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Posts Tagged ‘mouse’

a mouse of arc touch from microsoft Posted By : Michael Jone

This Mouse is an attractive device which has given more importance to its shape than its function.

Features: It has an outstanding style and look which is comfortable for carrying. It has a powerful sensor, wireless receiver, and a track pad which is touch sensitive. This is available for $80.

Review: It is without doubt that all the internet users were taken away by the launch of this extraordinary sleek designed mouse. The Arc Touch from Microsoft has both plus and minus points.

When Michael Douglas met Mickey Mouse

Michael Douglas, who recently went through painful radiation and chemotherapy for his cancer treatment, took some time off to spend a day with his family in Disney Land. The beaming ‘Wall Street’ star took wife Catherine Zeta-Jones, 41, and their children Dylan, 10, and Carys, seven, to the theme park, reports the Daily Star. And [...]

Movea Air Mouse app, iOS 4.3 on Dec 13 rumor, GoSmart Clip

If you give many presentations for work or have a HTPC in the living room and you are looking for an easier way to use a mouse Movea has a new app for you. The app turns your iPhone 4 into an Air Mouse for controlling any computer cursor. A rumor is circulating that iOS [...]

Boost your Mouse Pointing Accuracy in Windows Posted By : Agnes Celina

Majority of the users wants to enhance their mouse pointing exactness so it will not be difficult for the users to choose the pixels while doing any kind of graphic or web designing.

Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse celebrates his 82nd birthday

Walt Disney’s cartoon character Mickey Mouse has turned 82. Mickey Mouse had made his first appearance with sound in ‘Steamboat Willie’, which was the first of his films to be distributed, on November 18, 1928, the New York Daily News reported. He had appeared in ‘Plane Crazy’ six months prior to the release of ‘Steamboat [...]

Stanley “Mouse” Miller Opens Gallery In Healdsburg

FAMED GRATEFUL DEAD ARTIST HAS HIS OWN SPACE

Stanley “Mouse” Miller, every Dead Head’s favorite living poster artist, has opened a gallery of his own, Rockin Roses, on the square in Healdsburg, CA (243 A Healdsburg Ave.). It’s got a ton of art, T-shirts, paintings and so forth, including his latest show, which focuses on the feminine figure like this painting below.

Official Bio

Stanley “Mouse” Miller was born to a Disney animator who took his family to live in Detroit in the 1950s. The combination of Motown music and the city’s obsession with motorcars with his birthright genius at drawing made his life path very clear at a very early age. By the 7th grade he’d become known for his sketches of monster-driven muscle cars and mice, and earned his lifelong nom de crayon.

He found a niche in the Detroit hot rod culture by detailing extraordinary paint jobs on vehicles until no quality hot rod in town could be seen without a Mouse pinstriping job. Soon after, he began applying his favorite subjects to T-shirts with an airbrush. Now confident about working with unusual surfaces, he tried the freshly painted walls of a local teen hangout and was expelled from high school.

He enrolled at Detroit’s School for the Society of Arts and Crafts, and found inspiration only in the work of a young woman in his painting class, who was depicting their models as monsters. “I was amazed and a little disappointed, maybe a little grossed out,” said Mouse, “that she was making the beautiful model into a monster. That was something that I did on weekends at hotrod shows. I was in art school trying to learn how to paint the model like Rembrandt, not Picasso. It also showed me that by painting monsters, I was doing the right art movement at the right time. But there seemed to be a higher calling: to paint like the masters.”

The psychedelic experienced expanded his vision and his style, and soon, like so many children of the ’60s, he left for San Francisco – although he was probably one of the few who drove out in a Porsche. Hanging out with fellow Detroiters, he fell in with the original members of The Family Dog, a collective which produced SF’s first rock dances. One of those Dogs was Alton Kelley, and they quickly became partners.

