Rebar return to Greensboro, June 25, 2016

Last night I drove to Greensboro to see one of my all-time favorite NC bands, Rebar. Their heyday was the mid-late 90s, and their claim to fame was a catalog of songs that took the skewed guitar-driven indie-rock of the time, and intermittently fucked with the speed control. They’d be cruising along at a semi-normal tempo & then suddenly everything would smear and slow down to a crawl.

(Their other claim to fame was an unexpectedly brilliant end-to-end cover of The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars, which they performed maybe a half-dozen times to crowds of people with mouths hanging open in astonishment.)

Rebar split up nearly 20 years ago. Their breakup was an odd one — guitarist Masa Koyama had to return to Japan (maybe something to do with visa expiry — it was a long time ago & my memory is fuzzy). They briefly reformed around the turn of the millennium with guitarist Scott Hicks but couldn’t regain the momentum.

Cut to this summer: some oldschool Greensboro folks decided to throw a homecoming/reunion weekend, complete with band reunions. Conversations started. The next thing we knew, word trickled out that Masa had booked a plane ticket & Rebar would be playing.

So it was that ~75 middle-aged people (and maybe 25-30 of their kids) convened on a farm outside of Greensboro last night to sit around in the twilight, catch up on old times, and watch Rebar (as well as even-older Greensboro band Slowchange Madagascar) shamble through a set of songs that sounded as fresh and weird now as they did 20 years ago.

I only shot video of one song, “Acquaintances.” Here it is:

As sometimes happens, the momentum built up via the reunion planning overflowed & resulted in the band finally getting it together enough to master & release the full-length album that they had completed but never released. It is phenomenal. You can buy it here. I strongly encourage you to do so.

Rebar return to Greensboro, June 25, 2016

TL;DR: Politics in NC, the 90% shorter version

Hi! I just posted an update to this information, which you can read here.

My post yesterday breaking down all the contested NC House & Senate races was pretty long (3700 words). Here’s a bare-bones distillation. It necessarily omits a lot of info.

OK, that’s it. I still think you should go read my other post, but I totally understand if you don’t.

TL;DR: Politics in NC, the 90% shorter version

Concrete things you can do to fix NC politics

HI! I just posted an update to this, which you can read here.

Say you wanted to do something about actually changing NC politics, apart from all the typing you’re doing on social media. What are your options?

EDIT(s) based on ppl’s comments:

  • I wrote a TL;DR for this, in case you get halfway through this & feel overwhelmed.
  • This post assumes that you are already highly educated about the races in your area. If not, FIX THAT. City councils matter. County boards of commissioners matter. School board races matter. One resource for unbiased candidate info is the League of Women Voters. If you live in the Triangle, the Indy does a great job (even if they endorsed the wrong presidential candidate this year). If you live in Durham, the People’s Alliance takes its endorsement process very seriously.

Donate to, or volunteer with, progressive organizations

Here’s a list of organizations doing good & important work, work that will hopefully help shift NC politics in a more positive direction come November. There are only seven groups on this list, so you can take the 10-15 minutes necessary to click and read about them.

Donate to, or volunteer for, statewide candidates

These are all solid candidates, even Roy Cooper, who as Attorney General has stood up to Pat McCrory and the NC legislature in refusing to enforce or defend extremist and unconstitutional laws on multiple occasions, even though he knew it would result in negative campaigning against him. (I didn’t vote for him in the primary because he jumped on the “no Syrian refugees to NC” bandwagon, but he’s still 10000000x better than Pat McCrory)

There’s no way to recover Democratic control of either branch of the state legislature this year, so having a strong set of executive-branch folks will be crucial in mitigating the damage that the legislature is likely to continue to do. And getting rid of Senator Richard Burr would be outstanding, to boot.

  • June Atkinson for State Superintendent of Public Instruction
    June Atkinson has been NC schools superintendent since 2005; she won her most recent election in 2012 with 54.2% of the vote.
  • Linda Coleman for Lieutenant Governor
    Last time Linda Coleman faced Dan Forest, in the 2012 Lt. Gov race, he only won 50.1% to 49.9%, or under 7000 votes. We can take this one!
  • Roy Cooper for Governor
    Any one of the stuffed animals at the TROSA Thrift Store would make a better governor than Pat McCrory, so this is a no-brainer no matter what. The fact is that Roy has been a good Attorney General, and has been remarkable in his willingness to shirk his nominal “official duty” when it comes to defending laws that are patently unconstitutional.
  • Dan Blue III for Treasurer
    Democrat Janet Cowell has been our treasurer for two terms, but she’s not seeking reelection. Democrat Dan Blue III, the son of one of the most powerful (and popular) NC legislators, is running. He has a background in law and finance, although he obviously grew up steeped in NC politics as well. Cowell won her last election with 53.8% of the vote.
  • Elaine Marshall for Secretary of State
    Elaine Marshall has been the NC Secretary of State since 1996. She won in 2012 (when McCrory was elected governor) with 53.8% of the vote, which is hardly a landslide, but still impressive, considering.
  • Charles Meeker for Commissioner of Labor
    Meeker was the hugely popular mayor of Raleigh, but can he overcome Cherie K Berry’s unfair photo-based advantage?
  • Deborah Ross for US Senate
    Deborah Ross is currently polling behind Richard Burr, but she’s not out of the running. This is a key race where donations & volunteering could help.
  • Josh Stein for Attorney General
    In the primary, there were more votes cast for Josh than for his Republican opponent (and more for the Democrats than the Republicans overall), but it was a tight margin. Again, this is winnable, but it will take work.
  • Beth Wood for State Auditor
    Beth Wood is seeking her third term as state Auditor. She has held the job since 2009. She won reelection in 2012 with over 53% over the vote.

Donate to, or volunteer for, NC state legislature candidates

Here’s where it gets interesting. In the NC State House, Republicans have a veto-proof supermajority (60% of members are required to override a veto; the Republicans currently hold 75 seats, with Democrats holding 45, giving them 62.5%), but they only need to lose 4 seats in order to lose that supermajority.

Likewise, in the NC Senate, Republicans currently hold 33 of 50 seats (Democrats hold 15, and 2 are vacant). Republicans would only need to lose 4 of those 33 in order to lose their supermajority.

Thanks to the extremely partisan gerrymandering of NC legislative districts, only 46 NC House districts are actually contested this November, although all 120 seats are elected every time. Likewise in the Senate, only 32 of the 50 seats are actually contested.

Among those seats that are even contested, only perhaps 1/3 of them are even remotely competitive. Nevertheless, if Democrats can win all or most of those, those 4 necessary seats in the House & the Senate could be obtained. We’re highly unlikely to flip control of either body, but securing the veto for a Democratic governor would be a huge step forward.

A few notes: pretty much all of these candidates are running on a platform of improving education in NC. Some of them, particularly in coastal & mountain areas, are also pretty actively pro-environmental causes. Some of them have Lillian’s List endorsements, which means they’re women who are on the record as being strongly pro-choice (and whom Lillian’s List has decided have a chance at winning). I have noted those.

It is much harder to get a reading on their positions re: HB2. Those in more urban districts are far more likely to have made public statements in opposition to HB2. Some others have made slightly vaguer statements about legislative overreach. It can be hard to run as a Democrat in a rural district in NC.

You’ll have to make your own decisions about whether to support rural Democrats who haven’t made anti-HB2 statements. I wish I could say that they’d vote in a bloc with Democrats once elected, but the HB2 vote itself taught us that we can’t rely on that, with 11 Democrats voting for it. Nearly all of those were men over the age of 60 in safe districts with no Republican opposition. Maybe that’s a template for whom to avoid this time around.

Likely NC State House candidates

So where do we start? Let’s begin with Democratic candidates in potentially winnable districts that are currently held by Republicans, since that’s where the most potential impact is:

