Saturday, February 21, 2009
Where in the World Is... Part Two
Every few months, I check Google to see where my reviews are ending up. Here are some of the more interesting results.
Bach Movies:
Amazon review of The Anniversary Party
[My first Amazon theatrical review.]
Belinda Carlisle:
Amazon review of Voilà
Doomed to Be Stoned in a Sludge Swamp:
AMG review of the Screaming Trees - Buzz Factory
Eschatone Records:
AndMoreAgain review of Brian Dewan - Words of Wisdom
HellHorror.com:
Amazon review of Crónicas
Knowledge:
Amazon review of Style Wars
[This review is all over the net, which thrills me, as it means a
lot of people are discovering and re-discovering this b-boy gem.]
Last.fm:
AMG biography of Benjamin Biolay
Memphis Music:
AMG review of Monsieur Jeffrey Evans - I've Lived a Rich Life
MSN Music:
AMG review of Love - Love Live
Queer Theory:
Amazon review of A&E Biography - Sal Mineo
Scott Walker - 30 Century Man:
Link to my Resonance interview with Stephen Kijak
The Seattle Times:
Article about Microsft's queue announcer program
[My job from 1992-98; I also recorded all phone support messages.]
Super70s.com:
Amazon review of The Honeymoon Killers
Syracuse.com:
AndMoreAgain review of Jesse Dee - Bittersweet Batch
[They refer to me as an "internet pop culture blogger." Hey! I'll take it.]
Zune.net:
AMG review of Mike Johnson - What Would You Do?
[They also feature my Buzz Factory review, among others.]
Endnote: In addition, in the months before David Hudson
left GreenCine—he's now at IFC.com—he linked to the follow-
ing reviews, interviews, and other ephemera: Duplass Brothers interview, 2008 film list, Day of Wrath, A Colt Is My Passport,
i.e. "Billed as a noir, the film feels more like a thriller with Left
Bank overtones; more Albert Camus than Jean-Luc Godard,"
and Matt Wolf's debut, i.e. "There's nothing overtly strange about
[Arthur Russell's] music, except it's ethereal without entering the
more recognizable realms of psychedelia or new age (and intimate
without qualifying as conventional singer/songwriter fare). It's
accessible, in other words, but not commercial. And there you
have it: the kiss of death. You also have the makings of a cult
artist, and that's where Wild Combination begins..."
I'm also name-checked in the following thread at The Stran-
ger's Line Out. It's weird when you're reading a blog and all of
a sudden you stumble across your own name. Happily, no one
said anything unkind. Sadly, some of the chatter is inaccurate,
i.e. a couple of people seem to think I'm a regular contribut-
or to The Seattle Weekly. I'm not. Image from Fatlace.
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2 comments:
Love that Vaughn-Bode-style graffiti. There used to be an incredible Bode warrior babe spray-painted in the King Street Station tunnel. It disappeared a few years ago, but it lasted for about 15 years. I wish Bode had lived to see graffiti artists embrace him.
Me too. Saw lots of graffiti in Rome--hey, it's an Italian word!--but nothing quite that creative, and in that ancient city, it just seemed...out of place.
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