Scott Schiaffo [Interview]

Scott Schiaffo1

 

Every once in a great moon, a film comes out that is absolutely perfect in so many ways.  And one of the things that makes said film so wonderful is usually (don’t quote me) is a wonderfully assembled cast.  Granted there are great films out there that only require on terrific lead character to make the whole thing work, but who can resist a group of great actors all gather as one?

And in 1994, a little gem of an independent film came out known as Clerks.  This is a film that shocked the world with its vulgarity, roughness, and brilliance.  It is also a film with an amazingly real and wonderfully spoken cast who ironically enough, had never been heard of before appearing in this now cult classic memoir of the everyman.  And one of those characters was portrayed by the amazingly talented actor/musician Scott Schiaffo who starred as one of the most heinous characters of all time (think the indie film’s version of Nurse Ratchet).  It was Scott’s interaction with Dante (portrayed by Brian O’Halloran), Veronica (Marilyn Ghigliotti), and an angry mob that really kicked things into gear for Clerks, and has marked itself in history as one of the greatest scenes of commotion and hilarity in independent film history.

I thought it would be cool to see what Scott Schiaffo has been up to these days, and man, the man has had a career that is definitely of note, and has come along way from portraying one of the most infamous pricks of all time.  And I can personally vouch that he is one of the nicest, kind, and generous folks you could ever know.  Nowhere near is insulting to human life as the gum slanging douchebag we all love to hate.  So check out what Scott has been doing, what is in his future, and basically gain a little insight from one of the independent film world’s greatest talents.  Enjoy!

How did you score the gig as the ever hated Chewlies Gum representative in Clerks, and how was the experience of shooting with the young Kevin Smith?

It’s funny that you label the Chewlies Gum Guy as “ever hated” because I tend to agree that he’s pretty much an “A-1 LOUDMOUTH A$$HOLE” but fans of the film seem to embrace him in an almost oddly endearing way, which is awesome for me 20 years later, but still it makes me wonder why he’s “liked” because he’s pretty despicable. I say that all the time and the response usually is, “well he’s pretty funny” so I guess that redeems him but he was written to be an A$$HOLE and I played him like one.

I scored the role by auditioning. I didn’t know Kevin or any of the production folks I was coming from about an hour and change away from the auditions. I saw the ad in a New Jersey newspaper classified section. Usually I’d get audition notices in papers like Backstage but this was in with the classifieds of a north jersey newspaper, the Star Ledger I believe, and it struck me as interesting. The wording was something like, “Indie film maker explores the day in the life of a convenience store clerk.” I am paraphrasing, of course, but it was a very interesting little ad.

It was additionally attractive because it was going to be filming in New Jersey and back then there weren’t that many indie films being shot in NJ, at least not any that were listing auditions in the trades I was following at the time. We’re talking no internet or cell phones at this time, the stone ages!

As for shooting with the young Mr. Smith, I personally was very quickly impressed by Kevin. I was older than most of my fellow cast mates on this film. I went in feeling like an older statesman. Kevin’s command of the English language was very apparent from jump. He has a great vocabulary. The banter between Dante & Randall is priceless as is the interplay between Brodie & T.S. and so on and so on.

I felt quite confident that he’d whip us all into shape and make a cool little film. Of course none of us had any idea this cool little filthy B & W film would outperform our wildest expectations. At the risk of sounding melodramatic, it was a dream come true for pretty much all of us on that film and balls man, how often do you get to be a part of something like that?

Did you ever foresee Clerks becoming the legend that it has become? 

Absolutely not. If I could foresee that type of thing I’d produce films and make tons of dough! No man that was kismet, serendipity or just plain old dumb luck. Honestly, I didn’t think we had a chance at cross over or mainstream success because of how crude the dialogue was at the time.

Scott Schiaffo2I thought the film was hilarious and quite unique but I thought we’d get a small run and become a cult thing in the college and indie world. I mean come on; if you remember they wanted to slap an NC 17 on it because the language was so brutal so usually that meant a smaller audience which would have been fine by me too. When it was accepted to Sundance I was floored and when it won at Sundance I was speechless. What a wild ride that first year was for all of us involved in the film!

You are a renowned Jersey boy, and have been featured in several films shot and based there.  What do you feel is New Jersey’s status in the film industry?

You can’t have an intelligent conversation about the film industry and not give New Jersey the recognition it deserves.  Well known New Jersey native, Thomas Edison, not only invented and built the apparatus for filming and projecting motion pictures, he also produced films for public viewing.

As far as New Jersey’s current status in the industry, it’s common knowledge we’re a force to be reckoned with.  I’ll give you a conservative guesstimation and say half of the actors, directors, writers and producers working in Hollywood today came from the Garden State or the East Coast.

 

Can you tell us a bit about the 2006 film, Idiots Are Us, in which you starred, co-produced, and wrote?  How did the idea for this film come about?

