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What Would Jesus Kick?
By - Tuesday August 23rd 2005

kung fu jesusBut I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also.
-Matthew 5:39-40

Then proceed to take him down with a roundhouse kick delivered to the back of his head.
-Sam Silva 5:41

Enrollment is now open for Kung Fu at Calvary Chapel in Chino Valley. Classes, guided by Master Sam Silva, meet Tuesdays and Thursdays in the Banquet Hall and close with a Bible devotion and prayer.

If guns are more your thing Calvary Chapel is also hosting Revolution, a ministry for youth ages 13-17 who are influenced by Hip Hop Culture. This week learn how to convert an ordinary chalice into a jewel-encrusted pimp cup.

Calvary Chapel Kung Fu Site



LA Concert Calendar: August 22 – 28
By - Monday August 22nd 2005

Visit our concert calendar for a complete list of shows, links to buy tickets and our picks.

walkmen***Recommended Show of the Week***
Walkmen @ Spaceland
Hamilton Leithauser’s vocal chords will be put to the test as the Walkmen play the second of two Saturday shows. Sales of Mentho-Lyptus Halls in the Silverlake region should hit record levels.

MONDAY
Eisley @ Troubadour (free – print online ticket)
John Legend @ House of Blues
Starlite Desperation @ Spaceland (free)
Har Mar Superstar @ Knitting Factory
88 @ Troubadour
Satisfaction @ Silverlake Lounge (free)
Inara George @ Echo (free)

TUESDAY
Seeds @ Knitting Factory

WEDNESDAY
Mellowdrone @ Hotel Cafe

THURSDAY
Buckwheat Zydeco, Kermit Ruffins @ Santa Monica Pier (free)
Red Hot Chili Peppers, Snoop Dogg @ Greek
Our Lady Peace @ Viper Room
New Pornographers @ Tower Sunset (free-ish)
Willowz @ Amoeba (free)
88 @ Viper Room
Goldspot @ Hotel Cafe
Yasmin Levy @ Skirball (free)
Alejandro Escovedo @ Spaceland

FRIDAY
I See Hawks in LA @ Cole’s
Midnight Movies @ Cinespace
Music of Leonard Cohen @ Theatricum Botanicum
Sharon Jones @ Echo
Blasters @ Tower Sunset (free-ish)

SATURDAY
Walkmen w/ Giant Drag @ Spaceland
Rilo Kiley, Walkmen, Jason Falkner @ Sunset Junction

SUNDAY
New York Dolls, Sharon Jones, Suicide Girls @ Sunset Junction
Reggae Night IV @ Hollywood Bowl
Silverback Music Festival @ John Anson Ford
John Wesley Harding, Kelly Hogan @ McCabe’s
Rachel Yamagata @ Hotel Cafe (two shows)



A Plea For Graffiti
By - Sunday August 21st 2005

File under: What The Hell Is This Crap? Gaudy placards with posters for upcoming high-concept studio comedies have been popping up on the sides of buildings in areas with heavy foot traffic. The photo shows an office building Westwood Village (this same building has 2 additional placards tacked onto it–one more “Deuce 2″ and “40YOV” awaits you in either direction around the corner) and have been spotted in a few locations along Sunset as well, just east of the Strip bend. The posters are mounted in tacky faux-chrome plastic frames that are crudely bolted onto the buildings.

Visual Pollution

While King Kong-sized ads on highrises are a Hollywood tradition that are easily ignored–unless being mocked, especially when they are for duds that die on opening weekend (Herbie) or shows that no one is watching (The Comeback [which took a while, but has finally hit its stride])–this particular form of advertising is particularly reprehensible for it’s eye-level confrontation factor and semi-permanent building defacing. It’s pure and simple visual polution, turing the city into a bad magazine, creating the exact kind of clutter of which L.A. needs no more. No doubt Adbusters would be all over these.

