Results tagged “Politics” from Powers Perspective

Hypernova, The Troubadour, LA - 7/16

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Took some snaps of Hypernova when they played WeHo's Troubabour recently (see photo gallery). The band have an amazing story (they're from Iran) and an awesome sound (New Order meets Franz Ferdinand).


Hypernova are currently on a nationwide tour with fellow Iranian band The Yellow Dogs (who appeared in an award-winning documentary about the underground rock music scene in Tehran called No One Know About Persian Cats). Both bands are in exile (it's illegal to perform Western style music in Iran) and based in New York now (Hypernova originally obtained work visa thanks to the personal intervention of New York Senator Charles Schumer). They're hoping the tour will open a window on a different, more positive aspect of Middle Eastern culture than we're used to seeing on TV, so be sure to check 'em out.


Visit Hypernova's Facebook for tour dates and their website for a free download of their new single, "Fairty Tales," off their debut album Through The Chaos.

Interview with Jonathan Davis of Korn

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As the frontman for heavy duty California rock band Korn, Jonathan Davis has turned angst into an art form, and has sold an impressive 32 million albums worldwide since the group's inception in 1993. Having battled addiction and long-term depression, much of the inspiration for Davis' lyrics has come from internal demons. But right now he's making noise about an external issue that will likely affect us all in some way - the April 20th drilling explosion at the Deepwater Horizon oil rig.


Owned by Transocean but leased and operated by BP, the disaster at the rig appears to be caused, at least in part, by the oil giant's concern for profits above safety. Channeling his anger at the company's culpability into action, Davis is the instigator behind a boycott of BP's products by a coalition of touring bands. Initially it consisted mostly of those on the traveling Mayhem Festival bill, which Korn are currently co-headlining, however the coalition's ranks have rapidly swelled and now include artists such Lady Gaga, Anthrax, Backstreet Boys, Maroon 5 and Filter.


Though the Deepwater Horizon spill occurred in the Gulf of Mexico, the human and environmental issues it raises are far closer to home for Davis. He was born and raised in Bakersfield, a city within the borders of Kern County, CA, which has the dubious honor of being the largest oil producing county in the US. Though rich in oil, eighteen percent of Bakersfield's population lives below the poverty line. The city also ranks as one of the least educated in the nation.


Music was a way out for Davis, but his ties to his hometown remain strong, as evidenced by the first single off Korn's new album, Korn III: Remember Who You Are. The track is called "Oildale (Leave Me Alone)" and is named after a suburban town 3.5 miles northwest of downtown Bakersfield. Surrounded by oil wells, Davis calls Oildale "the most impoverished, fucked-up place I think I've ever been to." Though this statement is anecdotal, if the video for "Oildale" which was shot there is anything to go by, it's clear the place could do with benefiting a little more from its oil wealth.


SuicideGirls caught up with Davis shortly after he came off stage after performing at the Mayhem Festival in Idaho. Talking the day after the new album's release (Korn III: Remember Who You Are has since debuted at #2 on the Billboard Top 200 sales chart), we spoke about life, music, organized religion, close encounters of the crop circle making kind, and his hope that his wrath for big petroleum will prove to be contagious.


Read my interview with Jonathan Davis of Korn at SuicideGirls.com.

Samantha Bee: I Know I Am, But What Are You?

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"I have a knack for penises," isn't the kind of confession you'd expect from a memoir penned by Samantha Bee, The Daily Show's Most Senior Correspondent. But then I Know I Am, But What Are You? isn't the kind of book you'd expect her to write. Leaving politics and talk of Jon Stewart & Co. mostly to one side, the collection of humorous essays sheds light on Samantha's unconventional upbringing, which in turn sheds light on why her recipe for success includes a hearty helping of sexually explicit material - ergo her theory that "we need to bring more of a porn sensibility to our financial regulatory mechanisms" (see April 27, 2010 Sex-curities XXXchange Cumission report).


I spoke with the Canadian-born not-news show funnywoman (who is married to fellow Daily Show correspondent Jason Jones) about her Granny juice steeped childhood, her affairs with Jesus and her cat, her rebellious dislike of hot ham, and the repercussions of her exposure to penis-laden literature and videos at an exceedingly young age.


Read my interview with Samantha Bee at SuicideGirls.com.