The main character of Mo came from a short film I did many years ago called I Got Stuff.  Writer/director Michael P. Russin saw this short and enjoyed the hapless nature of the character and he and I being frequent collaborators decided to build a comedic duo off of the back of this character and do a feature length treatment.  Michael’s instincts served us well as Idiots Are Us won Best Comedic Feature in the New York International Independent Film and Video Festival in 2006.

I understand you are a musician as well as a man of the screen.  What do you play?  Do you still perform?

I’ve been playing guitar since age 13 and it’s my main instrument and the one I embrace above all of the others. But in no particular order I also play piano/keyboards, bass, harmonica and the drums.

Scott Schiaffo3I have a project studio where I record, mix and master professional recordings for musicians and songwriters, but I mostly create music for film and video in my studio. I do digital video post and media design too. It’s on a per project basis and level but it’s really been a lifelong passion and dream to have a project studio set up where I can do everything from MIDI keys/strings to live drums and loud guitars!

I am releasing a CD later this year. It will be a collection of film music I’ve scored and produced for indie films over the past 15 years.  The proceeds will go to the abused and homeless animal charity I’ve been working with called the Angels of Animals. They are based in northern New Jersey where I live.

Is there a role or type of character that you feel as though you were just meant to play?  

If you asked me that question many years ago I would have waxed on tirelessly! Today I am thankful to continue to be cast in a myriad of interesting roles and projects. Certainly my turn as the Chewlies Gum Guy in Kevin Smith’s audacious debut film Clerks assured me the opportunity to be seen as a versatile and spirited actor.

What have you got going on these days and what can we find you doing in the near future?

I appeared in two films which were shot over the last 18 months that I am looking forward to seeing released in the not too distant future.  The Puppet Apocalypse, the brainchild of Scott Meaney and Christopher Laudando of Constellation Park fame, is an insane comedic half man half puppet madcap romp.  I can say no more, but be afraid – be very afraid…

Charlie Esser’s I Know You Want This is a physiological thriller set in a Jersey strip club (my home away from home LOL).

Both of these films are unique and independent in spirit, and run the gamut from drama to comedy and back again. I am very fortunate to have been cast in these projects.

Lastly I’m still promoting my book from 2012, “Vicious Dogs Attack Me in Sleepless Nights of Summer” which is available worldwide on Amazon.

(www.amazon.com/Vicious-Attack-Sleepless-Nights-Summer/dp/0615587402)

What was the last thing that made you smile?

That is such an awesome question, I am glad you asked! This past weekend I went to the New Jersey State Fair with people I am very blessed to have in my life today. We had a fantastic night of fun, excitement, laughs and memories.

Scott Schiaffo4As we walked around the fair grounds and took it all in I became consumed with happiness and gratitude for the life I have today and most importantly for the people who are in it! I mean I could not wipe the grin from my face all night and I felt like a kid on Christmas Eve all night long!

 

Be sure to head over to Amazon.com to pick up a copy of Scott’s incredible book, Vicious Dogs Attack Me In Sleepless Night Of Summer.  You’ll be glad you did! 

Two Years of Trainwreck’d [Exclusive!]

2nd-anniversaryIt has been two years.  Two strange, trying, yet overall, pretty good years.  Awakening to say the least.  It was Independence Day 2011 in a hotel room just outside of Biloxi, Mississippi where I found myself surrounded empty bottles of cheap vodka and cartons of take out Buffalo wings and a feeling of longing and a great deal of loneliness.  I was once again displaced from my loving family, albeit on two months this time around.  I was fresh of the release of the collective works book for charity that I had been pouring my every waking moment in to for the the better part of 7 months.  In fact, I had just completed one of these “questionnaire based interviews” with College Magazine about the book, and something struck me: I’ve got nothing else to do.  Well, nothing is a bit of a stretch as I always had the wonderful man known as Andy Fenstermaker and his blog Fensepost in which I had been a minor character at for around 3 years.  I loved Fensepost, and I still consider it to be the finest music blog on the interwebs.  But, I was longing for something more.  Maybe it was some sort of control factor I was searching for.  In fact, I’m pretty sure that is what it was.  Almost certain.

And somewhere between e-mail conversations with dear friends Tyler Averett and Chris Eaves, and the loss of a very dear friend, It was decided that I should venture out on my own.  So, I stole the title of one of my favorite indie folk songs that never was, and made it happen.  I stuck to my known format with a review for The Coffin Collectors, and we were off and running.  And since then, we have managed to produce countless interviews, features, and album reviews that we couldn’t be more proud of.

