On one hand, 2015 doesn't seem that long ago and on another, it feels like FOREVER ago. So much crazy shit has happened in the last decade. This week on Stuck In Thee Garage, I played songs from 2015 in hour 2, after first paying tribute to lost icons Brian Wilson and Sly Stone and new hotness from Turnstile, Illuminati Hotties and Frankie and the Witch Fingers in hour 1. It'll hack your mainframe or some shit.
Domo arigoto, Mr. Roboto:
Hour 1
Artist - Song/Album
The Beach Boys - Heroes and Villains/The Smile Sessions
Sly & the Family Stone - Luv N' Haight/There's a Riot Going On
Sly & the Family Stone - Family Affair/There's a Riot Going On
Turnstile - I Care/Never Enough
Illuminati Hotties - Wreck My Life (feat. PUP)/Nickel on the Fountain Floor EP
Frankie and the Witch Fingers - Fucksake/Trash Classic
Pulp - Grown Ups/More
Stereolab - If You Remember I Forgot How to Dream Pt. 1/Instant Holograms on Metal Film
Savak - Casual Cruelty/SQUAWK!
Civic - Trick Pony/Chrome Dipped
TVOD - Alcohol/Party Time
The Tubs - One More Day/Cotton Crown
Ty Segall - Another California Song/Possession
Thalia Zedek Band - Circus/The Boat Outside Your Window
The Convenience - 2022/Like Cartoon Vampires
Hour 2: 2015
METZ - Spit You Out/II
Pile - #2 Hit Single/You're Better Than This
Faith No More - Sunny Side Up/Sol Invictus
Courtney Barnett - Elevator Operator/Sometimes I Sit and Think, Sometimes I Just Sit
Colleen Green - TV/I Want to Grow Up
Speedy Ortiz - Raising the Skate/Foil Deer
Palehound - Molly/Dry Food
Jeff Rosenstock - Nausea/We Cool?
Titus Andronicus - Dimed Out/The Most Lamentable Tragedy
Mikal Cronin - Made My Mind Up/MCIII
Sleater-Kinney - Bury Our Friends/No Cities to Love
Sometimes it's good not to have a plan. Just wing it. Get behind the wheel and drive. This week on Stuck In Thee Garage, I played new indie rock from the likes of Civic, The Tubs, Tchotchke and King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard in hour 1 and a bunch of cool stuff I've been digging lately in hour 2. But you have nothing to worry about. I'm a professional.
Step on it:
Hour 1
Artist - Song/Album
Civic - The Fool/Chrome Dipped
The Tubs - Chain Reaction/Cotton Crown
Savak - Talk to Some People/SQUAWK!
Tchotchke - Did You Hear?/Single
Ty Segall - Shoplifter/Possession
King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard - Deadstick/Phantom Island
Unsung is a feature in which I take a look at a pop culture phenomenon (be it music, TV, literary, whatever) that has been forgotten or underappreciated. In this installment, I look at the cultural cachet of the band t-shirt.
The t-shirt has been a staple of North American fashion for as long as I can remember. Which is a pretty long time, because I'm old. Growing up in the '70s and '80s, t-shirts were a vital part of my wardrobe and they remain that way, 50+ years later. But a particularly prized subset of my vast collection of t-shirts is the band shirt.
T-shirts have apparently been around since the late '30s, when they were primarily white cotton shirts, they really became popular after the release of 1951's A Streetcar Named Desire, when Marlon Brando wore one. A few years later, Elvis Presley began selling Elvis-branded merch, including t-shirts. When Beatlemania hit the U.S. in 1964, concert t-shirts became a huge seller. In the early '70s, legendary concert promoter Bill Graham formed the first music merchandising company and started selling concert shirts that featured the band's logo on the front and their current touring schedule on the back.
Band became known by their iconic logos: the Rolling Stones with the tongue, Led Zeppelin, the Grateful Dead, AC/DC, Van Halen, Pink Floyd with a number of designs and on and on. While band shirts were ideally purchased at a concert, you could also buy them in stores. My first rock band shirt was a Led Zeppelin one purchased in 1980; I bought it at the local mall. Even though the band was broken up by then, they were my favorite and I was excited to get a shirt. It was a prized item; I didn't wear it too often because I didn't want the decal to fade.
