If you're paying attention even a little bit, there really still is just too much great rocknroll music pouring out of basements and dark clubs worldwide to stuff into a 60-minute phony radio show every two weeks - yet I do try. The list of things I wanted to play is longer than the list of things I played, but I guess that's what happens when you shoehorn in a nine-minute, feedback-laden track off of a Velvet Underground bootleg - and expect people to listen. You'll listen, won't you?
DYNAMITE HEMORRHAGE RADIO #34 has got some absolute gnarl from modern bands like SEX TIDE (new track!), VELO, THE FIREWORKS and THE IN OUT. Would you believe DEATH OF SAMANTHA and ANIMALS & MEN are still with us, and have first-rate new recordings being played here? How about some brand new guitar bending from the misanthropic ALVARIUS B? Or some perfect new pop from Dunedin, New Zealand's TRICK MAMMOTH?
I even headed into the library for "deep cuts" from The Weirdos, Salvation Army, Spider and the Webs, Division Four and more. Listen up and maybe come over to iTunes and give it nice plug, hows about?
Download Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #34 here.
Stream or download the show on Soundcloud here.
Subscribe to the show on iTunes here.
Track listing:
ANIMALS AND MEN - Easy Riding
SEX TIDE - I Want To Die
THE LA DE DAs - How Is The Air Up There?
SALVATION ARMY - She Turns To Flowers
FLESH EATERS - Agony Shorthand
THE WEIRDOS - Scream Baby Scream (1977 demo)
THE FIREWORKS - Getting Nowhere Fast
DEATH OF SAMANTHA - Amphetamine
COACHWHIPS - Body and Brains
DIVISION FOUR - Doctor's Wife
SPIDER AND THE WEBS - Bacon Achin'
VELO - Out
TRICK MAMMOTH - Delphine (With a Purpose)
BELLE & SEBASTIAN - Lazy Line Painter Jane
THE VELVET UNDERGROUND - Run Run Run (live 1969, Hilltop Pop Festival)
ALVARIUS B - Yeah Well, Oyster Shells
GIBSON BROS - Broke Down Engine
THE IN OUT - The Stupidity
Past Shows:
Dynamite Hemorrhage #33 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #32 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #31 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #30 (playlist)
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
BOOK REVIEW: "THE SMARTEST KIDS IN THE WORLD AND HOW THEY GOT THAT WAY" by Amanda Ripley
For those of you Americans
with school-age children like me, you know that elementary and middle school
can be a time of endless hand-wringing, soul-searching and parental banter
about how to ensure the “best” or the “right” education for your children. Some
previously public-school-minded parents truck their kids off the private school
at the first sign of stagnation, and use the comparatively better institutional
structure, like-minded peer groups & heightened academic rigor as salves
for their tremendously lightened savings accounts. My wife and I not there
(yet, if ever). We’re still working through how much of a contribution to make
at home, at our son’s public school itself, and in advocacy on a broader scale
to institute meaningful change at the district and even federal level, as soon
as we figure out exactly what it is that needs changing.
It can get to be something
of a preoccupation, you might say. I suppose that’s healthy at some level. Did
our parents care so much about the schools we went to and the education we were
getting? It depends on whom your parents were, but mine sent me to the
neighborhood schools in the 70s and 80s; I was a fairly decent student in those
schools; I learned the basics while doing almost no homework; and outside of
admonishments to get A’s and B’s (which I mostly did), it didn’t seem like much
hand-wringing about the broader system was happening at home. The only educational controversies I
remember were racial flare-ups I’d read about in other states: busing, and
other harbingers of white flight and black acceptance only a decade after the
Civil Right Act.
Yet as the US sees itself
fall further and further down the academic achievement scales relative to other
countries (with math, science and reading scores being the harbingers of doom),
and as American parents reach their boiling points with regard to intransigent
teacher’s unions, underqualified teachers; dim-witted, dumbed-down curricula
and so on, there’s a cottage industry in books and films seeking to make a
difference. We’ve seen just in this country how successful people who challenge
the institutional status quo can be, in the limited arenas in which they’ve
been allowed to experiment; witness Eva Moskowitz’s Success Academies in New
York or Geoffrey Canada’s Harlem Children’s Zone in the same state; or Michelle
Rhee’s attempt as Washington DC chancellor to tie teacher compensation to
student performance, while rooting out the ancient “battle axe” teachers
collecting paychecks to babysit while the minds of the children rot in their
classrooms.
