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Archive for the ‘Music – Current’ Category

World Cup World Tour #21: Poland

Saturday, June 24th, 2006

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Though they are allegedly embarassed by it, the biggest music in Poland these days is Disco Polo, a weird hybrid of vulgarized folk songs (Wikipedia’s definition, not mine) and the very worst in Eurodisco. An MP3 doesn’t quite get it across; you’ve got to see it for the full effect. Thus, I’m forced into posting my first video in the World Cup World Tour, “Jeste? Szalona PV” by Boys, apparently the biggest act in the genre. Yikes.

Boys – Jeste? Szalona PV

More fabulous Disco Polo videos here

Daphne Carr is the US’s biggest authority(!) on Disco Polo, having presented an paper on it at last year’s EMP Live. She wrote recently in The Village Voice about Brooklyn’s burgeoning Polish nightclub scene. If you’re looking for a big Disco Polo dance night, Greenpoint’s the spot.

World Cup World Tour #19: United States

Thursday, June 22nd, 2006

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Random thoughts on a day of defeat:

Isn’t it appropriate that I have the US entry following the Saudi entry? We’ll follow those guys anywhere. (rimshot) I’ll be here all the week, don’t forget to tip the waitresses.

Rant coming: If people get so upset about American flag-burning, why is it OK to wear Old Glory as a bandana or a T-shirt or facepaint or a bikini top or a towel or…? I am always shocked when I see alleged patriots displaying old faded flags, flags touching the ground, faded flag bumper stickers, flags left out at night, unlit… It’s fundamentally wrong and easy to see & know that it’s wrong. When the military has elaborate routines about how the flag should be hung, folded and destroyed with honor, surely my fellow citizens should easily see that wadding up their faded American flag t-shirt and throwing it on the bedroom floor or drooling ice cream on it is disrespective and certainly not patriotic. Am I wrong in thinking that the people who are most likely to “wear the flag” are closely related or perhaps even the same people who get so upset over flag desecration? Shouldn’t proposed constitutional amendments banning flag-burning also cover bikinis?

Which is all just a way of working to this next thought: When I see people from other nations at the World Cup wearing their national colors, I usually think “Wow, that’s so great that they have such spirit.” On the other hand, if I see a bunch of Americans with stars and stripes painted on their faces or chests or whatever, I’m embarassed. Am I wrong to feel shame? Or would it be worse to be at the stadium and not proudly display the colors?

My colleague Simon over at My Name Is Betty, who has some pretty great World Cup music coverage going himself, heard this same complaint from me and responded “As for the people in national dress, you’re embarrassed? English national dress seems to be a shaved head and a beer gut, maybe a novelty hat. I’m fortunate to live in London though – my street alone has Ghanaian, Trinidadian, English, Australian, Portuguese, Italian and even Jamaican flags out, and it wouldn’t take me too long to gather the rest. It’s good fun, every four years doesn’t come often enough.” It must be nice to live in a place where immigrants are considered pluses.

I worked for a Frenchman for a number of years and he told me several times how amazing he thought it was that there so many flags displayed in America. I plead ignorance until we looked out at the view from North Beach and, sure enough, every building in downtown SF was flying the colors. It was shocking to really see this, and this was long before 9/11. It’s nice to be patriotic, sure, but it looked more neurotic than anything else, like the old saw that nothing is Cool that has to continually tell you it’s Cool.

And now to the task at hand. It’s completely ridiculous to try to sum up my home country’s rich musical tapestry in a couple of songs. Just think of the musical forms that are indigenous and original to the US: rap, jazz, surf, tin pan alley, musical theatre, blues, country… When I think of how my “World Cup World Tour” is trying to put this same straightjacket on 31 other countries, it brings home that I’ve taken on an enormous task with at best well-meaning chutzpah and at worst total arrogance. (And doesn’t that make me so quintessentially American?) But just to be clear, I’m not trying to sum up or size up countries or their musical output with just a couple of songs, but simply trying introduce a taste of the musical life that floats through each nation’s cultural aether. Hey, I can try, right?

So in that spirit, I offer for the United States its greatest living songwriter ruminating on natural disaster & cultural collision and two of its most rockin’ clown princes having a cultural collision and just being silly. Enjoy.

Bob Dylan – High Water (For Charley Patton).mp3
Jon Spencer Blues Explosion with Rufus Thomas – Chicken Dog.mp3

Insult to injury: There was no baseball on the night after the US-Ghana game.

World Cup World Tour #18: Saudi Arabia

Thursday, June 22nd, 2006

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As in Iran, female singers are banned in Saudi Arabia, thus knocking out half the fun. I get the sense that fun isn’t a real high priority over there.

Abdulmajeed Abdulla – Al Gaid.mp3
Mohamed Abdu – Abaa’d.mp3

I think the Mohamed Abdu track kinda rocks — it takes a while to get going, it’s 20 minutes long and it’s not exactly pop — but 20 year-old Rima Mo in Jeddah can’t stand it. Here are Rima’s reasons why she hates Mohamed Abdu:

1/Every Friday we visit my grandmother from my fathers side, and only God knows how she loves mohammed abdu. So we are forced to listen to all his music EVERY FRIDAY!!! :O

2/On our way to visit the same grandmother and on our way back home my Dad plays mohammed abdu’s CD ALL THE WAY and EVERY FRIDAY!!! :O

3/It’s like he has the same Melody but only different words.:S

4/I feel sleepy whenever I hear him singing.

