A Lifetime of Devotion

It’s always a thrill to meet one of your heroes. And that’s what it was for me when I met our client Smokey Robinson in the green room before his appearance on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon.

I’ve adored this legendary singer and songwriter since the first time I slow-danced to “Ooh Baby Baby.” And in person he’s charming, smart and thoughtful, as befits the man Bob Dylan once called “America’s greatest living poet.”

After Smokey sang “Girlfriend” from his new ‘Time Flies When You’re Having Fun‘ album – with The Roots earning their title as the world’s greatest house band – he did a special performance of “Tears of a Clown” for the studio audience, and it’s now online.

And I ask you: How can you not be crazy about a guy who can not only make a new album that iTunes calls “timelessly seductive” but can also use the word “Pagliacci” in a lyric?

I Lost It At The Movies

There are three documentaries out this fall that I’ve just gotta see, all mixing a nihilistic attitude with fascinating portraits of artistic ambition.

One Fast Move or I’m Gone: Kerouac’s Big Sur inspired an album by Shore Fire clients Jay Farrar And Benjamin Gibbard, who are also in it; it’s sure to make me want to get on the road again.

William S. Burroughs: A Man Within should be an intense look at the Naked Lunch author (fun fact: what legendary duo, now featuring our client, bassist “Ready” Freddie Washington, in their touring band, named themselves after an object in that novel?).

Watch the out-there trailer for a glimpse of a manic Iggy Pop:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FU8EUbJ28dc]

And last, but certainly not least, is Let Them Know: The Story of Youth Brigade and BYO Records, about the legendary SoCal punk label. Lots of great punk energy, premiering in LA September 10 and available on the 22nd in a limited-edition box set with a double-LP compliation of 31 loud-fast-rules songs and a hardcover, full-color book.

Look at this and just try not to slam dance at your desk:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FLbAb7ppXgk]

I’m buying the popcorn!

Postcard From Nicaragua

The classic 20-gig iPod I’ve had since 2004 finally passed away after many hours of service, just before I left for the airport for my flight to Nicaragua 10 days ago. I typically travel with it and a JBL OnTour setup that provides me with a soundtrack wherever I am. Nonetheless, I was neither musically nor aesthetically deprived.

For evidence of the latter, see the photo below of the grand staircase in the 19th-century home of generous and gifted friends in Granada, one of the oldest cities in the Americas, where I slept in an antique, mosquito-netted four-poster bed, soothed by the sound of tropical rains and wakened by the bells of the cathedral next door.

On a side trip to the surf destination San Juan del Sur, a friend was kind enough to lend me a horse. There is a reason that riding through a jungle and cantering along an otherwise inaccessible beach is the stuff of fantasy. My steed was white, and named Pablo Picasso, so I couldn’t get the Jonathan Richman song of the same name out of my head. I also sang “Caballito Blanco” to Pablo, which I learned as a child in Chile.

Thus, when it came time to go clubbing, I was prepared for Latino men whose stares I could not resist. My Spanish held up well enough for me to crack jokes, decline invitations, and read mash notes from the smitten. I also had the new-to-me experience of being piloted around a dance floor by a smiling fellow whose eyes were at an awkward level that made staring both impossible and unnecessary. But we were dancing to a 9-piece band playing the Nicaraguan classic “Pobre de Maria,” a tragic story of a poor campesina in the big city, so I didn’t mind.

I managed to refrain from the Internet most of the time, but of course it found me:

And now, the Apple Store awaits.

Knew What He Was Doing When He Caught My Eye

The most recent chapter of the Phil Spector story is a tragedy that can’t be undone. But I’ll miss thinking about him as the guy who created this wall of sound for The Crystals:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dqgtsai2aKY]

She’s About A Mover

I’m not at SXSW this year, so I’m living vicariously through the Twitter posts of the ShoreFire-ians who are (two Wavy Gravy sightings!). But when I saw in Billboard that there’d been a couple of Doug Sahm tributes in Austin, one starring former client Alejandro Escovedo and the other featuring current clients Sarah Borges & The Broken Singles, I knew I had to post this video of the Sir Douglas Quintet playing “She’s About A Mover,” one of the greatest happy-dance songs ever – and dig those shiny suits!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-VFq6nWvT8]

Punks May Be Dying, But Punk’s Not Dead

I’ve been remiss in not noting the sad and too-early passing of two punk greats: Lux Interior of The Cramps and Ron Asheton of The Stooges.

Today comes news of Lux’s recent memorial service (Poison Ivy wore leopard print), as well as an item indicating that ex-Sex Pistol Steve Jones, once host of Jonesy’s Jukebox on the recently left-for-dead Indie 103.1, has been talking to Iggy Pop about replacing Asheton on tour.

I learned about all of this from the indispensable Daily Swarm. It affirms my belief that punk’s not dead.

Pi A La Mode

Excuse me while I geek out: you can now hear the first 10,000 digits of pi in a musical sequence. Play ten notes from the tune of your choice, and you’ll literally hear the music of the spheres. I tried “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star” and “Stairway to Heaven” and they both sounded equally trippy. (Via Idolator.)

Toubab Krewe Live in New York

Our clients Toubab Krewe are world travelers who within the past couple of years have played throughout the US, the Caribbean snd West Africa, where they were special guests at Mali’s Festival of the Desert, the world’s remotest, a trip they document in their “Buncombe to Badala” video.

Last week, they were in New York to play a packed show at S.O.B.’s for an enthusiastically dancing crowd (another client, Jar-e, opened), about which one review said, “Toubab Krewe are what Vampire Weekend would have sounded like if their parents took away their BMWs, dosed their white wine spritzers and locked them in Fela’s basement.”

The next day, Toubab Krewe did a much more intimate performance over a pizza lunch at the SoHo offices of ADA, which is distributing their new Upstream Records release, “Live at the Orange Peel.” Of course, we took a photo to commemorate the occasion:


From left: Drew Heller (guitar, soku), Greg Vegas (ADA), Jake Frankel (Upstream), Luke Quaranta (percussion), Justin Perkins (kamel ngoni, kora, guitar), David Pransky (bass), me (Blackberry), Teal Brown (drumset), Andy Silva (iPhone).

We’ve Got Office Visitors!

Some of our friends from AOL Music stopped by last Friday to tell us about some of the cool things they’ve working on – which, as it turned out, included a nice “What’s That Song?” item about our client Max Morgan, whose song “Secret” from his forthcoming debut ‘Interrupting the Silence’ accompanied a pivotal scene on Thursday’s Grey’s Anatomy.

From left below: Shore Fire’s Andy Silva, Chris Taillie and me, and AOL Music’s Bill Crandall, Jessica Robertson, Gaylord Fields and Mike Spinella.

Just Shoot Me

An addendum to Mark’s post below – as a bare-armer, my contribution to the evening was this gun-inspired mix: