My 12 Favorite Concerts - #11 Guadalcanal Diary

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#11Guadalcanal DiarySept. 15, 1989, Center Stage (Atlanta)I've had a lot of favorite bands through the years, but the one that held the top spot through my senior year of high school was an Atlanta band called Guadalcanal Diary. They played literate rock songs on topics as varied as the Trail of Tears and unexplained visions of The Three Stooges. The music veered from stately Rickenbacker college rock to loose-as-hell rockabilly. They were smart and fun. Problem was, they were on the verge of breaking up soon after my discovery. So my first time to see them happened to be their...  read more

My 12 Favorite Concerts - #12 Radiohead

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I was recently digging through a pile of ticket stubs I've saved, finding cool show after cool show, from high school, college and especially, these last six years since we started Paste magazine. There are some big omissions—I've still never seen Springsteen or The Stones. I've only in the last few years checked off Dylan and Prince (neither made the list and only Prince was close). Some of my favorites are obvious choices. Others are more offbeat or just personal. But all are seared into my memory; for each night, I stood (or occasionally sat) in awe of the performance...  read more

If you haven't seen this Joe Cocker video...

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Someone probably forwarded you this YouTube video today too. But in the event that your friends have let you down, I give you:...  read more

Sigur Rós, Elin Ruth Sigvardsson & other hard-to-spell things

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We just wrapped up putting together Paste's International Issue for August, which will be out in a couple of weeks (one of the problems with working at a long lead magazine is keeping up with which month I'm actually in). The idea behind the issue is that there's great music coming from all over the world. This week's picks continue that theme:CD Pick of the WeekSigur Rós - Med sud i eyrum vid spilum endalaustOne of the highlights of Bonnaroo, Iceland's Sigur Rós is no less impressive on album. For the first time, the band left their now-famous studio built...  read more

Reason #287 Why I Should Go to Comic-Con

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I've never been to Comic-Con or even it's little brother in my fair city, Dragon Con. For someone who can tell you his 10 favorite sci-fi shows, who has seen all the Star Trek movies (even the bad ones) and has been known to Netflix the occasional anime film, you think I'd make the trek. But I didn't have a compelling reason until now, and it's name is The Dude (Unemployed) 8-Inch Action Figure. It's exclusively available at Comic-Con, unless, you know, you decide to order it from this website for $24.99. I guess I'll skip this year too. ...  read more

Bill Mallonee at AthFest 2008

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After four days of Bonnaroo, AthFest felt wonderfully local. Instead of trying to decide between Cat Power and The Avett Brothers, I was watching bands I'd never heard of—some good, some bad. And the bad ones left me plenty of time to reconnect with friends in Trappeze, Athens' coolest pub, which also happens to be run with one of my old bandmates.One set that I wasn't going to miss, though, was Bill Mallonee's. Paste first launched as a company in 1998 by releasing a live album from his old band, Vigilantes of Love, and he played several Vigilantes songs with...  read more

Sam Phillips, Don Chambers + Goat & Gulden Draak

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Sam Phillips to TourMy interview with Sam Phillips is up on the site now and includes the news that she'll be touring this fall, including a trip to Atlanta. It's been several years since her last show here, a jaw-droppingly good set at The Red Light Cafe. ...  read more

10 Best Sci-Fi TV Shows

10 Best Sci-Fi TV Shows

I started this blog with a list of the 10 Best Sit-coms since 1980, but in light of last week's season finale of Battlestar Galactica, it's time to unleash my inner geek and look at the best sci-fi TV series of all-time: 10. Mystery Science Theater 3000Certainly the funniest sci-fi show of all time (apologies to both Futurama and Red Dwarf), MST3K was as good as the movies it parodied were bad—meaning it was very, very good. The movie theater on the Satellite of Love was more ruthless than a cage of Klingons when it came to savaging B-movies....  read more

Levon Helm, Pearl Jam and Sigur Rós at Bonnaroo

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We just finished putting together our August issue, which is our special International Issue. Our premise is that "world music" isn't a genre; musicians from around the world are contributing to every style of music and adding their local flavors. International influence certainly proved to be true the first part of the day yesterday at Bonnaroo. I started local with Augusta, Ga., native Sharon Jones and her Dap Kings. It was like watching Amy Winehouse if she was better and likable—and could dance. From there, I caught Abigail Washburn & The Sparrow Quartet. Abigail is from Tennessee, but her music...  read more

Swell Season at Bonnaroo

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When Swell Season played "Falling slowly," and Glen Hansard asked the crowd to sing along “because we’re really quiet,” and thousands of people took him up on the offer, I remembered why I love music festivals. When Hansard and Markéta Irglová, a pair of actors who became one of recent cinema’s most intriguing fictional couples, then became one of music’s most intriguing actual couples sang Van Morrison’s “Into the Mystic” into the same mic, looking at each other lovingly, I remembered why I love music festivals. When Drive-By Truckers’ Patterson Hood told a six-minute maybe-true, maybe-not six-minute story about his...  read more

