Categories
GUEST EDITOR

From The Desk Of Torche: Grilled Cheese

Back in 2005, when Torche unleashed its debut helping of thunderous doom-pop, guitarist/vocalist Steve Brooks’ former band, Floor, was dead and buried. Never again would Brooks’ former and present groups compete for his time and attention. Well, never say never. Floor dropped Oblation last April. Suddenly, “a few reunion gigs” became a time-consuming reality, with Brooks balancing two bands’ write/record/tour cycles. It’s a juggling act Torche has been at since 2008 when members started moving away from the group’s Miami home base. Restarter, the band’s fourth LP, packs in all the familiar elements, but does so with a looser, more somber tone and sullen mood. The members of Torche will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our new feature on them.

GrilledCheese

Andrew Elstner: The greatest grilled-cheese sandwich on the face of the earth is at the Borough Market in London. I’m not the first to write about it, nor is this my first time writing about it. Inside the market, you’ll find the Kappacasein stall where this legendary sandwich is served. My friends Claire and Paul, who run U.K. band p.r. company A Badge Of Friendship, introduced me to it. We showed up starving, walking past piles of meat pies and pastries, thinking big, “I’m seriously going to eat one of those meat pies, too.” The line was big at the Kappacasein stall as folks lined up for their two big bruisers: the toasted cheese and the raclette. The raclette is simple, but insane. You need a raclette machine to properly do it. It’s basically a unit that holds a giant half wheel of cheese that has a moveable flame bar that sits over the top of the flat side of the wheel, melting and caramelizing the shit out of the first half inch or so of cheese. That cheese and the crispy edge bits are scraped off onto a plate of cooked new potatoes, with gherkins and pickled onions on the side. Holy shit. It looked and smelled amazing. Nearby though, the uncooked toasted cheese sandwiches sat waiting to be ordered. Sourdough bread, three kinds of cheese piled foolishly high, spiked with minced onion and leeks. You order your sandwich, they mash it onto a panini maker and out comes the greatest grilled cheese on earth and maybe one of the top-five sandwiches of all time. I’m not exaggerating. Melty, salty, tangy, oily, onion-y and a good crunch from the bread without it being a total mouth slicer, laced with a crunchy caramelized cheese crust all around the edges. Super filling, but you still cry when it’s gone.

Video after the jump.

Categories
VINTAGE MOVIES

Vintage Movies: “Fay Grim”

MAGNET contributing writer Jud Cost is sharing some of the wealth of classic films he’s been lucky enough to see over the past 40 years. Trolling the backwaters of cinema, he has worked up a list of more than 500 titles—from the silent era through the ’00s—that you may have missed. A new selection, all currently available on DVD, appears every week.

FayGrim

Fay Grim (2006, 118 minutes)

Time marches on for the Grim/Fool clan in Fay Grim, the second installment of this sharp Hal Hartley trilogy, shot nine years after the opening volley, Henry Fool. The tone of the work hasn’t changed. It’s not ultra-realism or even pseudo-realism—more like some other, slightly uncomfortable, pressed off center realism. The only work that even comes close is Spike Jonze’s Being John Malkovich.

Henry Fool is presumed by the law to be on the lam in Europe, seven years after being smuggled out of the country with a fake passport, cooked up by his brother-in-law, Simon Grim, now serving time for aiding a wanted criminal. What Henry, who’s been incarcerated for being caught in flagrante delicto with a 13-year-old girl, is wanted for, this time around, is never made quite clear. Henry’s wife Fay (Parker Posey), is raising their son Ned, now 14, and there are problems. “Ned brought this pornographic device to school today and was caught showing it to other children,” says the boy’s principal to Fay. Ned shows his mother how to operate the Edwardian-era peep show device, something that wouldn’t cause a ripple in today’s sludge-choked river of bad taste.

Of course, there are also more serious charges leveled against the boy. Ned was recently caught getting a blowjob from two 16-year-old female classmates. Fay, whose hair style this time around is more flattering than the matted haystack she sported in the previous film, is being harassed by CIA agent Fullbright (Jeff Goldblum). Who knows why the Feds are after Henry, unless it’s become a federal offense to be a mediocre poet caught impersonating his brother-in-law, Simon, hailed the world round as a Nobel laureate, albeit in jail.

During visiting hours with her brother, Fay pleads with him, “Simon, you’ve gotta get outta jail! I can’t handle all this on my own. Ned needs a father figure, or something.” Simon (James Urbaniak) replies, “What do you want me to do, escape?” She tries to explain, her words bumping into one another. “You might be eligible for early parole on account of your good behavior.” “I won’t be eligible for that until a couple more years,” he says, breathing deeply.

“I can’t wait that long,” Fay groans. “They’ll send Ned to reform school. And he’ll be in prison before he’s old enough to get a driver’s license.” Simon shakes his head in resignation. “Look, if you need anything at all, just ask Angus.” Ned (Liam Aiken), who’s been sitting quietly all this time, pipes up: “She’s got a date with him. He’s taking her to the theater and supper afterwards. He calls her all the time.” Fay faces the boy and hisses, “Evaporate!” Veins deepen on Simon’s forehead as he asks, “You’re dating my publisher?” She snaps back, “You got a problem with that?!”

Categories
GUEST EDITOR

From The Desk Of Torche: Good Days

Back in 2005, when Torche unleashed its debut helping of thunderous doom-pop, guitarist/vocalist Steve Brooks’ former band, Floor, was dead and buried. Never again would Brooks’ former and present groups compete for his time and attention. Well, never say never. Floor dropped Oblation last April. Suddenly, “a few reunion gigs” became a time-consuming reality, with Brooks balancing two bands’ write/record/tour cycles. It’s a juggling act Torche has been at since 2008 when members started moving away from the group’s Miami home base. Restarter, the band’s fourth LP, packs in all the familiar elements, but does so with a looser, more somber tone and sullen mood. The members of Torche will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our new feature on them.

GoodDay

Jonathan Nuñez: I really like good days. Having them, remembering them, and participating in them. You just can’t beat a damn good day. Even when you have a partially good day or night, you forget about the shitty parts prior to when things got better/good/great. Cheers to good days.

Categories
VIDEOS

Film At 11: Kate Pierson

Multi-instrumentalist Kate Pierson, better known as one of the lead singers and a founding member of the B-52s, recently released her debut solo effort, Guitars And Microphones. Now she offers a trippy new video for the peppy title track. The clip consists of old pictures, some of Pierson no doubt, floating through the air, like a digital scrapbook. Check it out below. But before you do, also check out our recent conversation with her.

Categories
FREE MP3s

MP3 At 3PM: Arthur Nasson

arthur

Arthur Nasson is a singer/songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, producer and recording artist. He has seven albums and two EPs, so it’s safe to say he is no musical novice. He readies for the release of his latest offering, The Emperor’s New Sound, due out April 28, and shares the title track for free download. Pianos and raging guitars start the song off, and it’s all uphill from there. Download “The Emperor’s New Sound” below.

“The Emperor’s New Sound” (download):