Los Campesinos! not a flamenco band, sorry
When they first started gigging two years ago at Cardiff University in Wales, Los Campesinos! would occasionally be mistaken for a flamenco band—that is, until the flamenco aficionados saw the seven indie-rockers on stage.
“Had we thought we were going anywhere, we would’ve put more thought into the band name,” laughs the band’s singer and resident glockenspiel player, Gareth, who like all the members uses Campesinos as his surname. “Our guitarist Neil was pretty fluent in Spanish and we all thought the word [which means ‘peasants’] looked and sounded pretty cool. So why not? But it’s ended up that people make all sorts of assumptions that really have nothing to do with the band or its intentions. People show up expecting a flamenco band, or a political band, and leave quite disappointed. They suggest it’s in bad taste or inappropriate. We’re not trying to upset anyone. We’re not that kind of band.”
Indeed, the Campesinos are a modest bunch by any standard. Their bus driver on a recent tour of Europe had to pull over to admonish the band—not for being too loud, but for not being loud enough. “He came back to ask us to make more noise because he was worried he would fall asleep while driving us to the next show,” Gareth says. “We’re not very good at being rock stars.”
But the septet are becoming stars almost in spite of themselves. A series of terrific singles, notably “You! Me! Dancing!,” ushered in an acclaimed debut album, “Hold On Now, Youngster …” (Arts & Crafts), released last month. The band’s exuberant melodies and co-ed harmonies, tinged by Harriet Campesinos’ violin playing and Gareth’s frantic glockenspiel, reinvest indie-rock with an often-ignored virtue: joy.
“We were depressed by the music we were hearing while at Cardiff,” Gareth says. “It was boring, derivative, masculine. In the context of U.K. guitar bands who were into looking cool, moody or stylish, we were anomalies: A mixed gender band with multiple instruments who looked like they were enjoying themselves.”
Tags: leave, lyrics
Friday 23 May 2008 | Pattie | Uncategorized
All kinds of awesome. Heres one I just made for 99 bottles of beer.
Ask and ye shall recieve.Ok, that’s enough
Answer: pretty frickin’ sweet.small jpg, 3 mb png, svg
Apparently I don’t have the “graph” library installed. Anyone know where it is, or better, which ubuntu package it’s in?
"Albuquerque" by Weird Al.
GraphViz sucks on too many levels, especially for large graphs. There are tons of graph visualization software that are much, much, much better, such as aiSee, Walrus, ILOG Views, Tulip, or yFiles, to name only a few.
Oh, thanks, I had looked at aiSee but I couldn’t find a layout like the one I wanted. I want to draw maps for a MUD, where they’re more or less planar and orthogonal, so I think it’ll do, thanks again.
Check also the following lyricshttp://www.siteforlyrics.com/singer/Aaron_Neville.htmlhttp://www.siteforlyrics.com/singer/Aaron_Tippin.htmlhttp://www.siteforlyrics.com/singer/ABBA.htmlhttp://www.siteforlyrics.com/singer/Abc.htmlhttp://www.siteforlyrics.com/singer/Abdul_Paula.html
Cool.Now, if anyone could explain what kind of info can we glean from this graphs.
Hey, do you know of a program that will draw map-style graphs correctly (orthogonal layout, I believe it’s called). Bonus points for open-sourceness or easy usage (graphviz-style command line preferred), but I’m not too picky. yFiles did a good one, but it’s not free…
Argh, I fail. The url to get the library is in the source code.Direct link to zip: http://www.fantascienza.net/leonardo/so/graph.zipLink to page: http://www.fantascienza.net/leonardo/so/index.html
I’m waiting to be GraphRoll’D
Heheh, enter in real song lyrics like “And She’s Building a Stairway to Heaven” and get something totally off!