Friday, December 21, 2007

Hunka Hunka burnin Christmas


Elvis Says:
Enjoy one another this holiday, eat alot of merry doughy biscuits, drink during the day-"Christmas in a Bottle", love your family and friends, laugh so hard you think you may puke, make some fried peanut butter bananna sammies, make out with someone backstage, and find your Priscilla under the mistletoe-and ask her "are you wearing cotton panties"?
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
Thank you, thank you very much...

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Sometimes you can't make it on your own.




U2-by Chris Martin (lead singer of the band Coldplay)


I don't buy weekend tickets to Ireland and hang out in front of their gates, but U2 are the only band whose entire catalog I know by heart. The first song on The Unforgettable Fire, "A Sort of Homecoming," I know backward and forward -- it's so rousing, brilliant and beautiful. It's one of the first songs I played to my unborn baby.
The first U2 album I ever heard was Achtung Baby. It was 1991, and I was fourteen years old. Before that, I didn't even know what albums were. From that point, I worked backward -- every six months, I'd get to buy a new U2 album. The sound they pioneered -- the driving bass and drums underneath and those ethereal, effects-laden guitar tracks floating out from above -- was nothing that had been heard before. They may be the only good anthemic rock band ever. Certainly they're the best.
What I love most about U2 is that the band is more important than any of their songs or albums. I love that they're best mates and have an integral role in one another's lives as friends. I love the way that they're not interchangeable -- if Larry Mullen Jr. wants to go scuba diving for a week, the rest of the band can't do a thing. U2 -- like Coldplay -- maintain that all songs that appear on their albums are credited to the band. And they are the only band that's been around for twenty years with no member changes and no big splits.
It's amazing that the biggest band in the world has so much integrity and passion in their music. Our society is thoroughly screwed, fame is a ridiculous waste of time, and celebrity culture is disgusting. There are only a few people around brave enough to talk out against it, who use their fame in a good way. And every time I try, I feel like an idiot, because I see Bono actually getting things achieved. While everyone else is swearing at George Bush, Bono is the one who rubs Bush's back and gets a billion dollars for Africa. People can be so cynical -- they don't like do-gooders -- but Bono's attitude is, "I don't care what anybody thinks, I'm going to speak out." He's accomplished so much with Greenpeace, in Sarajevo, at the concert to shut down the Sellafield nuclear plant, and he still runs the gantlet. When the time came for Coldplay to think about fair trade, we took his lead to speak out regardless of what anyone may think. That's what we've learned from U2: You have to be brave enough to be yourself.





Enjoy Music Everyday-"U Money Laundering Imposters"

Monday, December 10, 2007

I'll have one Time Machine, please...


If you don't own any Talking Heads albums you dont own your right of music independence

Download these now-David Byrne says so...

-Stop Making Sense
-Little Creatures
-77
-Remain in Light
-Speaking in Tongues
-Naked


Talking Heads live at CBGB, 1977. Their first performances at CBGB as a foursome. Spring of 1977, around the time they began recording their first album. Just before their first European tour that summer with the Ramones.

Enjoy Music Everday- "U Wreckless know it all's"

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Old Man Vedder

Sometimes the middle of the week feels like we just got done with a thirty-four city stadium tour.

Hang in there mates and power thru-Eddie Says so...


















Enjoy Music Everyday-"U death defying speaker jumpers"

Monday, December 3, 2007

BRAVO!

Tonight on Inside the Actor's Studio
John Cusack
Season 13, Episode 1311
Original Airdate: December 3, 2007
-Host James Lipton gets up close and personal with Golden Globe nominated and renowned actor John Cusack on Bravo's 13- time Emmy-nominated series “Inside The Actors Studio.” The usually private actor opens up to Lipton about growing up in Chicago, his friendship with “Entourage” star Jeremy Piven, and why he almost didn't take the role of Lloyd Dobler in the 1989 hit “Say Anything.” Cusack, who has a career spanning over two decades, takes the audience on an intimate ride through his history of films, including his role in front of and behind the camera in “High Fidelity” and his upcoming project with Hilary Duff, “War, Inc.”
Premieres Monday, December 3 @ 8/7c on BRAVO.