I was still too young to go to concerts at that point, but a few years later, I remember getting an Iron Maiden jersey shirt at a store when I was up in Toronto for a visit after we had moved to the U.S. Then in July 1984, I went to my first concert, which was a festival show at the Kingston, NH, Fairgrounds with Cheap Trick, Ratt, Twisted Sister and Lita Ford. I loved Cheap Trick, but Ratt was on the rise at that time and I picked up a "Ratt 'n Roll" jersey from that show. Concert shirts were still pretty inexpensive at that time, so I would get them at most shows I attended: Rush, Dio, Peter Gabriel, U2, Genesis. Occasionally, I would get a cheap bootleg shirt in the parking lot; I picked up a $5 Van Halen shirt in the lot after a show at the Portland Civic Center in 1986 (Van Hagar era). I remember buying a Black Sabbath Born Again shirt featuring a devil baby, but I don't think I ever wore it because it would have freaked my religious mom out.
As I got into more indie and alternative bands in the '90s, I would see more shows at clubs and the shirts I purchased at those remain some of my prized possessions. I still have shirts purchased at Pavement, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Sloan, the Tragically Hip and the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion shows in the early '90s. Some shirts have been tossed because of wear and tear, but I have most of them still. One time I wore a Bad Religion shirt to work, only to have an older co-worker (probably in her late 50s or early 60s at the time) ask me which religion was the bad one. I explained it was a band, but I should have told her, "All of them."
As with everything else, shirt prices have gone up over the years, so I don't buy as many shirts. If a shirt costs more than $25, I probably won't buy it. But as other revenue sources for artists dry up, I might get one to support a band. I've also picked up or been gifted shirts in recent years of bands I love but have never seen: the Clash, Joy Division, Zep, Black Sabbath, Bad Brains.
I've been working from home since the COVID pandemic hit in March 2020, so most days I'm wearing a t-shirt and sweatpants or shorts (if I have to be on camera, I might wear a button-down shirt or a sweater). I go to the gym on most days and I've noticed a lot of people work out in band shirts, which I would never do; I wouldn't want to get them all sweaty.
Another trend that's emerged in the last few years is the ubiquity of the Nirvana shirt. I see a lot of young people (and some older ones) wearing shirts and hoodies featuring the Nirvana logo and smiley face with x'd out eyes, including the pre-teen daughter of one of our neighbors. I'm willing to bet most of these folks have no idea who the band is, and indeed, a little research reveals that Nirvana merch has become part of the uniform, another logo shirt like UnderArmour, Nike or Vineyard Vines. Even as rock music has declined in popularity, rock shirts are booming. You can find them in stores like Target, Old Navy or Wal-mart, as well as specialty shops like Newbury Comics.
It may have started with celebrities, as most trends do. A decade ago, Justin Bieber wore a Nirvana shirt to the American Music Awards. And even before that, you could find pop stars like Miley Cyrus or celebs like Kim Kardashian wearing Iron Maiden and other rock shirts ironically. Even if the bands aren't as cool anymore, wearing their merch is. Indeed, vintage rock shirts sell for thousands online.
Of course, this will get rock purists all worked up when they see a 12-year-old girl wearing a Nirvana shirt. "Name three songs!" they will bleat self-righteously. I find it interesting more than anything. I bought my younger daughter a Nirvana shirt a few years ago, but she actually is into the band, along with many others that I like. But for those kids who are clueless about the name on their shirt, what are you going to do? There are many more important things to get outraged about these days. A cool shirt is a cool shirt, man.
This week on Stuck In Thee Garage, I'm seeing double with songs about twins in hour 2, in addition to new hotness from the Lemonheads, Pile, the Thalia Zedek Band and Pulp in hour 1. Just like on Breaking Bad, be patient and the job will come to you.
