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The sun, which emerged briefly around 2 p.m., darted not 10 minutes later back behind a thick cover of cloud and fog (of the "stinging, cold" mixture), and the temperature dropped accordingly. I'm no weatherman, but anyone headed out to the Lands for the rest of the weekend, one bit of advice: wear layers.
Which leads me to a question, which I'll get to in a minute. The festival's Eco Lands area seems to be more than the token "greenwashing" effort you see at a set of events along the lines of Outside Lands [ ]. The Panhandle Stage, for instance, is fully solar, running a 4-kilowatt organization to top executive all the equipment onstage. Which is pretty cracking, but waitress: there's more.
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There are compost bins everywhere. When the need rises to put away of whatsoever you have in your hand at the moment, you're confronted with a set of choices: recycle, compost, or landfill. There is no lecture attached, and no penalty for contributing to the landfill, you barely get a fairly linear multiple alternative option, and you let to think about the thing that you're trying to get rid of, maybe simply for a second or two, simply you do think around it. Especially when there's a guy cable from the Clean Vibes trash and recycling gang hollering "Don't toss that beer cup! Compost it!" at every station.
They're 100% biodegradable and made from corn, if you didn't know.
Whoops, I promised a question and then promptly forgot near it. So, when the sun goes away and doth reject to shine, like it did for all simply few glorious moments this afternoon, what happens to the solar-powered music from the solar-powered stage? Is this thing being run on batteries, or did they just keep a spare extension cord handy? I'll check with individual and pay back the answer later.
I would do that sort of fact-checking sooner, instead of later, except that right around the time Steve Winwood [ ] was finishing up a power plant set in front of a vast main stage crowd (including several note-perfect versions of his old Traffic songs, including "Low Spark of High Heeled Boys" and "Mr. Fantasy"), my laptop computer decided to give up the ghost. The "live" portion of this web log has now been affected to the "file afterwards the evince" category.
Earlier, ahead the Great Laptop Tragedy of '08, M. Ward [ ] delivered a tight, soulful set in front of an enthusiastic Lindley Meadow crowd, many of whom no doubt said to themselves something like "I really should get me some M. Ward albums!" This newsperson included, dishonourably. And homo, does he sound like mid-'70s Dylan, or what?
Hey, what's that enormous circus tent in the eye of the Polo Field?
Answer: Crowdfire is this enormous circus tent in the middle of the Polo Field; it is also this site where citizenry can upload video mash-ups and photos and whatnot, and the great unwashed inside the big collapsible shelter at Outside Lands john watch them projected all over the place. You can append your possess contribution while you're there at the festival, as a matter of fact; lots of people sprawled inside on big blankets and pillows watching the shifting content, which acted sort of like an instant feedback response to whatever was going on outside the tent or, really, anyplace else on the 'Net.
Radiohead's up on stage right now? Here's some bootlegged video from a European festival earlier this summer. Here's Thom Yorke's voice put through a pitch-changer, and "Karma Police" coming out wish Alvin & the Chipmunks. What around Beck from last night? Here you go. Blink and you'll miss it.
I don't cognize if whatever of this is in reality useful, simply the Crowdfire tent is, at the very least, a nice place to spend an hour or two while waiting for Ben Harper [
] to come on.Speaking of which, the nice lady world Health Organization runs the hand-painted light bulb concession (and world Health Organization let us pet her awesome firedog, Rainbow) would like to know why you get too a great deal good clobber going on, Outside Lands organizers.
"Ben Harper, Primus [ ] and Cake [ ] ar all happening at the same time," she complained. "Why can't they flounder them out?"
