Showing posts with label best coast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best coast. Show all posts

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Fade a Bronzed Familia (October 21st - 25th)

Hello and welcome to Work Tunes.

Bit of a late one this week, because the day just got away from me. I've been out with the fam into town at MYRE and the markets, plus the usual Saturday grocery run and then swimming so I'm only just sitting down. Better get into it then hey?

Besides the second disc of the Essential Bill Withers, there's a David Wilcox LP and some LCD Soundsystem. A few new ones make the list this week, with Best Coast's new EP, the soundtrack to a Spanish film from Josh Rouse and the enticingly titled (for me) Jazz Hop from Gas-Lab and Traum Diggs. Also new, kind of, is the 2013 mix of Nirvana's brilliant In Utero. Slotting in nicely with the noise of Nirvana, there's Dom and Sonic Youth. Finally, just a bit of Missy Elliott along for the ride.   

Check it out:

  1. Ryan Adams
  2. Soul Asylum
  3. Pearl Jam
  4. Devo
  5. LL Cool J
Song of the Week : Wilco - My Darling


When my Brother in Law and Sister in Law had their first child, I made them a video using the footage I’d taken on our hospital visit and this song. At the time, Mrs CoreyJ and I didn't quite have children on the radar. When we did have our first, I used a different song than the one I used for her cousin because I didn't want them to be the same. I've always been bummed about that, because this is such a beautifully simple song and it just says so much with very little. If I’d used something else for my niece, I definitely would have snatched this one up for Miss 7. 

I’m pretty sure you’re familiar with it. It’s got that rickety honky tonk piano in the intro and throughout. The acoustic guitar strumming beneath is steady and plain, while the drums and the backing vocals are what ramps it up a little. What the lyrics are saying is universal, I think. Go to sleep, I’ll take care of everything, don’t grow up too fast, your parents love you and each other, we’re a family. It’s all so cheesy and yet isn't  because it’s a universal truth.

I’d really love to hear a remix with just that piano and Tweedy, because it would be a completely different song. I’d still want to have the original to listen to, but I would love to hear a different form. Garage band, get on it!    


Bye
No point waffling on then, I'm already late. I have to go prepare some tapas soon from a bunch of stuff we bought while out and about. I do believe it will go well with a beer and all. 

The best of the weekend to you and yours. Hasala malakim.

Friday, December 21, 2012

Top 10 Albums of 2012

Hello and welcome to Work Tunes.

You might have noticed there was no Work Tunes last week. That's because I was saving the surprise of my Top 10 Albums of 2012. My top 10 list has been my weekly soundtrack this week. 

The albums I've selected are not necessarily the same ones that would make my critical top 10 list. These are my favourite albums this year, the ones I have especially enjoyed listening to. The one that I have continued to play all year whenever the mood strikes. These are my top 10.

I've written a few words on each of them and listed them in reverse order - just for the suspense* (*suspense may not be actual). At the end of the list, you'll find the next ten albums in my top 20 and finally a mixtape of one song from each top 10 selection.

Check it out:

10. Paul Kelly - Spring and Fall

This year's release is among Mr Paul (poet and living legend) Kelly's best in a while. Spring and Fall is the sound of a man growing old and weary but comfortable in his own skin. As 'over the hill' as the narrator of every song is, he's still obsessed by the universal themes of love and sex and death. By the end of the album with Little Aches and Pains, we hear a man expressing how the heart is willing but the flesh is weak. At the Stories of Me event, PK told us that the song was written because he and his siblings have a rule that they can only talk for 5 minutes about their medical complaints when they meet up, or else they talk of nothing else. I am really glad to hear yet another great Paul Kelly album.

9. The Bamboos - Medicine Man

This is the first spot I had to think really hard about filling and I wrote this list from top to bottom. A few albums have slipped into the lower half of my top 20 to make way for this. In the end I had to include it on the strength of the Tim Rogers collaboration alone. Plus, it is so good to see Australians putting out this kind of soulful rock music. I think if it was a US release, it would make a lot of international Top 10 lists.

8. Beth Orton - Sugaring Season

As an Orton fan since Sunky hipped me to her, I was eager to hear the new album. It has been a while between drinks for the "tall glass of water" (as she is referenced in Ryan Adams' English Girls Approximately). Worth the wait. Sugaring Season seems a lot more organic than previous efforts; meaning not as electronic - though I know there are plenty of keys in it. BO has managed to weave her distinctive voice through some very smooth piano and string lines. There's a bit of sadness in the lyric content, but it doesn't get too morbid. 

