POPULARITY
The children return once again to David Cronenberg with his body horror banger, The Brood. From wiki: “The Brood is a 1979 Canadian psychological body horror film written and directed by David Cronenberg and starring Oliver Reed, Samantha Eggar, and Art Hindle. Its plot follows a man and his mentally ill ex-wife, who has been sequestered by a psychiatrist known for his controversial therapy techniques. A series of brutal unsolved murders serves as the backdrop for the central narrative.” Also discussed: body dysmorphia, Going Down, Final Destination: Bloodlines, Clown in a Corfield, Prom Night, Hello Mary Lou : Prom Night II, Friendship, Dead Ringers, Future Ruins, and more. NEXT WEEK: Repulsion (1965) Bloodhaus:https://www.bloodhauspod.com/https://twitter.com/BloodhausPodhttps://www.instagram.com/bloodhauspod/ Drusilla Adeline:https://www.sisterhydedesign.com/https://letterboxd.com/sisterhyde/ Joshua Conkelhttps://www.joshuaconkel.com/https://bsky.app/profile/joshuaconkel.bsky.socialhttps://www.instagram.com/joshua_conkel/https://letterboxd.com/JoshuaConkel/
Deb and Vlarg eat their way through the Treasure! We also talk about Empire of the Damned, Stardust Thief, When the Moon Hits Your Eye, The Warriors, The Elephant Man, The Perfect Assassin, James Patterson, Bubble Shooter, Mobile Gmes, Ace Doubles, Sweet Silver Blues, Area 15, HBO Max comes to its senses, Bandersnatch no more, Bridgerton, X-Men plans, and the Future Ruins music festival. So, eat your fruit roll-up, it's time for a GeekShock!
Welcome to another episode of the Media Boat Podcast. We start with Future Ruins music festival focusing on film and tv scores. Next, an update on the Epic vs Apple lawsuit as Fortnite continues to not be available on iOS devices. Later, WBD is switching up its streaming service name from MAX to HBO MAX. We wrap it all up with the return of MoviePass, but this time its a box office fantasy gaming platform. We also have thoughts on Just Like Heaven and Balatro. All this and more on this weeks episode of the Media Boat Podcast.
The Podcast That Rocked for 5/14/25. The Poisoned Ascendency Tour from Trivium and Bullet For My Valentine has been stopped, Sleep Token on route to #1, more. ___Discussion Topics:Trivium VS Bullet For My Valentine (but not really?)Even In Arcadia by Sleep Token on route to be #1Someone actually bought the Gene Simmons roadie opportunityTurnstile go big at home show in BaltimoreNine Inch Nails announce Future Ruins composer festivalUpcoming albums/tours/more ___SONG OF THE WEEK: Halsey & Amy Lee “Hand That Feeds” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i_cBf-E7n7A ___“Fans initially expected both bands to visit South America, Australia and more, but Bullet for My Valentine will instead "divert [their] full attention towards the next chapter" of the band with plans to enter the studio in the summer. "As we head into the final shows of The Poisoned Ascendancy tour, we want to thank everyone who's come out to celebrate with us," the band wrote. "The shows have been phenomenal and we've loved connecting with every single one of you. Being in this band is the most important thing to the four of us. We're incredibly grateful to have been given the chance to look back at a pair of life-changing albums for us & Trivium, who we have nothing but respect and admiration for." After acknowledging the "incredible achievement" of a 20-plus-year career, Bullet for My Valentine said they "can't wait to get back in the studio later this summer and finish what we promise you is our best album to date. To go along with this, we are already starting to make plans for the 2026 & 2027 touring cycles, hitting every corner." They ended their statement with a note of gratitude for their fans plus the promise, "We'll be back with all of you very soon." What Did Trivium Say About Bullet for My Valentine Tour Ending? Earlier this week, Trivium bassist Paolo Gregoletto blamed Bullet for My Valentine frontman Matt Tuck for the Poisoned Ascendancy tour coming to an apparently premature end. "Matt Tuck didn't want to do it, after we had planned it, after stuff was already in the works — don't know why," Gregoletto said in a livestream. The band later said in a TikTok comment that Tuck was "the sole decision maker of the band and he has no respect for us or our crew." Despite the public drama, Trivium frontman Matt Heafy expressed his joy and gratitude for the tour in his own statement on Tuesday. "I have loved every show, every day, every minute; from the work I did - I have found myself more present and more appreciative than ever," he wrote.” (Loudwire) ___Trivium VS Bullet For My Valentine?! | The Podcast That Rocked