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They say the house always wins, but in the case of "Casino" Jack Abramoff it was the guy holding the keys to the front and back doors that made out like a bandit. Like thousands of other lobbyists (close to 14,000 individuals were registered as such in 2009 according to the Center for Responsive Politics) Abramoff peddled access to influence, which he bought with generous campaign "donations" and perks such as luxury "fact-finding" trips.


Abramoff wasn't too picky about who his clients were, had no problem representing more than one side, and, as a disciple of Ronald Reagan school of economics, had a innate disrespect for any rules and regulations that interfered with his ability to capitalize at the often excessive expense of his clients.


Having represented several Indian tribes with regards to their lucrative gaming rights, Abramoff (along with business partner Adam Kidan) utilized his gambling expertise and made a play to buy the SunCruz floating casino line. The deal hit headlines in 2005 when three men connected to the Gambino crime family were charged with the 2001 murder of SunCruz founder Konstantinos "Gus" Bouli, who had sold a majority interest in the company to Abramoff and his associates. By this time Abramoff was being investigated for bribery and corruption relating to his Indian gaming clients, who had collectively been charged an estimated $85 million in fees by Abramoff and cronies Ralph E. Reed, Jr., Grover Norquist and Michael Scanlon -- for the privilege of being played off against each other.


In truth, Abramoff's business practices probably had much in common with those of a large proportion of his contemporaries. His main crime in Washington's prevailing climate of corruption seemingly being that he got too cocky not to get caught. Ultimately Abramoff and an elite group of conspirators including Ohio's Republican Rep. Bob Ney, his former Chief of Staff, Neil Volz, and Michael Scanlon, who had served as Communications Director for disgraced Texan Rep. Tom DeLay (and had assisted Abramoff in the SunCruz purchase), paid -- albeit relatively lightly -- for their crimes, and Washington was able to breathe a collective sigh of relief that it had been seen to do something with actions that had minimal long-term impact on the status quo.


However, it's this status quo, the lobbying system and how its symbiotic with the way we finance the election of our leaders, that we should really take issue with since it has done more to pervert the course of democracy than any one individual. In 2009 a record $3.48 billion was spent on lobbying. And since a politician's primary objective once they get in power, by necessity, is to find the money to get reelected, it's easy to understand why our representatives in government are forced to serve the needs of those with fat checkbooks above those of the people.


With an eye on this bigger picture, Oscar-winning documentarian Alex Gibney (whose previous credits include Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room and Taxi to the Dark Side) takes an in-depth look at the stranger-then-fiction Abramoff affair in his new film Casino Jack and The United States of Money. I caught up with Gibney to talk about the wholesale selling of America he investigated, and how, with a dearth of untarnished white knights, our future champions might just take the form of the likes of Eliot Spitzer (who's the subject of Gibney's next, as yet untitled, project).


Read my interview with Alex Gibney on SuicideGirls.com.

Anders Østergaard: Burma VJ

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At the time much of the footage for the Oscar-nominated documentary Burma VJ was being shot, its director, Anders Østergaard, wasn't even in the same hemisphere. Wanting to open a window on the closed country of Burma (a.k.a. Myanmar), the Danish-based filmmaker struck up a groundbreaking remote collaboration with a network of underground citizen reporters, who risked torture, imprisonment and death as they shot then smuggled footage beyond the military dictatorship's closely guarded borders.


The documentary was originally intended to be a half hour short, profiling a 27-year old video journalist (or VJ) known as Joshua who worked behind Burma's barbed-wire veil of silence and against the strict media embargo enforced by its military government (which came to power after a coup in 1962). Using a pseudonym to protect his identity, Joshua coordinated illicit on-the-ground coverage for the Democratic Voice of Burma, a non-profit news organization based in Norway. However, when Burma's ruling junta abruptly ceased subsidies on fuel, which caused the price to skyrocket, destabilizing an economy that was already among the world's poorest, Joshua and Østergaard's project took on a far greater significance.


