Wednesday, March 24, 2010

FILM: THE SUITCASE

My niece and nephew came to town last week and while they were here we made a short movie around downtown Toronto... It's a chase movie called The Suitcase.

This is the third or fourth one we've made, and the first following the instant classic Hide & Seek.

Hope you enjoy...

Monday, March 8, 2010

MUSIC: JENNY LEWIS' ACID TONGUE

Personally, I thought that Rilo Kiley -Jenny Lewis' former band- were pretty mediocre; and Rabbit Fur Coat, the album she recorded with The Watson Twins, which drove a lot of my friends gaga, left me feeling a bit cold. So when she released Acid Tongue in September of 2008 I didn't even blink. I'd kind of written Jenny Lewis off.

And then, over a year after it was released, I listened to it. And holy shit.


Somewhere in there, between plopping out not-particularly-great music in collaborations, Lewis became a genius.

I figure that the majority of female artists out there these days fall into a few categories:

There are the pretty and pretty vapid pseudo poets, best personified by Chantel Kreviazuk and (sorry Becca) Jewel.

There are the teen pop tarts, full of love and angst and singing about absolutely nothing at all, rightfully more known for what's written about them than for what they write, if they even write anything themselves. (Lindsey? Britney? Jessica?)

There are the distillations of what was once good, but devoid of the edge a sparkle of the originals... Avril Lavigne is meant to harness the fuck you attitude of Joan Jett but fails; Kelly Osbourne is a watered-down Blondie, or maybe Courtney Love.

And then there are the holy-fuck-we're so-weird-we-must-be-artists, like the bewildering Lady Gaga, La Roux or Peaches; none of which have a clue what art looks like. (Self-promotion is not art.) This is the new generation of Madonna wanna-bes (Madonna-bes?), but each lacking in her basic sense of melody or what makes a strong pop hook.

This was not always so. Once upon a time there were female recording artists; once upon a time female recording artists were the rule and not the exception once upon a time there was Emmylou Harris, Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn, June Carter, Joan Baez and Dolly Parton! And there were a million jazz singers: Sarah Vaughan, Etta James, Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Etta James, Carmen McRae, and on and on.

These were artists; these were master interpreters and creators.

And with Acid Tongue, released a year and a half ago, you can add to that list Jenny Lewis, with a voice that recalls Loretta Lynn especially, and not her own early self in any way. Acid Tongue is a rock & roll album with balls, rare enough to find from someone with balls, and insanely rare from someone without them. It's a tough record, but one that refuses to shy away from true beauty, in the way that, say, Courtney Love does. (And alternately, it doesn't flinch at adding a little darkness to the beauty, like the way opener Black Sands starts to turn a bit towards the end, or how the very pretty Bad Man's World opines "I've got a bullet left, but I can’t decide which scorpion I’m going to shoot; will it be me, or will it be you?")That said, when she needs unadorned beauty she can nail that too, as she does on Trying My Best to Love You.

Godspeed is one of the most incredible things I've heard in years, with a wonderful melody, and an almost hopeful bounce underlying the melancholy.



The chugging See Fernando is brilliant and Carpetbaggers (with a shockingly good, shockingly ferocious guest turn from the almighty Elvis Costello) is straight up aggressive in the best possible way.



Jack Killed Mom is a murder ballad / story-song that would make Johnny Cash or Bruce Springsteen smile with glee.



The whole thing has a kind of 1960's Laurel Canyon singer-songwriter, community-made feel to it, where every single note played by every single player was struck, plucked or sung with pride and a desire to create the very best art possible.

There's not a bad song in the lot, and although I might be two years late, I can't now recommend it any more strongly. I feel like your life is probably worse for not having this album on your iPod.

Friday, March 5, 2010

DESIGN: SHARKY TEA INFUSER


I don't drink tea (I'm adverse to hot liquids) but if I had this tea infuser, designed by Pablo Matteoda, I might.



Tuesday, March 2, 2010

MUSIC: THE DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS

One of my very most favoritist bands around, The Drive-By Truckers, have announced that their new album -The Big To-Do- is going to be released on March 16, 2010.


These guys are incredible; if you like roots music this is the band for you. Their last full-length album, Brighter Than Creation's Dark, was made up of nineteen songs with nary a dud in the bunch. From the beautiful and tragic opener, Two Daughters & A Beautiful Wife -about a friend of the band whose entire family was murdered in a random home invasion- through to the album closer, Monument Valley, which imagines iconic director John Ford laying some knowledge on a protege, they strike not a single wrong note lyrically, musically or tonally. The album is a true work of art, the kind that rarely gets made in this era of 99 cent-per-song digital downloads.
From Two Daughters & A Beautiful Wife: "Memories replay before him; all the tiny moments of his life: Laying round in bed on a Saturday morning. Two daughters and a wife; two daughters and a beautiful wife."

