Author Topic: Bands on T.V.  (Read 6639 times)

thirsty moore

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Re: Bands on T.V.
« Reply #45 on: October 01, 2004, 01:48:00 pm »
Here's where vansmack explains how connecting the green wire to the blue wire bypasses the cpu module and allows one to TIVO (is this a verb yet?) three shows at the same time.
 
 
Quote
Originally posted by Bags:
  Don't think a Tivo would have helped -- I wouldn't have Pearl Jam programmed as a passport or whatever it's called, and would still have to have set it to record that segment just that night...

vansmack

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Re: Bands on T.V.
« Reply #46 on: October 01, 2004, 02:44:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by econo:
  Here's where vansmack explains how connecting the green wire to the blue wire bypasses the cpu module and allows one to TIVO (is this a verb yet?) three shows at the same time.
 
   
Hangs head in shame as I've become too predictable.....but I still don't have the willpower to pass on this one.
 
 I set Tivo to record the last 15 minutes of Leno, Letterman, Conan, whomever is in for Kilborn, Kimmel and Carson Daly every M-F and then watch the performances the next day when I get home from work.  If it's an artist I don't like (or a comedian), I simply delete it.  I've given up on going through the line-up each Sunday night and picking which ones to record.  Now I just get them all because line-ups change and it's only an hour and a half a night total, which is not much space, even if I fall a day or two behind.    
 
 All that with no super tehcie wires to move around....and before Rhett points out that if he had a VCR and watched TV, he could do the same thing, yes he could, but you can't delete individual performances and keep others.  For example, if you wanted to show Celeste how big the cock of the guy from DBT was, you'd have to keep the entire nights shows on the tape.  I can delete the Nelly performance and some no name comic individually, keeping only the one's I want.  And Smackette, who has substantially less time then I do, can watch the greatest hits over the weekend, when she has time.  Some performances are so good, that I've kept them for months now.
 
 And yes, TiVo is a verb.  And a drug.  And a way of life.
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kosmo vinyl

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Re: Bands on T.V.
« Reply #47 on: October 02, 2004, 01:23:00 pm »
<img src="http://us.gq.com/images/main/040928mast_01.jpg" alt=" - " />
 
 kinda think that the tivo is going to be feeling a little lonely this weekend courtesy GQ...
T.Rex

vansmack

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Re: Bands on T.V.
« Reply #48 on: October 03, 2004, 05:21:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by kosmo vinyl:
 
 
 kinda think that the tivo is going to be feeling a little lonely this weekend courtesy GQ...
Oh.....my......god.....
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grotty

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Re: Bands on T.V.
« Reply #49 on: October 05, 2004, 01:12:00 pm »
The video from the Late Show performance is now up:
  Masters of War on Letterman
 
 [it's an excellent vid btw - I just downloaded the DivX player & opened it in Media Player. It's like watching tv. I didn't even need a tivo!]
 
 
   
Quote
Originally posted by Bags:
  Check it out!  from the link Grotty included:
 
 Letterman Multimedia
 Oct 01, 2004 at 12:38 AM  
   
 Pearl Jam appeared on The Late Show with David Letterman tonight to perform Masters of War, which is being released Tuesday on the "Songs and Artists that inspired Fahrenheit 9/11" compilation.
 
 We recorded the performance and will be posting video shortly. But for now, here's audio:
 
 Masters of War - Late Show 9/30 .mp3
 Update: Video isn't ready yet. Possibly later tonight, but probably tomorrow.

 
 
   

eltee

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Re: Bands on T.V.
« Reply #50 on: October 08, 2004, 10:52:00 am »
Anyone catch Ambulance Ltd on Last Call?

eltee

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Re: Bands on T.V.
« Reply #51 on: October 08, 2004, 12:12:00 pm »
According to the schedule on BY, Interpol is on Conan in the early AM.

Bags

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Re: Bands on T.V.
« Reply #52 on: November 11, 2004, 01:16:00 pm »
Washington Social Club on Last Call With Carson Daly will air November 16th-19th for the whole week.
 
 Keep Rockin',
 M,O,R,E
 
 www.washingtonsocialclub.com

Bags

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Re: Bands on T.V.
« Reply #53 on: November 11, 2004, 01:17:00 pm »
MM on SNL this week:
 
 November 11, 2004
 POP REVIEW | MODEST MOUSE
 Just a Whisker Away From Full-Blown Celebrity
 By JON PARELES
 The New York Times
 
 Isaac Brock took a moment during Modest Mouse's set to look around Radio City Music Hall on Tuesday night. "This place seems a little fancy for us, but it's real nice," he said. After years on the club and college circuits, Modest Mouse is suddenly above the pop horizon, with video clips on MTV and over a half million sales of its current album, "Good News for People Who Love Bad News" (Epic).
 
 The album tunes up and cleans up some of the band's old low-fi quirks. But the band treated Radio City like a big club, casually taking its time between songs and working through each tune without overt showmanship. For most of the set Mr. Brock wore a broad-brimmed cap that hid half his face. Modest Mouse isn't likely to be mistaken for slick anytime soon.
 
 There's always something a little askew in Mr. Brock's songs. His voice starts out unglamorous, nasal and quavery with a drawl that comes and goes, and he pushes it, shouting or cackling with sudden bursts of vehemence or petulance. The band's tempo may suddenly lurch into a different gear, and sometimes a discordant guitar will start strumming away or blast into the foreground. It's all deliberate; Mr. Brock is a misfit who makes himself worth knowing.
 
 His lyrics muse on life and death, the origins of the universe and his personal failings, veering from optimism to fatalism: "We have one chance, one chance to get everything right," he sang. "And maybe we might."
 
 The music matches his crankiness, refusing allegiance to any particular structure or style. Its roots are in the late 1970's and early 80's, when punk had smashed old notions of virtuosity and arty types were cobbling new structures out of the shards. What those bands discovered was the power of the arbitrary, the stubborn joy of knocking together a beat and sticking to it until its mannerisms began to sound natural.
 
 In a set that relied on recent songs, Modest Mouse could sound like a skiffle band that had discovered minimalism, a folk-rock band with loose ends or a sprawl of clangorous guitars.
 
 With two drummers, the band could sock out a simple beat or play ratcheting, overlapping grooves; its songs sometimes recalled the Talking Heads of "Speaking in Tongues." In any configuration, Modest Mouse sounded willful above all, daring its new audience to accept every last idiosyncrasy.
 
 
 Modest Mouse is to perform on Saturday on "Saturday Night Live," at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago on Dec. 4 and at the Crystal Ballroom in Portland, Ore,. from Dec. 13 to 16.