Zach Galifianakis at Bonnaroo

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I came to Bonnaroo yesterday looking forward to the music, but as surprisingly tight as Vampire Weekend was last night (they played like a band that's been around longer than three weeks) and as surprisingly big Nicole Atkins' voice is, the best thing I saw was Zach Galifianakis. Bonnaroo has been doing a comedy tent for years, but this was the first time I'd actually gone. I was more familiar with his awkwardly uncomfortable skits, like this ad for Absolut:...  read more

R.E.M. with Johnny Marr, New Sigur Rós Stream

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Forget that R.E.M.'s new record is their best in years. Forget that even when their albums started sucking, their live shows remained phenomenal. Forget that one of the openers is one of the best young bands around (The National, whose album was declared by Paste as the best of last year—an honor that has gone to their heads, according to Rainn Wilson). And forget that Modest Mouse is also on the bill. This one thing is reason enough for you to make sure you get out to see R.E.M. on their North American tour......  read more

My Morning Jacket, The Bridges & Beer

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Lots of good records out today, including new ones from Jakob Dylan, Emmylou Harris, The Fratellis, Joan as Policewoman and Solomon Burke, but there can be only one...CD OF THE WEEKMy Morning Jacket - Evil UrgesBack in 2006, when we recruited Drive-By Truckers frontman Patterson Hood to write about one of our 100 Best Living Songwriters, I was surprised that he chose Prince. But listening to My Morning Jacket's latest makes me realize Mr. Purple Rain's influence on Southern rockers is more widespread. Jim James gets downright funky on songs like "Highly Suspicious" which has half our office scoffing and...  read more

10 Great Books of Southern Fiction

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There are plenty of things about the South that I'm either indifferent to (NASCAR, sweet tea) or ashamed of (a history of slavery, segregation and racism; Ernest). But I'm certainly proud of our writing tradition, from William Faulkner to Alice Walker. Here are 10 great novels and collections of short fiction by Southern writers, set in the 20th Century South.As with any of the lists on my blog, these are simply my favorites. We do plenty of lists in Paste magazine, all of which are researched, vetted and argued over endlessly. But what follows are simply 10 books that were...  read more

The Week at Paste

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It was a busy week at Paste. Several Paste staffers returned from Sasquatch, we welcomed Ben Sollee by the office for a performance, celebrated two upcoming arrivals into the Paste family with a double shower, said hello to a brand new crop of interns, and oh yeah, I started a blog. Here's a little round-up of what was going on at PasteMagazine.com this week:Rainn Wilson video from SasquatchRainn Wilson goes toe-to-toe (at least that's how I hope it was) with our own Jason Killingsworth, complaining that his favorite band The National has gotten all uppity since their album landed #1...  read more

Top 10 Kids' Songs That Don't Suck

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K Records announced this week that Moldy Peach Kimya Dawson has a new children's record coming out, the wonderfully titled Alphabutt. Like They Might Be Giants, the idea of Dawson singing kids' songs seems natural. And it's good to have more entries into this growing field of "Children's Music That Parent's Will Try to Make Their Kids Like." The truth is, sometime's the best intentions—like Tom Waits singing "Bend Down the Branches"—don't strike the same chord with the little one's that mom or dad might have hoped. Here's a list of 10 songs, my three children and I can agree...  read more

CD Picks of the Week

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Of the hundreds of CDs released this week (715, according to All Music Guide), here are my picks...Fleet Foxes - Fleet FoxesThis five-piece from Seattle is one of my absolute favorite new bands (along with Bon Iver and Islands) of '08. With CSN&Y harmonies. Like their labelmates, Band of Horses, they're a spiritual descendant of early My Morning Jacket with soaring melodies and vocals that sound like they're recorded in a grain silo. They add CSN&Y harmonies to boot. - Listen here.William F. Gibbs - My Fellow SophisticatesThe hooks come with baroque ornamentation on this debut that was original and...  read more

Questions for Sam Phillips, Conor Oberst, Ben Sollee

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I've got three interviews scheduled for today. First up at 11a.m. is Ben Sollee, one of the best new singer/songwriters I've heard this year. He's a cellist, who plays with The Sparrow Quartet, along with Bela Fleck, Abigail Washburn and Casey Driessen. They're headed to Beijing this summer to play some gigs around the Olympic Games. He's also got his first solo album, Learning To Bend, coming out a week from today....  read more

The Coen Brothers roll on

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First things first, congrats to my University of Georgia Bulldogs for earning a trip to the College World Series Super Regionals by beating rivals Georgia Tech 18-6—their fourth win in a row after losing the first game of the double-elimination tournament last weekend. If they beat NC State, they go to Omaha. ...  read more

Best Sitcoms Since 1980

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Welcome to High Gravity, my new blog for daily nuggets of music, film and culture. I plan on using this space for quick, throughout-the-day updates on whatever comes across my desk or crosses my mind, from news about Thom Yorke making sure Prince's Coachella cover of "Creep" gets unblocked by YouTube or Liz Phair performing Exile in Guyville in its entirity (June 23rd at the Fillmore in San Francisco, 24th at The Vic Theatre in Chicago and 25th & 26th at the Hiro Ballroom in New York) to my own Top 10 lists, favorite new discoveries and, yes, beer recommendations.My...  read more

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