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FREE MP3s

MP3 At 3PM: Bill Callahan

Drag City, the venerable indie label tasked with releasing Bill Callahan‘s newest record, Apocalypse, describes the collection in stark and intriguing terms on its website: “A mirror held up to the self and then turned around to the world. This record makes us wonder what has really happened in the last 100 years. And what will happen in the next 10. The soul of your country called and left you a message. Seven messages.” The style and imagery dovetail nicely with the spare-yet-earnest folk of “Baby’s Breath,” the first single from Apocalypse. The seven-track LP is the songwriter’s third studio album under his own name (and 14th overall when you count his Smog releases). Be sure to catch him on tour this summer when he comes to a town near you.

“Baby’s Breath” (download):

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DAVID LESTER ART

Normal History Vol. 109: The Art Of David Lester

Every Saturday, we’ll be posting a new illustration by David Lester. The Mecca Normal guitarist is visually documenting people, places and events from his band’s 27-year run, with text by vocalist Jean Smith.

David Lester’s graphic novel The Listener arrived from the printer this week. Beautiful, heavy and shiny, like all great works of art should be. In June, we’ll launch the book in Canada. In Vancouver, Winnipeg, Ottawa, Montreal and Toronto. I’m creating an adaptation of David’s book, which includes a Mecca Normal performance. Several characters will come off the powerpoint page to discuss the story, and David, playing the part of the author, will interrupt to interject history. In Mecca Normal, I am story and David, on guitar, is history. Story and history run concurrently in music, which, like history, repeats itself.

As Dave and I rehearsed the adaptation for the launch event, I started thinking about finishing the video for Mecca Normal’s song “Malachi.” It came out as a seven-inch single on K Records in November 2010, and I hadn’t figured out how to complete the video. The song is about an activist who lit himself on fire to protest war. His action went largely unnoticed due to extenuating circumstances. I wrote the lyrics before I realized that a song about his action might increase opposition to war, which was, I believe, part of his intention.

It wasn’t until I was watching the video for the third or fourth time that I made a connection between “Malachi” and The Listener, the part where the old people express regret. They were complacent at a significant juncture in history, and Hitler was able to rise to power.

In the first run-through of the adaptation for The Listener, I told a story about being on tour with the Indigo Girls, when Jane Siberry and I worked out this weird little skit where it appeared as though I smashed her head into her keyboards while she was playing a song. The purpose of the Siberry story within The Listener event is to demonstrate that we don’t know how art or actions will be regarded. Art, in my opinion, should abstract and obscure the realities that we can otherwise simply experience.

To take the point of the Siberry story further, I piled a lot of David’s MAGNET illustrations into the linearity of the video-making program and immediately noticed that my brain (“the brain”) very much wanted to connect the images to the story being told. I found the results to be quite interesting. I used David’s art for my own purpose, beyond his intention, and created something else. It could just as well be otherwise.

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GUEST EDITOR

From The Desk Of Kristian Hoffman: Los Shakers (The Ersatz Was Never So Exquisite)

Kristian Hoffman and Lance Loud met in high school back in the early ’70s in Santa Barbara, Calif. After starring in PBS cinéma-vérité documentary An American Family, they formed the Mumps, moved to New York and shared Max’s and CBGB stages with all the legends of the punk/new-wave explosion of 1976: Television, the Ramones, Talking Heads and Blondie. Hoffman and Loud also had front-row seats for the Mercer Arts Center incubation of the New York Dolls, before that. In our book, that grants you unlimited license to open the floodgates. Fop (Kayo), Hoffman’s latest solo album, is an ornate masterpiece of baroque pop, well worth your attention. Hoffman will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our new Q&A with him.

Hoffman: Since I am an elder coot and also have a radio show that celebrates the lite-psych foibles of the late ’60s, I am constantly trolling for new “oldie” sounds that usually serve to reinforce what I’ve already confessed to myself: I am enjoyably stuck in my era! The wonderful result of this is that I’m constantly reminded there are still so many exultant ephiphanous disc-coveries to make!

The fantastically fabulous Los Shakers from Uruaguay, transparently modeled on the Beatles template, are like having a parallel universe of Fab Fourdom to treasure as an equally exhilarating treasure trove of Liverpudlian-derived but wildly original (and almost always danceable!) sonic gemstones. Their experiments with the Beatles’ mystical, almost-spiritual relationship with the seventh chord happily far outshine my own tremulous tip-toes into that arena (“Just Look, Don’t Touch” by the Mumps on How I Saved The World and “He Means Well” on Earthquake Weather).

