Ridiculous Indie Rock Band Photos

Used Wigs added captions  to describe what might be going on during some photo shoots for indie rock bands . For more, check out part one and part two of Used Wigs‘ collection of “Ridiculous Indie Rock Band Photos”.

To get away from all the tension, Fergus thinks about his happy place, Puppytown Junction, just like his therapist told him to do.
(Click here to listen to Dragonette)

And there they sat for hours in silence, all refusing to take responsibility for forgetting the picnic basket and Frisbee.
(Click here to listen to Crystal Stilts)


I hid all of my bandmates’ hats and I refuse to tell them where they are.

(Click here to listen to The Veils)

Meco’s Star Wars disco on TV

This was broadcast on the Dutch TV program TopPop  in 1977.  Top Pop was on the air for 18 years and  if the actual artist wasn’t available to perform the song they’d do something like this. More information is available at the Avro website and you can watch  many, many more clips on Avro’s Youtube channel .

 I don’t remember anything this entertaining being on American TV when I was in 10th grade. I do remember the song being played on American Top 40. “Star Wars Theme/Cantina Band” was number 1 in America for 2 weeks, losing the number one spot to “You Light Up My Life” by Debbie Boone. This was about the time I stopped obsessively listening to the Top 40 countdown.

Meco’s Star Wars disco on TV via Boing Boing
’70s Dutch pop music show revived online via Boing Boing

Scopitones: Music Videos From the 60’s

Before MTV, and long before we could stream music videos on our cell phones, mid-1960s American hepcats gathered around 500-pound, 7-foot-high contraptions to watch 16-millimeter Technicolor films of B-list pop stars gyrating to their latest hits. The contraption in question was usually a Scopitone, one of several audio-visual jukeboxes found primarily in bars. Their reign, if you can even call it that, was brief, and by the end of the decade, the novelty of these then-high-tech devices had faded entirely.



Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass – “Tijuana Taxi” (Scopitone S-1064)
More information at Collectors Weekly.
More videos at Scopitones.

Joe Perry’s Hot Sauce

Joe Perry has been creating bone rattling licks with Aerosmith for 30 + years. Now his Boneyard Brew Hot Sauce will rattle your palette with its incredible flavor and taste. 5 Ounces of fresh habanero peppers, onions and garlic, tangy squeezed lime juice, red bell peppers, chipotle peppers, and aged red wine vinegar; it’s hardly the same old song and dance. Joe Perry’s Rock Your World TM Boneyard Brew has a mystical flavor that will keep your taste buds rollin’ all night long! Hot sauce ingredients: Vinegar, fresh red bell peppers, fresh lime juice, fresh habanero peppers, fresh onions, fresh garlic, chipotle peppers, salt, xantham gum.

Also available

Joe Perry’s Rock Your World TM Mango Peach Tango Sauce

Hot sauces available for purchase from Joe Perry’s website. The story of how Fiery Foods & BBQ magazine managed to get Joe Perry to pose for the cover of the magazine is at Diary of a Rock Star Cover Photo Shoot.

AEROSMITH – Walk This Way – LIVE 1977 (Houston Ⅱ)

The Chinch Bugs


I posted this picture to Facebook, but neglected to post it here. Jimmy’s song “Why Ya Hate Me?” was played at Target Field last Friday night. In entirety, with the above image on the screen, during the pregame while Harmon Killebrew was being interviewed on field and a portion during the game.

And since most of my readers didn’t make it to the last Chinch Bugs show, here is a video of them performing one of Jimmy’s new songs. The bad recording is from my camera which I set on a table in front of the stage during most of the show.

I’m in the process of clearing everything off my new computer so I can ship it back to get the motherboard replaced and came across this clip. I forgot that I had tried out Windows Live Movie Maker. (I got as far as figuring out how to do this). A friend shot a better video of the show so maybe when my computer comes back I’ll post a better clip.

Code Organ

The website, codeorgan creates musical tracks based on the content of a URL, Uniform Resource Locator, the global address of a web page. I tested it on The website for my husbands band, The Chinch Bugs (both the band and the website still exist). The News page was the most melodic.

Synthesizer

Simple sinewave synthesizer triggered by an ordinary 16step sequencer. Each triggered step causes a force on the underlaying wave-map, which makes it more cute.

That’s the description from aM Laboratory. It’s a simple synthesizer that’s very easy to play with and quite relaxing. Click box to add note, click again to remove a note. Space bar will clear all.

Nutritional Labels for Songs

A teen panel working with the Boston Public Health Commission has set up a “nutrition facts label” rating (like that seen on food items) for songs:

“Music, like food, can feed our brains and give us energy,” said Casey Corcoran, director of the Commission’s Start Strong Initiative. “But songs can affect our health and the health of our relationships.”

The tool, patterned after common food nutritional labels, invites consumers to become song lyric nutritionists by helping them identify relationship ingredients that make up a song. Using printed song lyrics as a guide, users can tally the number of healthy relationship themes, such as respect, equality, and trust, which are present in the song. And, like fattening calories, unhealthy relationship themes – possession, disrespect, and manipulation – are also counted. The number of times these themes are mentioned also factor into to the song’s total nutritional value. Corcoran recommends consuming lots of ‘healthy relationship’ ingredients for a balanced media diet.

The model was developed by 14 peer leaders in the Commission’s Start Strong Initiative. The teens, who range in age from 15 to 19 years old, attended a seven-week “Healthy Relationship Institute” where they were trained in teen dating violence prevention and healthy relationship promotion. They also learned to look at media critically, breaking it down to better understand the healthy or unhealthy relationship messages it may contain, such as power, control, equality, and gender roles.

“It’s important to have youth involved in this effort because teenagers are the main audience of the music,” said peer leader Shaquilla Terry, age 15 of Boston. “It’s important to actually listen to and think about the lyrics of a song and not just the beat.”


Since I don’t listen to popular music anymore, I haven’t heard any of the songs listed as top 10 healthiest and unhealthiest. I haven’t even heard of most of the artists.

link via Neatorama