Friday, September 29, 2006

Kingblind.com Ticket Giveaway (The National- Live in Seattle 10/6/06)

The National will be playing on Oct. 6th in Seattle, WA at Neumo's and Kingblind.com and Beggars will be giving away a pair of tickets. You want to go? Well just follow these simple rules and we will randomly pick a winner this weekend. Ok, Here are the rules. Just send your Name and address (In the body of the message) to kingblind(at)gmail.com with THE NATIONAL in the Subject line.. That's it!! So very simple..

Listen to The National
Slipping Husband

Murder Me Rachael

Wasp Nest

Cold Girl Fever

About The National
Beggars’ Banquet is thrilled to release the third record by Brooklyn-based band THE NATIONAL. Their label debut, “Alligator” will be released on April 12th, 2005. Here is the story of the band and their music as written by their friend Alec Hanley Bemis.
----
On New Year's Eve 2004, I ran into The National's singer, Matt Berninger, at a party in Brooklyn. He looked pretty much as he had the last couple of times I'd seen him, like he'd been locked up at home for days on end, trapped in thoughts, books, and videotapes. An old friend asked him what it was like to have left behind the world of regular employment, and I overheard this reply: "Don't get too into your band. You'll be poor, and happy, and never want to do anything else ever again."

All you need to know about The National is that they gave up good jobs for this. But perhaps you want more…

They are five friends from Cincinnati, Ohio, who started making music in 1999 when they found themselves living near one another again in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. They weren't looking to take over the world with a demo and matching outfits. Rather, music was their way of letting off steam from those good jobs. Records are what they talked about when they went out drinking together, when they ate together, when they played wiffle ball in the summertime.

Simply put, songwriting allowed The National to deepen their conversations. It's how they broached the topics they really wanted to talk about -- how they were past the halfway mark between twenty and thirty, and speeding toward a kind of permanence they never expected; how they pleased and disappointed their mothers and fathers; how flings had become girlfriends, and girlfriends, wives.

Thankfully, the band's pre-existing bonds lent this musical conversation an unusual intimacy. The National contains two pairs of brothers -- Aaron Dessner (guitars, bass) and Bryce Dessner (guitar), Scott Devendorf (guitar; bass) and Bryan Devendorf (drums). Matt sings because he's taller, blonder, and older than the rest.

Their self-titled debut album “The National” (Brassland 2001) was recorded and released before they had played even a single show, before the music spilled far from their heads. They cut the album with engineer Nick Lloyd and formed a label with a writer (yours truly, Alec Bemis), so those recordings could be released. A few fans were gained, some friends were made, but not much really happened.

The National made a second album, “Sad Songs for Dirty Lovers” (Brassland/Talitres 2003). The staff was the same, though Peter Katis, who produced both Interpol records, helped produce and mix, and Australian composer Padma Newsome from Clogs collaborated on arrangements and strings. Rolling Stone and many other magazines noticed this one, and when it made its way to Europe, magazines the band had never heard of began saying it was one of the years best.

A show at their favorite bar became a van ride to neighboring cities, became a plane ride to Europe, became two summers overseas. Their ties to those good jobs slackened.

It was the press attention in the UK that got the attention of Roger Trust, A&R for Beggars Banquet – who read a review and thought it would be something he would like. Strangely enough, within hours of reading that review he received a call from someone informing him that the band was looking for a label. Several months later he saw them live and was completely impressed…the rest they say is history!

Although The National have now signed to Beggars Banquet, they continue on their own path. Four of them have moved even further out in Brooklyn to Ditmas Park, where there is space and familiar suburban streets and even Geese on Beverly Road. Their new album, “Alligator”, much of which was recorded at their homes in Ditmas Park, was engineered by Paul Mahajan, who has worked with the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and TV on the Radio. Padma Newsome camped out for a month with the band, and Peter Katis added more production and mixed the record at his house in Bridgeport, Connecticut.

Matt Berninger's potent baritone still intones about matters fraught and funny and sad; about record collections, missing persons and medium-sized American hearts. But the record’s not simply gothic or miserablist -- more like the plays of Tennessee Williams, it’s full of peculiar intimacies and awkward grace. Alligator's heroes are reckless and possessed seducers, but they are apologetic ones. In The National's imaginings, in songs alternately lush and spare, there is something twilit and dreamy worked out in the basement of our brains.



“Startling and subtly affecting, the National creeps in like the killer in a bleak gothic novel. Strings tremble, hearts break and each smoldering song brings a harrowing tale of new pities.” - MAGNET

“If Nick Cave had discovered the horror of suburban ennui before the Bible and heroine, we might not have had to wait so long for a band like the National.” - CMJ MONTHLY

New tracks from The Who!!

There's a NEW record from THE WHO! First one in 24 years. It's called Endless Wire and it comes out 10/31. Though, you've probably known this for a while. The first release of it will also include a limited edition bonus DVD of a 2006 concert in Lyon, France (which features a sweet 10min version of ‘Won’t Get Fooled Again’).
TEA AND THEATRE

IT'S NOT ENOUGH

Thursday, September 28, 2006

Ash singer to release solo single

Ash singer Tim Wheeler is set to release a solo single.

'Glow' is a collaboration with legendary dance music producer Arthur Baker.

Baker has previously worked with the likes of New Order and Bob Dylan.

The single's release follows the announcement that Ash guitarist, Charlotte Hatherly, would be leaving the band after 9 years to concentrate on her solo work.

'Glow' is set to be released on March 20.
(nme)

Kingblind Downloads

The Album Leaf:: Always for you
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

Whitey:: Walk in the dark
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La Donnas:: Pale Horse
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Sonic Youth - Peel Sessions October 19, 1988
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

Arctic Monkeys - live @ 9 30 Club,Washington 2006
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Kingblind Downloads

Decemberists: 2006-09-25, KCRW*

Badly Drawn Boy: 2006-09-13, Oxford*

Okkervil River: "The President's Dead"

Tom Waits:: Bottom of the world

120 Days:: Come Down
* Registration required for downloading

Wolfmother pull US shows

Wolfmother have been forced to cut short their American tour after bassist/keyboardist Chris Ross' son was born a month early.