Bruce Springsteen a profité de sa présence sur le vieux continent pour défendre l'Amérique qu'il aime tant et dénoncer les errances et erreurs de l'administration de Donald Trump et vient de sortir "Repo Man" un nouveau single. Liam Gallagher va être grand-père pour la première fois, maintenant que sa fille aînée Molly Moorish a annoncé qu'elle était enceinte et évoque Oasis. On découvre le nouveau Volbeat qui sortira demain ‘'Time will heal'', troisième extrait de l'album complet à venir le 6 juin ‘'God of Angels Trust'', et que voici déjà en exclusivité pour Classic 21. Trent Reznor et Atticus Ross, le duo emblématique de Nine Inch Nails, s'apprêtent à révolutionner le monde des festivals musicaux. Steve Perry, ancien chanteur de Journey, et Willie Nelson, légende de la country, unissent leurs voix sur une nouvelle version de "Faithfully", le classique de Journey de 1983. Mots-Clés : show, Manchester, public, prises de position politiques, Faithless, Rain in the River, Blind Spot, compilation, Instagram, enfant, footballeur, Nathaniel Phillips, déclaration, manager, frère, Noel, comptable, menteur, Future Ruins, compositeur, bandes originales, cinéma, centre équestre, Los Angeles, scènes, partitions, direct, bénéfices, Farm Aid, anniversaire, événement caritatif, chant, principal, couplets. --- Classic 21 vous informe des dernières actualités du rock, en Belgique et partout ailleurs. Le Journal du Rock, en direct chaque jour à 7h30 et 18h30 sur votre radio rock'n'pop. Merci pour votre écoute Plus de contenus de Classic 21 sur www.rtbf.be/classic21 Ecoutez-nous en live ici: https://www.rtbf.be/radio/liveradio/classic21 ou sur l'app Radioplayer BelgiqueRetrouvez l'ensemble des contenus de la RTBF sur notre plateforme Auvio.be Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement. Découvrez nos autres podcasts : Le journal du Rock : https://audmns.com/VCRYfsPComic Street (BD) https://audmns.com/oIcpwibLa chronique économique : https://audmns.com/NXWNCrAHey Teacher : https://audmns.com/CIeSInQHistoires sombres du rock : https://audmns.com/ebcGgvkCollection 21 : https://audmns.com/AUdgDqHMystères et Rock'n Roll : https://audmns.com/pCrZihuLa mauvaise oreille de Freddy Tougaux : https://audmns.com/PlXQOEJRock&Sciences : https://audmns.com/lQLdKWRCook as You Are: https://audmns.com/MrmqALPNobody Knows : https://audmns.com/pnuJUlDPlein Ecran : https://audmns.com/gEmXiKzRadio Caroline : https://audmns.com/WccemSkAinsi que nos séries :Rock Icons : https://audmns.com/pcmKXZHRock'n Roll Heroes: https://audmns.com/bXtHJucFever (Erotique) : https://audmns.com/MEWEOLpEt découvrez nos animateurs dans cette série Close to You : https://audmns.com/QfFankxDistribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
As a fiction writer, essayist and journalist, Lauren Markham’s work most often concerns issues related to youth, migration, the environment and her home state of California. ‘A Map of Future Ruins’ explores the global immigration crisis’s historical, contemporary and, of course, future implications. Speaking with Georgina Godwin during the Lannan Literary Festival at Georgetown University, Lauren shares stories of her Greek upbringing, working with refugee communities and her future work.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On this episode, Laura reflects on some of the highlights from interviews over the past year. Featured guests include Maria Guidice, best-selling author and founder/former CEO of Hot Studio; Fritz Clay, founder of Fostering Connections; Lauren Markham, journalist and best-selling author of A Map of Future Ruins; and Henry Shukman, Zen master and author of Original Love. Thank you for listening, liking, reviewing, and subscribing! For more information about these guests, you can visit their websites: hotstudio.com, hairplay.com, laurenmarkham.info, and henryshukman.com.
