Patrick Wolf, The Bachelor

Published on July 30th, 2009 in: Current Faves, Issues, Music, Music Reviews, Reviews |

By Ann Clarke

Just when I didn’t think young musicians had anything left to offer (because they’re all either fake and talentless or just fashion plate hipsturds), along comes Patrick Wolf. Granted he is fashionable, and has done some modeling for Burberry, but he is quite alluring, and it’s nice work if you can get it! (It definitely helps finance some lucrative projects.) I had first heard Patrick by accident when stumbling upon the video for “The Magic Position,” and was immediately totally addicted. I rarely ever seek out a new artist, but there are times when something grabs you by throat and won’t let go until you give in, and with “The Magic Position,” such was the case.
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Great Expirations: Top Five Deaths Under Suspicious (Or Nefarious) Circumstances

Published on July 30th, 2009 in: Issues, Listicles, Top Five Lists |

By Emily Carney

5. Jimi Hendrix: Rock star

Manner of death: Victimized by his own vomit

hendrix

On September 18, 1970, Jimi Hendrix joined the Great Rock Supergroup in the Sky when he died at age 27. It was initially assumed he probably died of a drug overdose, since he was a casual abuser of drugs; suicide was even bandied about as the probable cause of his death. However, the doctor who attended to him at the death scene concluded he had died because his lungs had filled with red wine vomit.
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Underappreciated Album: Queen’s Sheer Heart Attack

Published on July 30th, 2009 in: Issues, Music, Music Reviews, Retrovirus, Reviews |

By Christian Lipski

At first glance, Sheer Heart Attack‘s only claim to fame is that it’s the album with “Killer Queen” on it, which may even come as a surprise to people who thought that that was Greatest Hits I. But the album goes quite a bit deeper, and is one of my favorite complete albums from Queen, even above A Night At The Opera or News Of The World, both very popular albums. Sheer Heart Attack was Queen’s third album, and the first one to really peek its head out from the progressive-rock mire that the previous two had been firmly entrenched in. There were still some elements of fantasy and nods to prog rock, but they were kept at a tasteful level. What you got was a selection of catchy rock songs of the pop-, hard-, and arena- varieties.
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Still Tuning In After All These Years: Why I Love Radio

Published on July 30th, 2009 in: Issues, Music, Radio, Retrovirus |

By Jesse Roth

On an otherwise normal Sunday night a couple months back, I found myself sitting alone in my car, mourning the loss of what can best be described as a fair-weather friend. 94.7 The Globe, a mediocre but mostly listenable attempt to resurrect the hallowed progressive rock station WHFS , was echoing its long-departed cousin by playing Jeff Buckey’s “Last Goodbye.” Following a minute of dead air, the station would transition to yet another bland adult contemporary wasteland, a now-familiar occurrence on the radio dial.
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The Decline of Disney

Published on July 30th, 2009 in: Cartoons, DVD, Issues, Movies, Over the Gadfly's Nest, Retrovirus |

By Maureen

They don’t make ’em like they used to: the nature of Walt Disney productions has changed. In the mid-1990s, the success of Toy Story brought the new (and previously untapped) market of computer animation into the picture. Disney’s computer-animated films have become very popular, and there are some quality movies affiliated with Disney. Recently, both WALL-E and Up have received critical and financial success. As Disney has begun to adapt their technology and marketing to the computer age, the overall tenor of their animated films has monopolized the genre.
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Jarvis Cocker, Further Complications

Published on July 30th, 2009 in: Current Faves, Issues, Music, Music Reviews, Reviews |

By Ann Clarke

I’m rather surprised Jarvis Cocker has already released another album since his self-titled one really wasn’t out that long ago. He must be on a creative spurt lately, since he’s been all over like the place like horseshit during a parade! Check out his five-day stint at a Parisian art gallery. He and his band exhibited themselves playing music under many different guises.
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Top Ten Questions Everyone SHOULD Be Asking About Michael Jackson

Published on July 30th, 2009 in: Issues, Listicles, Music, Top Ten Lists |

By Brenna Chase

Rather than keep your eyes glued to your favorite news channel for the latest intrusive development or read another biased career retrospective on the recently deceased King of Pop, ponder these conundrums, posed by a true (frustrated) fan who pays attention to what’s really important.
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Don’t Touch That Dial: TV That Shaped My Musical Tastes

Published on July 30th, 2009 in: Canadian Content, Issues, Music, Radio, TV |

By Jesse Roth

Like many members of my generation (and those of the previous one), I received a decent yet incomplete music education via the radio, MTV, and my parents’ eclectic record collection. By the time I hit high school however, I was quickly seeking new avenues for discovering music.
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I Just Can’t Stop Loving You

Published on July 30th, 2009 in: Editorial, Eulogy, Issues, Music |

The reaction to Michael Jackson’s death surprised me. I can’t pretend to be like the true hardcore Michael fans; I have always hovered on the edges of the fandom and kept it to myself, too much perhaps. For years I have kept quiet about loving him, even as part of a music fandom where coolness doesn’t really matter. There has just been so much wrong with loving him—truly and wholly—in the eyes of the world for so long.
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Don’t Fall Into The Pit: Parks And Recreation

Published on July 30th, 2009 in: Comedy, Current Faves, Issues, Reviews, TV |

By Lisa Anderson

A network TV season has ended, and as usual, the battlefield is littered. Some shows have been renewed, some have been axed, and some have found homes on other networks. One survivor among new shows was Parks and Recreation, a sitcom co-produced by and starring Saturday Night Live alum Amy Poehler.
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