Songza has playlists for all kinds of things – Waking Up Happy, Drinking at a Dive Bar, Every ‘90s Summer Dance Party – but really there may be nothing better than ‘00s #1 Hits for inducing YES! moments (real or sarcastic) when a new song pops up.
Songza has playlists for all kinds of things – Waking Up Happy, Drinking at a Dive Bar, Every ‘90s Summer Dance Party – but really there may be nothing better than ‘00s #1 Hits for inducing YES! moments (real or sarcastic) when a new song pops up.
The Washington Nationals are once again hosting a series of post-game concerts during the summer, with a lineup featuring Plain White T’s, Austin Mahone and Martina McBride.
The concert games are an extra level of fun, but for the second year in a row the artists involved aren’t exactly high on my list. My brother agrees. He sent me a chart that’s been going around the Internet in the past few weeks showing the fees certain artists get for doing shows, which of course gives me the opportunity to re-imagine what the NatsLive series could be.
First, let’s take a historical look to figure out what sort of budget the team is using. Here are the acts from 2012-2014, with the lowest end of the prices from the chart (which several articles note may be inflated):
So it seems like we’re basically working with $200,000 and three concert dates. Obviously the team wants to attract people to buy tickets to the game, and ideally wants those who otherwise wouldn’t be coming that night or perhaps not even attend a game all season. My brother and I have discussed the optimal mix of acts to achieve this goal, and we think you want a rock band that appeals to people 25-40, a country-ish artist, and some sort of up-and-comer, perhaps more on the pop side who skews younger.
With all that in mind, I threw together three lineups I think would achieve those goals within that budget:
I think 311, Incubus and Paramore would be KILLER in this concert format. The best one I’ve seen so far was Third Eye Blind, and each of those bands would easily do just as well at Nats Park, and likely better.
Of course we don’t know how much the Nats are actually spending, and there’s the huge question of availability. There are a lot of music venues in the DC area, and if you have a tour swinging through in July, you’re not cannibalizing your audience by play Nats Park in August.
That said, we can dream, right?
Like most people, I have acquired a few nicknames during my time on this planet. I’ve mentioned before ones like Hotshoe, Heinous, Christafuh, Erty, Channas and Issypher, but I recently came across a completely forgotten forum that fostered a few others.
We hear a lot these days about the permanency of the Internet, you know warnings like, “ONCE IT’S ON THE INTERNET IT’S THERE FOREVER!!!!” But there’s a flip-side to that. Some things that are not dangerous and can give you a fun trip down memory lane stay on the Web too.
In the spring of 2002, I saw a music video on TV (remember those days?) from someone I’d never heard of before and went to the Internet to check her out. It was Vanessa Carlton, whom you surely know from this song:
Her website back then had all the normal info you find from any artist, from the quick bio to tour stops and information about their albums. Like many others at the time, it also had a message board, and after spending a few minutes browsing through, I felt the need to chime in on something and posted my first message.
In the span of a few years, I would go on to post more than 1,000 messages, though 99.9999 percent of them were far from profound. During that time, I noticed a group of people who talked about similar interests or just seemed like cool peeps, and through both our board postings and later AIM chatting, I got to know a few of them quite well. They were the first of what I call my “Internet friends,” which at the time was a weird concept to many, but now I think is much more relatable in our Facebook/Twitter experiences.
That’s where I got those extra nicknames, like Ti. Ti is short for Tiem, which this girl Kelley started calling me to make fun of the fact that in AIM convos I always made a typo when trying to write “time.” The original forum no longer exists, but thanks to the cool Wayback Machine, I was reminded that Kelley and I also had a super important running debate about the merits of wearing socks:
That original forum often had issues, and eventually someone made a new message board that we all migrated to. It’s there that Kelley, who is a few years younger than me, posted about the time she and I met in real life:
She was looking at colleges and where I went happened to be on her list, so we planned to say hi and chat for a minute after her official tour. Since you know me, you’ll find it funny how SUPER sketched out her mom was about the whole idea of her talking to this random guy. That meant our meeting took place in an open spot just across the street from a parking lot where Kelley’s mom was watching from the car. She didn’t end up going to school there, and we eventually lost touch.