Notes and Links to Lauren Markham's Work Lauren Markham is a writer based in northern California. She is the author of the recent A Map of Future Ruins: On Borders and Belonging (Riverhead, 2024) which The New Yorker listed as one of “The Best Books We've Read in 2024 So Far” and which Kirkus reviews called “a remarkable, unnerving, and cautionary portrait of a global immigration crisis.” A fiction writer, essayist and journalist, her work most often concerns issues related to youth, migration, the environment and her home state of California. Markham's first book, The Far Away Brothers: Two Young Migrants and the Making of an American Life (Crown, 2017) was the winner of the 2018 Ridenhour Book Prize, the Northern California Book Award, and a California Book Award Silver Prize. It was named a Barnes & Noble Discover Selection, a New York Times Book Critics' Top Book of 2017, and was shortlisted for the J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize and the L.A. Times Book Award and longlisted for a Pen America Literary Award in Biography. Markham has reported from the border regions of Greece and Mexico and Thailand and Texas; from arctic Norway; from gang-controlled regions of El Salvador; from depopulating towns in rural Sardinia and rural Guatemala, too; from home school havens in southern California; from imperiled forests in Oregon and Washington; from the offices of overwhelmed immigration attorneys in L.A. and Tijuana; from the upscale haunts of women scammed on the Upper East Side. Her writing has appeared in outlets such as VQR (where she is a contributing editor), Harper's, The New York Times Magazine, The Guardian, The New York Review of Books, The New Republic, Guernica, Freeman's, Mother Jones, Orion, The Atlantic, Lit Hub, California Sunday, Zyzzyva, The Georgia Review, The Best American Travel Writing 2019, and on This American Life. She has been awarded fellowships from The Mesa Refuge, UC Berkeley, Middlebury College, the McGraw Center, the French American Foundation, the Society for Environmental Journalists, the Silvers Prize, the de Groot Foundation, and the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference. In addition to writing, Markham has spent fifteen years working at the intersection of education and immigration. She regularly teaches writing in various community writing centers as well as at the Ashland University MFA in Writing Program, the University of San Francisco and St. Mary's MFA in Writing Program. Her third book, Immemorial, will be published by Transit Books in 2025. Buy A Map of Future Ruins Lauren's Website Los Angeles Review of Books' Review of A Map of Future Ruins At about 4:00, Lauren makes the case that not all young reading has to be high-brow as she discusses formative works as a kid and adolescent, which included Nancy Drew and Milan Kundera At about 6:50, Lauren responds to Pete's question about how she thinks and writes in diverse genres, and how her reading of varied writers informs her own work At about 10:40, Lauren shouts out Vauhini Vara, Hernan Diaz, Nathan Heller, Jia Tolentino, and other treasured contemporary writers At about 12:45, Lauren talks about how writing informs her teaching, and vice versa At about 15:25, Pete asks Lauren about seeds for A Map of Future Ruins and how her work with many undocumented and refugee students has affected her writing At about 19:00, Lauren and Pete discuss ideas of belonging and exclusion and pride and heritage in connection to Lauren's Greek heritage and reporting trips there At about 23:10, Ideas of “insiders” and “outsiders” and the challenges of immigration paperwork are discussed At about 26:05, Pete and Lauren reflect on a powerful quote from Warsan Shire regarding people being impelled to emigrate At about 26:55, Lauren gives background on the conditions that made Moria on the Greek slang of Lesbos a “purgatory” At about 31:20, Demetrios, a representative Greek from the book, and his views on immigration and “speak[ing] bird” is discussed At about 36:05, Lauren expands upon how Greece as the “starting point of democracy” has been corrupted and co-opted and points to a stellar expose on truth from Kwame Anthony Appiah At about 41:50, The two discuss the arbitrary nature of “The West” and Greece and its ideals and ideas of a “Western lineage At about 43:55, Lauren expands upon the ideas of “proximity to Whiteness” with particular historical relevance for Greeks, Italians, and Southern Europeans At about 44:55, Pete and Lauren reference the horrific images of the Syrian refugee whose death galvanized support, as well as Ali Sayed's story, traced in her book At about 46:40, Lauren explains terminology and methods of doing business by Turkish and other smugglers At about 48:10, Turkish and Greek relations and how they affected the lack of patrols is highlighted At about 49:20, “The Moria Six” and Ali's story and trials are