sort of ducked out of public life for a second to go back to school. I’m a 34-year-old full-time college student right now, studying Writing & Literature with a concentration in Secondary Education. The idea is that I want to become an English teacher, obviously, so I’m definitely anxious to finish my degree and get on with it.

Making music is more of a personal endeavor at this point, but I’m pretty excited by the recent direction of Zodiac Social. The last few tracks I finished have really set the tone for what I hope will become a full-length album. Also, I just took a brief sabbatical from blogging after driving myself crazy posting about the election, but I used the time to prune and redesign Nervous Acid. The break gave me a chance to figure out how I would make it more of a personal statement and less of a pop culture catch-all. I’m going to try to roll that all out this week.

RR: Where have you traveled so far this month?

Brannon: My boyfriend and I took a hike in upstate New York a couple of weeks ago, on Sugarloaf Hill, which is somewhere between the Hudson River and absolutely nowhere. There is one stretch of the hike that is kind of ridiculous — like, it feels like you are walking up a wall. I was struggling a little bit and we saw this family coming down from the peak with a 7-year-old girl and boy who had to be 4. I turned to John with this face, like, “There must be a fucking elevator somewhere. There is no way they did this.” So anyway, the little girl waits for me to climb by and then she stops me and says, “Don’t worry! The view is worth it!” I must have just scowled at her. But it was pretty awesome at the top.

RR: What’s your favorite music right now?

Brannon: I’ve been spending a lot of time with the Notwist. I saw them play a few weeks ago and it was the first time I’ve been so excited about a show in years. I also recently discovered this guy in London named James Yuill, who makes this really unique kind of pop-techno. The only way I can explain it is that if you took out the electronic elements, it would still be a solid folk record, and if you took out the guitar and vocal, it would still be a solid techno record. I can’t think of anyone else who can really pull that off. There’s been a lot of Lowgold, Radio Slave, and Carl Craig in the mix, too.

RR: Best food you’ve had in your neighborhood lately or while you were traveling?

Brannon: Local is a relative term in New York City, so I will say I had a pretty awesome vegetable risotto at La Nacional on 14th Street the other night. But my favorite restaurant in New York is Vatan, hands down. It’s the best Indian food I’ve ever had, and I’ve probably spent at least 6 or 7 months of my life living in India. They shut down for, like, a year to renovate, and I thought I was gonna have a heartattack.

RR: Anything Else You Want To Mention?

Brannon: Yeah. Four years ago I got hit by a tow truck while crossing the street, and I almost died. I was in the hospital for, like, two months. And I got literally hundreds of get-well cards and letters from well-wishers who appreciated something I did in the past 15 years. Maybe I was in a vulnerable state, but I got really choked up by it — just looking at those boxes of mail by my hospital bed. Anyway, it would have been impossible to write everyone back and I never managed to put out there, somewhere in the ether, that all those letters really helped me through it. So I wanted to put it out there now, better late than never.

Old Canes - Early Morning Hymns

Old Canes record Early Morning Hymns came out on Second Nature Recordings back in 2004. I’m still listening, loving it and I’m just not sure enough people know about it. It’s a great fall meets winter record.

About:

“Appleseed Cast frontman, Chris Crisci, departs from space rock and moody atmospherics for a multi-instrumental fuzz-folk masterpiece featuring the talents of Jordan Geiger (Minus Story) and Nathan Richardson (The Casket Lottery). Layers of home-recorded toy pianos, glockenspiels, children’s xylophones, trumpets, and cellos combine with the traditional folk-rock instrumentation…”

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

(MP3)

You can purchase it at Amazon.
Learn more at Second Nature.

GoodGuide - Find Safe And Healthy Products

Goodguide helps you on your journey of buying the right products that are safe for you and the environment. With it’s growing database of products, you can look up pretty much anything you use right now, or are about to purchase.

From the companies’ business practices, to what the actual chemicals are, you can learn about your shampoos, deodorants, face wash, household cleaners, just about anything. After you look it up it also has a great suggestion engine to help you replace a product you might using that isn’t all that great. Each product you look up is rated by health performance, environmental performance, social performance, has links to user reviews, and buy links to find the products you want.

I think their greatest new feature is the iPhone application that makes shopping even easier by allowing you to look up the products as you shop.

Visit Goodguide at http://www.goodguide.com