The name Erty (the Ert Movement was big at the time) was bestowed by another person whose life is a mystery to me now. The biggest thing I remember about her is that she for a long time told everyone she was roughly my age, then made this big dramatic post one day admitting that she was in fact like five years younger. She expected everyone to hate her and never speak to her again…but absolutely zero people cared. Good times.
I haven’t had an actual conversation in a long time with the girl who started calling me Chewy (a play on chwilbur), but we are Facebook friends and more or less aware of each other’s lives (hey, Jiggy!).
I feel like we need a music break, so enjoy one of my more favorite songs from Carlton’s first album:
The cool thing about having Internet friends is that you aren’t constrained by geography. My three closest ones from that era are an Australian, a Brazilian who lives in Japan and a Spaniard who lives in Britain.
Nerea, my Spanish friend, wished me happy birthday back in 2004 in a thread that was the equivalent of waking up to your birthday today and seeing a million notifications on Facebook:
She and I haven’t been in the closest contact over the years, but we check in from time to time. Finding this last week reminded me to do that, and naturally we both lamented how old we feel now that it’s been almost 10 years since she posted that message.
Katie, the Australian, and Juliane, the Brazilian, I talk to all the time, and while our conversations are often about television and ridiculous things, there have also been the kinds of moments you expect with any good friends. We’ve talked about moving far from home, jitters about starting new jobs, our families, differences in our home towns, dating and counseling each other when we’ve lost people close to us.
Another thing I gained from that message board was the ability to use Photoshop. The system allowed you to embed pictures in your posts, and everyone made “signatures” that were sort of personal flags that said something about them or their fandom. Here’s an example (though not one I made) at the top of this thread in which I gave a British girl grief for how they spell neighbors:
Only certain people had the technical ability to make them, and after teaching myself the basics for my own use, I often took requests and made graphics for others. So every time you see a picture on here that took me five seconds to prepare for the Web, the root is in those early forum postings.
Of course, there is a downside to knowing somebody only virtually. Just like with texting, it’s easy to miss context and to create things in your mind when you don’t speak to someone in person. I found in my messages a note from a girl who somehow decided I hated her:
Don’t worry, I assured her there was no problem, though she is not one of the people I kept in contact with at all. Oh well.
This post is entirely too long, so I will close with one final anecdote from that era. My inbox has a number of messages from Kelley talking about the “random PM game.” PMs are private messages, or the email-like system on the forums. You can send one to any registered member, and from tiem to tiem Kelley and I would PM each other a random username. The game was that we had to send a message to that person, say something nice and send a copy back to the other player to see what we wrote.
When I think about the comments you see on YouTube or any news article today, the random PM game might be my favorite memory of the forum era. Today’s Internet could use more random compliments.
[Lots of people ending up here from Google searches — 2012 NatsLive info here]
Last night I had one of the best baseball game experiences of my life.
It started with a rookie pitcher who in his first Major League start threw two no-hit innings, then hit a 3-run HR in first first at-bat. On the very first pitch he saw. Which I (sort of) predicted:
Bro: “Oh the pitcher’s up.”
Me: “We haven’t seen him hit, he might be good.”
Bro: “True…”
Me: “If I see a pitcher homer in his first big league at-bat I’m never coming to a game again. I’ll never see anything better than that.”
I guess predicting the future happens to be in our genes. Late in the game, with the Nationals trailing by two runs, my brother said Ryan Zimmerman would hit a walk-off home run. He later amended that to just a walk-off hit.
Ninth inning. Bases loaded. Ryan Zimmerman hits a single. Two runs score. Nationals win.
The game itself would have been high on the list of great experiences, but these tickets we bought back in March just happened to fall on a day when the Nats were having a post-game concert featuring Lifehouse.
That would be Lifehouse, one of my favorite bands. (Yeah yeah, not a universally accepted choice, but I like them, so whatevs.) They’re best known for their hit song “Hanging By A Moment,” which came out when I was a senior in high school:
When I heard they were playing after the game I figured they might do four or five songs, but they ended up playing 12 in all. I was slightly disappointed they didn’t hit my favorite one, but I’m not about to argue about a free concert. One of the big worries about hearing a band you like play in person for the first time is the fear that they will be terrible live, but fortunately I thought Lifehouse was fantastic last night.
