Posts Tagged ‘video’

I Saw Peter Gabriel in Austin Last Night

Thursday, October 19th, 2023

I saw the Peter Gabriel concert at the Moody Center in Austin on October 18. It was the third time I’d seen Gabriel perform live, and he put on a good show. We had tickets facing center stage in the mezzanine section, and they were quite pricey.

About half the songs are off the forthcoming I/O album, while the other half are from other parts of his career (“Sledgehammer,” “Solsbury Hill,” etc.). His tour ensemble was a mixture of old familiar faces (the always excellent Tony Levin, Manu Katche and David Rhodes) and new (cellist/vocalist Ayanna Witter-Johnson, who was very good).

They had an interesting multimedia setup with projection surfaces on different stage elements that they could move, as well as close-up cameras for projecting on either wing (and occasionally the giant circular moveable hanging surface that was the centerpiece of the set).

I think the best song of the concert was an absolutely killer version of “Digging in the Dirt,” which had a nasty, funky, bass-heavy sound to it. There’s not a version with great sound on YouTube, so this will have to do:

They also did an extremely good version of “Biko” as the final encore.

Here’s the set list, which seems to be constant across venues.

I think the last two shows of the tour are in Dallas tonight and Houston Saturday, and overall prices are a bit cheaper than the Austin show. It’s well worth catching if you’re a Gabriel fan.

As for the Moody Center, the sightlines are very good, the concession prices are exorbitant, and the seats are too small and not particularly comfortable.

Halloween Horror: Kaiju No. 8 Trailer

Friday, October 13th, 2023

Not sure if this quite qualifies as a Halloween Horror, but it includes monsters, and it struck my fancy.

Basically, it’s an anime series focused on a guy who’s crappy job is to clean up after kaiju attacks.

It’s basically Damage Inc. meets Godzilla. Plus the teaser trailer is giving off a tiny bit of a FLCL vibe.

I don’t subscribe to Crunchy Roll (or any streaming service), but I’d seriously consider buying the DVD set when it eventually comes out.

Halloween Horrors: Steamed Hams as Terrifying Soviet Animation

Thursday, October 12th, 2023

Once again, The Simpsons “Steamed Hams” segment has inspired the Internet to produce an alternate version, this one in terrifying Soviet-style animation.

The juggling Crusty is pure nightmare fuel.

(Previously.)

Halloween Horrors: Mel’s Hole

Tuesday, October 10th, 2023

Here’s a nicely creepy borderlands of science/urban legend/conspiracy theory video about a hole that has no bottom.

80,000 feet worth of fishing line found no bottom. Plus animals avoided it, and radios went crazy, when they weren’t picking up signals from 30 years before.

Then the government took it over.

Much more paranormal weirdness ensues

Was it real? Well, as real as anything else with a Wikipedia entry featured on Art Bell.

Good luck finding it on map…

Shoegazer Sunday: S.C.U.M.’s “Whitechapel”

Sunday, October 8th, 2023

I found this S.C.U.M. video in a list of Shoegaze videos, and I see them described as “Post-punk,” but what they sound like to me is 1980s-era Simple Minds. Here’s “Whitechapel.”

By the way, Simple Minds are still around and have a tour coming next year, but S.C.U.M. broke up in 2013.

Halloween Horrors: Play-through of Cosmic Horror Game Isle of Eras

Sunday, October 1st, 2023

The Halloween season is upon us again!

This video features a complete play-through of Isle of Eras, which starts out as a search for a missing brother and quickly morphs into a weird cosmic horror/time travel game with giant monsters and nods to everything from Donnie Darko to 2001: A Space Odyssey. It’s amazingly elaborate for an indie game put together by a tiny team. The monster design is particularly impressive.

Available for PS4/5 and PC (but not, alas, Mac).

Shoegazer Sunday: Collapse’s “Path”

Sunday, September 17th, 2023

Collapse is another obscure Japanese Shoegaze band. Or maybe not so obscure, since they already have ten albums and EPs out. Their earlier songs seem more My Bloody Valentine-influenced, but their later stuff seems a bit more Dreampop with a noisebed base, maybe Tokyo Shoegazer by way of The Cherry Wave and Civic with a soupcon of Asobi Seksu thrown in. Here’s “Path.”

Shoegazer Sunday: Slowdive’s “The Slab” (and first impressions of Everything is Alive)

Sunday, September 10th, 2023

Here’s “The Slab,” the final track from Slowdive’s new Everything is Alive album. But I should warn you that this is a case where the song of the CD is much stronger than the compressed version on YouTube:

I finally got the CD in this week, and I think it’s a very strong album, more consistent than their previous self-titled album, but only time will tell is something as strong as “Slomo” or “No Longer Making Time” emerges as particular favorites. (And the later only really twigged for me when it became such a burner live.)

Shoegazer Sunday: Slowdive’s “Skin in the Game”

Sunday, August 20th, 2023

Here’s another song off Slowdive’s forthcoming Everything is Alive album, due out September 1st.

40 Years Ago Today: Genesis Releases “Mama”

Saturday, August 19th, 2023

Forty years ago today, August 19, 1983, Genesis released their self-titled album (their twelfth), and “Mama” was the first single released off that.

As a fairly new convert to classic Prog Rock Genesis at the time, I wasn’t a fan of Genesis’ move toward more mainstream pop, but “Mama” caught my attention, as it’s a pretty interesting song. And far from being an average pop song, it was weird and sinister.

And it has perhaps the most memorable laugh in any song, ever.

Peter Gabriel-era Genesis had a lot more overtly sinister songs (“The Waiting Room” comes to mind), but “Mama” was distinctly different from Genesis’ 1980s output, or indeed, just about anything else on mainstream radio in 1983. Between the sparse drum loop, the eerie high synthesizer wash, and Collins’ urgent, hungry vocals about a young man’s unrequited love for a prostitute, it still has power four decades on.