  • District 2: Joe Parrish
    This seat that covers Roxboro & Creedmoor was held by Democrats until 2014, when it flipped to Republican, with current incumbent Larry Yarborough taking 56.7% of the vote. Joe Parrish is strongly opposed to HB2, and has a shot at returning this seat to Democratic control.
  • District 6: Warren Judge
    This is the seat currently held by Paul Tine, elected as a Democrat, now an “unaffiliated” who caucuses with the Republicans. Tine won this seat with 53.6% of the vote. Tine isn’t running for reelection, which makes this an excellent chance to retain this seat for a [hopefully] actual real Democrat. This district covers the Outer Banks and Belhaven. I have not been able to find a public statement from Warren Judge regarding HB2.
  • District 9: Brian Farkas
    This one is interesting — this seat only went Republican by 51.5% in 2012. It was 60/40 in 2014, probably because the Democrat was a [really awesome] college student named Uriah Ward who looked like he was 16 years old. Brian may actually have a real chance, much moreso than Uriah did. I can’t find any policy statement from Brian about HB2. He has come out strongly in favor of non-partisan redistricting, however.
  • District 35: Terence Everitt
    This is the seat in northern Wake County that covers Rolesville & parts of Wake Forest. Republican incumbent Chris Malone won his 2014 race with 56% of the vote. I reached out to Terence to ask for a statement on HB2, and I got a private response from his campaign manager, offering to let me talk to Terence on the phone. No public statement was offered. I didn’t call him.
  • District 36: Jen Ferrell
    This is the Apex/Cary seat currently held by Republican Nelson Dollar, who got 54% of the vote in 2014. Democrat Jen Ferrell is enthusiastic and media-savvy, and is a very strong opponent of HB2. This seat is a must-win.
  • District 40: Joe John
    This is the northwestern Wake County seat currently held by Republican Marilyn Avila, who took 54.3% of the vote in 2014. Her challenger, Joe John, has been silent on social media since just before HB2 was passed, so I don’t know his position. It would be great to see all of Wake go Democratic this year, however.
  • District 49: Cynthia Ball
    This is one of the core Raleigh seats in the NC House. Republican incumbent Gary Pendleton only won it with 51.6% of the vote in 2014. Cynthia Ball is endorsed by Lillian’s List, and has expressed her opposition to HB2.
  • District 53: Jon Blum
    This district covers the portion of Harnett County that includes Angier, Dunn & Erwin. Republican incumbent David Lewis took 55.7% of the vote in 2014. His challenger Jon Blum is strongly opposed to HB2.
  • District 88: Mary Belk
    This is one of the Mecklenburg County/Charlotte metro area seats. Republican incumbent Rob Bryan took 55.4% of the vote in 2014. Democrat Mary Belk has expressed some opposition to HB2.
  • District 92: Chaz Beasley
    This is a super-thin slice on the far western edge of Mecklenburg county. Chaz Beasley is strongly opposed to HB2, and is a strong campaigner. Republican incumbent Charles Jeter only took 52.5% of the vote in 2014.
  • District 93: Sue Counts
    This district includes Boone, but is nonetheless in Republican control. This is a rematch of the 2014 election, in which Republican incumbent Jonathan Jordan took 53% of the vote. Sue Counts should have more name recognition this time around. She is strongly opposed to HB2.
  • District 118: Rhonda Cole Schandevel
    This is a district in far western NC, including Maggie Valley. Republican incumbent Michele Presnell only took 51.3% of the vote in both 2012 and 2014. Rhonda Cole Schandevel is a pro-choice progressive Democrat supported by Lillian’s List, although I’m unable to find any statement from her regarding HB2.

Next, let’s look at current House Democrats in tight reelection races. If we don’t win these, we lose ground:

  • District 41: Gale Adcock
    Gale represents parts of western Wake County. She flipped this district from Republican to Democrat in 2014, taking 51.3% of the vote. She was absent when the House voted on HB2 and I have been unable to find a statement from her regarding it. She was a Lillian’s List candidate in 2014, so I know she is progressive and pro-choice, but I don’t know her definitive stance on HB2.
  • District 44: Billy Richardson
    Billy represents Fayetteville, and is one of the 11 House Democrats who voted for HB2. But he has subsequently apologized for that, in a meaningful way. He won his last race, in 2014, with 52.5% of the vote.
  • District 54: Robert Reives
    Robert represents Chatham county in the NC House, along with just enough of Lee county to cover his home in Sanford. He won his 2014 election with 56% of the vote. Despite that fairly close margin, he voted against HB2.
  • District 115: John Ager
    John represents parts of Buncombe County. He flipped his district from Republican to Democrat in 2014, but he only took 50.8% of the vote. He voted against HB2.
  • District 116: Brian Turner
    Brian is our other Buncombe County success story from 2014, when he successfully flipped his district from Republican to Democrat. He took 52% of the vote in 2014. He voted against HB2.
  • District 119: Joe Sam Queen
    Joe Sam Queen is from Waynesville & represents parts of far Western NC. He didn’t travel to Raleigh for the special session, but spoke out against HB2. He won his most recent election in 2014 with 52.6% of the vote.

And one open seat currently held by a Democrat who isn’t running for reelection:

  • District 46: Tim Benton
    This seat went to the Democrat with 53.4% of the vote in 2014, and 54% of the vote in 2012. It represents all or part of Bladen, Columbus & Robeson counties. Democrat Tim Benton hasn’t made any public statements about HB2.

Here’s a list of other current House Democrats whose races aren’t quite as close, but are still contested:

  • District 7: Bobbie Richardson
    Bobbie was unopposed in 2012 and 2014. She’s opposed now, but this seat is comparatively safe. Bobbie voted against HB2.
  • District 11: Duane Hall
    Duane is a Wake County representative who voted against HB2. He won his 2014 election with 61.5% of the vote.
  • District 18: Susi Hamilton
    Susi is from Wilmington. She voted against HB2. She won her 2014 election with 66.5% of the vote.
  • District 30: Paul Luebke
    Paul Luebke has represented Durham for something like 18 years. He was unopposed in 2012 and 2014. He was absent from the HB2 vote, but he is a progressive Democrat.
  • District 34: Grier Martin
    Grier Martin represents portions of Raleigh in the NC House. He was unopposed in 2012 and 2014. He voted against HB2.
  • District 50: Graig Meyer
    Graig Meyer represents Orange & parts of Durham county. He voted against HB2. He won his 2014 election with 57% of the vote, which is lower than I would have expected. It might be worth shooting some dollars his way, for insurance.
  • District 101: Beverly Earle
    Beverly Earle represents a big chunk of Charlotte in the NC House. She was absent during the vote on HB2, and I have been unable to find a statement from her. She was on Lillian’s List in the past, so I know she is a progressive and pro-choice, but I don’t know her exact stance on HB2. She was unopposed in 2012 and 2014.

Conspicuously absent from that list is Brad Salmon, of District 51. Brad flipped his district from Republican to Democrat in 2014, in a closely-watched race. But he was one of the 11 turncoat Democrats who voted FOR HB2. He hasn’t made a public statement about that since so doing. As far as I’m concerned, he’s no different than the Republican he replaced.

So what about the other 19 contested NC House seats? They are a mix of seats where Republicans haven’t been opposed in the previous two elections (meaning I don’t have data because I’m lazy & just use Ballotpedia for my data), and ones which Republicans have previously won by LARGE margins. In some cases their Democratic challengers lack support from the party, or are in need of organizational assistance (if I can’t find any web presence, that’s generally a bad sign). If you have a lot of time on your hands, these folks could use your help — but any wins from this list would be a welcome (highly unlikely) surprise.

The biggest heartbreaker on that list is Jonathan Graham in District 37, which covers Holly Springs, Fuquay-Varina, and parts of Graham & Apex. It’s the seat currently held by Paul “Skip” Stam, the evil Wake County Republican. He’s retiring, which gives Wake County Democrats their best chance in a while to flip this seat. But Jonathan Graham currently has no visible campaign infrastructure, only a personal Facebook page (with literally 6 friends, including me). He’s strongly opposed to HB2, but he’s also strongly opposed to (for example) yard signs with his name on them. Sigh.

Likely NC Senate candidates

Don’t worry, the Senate is a smaller body, so this is necessarily a shorter list. Remember, Democrats need a net gain of 4 seats here as well, in order to remove the Republican supermajority & secure veto power for the governor (who had better NOT be Pat McCrory).

Again, let’s begin with Democratic candidates in potentially winnable districts that are currently held by Republicans:

  • District 1: Brownie Futtrell
    This district includes the Outer Banks and several sound-front counties behind them. Republican incumbent Bill Cook took 53.5% of the vote in 2014. This district was Democratic up until 2012, when it flipped by a margin of literally 21 votes. Brutal. Democrat Brownie Futtrell has a lot of posts on his Facebook page about his Senior Games pool & ping-pong wins, but nothing about HB2.
  • District 9: Andrew Barnhill
    This district covers all of New Hanover county, which includes Wilmington & Wrightsville Beach. But it still went Republican with 55.4% of the vote in 2014 (though only 54.2% in 2012). Democrat Andrew Barnhill has stated his opposition to HB2.
  • District 12: Susan Byerly
    This district covers Harnett, Johnston & Lee counties, aka several rural counties that immediately border the core Triangle counties. Democrat Susan Byerly ran for an NC House seat in 2014 but lost 56/44, which is the same margin by which this district went for Republican Ronald Rabin in 2014. I can’t find any public statement by Susan Byerly re: HB2.
  • District 15: Laurel Deegan-Fricke
    District 15 is one of the Wake County districts, covering the northwest 1/4 of the county, including parts of Raleigh & most of Wake Forest. Republican incumbent John Alexander only took the district with 50.4% of the vote in 2014. Democrat Laurel Deegan-Fricke has a real chance. She is also opposed to HB2.
  • District 17: Susan Evans
    This district covers southern Wake, including Holly Springs, Apex, and Fuquay-Varina. It went for Republican Tamara Barringer with 58.5% in 2014, but only 53.7% in 2012. So it’s perhaps more in-play than it first appears. Democrat Susan Evans is supported by Lillian’s List, and has stated her opposition to HB2.
  • District 18: Gil Johnson
    This district covers the far east/northeast portion of Wake, as well as all of Franklin county. Republican incumbent Chad Barefoot only took in 52.9% of the vote in 2014. Democrat Gil Johnson has not made any public statement about HB2 that I can find.
  • District 19: Toni Morris
    This district is one of two that divide Fayetteville like a jigsaw puzzle. That map is one of the most embarrassing examples of gerrymandering in NC. (The other Fayetteville district is safely Democratic, with no Republican opposition in 2012 or 2014.) Nevertheless, Republican incumbent Wesley Meredith only held this district with 54.4% of the vote in 2014, so a flip is a possibility. Democrat Toni Morris is opposed to HB2.
  • District 25: Dannie Montgomery
    This district covers a big chunk of rural southern NC. It was Democratic in 2012 (53/47) but flipped to the Republican side in 2014. Republican Tom McInnis only drew 50.4% of the vote. There was a Libertarian candidate in 2014 who drew 2.5% of the vote, apparently largely from the Democratic side. This is a key opportunity to flip this seat back. Democrat Dannie Montgomery hasn’t made any statements on social media since February, before HB2 passed, so I don’t know her position on HB2.
  • District 27: Michael Garrett
    This district covers eastern & southern Guilford county, in sort of a half-donut around Greensboro. Republican incumbent Trudy Wade was unopposed in 2014, but she only took 57.6% of the vote in 2012, so this one is a possible win. Democrat Michael Garrett is opposed to HB2.
  • District 39: Lloyd Scher
    This district is currently represented by Republican Bob Rucho, who took 55.2% of the vote in 2014. He’s retiring; the Republican running to replace him is the vile Dan Bishop, co-sponsor of HB2. This is a Mecklenburg County district, so I guess we’ll see which side of the Charlotte electorate is more motivated this year. Lloyd Scher is strongly opposed to HB2.
  • District 48: Norman Bossert
    This is one of two NC Senate seats that covers part of Asheville. It is currently held by Republican Tom Apodaca, who took 57.4% of the vote in 2014. My friends from out west *really* dislike him. He’s retiring, so there will be no incumbent running. Democrat Norm Bossert is strongly opposed to HB2.
  • District 50: Jane Hipps
    This is the district that covers far western NC, including Murphy, Highlands, Cashiers. This is the second time that Democrat Jane Hipps has run against Republican incumbent Jim Davis; in 2014, he beat her 53.9/46.1. Jane is endorsed by Lillian’s List, but as of now she hasn’t made a public statement about HB2.