7. Seapony - Falling

What can I say about Seapony? I loved their 2011 debut Go With Me, so I jumped at the next release. The two sound very similar, in that there is a sound that is distinctly Seapony. I hear it as a loud punk band playing behind a shiny piece of not-quite-soundproof glass. All the edge is taken off the crunch and fuzz and you get this dreamy kind of hum. I suppose that's why it's referred to as Dream Pop. It's good, anyway.

6. First Aid Kit - The Lion's Roar

Emmylou was all it took to get me to buy this album. The harmonies, the reference to country's veteran royal couples, the sweet, sweet melody. I was blown away when I found out these girls were Swedish. They sound like mountain folk - and I suppose they are, just Scandinavian and not Appalachian. There's other great tracks on the album too though and they are all as Americana as the one that got my attention.  

When I first heard The XX with VCR, I expected more catchy pop tunes with a decidedly electronic backing. Listening to the whole album showed they were a little less shallow than they probably seemed at first. With Coexist, they've added a large ambient string to their bow and made a coherently whole album that sets a mood. Every song on it seems to have this ominous undertone like it’s the end of the world in a dance song – very fitting in these 2012 times, no?. I think it's just the keys, but whatever it is, it works and it definitely maintains a singular mood. I like it a lot.

4. Justin Townes Earle - Nothing's Gonna Change The Way You Feel About Me Now

Besides the unwieldy title, this is a very good release from JTE. I only discovered the man and his music with 2010's Harlem River Blues but have since acquainted myself with the back catalogue. This LP is as soul-searching and redemptive as Harlem, but it doesn't hide the sadness behind catchy jigs. Where Harlem was a bit of a romp, NGCTWYFAMN is subdued and lonely. Songs like Unfortunately Anna and Won't Be The Last Time sound like late night confessions and cries for help. He still puts a stomp in proceedings a little with Look The Other Way, but even that is a song about how his mother never recognises the good things he does, and only focuses on the many negatives. It seems that JTE is getting better with each release. Early stuff had a couple of good tracks, maybe one great one in Midnight at the Movies; while Harlem River Blues was outstanding and this album is superb in its own right. 

When The Only Place was released, I read a lot of good press, but just as many complaints by fans of their debut Crazy For You. The argument was that it was more of the same and that the repetitive choruses were now annoying. I'm of the opinion that this album is not more of the same, because the production of it and the ability of the band's lyricist and lead singer has exploded in a great way. Besides the deeper polish on the sound which gives it a 50s/60s feel, Bethany Constantino has developed a real voice. No longer the whiny LA surfy chick, she sounds more like Patsy Cline or Connie Francis on songs like Up All Night and How They Want Me To Be. This is a deserved Top 3 choice and I really should have bought the vinyl instead of the CD, but i cheaped out on the shipping. Silly me. Now I have to buy both anyway.

2. Dinosaur Jr. - I Bet On Sky

I'm probably a little biased here, because there isn't much I don't like from Dinosaur Jr. But I thought I Bet On Sky was better than Farm (2009), which I also enjoyed. What I prefer about Sky is the low end thump has been taken out of the sound, so it sounds less like Metallica and more like J Mascis lazily humming over a lovely warm and fuzzy guitar. So okay, maybe it all just sounded more like the 90s and I am a sucker for Slacker nostalgia. Whatevs. I really liked this album.


No surprises that probably one of the strongest releases from one of my favourite groups would make my Top 10 list. For me, Hilltop Hoods haven't put a foot wrong since The Calling. Since that breakthrough, they have been the undisputed high watermark in Australian Hip Hop, no argument. For me, the highlights on Drinking From the Sun are the massively hooky I Love It and The Underground; the out-of-left-field rapid fire rhythmic rhyming scheme of Rattling The Keys to the Kingdom, the awesome Joe Pesci sample in the Good For Nothing hook and the inclusive politics of Speaking In Tongues. 