discussed in relation to the fire referenced at the beginning of the book At about 52:00, The impositions of maps and Empire are reflected upon At about 53:05, “Whiteness” and its imposition on “classical form” and racist science are explored, as written about in the book At about 54:55, The two trace the initial and later welcome for refugees to Greek islands and ideas of the original meaning of “asylum”; Lauren also highlights many incredible people helping refugees to this day, as well as ideas of “invaders” and scapegoats At about 58:40, Discussion of Greek austerity and true issues of difficulty for are referenced At about 59:50, The two discuss Lauren's section in the book regarding Darien Gap and connections to Lauren's family's own emigration/immigration story At about 1:02:00, The two highlight ideas of community among refugees, and Pete asks Lauren about pessimism and optimism and the book's title At about 1:03:25, Ali's unfinished story is referenced At about 1:04:05-Laser Round Questions! East Bay Booksellers, Point Reyes Books and Green Apple are shouted out as good places to buy her books At about 1:05:05, Immemorial, Lauren's 2025 release, is described What a pleasure it has been to speak with Lauren. Continued good luck to her with her future writing and important work. Thank you for listening to this episode of The Chills at Will Podcast. You can now subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, and leave me a five-star review. You can also ask for the podcast by name using Alexa, and find the pod on Stitcher, Spotify, and on Amazon Music. Follow me on IG, where I'm @chillsatwillpodcast, or on Twitter, where I'm @chillsatwillpo1. You can watch this and other episodes on YouTube-watch and subscribe to The Chills at Will Podcast Channel. Please subscribe to both my YouTube Channel and my podcast while you're checking out this episode. I am very excited to have one or two podcast episodes per month featured on the website of Chicago Review of Books. The audio will be posted, along with a written interview culled from the audio. A big thanks to Rachel León and Michael Welch at Chicago Review. Sign up now for The Chills at Will Podcast Patreon: it can be found at patreon.com/chillsatwillpodcastpeterriehl Check out the page that describes the benefits of a Patreon membership, including cool swag and bonus episodes. Thanks in advance for supporting my one-man show, my DIY podcast and my extensive reading, research, editing, and promoting to keep this independent podcast pumping out high-quality content! This month's Patreon bonus episode features segments from conversations with Jeff Pearlman, F. Douglas Brown, Matt Bell, Rachel Yoder, Jorge Lacera, and more, as they reflect on chill-inducing writing and writers that have inspired their own work. I have added a $1 a month tier for “Well-Wishers” and Cheerleaders of the Show. This is a passion project of mine, a DIY operation, and I'd love for your help in promoting what I'm convinced is a unique and spirited look at an often-ignored art form. The intro song for The Chills at Will Podcast is “Wind Down” (Instrumental Version), and the other song played on this episode was “Hoops” (Instrumental)” by Matt Weidauer, and both songs are used through ArchesAudio.com. Please tune in for Episode 261 with Greg Mania, who is a writer, comedian, and award-winning screenwriter. He's also author of the debut memoir, Born to Be Public, which was an NPR Best Book of 2020 and an O, Oprah Magazine Best LGBTQ Book of 2020. Greg's work has appeared in The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, Oprah Daily, PAPER, among other international online and print platforms. This episode will air on November 12. Lastly, please go to ceasefiretoday.com, which features 10+ actions to help bring about Ceasefire in Gaza.
Lauren Markham, journalist and author of A Map of Future Ruins: On Borders and Belonging, is the guest on this episode. Lauren's latest book draws on her career reporting on migration and the issues asylum seekers face in the US and abroad. It centers around the story of the fire that burned down the largest refugee camp in Europe on the island of Lesvos, Greece, and the six young Afghan refugees accused of arson in spite of scant evidence. It takes us deep into causes of migration and offers thoughtful ideas for more humane approaches to dealing with the issues. Lauren's book turns the journalist lens on herself as she questions the effectiveness of her vocation in making change, and explores her own Greek identity and the journey of her grandmother who immigrated to the US as a young woman. Lauren and Laura's conversation is at once informative, insightful, and compassionate, with a little bit of the mystical thrown in.