I can’t give you a list of current Senate Democrats in tight reelection races, because there aren’t any. The candidate with the narrowest margin in the 2014 election was Gladys Robinson in district 28, who won that race 59.4/40.6. She could definitely use your support, if you have it to give.

Here are the other Senate Democrats up for reelection this cycle:

  • District 4: Angela Bryant
    Angela represents Rocky Mount & parts of Wilson. She won her seat in 2014 with 65.5% of the vote. During the HB2 vote, she walked out of the senate along with the entire NC Democratic Senate Caucus.
  • District 13: Jane Smith
    Jane represents Columbus & Robeson counties. She won her 2014 election with 62.8% of the vote. I asked her on Twitter what her position was on HB2, and she said that she was upset with the provisions that had been inserted into it. I couldn’t get her to elaborate on that. As of this writing, her website is down.
  • District 21: Ben Clark
    This is the crazily gerrymandered district that covers the other half of Fayetteville. Ben was unopposed in his 2012 and 2014 races; that’s how gerrymandered the district is. He’s strongly opposed to HB2.
  • District 22: Mike Woodard
    Mike Woodard was a Durham city councilman before running for this senate seat. He won his 2014 race with 67.1% of the vote. His Republican opponent this time is T. Greg Doucette, a defense attorney who has had some great things to say about bias in policing. Oddly, Greg hasn’t had anything to say about HB2, whereas Mike Woodard is strongly opposed.
  • District 23: Valerie Foushee
    This is the Orange + Chatham seat formerly occupied by Ellie Kinnaird, so it’s sort of the epitome of a safe seat. Valerie won her 2014 race with 68.2% of the vote; her 2016 challenger, Mary Lopez-Carter, was also her 2014 opponent. Valerie is strongly opposed to HB2.
  • District 37: Jeff Jackson
    Jeff Jackson represents a big chunk of downtown Charlotte, plus a stripe of Mecklenburg running south towards the SC border. Jeff is one of the most articulate & astute NC politicians. I highly recommend following him on Facebook or Twitter. He ran unopposed in 2014, and won his 2012 race with 67% of the vote. He’s strongly opposed to HB2.
  • District 38: Joel Ford
    Joel Ford represents the northwest half of Charlotte; he won his race in 2014 with 79.7% of the vote. He faces the same challenger, Richard Rivette, this year. Joel is opposed to HB2.
  • District 40: Joyce Waddell
    Joyce represents northeastern Charlotte & Mecklenburg county; she was unopposed in 2014, and won 84.1% of the vote in 2012. She walked out of the HB2 vote along with the rest of the NC Democratic Senate Caucus. I haven’t seen a public statement from her since then.

So what about the other 10 contested NC Senate seats? They are a mix of seats where Republicans haven’t been opposed in the previous two elections, and ones which Republicans have previously won by LARGE margins. In some cases their Democratic challengers lack support from the party, or are in need of organizational assistance (if I can’t find any web presence, that’s generally a bad sign). If you have a lot of time on your hands, these folks could use your help — but any wins from this list would be a welcome (highly unlikely) surprise.

There are no Republican incumbents running in 11, 33, 36 and 45. Of those, only Art Sherwood has any sort of web presence. Of the folks who *do* have some kind of web presence, John Thorpe, Michael Garrett, Michael Holleman, Art Sherwood *and* Anne Fischer are strongly opposed to HB2. Of those, Anne Fischer probably has the best chance.

OK. That’s it for this post, all 3700 words of it. I hadn’t intended to spend so much time on this — but I feel like I know a lot more about NC politics now than I did when I started it a few weeks ago. If you have read this far, I hope you learned something as well.

And I really hope you’ll invest some time, money, or both in assisting these candidates. The pressure being put on NC from all directions, as a result of HB2, is a potentially huge chance to flip some seats that wouldn’t have even been considered in play 2 years ago. Let’s get some benefit from this awful situation.

Concrete things you can do to fix NC politics

January 11 – 22, 2016

Big couple of weeks. Yesterday there was a sleet storm here. In Raleigh it was apparently an ice storm; throughout much of the Mid-Atlantic states it’s a 2-foot blizzard. If you have a theater near enough to walk to, go see The Revenant. It complements the weather perfectly.

I’m tempted to just make a bulleted list of pros/cons of the movie.
Pros:

  • Absolutely gorgeous cinematography. If it doesn’t win an Oscar, there’s something wrong. Or too many Academy voters watched DVD screeners. I’m not usually one of those “see it on the big screen” people, but seriously.
  • Second-most horrifying grizzly bear attack of any movie ever in the history of movies. Permanent top spot reserved for Grizzly Man because, well, it’s a documentary & Tim Treadwell actually died in real life. But it’s hard to imagine any other fiction film ever topping The Revenant, grizzly-bear-attack-wise.
  • Tom Hardy’s accent must be heard to be believed.

Cons:

  • If people start giving Leo awards for acting then I guess we’re redefining acting as stunt-manning. He did some impressive stunt work, for sure. I haven’t read enough of the deep-dive articles to know how much of it was actually him, but I have the impression that he’s one of those goofballs who wanted to do it all.
  • You sit through a 150-minute-long movie & it turns out the whole thing was just a buildup to one of those dumb bro-on-bro dude-man fight scenes at the end.
  • The portrayal of Native Americans is actually more nuanced than in most classic westerns, but they’re still portrayed almost entirely as inscrutable unstoppable murder machines. OTOH, as someone who has grown increasingly uncomfortable with the entirety of the history of white ppl in North America, I actually enjoyed the fact that the Native Americans win every skirmish in the movie. If you’re rooting for them, there’s a lot to root for. And man, the scene early on of the raid on the trappers’ camp, with arrows flying in silently from all directions, is nearly as harrowing as the opening sequences of Saving Private Ryan.

The day after we saw The Revenant, David Bowie died.

It’s nearly impossible for me to say anything about David Bowie, particularly now, a week or so later. I will say that for the entirety of my adult life, my appreciation of Bowie has been heavily skewed by an ill-advised purchase of the Sound+Vision box set in 1989. Nobody made it clear to me that it was mostly alternate takes & deep cuts. So the versions of many Bowie songs in my head are literally incorrect. And in many cases inferior, although I like the “John I’m Only Dancing” in the box better than the album version.

One other thought: I can’t remember whether I pooh-poohed Let’s Dance when it came out. It was so early in the history of MTV that they played those videos ALL THE TIME. And I was pretty much glued to MTV during as much of the early 80s as was physically possible. This despite the fact that I was mostly a huge nerdy Rush fan during the period 1981-1985.

So yeah, I know I never owned a copy of Let’s Dance, but the singles are *all* fully embedded in my brain, in the same way that every other MTV single from the first half of the 80s is. And the Bowie stuff has definitely held up better than the majority of what it was surrounded by.

Anyway. The enormity of the collective mourning on social media was like nothing else I’ve seen on Teh Internets. It was fascinating to see the different subcategories of ppl — the Hunky Dory ppl, the Berlin Trilogy ppl, the Modern Love ppl. No infighting, though.

I do recommend watching the BBC Five Years documentary. The biggest takeaway for me was that all of the many musicians interviewed seemed to have extraordinarily fond memories of their time working with Bowie, and of the music they made.

