Not So Little You & I
Last Monday was the
Jason Mraz show at the Georgia Theatre. It was really great, as I'd heard his shows are. I went with David, Kim, and Katie, and we were the first ones there-- quite the overacheivers, we are. In any case, getting there early paid off, as we were right in front and relatively centered. Within spitting distance, as the metaphor goes, but when you're directly beneath somebody who's singing, the metaphor is usually more of a reality.
So there was an opener, Aqualung, who sounded good but were far too mellow-- we were all almost asleep by the time they finished their set. Mraz's more energetic show was a welcome change. He stayed on for a long time, by all standards, and played mostly non-album tracks. It was exciting to hear some of the songs that will be on his upcoming CD,
Mr. A-Z, which I believe is slated for an early August release and sounds like it will be as good if not better than
Waiting For My Rocket To Come. So after the show, as we were up in front, we managed to get some of the stuff the roadies were clearing off the stage (y'know, set lists, stray drumsticks...the usual stuff). Except I ended up getting a bottle of Jason Mraz's orange juice, which is a little less common. It's cool though, we waited for awhile out by his tour bus with a small mob of people until Mraz had smoked enough pot on the bus to get him through the rest of the night, and then I got both he and Toca (his percussionist) to sign the juice. They were both very nice, and stayed out there until every single fan had gotten pictures and autographs and stuff. So it was a really fun night, and I'd definitely recommend anybody go see him if you get a chance.
Please Don't Hide Your Love Away
Tuesday night Chris, AB, Farah, and I decided to make an impromptu roadtrip (if 60 miles can qualify as roadtrip) to Atlanta to see
Red Letter Agent perform an in-store at Criminal Records in Little Five Points. We were running late so we wound up doing probably 90 down 85 trying to get there on time (we would know for sure, of course, if AB's speedometer wasn't
broken), and somehow we managed to get there only 15 minutes late despite leaving about forty minutes late. The band played several songs off their new CD,
Burn The Good Ones Down (which I have since listened to--very good), and then just stuck around awhile to chat with the twenty or thirty people who'd gathered in the parking lot to watch. It was nice, a good way to spend an afternoon, but sadly, the cute drummer that we first encountered at a coffeehouse in Midtown this summer (Black 22, was it?) appears to have a girlfriend now. Alas. Good band, anyway.
If I Had To Marry A Magazine...
It would be
Paste.
I don't think I've mentioned Paste here before, but it's a national music magazine run out of Decatur that seems to be designed specifically towards my particular musical tastes. On their website, they describe the musical genres they tend to favor as Adult Album Alternative (basically modern rock), Americana (the alt.country I so love), and Indie Rock. So you can see why I would be excited. Also, it's a lovely magazine, extremely intelligent and well-written, and very pretty (which you wouldn't think would really matter, but it does).
In any case, this past Thursday the founder and editor of the magazine, who happens to be a Grady alum, came to do a lunch seminar about running and writing for a music magazine. So
of course, I RSVP'd yes. It was really cool; the editor, Josh Jackson (no, not Pacey...unfortunately) seems very nice and down to earth. He and one of his assistant editors spoke about getting the magazine started, and all the troubles they've gone through the past couple years, and how they're just starting to be pretty successful as far as magazines go. Overall it just got me really excited about my future career. I would love, love, love to intern for Paste, maybe next year or the summer after, but first: I have to become good at writing! And I have to get clips! Oh, this could prove disastrous.