Is this part of the redirection of studio marketing dollars away from print ads that Nikki Finke mentioned in the Weekly? Going heavier on the billboards? Standing in one spot at the intersection of Fairfax and Wilshire you can see no less than 3 billboards for “40YOV.” A passing bus also had the irritating sunburst graphic with Steve Carrell. This carpetbombing ad campaign only firms up an indifferent resolution to pass on this one-note-joke 84-minute SNL sketch.

Perhaps our local graffiti talent will take on these fresh canvases and jam their unwanted selling. Note: They are covered with a matte plexiglass that probably resists ink, so paint might be the way to go. The Westwood location is at a “T” intersection of Broxton and Le Conte Ave. One could probably do the job at this location with a single lookout at the corner of Gayley and Le Conte (Map here). Maybe Buff Monster or Neck Face can answer the call to beautify these hideous ads.



U-Dog, We Hardly Knew Ye
By - Sunday August 21st 2005

Goodbye U-Dog The premise was perfect: Sell only hot dogs and sausages for 92 cents–priced so as to cost an even $1 dollar after tax. Brilliant. The marketing hook, was pure gold–”U-Dog” would be shorthand for a fictional University of Hot Dogs. And so they burst on to the scene in Westwood, taking a storefront between In-N-Out and the Buck Fiddy sub shack. Students (dudes mainly) collected before their plasma tuned to MTV or some NCAA action and pounded dogs, brats and Pepsi standing up. Out of eight reviews on www.bruinfood.com, U-Dog averaged 3.875 stars out of 5. Things were looking good for U-Dog.

But after a few months the time came for U-Dog to raise prices, and the former $1 dollar bargains were hastily hidden behind crude paper signs bearing prices of $1.99–an unwieldy $2.16 after tax. Filthy coins now had to be fished out of pockets in the transactions. And thereby went the kids. Apparently, there is some kind of complex mathematical correlation between the price of an item and the number said items that will sell.Sausages for Sale

And so U-Dog has gone out with a whimper, the dreaded tombstone of retail, the For Lease sign, now hanging in their window. Sadder still, they had to shutter during the summer, not even able to say goodbye to the students away at camp. When they return in September, where will they go in Westwood for a good bratwurst or chicken-apple-sausage dog? Where?

UCLA’s paper, the Daily Bruin, covered the story of the closure of U-Dog. Curiously though, they do not have any comment from anyone actually affiliated with U-Dog, just quotes from competing restaurants, who, unsurprisingly, make desparaging remarks about their former competition and tinge their comments in a way so as to discourage new competition in the Village.

A further examination of the exchanges between the newspaper and U-Dog reveals a clear Daily Bruin agenda against the gourmet hot dog restaurant. First, a sarcastic column of faux praise for U-Dog ran late last year. Then it seems that the Daily Bruin published a list of “Places in Westwood to Avoid Eating At” (sic) and, no surprise, included U-Dog on the dubious list. This prompted the then-manager of U-Dog to respond with an Op-Ed piece, defending his restaurant. Curiously, the original list piece is now no longer available in the online archives of the Daily Bruin. These earlier biased mentions of U-Dog in their pages are suspiciously omitted from the Daily Bruin story of their ultimate closure. Did the Daily Bruin have a vendetta against U-Dog? Did they bring down U-Dog? Was Buck Fiddy in on the hit? We are not accusing anyone, but simply saying someone should investigate this.

P.S. This location would be great for my new fast food venture, DIPPERZ. I am still raising capital. If you are interested, contact me through the website and I will send you an investor packet. Or if you know where I can get good second-hand deep fryers. Thanks.



Weekend Photo Supplemental: Acres of Ambience
By - Sunday August 21st 2005

you will find her there, behind the boxes

Not affiliated with Saturday’s SoundWalk, Long Beach resident Broken Appliances managed to make an afternoon of digging through musty books at Acres of Books all the more surreal with her forlorn sax postulating big, gloomy question marks, reaching dissonant top shelves sporadically for good measure. Vintage microphone feedback and damp, thick reverb added a fine layer of ancient book dust to the proceedings. As daylight waned she continued to wail from behind a pile of boxes in the very back of the store, amplifier poised at the service entrance door, singing to the empty lot outside.