Last night we tried to go to the brand-new sushi restaurant next door to the Durham hotel, but Michael had decided (sanely) to send his staff home & not open. Which is a drag for him, because yesterday was supposed to be his first day open, and he said he’d bought like $2k worth of fish.

Anyway, he & his wife & the folks from Alliance Architecture (who own the building) were hanging out, so they invited us in, showed us around, and shared some bourbon with us. The space looks *totally* different than it did when it was a cavelike bike shop, to be sure. But the ceiling is still ultra-low, which gives it a nice intimate feeling. The decor is super-simple, and it’s clear that the focus is going to be on the food. I’m unquestionably excited to have a high-quality sushi place three blocks from my house, but I’m guessing it’ll be a monthly splurge rather than a weekly staple.

Yesterday I got fabulous new albums from Savages, Naked Naps, and al riggs. Fabulous.

January 11 – 22, 2016

January 2-10, 2015

I realized earlier today that I had completely forgotten about two movies I saw and enjoyed in 2015, The Diary of a Teenage Girl and White God. On the one hand, if I completely forgot about them, they clearly didn’t make a lasting impression. On the other hand, I’m self-aware enough to know that very few things make a lasting impression unless I go out of my way to reinforce them. Hence this blog.

Last Saturday we tried to go see Creed at Northgate. I should make it clear at the outset that I love Northgate, at least in part because it reminds me of all the other janky independently-run theaters that I have loved in my life.

Having said that, we realized during the trailers that there was something seriously weird with the sound, namely that the only channel being played — on all howevermany speakers in the auditorium — was the center dialogue channel. It was particularly noticeable during the trailers, which are usually nonstop music and big booming sound effects & whatnot.

This situation persisted into the start of the movie, so we left & asked for a refund. We wound up talking to the tech/maintenance guy, who told us that a few weeks ago the mall had been hit by a massive power outage, and when the power came back on, a bunch of their audio power amps — around $30,000 worth — had blown.

While they’re waiting for their insurance check to arrive, they’ve apparently just jury-rigged the audio in the affected theaters any way they can. On the one hand, I respect their ingenuity. On the other, they really ought to tell people, or just close the auditoriums.

Anyway, we still want to see Creed.

For [my own] future reference: On New Year’s Eve we saw Spotlight. It was a good old fashioned muckraking journalism movie.

This week was mostly back-to-work, which is to say a lot of recalibrating bedtimes & trying to remember what I do for a living. We finished watching the new season of Transparent — I admire it, but I don’t usually enjoy it all that much, to be honest. Such terrible people, so terrible that good secondary characters are always leaving because they can’t stand to be around them.

Yesterday we went to see Carol. It was fine. Kind of prestigey. Fully in keeping with the Todd Haynes melodrama program. Not as good as Mildred Pierce — but then that’s hardly a fair comparison. Let’s put it this way: I was distracted by how clean & shiny all of the vintage automobiles were. And by the fact that Carol turns on the [AM] car radio in a tunnel & music comes out.

I guess what it boils down to for me is that while I admire Cate Blanchett greatly, she’s not a particularly naturalistic actress, at least not anymore, or not in the movies that I see her in at any rate, and after a while that wears me out. She’s all weird stilted voice & odd mannerisms, which makes a fair amount of sense given the subject matter & its deep psychological subtext, but still. I wonder if she brings a lighter touch to those animated dragon movies.

Rooney Mara was awesome, though.

Reading-wise, I finally nearly exhausted my interest in the collected works of Richard Stark & Robert Crais, and thus took a gander at what’s available in eBook form from my local library. It’s kind of a mixed bag, which is why I’m currently reading To Say Nothing of the Dog by Connie Willis. Which is quite literally a mashup of Jerome K Jerome’s Three Men in a Boat, and time travel. It’s . . . odd. I mean, I’m enjoying it, but the humor is so mild and so British that I’m honestly not sure why.

Entirely coincidentally, I was reminded a couple of weeks ago that I had read the aforementioned Jerome K Jerome novel as a bored tween — anytime I professed boredom to my mother, she would direct me to the family bookshelf, which was loaded with Modern Library editions of things like the Jerome, Sayers, E. B. White, etc.

Thanks, mom!

January 2-10, 2015

2015 in review, part 2: Favorite movies & shows

Here are some other things that I really enjoyed in 2015. Some of them (the movies) you can easily track down. Others (the shows) you’ll have to work a little harder to replicate.

Movies

I saw at least 85 movies this year, roughly half in the theater & the rest at home. Here are my fifteen favorites from among the ones I saw in the theater:

Being Evel

I’m just old enough to remember Evel Knievel as a cultural force, but young enough to not really know that much about him, or exactly why he was so huge. After watching this documentary, I know a lot more about some of those things, although his celebrity still kind of baffles me.

The Big Short

This should pretty much always be watched as a double feature with JC Chandor’s Margin Call, so make sure you plan your day accordingly.

The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution

Unless you’re already a scholar of 20th-century Black Revolutionary thought, this movie will completely change your understanding of the Black Panthers, and the massive governmental effort to discredit them.

Dope

Weird, hilarious, loose; an intentional cross between House Party and Boyz N the Hood, with a little bit of Scott Pilgrim thrown in for good measure.

Glen Campbell: I’ll Be Me

An all-access-granted documentary of Glen Campbell’s struggle with Alzheimer’s during his farewell tour. Hugely affecting even if you don’t acknowledge Campbell’s brilliance as a musician.

Iris

I have an enormous weakness for documentaries about phenomenally fashionable old ladies who tell it like it is (see also: Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel; Elaine Stritch: Shoot Me). This also has the (unhappy) distinction of being the last film Albert Maysles finished before he died.

It Follows

When you’re done watching this profoundly spooky (and brilliant) movie, go ahead & watch director David Robert Mitchell’s previous film, The Myth of the American Sleepover, which is a quietly funny end-of-summer story set in the same suburban Detroit milieu as It Follows.

Love + Mercy

I’m aware that there are some people who don’t care for the Beach Boys, or Pet Sounds. If I had to guess, I’d guess that those people would probably also not care for this movie, in part because of all the wonderful time it spends recreating the recording sessions for so much of that brilliant music.

Mad Max: Fury Road

It is a remarkable thing, 100+ years into the history of motion pictures as an industry, to be able to say that the greatest action movie ever made just came out last year.

A Most Violent Year

Director JC Chandor has made exactly three feature films, all within the past 5 years: Margin Call, an incredibly tense movie about the exact moment of the 2008 financial meltdown; All Is Lost, an almost entirely dialogue-free movie featuring 76-year-old Robert Redford alone on a slowly sinking sailboat in the middle of the ocean.

And this one, an early-80s period piece about one man’s struggle to keep his heating-oil business out of the hands of the mafia. All three of these movies are utterly gripping & completely brilliant. We are so blessed that thus far, Hollywood has continued to allow him to make the movies he wants to make, instead of the next Avengers movie.

Selma

2014 was a good year, movie-wise, but that still doesn’t excuse the award nominations snub that this movie received. David Oyelowo, in particular, was robbed.

Spy

I have this sense that nobody went to see this movie, which is a pity, because it was hilarious and good-natured and intermittently batshit crazy. Stream this one. Seriously.

Tangerine

The other day I was thinking about this movie and realized that it’s kind of the absolute polar opposite of The Hateful Eight. Tangerine was shot on an iPhone, stars mostly black transwomen, and is 100000x better than Tarantino’s piece of racist, misogynist trash.

What Happened, Miss Simone?

Tragedy, frustration & pain have always bubbled just below the surface of Nina Simone’s music. This documentary starts to unpack all of the reasons why that is.

The Wolfpack

Just . . . just watch it. Budget a couple of hours & free yr mind & just watch it. Preferably without reading anything else about it before you do.

Shows

I don’t go out to shows as often as I used to, and nowadays when I do, they’re somewhat more likely to be seated shows, with start times closer to 7:30 than 10:30. This list definitely reflects that reality. I saw a lot more than this in 2015 (8 or 9 theatrical things, roughly 80 bands), but these are the things that stuck with me.

Alabama Shakes @ Koka Booth Amphitheatre

I knew going into this, academically, that Alabama Shakes were a great band with a phenomenal frontwoman in Brittany Howard. Now I KNOW it, know it.

Maria Bamford @ Carolina Theatre

Maria Bamford is a hero for life. The best comedy has always been about fearless self-exposure, but Maria takes it to a whole new level.

Ian William Craig @ Hopscotch

I just sat in the dark and cried for half an hour.

Davidians @ Duke Coffeehouse

Within five minutes of the start of their set, I had a new favorite Triangle guitarist in Colin Swanson-White, who fearlessly applies wacked-out chorus and other heretofore verboten effects to punkrock.

Frazey Ford with Phil Cook @ Duke Gardens

I didn’t hear Frazey Ford’s 2014 album Indian Ocean until sometime in the spring of 2015 (thanks to this brilliant video for the amazing “Done”), which is the only reason it wasn’t at the top of my 2014 list. I guess if I weren’t such a stickler, I’d have put it near the top of my 2015 list.

Anyway. Going into this show, I assumed that I had come late to the party, and that everyone else at this show was there, like me, to see Frazey. Turns out I was wrong — I was actually slightly ahead of the curve in being only 8 months behind. It was wonderful to hear Frazey — backed by Phil Cook & his Guitarheels — play her amazing music, and equally wonderful to feel everyone in the audience rocked back on their heels at the same time.

