“I’ll Never” — Trans Am

“All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music”

“Trapped by a Thing Called Love” | Dance Scene, Only Lovers Left Alive

“All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music”

Quinoa Valley Recording Company, Complete Discography

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“All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music”

“Darling Commit Me” — Steve Earle

Connect the dots

velvets-connect

“All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music”

Sonic Youth Play “100%” on Letterman in 1992

“Suzanne” (Live) — Nina Simone

“Distant Shore” (Live) — Dirty Three

“Up with People” — Lambchop

“All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music”

The Minutemen Play an Acoustic Set on Public Access TV in 1985

Will Oldham on Bonnie “Prince” Billy (Book Acquired 3.01.2014)

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Earlier this month, my good friend sent me Will Oldham on Bonnie “Prince” Billy, a book-length interview between Oldham and musician Alan Licht. In the book, Oldham parses his identity from Bonnie “Prince” Billy, the character he’s been performing (in different versions) for over a decade now. The book is fascinating stuff and strangely personal/weird for me—reading his oral history is bizarre, I guess, because I remember it all happening. Like, I remember buying the 7″s he talks about making; I remember puzzling over the early Palace LPs, trying to glean meaning from the covers, the personnel. Palace—Oldham—B”P”B—soundtracked so much of my high school and college days that I inevitably had a falling out with him/them/it—or maybe that’s not the right word…what is the term for the emotional intensity we feel toward certain albums, certain records imprinted in the back of our souls? (I used a line from “For the Mekons et al” for my Senior yearbook quote but the fucking yearbook staff fucked it up. But fuck a yearbook anyway). Ease Down the Road was the last Oldham record that I let get to me; intellectually, I realize that the stuff he did after is somehow superior—tighter, richer even—but it couldn’t sink in, I wouldn’t let it sink in, too many too-good memories already there, I don’t know. I saw him on the Superwolf tour; he deepthroated the mic during an R. Kelly cover, and after the show my wife remarked that he would never be welcome as a guest in our home. I thought that seemed harsh. I tried—years later, reading this book—to explain that it was just a character. No dice.

Thanks Nick.