Amanda Ripley decided not to rehash
the arguments we’ve been having as a nation about vouchers, charters, unions
and so on in her book, and instead trained her eye on those nations that were scoring
highest on the standardized PISA test. What did Finland, South Korea and Poland
do differently than the United States, mired as it is in test-taking mediocrity
next to the likes of Estonia and Spain in collective scholastic ability, and
yet with such loftier economic heights from which to fall? She followed a cadre
of American high schoolers as they spent years abroad in Finnish, South Korean
and Polish schools, and came back with some pretty strong insights that she
dishes out piecemeal, in the Socratic method, throughout the book.
More than anything else, she
observes that we Americans do not insist on rigor:
in our teachers, nor in our students. We’re behind because we’re lazy and
proud. We let teachers become teachers on the flimsiest of requirements, which
institutionalizes mediocrity in students. We then barely pay them a respectful
wage, thereby repelling the best and brightest in our society, whom we need
more than ever as teachers, into other fields. In Finland, the teaching
profession is revered, and only 30% of applicants to the teaching colleges are
accepted, and must pass a series of intense tests to graduate and begin their
careers. They’re also paid well, befitting their place in Finnish society.
Teenage students in Finland, while far more alike than different than their American
equivalents, take school extremely seriously. It is a culture in which kids can
still be kids, with leisure time the equal of ours, but one in which education
holds a central and sacred place in society from cradle to collage.
We also hold our students to
far lower standards, letting them skate by to graduation and finding untold
numbers of excuses in allowing them to do so. Other societies profiled by
Ripley (as well as in my aforementioned US examples) have proven that kids, no
matter whether rich or poor or white or brown, can deliver exceptional results
with the right teachers, rewards and admonishments. It starts with rigor, and
it continues with a belief in education for its own sake (and for its role in a
better life, both economically and otherwise). We parents, important as we are
as we dutifully read to our kids at home, actually have less to do with
eventual scholastic achievement and skills-gathering than we think. Teachers,
society-accepted incentives (If I go to
college I will break the cycle of poverty and lack of achievement I was born
into) and even peer environment matter greater more.
Ripley also takes aim at the
ridiculously disproportionate importance of sports
in American schools, relative to the nations with whom we compete in education.
I heartily agree. The amount of money and attention lavished on athletic
programs in high schools is shameful when so many students are dropping out or
floundering in mediocre, rigor-free schools. We as a culture have let sports so define our way of life that we
pretend that all this in-school and afterschool athletic activity funded by our
taxes is good for all (reducing obesity etc.), when in fact only a small subset
of students actually participate in it. In other countries, as Ripley deftly shows,
sports have their place – but not at
school. (South Koreans have their own obsession on scholastic achievement
that’s potentially more damaging, which Ripley, to her credit, does not flinch
from condemning in the least).
I found this book far more eye-opening
and better-written than Paul Tough’s and a
better spur to action to boot. Ripley write simply but forcefully, and she’s
non-ideological while radiating acres of common sense. There aren’t miracles
happening overseas that we can’t replicate, and there aren’t magical qualities
genetically imbued in Finns or Poles that make their kids able to do things
ours can’t. They’ve just received, and acted on, some essential truths about
learning and achievement faster than we have, and their societies are reaping
the gains accordingly. May we be so brave as to shake up our own stagnant and
outdated educational systems as well as they have.
Sunday, March 23, 2014
BOOK REVIEW: "SO MANY BOOKS: READING AND PUBLISHING IN AN AGE OF ABUNDANCE" by Gabriel Zaid
Excessively literate book obsessives are an
exceptionally narcissistic tribe; how else to explain the incredible amount of
available books that happen to be themselves
dissertations about books, or that concern the pleasures of reading, or are
instead navel-gazing studies into the mind of the reader whilst reading? I’m
certainly not immune, and Gabriel Zaid’s short treatise on books isn’t the
first such missive I’ve spent money on in order to justify or deepen my attachment
to reading and/or console myself as such. 2003’s “So Many Books: Reading and Publishing in an Age of Abundance”, which I
observantly read in true printed hardback dorm, could qualify now length-wise
as a “Kindle single”, and is really akin to a nice long magazine article. I
know I read it in 90 minutes, tops, and yet my reptilian, reading, narcissistic
brain experience the act of doing so as pure pleasure.