    2012 Mixtape Tracklist  

    The Bamboos - I Got Burned (feat. Tim Rogers)
    Dinosaur Jr. - Don't Pretend You Didn't Know
    Seapony - Prove To Me
    Justin Townes Earle - Look The Other Way
    First Aid Kit - Emmylou
    Beth Orton - Dawn Chorus
    The xx - Chained
    Paul Kelly - Cold As Canada
    Best Coast - Up All Night
    Hilltop Hoods - I Love It

    Get the Mixtape

    And that's my whole year. I'm on leave until January 7, so no Work Tunes until then. If I get a spare moment, I might post a review over at Make Films Not Movies, but most likely I'll just be 'maxing and relaxing'.

    Have a great silly season. Whatever you do, be careful on the roads but more importantly in the shops - I've been there a lot lately and it is chaos! 

    As always and forever - hasala malakim brothers and sisters. 

    Friday, May 11, 2012

    Nasty Suburban Sea Songs (May 14th - 18th)

    Hello and welcome to Work Tunes.


    First up, I have to say I am still smarting from the passing of MCA. This week's Song of the Week was a special tribute edition and you'll see later on that it's quite long. It isn't just the tragedy of losing a great artist either, it's awful to see a man taken from his family and friends at such a young age. I am listening to To The 5 Burroughs and Hello Nasty this week to continue to pay respect and enjoy the music.


    Besides the two Beastie LPs, I've grabbed my favourite Josh Rouse; there's the latest effort from Best Coast; Neutral Milk Hotel I am checking out thanks to Parks and Recs; I bought a bonus EP copy of Hand It Over on the weekend, so that's here; Australia's own Bob Evans makes an appearance; Suzanne Vega has been sounding great in the wetter weather; U2s monumental live album is along for the ride and finally a Bloodshot Records compilation. 


    Check it out:
    1. Beastie Boys
    2. Sonic Youth
    3. 2Pac
    4. The Lemonheads
    5. Nirvana

    Song of the Week : Beastie Boys - Right Right Now Now



    The first time I saw the Beastie Boys was the film clip to Fight For Your Right. Being 14 / 15 at the time, these three brats from NYC talking about smoking and drinking and porno were the three coolest guys on the planet. (Side Note: I don’t know if you know or remember this, but kids actually used to steal VW emblems to hang around their neck like Mike D. I never did, but I remember trawling the streets of Koongamia looking for a Beetle to gank one off).


    Part one of my multimedia tribute is the video on my tumblr (www.coreyj.tumblr.com) of an unaired live performance on Chappelle’s Show. This is how they were when I found them; raucous, NYC, precocious and wild. Part of them stayed exactly like that even as they matured.


    After I saw the film clip for Fight, I immediately took some money from my Kmart job and bought the 45 of the song.  On the other side was Paul Revere. It was that song that for me established MCA as the “bad ass” of the three. Ad Rock was always the whiny brat and Mike D the smooth ladies man. MCA always came across as the tough guy, and that sort of has always carried on.

    That’s why I chose Right Right Now Now from The 5 Burroughs as my SOTW. I think 5 Burroughs is unfairly underrated by even big Beasties fans. I have always loved it. This song shows beautifully how MCA was the counterpoint to the old school Beastie brattiness. As Simon pointed out, they still had fun while they spoke on important topics. Have a look at some of the exchanges of lyrics across the song:


    Ad Rock:  With the sound delight we rock all night / And yes we're gonna party for the right to fight
    MCA: What we do now is future moulding / Columbine bowling, childhood stolen / We need a bit more gun controlling


    Mike D: I'm not here to fight, or incite  / I'm like the beach in the Bahamas make you feel alright 
    MCA: I'm getting kind of tired of the situation / The US attacking other nations


    When I watched Awesome! I F%#^n’ Shot That last night and saw them play as a live band, instruments and all, it drove home just how far they’d evolved from the hardcore punk band who wanted to be terrible at playing, through their rap pioneering and onto being accomplished instrumentalists as well as highly respected rappers. The band, the culture and the world will never be the same without MCA. It was a sad, sad day when we lost him.


    Woah, long one. Sorry about that. But I think you know how I’ve dragged the Beastie Boys around with me like a security blanket from the age of 14; a constant touchstone to that part of my personality and culture. I sure am going to miss them – because I don’t think there’ll be any more output from the other two as a group. Hopefully there’ll be some lost tapes or something with MCA as star.


    Nnnnnddroooop!

    TTFN brothers and sisters. May your whole week be charged with new music and old favourites. If you're going out, play safe. Happy Mothers Day if you're a Mum in Australia. 


