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December 28, 2007

Feliz Navidad Part 2: Jose Feliciano Concert Review

This is a continuation of Feliz Navidad Part 1, in which I recount the lengths I went to in order to gain entrance to the Jose Feliciano concert on December 16th at the One World Theatre in Austin, TX.

I tried to see if I might befriend the Texas Lady who graciously handed over her extra ticket to me, especially since I was being gently caressed by the long tufts of her fox fur coat spilling into my personal space, but her body language reassured me that she wasn't interested.  So I counted my blessings and settled in to enjoy the amazing vantage point from our central seats.  During the show she gave a hoot and a holler and some enthusiastic clapping in all the right places, so I felt reassured that she did in fact like music in general and perhaps Jose Feliciano's in particular.

As the lights dimmed Jose was escorted out to a stool in the middle of the stage while his five band members took their places.  A percussionist, bassist and drummer set up behind him, and that core band was flanked by two gray-haired keyboard players on either side of the stage.  All were dressed in black and were clearly hired guns rather than long-standing band members (the bass player wore his five string bass above his belt in that tell-tale "pro" style), except for the percussionist who Jose mentioned had produced his latest album.  It was hard to tell how long the rest of the players had been touring with Jose.  Since they each had sheet music to read from, it could have been their first show for all I knew, and there was no cohesiveness to make me believe they'd been with him any longer than that. 

Youngjose It's clear that Jose was the star of the show, and he had the chops and charisma to carry it, but we all know how distracting a lackluster band can be.  The percussionist was clearly the most invested, and his enthusiasm made him a pleasure to watch.  But the rhythm section was barely awake for most of the show and didn't show signs of life until well into the second half.  Especially egregious were the two keyboard players that created a visual frame around the performance:  they were the grimmest gray-haired parentheses ever to hit a live stage.  The keyboardist on the right did not crack one smile, change his facial expression, or even move any body part to any beat for the duration.  He really got my hackles up.  How dare he?  If you've grown that numb to your gig, step aside and let someone else play.  I mean, Jose was born blind in Puerto Rico, taught himself how to play guitar at a young age by listening to records, and has spent the past forty-plus years entertaining people all across the world.  That's a work ethic.  The least you could do is show some respect and not phone it in. 

I think part of why I was so offended at the lifeless band members is because it's clear that Jose came up as an entertainer and prides himself on fulfilling that role.  His entertainer persona is old school;  he spoke to the audience between each song, rattling off corny jokes, riffing on local landmarks and lore and making the obligatory self-deprecating jokes about his blindness.  Since his band members were so comatose, I couldn't tell if they'd heard all his jokes already or if he made them up on the spot.  Strangely, toward the end of the set a couple of his jokes became downright bawdy. After graciously thanking his wardrobe assistant he made a lewd wisecrack about her, and later on he made a randy seasonal pun about what he'd like to do with holly/Holly.  The piece de resistance of this blue humor was a non sequitur about confusing 'oral sex' with televangelist 'Oral Roberts,' which went over like a lead balloon (hm, ya reckon any older folks in Texas go to church?)  It was the slow degeneration of boundaries that one might normally attribute to increasing drunkenness, except he clearly didn't drink anything on stage and kept a steady composure throughout.  Fortunately the awkward jokes were few, and he'd built up enough good will to earn himself some nervous laughter and quick forgiveness.

He was also very professional and old school in taking care to introduce most of his songs, even invoking the phrase "it goes a little something like this" a few times, unironically, which I found endearing.  The set was eclectic from start to finish, with each new song presenting a change in genre.  He's performed in different styles throughout his career, starting out in his teens on the Greenwich village coffee house circuit and then recording several well-received Spanish language albums featuring his unique take on classic boleros.  His breakout hit was a Latin-tinged cover of The Doors' "Light My Fire" and the most successful original song he wrote is the holiday hit "Feliz Navidad".  He's built a career on interpreting classics and mixing things up, and was even the first artist to stylize the National Anthem while performing it during the 1968 World Series.  Thus, the band played flamenco, funk, traditional carols and soft rock favorites back to back with no tie-ins or transitions.  Once the unpredictable tone was established, I found it easy to get into the grab-bag flow of the set. 