Bonus Photos
Super K & Marxism
Diplomacy Room
He doesn’t read the same books that I do



Recap: SoundWalk 2005
By - Sunday August 21st 2005

this is definitely very close to some type of coffee shopLast night’s magical pre-sunset hour: SoundWalk, Long Beach. Wandering around a few blocks in the East Village Arts District while keeping an eye out for sound installations, I may have reached an epiphany: the immediate blocks encircling the Broadway/Linden intersection are home to more coffee shops per capita than Silverlake’s Rowena corridor and all of Westwood combined. I’m telling you!!

Coffee in hand, it was now time to do some Sound Walking. Choices included live sound shows, interactive sidewalk installations, in-store installations and swarms of people sharing funky headphones at every turn.

Although many entries were earnest, I have to say the ones that worked best for me were the incidental, quasi-hidden speakers on sidewalks such as those placed strategically by Carrie Yury and Redux on Broadway. Example: you’re walking innocently enough under a tree until a creepy voice from the branches whispers “Raspberry compote…Flavours of nutella…” Laugh, but it worked. It also triggered the memory of listening to Barry Adamson’s Moss Side Story in high school, for some reason.

Before heading home I stopped by Machine Project in Echo Park to peek through a hole in the floor at some fake bones. I think I’ll end with a quote from the flyer I received at the show, also available on their website:

If you write upon the Palm of your Hand, or upon Paper with the said Gum, what ever you write will appear all on fire, and the Letters may be read a long time after; but you must have a great care, that you do it softly, and to put it into Water, as soon as you have done, for if it happen to fire ’twill burn the place most dreadfully.

SoundWalk Photos
[The chill-out zone]
[Spotted @ Koo]
[Please Enter Quietly]
[Coffee Cellist]



Do Not Throw Shit
By - Saturday August 20th 2005

brian jonestown massacre 2Brian Jonestown Massacre
Thursday, 8/18/05
Vanguard, Tinseltown, USA

On his website Anton Newcombe says the following of his new songs:

“Sara and I believe this to be the most important work of our lives, and to a greater extent, our time. This is not some mamby-pamby-pop-culture-vomit, regurgitating or emulating something else. These are whispers from the underworld and tears of joy from heaven. These are anthems for all time.”

Regret to inform I heard neither whispers nor tears Thursday eve. You were louder than fuck. I had to cram napkins in my ears. That might not have been a bad thing if the songs were in any way captivating.

Whether he likes it or not, Newcombe is the breakaway star of DIG!, the Sundance Grand Jury-winning documentary presumably responsible for the sold-out dates on his current tour. People turn out in droves eagerly anticipating Newcombe’s drunken egomaniacal antics, which he delivers in brian jonestown massacre 5spades. It is unfortunate these same people (myself included) also expect to have their minds shattered by music bold enough to complement the sheer onstage ass-hattery for which they’ve subjected themselves. When they end up getting a set of songs the Charlatans UK might have delivered in 1990 with added 20-minute four-chord spaceout jams tacked half-assedly to the endings, their minds remain stolidy unshattered. Add lengthy talking, amp fiddling and incessant bickering between songs, the ejection of a “shit-throwing” fan by bouncers, a sour, spite-tinged Dandy Warhols cover and the show’s history. Next stop, San Fran.

In the troubled genius genre there is perhaps only one road show that may be more tedious this year: Brian Wilson. Wilson!! I caught him recently, crazed look in his eye, wiping his nose, sitting on the throne like King Toad at the breakfast table with a voice and demeanor equivalent to Nick Nolte, shouting triumphantly that Paul McCartney’s favorite song is God Only Knows. The Army of Wilson maintains “Brian’s a big Teddy Bear, gotta love him” while the backing band and tape pulls the weight of the concert, hoping beyond hope to mask the Nolte-esque warblings of their crazed leader as much as possible.

brian jonestown massacre 4Good Lordy! Suddenly I’m intensely riled up for the Wilson show @ the Hollywood Bowl.