Fun Home @ Circle in the Square, NYC

Somehow, despite not being musical theatre people, we keep going to Broadway musicals. We can probably stop now, however, because nothing’s going to top this beautiful thing.

Sarah Louise @ Hopscotch

I wrote about this over on my favorite albums of the year list.

Cecile McLorin Salvant @ Baldwin Auditorium

This was the best show I saw in 2015. Everything they say about Cecile McLorin Salvant is true: her voice is reminiscent of Ella Fitzgerald and Sarah Vaughan, her song selections range from the dirty blues of Bessie Smith to the high art of Kurt Weill and Langston Hughes, plus a lot of golden-era vocal classics. But I was completely unprepared for her stage presence, and for her inside-out ownership of her material. She could sing it straight, or she could interpret the hell out of it, and it all Just Worked. Incredibly well. And she’s just 26.

Kamasi Washington @ MotorCo

What a crazy evening. Kamasi Washington is the name on the marquee, and on the cover of the massive 3-hour album, The Epic, that got all the attention this year. But he’s the polar opposite of the Jazz Autocrat. He took great pains to make it clear that the folks onstage were his posse, and that they all had albums in the works, like the Wu-Tang Clan of west-coast jazz funk. Everybody in the band played at least one song of their own, and Kamasi at times seemed more like the emcee than the nominal bandleader.

Kamasi’s stuff was the best, though.

Yo La Tengo @ Carolina Theatre

Still the champions. To be honest, I didn’t spend all that much time with their new album — it felt like Fakebook outtakes, or something. But this show was magical, due in large part to Dave Schramm’s guitar. YLT are still the greatest power trio of the modern era, but this classic quartet configuration was something else.

2015 in review, part 2: Favorite movies & shows

2015 in review, Part 1: Favorite albums

OK! Here are my top 20 albums/EPs of 2015, plus another 35 albums/EPs that are tied for 21st on the list.

20. Just Jess: The Break-Up EP

Jessica Caesar plays drums for Pink Flag, and has sat in on drums in a variety of other local bands. She has also worked the door at the Pinhook off & on practically since they opened.

At no point did I ever have the slightest inkling that she was sitting on this batch of great songs, or that she’s such a great singer. This is weird, raw soul album, dominated by bass guitar, kickdrum, and Jess’s vocals, but with lots of neat little percussion, keyboard & guitar flourishes. It’s called “The Break-Up EP” and that’s 100% accurate — this is raw emotion, without much distance. It’s remarkable to hear an album this full of soul & pain, but recorded in this kind of immediate, mid-fi, non-slick/overproduced way. Give it a spin with open ears & open mind.

19. Chrch: Unanswered Hymns

Chrch (formerly Church) are a west-coast doom band whose low-n-slow songs differentiate themselves in large part via the buried but still distinct & haunting vocals of Eva Holland.

18. Crypt Vapor: Tombe Della Citta

Are you a huge John Carpenter fan? Do you sit around obsessively refreshing his IMDB page, hoping to see a new “in production” direction credit added to his list? Or do you just love weird/classic 70s/80s action/horror soundtracks (not just John Carpenter, but other titans of the genre like Goblin)?

Well, so does a mysterious Italian? Australian? named The Death. Crypt Vapor is his (or her) band; this is their first full-length release. The song titles do a pretty good job of setting up the tone/mood of each track — the intention is clearly for us to interpret these as soundtracks to [imaginary] horror/action movies.

17. Buck Owens: When Buck Came Back, Live San Francisco 1989

By the late 80s, Buck Owens was in semi-retirement, having quit Hee Haw in 1986 (and quit making serious music years before that). But then Dwight Yoakam cajoled him into recording a duet of Buck’s “Streets of Bakersfield” for Dwight’s second album in 1988, and the song went to #1. Thoroughly rejuvenated, Buck cut an album, “Hot Dog,” and hit the road.

This live album was recorded in January of the following year at the Victoria Theater in San Francisco — his first show in the city since 1967(!!). It takes the band 3-4 songs to get into the groove, but at around the 15 minute mark, things just take off. The material is 90% vintage Buck classics, performed in crackerjack style, but the best part is actually hearing the awestruck gratitude in Buck’s voice as he thanks the crowd.

16. Boulevards: Boulevards EP

Boulevards is a dude from Raleigh named Jamil Rashad, who seems to have an improbable direct mental line to the 70s/80s funk wellspring originally tapped by Chic, Rick James, Cameo et al.

Boulevards was the breakout star of this year’s Hopscotch Music Festival, and he’s clearly bound for bigger stages.

15. Kamasi Washington: The Epic

You’ve probably read a lot about this album by now — west-coast sax player Washington did time as a sideman (sax for Chaka Khan!) as well as an arranger (chunks of Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly). And then suddenly he dropped this 3-hour debut album of majestic jazz. It’s kind of all over the place — some cooking mid-size ensemble work, some more “out” material, some weird vocal pieces a la Sun Ra. The overall impression is of a genius exploding onto the scene, so full of ideas that filtering/editing would have been impossible.

14. Un: The Tomb of All Things

Un singer/guitarist Monte McCleery was diagnosed with Lymphoma in 2014. He’s in remission now, but based on what I have read, there’s little question that his confrontation with mortality fed into the creation of this album. It’s almost impossible to understand what he’s singing, but there are lyrics posted online, and they’re literally all about the journey towards death.

Musically, this is low-and-slow funeral doom of the highest order. Obviously heavily influenced by their Pacific Northwest forebears Earth and sunn o))), the guitars here just sustain & sustain on endless ultra-heavy chords, and the drums, where present, are nearly as slow and controlled as Earth’s Adrienne Davies. But Monte’s hoarse, bellowed, nearly unintelligible vocals set this apart — those bands are more about transcendence and space, whereas Un are about pain, sorrow, and death.

13. Sarah Louise: Field Guide

Sarah Louise Nelson lives in the woods in the mountains of NC, about an hour outside of Asheville. She plays absolutely mesmerizing fingerstyle 12-string guitar. She happily identifies with the American Primitive tradition, although based on her interviews she’s also a highly curious & wide-ranging listener to all kinds of music, and has actually apparently been woodshedding with a 4-piece band to put together some extended psych jams based on her songs.

Sarah’s writing process starts with her making up a new tuning, and then she sees where her fingers take her. She has spoken in interviews about the power of the drone, and its relation to natural sounds, so her tunings tend to take advantage of the opportunities presented by 12 strings to build up resonances & let them hang in the air between the notes.

She absolutely blew me away at Hopscotch 2015, and I was kicking myself for not having heard of her sooner, especially since this album was released on Scissor Tail, the same label that released the most recent Chuck Johnson album. This one was just a limited-edition cassette, though, which sold out in 2 weeks.

Interestingly, the original demo of this album had vocals on some of the tracks, but Sarah went back and re-recorded them without vocals because Scissor Tail specializes in instrumental music & she wanted to fit their aesthetic. At Hopscotch she sang on several numbers, and I’ll be excited to hear recordings of those songs when/if they’re released.

12. Daniel Bachman: River

Always a treat to get a new one from Daniel Bachman. This is Daniel’s first album recorded in a “real” studio, but to be honest, although there’s a tad bit more clarity, his other records always sounded good to me, and so does this one.

The opening track is 14+ minutes long, and it’s a step forward for Daniel. It starts out slower & more open/brooding than is usual for him, and then when it kicks in, his right thumb is going nuts, whacking the shit out of the lower strings — it’s a more forceful attack than I’m used to from Daniel. The tune goes a lot of places in 14 minutes & it’s well worth your time. There’s also a 4:45 reprise of the same piece at the end, which is less intense.

Elsewhere, there are a heavy-feeling slide blues, a mix of shorter & longer experimental pieces, and a more straightforward piedmont blues.

11. Cantwell Gomez and Jordan: Half-Finished Bobcat

First new material from the mighty CG+J since their half of a [too-brief] split cassette back in 2012. Back in the 90s people talked about “post-rock” to describe bands using rock instruments in somewhat less-rock ways. At this point I’d rather call CG+J “free rock” inasmuch as they’re fully capable of locking into an insanely tight groove, but they also spend a lot of time going in three distinct directions at once. Or four, if you count Anne’s vocals. (David’s vocals are more likely to mirror closely his guitar melodies).

These folks are just about my favorite band ever, and also just about my favorite people ever. Their music is endlessly inventive & endlessly amusing, in the best way.

10. Alabama Shakes: Sound & Color

Near as I can tell (from the Internet, as well as a certain amount of teasing I’ve gotten from younger friends), it’s apparently maybe not “cool” to like Alabama Shakes? Thankfully I’m much too old to care about what’s cool. This record sounds huge, and when they came through the Triangle this past summer, the band sounded even bigger.

9. Sagan Youth: Cela

For their second album, Chapel Hill live-organic-electronic duo Sagan Youth swung for the fences and connected, solidly. This is a concept album about landing on a moon of Saturn (OR IS IT???) — gorgeous stuff, some of it heavily beat-driven, others more spaced-out. All instrumental, although there are some apt sci-fi movie dialogue samples here & there.

