Sunday, May 31, 2015

An Ear For An Era: 2004

Oh, 2004. The year of...turning 21. The year of going out dancing all the time. The year I stopped trying to be who I wasn't and embraced some budding friendships. Stuff. Things. Dancings.

The music, I don't even know where to begin here. 2003 was kind of the last hurrah for the emo/punk phase of my life. 2004 was mostly just dancing music at this point. A big shift. Myspace days. Hipster (not yet such a bad word, at least as far as I knew) stuff. And there was just a lot of music in my library from 2004. Bear with me.

Move My Hips To Move My Heart.

In 2004 we used to go to an 18+ or All Ages (don't remember) dance night at a place whose name escapes me right now. Downtown Denver. Kind of Five Points area. I started making dance mix CDs in these days. Once we turned 21 we started going to Lipgloss, the way-too-hip dance night every Friday night. $2 Gin & Tonics and $2 PBR. In 2004 I was overwhelmed by it, thinking I wasn't cool enough. By 2005 I was comfortable enough there to dance with strangers. That place changed my life. Or maybe it was the music. Isn't this a music blog? I'll talk more about 2005 in the 2005 entry. How about that? So anyway, 2004 I was discovering the dance music genres and picking up some confidence in it.

Le Tigre's big major album This Island was very near and dear to me. I saw them live and was blown away that feminist icon Kathleen Hanna was now playing awesome dance music with the same political spirit. And the show was just so much fun...it seemed we were all going through this same transformation together. And the total protest song "New Kicks" just reminds me of the Iraq war protests and how pissed off I was about that war. I could still care about things while shifting my music focus!

!!! was the ultimate band to see live if you wanted to dance. They played at the same venue in downtown Denver mentioned above and the whole room just turned into this organic dancing thing, like it wasn't even a concert but a party. Half the time I wasn't even looking at the stage. Their album of this time Louden Up Now was a bit repetitive for my tastes but when it had the jams it really had the jams. Particularly this now-staple" I always have to stomp-stomp-clap along to that song every time I hear it.

 !!! "Me and Giuliani Down By The School Yard (A True Story)

Black Black Ocean, that ol' favorite Denver band of mine, put out their final album Eaglemaniac. Did I talk about these guys? I saw them roughly 10234 times over the course of two years. Such a confrontational live show but so much fun. The singer would walk right up to your face and after I saw them a few times I started craving this. And they picked up on that. And I got so close to this band as a fan that they asked me to video tape their reunion show a year or two later. Eaglemaniac though, how about that album? It was the one that finally captured the kind of band they were. The energy, the insanity, it's all there.

And The Scissor Sisters! Their self-titled album is a dance classic that has remained awesome over time. "Take Your Mama" and "Filthy/Gorgeous" were always going to do well at Lipgloss.

Franz Ferdinand kind of changed something for me. My acceptance of "mainstream" indie rock came about because of these guys. I'd heard one or two of their songs and dug them and back then Target had some sort of BS "up and coming" endcap with cheap CDs by bands like Franz Ferdinand. I always paid it no mind because I was punk rock and knew better than Target what bands were good. I could take recommendations from local indie record shops instead, thank you very much. But anyway, I'd heard some Franz Ferdinand and their self-titled album was on said endcap and it was only $8 or so so I gave it a shot. It had everything a dance whore like myself could want. Fire! Homoeroticism! Angular guitars with a good dance beat! Sexiness! Just enough heart! I put "This Fire" on maybe my second dance mix CD.

Based on the success of me loving that Franz Ferdinand album, I also picked up Hot Fuss by The Killers under the same general circumstances. Those singles would set that dance floor on fire ("Mr. Brightside," "Somebody Told Me") but beyond that the album didn't really resonate with  me like I'd hoped. "Midnight Show" was another good song though, if you want a deep cut.


There was also this thing called electroclash. It was this thing where hipsters would listen to a version of electronic music that just had a way of getting us all going crazy. It was weird listening to electroclash 11 years later because my mind was enjoying it in an ironic way but it was always an ironic thing. This stuff wasn't made to be taken seriously, it was made for a laugh and a good time on the dance floor. And while it is now ridiculously dated, I don't think it was ever intended to be timeless. So listening to it now it was probably just as fun as it was back then.

