Enter The Magical Mystery Chambers - Wu Tang Vs The Beatles / Tom Caruana
Conceptually a weaker effort than Dangermouse's Beatles breakbeat benchmark 'Grey Album', but for my (admittedly Wu Tang fanatical) dollar this mash-up is a far more entertaining listen front-to-back. The tracks that work far outweigh those that don't, and a handful (the bludgeoning, 'I Am The Walrus' sampling "Run", a re-make of "C.R.E.A.M." almost as smooth as the original, & the centre-piece, show-stopping "Uzi (Pinky Ring)") have remained heavy rotation heavyweights on my ipod all year. Precisely the sort of post-modern irreverence that Lennon woulda loved.
Book Of The Year
Dino: Living High in the Dirty Business of Dreams - Nick Tosches
Everything you need to know about mid-20th Century US pop culture is here. A serious - but never remotely dry - book, packed with punchy, profane prose, placing the vacant, solitary anti-hero figure of Dean Martin at the centre of a wide ranging cultural discourse on pop music, film, showbiz, television, sex, money etc etc...and however black the oblivion of Dino's empty megastardom gets, you still wind up with the impression of Martin as the Rat Pack's true hipster - a dispassionate, untouchable, grade-A bad-ass - "the cool guy's cool guy".
Film Of The Year
Toy Story 3 - Dir. Lee Unkrich
In which everybody is forced to recognise the shocking frailty of thier own mortality via a fiery pit-hell incinerator scene where Woody, Buzz and the Toy Story Gang take one another's hands and accept their own imminent and certain doom with quiet, heart-breaking dignity. Peerless popular art, bursting with imagination, and with an emotional depth of resonance greater than any number of the "serious" middle-brow movies with which Pixar will compete - I suspect fruitlessly, mores the pity - for a Best Picture Oscar come February.
TV Show Of The Year
The Office (An American Workplace) / Curb Your Enthusiasm
I'm gonna have to chicken outta making a definitive call on this one. Overall, these are very different shows; the former has a warm, beating heart the size of a watermelon and gets slushier by the episode, happily embracing it's position as the closest any post-Friends sit-com has come to reconciling the briefly un-cool merits of A Bunch Of Likeable People Who Actually Like Each Other mainstream comedy with the edgier, taboo-trampling brinksmanship of Gervais / Merchant's British original, while the latter is characterised by a no-holes-barred barrage of mind-boggling "WTF" moments that re-invents the Seinfeld formula of jaw-dropping social awkwardness + astonishingly tight narrative structures + self-reflexivity + people who hate themselves and everyone the know, on an operatic scale, making Gervais / Merchant's efforts seem conservatively quaint by comparison. I admire and enjoy them both equally. A dead-heat, then - The Office, for the sheer number of hours of pleasure it has given me this year, and CYE, for those spectacular, fan-pleasing Seinfeld reunion episodes.
Songs Of The Year
.1. In Tha Park - Ghostface Killah Crunching, distorted, heavily fuzzed, block-party rockin', psyche-soul, old-skool flavoured hip-hop ticks every one of my boxes. With deliberate nods to P Diddy's "Bad Boy For Life" and MC Shan, In Tha Park stands proudly along side the strongest Wu releases from any era. This is how that BlakRoc LP shoulda sounded.
.2. Groove Is In The Heart - Crocodiles Pure, unadulterated nostalgic 90s kid indulgence - shoegazing indie-rock fetishists covering a 'contemporary' 1990 pop masterpiece. About as authentic an impresssion of an ealy 90s John Peel session by some B-list sub-Chapterhouse outfit as one could possibly imagine. Smart, funny, trippy, and undeniably groovy.
.3. Boyfriend - Best Coast I guess basically like a gazillion records sounded pretty much exactly like this in 2010, but for whatever reason Best Coast's particular take on the year's ubiquitous early 60s girl-group + slacker 90s indie formula lodged itself in my skull like no other.
3 comments:
Awesome, I need to check out these songs x
Hey Paul,
Happy New Year, mate, and great writing as always. Embarrassingly, I don't have personal experience of any of your choices for Year's Best,but I bow to your superior coolness and will endeavour to check them out...
For me, I think that I'll look back on 2010 as the year I finally got old - pop music is in one of it's periodic troughs, nothing much excited me on celluloid, and my favourite TV was all re-runs and DVD boxsets.
So yeah, I guess Blur were right. Modern Life is Rubbish and I appear to be stuck in an ever tightening tailspin of 60's & 70's Brit/Yank pop culture, where I'll eventually crash land in 1977, surely the absolute central point of all things trash & funky.
Anyway, thanks for posting - by the way, I'm on a major Beatles kick at the moment, and was looking for a definitive biography to read. I hear Shout! is pretty good, but I suspect you might know of something a little more left-field. Any suggestions?
Oh, and Scooby Doo! Have you seen those early 70's team-ups with The Globetrotters, Sonny & Cher etc? Aren't they great?! I love me some Scoob-ster...
Anna: I think you'll dig the Best Coast track at least.
Dazzy: Yeah, happy new yeezy to you too.
I mean...truthfully, I guess a solid 75% of my pop culture input in 2011 was pretty much old records and DVD box sets too. I actually think chart pop music is in a pretty good state in relative terms, but certainly when I pick up the NME now I baically have no clue what they're talking about, and I really have zero interest in contemporary 'serious alt rock / folk' etc.
As I've got older my tastes have simultaneously narrowed and expanded...in a general sense I'm more tolerant of far more types of music than I ever was as a kid, but in terms of what I actually listen to regularly, it basically boils down to Frank Sinatra and the Wu Tang Clan.
In terms of a good Beatles book: Ian MacDonals's song-by-song analysis 'Revolution In The Head' is an absolute must-buy. I don't agree with everything he says (he's no fan of Helter Skelter), but it treats the subject matter with the seriousness and imagination it deserves. I'd also highly recommend "Get Back - The Beatles Let It Be Disaster", which is a minute-by-minute record of that album's recording sessions. It's the nerdiest book ever, but really, reaaly great. A broader 'day by day' record is Mark Lewisholm's "The Complete Beatle's Recording Sessions". As I recall, "Shout" is probably worth a read too.
Anyways, no - I haven't caught the Scooby Doo team-ups you've mentioned, I'll definately check them out.
Cheers for reading as always - I look forward to reading your blog soon!
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