Tuesday, June 03, 2008
LA reading, the Hall of Mammals, and some other stuff
And because these clips are so great, I am stealing them from the email that Steve at Skylight sent around to the people. (Captions are his as well).
> (how many drugs is Geezer on? And Ozzy in yellow pants with a
> rainbow!)
> And for you rubber powered flight and aviation fans:
John is also playing with the Mountain Goats at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County the night before. Apparently the evening revolves around the fact that "one hallmark of mammals is the evolution of a highly developed brain capable of orchestrating amazingly complex behaviors." You go, mammals!
* * * * *
And some quick links related to a couple books mentioned in the post below this one:
* Vice interviews the lovely and charming Shane McGowan of the Pogues.
* Somewhat Slayer-related: Reign In Blood(sport).
* And just general awesomeness, here's a searchable and browsable inventory of Mtv's top 20 videos every week from 1981 to 2001 (Martha Quinn not included).
* * * * *
This just in from Kim Cooper and Erik Davis!
June 7, A whole day of 33 1/3 Action at Skylight Books in LA
At 10:45am, Skylight is the rendezvous point for VISIONARY HOLLYWOOD, a guided bus tour to the most extraordinary historical spiritual spaces in LA, hosted by Erik Davis (Led Zeppelin's 4th album) in collaboration with Kim Cooper (Neutral Milk Hotel's "In The Aeroplane Over The Sea") and her Esotouric bus adventures. After the bus returns at 3:45, Erik and Kim will be signing their books in the store. Later that evening, John Darnielle will be signing his Black Sabbath book.
For more info, or to grab one of the last remaining seats on VISIONARY HOLLYWOOD, visit http://www.esotouric.com/vision
Saturday, May 24, 2008
Coming up in 2008
Publishing in the next ten days or so:
Slayer's Reign in Blood by DX Ferris
Richard and Linda Thompson's Shoot Out the Lights by Hayden Childs
Publishing in Aug/Sept/Oct (definitely!):
The Afghan Whigs' Gentlemen, by Bob Gendron
The Pogues' Rum, Sodomy & the Lash, by Jeff Roesgen
The Flying Burrito Brothers' Gilded Palace of Sin, by Bob Proehl
With any luck there'll be three or four more publishing in Nov/Dec, but more on those when I have the finished manuscripts on my desk.
Upcoming call for Proposals
Still no decision on this, but I'm crossing my fingers that we'll be able to announce an open call for proposals at some point in October - more details as soon as I have them, obviously.
Currently on the headphones:
"The Time Is Now" by Moloko.
Monday, May 19, 2008
A little more Reality


Tomorrow I'll post an update on how the series is shaping up for the rest of 2008...
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Sabbath on Saturday (now with more links!)
Chaya from Housing Works just dropped off some awesome posters for John Darnielle's reading on Saturday.
Saturday, May 17, 2008 at 7:00 PM
John Darnielle of the Mountain Goats is working in a new genre. Tonight he'll be reading from his brand new book, "his first novel and a stunning piece of rock criticism and appreciation" Black Sabbath's Master of Reality, the newest in the 33 1/3 series of chapbooks about seminal records.
AT HOUSING WORKS IN SOHO!
New York Magazine chose the event as a critics pick for the weekend, and Gothamist has an interview with John up this morning that features this nugget:
Which New Yorker do you most admire? This is a tough question and it depends on whether you want natives-only or people who came to be from NYC. If the latter I gotta go with either DJ Kool Herc. If it's gotta be natives, gimme Edith Wharton.
You can also check out the Mountain Goats on Friday (tonight!) at the Brooklyn Masonic Temple. Tickets are surprisingly still available (and only $25).
And over at the Powells blog, Ed Park (whose novel Personal Days I am very much looking forward to reading) talks a little about the series in general and the Sabbath book in particular.
AND NEXT WEEK!
Thursday, May 22, 7:30pm
Music writing event featuring 33 1/3 authors Matthew Stearns (Sonic Youth’s Daydream Nation), Michael Fournier (The Minutemen’s Double Nickels on the Dime), and Amanda Petrusich (Nick Drake’s Pink Moon). The discussion will be moderated by Rolling Stone’s Jenny Eliscu.
AT WORD BOOKS IN GREENPOINT!