Miss Kittin's solo album I Com was one of the better albums in my opinion, and her song "Requiem For A Hit" became "our song" when Jess & I started dating. All irony lyrically. But a hell of a beat. Dirty Sanchez and Avenue D captured the pervy jokiness of the movement. I also had a mix called Xavier J: Electro Wave that I listened to on a run and it certainly kept me going.

Move My Hipster to Be Hipper.

I also started exploring more non-dance, non-punk indie music. Pinback's Summer in Abaddon is a lovely thing, isn't it? Iron & Wine kind of reached their apex of achievement (before they started adding more instruments to the very minimalist acoustic guitar setup) with Our Endless Numbered Days. Denver's own DeVotchKa put out a bonafide classic with How It Ends (I saw them live at Red Rocks last year, I am guessing you already know how their set ends...). Battles pre-empted their amazing debut full length (coming out in 2007!) with THREE EPs put out within a month of each other. Blonde Redhead started moving comfortably into their more "comfortable" sound on Misery Is A Butterfly, which is a sound I quite like from them.

Black Eyes blew my mind. I got their second album Cough when I was in Chicago visiting some friends. Because at that time it was still somewhat difficult to find stuff I wanted, the record store in Chicago was a big deal because I found this album. I played it for those friends and they were...as supportive as they could be. But it takes a very special person to really enjoy this album. Willfully abrasive and a guy with a really annoying voice sings about half the words. But beautiful post post hardcore (I think that's the term I went with when I'd try to describe them). I don't remember what I officially called the album of the year for 2004 but this is a distinct possibility. It awoke in me my punk rock spirit while calling on the adventurous nature of my musical journey at the time. I have only known a couple people in my lifetime who actually listened to Black Eyes and they have both been very special to me. And after this album they were done. One-Two-Done. For one of the most innovative bands in post hardcore or whatever you would call them.

I started really getting into The Magnetic Fields around this time. They had a dance remix of "I Thought You Were My Boyfriend" that was suggested to me when I was making a dance mix, and based off of that I picked up the album i. That album was full of analog instruments and had a very melancholy feel which I loved. It was my first Magnetic Fields album. Then I saw them live and picked up 69 Love Songs and I was off to the races. But i is a very strong album with Merritt's trademark wit and sadness combination. If I hadn't picked the song I had for my wedding first dance (discussed in the 1999 entry), I might have gone with "It's Only Time," a lovely underutilized song about devotion. "I Looked All Over Town" is probably my favorite song on this album, about a sad clown. A very sad song about not fitting in, I remember being annoyed when I saw them live because people were laughing at the song when I took it very seriously, but I understand now. It is both. And we need to be able to laugh at pain. And this song does this in a very beautiful way. Like a sad clown. (the tragically ludicrous/the ludicrously tragic?)

The Magnetic Fields "I Looked All Over Town"

Jens Lekman seems like he looks at the world though a similar lens as Stephin Merritt, just a little less cynical and with more innocence. They have similar baritone delivery and both hit the perfect balance of humor and melancholy though. It took me a while to finally find and pick up When I Said I Wanted to Be Your Dog, but it has the wonderful "You Are The Light (By Which I Travel Into This and That)."


Modest Mouse found some modest success with Good News For People Who Love Bad News. It still is, front-to-back, one of my favorite albums of theirs. Biting lyrics, painfulness, clever clever words. And as much as the song "Float On" was everywhere and inescapable to the point where I started disliking it a little, a few years later I took it as an empowering anthem after getting laid off at my job. And now when I hear it that's all I think of.


I didn't get Seven Swans by Sufjan Stevens until recently even though the first song I ever heard by him was "To Be Alone With You." It was a highlight on a mix from my friend Christy. But I didn't really explore him until Illinois (story coming next entry!). My wife walked down the aisle to "The Dress Looks Nice On You" though. Because it was perfect. He is very good at the folk thing.

That same mix included a song called "Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)" by this new band called Arcade Fire. I heard it in December of 2004. The major standout to the mix, I had to ask more questions about this band. The song was just so full of passion that it kind of reminded me of The Broadways in a weird way. So it went from obsession with this song, to checking out the album Funeral (and finding out it was a big big deal in the indie world, probably the #1 album of the year by "indie consensus" if that's a thing), to being pretty obsessed with the whole album and inserting myself into that indie rock culture. I was kind of an outsider when I approached this stuff after knowing everything about everything punk rock. It was a fun adventure.