Sharpen your axe:
Hour 1
Artist - Song/Album
The Lemonheads - Deep End/Single
Pile - Born at Night/Sunshine and Balance Beams
Thalia Zedek Band - Disarm/The Boat Outside Your Window
Stereolab - Vermona F Transistor/Instant Holograms on Metal Film
Pulp - Got to Have Love/More
Preoccupations - Panic/Ill at Ease
(T-T_b - Julian/Beautiful Extension Cord
Car Seat Headrest - The Catastrophe (Good Luck with That, Man)/The Scholars
TVOD - Mud/Party Time
Pretty Rude - The Caller/Ripe
Psychedelic Porn Crumpets - Weird World Awoke/Carpe Diem, Moonman
Momma - Last Kiss/Welcome to My Blue Sky
The Convenience - Never Became a Dancer/Like Cartoon Vampires
Viagra Boys - Dirty Boyz/Viagr Aboys
Hour 2: Twins
The Pains of Being Pure at Heart - Twins/Perfect Right Now: A Slumberland Collection 2008-2010
The Cure - Siamese Twins/Pornography
Smashing Pumpkins - Geek USA/Siamese Dream
Pinecones - Apocalypse Twin/Sings for You Now
Deerhoof - Twin Killers/The Runners Four
Melkbelly - Twin Lookin Motherfucker/Nothing Valley
Metric - Clone/Synthetica
Faye Webster - Vanishing Twin/Good Music to Avert the Collapse of American Democracy, Vol. 2
Parliament - Children of Production (live)/Tear the Roof Off 1974-1980
The Futureheads - Jekyll/POWERS
Mclusky - Day of Deadringers/Mclusky Do Dallas
Fu Manchu - Clone of the Universe/Clone of the Universe
Elvis Costello - My Science Fiction Twin/Brutal Youth
Wyatt Blair - Alter Ego/Point of No Return
Bread Pilot - Twin Lakes/New to You
Marnie Stern - Clone Cycle/This is It and I Am It and You Are It and So Is That and He Is It and She Is It and It Is It and That Is That
Unsung is a feature in which I take a look at a pop culture phenomenon (be it music, TV, literary, whatever) that has been forgotten or underappreciated. In this installment, I look at the compact disc and its rollercoaster ride from dominant music format to obsolescence.
A few weeks ago, I wrote in this space about the audio cassette and its interesting journey over the decades. Today I'm doing the same with the compact disc, which emerged in the early '80s and by the end of that decade was the dominant music format before MP3s came along.
Vinyl and cassettes were the big formats throughout the '60s and '70s, but in 1970, American inventor James T. Russell was granted a patent for the first system to record digital media on a photosensitive plate. Sony and Philips both developed prototypes in the late '70s for a disc that is read using a laser. The LaserDisc was introduced in 1978 by Philips, Pioneer and movie studio MCA under the amazing name DiscoVision for movies and other video presentations like concert recordings; somehow, DiscoVision didn't stick as a name but LaserDisc did. The discs themselves were the size of 12-inch vinyl records and offered superior video quality, but the VHS, which was introduced two years earlier, was the video format that caught on with consumers. It was less expensive and the videocassette recorder (VCR) made it easy to record TV programs.
Meanwhile, Sony and Phillips designed a new digital audio disc using the LaserDisc technology. The compact disc was introduced in 1982 and was marketed as the height of audio for consumers who wanted a better listening experience than the record or cassette could offer. It was also much smaller than a record and initially touted as resistant to scratches or breaking, although both of those were false claims
It took a few years to catch on. When I got to college in the fall of 1985, most of us were still listening to records and/or cassettes. My RA still had an 8-track player in his room. But my friend Rob was the first person I knew to have a CD player. And he remained the only one all the way through college.
I was hesitant to start buying another format that required another player, so I stuck with buying new vinyl and taping them onto cassettes for the time being.
But CDs were definitely making headway. I remember a lot of noise in 1987 when the Beatles began reissuing their albums on CD with remastered audio. People started to replace albums they already owned with CDs. When I graduated from college in 1989, my dad gave me my first CD player as well as some huge-ass speakers to go with them. The first CDs I bought were appropriately random: Joe Jackson's I'm the Man, The Cult's Sonic Temple and the soundtrack to the Who's The Kids Are Alright.
I was still buying vinyl, but I could see that CDs were starting to take over. I had been using my dad's old turntable to that point, but I decided to get a new one while they were still around and affordable.
CDs were still more expensive than the other formats at that point, so I would look for sales. I had started working in Peabody, Mass., after graduation and there was a little video store that also sold CDs for $8 a pop, so I would pick up stuff there. And the now-defunct department store Lechmere would also have good deals. In 1990, I discovered stores like Rockit Records in Saugus and the Record Exchange in Salem that would sell used CDs for cheaper prices; they were also good places to find hard-to-find promo discs and imports that radio DJs would unload.
Eventually, I just started buying only CDs. Although the cars I drove still only had cassette decks, so I would continue my habit of taping albums for use in the car and in a Walkman. Sony developed a portable CD player called the Discman in 1984, although it didn't really catch on in the U.S. until the '90s; with a cassette converter, you could use the Discman in the car. Another development was the advent of the CD burner, which allowed you to duplicate CDs or make mixes using blank CD-Rs.
The CD had a stronghold on music media sales throughout the '90s until the emergence of MP3 file sharing in 1999, when Napster and other peer-to-peer service sprung up on the internet and allowed music fans to share (or steal, depending on your point of view) vast amounts of music from like-minded folks who had figured out how to rip the songs from their CDs into MP3 files. Sure, the audio quality was often shitty (or at least not as good as CDs) and the files were often mislabeled, but it introduced an entire generation (since a lot of Napster users were often college campuses, where they could take advantage of high-speed internet to enable faster downloading) to the joys of not paying for music. The record labels sued and eventually got Napster and its ilk shut down, but by the time this happened, the digital genie was out of the bottle. Sales of recorded music (mostly CDs) dropped by 50% from 1999 to 2009. Apple introduced the iTunes store and the iPod in the early '00s as a way to get music fans enthused about legal MP3s, but that didn't help CD sales.
But the real death knell for the CD came via audio streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music, which allowed users to access to a huge catalog of music using their phone wherever and whenever they wanted, thanks to the prevalence of high-speed internet and Wifi. Vinyl has made a comeback with hipsters and fans of huge artists like Taylor Swift and Adele, who offer special vinyl editions of their albums with bonus tracks. You can still find CDs at music stores, but the selection is much smaller than it used to be.
CD players are also pretty scarce. When I was putting together an old-school component stereo system for my daughter Lily a few years ago, the CD player I bought her was a $30 DVD player that also plays CDs (I had to ask a clerk at Best Buy to find me one; it was located in a tiny corner of the store and barely noticeable). And the CD player I use is an old 5-disc DVD player that we used to have in our living room.
One thing that has diminished since CDs declined in popularity was the album. The CD was the last dominant album format; indeed, there are certain albums that only make sense on CD (see Steven Hyden's great post on this topic). There are more albums released than ever thanks to the ease of the internet, but many music fans rarely listen to albums in their entirety now. Streaming allows them to pick and choose their favorite songs and skip or ignore the ones they don't like or care about. It's so easy to make playlists that you can only hear the songs you want to hear at any given time.
As I mentioned in the cassette post, I primarily listen to music on MP3 because I use them to put together my weekly radio show. I'll still occasionally buy vinyl, but rarely anything new since those tend to be overpriced. It's the same with CDs. I'll usually only get them if I'm in a record store with a good used CD section and I find something I don't have for under $10. I've also revisited something I was doing several years, which is going to my local library to borrow CDs I don't have. You can also find cheap CDs on Amazon.
When we have long road trips in the car, I'll often break out a selection of CDs for the ride. I still have just about all the CDs I've purchased over the years, so it can be fun to revisit things I haven't listened to in a long time. The CD wasn't perfect, but it has gotten a bum rap over the years. There's also something to having physical media that won't disappear at the whim of a record company or studio conglomerate.
There isn't enough time in the day to get everything done. And sometimes that leads to little details getting missed. Case in point: When I was putting this week's Stuck In Thee Garage episode together, I thought I had an extra 1:30 left at the end and added another song. But as I was going through the voiceovers, I realized I left one out and had to go back and redo everything. In my haste to get the episode done, I forgot to remove the song I'd added, which is why there's this gloriously weird mashup of Mudhoney's "Check Out Time" and Beastie Boys' "Time for Livin'" at the very end of the show (in which I played songs about time in hour 2). That's what happens when the Tick Tock Man is getting on your case.