The band played in Pittsburgh on Friday and at the Virgin Festival in Baltimore on Saturday (September 23), after which Ross flew back to Australia to be with his partner and son.

Both an in-store appearance in Chicago on September 26 and their Hollywood show on Thursday (September 28) have been postponed, with the Hollywood performance rescheduled for December 12.

However Friday's (September 29) San Diego gig has been cancelled, as has their Saturday appearance at the Download Festival at Shoreline Amphitheatre outside San Francisco.

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Kingblind's Favorite Finds

episodes of: The Simpsons, Futurama, South Park, Family Guy, American Dad

List of Films Ordered By Uses Of The Word "F*ck"

Death Cab for Cutie, Postal Service featured on Bittorrent.com

Bohemian Rhapsody in 25 different voices

Merritt Returns To 'Bubble-Gum Goth' On New Album

It's been nearly 10 years since Stephin Merritt released an album under the moniker the Gothic Archies, but that doesn't mean he hasn't been working on one.

Indeed, for every volume of the "A Series of Unfortunate Events" books that Daniel Handler, aka Lemony Snicket, has produced since 1999, the Magnetic Fields mastermind wrote a corresponding track. On Oct. 10, the Gothic Archies will round up those songs on "The Tragic Treasury: Songs From A Series of Unfortunate Events" (Nonesuch), the same week Handler's 13th and final book in the series will be released.

In addition to the 13 tracks, Merritt also added two bonus tracks, including "Freakshow," which he originally wrote to correspond with the book "The Carnivorous Carnival" but ultimately deemed too depressing.

"It's an extremely upsetting song on some level, being such a freak that birds come and poop on you," Merritt said. "This project, the Gothic Archies, revolves around this sense that the world is terrifying and ridiculous. Instead of taking the straight-ahead rock approach, it's my bubble-gum gothic band."

With song titles like "Smile! No One Cares How You Feel," "The World Is a Very Scary Place" and "Dreary, Dreary," Merritt obviously tapped into the dark sentiments of the children's books. However, his working relationship with Handler wasn't constrained to just the soundtrack, as Handler played accordion on several tracks on Magnetic Fields' critically acclaimed "69 Love Songs." Upon meeting in the late '90s, the two also began writing a musical script together, dubbed "The Song From Venus," which Merritt says is about two-third complete.

Merritt will join Handler on his book tour, playing ukulele while the author plays accordion. Lemony Snicket, Handler's pseudonym, is also supposed play percussion. "Yeah, we have to figure that one out pretty soon, I guess," Merritt says, deadpan.

Meanwhile, fans can expect two new albums from Magnetic Fields in 2007, the first of which Merritt promises "will be loud" but will not be supported with a tour. The artist also contributed the track "The Meaning of Lice" to "Plague Songs," a compilation based on the plagues in the Old Testament of the Bible. The collection, which also features Rufus Wainwright, Imogen Heap and Brian Eno, is due Nov. 7 via 4AD.
(Katie Hasty, N.Y. Billboard.com)

Sparklehorse:: Dreamt For Light Years In The Belly Of A Mountain (Album Review)

Four albums in, its some kind of revelation that Sparklehorse remains strictly a cult phenomenon. The record-making vehicle of Virginia-born Mark Linkous, Sparklehorse music settles into the subconscious as surely as sediment on the seabed. And Dreamt For Light Years In The Belly Of A Mountain is prima facie evidence

It could be that the favouring of minor-chords and the most subtle of changes precludes any Flaming Lips-style breakthrough. Despite the hopes of Parlophone, one suspects that somewhere up in the North Carolina hinterlands this suits Mark Linkous just fine.

Five years on from the David Fridmann produced It's A Wonderful Life, there are no earth-shattering changes to Linkous' studio-warped rock 'n' roll pastoralism. As there was nothing broken on previous Sparklehorse outings, there is little in need of fixing.

There are filtered rockers ( Ghost In The Sky, It's Not So Hard) gentle subterranean melancholy (Morning Hollow, Getting It Wrong) and bruised, yearning pop Sparklehorse specialities like Some Sweet Day and Knives Of Summertime.

The only discernible difference is that Dreamt For Light Years In The Belly Of A Mountain thankfully lacks the odd distraction that made Good Morning Spider and Vivadixiesubmarinetransmissionplot (whew!) such difficult records to maintain concentration through. In the time-honoured phrase, DFLYITBOAM is all killer and no filler.

What also remains are Sparklehorse's gallery of supporting players. Scattered over DFLYITBOAM are Tom Waits, Sophie Michalitsianos (AKA Sol Seppy), Stephen Drozd, (The 'Lips again), and the weirdly omnipresent Dangermouse. But ultimately, this record is the product of Linkous' vision alone.

Though routinely accused of miserablism, Linkous variously wraps the Sparklehorse sound in such delicate distortion (the faster numbers) and sanguine twinkling (the slower ones) that the prevailing mood of DFLYITBOAM is one of cautious rapture.

Unlike, say Calexico or the Tindersticks, Linkous is never weighed down by, or in love with his own capacity for rueful introspection. Having once been pronounced dead and temporarily losing the use of his legs, slivers of quiet optimism are easy to discern even through the dewy requiem of the protracted titular finale.

Defiantly in the key of low, Shade And Honey remains tender and devotional. Similarly, Return To Me radiates a grace and warmth that belies the despondent travails of the singer. To underline that this is no one-trick pony, those aforementioned rock-outs have enough cojones to fill out these horse latitudes. Like Graham Coxon, without the sound of someone trying too hard.

Though it's something of barrier to true greatness, Linkous manages to wield his influences firmly in the service of the Sparklehorse aesthetic, rather than let his influences rule him. For example, there are refracted Beatle harmonics all over Don't Take My Sunshine Away and Ghost In The Sky like a psychedelic peppery rash.

There's also a glimmer of suspicion that, as with the earlier Sad & Beautiful World, Linkous wants to rewrite the final two Velvet Underground albums. Thankfully, Linkous is far too much the technician to let Sparklehorse go the way of other camp followers. DFLYITBOAM is a recording that belongs firmly in the 21st Century.

