Rick Owens is Included in Stars In Stereo’s Pick Three Column

Pick Three is a column where we ask some of our favorite musicians to choose three pop culture picks – this can be a fashion label (“Levis are the only jeans that make my butt look good!”), an instrument manufacturer (” I can’t imagine playing anything but Gibson guitars!”),  a movie (Gone with the Wind changed my life!) , tv show, book, comic, internet video, album, etc… whatever they want to talk about! We all have our favorites – these are their favorites. And now for Justin Siegel’s of Stars In Stereo Pick Three Column!

 

1. Gallery 1988

If I took the money that I’ve spent at this gallery and put it towards college, one might be able to now call me Dr. Siegel.  It combines two of my favorite things in the world, pop culture and art.  The artists selected by the owners/curators are always innovative, relevant, and insanely talented.  The themes of the shows have geeks and non geeks alike salivating from the initial announcement alone, especially the annual Crazy 4 Cult shows.  Every time I go to an opening, there is a line around the block that sometimes commences a whole 24 hours prior.  Lately, I’ve been collecting every He-Man related piece that comes through (you’d be surprised).  When they had their Mattel sponsored He-Man show, I picked this piece up as soon as I laid eyes on it:

 

Some of my favorite artists that consistently display there are N.C. Winters, Luke Chueh, Dan Goodsell, Greg Simkins, Alex Pardee, Daniel Danger and Robert Brandenburg.  We also went through the gallery to commission artist Greg “Craola” Simkins to design our Stars in Stereo starbolt logo.

2. 42 Entertainment 

 I’m a very big fan of smart marketing campaigns.  I’m a consumer, I eat it all up, give me the same toothpaste I already have but in a cooler box, I’ll probably buy it!  So when I first started hearing about the buzz happening around the release of Nine Inch NailsYear Zero album, I got hooked hard.  This was a multi platform campaign happening that not only encompassed the internet, but it ventured way outside to an alternate reality video game, and ultimately to the real world, utilizing murals, telephone numbers that led to pre recorded phone messages, USB drives that were found by fans at NIN shows, and ultimately climaxed at a secret show that was disguised as a “resistance meeting” in a Los Angeles Parking lot.  The video of that show can be seen here:

The next campaign they produced that caught my and many others’ attention was the “Why So Serious?” campaign for The Dark Knight film.  This campaign sent fans on a massive online and real world scavenger hunt to ultimately unlock a new teaser trailer for the film and the first photo of the Joker which obviously went on to become one of the most iconic roles ever played on the big screen.  They had a series of the these scavenger hunts each leading to more content, sometimes digital sometimes physical, but it always kept the fans consistently excited and engaged, it was fun as a fan to watch it all unfold.  They’ve done campaigns like this for Tron and for Halo as well, I really hope that one day we can engage our fans in the same way and create an experience as incredible as this company has done in the past.

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Pick Three with Kellen Ross of Opium Symphony

1.V for Vendetta

V for Vendetta is the most underrated mainstream movie ever!  The movie finally vocalized frustrations that I feel the world has been feeling for a long time.  I tip my hat to the movie makers (and anyone else really) that aren’t afraid to “speak the unspeakable.”

2. UFO Conspiracies

I am huge UFO conspiracy theory buff.  The book that confirmed my belief in extraterrestrials was The Day After Roswell by Philip Corso.  The last 2 years have been very exciting for me because there has been a dramatic increase in public broadcast/general awareness that we are not alone.  For example,  there was a UFO in a Mongolian airport that put a stop to air traffic for 45 minutes while hovering there not too long ago.

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Pick Three with Gary Jarmon of The Cribs

1. Brut Deodorant

I don’t care if people think it makes you smell like a Grandad, this is by far my favourite scent to wear. And as such I will never wear it again most likely. Reason being that scent is the most powerful sense for triggering memories, and even a faint whiff of Brut sends this sentimental creature into such a reverie that I don’t want to dilute that. I have been searching for a replacement for the last few years and haven’t come upon one yet. Old Spice classic comes close, and they have a new one called Old Spice Noir, but I don’t love them as much.