Part 4 of my conversation with guest Phil Stacey as we crown the winner of a March Madness-style tournament featuring our favorite rock artists. Listen to the episode below or download directly (right click and "save as").
Show notes:
Round 3 begins
The Smiths vs. Led Zeppelin
James Brown vs. Rush
Rolling Stones vs. The Cure
The Clash vs. The Police
U2 vs. The Replacements
The Who vs. Talking Heads
Tom Petty vs. Neil Young
The Beatles vs. David Bowie
Round 4
The Final Four
The Championship
Completely Conspicuous is available through Apple Podcasts. Subscribe and write a review!
The opening and closing theme of Completely Conspicuous is "Theme to Big F'in Pants" by Jay Breitling. Voiceover work is courtesy of James Gralian.
A wise man once said, "Tha streetz is a mutha." That dude wasn't telling lies. Things are getting really crazy out there. This week on Stuck In Thee Garage, I played songs about streets in hour 2, as well as new music from Lawn, Car Seat Headrest, Daniel Romano and The Convenience in hour 1. It'll hit you hard like an old friend in a crosswalk.
This playlist is street legal:
Hour 1
Artist - Song/Album
Lawn - Sports Gun/Single
Car Seat Headrest - True/False Lover /The Scholars
Shark? - King of the Chaff/A Simple Life
Viagra Boys - You N33d Me/Viagr Aboys
Mclusky - Cops and Coppers/The World is Still Here and So Are We
PUP - Needed to Hear It/Who Will Look After the Dogs?
Daniel Romano - Sweet Dew of the Kingdom/Even If It's Obscure
The Convenience - I Got Exactly What I Wanted/Like Cartoon Vampires
Momma - Rodeo/Welcome to My Blue Sky
Lambrini Girls - Special Different/Who Let the Dogs Out
Scowl - Cellophane/Are We All Angels
Jeanines - On and On/How Long Can It Last
Daily Worker - Delmar Overload/Field Holler
Preoccupations - Sken/Ill at Ease
Model/Actriz - Audience/Pirouette
Friend of a Friend - Moonlight/Desire!
Lunchbox - Letter from Overend/Evolver (2025 Vinyl Edition)
Tunde Adebimpe - God Knows/Thee Black Boltz
Hour 2: Streetz
METZ - Entwined (Street Light Buzz)/Up On Gravity Hill
Superchunk - Rainy Streets/Here's to Shutting Up
Beeef - Street Signs/Somebody's Favorite
Bloodshot Bill and King Khan - Tandoori Street/Tandoori Knights
Kristin Hersh - Constance Street/Clear Pond Road
The Cure - Fascination Street/Disintegration
Girls Against Boys - Park Avenue/Freak*On*Ica
PUP - Cul-De-Sac/PUP
Lou Reed - Dirty Blvd./New York
Ween - Joppa Road/Chocolate & Cheese
Pavement - Shady Lane/Brighten the Corners
Ted Leo - Lonsdale Road/The Hanged Man
Courtney Barnett - Rae Street/Things Take Time, Take Time
The Pursuit of Happiness - The Downward Road (Revisited)/The Downward Road
Part 3 of my conversation with guest Phil Stacey as we wrap up the second round of a March Madness-style tournament featuring our favorite rock artists. Listen to the episode below or download directly (right click and "save as").
Show notes:
Round 2 forced some difficult choices
The Smiths vs. Spoon
Led Zeppelin vs. Prince
James Brown vs. Queens of the Stone Age
Rush vs. Allman Brothers Band
Rolling Stones vs. Beastie Boys
The Cure vs. The Afghan Whigs
The Tragically Hip vs. The Clash
The Police vs. Mark Lanegan
Stevie Wonder vs. U2
Sonic Youth vs. The Replacements
The Who vs. Beck
Talking Heads vs. Dinosaur Jr.
Tom Petty vs. Pixies
Neil Young vs. Steely Dan
Van Halen vs. Beatles
Pearl Jam vs. David Bowie
Next: The final two rounds
Completely Conspicuous is available through Apple Podcasts. Subscribe and write a review!
