here’s a riddle for you

Why is it that people who play their music too loudly (in their car in the alley behind your building, for example, or in the apartment next door) always play crappy music?

New next-door neighbors moved in yesterday. They look like adults, but I’ve been treated to what sounds like MTV pop/r&b all afternoon. Just once I’d like to hear a car drive by blasting Liz Phair, the Pixies, say, or the Clash.

Okay, how do I deal with this? “Hi, I’m your neighbor. Would you turn that shit down?” No, that won’t work. “Hi, I’m your neighbor. You know, you’re obviously so clueless about apartment living we’ll probably be able to hear you having sex.” Nope. “Hi, you voted for Bush, didn’t you?” Nah. “Hi. Ever hear of the social contract?” Uh-unh.

Suggestions?

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a ghost is born

According to Pitchforkmedia, Wilco is about to head out on tour in support of their new album A Ghost is Born, which you can listen to in its entirety online. They are scheduled to perform in Manchester (UK) on July 14 at Manchester Academy, a venue I passed twice a day last summer as I trekked between The Verdene and the John Rylands University Library. I should, in fact, be in Manchester on July 14 and will probably be staying only a short walk from the venue. So while their show in Columbia (MO) was cancelled, it looks like I’ll get to see them after all.

In other music news, I recently purchased Loretta Lynn’s new album, the Jack White-produced Van Lear Rose (iTunes), largely because I liked what I heard when she performed “Portland, Oregon” on the David Letterman show recently. I’ve picked what I think are the four best tracks (iTunes iMix), if you want to give her new music a try.

This morning we leave for San Francisco, where we will be staying at the Hotel Rex. Apparently, we will be close to Lawrence Ferlinghetti‘s City Lights Bookstore, a landmark of American literary history. It’s been twenty years since my last visit to the city. My junior year of high school was spent in northern California, a beautiful part of the world. Unfortunately, it was one in a string of bad years: four schools and three countries in four years. That was a long time ago, though.

William Gibson’s Pattern Recognition will be coming along as airplane reading. The very first page features this particularly nice passage:

She knows, now, absolutely, hearing the white noise that is London, that Damien’s theory of jet lag is correct, that her mortal soul is leagues behind her, being reeled in on some ghostly umbilical down the vanished wake of the plane that brought her here, hundreds of thousands of feet above the Atlantic. Souls can’t move that quickly, and are left behind, and must be awaited, upon arrival, like lost luggage.

The aforementioned graduation present will be, as Sheri suggested, cash.

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procrastination

I’m using iTunes lately to listen to music on the computer. Maybe it’s just my Mac lust kicking in, but I like it much better than Winamp or MusicMatch (and don’t get me started on the annoying Realplayer). These players have very similar features, but I’ve been able to figure them out much more quickly on iTunes than on its competitors. One feature I like is the ability to export easily, as a text file, various playlists from your collection. Here’s the “party shuffle” I’m listening to as I calculate semester grades.

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from the “where are they now?” files

I met David Daniell when he was a 19-year-old freshman at Georgia Tech, playing guitar in his first band at a house party just off campus. Now he has his own record label, Antiopic, which has just released a CD featuring members of Sonic f’ing Youth.

Last year, Antiopic released a monthly series of free, downloadable mp3s entitled Allegorical Power, a project exploring “the possibilities and roles of abstract or experimental music as social and political response.”

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do they have a toddler mosh pit?

Checking in on the daily news at Pitchforkmedia, I came across a reference to “the D.C.-based ‘punk rock kids’ show’ Pancake Mountain” and I thought, “There’s a punk rock kids’ show named Pancake Mountain?”

Yes, there is.

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