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T O P I C    R E V I E W
Broken Face Posted - 11/17/2005 : 07:39:41
Yet another reason to love the Bad Plus. This is from their blog; anyone have anything to add to the list:


61 Bands and their corresponding Authors (Invitational)

On the train ride between Cork and Dublin yesterday, we came up with a list comparing rock bands/artists to writers.

The rationale of these parings could be specific or intuitive. In musical alphabetical order it begins with linking AC/DC to Julia Childs. Rationale: they are both extremely popular, are reliable craftsmen, and exude a charismatic, “come on and get it” quality. A more typical and legible pairing is Kate Bush--James Joyce: in this case, Bush’s lyrics are in the Joyce tradition. Some other more indirect connections include Douglas Adams to Phish (their fans are similar types and both artists are whimsical) and Jimi Hendrix to Kurt Vonnegut (an adolescent’s discovery of each one has a similar thrilling quality).

These comparisons do not reflect qualitative opinions; at times a band we don’t like as much is paired with a writer we love and vice versa. No one is used twice, and some comparisons we stand behind more firmly than others. (The Notorious B.IG/Iceberg Slim riff is pretty cheap, for example.) But assuredly, they all are linked for a reason, and some of them are dead on.

***Until December 1st, send us your own pairings, comments and opinions at badplus61at yahoo dot com. We will post the best stuff.***

BAND/ARTIST--AUTHOR

AC/DC--Julia Child

Alice Cooper--Stephen King

Tori Amos--Alice Walker

Björk--Italo Calvino

Kate Bush--James Joyce

The Beatles--Roald Dahl

David Bowie--J.G Ballard

Jeff Buckley--Frank O’ Hara

Captain Beefheart--Allen Ginsburg

Johnny Cash--Carl Sandburg

Nick Cave--William Faulkner

The Clash --Hunter S. Thompson

Leonard Cohen--John Updike

Elvis Costello--William Shakespeare

Cream--Jane Auel

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young--John Steinbeck

The Cure--William Gibson

The Doors--Jack Kerouac

Bob Dylan--Ernest Hemingway

The Eagles--Tom Wolfe

Mark Eitzel--William Carlos Williams

The Flaming Lips--Shel Silverstein

Fleetwood Mac --J.K. Rowling

Peter Gabriel--Ray Bradbury

Marvin Gaye--Maya Angelou

Green Day--Dan Brown

Hall and Oates --Nick Hornby

P.J Harvey--Virginia Woolf

Jimi Hendrix--Kurt Vonnegut

Jewel--Danielle Steele

The Killers--Bret Easton Ellis

Led Zeppelin--Herman Hesse

Madonna--Anne Rice

Stephen Malkmus--Thomas Pynchon

Metallica--Clive Barker

Joni Mitchell--Margaret Atwood

Nirvana--William Burroughs

Notorious B.I.G.--Iceberg Slim

The Pixies--Paul Auster

Phish--Douglas Adams

Pink Floyd--J.D. Salinger

The Police--F. Scott Fitzgerald

Prince--Henry Miller

Public Enemy--Langston Hughes

Queen--Walt Whitman

Radiohead--Franz Kafka

Lou Reed--Truman Capote

Rolling Stones--Charles Dickens

Rush--J.R.R. Tolkien

Shudder To Think--Samuel Beckett

The Smiths--Agatha Christie

Bruce Springsteen--Norman Mailer

Steely Dan--Raymond Chandler

Sting--John Le Carre

Talking Heads--Eugene Ionesco

U2--C.S.Lewis

Van Halen--Cameron Crowe

Tom Waits--Charles Bukowski

Wilco--Mark Twain

The Who--Ian Fleming

Yes--H.P. Lovecraft


-Brian
17   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Newo Posted - 11/19/2005 : 16:38:09
Thank heavens, I thought I was the only one to feel that way about the McGrateful Dead.

--


Buy your best friend flowers. Buy your lover a beer. Covet thy father. Covet thy neighbour's father. Honour thy lover's beer. Covet thy neighbour's father's wife's sister. Take her to bingo night.
floop Posted - 11/19/2005 : 13:25:38
quote:
Originally posted by HeywoodJablome

Rolling Stones and Charles Dickens?

And if they're going to go through the trouble of comparing Phish with an author the author has to first and foremost be a retard.



i think even mentally disabled authors would be offended by the Phish comparison
kathryn Posted - 11/19/2005 : 11:33:58
quote:
Originally posted by IceCream

Why did I waste all my time on that post? Does anyone read my posts?



I read your posts, IceCream. I've also read several Fitzgerald books (Tender is the Night is my favorite, even better than The Great Gatsby in my opinion...read it!) and I don't get the comparison with the Police, a band I was totally into in the early 80s.