And now we are here, two years in to the game.  And though we have had the consistency of Harry Caray on the WGN actually reporting what is happening during a Cubs game, I think we have had some great things happen over the years.  And one of the things we have developed as  a key point of TWS is finding out what makes people smile (all credit due to one singular interview I read that was conducted by author/musician Jess Gulbransson at another former stomping ground known as Crappy Indie Music The Blog! who asked this question once, and has stuck with me since.)  And with that in mind, I decided it would be fun to invite back a few friends of ours that have been featured on this site over the past two years.  Some old, some new.  Hell, even some brand new folks who will surely be around for the long haul.  I asked each of them one simple question:  What was the last thing that made you smile?  I know for me it has been the last two years spent behind laptops in various cities hammering away at this little web site.  Thank you all for joining in the madness and continuing to rubber neck at the wreckage.  I can’t wait to see what we have in store for the coming year, and maybe the formable years to come.  Hell, I don’t know if this trip will last that long, but isn’t it pretty to think so?  Enjoy!

(P.S.  there are various links throughout the following content that will send you along a journey back in time over the last two years to various relevant stories and features related to the contributor at hand.  Enjoy!)

Addison, Brin

Brin Addison (musician, Guilt Monkey)

“I used my wife’s vagina as a hand-puppet to sing a song this morning.”

Angel, Vanessa

Vanessa Angel (actress/fashion designer, Weird Science)

“Watching my beautiful daughter singing at the graduation ceremony from her elementary school.”

Botterill, Andy

Andy Botterill (musician/poet)

“A photo my wife Harriet took of our daughter Daisy lying on her bed last night in her pink pajamas with a big cheesy grin on her face…”

Bukowski, John

John Bukowski (musician, Ebony Sorrow)

“Seeing Mouth of the Architect last night, playing 4 songs from their amazing new record.”


Capozzi, Catherine

Catherine Capozzi (musician, Darling Pet Munkee)

“Finally repairing my Fuzz Factory after 8 years and using it to record and play! It sounds amazing!”

Jeremiah Chechik
Jeremiah Chechik (filmmaker, National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation)

” Jenny Slate’s comedy and both my dogs, pickle and scooter.”

Cope, Lindsey

Lindsay Cope (blogger, Love Lindz)

“A 1 a.m. phone call from a good friend with a crazy-awesome story about an acquaintances drunk, inept, split personalities. There’s nothing like late night phone calls that make me laugh until I cry!”

Dobi, Dan

Dan Dobi (filmmaker, Please Subscribe)

“My dog at the beach!”

Doyle, CaitlinCaitlin Doyle (musician, Smooth Hound Smith)

“Being on tour for two months and coming home and seeing our dog. Damn I missed the crazy ball of fur!”

Dye, Cameron

Cameron Dye (actor, Helliversity)

“My son Mason dancing in his wheelchair to my playing and singing our own bastardized version of John Lee Hooker’s ‘San Francisco’.”

Eaves, Chris

Chris Eaves (writer/director, Sound Skript Entertainment)

“[My girlfriend] Jill and my week ago trip to Stevenson, Washington in the Gorge along the Columbia River. It’s a small town, with nothing going on but a lovely charm. It was a beautiful day. Jill got a small swirl ice cream cone from a roadside vendor. The small was still bigger then any one person could handle. It melted all over the place. It was the first real day that felt like summer and I was happy to have shared it with Jill.”
11 Michael J. Epstein
Michael J. Epstein (musician/filmmaker, Do Not Forsake Me Oh My Darling)

“A picture of a grumpy turtle.”

Faith, Elsa
Elsa Faith (musician, Madame Torrent)

“Receiving a text message from a loved one whom is 17,000 miles away but that message erased the distance.”

 Feigh, Ryan

Ryan Feigh (writer/blogger, The Portland Mercury)

“I was checking my instagram feed, and saw that my little sister Alison had took a picture of my sixty-something-year old parents in MN. The photo wasn’t anything special aesthetically, no filters were used, and it wasn’t necessarily a very flattering picture, considering they were both squinting into the sun. But it was good to see my parents happy and together, thousands of miles away from me. So I smiled.”

 Geoghan, Jim

Jim Geoghan (writer/producer, Family Matters)

“I was having lunch today when three dolphins swam by.”

Giaratta, Kali

Kali Giaratta (musician, There Is No Mountain)

“Trying a bite of [my husband] Matt’s homemade salsa.”

Grey, Robin

Robin Grey (musician/poet)

“Teaching a uke student how to play a song from The Jungle Book.”

Haley, Doug

Doug Haley (actor, Hot Bot)

“Today was Fathers Day…and I was left with a huge smile on my face thanks to a friend of mine who I’m not even very close with.  My friend Christie Burson-who is also an actor, asked me what I was doing after the BBQ or where my Dad is today and I said I don’t know…he has never been in my life but I know he lives in San Diego somewhere.  And she said well have you ever wanted to find him?  And now that I am old enough to take care of myself….and I feel solid and comfortable with who I am…I thought sure…now that I’m responsible for my life and I’m on a path that I love…maybe I’ll make an effort in the near future.  And she left…and then she texted me a few min later saying that she knows we don’t know each other very well but if I was to find him she would be happy to go with me and be at my side because that must be scary and intense and if I needed someone with me…it could be her.  And I was so touched by her honesty and her sensitivity…it made me smile the entire remainder of my day…when people are that kind, and that gracious…how can I not smile?”

