This is a trailer for another feature-length concert film due in March, supposedly, from one of my favorite bands, Fields Of The Nephilim. There's a double-CD + DVD set and a double-vinyl LP called "Ceromonies"...the elusive Carl McCoy and band live and loud. Magnificence! And check out Carl's appearance on Watain's last amazing album, "Lawless Darkness", too.
Friday, February 24, 2012
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
"Where The Streets Have No Name" DVD (director: Vijaykumar Mirchandani)

Falge, a chiropractor by trade, noticed an alarming number of homeless youth in his homeland. Seeing how these kids became entangled in webs of drug abuse and prostitution, he set up programs, often with his own funding, and enlisted others to clean up his town. Falge's tireless work on behalf of Cairns' youth has won him a number of awards, and garnered him international respect.
This film examines this work, and sensitively looks at the reasons and motivations of these children, even following some into adulthood (and stability). Candid interviews with the people of Cairns, and Falge himself, show a portrait of a tropical paradise that was once under threat of becoming a seedy center of illegal trade and child abuse, now moving in the right direction.
A splendid film, and one that should rightfully be seen by any and all. (MVD Visual)
Friday, February 17, 2012
The Twilight Sad - "No One Can Ever Know" CD

Vocalist James Graham's thick and distinctive Scottish accent is still present, but the music on "No One Can Ever Know" seems like an entirely different band. "Not Sleeping" seems to drone on, going nowhere in particular. "Another Bed" is shimmery synthpop with a wall of keyboards that drown out the vocals. The single, "Sick", is the best, reminding me of Radiohead a bit.
I'd like to think that this album is a one-off experiment for the boys, as their anthemic rock hooks and emotional connection seem to have been detached here. (Fat Cat)
Twilight Sad site
Tindersticks - "The Something Rain" CD

With similarities to Scott Walker, Nick Cave's Bad Seeds, or Leonard Cohen, the Tindersticks' classy, literate music is mellow, mature, and moody, drawing inspiration from European traditions, as well as vintage soul ("Show Me Everything") and noir soundtracks. For example, "Medicine" is a slyly romantic slice of melancholy, and "Frozen" is like a classic nocturnal spy-thriller in audio form. No, Tindersticks don't "rock", but they do possess a great skill at subtlety with sound, and in a tangent rock format. Well-done! (Constellation)
Buck Satan and the 666 Shooters - "Bikers Welcome, Ladies Drink Free" album

As his long-promised country and western band, Buck Satan is a rollicking good-time joyride, full of songs about drinkin', fightin', and general rabble-rousin'. Forget the powder-puff, pretty-boy country icons of today, Al and company are channeling the spirits of Hank Sr., Buck Owens, and the like. This isn't parody, but sincere homage.
"Medication Nation" proves that Al can still pen a catchy tune. "Drug Store Truck Drivin' Man" is a Gram Parsons cover, and is as silly as it sounds. Buck Satan's songs are hard-luck, tough-living anthems for a generation that has lost touch with it's country roots. My sole complaint is that the drum programming seems out of place. Nonetheless, a "Bikers Welcome" is a surprisingly fun record. (13th Planet)
Labels:
13th Planet Records,
Al Jourgensen,
Buck Satan,
Ministry
Crucifuge - "Vestri Animus est Mei" CD

Crucifuge site
Labels:
classic metal,
Crucifuge,
Evansville,
thrash metal
Various Artists - "The Jettisoundz Promo Years" DVD

We get plenty of obscurities here, from classic punk (Exploited's ham-fisted "Sexual Favours"), hardcore (Crumbsuckers), garage rock, death-rock (the Birthday Party rip-offs Inca Babies), indie folk (Michelle Shocked or Robyn Hitchcock), Sunset Strip-style glam (Tygers Of Pan Tang), space rock (Hawkwind), psychobilly (The Meteors), blues (Turnpike Cruisers), exotic pop (Sheila Chandra), and cut-up electro from 2-Kut, featuring future KMFDM/Pig frontman Raymond Watts and Neubauten's Blixa Bargeld.
The crowns here, from my point of view, are the inimitable Alien Sex Fiend, who's classic acid-electro-rock of "Buggin' Me" and "Ignore The Machine" are underrated slabs of weirdo proto-industrial rock, and Psychic TV, who get 3 solid post-acid house videos in "JOY", "R.U. Xperienced (with Caresse P-Orridge), and "I.C. Water", their loving tribute to Ian Curtis.
Sure, there's a lot of naff stuff here to slog through, but with a few true gems, this one can be a nice part of the collection. (Screen Edge via MVD Visual)
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