Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

Little Boy Jump Rope

Not too sure what this is from but it is freakin’ cute!

Spinning right now on StarlifterRadio.com

Bang! Bang! Eche! Rawk!

Bang! Bang! Eche! Rawk!

Hey yo! Heaps of cats keep sending us guff to play on StarlifterRadio.com so we keep adding new shiz YO! We’ve just added a brand new song from Bang! Bang! Eche!’s latest EP Sonic Death Cunttttt, a new track from Del The Funky Homosapien & Tame One, Ed Muzik’s Disco(very) DJ mix, we’re still spinning the Time Machine Mix from Zombie Nation, Chilli JAM Episode 10 DJ mix by Johnny Kingdom [courtesy of www.Chillij.com], and there’s advice on Social Media Gurus (heh) and we’ve even got a cameo from Dolly Parton. Choice!

So heaps happening on StarlifterRadio.com, be sure to check it out. In a couple months time you’ll be able to be one of those pre-cool cats who walk around being like “yeah, I was listening to Starlifter Radio years ago. It’s not as good these days…” ;)

Peace,
Dr H

Tom Cosm Live – TONIGHT – Be here from 10pm NZ time

Go the Tiger Tones! No.1 on NZ Alt Radio in 2008

“I Love You But I Hate You But I’m Just Not Sure” from Starlifter.TV favs the Tiger Tones was the most played song on Alternative radio in New Zealand in 2008. That’s awesome! Go the T-Tones!

Tiger Tones (Radioscope.net.nz)

” … the b.net stations ensured 2008 largely belonged to the locals. All but one of the year’s Alternative Top10 were by New Zealand acts – just Aussie alt godfather Nick Cave and his Bad Seeds allowed entry to the exclusive club. And although there are some widely recognisable names in the final hit list, it was the newcomers who took out the top spots – Christchurch’s Tiger Tones at #1 with I Love You But I Hate You But I’m Just Not Sure, followed closely by one of the discoveries of 2008 The Naked and Famous who score two places in the Top Four, and current international sensation Ladyhawke.” (Radioscope.net.nz)

‘Til I Die – Beach Boys ::Jonathan Phillips

“Until I Die” begins like a particular kind of film. All the colours are drained and the actors dialogue doesn’t go anywhere; the camera just drifts through a series of lonely conversations with quiet people who want to be somewhere different. There is such a maudlin feeling it’s almost unbearable; it’s sunk in a mire of empty diners and restless nights on unfriendly beaches. There is no resolution in the song. The focus on loneliness and preoccupation with death marks a considerable shift for the Beach Boys, there is no innocence in this song or optimistic reflection on summer love. Brian Wilson wrote that “I wanted the music to reflect the loneliness of floating a raft in the middle of the Pacific. I wanted each note to sound as if it was disappearing into the hugeness of the universe.” After about one and half minutes of uneasy restlessness, a chorus emerges but, unlike the familiar melodies of the early Beach Boys it is entirely beguiling. Brian Wilson repeatedly sings the line “These Things I’ll be Until I Die”. It emerges amongst waves of unbearably beautiful vocal harmonies, moonlit waves that eventually fade away like you are driving away from the beach and can hear the distant reverberation of the sea. Everything is cradled in that sad melody and, for its duration, there is nothing else that matters in the world. Just don’t listen to it when drunk, you will probably kill yourself or something.

:: Jonathan hosts Throwing Shapes on RDU 98.5 FM and writes music as Mount Pleasant. He also enjoys romantic nights with wine and cheese, and controversy.