 

8. Dødheimsgard: A Umbra Omega

Holy crap this is completely insane. Musically it’s intricate black metal, although the interludes of piano & sax kind of explode any sense of black metal orthodoxy. But far more bizarre than the music are the vocals of Aldrahn, which are like strange soliloquies by the insane villain from a Hammer Horror movie. Taken all together, it’s the strangest metal album in a year of strange metal albums, and I can’t stop listening to it.

 

7. Ryley Walker: Primrose Green

Did Pitchfork kill this album’s momentum, or did people just forget about it? (Or, as my friend Grayson would have it, is it simply not the album that Ryley could and should have made?)

No way for me to know; I still think it’s amazing. Of course, I’m coming at it as someone who spent a lot of his teenage years listening to the classic late-60s/early-70s Van Morrison albums, which are the clearest sonic antecedents to this record. If you don’t like Astral Weeks & Veedon Fleece, you’re probably gonna hate this album. And I guess even if you do like those albums, you may or may not be ready for some kid from Chicago to take a stab at replicating their sound.

6. Joanna Newsom: Divers

If you already know you don’t like Joanna Newsom, then I feel bad for you, but I’m not going to try to change your mind. And neither will this album. It’s part continued evolution, part distillation of the insane brilliant sprawl of Have One On Me into a more concise form. It’s a phenomenal piece of work, and could certainly garner Joanna new fans — but probably not from those people who’ve already heard her voice & decided to hate it.

5. Des Ark: Everything Dies

Third full-length studio album from Des Ark, her best yet, and the first since 2011’s “Don’t Rock the Boat, Sink the Fucker.” Aimee has been busy in those four years, some with music, some with other important stuff in her life. That split is apparent when you realize that over half of these songs appeared in raw acoustic demo form on her 2011 WXDU live session (subsequently released by Paramnesia & then Lovitt as WXDU Vol. 3). Those songs are recognizable here, but the meticulous arrangements, including layer upon layer upon layer of backing vocals, are decidedly new.

The other big shift here is lyrical, particularly on tracks 7+8, which together make up the emotional center of the album. For the first time on those two songs we hear a fully emotionally vulnerable Aimee Argote, one who is deep in love and is in some ways happy about it, even as she recognizes the weird effect(s) it has had on her feelings & her self-confidence. Given how much she used to flaunt her love-em-and-leave-em persona, this is kinda unprecedented. I’ll be really interested to hear more new material — stay tuned at some point for a WXDU Vol. 4 demo session.

I love all these songs & I’m fascinated to see Aimee continue to evolve her sound. Piano was her first instrument as a child, but it’s only on this album that it has emerged as a major instrument in Des Ark. This is also her most collaborative work, with contributions from members of Appleseed Cast, plus Jonathan Fuller of Engine Down, Thor Harris of Swans, and Andy Lemaster of Now It’s Overhead & Bright Eyes.

4. Body Games: Local Love Vol 1

By now we were supposed to have a Body Games full-length, but it apparently takes Dax a long time to get to where he’s fully satisfied with his own material. So to distract (us/themselves), they quickly pulled together this EP of covers of local bands. Which is of course more brilliant than most other things I’ve heard so far this year.

The Body Games sound falls squarely into the Postal Service / Hot Chip sector of electronic pop — a little chilly, a little melancholy, vulnerable, but impeccable. Add to that a fondness for well-placed (and heavily manipulated) samples, both musical and movie dialogue, and some excellent source material, and you’ve got the Jams of the Summer.

3. VHOL: Deeper Than Sky

VHOL are a northwest metal supergroup: John Cobbett & Aesop Dekker from Ludicra; Sigrid Sheie from Hammers of Misfortune; Mike Scheidt from YOB. (OK, John is also in Hammers of Misfortune & Aesop is in Agalloch, too). Their self-titled debut was my favorite album of 2013.

As with the first one, the primary program here is a thoroughly & gloriously indulgent exploration of their mutual affection for thrash, speed & hardcore crossover metal. This time around there are fewer moments of blackened guitar, although the unearthly choirs of strum do make an appearance here & there. Also new this time around: some mid-album goofiness as University of San Francisco piano instructor Sigrid Sheie goes nuts on the piano on “Paino.”

Everyone here turns in top-notch performances on their respective instruments, and they’re all clearly having a blast as well. Mike Scheidt splits his time between hardcore/thrash barking & his gorgeous high unearthly singing. Lately my favorite metal is that which blurs genre boundaries most effectively, and VHOL blur them right out of existence.

2. Bell Witch: Four Phantoms

Bell Witch are a bass/drums funeral doom duo from the Pacific Northwest; this is my favorite metal album of 2015. I determined this organically, by realizing that I had various riffs & melodies from it repeating in my brain off & on all the time, even if I hadn’t listened to the album in a week or two. It’s gorgeous and elegiac and brutal and sad and lovely. I absolutely cannot wait until they come through on tour in a couple of months.

1. Sleater-Kinney: No Cities to Love

Today (January 1, 2016) I went back through all my blog posts from 2015. It was gratifying and a little hilarious to see how many times I made a point of saying “still listening to the new Sleater-Kinney; still confident it will be my number 1 album of the year.”

I made this list (this one here, the one where this album is #1) a couple of days ago, and I had honestly forgotten about all those blog posts. But I hadn’t forgotten about this album — it’s unforgettable.

I will also say that, for once, my enjoyment of a record was enhanced by learning more about the band; in this case, via Carrie Brownstein’s memoir, “Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl.”

35-way Tie for 21st:

Aevangelist: Enthrall to the Void of Bliss

Aevangelist make “New Oblivion Gospel Music” — one of them currently lives in Portland, and the other in Chicago, but they still manage to release at least one full-length and one or two EPs a year. This music is nominally blackened death metal, but that doesn’t come anywhere near describing it. This is as close as you’re going to get to a soundtrack to hell, or at least a soundtrack to someone’s really vivid nightmares of hell. Yes, there are (programmed) blast beats, and yes, there are guitars, but there’s also some kind of zither or autoharp in the right speaker, being played intermittently & kind of tunelessly, throughout the entire album. Vocalist Ascaris (aka Chicago improv sax player Val Dorr) produces a profoundly unholy range of guttural noises (including an extended choking-to-death thing at the start of #6), but also sings in a pleasant deep voice on #2. And sort of raps, briefly, on the short interstitial black metal trip-hop #4.

Basically, everything here is designed very carefully to fuck with your head. Apparently, at their comparatively rare live shows, there are a lot of masks, weird body paint, genderfuck clothing, saxophone, and a bunch of other things that reportedly drive the black/death metal traditionalists up the wall, which is totally awesome. And totally intentional, based on the interviews I have read. Metal desperately needs more of this.

Bandway: Buddies

This is some kind of miracle — the first new Bandway album in something like 11 years. Bandway are Bo Taylor (Motocaster, Dish, Tonk) and Brooks Carter (Jack O Nuts) making dead-on parody 70s/80s mullet-rock. They’re way funnier than Tenacious D, and this album is their funniest work yet.

Several songs here seem to be inspired by movies and/or by the butt-rock that often appeared on the soundtracks of 80s action movies. “Indecent Proposal” is actually a straight retelling of the plot of the movie of the same name. I’m told that another song was inspired by the movie ‘FM’ but it has been too long since I saw it to be able to tell.

Birds of Avalon: Disappearance

The first completely new music from Raleigh’s Birds of Avalon in several years — Paul and Cheetie took some significant time off to build out & open Garland, Cheetie’s amazing Indian-fusion restaurant that occupies the ground floor of the Kings/Neptunes building.

The last time we heard from the Birds, they had lost vocalist Craig Tilley, but had a full album in the can that they had recorded with him, so they went ahead & released it. It was actually their best work up to that point, and it was pretty cool to see them play gigs after its release & hear them take turns taking over all the vocals that Craig had sung.

This, then, is their first all-new effort without Craig. Bassist David Mueller and guitarist Cheetie Kumar share vocal duties. Between David’s vocal prominence and the addition of more synth textures (and even some sequenced beats/basslines), the line between BoA and David’s own band Heads on Sticks becomes increasingly blurred, sound-wise. Nevertheless, this is still emphatically Birds of Avalon, and all you need to hear is the extended psych guitar workouts on nearly every song to bring that point home.

The Charming Youngsters: Middleweights

Saw these folks at a Hopscotch day party, thanks to a weather-related scheduling snafu. It was the best surprise of this year’s festival. My favorite thing about indie-rock is how it’s more ramshackle & taped-together than regular-rock — and thankfully there will always be bands who wind up working in that mode, whether by choice or by accident.

Daddy Issues: Fuck Marry Kill

In which our heroes finally match their musical chops to their lyrical & thematic ambitions, and then immediately break up. This is such a great nutty filthy amazing silly heartfelt record.

Davidians: Night Terrors 7″

This is the first installment in a new all-NC 7″ series on Sorry State, which makes me very excited. Also exciting: Davidians keep getting better & better. The guitars here are so crazed, with what sounds like a little bit of chorus on there to make them all slippery & strange & non-hardcore.

Despoiler: Dysgenika

I don’t know anything about this record, other than that it was released by a local label, and appears to be the work of a local artist. And that it’s insane, in the best possible way.