    Go Eagles! (no chance) Hasala malakim.

    Friday, January 27, 2012

    Playlist : January 30th - February 3rd, 2012

    Hello and welcome to Work Tunes.


    It feels like it's been one long tun of short weeks this year so far, but I have Tuesday off this week too. After a babysitting dilemma, I decided to stay home and take Miss 5 to see Hugo. I'm really looking forward to seeing what Scorsese does with not just the 3D, but his utter love of cinema and the early history of film-making. I can't wait.


    For the soundtrack of my working week, I've got the self-titled LP from The Felice Brothers; the debuts of Iron & Wine and First Aid Kit; some James Taylor because I only just discovered Dolorean's Hey Mister, That's Me On The Jukebox was a Taylor cover; Fear Of A Black Planet because I just bought the vinyl; a Lost Highway compilation; classics from The Flaming Lips and U2; my favourite hot summer album, Crazy For You from Best Coast and finally Hilltop's State of the Art because I have a Hoods gig on Friday night.


    Check it out:

    1. Bob Dylan
    2. Nada Surf
    3. Belle and Sebastian
    4. Lil' Kim
    5. Concrete Blonde

    Song of the Week : First Aid Kit - King of the World



    I had a tough decision to make between two songs that have stuck with me this week, so I chose the one I think you’ll all prefer. I only just discovered this band First Aid Kit through the NPR stream of their latest LP The Lion’s Roar. They are a duo of sisters from Stockholm who play kind of freak folk style tunes. Wiki says Fleet Foxes and Joanna Newsom are influences, but I heard a bit of Bright Eyes too. Lo and behold, there’s Conor Oberst on the final track of this album – King of the World.


    King of the World sounds more like a Bright Eyes song than a First Aid Kit song, almost like Conor co-wrote it, but I don’t think he did. It’s a very wordy track with that rollicking hoedown style that Bright Eyes sometimes does (never, ever stop in the middle of a hoedown!). See what you think anyway. I dig the band a lot and will be checking out their debut album next week.


    Enjoy. 

    CongƩ

    If you get the chance, check out the new Nada Surf. The song Teenage Dreams was almost my Song of the Week. They don't sound much like the guys who released Popular all those moons ago.


    That's it for this week. Try and stay cool and happy for the rest of the week. I'll see you back here next week, no doubt still buzzing from the Hoods. Congratulations to Gotye on the most unsurprising JJJ Hottest #1 since Oasis - Wonderwall. It really is a great track and deserves all the attention it has had all year.


    Hasala malakim.

    Friday, June 10, 2011

    Playlist : June 13th - 17th, 2011

    Hey there tunesters. How's everybody doing? You comfortable? Good.

    In music news for me this week, I snared a cheap Yamaha RX-550 amp at the Melville markets, along with some Hendrix and Blondie vinyl and some bargain CDs. A few of the CDs I bought have made it onto the list this week. Besides those from Beastie Boys, Ben Folds Five, Prince and the Friends soundtrack, there's the new Daisy, Kitty and Lewis for a bit of brand new old timey rock n roll, some Public Enemy because Chuck D himself now follows me on Twitter (squeeee...) and some other stuff. I added some David Bowie because I feel like my Bowie education is very poor, even though I appreciate much of what I do know.

    So this week;
    1. The Herd
    2. Mos Def
    3. The Vines
    4. Lucinda Williams
    5. Dolorean
    Song of the Week : REO Speedwagon - Keep On Loving You
    So with my new amp, I have been spinning much vinyl. Besides the Hendrix and Blondie I bought, I have been reaching for 80s compilations that I still have from back in the day, or I got for $2 at various op shops over the years. I’ve rocked out to Duran Duran, Men Without Hats, Falco, Austen Tayshus, you name it.

    But the one song that really still RAWKS for me is today’s SOTW; REO Speedwagon – Keep On Loving You. The subtle snake rattle, the grinding pick scrape, the blazing high solo and the cleanly rumbling rhythm crunch just make me want to do that thing Homer does when he throws horns and bangs his head going Yes! Yes! Yes! to Phish or someone.

    This freakin’ song, for all its big hair and glam 80s pop juts kicks so much butt. Gentleman, in the words of the immortal Mr Bob Dylan “Play it fawkin loud!”