JoseSince the concert happened about a week before Christmas, it was clear that everyone in the room was anticipating "Feliz Navidad", one of the top 25 most recorded and played Christmas songs around the world, which he saved for the last stretch.  (He should be exceedingly rich from having written this song, but who knows what kind of publishing deal he might have signed at the tender age of 25 years old?  If anyone knows the details on this, please comment!)  But I found his rendition of "The Little Drummer Boy" to be more moving, and definitely one of my favorite parts of the show.  He introduced it as a song that meant a lot to him personally, and played it alone on his acoustic guitar.  It was one of those moments where a song you've heard a thousand times suddenly sounds fresh and you're able to hear it and appreciate it in a different way.  The often silly-sounding repetition of "pa rum pa pum pum" sounded earnest and impassioned in his version.  Jose is a master interpreter.

Perhaps the highlight of the set for me was their cover of "Papa Was A Rolling Stone", which came out of nowhere, hot on the heels of a very mellow ballad.  The rhythm section drew an outline with that dead simple bass line and hi-hat rhythm which Jose filled in with the train-track wah wah on an electric guitar.  The energy in the place rose about ten feet.  Jose built an impressive intensity out of the driving rhythms and laid back pace of the melody, drawing tension from the timing.  Even the drummer showed signs of life (but not that damn keyboard player).  I was deeply satisfied by watching the bass player pluck out that repetitive six-note bassline for six or seven minutes straight.  Your fancy five string bass seems a little excessive at that point, doesn't it?  When the sickest bass line of the evening consists of a repetition of six notes?  (I've said it before and I'll say it again -- I see almost no justifiable reason for a five string bass.  If you can't play it on four strings, perhaps you shouldn't play it at all.) 

I wouldn't characterize Jose as a phenomenal singer, but I truly enjoy the robust timbre of his voice and the way he uses it to wrap around, stretch and subvert familiar melodies.  That languid vibrato and the intensity - it skates the line of shouting at times - can be attributed partly to the flamenco singing style, but Jose also brings a jazz ethos to the way he improvises on a melody.  And as lauded as he is for his guitar prowess, he's not the greatest player I've ever seen; certain sections of songs were a little shaky.  But he would find pockets, usually when he took a solo in a flamenco song, where he took off and flew, and I could have listened all night.  It makes me wonder what kind of concert he'd perform if he let go of the audience's expectations and didn't deliver anything beyond what he himself really enjoyed playing.  But as an entertainer, perhaps that sort of indulgence doesn't cross his mind.

 

I'll admit I was disappointed I didn't get to hear his version of "California Dreamin'".  I love how he took that sunny, ethereal ode and turned it into something forlorn and desperate.  Despite his deadbeat band members and the rigamarole I went through to get inside the theater, I loved the show.  I have a lot of respect and admiration for Jose Feliciano and I feel fortunate to have spent an evening listening to a living legend.

December 27, 2007

Tacks, the boy disaster

Season's Greetings!  AITNR is going to have a light posting schedule this week and next, but I know I still owe you some Jose Feliciano and a top 10 of '07 list.  Working on it!

I arrived home from the coffee shop earlier to see Shayla's truck in our driveway and hear organ music wafting out of our open front door.  My roommate Jeff has been wanting to get a piano or organ ever since we moved in, and today was his lucky day.  Evan (from Tacks, the boy disaster) and Shayla are lending Jeff a groovy organ that's going to live in his room for awhile.  Here's a bit of a post-installation demonstration from Evan:

Please excuse the shoddy camera work and be sure to turn the volume up loud enough to hear the melodies Evan plays (the programmed beat almost drowns them out).  That's the lovely and beautiful Shayla waving at the end.

I've been meaning to spend some time listening to Evan's band since I've heard great things about it and especially since I see his wife Shayla all the time.  (Whenever someone asks "What band is your husband in?" Shayla always replies "Tacks, the boy disaster" followed by an adorably sheepish grin.)  So, after meeting him in my house earlier I figured it was high time to give his band a listen.  My initial thoughts after listening to a few songs is that it's intricate and beautiful and in it I can hear the vestiges of Evan's former work in Midlake.  To do:  get a copy of their EP and see them live.

Watch the video for "Frozen Feet":

Listen:
Download "Matilda"
Listen to Tacks, the boy disaster on MySpace
Buy their 7-song EP Oh, Beatrice

December 20, 2007

BEAT IT, Fergie

Awful Is Fergie trying to give me high blood pressure? 