Here’s a medley of the show (minus “Nerve Damage” which I failed to record at all):
For people who care about such things, the set list was:
-All In
-Spin (which I used in a montage in my documentary)
-Nerve Damage
-You and Me
-Whatever It Takes
-Wrecking Ball
-Beast of Burden (Rolling Stones cover)
-Falling In
-Hanging By A Moment
-Halfway Gone
-First Time
-Broken
Continuing the trend of digging through the CD archives, today I rocked out some Our Lady Peace on my drive to work.
It took about three seconds for me to think about when the band played at Susquehanna University during the fall of my sophomore year. Here’s my ticket stub:
If you’re not paying close attention, you may have missed the beautiful error I assume was made by someone working the Weber Chapel box office. Apparently Our Lady Peach was supposed to play. The question is, was it a bored work-study student who just made a mistake, or an adult who had never heard of the band in the first place? Hard to say. Unless of course you worked at the box office at the time, then please enlighten me.
“The sign said: a yoga class for cats” is a line from the song “Carnival,” which unfortunately was not played that night. My memory is not that amazing–I actually was able to find a set list from the show online. How did people live with those sorts of minor questions without the Internet? I think my head would have exploded with all of the “I wonder…” types of questions I’ve had over the years that would have been unanswered.
I do remember when they kicked into “Starseed.” I’m not sure it was actually on any of their albums, but it was on the “Armageddon” soundtrack. I also defy you to listen to it and not enjoy yourself. If you’re not familiar, here it is courtesy of our friends at YouTube.
According to the set list, it was the last song before the encore. That would have been a pretty good way to end the evening, but they decided to come back and drop some “Somewhere Out There” and “4 a.m.” on us. Good times.
It’s unfortunate that the opening act was so so so very bad though. You know you aren’t seeing Van Halen when only a few years later the band has changed its name and is no longer with their record label. They were Greenwheel. Apparently now they’re Go Van Gogh.
The next year things were a lot better. Fuel came to Selinsgrove, and brought Breaking Benjamin to open. Now THAT was a good time. Better than when Michelle Branch came? Hard to say really…OK, not that hard to say. Though the MB concert was entertaining for the fact that about 75 percent of the crowd was college students more interested in seeing opener Pat McGee Band, and mixed in were tweens and their moms there for Michelle Branch.
Good times.
CDs, no matter how much you may like them at one point in your life, will inevitably be forgotten and stashed away. You pick up new ones, fight with the tight plastic wrapping and rock out to the latest sounds.
While the new ones are the same size and hold the same amount of music, they don’t come with one thing the old ones all have–memories.
I defy you to put in a CD you haven’t listened to in a few years and not think back to the time it was a mainstay in your rotation. Think about the car trips it gave a soundtrack to, and the people along for the ride.
Lately I’ve been bringing one of the old favorites to my car each morning. Between my morning and evening commutes, there is just about enough time to get through the whole disc.
After listening to a dozen of them, I have yet to experience one that didn’t bring me back to when I first hit play. With most of them, this is the first time I have played them in my current car, which I’ve had for five years now.
One thing is clear–the current ride has a FAR better sound sytem than the 1993 Pontiac Grand Am I drove in high school and the first three years of college.
But the Grand Am was the beginning for CDs from bands like SR-71, Incubus, Lifehouse, Beastie Boys, Good Charlotte and Barenaked Ladies. It was also the ride responsible for transporting my carpool cohort from Copper Crossing (our neighborhood) to Oakton High School and back.
There were four of us–Myself, Kristen, Becky and Dave (or David if you like). I think I picked everyone up in that order, though I just spent five minutes trying to remember that detail from something I did at 6:30 a.m. in 2000-01. It’s the most logical order based on where they lived, so I’ll assume that’s how I did it.
The music seemed to be sort of my choice, but it quickly became clear that there were some favorites among my collection, and others that weren’t quite as welcome in the CD player. I can’t even begin to describe how many times we listened to SR-71’s album “Now You See Inside.” Ditto for Lifehouse’s “No Name Face.” Not that I was complaining–they were my CDs after all.
