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2008:11:23:20:00.

Sunday.


REDEEMED?

Based on the first hour of tonight's 24 telefilm, it seems that in the Obama era the new neo-con wank-a-thon will be harping on the lessons of Rwanda. If so, I guess it's marginally better to have these people motivated by humanitarian interventionism than by strength projection, but only just so. As it is, this movie is so far both dumb and boring, which even the terrible season 6 managed to not be at the same time, mostly.

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
TV ... Permalink


2008:11:21:08:00.

Friday.


NO!: THE GERMAN ART STUDENTS (#457, NOV 15 2008).


The German Art Students

"Do the Bumble Bee" (18.3 MB)
from Kissing By the Superconductor


The Frequency
Madison, WI
November 15, 2008



I don't remember the last time I saw this song performed live, maybe way back when I first saw these guys playing a lunchtime gig at the Capitol a few years ago. This whole block of old stuff (much of which was also on their sort-of-secret first record, What Did You Expect? Heartland Rock?) was a lot of fun, and makes for a nice set of clips that might be closing out my year of recording. The remaining 2008 show calendar is pretty sparse and I'm going to be out of town a lot between now and 2009. We'll see -- hopefully some good stuff comes up!

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
NO!: The Podcast ... Permalink


2008:11:19:08:00.

Wednesday.


NO!: THE GERMAN ART STUDENTS (#456, NOV 15 2008).


The German Art Students

"Left of Center" (14.3 MB)
from Kissing By the Superconductor


The Frequency
Madison, WI
November 15, 2008



So Annelies and Andy's wife are both going to give birth pretty soon, which means another G.A.S. hiatus is upon us. Along with two songs on their new 7" they've got a third new one that they've been playing out, so hopefully when they return they'll have a new record to bestow upon us. Also, hopefully it will be before I move.

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
NO!: The Podcast ... Permalink


2008:11:17:08:00.

Monday.


NO!: THE GERMAN ART STUDENTS (#455, NOV 15 2008).


The German Art Students

"Eighteenth Century Love Song" (15.9 MB)
from Kissing By the Superconductor


The Frequency
Madison, WI
November 15, 2008



In something of a paradox, this show was both a 7" release show and a 10th anniversary show. So not surprisingly, the set relied heavily on stuff from the earlier part of their decade. Lots of folks reacted really well to these old songs, and I think a lot of them haven't been played much recently -- I know there were a bunch that I don't remember hearing live.

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
NO!: The Podcast ... Permalink


2008:11:14:08:00.

Friday.


NO!: VANCOUGAR (#454, NOV 2 2008).


Vancougar

"Philadelphia" (19.2 MB)
from Canadian Tuxedo


The Frequency
Madison, WI
November 2, 2008



I'm an absolute sucker for guitar pop with girly harmonies, so it's no surprise that this is my favorite song on Canadian Tuxedo. With the sing-song harmonies and science-related lyrics, it reminds me a lot of the Hot Toddies, though I think the bands are largely dissimilar otherwise.

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
NO!: The Podcast ... Permalink


2008:11:12:08:00.

Wednesday.


NO!: VANCOUGAR (#453, NOV 2 2008).


Vancougar

"Temporary Teamwork" (12.4 MB)
from Losin' It!


The Frequency
Madison, WI
November 2, 2008



The nice thing about this show was finding out about an excellent new band, but the other nice thing is that they have a secret first album from a couple years ago that I didn't know about until we saw it at the merch table. It features this song (among others) and we picked up a copy after the show, and then I discovered later that it's only available in the US as a pricey import. We saved like $15 on this thing!

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
NO!: The Podcast ... Permalink


2008:11:10:08:00.

Monday.


NO!: VANCOUGAR (#452, NOV 2 2008).


Vancougar

"Obvious" (18.1 MB)
from Canadian Tuxedo


The Frequency
Madison, WI
November 2, 2008



When this show was announced a few weeks ago I was drawn to it largely for the description including terms such as "Canadian," "all-girl" and "power-pop." It's also true that their terrific pun of a name was pretty attractive. So I checked out their new album and it's pretty good stuff, and this is one of the really good tunes from it. I realized listening to it live that they weren't as much like the Dials as I'd originally thought, but were actually more like a Canadian, indie version of the Bangles -- there's something very Hoffsian about singer Eden Fineday.

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
NO!: The Podcast ... Permalink


2008:11:07:08:00.

Friday.


NO!: MARGOT & THE NUCLEAR SO AND SO'S (#451, OCT 31 2008).


Margot & the Nuclear So and So's

"O' What a Nightmare!" (20.5 MB)
from Animal!


Der Rathskeller
Madison, WI
October 31, 2008



I believe Margot have two songs with "Nightmare" in the title, and I managed to record both of them at this show. The first one I posted is one of my favorites; this one is from one of their disappointing new releases, the version of their new record that the label didn't want to put out.