2. Tab Clear
The greatest drink of all time. Discontinued after only a couple of years at the start of the 90′s. Me and my brothers used to live off this stuff when we were kids. I recently became quite obsessed with trying to track down a can of it, and couldn’t rest until I finally did. I wish they would bring it back.

1. Korg M1

Terribly out of date and unfashionable, the M1 was the most common synth ever in the 80s and early 90s, and hasnt aged well – but for some reason I just love them. I was determined to get some M1 on our new record somewhere, and finally pulled it off in ‘Confident Men’…and it sounded amazing to my ears. Not sure what Dave Fridmann (producer) thought though…

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Pick Three with Marc Cantone of The City and Horses

1. Vintage Radio Shows

Every single classic American radio drama, comedy, news program, and variety show that can be found online is available for free.  These programs provide the modern listener an intimate look into mid-twentieth century popular culture.  The greatest of these programs belong to Orson Welles.  The Mercury Theater on the Air and The Campbell Playhouse.  Both of these shows featured hour-long adaptions of popular novels and plays (like The Man Who Was Thursday, Dinner at Eight, War of the Worlds, etc.,)  and were produced by Welles (who was all of 22 at the time) in the mid-late 1930s.  It’s not just the material and performances that are so compelling.  The advertisements found within the shows are just as fascinating.  The Campbell Playhouse, for example, was sponsored by Campbell Soups.  At the beginning and middle of each show, the announcer, Ernest Chappell, would read a minute’s worth of copy touting Campbell Soup as a healthy, cost effective alternative to homemade soup.  These ads were directed solely at the “woman of the house” and ushered in the beginning of America’s obsession with preserved foods.

Man, I’m boring.  If you’re boring, too, and own an iPhone (the two aren’t mutually exclusive), check out the Vintage Radio app.

2.  The Field Mice’s Last Show

Short introduction to The Field Mice.  Archetypal twee-pop band lead by Bobby Wratten who later formed Trembling Blue Stars after his breakup from former Field Mice/Northern Picture Library bandmate Annemari Davies.

I recently found clips of the Field Mice’s last show in 1991 in London.  This was big for me for two reasons.  1. I’ve only ever saw fuzzy, black and white photos of the band prior.  And 2., those black and white photos didn’t prepare me for the utter beauty and majesty that is Annemari Davies.  From what I understand, Bobby and Annemari were officially a couple when the Field Mice broke up a few weeks before this show.  The two of them went on to form the band Northern Picture Library.  At some point during or after NPL, the couple broke up leaving Bobby so completely heart broken that he created the band Trembling Blue Stars and wrote three of the most beautiful breakup records ever made.  These are Her Handwriting, Lips That Taste of Tears and Broken By Whispers.  After finally seeing  Annemari on video I now wholly understand the extent of Bobby’s heartbreak.  If I wasn’t 12 in 1991 and too busy slow dancing to Tevon Campbell songs at 7th grade dances, I would’ve been on the first plane to London.

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Pick Three with Erix S. Laurent of Teepee

1. Alexander McQueen Boots

I’m crazy about boots. Totally mad about them. When I’m not diggin’ around the internet looking for new music, I’m window shopping online for a future pair of boots. So while I was in L.A. on my second solo tour, I made a pit stop at the McQueen store. As I browsed around, I saw the boots from a distance and knew they were the ones. I ended up not buying them because I still had more traveling to do and they’d get wrecked by the tour’s end, but funny enough my photographer that came with me ended up buying them a few weeks after the tour. I heard somewhere that the criteria for entrance passed the velvet rope to Studio 54 was based on the quality of the person’s shoes. The guys from Jesus and Mary Chain are also totally obsessed with boots. I’m telling you: boots are no joke.

