I’ve never been a big fan of the band, but this video is spectacular. The song is good too though, reminiscent of Architecture in Helsinki.
Category Archives: music
Soundtrack
I’ve never been one to really appreciate hippie music but I’ve been addicted to the soundtrack from Zabriskie Point, a film made by Michelangelo Antonioni who was also responsible for Blow Up (also with a great soundtrack by The Yardbirds and Herbie Hancock). The track listing is heavy on Pink Floyd and Gerry Garcia but the bonus improvised tracks are what are really special. Turn on, tune in, and drop out.
The love scene featuring Gerry doing his thing, and some earthy lovers doing theirs.
both French and English lp covers, I prefer the French ofcourse…


One Week..
..until the new Vampire Weekend officially releases. I’ve gotten a preview of some of the new tracks via an incomplete leak but I anticipate hearing the whole thing. I’ve always been a fan of their album covers and their standardized layout of an image with text in Futura.




a stenciled version of futura
Grizzly Bear
Amazing clay stop-action video for Grizzly Bear’s “Ready, Able”
Perhaps the most psychedelic thing ever done with clay, that I’ve seen at least.
Blue Note Style

Ah, the ultimate cool style. What’s more classic than a Blue Note musician in a perfect suit? Such raw sounds coming out of a modern dressed man. Here’s a great read, an essay on the style of these guys from Blue Note: Album Cover Art The Ultimate Collection by Graham Marsh, a really great little book filled with the best Blue Note LP’s.

on the clothes…
NO ROOM FOR SQUARES
“Consider the irony – the button-down shirt, which came to symbolize all that was hip about the Blue Note musician, was originally English. Polo players at the turn of the century were seen by John Brooks, of Brooks Brothers, to fasten their collars with buttons to keep them from snapping up in their faces.
This piece of sartorial history was of no concern to us, however; the mere fact that Hank Mobley, Sonny Rollins, Art Blakey, and other Blue Note luminaries were photographed wearing these shirts, on their respective album covers, was endorsement enough. Now I’m sure to those musicians it was just another clean shirt, but in the early 60’s , unless your taste was for homegrown, the importance of being imported applied to the clothes as much as to the records. It was an obsession; a friend of mine was not a happy person until he owned a striped button-down identical to the shirt Big John Patton wore on the sleeve of The Way I Feel.
Psychedelic Freakout
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