JOSEPHINE ANCELLE-Ends With Always

Posted on December 13th, 2010 by ekko

Let’s get one thing straight, right off the bad.  Parisian singer/songwriter Josephine Ancelle is sweet.  Her songs are nice, cute, and peaceful.  There’s zero edge here.  So if you’re looking for that, move along.  But if you’re looking for a charming, sunny, bilingual indie folk/pop record–this is a great place to stop. Her voice is disarmingly good, making radio-ready pop from what might come off as insipid in the hands of a lesser artist. It’s a great break from the “serious” music that floats around indie blogs, and from the depressingly identical pop on the charts. Pop music is usually pretty familiar–that’s the whole point of it–but Ms. Ancelle has a unique voice, and she holds on to her identity even while crafting pop tunes that are still traditional enough to fit the genre. Check it out!

For fans of: Lisa Loeb, Edie Brickell, Hanson, Sixpence None The Richer, or even a happy Paula Cole (if there is such a thing).

Man

Ends With Always

I wouldn’t be presumptuous enough to list “the best comics of 2010″ because I haven’t read nearly enough–and because I read trades and not single issues for the most part, so I’m 6-9 months behind real comicheads.  That said, if I’m not poring over complex legal documents for my job, chances are what I’m reading has pictures and word bubbles.  My strong preference is capes and Marvel characters, but I dabble in other areas . . . This is what I think was great this year . . . And wasn’t.  After the break.

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PICTURE OF THE DAY

Posted on December 11th, 2010 by ekko

LELAND SUNDRIES-Apothecary EP

Posted on December 11th, 2010 by ekko

Lou Reed, cowboy up!  Brookyln’s Leland Sundries compose New Yorker storyteller tunes, with an Americana approach. The lyrics are full of hipster honesty, and the music is tough and true.  A very solid EP that’s cool without being slick, and is never too cool for it’s own good.

For fans of: Leonard Cohen, Chuck Prophet, Sun Volt, Afghan Whigs, etc.

Hey Self-Defeater

THE GASLIGHT ANTHEM’S BANNER YEAR

Posted on December 10th, 2010 by ekko

Last year, Gaslight Anthem released the best album of 2009.  The ’59 Sound was tremendous: As a punch in the face, a tribute to Joe Strummer, or any other barband/punk rock standard, it kicked ass.  This year, the band toured behind their extremely good (but not quite as good) follow up, American Slang, and unleashed a slew of covers from a wide variety of classic rock sources . . . I wish some of these were better quality, but you get what you get and don’t have a fit.

American Girl (Petty)
Refugee (Petty)
Stand By Me (Ben E King)
Angry Johnny and the Radio/I Was Married/Downtown Train (Tom Waits)/What Becomes of the Broken Hearted (Eddie Ruffin)
Hallelujah (Leonard Cohen)
I Do Not Hook Up (Kelly Clarkson)

I’m on Fire (Springsteen)
Backstreets (Springsteen)

State of Love and Trust (Pearl Jam)
The Weight (The Band)
It’s a Man’s, Man’s World (James Brown)

UNZIP THEM ALL HERE

PICTURE OF THE DAY

Posted on December 9th, 2010 by ekko

MOVING PICTURE OF THE DAY

Posted on December 8th, 2010 by ekko

THE TOP 5 EPs OF 2010

Posted on December 8th, 2010 by ekko

The best EPs of the year . . .  After the break.

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COMIC BOOK SALES FOR NOVEMBER 2010

Posted on December 7th, 2010 by ekko

We’re in the heavy months—Holidaze; tighter spending on self/more for others; DC and Marvel don’t even print during the last week of December . . . So how’d the pamphleteers do?  Overall, 2010 sales are down from 2009 sales (year to date), by about 4%.  Higher prices (especially on trades) have helped cushion the blow a little, but if we don’t get our sons, daughters, nieces and nephews into comics soon, the art form will either die or, at a minimum, whither.

Marvel sold about 40% of the floppy market, but DC was right on their heels at 37%.  That’s the closest they’ve ever come, largely due to Batman, Batman, Batman. Batman: The Return was #1, joined in the top ten by Batman Inc. (rank #2), the final issue of The Return of Bruce Wayne, the final Grant Morrison issue of Batman and Robin (rank #5) and the first Paul Cornell issue of the same (#10).  Round that out with two Brightest Days and one Green Lantern, and you only have space for one Marvel title: Avengers (rank #3).  Amazing.

Digging deeper in the list, the bottom 20 look more like the usual top 10 (lots of various Avengers titles, two X-books (X-Men #5 and X-Force #2), and both November issues of Amazing Spider-Man.  It looks like throwing Avengers on a title is a license to print money, with three more Avengers titles in the top 40, but Avengers Academy—arguably the most innovative of the titles—is struggling in the bottom half of the top 100—all the way down at rank #66.  (And the Chaos War Avengers one-off was way down at #88).  Which makes you wonder: Are there titles that Marvel could cull out here?  Their tactic has always been market saturation—make sure there’s no room on the shelf for anyone else—but is it really paying off?  The dilution of Deadpool has brought the character’s main title down to rank #54, and as for Deadpool Corps, the only book that it beat in the top 100 was (gasp) Green Hornet—an indie book that, by all accounts, pretty much sucks.  Maybe if they focused on one Wade book, they could make it special.  Maybe if they focused on three or four Avengers books, that would be enough.  As for DC, they certainly could stand to lose a few Batbooks (Red Robin, Gotham city Sirens, Red Hood Lost Days . . . none of these do well).

In the trade paperback arena, it’s no surprise that the latest Walking Dead volume led the pack, and the first Walking Dead volume brought up the rear at #9.  Well-deserved indie sales.  Superman: Earth One is still up there (rank #3), along with stalwarts like Morrison’s Batman and Robin Vol. 2, Marvel’s Siege paperback, Chew, and Ex Machina.  The surprises for me were Dark Horse’s Serenity: Shepherds Tale and the latest volume of Garth Ennis’ blood-and-nudity fest The Boys.  Not that they don’t deserve a spot, I just didn’t know they were so popular . . .

PICTURE OF THE DAY

Posted on December 7th, 2010 by ekko

If they cast the X-Men movie with cats, this dude’ll be Gambit.

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