
Ben Wallace agrees to four-year, $60 million ($60 million … wow) contract with the Chicago Bulls. This deal could very well return the Bulls to their glory days.
Sorry, Detroit fans.

Ben Wallace agrees to four-year, $60 million ($60 million … wow) contract with the Chicago Bulls. This deal could very well return the Bulls to their glory days.
Sorry, Detroit fans.
If you’ve come here with any regularity, you might have noticed me talk about the Radar Bros. before. Yeah, I really dig them. Like, um, a lot. I know Brian is into them, too. But I can’t figure out why they don’t get more blog love. Oh well.
Their Falling Leaf Pages was one of my favorite albums of 2005, and I stumbled across the video for Papillon. It’s directed by bassist Senon Williams. I love how the fast-forward-like movement of the video sort of balances the steady tempo of the song. It also has this home video feel: kinda grainy and jumpy.
Related:

When it comes to progressive hip-hop and soul, you’d be hard-pressed to find a better label than Stones Throw, home to MF Doom, Breakestra, Dudley Perkins and Peanut Butter Wolf, among others.
A new release to look for is Aloe Blacc’s Shining Through (due out July 11). Blacc, one-half of indie hip-hop group Emanon, explores an array of styles on Shining, from soul to Latin to world. At first blush, his uplifting voice – especially on Dance For Life – is a bit reminiscent, however lofty this comparison may seem, of Stevie Wonder.
Aloe Blacc | I’m Beautiful
Aloe Blacc | Dance For Life


Dangerbird Records is giving us a sneak peek into the upcoming Silversun Pickups full-length debut, Carnavas (due out July 25), which I’m exctitedly hyping to myself as my most-anticipated record of the year.
I’ve posted on Silversun quite a bit (see below) just based on last year’s Pikul EP. (In fact, I think I’ve run out of press photos to use with my posts. Seriously, time for some new pics.)
Anyway, Well Thought Out Twinkles seems to follow the path Silversun laid down on the EP: fuzzy guitars topped by taut drumming and Brian Aubert’s strained and distant vocals.
You want comparisons, don’t you? Well, you’re gonna see Smashing Pumpkins come up quite a bit when you read about Silversun; I bet Silversun is really sick of that. (Or maybe they’re flattered by it.) But I’m going to say that this song reminds me of (gulp) Gwen Mars. Seriously, I don’t mean that in an offensive way because I dug Gwen Mars a little. I mean, they once opened a tour for Catherine Wheel, so they’re good in my book.
But listen to Gwen Mars’ Cosmic Dick (mp3) and tell me if the guitar riffs from Well Thought Out Twinkles don’t bear just a faint resemblance. I’m not suggesting a note-by-note comparison. It’s more about guitar effects: They’re both crunchy/fuzzy/echo-y. There’s just enough distortion to balance the driving melodies.
Silversun Pickups | Well Thought Out Twinkles
Related:
Silversun Pickups on KEXP.
Silversun Pickups: Kissing Families.
“Phoenix … kind of f—ing rules!”
– Ben Bridwell
Band of Horses singer
June 29, 2006

If the increase in size of the crowd at Thursday night’s show compared to a March appearance at the same venue is any indication, Band of Horses is growing in popularity exponentially. Last night’s gig at the Rhythm Room drew roughly 300 people, compared to (and this is a rough guess) about 75 for a date in March. For Phoenix, that’s saying something. The buzz was palpable, and I’m still trying to figure out where it originated (magazines? radio? MySpace?).
The place was so packed we tried to wedge out a little spot for ourselves off to the side. Somehow, we ended up smack dab in the front, close enough to put our finished drink glasses/cans on the stage (sorry, Rhythm Room). Also close enough to get good shots of frontman Ben Bridwell’s neck tattoo. (I’m pretty sure it’s a liger.)

I gotta admit: I was a little disgruntled. Where was everyone in March?!? Ah, but that’s just indie-rock snobbery. A band like this deserves whatever sold-out crowds it draws. There’s not a more amiable and engaging frontman than Bridwell. His chatter in between (and sometimes during) songs is priceless, and he exudes a carefree feeling that there’s just no other place he’d rather be than playing for you.
His gratuitous use of the word “dudes” – “Thanks, dudes!” after about every song – is both humorous and endearing. “We’re just gonna have a good time together, dudes,” he said at the start of the show. And the overwhelming applause from each song made him jokingly cover his ears, as if he didn’t just get the same response the night before. No matter. For one night, Bridwell boasted on Phoenix and took a jab at his former hometown of Tucson, where they played to an apparently lackluster crowd on Wednesday night. (Memo to touring musicians: Phoenicians eat that up every time.)
Whatever, his “dudes” and thumbs-up and hang-loose hand gestures (seriously, hang loose?) make the touring rock-star life seem so appealing. If you don’t wanna be the lead singer of Band of Horses after you see Band of Horses, there’s something wrong with you.
Perhaps predictably, the group saved Funeral (mp3) for last – at least prior to the obligatory encore, in which Bridwell played a new tune solo. He warned that it was still rough: “So don’t go write about it on your blog. I know you have a blog; I can tell from the look in your eye.” What? Who, me?
For Funeral, Bridwell encouraged the crowd to sing along on the “ooooh, ooooohs” leading up to the song’s climax: “Come on, dudes. Stay in tune.” So when he botched a guitar note later on in the tune, he jokingly reminded us mid-song: “Hey f— that; you guys f—ed up the vocals!”