Zaid is a Mexican author
whom I probably should know more about, but don’t. His book on books was
written as a defense and response against the cry of the bewildered, against
the chicken littles who in 2003 (and even still today) see the imminent death
of books and of measured, informed reading. He proceeds, Borges-like, into an
abstract recitation of facts and figures that show just how defenseless we are
against the massive mountains of books that are published every day, and that
have already been published. In other words, there is more quality literature
and nonfiction available to read than any sentient human being could conquer,
even in of hundreds of lifetimes. Zaid defends those of us who have to
delicately carve out time to read books in an age in which “leisure time” is often
anything but, particularly when parenting; or when engaged in all-consuming employment;
or when stacked against many other compelling entertainment and leisure
activities - and so on. That many of us still read books at all (to say nothing
of the fact that publishing is growing, not shrinking) is, to Zaid, a true measure
of their nearly infinite staying power.
Many of his insights are
pithy, and are delivered accordingly, but the net result is a nice
state-of-the-industry and a philosophical inquiry into the psyche of the reader.
The fact that it’s 11 years old now doesn’t really figure so much, except for
the salient fact that his observations are all pre-Kindle, pre-tablet, and
therefore there are at least 30 pages or so of missed exploration that I’d have
enjoyed seeing him weigh in on. It’s a nice companion to the similarly-constructed
(and even better) mini-tome “The Pleasures of Reading in an Age of Distraction”by Alan Jacobs. Read ‘em both!
Friday, March 14, 2014
DYNAMITE HEMORRHAGE RADIO #33
Stream or download yet another in my series of bi-weekly phony radio shows - DYNAMITE HEMORRHAGE RADIO #33. This one explores the recent "Punk 45: Kill The Hippies etc." compilation that Soul Jazz put out; doses out a 15-minute krautrock classic; includes some wild DIY stuff from bands with names like Pissy Relay Switches, Occult Chemistry and Bona Dish; and unveils some pretty stellar new stuff from WET BLANKETS, AUSMUTEANS, PANG, VELO, TRAMPOLINE TEAM and more. More on-"mic" shucking and jiving than usual, too.
Download Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #33 here.
Stream or download the show over on Soundcloud here.
Subscribe to the show on iTunes.
Track listing:
WET BLANKETS - TV Suicide
AUSMUTEANTS – Felix Tried To Kill Himself
LUNG LEG – Kung Fu on the Internet
ANGST – Die Fighting
IRREPERABLES – Digested System
THE ZEROS – Wild Weekend
SAUNA YOUTH – Oh Joel
FLAMIN’ GROOVIES – Dog Meat
VERTIGO – Front End Loader
SCRATCH ACID – The Final Kiss
KENDRA SMITH – Aurelia
TRAMPOLINE TEAM – I’m So Popular
DEAR NORA – Make You Smile
ANA HAUSEN – Professionals
TUXEDOMOON – Joeboy the Electronic Ghost
VELO – Small Town Minded Boy
PANG – Young Professionals
OCCULT CHEMISTRY – Water
PISSY RELAY SWITCHES – Telephone Man
BONA DISH – Challenge
CAN – Mother Sky
Past Shows:
Dynamite Hemorrhage #32 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #31 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #30 (playlist)
Download Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #33 here.
Stream or download the show over on Soundcloud here.
Subscribe to the show on iTunes.
Track listing:
WET BLANKETS - TV Suicide
AUSMUTEANTS – Felix Tried To Kill Himself
LUNG LEG – Kung Fu on the Internet
ANGST – Die Fighting
IRREPERABLES – Digested System
THE ZEROS – Wild Weekend
SAUNA YOUTH – Oh Joel
FLAMIN’ GROOVIES – Dog Meat
VERTIGO – Front End Loader
SCRATCH ACID – The Final Kiss
KENDRA SMITH – Aurelia
TRAMPOLINE TEAM – I’m So Popular
DEAR NORA – Make You Smile
ANA HAUSEN – Professionals
TUXEDOMOON – Joeboy the Electronic Ghost
VELO – Small Town Minded Boy
PANG – Young Professionals
OCCULT CHEMISTRY – Water
PISSY RELAY SWITCHES – Telephone Man
BONA DISH – Challenge
CAN – Mother Sky
Past Shows:
Dynamite Hemorrhage #32 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #31 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #30 (playlist)
Sunday, March 2, 2014
DYNAMITE HEMORRHAGE RADIO #32
There's a mighty wind of righteous and gnarly tuneage blowing across my computer in the form of DYNAMITE HEMORRHAGE RADIO #32, our (appx.) bi-weekly podcast of the best and brightest raw, sub-underground rock music of the last 50 years. Given that I'd been m.i.a. for three weeks, I tacked on an additional 15 minutes of crazed RnR, extending the life of this podcast past our normal hour limit to a big 1:15. That's enough to burn on a CD-R, and enough for you to press the download or play button and listen to it right about now.