Arcade Fire "Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)"

Oh and 2004 was also the year I first got into a new Sonic Youth album. Speaking of an outsider learning about indie rock. Sonic Nurse was their latest at the time and I got it and loved it a lot. Kind of had the band heading in a similar direction to Blonde Redhead mentioned above. A little less abrasive but still passionate and energetic and experimental.

My previous investments in the awesomeness of Touch & Go Records continued to pay dividends. I got the track "Good Friday" by CocoRosie for free off their website and then eventually was able to find their debut album La Maison de mon Reve somewhere in Denver. Something I looked for everywhere but was hard to find back then. A really cool mix of art and hip hop beats and melody...CocoRosie would slowly evolve over time, but not quite in the direction I'd hoped. I still love them though. This album is very cool.

And then there was my real actual probably #1 album of the year. If not Cough, it had to have been Desperate Youth, Bloodthirsty Babes by a certain TV On The Radio. They felt like my band, like my discovery. My secret. I also discovered them via Touch & Go Records and they filled a void for me. Something completely unique and not really like anything else I listened to at the time. I always speak in hyperbole when I speak of this band because I really do think they are the best band of this century. And it really started here. Or that EP from 2003. Maybe there. But here is where they started for me. A combination of spacey minimalist instrumentals (with maximalist portions when appropriate) and soulful vocals. I know the fact that they were on the jukebox at the hipster bar we went to means I wasn't the first/only person to know them, but I still felt pretty cool when I played them on said jukebox on a crowded Thursday night (Thursday night was the big party night in Boulder) and confused the hell out of everyone. The song was "Ambulance," their a capella love song, which may have not been the best song for partying. But I just really wanted my friends to hear it and that was the best way to do that. But that's not the song I'm going to post here because another song has eclipsed it. They opened a show back then, I think maybe election day 2004? The line was so long I couldn't get in until their last song. But I caught the last song and at that moment it was the best thing I'd ever heard live. It is everything TV On The Radio does well at its best. A perfect song that gets stuck in my head for days. (note: I am really sorry about the image below. Thanks, whoever put this on Youtube, for finding it necessary to use such an image!)


TV On The Radio "Poppy"

Old Reliable.

Elvis Costello continued to deliver with The Delivery Man. I remember being a sucker because I went and bought this album on CD at the local independent record store for something like $17.00 and then seeing it at Target or Best Buy or whatever for less than $10. But I was supporting something important, man! This album was yet another left turn from his previous (When I Was Cruel), and while I didn't love it quite as much I still have a lot of affection for it. It introduced me to the voice of Emmylou Harris, who provided some beautiful guest vocals on a couple tracks. It told a story. It was heartbreaking in places. Like here.

Elvis Costello featuring Emmylou Harris "Heart Shaped Bruise"

The best album of the year was probably technically this 40-years-in-the-making one. Brian Wilson finally finished Smile! I feel like I kind of talked about it with Smiley Smile and all that stuff back then but I have to talk about it a little bit here. But everyone knows what he did. It just turned out so damn good! It felt great to listen to even when Colorado was experiencing a ridiculously rainy May. I could feel the sunshine and the harmonies were just Wonderful.

And On and on.