03 Alexander Hallett

Alexander Hallet (musician, Bodi)

“Seeing the kids at the Faraja orphanage in Kenya smile.”

Kramer, Vince

Vince Kramer (Bizarro fiction author, Gigantic Death Worm)

“Getting Anakin Skywalker to fuck Obi-Wan in the ass so well during their lightsaber battle.”

 Maupin, Lelah

Lelah Maupin (musician, Tacocat)

“This message! Does that count?”

 Minne, David

David Minne (musician/blogger)

“My daughter Sayla tickling my feet.”

Haviland MorrisHaviland Morris (actress, Sixteen Candles)

“This question.”

Nyberg, Ola

Ola Nyberg (musician)

“When I saw my son.”

 O'Grady, Katie

Katie O’Grady (actress/producer, Rid Of Me)

“It’s not usual for an adult to be tickled, but this morning my fiancé got me in a tickle attack that got me giggling so hard! Everyone should be tickled…no matter how old!”

 Palumbo, Mark

Mark Palumbo (musician, Tenderkill)

“I was caught day dreaming at work and told “wake up! shift’s not over yet!” the long arm of reality made me smile.”

Prez, VJ

VJ Preziosi (comedian)

“Making jokes with friends at work. If I make other people laugh, I make myself smile. Simple as that.”

Ragel, Jon

Jon Ragel (musician, Boy Eats Drum Machine

“This….

Ragel, Jon 1

Frederic Raphael

Frederic Raphael (author/screenwriter/filmmaker, Eyes Wide Shut)

“Every morning when I wake up, in whatever glum or torpid mood, I look at my wife and she is smiling at me, because she is someone who has always known how to be happy (which does not entaill that she always has been) and I smile back, in admiration and gratitude. So there, as they used to say.”

Redford, Corbett

Corbett Redford (musician, Bobby Joe Ebola & The Children Macnuggits)

 “My cat Alice discovering, and subsequently disapproving of, a new toy.”

 Rice, Bob

Bob Rice (DJ, 88.1 KYRS in Spokane, WA)

“Locking eyes with a friend that I had not seen for many years, and then sharing a long energy exchanging embrace!”

Richard Riehle

Richard Riehle (actor, Office Space)

“I’m still fortunate enough to wake up smiling at the possibilities of a new day. And the possibilities have been turning into wonderful experiences, the rewards of saying ‘yes’.”

Romanos, Robert

Robert Romanos (actor/musician, Fast Times At Ridgemont High)

“Watching a jazz jam with awesome musicians at my coffee shop.”

 Roze

Roze (actor/writer/director, Dead In 5 Heartbeats)

“The last thing that made me smile was my wife, Candace. She is my one true love, my teacher and partner.”

Sessions, Steve

Steve Sessions (writer/director/composer, Torment)

“Whenever my dog works hard with paws and teeth and nose to arrange the bedcovers in a little nest before snuggling into it, I smile. I don’t want to laugh out loud because it snaps him out of his ritual – he looks at me like, ‘what?” – so I grin quietly the whole three minutes of tugging and pulling and pushing, and through him circling and settling down, followed by his long sigh before he closes his eyes to sleep. Why this produces a smile, I’m not sure. It could be tragic – he’s running a program in his brain written long ago for tall grass, and is helpless to it. But it’s so damn cute.”

 Tremolo King, Phil the

Phil The Tremolo King (musician/composer)

“Your message asking me what made me smile.”

Victoria, Samantha
Samantha Victoria (writer/director, Summer O’Horror)

“Hearing my favorite song on the radio, “My Songs Know What You Did in the Dark” by Fall Out Boy, because it reminded me of seeing them perform live.”

Jess Walter

Jess Walter (author, The Financial Lives of the Poet)

“For Father’s Day my kids made archery targets with things I (jokingly) hate on them, including our cat.”

Anna Lynn Williams

Anna-Lynne Williams (musician, Lotte Kestner)

“I recently resuscitated an old b-side and starting playing it again. It’s called Bee, because after I’d spent the whole afternoon recording the song, I discovered a bee had been sleeping on my sweater. I was just running through it with my boyfriend to play at a show tomorrow night, and when he started singing along with me on it for the first time I couldn’t stop smiling. Harmonies make me smile.”

Williams, Timmy

Timmy Williams (comedian, Whitest Kids U Know)

“On the last day of the 2013 Whitest Kids tour, Darren and I decided to fake a fight in front of the other members of the group as a prank.  Since we’re the only two parents in the group we decided to make it about parenting  The fight went well and after dragging it out just long enough (the other guys thought Darren and I were about to throw punches) we started cracking up and let them know that we had just fucking owned them.  It was a great fun moment with four of my best friends in the world and made me smile ear to ear!”