My friend Anil uploaded "Beat It 2008 With Fergie" to his Vox blog, and against my better judgment, I just listened.  And, as suspected, it's horrendous.

Don't listen to it.  Do read his post, but don't listen to the song.  You will regret it.

I'm all for celebrating the 25th anniversary of Thriller's release, which is the reason for this horrible remake, but the thing about a classic album is that it's classic for a reason.  It doesn't need to be messed with.  You certainly don't need to tack on some terrible "remixes" with today's hott stars (Akon, will.i.am, Fergie, Kanye) in order to get the kids to buy it, do you?  Maybe you do.  That's depressing.

And now I must go listen to the real, unmolested Thriller to cleanse my ears of this travesty.

December 18, 2007

"What if I don't become famous posthumously?"

Best Christmas single ever:

"We're All Going To Die" is the opening track on Malcolm Middleton's album A Brighter Beat.  You might know Malcolm best from his work in Arab Strap.  Apparently there's a campaign happening to make this the number one Christmas single in the UK. The song even has its own website.  He's got my vote.

Middleton's song is so much better than The Killers' horrible Christmas song which features Brandon Flowers' best drunken Roy Orbison impression as well as some Trapped in the Closet-esque spoken vignettes. 

December 17, 2007

Feliz Navidad, part 1

I gave up many things when I moved back to Austin from San Francisco, including my hookups in the local music scene.  Back in San Francisco, I usually knew - well in advance - all the concerts coming to town that I was interested in, plus I could usually procure entrance to these shows with an email or two and would follow up by posting a concert review on SFist.

Now it goes more like:  "Oh that show is coming to Austin??  Tonight??  And it's sold out???  &%#@!"

Which is what happened to me when I realized yesterday that Jose Feliciano was playing in Austin at the One World Theatre that night.  Longtime followers of this blog will remember that I've written of my love for Jose before;  actually I tend to write about him in December of each year (2004, 2005), except for 2006 when he apparently slipped my mind entirely.

Jose Feliciano: 2007
This year's Jose-post starts with me realizing last night that he was playing two shows - one at 6pm and one at 8:30pm - and deciding that, even though he tours rather frequently, I'd better try to hurry up and see him while I still could. The One World Theatre is one of those fancy special events places where most tickets are likely sold to season pass holders, and since it was already Sunday at around 5:30pm when I started looking for tickets, no one was answering the phones at the venue or ticket outlets.  Online, only the 6pm show was listed as being sold but tickets for the 8:30pm show weren't available for purchase.  My last option was to go to the box office to ask if tickets were available, but that would require a 20 minute drive into the boondocks of West Austin in the 40 degree cold by myself, with the chance of being turned down once I got there.

So I figured, what the hell!  And I jumped in my car around 6:30pm in pursuit of Jose.

The Quest For A Ticket
After I found the place, parked in the dark gravel parking lot and figured out which stairway lead to the entrance, I located the box office inside the lobby.  The young guy working at the ticket window told me the 8:30 show was indeed sold out.  Perhaps he inferred from my having made the trek all the way out to the remote venue, and requesting just one ticket, that I really wanted to see the show.  He told me if I waited around he'd try to get me in.  So I crossed my fingers, grabbed a $7 Dos Equis from the cash bar in the lobby and sat on a fancy carved wooden bench at the edge of the room.

I've gone to many, many concerts by myself, and despite always fearing that I stood out like a freak I usually blend in with most concertgoers in age and attire.  Not so with the One World Theatre crowd I joined waiting in the lobby before the show started.  Most of the esteemed patrons were in their 50's and 60's and were decked out in their Special Concert clothing which included silks, brocades, wraps, jaunty hats and leather jackets, and at least one pair of tapered leather pants. 

After waiting for about 45 minutes, I returned to the box office window where Nate the ticket seller sold me a standing-room only ticket, which was a ticket-shaped piece of paper onto which he wrote "Jose Feliciano" and "8:30pm".  He told me I wouldn't have a seat - I'd have to stand in the aisle - and that the ushers would point me where I should go.  "Ask for Skyler," he said.

After a little more waiting, the crowd made its way up a narrow flight of stairs onto a balcony and toward the entrance to the performance area.  The ticket taker smiled at me and asked for my ticket, which I handed over with a smile.  He took one look at it and his face fell.  He gave me a sidelong glance and asked, "How did you get this?  Was it comp'ed?  You're not going to have a seat, you know."

