Tone-Loc: Wild Thing (Peaches remix)

I’ve karaoked just once in my life. True story. I was a little inebriated (read: a lot) and decided to “sing” Tone-Loc’s Funky Cold Medina. At a cowboy bar. In Lubbock, Texas. Called Adolph’s. Also a true story.

What does this have to do with a Wild Thing remix by Peaches? Nothing, really. It was just a roundabout way of introducing Tone-Loc’s name into a post. I actually interviewed him in 1999 for a story I wrote for The Arizona Republic. (I don’t have a link; I don’t think the Internet existed in 1999.) He talked about, among other things, being a father, his career and his voice-over work, including for a cartoon called C-Bear and Jamal.

“I’ll always be involved in that as long as my voice sounds raspy,” he said. ”I’m the type of guy that’ll take anything that comes my way as long as it’s a nice offer and it’s good. I’m a pretty laid-back kind of guy. I’m pretty happy in life. I have a great family.”

And there you have it.

Check out Peaches’ awesome take on Wild Thing, an oldie but a goodie. I definitely love the added verses … a little female perspective this time around.

  • Tone-Loc | Wild Thing (Peaches remix)

Spoon in VW Green Room

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Earlier this year, I posted about Bloc Party performing in the VW Green Room, a smallish, acoustic session that doubles as genius marketing for Volkswagen. (Proud owner of a Mazda 3, in case you were wondering.) The sessions are aired, I assume, on WFNX in New Hampshire.

So if you can just get past the corporateness of the whole thing, it makes for some pretty great music.

Spoon stopped by for a performance a few weeks ago and played three tracks off Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga.

  • Spoon | Don’t Make Me a Target (at VW Green Room)
  • Spoon | Black Like Me (at VW Green Room)
  • Spoon | The Underdog (at VW Green Room)

Here’s video of The Underdog, courtesy of WFNX’s YouTube page.

The Ghostface Doll

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All I want for Christmas … is the Ghostface Doll.

For a mere $499, the Ghostface Doll comes equipped with poseable hat, 14K gold eagle wristband, 14K gold pendant/chain and velvety robe. It comes “enclosed in a box that has remnants of Fine Louis XIII cognac” and is accompanied with an exclusive mixtape CD of 36 Ghostface songs mixed by DJ Rhettmatic.

Did I mention it talks? Oh, it talks. The doll says such pleasant lines as: “Remember when I long dicked you and broke your ovary?” Just imagine how much fun that would be to open on Christmas morning with the family!

Judging by the “Adventures of Little Ghost” (pics sorta NSFW), this is kinda like Lil’ Penny, only, you know, way cooler.

So, seriously, who’s buying this thing for me?

New Bloc Party video: Flux

In which Bloc Party channels visual effects from classic video game Rampage (which you can play here, by the way) … or as commenter jimmytj999 says at the YouTube page (and I quote): “lol wtf @ video.”

My thoughts exactly. I mean, when did C-3PO become a Power Ranger?

But, seriously, folks … this song is growing on me, even though I sort of expect Cher to bust out the chorus to Believe at any moment.

D-Nice Presents: Black Sheep

I’ve discussed D-Nice once or twice around here. (Maybe even three times.)

Well, the former Boogie Down Productions member and solo rap artist (now a photographer) is branching out with a YouTube series called D-Nice Presents: True Hip-Hop Stories. The latest installment of the relatively new series features a short sit-down interview with Dres of Black Sheep, who talks about the making of the classic joint The Choice Is Yours and how the ever-present third verse (“Engine, engine number 9”) came about. I mean, how classic is this song? Consider the lyric: “And, pass the paper, cross the fader / Black Sheep getting played, like a Sony in a beta.”

Check out the interview:

Mike Doughty: Golden Delicious

Everyone’s favorite former Soul Coughing singer, Mike Doughty, is releasing Golden Delicious, the follow-up to 2005’s Haughty Melodic, on Feb. 19, again on ATO Records.

Because I haven’t heard the album, I’ll leave to an e-mail blast Doughty sent to fans describing the new record:

“Our guiding principle was something we called ‘dude theory,’ which meant that it should sound like a bunch of visualize-able dudes; a band, in other words. It was a way of keeping the music spacious.”

