Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Nothing Can Hurt Me Now—The Big Star Documentary

By Jack Brummet, American Music Ed.

I watched "Nothing Can Hurt Me Nowlast night. It was moving, informative, and wonderful. Since I discovered them in the early 90's, they have been in my top ten bands of all time. If you love rock and roll, you should watch this documentary--buy it, stream it, do whatever it takes. I feel lucky to have seen them four times when they reformed with Ken Stringfellow AndJonathan Paul Auer a/k/a The Posies. Thank you Jody, Alex, Chris, Andy, and Jon and Ken for the great music that has fueled the soundtrack of my life for the last 20+ years. 



If you haven't heard Big Star, it's time. Probably the most moving part of this film is the number of people—across the music industry—that revered them and were inspired by them. And it wasn't about the money for once; they didn't make any, no one one made any.  It was a losing proposition all around except for the magnificent music that influenced so many great singers, bands, and songwriters. Big Star reverberates all around us now in a crazy lineage, filtered through succeeding rock generations down to current indie bands through bands like REM, Cheap Trick, Teenage Fanclub, The Replacements, The Posies, and all the rest.



And a video from The Tonight Show, not after Big Star reformed during the 1990's:


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Faces #627 - The Russian Olympics Coach

by Jack Brummet

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Sunday, February 16, 2014

Drawings: Faces #616-#624: Confessions, part 2

By Jack Brummet

[pen, pencil, and pink highlighter on surplus 24"x24" surplus muslin sterilization wrapper]









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Saturday, February 15, 2014

Drawing: Faces #625 - Lockout

By Jack Brummet

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Drawings: Faces #608-#615 - Confessions (Part 1)

By Jack Brummet

[pencil and Sharpie on a surplus hospital muslin instrument wrapper]








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List: The rules of combat

By Jack Brummet, List Ed.


This is a list combining several other lists of the rules of combat.  These various lists appear in several places, and it's impossible to determine who authored the originals.  At least one of them has been kicking around the internet since the BBS days. . .



The Rules of Combat


  • The easy way is always mined.
  • Try to look unimportant; they may be low on ammo.
  • The only thing more accurate than incoming enemy fire is incoming friendly fire.
  • If it's stupid but works, it isn't stupid.
  • Mines are equal opportunity weapons.
  • A Purple Heart just proves that you were smart enough to think of a plan,
  • stupid enough to try it, and lucky enough to survive.
  • Don't ever be the first; don't ever be the last; and don't ever volunteer to do anything.
  • Five second fuses only last three seconds.
  • It is generally inadvisable to eject directly over the area you just bombed.
  • Recoil-less rifles aren't.
  • Suppressive fire won't.
  • Never draw fire, it irritates everyone around you.
  • When in doubt empty the magazine.
  • Never share a foxhole with someone braver then you are.
  • Your weapon was made by the lowest bidder.
  • If you can't remember, the claymore is pointed toward you.
  • If you are forward of your position, the artillery will be short.
  • The enemy diversion you are ignoring is the main attack.
  • The important things are always simple.
  • The simple things are always hard.
  • If you're short of everything except the enemy, you're in combat.
  • Incoming fire has the right of way.
  • No combat-ready unit was ever passed inspection.
  • No inspection-ready unit has ever passed combat.
  • Teamwork is essential. It gives them other people to shoot at.
  • If the enemy is in range, so are you.
  • Tracers work both ways.
  • The only thing more accurate than incoming enemy fire is incoming friendly fire.
  • Radios will fail as soon as you need fire support.
  • When both sides are convinced that they are about to lose ... they are both right.
  • The bursting radius of a grenade is always one foot greater than your jumping range.
  • The only terrain that is truly controlled is the terrain upon which you are standing.
  • The law of the bayonet says the man with the bullet wins.
  • REMF's (Rear Echelon Mother Fraggers) are everywhere.
  • The best tank killer is another tank. Therefore tanks are always fighting each other ...& have no time to help the infantry.
  • Precision bombing is normally accurate to within +/- one mile (...or so).
  • Don't look conspicuous, it draws fire.
  • Cluster bombing from B-52s and C130s is very very accurate. The bombs always hit the ground.
  • Perfect plans aren't.
  • The side with the fanciest uniforms loses.
  • Professionals are predictable--it's the amateurs that are dangerous.
  • Armored vehicles are bullet magnets; a moving foxhole that attracts attention.
  • No plan survives the first few seconds of combat.
  • Expending material in combat is easier than filling out Graves Registration forms -- Ammo is cheap; your life isn't.
  • Just because you can't see the enemy; don't for a minute believe they can't see you.
  • The enemy invariably attacks on two occasions: When you're ready for them. When you're not.
  • If your attack is going well, you've just walked into an ambush.
  • Anything you do can get you shot, including nothing.
  • Make it tough enough for the enemy to get in and you won't be able to get out.
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Friday, February 14, 2014

Jean-Michel Basquiat's Resume

The best resume ever. The artist Jean-Michel Basquiat created this as part of a "Man Made" selling exhibition at Sotheby's. Nice reference list! The resume sold last year for $50,000.

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Painting: Happy Valentine's Day

By Jack Brummet

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Thursday, February 13, 2014

The Beatles perform Please Please Me, warts and all

By Jack Brummet, 20th Century Sounds Ed. 

I am always fascinated by The Beatles live performances.  They were playing giant halls and stadiums using PAs and guitar amplifiers far less powerful than what we see in 100 person clubs now. They couldn't usually overmatch the screaming. When I saw them in '66 in Seattle (their second to last concert performance ever), it was a murky jumble of sound, and the girl's screams won.  It was all made up for by just being in their presence for 25 minutes (yes, that's how long they played, but still, we got our $5 worth).  It is amazing how good they actually sounded, with the deck totally stacked against them...





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