While I in agreement with her, I personally wouldn't have made the decision to sit slow a
![]() Artist: Guano Apes: mp3 download Genre(s): ROck: Alternative Rock Alternative Metal Metal: Alternative Guano Apes's discography: ![]() Planet Of The Apes CD2 Year: 2005 Tracks: 19 ![]() Planet Of The Apes CD1 Year: 2005 Tracks: 21 ![]() Planet Of The Apes: Best Of (Premium Version) (CD 2) Year: 2004 Tracks: 19 ![]() Planet Of The Apes: Best Of (Premium Version) (CD 1) Year: 2004 Tracks: 21 ![]() You Can't Stop Me Year: 2003 Tracks: 5 ![]() Walking On Thin Line Year: 2003 Tracks: 15 ![]() Walking on A Thin Line Year: 2003 Tracks: 14 ![]() Pretty In Scarlet Year: 2003 Tracks: 4 ![]() No Speech Year: 2000 Tracks: 4 ![]() Lords Of The Boards Year: 2000 Tracks: 3 ![]() Don't Give Me Names Year: 2000 Tracks: 12 ![]() Proud Like A God Year: 1999 Tracks: 12 ![]() Don't You Turn Your Back On Me Year: 1999 Tracks: 5 ![]() Rain Year: 1998 Tracks: 1 ![]() Lords Of The Boards CD 2 Year: 1998 Tracks: 3 ![]() Open Your Eyes Year: 1997 Tracks: 3 ![]() Lords Of The Boards CD 1 Year: 1997 Tracks: 3 ![]() Walking On A Thin Line (Limited Edition) Year: Tracks: 14 ![]() Planet of the Apes: Best of Guano Apes (cd2) Year: Tracks: 20 ![]() Planet of the Apes: Best of Guano Apes (cd1) Year: Tracks: 20 The German alt-rock quaternary Guano Apes consists of vocalists Sandra Nasic, guitar player Henning Ruemenapp, bassist Stefan Ude and drummer Dennis Poschwatta. Ude, Ruemenapp and Poschwatta had been playacting together for for a while and added Nasic in time to extradite the goods first-class honours degree station in the 1996 "Local Heroes" contest held by VIVA, Germany's music TV channel. The Guano Apes' fusion of alloy, belt down and rap music beat out all over 1000 competitors, and their debut single "Open Your Eyes" was a Top 10 shoot in Germany that year and stayed in the Top one C for 30 weeks. Thanks to VIVA's wakeless rotation of the picture for "Open Your Eyes," Guano Apes signed a deal with Gun Records, world Health Organization released the group's full-length track record album Proud Like A God in 1997. The group's minute single "Lord of the Boards," which was licenced for the 1998 European Snowboarding Championship, was an tied larger rack up and pushed the phonograph recording album to pt position in Germany and gold condition in other European countries. RCA released Majestic Like a God in the US in 1999. |
Somewhere right about the time that blues great Keb' Mo' shows up as a blind guitarist named Possum who loves nothing more than to pick at his instrument and dispense homespun wisdom with a wry chuckle, it becomes clear that Honeydripper is not going to be anything close to the film that it should be. For sure, it would be near impossible, and probably not even advisable, for a filmmaker to totally eschew clich� when placing a film in as weighted a setting as John Sayles has done here. A small town in Alabama named Harmony, circa 1950, with a mean white sheriff, a lot of dirt-poor black folk, a bucolic landscape of thick green forests and insect-buzzed cotton fields, and plenty of porches to watch life go by from -- the blues is in the air. It's all the characters can do not to burst into choreographed song and dance.
As usual with Sayles, there's a hard knot of a good story here. The film is named for the town's Honeydripper Lounge, a ramshackle affair that serves up a good fried chicken affair but whose old blues singer can't compete with the jukebox R&B getting blasted by the competition down the street. Danny Glover plays the owner, Pine Top Purvis, a piano player with a violent past who's in debt to everyone in town and about out of chances. His last one is a New Orleans hot shot named Guitar Sam who's got a radio hit and is booked to play the Honeydripper on Saturday; only problem is, when the train shows up, Guitar Sam is nowhere to be found, even though Purvis has plastered the town with ads. The whole thing is a scramble, with Purvis frantically (well, not frantically, maybe busily; it is the old South, after all, and things take time) working every last hustle he can to stay ahead of the creditors and the corrupt sheriff (Stacy Keach, playing it more for laid-back humor than menace) who will shut him down if he can't find somebody who looks and plays like Guitar Sam to show up on Saturday. Maybe that handsome fella who just hopped off the train and is chatting up Purvis' daughter could do the trick…
As is also unfortunately usual with Sayles, the solid structure of his story is one that plays much better on paper than it does on screen, endlessly padded out by digressions and dramatic dead-ends. A good example is the subplot following Purvis' wife Delilah, who is a maid for a rich white family and going through some sort of religious reawakening at an itinerant preacher's tent revival. There's nothing wrong on the surface with this story, as Lisa Gay Hamilton acts it with her expected dignity and grace, and the scenes are warmly rendered. But the whole thing is just one more element that detracts from the main thrust of Purvis' desperate predicament. The same goes for another endless thread following a number of bickering cotton pickers whose relationship to the entire story is tangential at best. Given how much vibrant humor and energy Sayles gets out of Glover and Charles S. Dutton, as Purvis' friend, it's eminently frustrating each time the film wanders away from that setup to dawdle in the weeds.
One wants to applaud Sayles for trying to present a portrait of an entire town and period here, but so much of Honeydripper is lacking in punch or drive that it's hard not to let one's initial admiration drain away and just start waiting for the thing to end. In any case, there's just no excuse for that blind guitar player, none whatsoever.
Robert Plant called. He wants his name back.
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