2. iPhone

I practically do everything on my phone: I jot down my odd ideas, send emails, creep on Facebook, listen to audiobooks, send love to people, take pictures of weird things that I like, etc. Music-wise, if I need to figure out the BPM of a song, I just use the metronome app. If I have a melody in my head that works for a potential song, I’ll just open up the recorder and record it. For lyric ideas, I’ll either type it in the notepad or sing into the recorder. I’m sure there’s much more I can do with it, I just haven’t gotten there yet. I tend to keep my phone very simple, I don’t like to have apps on the main screen, I keep it all in folders so the main screen is all black and there’s minimal lag. I read a quote on twitter the other day and it said “slow internet is worse than no internet.” That applies to the iPhone, in my opinion.

2. Fender Jazzmaster

I used to be a Gibson guy, but not anymore! Two different worlds, I understand, but there’s nothing like a Jazzmaster rippin’ through your pedals and Fender Twin. I’m not sure if words can describe it, but I’ll try: it adds a bit of creaminess to a clean jangle tone and rounds out good fuzz. It’s an incredibly versatile sound and works for a variety of live situations. For the latest series of videos I produced with the Revera Corporation – the record label releasing my latest single, Time Meant Nothing, and LP later this year, Distant Love or: Time Never Meant Anything, And Never Will – I used mostly vintage Fender amps and Jazzmasters. I’m always blown away by how loud and expressive that setup is.

TEEPEE and the Revera Corporation proudly present TEEPEE’s newest single, “Time Meant Nothing,” an honest, powerful meditation on time’s ability to both heal wounds and ruin lives. “Time Meant Nothing” – with its fragile yet propulsive melodies that give way to searing, fuzz-driven bursts of white noise – is an anthemic introduction to his highly anticipated upcoming album, Distant Love or: Time Never Meant Anything, and Never Will, due later this year via The Revera Corporation.

Instant Free Download For Your Library: Time Meant Nothing (320 MP3)
SoundCloud: Time Meant Nothing
iTunes: Time Meant Nothing

Pick Three with T.J. Masters from Conveyor

1. Jodorowsky‘s Holy Mountain 

A film about a film, at heart, an idealistic pursuit of happiness via the machinations of a flesh-driven multi-linguist; the film itself as much of a trip as one can take through sacred texts and redefinitions of a sort of human atavism, a return to form, as it were, with just enough of a biological imperative to demand a like reflective reasoning process of its viewers (turn the lens on the lens as it lies).

While the consumption of organic matter with hallucinogenic properties is not explicitly recommended, the characters in which froth at the mouth and hurtle through dirt and earth which makes me cradle the thought of my…

2. Dove-brand(R) White Beauty Bar

Soap, which is the reason that I smell the way I do; Dove-brand(R) White Beauty Bars are composed of one-quarter pure (here undefined) moisturizing cream and are made mostly (that is to say the other 75%) from tallow, and but then washing oneself with the byproduct of another animal is a sort of comforting assurance of interspecies dominance anyway, a like 15 extra minutes of fame, which in the long run will not turn out to be a long run at all, and in any case in the mean time I’m willing to sacrifice a kinda sense of ecological awareness in favor of silky-smooth skin and a neutral, pleasant odor, which, with regard to the external world on which I unwittingly project things like smell, I’m obliged to dedicate a portion of my daily reverence to…

3. LensCrafters(R)

For engineering and manufacturing corrective lenses, which, when installed in a plastic frame, sit snugly on my head and at a comfortable distance from my eyes via three contact points (left ear, right ear, bridge of nose) and bend wavelengths of light such that objects are registered as sharply in-focus, the measurement of which directly correlates to functions of navigation, information processing, non-verbal communication, etc. (q.v. Marr, D. (1982). Vision: A computational investigation into the human representation and processing of visual information. MIT Press: Cambridge, MA.), which, in any case, does not necessarily coincide with any factors of my personal decision to pursue a career as a musician, though I feel a responsibility to admit my fascination with Elvis Costello and the style of eyewear for which he is most known.