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Sabbath on Saturday
Please do come along if you're in town! Oh, and it kicks off at 7pm, so don't be late...
Thursday, May 08, 2008
Interim House benefit, May 29th, Dorchester MA
They'll be joined - and possibly even upstaged - by superstar authors Michael Patrick MacDonald, George Pelecanos, and Tom Perrotta. There are some fantastic items up for auction, including two tickets to a Red Sox game in Theo Epstein's personal box!
You can find more about the auction here, and more details on the event as a whole right here.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Links for Tuesday...
* John Darnielle has begun his guest blogging stint over at the Powell's blog. Do check it out here. You will be rewarded with metal.
* I've been a fan of the blog 20 Jazz Funk Greats for a while now, which is neither a blog about jazz funk greats, nor a blog solely about Throbbing Gristle, but I suppose it does make sense that they would dedicate a post to Drew Daniel's 33 1/3 on Throbbing Gristle's 20 Jazz Funk Greats. Some great tracks are embedded in the post!
* Next up is Max Abelson's Super Groovy Music/Video Spectacular, which is a daily dose of youtube links loosely curated along these lines: Monday 60s, Tuesday 70s, Wednesday 80s, Thursday 90s, Friday 00s. Whenever I start playing around on youtube I always end up watching that lady fall over while stomping grapes, so it's nice to have someone steer me in a more worthwhile direction (still love the grape lady though).
* And finishing things off today is the following OpEd from the Morning News, Two Minutes and 42 Seconds In Heaven, in which the author weighs in on the ideal length of a pop song. Good stuff.
"Three minutes is where bloat starts to set in. Where the band thinks: Hey, let’s do the chorus seven times. Hey, let’s give the saxophone guy a real moment to shine on this one. Hey, let’s add another bridge."
Friday, April 25, 2008
The Great Truth of Metal
Popmatters just put up a really great interview with John Darnielle about working with kids in psych wards, his book on Black Sabbath, and metal in general. It's really an excellent read...
“But yeah—metal was a place young people went to feel like not everybody thought they were dumbasses, you know, where adults could look at them from a place of success and position and say, ‘The things you value have value, no matter what they are or how weird they seem to other people, and anybody who tells you otherwise is an asshole.’ Which is the great truth of metal, as far as I’m concerned.”
In other Sabbath news, John will be reading at Housing Works in NYC on Saturday, May 17, 2008 at 7:00 PM.
And starting on Monday, he'll be doing a week of guest blogging over on the Powell's site.
Still Talking About Love
There's an excellent review of Carl's book in the "Summer Reading" section of The Mac Weekly: MacAlester's Independent Student Newspaper Since 1914, the review being written by Peter Valelly. Here's a short clip:
It may not sound like it if you're not a total music geek like me, but this book is outrageously entertaining and funny, and it probably won't take you more than three days to read. And while I personally still find Celine Dion's music indefensibly putrid, the book may prompt you to think for about two extra seconds before plugging your ears the next time you find yourself in the dismal situation of hearing "My Heart Will Go On."
And you can read the whole review right here.
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Revised, Updated, and Award-Winning
The revised and updated paperback edition of the book has just shipped out from our US warehouse, and will be on sale on bookstores any day now, and on Amazon, right here. (It says temporarily out of stock, but they have many more copies en route...)

Friday, April 18, 2008
NEW BOOK: Black Sabbath's Master of Reality, by John Darnielle
***
Imagine that you are a man from space! And you don't speak English and you never heard of weed, and you landed in California and the first person you met up with took you to his house and said "Hey check out this band." And then he played you "Sweet Leaf." In my opinion, the man from space would hear that song, just the crunchy guitar sound and those bass notes, Geezer Butler is the best bassist it sounds like his strings are made from lime jello salad, and he would start banging his head! Because the riff on "Sweet Leaf," that is something anybody could understand. ANYBODY.
Black Sabbath's Master of Reality has maintained remarkable historical status over several generations; it's a touchstone for the directionless, and common coin for young men and women who've felt excluded from the broader cultural economy. John Darnielle hears it through the ears of Roger Painter, a young adult locked in a southern California adolescent psychiatric center in 1985; deprived of his Walkman and hungry for comfort, he explains Black Sabbath as one might describe air to a fish, or love to an android, hoping to convince his captors to give him back his tapes.