Sometimes being on the outside looking in is the best place to be. If it takes Linkous another few light years to dream up the next Sparklehorse show, it'll be worth the wait.
- Steve Hands

Kingblind Downloads

Mega Indie Rock Directory

The Magic Numbers:: Take a chance

Northern Soul's Classiest Rarities

New Directions - A Collection Of Blue Eyed British Soul

THE SMITHS & MORRISSEY BOOTLEGS

A dozen remixes (2006) of Brian Eno and David Byrne's My Life in the Bush of Ghosts (1981)

Monday, September 25, 2006

Kingblind's Favorite Finds

Jarvis Cocker (Pulp) goes solo

The MPAA Surrenders in War Against Piracy?

Pitt tipped to take over Cruise MI role

Trail Of Dead Crosses The Great 'Divide'

Neil Young Opens Archives For Fillmore CD/DVD

Kingblind Downloads

Damian Jurado:: Pink Moon (Nick Drake Cover)

Rocky Votolato: Tinfoil Hats

Mastodon: 2006-09-19, Denver*

TV on the Radio 2006-09-22 Live on KCRW (FLAC)*

Raconteurs: 2006-09-15, Dallas*
* Registration required for download

Friday, September 22, 2006

Bonnie 'Prince' Billy:: The Letting Go (Album Review)

To understand just how big a record The Letting Go is in the Oldham canon, a bit of background is called for. Fans of this poster boy for Old Testament facial hair tend to regard 2003's largely acoustic Master and Everyone as one of his loveliest and least complicated records.

For Oldham himself, however, its making seems to have precipitated some kind of creative crisis. Since Oldham's favourite way of restoring his own equilibrium is to disrupt as many other people's as possible, the last few years have inevitably been challenging ones for his long-suffering fanbase.

The Letting Go's marvellously grandiose taster single, 'Cursed Sleep', suggested that this would be the album to finally reward our patience. And so it is, though not always in the way that might have been expected. The first song's elegant opening verse - 'When the numbers get so high/ Of the dead flying through the sky/ Oh I/ Don't know why/ Love comes to me' - combines with Ryder McNair and Nico Muhly's courtly string arrangements, and the ethereal backing vocals of Faun Fables' Dawn McCarthy, to soften the listener up for a self-conscious tilt at glacial perfection.

The equally exquisite second song, 'Strange Form of Life', confirms this impression, but just when you're starting to worry that Oldham might have shaved off too many rough edges in the pursuit of a conventional pay-off, 'Wai' undercuts this anxiety with some of the most brutally discordant 'harmonies' ever put on record.

And so it goes on. A thrillingly straightforward country-blues paves the way for a couple of tunes sung in an inexplicable death-metal croak. And if Oldham has a specific letting-go in mind, perhaps it is the fantasy that these two warring impulses in his music can ever be separated.

Kingblind's Favorite Finds

'SNL' makes cast changes, cuts

Beatles' Liverpool haunt named a landmark

Keith Richards: I've quit 'weak' drugs

A music site provides a guilty pleasure

TV on the Radio give a ‘voice to our time ’

Thursday, September 21, 2006

Indie Rockers Band Together For Rogue Wave Drummer

A host of notable indie rock artists will join Rogue Wave for a Sept. 30 benefit in San Francisco for the band's drummer, Pat Spurgeon, is in need of a kidney transplant.

Ben Gibbard of Death Cab for Cutie, Matthew Caws of Nada Surf, Ryan Miller of Guster and John Vanderslice are among the guests slated to perform during the evening, with more still to be announced. Daniel Handler, otherwise known as popular author Lemony Snicket, will be the MC for the event.

Indianapolis native Spurgeon was born with only one kidney, requiring a 1993 transplant. However, that kidney has begun to deteriorate, and Spurgeon has been on dialysis since April while searching for a donor. Friends and band members have been tested to see if they are matches, "but Pat has yet to hear good news. Provided he finds a donor, there will be an enormous amount of costs that both Pat and his donor will incur," reads a post on Rogue Wave's Web site.

Despite his condition, Spurgeon is still touring with Rogue Wave. Earlier on the day of the benefit, the band will perform at the Download Festival, alongside Beck, the Shins and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, among others.

In June, frontman Zach Rogue said Spurgeon's health situation crystallized his own priorities about life in a touring band. "It's almost like you are stripped down to knowing the most important things in your life," he said. "It makes you understand who you are and what relationships matter to you. Maybe when you're 18, touring is a party on wheels. But when you're a little bit older, you do this for reasons of wanting to make music."

Fans can make a donation to Spurgeon's medical expense fund via Rogue Wave's site.
http://www.roguewavemusic.com
(via billboard)

Kingblind Downloads

Bikini Kill: 1993-04-25, La Maconda (ntsc dvd)

Jimi Hendrix Experience - Southeby's auction tapes

TOM WAITS SOLO AT THE MAIN POINT JAN 4, 76 SB SHN

Beck - Detroit Sept 22, 2005 - State Theatre
* The above listed free and legal downloads may require registration.

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Sugarcubes Reunite!!

"Nearly 20 years ago The Sugarcubes put out on their own label Smekkleysa SM, their first single "Birthday". This release was the start to the splendid career of The Sugarcubes, and impressive releases of Icelandic artists in Iceland and abroad alike. These first steps made by The Sugarcubes have made and everlasting impact and influence on the Icelandic export of music.

It is therefor with unbound joy we announce the 20th anniversary concert of Birthday and The Sugarcubes in Reykjavik on the 17th of November. The Sugarcubes will take to the stage for the first time in 14 years.

All profit from the concert goes back into Smekkleysa SM who will continue to work on a non-profit basis for the future betterment of Icelandic music and artists.
(via bjork.com)

Kingblind Downloads

Panda Band:: Eyelashes

Sea Wolf:: Black Dirt

Bright Eyes- I Will Be Greatful for This Day

Jarvis Cocker - Running The World (video)

her space holiday:: the weight of the world

johnny cash:: god's gonna cut you down

Kingblind's Favorite Finds

The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

Boston's Phoenix reviews Touch and Go's 25th anniversary party.

