Tag Archives: Twin Peaks

Living A Real-Life Twin Peaks

RIP Laura Palmer

RIP Laura Palmer

When Twin Peaks debuted in 1990 it basically launched a genre — pretty blonde girl gets murdered in small town, everything goes bonkers.

But what if you actually lived in a real town where something like that happened?

Sarah did. She lived in Welland, Ontario around the time the truly evil pair of Paul Bernardo and Karla Homolka were terrorizing the Niagara area.

She wrote about what it was like at that time in a feature story for Consequence of Sound’s Twin Peaks Week series.

To read the full story go here.

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Filed under Films, Recollections, Shameless Promotion, Television

TV Soundtracks: 10 Of The Best Albums To Come From The Small Screen

Flight Of The Conchords

Flight Of The Conchords

Because we’re uncomfortably deep into awards season Sarah took a look at some television shows to determine which had the best soundtracks from their time on the air.

Some of the names that made the cut include The Wire, Twin Peaks and Life On Mars.

To read the full article at Huffington Post Music Canada go here.

 

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Filed under Music, Shameless Promotion, Television

Welland’s Got 99 Problems, But The Joys Its Local Paper Brings To My Heart Ain’t One

Frugal Friday

Frugal Friday

Growing up in the thriving mecca of Welland, Ontario was a fascinating and bizarre experience for me. It was basically like living in an industry and scenery-free Twin Peaks. (I can’t confirm that Welland has a Black Lodge, but I’m assuming that’s the case, given all of the melting grandmother mummies and other wild happenings that have happened there over the years.)

One of the most the most impressive and consistent bastions of Welland’s rather unique charm is the city’s paper, The Welland Tribune. I love The Trib. The paper does its best to cover local issues in the face of what I’m assuming is a tiny-even-by-abysmal-industry-standards budget. And they gave me my first taste of fame when one of their photographers picked me out of the crowd at a 1989 craft show and got me to pose with a bear (they also erroneously described me as a “lover of poetry” in a 1997 story, but I forgive them for that).

I also consider the paper a trailblazer, in a sense, because it eschewed that silly and overrated thing called copy editing long before the bigger and more reputable papers even considered outsourcing it.

This is why The Welland Tribune is often called The Welland Turbine by locals, and why spotting its bold typos and mistakes (and its utterly perplexing editorial choices in general) has become a rather popular hobby for the locals and the homesick.

Up until tonight, I considered the following some of The Turbine’s Greatest Hits:

  • Their intense coverage of Ontario’s controversial “Pit Pull Ban,” as the headline read
  • The time someone decided that “Leave The Roasting To Chestnuts” was the prefect headline for a story about children being burned in Christmas fires
  • This:

deathbycooking

But none of that compares to the amazing promotional email that my mother just received.

turbine

Here are two things I love about this message:

1. It’s addressed to my grandfather, who has been dead for nine years.

2.  Everything else.

So keep up the good word, Welland Turbine. Who needs an industry or a functional economy or any hope for the future when I have you?

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Filed under Recollections, The Misadventures Of

The Connection Between Twin Peaks And Contemporary Music

Metric are on the cover of AUX magazine's first issue

Metric are on the cover of AUX magazine’s first issue

The folks at AUX have launched a fancy new iPad magazine that you can cop by clicking through to the iTunes store here.

There’s all kinds of quality stuff in there, including a pretty in-depth story by Sarah about bands who’ve been affected by David Lynch‘s mind-melting ’90s television series, Twin Peaks.

Bands like Cults and Silent Drape Runners give their take on where to find a great cup of coffee.

 

 

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Filed under Music, Shameless Promotion, Television

A Review Of Aaron’s Review: Tasseomancy – Ulalume

Tasseomancy

Earlier this month, we told you that Aaron’s review of twin sister gloomy art rock duo Tasseomancy’s (née Ghost Bees) new album, Ulalume, had been published in the latest issue of Rue Morgue Magazine.

Now, we’re usually very supportive of each other’s writing endeavors, but I have to confess that I was a little disappointed with this particular review. Aaron likes to think that he’s some sort of expert on morbid young women because he’s listened to so many of their musical projects and because he married one.

But the only people who can truly understand and explain morbid young women are their fellow sisters of darkness. I tried to help Aaron when he was writing the review, but he refused to listen to me. Here are some of the ideas that he rejected:

– Sari and Romy Lightman are a pair of Emily Stranges for the non-dilletante.

– Imagine Wednesday Adams with a sister instead of that idiot Pugsly.

Dead Ringers for girls.

– Something about Brian De Palma’s Sisters that I couldn’t fully formulate.

– Tasseomancy are the duo that Laura Palmer and Madeleine Ferguson would have formed if BOB hadn’t gotten to them first.

– Holy crap! The conjoined twins from Carnivàle traveled to the future and separated! Sadly, the surgery may have cost them their contortion skills.

Ulalume sounds like it was crafted by people who spent many carefree childhood days memorizing the words to Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Bells.”

Ulalume sounds like a musical version of that episode of Night Gallery when the woman keeps having a dream that a stranger is coming to her door, and then, one time, she finally opens the door and realizes that the scary person is herself.

– It’s a little-known fact that Liv Ullmann’s character in The Hour Of The Wolf was actually pregnant with Sari and Romy Lightman.

– Imagine Ingmar Bergman’s Persona as a jam session.

– A Tasseomancy album is reminiscent of Black Swan, if you removed all six thousand of Vincent Cassel’s monologues about how the white swan is pure and the black swan is sexual and raw and Natalie Portman is really good at being the perfect and virginal white swan, but he doesn’t know if she can be the provocative black swan, because she’s so white and pure like the white swan and not at all like the sexually bold black swan.

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Filed under Art, Films, Music