Thousands of the country's Buddhist monks took to the streets in the latter part of 2007, leading what developed into widespread protests against the intransigent regime. Armed with their wits and hand held video cameras, Joshua and his crew of VJs documented the saffron uprising and the Burmese government's brutal retaliation to it from the front lines. It was the first time in a generation that the people had dared challenge their leaders, but this was very different to the last uprising in 1988. Footage captured by Joshua and his team was beamed around the world. Vivid images of soldiers viciously beating monks in the street in broad daylight were broadcast via all the major new networks, putting Burma - albeit briefly - at the top of the United Nation's political agenda. With no room for deniability, Burma's military leaders were shamed into making concessions. And then the world's attention moved on.


Fast-forward to 2010, with promises broken and hard fought concessions reneged on, it might be easy for Joshua and his fellow Burmese citizens to feel despondent. However, with Burma VJ, a documentary that combines original footage with dramatic recreations, Joshua and Østergaard hope to raise awareness for the ongoing plight of the Burmese people. At the start of this month their cause was given a massive boost with an Academy Award nomination for their film in the category for Best Documentary feature.


I caught up with Østergaard, a Danish filmmaker who was previously best known for Tintin and Me (a 2003 documentary about comics writer and artist Hergé). Over coffee we talked about Burma VJ's dramatic journey from the impoverished streets of Burma to Hollywood's glittering Kodak Theater, and what the film's Oscar nomination means for a new generation of citizen journalists and for those fighting oppression around the globe.


Read my exclusive interview with Anders Østergaard at SuicideGirls.com.

Camille Rose Garcia: Alice's Adventures In Wonderland

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Growing up in the shadow of Disneyland, artist and illustrator Camille Rose Garcia spent a lot of time contemplating the reality of fantasy and the fantasies that make reality palatable.


Just as the white paint flaked and the wood decayed in the once-perfect picket-fenced suburbs that surround Disney's Orange County Fantasyland, on canvas and in print, Garcia's brightly colored fairytale tableaus are juxtaposed with darker elements, as real world forces impinge on her perfect dream worlds.


Much of Garcia's work explores the lie of the American Dream, the loss of it, and how the masses are self-medicating to deal with the aftermath. Though these themes are adult in nature, the on-the-surface beauty of Garcia's art appeals to a younger audience on a more basic level. So when Harper Collins decided to revisit Alice's Adventures in Wonderland amid renewed interest in Lewis Carroll's curious tale (which was first published in 1865), Garcia was a natural choice to re-imagine the visual element of the book.


I spoke with Garcia to find out what she saw when she followed Alice and a certain well-dressed (and very late) White Rabbit down Carroll's most unusual rabbit-hole.


Read my exclusive interview with Camille Rose Garcia at SuicideGirls.com.

Jon Ronson: The Men Who Stare At Goats

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The Men Who Stare At Goats is a hilarious new film starring George Clooney, Jeff Bridges, Ewan McGregor and Kevin Spacey. Unfortunately, the true story it's based on is no laughing matter, especially if you happen to be a de-bleated goat housed in the U.S. Army's top secret Goat Lab or a guest of our government at Guantánamo Bay or Abu Ghraib.


The screenplay for the movie is woven around cold, hard -- and quite frankly bizarre -- facts uncovered by British author, journalist and documentarian Jon Ronson during his investigation into the U.S. Army's all too real paranormal activities, which he chronicled in a book first published in 2005. Though fictionalized, the script features whole chunks of dialog lifted directly from actual interviews Ronson conducted for the book with high ranking army officials and those who were trained by them as psychic spies.


Major General Albert Stubblebine III, who in the early '80s headed up the United States Army Intelligence and Security Command, a joint Army and N.S.A. clearing house responsible for gathering and disseminating intelligence, was one of the military's highest ranking proponents of supernatural techniques. Stubblebine, who was frequently frustrated by his lack of aptitude in the walking through walls department, was eventually forced out, but his dream of creating a superpowered army to defend the world's greatest superpower lived on thanks to the work of a Lieutenant Colonel called Jim Channon.


Disillusioned by what he'd seen and experienced in Vietnam, Channon had wanted to find a better, less lethal way of engaging in war. In 1977 he persuaded the Pentagon to fund a two year fact finding mission. During this time he visited numerous establishments that claimed to offer methods for enhancing human potential (including one in Big Sur that did this with naked hot tub encounter sessions). Upon his return, Channon wrote a blueprint for the next generation of soldier, or "warrior monks" as he called them, in a document entitled The First Earth Battalion Operations Manual.