Today, we're setting up Ellpetha Tsivicos, a Cypriot-American artist, performer, director, author, filmmaker, and singer, who says her home is on stage. Her production company, One Whale's Tale, creates maximalist work that blends music, dance, film, food and narrative storytelling — turning plays into multidisciplinary performances. Two recent books she loved were Song of Achilles + Island of Missing Trees, and she's down for classic or modern books. Books we recommended (and please support East Bay Booksellers) The Penelopiad by Margaret Atwood Disappearing Earth by Julia Phillips The Women Could Fly by Megan Giddings Eva Luna by Isabel Allende A Map of Future Ruins by Lauren Markham The Astrology House by Carinn Jade
Join us for an illuminating conversation about borders, belonging, myths, and oracles. She warns, “What we have created is a ruinous map for a ruinous future.” I was so happy to get a chance to talk with writer, author, and journalist Lauren Markham about her insightful and page-turning new book A Map of Future Ruins: On Borders and Belonging. In this conversation we take a journey through the layers of this book starting with a deadly 2020 fire at the Moria refugee camp on the island of Lesbos in Greece, we talk about borders and bordering throughout the world, maps, getting lost (both psychically and physically, as Lauren puts it), mythology and confronting myths, the layers of history both personal and global, journalism, and, sweetly, how oracles can be medicine. As Lauren told me in the interview, “What we have created is a ruinous map for a ruinous future.” Please read A Map of Future Ruins, you won't regret it. Lauren Markham has also written the award-winning The Far Away Brothers: Two Young Migrants and the Making of an American Life. Her writing and journalism can be found in many places including The Atlantic, Harper's, and The New York Times Magazine. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/border-chronicle/support
On this edition of The Weekly Reader, our book critic Marion Winik recommends three books that just might help you make some sense of the crisis at our southern border and the increase in global migration: The Prince of Los Cocuyos, by Richard Blanco, , Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here, by Jonathan Blitzer and A Map of Future Ruins, by Lauren Markham. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Lauren Markham is the author of A Map of Future Ruins, available from Riverhead Books. Markham is the author of the award-winning The Far Away Brothers: Two Young Migrants and the Making of an American Life. She has been working with migrants for two decades and has written about migration and other social issues in The New York Times Magazine, The Guardian, The New York Review of Books, and other publications. She lives in Berkeley, CA. *** Otherppl with Brad Listi is a weekly literary podcast featuring in-depth interviews with today's leading writers. Available where podcasts are available: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, etc. Subscribe to Brad Listi's email newsletter. Support the show on Patreon Merch Twitter Instagram TikTok Bluesky Email the show: letters [at] otherppl [dot] com The podcast is a proud affiliate partner of Bookshop, working to support local, independent bookstores. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
ARMCHAIR ORACLES “All My Time” from All My Time - Single (2018) RAYLAND BAXTER “79 Shiny Revolvers” from Wide Awake (2018) J MASCIS “Sky Is All We Had” from Elastic Days (2018) I WAS A KING “Bubble” from Slow Century (2019) VALLEY LODGE “I'm Your Man” from Fog Machine (2018) WES HOLLYWOOD “Nothing to See Here” from Dynamite (2018) GENUINE FAKES “Even With You” from Issues (2018) DAVE SHEININ “Lies” from First Thing Tomorrow (2018) PAINTED DOLL “Hidden Hand” from Painted Doll (2018) SWERVEDRIVER “The Lonely Crowd Fades in the Air” from Future Ruins (2018) JOHN DAVIS & MATTHEW CAWS “We Are in the Wild and We Are Home” from Single (2019) GENTLE HEN “She's Got It Bad” from Be Nice to Everyone (2018) THE BLANK PAGES “Into the Ether” from Single (2019) DUNCAN REID & THE BIG HEADS “Let's Skip to the Good Bit” from Bombs Away (2017) BREAKING LACES “Better Than Me” from Come Get Some (2012) RICHARD TURGEON “Into Your Arms” from Single (2018) JEREMY MESSERSMITH “Monday, You're Not So Bad” from Late Stage Capitalism (2018) HAZEL ENGLISH “Never Coming Home” from Single (2016) HIDEOUS TOWNS “Lion” from Disquiet Living (2016) DERBY “Streelight” from Posters Fade (2008) MIKAL CRONIN “Say” from MCII (2015) THE BETHS “Great No One” from Future Me Hates Me (2018) CREAMER “Drugs No More” from Creamer (2018) GREENBERRY WOODS “Are You in Love Again” from House (2018) SMASH PALACE “Heart of a Loving Man” from Right as Rain - EP (2018) YOUR GRACIOUS HOST “Never Been So Blind” from Boomerang (2017) WESLEY WOLFE “Cloud Cuckoo” from Numbskull (2014) GUIDED BY VOICES “Cohesive Scoops” from 100 Dougs EP (2018) HOT NUN “Anyway” from Born to Blaze - EP (2018) BOB MOULD “Sunshine Rock” from Sunshine Rock (2019)