  • Milk Man is a great Deerhoof album that I just recently acquired and have only listened to a couple times.
  • A Ghost Is Born shows Wilco going full on experimental. It's pretty great from the right mood (country Wilco just puts you in the mood).
  • I got Love Everybody by The Presidents of the United States of America because I have been a long-time fan but only a few of the songs have that element I love about them. But "Some Postman" and "Jennifer's Jacket" are quite good.
  • Asian Man Records got into the "indie rock" stuff outside of the usual ska and punk with a very cool rhythmic album by Colossal called Welcome the Problems.
  • The Roots and Mos Def kind of put out forgettable-ish albums (compared to everything else either artist has put out!).
  • The Grey Album was pretty neat, I wish it sounded a little more Beatlesy though. Not that that was super possible when mixing them with hip hop.
  • The Black & Blue Album was a Weezer-Jay-Z mashup, which was also pretty neat, though messy in places. It did have a bonus track "99 Luft Problems" which is pretty much my favorite mashup ever.
  • I didn't discover Feist until The Reminder a couple years later, but her debut album Let It Die was pretty neat. I love her cover of "Inside And Out" by The Beegees. I had it played at my wedding.
  • That Loretta Lynn album produced by Jack White was neat!
  • Madvillainy was rad too. And MM...Food. That MF Doom guy is a reasonably talented dude!
  • Super xx Man is great singer songwriter stuff. I particularly recommend 2004's Vol. IV: My Usual Way.
  • The Descendents came back after another 8 years off! Cool To Be You was...interesting. I liked a couple of the tracks but I'd just as easily stick with their early stuff.
  • The Good Life put out Album of the Year so that was neat.
  • Some kid called Kanye West released his debut album. I did not care at the time. Pretty good listen though.
  • The Streets. "Fit But You Know It." Another dance floor staple.
  • The Go! Team! I got into them a year or two later when they opened for The Flaming Lips at Red Rocks! Rad band!
  • Hanalei saw Brian Moss from The Wunder Years and The Ghost expanding into a more personal territory.
  • Annie! Anniemal! Swedish pop is the best pop.

Next Time:

2005 was probably the best year of my life. I will try to fit in some music discussion with that.

Thursday, May 7, 2015

Stanley Film Festival 2015 In Review

This year I was a very lucky man and my wife got us fancy passes to the 2015 Stanley Film Festival in Estes Park. It was this past weekend and it was one of the awesomest experiences of my life. Hanging out with genre film nerds and people that make such genre films, seeing tons of movies that haven't been available to the public as of yet, and just hanging around the historic Stanley Hotel all contributed to that. I'm going to spend the bulk of this entry talking about the movies to hopefully help spread the word about them and contribute in my own small way toward their success. And really, it's all about the movies.

But let me also quickly mention things like the great parties. Bands like Snake Rattle Rattle Snake played, which was super cool. And the awards brunch included such high concepts as our Saw table, requiring us to locate a key hidden in a dummy's mouth to get our silverware and our Re-Animator biscuits & gravy included an awesome green hot sauce in a syringe just because. And if they count as parties, all the other immersive/interactive things going on, it was more than a film festival. It was a full weekend of insanity.

And the people! Jess is quite good at striking up conversations with people at the festival, finding common ground in our obvious similar obsessions with horror movies. Just talking about movies with other people that developed toward the same obsessions over different time periods, talking about other interests, it seemed like everyone was generally easier to talk to there than in the real world. I miss that already.

Oh and being star struck because I don't get to meet a lot of heroes, but there were so many filmmakers in attendance. For every movie we saw but two, at least the writer or director was in attendance for a Q&A after the screening. The insight on the creative process was so inspiring that I am starting to think that I can maybe make at least a short myself someday soon. And submit it to various festivals. And use that to get funding for a real live, honest movie! And start a career and all that. Some directors seemed awesome (particularly Karyn Kusama and Todd Geoghegan) and some seemed somewhat douchey (not going to call them out here) but it was always interesting and inspiring to hear them talk about their craft.

What a great way to segue into the movies themselves! I'll just write a little bit about each one I saw and maybe be more obvious about recommending things that I feel should be recommended. Which is most of what I saw, but some more passionately than others.

Day One: April 30
The opening night film was Cooties, produced by Elijah Wood's SpectreVision. Goofy horror comedy. We saw a lot of goofy horror comedy, which is kind of our main subgenre of "horror" anyway. This had an all star comedy cast including Elijah Wood, Alison Pill, Rainn Wilson, and more (you can look at imdb for such details) and was about teachers surviving a crazy zombie-like outbreak amongst the students. Without giving too much away, there is a lot of kid killin' in the most tasteful way possible. I will highly recommend this when it comes out. I gave it 4 out of 5.

Day Two: May 1
We showed up over an hour early to see Director's Commentary: Terror of Frankenstein. We did not need to do this. We could have easily seen another movie before hand. But with the legendary Leon Vitali in attendance I figured it would be much more popular than it turned out to be. The concept was an odd one: a made up director's commentary track on a DVD for a real movie from the 70s revealing a very strange and tragic string of events (paralleling the story of Frankenstein in its own way) happening behind the scenes. A bit better in theory than in practice, it was still a very interesting concept and a bizarre experience.