Thursday’s Newcombe Transcript:

“Thank you all so fucking much for being so fucking patient. No, seriously. Seriously. We’re just going to have a fucking good time and just. Chill. Chill. We’re just going to chill the fuck out and rock and then leave in an orderly fashion.”

“I’m going to fucking whip it out right now you ready for it?”

“No, seriously.”

“We have toured all over the fucking place. Sixty shows, we have fucking been everywhere. Not like Oasis when they come, well except for this current tour where they’re trying to save their careers, but… usually when they tour the states they play eight shows. We’ve played sixty. We’ve been to all the fucking cities.”

“You were going way too fucking slow in that last song, because that’s not how you play the drums in that song.”

brian jonestown massacre 3“You can get right the fuck off stage.”

“Do not fucking throw shit. No. No throwing shit. Do not. Hey what the fuck you fucking fucker yeah get out here. Bouncers! Yeah you want to fucking throw shit?”

“Do not fucking throw shit. No. No throwing shit. Do not. Do not fucking throw shit. No. No throwing shit. Do not.”

“Do not fucking throw shit. No. No throwing shit. Do not.”

“No, seriously though. Seriously.”

“No seriously though thank you so fucking much for coming out and being chill. Seriously.”

“Seriously.”

“Do not fucking fucking throw sh—-VROOOOOOOOOM*

*my car, leaving
 
 
Photos by Audree



Temple Crosswalks Receive Facelift; Jaywalk-icity Undimmed
By - Friday August 19th 2005

walking on weaveFollowing up on a post I read last week on blogging.la, I took Temple home this afternoon in order to grab some photos of the three intersections in historic filipinotown featuring brand-new snazzy traditional-filipino-weave-designed crosswalks.

Glendale boasts four new walks effectively circling the intersection; Hoover’s decided that traditional crosswalk-identifiable white borders are in order. Alvarado’s easily the fanciest of the bunch.

Glendale [photo] [closeup]
Alvarado [photo] [closeup]
Hoover [photo][closeup]

 
 



Photo Op: Stilts Bring Smiles
By - Friday August 19th 2005

stilts bring smilesIt doesn’t really matter what the two stilted ladies were hawking outside Cal Plaza Water Court today at noon. The point is simply Friday afternoon and sunny: End of the week and the beginning of the weekend. Ladies in formalwear bopping about on souped-up stilts are the icing on the cake and destined to bring a smile to your face, like it or not. Meantime, the Warsaw Village Band reminds us that the free concert season is far from over.

Bonus Photos:
Stilted Lady You Make-A Me Smile, Cal Plaza, 8-19-05
Lunchtime, Grand Performances, Cal Plaza, 8-19-05
Construction Continues, Olive St, 8-19-05
Cantaloupe, Hal’s, Abbot Kinney Blvd, Undated

 



Off-Pitch Pitcher Pitches New CD
By - Friday August 19th 2005

If you went to college in the 90′s chances are there was someone in your dorm with an acoustic guitar who could play a handful of popular grunge songs. At first you were impressed when he strummed Plush and Black. But the novelty wore off real quick. And you grew into deeper fits of rage each time you overheard him pick the intro to the “I’m going hungry” song.

Boston Red Sox hurler Bronson Arroyo was one of those guys. Only he never grew out of it. After a start against the Angels Saturday, Arroyo will appear at the Sunset Guitar Center signing copies of his recently released debut album, “Covering the Bases.” The album features twelve cover songs including Plush, Black and the “I’m going hungry” song.

bronson arroyo

Bronson Arroyo Autograph Signing
Guitar Center on Sunset
Saturday, August 20
7-8 PM

- Event Info
- Listen to “Covering the Bases” Samples on Amazon



Dig! The BJM This Eve
By - Thursday August 18th 2005

I’m sitting here revisiting the movie DIG! and laughing my ass off in preparation for tonight’s Brian Jonestown Massacre concert. Although the movie is in no way endorsed by Anton Newcombe, it’s getting me riled up like nobody’s business. Personally I’ve always thought the BJM’s music to be 4000x better than the Dandy Warhols’ music, which I can hardly stomach most of the time. Question is, will tonight’s show begin to live up to the foolishness bar I’ve set so high? We can only wait and see. Expect a full writeup, Hilburn-style.