Fair enough. Two of the new songs are streaming at Doughty’s MySpace: 27 Jennifers and I Just Want The Girl In The Blue Dress To Keep On Dancing. If you’re a Doughty fan, you’ll recognize 27 Jennifers, which originally appeared on a 2003 collection called Rockity Roll, albeit less polished and more acoustic than this new version.

Golden Delicious track list:

1. Fort Hood
2. I Just Want The Girl In The Blue Dress To Keep On Dancing
3. Put It Down
4. More Bacon Than The Pan Can Handle
5. 27 Jennifers
6. I Wrote A Song About Your Car
7. I Got The Drop On You
8. Wednesday (Contra La Puerta)
9. Like A Luminous Girl
10. Nectarine (Part One)
11. Navigating By The Stars At Night

  • Mike Doughty | 27 Jennifers (from Rockity Roll)

Haughty Melodic and Skittish/Rockity Roll are available at eMusic.

ALSO: Circa 45 lives! It’d only been, like, three months since the last update. But here’s a new one, with an mp3 of Low’s Breaker (Dub Plate).

2 new Broken West songs on WOXY

If you haven’t checked out WOXY’s blog the Futurist, you are missing out.

The station is posting recaps of its Lounge Act sessions (with individual mp3s) and Lounge Act flashbacks (like this Long Winters session).

The latest band to swing by was the Broken West, whose I Can’t Go On, I’ll Go On (released in January) should not be forgotten for best-of 2007 lists.

The band played two new tracks for its Lounge Act session (full download here), and WOXY was kind enough to separate them out into individual mp3s (high bitrate, too!).

  • The Broken West | Embassy Row (on WOXY)
  • The Broken West | Perfect Games (on WOXY)

Related:
The Broken West: Live at SXSW (with mp3s)

ALSO: Congrats to Paolo, whose name was randomly picked by my wife for the Emma Pollock 7-inch giveaway.

Jonah Matranga: So Long

I really should pay better attention to Tuesday release lists because albums like Jonah Matranga’s And just slip right by me. Dumb, dumb.

I’ve yet to listen to the full album, but the lead single, So Long, is available via Limekiln Records and Jonah’s MySpace page (and below).

If there’s anything I’ve learned listening to Matranga, especially his post-Far solo work, it’s that he unapologetically wears his heart on his sleeve, a trait that even an armchair cynic like myself can appreciate. (Witness his I Used to Love H.E.R. entry.)

Besides that, he’s unbelievably accessible to his fans and has been using a sliding-scale pricing system – pick your price – on his Web site for years. Clever. I think some fairly big band from England recently adopted that idea.

On the off chance Jonah is reading this (and, hey, he’s commented here before), what can I do to help get Far’s Water & Solutions out on vinyl??

  • Jonah Matranga | So Long

Buy/download And at Jonah’s Web site for $7.99; the package includes liner notes, lyrics and guitar chords.

ALSO: The NBA season is under way (please, John Paxson, don’t gut the Bulls for Kobe Bryant), and that got me thinking of one of my favorite dunks of all time.

1994 playoffs. Scottie Pippen. Patrick Ewing. Facial. Then trash talk with Spike Lee for good measure.

Of course, Ewing was on the receiving end of something similar a few years prior to that.

The Coup: Steal This Double Album (live set)

I’m not much of a fan of the reissue trend. How many times do we have to buy an album?

But I’ll make an exception here. That’s because eMusic has the Coup’s Steal This Double Album, a 2002 reissue of the 1998 classic Steal This Album that contains two extra tracks and a second disc of a live performance.

Well, on eMusic, the second disc – 73 minutes, 80.6 MB in size – costs you just one download. From what I’ve read, the CD version also is not divided into separate tracks. By comparison, iTunes has Steal This Double Album for $19.98, and you get the live set only if you buy the entire album.

All that said, the quality of the live recording clearly does not come from the soundboard. But for one download of your monthly allotment, how much can you really complain?

I’m not sure what year the show was recorded, but using my amazing powers of deduction, I can tell you it was recorded in Eugene, Ore. (“Mothafuckin’ Eugene, Oregon, what’s happenin’?” was my first clue.)

I went ahead and spliced the first track, The Shipment, from the performance.

  • The Coup | The Shipment (live, from Steal This Double Album)

Also, check out the Coup’s MySpace page for four downloads, including a live version of Heven Tonite (from the 2001 album Party Music) and the amazing My Favorite Mutiny (even if it does feature Talib Kweli).