John Darnielle was born in Bloomington, Indiana, and was raised by southern California. He sings, writes songs, and plays guitar for the Mountain Goats and writes South Pole Dispatch monthly for Decibel magazine. He lives with his wife in Durham, North Carolina.
***
Thursday, April 17, 2008
BOOK REVIEW: Swordfishtrombones
"In many ways Smay’s book is actually a better study of Waits’ music and life than the few recent (and much longer) biographies. The major elements of Waits’ music, and how many of those elements originated with Swordfishtrombones, are all addressed with a mixture of well-researched information and hilarious anecdotes and interpretations."
You can read the entire review here.
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
NEW BOOK: Patti Smith's Horses, by Philip Shaw
That Patti Smith was operating in a different realm entirely to that occupied by her sisters in the genre was made obvious when one removed the vinyl from its plain paper sleeve. Placing the record on the turntable, putting the needle into the groove, none of the ritualistic operations of the act of listening to a record could prepare the listener for the visceral and intellectual disturbance of "Gloria (In Excelsis Deo)." A live highlight from the CBGBs sets, the song's opening lines, adapted from the poem "Oath," have lost none of their power to shock.
Horses, to many of those who heard it upon its release in late 1975, was a revolutionary album and marked the debut of an astonishing talent. Here, British scholar Philip Shaw details the early life and career of its creator, Patti Smith, looking closely at her poetry and performances from the early 70s through to the album's genesis. The result is an insightful and revealing study of one of rock music's landmark records and the artistic milieu from which it sprang.
Philip Shaw is a Reader in the English Department at the University of Leicester, where he specializes in the teaching of nineteenth-century literature and critical theory. In his spare time he writes songs and plays guitar in the group Alberteen.
***
Tuesday, April 08, 2008
The League Table, and Quiz Results
Here's the new 33 1/3 series league sales table, current through the end of March.
1. Neutral Milk Hotel
2. The Kinks
3. The Beatles
4. The Smiths
5. The Rolling Stones
6. Joy Division
7. Velvet Underground
8. Led Zeppelin
9. Radiohead
10. Pink Floyd
11. Neil Young
12. Jeff Buckley
13. The Beach Boys
14. Dusty Springfield
15. Love
16. David Bowie
17. DJ Shadow
18. Beastie Boys
19. Bob Dylan
20. My Bloody Valentine
21. The Pixies
22. Jimi Hendrix
23. Bruce Springsteen
24. The Replacements
25. The Band
26. Prince
27. R.E.M.
28. The Ramones
29. Sonic Youth
30. Elvis Costello
31. James Brown
32. Celine Dion
33. The Who
34. Captain Beefheart
35. Nirvana
36. Steely Dan
37. Magnetic Fields
38. Guided By Voices
39. The Byrds
40. The Minutemen
41. Stone Roses
42. Jethro Tull
43. Sly and the Family Stone
44. Abba
45. The MC5
46. Joni Mitchell
47. Belle & Sebastian
48. Stevie Wonder
49. PJ Harvey
50. Nick Drake
51. Tom Waits
52. Guns N Roses
53. U2
54. A Tribe Called Quest
55. Throbbing Gristle
Strong moves from the Beefheart, Steely Dan, and Magnetic Fields books, and it's early days yet for several of the very new titles. Having said that, the Celine Dion book enters the chart at number 32, which is pretty impressive after four months. Nobody predicted 32 in our competition, but Brian Castro went for number 33 and Matt Elliott cunningly countered that with a guess at number 31. So we have two winners, and congratulations to Brian and Matt - I'll email you separately to ask for your list of 10 free 33 1/3 books each. (A pat on the back also for Dave Heaton, who was perilously close with his guess of number 30.)
***
Upcoming events in Baltimore and the Northwest
And way out west, Matthew Stearns has lined up a handful of dates to read from his Sonic Youth book - and the events in Seattle and Portland will include music from a Sonic Youth cover band, too.
Friday April 11th at 7pm: Village Books, Bellingham WA
Friday May 2nd at 7pm: University Bookstore, Seattle WA
Saturday May 3rd at 7pm: Reading Frenzy, Portland OR