"New" or "new-ish" is an operative word this time, with less-than-1-year old stuff in play from VELO, BRIDGE COLLAPSE, GROWTH, POW!, SAUNA YOUTH, FLESH WORLD, PANG, NEONATES and more. I then stuffed in a couple of New Zealand Velvets-mining classics from The Terminals and The Pin Group; some English DIY from Desperate Bicycles and Cardiac Arrest, some 50s/60s girl stuff, and what the hell, even a Misfits tune.
Download Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #32 here.
Stream (or download) the show on Soundcloud here.
Listen to, and subscribe to the show on iTunes here.
Track listing:
VELO - I'm in Hate
SAUNA YOUTH - False Jesli Pt. II
IRREPARABLES - Broken Sound
PANG - Attention Deficit
THE FALL-OUTS - Like Me
MISS ALEX WHITE & THE RED ORCHESTRA - She Wanna
POW! - Cyber Attack!!
THE MISFITS - TV Casualty
MAD VIRGINS - I Am A Computer
KENT III - The Palms
SO SO MANY WHITE WHITE TIGERS - Paws
DESPERATE BICYCLES - Handlebars
BRIDGE COLLAPSE - Blockbreaker
GRASS WIDOW - Tattoo
THE PIN GROUP - Coat
PALACE BROTHERS - Drinking Woman
NEONATES - Gridlock
CARDIAC ARREST - T.V. Friends
GOOD THROB - Double White Demin
DIANE RAY - Please Don't Talk To The Lifeguard
ARLETTE ZOLA - Mathematiques Elementaire
LONG BLONDES - New Idols
FLESH WORLD - Sturdy Swiss Hiker
GROWTH - Whip
THE TERMINALS - Do The Void
Past Shows:
Dynamite Hemorrhage #31 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #30 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #29 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #28 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #27 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #26 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #25 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #24 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #23 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #22 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #21 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #20 (playlist)
"New" or "new-ish" is an operative word this time, with less-than-1-year old stuff in play from VELO, BRIDGE COLLAPSE, GROWTH, POW!, SAUNA YOUTH, FLESH WORLD, PANG, NEONATES and more. I then stuffed in a couple of New Zealand Velvets-mining classics from The Terminals and The Pin Group; some English DIY from Desperate Bicycles and Cardiac Arrest, some 50s/60s girl stuff, and what the hell, even a Misfits tune.
Download Dynamite Hemorrhage Radio #32 here.
Stream (or download) the show on Soundcloud here.
Listen to, and subscribe to the show on iTunes here.
Track listing:
VELO - I'm in Hate
SAUNA YOUTH - False Jesli Pt. II
IRREPARABLES - Broken Sound
PANG - Attention Deficit
THE FALL-OUTS - Like Me
MISS ALEX WHITE & THE RED ORCHESTRA - She Wanna
POW! - Cyber Attack!!
THE MISFITS - TV Casualty
MAD VIRGINS - I Am A Computer
KENT III - The Palms
SO SO MANY WHITE WHITE TIGERS - Paws
DESPERATE BICYCLES - Handlebars
BRIDGE COLLAPSE - Blockbreaker
GRASS WIDOW - Tattoo
THE PIN GROUP - Coat
PALACE BROTHERS - Drinking Woman
NEONATES - Gridlock
CARDIAC ARREST - T.V. Friends
GOOD THROB - Double White Demin
DIANE RAY - Please Don't Talk To The Lifeguard
ARLETTE ZOLA - Mathematiques Elementaire
LONG BLONDES - New Idols
FLESH WORLD - Sturdy Swiss Hiker
GROWTH - Whip
THE TERMINALS - Do The Void
Past Shows:
Dynamite Hemorrhage #31 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #30 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #29 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #28 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #27 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #26 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #25 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #24 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #23 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #22 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #21 (playlist)
Dynamite Hemorrhage #20 (playlist)