Willie Nelson Cited for Drug Possession

Want to avoid file-sharing apps? You can find entire albums - using Google

Chuck D (Public Enemy) lays down the law on DRM

Jay-Z ends ‘worst retirement in history’

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Kingblind Downloads (Viva Toolshed edition!)

Robert Pollard:: Supernatural Car Lover
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Jeremy Enigk:: Been here before
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Portastatic:: Sour Shores
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Novillero:: The Hypothesist
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Eric Bachmann:: Lonesome Warrior
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Dulli Regroups With Lanegan, Afghan Whigs

Vocalist Mark Lanegan has joined Greg Dulli to share lead vocal duties when the latter's Twilight Singers tour to support their newest album, "Powder Burns." The trek, which begins Oct. 24 in San Francisco, follows the group's summer stint in Europe, as well as Dulli's recent announcement that the Afghan Whigs will reunite in the studio later this month.

Opening the shows will be Stars Of Track & Field and Jeff Klein; Mighty Fine, featuring longtime guest Twilight Singers vocalist Steve Myers, will perform in place of Klein at the Nov. 16 tour finale in Brooklyn.

Dulli and Lanegan have previously performed together as the Gutter Twins and have regularly contributed to each other's projects since 2000. The pair have recorded 13 songs for a Gutter Twins album but no release date is on the horizon for the project.

Continuing in the spirit of reconnection, Dulli will convene this month with former Afghan Whigs bandmates John Curley, Rick McCollum and Michael Horrigan to record two new tracks for an upcoming Rhino retrospective, "Unbreakable." After rehearsing in Cincinnati, the quartet will head to Memphis record at Ardent Studios with longtime Whigs collaborator Jeff Powell.

Here are the Twilight Singers' tour dates:

Oct. 24: San Francisco (Great American Music Hall)
Oct. 25: Los Angeles (House of Blues Sunset Strip)
Oct. 27: Tucson, Ariz. (Club Congress)
Oct. 28: Albuquerque, N.M. (Launchpad)
Oct. 30: Omaha, Neb. (Sokol Underground)
Oct. 31: St Louis (Mississippi Nights)
Nov. 1-2: Chicago (Double Door)
Nov. 3: Newport, Ky. (Southgate House)
Nov. 4: Nashville (Mercy Lounge)
Nov. 6: Orlando (The Social)
Nov. 7: St Petersburg, Fla. (State Theatre)
Nov. 8: Atlanta (The Loft)
Nov. 9: Athens, Ga. (40 Watt Club)
Nov. 11: Norfolk, Va. (The Norva)
Nov. 13: Philadelphia (Theatre of Living Arts)
Nov. 14: Boston (Paradise Rock Club)
Nov. 15: Washington, D.C. (Black Cat)
Nov. 16: Brooklyn, N.Y. (Warsaw)
(via billboard)

Monday, September 18, 2006

Bob Dylan - When The Deal Goes Down (Music Video)

Scarlett Johansson + Super 8 = the best Bob Dylan video ever? Hungry Man's Bennett Miller directs. CLICK TO VIEW

My Morning Jacket announce US Tour

My Morning Jacket have confirmed a tour of America to follow their European stint opening for Pearl Jam. Plus singer Jim James has announced a few solo shows as well.

The Louisville quintet will hit the road again in November, after frontman Jim James has played some solo dates in October.

The dates are:
Charleston Music Farm (November 9)
Knoxville Tennessee Theater (10)
Atlanta The Tabernacle (12)
Nashville Ryman Auditorium (13)
New Orleans House Of Blues (15)
Dallas Gypsy Theater (16/17)
Austin Stubb's (18)
St. Louis The Pageant (20)
Milwaukee The Riverside (21)
Louisville Gardens (22)
Chicago Riviera Theater (24)
Indianapolis Clowes Hall (25)
Washington DC 9:30 Club (27/28)
New York Roseland Ballroom (30)
Philadelphia Electric Factory (December 1)
Boston Avalon Ballroom (2)

The Jim James solo dates are at:
San Francisco Palace Of Fine Arts (October 23/24)
Los Angeles Wilshire Ebell Theatre (27)
Santa Barbara Arlington Theatre (28)
Las Vegas Vegoose Festival (29)
(via nme)

Kingblind Downloads

TV on the Radio:: dry drunk emperor
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Isobel Campbell:: O Love is teasin
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Richard Buckner:: Town
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Mogwai:: Drum Machine (From Rock Action outtake)
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Mogwai remix of track from Craig Armstrong's 'As If To Nothing' album.
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

Friday, September 15, 2006

Kingblind Downloads (LIVE EDITION)

Broken Social Scene - Virgin Festival, Toronto. September 10, 2006 (WMV Webcast)
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Mogwai: 2006-09-13, Bremen Germany
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Band of Horses: 2006-07-28, Seattle
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Big Black & Scratch Acid: 2006-09-09, Chicago (Flac)
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

Mastodon:: Blood Mountain (Album Review)

Music journalism is (or at least should be) a constant struggle to keep control of the superlatives. It is hard to resist getting into the habit of comparing everything to Nirvana or The Smiths. So that's why it's such a treat when you get a truly mould-shattering band like Mastodon - you really don't have to watch your step at all. They're that good. Their second full-length album 'Leviathan' (a take on Herman Melville's 'Moby Dick'), announced their arrival as the most important metal band since Pantera and the most forward-looking mainstream act since Metallica. So 'Blood Mountain', another concept album of sorts, makes another massive leap forward, retreating even further away from their quasi-hardcore inception as it heads Mastodon into the realms of the progressive.

The concept this time is so true metal that even Manowar would be proud of it. The Atlantan four piece are ascending a mythical mountain and encountering all sorts of creatures on the way up, including a Circle Cysquatch and a Colony of Birchmen. It is this unashamed lack of bedroom tidying angst and naval gazing emo self-obsession, in conjunction with a brutally elemental sound that marks them out as true visionaries. Talking of the elements, Bran Dailor, drummer extraordinaire is still the most stunning thing here and is definitely the representation of water. His technical jazz drumming skills, complemented by a looser, more instinctual talent sees his sticks rolling around the kit in and out of tempos like the broiling sea itself.