Conveyor is a Brooklyn-based music project spawned by the fated juncture of a wandering tarot of musicians in Gainesville, FL. Was it kismet or perhaps a primordial summon which led these gentlemen purveyors of sound to individually tune in and migrate North to the bustling seductress known as New York City? Their retort is Sun Ray, a debut EP birthed and released in the warm embrace of Spring 2011.

Brimming with lucid, homey synths layered over acoustic guitars and harmonious vocals, they channel extraterrestrial bible-thumpers drenched in love, spouting acid-soaked pop unabashed to beam with the simultaneous embrace of life/death realities backed by a polyrhythmic, pulsing backdrop. A decidedly grand task indeed, and following a string of self-released, handmade EPs, they are releasing their debut full-length album in 2012 with Brooklyn’s Paper Garden Records, a testament to our nature and the nature of ourselves.

Pick Three with Valerie June

Spending just as much time in the air as I do touching the earth, has it’s challenges and rewards.  One of the greatest rewards I give myself is the devouring of a delicious short story during layovers, on flights or while waiting to board a plane after the rigamole of having big hair and brown skin at the airport’s security checkpoint.

1. Traveling at Home by Wendall Berry

Wendell Berry was introduced to me by a sweet fella a few years ago.  As I lay in a bath unaware of a dormant illness, he read me a short story that more than captured our three years together.  The story was called “A Jonquil for Mary Penn” from his book entitled, Fidelity.  Years later and with a few extra bucks to invest in poetry, I found myself at Greenlight Bookstore in Brooklyn, NY purchasing Wendell Berry’s Traveling at Home.  The book seemed fitting for my constant musical ventures, so I welcomed it into my life by starting to read it on a plane ride to LA where I was to meet and write songs with Booker T. Jones.

It was reading Traveling at Home that allowed me to experience every moment of that journey as a musical experience.  Wendell Berry talks about his life on his farm in Kentucky and finding music in nature’s infinite song.  The plane’s engine began to hum.  The wind around it began to sing.  A small child started to holler.  The barista’s foam growled from the thought of three more hours on the clock.  The car I rented was as silent as any vehicle I’d ever set out on the freeway driving.  Although my experience was in the big city of Los Angeles, it was still brimming with music.

2. Reasons and Advantages of Breathing by Lydia Peelle

It’s always a healthy habit to read more than one book at a time.  I was given a copy of Lydia Peelle’s Reasons and Advantages of Breathing by her husband Ketch Secor when we were recording my EP record, Valerie June & The Tennessee Express.  I read the opening story in 2009/2010, but I just settled my spirit enough to really begin heavily reading again this past winter.  It was when I hit “This Is Not A Love Story” that I began to realize the role of an artist in this world.  I was once told that artists carry the weight of emotion for everyone else on earth so that they don’t have to bear it themselves.  I think that’s too much weight for any artist to carry alone.  Lydia’s story broke my heart open so wide that past pain from before I could speak my first word came racing through in unexplainable multitudes that lasted seconds, left me silently shedding tears next to a stranger on a plane and relieved me of a much needed catharsis of the heart.  The artist’s role is to open the door for the reader, viewer or listener to truly feel and release emotions that are simple, but difficult to process on our own.  From laughter to tears, artists beg and encourage us to express our feelings and face our fears as creators having human experiences.  Peelle’ work also enveloped me because of the genuine way she captures life in the South, and y’all know how I love Tennessee!