Their first album has no less than three deconstructivist re-imaginings of “I Saw Her Standing There,” yet each one is Shaker-specific and uniquely delightful. The most familiar is “Break It All”: “When the music starts, don’t stand there like a fool!” When you hear this song, you won’t be able to stand there. Every song on the first LP just makes you want to get out on the Hullaballo dance floor, and the dances are even suggested after each song, although curiously limited to either “Shake” or “Slow Shake.” You’ll be shaking for sure if you hear this great LP. You’ll be able to hear specific echoes of the Searchers’ “He’s Got No Love,” the Hollies making harmony pop of “Memphis,” the Zombies’ soul shout on “I Love You,” the Monkees’ “The Kind Of Girl I Could Love”—all with Beatlesque hand claps, guitar hooks and backing vocals. There are transparent rips of “I Should Have Known Better,” “Hold Me Tight,” “Things We Said Today” and scads of other Beatle tunes, but Los Shakers add more minor, descending chords, peculiar key changes and an exuberance that is their very own. “Don’t Ask Me Love” in particular has no specific Beatle reference, but it stands as one of the greatest “With The Beatles But Without The Beatles” songs ever. What is Spanish for Fab?

Los Shakers’ self-titled debut takes you from Meet The Beatles through A Hard Day’s Night, and their second, Shakers For You, riffs on Help through Rubber Soul—less dance party and more maracas/tambourine, acoustic sounds with scintillating melodies and what becomes a fetching penchant for humorous overdubs. Of course, it has great inspired lifts from the “Ticket To Ride” riff, but it depends less slavishly on specific Beatle blueprints and adds inventive drumming, snatches of the Beach Boys, more Searchers and a burgeoning sense of Los Shakers’ own Latin-American identity. The forward-looking, dreamy “I Hope You’ll Like It” points toward “a Revolver/Byrds “5D” amalgam. “No Molestar” is an incredibly rocking take on “I’m Down.” As with the first CD reissue, it’s admirable that there are so many bonus tracks, but they are more formative and academic than rewarding. Los Shakers’ covers of ’60’s hits, including many by the Beatles, uniformly pale beside their own dazzling, foot-stomping originals.

It’s tempting to call Los Shakers’ third LP, La Conferencia Secreta Del Toto’s Bar, their Sgt Pepper, but in reality, it’s more peculiar than that (more a cross between Love and Big Star), and their own bossa-nova voice becomes more delightfully prominent. That said, it is Los Shakers at their most pleasingly psychedelic and experimental. “B.B.B. Band” starts out with bagpipe, organ and Association-styled “ba ba ba ba”s and gets to a great raga chorus with a brazen “If I Needed Someone” counter melody suddenly sung over the second verse. “Mas Largo Que El Ciruela” goes from a melody based equally on Bacharach and “My Girl” with snatches of “Heroes And Villains” concertina to a salute to what I think is “Red Wine,” and suddenly the backward high-hat and strings start, complete with a “Day In The Life” bridge, making the unfortunate blaring intrusion of horns forgivable. Just fantastic. So full of invention and playfulness.

Until fairly recently, Los Shakers’ digital presence was limited to one out-of-print compilation, and hearing their amazing canon was limited to obsessive vinyl collectors like me. Even then, much of it was only legend. Now it’s all available on CD and just amazing! Shake with Los Shakers, and you’ll never regret it!

Videos after the jump.

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VIDEOS

Film At 11: Telekinesis

Telekinesis recently released sophomore album 12 Desperate Straight Lines (Merge). The follow-up to last year’s Telekinesis! again features Michael Benjamin Lerner collaborating with Chris Walla (Death Cab For Cutie), though now Lerner’s band consists of guitarist Cody Votolato (Jaguar Love, Blood Brothers) and bassist Jason Narducy (Robert Pollard, Verbow). Catch Telekinesis on tour with Portugal. The Man starting April 29 in Portland, Ore., watch the Spencer Gentz-directed video for 12 Desperate Straight Lines track “Please Ask For Help” below, download an mp3 of “Car Crash,” and check out the awesome mix tape that Lerner made MAGNET last year.

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TIVO PARTY TONIGHT

TiVo Party Tonight: Mary Mary, The Lonely Island, Cee-Lo Green

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

The Tonight Show With Jay Leno (NBC): Mary Mary
Rerun from March 31. Sister duo Mary Mary played “Never Wave My Flag” from new LP Something Big.

Late Night With Jimmy Fallon (NBC): The Lonely Island
Rerun from April 1. The music/comedy troupe of Andy Samburg, Akiva Schaffer and Jorma Taccone performed in support of forthcoming album Turtleneck & Chain.

Last Call With Carson Daly (NBC): Cee-Lo Green
Rerun from March 4. Goodie Mob and Gnarles Barkley’s Cee-Lo promoted new album The Lady Killer with performances of “Bright Lights, Bigger City” and “Fuck You.”