Hungry For Love, Part Two: Ten More Obscure Yet Hilarious Videos

Published on July 8th, 2010 in: Music, Video |

By Jim R. Clark

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This is Part Two in our series on bizarre videos you may have forgotten about or never seen.

The EU is well-represented in this installment. If you have heard these songs or seen these videos before, please comment and let us know.

To read Part One, go here.
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The Cure, Disintegration Deluxe Edition

Published on July 6th, 2010 in: Music, Music Reviews, Retrovirus, Reviews |

By J Howell

disintegration deluxe edition art

Oh, to revisit the heady days of 1989. . . as a young person, two things (at different times, and both seemed to recur often) were the focus of my adolescent adulation. These were head and shoulders above everything else (and made a killing from my obsessive need for more and more merchandise): Star Wars and The Cure.

Before I give myself an opportunity to digress on the efficacy of the Lucas Merchandising Machine, let’s talk about The Cure. Rhino has just released a curated-by-Robert-himself reissue of Disintegration in three discs: the first, a remaster of the record; the second, a collection of rarities; and the third, an expanded version of Entreat, a live record from the “Prayer” tour following Disintegration that was originally released in 1990.
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Underground Girls Blog: Q&A With Mandy Mullins Of Garbo’s Daughter

Published on July 2nd, 2010 in: Feminism, Media, Music, The Internets |

By Less Lee Moore

mandy garbo

The lovely and talented Mandy Mullins, who has been an integral part of so many of our Popcasts here on Popshifter, was recently featured on the Underground Girls blog where fellow groovy girl Kelly Fever describes her as “one of the grooviest girls in the pop music scene” and I couldn’t agree more.

Read their Q&A with Mandy to find out more as she discusses her influences, her idols, her guitar, plus Stryper, Sassy Magazine, The Beatles, The Osmonds, and Bubblegum!

Hitting The Penthouse And Pavement: Whatever Happened To Ian Craig Marsh?

Published on July 1st, 2010 in: Music, Retrovirus |

By Emily Carney

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Confession: I am a massive fan of the early output of the Human League (Reproduction and Travelogue era) and Heaven 17. I still have my vinyl copies of Penthouse and Pavement, The Luxury Gap, and How Men Are at my disposal. If anyone needs some surprisingly undated anti-capitalistic-fat-cat synthesizer masterpieces, please locate these albums right now.

At any rate, the small contingent of Heaven 17 fans which still linger to this day are well aware that the group still exists with two of its iconic three-man lineup—Glenn Gregory, the Rutger Hauer-esque, smooth-as-hell lead singer; and Martyn Ware, the mustachioed evil synth genius who had an ax to grind with one Phil Oakey (you know, the asymmetrically-haired one from the Human League).

But my question is, what the hell ever happened to my personal favorite member of H17, Ian Craig Marsh?
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The Birthday Cakes, Expansion Pack

Published on June 29th, 2010 in: Canadian Content, Current Faves, Music, Music Reviews, Reviews |

By Jemiah Jefferson

birthday cakes

Okay, these guys are total freaks. And I think I love them. Don’t be fooled by the cheerful grins on this trio of damn handsome ginger brothers, nor by their love of really dreadful ’80s sweaters and paint-streak-patterned T-shirts: The Birthday Cakes are ready to rock your face off and make you howl at the moon (or at least roll up a really good werewolf mage).
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Eureka! Rooney At The Wonder Ballroom

Published on June 29th, 2010 in: Concert Reviews, Music |

By Christian Lipski

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The Wonder Ballroom, Portland OR
June 24, 2010

A backdrop painted with a California sunset hung at the back of the stage, setting the scene for the music to come. Though not all the bands came with the West Coast sound, the vibe was there anyway.
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Young Doctors In Love, 5 Golden Greats EP

Published on June 28th, 2010 in: Canadian Content, Current Faves, Music, Music Reviews, Reviews |

By Less Lee Moore

5 golden greats EP

Toronto five-piece Young Doctors In Love has recently released 5 Golden Greats, an EP that is aptly titled and perfectly suited for sunny days and hot weather. These five tunes are catchy without being repetitive, hefty without being heavy, and unique without being precious.
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Peggy Sue, Fossils And Other Phantoms

Published on June 25th, 2010 in: Current Faves, Music, Music Reviews, Reviews |

By J Howell

peggy sue fossils cover

Watch the video for “Watchman” and download the song here.

Peggy Sue singer Katy Young recently said of Fossils And Other Phantoms that the main themes of the album are “absences and presences, and the emotional and physical beings that remain after various endings.” This is a break-up record, but fortunately, it’s a damn fine one.

Peggy Sue—composed of Young, co-singer/guitarist Rosa Slade, and drummer Olly Joyce—mine some raw emotional territory on Fossils, and it’s a rather melancholy record. In places, it’s reminiscent of, say, Beth Orton, but with a somewhat more aggressive point of view. While the subject matter may not exactly be fun, and thus some songs may not quite enjoyable as such, the presentation is admirably insightful and interesting.
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Johnny Dowd, Wake Up The Snakes

Published on June 23rd, 2010 in: Current Faves, Music, Music Reviews, Reviews |

By J Howell

wake up the snakes

It’s more than a little puzzling to me why Johnny Dowd isn’t better known or revered as a master of American music. Dowd’s latest release, Wake Up The Snakes, is everything that rock and roll could and should be, or at the very least, one badass variant thereof.

In this day and age, even if Dowd isn’t exactly a household name (and I have to admit, prior to near-synchronous name-dropping in song by Howe Gelb and seeing the brilliant film Searching For The Wrong-Eyed Jesus a couple years back, Dowd was a stranger to me, too), it’s easy enough to find a lot of recurring descriptors and comparisons on the Internet. While it may be somewhat lazy, it’s not exactly a huge stretch to say that listeners who enjoy the work of Nick Cave or Tom Waits, or readers who like Harry Crews, will likely find a new favorite in Dowd: he deserves the respect those three command.
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“And Then It All Went Wrong”—VH1’s Behind The Music

Published on June 18th, 2010 in: Music, TV, Upcoming Events |

By Emily Carney

Finally, the Rock Gods have heard my prayers, and they are bestowing unto us an episode of VH1’s infamous rockumentary series Behind the Music on. . . the Rock Widow of the Ages herself, Courtney Love.

This show will debut on June 21, and previews have shown it to be, well. . . interesting. At two hours length, I am curious if it will fill the void left from the 2006 Return of Courtney Love documentary from the UK’s Channel 4; will it address her musical output instead of her many tabloid travails over the last decade?
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