3. Housecoat Diaries:  Chicken Scratch for the Soul by  John Scoles

In a venture to Winnipeg, Canada, I was invited to perform at a place called Times Changed by a fella named John Scoles.  He is a writer of the real world as far as I see it, but he does it in a way that had me laughing out loud like I was at a comedy show.  I needed that laugh because I arrived to find my Gibson guitar was destroyed.  Philosophy, money and health care can be difficult to write about with a light heart.  I won’t tell you too much about his book, Housecoat Diaries:  Chicken Scratch for the Soul, other than it made me buy a housecoat and spend a few more days enjoying just sitting still in a chair and looking at the wall, listening to the world move outside my window and watching the rainfall all the while knowing the time would come soon enough to be on the grind again.

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Pick Three with Brave Chandeliers

As a touring band, you quickly learn some key “Don’ts” to help survive the road.

DON’T: Drink more than one Sugar Free Rockstar within a four-hour period. DON’T: Assume that the tollbooth is closed for the night. DON’T: Eat sunflower seeds in the van.

But we’ve also learned some important “Do’s” that make life on the road worth living – not the least of which being: DO: Trust fortune to reveal the best local restaurants.

We’ve developed a theory over the past few years that rock bands could put together a really killer travel guide. So with that in mind, here are our top three roadside eatery godsends, made all the better because of the completely random and providential circumstances that brought us to them.

1. Best Soul Food: Pepper’s Ole Fashion BBQ and Soul Food, Albuquerque, NM

Pepper’s is a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it spot in a SE Albuquerque strip mall, which we stumbled onto because we were rehearsing at a studio next door. The meat is fall-apart tender, the sides are just the right amount of salty and savory, and the portions are generous – just the thing for a few underfed kids. Don’t miss the Southern Fried Catfish – which isn’t overly breaded or dried out – and the Brisket sandwich (chopped or pulled). The owner also gave each of us a free slice of their divine peach cobbler; the perfect end to the best soul food and BBQ that we’ve had on the road. Plenty of people in Albuquerque don’t even know about Pepper’s, so it’s likely to stay just as under the radar – and delicious – until we come back next time.

2. Best Thanksgiving Substitute: Bates House of Turkey, Greenville, AL

On a hot July afternoon last summer we pulled off of Exit 130 on I-65 to get some gas and clean the Gettysburg of bug guts off of our windshield, only to discover Bates House of Turkey next door to the gas station. Intrigued, we stepped inside and found an air-conditioned monument to that peculiarly American protein, the turkey. Turkey dinners, turkey sandwiches (open faced or not), turkey salads – your choice of roasted, barbequed, but never fried – all prepared fresh and sourced from the Bates family turkey farm down the road. We’re not sure how the Subway across the street stays in business. Get the Old Fashioned Turkey Dinner and two slices of white bread, and you’ve got yourself a Black Friday Sandwich to rival them all.

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Pick Three with Matt and Sean of Jimmy at the Prom

First up: Matt Turner, bassist for Jimmy at the Prom.

1. Ashdown Bass Heads

They rock! My gear handles ALL my gigs! From country to catastrophic noise, make it an “Ashdown Day!” You’ll just feel better! I couldn’t imagine not having my Ashdown gear! I was an Ampeg believer for years but now I find it hard to hit the stage without Ashdown.

2. TMZ

That’s right the tabloid show, with the lawyer host. I can’t turn it off, I want to!!!! But then who will tell me how Snooky’s baby is doing??? Or who Oprah isn’t doing. I know it’s kinda weird, but this show is hilarious and why not enjoy it if it’s there? Wait, everything I see on T.V. is true and real, right?

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Pick Three with Jon Elling of Grand & Noble

1. Fiona Apple, When the Pawn…

I laughed at this album when it came out due to the long title – the full title is 90 words – but one day I was driving in Tallahassee, FL and I heard the drum break on “Fast as You Can” and I was hooked. This album is undeniably sad, but boldly so. Her lyrics sparkle with wit and that voice…well, Fiona, call me anytime. Add to that Jon Brion‘s lush production and criminally under-praised Matt Chamberlain on drums, and this is a record I go back to routinely.

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