Adam Franklin has fronted the British alternative rock band Swervedriver since 1989. Though the Oxford born band went on hiatus between 1998 and 2008, Adam kept busy with a variety of projects; his group Toshack Highway, Bolts of Melody, Magnetic Morning, and his involvement with the Sophia collective being the most notable. Swervedriver's most recent release was 2019's excellent Future Ruins record. On January 19th, 2024, Outer Battery Records re-issue Swervedriver's 1998 album 99th Dream. Bolts of Melody release their new album Film Noir on the same day.PLEASE VOTE FOR THE JAMES MCMAHON MUSIC PODCAST IN THE OH MY POD CATEGORY (BEST INDEPENDENT PODCAST) OF THE 2023 POD BIBLE LISTENER POLL. YOU CAN DO THAT HERE. Show theme by Bis.Want more? Join The James McMahon Music Podcast Patreon. Twitter - @jamesjammcmahon Substack - https://spoook.substack.com YouTube - www.youtube.com/channel/UC8Vf_1E1Sza2GUyFNn2zFMA Reddit - https://www.reddit.com/r/jamesmcmahonmusicpod/
RAYLAND BAXTER “Casanova” from Wide Awake (2018) CROCODILES “Wait Until Tomorrow” from Love Is Here (2019) FOREIGN FILMS “Broken Dreamers” from The Record Collector (2018) TWO HOURS TRAFFIC “Noisemaker” from Territory (2010) BOB MOULD “What Do You Want Me To Do” from Sunshine Rock (2019) VALLEY LODGE “Fire” from Fog Machine (2018) JEFF WHALEN “Goofing Around” from 10 More Rock Super Hits (2018) THE FIZZIES “Love American Style” from Love American Style (2002) NEW PORNOGRAPHERS “Clockwise” from Whiteout Conditions (2017) THE BEACHES “Money” from Late Show (2017) WOLF ALICE “Freazy” from My Love Is Cool (2015) I WAS A KING “Bubble” from Slow Century (2019) SEA DRAMAS “Sometimes Repeater” from Beware the Ephemeral (2014) BILLY & DOLLY “Everything Is Off” from Twelve String High - Volume 3 (2018) ORANGE PEELS “Wintergreen” from Begin the Begone (2015) SWERVEDRIVER “The Lonely Crowd Fades in the Air” from Future Ruins (2019) RIDE “Lateral Alice” from Weather Diaries (2017) FAUXKNOW “Carterista” from Tactics (2016) THE BETHS “Not Running” from Future Me Hates Me (2018) SON VOLT “Devil May Care” from Union (2019) THREE HOUR TOUR “I Wanted You Around” from B Side Oblivion (2007) VEGAS WITH RANDOLPH “You Could Say Yes” from Legs & Luggage (2018) THE SUPERS “Turn” from Spklang! (1999) THE ELMS “Who Got the Meaning?” from Big Surprise (2001) THE VAPOUR TRAILS “Godspeed It” from Godspeed It (2019) MATTHEW SWEET “Millennium Blues” from In Reverse (1999) WADE JACKSON “Carolina” from Whiskey Alpha Delta Echo (2015) BRENDAN BENSON “Get It Together” from The Alternative To Love (2005) JIMMY HABER “Wonderful Life” from New Bondi Hippies (2013) JOHN DAVIS & MATTHEW CAWS “We Are in the Wild and We Are Home” from We Are in the Wild and We Are Home - Single (2019)
Hey folks, it's time for a brand new Random Old Records Podcast! EPISODE #73 starts out punk rock, ends up pop, and takes a lot of wild detours in between. The original playlist for this one was over four hours, and it took a lot of work to get it down to 59 minutes and 37 seconds. Let's dive in!The punk rock comes from classic tracks by Pansy Division and Sado-Nation and newer jams by BB And The Blips and Negative Scanner. The pop goes all the way back to the Everly Brothers and forward to some brand new Swervedriver, and there's a nice gooey middle with hooky goodness from Colleen Green, The Beths, The Bombpops, and many, many more. In between all the heat, you'll hear excerpts from the classic 60s head movie The Committee, starring Paul Jones of Manfred Mann! Check it out, and I hope y'all dig it!!Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to Random Old Records via iTunes, Google Play, or RSS. If you like the show, please rate it and write a review! More classic episodes from the past ten years are being added to the feed as well, so check those out as well. You can also go the traditional route and stream or download the new episode below. Watch this space next month for the another episode of Random Old Records. As always, thanks for listening!Random Old Records Podcast #73Released 03/27/19DOWNLOAD HERE (Right-Click, "Save As")1. Pansy Division - "I Can't Sleep"(Pile Up, Lookout 1995)2. Pure Hell - "I Feel Bad"(Noise Addiction, Cherry Red 2016)3. Bad Sports - "Comes Close"(Constant Stimulation, Dirtnap 2018)4. Negative Scanner - "Nose Picker"(Nose Picker, Trouble In Mind 2018)5. Sado-Nation - "Messed Up Mixed Up"(We're Not Equal, Brainstem 1983)6. Dasher - "Resume" (Sodium, Jagjauwar 2017)7. BB And The Blips - "Shame Job"(Shame Job, Thrilling Living 2018)--The Committee, Part 1!8. Ethers - "Empty Hours"(Ethers, Trouble In Mind 2018)9. Eric's Trip - "Follow"(Love Tara, Sub Pop 1993)10. Smokescreens - "Jolly Jane"(Used To Yesterday, Slumberland 2018)11. Colleen Green - "Heavy Shit"(Sock It To Me, Hardly Art 2013)12. The Beths - "Future Me Hates Me"(Future Me Hates Me, Carpark 2018)--The Committee, Part 2!13. The Bombpops - "Be