"Are you...Skyler?"  He glared.

I answered his questions honestly and he barked at me to stand to the side while he saw to it that everyone else was seated.  I stood exiled in the cold for about 15 minutes as everyone in their finery filed by with their friends and loved ones, clutching their season tickets in bejeweled fingers.  I have to admit, at this point I asked myself how badly I really wanted to see this show, especially since it seemed dicey that Ticket Taker Guy would even let me in. 

Luck, Be A Lady Tonight
Then I overheard TTG saying: "An extra ticket?  There's a woman here who might want that."
And a woman's voice:  "Really?  Take me to her."

The crowd parted and a platinum blonde Texas Lady sauntered over, swathed in fur and dripping in gold.  Ticket Taker briefly explained I was in need of a seat while Texas Lady gave me the quick once-over. 

"Well fine," she decided, "It's already paid for."

"Thank you so much!" I blurted out and my eyes welled up, ever so briefly, at the kindness of strangers. 

"Karma," she declared, and turned on her heel back toward the entrance.

We were swiftly escorted in to the tiny theater and I took my seat which was almost in the very center of the room, about ten rows from the stage.  I felt a frisson of accomplishment, silently congratulating myself for taking a chance. 

I turned to Texas Lady to thank her again.  "Thank you so much, I really appreciate this," I whispered into the side of her shellacked blonde coif, and she replied, looking stageward as the lights began to dim, "Merry Christmas."

Stay tuned for Feliz Navidad Part 2, Concert Review.

December 13, 2007

Rock n Roll Forever

The inductees for the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame for 2008 were announced today:

Leonard Cohen
The Dave Clark Five
Madonna
John Mellencamp
The Ventures

From the website:  "The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame honors the legendary performers, producers, songwriters, disc jockeys and others who have made rock and roll the force that it is in our culture."

Madonna?  Really?

Of all the inductees, John Mellencamp offers the most rock & roll for my money.  Anyone who used to use Cougar as their middle name is pretty rock & roll if you ask me.  But I just don't know about the rest of them.

So I'm tipping my proverbial hat to Mellencamp.  Let's let him rock us.

December 12, 2007

Let's "Let Die", Shall We?

I saw a link on the internet last night that I really wish I wouldn't have clicked on.  What I saw behind that link irked me on so many levels, I must write about it.

Let me begin by stating I don't particularly hate Fergie as a whole.  I can understand her appeal, her talents, her fashion audacity, her struggle to the top or whatever.  Fine.

But Fergie's voice has a chainsaw or dentist drill quality to it, especially when she's belting out a song.  It is a truly disturbing sound.  If this sound were to awaken you out of a peaceful slumber, you would instinctively hurl a heavy object at the source and the experience would likely leave you cross for the rest of the day. 

It is not a pleasant sound, Fergie's full-on singing voice.  When she's speak-singing a song like "London Bridge" I don't feel particularly assaulted.  Or even "Big Girls Don't Cry" - she didn't bring out the buzzsaw timbre on that one really.

But she did bring it out, full force, to cover one of my least favorite songs ever:  "Live and Let Die".

I have no idea why Fergie would cover this song.  Is it for a movie soundtrack?  Because it's been covered enough before, hasn't it?  The occasion for the live performance of it was the televised Movies Rock event.  I'm not going to waste my time or yours wondering why this event even happened.

If you haven't already seen it, please watch this YouTube clip of her performance.

And now I must rant.

How many thousands of dollars did they pay the wardrobe stylist?  All the stylist could come up with is shiny black catsuits with holes cut out in the midriff, high ponytails and ankle booties?  It's a fine line between edgy and tacky, isn't it?

And the choreographer, what were they thinking?  "Dancers!  Gather 'round Fergie now and point your thumb up and index finger out, yes, yes, like guns!  That's it!  Now point your guns, point them at the audience, now bend from the elbow and point your gun up, up to the sky!  Up, out, up, out!  Brilliant!"  I know they're trying to conjure Bond imagery here, but these moves are kind of a cross between old-school Fosse jazz, the Charlie's Angels logo, and some dance me and my friends in 7th grade would have made up during a Friday night sleepover.  (I've always thought there's something very 7th grade about Fergie, like she's one set of hairsprayed donut-bangs away from copping the style of a 13 year old girl in the 80's.)