Earthly: Days

Debut album from the artists formerly known as Bonglestar [Galactabong]. Kinda bummed they changed the name, but it’s probably for the best. This album fits squarely in with a lot of the other heavily sample-based electronic music that has come out in the Triangle over the past year — artists such as Blursome, Hanz, and Laso Halo. Lots and lots of samples, sliced & diced & thoroughly hashed together, sometimes in the service of a beat, sometimes more ambient, sometimes going for wall-of-irritation. It’s all good stuff, whether you’re going for the more straightforward & danceable or the fucked-up glitch.

Eldritch Horror: Untouched By the Sun

Eldritch Horror were quite possibly the only death metal band in Raleigh when they were originally active, from 1989-1993. I moved here in 1992 and I remember there being a lot of sludge & post-industrial & some hair metal, but Eldritch Horror definitely stood out.

They dissolved around ’93-’94, but reunited once in 2006, and again in 2014. This time it seems to have stuck. What you’re hearing here is an ALL NEW recording (2014-2015) of their original set of material from ’89-’93. And it’s REALLY good. Total oldschool death metal, tempered (as was more often the case back then) with hefty doses of thrash & power metal. Singer David Price has an awesome growl, made all the more remarkable by the fact that he took 20 years off from using it.

Huge riffs, some pretty nutty solos, and live-sounding (but fast as heck) drums. Good stuff.

Escher: The Ground is Missing

Tech death / math metal from Raleigh, with screechy vox that veer into metalcore territory. They’ve got an intermittent sax player, and they’re prone to drop in mid-song breakdowns where everybody plays clean & the time signatures get weird. In other words, they’re doing interesting stuff to mix things up, and I’m into it.

Fake Swedish: Truce

They’re back. Fake Swedish were a weirdo Chapel Hill band of New Jersey transplants who wore their obsession with those early Scott Walker solo albums proudly on their sleeves (and in their Jacques Brel covers). Their originals were excellent, and the more baroque they got, the better they were.

So of course they had to break up. Guitarist Eric Haugen gigged around in various bands, while singer Joe Romeo moved back & forth between here & New Jersey, and made a country-rock album with his band the Orange County Volunteers.

Fake Swedish reappeared in 2014, quietly, gigging around Chapel Hill. This is their first recording since their 2005 debut, “Get Correct,” and it’s a doozy. 70s rock/artrock tropes + Joe Romeo’s baroque lyrical tendencies.

Genocide Shrines: Manipura Imperial Deathevokovil (Scriptures Of Reversed Puraana Dharmurder)

Yep: “anti-Dharmic” death metal from Colombo, Sri Lanka. In an interview with “Grim Kim” Kelly, singer Chathuranga Fonseka says “This was an unmistakable cleansing ritual for us. We poured demented amounts of energy to ensure the stability of the continuity of a pounding fist of madness. To ensure the message of the absolute NOTHING, demonstrated by a desecration ritual transmitted as an audial offering.”

That just about sums it up, really. This whole thing sounds like it was recorded in a cavern — it’s so drenched in dark reverb that you can’t really make out anything distinctly (except, weirdly, the ride cymbal, which is crystal-clear). Drummer BlasphemousWarGoat is just an endless rumbling roar, the vox are just roaring & growling & hissing, the guitar is more a suggestion than anything else. It’s pretty awesome.

GNØER: Tethers Down

GNØER are the same three guys who make up the excellent Raleigh indie-rock band Goner. For the past couple of years they’ve been playing around with keyboards and drum machines (though it should be noted that they’ve always been a keyboard band — their standard lineup was keyboard/bass/drums/vocals). Now they’ve got a 5-song album that’s all-electronic (well, nearly — there’s electric bass on a couple of songs) & with the new sound comes a newish name.

Given that they were already a keyboard-heavy band, this is more an evolution than a revolution — you can tell they’ve had a lot of fun reimagining their sound using their new toys, but structurally these are mostly still longish anthemic songs with a lot of words about the lives of small-town post-college people. Which is good, because that’s what these guys do best.

Nathan Golub + Wood Ear: Nothing in Return

Nathan Golub takes his place among the first rank of Triangle guitarists with his solo track on this three-song split, the 12+ minute “Liberty Drive In.”

Malcolm Holcombe – The RCA Sessions

All I really know about Malcolm Holcombe is that he’s from Asheville, he’s a brilliant songwriter, and his voice is a croak so wizened and idiosyncratic that to call it an acquired taste would do a disservice to the whole concept of acquisition. This brilliant album is a survey of material from across his long career, re-recorded with some ace backing musicians at RCA studios in Nashville.

Hooded Menace: Darkness Drips Forth

Hilariously awesome & highly cinematic doomy death metal. It’s fun & riffy & slow & heavy and kind of profoundly silly but in a completely straight-faced way.

Howls of Ebb: The Marrow Veil

Absolute chaos. Total low-budget horror soundtrack music, if your low-budget horror movie requires a mix of spooky tones, echoes, and crazy satanic death metal.

Magpie Feast: The Atlas of Lost Hearts

This is something of a step forward for Raleigh’s Magpie Feast, who continue to hone their kinda-ramshackle country-rock sound. This is a little more straightforward than their last EP, but no less satisfying. The instrumentation is solidified as gtr/bass/drums/fiddle + male+female vocals, often sung in unison. There’s a sense of confident authority here that was less evident on their earlier releases. The rhythm section, in particular, is locked in but not lockstep.

If you recall the Asheville musician Seth Kauffman & his band Floating Action, back before they got a little too slick, this is in that same laid-back rattletrap country/rock/soul mode. It’s good summertime North Carolina music.

MAKE: The Golden Veil

Been a while for MAKE — they got kinda burnt out & had to regroup, rethink, etc. The result, this, their second full-length album, isn’t really a new direction for them — it’s more just a huge evolutionary leap forward. Everything that made them great before, amplified & purified. Epic transcendental blackened space metal, more or less.

The Malpass Brothers: The Malpass Brothers

Two brothers from Goldsboro who decided that the right thing to do was to pretend that it’s the early 60s and straight hardcore honky-tonk country music is still a thing that people play. This album is as remarkable for its sheer existence as it is for how good it is.

Midnight Plus One: Unlearn Everything

This is the second full-length from Midnight Plus One, and their last as a 5-piece. Given that they’ve been a three-piece for a while now, you can probably surmise that they weren’t even sure if these recordings would see the light of day — but then Chris DeFusco of Negative Fun basically insisted.

The current gtr/drums/vox trio is pretty in-yr-face aggro, and the songs here that are in that vein are my favorites. The slower/longer cuts can sometimes get lost in the midtempo doldrums.

Jenks Miller + Rose Cross NC: Live September 11, 2015

This was one of my favorite sets at Hopscotch, and my friend Jonas Blank of NYCTaper did such a great job with the recording that it has wound up one of my favorite releases of the year as well. Jenks & his band have been pretty fearless these past couple of years. Specifically: Nearly every set consists of the same 3 or 4 songs, but stretched, teased apart, expanded & reconstructed. It has been a fascinating process to watch.

Monologue Bombs: Eighties Night b/w The Nightingale Routine

Monologue Bombs are the solo side-project of Goner keyboardist Scott Phillips. They started out as Scott mostly playing accordion and singing, but they’ve clearly evolved since then, to the point that one might mistake these for demos from some upcoming Goner release.

Scott has always had a gift for concise, vivid description, and an ear for narrative detail, and these two songs are proof that he’s continuing to hone his talents. These are affecting & gripping songs & they remind me, again, that I can’t wait to hear more from Scott.

Mountain Goats: Beat the Champ

Here it is: The Mountain Goats wrestling concept album. I never watched wrestling as a kid, so I don’t have that hook to hang this on. But I love people and drama and human emotions and stuff like that, and that’s what this album is all about.

But so we’re clear: These songs are seriously really all about professional wrestling.

My quibbles with it have more to do with the sonics than the content — there’s a certain kind of bippy-boppy upbeat rounded-off anodyne mode that they get into sometimes that I wish they’d avoid. Overall, though, the high points definitely outweigh the lower points. I know it’s not how he works, and probably not good for business besides, but I’m increasingly thirsty for an entire Mountain Goats album of slow songs with John solo at the piano.

Naked Gods: Naked Gods

Third album from this exceptionally good Boone-based southern psych-rock outfit. There’s a southern twang throughout, and some great guitar work, but there are also organs & drones, heavy fuzz attacks, moments of pop clarity & moments of heavy psych. It all fits together remarkably well, particularly given how short most of the songs are — you feel like you’ve had a solid workout in 3-4 minutes.

No Love: Dogs//Wolves 7″

The second release in that Sorry State NC singles series. Another pair of super-catchy numbers from No Love, who manage to be abrasive & not remotely “pop” and yet still hooky as shit.

Patois Counselors: Patois Counselors 7″

Killer new “postpunk” from the ever-shifting Charlotte universe — that’s Bo White (Calabi Yau, Yardwork, various solo stuff) on vocals, and Nick Goode (Brain F≠, Joint D≠), plus other folks I may or may not know (it’s all pseudonyms on their Bandcamp).

Since the rumors of Whatever Brains’ demise have proven to be true, at least we’ll have Patois Counselors to step into the gap they leave — and they may be uniquely suited to do so, given how restless Bo has always been, musically. This is wicked good.