Sweet"(Fear Of Missing Out, Fat Wreck Chords 2017)14. Cheatahs - "Get Tight"(Cheatahs, Wichita 2014)15. Swervedriver - "Drone Lover"(Future Ruins, Dangerbird 2019)16. Kevin Krauter - "Suddenly"(Toss Up, Bayonet 2018)--The Committee, Part 3!17. Split Decision Band - "Say Woman"(Split Decision Band, Now-Again 2017)18. Roger Tillison - "Nobody's Lover"(Ain't It Hard! Garage And Psych From Viva Records, Sundazed 2007)19. The Everly Brothers - "Mary Jane"(The Everly Brothers Sing, Warner Bros. 1967)20. The Chicago Loop - "This Must Be The Place"(Fading Yellow Vol. 3, Flower Machine 2002)21. The Razor's Edge - Don't Let Me Catch You In His Arms(My World Of Make Believe, Teensville 2018)22. Ronnie Bird - "Sad Soul" (Salut Les Copains, Mercury 2015)
This week, Steve and Remfry discuss the sobering topic of HMV going into administration for a second time and what that could potentially mean for the music industry at large (spoiler, it’s not good). In addition, they talk about some surprising and welcome additions to NME’s ‘Essential new artists for 2019’ as well as the sheer ridiculous situation that has forced Kate Bush to come out and proclaim she’s not a Tory supporter (as if anyone sensible cared). There are also album reviews of Swervedriver’s ‘Future Ruins’ and Soilwork’s ‘Verkligheten’ and Trade-Off this week comes courtesy of Agnes Obel’s ‘Citizen of Glass’ and Kruger’s ‘Adam and Steve’. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Swervedriver - Mary Winter - from the 2019 album Future Ruins on Dangerbird Records.Support the show: https://www.kexp.org/donateSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to Season Two of Star Trek Enterprise, guys! We made it! Archer and Daniels are poking around a library in the 31st century while back in the 22nd, the crew of the Enterprise is desperately trying to survive a Suliban occupation of their ship. Shockwave Part 1 was one of the strongest of the series so far, will part 2 keep it going? Enterprise 02x01 - Shockwave Part 2 Directed by Allan Kroeker Written by Rick Berman & Brannon Braga Guest Stars: John Fleck, Matt Winston, Vaughn Armstrong, Gary Graham, Keith Allan, Jim Fitzpatrick There Are Four Mics is a weekly Star Trek podcast discussing the Star Trek episodes and movies in stardate order. Join Chris Keeley, Jason Allen, Joe Heiser, and Joshua B. Jones as we discuss the 1st episode of season two of Star Trek: Enterprise, Shockwave Part 2. Music credits: Faith of the Heart/Where My Heart Will Take Me - Written by Diane Warren, performed by Russell Watson, Jerry Lubbock, and the New York Trek Orchestra Archer's Theme - Dennis McCarthy and New York Trek Orchestra === Show Notes Cold Open After Archer disappears, T’Pol offers to drop out of warp so that Silik can come aboard and verify he’s truly not there. Trip protests her foolishness in agreeing to such a thing, only to realize there are no other options and that he was the one who was being truly foolish. Act I Archer and Daniels trapse through the Future Ruins as the Captain becomes increasingly frustrated with the time traveler’s inability or refusal to clarify much about what’s going on. After becoming concerned that it looks like the monument to a federation was never even built, Daniels and Archer make their way to a library. Upon entering, Daniels is surprised to learn that the library is not filled with electronic storage like he expected, but instead good old fashioned paper books that they get to work looking through in order to piece together what went wrong. Back aboard the Enterprise, the Suliban are unable to locate Captain Archer but do detect a temporal signature in the turbolift where he was last seen. The Suliban take control of the Enterprise and the ship warps away. At Starfleet Headquarters, Soval is scolding Admiral Forrest for the fact that Archer and the Enterprise are three days late in following their orders to rendezvous with the Vulcan ship. He tells Starfleet that since it’s obvious that Captain Archer has gone rogue and must be holding T’Pol against her will, he has no option but to send a Vulcan ship to get her back. Act II After taking the Enterprise back to The Helix, Silik finds himself unable to contact Future Guy. While Silik’s buddy strongly advocates for blowing up the Enterprise, Silik advises him to have the surgeons get ready and to deliver him the Vulcan for some drug-assisted interrogating. Daniels’ research in the library has him realizing that taking Archer from the 22nd Century is what caused Daniels’ time to be destroyed, and the only way to fix it is to find a way to return the captain to his own time. Using Archer’s communicator and scanner, Daniels thinks he might have a way to communicate with the past and Archer goes to collect some materials. Trip found a workaround that allows him to use comms, and he reaches Reed and tells him to sit tight until he can get the rest of the crew on the