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
NO!: The Podcast ... Permalink


2008:11:06:13:00.

Thursday.


2009.

I got a fundraising letter in the mail last week from Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson, who is up for re-election in the spring. Democrats just took over the Wisconsin Assembly, giving them control of both legislative houses and the governorship -- they have an extremely tough budget project ahead of them and will be fought tooth and nail by the minority GOP. The Democratic caucus in the U.S. Senate isn't going to have 60 members, let alone 60 members that could be counted on for every cloture vote.

In his victory speech Tuesday, Obama said that his win was not the change that his campaign pursued; it was the chance to make the change happen. Making it happen means keeping your checkbooks out, your feet on the ground and your mouth open. The year after a presidential election is typically when government and voters pay the least attention to each other, and if that happens in 2009 this was all for nothing.

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
Politics ... Permalink


2008:11:05:11:47.

Wednesday.


A VALEDICTORY.

What happened yesterday -- really, what's happened since Election Day 2006 -- is nothing short of astonishing. On his way to the presidency, Barack Obama won two of the most strongly Republican states in Indiana and Virginia. He won the greatest popular vote percentage for a Democrat since Lyndon Johnson. Establishment stalwart Elizabeth Dole found herself removed from the Senate when her culture war tactics failed in North Carolina of all places.

But for all of the incredible stuff that happened yesterday, we also saw what appears to be the first major failure of the Obama era. His electoral vote win wasn't called until the west coast polls closed at 11:00 EST, but his early wins in Pennsylvania and Ohio made it clear where things were going -- indeed, his huge lead in the polls in the last few days made it clear. And unfortunately, it looks like turnout wasn't what it should have been and that down-ticket races were never enough of a priority for the presidential campaign. Democratic gains in the House are going to be lower than they could have been, while Senate races in Minnesota and Alaska have worked out far below where they should have been. Proposition 8 in California, rescinding the right of gay couples to marry, is going to pass (ironically, exit polls suggest this is the result of strong black turnout). Watching the down-ticket returns come in (or not come in, as is still the case in Oregon, who could've counted most of their mail-only votes before Election Day, WTF?!?) I felt sick, because this was one of my major concerns about Obama throughout the campaign -- not that he would be a drag, but that he wasn't interested in building a party movement rather than an Obama movement.

We've done this before. When Bill Clinton was elected we forgot about party cohesion (to be fair, there were a lot more Dixiecrats in the party at that time) and the rest is history. I desperately hope we don't forget the lessons of those first two Clinton years. The biggest one is that the GOP isn't going away. They are going to "filibuster" everything without having to actually get up and do it. They are going to be at Obama's heels from day one, if not before. It's been tempting for a lot on the left to read the accusations of Marxism as secretly being about race, and I have to think that's what the attackers want. In fact, this is how they go after Democrats, and they will continue to do so. Yesterday wasn't just about electing Obama, and tomorrow isn't just about Obama being the president; it's about Obama governing.

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
Politics ... Permalink


2008:11:04:08:23.

Tuesday.


A BENEDICTION.

There's been a ghost haunting our politics of late, and his name is George W. Bush. Except for briefly materializing to nationalize the banks, Bush has been absent from our collective imagination, and I imagine we've all been glad for it. Unlike the end of the last eight-year Republican presidency, there's no last-minute uptick this time. Bush's ratings and the perception of the country as being on the right track are as low as they've ever been. His destruction of his party's brand is so complete that a much-loved Republican war hero and Wise Old Man of Washington is about to get taken apart by a black guy who's been in the Senate for less than four years.

Most of us would probably like to forget this whole sad part of our history, pretend it's 1993 again, give that post-Bush consensus a second chance. I can understand that impulse and I certainly sympathize with it, but it would be a mistake. With 2012 already on the horizon, it's vital that we understand and remember what the Bush administration and modern conservatism have meant for this country. If we look at this election as the quiet demise of a bad relationship we're going to fall back into the same pattern again. So let's take a moment to understand what George W. Bush's leadership has meant.