I got some heaven in my head

IceCream Posted - 11/18/2005 : 20:06:13
quote:
Originally posted by Crispy Water

quote:
Originally posted by IceCream

Why did I waste all my time on that post? Does anyone read my posts?



Not a waste of time. Please don't be discouraged; your show of intelligent thought was well worth it. It's the ones like that which make all the "your mom," "lol," crap more bearable.

Nothing is ever something.

thanks.
HeywoodJablome Posted - 11/18/2005 : 19:25:26
Rolling Stones and Charles Dickens?

And if they're going to go through the trouble of comparing Phish with an author the author has to first and foremost be a retard.
Crispy Water Posted - 11/18/2005 : 15:12:40
quote:
Originally posted by IceCream

Why did I waste all my time on that post? Does anyone read my posts?



Not a waste of time. Please don't be discouraged; your show of intelligent thought was well worth it. It's the ones like that which make all the "your mom," "lol," crap more bearable.

Nothing is ever something.
Carl Posted - 11/18/2005 : 07:46:37
I've never read The Great Gatsby, there is an old copy lying around the house. All I know is that Andy Kaufman was a fan.

"Join the Honeycult!"
Erebus Posted - 11/17/2005 : 23:29:13
I do.
IceCream Posted - 11/17/2005 : 22:07:57
Why did I waste all my time on that post? Does anyone read my posts?
IceCream Posted - 11/17/2005 : 22:02:29
I don't really see the Police/Fitzgerald comparison. Granted, I've only read Gatsby, but it seems Fitzgerald is extremely dense with coloful and vivid (yet subtle) symbols, insightful, pessimistic, and charismatic - wise and attractive. Of course, I don't know if that was Nick Carroway talking or Fitzgerald - I love the way Fitzgerald personifies Nick as such a pretentious, unknowingly self-contradicting, overblown individual, yet with good insights and morality. Nick's flawed character makes the story so incredibly believable. Gatsby is told from the view of an actual character and not a fake one.

Thinking about it, though, I suppose the Police, considering their dense cramming of pop, reggae, jazz fusion, synthesizers, new wave, punk, disorienting noises, and rock into their sound, COULD be considered colorful and vivid while being subtle. Most certainly. The Police were original enough to keep their influences from ever being obvious. "Tea In The Sahara" is a mysterious song that most certainly conveys the haze of the green light and the mysteriousness of Fitezgerald's writing (i.e. Nick, not a hero, not a villain, being the narrator is quite mysterious.) And Gatsby was a short book. So were pretty much all of the Police's songs. I don't ever recall hearing a Police song over 7 minutes. Man, all this talk makes me wanna hear the Police. "King of Pain" -------- awww yeah.
Newo Posted - 11/17/2005 : 18:30:40
That´s pretty accurate about Cave and Faulkner, Cave´s novel Ass saw The Angel had that writer´s kind of feel about it.

--


Buy your best friend flowers. Buy your lover a beer. Covet thy father. Covet thy neighbour's father. Honour thy lover's beer. Covet thy neighbour's father's wife's sister. Take her to bingo night.
Kirk Posted - 11/17/2005 : 14:16:14
How did you find the time to read from all these authors?
darwin Posted - 11/17/2005 : 13:54:05
Rush--J.R.R. Tolkien

True they're both not as smart as they think they are, but isn't Rush a Ayn Rand inspired group?
floop Posted - 11/17/2005 : 13:27:02
listening to Wilco is like eating dry horse feces with cold decaffinated coffee. reading Mark Twain is not
Newo Posted - 11/17/2005 : 13:22:23
I´m curious to know why they paired Auster with Pixies, I would have said Mingus.

--


Buy your best friend flowers. Buy your lover a beer. Covet thy father. Covet thy neighbour's father. Honour thy lover's beer. Covet thy neighbour's father's wife's sister. Take her to bingo night.
Newo Posted - 11/17/2005 : 13:20:27
Reading Italo Calvino is like eating a box of dry crackers with nothing to drink. Listening to Bjork is not. I could fit Pynchon into most of those musicians.

--


Buy your best friend flowers. Buy your lover a beer. Covet thy father. Covet thy neighbour's father. Honour thy lover's beer. Covet thy neighbour's father's wife's sister. Take her to bingo night.
kathryn Posted - 11/17/2005 : 09:15:53
This list offends my very soul, from the obvious Tom Waits/Bukowski pairing to the unspekably sacrilegious Joni Mitchell/Atwood suggestion. I'll be vomiting if anybody needs me.


I got some heaven in my head


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