Mouse was the draftsman and Kelley held down the composition, conceptualization and promotion; better still, Kelley was left-handed and Mouse right-handed, so they could work on a poster simultaneously, side by side. Their work for the Avalon Ballroom swiftly became legendary. A combination of Art Nouveau elegance and grace with American pop-art sensibilities and stonededness made their posters the ideal depiction of the fabulous, innocent, dancing, laughing party that was San Francisco in the ’60s.

It was far too good to last. Tourists flooded the Haight-Ashbury and the scene died of over-population. Mouse saw the writing on the wall, and it wasn’t airbrushed; he split to London to paint flames on Eric Clapton’s Rolls Royce – although the car was wrecked before he even arrived.

Back in San Francisco in the 1970s, he and Kelley resumed their work, creating dozens of iconic album covers, including the first eight of the Grateful Dead’s releases. In the ’80s, Mouse moved to Santa Fe, and studied plein air painting with the revered landscape artist Randall Stauss, now of Lake Tahoe. Fortunately for the Bay Area, he returned to live in Sonoma County a few years back, and continues to produce exquisite works.

He’s been known to say that he’s just an art cat who got lucky, who was in the right places at the right times, no biggie. Those who know his work would disagree. His work has helped define the visual fix of the past 50 years, and we are most fortunate to have him contribute to our visual stock.


Magic Trackpad an Excellent Mouse Alternative

Seattle Times reviewer Jeff Carlson calls Magic Trackpad “an excellent mouse alternative” and “a fascinating addition to the Apple hardware lineup.” He also mentions the new Apple Battery Charger, noting that it “pulls much less power (30 milliwatts) once the batteries are charged compared to other battery chargers.” About Magic Trackpad Carlson concludes: “…if you want to take advantage of Multi-Touch gestures on a desktop computer, it’s a stylish and solid implementation.”

Get a Cursor Change: Change Your Mouse Cursor Very Easily and Cost-Free Posted By : Dylan Vanland

Its now feasible to perform a change cursor function on your pc as simply as it is to alter the wallpaper. By downloading a cost-free toolbar, you are able to immediate alter your mouse cursor and start working with a cool fresh animated pointer.

How to Obtain Cost-free Mouse Pointers Employing a Toolbar Download and Install Posted By : Dylan Vanland

It is now feasible to customize your mouse pointer for free by simply downloading a toolbar in your browser. You are able to begin using new animated mouse cursors in seconds

Toxoplasmosis and psychology: A game of cat and mouse

There is tantalising evidence that a common parasite may affect human behaviour

IF AN alien bug invaded the brains of half the population, hijacked their neurochemistry, altered the way they acted and drove some of them crazy, then you might expect a few excitable headlines to appear in the press. Yet something disturbingly like this may actually be happening without the world noticing.

Toxoplasma gondii is not an alien; it is a relative of that down-to-earth pathogen Plasmodium, the beast that causes malaria. It is common: in some parts of the world as much as 60% of the population is infected with it. And it can harm fetuses and people with AIDS, because in each case their immune systems cannot cope with it. For other people, though, the symptoms are usually no worse than a mild dose of flu. Not much for them to worry about, then. Except that there is a growing body of evidence that some of those people have their behaviour permanently changed. …

Watch Internet TV With Few Clicks Of Mouse Posted By : Faith Rodricks

The advancement in technology has brought unprecedented changes in my favorite fast time habit.

80/35 Fest Adds Modest Mouse

MODEST MOUSE TO HEADLINE 80/35 MUSIC FESTIVAL

Modest Mouse

80/35 makes its third lineup announcement with the release of Modest Mouse as the July 4th headliner. Also announced today are The Heavy, William Elliott Whitmore, Dar Williams, Sara Watkins, Cashes Rivers, and Omega Dog.

LINEUP

The next lineup announcement is Monday, May 10. All bands will be released by mid-May. More than 30 bands will play the festival.

