"Pokemon is exactly like record collecting except that instead of black discs you're gathering up small lumpy animals with bright colors.
They both make funny sounds when you poke them with needles, though."
"Pokemon is exactly like record collecting except that instead of black discs you're gathering up small lumpy animals with bright colors.
They both make funny sounds when you poke them with needles, though."
Posted at 09:23 AM | Permalink | Comments (17)
I always liked the name "Soul Asylum". In fact, probably more than I liked the band itself if I'm being brutally honest. It sounded like it should have been the name of a band with a much harder sound.
Soul Asylum are one of those bands that I'm always vaguely surprised are still around. There was a moment when their star burnt very brightly - around 1992 they released "Runaway Train"
Frontman Dave Pirner dated Winona Ryder, appearing briefly in "Reality Bites" with her, was part of the "allstar" group put together for Beatles bio-pic "Backbeat" and also became friendly with Kevin Smith (back when he was considered the indie auteur wunderkind) providing tracks for "Clerks" and "Chasing Amy".
And then ... nothing.
I have hazy recollections of the track "Misery"
but, unusually for me, I couldn't tell you what album it was on or even what year it came out.
Apparently they're still knocking around and are working on a new album.
So now you know.
Posted at 01:03 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Posted at 12:38 AM | Permalink | Comments (2)
From Dependable Letterpress for clients Turner Duckworth. There's no specific URL and it doesn't look like you can buy them but ... I want these so hard ...
and then turned the other way up
Posted at 10:26 AM | Permalink | Comments (2)
I was mooching around today when The Prodigy's "No Good / Start The Dance" (which was my second ever "90s Music Monday" over 3 years ago) randomly shuffled round on the old WalkPod and I got to thinking how it (or its video) haven't aged badly at all.
Then later today when I was mentally scanning through my CD collection I remembered Little Angels. Who have dated badly.
I mean, the video for "Soap Box" largely consists of the puppets from "Spitting Image" which is perhaps the zenith of dated pop culture references. Unfortunately the the only copy of the video on YouTube is set as "embedding not allowed" as are, it seems, every other one of their videos.
Because clearly the ability to embed 17 year old videos is what is preventing record sales.
You can watch the video here and also the video for "Womankind" here.
But basically imagine an English version of Exteme's "More Than Words"
In fact, the woman in the video for "Womankind" does look a little bit like Nuno Bettencourt
Posted at 05:29 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
I cooked for a bunch (14 I think in the end) of people on Friday. Sadly I forgot to take photos because I was really happy with everything for once. Plus it was family style so my usual inability to plate wasn't evident
The pork was served with Elote from the "Elote Cafe Cookbook" fire-roasted corn kernels doused with chili, lime, cojita cheese and spicy mayonnaise), roasted peppers, garlic and cherry tomatoes and a salad of shredded Iceberg lettuce with apple slices and a mint vinaigrette.
The pork itself was really simple:
I preheated the oven to about 205°C/400°F and stuck a roasting tin in to get hot.
I got 7lbs of deboned Pork loin and cut the string that bound the two parts together (the stuff I got from WholeFoods was in two parts which worked out well because it was much quicker to cook and fitted easily in my oven) then scored the sides lightly in a diamond pattern.
Then I blended together 1 tbsp rock salt, 3-4 tbsp fennel seeds and 3-4 tbsp of dried chili flakes until they were granular but not yet powdered. Then I added the peeled cloves from a whole head of garlic and the zest and juice from two medium sized oranges and whizzed the whole lot into a paste, adjusting with oil to get the consistency I wanted. I deliberately made it a little salty - mostly because I like salt but also because I wanted the fatty side to crisp up a bit (I should really check with Harold McGee on whether that's actually scientifically sound but it's based on what I do to get crackling on Roast Pork).
I rubbed the marinade all over both sides of the pork - if I'd had time I'd have like to leave it for a few hours, maybe over night, but I didn't have the luxury.
I took the roasting pan out of the oven and put the pork in, fat side down where appropriate and then stuck it back in the oven. After about 20 minutes I took it back out again and turned the pork over. The reason for this was to get a nice sear on the fat initially and then, after 20 minutes when the juices had started to come out I could turn it over so the fat got crisped up but the rest of the meat got a bit of a braise.
I could be wrong but I seem to remember it taking about 40-50 minutes in total - basically it depends on the thickness of the meat. Check the internal temperature after the first 20 minutes and then check again after about 40 minutes (or sooner if the first check showed the temperature to be near 155°C).
When it was ready I took it out, covered and rested it for about 10-15 minutes and then sliced it into thick slices. I decanted the juices from the pan, deglazed it with some white wine (cider or orange juice would work as well) then added that back into the liquid and skimmed off as much fat as possible.
There wasn't much leftover but it made an awesome sandwich the next day with the left over salad.
Posted at 11:43 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Maciej is staying on a tiny island called Spildra just north of the 70th parallel - "a little rectangular block of land about four miles long in the Kvænangen fjord". It has a population of 43.
"[a] cellular phone can be used all over the island"
"it's easier to get a good cup of tea and decent mobile phone reception up the side of Ben Nevis than it is to get either of those anywhere in the whole of the US"
Posted at 03:19 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
The Propellerheads sort of exploded onto the musical conciousness in Britain in 1998. Before then there had been a little known EP, a remix of John Barry's "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" theme for James Bond on David Arnold's "Shaken and Stirred" project and then came "decksanddrumsandrockandroll" which was one of those albums that it seemed like everybody you knew bought simultaneously in some sort of gestalt hive mind event around the time that "History Repeating" came out featuring Miss Shirley Bassey with genre blending jazz/big beat fusion sound and a aesthetic that took the laid back feel of the latter with the cool daddy-o sharpness of the former.
Then came "The Matrix".
The official video for "Spybreak!" looks like this
but in pretty much everyone's minds it actually looks like this
Posted at 11:49 AM | Permalink | Comments (3)
Matt Smith (aka The 11th Doctor) on stage doing "Doctor?" with Orbital at Glastonbury
Posted at 10:22 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Posted at 09:22 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)