See Gulls: You Can’t See Me

Long-awaited debut from See Gulls. These folks got so good so fast — and garnered so much attention at Hopscotch 2014 — that it was an honest surprise to discover that their debut would be this comparatively brief 5-song EP. Sarah Fuller is really coming into her own as a songwriter & frontperson, so I can’t wait to see what they come up with next.

Silent Lunch: Silent Lunch

Two new ones from Durham trio Silent Lunch, matched up with the three songs from their original (out-of-print) EP, and destined to be the entirety of their recorded output. Sigh.

The two new songs are both much stronger than the material on Late to Bloom — they’re better recorded, the instruments do more interesting things, they’re tighter, and the vocals are unsettling in their intensity. Both songs are about the fine line between love & lust, and they repeatedly cross over from urgency to desperation (and back again). Given that, it’s profoundly depressing that they broke up more or less simultaneously with releasing this.

Suppressive Fire: Hellwraith

Suppressive Fire are a thrash band from Raleigh. They call themselves “blackened thrash” but it’s really just high-quality post-Slayer thrash. I love how raw this sounds (it was recorded by Greg Klaiber of the Pinhook). Track #2 is a fairly straight transcription of the climactic scene from Raiders of the Lost Ark, because why not? This is all kind of silly and totally ripping.

Terrace Heater: Harris Teeter

Terrace Heater is (was) Graham Cox (ex-Brainbows) and other people from bands like Fruit, Plankton Feast and Santana. I never saw them so I honestly don’t know, and now I’m told this is their first and last album. Trivia: Two of the songs on here were originally released as singles on Bandcamp with a price tag of $1000 per song. I’ll have to ask Graham if he sold any.

This is punk/postpunk with a jittery early-80s feel — some Minutemen, some Feelies, some early Joy Division in there somewhere as well. Stuff I really like, which is why I’m so irritated at myself for never seeing them. At least we have this record.

Wes Tirey: Journeyer/Forward, Melancholy Dream

Wes Tirey is from somewhere up near Asheville — he’s part of a loose affiliation of folks up there (Sarah Louise, Tashi Dorji) who use traditional music forms as points of departure for someplace decidedly weirder.

Wes is a guitarist, but the first three of these tracks lean more heavily on the organ than the guitar. The common denominator throughout is Wes’s creaky talk/sung vocals. He’s not quite as grizzled sounding as neighbor Malcolm Holcombe, but his voice does seem to come from an older, darker universe.

Wes is a prolific guy, and has a ton of stuff up on his Bandcamp — you can buy his entire discography there for like $17, which I strongly suggest you do.

Waxahatchee: Ivy Tripp

I wasn’t sure I needed this record — great, more breezy well-written well-played well-recorded indie-pop-rock — but after bits & pieces of it kept getting lodged in my head, I was forced to conclude that I absolutely needed it.

The Wigg Report: Everyday Revolution

It has been a few years since the last album from Durham’s Wigg Report, the band who travel to all their gigs via bicycle. They’re all about making what ppl in the 90s called Temporary Autonomous Zones in which they can live their lives. The quote on the back is a good one: “revolution is not the overthrow of the existing system but the setting up alongside of a better one.” They work as teachers & computer nerds & make music for their friends & neighbors.

Instruments: guitar (acoustic but amplified & distorted), minimalist drumkit, saxophone, voice. New this album: bass, from a guy named Charles Latham, who moved away to Philly for quite a while but is back now. He’s a pretty great antifolk singer in his own right.

This was recorded live in minimal takes & it sounds just like what the Wigg Report sound like, which is a good thing, because they are joyous & smart & compassionate & funny & both cynical & idealistic at the same time.

The Wyrms: At Wizard Island

Last year there was a kind of sunny indie-pop band from Carrboro called Rogue Band of Youth. One day, according to the email they sent me, they went out & bought a bunch of fuzz pedals, changed their name to The Wyrms, and wrote a ton of amazing garage/psych/fuzz/pop tunes about vampires and other horror/fantasy movie tropes. This is the result. It is amazing, primarily because they still remember how to write pop hooks & they’re not afraid to throw in little “oooh oooh” parts. Seriously, if you listen to this enough you start to realize that if you cut out all the fuzz & added some tambourine, these songs would work wonderfully as sunny indie-pop. Or the Partridge Family.

THIS IS A VERY GOOD THING. This is the party/driving/housecleaning/anything album of the late-summer/early-fall.

2015 in review, Part 1: Favorite albums

Durham Police seeking feedback on draft body camera policy

The city is seeking feedback on their new draft policy covering the deployment of body cameras to officers.

Here is the policy. (pdf download)

And here is the feedback form.

Durham Police seeking feedback on draft body camera policy

Nov 17 – Dec 13, 2015

Saw Cecile McLorin Salvant last night & spent most of the show in awe. I’m glad I didn’t know just exactly how young she is (26) until after I got home.

Yes, her voice is hugely powerful — pure & rich in the lower registers, which is what leads to the Ella Fitzgerald & Sarah Vaughan comparisons. Up in the midrange it gets brassy, and on a couple of vintage blues numbers she let rip with a guttural growl that would’ve blown out a weaker throat after just a few seconds.

But even more than that, it was how completely at ease she seemed, twisting songs, turning them inside out & then putting them right again, all with an ear for musicality & for the lyrical sense, both at once. It seems like it should take more of a lifetime to get good at that.

What else? Transparent Season 2 came out. I had forgotten what pathetic wretches the children are. We’re only 2 episodes in & I’m dreading the rest, but that doesn’t mean I won’t keep watching.

Back at the start of the (ahem) 4-week period covered by this entry, we saw You Us We All, the baroque opera written by Shara Worden and Andrew Ondrejcak. Parts of it were highly enjoyable (including all of the music, much of the singing, and emphatically the costumes). The libretto was kind of a mess, and it never really seemed to go anywhere, but it was definitely a spectacle, and when I step out for an evening of musical theatre, spectacle is what I expect.

What else? Saw T0W3RS & Boulevards the day after Thanksgiving. T0W3RS were great — Derek’s newer material has him exploring his lower Ian Curtis vocal register, which I loved. Boulevards *really* needs to assemble some kind of dynamite funk band to back him up. He’s a hugely energetic performer, but too much of his energy is being diverted into overcoming the fact that he’s singing along to backing tracks.

Plus I got the sense that his backing tracks are the same as (or very similar to) the ones on the record, and the mix felt weird in a live setting as a result. I love the record, but I’m gonna have to give the live show a B-.

Last weekend we saw Isabella Rossellini do her “Green Porno” show/lecture thing. It was 1000% beautiful & life-affirming & goofy. And adorable. If she were American, her kids would probably be totally mortified. But she’s Isabella Rossellini. 950 people in a theater totally crushing out as she dressed up like a hamster with prominent red nipples.

This month is my favorite time of the year for music because it’s when all the Top-Whatever lists come out, and I get to start listening to new music. Keeping up with the full flood of new releases is too exhausting, so I just wait for the year-end summaries & cherry-pick the best stuff. The other day I spent 2-3 hours listening through the Stereogum Top 50 Metal Albums list & found at least a half-dozen things to love.

Book-wise I have taken a break from my endless back-and-forth between Richard Stark’s Parker novels, and Robert Crais’s Elvis Cole novels, to dive into that super-popular sci-fi series The Expanse, the one they just turned into a SyFy Network series. I had read the first book, Leviathan Wakes, back in 2011 and really enjoyed it, but since Amazon sucks at even the most obvious recommendations, I hadn’t even realized there had been subsequent volumes.

It’s space opera, but with a somewhat higher than average degree of character development, and with an interesting First Contact plot. Things start to spin out of control shortly after the start of the third book, but the first two are solid. Out of curiosity I watched the first 7-8 minutes of the first episode of the TV series, but I couldn’t go any further.

Nov 17 – Dec 13, 2015

Letter to city council re: ongoing street closures

Dear Council, Tom Bonfield, & downtown water main replacement project management:
As the water main replacement project drags into the autumn, my sympathies continue to lie with the downtown merchants who have suffered through multiple weekends of lost revenue, with seemingly no end in sight. I can’t help but feel that this project is being managed by people who have never worked in a retail business, and who feel no sense of accountability to the citizens & business owners whose taxes fund the work being done. It reminds me of the terribly planned downtown streetscape project of a decade ago, which drove Ringside out of business. Did we learn nothing from that project?
 
It adds insult to injury, then, when Mangum Street remains closed on a Sunday when apparently no work is actually being done. I’ll direct you to the tweet below, from the poor folks at Dos Perros, who have been impacted harder than nearly all other downtown businesses by this work:

It’s all very well and good to say that this is a once-every-90-years project (although one is compelled to ask: why are we replacing all of it at once, rather than staggering the replacement of sections, to spread out both the cost and the impact to businesses?) — but for the businesses being impacted, it’s a potentially cataclysmic event. Good city planning should take the reality of commercial business into account, particularly now that so many citizens have invested so much in revitalizing downtown. This project is being managed as though it were taking place in the downtown of 1995, a place that nobody wanted or needed to go after dark or on weekends.

Surely the Durham of 1995 is not the city you wish to be managing — so perhaps you & your contractors should alter your actions to reflect the reality we currently live in?

Warmest regards,
Ross Grady

Letter to city council re: ongoing street closures