Saturday, July 3

Spoon

Slightly Stoopid

Particle

William Elliott Whitmore

Earl Greyhound

Cashes Rivers

Omega Dog

Modern Day Satire

Sunday, July 4

Modest Mouse

Railroad Earth

The Walkmen

Avi Buffalo

The Heavy

Dar Williams

Sara Watkins

The Workshy

Christopher the Conquered

ABOUT 80/35

The third annual 80/35 is Saturday and Sunday, July 3 and 4, 2010, at Western Gateway Park in downtown Des Moines. The music festival will feature more than 30 acts on multiple stages for two full days of music.

TICKETS

A limited amount of advance tickets are currently on sale for $25 one-day, $40 two-day, and $175 VIP through midwestix.com. Find all ticket information at http://80-35.com.

Advance (Limited amount on sale now)

$175 VIP

$40 Two-Day

$25 One-Day

Regular

$60 Two-Day

$35 One-Day

Day of

$40 One-Day


180º South: Modest Mouse Shins, Jennings Jack Johnson

CHRIS MALLOY’S 180° SOUTH SOUNDTRACK TO FEATURE ORIGINAL SONGS BY
UGLY CASANOVA (ISAAC BROCK OF MODEST MOUSE), JAMES MERCER (THE SHINS) & MASON JENNINGS
ALSO FEATURES SONGS BY JACK JOHNSON & LOVE AS LAUGHTER

Mason Jennings

Brushfire Records will release the original soundtrack to director Chris Malloy‘s film 180°
South
on June 22, 2010. The 180° South soundtrack features new music from James
Mercer
(The Shins, Broken Bells w/Danger Mouse), Mason Jennings and Ugly Casanova (Isaac Brock of Modest
Mouse
with various collaborators) – all of whom participated significantly in the overall film project. Songs by
Jack Johnson and Love as Laughter also appear, as well as
James Mercer’s cover of Neil Young‘s
“Journey Through The Past.” The compilation was assembled by the film’s producer, Emmett Malloy, who recently
directed The White Stripes‘ “Under
Great White Northern Lights”.

180° South (select markets nationwide) retraces Yvon Chouinard‘s and Doug Tompkins
epic 1968 journey
to
Patagonia through the eyes of adventurer Jeff Johnson. Along the way, Jeff is shipwrecked off Easter
Island, surfs the
longest wave of his life and plans a rare ascent of Cerro Corcovado. Jeff’s life takes a turn when he meets with his
heroes Chouinard and Tompkins, now spending their fortunes to save Patagonia’s wild lands from damming and
development. Director Chris Malloy’s film strikes deeply into the heart of Patagonia’s wilderness – it was there,
during the making of the film that the soundtrack was conceived.

Mason Jennings and James Mercer visited Patagonia during the shooting of the film. Deeply impacted, they spent the following weeks, months and years that followed, writing music and enlisting friends such as Modest Mouse’s Isaac
Brock and Jack Johnson to help get the soundtrack made.

“When we had a rough edit of the movie, we headed to Portland to Isaac’s studio to record the soundtrack for
180º
South
. Pulling up to an old two-story craftsman house, we could hear the peaceful sound of guitars through
the
windows” says producer Emmett Malloy. Chris and I stopped and stared up at the attic, completely captivated. It was not long before we were
watching footage and going over ideas and it wasn’t long after that before we heard banjo, trumpet, squeezebox,
drums and harmonies coming from every corner of the house. That did not stop for almost two weeks.”

Track listing:

1. “MOUNTAINS OF STORMS” – Ugly Casanova
2. “HERE’S TO NOW” – Ugly Casanova
3. “MACHINES” – Mason Jennings
4. “DOUG’S THEME” – James Mercer
5. “WAVE GOODBYE” – Ugly Casanova
6. “LONESOME BLUES” – Ugly Casanova
7. “JOURNEY THROUGH THE PAST” – James Mercer
8. “HOTCHA GIRLS” – Ugly Casanova
9. “SPRING WIND” – Jack Johnson
10. “MAYBE WE’RE LOST” – Ugly Casanova
11. “CORCOVADO” – Ugly Casanova
12. “COCONUT FLAKES” – Love as Laughter
13. “THE GEEZER” – Ugly Casanova
14. “LAY ME DOWN” – Ugly Casanova


