Showing posts with label Gomez. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gomez. Show all posts

April 16, 2008

Catch the trade winds in your sails

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"Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain


I'm on a short trip out to a conference in Utah this week and the weekend - I really can't wait to get back on a plane again, see somewhere new. Here's some songs that I've been listening to recently:

Come Fly With Me
- Frank Sinatra

Falling or Flying - Grace Potter & the Nocturnals
Freeway - Removed by Request - Aimee Mann
International Airport - Carbon Leaf
It's My Turn To Fly - The Urge
Leaving on a Jet Plane
- John Denver

Minutes to Memories (John Mellenkamp)
- Carbon Leaf

Out of Town - Zero 7
See The World
- Gomez

Venture Highway
- America

Where Are You Going?
- Dave Matthew's Band

February 22, 2008

House : Carry You Away Soundtrack



I'm a huge fan of the TV show House, MD. It's got good stories, even better characters and a fantastic taste in music for it. Last fall, FOX released a soundtrack of some of the songs that made it onto the show. It's a very fun soundtrack, with some really good, and some rare songs onto it.
Beyond that album, there's a bunch of other songs that have made it onto the show that didn't make it onto that soundtrack (and a couple that did, but are still really good.)

The main point in looking at this cross section of music from the show is it's tone and how that relates to the show itself, particularly when it comes to the character of house. All of the below songs are fairly moody ones - mostly dealing with loss or are otherwise not really 'up' songs. Overall, they form a really good feel for the show and House himself, who is a fairly depressed character all things considered. The comedy in the show aside, there's usually a couple of moments where we really see House as himself - alone and depressed. These songs fit perfectly.

Are You Alright? - Lucinda Williams
Beautiful - Elvis Costello
Colors
- Amos Lee

Good Man - Josh Ritter
Grey Room - Damien Rice

Hope for the Hopeless - A Fine Frenzy
Human
- Civil Twilight

In The Deep - Bird York
Orange Sky
- Alexi Murdoch

Se
e The World - Gomez
Some Devil
- Dave Matthews

Walter Reed
- Michael Penn

January 7, 2008

Around the World In 80 Bands



Something that I've been interested in for a little while now has been World music, either traditional or contemporary works. I've collected, over the past couple of years, a number of songs from various nations around the globe. It's fascinating to see the huge differences in styles between countries, which isn't all that surprising when you consider the huge differences in countries from around the world.
Unfortunately, most people only are really familiar with the music of two countries - the United States and the United Kingdom. This is to be somewhat expected, given that we'd be generally more familiar with music from our own home (at least for those of us in those countries). So, in an effort to help show the diversity in the music of the world, I'm going to be embarking on a regular feature over this coming year, highlighting eighty different groups from around the world from eighty different countries, Around the World in 80 Bands.
Some countries were easy to find a representative band, while a couple others took some narrowing down, and even more required a bit of research and some learning on my own part to complete the list. Some artists were born in the countries and gained fame elsewhere, or have had their career there. In some cases, there are a couple of countries that I'm more familiar with that I'll include a bonus band or two to cover the country - this won't however, add to the 80 count.

See The World - Gomez


January 4, 2008

My Mix



I can't think of a good title for this mix of songs. I was fooling around with play lists on iTunes - I swear, it's a compulsion sometimes, when I came up with the first five songs, when I realized that I had something good here. When I got home from work, I pulled another dozen songs together to come up with this final list. I think that it's the best play list that I've come up with in a while. Let me know what you think:

Everybody Knows
- Ryan Adams
Hang Around
- Gregory Douglass
When The Pain Dies Down -
Chris Stills
Pagan Angel and a Borrowed Car
- Iron & Wine
Hard Sun
- Eddie Vedder
Good Man
- Josh Ritter
Who You Are
- Cary Brothers
Pressure Suit
- Aqualung
Time Is A Runaway
- The Alternate Routes
Toy Soldiers
- Carbon Leaf
See The World
- Gomez
Trouble
- Ray LaMontagne
Place To Be
- Nick Drake

Have a good weekend! Next week, regular features & an announcement for a new feature.

