DEVO promotes use of rock and roll animals
DEVO throws a listening party for their new cd... on the internet... for cats.
Watch it here:
http://www.ustream.tv/devo?loc=interstitialskip
DEVO throws a listening party for their new cd... on the internet... for cats.
Watch it here:
http://www.ustream.tv/devo?loc=interstitialskip
| For our friends in Charlotte -- radio station WEND is playing us on Divakar's Sunday night show - 8:30 - 10pm. Feel free to email or call and request us. http://www.1065.com/pages/divakar.html704-570-1065 |
Look out all you skinny tattooed punk-rockers, The Public Good will be down with their own brand of "standard American college radio rock" http://dcist.com/2010/06/fort_reno_2010_schedule.php
Prepare yourselves for high-energy performances of standard American college radio rock favs, such as "Hey! Solomon Grundy" (The Public Good), "This is What We Want" (The Public Good), and "Black Ice" (The Public Good). No one can touch the Public Good's own interpretations of these standards that have existed for years, even if we wrote them. No animal sex, but we will be putting the standard back into standardized. Watch out kids!
| "A Varied Program of Stereo Dynamics for Your Wild Nights Alone" is out in the world. As band accountant, I have set up the savings account requested by the band. Should they sell their targeted 2.5 million copies, my job is to supply them with an ongoing supply of ladies, limousines, and regular nap times.Two reviews of the new music:"It is the band's best offering to date, going back to the Popes! As usual, a sprinkle of humor to mix it up a bit. Highly recommended for those wild nights of all kinds."Mike "Dr. Feelgood" Burton As with their first album, this one opens with a ridiculously infectious pop-rock tune--though I'd say "You Looked Good" carries evidence of the band's maturing sense of its own sound. In fact, the first three tracks as a whole work like as bait to lure the listener in--from the first line of "You Looked Good," through the driving beat of "This is What We Want," all the way to the last note of "Black Ice" (a surprisingly philosophical track that's a crowd favorite at their shows), the album opens with a showcase of the guys' talent as seen in mostly "traditional" pop-rock tracks. Two later, paired tracks are as awesome as they are different: "I Saw You Walking" explodes and restrains a driving guitar line and some of the best vocals on the album, and then "I Want to Be Clean" comes along with this low-key vocal track and tight lyrics, and overall the track sounds like a child of Lou Reed (for atmospherics), Leonard Cohen (for lyrics), and the Public Good themselves spinning all of it into their distinctive sound. Overall, great album and continued growth for one of the smartest pop-rock groups ever.Adam "Prof. Feelgood" Tamashasky |
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From Erik Johnson, contributor to "Ah, Bartleby!" and other fine sources:Whiskey and a Sense of Humor We all have that friend who asks – “hey, a buddy of mine’s in a band. They’re playing Friday night – want to go?” I did not want to go. I’ve seen plenty of bad cover bands, and I’m on the other side of 40. I didn’t need to see another bad cover band. But because my friend happens to be my best friend, and I had watched the Super Bowl with a guy in the band – what choice did I have? If nothing else – it got me out of the house and got me, for the first time, on the band’s guest list. No cover – “that’s another round of drinks,” I thought. So okay – I’d go. Then the band – not a cover band, not hobbyists, but a few guys intent on proving a point – blew the roof off the joint. The Public Good restores one’s faith that rock and roll can grow up and remain interesting. Not just interesting – but relevant, and exciting. They write songs that sound like the Faces – in the best way. Not sloppy, but sincere. A few guys with just enough whiskey in them to be honest, and to enjoy themselves while speaking of their frustrations with the women that walked past, with the labels that turned them down, with the too-small crowd that showed up…and the band still loves what they’re doing. Their second album – “A Varied Program of Stereo Dynamics for Your Wild Nights Alone” – is riff heavy but treads lightly, with a knowing wink to the passage of the years and a yearning that is universal. They balance a sense of humor with a seriousness of purpose almost perfectly. Utterly un-self-conscious, they lay bare their wounds and make sure you don’t feel sorry for them. On a song like “I Saw You Walking” – earnest and sincere and unsentimental and utterly romantic – coming two songs after the tongue-in-cheek “Your Product Name Right Here.” Who pulls that off and maintains their credibility? There aren’t too many bands that even try, let alone succeed – which the Public Good does, wildly. Or a song like “Black Ice,” which is rife with an adult’s perspective of cancer in a family member set against a rib-cage-crushing riff that cracks the foundation of whatever bar they’re playing tonight. This is not irony. This is not meant to provoke hipster smugness. Like the Hold Steady, the Public Good means to reach you – with humor, and vulnerability, and sincerity – while still hoping that the listener smiles along with the bittersweet observations. We do – in recognition and empathy. “My Pre-Existing Conditions” next to “In Bed” on tracks 10 and 11 of their new CD captures the sweet-and-sour nature of their observations on a life a degree outside the mainstream. And who hasn’t felt a degree removed from real meaning, especially as fractured marriages and kids and cancer and lost opportunities become all too familiar? Top to bottom, the Public Good has its heart on it sleeve and your concerns top of mind. Crank that up with killer riffs, a dependable rhythm section, and a few words to let you know you’re not alone – why wouldn’t you buy this album? Trust your friends -- when they ask you if you want to go see a "friend's band," you never know what you will stumble upon. |