Danger Mouse & Sparklehorse: Dark Night of the Soul Out 7/13

HIGHLY ANTICIPATED DANGER MOUSE AND SPARKLEHORSE COLLABORATION OUT JULY 13

Danger Mouse

Dark Night Of The Soul is an album by audio auteur Danger Mouse and the already
much-missed Sparklehorse (who committed suicide on March 6). The record sees the pair joined by the following remarkable roll call of
guests: The Flaming Lips, Gruff Rhys, Jason Lytle, Julian Casablancas, Black Francis, Iggy Pop, David Lynch,
James Mercer, Nina Persson, Suzanne Vega and Vic Chesnutt.

Rumours of this mysterious collaborative project began to circulate in early 2009 sparking widespread anticipation
and excitement. However, whilst Dark Night Of The Soul successfully manifested itself as both a limited
edition art book with enclosed blank CDR and an audio-visual gallery installation, its music was never officially made
available. Now, following months of talks, Danger Mouse and EMI are excited and proud to announce that Dark
Night Of The Soul
will be released worldwide in July.

Whilst this beautiful, haunting record being made widely and legitimately available is undoubtedly a cause for
celebration, the news is shadowed by sadness following the recent passing of Mark Linkous, who released
and performed under the Sparklehorse pseudonym. Dark Night Of The Soul will now stand as a de facto
tribute to this well-loved, stunningly talented yet often-overlooked artist and has received the blessing of Mark’s
family who have issued the following statement: “Mark felt that it was an honor to be able to collaborate with so
many of the artists on this record. His time and dedication to this project was immense and his hopes for its release
are finally being realized. We are glad that people will now be able to hear these songs and know the beautiful gift
that Mark shared with all of us through his music.”

Danger Mouse adds: “I told Mark that we’d worked things out with EMI back in January and he was very happy that
the album was finally going to be released this year. Mark meant a great deal to a lot of people and I’m grateful to
have made music with him and to be a part of his legacy.”

Dark Night Of The Soul is also dedicated to the memory of Vic Chesnutt.

In addition to featuring on two songs, David Lynch has created a series of original photographs for Dark Night Of
The Soul
adding a spectacular visual dimension that will be incorporated in to the artwork for this already
unparalleled project.

Danger Mouse and Sparklehorse’s Dark Night Of The Soul will be released on July 12 in the U.K. through
Parlophone/EMI and on July 13 in the U.S. via EMI’s Capitol Records.

Danger Mouse Tour Dates :: Danger Mouse News :: Danger Mouse Concert Reviews


Modest Mouse: Summer Tour

MODEST MOUSE ANNOUNCE SUMMER TOUR; AVI BUFFALO, MORNING TELEPORTATION TO OPEN
SHOWS

Modest Mouse

Modest Mouse have
announced their 2010 summer tour plans. The
new tour dates will take the band across the U.S. with a stop in Chicago
at this year’s Pitchfork Festival and over to Europe for appearances at
the Leeds and Reading Festivals. Avi Buffalo and Morning Teleportation
will open various shows on the tour. See below for full list of tour
dates.

Modest Mouse celebrated the 10th anniversary of The Moon & Antarctica
with the long awaited vinyl reissue of the landmark album on April 17.

Out-of-print on vinyl for the past five years, The Moon & Antarctica,
newly-struck on 12″ heavy double vinyl, has been remastered using the
band-approved 2004 CD master. The album features restored original
artwork and replicates the infinite lock groove found in the original
vinyl pressings of 2000. Recorded from July through November 1999, The
Moon & Antarctica
, the third Modest Mouse album, was first released on
both vinyl and CD in June 2000.

The new vinyl reissue includes a download card for The Moon &
Antarctica.

