WORTH REPEATING: In Defense Of Mr. Mojo Rising

Artwork courtesy of the RICHARD GOODMAN GALLERY “Check out Jim’s new spoken poetry with Manzarek overdubs album, An American Prayer, the best recitative sluice of American literature on LP since Call Me Burroughs, and hell, even Burroughs never had the sheer nerve to lead with “All join now and lament the death of my cock.” In a way Jim was really the end of the Masculine Mystique as celebrated American culture up to and through rock ‘n’ roll, because unlike clowns like John Kay or indeed any of his progeny, he was a master of the sly inflectional turn, so […]

TONITE: Kiko And The Lavender Moon

Los Lobos 1992 masterpiece Kiko was/is the Pet Sounds/Smile of Latin music. To mark the album’s 20th anniversary, Los Lobos’ will play it from beginning to end tonight at the Keswick. We can hardly wait. RELATED:  Just as Brian Eno became an aural architect for Talking Heads’ new sound, Los Lobos began a collaborative partnership with producer Mitchell Froom and engineer Tchad Blake that crafted sounds for Kiko that simmer and undulate. As the band and recording team have related, when it came to instrumentation and recording techniques, nothing was off the table, be it running guitars through cheap, pawnshop […]

RANDY NEWMAN: Dreaming Of A White President

Randy Newman, the legendary putdown/pick up artist, has been hoisting racist assclowns by their own petards since at least 1974’s “Rednecks.” Simply put, he’s better at bigotry than they are, and he doesn’t even mean it. Just in time for the holiday that shall mark the second coming of Barack Obama, aka election day, Newman is back with yet another poison pill for the haters, it’s called “I’m Dreaming” but instead of the ‘a white Christmas’ you might expect to follow such a declaration, he’s dreaming of a white president. Or more accurately, the character he plays in the song […]

EARLY WORD: There Will Be Blood

  RELATED: Alpha Beta house is the oldest and most elite sorority in the world. Some of the most influential politicians, celebrities and scientists are Alpha Girl alumni. After performing long hidden rituals, some of the sisters suspect that their good fortune is tainted by demonic evil. They quickly realize firsthand that the consequences of their curiosity are much more gruesome than any of them could have possibly imagined. MORE

Why Philadelphia Will Be The Death Of Unions

PHILLY POST: Until last week, the pharmaceutical and biotech (read: big bucks) convention Interphex was in talks to bring its annual 10,000-person event to Philadelphia in 2014. According to Philadelphia Convention & Visitors Bureau president and CEO Jack Ferguson, Interphex was looking at Philadelphia as a more inexpensive option than its 2013 destination, the Javits Center in Manhattan.  If you’ve ever been to one of these big conventions, you know the setup: a giant room filled with exhibitor booths showcasing the latest in whatever it is that the convention is about. Exhibitors typically assemble their own displays. Naturally, this being […]

CONCERT REVIEW: The Afghan Whigs

Photo by PETE TROSHAK In the mid-90s, the Afghan Whigs made a name for themselves by releasing two critically acclaimed albums – Gentlemen and Black Love – each one a voodoo stew of  Motown funk, unfaithful soul and post-grunge alt-rock. And live they could walk the walk with sweaty, frenetic and unpredictable shows that seamlessly weaved their own songs into an assortment of covers – everything from “Moon River” to “Purple Rain” and on some nights both. The Whigs have reunited, without an album to flog and with no agenda except to revive their noir-ish rock for fans new and […]

CINEMA: Time Bandits

Artwork by MARTIN ANSIN LOOPER (2012, directed by Rian Johnson, 118 minutes, U.S.) BY DAN BUSKIRK FILM CRITIC Looper, the new sci-fi film by writer/director Rian Johnson (Brick, The Brothers Bloom) starts out with a fatal unforced error. It’s the make-up applied to the eyes, nose, and jaw of its star Joseph Gordon-Levitt, a ham-fisted stab at trying to make the actor resemble a younger version of Bruce Willis, who plays the same character in the film 30 years older. Right from the start this comes across as a preposterous and needlessly distracting decision. With the last Batman film and […]

CONCERT REVIEW: David Byrne & St. Vincent

Photo by MEREDITH KLEIBER David Byrne and St. Vincent (née Annie Clark) took the stage in Upper Darby last night looking and sounding like one part New Orleans brass band, one part modern dance ensemble, and one part polished art-rock duo. They paired kinetic, meticulously choreographed stage movement  with an impeccably rendered selection of songs spanning both Byrne’s and Clark’s solo careers, as well as Love This Giant, their new joint album. A roaring, brass-filled rendition of the Talking Heads “This Must Be the Place” towards the beginning of the set brought the crowd to their feet and dancing along […]

HOPE RESTORED: Local Low-Income Mom Forgoes Family Pizza Night, Sends $15 To Obama Along With Heartfelt Letter, Gets Thank You Call From POTUS

  Dear President Obama, I’m writing to tell you about the $15 my family just donated to your 2012 campaign. It was $15. That’s really all we could give. My husband Steve is currently a student at Temple University. Since starting his degree, three years ago, we’ve been living considerably below the poverty level (I keep forgetting which percent … does it matter?). But we aren’t complaining. Two healthy daughters; dusty, well-travelled backpacks in the basement; a house full of memories—a future full of hope. We’re the lucky ones. So—we’re currently “poor on money—rich in life” (as we like to […]

SAMUEL JACKSON: Wake The F*** Up, People!

  YAHOO: The three-minute, 30-second ad, sponsored by the Jewish Council for Education and Research, is a play on the reading Jackson did last year of the satirical “children’s book” Go the F*** to Sleep, which quickly went viral. Adam Mansbach, who wrote the book, also penned the script for the video (set to dramatic, kid-action-filmesque music), which follows a young girl as she goes from room to room of her house, attempting to reenergize her jaded family into taking part in the Obama campaign this time around like they did four years ago. As the girl in the video […]

FROM THE VAULT: Hello Darkness My Old Friend

Artwork by ADAM GREELEY BY JONATHAN VALANIA FOR PHILADELPHIA WEEKLY: Near the end of The Royal Tenenbaums, Wes Anderson’s storybook cinematic fable of wasted potential, the character of Richie, a disgraced world-class tennis player with a dark secret, looks soulfully into the bathroom mirror. It’s impossible to say what he’s thinking–he looks scared, confused, angry, on the verge. A tensely strummed acoustic guitar spirals in the background, accompanying a hushed, faintly ominous vocal. It’s Elliott Smith’s “Needle in the Hay.” Richie picks up a scissors and methodically, if crudely, crops his shoulder-length tresses down to the scalp. He lathers up […]

JAZZER: Oh, Sugar, Sugar

  BY ZIVIT SHLANK JAZZ CORRESPONDENT Sun Ra was famously quoted as saying, “I’m not a prophet. I’m a destiny-changer… the best thing to do is change things if you’ve got the power.” There’s no doubt his wisdom and musical vision left an indelible impression on many, including author, educator, musician, and former Village Voice writer Greg Tate. He, along with bassist Jared Nickerson, founded Burnt Sugar: The Arkestra Chamber in 1999. This eclectic, sprawling ensemble features a cast of musicians ranging in size from 13 to 35 members, who Tate refers to as “known Irish fiddlers, AACM refugees, Afro-punk […]