The opening and closing theme of Completely Conspicuous is "Theme to Big F'in Pants" by Jay Breitling. Voiceover work is courtesy of James Gralian.
Unsung is a feature in which I take a look at a pop culture phenomenon (be it music, TV, literary, whatever) that has been forgotten or underappreciated. In this installment, I look at the rise of the audio cassette and its impact on the music industry.
There have been many audio formats that consumers have used to enjoy music over the years. Digital audio streaming is currently the most popular and convenient format, but vinyl records, 8-track tapes, compact discs and digital audio files like MP3s and WAVs have all had their moments. I mainly use MP3s and streaming these days, but I still have a ton of records, CDs and cassettes that I've acquired since the late '70s. They all hold sentimental value for me, but I have a lot of love for the cassette, which played a huge role in my growth as a music fan.
The Compact Cassette, as it was initially called, was invented the Dutch company Philips and first released in August 1963. The cassettes contain two miniature spools, between which magnetically coated tape is passed and wound; they're enclosed in a small case. The audio cassette as we know it is essentially a miniaturized version of the reel-to-reel audio tape first developed in the 1920s. Engineers improved the audio fidelity in the 1940s and reel-to-reel recorders were used by major recording studios; less expensive recorders were sold for use in homes and schools, as well as for business dictation. My dad actually bought one in the late '60s and would record some audio of us kids goofing. I still have it and one of these days I'll see if it still works.
Anyway, once the compact cassette was released, it became popular with consumers for its portability and ease of use. I highly recommend the book High Bias: The Distorted History of the Cassette Tape by Marc Masters for an interesting look at how cassettes were developed and how they became popular and in some small pockets, still remain so.
As for me, I was too young to experience the popularity of the 8-track tape, which around from the mid-1960s to the 1980s. It was bulkier than the compact cassette and was mainly used in cars; it could play continuously in an endless loop and did not have to be ejected or flipped to play the full tape, but you couldn't rewind it.
I became aware of cassettes through my dad, who would sometimes play them on a small Panasonic mini-boom box. When disco was getting popular in the late '70s, I remember him bringing home a few mix tapes of disco hits that a work buddy of his had made. Around 1979, I got a clock radio that had a built-in cassette deck, so I would buy cheap 3-packs of blank tapes and make crappy mix tapes of songs I liked off the radio. The audio quality was shit, but I loved those old tapes, especially when we moved a few years later to a city in Washington state that was lacking in quality radio stations. I used to listen to those old tapes all the time.
It was 1982 when I bought my first Sony Walkman, which had been introduced a few years earlier and was revolutionizing the personal audio space. Now people could listen to their music anywhere. I wasn't rollerblading with it or anything like in the commercials, but I definitely brought it to school to drown out everybody else. (Here's a post I did a while back about the different audio devices I'd purchased over the years.)
I didn't typically buy pre-recorded cassettes; I preferred to buy music on vinyl and later CD and then record it on cassette to listen to in a Walkman or the car. I also enjoyed making mix tapes for personal use (as well to give to friends).
Not everybody was thrilled about the advent of cassette recorders. In 1981, the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) launched a campaign called Home Taping is Killing Music, which argued that the rise of home taping would eat into record sales. The logo had a Jolly Roger pirate flag in the shape of a cassette with crossbones and the words "And It's Illegal." It turned out to be for naught, as it was parodied by many artists and indeed, record sales continued to rise.
Meanwhile, taping or bootlegging of concerts was more of a trend than taping off the radio or from friends' collections. Bands like the Grateful Dead would create dedicated areas for tapers and it was common to find classified ads for bootleg concert tapes in music magazines; I contacted and received a list of available tapes from a bootlegger who had put an ad in Circus magazine, but I never actually ordered anything from it. A bootlegger used to set up in the student union building at UNH selling cassettes when I was a student there; I bought a version of Prince's then-unreleased Black Album.
If anything, the cassette increased interest in music instead of the BPI's alarmist claims. Similar concerns were raised in the early 1980s by the Motion Picture Association of America about the advent of the videocassette recorder and in the early 2000s by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) about CD burning.