Modest Mouse Tour Dates :: Modest Mouse News :: Modest Mouse Concert Reviews


Modest Mouse The Moon & Antarctica Reissue On Vinyl 4/17

MODEST MOUSE CELEBRATE THE 10th ANNIVERSARY OF THE MOON & ANTARCTICA

WITH LONG AWAITED VINYL REISSUE OF LANDMARK ALBUM ON APRIL 17

Modest Mouse

Epic/Legacy Recordings will celebrate the 10th anniversary of The Moon & Antarctica, the highly
acclaimed major label debut from American indie rock band Modest Mouse, with the long
awaited vinyl reissue of the landmark album on April 17.

Out-of-print on vinyl for the past five years, 12″ copies of The Moon & Antarctica have become prized
collector’s items.

Available in time for Record Store Day 2010, The Moon & Antarctica, newly-struck on 12″ heavy double
vinyl, has been remastered using the band-approved 2004 CD master. The album features restored original artwork
and replicates the infinite lock groove found in the original vinyl pressings of 2000. The new vinyl reissue includes a
download card for The Moon & Antarctica.

Recorded from July through November 1999, The Moon & Antarctica, the third Modest Mouse album, was
first released on both vinyl and CD in June 2000. A milestone for the band and a sublime presence on the
American pop music landscape, The Moon & Antarctica turned up on many year-end best-of lists.

The highly influential Pitchfork Media ranked the album #3 for 2000, #7 for 2000-2004, and #6 for the decade
(2000-2010). Better Propaganda named The Moon & Antarctica #23 for the decade, Rhapsody ranked it #4
on their Alt/Indie’s Best Albums of the Decade” list and Entertainment Weekly, who ranked it #37 (out of 100) in
“The New Classics” list (from 1983-2008) calling the “…major-label debut from the Northwest indie heroes…an
angular, experimental treasure….”

A success in both the mainstream and the underground, The Moon & Antarctica was certified gold by the
RIAA as of March 9, 2009.

Fans may pre-order the album online at
www.modestmouse.com or
www.modestmousemusic.com

Modest Mouse Tour Dates :: Modest Mouse News :: Modest Mouse Concert Reviews


Cut the Cord with Wireless Mice from Apple, Microsoft, Logitech

Cords are so last decade. The mouse of the future is not only wireless, it offers a level of design sophistication and ergonomics never before seen. Enhanced accuracy, tactile refinement and rapidly falling prices make 2010 the ideal year to cut the cord on your old mouse and move into the world of wireless.
– …


Jim Fairchild: Smiling Mouse

By: Alexander Napoliello

Jim Fairchild by Janet Weiss

After former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr left Modest Mouse to play with rising U.K. rockers The Cribs in January 2009, the band rummaged through their past for a rhythm guitarist who could help carry the substantial load of the indie rock empire built by Isaac Brock and company. Modest Mouse is complex and well versed, integrating various forms of punk, pop, rock, blues, and aspects of folk – so not exactly a simple feat for any guitarist.

Jim Fairchild, who previously played with the band for a short time in 2006, quickly rose to the top of the list. Fairchild was no stranger to the various musical aspects bandleader Isaac Brock, bassist Eric Judy and drummer Jeremiah Green build upon. For 13-years Fairchild played alongside Jason Lytle in Grandaddy, an established indie rock act incorporating elements of folk and electronica into a pop formula. Fairchild’s solo venture, All Smiles, proved he could not only play next to a prominent frontman, but be one as well.

“Isaac [Brock] is a very smart dude. He doesn’t fuck around. He doesn’t bring people into the picture he thinks won’t be able to bring something to it. So within that, there is a real surprising amount of latitude,” Fairchild told JamBase over the phone from his home in San Francisco. “He encourages you to bring your personality to it. That’s a demonstration, first of all, of just how smart he is, what a great musician he is, and what a great sense he has for what is going to be effective in his band.”

Modest Mouse’s lengthy resume began to take shape with the 1997 cult-classic The Lonesome Crowded West, an album full of anger and resentment transcribed through a renegade, punk fashion. Then, 2004′s platinum-selling Good News For People Who Love Bad News proved a more melodic offering with pop hits “Float On” and “Oceans Breathe Salty.” With this album came instant popularity and the beginning of a pop transformation that found Modest Mouse staying true to their roots but suppressing the anguish found in earlier albums. The release of We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank (2007) displayed slight hints of their earlier aggression but largely capitalized on a modern rock undertone featuring sing-along choruses and softer sounds. Created from outtakes of the previous two albums, 2009′s EP No One’s First and You’re Next followed suite, proving just how deep the band’s songwriting cannon goes.

