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Jimmy Fallon sings Pearl Jam’s “Jeremy,” with Jeremy Lin-related lyrics.
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M sent me this song, “All the Places” by Made In Heights. Love it!
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Profile of LMF
From SCMP:
Final countdown
After 20 years of rapping what many were thinking, controversial collective LMF are bowing out at a farewell show
The sitting room of Aroom Studio in Sham Shui Po is just big enough to hold seven of the nine members of Hong Kong band LMF, although not everyone can sit. They offer their guest a stool in the shape of an oversized dice.
Someone mutes the flat screen television, which is tuned to a Taiwanese telethon in support of the survivors of the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. No one is smoking. Now and then someone gets up so another person can sit down on the denim couch.
Present: Prodip, MC Yan, Kit, Phat, DJ Tommy, Jimmy and Davy, who runs Aroom. Absent: Wah and Kevin.
A photo shoot has just wrapped up, and Prodip (the band’s bassist, graphic designer and leader) asks the photographer if he would like a poster (which he designed), and inquires whether the reporter would like something to drink. The other members sip iced tea from plastic takeaway containers, refuelling after a long day. It’s a Friday night, and the musicians have gathered to talk about their last-ever concert together, which takes place on Friday at Kitec’s Star Hall in Kowloon Bay.
The event marks the end of a five-album, 20-year journey for LMF (the acronym stands for Lazy Mutha F***a), whose ethos served as a much-needed counterpoint to commercial Canto-pop. “The band started in about 1991 or 92, when we were putting on underground shows,” says Prodip. “There were about five or six bands on each bill.
Near the end of the night, members from different bands would come together to jam. And that’s how LMF came together.”
In the beginning, they were a loose community, with musicians coming and going, including actor Sam Lee (Made in Hong Kong, Dog Bite Dog). Though LMF’s roots were in Hong Kong’s underground band scene, over time with the additions of emcees Kit and Phat, MC Yan and DJ Tommy (who placed second in the 1996 Technics world DJ championships) they began to fuse rock and metal with hip hop. “Our style hasn’t changed that much over time because we never paid attention to the mass market,” says Davy.
After releasing a debut album independently, the band signed with Warner in 1999, and put out a record with a title that loosely translates as Lazy Hall. One of the singles from the album, Hum Ga Ling was based around a Cantonese curse phrase against family, and the rhyming chorus mixed Chinese and English: “Hum ga ling ’ Hum ga ling ’ Do you know what the f*** I’m saying?”
For many, the swearing overshadowed the other content of the lyrics, even though the track was a critique of local tabloids, taking journalists to task for irresponsible reporting and sensationalism. The knee-jerk response was to dismiss the band’s music as an assemblage of “swear word songs”, rather than to listen to the music and acknowledge that the content dealt with pressing issues of the time. Some critics missed the fact that the songs were social commentary.
“We wanted to write songs that avoided the topic of love,” says MC Yan. “We wanted to discuss life, and examine our society.” LMF were saying - or rapping - what many were thinking, although in a brash and, at times, crude way. They were blunt and honest about their opinions - and they never let that get in the way of making a good song.
Debt, from the LP Crazy Children, explores family and Hong Kong’s post-colonial condition, questioning middle-class parenting decisions and values, and the impact of sending children abroad to be educated. I Love Hong Kong is a jazzy riff on the city’s pros and cons, including the lack of manners and awareness of its citizens. And lyrics aside, the band were capable of writing catchy hooks. At the core of it, the music provided a foundation for the ideas LMF wanted to explore.
“We’d get the music, and then we’d think about topics,” Kit says about the band’s songwriting process. “We’d think about our feelings on certain current events, and decide what to write.” No topic was too small or big to explore: Bruce Lee, education, bird flu, the missteps of politicians, the stock market, war, capitalism.
When their contract with Warner expired in 2003, the band decided to break up. “During our time with Warner, we did a lot,” says Davy.
“We were all tired, and it was the right time to stop. There were a lot of arguments with the label because we couldn’t agree on a direction.
They wanted us to do a lot of promotion, and we didn’t want to do any of it. We wasted a lot of time trying to communicate.” The members moved on to other projects.