And from Self-Destructive Zones, written from the point-of-view of a hair metal band at the beginning of the nineties, being overcome by the grunge movement: "It was 1990, give or take I don't remember, when the news of revolution hit the air; the girls hadn't even started taking down our posters when the boys started cutting off they're hair. The radio stations all decided angst was finally old enough it ought to have a proper home. Dead fat or rich nobody’s left to bitch about the goings' on in self destructive zones."


The Drive-By Truckers are a remarkable group of musicians and songwriters. They're a career band, making music to last; they might not storm the charts or get hounded by paparazzi, but in a perfect world they'd have their television network, broadcasting their music twenty-four/seven.

Monday, March 1, 2010

DESIGN: STAIRS WITH FREAKING SLIDES ATTACHED!

Becca and I have talked about the possibility of maybe one day possibly buying a house... If we do, I'm going to insist on having one of these:


Holy crap, that's awesome. Could you imagine? The people who built this house obviously love their children very, very much, and so do these parents:



They are stairs. With slides attached to them. I can't even begin to express how cool this idea is. Why don't all stairs have slides attached to them? In a perfect world...

Sunday, February 28, 2010

There's been a long history in music of the powers that be searching for a white artist who sounds black. Labels have always thought that if they could just harness the power of black music (which, for some reason, means authenticity)but put a white face on it, they would hold the Holy Grail; a palatable, critic-proof, television-friendly artist that suburban moms and dads can't complain about. That's what Elvis was about, and Jerry Lee Lewis; people were initially taste-tested with Rick Astley's songs but weren't shown his picture, and the resounding reaction was that he was a talented black singer; The New Kids on the Block were put together with the specific intention of creating a white version of New Edition and The Jacksons, and in the same vein came along The Backstreet Boys and N*SYNC, not mention how the execs must have been salivating when they heard the R&B inflected, Michael Jackson influenced Justin Timberlake on his own; Remy Shand was the first white artist signed to Motown, because they thought he was going to be the white Stevie Wonder; and labels have been searching high and low for viable white rappers, from House of Pain through to Eminem.

In the last, say, ten years things have changed a bit; black artists rule the charts, and for artists -both white and black- authenticity is almost a dirty word; as I write this, the highest charting white artist on the Billboard Hot 100 is Kesha, whose name I refuse to spell with a dollar sign because it's stupid. Umm, Taylor Swift? James Blunt? Nickelback was the most successful band of the nineties, in terms of record sales? And what the hell's happened to U2? (To be fair, black artists seem as adverse to authenticity as white; The Black-Eyed Peas went from a socially conscious hip hop act to an idiot-baiting bubblegum pop group that doesn't so much record songs as they do jingles; rapper Ludacris has recorded with the latest white suburban teenage flash in the pan, Justin Bieber; why the fuck does anybody but fourteen year old girls listen to Rihanna???)

In the 1960's protest songs ruled the charts; led by the great Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Joan Baez, Phil Ochs, John Lennon railed against the government and stood as the soundtrack to the civil rights movement, becoming huge stars in the process. Music meant something at the time, it set out to accomplish something, and listeners were inspired by it. Today, music is a trifle, a diversion; people put on their headphones to tune out and get away from thinking. They blast computer-made, heartless beats into their ears, and revel in computer manipulated and corrected voices; guitars and rums, which at the birth of rock and roll were gloriously ragged and human, are now processed so completely that they rarely sound like guitars and drums even when they are real.

DESIGN: LETTERHEAD

Great design can be found in the simplest places; I present to you, courtesy of LEADERHEADY, well, letterheads...
The great artist, Roy Lichtenstein, circa 1971. (I HEART ROY LICHTENSTEIN.)

Marvel Comics, c. 1982.

My childhood favorites, Laurel & Hardy, c. date unknown.

A Special News Bulletin from the Office of Johnny Cash, c. 1960.

One of the most brilliant entertainers ever, P.T. Barnum, c. 1891.

And the bizarre:

The Church of Scientology, c. 1976.

Go HERE to see more.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

OTHER: STUMBLE!

I stumbled upon this:



From REDDIT.

Friday, February 26, 2010

ART: SHAUNA RICHARDSON

U.K.-based artist Shauna Richardson creates life-size, ultra-realistic animals using the medium of crochet. (She refers to her art as Crochetdermy.)

The Lioness.

A Jack-Rabbit.

A detail of the Brown Bear.

A mounted Fox.

The Monkey.

Richardson was chosen as one of a handful of artists to create works of art to be displayed around London during the 2012 Summer Olympics; her contribution will consist of three thirty-foot tall hand-crocheted lions, representing the East Highlands, home of Richard the Lionheart.

To see more of her work, and shots of her creations in their "natural habitats," visit her website HERE.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

MUSIC: WILLIAM ELLIOT WHITMORE

HERE is a clip of Whitmore performing Hell Or High Water

Saturday, February 20, 2010

DESIGN: MARK, BY DAMJAN STANKOVIć

I'm not one for internet abbreviations -webreviations?- but I'll make an exception this one time:

OMG I WTB THIS SUPER-AWESOME XC10 THING!!! IT'S EFFING G9!