Some Dodger Musings
By - Wednesday August 17th 2005

As we’ve written here in the past, we lean towards Dodger blue when it comes to baseball. While this season has been a wash, lately we’re floating high on back-to-back Dodger wins over Pedro Martinez and John Smoltz, both of which were won with improbable late inning rallies. That one guy came up with that one guy on base in the 9th and picked him up. OK, that’s exaggerating, but we barely know anyone’s name on sight alone with these damned nameless jerseys. It still doesn’t look good for making the playoffs, but we’ll take the small daily gains for what they’re worth.

We confess that lately we’ve been turning down the volume during Vin Scully’s incesant between-pitch anecdotes . Sacrilege, I know. But when a season’s not going your way, his perpetually sunny outlook and Farmer John pork plugs can really grate. He has a blissful detachment from the reality of a situation that’s second only to George Bush. It’s like he’s the Minister of Information for the DePodesta regime and more than once we’ve caught him being their appologist. Case in point: when the trading deadline was looming, he repeatedly commented that returning players off the DL would be better than any trade or pick up that might have been available. This sounds now as if he knew then that DePodesta would go on to not make any personnel moves. You would never catch Chick Hearn doing anything of the like; on a night (or the rare whole season) when the Lakers stunk up the joint, he’d be the first to say so.



World Badminton Championships Go Largely Unnoticed
By - Wednesday August 17th 2005

The World Badminton Championships are currently under way in Anaheim.

badmintonI think it’s safe to say Los Angeles is not a Badminton town. But badminton is very important to Malaysia. It even says so on the Badminton Association of Malaysia’s home page.

Badminton is in fact so important to Malaysia that the national team’s safe landing in Los Angeles for the tournament made headlines.

But worlds collided Monday when a journalist from the Malaysian National News Agency tried to navigate his way around LAX:

The Americans are simply an ignorant lot when it comes to badminton.

From the time I landed at the Los Angeles International Airport in California on Saturday, my attempts to gather information on the World Badminton Championships held at the Arrowhead Ponds in Anaheim, California, from Aug 15-21, were futile.

Since there were no special counters set up at the airport to guide or provide information to the players, officials, fans or the media, I proceeded to the information counter but was told they were not aware of such an event.

“What championships you say” was the immediate question from across the counter.

Worst still, an airport tourist guide, who attends to those in need of specific information, when approached and asked of the World Badminton Championships, looked at me astonishingly and asked whether it was a world baptism meeting.

It’s not that we’re ignorant, it’s just that we don’t care.



Dissecting Robert Hilburn
By - Wednesday August 17th 2005

Los Angeles Times Calendar readers no doubt are familiar–and no doubt frustrated– with the sycophantic ramblings of Robert Hilburn, their forever reigning pop music critic. Long known for his Bruce Springsteen and Bono puff pieces rather than any display of insight, of late he has moved on to the current alterna-darlings such as Coldplay and White Stripes and embarassingly bandwagoned onto the buzz bands of the moment (Bright Eyes, Arcade Fire, Bloc Party, et al) in a transparent grasp at relevance. His writings of late have deteriorated into strings of nonsequitors where he hops from one baseless point to another. The mess of awkward jumbles of prepositions, participles and bad metaphors make you wonder if anyone dares edit him over there. It is time for the Times to fade him out and free up those column inches for someone else. Just have him phone in the occasional drooling piece when the Boss has a new product to schill. Yesterday’s “review” of the White Stripes follows verbatim below, annotated with commentary for your reading pleasure:

POP MUSIC REVIEW
Rock of a fresher stripe
The White Stripes continue to defy rock ‘n’ roll convention in concert at the Greek.
By Robert Hilburn
August 17, 2005

At a time when many of our most prized bands are relying chiefly in concert on songs 30 or more years old, it was exhilarating Monday at the Greek to be wowed by tunes written less than seven months ago.