Jack Wilson – Spare Key [Album]

Jack-Wilson-Spare-Key-Cover-w-sticker-420x420When an artist does is best to poor out his heart to you, it’s almost impossible not to fall in love.  This is especially so when an artist has a voice that is both harrowing and comforting at the same time.  Yes, a beautifully told story with a wonderful set of pipes serenading directly into your years is something to cherish.  And that is exactly what Jack Wilson is trying to give to you on his beautifully perfected album Spare Key.

Much like any great album, Spare Key really doesn’t have any stand out tracks.  Hell, there are only 9 of them, so it’s not as though there are many to choose from.  And that being of no matter when you throw in the fact that each track is blissfully beautiful in their own right and stand out all on their own.  Each track is just another example of just how passionate and talented Jack Wilson is when it comes to creating stylistic spaced out folk songs that reach right down in to the core of the human psyche, and make us smile, laugh, and cry.

Listening to this record brings on a bit of sadness in some ways.  It is a shame that smoking has been banned from almost every bar across the continent, because there a few tracks on Spare Key that belong in smokey bars, swirling around whiskey bottles and lost souls.  This is music to lose and/or find yourself to.  This is beautiful.  This is refined.  This is the soundtrack to life.  Or at least it should be.

Hailer: Anyway I Can [Single]

HealerAlthough Hailer may have a reputation for simple psychedelic rock and roll with some sort of strange derivative of the obscure scattered amongst their tunes, any wondering if these cats could create a pop-fused masterpiece should be completely dismissed as any chance of being fact when “Anyway I Can” begins to splinter your ear drums.  This is a song that could serve as the “interesting music in the background of any independent film from the 1990’s”.  I can only imagine how much Cameron Crowe would approve of a band like Healer.  This is grandiose stuff, this is fun.

Yes, this is an Australian act.  This fact almost makes me feel bad about the fact that their style reminds me of some of the classic English fuzz pop bands (specifically from Exeter) that I have become such a fan of over the last few years.  But, I will be damned if I didn’t feel as enlightened by their lyrics and mad rush fortitude that I find just as impressive as acts like Simon Bish and National Pastime.  Save for the more hardcore innuendos and electric guitar skills, the sound is similar and simply just as brilliant.  Yes, Hailer is a band that is been killing it for a while, but it definitely feels as though they have truly found their voice and skill.  This a band that the modern ages should listen to, and feel proud that something this phenomenal can still exist in this, our time of dying.

James Lough shares This Ain’t No Holiday Inn: Down and Out at the Chelsea Hotel 1980-1995 in Portland, OR [Event]

ChelseaThere really is no other hotel quite like New York’s Chelsea Hotel. During its heyday from the 1960s to the 1990s, the Chelsea Hotel was a home and safe haven for Beat poets rubbing shoulders with machine-gun toting gangsters, performance artists partying with con artists, and film directors riding elevators with directors of drug rings.

This Saturday (June 29th, 2013), author James Lough comes to Portland, Oregon to share his oral history of the Chelsea Hotel “This Ain’t No Holiday Inn: Down and Out at the Chelsea Hotel 1980-1995.” The reading takes place on Saturday, June 29th at the Jack London Bar in SW Portland (529 SW 4th Avenue) at 6:30 p.m. Doors open at 4:30 p.m. for a special free lecture for hopeful authors. Lough will be joined by actor Murri Lazaroff-Babin, best known for his portrayal of Sid Vicious from a stage adaptation of “Sid & Nancy.”

We took a moment to sit down with James Lough to learn a little more about why he decided to write the book, and what makes the Chelsea Hotel such an interesting subject for a book.

Why did you decide to write this book?

I decided to write the book when my brother-in-law, Robert Campbell, kept asking me things like, “Hey, y’ever heard of Herbert Huncke? He was the first Beat writer. I used to live next to that guy at the Chelsea.”  I did know the Beats, but I’d never heard of Herbert Huncke, so I figured he was a very minor figure, peripheral to the movement. Then, two weeks later, while reading a book review, I saw The Collected Works of Herbert Huncke. Turns out Huncke WAS the first Beat writer. He had turned Kerouac and Ginsberg onto the mean streets in Times Square, and as a result they dropped out of Columbia and hit the streets.

From then on, when my brother-in-law said things like “I knew Dee Dee Ramone — I was in a band with him at the Chelsea,” I started to take him more seriously. After grilling him about these things, and phoning people he connected me with, I realized I had great material for a book.

Who are some of the more famous people that you feature in this book?

The most famous people featured in the book are beat writers (Herbert Huncke, Gregory Corso, Marty Matz) punk rockers (Dee Dee Ramone and Johnny Thunders) and various other artist/writers/musicians like playwright Arthur Miller, composer Virgil Thompson, Warhol scion Viva, jazz bassist Jaco Pastorius, writer Thomas Wolfe, musicians Tom Waits and Phillip Glass, photographers William Eggleston and Louis Faurer.

