Archive for August, 2010

They Get It, Vol. 3: Matix Clothing

Posted by Neal Shaffer on Thursday, August 26th, 2010

http://www.vimeo.com/14192092

Skate/surf wear label Matix is up for some serious props with the release of their Capital Collection, a new line of denim and basic pieces that’s both manufactured and sourced in the USA. The short video above has the details.

As I learned in the video, Matix is an interesting case. They started out US-made, grew to the point where economics dictated they either outsource or die, and are now coming back to US manufacturing on a small scale.

I make no secret of my love for US-made goods but I’m not an idiot about it. I realize that outsourcing is in many cases necessary. I think it means a lot, then, when a company does what they can.

Matix isn’t alone. Levi’s manufactures some of their high-end stuff in the US. So do L.L. Bean, Woolrich, and others. Every little bit helps and if the recent general trend toward traditional/artisanal is any indication I think we’ll start seeing more and more of it. Hopefully, anyway.

Below: some images from the Matix Fall/Winter 2010 catalog:

The Piano Man: A Theory of Tom Waits

Posted by Neal Shaffer on Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

As anyone who ever listened to him knows, Tom Waits is two men.

The first showed up in 1974 with The Heart of Saturday Night, a brilliant slate of tracks that, while not his debut album, announced the presence of an American songwriter who would not go unnoticed.

The second arrived nine years later with Swordfisthtrombones, a record that declared a sharp, eccentric break from everything he had done before.

The first era (6 albums, not counting his debut or the One From the Heart soundtrack) was defined by an elegant ability to chronicle the down-and-out. To give voice to the drunken, striving, troubled lives of people in touch, maybe too much so, with the ragged underbelly. He did pretty well with it, too. The Eagles covered him, among others, and he worked his way into a collaboration with Francis Ford Coppola (the aforementioned soundtrack), to name just two of the highlights.

The second featured a different kind of storytelling. More baroque, more theatrical, more willfully weird. He eschewed the piano ballads that had become his signature and replaced them with a unique but less accessible voice.

Any number of theories explain the shift. He stopped the hard partying. He got married. He stopped living in hotels, cafés, and bars. He tired of his own reputation and sought to expand his capabilities. All of these are probably true, to some degree, and are variously supported by the historical record.

But I have a different theory: Waits stopped being Waits because he couldn’t be Billy Joel.

In an October, 2004 review of Real Gone, Pitchfork.com writer Amanda Petrusich says: Sometime in the early 1980s, Waits stumbled past a mirror, caught a quick glimpse of his knobby mug, and was slapped with a cosmic, knee-wobbling epiphany: Tom Waits saw Billy Joel.

In Petrusich’s eyes this is clearly a very bad thing. Waits, after all, is a counterculture icon. He has the kind of credibility a guy like Billy Joel could only dream of. And yet for a time they both worked the same fertile ground: piano players and songwriters writing pop music with a nod to the disaffected.

From an artistic perspective Waits was always better at it. Nothing Billy Joel has ever done can stack up against Tom Waits at his best. The thing is, though, that there’s enough evidence in the albums leading up to Swordfishtrombones to suggest that Waits wanted to write a Piano Man of his own. He was no stranger to schmaltz (see Kentucky Avenue) and most of his early work has solid pop underpinnings (see the Eagles’ cover of ‘Ol 55). I don’t think he was willfully avoiding mainstream success, I think he was dancing right up to it and seeing if he could give it a go.

It just never clicked. Not really. So, Waits resigned his post.

That’s a shame because, despite the reputation, later Tom Waits isn’t as consistently good. There’s a Hang Down Your Head here or a Picture In a Frame there, sure, but for the most part you have to work to enjoy Waits, Version Two. He may be capable of more, but it amounts to less.

I wonder what could have been. What would have happened if he really did look in that mirror, really did see Billy Joel, and decided to ride it for all it’s worth. It’s a damn shame we’ll never know.

Brightblack Morning Light

Posted by Neal Shaffer on Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Fall’s on the way and Brightblack Morning Light will be on my soundtrack.

I discovered them here (click the “play” icon at the top of the post) then downloaded their second album, Motion to Rejoin. No description I offer could really explain their sound, but think of a deep, heady mix of ethereal southern grooves and folk. You could say “psychedelic” but that definitely doesn’t do them justice. Perfect music for down time or just winding down.

Embedded below is a fan-made video from YouTube to give you a taste. Probably not for everyone, but highly recommended nonetheless.

YouTube Preview Image

Vintage American Ink: US Navy Tattoos

Posted by Neal Shaffer on Monday, August 16th, 2010

This is, arguably, my best LIFE archive find: tattoo images circa 1940 featuring US Navy sailors. Shot by Carl Mydans, a photographer of some note whose broader body of work is definitely worth checking out.

If you can’t make it out that first one reads “Hold Fast.”

Indeed, my friends. Indeed.

In Praise of Friday the 13th

Posted by Neal Shaffer on Friday, August 13th, 2010

Horror movies aren’t what they used to be. A genre once fully defined by a rebellious spirit and boundless creativity has today (at least at the mainstream level) been reduced to an effects-laden shock-a-thon. Lost are the days when craft and storytelling ruled and shock and/or gore merely juiced the mix.

The best experience, then, is still found in the classics. Films made when “special effects” meant a bunch of folks getting their hands dirty because no other option existed and when shooting on a shoestring brought out their best. As far as that goes, few options outshine Friday the 13th.

That might sound odd given how the franchise has lost much of its luster over the years. Too many sequels, too many remakes, and too many jokes have weakened the name. Jason X may have some value as camp but it does little to support the idea that the series once offered something great. No matter. Sean Cunningham’s original is a true low-budget horror classic, filled with enough suspense and plot twists to satisfy all but the most jaded viewer. There’s true craftsmanship there. The way the identity of the killer is handled is brilliantly tricky, and the final scene makes me jump to this day despite having seen it at least twenty times.