Of course, the audio format that really did major damage to the music industry was the MP3. As Napster and then other peer-to-peer file sharing networks emerged in the late '90s/early '00s, CD sales took a nosedive and sales of recorded music dropped by 50% from 1999 to 2009. Even though the RIAA and the major labels led the charge against Napster, forcing it to shut down in 2001, the damage had been done and the genie was out of the proverbial bottle. Apple launched the iTunes store in 2003 as a way to sell music files and other services followed suit, but the sale of recorded music never returned to previous levels.
As high-speed internet and WiFi became commonplace, Spotify and other streaming audio services made it affordable for users to have access to a huge catalog of music via their cellphones. And that's where things stand today. You can still buy CDs and records of new albums (as well as some cassettes), but it's more of a hipster trend than anything else. I still use MP3s because I put together my radio show with them and I still like to own music, but I think I'm in the minority; I refuse to pay for Spotify but my daughters do and listen to it constantly. I buy vinyl on occasion, but mostly older used stuff. I still love going to a record store and combing through the stacks for cool albums.
As for cassettes, I still have pretty much all the tapes I made in the '80s and '90s, but right now I have nothing to play them on. I bought a used tape deck from someone off Craigslist about 15 years ago but it crapped out after a few years. Plus my old Walkman that I bought around the turn of the millennium doesn't work anymore, either. I want to buy a new deck but they're expensive, so I'm keeping an eye out for a good deal. Also, I was driving an old 1996 Explorer that had a tape deck in it, but that died about seven years ago, so no more tapes in the car.
Those were my favorite times with cassettes, driving around listening to a kick-ass mix I made. I have great memories of bombing around the North Shore in the early '90s, driving to interview someone for an article or going to a party, cranking the tuneage. Not quite like Wayne, Garth and pals, but pretty close. Long live the cassette!
Much is made about the insanity of the world right now, and with good reason. It's good to remember that things have always been crazy, although it's ratcheted up now. It was pretty nuts in the year 2000: post-Y2K, pre-9/11, Napster was blowing up and then blown up. This week on Stuck In Thee Garage, I played songs from the year 2000 in hour 2 (after playing new hotness from Model/Actriz, Blondshell and Melvins in hour 1). In 2000, the biggest thing these guys were worrying about was the location of their car.
Dude, here's my playlist:
Hour 1
Artist - Song/Album
Model/Actriz - Vespers/Pirouette
PUP - No Hope/Who Will Look After the Dogs?
Mclusky - People Person/The World is Still Here and So Are We
Viagra Boys - Uno II/Viagr Aboys
Blondshell - T&A/If You Asked for a Picture
Preoccupations - Ill at Ease/Ill at Ease
Friend of a Friend - Beautiful Ppl/Desire!
Ekko Astral - Pomegranate Tree/Pink Balloons: Popped EP
Lunchbox - Gravity/Evolver (2025 Vinyl Edition)
Melvins - King of Rome/Thunderball
Bob Mould - Breathing Room/Here We Go Crazy
Crime Oblivion - And Again/Chime Oblivion
Rude Television - Emphasis/I Want to Believe
Tunde Adebimpe - Pinstack/Thee Black Boltz
Dean Wareham - New World Julie/That's the Price of Loving Me
Mekons - Surrender/Horror
Cameron Keiber - Never Let Me Go/Nurser
Hour 2: 2000
Outkast - B.O.B./Stankonia
The Hives - Main Offender/Veni Vidi Vicious
Rollins Band - Get Some Go Again/Get Some Go Again
PJ Harvey - Kamikaze/Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea
Sleater-Kinney - You're No Rock N' Roll Fun/All Hands on the Bad One
Pedro the Lion - A Mind of Her Own/Winners Never Quit
At the Drive-In - Rolodex Propaganda/Relationship of Command
Hot Snakes - Salton City/Automatic Midnight
Queens of the Stone Age - Leg of Lamb/Rated R
The New Pornographers - Execution Day/Mass Romantic
The Tragically Hip - The Bastard/Music@Work
The Twilight Singers - King Only/Twilight as Played by the Twilight Singers
Radiohead - Everything in Its Right Place/Kid A
Modest Mouse - Tiny Cities Made of Ashes/The Moon and Antarctica
Elliott Smith - Son of Sam/Figure 8
Yo La Tengo - Cherry Chapstick/And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out