'The Wolf Is Loose' makes an impressive bridge from the ferocity of the last album to this but then almost immediately 'Blood Mountain' becomes progressive (with a lower and upper case P). The twin guitar assault of 'Crystal Skull', and complex song structure, is somewhere midway between 'Seventh Son' Iron Maiden and 'Ride The Lightning' Metallica. The diversity of influences range from Slayer and Isis (their producer Matt Bayles is on knob twiddling duties here) to Rush and Jethro Tull. It would be wrong to say that prog metal is going to become the standard for the next five years or anything daft like that, but tellingly enough Cedric Bixler and Ikey Owens of those other forward-looking intranauts The Mars Volta guest here too.

Put simply: there isn't a bad track on 'Blood Mountain', which will be seen as the metal release of this year, on whichever level you care to mention.
(John Doran)

Thursday, September 14, 2006

TV on the Radio:: Wolf like me (Live on Letterman)

Parlophone takes gamble on Babyshambles

Maybe Parlophone is buying Pete Doherty’s claims that he’s trying to get sober. More likely, they just want to be there to cash in when the poor bastard finally OD’s and becomes this generation’s icon for dissafected, misunderstood youth everywhere. Either way, the label has signed Doherty’s Babyshambles to their Regal imprint. The band is supposedly set to start recording The Blinding EP which will see release this November.

Curious as to what ever happened to their Rough Trade deal? Well, apparently that deal expired because the label couldn’t figure out a way to get in contact with Doherty in order to renegotiate. Bodes well for Parlophone…

Kingblind Downloads

A Silver Mt Zion Live at Le National on 2006-09-05
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Mogwai Live at Die Röhre on 2006-09-05
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Chin up Chin up:: This Harness Can't Ride Anything
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Wednesday, September 13, 2006

The Mars Volta:: "Amputechture" (Album Review)

This is the first of the iconoclastic L.A. band's three albums that doesn't tell a unified story, though given their surreal approach, we might not know that if they hadn't told us. It doesn't really matter too much, because it's best to treat the lyrics as one impressionistic element of the work rather than text to be parsed.

Visceral power and mournful, disquieting atmosphere are the heart of the Mars Volta experience. Singer Cedric Bixler Zavala and guitarist Omar Rodriguez-Lopez have set themselves up as popularity-be-damned visionaries, pursuing their muse into a resurgent blend of progressive rock and jazz fusion.

Their independence — and their virtuosity — has brought them their own kind of popularity, and "Amputechture" will disappoint only those fans who were hoping to see them head into deep space. It mainly restates their agenda, in impressive fashion.

The punishing nature of the fusion furiosity is relieved by more soothing vocal sections. There's something of the oracle in Bixler's steely, high-pitched voice. He can make you care about even the most frag-mented fever-dream imagery, as Rodriguez-Lopez, with help from the Red Hot Chili Peppers' guitarist John Frusciante, leads the band once again into parts unknown.
Review by: Richard Cromelin (L.A.)

Kingblind's Favorite Finds

Rap star loses Diddy name rights

The New Knight Rider KITT?

Transformers Movie Exclusive! First Five Pages Of Transformers Script!

VIDEO:: HARRY HOUDINI Escapes StraitJacket Upside Down in Mid Air Hanging

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Kingblind Downloads

Polyphonic Spree:: Lithium (Nirvana Cover)

Neko Case 2006-09-11 Live On KCRW

Nouvelle Vague Misc Tracks

Kingblind Ticket Giveaway (SERENA MANEESH)

Kingblind.com is happy to be giving a pair of tickets away to the SERENA MANEESH show in Seattle, WA at Neumo's Crystal Ball Reading Room on Tues. Sept 19th 2006. Want to win? It's so easy! Just send an email with SERENA MANEESH in the Subject line and your name & address in the body of the message to kingblind(at)gmail.com And we will randomly pick a winner. This show is 21+ only. You must show photo ID at door for entry.

Serena Maneesh Media:
Download a remix of "Sapphire Eyes"
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

Link to their video for Drain Cosmetics:
CLICK TO VIEW

Music samples:
http://www.serena-maneesh.com/rec_vid.php#

Mypsace Page:
http://www.myspace.com/serenamaneesh


About Serena Maneesh:

Emil Nikolaisen, frontman of Serena-Maneesh, can recall the moment as a child, when the germ of the notion of the group first appeared in his head. “It was when my music teacher played “Heroin” by The Velvet Underground to a class of innocent, ignorant little kids. A very rare thing to do in a small village in the Norwegian countryside. I was caught in a moment, completely captured, with no reservation. I had no idea whether I was fascinated or scared. The only thing I knew was that I felt it was very dark, but EXTREMELY real. It was like reality caught to tape.”

Serena-Maneesh are on an undoubted quest for difference, yet they could be considered an attempt of Nikolaisen to return through the mists to that original moment of awestruck epiphany in that Norwegian classroom at the hands of that improbably enlightened schoolteacher. Their ethereal yet blistering, self-titled debut album suggests, among many other things, a journey back into the black hole centre of rock music itself - backward to the Stooges and the Velvets, yet via, among others, Krautrock and Umagumma-period Pink Floyd.
These are subtly alluded to, however, rather than merely regurgitated. This is music that takes in a great deal - add to the list early blues, Norwegian folk music and Sun Ra among others, yet is a wonderfully mobile, weightless affair, all wisps, veils, webs and miasmas.

Despite Nikolaisen’s undoubted status as Maneesh’s head musician, and the personalized, impassioned compositions and soundworld that make up the album, this is no private, bedroom concoction. Serena-Maneesh have seen the world. The record was completed over the course of six months in Chicago, New York, Oslo and Stockholm. The fingerprints of fellow collaborators are all over it, including remixer Martin Bisi (Swans, Sonic Youth), Nikolaisen’s sisters Elvira and Hilma, friends such as Sufjan Stevens and Daniel Smith of the Danielson Famile. Lina Holström supplies female vocals, Eivind Schou plays violin, Sondre Tristan Mittun on guitar and Tommy Akerholt on drums. There are guest contributions too from Mental Destruction’s Samuel Durling (Indian samples) and Harald Froland of Jaga Jazzist (guitar), plus a host of others providing tambourine, distortion, harmonica, all bobbing about half-submerged in the rock’n’roll of the cauldron’s mix.

