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TIVO PARTY TONIGHT

TiVo Party Tonight: Stewart Copeland, Mat Kearney, Bush, Big Audio Dynamite, Girl Talk, Interpol, Christina Perri

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

The Late Show With David Letterman (CBS): Stewart Copeland
Former Police drummer Stewart Copeland continues Drum Solo Week 2.

The Tonight Show With Jay Leno (NBC): Mat Kearney
Rerun from August 2. Mat Kearney performed “Hey Mama” from new album Young Love.

Jimmy Kimmel Live! (ABC): Bush
Rerun from July 21. Bush played classic “Machinehead” and new track “The Sound Of Winter.”

Late Night With Jimmy Fallon (NBC): Big Audio Dynamite
Rerun from August 3. Big Audio Dynamite performed “Rob Peter Pay Paul.”

Last Call With Carson Daly (NBC): Girl TalkInterpol
Rerun from April 26. Carson featured both Girl Talk and Interpol.

Conan (TBS): Christina Perri
Rerun from December 7. The Philadelphia singer/songwriter supported debut LP The Ocean Way Sessions with a performance of “Jar Of Hearts.”

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GUEST EDITOR

From The Desk Of Of Montreal: Slavoj Žižek

of Montreal’s music is hard to define, given it changes more often than frontman Kevin Barnes’ sequined and feathered outfits during a live show. One album might be heavy on the drum machine and synthesizer, while another showcases Barnes’ best high-pitched Prince wail with more traditional strings and percussion. The Atlanta band boasts a prodigious body of work; in a decade and a half, Barnes and Co. have churned out 10 albums, eight collections and 29 singles and EPs, including their most recent effort, thecontrollersphere (Polyvinyl). Barnes and of Montreal’s two art directors—wife Nina Barnes (a.k.a. geminitactics) and brother David Barnes—will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our brand new Q&A with him.

Nina: Where to begin with this man? I can not do him justice in a paragraph. Just know that you are in for a ride, and whether you agree with him or not, he will amuse and provoke you with his observations on our society and culture. This Slovenian philosopher is perhaps one of the most influential thinkers of our time, from the far left of politics at least. Owing to his charismatic and confrontational style, he seems to have gained a lot of attention in the U.S. Listen to him explain cultural differences based on how we flush our poop. Or how we gain good coffee karma from Starbucks. Or how he, of course, is a disciple of Lacan. Listen to his mind-expanding views on cinema. And so on and so on …

Video after the jump.

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FREE MP3s

MP3 At 3PM: Sun Wizard

The self-described Vancouver “fuzz-rockers” in Sun Wizard are all set to drop their first full-length, Positively 4th Avenue, on September 20 via Light Organ. Classicists at heart, they pull their inspiration from the likes of Paul McCartney and Fleetwood Mac. Album track “Middle Of My Heart” is a sunny, late-summer jam that fits to fill these awkward August days as we slide toward autumn. We are proud to premiere the song today on magnetmagazine.com. Download it below.

“Middle Of My Heart” (download):
https://magnetmagazine.com/audio/MiddleOfMyHeart.mp3

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GUEST EDITOR

From The Desk Of Of Montreal: Os Mutantes

of Montreal’s music is hard to define, given it changes more often than frontman Kevin Barnes’ sequined and feathered outfits during a live show. One album might be heavy on the drum machine and synthesizer, while another showcases Barnes’ best high-pitched Prince wail with more traditional strings and percussion. The Atlanta band boasts a prodigious body of work; in a decade and a half, Barnes and Co. have churned out 10 albums, eight collections and 29 singles and EPs, including their most recent effort, thecontrollersphere (Polyvinyl). Barnes and of Montreal’s two art directors—wife Nina Barnes (a.k.a. geminitactics) and brother David Barnes—will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our brand new Q&A with him.

Kevin: I think it was in the kitchen of the house that Julian Koster, the Late B.P. Helium and Jeff Magnum lived at on Grady Street that I first heard Os Mutantes. I think John Fernandez had dumped the first two Os Mutantes records onto a cassette tape, and Julian and I listened to it on a boombox while he made pasta or something. It was one of those moments I’ll never forget. It didn’t matter that we didn’t share a spoken language (most Os Mutantes lyrics are in their native Portuguese)—I fell in love with them. I fell in love with their complete disregard for conventional song arranging, their insanely infectious hooks and, most of all, their wildly creative spirit. I don’t know what kind of music I would have made these last few years if not for the influence of Os Mutantes, but I’m sure it would be much lamer.

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TAKE COVER!

Take Cover! Zee Avi Vs. Interpol

When is a cover song better than the original? Only you can decide. This week Zee Avi takes on Interpol’s “Slow Hands.” MAGNET’s Ryan Burleson pulls the pin. Take cover!

Despite the gloom often hovering amid Interpol’s music, there is often heaps of romance at play. Over the course of four LPs, the band has remained consistent in this, infusing shadowy, audio film noir and oblique lyrics that almost always hint at deep longing. “I submit my incentive is romance,” Paul Banks sings in “Slow Hands” as stoic and academic as ever, yet there’s no doubt that he feels just as crazy in love as the rest of us. But to go overboard would spoil the spirit and the polish of Interpol. Composure, for the quartet, has always been king.

Interpol wouldn’t be Interpol if it came across more vulnerable—the band is kind of stuck in that way—which is one reason we should be thankful that young songwriter Zee Avi shed a different light on Banks and Co.’s work for them. On her excellent cover of “Slow Hands,” Avi, who came to prominence on YouTube, completely deconstructs the arrangement and rebuilds it as if it were some lost, sun-drenched vocal-jazz classic. And yet the imprint of Interpol is left intact, as Banks’ lyrics are anything but generic. Testaments of love, it seems, come rendered in many shades.

The Cover:

The Original:

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