"Alone in his dining room, he makes raw, sparse music about broken relationships, crumbling lives . . . and thawing out Walt Disney (who, incidentally, won't awaken in particularly fine spirits)," the Washington Post reviews Patterson Hood's Killers & Stars.
"The Day the Voices Died," a history of Guided By Voices
Television chef and cookbook author Alton Brown rants about Martha Stewart, his aching heart, and cheese.
"Music is my religion. Creativity is my communion," Zachary Gresham of the Summer Hymns tells the Houston Press.
Sometimes the worst movies have the best soundtracks, so says the Kansas City Pitch.
“As far as musicians, there's a certain mentality that doesn't want to deal with Los Angeles or New York,” Tortoise's Doug McCombs on the band choosing to live in Chicago.
Harvey Pekar discusses regionalism in Minneapolis-St. Paul.
My favorite novelist Michael Chabon co-wrote the screenplay for Spiderman 2?
Posted by david on May 06, 2004I miss Walt Disney. I wonder what he would say to his company today, too.
Posted by: Terry on May 6, 2004 09:41 AMDisney has become such a huge entity... I may track down a biography about Walt Disney. That's a great question, Terry.
Posted by: david on May 6, 2004 10:26 AMThis is off-topic, but... I need help over on my silly little blog, and you've got all the popular and knowledgeable music fans over here. (wink wink)
(Off to read your soundtrack link quickly while I try to breathe...)
Posted by: kelly on May 6, 2004 01:43 PM