The album starts off with the impressive single “Drain Cosmetics”. Amid, bittersweet, black crushed velvet and dungeon reverb, Nikolaisen can be heard calling out to the chink of sky visible through a chink in the wall to “break my chains”. It’s typically paradoxical, all bright blue Promethean energy and splendid, gothic gloom. “I've always loved tension,” explains Nikolaisen. “’Opposites' battle each other. Within harmony in melody and chord, between the sexes, the dry and the liquid, the dynamics, at obvious or subtle levels. I love the constant danger of things falling apart.”

That’s Serena-Maneesh in a crumbling nutshell - richly woven yet constantly courting the danger of coming undone, of disintegration. The rich musical mix, guided by Nikolaisen’s instinctive sleight of hand makes for a constant shadowplay of distortion and revelations.

Serena-Maneesh are picking up on ideas only touched on and too quickly discarded back in the Eighties, with the advantage of new twists, turns and technology - and, of course, a multiple approach which is applied to every last track of the album. “There's lots of ways to deliver a certain note or notes,” observes Nikolaisen. “It could be the distorted violin wailing, it could be guitars, organ, cello, voice... the context and possibilities are endless.”

The album ends with a blistering 12 minute finale, “Your Blood In Mine”, the realization of all Serena-Maneesh’s ambitions, a wailing, gigantic tide of guitar and processed noise, a backward, dirty, foaming river of rock history and psychedelia, Faust, Floyd and back to the blues source where it’s swallowed up, with a solo piano resounding in a stunned, meandering fashion at the wake, seeing the album out.

First released only in Norway in August 2005, the self-titled Serena-Maneesh album made an immediate impact, outshining Franz Ferdinand in Pitchfork’s top 50 albums of the year, earning them a Norwegian Grammy nomination and a Full European tour supporting The Dandy Warhols. Serena-Maneesh have just recently returned from a hugely successful month long headlining tour of the US including three mind-blowing sets at SXSW, which only added to the buzz that has continually grown around the band.

For those looking for a giant step beyond the nearly done-to-death post punk revival, the magnificent Serena-Maneesh are timeless and timely. But they’re also out of time. “We're with the nomads, gypsies and Indians”, says Nikolaisen. “We find ourselves somehow as strangers to our place and era.“

They will not, however, be strangers for long….

"Serena-Maneesh really does sound a bit like a new rock manifesto, something Marx would have written had he gone into psychedelics instead of politics. The emotions are fiery, the logic is muddy and each musical statement made by the five-piece group...is grandiose."
-Under the Radar

"Norway's Serena Maneesh make strangely beautiful and lushly noisy pop using guitars that are alternately washed out or shrieking, distorted samples, and breathy female vocals singing lyrics in broken english"
-Village Voice

“a Norwegian psychedelic, distortion heavy, weaving, undulating, oscillating fiesta of ethereal noise.”
– URB

R.E.M. Bringing Back The Rock On New Album

R.E.M. this week will release classic and rare material from its first five years on I.R.S. Records, but bassist Mike Mills says the veteran group remains most interested in moving forward with new music. As previously reported, R.E.M. is getting ready to return to the studio to record the follow-up to 2004's "Around the Sun."

"We'll start rehearsals probably some time in the next month or two," Mills tells Billboard.com. "I think [guitarist] Peter [Buck] and I probably both have a tone of stuff, but we haven't sat down and played it for each other yet. I don't think in terms of directions, but I think this next record might have a little more rock to it. I like 'Around the Sun," but I think, honestly, it turned out a little slower than we intended for it to, just in terms of the overall speed of songs."

In addition to R.E.M.'s early classics, the two-CD compilation "And I Feel Fine" features 11 unreleased tracks, foreshadowing a possible larger rarities boxed set at some point in the future. "We don't have any set plans," Mills says, "but I wouldn't be surprised if one day well into the future one or more of us will probably start digging through the pile and seeing if there's anything worth putting out. And if there is, maybe we'll do a fun box set with all kinds of even weirder stuff than this."

And although five vintage concert cuts are included on "And I Feel Fine," Mills says the prospect of an R.E.M. live album has never held much interest for the band.

"In my personal opinion, there are some great live albums," he explains. "[The Allman Brothers Band's] 'Fillmore East' is something I'll always enjoy. But for R.E.M., my feeling is if you weren't there, you missed it. The music is meant to be heard in conjunction with seeing the band in those situations, and I don't really like separating the two.

Click to learn more...
"But," he adds, "depending on what we find in the vaults, some more of that [live] stuff could make its way out."

This week, Mills, Buck and vocalist Michael Stipe will reunite with ex-drummer Bill Berry to rehearse for R.E.M.'s induction into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame. The foursome will play three songs on Saturday (Sept. 16) at the ceremony in Atlanta, although Mills said no decisions have yet been made on which.
(Via: Gary Graff, Detroit / Billboard)

Monday, September 11, 2006

Yo La Tengo:: I am not afraid of you and I will beat your ass (Album Review)

Twenty-two years into a career that’s embraced everything from surf instrumentals to free jazz and underwater documentary soundtracks, Hoboken’s veteran indie trio return with another genre-straddling gem. 2003’s hazily homogenous Summer Sun was obviously a blip, as its successor ricochets blithely but brilliantly between ten minute guitar wig-outs (Pass The Hatchet), country-tinged indie nuggets (Sometimes I Don’t Get You), and beautifully arranged chamber pop songcraft (Black Flowers, replete with drummer Georgia Hubley’s sublime harmonies). At 77 minutes it’s no sprint, but YLT’s mellifluous serpentines are never less than involving.

Kingblind Downloads

Lou Barlow:: Home

The Hold Steady:: Most people are Dj's

The Thermals:: A Stare like yours

Mudhoney:: Hard on for war

Friday, September 08, 2006

Watch the first 7 mins of the new Simpsons season premiere!!