November 16, 2007

On the Road Again...



I'm headed out of state again for multiple hours, so here's a mix of some of my favorite travelling-themed music.


On the Road Again - Willie Nelson
Carefree Highway - Gordon Lightfoot
Stop the Bus - Grace Potter & The Nocturnals
Wandering 'Round - Carbon Leaf
Three Hours - Nick Drake
Ventura Highway - America
See The World - Gomez



Have a good weekend!


Hype - Buy


September 14, 2007

Everybody's Going to the Moon

The New York Times is reporting today that the group who financed the X-Prize has come back with a second challenge for the fledgling, but growing private space industry - The first group to land a rover on the moon, move around and take video, will win the new prize, this time at $25 million dollars.
The first X-Prize was valued at $10 million, for the first group to create a privately funded and built space ship that could travel to a certain height and back again within two weeks, and was won in 2004 by SpaceShipOne, which was helped along by Paul Allen, who is the co-founded of the Microsoft corperation.

$25 Million in Prizes Is Offered for Trip to Moon

The NYT has posted up a discussion thing on whether this is a good or bad idea, and the result from readers seems to be fairly positive. Although it still puzzles me that people on there, in this day and age still maintain that we never went to the moon, that it was filmed in the desert somewhere. Other people have said that it's a waste of money, that the focus should be here at home, on big issues such as global warming and things like that that'll help benefit humanity down here.

I personally think that we should go to the stars, now. I've begun to read more on the space industry and it's history. Two books that I've gone through have been extremely interesting. The first is called Rocketeers, and is about the race for the X-Prize a couple years ago. I was introduced to a band of people who want to go to space, and have started building real rockets in their garages and private hangers on a shoestring budget to reach into space. Often, these people are the age of my parents, and remember seeing the lunar landings on the TV, and were inspired by that sort of thing. The other book that I read was called In the Shadow of the Moon, and is about the Gemini to Apollo missions that NASA conducted to reach the moon. If anything, I'm a bit more convinced that NASA really screwed up our chances at long term space habitation and exploration. For starters, it was essentially given it's purpose to win a race, one that we ultimately one, with several lunar landings before interest vanished. What happens once a race is won? NASA's turned it's focus on more scientific endevours, rather than exploration, which is a fine goal, but not one that's likely to go out and start poking everything above us. Plus, NASA's a governmental agency, and with a waning in public interest, politicians have their way with the agency, and now that we don't have to beat the Russians at something, we're back down with the Space Shuttle (Which I think was a bit of a crappy idea. Looks cool, but ultimately doesn't serve our interests in exploration).
This is why the X-Prizes are so important. Commercial enterprises are what will bring us to space. It's always been the key behind exploration, whether it was the Spanish coming to the New World, Lewis & Clark's expeditions into the Western United States and the British interests in India, all because money was to be made from those locations. I'm sure that we can find some way to make space travel profitable. Asteroids have high metal contents. Tourism in space has already started, with various people going to Russia for trips into orbit. I'm sure that there could be a market for a number of other things in and around our planet, whether it's a week trip to a space station, the Moon or Mars or whether it's for private science enterprises. Publicly administrated space exploration doesn't work. The two shuttle disasters, the Challenger and the Columbia, both shut down American manned space missions for years afterwards while the problem was sought and people debated whether the risk was too high. Not to sound callous, but those crews are a relatively small price to pay, and are the ultimate heroes for the coming future, because they risked everything to further humanity along this path. There will be more deaths - all exploration is fraught with peril, and these might be necessary, or maybe not, but it should not stop us from getting out there.

Man on the Moon - R.E.M.
Moons - Josh Ritter
Moon and Sun - Gomez


August 22, 2007

C&O


This week's Cover and Original is of another Beatles song, with a couple of pretty good covers to go along with it. I was going to do something different this time around, but this song fits with my mood for the time being. (The getting better all the time part anyway)
Getting Better was first written in 1967 and was on the landmark album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart Club Band. Here's two covers by Gomez and the Kaiser Chiefs.
Getting Better - The Beatles
Getting Better - The Kaiser Chiefs