What made the Chelsea Hotel such an interesting subject?

The Chelsea was so interesting because it was the biggest, longest-lasting artist’s colony in US history, maybe the history of the world. It provided an encouraging, even libertine atmosphere that encouraged artists to create great art (and to burn out spectacularly if they made some shaky choices.) Not only that, but because management looked the other way when the artists got a little crazy or debauched, it was also an attractive place for criminals. So Beat writers rode the elevators with gangsters, con artists with performance artists, film directors with directors of drug rings.  And this makes of interesting stories galore.

About The Book.

A complete oral history of the famed Chelsea establishment during its grand, final days, “This Ain’t No Holiday Inn: Down and Out At the Chelsea Hotel 1980-1995” (Schaffner Press, July 2013) by James Lough peers behind its iconic façade and delves into the mayhem, madness and brilliance that emerged from the hotel in the last decades of the 20th Century. First-hand accounts from former residents and visitors provide a unique and vibrant, behind-the-scenes look at one of New York City’s most celebrated cultural landmarks, and a window with a view of the latter years of Bohemian New York. Residents like Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix, Mark Twain and Thomas Wolfe, Pablo Picasso and Andy Warhol loved the Chelsea for its libertine atmosphere, where they didn’t have to put on masks or airs. And it didn’t hurt that Bard was rumored to accept paintings and scripts in lieu of rent past due.

For More Information, Check Out This Facebook Event.

Alela Diane: About Farewell [Album]

alela-diane_about-farewellA few years ago, my favorite band released an album that has never left my thoughts and iTunes playlist to this very day.  That band was/is Blitzen Trapper.  I love these guys, and I have expressed this time and time again.  But, what I may have never mentioned is that the star track from their album was heavily and heavenly assisted by one woman who has become another dear favorite of mine, and is an obvious influence on, not only myself, but my favorite band.  The song was “The Tree”.  And the illustrious woman was Alela Diane.  Saying that this woman has the voice of an angel would be as insulting as saying the Pope is simply a man of God.  Alela is an Americana treasure that we should all be so lucky to have ever none.  Yes, Lady Diane is a woman who gets the human psyche better than any of us can imagine, and has the beautiful pipes to tell us about ever so sweetly.  And on her latest full length effort About Farewell, she shines brighter than one could ever imagine.

Much like my beloved Eric Earley, this is a woman who can write a song that just touches my heart in all the right places and make me feel whole at heart and completely disheartening all at the same time.  The way she speaks of the desolate smoldering on “The Way We Fall” just kicks me in the memory banks and makes me resent and retort all of the past mistakes I can manage to conjure up from the thoughts best left behind.  This is a woman who sings about life, love, and the pursuit of decency amongst broken hearted thieves.  Yes, Alela Diane is a genius with the written word, and a masterful musician.  Furthermore, she is the obviously the mastermind behind the finest album of 2013.  Hands down, this is the best album to be sent down from the heavens to us this year.

About Farewell is available now in the digital form today, and the physical world on July 25th.  Discover more details right HERE.

STRFKR: Miracle Mile [Album]

STRFKR-MiracleMileOh sweet holy fires of hell, the new aged funky bunch is back with a vengeance with their latest disco laced, funk driven, and extremely solid album Miracle Mile.  In some senses, this is simply a continuation of the pleasure they have always provided their fans, but in so many ways it is different.  At the very least, it is an improvement from an already amazing style and sound that drives home the space shuttle of spunk and soul we have all grown accustomed to hearing from STRFKR in their continuous odyssey to get on down.

Miracle Mile‘s track list is solid in its entirety, but of course we are going to find a stand out track somewhere.  And fans and critics alike are finding “While I’m Alive” to be an obvious stand out track amongst a plethora of killer tracks.  But, who can simply look paced a track like “Say To You”, which sounds The Beach Boys, meeting The Beatles, meeting that crazy blue crystal meth from Breaking Bad.

The solidarity of Miracle Mile is what is so damn impressive.  As we have come to expect from the fuckers of stars, this is a crew that draws from the depths of sorrow to rediscover what it is that enlightens us at the exact moment we need to be revived from the depths of hell, to learn to party our way through a disruptive existence, and just let it go.  And by no stretch of anyone’s imagination, this is not only the finest work from STRFKR to date…but, it is definitely one of the finest albums you will adore in 2013.

Pick up your own copy of Miracle Mile at Polyvinyl Record Co. NOW!

And be sure to catch STRFKR live, as they are continuously on the move.  The band will be hitting the road for a cross country road trip starting at the Capital Hill Block Party in Seattle, and continuing across the great lands.  Find out more information HERE.

