Green Day have released a new video “Troubled Times.”
Coffee Project – “Wasted Love” Video
Coffee Project have released a video for “Wasted Love.”
Relevant Again
https://twitter.com/OmanReagan/status/896563796071731201
Wilco – “All Lives, You Say?”
Riot Fest Announce Late Night Schedule
Riot Fest have announced their late night show schedule for this year. Tickets will go on sale this Friday.
Real Friends Writing New Album
Real Friends are currently writing their new album.
Portugal. The Man Perform on Conan
Portugal. The Man performed “Feel It Still” on Conan last night.
Louis C.K. Announces New Film
Louis C.K. has been working on a new film in secret. The film is titled I Love You, Daddy and will premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.
Converge Announce New Album
Converge will release their new album, The Dusk In Us, on November 3rd. Today they’ve released the new song “Under Duress” and pre-orders are now up.
Brand New Announce New Album and Tour Dates
Brand New’s fifth album will be shipping on a very limited vinyl in October. Pre-orders were up here. They’ve also announced some new tour dates for this fall.
Taylor Swift Wins Lawsuit
Taylor Swift has won her lawsuit:
Jury sides with Taylor Swift in groping lawsuit, orders fired radio host to pay the pop star a symbolic $1.
Anti-Flag – “Racists”
Anti-Flag have released their new song “Racists.” They’ve also shared the following statement:
We stand in solidarity with those fighting racism and fascism in the streets of Charlottesville and beyond. We believe it is time for the removal of all monuments to the confederacy and the racism for which they stand. We must put these symbols of white supremacy into places where the proper context can be provided for what they actually are; outdated, backwards, and antithetical to what we believe the values of humanity should be. It is past time to have real conversations on systemic racism and America’s history of it. There are museums memorializing the Holocaust all across Europe, while America continues to try to hide from its racist and murderous past and present.
How “Nice White People” Benefit from Charlottesville and White Supremacy
Lauren Duca, writing for Teen Vogue:
For white people who don’t self-identify as disciples of Richard Spencer, David Duke, and/or the ancient demon Beelzebub, there is extreme anxiety around the accusation of racism. We see this fear of blame in Trump’s statement. “Not Donald Trump, not Barack Obama” seems to say, ‘Hey, there’s been a tense racial climate in this country forever. It’s not anyone’s fault!’ Except the opposite is true. American white supremacy has been a problem forever, and it is all of our fault, fellow white people.
White people benefit from white supremacy. Period. Peggy McIntosh spelled this out for us in 1989, but apparently we’re still not quite getting it. Her famous piece, “White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack,” lays out undeniable ways that it is simply easier to be white in this country, like always having a boss who is a fellow white person, or, you know, being able to eat Skittles at night without getting shot. Most white people didn’t ask for this privilege. Actually, that’s the whole idea. White privilege is an inherent advantage that easily goes unnoticed and unacknowledged. Rather than stuffing down the sense of shame associated with this obvious unfairness, why not work to even the playing field?
Lauren Duca’s column has become a must read for me.
In March of this year I was lucky enough to photograph the Japandroids and Craig Finn in Seattle on Saturday, March 18th at the Neptune Theater. It was a sold out show with no barricade for the photographers to be in front of, so things definitely got rowdy when the Japandroids started. You’ll find the gallery below.
Review: Matt Nathanson – Some Mad Hope
Few albums sound more like growing up to me than Matt Nathanson’s Some Mad Hope. Last year, for my 26th birthday, I wrote a blog post where I chose one defining song from every year I’ve spent on the planet. “Car Crash,” the opening track from Some Mad Hope, was my pick for 2007. For me, that song—and this record in general—marked the end of youthful innocence and the beginning of something a little more complex and a little less black and white. It’s tough to imagine a better record for that moment in life than Some Mad Hope, which effortlessly pairs pop hooks and anthemic arrangements with emotionally weighty lyrical work. What is tough to process is the fact that this record—the one that marked the start of my journey from youth to adulthood—is now 10 years in the rearview.
Some Mad Hope would prove to be Matt Nathanson’s breakthrough, but it wasn’t his first record. On the contrary, in Nathanson’s catalog, Some Mad Hope holds the status of being the sixth LP. He’d moved the needle slightly in the past. His cover of the James hit “Laid” opened American Wedding, the final film in the initial American Pie trilogy, and his fifth album, 2003’s Beneath the Fireworks (produced by future Springsteen collaborator Ron Aniello) spawned reasonably well-known tracks like “I Saw” and “Curve of the Earth.” But until this record, Nathanson tended to be known as an artist who put on a fantastic live show, but could never quite translate the energy and fun of his concerts into compelling studio records.



























