Kiosk feat Mohsen Namjoo

November 30, 2009 Leave a comment

Underground Persian-Canadian rock band Kiosk partners up with Mohsen Namjoo. I say holy alliance.

 

Enemy of the State: A Love Story…Lateset Mixtape from Lupe Fiasco Download Below

November 29, 2009 Leave a comment

I downloaded it and giving it a spin as I write this post.


Wanted to share the music..  Download mixtape here.

Go Youukla!!!! U-C-L-A Fight Fight Fight!

November 28, 2009 Leave a comment

I am cheering you on from the Bay Area.  Okay from behind my computer while I’m at work in the Bay Area.  Sucky, I know.  Tis is life.  Let’s go Bruins!!

Shed lights on the state of Persian Hip Hop

November 28, 2009 Leave a comment

Interesting observations.  Particularly his comments on the demographic of the hip hop artists in Iran certainly adds a piece to the puzzle.  Cuz, uh, Persian hip-hop is a bit puzzle-ing…wouldn’t you agree?  Not hating on it or anything but it’s always a tad rough on my ears.   Every now and then I’ll post something and try to keep an open mind to a nascent art form in my home country.  Afterall, hiphop is the voice of rebellion and that is precisely what Iranian youth need right about now:  a voice.

 

Pirate Radio – Sex, Drugs, Rock n Roll and So Much More

November 27, 2009 1 comment

Dope movie. Go see it.

Directed and written by Richard Curtis and starring Philip Seymour Hoffman, Pirate Radio opens with Carl (played by Tom Sturridge), a teenage boy, being sent off by his mother to stay with his God Father on Radio Rock, a pirate radio stationed on a ship in the middle of the North Atlantic. Ostensibly, the boy was sent here by his mother as a disciplinary measure for getting caught with drugs in high school. Although that was the opening plot line and one which was skillfully weaved throughout the rest of the movie, it was not really what the movie was about.

The movie was, at the end of the day, about rebellion, rock and roll, and unrighteous living. The 1960′s, at least in my mind, conjures up images of Vietnam protests, bus boycotts, the civil rights movement, The Black Panthers, hippies in Haight Ashbury, academics in Berkeley and the like. This movie gave me a glimpse into what was going on on the other side of the Atlantic. Rock n Roll was a rogue musical form that broke all the existing social boundaries, and the British government passionately hated it (at least publicly). Which was yet another dominant storyline throughout the movie; an official in the British government hellbent on taking down Radio Rock.

The 8 or so Disk Jockeys that occupied the ship rotated broadcast responsibilities, each putting their own unique stamp on the illegal radio transmission by playing their favorite records and narrating the debauchery that transpired in the lives of the DJ’s: sex-scandals, lesbian chefs, life-threatening machismo competitive skirmishes, soul searching, cherries of young boys being popped, father and sons being reunited, etc. The listeners, the loyal lovers of music craving for their daily dosage of Radio Rock on the mainland ooo’ed and aww’ed, screamed and salivated, sang and danced to their favorite music being aired only on Radio Rock. From old couples with their beach radios to young teeny boppers under their covers secretely tuning in, Radio Rock had clearly tapped into the hearts and imaginations of a new era. Ultimately, it was these faithful listeners who rescued Radio Rock. Watch the movie to see what I mean. :)

The movie is full of laugh out loud moments, coming of age delicacies and if you squint your eyes you can glean some deeper longer-lasting messages out of this delightful, inspiring flick. Messages of resistance and the power that music has over the souls of a generation are elusive but certainly present. A movie about changing tides giving testament to the significance of doing, and listening, to what you love.

‘My Brain is Crowded Like Sunset on a Saturday’

November 23, 2009 1 comment

So much to do, so little time.

Working on my site now.

Don Reed’s “East 14th St. – True Tales of a Reluctant Player”

November 21, 2009 Leave a comment

Saw this last night for the 2nd time at the Marsh Theatre in the Mission District, San Francisco, CA.  Go see it.  If you don’t catch it at the Marsh it is coming to the East bay soon.

Don Reed’s one man show doubles as a theatrical biography detailing his own experience growing up in 1970′s Oakland as well as a subtle yet poignant social commentary on the impact of growing up in the ghetto.

Come on Try a Little, Nothing is Forever

November 21, 2009 Leave a comment

Listening to the WallFlowers. Welcome to my blog. This is my 2nd attempt at blogging and I will try to be more committed this go around.

Hope you enjoy my musings, perspectives and ramblings that I will try to present here in some kind of coherent fashion. Feel free to comment and add to any discussion. Everybody’s perspectives are welcome.

 

Peace!

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