Your Daddy Don’t Know

The New Pornographers covered a song by the forgotten 80’s band, Toronto, called “Your Daddy Don’t Know” for a movie called Fubar. They also did a video for the song and it cracks my shit up.

It has all of the best cheesy 80’s video elements: god awful clothes/hats, teased hair, mustaches/beards, inane back story, cheesy band studio performances, even a fat guy in a cape with white clown makeup. Here are some stills from the video:

Neko’s teased hair

Neko Case

Carl Newman looks hilarious

Check out Carl Newman's outfit and wig!

Neko doing her best Stevie Nicks

Neko Case doing her best Stevie Nicks

Creepy 80’s video guys

Creepy Guys

I must say, they did a really good job recording this song and Neko Case sings her ass off. Trust me, you’re going to love this.

The New Pornographers – Your Daddy Don’t Know (quicktime)

(via Chromewaves)

The State I’m In

This is one of those really annoying posts about why I haven’t been writing much lately. Sorry in advance.

Mucho crappiness has been going on around me as of late and it has sapped my strength to the point that I rarely feel like writing anything on this site anymore. I want this to change and will be writing more, I swear. I just wanted you to know what is going on and why pretty much the only thing that happens on themuy these days is a random post of links to other tidbits of note on this world wide web of internets.

One thing I know for sure is that these things suck: death, car break-ins, physical injury, website hackers and Atlanta Medical Center.

I sure am glad it’s a three day weekend. Here’s hoping nothing blows up. Cheers!

Bar Etiquette 101

How To Get Served A Good Drink Quickly Even When It’s Busy

This list of drink ordering Do’s and Don’ts is fucking hilarious. Here’s one of my favorite Don’ts:

Be “The Microbrew Aficionado”
Usually a pseudo-hippy who can’t tip a quarter but can’t bring himself to drink “schwag,” and who has to sample some new berry-wheat-harvest-ale that he heard about at Burning Man. “Do you have the new Vernal-Equinox Special Welcome-Fest?” “Does Anyone?” Here’s your Newcastle. Go.

We Jam Econo

The wife and I went down to the EARL last night to catch the Minutemen documentary We Jam Econo. Overall, I’d say it was a solid effort, but it didn’t blow me away. I’ll give it a 7 out of 10 on the “I just now made up a movie rating system for themuy.com” chart. And now, here are some random thoughts about the film and the band.

The film basically had 3 different devices: interviews with Mike Watt, interviews with various famous (and not so famous) people and live performances by the Minutemen. The editing job was pretty much just a grab bag of interviews and live performances sequenced into a movie. I would have wished that there was some type of narrative device that tied everything together better and gave you a sense of the historical ramifications of what the Minutemen accomplished. I kept getting the feeling that I wanted a step back so I could survey the scene instead of constantly being shuttled back and forth between interviews and live performances. This is probably more a stylistic wish on my part because as I think back about the film, there really aren’t that many unanswered questions I have about the band. I just think it might help the non-fan to get into the film a bit more.

It was great getting to look back on a time when bands like the Minutemen could hop in a van and just make up a life for themselves. As Mike Watt puts it, “our life was art.” Mike is, of course, the star of the movie and provides the most laughs. He is such an original guy. Watching him drive his van around San Pedro telling stories about D. Boon and the early years of the Minutemen is the best part about the movie. I’d love to see just that entire interview uncut.

I only recently heard Double Nickels on the Dime for the first time. It’s one of those albums I had always meant to listen to but just forgot about over time. I’ve listened to it pretty much non-stop for the last few weeks on my commute to work and it was a great coincidence that this documentary played in my town last night. I have to say that all the hype I’ve heard about this album is right on target. It’s a quirky, sprawling document of two lifelong friends’ musical ambitions captured in double album form. I think D. Boon already had his band’s documentary in mind when he wrote History Lesson (Part II):

our band could be your life
real names be proof
me and mike watt
we played for years
punk rock changed our lives
we learned punk rock in hollywood
drove up from pedro
we were fucking corndawgs
we’d go drink and pogo
“mr narrator!”
this is bob dylan to me
my story could be his songs
i’m his soldier child
our band is scientist rock
but i was e bloom
then richard hell
joe strummer
and john doe
me and mike watt
playing guitar

It’s crazy that 25 years after the fact, about 100 people went down to a rock club on a Monday night in Atlanta, Georgia to watch a film about 3 guys from San Pedro, California. What a cool legacy.