Then we got to the main theater for The Invitation. Very anxious and stressful, very good at keeping you guessing, maybe more thriller/drama than horror film but very well executed. This is the new one from Karyn Kusama (Girlfight, Jennifer's Body) so I'm sure you'll be seeing it somewhere soon enough. I gave this one a 4 as well.

We only saw three films on Friday due to needing to eat and not seeing one before Terror of Frankenstein. So after dinner and hanging out in the lounge, we made our way to the midnight(ish) movie of the night, Deathgasm. I'd watch it again because it was quite entertaining but I can't give it the greatest rating for a couple reasons. As funny and gory as it was (New Zealand horror comedy), a couple things seemed a little derivative (using a chainsaw...) and disingenuous (it's about a metal fan but it felt like the writer didn't really care about/fully understand metal music and this is coming from someone who doesn't fully understand metal music). But overall, it's a silly comedy and worked great as a midnight(ish) movie. It's not exactly asking to be judged on very high standards. I think I gave it 3.

Day Three: May 2
We started our day at the oldest movie theater in the country (that was originally built as a movie theater) with a world premiere (much of the cast in attendance!) of Some Kind of Hate. The first real horror movie in a way. Very violent, pretty serious, and the second movie in a row that included an instance of a metal head introducing a cool/popular girl to metal music and her life being changed. Is that a common fantasy amongst high school metal heads? Anyway. This reminded both of us of Carrie. The drama factor wasn't as strong as the film wanted it to be, but the horror aspect was great.

We stayed at the old theater for a 35mm print of the classic film Re-Animator. Neither of us had seen it, shamefully enough. But we can no longer say that. Director Stuart Gordon was in attendance to receive the Master of Horror award (an axe, of course) and he sat in the same row as us! And Barbara Crampton presented it to him! What an experience this film was, I don't know how we never made our way to seeing that one in our annual October tradition, but luckily that has been remedied. I don't think I need to say much about this other than the fact that the final act is one of the most amazing displays of ridiculous gore I've ever seen.

We made our way over to the closing night presentation of The Final Girls. Another horror comedy, this one is super meta, think Sherlock Jr. meets Friday the 13th. Or an elaborate episode of Community. Without saying too much, it was quite funny, not quite scary, and surprisingly quite touching. Almost everybody we talked to loved it, I gave it 5 out of 5 stars, and I highly recommend it when it comes out later this year. But it was also the best possible crowd for this type of film, I'm not sure how it would land without having such an enthusiastic crowd. The other concern I must bring up is that one person we talked to that didn't love it. He hated it. He felt like it was too cheeky, that it was making fun of old stupid horror movies and their tropes. I took it as a harmless tribute made with love of the genre, but apparently a small percentage of the audience may not see it the same way.

Day Four: May 3
On the last day we had to see as many movies as we could. Meaning two before we had to head back home to the real world. After the awesome brunch alluded to above, we made our way to see We Are Still Here. The other "real" horror movie we saw. Another one I really don't want to say much about for fear of ruining your experience, I'll just say that it is a haunted house movie, it stars the legendary Barbara Crampton, and it has some amazing amazing practical effects and gore. Maybe the scariest movie we saw all weekend as well. I wanted to give this one a 5 (and kind of regretted giving The Final Girls a 5 the night before) because it was just so great, so mature (particularly for a first time director!) so scary, so mysterious and intriguing enough that I want to re-visit it when it comes out to the public. Unfortunately for some reason we didn't get ballots to vote for this one. See this movie when you can. It was my favorite. Just love.

And finally we caught When Animals Dream. A movie about a werewolf in Denmark. That description made me want to see it in hopes that it would be somewhat similar to Let the Right One In. And I guess it was. Subtle, dramatic, and very Nordic. It really reminded me of the great films I watched in my Nordic Film & Lit class. Like The Match Factory Girl except she turns into a werewolf. I gave it a 4. Just a great depiction of sadness and repression and...well you can probably imagine but you should see it for yourself anyway. It's got the same distributor as Let the Right One In so it'll probably make its way to theaters soon enough.

That is a lot of high ratings. There were some fantastic films. And many we were not able to see. Such is the nature of such things. I want to go back next year. And I highly recommend genre lovers do so as well. It is getting more and more popular and it will probably be crazy. Maybe they'll eventually have to expand it to a full week!