CLICK TO VIEW

Arab Strap To Split

Arab Strap will be calling it quits after the release of their next LP. Malcom Middleton and Aidan Moffat have found success with solo albums, and now will be focusing on these projects exclusively. Their final album, Ten Years Of Tears, a collection of B-Sides and rarities, will be released by Chemikal Underground on October 23rd.

Kingblind Downloads

New Bomb Turks:: Killers Kiss

The White Stripes:: Jimmy the Exploder

Compulsive Gamblers:: I Wanna Be Your Happiness

Outrageous Cherry:: Togetherness

The High Strung:: Hurry Up

Johnny Cash:: The Mercy Seat (Nick Cave Cover)

Thursday, September 07, 2006

Obie Trice:: Cry Now

DCFC Sets Major Fall Tour

Death Cab for Cutie has unveiled details of their upcoming fall tour. Having spent much of the past two years on the road, the band is set to perform their third and final North American tour in support of their Grammy nominated album, PLANS.

The Seattle-based quartet will launch their six-week tour just outside Philadelphia at the Tower Theater on October 26th. The tour will then traverse the United States and Canada through December 9th, with Death Cab set to play their biggest-ever hometown show at Seattle's Key Arena. As ever, the tour will see Death Cab supported by some of today's best and brightest indie artists, with special guests including Ted Leo + Pharmacists, OK Go, and Jenny Lewis. Pre-sale tickets will be available starting Thursday, September 7 through the band's website www.deathcabforcutie.com

TOUR DATES:
10/26 UPPER DARBY, PA - TOWER THEATRE
10/27 ROCHESTER, NY - AUDITORIUM THEATRE
10/28 OTTAWA, ONT - OTTAWA CIVIC CENTRE THEATRE
10/30 TORONTO, ONT - MASSEY HALL
11/01 MONTREAL, QC - METROPOLIS
11/02 BOSTON, MA - THE OPERA HOUSE
11/04 PROVIDENCE, RI - PROVIDENCE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
11/06 WASHINGTON, DC - CONSTITUTION HALL
11/08 NEW YORK, NY - THEATRE AT THE GARDEN
11/10 NORFOLK, VA - NORVA
11/11 BELLE VERNON, PA - ICE GARDEN ARENA
11/13 COLUMBUS, OH - PROMOWEST PAVILION
11/14 INDIANAPOLIS, IN - MURAT THEATRE
11/15 LOUISVILLE, KY - LOUISVILLE PALACE THEATRE
11/16 BIRMINGHAM, AL - ALABAMA THEATRE
11/17 ATLANTA, GA - FOX THEATRE
11/18 CLEMSON, SC - LITTLEJOHN COLISEUM
11/19 ORLANDO, FL - UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLORIDA
11/20 CORAL GABLES, FL - UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI
11/26 MILWAUKEE, WI - EAGLES BALLROOM
11/27 ST. LOUIS, MO - THE PAGEANT
11/28 MEMPHIS, TN - ORPHEUM THEATRE
11/29 NEW ORLEANS, LA - REPUBLIC
11/30 HOUSTON, TX - HOBBY CENTER - SAROFIM HALL
12/02 MESA, AZ - MESA AMPHITHEATRE
12/03 LAS VEGAS, NV - HARD ROCK HOTEL - THE JOINT
12/05 IRVINE, CA - UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA - IRVINE
12/06 SANTA BARBARA, CA - ARLINGTON THEATRE
12/09 SEATTLE, WA - KEY ARENA

(With TED LEO & PHARMACISTS 10/26-11/20)
(With OK GO 11/26-11/30)
(With JENNY LEWIS 12/02-12/09)

View the video for "I Will Follow You Into the Dark" from the album PLANS.
CLICK TO VIEW

Kingblind's Favorite Finds

New MASTODON Available Now as a Full Stream on MySpace

DYLAN's New CD His First #1 in 30 Years

LADY SOVEREIGN Announces Fall Tour

Letterman to do 4 more years of ‘Late Show’

The crunk tribute to Radiohead

Kingblind Downloads

The Hold Steady:: Chips Ahoy

Mountain Goats:: Going to Scotland

Dead Moon:: Dead Moon Night

Album Leaf:: Always for you

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

THE ROOTS:: Game Theory (Album Review)

There was some understandable concern when the Roots signed to Def Jam that label honcho Jay-Z and his Carter Administration might try to bling up Philly's finest with a radical image makeover. Although they appear in business suits on the back of the Game Theory disc, the hand-drawn monochromatic hangman image on the front suggests that it's hardcore truth-telling hiphop business as usual, and heavy-hitting tracks like False Media, Don't Feel Right and Livin' In A New World confirm it. If anything, the grooves have gotten tougher and funkier on Game Theory, but Jay-Z clearly intends to move some units, so Black Thought's tirades about society's ills now come with shout-along choruses and women guest vocalists sing the hooks. It won't help the Roots suddenly sell crazy 50 Cent numbers, but Game Theory should definitely top the performance of The Tipping Point and Phrenology.

Kingblind's Favorite Finds

When Does (Insert TV Show Name Here) Come Back?

Mate tells of Irwin's last moments

How Bands & Musicians Got Their Names..

ARCTIC MONKEYS Win Mercury Prize

CLAP YOUR HANDS Record Ltd Ed EP for Upcoming Tour

Kingblind Downloads

Queens of the Stone Age:: Live @ Bob's Garage
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

NIRVANA - IN THE RAW (RECORDED LIVE DEMOS DURING 1987-1992)
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

Dresden Dolls
Live Performances, Unreleased Songs, B-sides, Videos, Covers

CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

The Clash @ The Roundhouse in Camden Sept5,1976
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

Rolling Stones - Hampden Park, Glasgow, 25 August (2006)
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD Part 1
Part 2

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

R.E.M. Plots One-Off Berry Reunion, New Album

R.E.M. will perform three songs with original drummer Bill Berry to celebrate its induction into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame, to be held Sept. 16 in Atlanta. Berry has only played three times with his longtime colleagues since exiting the band in 1997, most prominently at the October 2005 wedding of R.E.M. guitar tech Dewitt Burton.

At that performance, the foursome played a seven-song set of classic early material, including "Sitting Still," "Radio Free Europe" and "Wolves, Lower." In April, Berry joined vocalist Michael Stipe, guitarist Peter Buck and bassist Mike Mills to perform R.E.M.'s "Country Feedback" at an Athens, Ga., show by Buck's side band, the Minus 5.