It's a light for your bedside table...

That's also a bookmark for your bedtime reading!

Here's how it works:

When you put your book across it shuts off automatically!!! Unbelievable! Who thinks of such a thing?? (The answer is Damjan Stanković, a designer based out of Belgrade, Serbia, and you can see more of his work HERE.)

It's only in the prototype phase, but when it's released I will have one, I <3>

Here are a few other options for your bedside table:

The Nod Light by IC Designs...

My Pet Lamp by OFFI...

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

DESIGN: THE MAST HUMIDIFIER, BY SHIN OKADA

I've become kind of obsessed with beautiful designs for mundane things (see the parking garage below)and I'm not sure anything more mundane could be more beautiful than this humidifier, designed by Shin Okada from Japan. It's constructed from Hinoki Cypress -which, according to Wikipedia, is also used to build palaces, temples, traditional Noh theatres, and ping pong racquets- and uses absolutely no electricity: The wood absorbs the water from the base and diffuses it into the air, tinging it with a slight lemony scent.

Unfortunately, I don't think we have need for a new humidifier... Although, I believe that this one retails for under a hundred dollars...

Monday, February 1, 2010

DESIGN: EUREKA TOWER CARPARK

This is an underground parking garage in Melbourne, Australia... It's designed to look like absolutely nothing, until you're in the right place, looking at the design from the right angle, at which time all is revealed.

It feels weird to refer to a parking garage as brilliant, but c'mon... This is brilliant.




I would drive if parking garages were this fun.

This is incredible design; it turns the mundane into something artful.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

OTHER: FACEBOOK FAILS

I Stumbled on these today... They're dumb, but they're pretty funny.

I love a good Fail.

I found them on ODDEE, a pretty fun time-wasting site.



And my personal favorite:
Happy Sunday.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

ART?

I was looking at some art on Etsy, and found this when I searched for "Encaustic Paintings," and sorted them high-priced to low. I'm not entirely sure what to make of it...


I'm 90% sure this is a joke, like those terrible singers who pop up on American Idol. I know art is subjective and bladdy-blah, but I think that we can all agree that this is terrible. If you look closely you'll see that there's some hair glued to the piece near the top, and I think there are pipe cleaners in the bottom left hand corner, sticking out like tentacles. Ugly, ugly tentacles.

Here's the description that accompanies the painting:

"The painting is a collaborative piece of mind and matter, emphasizing the power of direction in the focus of surrealism. Bright glitter specs to muted beeswax melted into many recycled trinkets depicted the chakras, reality, violence & rebirth. The art is completely eco-designed, painted on salvages (sic) wood, local bought beeswax, and a year's worth collected junk that became part of the art."

I'm not sure if this is some kind of Kaufman-esque prank, and I'm less sure if it would be worse for this to be real, or to accept that my faith in art is so beaten up that I see something like this and believe that it might be real.

If only that write-up -that fucked up, garbled, say-nothing write-up- didn't sound so much like so many actual, real-life Artist's Statements...

There's a lack of respect for the artist these days, and most of that comes from so-called artistes, who think that throwing paint at canvasses -not in that Jackson Pollock kind of way- makes you real. Art is hard. Art takes skill, talent and practice. There is bad art, contrary to popular belief. I can judge someone else's art, and so can you; and you should, if for no other reason than art is hard.

And by the by: This painting is listed at $24,000. It's got to be a joke.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

DESIGN: LASER CUT FABRIC

From a company called Little Factory, out of Hong Kong... Laser-cut scarves and placemats, and coasters, and they also have lots of pretty great printed items, too.

Here are my favorite typography-based designs:

Laser-cut Uppercase scarf.

Laser-cut Numbered Placemats.


I love the way they've used just a detail
of the Serif font for this bag.

Click HERE to see more.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

ART: BROCK DAVIS

I Stumbled upon this art project by designer Brock Davis, who works out of Minneapolis. It's called Make Something Cool Every Day, and essentially involved Davis making something... What's the word? Cool? Pretty frequently, actually. In fact, every day of 2009. The works are consistently interesting and sometimes even brilliant. (There are very few duds.) But it's not just the quality of the execution that's fascinating; the sheer breadth of styles is mind-blowing. There are pencil sketches, conceptual pieces, photography, and even videos. There are drawings in human hair and expressionistic paintings. Here are a few of my favorites, but it would be worth your while to check out the remainder of the project, which can be found HERE.

Day One... January 1st. "Build."

January 3rd: "Rules-blank paper+thread+tape+exacto."

January 24th: "Shattered Coffee Cup."

February 20th: "Decowpitation."

March 13th: "That Was True."

June 5th: "Change of Heart."

June 25th: "56 Likes."

July 15th: "Elephat."

August 21st: "Foot."

September 21st: "Stairwell."

October 18th: "Nice Day."

October 21st: "I Only Play Sad Songs."

That's twelve of them there... Three hundred, and fifty... Some odd works left to see. So go see them.