The report detailed his ideas for the military application of a variety of new age techniques including telepathy, remote viewing, hypnosis, neuro-linguistic programming, and the use of music and subliminal sounds to alter mood. Channon's hippified vision of how to go about war, which included the use of special "sparkly eyes" greetings to disarm the enemy, was intended to create positive change. However many of the more tangible mind-bending techniques that Channon outlined were ultimately subverted by the military and used for torture and psychological warfare.


One of the army's more laughable attempts at co-opting Channon's ideas for darker purposes was their program to create telepathic assassins. The soldiers selected to hone their psychic powers in this way practiced their skills on a covert goat herd based at Fort Bragg that had been de-bleated to avoid rousing the suspicions of the local branch of the ASPCA. Though killing with a stare proved to be a somewhat challenging task, legend has it that a man named Guy Savelli did actually down a goat. But when Ronson caught up with Savelli, a civilian who was initially contracted by Special Forces to teach the mind over body martial art Kun Tao, the only proof of his skills he was able to offer was a somewhat dubious DIY hamster snuff video.


However, disturbing images leaked from inside Abu Ghraib and news reports of interrogation tactics used in Iraq and at Guantánamo Bay, involving loud music and fit-inducing strobe light inflicted over excessive periods of time, indicate that other psi ops methods, originally presented in a far different light by the likes of Stubblebine and Channon, have caused very real harm. Highly experimental mind-targeted tactics have also been deployed in a shockingly disorganized, cavalier and ad-hoc manner during various domestic sieges including the ill-fated 51-day stand off at Waco which resulted in 76 deaths. And it's not just terrorists and religious extremists that are a casualty of our rogue psychological warfare, which has caused a crisis of conscience at home that has over-shadowed the Bush presidency and threatens even that of Obama's.


I caught up with The Men Who Stare At Goats author and psychic spy expert by phone to find out more. Read my exclusive interview with Jon Ronson at SuicideGirls.com.

Shepard Fairey: Purveyor of Hope

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Having been harassed and arrested by agents of the United States' government as he perpetrated his graffiti art from coast to coast, Shepard Fairy has since earned the respect and gratitude of a future American president. Using the visual vocabulary of popular revolution, the humble DIY poster and sticker maker-cum-revered gallery and populist street artist used his graphic skill to transform Barack Obama from a presidential hopeful to a visionary icon.


But now that the future leader of our government is one of his choosing, Shepard Fairey is questioning his own message of dissent. In essence, what does a rebellious artist do when the central entity he was rebelling against is controlled by a commander-in-chief he helped elect?


SuicideGirls called Shepard at his Los Angeles studio to find out. In our interview he also talks about his Obama image, the psychology behind it, how he had to make a unique version that hadn't previously been distributed by illegal means for use by the official Obama campaign, and how he self-funded his own campaign of Hope for which the artist printed up a staggering 300,000 stickers and 500,000 posters!


Click HERE to read.

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Kristen Schaal has much to hide: She's somewhat pathological when it comes to winning things, has a wet T-shirt attired skeleton rattling around in her closet, and has a proclivity for the sexy bits in Harlequin romance novels. But as The Daily Show's Senior Women's Issues Commentator, she was loud and proud in her support of Hillary Clinton for president. Sadly, that didn't work out so well (though the Secretary of State gig is not such a bad consolation prize).


When Schaal's not championing the female cause and fighting sexism on Comedy Central (by stripping down to her superhero-inspired undergarments), she can be seen avidly stalking losabilly band Flight of the Conchords in the HBO Emmy-nominated show which shares their name. Schaal herself is easily cyberstalked, with multiple appearances in DIY comedies, such as Horrible People and Penelope Princess of Pets, posted online.


We caught up with Schaal by phone just as she was about to get hot n' steamy with her boyfriend in a New York diner. More on that later, first a few questions about the new season of Flight of the Conchords, which is almost in the can, and her thoughts on Clinton's new leading role.


Click HERE to read my full interview with Kristen on SuicideGirls.

Moby Does Porno (and Bush)

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Instead of blowing a pile of cash on a music video the usual way, DJ, producer, musician, and left field thinker Moby decided to offer a $10,000 cash carrot to aspiring and upcoming filmmakers. He launched a competition for the video for his new single, the disco-electro-pop "Ooh Yeah" (from the album Last Night), in June via his Moby Gratis site (which offers free music for independent and non-profit filmmakers). The winning entry selected by Moby, which was directed by Matteo Bernardini, was recently unveiled. On his website, Moby warns viewers, "if you're watching at work your boss might think it's porn" -- which is reason enough to give it a watch.