Following the Hall of Fame induction, R.E.M. will end a year-long hiatus and hit the studio to begin work on the follow-up to 2004's critically maligned "Around the Sun." That album debuted at No. 13 on The Billboard 200.

In the meantime, the band's first five years will be celebrated with the CD/DVD package "And I Feel Fine," due Sept. 12 via I.R.S./Capitol. The collection includes the first authorized release of a number of long-bootlegged rare tracks.
(Via Jonathan Cohen, N.Y. / Billboard)

Kingblind's Downloads

The Jam: 1975-1980, miscellaneous demos **
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

James Gang (Joe Walsh) - Clearwater, FL (8-27-06) - FLAC**
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

Editors:: Planet Claire Sessions
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

The Cramps "N.Y. '79 live" ripped from a TDK D-46 cassette (pw= rideyourpony)
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

**Registration Required

Monday, September 04, 2006

Bob Dylan:: Modern Times (Album Review)

With just hours to go until release, the competition to see who can slather Bob Dylan's 32nd studio album with the most deranged praise known to man is hotting up. The Americans have started strongly. US magazine Blender has ranked Modern Times alongside the work not merely of jazz giant Sonny Rollins, but of Matisse and Yeats, and has deployed the classic Dylan obsessive's strategy of lavishing superlatives on what appears to be an unremarkable lyric. "Wonderful lines galore," it enthused. "Try, 'I got the pork chops, she got the pie.'" Thus is Dylan's place among the deities of modern letters further assured.

Meanwhile, Britain's best hope for a medal may lie with Professor Christopher Ricks, who famously compared the Dylan lyric "All the tired horses in the sun/ How am I supposed to get any riding done?" to Keats, Tennyson, Marlowe, Shakespeare and Browning. Or perhaps with the Sunday Times arts writer who once informed us that in any list of the greatest albums ever Dylan's entire oeuvre would occupy the top 42 places. Evidently, pipsqueaks such as the Beatles or Marvin Gaye struggled in vain to match the musical heights attained by Down in the Groove or Dylan and the Dead.

What is it about him that makes otherwise intelligent men abandon all sense of rationality, and write stuff like the last Guardian review of Dylan live, which started with the critic announcing he was there to "touch the hem", then got progressively less objective? None of Dylan's peers, their influence on music every bit as tumultuous and far-reaching, can provoke that kind of effect: eyes are narrowed when Paul McCartney releases an album or the Stones tour, and guffaws are barely stifled when Lou Reed brings his t'ai chi master on stage. Dylan is held to be "still doing it for the music", but what are the rest of them doing it for? The money? A desperate attempt to bolster their meagre level of fame?

Certainly, Dylan has enjoyed an artistic renaissance, in that he published a fantastic autobiography and stopped releasing records that made you want to rip your own head off with embarrassment - but that alone isn't enough to explain the mania that greets his every action. Perhaps it is linked to his 1997 brush with pericarditis and intimations of mortality; praise him unequivocally now, while he can still read it.

Either way, it's hard to hear Modern Times' music over the inevitable standing ovation and the thuds of middle-aged critics swooning in awe. When you do, you find something not unlike its predecessor, Love and Theft. It again eschews the straightforward rock approach and sonic embellishments that producer Daniel Lanois brought to 1997's Time Out of Mind in favour of muted rockabilly shuffles and polite, country-inflected pre-rock'n'roll pop. Here are the kind of jazzy songs that would count as mild-mannered crooning if they were performed by Bing Crosby, but which invariably take on a slightly unsettling air when subjected to Dylan's catarrhal death rattle.

Some of these are great. You don't need to believe that Dylan's artistic renaissance is the most important event in western culture since the actual Renaissance to be beguiled by the descending riff of Spirit on the Water, or Nettie Moore's insistent pulse. Like The Friday Night Project's studio audience, Dylan dingbats tend to bust a gut over things that leave everyone else stony-faced: Love and Theft apparently caused uncontrollable mirth by featuring not only the line "Freddie or not, here I come", but also - and if you don't want to die laughing, look away now - "I'm no pig without a wig". Here, though, Thunder on the Mountains is genuinely funny. "I was thinking about Alicia Keys," he sings huskily, "I couldn't help from crying" - a sentiment with which anyone who has experienced the R&B singer's sanctimonious interviews and rotten poetry ("Hello morning/ Now I see you/ 'Cause I am awake") can heartily concur.

There are two lengthy epics. Workingman's Blues 2 has an elegiac, dying-of-the-light quality, bolstered by the singers' colloidal croak, and vaguely political lyrics: "The buying power of the proletariat's gone down." The closing Ain't Talkin' is a chilling low growl, full of muttered imprecations and intimations of doom. Equally, there are longueurs, songs that outstay their welcome or sound like filler, moments where you find your attention drifting elsewhere - frequently to the question of where all that crap about Matisse and Yeats fits with this largely pleasant and unassuming record.

Modern Times is not one of those infrequent, unequivocally fantastic Dylan albums that allow a non-believer to grasp what the fuss is about, or at least what the fuss was originally rooted in. But that scarcely seems to matter: said fuss seems set to continue until Modern Times and, indeed, modern times are merely a distant memory. (Alexis Petridis Guardian London-UK)

Friday, September 01, 2006

Mastodon:: The Wolf is Loose (1st video from the upcoming album Blood Mountain)

This video was shot and directed by the fine folks at Authority Films in Atlanta, GA

Kingblind's Favorite Finds

Why Music Videos Are Still Relevant

Beatles to sue EMI for millions

Create your own Punk/Rock Music

Tom Cruise officially 40% less popular

"This Film is Not Yet Rated" attacks Hollywood's "censorship" system

Village Voice Dismisses 8, Including Senior Arts Editors

NFL bans Gary Glitter songs

Kingblind Downloads

The Stranglers:: Walk on By

Rafter:: My Friend the crow

The Awkward Stage:: The Morons are winning

Xiu Xiu:: Boy Soprano

The Birthday Party:: Release the Bats