That old favorite: open with a strange, baseless statement as a foundation upon which to heap the praise upon the subject of piece. “Most prized bands”? “…songs 30 or more years old”? Are these references to The Eagles, the Stones, Paul McCartney? Who else could this be out of who is currently touring? Did they turn you down for an interview perhaps?

In fact, the only complaint about the White Stripes’ captivating performance was that the duo didn’t do more from its challenging new album, “Get Behind Me Satan.”

Ah yes, the first of many preformed phrases from the Review-o-Tron 6000–”captivating performance”

Who else would go through a 90-minute show without even plugging — er, playing — their latest?

You really should drop in more of that ironic voice the kids are using these days with stuff like the self-interrupting “er.”

But singer-guitarist Jack White has never surrendered to rock ‘n’ roll convention. He’s such a spontaneous performer that he probably didn’t even realize when he walked off stage that he hadn’t performed that sing-along single, “My Doorbell.”

I have it on good authority that Jack White has in fact surrendered to rock n’ roll convention. And not just because he dated a movie star, married a model, wears red pants and plays guitar in a rock n’ roll band.

This may have been White’s first L.A. concert since his recent marriage to model Karen Elson, but his heart still belongs to rock ‘n’ roll.

Wait, his “heart still belongs to rock n’ roll” but he “has never surrendered to rock n’ roll convention”? Does not compute.

When he and drummer Meg White walked on stage after a taut, satisfying set by the roots-leaning Greenhornes trio, a spotlight directed the audience’s attention to a large mural at the rear of the stage.

This might be true.

The painting was a scene right out of Adam and Eve: that tempting apple, placed in a paradise setting, just waiting for some mortal to come along and take that forbidden bite.

Damn. You just had to go and interpret it for us.

The mural underscored one of the chief themes of the “Satan” album: the struggle between innocence and betrayal in relationships. In fact, there are times, especially in “Blue Orchid,” when you can almost feel someone taking a bite out of that apple as White sings about the loss of innocence.

I don’t understand. Are we the apple and we feel someone bite into us, or is it that the apple is separate from us and someone else bites it and we feel this? And can something be both “in fact” and “almost” simultaneously? But we’ll let you slide on the this one.

On stage, the Stripes stretched the theme of the mural and album to reflect on the ever-present tension between rock ‘n’ roll integrity and compromise.

“…Ever-present tension between rock n’ roll integrity and compromise.” O-kay.

When the Detroit native pledged “No, I’m never gonna let you down,” during “The Nurse” midway through the set, he seemed to be speaking as much about being true to his music as to a loved one.

Awkward syntax aside, this kind of speculation is pointless. And don’t say “seem.” Dint your teachers learn you right?

The narrator in the “Satan” songs has seen so much betrayal and compromise in life and in music that he is wary.

Haven’t we all, Bob. Haven’t we all.

In the show’s darkest moment Monday, White sat alone at the piano at the start of the encore and sang “I’m Lonely (But I Ain’t That Lonely Yet).” It’s a country-flavored tune that includes some alternately tender and wickedly funny lines about almost overpowering need.

Eventually, the character in the song gets to a point so painful that suicide seems like the most comforting step:

I go down to the river / Filled with regret / I go down and I wonder / If there was any reason left.

Yet, the character rebounds, underscoring an essential optimism that runs through most of the White Stripes’ catalog.

This move of block quoting lyrics is Bob’s latest irritating technique. Pulling words from songs out of context and then mangling the interpretation to meet your vague thesis and pad out the word count is an old book report trick. I know this move well; it got me through AP English.

In both his dazzling guitar work and his passionate singing on his heavily blues-based rock, White clings to the possibility in every life for redemption and change.

“Dazzling guitar work” – Try again. “Heavily blues-based rock” – Swing and a miss. “Clings to the possibility in every life for redemption and change” – Strike 3.