Beyond that, the studio managed to somehow make four sequels that all worked. Parts two and three (shot in gimmicky-but-fun 3-D) both hold their own while Final Chapter and New Beginning likewise satisfy despite some drop-off. We’re talking solid horror films here. Nothing groundbreaking but certainly worth a look.

Unfortunately, New Beginning came out in 1985 which means we’ve gone 25 years without a truly worthwhile installment in the series. Long enough for some folks to forget the originals and many others to never have known at all.

That’s a shame. And so I say, what better day than today to get reacquainted? If nothing else it’s great prep for Halloween which is, lest you forget, right around the corner.

(photo borrowed from this page)

They Get It, Vol. 2: Tanner Goods

Posted by Neal Shaffer on Thursday, August 12th, 2010

A few months ago the time came for a new wallet. I’d had my old one for something like ten years and it never should have lasted that long. It was a random Wal-Mart buy, originally intended only as a temporary replacement. Weirdly, it stuck around. Solidly for maybe seven or eight years, then I kept nursing it along. That it lasted as long as it did is actually kind of amazing.

Still, the time had come to go in a new direction. No more “cheap/disposable/temporary,” even if it might accidentally last. It was time to buy a real wallet. One I could carry proudly. Something well-made, stylish, trustworthy, and crafted in the US if possible.

I found all of the above at Tanner Goods.

I’m now a proud owner of this piece and couldn’t be happier. It’s beautifully constructed and a pleasure to carry. The profile is very slim at first, so much so that I had to remove some extraneous cards before carrying it. Three months in, though, it’s loosening up nicely. Think breaking in a new baseball glove — the process is much the same. It wears the way I wear it, which means it fits me and always will.

As for Tanner Goods, they’re doing things the right way all around. From their “about” page:

Our small team of craftsmen produce every piece by hand in our studios here in the Northwest. We utilize the same tools that have been put to work for decades manufacturing heritage leather goods, and in many cases have sought out antique equipment that produce the best results. All of our sewing is done by a heritage saddle maker who started as an apprentice in the industry in 1964. For the past 45+ years he has been honing his craft, and has been generous enough to pass along his knowledge and skill to the rest of our team.

When they say “every piece by hand,” they mean it. After I placed my order I emailed them a question about when I might expect to receive it (I was hoping to get it in time for a trip). They responded quickly and pleasantly with news that it would take some time because, well, they had to make it first. I’ve never felt better about waiting.

The price might seem high but what you get for it — the product and the craft behind it — is if anything a bargain. You know where your money is going (which you can’t always say) and you can be sure you won’t need another wallet for a long time. Hell, maybe ever.

Craftsmanship, folks. Love it.

(photo via the Tanner Goods site)

RIP Patricia Neal, 1926-2010

Posted by Neal Shaffer on Monday, August 9th, 2010

Oscar winning actress Patricia Neal died Sunday at her home in Massachusetts. She was 84.

I only know Neal for her star turn opposite Paul Newman in Hud. Usually one movie wouldn’t be enough to merit my noticing or mentioning her passing, but Neal’s work in Hud is a special case. I remember the first time I saw it I came away thinking “Damn, what a woman.” Elegant, mature, tough, smart, sexy — all these and multi-dimensional, able to not only hold her own with Newman but match him shot-for-shot as well. If you haven’t seen it, you must. It’s a classic in every way and Neal is a big part of that.

She led, like so many gifted actresses, a troubled life. That she made it to 84 is one hell of an achievement.

American Travel: Railroads

Posted by Neal Shaffer on Friday, August 6th, 2010

American history is, in a lot of ways, railroad history. And while I’m glad that today I can get to California in six hours by plane, there’s still nothing quite like traveling by rail. It hasn’t lost its mystique and probably never will.

With that in mind, enjoy some eye candy from the LIFE magazine archives.

Rethinking the Exclamation Point

Posted by Neal Shaffer on Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

exclamation_pointFor many years I flat-out refused to use exclamation points. Whether writing fiction, journalism, an email, an instant message, whatever, I just wouldn’t do it. No matter what.

My reasoning was that exclamation points are cheap and flimsy. They have a tendency to make whatever you’re writing sound as if it’s being spoken by a cheerleader. That, it seemed to me, was clearly something to avoid. The practice served me well and I believed it always would.

Perhaps not.

Within the past two or three years the exclamation point has started to make a move on me. It started with text messages, then occasionally showed up on Twitter. Nowadays it even occasionally — very occasionally — ends up in an email.

What happened? I ran into (as everyone does) one of the biggest shortcomings of modern communications technology: the inability to accurately convey tone. When everything is flat, just letterforms on a screen, there’s no body language or voice to help tell someone how I feel. No way to let them know that I’m very excited and not just interested in whatever’s being discussed.

For example, there’s a big difference between typing “Thanks.” and “Thanks!” Sometimes only the latter will do because the former seems too cold, maybe even (depending on the context) sarcastic. Similarly, “f#*k off!” only feels flippant if accompanied by an exclamation point. And if flippancy is intended in a situation like that, it better be there.

So now I’m ready to admit that not only is the exclamation point occasionally useful, there are times when it’s actually essential. Amazingly enough.

That said, a plea. When you encounter a need for exclamation points in the wild, keep three rules in mind:

  • Always use them sparingly.
  • Never use them in any situation more formal than Twitter or a text. Keep them out of your blog posts, the bulk of your emails, and anything business-related.
  • Always double-check before going live. Is it necessary?

One final note: nothing I said above also applies to emoticons. The less said about those, the better.