An outspoken political, environmental and animal rights activist, the video shows the lighter side of Moby, who spends much of his energy campaigning against serious shit, and blogging to promote his enlightened agenda, and the Democratic cause.


Shortly after Barack Obama won the Democratic nomination, in one of his entries Moby said, despite the tawdriness of the nomination process, that "Obama has run one of the best presidential campaigns in memory." I dropped Moby an email to find out why he thought that, and to get the skinny on his old Connecticut neighbor, George W. Bush.


Click HERE for full interview.

Sale of Rock For Lit Drummer

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SoCal rocker's Lit are organizing an all star auction to raise funds to cover medical expenses incurred by their drummer Allen Shellenberger, who was diagnosed with a grade 4 malignant brain tumor in May of this year.

Click HERE for more info.

Tom Morello: Raging Against the Machine

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Never has there been a time when Americans needed to rage more against the machine. As we weather a perfect storm of a Great Depression-like financial meltdown, a war that's more costly (in so many ways) than Vietnam, and daily scandals that make Watergate look like a Boy Scout prank, guitarist, singer and songwriter Tom Morello is raging hard, on stage, on CD, and on the streets, where he's repeatedly risked his own life and liberty fighting what he believes are the true forces of evil.

A Harvard Political Science graduate, Morello has seen democracy in action both as an insider, while working for a United States senator, and on the frontlines. He faced a pitched battle with 700 riot police while participating in protests outside the Pepsi Center in Denver during the recent Democratic National Convention and days later was threatened with arrest while attempting to perform with his band at a rally on the Capital Lawn in St. Paul during the Republican National Convention. Despite skirmishes with the authorities at both events, Morello refused to be silenced.

Having expressed his anger loudly with his bands Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave, in 2007 he found a quieter voice with One Man Revolution, his first solo release under The Nightwatchman moniker. On September 30, The Nightwatchman returns with a more introspective album, The Fabled City, but (somewhat conversely) this time he's amped-up and ready to rock.

Click HERE for full interview.

Following David "Golden Balls" Beckham To Victory

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In these politically dubious times there are certain things I won't stand for on principle at a soccer game, but watching David "Golden Balls" Beckham lead Galaxy to a 5 to 2 victory on Saturday night had me jumping up from my seat like a Jack-in-a-box on speed. Losers, Washington D.C. might as well have gone home at half-time. Go Galaxy!


PS. Apologies to David if he had the feeling he was being followed from the freeway into the stadium. He was -- by me and my buddies. Well, after spotting his rather conspicuous blacked-out convertible Roller on the way to the game, with its even more conspicuous DVB plates, what else were we supposed to do?

Richard Patrick: Filter For The Damned

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Filter_article.jpgRichard Patrick, Filter's (hybrid) driving force, is frustrated. With one man down (the Webmaster of a fan site), and an ex-band member currently on the frontline in Iraq, what's going on in the Middle East is less remote for him than for most. So, while supporting our troops, he's speaking out against the war, but feels his cries of protest on Filter's May 2008 album release Anthems For The Damned are lost on a nation that downloads everything and values little.

In 2002 General Motors ironically launched their gas-guzzling H2 to the sounds of Filter's "The Only Way (Is The Wrong Way)." In 2003, to fuel a hunger for democracy -- and oil --America invaded Iraq. With our government, economy, environment -- and music industry -- in crisis, Richard talks about how he reconciles his need to make a living with his own value system...

Click HERE for full interview.

Another Palin Enters The Presidential Race

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He's a lumberjack and it's OK,
Seems anyone can run for office - as long as they're not gay!

If you think the election's not quite silly enough yet, click HERE to sign up and show your support for Michael Palin's presidential candidacy, and get a free fuzzy thing.

Free Slacker Uprising To Free America

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Sicko moviemaker Michael Moore is making his latest film, which documents his 2004 Slacker Uprising campaign, available as a free download for three weeks starting September 23. The flick features overachieving (or are they failed?) slackers R.E.M., Tom Morello, Eddie Vedder and Roseanne.


