According to bandleader Jacob Ewald, ‘Summer Windows’ “was the first song in the batch that became Crying, Laughing, Waving, Smiling. I was working at the studio all night on something bad. Eventually I gave up and sat on the couch and this song fell in my lap. You can tell when something was written in 10 minutes – you’re in and out before you have time to intellectualize anything. No rehearsal.”
He continued: “I love [bassist Ian Farmer] Ian’s walking bass line on this one. It somehow reminds me of him as a person, as a friend. This song is a favorite of mine, it feels the way I feel most of the time.”
Crying, Laughing, Waving, Smiling is due for release September 22 on Lame-O Records.
MJ Lenderman has released a new single, ‘Knockin’. It follows ‘Rudolph’, the singer-songwriter and Wednesday guitarist’s debut single for ANTI-, and first appeared on a self-recorded EP he put out in 2021. Check it out below.
“I was spending a lot of time watching John Daly videos and came across a rendition he does of Dylan’s ‘Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door’,” Lenderman explained in a press release. “Daly’s version includes an extra verse about golfing. My ‘Knockin’ became a staple of the MJ Lenderman & The Wind live set and it felt like a good idea to re-record it professionally.”
Lenderman’s latest record, Boat Songs, came out last year.
Fantasia has done an awful lot to showcase the best of madcap Japanese genre filmmaking over the last few years. In 2018, it hosted the Canadian premiere of the unlikely breakout hit One Cut of the Dead (2017), Shinichiro Ueda’s ostensibly one-take horror-comedy about a film crew attempting to make a zombie movie. A few years later, it boasted the North American premiere of Junta Yamaguchi’s cartoonish time-loop picture Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes (2021), which received a five-star review here at Our Culture. Reiki Tsuno’s feature debut Mad Cats is the latest film in this lineage, a delightfully off-kilter movie that injects a healthy dose of absurdist Japanese comedy into a high-octane action plot – doing for the action-thriller what One Cut of the Dead and Beyond theInfinite Two Minutes did for horror and science fiction respectively. Our Culture reviews the film here as part of its selection form the 2023 Fantasia International Film Festival.
Mad Cats follows Taka Kurosawa (Shô Mineo), who we meet at a particularly low period in his life; he is living in a filthy trailer with no drive or purpose. That is, at least, until his long-suffering landlady delivers a mysterious cassette tape in a brown envelope. The voice on the recording informs him that his brother Mura (So Yamanaka), an archeologist and cat expert, has been kidnapped – and it is up to Taka to rescue him and obtain a mysterious wooden box from the same isolated mansion in which he is being held captive. As Taka sets out to complete this mission, he becomes embroiled in a conspiracy involving forbidden catnip and highly evolved feline creatures hellbent on world domination, and has only two allies to rely on in his quest to bring them down – listless drifter Takezo (Yûya Matsuura) and the enigmatic Ayane (credited only as Ayane).
It goes without saying that Mad Cats has a hilariously weird plot, then, and one that draws on Japan’s love of all things feline – which has long been evident in its cinema, from Kuroneko (1968) to Studio Ghibli. But despite its eccentric narrative, there are more than a few familiar elements to be found here as the film borrows from and cleverly satirises the tropes of global action cinema for laughs. The film apes the crash-cut montage editing used extensively in Edgar Wright’s Three Colours Cornetto trilogy; the infamous Michael Bay ‘hero shot’; and the grainy 16mm aesthetics associated with 1970s grindhouse thrillers, which are sparingly deployed to jarringly comedic effect only in scenes that see Taka, Tazeko and Ayane take to the road together (at one point in a car bearing the license plate “HISSATU” in a great visual gag).
And, of course, Mad Cats wouldn’t be an action film without some thrilling action sequences, as Taka and his newfound friends come up against a litany of heavily armed cat-people, including the Insane Nunchaku (Ruice Mori) and the shotgun-wielding Remington Sisters (Ayaka Takezaki and Shen Tanaka). The visual effects used to realise gunfire and blood splatter throughout the film are a little bit disappointing, but forgivable given the film’s budget level – and it more than makes up for them with some excellently choreographed fight scenes, particularly as the film reaches its conclusion and Ayane is forced to engage in melee battle with the cat monsters.