line. T’Pol is returned to her quarters after her being drugged and interrogated by Silik, when a disembodied Archer head appears and tells her that she needs to find a way to make it over to Crewman Daniels’ quarters. Act III A conference call among the Enterprise crew via Trip’s comm system hack has everyone agreeing that the claustrophobic Hoshi is the perfect person to send through a cramped conduit shaft. After swinging by Phlox’s quarters to pick up some hypos, Hoshi shows up at Reed’s quarters topless after a “comedic” series of incidents. Later, T’Pol is feigning craziness in a hallway as some Suliban walk by, and then BOOM -- Enterprise crewmen fall from the sky and knock them out with drugs. Reed makes his way to Daniels’ quarters and pulls out a device from a secret compartment. Upon exiting, he sees some Suliban waiting for him, who proceed to rough him up something fierce. Under pressure, he tells Silik that Archer told him to destroy this device before he left to prevent Silik from contacting someone. After he’s returned to his quarters, T’Pol and Travis successfully take over engineering and initiate a core breach. The Suliban drag the Enterprise away from The Helix and scurry away, and then the Enterprise shuts off all the fireworks and goes into warp. Silik is using the device Reed recovered trying to communicate with Future Man, when the typically stationary fella jumps out of the projection and reveals himself to actually be Archer. Act IV Archer drags Silik out of the room with a gun to his head telling him to call off the ships he sent after Enterprise. The Enterprise itself is taking a helluva pounding, which all stops suddenly, confusing the bridge crew. All of the Suliban vessels break off, save one, which turns out to be carrying Captain Archer and his prisoner Silik. The Enterprise docks with the Vulcan vessel and phone home where Soval tells them that even though they didn’t kill those 3,600 miners, they still kinda suck and should be brought home. Archer gives a speech about gazelles in Africa being better than humans before T’Pol steps in andlaunches some torpedoes of truth about how the Vulcans aren’t that great either. Starfleet will meet to discuss the future of the mission, and holler back at them shortly. Archer shows up in T’Pol’s quarters in the middle of the night wearing his PJs to let her know that everything is awesome and that she’s probably what made the difference. T’Pol still doesn’t believe in time travel.
Other Architects is a small Sydney practice with a broad and global outlook. Working at a range of scales and across residential, commercial and institutional projects, Other Architects seeks out ‘other’ approaches that challenge conventional wisdom, popular opinion and architectural trends. Founded as an offshoot of Other Architects in 2013, Otherothers is a design organisation that engages in research, communication, competitions, curation, events, exhibitions and installations, operating beyond the scope of conventional architectural practice. Others founder Grace Mortlock is an architect and curator. Her work explores strategies of spectacle and spatial transformation, and she teaches in the Master of Architecture program at the University of Technology, Sydney (UTS). David Neustein is codirector of Other Architects, Associate of the UTS School of Architecture and The Monthly’s resident architectural critic. He is a recipient of the Adrian Ashton award for Architectural Journalism and the UTS Open Agenda prize. Mortlock and Neustein have participated in the 2014 Venice Architecture Biennale, exhibited at the 2015 Chicago Architecture Biennial, and are due to take part in New Cities, Future Ruins , a four year curatorial project launching November 2016 in Dallas, Texas. Widely published, their project Offset House has been featured in the Wall Street Journal, CityLab, Architectural Record and Australian Financial Review. Runnerup and Highly Commended for the National Gallery of Victoria’s 2016 Architecture Commission, the pair are both cocurators (with Fleur Watson) and exhibition designers for Occupied , an exhibition of architectural propositions for the near future, which opens 29 July at Melbourne’s RMIT Design Hub Gallery.
Eclectic mix of world wide flavor and globe trotting beats. 1.Mountain Man-Animal Tracks 2.Taj Mahal & Baaba Maal-Trouble Sleep Yanga Wake Am 3.CocoRosie-The Moon Asked The Crow 4.Nas & Damian "Jr. Gong" Marley-Patience 5.Low Pressure Sound System-Spoonbender 6.Soel-To This World 7.Ancient Astronauts-Anti Pop Song 8.Emancipator-First Snow (Ooah Remix) 9.Celt Islam & DJ Umb feat. Dawoud Kringle-Ya Allah (Sufi Dubstars Remix) 10.Tiki-Past Present Future (Pitch Black's Sleep Whisperer Mix) 11.Bombay Dub Orchestra-Monsoon Malabar 12.Ancient Astronauts-Lost in Marrakesh with Entropik (Pathaan's Mirage Mix) 13.STS9-Scheme Reprise 14.STS9-Scheme 15.Melodysheep-Ali G - The Science Rap