1 Top Class Manager—The Notebooks of Rob Gretton: Q & A With Lesley Gretton

Published on January 30th, 2009 in: Books, Issues, Music, Q&A, Retrovirus |

Due to an error, the location of this article has moved.

Click here for the new link.

Please update your links to this article to reflect its new location: https://popshifter.com/2009-01-30/1-top-class-manager%e2%80%94the-notebooks-of-rob-gretton-q-a-with-lesley-gilbert/

Popshifter apologizes for any inconvenience.

Comments Off on 1 Top Class Manager—The Notebooks of Rob Gretton: Q & A With Lesley Gretton

The Shortwave Set, Replica Sun Machine

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

By Chelsea Spear

If you like lush melodies, boy/girl harmonies, blackly clever lyrics, handclaps, obsolete musical technology, analog synths, or references to great pop songs of the past, I have great news for you: The Shortwave Set has released their second album.
Continue reading ‘The Shortwave Set, Replica Sun Machine

Comments Off on The Shortwave Set, Replica Sun Machine

The Good, The Bad, The Ugly: Film Remakes, Part Two

Published on January 30th, 2009 in: Issues, Movies, Retrovirus |

By Michelle Patterson

Read Part One of this series here.

In the previous installment, I explained what separates the good film remakes from the bad and the ugly. There should be a lot of care taken to avoid any of the mistakes of the past, or in the case of a particularly artistic original film, one should not overdo what made that film so good in the first place. Bludgeoning the audience to get a message across won’t make them roll over like kittens and beg for their bellies to be scratched; it will leave them numb and confused, desperate to go home and crawl under the covers to make it all just go away.
Continue reading ‘The Good, The Bad, The Ugly: Film Remakes, Part Two’

Licorice Pizza: My History With Vinyl

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

By Jesse Roth

It was an otherwise forgettable commercial for some product or service that was of no use to a middle school kid like me. Airing several times during evening broadcasts in the mid-1990s, it featured several scenes of children around my age with a voiceover expounding on the values and traits of this new generation—the one later to be known by the rather uninspired label “Generation Y.” One scene in particular showed a young girl leaning against the window on a school bus listening to a Walkman. The image was rather innocent but was coupled with the following line:

“They’ve never owned a record”
Continue reading ‘Licorice Pizza: My History With Vinyl’

Comments Off on Licorice Pizza: My History With Vinyl

Adam Ant, Strip

Published on January 30th, 2009 in: Issues, Music, Music Reviews, Waxing Nostalgic |

By Less Lee Moore

In 1983, having just experienced Adam Ant performing live to support Friend Or Foe (my very first concert!), I was a certified fan. I loved the videos for “Strip” and “Puss’n Boots” and was psyched for the upcoming Strip album.
Continue reading ‘Adam Ant, Strip

Dark City Is Overrated

Published on January 30th, 2009 in: Issues, Movies, Over the Gadfly's Nest |

By Chelsea Spear

In 1998, Alex Proyas’s Dark City saw a quiet theatrical release, and an even quieter end to its engagement. In the years since it was dismissed and disinterred to home video, filmmaker Joss Whedon and Roger Ebert, dean of American film critics, have found inspiration in the expressionistic, dystopian feature. Andy Herod of acclaimed indie band The Comas cited the film as “the only movie that makes sense or matters.” It has become a fetish object for slavering fanboys and Ebert acolytes. A decade later, it has all but been inducted into the neo-noir cannon. Ebert has recorded a commentary track for the deluxe edition DVD. Fans discuss the news of a sequel in hushed, reverent tones.

It is quite possibly the most overrated film of the 1990s.
Continue reading ‘Dark City Is Overrated’

Comments Off on Dark City Is Overrated

The Gonzo Tapes: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson

Published on January 30th, 2009 in: Book Reviews, Books, Culture Shock, Issues, Retrovirus, Reviews, Underground/Cult |

By Lisa Haviland

“For me, it was the first time I’d ever even heard an artillery shell fired and when they come in and hit, it’s a, ah, unnerving experience. . . When you’re out in a jeep that continually backfires and boils over and stops by the side of the road in the midst of voluntary convoys and hoards of refugees, yeah, you tend to think that maybe the world is about to come to an end.”

Continue reading ‘The Gonzo Tapes: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson’

Comments Off on The Gonzo Tapes: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson

The Bicycles, Oh No, It’s Love

Published on January 30th, 2009 in: Canadian Content, Current Faves, Issues, Music, Music Reviews, Reviews |

By Less Lee Moore

The Bicycles are a Toronto-based band, but one for whom the word “band” seems terribly limiting. Their live shows traditionally feature not only the four core members—Matt Beckett, Andrew Scott, Drew Smith, and Dana Snell—but also members of several other local bands and musicians such as Henri Fabergé and the Adorables, Laura Barrett, and many others.

Oh No, It’s Love, reflects the collaborations of this collective of musicians but also retains the signature sound the band established on their first album The Good, The Bad, and The Cuddly: captivating pop with ironic lyrics.

Yet Oh No, It’s Love is far more ambitious and fully-fledged than the band’s first album, and not just because it features more than twenty contributors (in addition to the four “official” band members) and a vast array of instruments, from harp and harmonica to kalimba and pedal steel. Although there are many current bands who also use less traditionally rock & roll instruments, many of them are utterly boring and passionless. The Bicycles are the complete opposite.
Continue reading ‘The Bicycles, Oh No, It’s Love

Comments Off on The Bicycles, Oh No, It’s Love

Ten Songs That Made Your Parents Want To Kill Themselves

Published on January 30th, 2009 in: Issues, Music, Retrovirus, Top Ten Lists |

By Jim R. Clark

The title here is pretty self-explanatory. Maybe you just broke up with the love of your life and you just want to while away a few minutes wallowing in self-pity? Well, why should your parents have all the fun, eh? Let’s take this depressing journey into musical history together. Join me. If you dare.
Continue reading ‘Ten Songs That Made Your Parents Want To Kill Themselves’

Jay Reatard, Matador Singles ’08

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

By Less Lee Moore

After seeing Jay Reatard’s name pop up all over The Big Takeover blog last year I grew curious. Then I saw he was also profiled in Spin a few times and I became suspicious. Was this more of the typical music press hype and hysteria?
Continue reading ‘Jay Reatard, Matador Singles ’08