5/He never Smiles.This man is like that All the time.(not happy)

 

Hoo-wee, at least my father dropped the Jimmy Buffett habit after a while. But if I have to hear Eric Clapton "Unplugged" one more time…

Abdulmajeed Abdulla comes courtesy of Call Me Mickey, which also has excellent World Cup music coverage

BTW I’m superstitiously not doing the United States today because I’m trying to save countries that make the Round of 16 for later. USA! USA!

World Cup World Tour #17: Sweden

Wednesday, June 21st, 2006

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Look, I know all you indie kids would rather I posted a softie like Jens Lekman or some kind of retro rock like Soundtrack Of Our Lives or The Caesars or The Hives or somesuch. But I’m going to tell you right now: the best Swedish album I ever heard — and maybe one of my Top Twenty ever — is I Centrum by Bo Kaspers Orkester, 1998 winner of the Swedish equivalent of the Grammy for Best Album, whatever that is. I’d command you to get this album, but it runs $150 on Amazon and that just wouldn’t be fair. But you should try.
Bo Kaspers Orkester – Semester.mp3

Like BKO, Esborn Svensson Trio (which mostly works under the acronym EST), is a piano trio, but of a completely different stripe: jazz tinged with electronica and pop. One of Europe’s most popular acts, they haven’t quite made the leap over here yet. Their catalogue is definitely worth checking out if you dig Brad Mehldau, Christopher O’Riley, The Bad Plus and other cats like that.
E.S.T. (Esbjorn Svensson Trio) – Seven Days Of Falling.mp3

World Cup World Tour #16: Iran

Tuesday, June 20th, 2006

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Iran’s President Bans Western Music

(AP, December 19, 2005): Hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has banned Western music from Iran’s radio and TV stations, reviving one of the harshest cultural decrees from the early days of 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Songs such as George Michael’s "Careless Whisper," Eric Clapton’s "Rush" and the Eagles’ "Hotel California" have regularly accompanied Iranian broadcasts, as do tunes by saxophonist Kenny G…

 

Well, heck, who can blame him?

Today’s MP3s come from Googoosh, who was Iran’s biggest female pop singer through the ’60s and early ’70s until the Islamic Revolution put an end to women getting to express themselves in public. The revolution ended not just her ability to give live performances, but also barred her from entering a recording studio or giving interviews.

O-Hum is today’s other featured artist. Certainly you’ve heard of bands that can’t get signed and turn to the Internet to seek its audience. O-Hum have a whole different spin. Iran’s most popular alternative band, its record label was behind them 100%, but The Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance "ejected the album a couple of times, describing O-Hum’s music as "Western", "cheap" and contrary to Islamic moral standards. Because of this, the record company broke off its deal with the band and cancelled everything." (Or at least so says O-Hum’s Wikipedia entry.)

O-Hum – Darvish.mp3
Googoosh – Shahrzad-e Qesseh-goo.mp3
Lots more Googoosh here, mostly LP and cassette rips

World Cup World Tour #15: Japan

Monday, June 19th, 2006

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Susumu Yokota – Uchu Tanjyo.mp3
Puffy Ami Yumi – Track 2 from “Nice”.mp3

See more of the incredible art of Japan: Hokusai’s 36 Views of Mount Fiji

World Cup World Tour #14: Croatia

Sunday, June 18th, 2006

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The Bambi Molesters – Theme From Slaying Beauty.mp3
(featuring Pete Buck and Scott McCaughey)

Surf music from Croatia? Sure, why not! Pitchfork gave it a 7.9.

World Cup World Tour #13: Tunisia

Saturday, June 17th, 2006

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Tunisia was the outskirts of the Roman Empire and its northern coast is dotted with ruins. Color me intrigued. You might know Tunisia best, unfortunately, as Tatooine.

Anouar Brahem – C’est Ailleurs.mp3

World Cup Detour #1: Awful National Theme Songs

Friday, June 16th, 2006

While it’s always thrilling to have your team advance deep into the championship, inevitably somebody comes up with an idea for a an asinine fight song and makes your fandom sound really really stupid. Most of the time these are simple cash-ins, as for the 2002 World Series when Thomas Dolby replaced “She Blinded Me With Science” with “San Francisco Giants.” (Sound it out, it works. And it hurts.) Some will feature hapless team members attempting to rap. Others are simply misdirected excess fan energy. But what happens when you get, ahem, the ENTIRE WORLD involved? Disaster. Check out some particularly horrible theme songs at the NPR story linked below.

NPR : Singing of the World Cup, Off-Key and Off-Kilter
Bonus points for product placement honesty: Iran’s official video invites you to “Check Out All of Our Products Featured
in Arash’s new Video, “Iran Iran”"

World Cup World Tour #12: Ivory Coast

Friday, June 16th, 2006

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Despite the excellent play of Drogba, the best player on the Premier League-winning Chelsea side, La Cote d’Ivorie looks headed for an early exit. Nevertheless, with the home country several years into one of those crazy multi-sided civil wars that plague many African countries, this World Cup appearance is probably one of the best things that’s happened this nation in a long time.

Alpha Blondy – Dictature.mp3

Washington Post: Ivory Coast Soccer Hoping to Spread Peace

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