  • Like a child of myth conceived in some violent tragedy, Bush's presidency was borne of the event that ushered in widespread mistrust of the American system of democracy. After the fairly brazen theft of the 2000 election, the 2004 and 2008 contests both were full of suspicion, some reasonable and some not. It is truly remarkable that, in the intervening eight years, only one action has been taken at the federal levels to deal with this problem, and that one -- the misnamed Help America Vote Act -- made things worse. Election theft and vote suppression is now SOP for the GOP, and nobody seems to care.
  • Bush pioneered "compassionate conservatism," which is essentially a series of baby-halving issue stances that are neither compassionate not conservative. By freezing federal funding for new stem cell lines in 2001, but not for old lines and not banning private funding for either, Bush managed to hobble the domestic biotech industry without doing much to slow the overall flow of stem cell research or to actually save any embryos. It is one of the most patently stupid positions a president has ever taken, and it took him a week to decide.
  • While he was deciding, he got a national security briefing titled "Bin Laden Determined to Strike in U.S." He dismissed it as intelligence agency ass-covering. Do I have to go any further?
  • Despite Bush saying for years that we haven't been attacked since September 11, 2001, the person or persons who killed five people by mailing them anthrax still have not been caught.
  • Let's roll, axis of evil, a smoking gun in the form of a mushroom cloud, the Iraq AUMF vote, Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney, yellowcake, the deck of cards, Mission Accomplished, bring 'em on, Al Aqaa, Abu Ghraib, now watch this drive.
  • In a textbook Karl Rove play, the Bush administration fired several Republican U.S. Attorneys who failed to come through with bogus vote-fraud cases against Democrats. Presumably this means the 80+ USA's played ball. Good news for public trust in democratic institutions!
  • The day Hurricane Katrina made landfall I watched a lot of the CNN coverage. I knew, based on this coverage, that there was a risk from the storm itself and from potential levee breakage. Thus, I was horrified but not shocked when New Orleans flooded. George W. Bush was busy at John McCain's birthday party, and apparently couldn't tear himself away to check the news for a couple minutes. To be clear, the day New Orleans flooded was one of two days worse than any other in his presidency. On the first day, his low point was sitting immobile in a classroom for seven minutes while Americans leapt to their deaths to avoid a worse fate in the fire. That he could somehow have had a slower response on the second day is unconscionable. It is perhaps the single worst performance by a president in the modern era.
  • "The Surge," generally regarded as having "worked," has Iraq no closer to political reconciliation and American troops no closer to leaving. If anything, it has further muddied the rationale for our continued mission there. So, for no reason that anyone can articulate, we continue spending nearly half a billion dollars a day on this adventure.
  • Meanwhile, what's a couple trillion for the banks, give or take?

And look, this isn't everything. The fact that, because of some hare-brained scheme that could never have worked in a million years, I can't take a bottle of water through airport security is ridiculous, and everyone knows it, and it's policy anyway, because we now live in theatre. Fully describing that bit of the Bush legacy is a book-length treatise in itself. The story told by these greatest hits is a simple one: We can't forget this time. Watergate, Iran-Contra, the smearing of Valerie Plame -- these are the same guys and the same plays, over and over. Whatever you do over the next four years, remember that. They aren't going to jail, and even if they somehow did, they'll still be back. They always come back. There's a lot they can do once they make their way back into office, but before they do we have an enormous power over them. We can say no. Saying no starts today with a vote for Barack Obama.

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
Politics ... Permalink


2008:11:03:13:46.

Monday.


PREDICTION TIME.

Here are my presidential predictions -- amazingly, we could know if the basic contours of this are right by 7:30 eastern tomorrow night..

Electoral College
Obama/Biden: 367 (All the Kerry states plus NM, IA, CO, VA, OH, FL, NC, ND, MO)
McCain/Palin: 171 (All the other states)

Popular Vote (Rounded) Obama/Biden: 53%
McCain/Palin: 46%
Other: 1%
Total turnout: 135,000,000

And the 111th Congress:

111th Congress - Senate
Democrats: 58 (pick-ups in VA, NM, CO, NH, OR, NC, AK, MN, GA)
Republicans: 40 (no pick-ups)
Other: 2 (Bernie Sanders (I-VT) caucuses with the Democrats, Joe Lieberman (I-CT) will leave the Democratic caucus)
* Barack Obama and Joe Biden will both be replaced with new Democratic Senators.

111th Congress - House of Representatives
Democrats: 258
Republicans: 177

Some states require December 2 run-offs if no candidate gets 50% of the vote, which could affect the composition of the House and the Georgia Senate race.

Also, Prop 8 in California will fail.

I sure hope I'm right.

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
Politics ... Permalink


2008:11:03:08:00.


NO!: MARGOT & THE NUCLEAR SO AND SO'S (#450, OCT 31 2008).


Margot & the Nuclear So and So's

"Paper Kitten Nightmare" (19.9 MB)
from The Dust of Retreat


Der Rathskeller
Madison, WI
October 31, 2008



We found ourselves wondering a lot of things before this show. Would there be anywhere to park downtown on Madison's crazy Halloween night? How would all eight members of Margot and all their equipment fit in the Rathskeller's little "stage" area? Would they be wearing themed costumes? Well, yes, it looked like a squeeze, and yes. The band's Peter Pan costumes seemed like a good look for them, though it was hard to tell in the can't-see-anything venue (and really, campus shows are going to be quite unfortunate when Union South closes).

I don't remember if they played this song the other times we saw them, but it's one of the unexpected treats of their debut album. Midway through you might find yourself thinking, "hey, is that guy meowing?" And he is!

posted by Aaron S. Veenstra
NO!: The Podcast ... Permalink