When White and his “sister” (as he calls his former wife) left the stage for the evening, the spotlight again went on the apple, still gloriously whole.

Yes, we all know by now that Meg is not really his sister. You are not privy to some exclusive cool kids knowledge here. And what did you expect, that the still photo backdrop would animate or something? Is it really any kind of revelation that it is unchanged?

True enough, in just four years the Stripes have gone from playing local clubs to headlining four nights at the 6,000-plus-seat Greek Theatre without surrendering their ideals. Yet they have has lost none of their sense of a rock ‘n’ roll mission.

Wait a minute, you said earlier he has “never surrendered to rock n’ roll convention” and yet they “have lost none of their sense of rock n’ roll mission”?

Like a quarterback calling an audible at the line of scrimmage, White turns the stage into a working laboratory, reaching for whatever seems to fuel his imagination at the moment, whether it’s one of his songs or one of Dolly Parton’s old tales of romantic desperation. Meg’s rudimentary drumming adds an essential warmth and human dimension to Jack’s virtuosity.

So is the quarterback a laboratory scientist in the off-season, or is this a laboratory on the sidelines of the football field which he runs to during timeouts? Is the scientist/quarterback experiment concocting the synthetic fuel for his imagination? Mixed (and bad) metaphors.

Aside from his falsetto-edge vocals, White’s chief weapon is his electric guitar, which he plays like a man obsessed. To get the desired emotion, White makes the instrument wail, howl, purr, shriek, convulse and seduce — sometimes during the same eight bars.

We’ll skip the “falsetto-edge” coinage for now. But “wail, howl, purr, shriek, convulse and seduce”? You just had to add “seduce”. You could have stopped, but you just had to use all five.

If White had come along in the ’60s, you could have pictured him going through what once seemed radical moves for guitarists, including setting the instrument on fire or smashing it to bits on the stage.

If Jack came along in the 60′s, you “could have pictured him…” Is this back then or now doing those Hendrix tricks? Your subjects and verbs agree about as well as the Crips and Bloods.

But those actions have been clichés for so long that he has to turn to new devices to maintain his edge. So, he took the radical step in most of the new album of simply ignoring the guitar.

Yes, that newist of devices, the piano.

To better frame the tender emotions in some of the songs, White turned to piano and even, in the case of “My Nurse,” to marimba.

Yeah, that’s the one.

Some Stripes fans have been a little uneasy about the move to keyboards, but the audience on Monday embraced those gentler numbers mightily.

We surveyed 100 White Stripes fans and asked them how they felt about the move to keyboards and the number one answer on the board was “uneasy.”

White remains a guitar-slinger at heart, delivering blistering versions Monday of such powerhouse rockers as “Seven Nation Army” and “The Hardest Button to Button.”

Jack, run! Hilburn can see what lives in your heart!

But his courage in following his instincts in the new album and on the new tour stand as the greatest proof of his own integrity and power.

For those of you keeping score at home, that’s integrity + power = courage.

Man, that’s enough to make a guy willingly read Pitchfork.



On the LAm: Suzanne Berron
By - Tuesday August 16th 2005

FOTWName: Suzanne Berron
Alias: Barbara Anne Berron
Height: 5’5″
Weight: 115 pounds
Hair: Blonde
Eyes: Hazel
Wanted For: Grand Theft

One usually associates white collar crime with a wily CEO, a dodgy Finance Director or a shady Accounant. But nobody ever suspects the secretary. Little ol’ Suzie Berron milked her employer, Shammas Investment Corp, for 400 large. Probably right after her boss berated her for not being able to book a Friday night dinner reservation at the Ivy.

Note to LAPD detectives: don’t bother trying to find Berron at Office Max or the San Roque Post Office. These are the last types of places a disgruntled secretary with newfound wealth will visit. Try the Giggling Marlin bar in Cabo San Lucas or the Cancun Señor Frogs. This little lady is throwing back strawberry margaritas somewhere south of the border, guaranteed.

More Info from the LAPD



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