Matthew Lillard of SLC Punk fame recently shepherded the outsider film Fat Kid Rules The World into existence and it’s a truly must-see flick for anyone with a hint of punk rock outcast in them.
Sarah talked to Lillard about the film and how Pearl Jam members contributed to it for Spinner.
For those of you not aware of the neo maxi zoom dweebie sub-culture that is super-duper Star Wars fans, yesterday was May 4, so those sci-fi dorkus malorkuses who understand wordplay have turned May the 4th into “May the Force…” as in, “… be with you.” As in, the Star Wars line.
So, in honour of yesterday being international Star Wars day I found a few youtube Star Wars music clips that were entertaining.
You can take the girl out of the Star Trek conventions, but you can’t take the Trekkie out of the girl. There’s really no other reason that Sarah started talking to Hanson about Star Trek and Star Wars when they were in town to promote their new album, Shout It Out.
In honour of May The Fourth, she shared their conversation with AOL Music Blog. You can check it out here.
Beware Of Mr. Bakeris nominally documentary about madman drumming legend Ginger Baker, whose musical history includes working with Cream, Blind Faith and Fela Kuti, amongst others. But it’s just as much a cautionary tale about what happens when you do what you want and don’t really give a shit about anything or anyone else.
Right from scene one — in which Baker, now an angry old curmudgeon withering his days away in South Africa, attacks director Jay Bulger — the drummer’s reputation as a difficult person is on display.
Sure, enough, as Bulger takes the viewer through a Baker 101 history lesson — his toxic relationships with Cream bassist Jack Bruce and guitarist Eric Clapton, his drummer battles versus other legendary beaters, his flameouts with ex-wives and his world traveling misadventures — complete with often compelling archival footage, it becomes absolutely clear Baker’s a jerk and a horrible person.
But he’s also a bold, unique and uncompromising one.
The only things that Baker actually cares about are his drumming, his desire to be taken seriously by respected jazz musicians, and the stable of polo horses he keeps. Every other aspect of Baker’s journey through life he treats with something between indifference and bridge-burning malevolence.
For anyone who has seen Lemmy, the documentary on Motorhead‘s Lemmy Kilmister, there are some interesting parallels between the moled singer and Baker. Both have untraditional relationships with sons who’ve clearly also gone into music to forge some connections with their fathers, both lead relatively solitary, arguably sad lives, yet both remain unrepentantly committed to what they are. They’ve lived their lives as musical outlaws, doing what they want, how they want to do it, and damn the consequences, they’ll never change.
And that’s the thing. Decades from now few people will remember Ginger Baker the horrible human, but those Cream records, his virtual invention of the drum solo, his travels to Africa on musical walkabouts — those are the things he’ll likely be remembered for. And if Baker ruffled a few feathers to achieve it all, he’d probably say it was worth it. And then punch you.
Kevin Costner, known throughout the world as Lieutenant Dunbar in Dances With Wolves and the Mariner in Waterworld, also happens to be a bit of determined country musician.
He’s been at it for years touring about and trying to, y’know, make it.
Sarah recently spoke to Costner when he was in Toronto to promote the forthcoming Boots And Hearts country music festival.
The resulting conversation ended up as a story double-shot.
The first story, about how Costner was the catalyst in getting Whitney Houston recording the song “I Will Always Love You” for The Bodyguard ran on AOL Music Blog. Click here for that.
The second story ran on country music site The Boot and went deeper into his country music career. Click here to read that one.