Not that Taka gets involved with much of the action; he is, in fact, hilariously ineffectual throughout the entire movie. Unwaveringly cowardly and mildly allergic to cats, he spends much of the film screaming, hiding, running away and/or sneezing. He is reminiscent of the frankly useless “action heroes” at the centre of films like Big Trouble in Little China (1986) and Hell Comes to Frogtown (1988), both of whom give way to far more capable women (in this case Ayane, without whom both Taka and Tazeko would be cat food). His fairly lame excuse for letting Ayane do the fighting is that the cat-people are all female, and “men shouldn’t go around hitting women.” But a benefit to his characterisation as a coward is that Mad Cats ends up being a film in which women hold the most powerful roles – as both heroes and villains – without ever feeling exploitative.
And even if they are basically useless in the action stakes, Taka and Tazeko play an important role at the comedic heart of the movie; Mineo provides some excellent physical comedy as Taka (he trips on the stairs mere moments after infiltrating the mansion where he has been told he will find his brother), while Matsuura elicits many of the film’s biggest laughs as Tazeko (especially when the film effectively stops for three minutes to let him to tell a lengthy and groan-worthy joke about a centipede). One of the funniest things about Tazeko’s character is that he has absolutely no reason to have gotten caught up in the film’s feline conspiracy in the first place (or the effort to stop it); he just has nothing better to do.
Ultimately, Mad Cats doesn’t quite live up to either One Cut of the Dead or Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes – two films that ooze innovation and ingenuity through their unusual narrative structures and the mind-boggling feats of narrative continuity needed to realise them – but it is nevertheless a very worthy entry in a recent cycle of eccentric Japanese genre mash-ups, which cleverly borrows and deconstructs the tropes of the action genre. If you’ve ever wondered if your cat is planning to take over the world (or if they’d be any good with a pair of nunchucks), this one’s for you.
Hot Chip have enlisted Yunè Pinku for their lastest single, ‘Fire of Mercy’. Check it out below.
“’Fire of Mercy’ relates to the central concept of William Blake’s ‘Songs of Experience’ – it bemoans the corruption that inevitably comes from adulthood and longs for a return to the purity of childhood,” the band’s Joe Goddard said in a statement.
“Massive honour to work with Hot Chip as they’re huge legends within the electronic world,” Yunè Pinku added. “When they played me ‘Fire of Mercy’ and asked me to jump on the track, I was thrilled to work with them.”
Hot Chip released their most recent album, Freakout/Release, last year.
Courtney Barnett has shared a cover of Chastity Belt’s ‘Different Now’, a single from the band’s 2017 album I Used to Spend So Much Time Alone. Recorded with Warpaint’s Stella Mozgawa, the track will appear on a split 7″ along with Kurt Vile’s rendition of Chastity Belt’s ‘This Time of Night’ – out October 27 via Suicide Squeeze. Listen below.
“This song is so special to me,” Barnett said in a statement. “I remember when the album came out and I listened to ‘Different Now’ over and over, I thought they were singing directly to me. It’s a perfect piece of songwriting, I showed it to Kurt [Vile] and he would always sing it to me on tour. I love Chastity Belt. I’m pretty sure we met in 2014 at a record store in Seattle. Then we toured together in 2015, and we’ve been friends ever since.”
“I originally played it as a little folk acoustic version, then I asked Stella [Mozgawa] to program some drums and it turned into something a lot more fun,” Barnett added. “We tracked straight to the Tascam 388 and it was a real joy to make.”
A 10th anniversary reissue of Chastity Belt’s debut LP, No Regrets, comes out this Friday. Their most recent album arrived in 2019.
Throughout the week, we update our Best New Songs playlist with the new releases that caught our attention the most, be it a single leading up to the release of an album or a newly unveiled deep cut. And each Monday, we round up the best new songs released over the past week (the eligibility period begins on Monday and ends Sunday night) in this best new music segment.
On this week’s list, we have Armand Hammer’s noisy, thrilling ‘Trauma Mic’, the Pink Siifu-assisted lead single off their upcoming album; Drop Nineteens’ first new single in 30 years, the dreamy and poignant ‘Scapa Flow’; ‘And Then He Wrapped His Wings Around Me’, the magnificent lead single from Mary Lattimore’s new LP, which features vocal contributions from Meg Baird and accordion from Walt McClements; and ‘tapeworm’, a hauntingly abrasive preview of Spirit of the Beehive’s upcoming EP.
