The most underrated bands of the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s

1960s: The Velvet Underground

Now this is a famous band, to some extent–but even allowing for all that it is the most underrated 60s band. Do you really know how good they were? To hear it all put out there in terms that those of you who fear the esoteric New York art band’s noisy early days (when the sound was heavily influenced by the legendary early members John Cale and Nico) can deal with skip forward to the late days of the group and the song “Stephanie Says.” No song has ever made a more convincing argument about how cold Alaska is, and few songwriters have captured the pop genius of the Lou Reed.

1970s: Television

Tom Verlaine invented the angular guitar hook sound of U2 all while forging a fascinating and complex punk sound that was still every bit as street as The Sex Pistols or the Ramones. Listen to “Prove It” from 1977 for a great example of the sound, or “Guiding Light” if you need a pop edge to it. (Attention Irish megastar fans: Television actually sounds nothing like U2, though what I said above about the guitar stylings is true.)

1980s: Pet Shop Boys

Nothing really comes to mind. Perhaps the early work of the Pet Shop Boys, while popular then, doesn’t get the attention alongside other dance classics the way it should. 1987’s “Actually” is a phenomenal album, and songs like “Shopping” would mix well into trance sets. (Well, I guess they probably roll like that in London, but here in San Francisco you’re just lucky if you don’t hear songs with lectures about “WHAT REAL HOUSE MUSIC IS” and “THESE DAYS EVERYBODY WANTS TO BE A DJ!” when you’re out. Actually, continuing on this tangent, I’ve been think of trying to compile a collection of such songs and release it as the “House Lecture Series” LP.)

1990s: Underworld

Underworld came out with a few long, melodic electronic tracks like “Born Slippy,” “Push Upstairs” and “Dirty Epic” that even got occasional airplay. But the 1996 album “Second Toughest in the Infants” is easily the greatest electronic album I’ve ever heard. Though it features none of the above-mentioned songs, it has an amazing opening triad (“Juanita/Kiteless/To Dream of Love”) and continues through a series of tracks that are both wide-ranging and highly consistent. “Pearl’s Girl” was the album single, where occasional shattered beats almost recall the drum-n-bass madness at the time, but then roll into the huge techno track with a star vocal turn by Karl Hyde.

Commutation shows how culture of corruption continues

While people are right to howl about the arrogance, corruption and unfairness that George W. Bush’s commutation of Lewis Libby’s sentence entailed, from a strategic standpoint this is another political embarrassment for Republicans, who have another terrible decision done by their leader that they will have to try to (pretend to) run away from in the next elections. (Well maybe not if the nominee is Fred Thompson, who after all lobbied for a pardon.)

There’s no real limit to the brazen disdain for laws applying to them–so why not a pardon too?

Liberal blogs are voicing outrage and disdain. MSNBC anchor Keith Olberman made his contempt for the president clear in his special comment, which concluded thusly:

‘Pressure, negotiate, impeach — get you, Mr. Bush, and Mr. Cheney, two men who are now perilous to our Democracy, away from its helm.

And for you, Mr. Bush, and for Mr. Cheney, there is a lesser task.

You need merely achieve a very low threshold indeed.

Display just that iota of patriotism which Richard Nixon showed, on August 9th, 1974.

Resign.’

While Bush may not resign or be impeached, and Scooter Libby may not do thirty months in federal prison as sentenced, the Republican party might see many more months than that out of power as the political fallout unfolds in favor of Democrats, even as remaining power increasingly slides away from the isolated, lame duck president. Better to show that the Republican corruption that voters tried to punish in 2006 continues on than send one man to prison for his lies, which were probably told in service of the president and vice president. It’s not personal, really, (unless you’re, say, Joe Wilson), mainly it’s political.

Glenn Greenwald puts it this way:

‘That Lewis Libby has been protected by George Bush from the consequences of his crimes only highlights how corrupt and broken our political system is. It reveals nothing new. This is the natural, inevitable outgrowth of our rancid political culture, shaped and slavishly defended by our Beltway ruling class and our serious, sober opinion-making elite.’

So more votes against the Republican culture of corruption and the “Beltway ruling class” in 2008, right? That’s one way to think about it.

Speaking of 2008, it looks like Barack Obama is leading in fundraising for either party, and with an enormous base of donors. Might they not get the anti-Hillary election that they want over at the RNC after all?

And if you’re wondering why the debates are starting so early this time, why are you wondering that? Bush is finished politically, his followers are in shock and denial, and Obama looks ready to take advantage of the disillusionment.

Good riddance to Tony Blair

Gordon Brown took over the role of prime minister from Tony Blair today.

Meanwhile, Blair received a major diplomatic post:

‘The international diplomatic Quartet of the United Nations, United States, European Union and Russia announced Mr Blair’s appointment as its representative in the search for peace in the region.’

Another typical Bush administration appointment–putting a loyalist in charge of something he doesn’t know how to do. With Hamas violently in charge of the Gaza Strip and a war-monger in charge of the “search for peace” process, this is going to be one long search.

Seeing power pried from the hands of a mad zealot like Blair makes for quite a moment. But John Howson (pictured below via Getty images) probably summed it up best: “Good riddance.”

Or maybe Jonathan Freedland says it best:

‘I have written before that it is an indictment of our system of government that Tony Blair was able to remain in office despite Iraq.’

photo of John Howson by Getty via guardian.co.uk, June 2007

Qwitr 0.2 – and a change in the project title

UPDATE: Qwittr has evolved and is now called Flightpath.
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http://pacificpelican.us/qwittr/beta/qwittr_beta_0_2.php

When I sent out an email to some family and friends to aunch Qwittr a little while ago, one of them wrote back to ask if it was really me that had written it, as I had called it “ad junk” in the subject line, and she also said it sounded kind of like web marketing these days.
Well then I guess that is some measure of success! Please try the Qwittr beta 0.2 yourself and decide what you think of the short messaging platform (be warned–it is rather crude and still near its infancy).
So I have discussed the philosophy of Qwittr enough already–but one thing that I have also mentioned is the need to make the program an open-source project public GPL plug-n-play download that anyone can use or modify. But I have a list of improvements that need to be made, ranging from relatively straightforward for me (streamlining and enhancing the basic PHP architecture) to the reasonably challenging (making the interface nicer with a new stylesheet or some Ajax enhancements) to downright hard (figuring out how to zip together an install file).
But as the farcical name and terminolgy of Qwittr: “What are you quitting now?” and “qweet,” have gone far enough and it will be time to release a user-friendly version, the working name (as Qwittr had been) for the project is being changed to MigratoryMessenger and the public release date is planned for some time in late 2008.

Blogs step into new advertising territory

More web 2.0 cred showdown news has broken since I wrote on the front page about this advertising controversy involving blogs using Federated Media. Now crunchnotes.com is sounding this rather bitter note:

‘I’m now pissed off at every single person involved in this. Denton for bringing up a non issue to attack competitors, Malik for folding immediately and making it seem like someone did something wrong, and now Battelle, our agent, saying he wished we had made a disclosure on this.

Any competing ad networks out there want our business, and promise not to throw us under a bus whenever Valleywag attacks?’

This story seems to be breaking very quickly–and Battelle is admitting that “we certainly stepped in it.” In what? Microsoft money?