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GUEST EDITOR

Los Campesinos! Got Your Back: “The Guardian Football Weekly” Podcast

LosCamplogoAs evidenced by both their music and exclamatory band name, the seven members of Cardiff, Wales’ Los Campesinos! are excitable boys and girls. The group’s third album, Romance Is Boring (Arts & Crafts), is an energetic, all-hands-on-deck dash through the pantheon of sharp indie pop and sloppy post-punk, gathering steam from Bright Eyes’ sense of emotional catharsis and Art Brut’s wry take on modern love. Try to gather all the influences brought to bear on Romance Is Boring by LC!’s seven-member army, however, and we’d be here all day. MAGNET spoke to songwriter Tom Campesinos! and guitarist Neil Campesinos!—all members (Tom, Neil, Ellen, Gareth, Harriet, Ollie and Kim) have taken the band’s surname—about the new album. Los Campesinos! will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our Q&A with them.

podcastTom: This is the only podcast I regularly listen to, and whenever we’re on tour abroad, the low, sensual mumbling of these men in my ear provides much comfort. The realm of football punditry—and, indeed, football itself—can feel like a bleak, depressing place at times, but this podcast fills me with much hope as it almost single-handedly snatches back the reputation of football analysis from the Luddite grip of the likes of pretty-but-dim Jamie Redknapp or the curb-crawlin’ David Pleat. Here, on Football Weekly, James Richardson, Barry Glendenning, Jonathan Wilson and friends provide insightful analysis into the game from around the world. It gets geeky, but never poe-faced, and is always entertaining. In fact, often it just sounds like a bunch of men dicking around in a recording studio. And that’s what I like listening to in my spare time. Sometimes I even find myself wishing that these people were my friends. And sometimes it feels like they already are. Video after the jump.

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TIVO PARTY TONIGHT

TiVo Party Tonight: They Might Be Giants, New Kids On The Block, Doves

TIVOTMBG5119Ever wonder what will happen during the last five minute of late-night TV talk shows? Here are tonight’s notable performers:

The Late Show With Craig Ferguson (CBS): They Might Be Giants
Rerun from December 11. The former MAGNET guest editors played “Why Does the Sun Shine?” and “Why Does the Sun Really Shine?”

Late Night With Jimmy Fallon (NBC): New Kids On The Block
Yes the original boy band is still reunited and will be performing on Fallon tonight. The group has also just announced tour dates for this year.

Last Call With Carson Daly (NBC): Doves
Rerun from October 30. Doves played the title track from Kingdom Of Rust.

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GUEST EDITOR

Los Campesinos! Got Your Back: B. S. Johnson

LosCamplogoAs evidenced by both their music and exclamatory band name, the seven members of Cardiff, Wales’ Los Campesinos! are excitable boys and girls. The group’s third album, Romance Is Boring (Arts & Crafts), is an energetic, all-hands-on-deck dash through the pantheon of sharp indie pop and sloppy post-punk, gathering steam from Bright Eyes’ sense of emotional catharsis and Art Brut’s wry take on modern love. Try to gather all the influences brought to bear on Romance Is Boring by LC!’s seven-member army, however, and we’d be here all day. MAGNET spoke to songwriter Tom Campesinos! and guitarist Neil Campesinos!—all members (Tom, Neil, Ellen, Gareth, Harriet, Ollie and Kim) have taken the band’s surname—about the new album. Los Campesinos! will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our Q&A with them.

bsjohnsonGareth: British writer B. S. Johnson has probably influenced me as a person—and my approach to writing lyrics—more than any single album or band has. When he took his own life in November 1973, he left behind a string of consistently captivating novels, poems and plays, which—to my mind, to this day—have never received the recognition they deserve. BSJ valued honesty over anything else, to an extent that many couldn’t understand. The bedrock of all his work—and he believed all good work—was truth. “Telling stories is telling lies,” he wrote, and to many, his slightly avant approach to writing was anathema to his character. He was a traditional, football-loving, working-class man who throughout his writing career strived for technical innovation and experimentation. Albert Angelo came with holes cut in the pages to allow the reader to see what happens later on in the story. The Unfortunates was a loose-leaf novel of 27 sections, 25 of which could be read in any order the reader chooses. In House Mother Normal, he retells the same series of events 10 times, with each coming from a more infirm mind than the previous. He was a renegade and a pioneer. And now when I write, I tell the truth. Because if I’m not telling people my truthful thoughts in my lyrics, then I don’t know what I’m telling people—or why they’d want to listen. Anything less than the truth doesn’t seem fair. Video after the jump.

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FREE MP3s

MP3 At 3PM: Scout Niblett

scout3123Singer/songwriter Scout Niblett (who takes her stage name from the To Kill A Mockingbird narrator) just released her fifth album, The Calcination Of Scout Niblett (Drag City). If you’re not familiar with her music, don’t expect sweet, clean-cut indie pop. The Kurt Cobain influences on the title track are obvious, with lethargic beats and grunged-out guitar, and they meld perfectly with Niblett’s Cat Power-esque vocals and minimalism. She’ll be playing a bunch of North American dates starting this month. Download the title track below.

“The Calcination Of Scout Niblett” (download):
https://magnetmagazine.com/audio/TheCalcinationOfScoutNiblett.mp3

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FREE MP3s GUEST EDITOR INTERVIEWS

Q&A With Los Campesinos!

Los-Campesinos!As evidenced by both their music and exclamatory band name, the seven members of Cardiff, Wales’ Los Campesinos! are excitable boys and girls. The group’s third album, Romance Is Boring (Arts & Crafts), is an energetic, all-hands-on-deck dash through the pantheon of sharp indie pop and sloppy post-punk, gathering steam from Bright Eyes’ sense of emotional catharsis and Art Brut’s wry take on modern love. Try to gather all the influences brought to bear on Romance Is Boring by LC!’s seven-member army, however, and we’d be here all day. MAGNET spoke to songwriter Tom Campesinos! and guitarist Neil Campesinos!—all members (Tom, Neil, Ellen, Gareth, Harriet, Ollie and Kim) have taken the band’s surname—about the new album. Los Campesinos! will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week.

“There Are Listed Buildings” (download):
https://magnetmagazine.com/audio/ThereAreListedBuildings.mp3