29 (More) Great Love/Missing You Songs [Exclusive]

I have to say that I am extremely surprised by the amount of attention our first installment of 29 Great Love/Missing You Songs (which you can check out HERE).  The amount of Google searches for things like “miss you songs” or “missing you songs” is almost astonishing!  We have even made the 1st page for searches, which as we all know, is the only ones we really look at.  This sort of makes me sad.  But it also makes me happy.  It is a juxtaposition between wondering if the hundreds of people looking something like this are either missing somebody they love and are currently associated with, or if they lost somebody special that they can never get back.  And in all actuality, both are fine reasons to find solace in music to sooth one’s soul.  Therefore, I am overall a very happy man to know that so many people are sharing and enjoying my wife and my opinions on great songs about love and longing.  So with that being said……

Today, as this post goes live, my wife and I are celebrating our 10 year anniversary as a married couple.  That’s right, an entire decade of togetherness.  And if you remember the prouess of the last list of great tracks to miss some one to, it was for my wife’s 29th birthday (so systematically disregarded, but ultimately obvious).  And it doesn’t take a algerbra fanatic to understand that this means that my wife and I have been married since we were teenagers.  Well, you can know that of her, and assume the same for me.  Actually, I am 10 months younger than my wife (and yes, I rub it in her face every day we get closer to 30!), meaning I was 18 years old.  In fact, I was married to my wonderful wife exactly one week after I graduated from Kelso High School in 2003.  So yes, it has been a long time, and through thick and thin, we have prevailed as lovers and friends.

And so celebrate our love, and to share it with all of you, we have both conjoined thoughts and created another list of great songs to miss the one you love, or simply love the one you love.  I also obviously want to extend a warm and loving Anniversary announcement to my beautiful wife Melissa Trembath.  You are the countess of my heart, and my reason to intake oxygen and exude energy in any manner.  I am shit without you.  I hope you know this day in and day out.  I love you.

And the rest of you…….Enjoy!

Also be sure to check out our original 29 Great Love/Missing You Songs from last April.

*as always, this is not all inclusive, and in no apparent order.  i also realize that some of these choices might be a bit too “obvious” to the hipster crowd out there.  that being said, feel free to leave a comment or two with your own choices and maybe they could make the next round, should we have another round.  so again, enjoy!*

A Band of Horses

A Band Of Horses – “No Ones Going To Love You”

Andrew WK

Andrew W.K. – “She Is Beautiful”

Avalance City

Avalanche City – “Love, Love, Love”

Banana and Louie

Banana and Louie – “Come Home Baby”

Beach Boys

The Beach Boys – “God Only Knows”

Blitzen Trapper

Blitzen Trapper – “The Tree”

Cake

Cake – “I Want To Love You Madly”

Cerny Brothers

The Cerny Brothers – “Don’t You Run Away From Me”

Death Cab For Cutie

Death Cab For Cutie – “I Will Follow You In To the Dark”

Decemberists

The Decemberists – “I 4 U & U 4 Me”

Eagle Eye Cherry

Eagle Eye Cherry – “Save Tonight”

Elliott Smith

Elliott Smith – “Say Yes”

Everclear

Everclear – “I Will Buy You A New Life”

Good Old War

Good Old War – “Loud Love”

Head and the Heart

The Head and the Heart – “Honey Come Home”

Iron & Wine

Iron & Wine – “Love and Some Versus”

Lotte Kestner

Lotte Kestner – “Halo”

MGMT

MGMT – “Electric Eel”

Motley Crue

Motley Crue – “Without You”

Pete Droge1

Pete Droge – “If I Don’t Love Me (I’ll Kill Myself)”

Pete Droge2

Pete Droge – “Beautiful Girls”

Pete Townsend

Pete Townsend – “Let My Love Open the Door”

Ray LaMontage

Ray LaMontage – “You Are the Best Thing”

Ryan Adams

Ryan Adams – “Wish You Were Here”

Tonic

Tonic – “Sugar”

Trespassers William

Trespassers William – “Different Stars”

Velvet Underground

The Velvet Underground – “I’m Sticking With You”

Ween

Ween – “I’ll Miss You”

The Young Immortals

The Young Immortals – “Photograph”

Lian Lunson [Interview]

Lian Lunson Head Shot 1

Like so many other folks I know, I find that Netflix can be overwhelming at times.  There are just so many options to choose from.  Do I re-watch the episodes of Arrested Development since it came back around?  Or do I watch the “dark independent comedies featuring a strong female lead” that they always seem to recommend, much to the dismay of my manhood?  Nah, I think I will just watch another random documentary.  And alas, I found quite the gem recently with Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man.  If L.C. wasn’t awe-inspiring before watching this film, he sure got to me after!  This is one of those documentaries that is far from just a simple biography told through the lips of random individuals.  This was special!  Half concert, half doc, full on awesome.

I loved this film so much I felt I desperately needed to reach out the creator of this fine gem and ask her a few questions to gain just a little more insight on how she managed to produce what should be considered a classic, and will be in due time.  So ladies and gentlemen, I present to you the lovely and talented Lian Lunson.  Enjoy!

 

What made you want to develop Horse Pictures, and transition from the world of acting to documentarian?

