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Luke Turner: The Uncanny Valley: Enya's Watermark Revisited, 25 Years On (The Quietus)
Luke Turner: The Uncanny Valley: Enya's Watermark Revisited, 25 Years On (The Quietus)
For years, saying you liked Enya was enough to get you laughed out of town. Recently, though, her implicit presence has been everywhere (whether intentional or not). A recent example would be Julia Holter's 'Horns Surrounding Me', a kissing cousin to Watermark's 'Cursum Perfico'. Or how about early Laurel Halo, Julianna Barwick, Grouper; even new Burial track 'Rival Dealer' has an Enya passage, as if his night bus had got lost up a country lane. She's surely ripe for a reappraisal.
·thequietus.com·
Luke Turner: The Uncanny Valley: Enya's Watermark Revisited, 25 Years On (The Quietus)
Drew Millard: I Saw Limp Bizkit Last Night and It Changed My Life (VICE)
Drew Millard: I Saw Limp Bizkit Last Night and It Changed My Life (VICE)
Where Durst was wearing black basketball shorts and a white Limp Bizkit hoodie, Borland was seriously dressed like a fucking orc, his entire body painted black with a giant black wig on his head and a light-up opera mask obscuring his face. He kept spitting water his water out instead of swallowing it, which seemed kinda weird but probably symbolized nothing.
·noisey.vice.com·
Drew Millard: I Saw Limp Bizkit Last Night and It Changed My Life (VICE)
Gerard Cosloy: The Year Complaining About Music Blogs & Beards Broke (Can't Stop the Bleeding)
Gerard Cosloy: The Year Complaining About Music Blogs & Beards Broke (Can't Stop the Bleeding)
Again, if you simply prefer the music of the early ’90′s, or more likely, that just happens to be the period in which you had a moment self of discovery (musical and otherwise) before real world circumstances beat it out of you, no problem. But blogs in general (or Pitchfork in particular) are a pretty convenient boogeyman compared to the public’s rotten taste and/or lazy music fans who’ve just fucking given up.
·cantstopthebleeding.com·
Gerard Cosloy: The Year Complaining About Music Blogs & Beards Broke (Can't Stop the Bleeding)
Nitsuh Abebe: Why We Fight: Your Chemical Romance (Pitchfork)
Nitsuh Abebe: Why We Fight: Your Chemical Romance (Pitchfork)
People born during a dip in the birth rate grow up consuming a lot of culture that's aimed at someone older than them. People born during a boom do not do cultural apprenticeship, because everything is quickly aimed at them; they watch the things that appeal to their age group bloom and succeed, whether anyone else is interested in it or not. This is why some Americans have spent decades clutching their heads as the Baby Boom generation makes big chunks of our world revolve around itself: Large cohorts have a large gravitational pull.
·pitchfork.com·
Nitsuh Abebe: Why We Fight: Your Chemical Romance (Pitchfork)
Nitsuh Abebe: Indie Grown-Ups
Nitsuh Abebe: Indie Grown-Ups
‘One good indicator of this norm’s normalness? The main criticism you hear about this kind of record—even outweighing references to Starbucks and/or the bourgeoisie—is that it is just too dull to even bother producing any more complex indictment of it. These acts, intentionally or not, have won; they’ve taken a lower-sales, lower-budget version of the type of trip Sting once took, from a post-punk upstart to an adult staple.’
·nymag.com·
Nitsuh Abebe: Indie Grown-Ups
Riff Market: Regarding Hipster Runoff's Animal Collective Post
Riff Market: Regarding Hipster Runoff's Animal Collective Post
"You can try to know, and own the fact that there are things you do not know, or you can be knowing, and hide your own ignorance with sideways shots of been-there done-that familiarity. You can understand that shit happens and try your best to keep things together and accomplish something against all odds — YOU CAN DANCE, as this album begins — or you can blow up the hospital just to show everyone that at any moment anywhere, a hospital can blow up for no fucking reason whatsoever."
·riffmarket.com·
Riff Market: Regarding Hipster Runoff's Animal Collective Post
Interconnected: This Isn't a Story I Tell Many People
Interconnected: This Isn't a Story I Tell Many People
Why privacy persists. "Along with new visibilities comes social understanding of those new visibilities." "If the end of privacy comes about, it's because we misunderstand the current changes as the end of privacy, and make the mistake of encoding this misunderstanding into technology. It's not the end of privacy because of these new visibilities, but it may be the end of privacy because it looks like the end of privacy because of these new visibilities."
·interconnected.org·
Interconnected: This Isn't a Story I Tell Many People