Jim Fairchild by Scott Dudelson

Fairchild has the experience to aid in the evolution of Modest Mouse. His solo career and involvement in Granddaddy encompasses similar aspects to Mouse’s more recent refined sound, and his style offers a nice contrast to Marr (who hasn’t officially left the group altogether, as expressed in a chat with Pitchfork last December).

Essentially, Modest Mouse is like a tree. At the roots are Judy and Green, who’ve been there since the beginning and anchor Modest Mouse’s solid foundation. The trunk is Brock, whose creative intuition is the bridge between the roots and the crown of the tree. The water that feeds the growth is the trio’s rugged rise outside Seattle, which became the driving force behind their hard-egged, rough lyrics (the pain and anger embedded in their early albums is reminiscent of Kurt Cobain’s manic, suffering themes). Over time, this tree grew branches, namely second percussionist Joe Plummer and multi-instrumentalist Tom Peloso, which allowed the band to evolve from an aggressive trio to an upbeat indie ensemble. In 2009, Modest Mouse grew another branch as Fairchild was welcomed in with open arms and offered free reign with the material. Although creativity goes hand-in-hand with an artist’s vision, Fairchild was unfamiliar with such congenial group dynamics.

“It got to the point toward the end of Grandaddy where there was no room for anyone’s creativity except for Jason’s, and that became pretty darn frustrating,” says Fairchild. “I don’t think it would be an overstatement to say he just didn’t want any input from anybody. He wanted to play exactly what he had written, exactly the way he had written it.”

“Lack of creative room led to the demise of Grandaddy. That was certainly a part of it, at least on my behalf,” Fairchild continues. “First of all, if people are going to make records they should make them however they want to make them. If Jason wants to sit around and only have himself plan the record, that’s fine. That’s his prerogative. But, I do think that there is strength in groups and I think there is strength in bouncing ideas off of people.”

Continue reading for more on Jim Fairchild…

 


You have to stay sharp when you’re doing stuff with [Isaac Brock]. That’s really a big part of the magic of that band; it’s certainly never the same show twice. He might do different lyrics or he might want to do a chord twice; those surprises are a big part of what makes that band so interesting and unique.”

-Jim Fairchild on playing in Modest Mouse

 

Photo by: Janet Weiss

Despite Brock being such a powerful force, Modest Mouse’s longevity and rise in popularity stems from a group conscience, the catalyst behind the progression of their sound. Fans from all walks of life can receive what they want depending on which album they choose to explore. Their earlier records offer kicks for a straight edge punk rock kid, while a laid-back stoner can get his musical fix from their latter releases.

Isaac Brock – Modest Mouse by Michael Jurick

“Playing with Modest Mouse is a lot more like being a part of nature than it is like being a part of a building or something man made. That’s what’s really fun about it,” says Fairchild. “It’s very haphazard, but there’s a real beauty in that. And there’s a lot of knowledge that’s informing those turns that can be perceived as… well, they are spontaneous.”

Onstage, Modest Mouse is full of loose threads. Brock’s sporadic playing often leads to repeated verses, improvised lyric teases, and deranged mashes of pedal effects and reverb.

“You have to stay sharp when you’re doing stuff with him. That’s really a big part of the magic of that band; it’s certainly never the same show twice. He might do different lyrics or he might want to do a chord twice; those surprises are a big part of what makes that band so interesting and unique,” Fairchild explains. “That’s a really fun thing to be a part of, especially coming out of having played with Grandaddy for so long. We played the songs exactly the same way every night and pretty much tried to recreate them as they exist on the album. That has its place, but at this point in my development as a person, it’s a really fascinating challenge [to be] playing in a situation that’s totally different every night. It’s a really interesting canvas to try to integrate yourself into. You have to really use your sharpest listening skills as much as [your] playing.”

