Legendary ex-Police drummer Stewart Copeland has a fascinating new project: Oysterhead, with Les Claypool (bassist from Primus) and Trey Anastasio (guitarist from Phish). They have a new album, The Grand Pecking Order. Their website has recent video footage. The Modern Drummer website has interesting interviews with Claypool and Anastasio about what it’s like to play with Copeland, as a teaser for the current paper magazine which features “The Return of Stewart Copeland.”
(Here’s an archive of three great, interesting interviews with Copeland, dating from 1980, 1990, and 1997.)
Music samples from Grand Pecking Order: Amazon, oysterhead.com.
So I’ve listened to all the samples, and I’ve ordered the CD (I mean, come on, it’s Stewart Copeland!), and I find myself wishing Claypool hadn’t done any of the singing.
I had to stop listening to Primus because the of the goofy lyrics and goofier vocals. They’re irritating. I chucked my Primus CDs and was much relieved when Tim Alexander’s Attention Deficit albums came out, as they afford an opportunity for me to enjoy his drumming without having to endure Les’ adolescent babbling.
I guess what I really wanted from Oysterhead was more music, and “Les” Claypool. (I am proud to say I stole that joke from WKRP in Cincinnati.)
Interesting question — if everyone with a laser pointer shined it at the moon at the same time, would we see the red glow from Earth? http://www.paintthemoon.org/
The first attempt is in a few weeks, 2001-10-27. If you’re afraid you’ll forget, send yourself a reminder via email. (The Site Foundry’s email reminder service will not spam you.) Here’s a reminder for the second attempt.
Yes, I’ve seen all the explanations for why this won’t, couldn’t possibly work. I still think this is a great idea.
Today I was amused to read that Toppik, a cosmetic solution for thinning hair, is packaged in “an elegant, discrete molded container specially designed to dispense the fibers through 167 digitally optimized openings.” That is, a plastic shaker bottle.
This wins my first-ever Corinthian Leather Award, which I will assign periodically as new instances of ridiculous, obfuscating marketing language come to my attention. Submit yours today! You might win this genuine faux-woodgrain pressboard plaque!
(“Corinthian Leather” is a phrase invented by Chrysler’s marketing department in the late 1970s, when Ricardo Montalban was hawking their autos via a famous series of television commercials. There is no such thing as “Corinthian” leather. They made it up. And yet everyone believed it, to the point where today some companies still sell “Corinthian Leather” foil handles and bible cases. Whether these vendors are deceived, or simply attempting to cash in on Chrysler’s 25-year-old deceit, is an interesting question, suitable for discussion when you’re next trapped in an elevator, or trying to pass the time during your prostate or cervical exam.)
According to gomez.com, TWA’s website ranks #1 in ease of use as compared to other airlines’ sites.
This is clearly a crock of shit. (That’s a marketing term.)
Here’s a chronicle of my attempt to purchase flight tickets via twa.com:
At this point, I’ve wasted a half hour and am intensely wishing some other airline flew the route I’ve selected. I’m forced to call TWA’s 800 number, where a telephone operator takes 15 more minutes to collect the same data I’ve already typed in several times. But at the end of the process, she can do what TWA.com’s #1 ranked website cannot: she can sell me flight tickets.
Avis, the car rental company, just sent me some official-looking junk mail that reads “Check Enclosed” on the outside. I am ever-wary of mail fraud so I eagerly opened the envelope. I was disappointed to find, inside, a real check for $2.50.
Of course, the scam is as real as the check. This isn’t a gift — if I cash the check, Avis will automatically enroll me in their “AutoVantage” program, which offers many great benefits I will never use, but for which I’ll be charged a monthly fee after a free introductory period.
My question to Avis is this: if AutoVantage is such a great deal, why do you have to pay me to enroll?