As if the dancers' finger-guns weren't enough, Fergie's got a bedazzled pistol affixed to her microphone stand.  And of course she, at one point, menacingly aims it at the audience. 

The song itself is not my favorite.  The most irritating part is this line:

"And in this ever-changing world in which we live in..."

 

The repetition of "in" is like a poke in the ribs every time I hear it.  I know rock songs play fast and loose with grammar, I get that and I'm OK with it.  I dig it.  But this line wants it both ways, and I can't go for that.  No can do

Fergie herself plays fast and loose with the timing of the chorus too, waiting just a beat after the backing track kicks in to join in the "Live and let dieeeeee" part.  I'm assuming this is a stylistic choice, and not the result of a malfunctioning of her in-ear monitors, but...stop it!!

Then she somehow manages to make the "when you got a job to do, you got to do it well" part sound dirty, by virtue of growling it with a stage full of women in spandex gyrating their hips in unison.  I never thought if it that way before, but now I will, for the rest of my life.  Thanks.

All the hair-flipping, pyrotechnics and Fergie's own smug delivery make me feel like they were expecting everyone to be blown away by this performance.  I mean, I couldn't hold on to a rope with one arm and swing from the ceiling while singing, but why would anyone want to?

To the audience that gave a standing ovation for this performance:  we'll just have to agree to disagree.

December 11, 2007

Show Review: Frank Smith

After my friend Ashod politely scolded me yesterday for not following through with what I say I'm going to do, I realized I needed to tell you what I thought about the Frank Smith show.

It was a low-key evening, there were just a handful of people out at the Mohawk after midnight last Wednesday.  It was funny running into someone from San Francisco amongst the small crowd; apparently Matt from High Road Touring moved here about a year ago to get married.  See, I'm not crazy for leaving San Francisco for Austin!

Franksmith Frank Smith is essentially Brett Saiia and Aaron Sinclair, plus they had a bass player sitting in with them on this occasion.  When I say "sitting in" I mean that literally -- Brett stood, and Aaron stood, and the bass player sat down on a chair in between them, kind of in the back where a drummer would normally be.  For some reason this really distracted me.  Because I would look at Brett for a while and think "nice banjo playing" and then I'd pan to Aaron and think "I really like his voice", but in the midst of that I'd have to see this guy just sitting there, on a chair, playing his bass, staring off into the distance.  It wasn't that I noticed if he was a good or bad bass player, I was just distracted by his positioning.  Brett and Aaron were standing but they didn't move around much either.  I think I would have liked to have seen either everyone standing up, or everyone sitting down like, hey this is a folk show, pull up a chair, it's casual.

Distractions and lackluster stage presence aside, I did enjoy the music.  Brett is an apt multi-instrumentalist and Aaron's got character in his voice.  The two sing well together and they have good songs.  I'm looking forward to see what these guys do in Austin and beyond. 

I need to get my hands on their latest record Heavy Handed Peace and Love.

Frank Smith mp3:  Listen to "Liar and a Thief"

December 10, 2007

The Hacienda Brothers

Moving back to Austin has me in the midst of embracing my Texas roots, so this weekend was the perfect time for me to be introduced to the Hacienda Brothers.  Although they characterize their music as "western soul" and the band hails from Arizona (says their bio: "Who wouldve thought that Country Road and Soul Boulevard would intersect out in the Arizona desert?") there's a manner of fingerpickin', pedal steel and country crooning that reminds me much of the Texas roots music I grew up with.

Watching the Hacienda Brothers on Saturday night at the Continental Club really made me feel at home, and happy to the point that I found myself offering up two-step lessons to my friends who were listening with me.  Alas, no one took me up on the offer.  It's really easy though:  slow, slow, quick-quick, slow, slow, quick-quick...

Here's a taste of the Hacienda Brothers - it's a live performance from SXSW this year.   

I'm so in love with the sound of pedal steel, and the more I learn about how it's played the more respect I have for the people who do it.  It seems that there aren't that many people in the world who play pedal steel, and have you ever seen a pedal steel player who sucked?  Not likely!  I figure it's probably so difficult to learn how to play the instrument (my friend likens it to "doing calculus while driving on ice") that the marginally talented players just give up, and (thankfully) all that's left are the good ones.  I'm hoping to not be proven wrong on this theory.