Pinkshift have announced a new EP, suraksha, with the new single ‘home’. Featuring the previously released track ‘to me’, the EP arrives October 13 via Hopeless Records. Check out ‘Home’ below.
surakṣā (or सुरक्षा) is a Hindi word borrowed from Sanskrit that means “protection” or “security.” “I grew up listening to Bollywood and Indian classical music would round out the songs perfectly,” singer Ashrita Kumar explained in a statement. “Going into the studio, the only thing on my mind was my family, and making these songs was unique because in my head I was making it for them.”
Pinkshift’s debut album, Love Me Forever, came out last year.
John Gosling, former keyboardist with the Kinks from 1970 through 1978, has died at the age of 75. The band confirmed the news on their social media pages, writing: “We are deeply saddened by the news of the passing of John Gosling. We are sending our condolences to John’s wife and family.”
“Condolences to his wife Theresa and family. Rest in peace dearest John,” the Kinks frontman Ray Davies said in the statement. Guitarist Dave Davies wrote: “I’m dismayed deeply upset by John Gosling’s passing. He has been a friend and important contributor to the Kinks music during his time with us. Deepest sympathies to his wife and family. I will hold deep affection and love for him in my heart always. Great musician and a great man.”
Former drummer Mick Avory added: “Today we lost a dear friend and colleague, he was a great musician and had a fantastic sense of humour, which made him popular member of the band, he leaves us with some happy memories. God Bless him.”
Gosling joined the Kinks in 1970, having had his audition during the recording session for ‘Lola’, which became a No. 2 hit in the UK. “We put down several backing tracks but Ray’s guide vocals gave little indication as to what the songs were about,” Gosling recalled in a 2009 interview. “I think we did versions of ‘Powerman’, ‘This Time Tomorrow’ and ‘A Long Way From Home,’ as well as ‘Lola,’ of course. “They seemed such an easy-going bunch of blokes! Dave handed me a beer from a crate in the middle of the room when I walked in and there was no starry behavior. I remember feeling completely at home – almost as if I’d always been there.”
Gosling appeared on 10 of the band’s albums, including Lola Versus Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One, 1972’s Everybody’s In Show-Biz, and 1977’s Sleepwalker. Gordon Edwards took over from Gosling on keyboards before Ian Gibbons joined in 1979.
In 1994, Gosling formed a group called the Kast Off Kinks, which featured four former band members, including Gosling, drummer Mick Avory, and bassists Jim Rodford and John Dalton. He played with the band until his retirement in 2008.
We are deeply saddened by the news of the passing of John Gosling. We are sending our condolences to John's wife and family. (1/4) pic.twitter.com/eFl5n6MQfB
boygenius were the musical guests on this week’s episode of CBS Saturday Morning, which celebrated its 500th edition. Filming from Forest Hills Stadium in Queens, New York, the trio performed three tracks from their debut LP, the record: ‘$20’, ‘Cool About It’, and ‘Not Strong Enough’. They also sat down for an interview with CBS reporter Anthony Mason to discuss their friendship and songwriting journey. Watch it happen below.
After wrapping a run of North American shows tonight at Colorado’s Red Rocks Amphitheatre, the supergroup will embark on a month-long European tour next week. They’ll then return to the US for another string of dates, including sold-out shows at New York’s Madison Square Garden and Los Angeles’ Hollywood Bowl.
Another Triumph of Ghetto Engineering also includes guest spots from Young Zee and Blu. In a statement, Open Mike Eagle said: “In the ghetto we never stop toiling! These songs are all fancy ways of saying ‘fuck you’ to people that ignore us and ‘thank you’ to people that care if we live or die! Pay close attention to the song titles! This is another triumph of ghetto engineering! I took that cover photo. Thats my mama’s hand!”
Another Triumph of Ghetto Engineering Cover Artwork:
Another Triumph of Ghetto Engineering Tracklist:
1. I Bled on Stage at First Rave
2. BET’s Rap City [feat. Young Zee]
3. A New Rap Festival Called Falling Loud
4. The Grand Prize Game on the Bozo Show [feat. Video Dave and Still Rift]
5. We Should Have Made Other Ground a Thing
6. WFLD 32 [feat. Eshu Tune, Still Rift and Video Dave]
7. The Wire S3 E1 [feat. Blu]
8. Dave Said These Are the Liner Notes
9. Mad Enough to Aim a Pyramid at You