    Ciao Bambinos
    For now then, that's all I've got. Enjoy your working week and may Friday afternoon come with speed and precision. Don't forget to be excellent to each other. Stay kooky, kids.

    Wednesday, December 15, 2010

    Playlist : Top 10 Albums of 2010

    Hello and welcome to Work Tunes.

    This week, I have chosen my Top 10 of 2010. This list is not necessarily of the 10 best albums released all year, it's just my personal favourites released all year. I also have to stress, this is not in any kind of preferential order. If I had to pick the best album of 2010 from a personal point of view, I'd say Wake Up! is it.

    On top of the list, I've made a mixtape of one track from each of the albums. You'll find a link at the bottom of the post.

    This year for me has been a good year for discovering new artists, thanks largely to NPR and KCRW and their excellent album preview features. A few of these new artists made it to the list. And here it is:
    • The Weepies - Be My Thrill : Two years on from the album that got them some well deserved mainstream attention, Hideaway, The Weepies released something a little less weepy and a lot more cheery. While Be My Thrill contains a few sad, sweet tunes, the title track and the catchy I Was Made for Sunny Days are a large slice of sunshine. ****
    • John Legend & the Roots - Wake Up! : When I heard Compared To What from this set for the first time, my jaw dropped. I was stunned that so much old-fashioned funk and soul was coming off a track from an album released in 2010. The other tracks on Wake Up! are in the same mold. This is probably my album of the year. *****
    • Ben Folds & Nick Hornby - Lonely Avenue : I must admit I've never read a Nick Hornby novel, but I have seen the excellent film adaptions of High Fidelity and About A Boy. It's obvious that Hornby writes good everyday type people well. Combined with Ben Folds' uniquely suburban heart and pop sensibilities, this colaborative effort makes for good listening. ****
    • Best Coast - Crazy For You : Released in July, which is Winter in the Southern Hemisphere where I am, this album sounds exactly like Summer. You can almost smell the coconut oil and the sea breeze mixed with the smoke from the late night bonfire at the beach party where romances are born and hearts are broken. This is joyfully rowdy pop music for the Sun. ****
    • Aloe Blacc - Good Things : It was I Need a Dollar that made me want this album. Like Compared To What on the John Legend and the Rootrs LP, Dollar stunned me with true 60s/70s soul and the groove behind it that really makes it bounce. 2010 saw soul music fans like me given a little taste of what was still possible with the genre. ****
    • Justin Townes Earle - Harlem River Blues : Another artist who has been around for some time whom I only discovered this year. Harlem River Blues is a collection of tunes that lend a little from everywhere; including rockabilly, bluegrass, folk, alt-country, blues and rock. It's a well-rounded album with the standout title track, One More Night in Brooklyn and the heartbroken Rogers Park. *****
    • The National - High Violet : For me at least, and for a good number of music publications, 2010 was The National's year. The massive success of 2008's Boxer and a busy touring schedule meant High Violet was much anticipated. Things got even more hyped with the release of a new The National track on the $1m raising charity compilation Dark Was the Night. Something of a hit single relatively speaking, Bloodbuzz Ohio ensured High Violet got to #3 on the US charts where Boxer had peaked at #68. *****
    • Gil Scott-Heron - I'm New Here : Released early February of this year, I'm New Here ended a 13 year absence of new material from the man some would call a proto-rapper. This is an album about redemption, about finding a way through a new and not always welcoming world. After a long life of drug problems, incarceration and hard living, Heron seems to be contemplating what lies ahead and how it all ends. Here is music from the very soul of a man with a lot of soul. *****
    • She & Him - Volume Two : The very digable Zooey Deschanaul and indie songwriter M.Ward released a collection of simple pop that sounded like the 50s run through a Doris Day film filter in 2009. That was Volume One and this is Volume Two, which is more of the same. Deschanaul wrote the lyrics and her voice is well suited to the pop from another age. There were stronger tracks on Volume One, but this is by no means inferior. ****
    So those are my very favourite albums from this year. Please, feel free to comment this post and tell me where you think I got it right and where you disagree totally. I'd love suggestions for better albums to listen to that I haven't caught yet.