Better were two versions of Wicked Gil: the album version (if you will) and a slower, more romantic rendition for the encore. My wife loves this song, even if she has no clue what the lyrics are (“they’ll be eating people to safety”?) so to have it played twice was gravy.
I bought Everything All the Time on vinyl last night, and I’m convinced it’s going to take a real strong showing from someone to supplant this as my Album of the Year. (And The Great Salt Lake (mp3) as my Song of the Year.)
Related:
Band of Horses on KEXP.
Song of the year (so far): Band of Horses “Funeral.”
(FYI: This selection has since changed to Band of Horses’ The Great Salt Lake.)
Band of Horses around the information superhighway:
@ Gorilla vs. Bear (from Denton, Texas).
@ Chromewaves (from Toronto).
@ Marathonpacks (from Bloomington, Ind.).
@ My Old Kentucky Blog (from Bloomington, Ind.).
@ Stereogum (from New York City).
@ Brooklyn Vegan.
Anyone in the Valley should go check out the Coup tonight at the Big Fish Pub in Tempe. I had planned on it, but the wife and I actually made an emergency jaunt to Henderson, Nev., where her parents live. Ill cat. Long story.
Anyway, the Coup’s Pick a Bigger Weapon is a politically charged gem in the vein of Public Enemy’s best work. It should stand up as one of the finest hip-hop releases of the year.
Unrelated, Band of Horses visit Phoenix tomorrow night. Rhythm Room. Be there.
The Coup My Favorite Mutiny
The Coup We Are the Ones
What does it say about the state of hip-hop when this jam by Philly-based Plastic Little – which clearly doesn’t take itself very seriously – is so much better than most of your mainstream hip-hop out there?
It’s a rhetorical question, I suppose. I’m not here to debate the direction of hip-hop. But it’s joints like this that give me hope. Think Pharcyde, circa Bizarre Ride. The Jump Off drips with irony and humor, not to mention one hell of a fresh beat.
Seriously, what’s the jump off?: “You’re dad’s in the Russian mafia? That’s the jump off!”
Vinyl junkies can pick up the 12″, which features Spank Rock and Diplo, here. You can also pre-order the full-length She’s Mature at the same spot.
Plastic Little | The Jump Off
[mov] The Jump Off video.
Speaking of Spank Rock, Ninja Tune is offering a free download of Rick Rubin here (make sure your browser allows a pop-up window). It’s off the new LP YoYoYoYoYo.
You can stream the video, too.
Related:
Spank Rock on KEXP.
Spank Rock Sweet Talk w/remixes.
It’s no surprise, but 2006 has yielded a crop of protest pieces, whether songs or full albums. One of the most personal and touching is Yell Fire!, the latest from Michael Franti and Spearhead, due for a July 25 release.
Franti, long an outspoken activist from his days in the Beatnigs and Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy, traveled to the war-torn sections of Iraq, Israel and Palestine two years ago to take in the devastation for himself. The result is a documentary, I Know I’m Not Alone, and Yell Fire!, a powerful protest of war (Time to Go Home) but also an uplifting plea for unity (Hey Now Now).
In the hands of someone less talented and, of course, less knowledgable, Yell Fire! would threaten to become preachy and righteous. But this is a guy who spent time in Iraq – of his own choosing, no less. He all but demands your respect and attention. He saw first-hand what we only read about or see on TV.
Like the Coup’s Pick a Bigger Weapon, Yell Fire! stands up and says something important. That Franti and his group spent time recording the album in Jamaica – an homage to his reggae forefathers, perhaps – only adds to the rebellious nature of his words and the music.
Franti and Spearhead | Yell Fire
(Pre-order the album.)
I Know I’m Not Alone DVD preview (large file, about 10-minute clip)

There’s no better news than to see Alejandro Escovedo touring again on the heels of his new release The Boxing Mirror.
In April 2003, Escovedo fell ill after a show in Phoenix. He was diagnosed with cirrhosis of the liver caused by hepatitis C. As Escovedo put it in an interview with the Washington Post, “I was in really serious, serious disrepair.”
In an interview during this show, Escovedo says it was the tribute album from fellow musicians, Por Vida: A Tribute to the Songs of Alejandro Escovedo, that inspired him to write again.
It’s no small miracle that he’s recording and touring again. This live stream from World Cafe Live is a great peek into the emotions of a singer who, without reaching for dramatics too much, we’re fortunate to still have.
Stream Alejandro Escovedo on World Cafe Live, 6/23/06.
Set list:
Put You Down
Dearhead
Arizona
Everybody Loves Me
Juarez/Rosalie
Evita’s Lullaby
The Ladder
Break This Time
Annie and I spent Thursday night carousing at a swank Scottsdale club – ahem, act like you’ve been here before – to celebrate the new issue of a friend’s magazine (oh, complimentary Skyy vodka drinks … you know we’re all up in that!). Then we hit our friends’ house to practice a little blackjack for our Vegas trip in August. We played spoons, too. If last night was any indication, I’m going to lose my ass on blackjack. But if they have spoons at the casino, I’m golden.
As promised, some more mp3s for the great show on Saturday night in Mesa that I, sadly, will be missing. I strongly urge anyone in the Valley to check it out: Saturday at Hollywood Alley with Sweet Bleeders, sourceVictoria, LetDownRight and Nowhere Man and a Whiskey Girl.
Sweet Bleeders | Betterplace
sourceVictoria | The End is Just the End
Related:
I sorta know someone in sourceVictoria … and totally proud of it.
Also …
The great Stateside Presents is bringing the Clientele to the Rhythm Room on Aug. 17 and Centro-Matic to Modified on Sept. 2.
Centro-Matic | Triggers and Trash Heaps