BTW, if you happen to be in KC tonight, the American Royal Barbeque is going on down in the west bottoms. I recommend it if you like beer barbeque and huge parties. http://www.arbbq.com/ Stay away if you are averse to parking nightmares.
BTW, if you happen to be in KC tonight, the American Royal Barbeque is going on down in the west bottoms. I recommend it if you like beer barbeque and huge parties. http://www.arbbq.com/ Stay away if you are averse to parking nightmares.
Did anybody on here go to the Portland show? What were the lines like at that one?
Hey Kopper - look forward to seeing ya'll. I'll shoot you my phone # via email - text or call me. Here's a few things about Lawrence for the uninitiated - its about 45 minutes west of KC. For those in the western KC burbs its really like another suburb and it has the best record store (Lovegarden) w/in 200 miles - check it out. 2 of the venues (Liberty Hall & the Bottleneck) are on the north end of Mass. St. and the Granada & Jackpot are on the south end. They're 2-3 blocks apart.
KU football will be on the road so no need to worry about college football crowds. However, there's a big NASCAR race in western KCK so there could be delays along I-70 if you're coming from the east. If you are coming in from the east you may want to consider taking I-470 south and then west and connect up w/I-435 and then connect w/K-10 west bound. It's going to be in the mid 60's w/a few clouds so its going to be an awesome day.
One question - Gories or Oblivians?
I still use mixtapes for the same reason others have said, I did it for years as a kid and I drive an old enough car that has a cassette player so they're always handy. I also love mix CDs and I think podcasting is just the latest equivalent and a great way to be exposed to new music, especially for more specialised genres where the fans aren't going to come across that music by any other means unless they scan through enough blogs or type just the right keyword when searching for something completely new, in that way podcasts are greatly beneficial to the music industry if it's concerning a specific genre because the listener will generally be more dedicated to that style and is likely to order the album anyway. Of course that's not always the case but never the less, that's got to be a positive when one considers the massive decline in CD sales in the past decade.
Gacey's Place (about John Gacey) - The Mentality Ill
The Sonics - "Psycho"
Also, any song by Hasil Adkins where he talks about cutting off girls' heads. "No More Hot Dogs," for example.
Dead Boys "Son Of Sam"
Good memory, but not exactly right, it's the Hollywood Square's "Hillside Strangler" that is on the same KBD comp (#1) as the Child Molester's song of the same name, not F-Word's song. I had to pull out the CD myself to find that out.
kopper said:
Aren't both of those on the same Killed By Death comp?
Mike said:F-Word "Hillside Strangler" different song than the Child Molester's song.
Aren't both of those on the same Killed By Death comp?
Mike said:
F-Word "Hillside Strangler" different song than the Child Molester's song.
F-Word "Hillside Strangler" different song than the Child Molester's song.
The Child Molesters - (I'm The) Hillside Strangler
I'm pretty sure this one is based on a true story.
the Fools- Psycho Chicken
Nick Cave's album "Murder Ballads"
I'm gonna check out the Sixtyniners for sure. I've already checked out the new Hank III and I pretty much agree: it's good, but not great and he seems a little uninspired. My biggest issue was that on the title track, he didn't make the worlds of country and hardcore "fit" together like he had on Straight to Hell and Damn Right, Rebel Proud. As for how he got hooked up with Curb, (from the always correct Wikipedia) "Three years after a one night stand in 1995, Hank Williams III was served papers on stage while opening up for the underground band Buzzov•en. The judge told Williams that playing music was no real job and to come up with $60,000 in overdue child support. To avoid being branded as a deadbeat dad, Williams signed a contract with Nashville, Tennessee, music industry giant Curb Records to pay off the debt."
A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
October 1, 2010
Call this one Hank III’s “contractual obligation” album.
There never was a Meg White sex tape. Sorry.
http://idolator.com/303481/meg-white-sex-tape-actually-product-of-internet-guys-feverish-wank-mining
Mardy Pune said:
fuck me: Meg White (ha! that's what you get for putting out a sex tape)
fuck you: Wendy O' Williams
Fuck me: Lily Allen
Fuck you: Niagara -Destroy All Monsters
Fuck you: Donita Sparks
fuck me: Meg White (ha! that's what you get for putting out a sex tape)
fuck you: Wendy O' Williams
Hello Kopper... you are absolutely right about early Blondie (my very favorite era of this band)... but, I have to say Debbie crossed over to the "dark side" when Blondie released the crap album Autoamerican... and their hit single "Rapture." That was Debbie Harry at her fu*k me best. Maybe I should have said Gwen Stefani instead!
That just reminded me to listen to Eighties matchbox bline disaster.
They're not necessarily a goth rock band although the media often tends to label them 'gothabilly' is a more modern band from Brighton in England called The Eighties Matchbox B-line Disaster, their first album Horse of the Dog is awesome dark themed garagey punk and one of my favourites. Definitely worth checking out. Then there's the Vile Imbeciles who was started by the Eighties Matchbox lead guitarist after he left the band which is more in the Birthday Party sort of vein. Both great bands I'd highly recommend.
The screamin' Soul Preacher said:Try "I have fun everywhere I go" by the fantastic Mike Edison
and "Rock Stardom for Dumbshits" by The wonderful Phantom Surfers !
Your life will better then !
I think that i'm a guest star into Sharky's book..where i can git it??!!
i think a lot of the photos in 'we never learn' are pretty cool, too
thanks for the great suggestons!
BTW, another recommendation I would like to make is "I Slept With Joey Ramone," which is a very upclose and personal look at Joey Ramone, written by his brother and Legs McNeil. Sadly, you're going to find out that Joey could be a real asshole too in his own strange way, although a lot of it was due to his OCD.