Click HERE for Moore info.


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Sarah Palin: A Disgrace To Beauty Queens

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I'm not exactly a fan of traditional beauty pageants, but the upside is they're supposed to provide a steady legion of Stepford women who are supposed to enjoy travel and looking after animals and children. John McTainted's newly announced vice-presidential running mate Sarah Palin is the exception to this rule. Palin won the Miss Wasilla title in 1984 and placed second in the Miss Alaska competition, but she's no ordinary beauty queen....


Click HERE to continue...

Public Transport Rocks

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Check out my review of Fullerton's Spare The Air music festival, which featured Saosin, Lit, Death By Stereo, Sugarcult, Aiden and The Used, at SuicideGirls.com.

Why I'm Voting For John McTaint

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Well how can you refuse an offer of free oil? Show your support for the man with a message you can approve of by visiting www.johnmctaint.com.

Chinese Pay Respect To Olympic's Greek Roots

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Loved this rather homoerotic display of athleticism, which was featured in the Olympic opening ceremony. It's a worthy tribute to the game's Greek roots, but the glaringly obvious subtext is perhaps not what the conservative Chinese government had in mind LOL.





Check out Current TV's coverage of our campaign to make air guitar an Olympic sport. Current TV and Current.com are part of a really cool democratic news network set up by the should've been president Al Gore. It's a place where you (and I) decide what's news, which has to be better than leaving it up to Fox!





I've just finished watching the finale of So You Think You Can Dance, a rare talent show that actually puts the emphasis on talent. I'm happy that street dancer Joshua won against the odds, and stiff competition from those with more formal training, though I have to admit I was rooting for Katie (who came in third) and the Debbie Allen trained Will (who got knocked out way earlier than I think anyone expected).


One of the nicest moments of last night's show was watching Katie and Will reprise one of the most stunning performances of season four, their pas de deux, which was choreographed by Desmond Richardson & Dwight Rhoden and set to LDS American Idol contender David Archuleta's interpretation of the John Lennon song "Imagine."


I love the song, it's one of my all-time favorites, and Archuleta's performance has its merits, but here's where I have a problem; American TV seems to have a very selective memory when it comes to the song's lyrics. It's like the majority of the nation has mass amnesia when it comes to that sociopolitically tricky second verse, you know, the really profound one which talks about doing away with religions and countries in order to achieve world peace. In case you've forgotten, since the verse in question is almost always edited out when the song is broadcast on TV, this is the message Lennon intended us to hear:


Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace




A Common Sense Attitude To Reggae

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PP_Common Sense 1.jpgI had the pleasure of catching popular SoCal reggae band Common Sense in Lake Arrowhead this past weekend. The show was part of the resort's free summer concert series, and attracted a huge crowd to the town's Center Stage open air venue.


Though Common Sense regularly pack mid-size venues such as San Diego's Belly Up Tavern, their following is strictly word of mouth. Having been burned by a major label early on in their 15-year career, like many unsigned bands they now connect directly with their fans via their website and MySpace page.


Despite having a loyal fanbase, the size of which many bands can only aspire to get, not to mention a slew of incredibly catchy songs, outside of Native Wayne's Indie 103.1 Sunday afternoon Smoke In show, you'll never hear them on mainstream radio. In fact, outside of the odd novelty recording, you'll rarely hear reggae on FM radio period due to programmers' wide-held and rather bizarre belief that you can only play reggae after April (seriously!!!). Consequently labels see the summertime-only genre as a bad investment in a year round music selling market, hence the serious lack of resources and investment.


PP_Common Sense 2.jpgAs I watch Lake Arrowhead crowd dance with abandon for the best part of three hours against the alpine backdrop, I couldn't help but think how short-sighted and lacking in common sense this sub-tropical reggae policy is.


For those who'd like to hear what they're missing out on, check out prime Common Sense cuts such as "Burn Fire Burn," "Ocean" and "Baby Girl" from their 2004 release Don't Look Back, which is available, along with rest of the band's catalog, via CDBaby.com.

Moby, Me & The Revolution

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Check out my preview of Moby's KCRW show at the Malibu Performing Arts Center in this week's Metromix.

Click HERE to watch the session live on Thursday July 31st at 8.30 PST.

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