    In the meantime, here is the mixtape I promised you, made up of a track each from my Top 10. You can get hold of it here. Tracklist is as follows:

    Gil Scott-Heron - I'm New Here
    John Legend & the Roots - Compared To What
    Aloe Blacc - I Need A Dollar
    The National - Bloodbuzz Ohio
    Ben Folds & Nick Hornby - Claire's Ninth
    Best Coast - Bratty B
    The Weepies - Be My Thrill
    Justin Townes Earle - One More Night In Brooklyn
    She & Him - Thieves
    Ray LaMontagne and The Pariah Dogs - New York City's Killing Me

    That's it for this week. I'm officially on holidays from Christmas Eve, so no Work Tunes for the next fortnight. You may find a review or two over at Make Films Not Movies.

    Take care and have an outstanding break, you crazy cats. Peace man, right on.

    Friday, August 27, 2010

    Playlist : August 29th - September 3rd, 2010

    Now that the decade themes are out of my system, apart from a still beating passion for 1970s rock, I've gone back to your regularly scheduled programming of something old and something new.
    • Jay-Z - The Blueprint : I've always associated The Ruler's Back from this LP with Ben Cousins "Charges don't stick to dude, he's Teflon. I'm too sexy for jail like I'm Right Said Fred I'm not guilty now give me back my bread." Given this is Ben's week, here's Jay Z. Plus, I hear Jay-Z is supporting U2 and may be coming to little old Perth.
    • Best Coast - Crazy For You : Read a few things about these guys in Rolling Stone and Spin. They seem to be everywhere at the moment. The album sounds like summer holiday tunes with a hangover. Just perfect for chilly Perth mornings.
    • Arcade Fire - The Suburbs : All I know of Arcade Fire is their decent album, Funeral. Everyone everywhere seems to be raving about their new cut. I thought I'd like to see what all the fuss is about.
    • The Weepies - Say I Am You : The Weepies fourth record Be My Thrill is due out at the end of August aka Now. In preparation and because I didn't pre-order it, I am giving Say I Am You a spin.
    • Ted Nugent - Great Gonzos - The Best of Ted Nugent : I know next to nothing about Ted Nugent. Except that while digging around for 70s albums, I came across a few tracks that made me smile. This is balls and all cheesy rock from the decade that gave us mission brown and lime green. Check out the cover art for an obvious giveaway of what you're in for.
    • Cowboy Junkies - Renmin Park : I'm a big Cowboy Junkies fan, and this is their new one. It is a little more electronic sounding in parts than I'm used to from the Junkies; and my first listen didn't take my fancy. But I do like this band, which is why I'm willing to give it a fair second listen. You should always afford bands a second listen when they've done some excellent work in the past. Governments too...
    • Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin III : I'm still not over my 1970s music kick, even as I continue my 50s culture obsession. Led Zep I was on a list a little while ago and II has never been a big favourite for me, so III comes next. Besides... Zeppelin Rules! \m/
    • Ozi Batla - Wild Colonial - Another album I probably haven't given enough of a chance. Not that I disliked this the first time, but that was the only listen so far. Time to take it for another turn. If nothing else, Batla has taught me that a good word for Aussie rappers/heads that sounds like Hip Hop's worst N word, is Digga.
    • Digable Planets - Blowout Comb : I'm not sure it's been that long since I heard this album, but I have been meaning to hear it in it's entirety. Quite a few songs end up on high rated playlists, but it feels a long time since heard it all. Brooklyn smooth Jazz Hop beats all.
    • Bruce Springsteen - The River : My renewed interest in vinyl has meant I've been listening to albums I own on record. One of them is The Boss' double LP The River that sounds impressive on wax. I wanted to listen to the CD for contrast. Nothing would beat the gate-fold artwork and lyrics printed on the record sleeve though.There's a scene in Jerry McGuire where Jerry, drinking, slips on Drive All Night and now it's all I can think of when I hear it.
    • Eli Paperboy Reed – Come And Get It : Blue eyed soul might sound like a total misnomer, but I have read some good reviews of this album (again from RS and Spin). A quick scan through and it sounds like classic Motown or Stax remixed with a white session singer. Which isn’t entirely terrible, but still not a patch on the original. Except these are original songs, they just don’t sound like it.
    Well, that's it. Until next week, be excellent to each other and all that good stuff. As I noted to @geoff9cow after he recently quoted Dr King about hate, "Life's too short to be pissed off all the time." And Edwrad Furlong said that, so it must be true.

    Don't get hung up man, stay cool.