I actually just always loved films..when you are young and a girl, the first thing you think is you want to be in them. Going to Drama School was very good for me..I think it gave me the confidence to pursue what I really wanted to do. I didn’t set out to make Documentary Films..It’s just what happened. I won’t make them forever..but I will always pursue the subjects that I am most passionate about.

What sort of process do you go through whilst watching hundreds of hours of photage and deciding how to condense it down to a normal length film?

I think the process involves letting the film make itself a lot of the time..and following your intuition. When you have a lot of footage and ideas, there is so much choice..how do I start the film..how do I finish?

They are the two elements I tend to start with..and the title..those three parts to me are the key…Once I have those and I know in my heart they are the right choices, the rest of the film falls into place.

What would you say is your greaest non artistic inspiration?  What keeps you motivated?

I would have to say the Unknown. I study Metaphysics..and Film Making and the Metaphysical world are very connected…they feed off each other..also the lives of animals. I am very inspired by animals, they teach you something constantly..so these are the things that keep me busy and happily motivated.

Leonard Cohen & U2 as seen in Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man

Leonard Cohen & U2 as seen in Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man

What was the most interesting fun fact you learned about Leonard that others might not have known during the making of I’m Your Man?

That he is more mysterious than anyone could possibly imagine.

Who are some other folks, musicians or not, that you would like to profile and have yet to do so?  

I never talk about those subjects until they cross my path or knock at my door.

Can you tell us a bit about your upcoming project entitled The Boom Boom Room?

It is a script that I have written..it is a beautiful story about Faith Love and Family…I have tried really hard to get it made..now I am not trying. The film will get made when the time is right and all the forces are lined up in it’s favor…then it will have the best opportunity to be the most visible.

Lian Lunson - Rufus and Martha 1

Rufus & Martha Wainwright as seen in Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man

Magic, endless possibilities, et l’amour et l’appréciation de cette belle vie!

What wast he last thing that made you smile?

The transformation of my last rescue dog..seeing her face change when she realized she was now loved and no harm would come to her.

Guilt Monkey: Revolution [Single]

Guilt MonkeyGuilt Monkey is one of those bands that I usually don’t find myself falling in love with.  Although I do enjoy the occasional “hard rock” act time and again, I am generally a softy looking for lovely little melodies that calm the soul.  But, like anyone else, I get a little upset from time to time.  Especially when I see all the violence, hatred, and re-distribution of insanity that occurs on what seems to be a daily basis.  So like many others out there, I find solace in a little bit of politically driven, fist in the mouth hard rock.  And thankfully, there is a gem of a group hanging around Brussels known as Guilt Monkey that is making Rage Against The Machine seem calm and steady.  They are out for blood.  They want the world to hear them.  And if they continue upon this path of construction in which they have laid for themselves, soon the world is going to be all knowing of the power frontman Brin Addison and company have to compel the minority, and to destroy the majority.

In with all that comes their delightfully in your face single “Revolution”.  The message of “Revolution” is clear, simple, and concise.  “Take back your freedom” is a line that can mean so many things, but shouldn’t be too confusing.  And in the Occupy Wall Street and Arab Spring movements, it isn’t news, really.  Dictatorships are becoming as useful as VHS tapes these days for those who care to see the world advance.  Even in some “democracies”, we are finding hoards of folks who have realized that not all is well in this day and age.  So the message is simple: there are millions upon millions of us who are affected by the evil deeds of only a few thousand or so, so fucking do something about it!  If only more people would be willing to take some time out of their lives to change the world, we might not have these issues arise.  Sadly, this beautiful theory is without a doubt, bullshit.  But, if there is no fight, there is no chance (i.e.  “a fighting chance”).  The world has never been changed by those who only saw only a light of defeat at the end of the tunnel, it has been changed by those who didn’t care if they ever saw the end of the tunnel.  The world is changed by those who may never actually see the change, but chose to live their lives in a fighting stance, no matter what the future holds.

And the good old boys from Belgium know this is of upmost fucking importance, and want you to take action.  And what can a rock and roll act really do to help?  Well, they can make bad ass tracks that get you hyped and ready to “take back your freedom”, the same way Bob Dylan had the hippies wondering what the hell was just “blowing in the wind”, or the way that Rage made us question was worth “killing in the name of…”.  And better yet, in this new day and age, they will give it to you…..ABSOLUTELY FUCKING FREE!  That is right.

Guilt Monkey World on a ThreadFollow this link HERE and get “Revolution” absolutely free.  For visual stimulation, check out the OFFICIAL VIDEO.  And then  be sure to check out the rest of their sophomore release, World on a Thread, for even more politically driven tracks that are not only thought driven, but fucking beautifully played.  This is hard rock music for people who think they don’t like hard rock music.  Guilt Monkey is loud with reason, and sullen with heart felt melodies that leave you paralyzed with both exuberance and delight.  This is just plain beautiful music with a great reason to get up and shout.