Learn more about the Hacienda Brothers on Myspace or visit their website.

Listen to "What's Wrong With Right" and "Midnight Dream"

December 07, 2007

The GRAMMY Nominations Are In

The nominations for the 50th Annual GRAMMY Awards were just announced, and I actually heard about them through looking at my blog stats -- a few people have ended up here via some GRAMMY-related searches.  So, why not give you something semi-relevant?  I used to work for the Recording Academy about 8 years ago, so clearly I'm a well-qualified expert to sound off on such things.   Right?

OK I'm not an expert and I'm not affiliated with the Recording Academy anymore, but I do find the GRAMMY Awards interesting.  I respect them and what they can do for an artist's prestige and record sales, but I also understand their inherent bias.  Last time I checked (several years ago), they're voted on by an academy of members who must have attained a minimum number of documented recording credits and paid up on their yearly dues.   The voting members roughly equate to people who have spent actual time in a recording studio, twisting knobs or performing on a minimum of one full album's worth of songs that was released with sizable distribution (there are a few exceptions to this).  It rules out a mass of people who really care about excellence in music and the industry, including: musicians who have released albums in relatively small distribution, qualified people who didn't realize they could join and vote/don't have the money/don't care, most industry types (writers, DJs, music execs, bookers), fans, et al.  It looks like the Recording Academy is expanding the voting membership to include those who release music digitally, which is a step in the right direction.   Understanding how the process works makes for a more balanced perception of the prestige.  If you were really savvy and well-connected, could you figure out a way to lobby for nominations and votes?  Hmm...

On to my thoughts on this year's nominees.  You can see the full list of nominees on the GRAMMY website
 

Good news and bad news:
Leslief Huge congratulations to Ms. Feist on her four nominations.  I've been rooting for her for going on three years now, and I'm glad that she's getting the kind of recognition in the U.S. that she's already used to in Canada.  It seems like with the release of The Reminder, a whole lot more people are discovering that she is the real deal.

And the bad news: who did Daughtry save from a burning building in order to earn five nominations?  With all due respect to Daughtry -- who I agree is talented and clearly makes popular music -- is this the kind of music we're going to remember in five, ten or twenty years? 


Pleasant surprises:
Conchords It's great to see Rihanna's "Umbrella", my summertime obsession as well as just about everyone else's, was nominated for Record of the Year and Song of the Year.  Although I'd prefer Feist to win Best New Artist, I really like Paramore as well (on a totally different level) and I'm glad they're nominated.  For Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, Feist looks like the interloper amongst pop powerhouses Christina, Amy, Nelly and Fergie.  And it's appropriately hilarious that Flight of the Conchords are nominated for Best Comedy Album.

I totally called this:

I predicted back in August (scroll to the end of this post for my prediction) that Glen and Marketa (a.k.a. The Swell Season) would soon be GRAMMY-nominated, and now it's true:

  • Best Compilation Soundtrack Album For Motion Picture, Television Or Other Visual Media
    Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova for Once
  • Best Song Written For Motion Picture, Television Or Other Visual Media "Falling Slowly" from Once by Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova

Both the film and the soundtrack for Once are phenomenal.

Buy "Falling Slowly" by Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova from Amazon.

Congratulations to my friends:

  • Best New Age Album: Ottmar Liebert
    OK so I only hung out with him one time but I'm still sending him huge congratulations.
  • Best Recording Package:  Cassadaga - Zack Nipper, art director (Bright Eyes) [Saddle Creek]
    I'm always happy to see my friends at Saddle Creek do well.

 

If I were allowed to vote in one category:

ArtmenomenaI'd wield my power to award Best Recording Package to Craig Thompson, art director, for Menomena's Friend and Foe [Barsuk Records]. The art is truly incredible, I think I talked about it on a radio show I did earlier this year.  Anyone who only downloaded this album and didn't buy a physical copy is seriously missing out.

Biggest headscratcher:
R. Kelly's Trapped in the Closet Chapters 13-22's nomination for Best Long Form Music Video. Really?

Don't Forget Cassettes

  • LeendaDLL & a few of her cassettes
    Who still has cassette tapes anymore? Keep the dream alive: send a photo of yourself holding a cassette tape to kteeger AT yahoo and I'll add it to the gallery.

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