But poor Dave. He was more into bands like MXPX, The Get Up Kids and of course, JEW. You haven’t heard of JEW? Well neither had I until early on Friday morning. Fridays were Dave days–that meant he could pick the music and we had to listen. It seemed like a fair system for someone who didn’t complain the rest of the week and even gave up any desires to sit in the front seat.
So there we were, sitting in Dave’s driveway as he settled into the back. I reached my hand back to receive his chosen disc. It’s label? JEW. Naturally, I asked about this mysterious band only to be chastened for not knowing the now-ubiquitous Jimmy Eat World.
In the afternoon, I’m confident I dropped off Dave first, then Becky and finally Kristen. I know this for a fact because of SR-71’s song “What A Mess.” It was by far Kristen’s favorite, and it was the soundtrack for the 30-second drive from Becky’s house to hers. She didn’t have to ask if it was OK, or even the track number. Once Becky got out, my stereo went “beep beep beep” the appropriate number of times to get us to track No. 3. Sometimes we’d even skip forward to the chorus, since, you know, 30 seconds isn’t that long.
I bet even Dave remembers the words to that song. Maybe I should get him a copy–only $8 on Amazon right now. A small price to pay for those memories.
There are two trends in music videos that seem to be becoming more and more prevalent, and which really need to be addressed.
The first is the growing use of Hollywood-style opening credits to start the video. On every channel that plays videos, the same standard information is shown at the beginning. It tells you who will appear, the name of the song and the album. That’s all we need to know.
Adding to the over-the-top nature of the credits is the fact that everyone mentioned is a HUGE star. Watch the first 15 seconds of this video. It introduces Kanye West, Ne-Yo and Keri Hilson. I didn’t know Keri Hilson before seeing this, but even someone as hip as myself knows exactly who the other two are.
The other recent perpetrator of the trend is Jamie Foxx. His video features cameos from Forest Whitaker, Samuel L. Jackson and Ron Howard. That group has won a combined 4 Oscars, and grabbed numerous other nominations. They have been responsible for some of the biggest movies in the past 15 years. If you’re in a position to be watching cable television in the United States, you don’t need a special introduction.
The other trend involves a specific shot in the videos. For some reason it has become a requirement to have the star floating above a bed. A main culprit is the Hilson/Kanye/Ne-Yo video I mentioned before. If you watch past the 15 seconds, you’ll see quite a bit of Hilson in mid-air above the bed. Maybe she’s just aspiring to be Beyonce, who achieves more of a floating–rather than falling–effect in her video for ‘Sweet Dreams.’.
I’m pretty sure there was a third one I made a mental note about this morning–I frequently rock VH1 while I’m reading the newspaper. But now I can’t remotely remember. So keep an eye out for people illuminating the themes in their songs by floating above a bed. And since they weren’t responsible enough to include a disclaimer, don’t try that at home. Unless you’re tired. Then it’s probably appropriate to make some sort of move towards a bed.
Some would say that I am a bit…umm…different. Yes different. I had two great joys today, all within about a 15 minute period in the blustery cold.
I was leaving campus for the day, but had to get a camera and tripod back to my apartment. Since the pair is heavy as a MOTHER, I walked up the street to the apartment and got my car, thus saving my shoulder from a great deal of pain this evening. During my walk at about 5:30, traffic on one of the main streets leaving campus was quite heavy. Great Joy No. 1 for the day: A bus passed me right when I reached the street. It’s maybe 3/4ths of a mile from there to my apartment. I out-walked the bus up the street. Even better was the look on some of the bus patrons faces, as they clearly saw me walk by several times as the bus grinded to a halt behind all of the other cars.
So when I finally made it back up that same street in my car–with camera in tow–Great Joy No. 2 appeared. Next to me at the light was a young woman, I presume a fellow student at Maryland. She was bobbing her head and singing along to some song as if no one was watching. Curious, I quickly switched around to a few different radio stations to see if I could find the one she was rocking out to. Thank you Hot 99.5 for letting me know that this girl was a fan of Rihanna.