Jim Fairchild by: Janet Weiss

In November 2009, Fairchild went on a brief solo tour overseas to promote his sophomore All Smiles full-length, Oh for the Getting and Not Letting Go (get a free download off the album here), as well as his first EP, Fall Never Fell. Currently, he is in the process of writing a new full-length and mixing a second EP. According to Fairchild, the EP will be released sometime in March but there’s no set release date for the full-length. He has also confirmed an appearance at the South By Southwest Festival (SXSW) in Austin this March.

Although it appears Fairchild is the missing piece in Brock’s complex puzzle, he assures JamBase that he is not an official member of Modest Mouse. However, he toured with MM all through 2009, including a short international tour last December in support of No One’s First and You’re Next. “The way Isaac describes it, I was the person that they called. That’s a good position to be in, I guess,” he laughs.

Even though Fairchild enjoys playing with Modest Mouse, All Smiles serves as his creative dumping ground, his mouthpiece to the musical world that allows him complete creative freedom for his musical vision.

He describes finding the perfect sound as “an intuitive thing, in the same way you encounter new people. Sometimes you’re not sure why, but you’re like, ‘That guy is bullshitting me,’ and then you avoid that person. And then sometimes you’re like, ‘I think I can hang out with that guy ’cause he’s not bullshitting me.’ I’ll sit around and tinker with [a song] forever until it just simply feels right and sounds right to sing it – [until] the actual sound of the words or the words themselves seem very true.”

“The world doesn’t need anymore songs necessarily. So, if you’re going to go through the trouble of writing one or making another record, what I try to imagine is, ‘Is this necessary to the world? Does the world need this?’”

Modest Mouse tour dates available here :: All Smiles tour dates available here

JamBase | Smiling
Go See Live Music!


Pitchfork Music Fest: Pavement Modest Mouse, LCD, St. Vincent

PITCHFORK MUSIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES PAVEMENT, MODEST MOUSE

LCD SOUNDSYSTEM, ST. VINCENT, RAEKWON, CASS MCCOMBS AND MORE TO PERFORM AT 2010 FESTIVAL

Pavement

As previously reported, the 2010 Pitchfork Music Festival will be held at Chicago’s Union Park on July 16-18. This year’s festival welcomes the highly anticipated return of legendary band Pavement as they make one of their first appearances since reuniting! Pavement will perform on Sunday night. Friday features indie rock, chart-topping mainstays Modest Mouse, while Saturday and Sunday sees performances by LCD Soundsystem, Raekwon, Here We Go Magic, St. Vincent, Lightning Bolt, Cass McCombs and Sleigh Bells. Stay tuned, as more bands will be announced in the coming weeks.

Tickets are on sale today (Friday February 5) at 12 p.m. CST at www.pitchforkmusicfestival.com. Single-day tickets can be purchased for $40 and three-day passes for $90. This year, Friday will feature more bands, providing festival-goers with a longer day of music. There will be no two-day passes for sale. Purchase your tickets early, as three-day passes are sure to sell out quickly!

The 2010 Pitchfork Festival Lineup so far:

Friday

Modest Mouse

Saturday

LCD Soundsystem

Raekwon

Sunday

Pavement

St. Vincent

Lightning Bolt

Cass McCombs

Here We Go Magic

Sleigh Bells

For more on Pitchfork Music Festival see our 2009 coverage here.


Danger Mouse & Mercer Broken Bells – Free Song

Danger Mouse & The Shins’ James Mercer Form Broken Bells

Free Song Available Now

Danger Mouse & Mercer
Broken Bells

Danger Mouse and The ShinsJames Mercer have created a new group called Broken Bells. Their self-titled album is set for release on March 9 via Columbia. You can get a free download of the song “The High Road” by entering your email address at the Broken Bells website here.

The duo recently worked together on the Danger Mouse/Sparklehorse album Dark Night of the Soul.