Prodip continued with graphic design; MC Yan started a music label, radio station and a clothing line; Kit and Phat formed hip hop group 24 Herbs with other musicians; Davy continued to produce records at Aroom; Jimmy opened a shop selling BMX bikes; and DJ Tommy started his own company and produced tracks for a number of artists.
In 2009, to celebrate the 10th anniversary of their first album, LMF got together to record and release a single, Hold Your Middle Finger.
The next year, the group reunited for the Wild Lazy Tour, playing concerts in Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore and Malaysia. Due to internet exposure, the band have gained a new audience. “There was a new group of young people at our concerts,” says Prodip.
The upcoming show in Hong Kong, called the LMF Finale, marks the end. So why is this the final concert? “We’re old ‘” several members say at the same time, and for about a minute everyone starts talking over one another, explaining why this is the concluding chapter. They reveal that there are two new songs that will be available for free download, but they are not sure when they will be ready.
They joke about titles of the yet to be released songs: The End of the World and The Final Swear Word Song. When asked about how they hoped their music had influenced their listeners, MC Yan says: “We hope that people became more open minded.”
As the interview draws to a close, everyone’s attention is drawn back to the telethon on TV. The band discusses the best way to help the people of Japan, and how money for previous tragedies and disasters has been handled from aid concerts to telethons. Their voices rise in a crescendo of ideas and opinions. “This is how we get our inspiration ‘” someone notes. “If society didn’t have problems, we’d have nothing to say,” says Prodip.
A deliveryman arrives with their dinner, but they politely abstain from opening up the fragrant bags. In the next room, the band Mister are waiting for Davy so they can continue recording their album. The interview is nothing more than a pause in the daily lives of the members of LMF, something now of their past. The group may be disbanding for good, but the community they created and fostered over the years continues to spread through their music, and through the projects they’ve taken on since. It’s not too shabby a legacy for a “lazy” bunch.
LMF Finale, April 8, 8.30pm, Star Hall, Kitec, 1Trademart Drive, Kowloon Bay, HK$280- HK$450 HK Ticketing. Inquiries: 3128 8288
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YES! Love it.
Daniel Bejar is THE GOOGLEGANGER
One day I began receiving fan email expressing admiration for my music. Being no musician, it quickly became apparent I had intercepted fan email intended for another Daniel Bejar.
Googling my name I discovered there was indeed another Daniel Bejar, who happened to be a rock star of the band Destroyer. A Google Image Search revealed we also shared a similar likeness, and it also revealed the majority of returned image results are of my Googlegänger the rock star.
“Daniel Bejar/Destroyer (The Googlegänger)” is a web based search engine intervention where I re-stage images of my Googlegänger culled from Google’s image search engine. These re-staged images are uploaded back onto the internet, where the re-staged images exist alongside the original images.Posted on December 19, 2010 via Being Snoyman with 10 notes
Source: beingsnoyman
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“Tired of Sex” (Tracking Rough) by Weezer
The Pinkerton reissue is out. Now you can relive 1996 all over again, and wonder how Weezer went so wrong after the green album.
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Yes, Robyn’s “Body Talk” is out! This is the video for “Indestructible.”
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The 90s, Again
I should be editing right now. I have about ten things to file. My feet are freezing. My back hurts. Yes, I’m in full on stress and neuroses mode. THAT’S RIGHT, I’M SUPER FUN RIGHT NOW. I have no business blogging, because I should really be filing, instead of stressing my editors out. But it’s almost ten p.m., and I finally just ate a bowl of broccoli for dinner. I can do this thing. But I’m still hungry.
I need to channel my inner workaholic, that total beast who is capable of writing 3,000 words a day.
My brain is clicking between writing about climate change, luxury brands, contemporary art, pop stars, and food. Coverage ADD. Even this entry is scattered. (Oh man, I just remembered I have a morning meeting. Grr.)
But I wanted to note two things.
1. Girls to the Front by Sara Marcus is a fantastic book. The research is impeccable, the writing is polished, and the feelings from that time period and riot grrrl remain as raw as ever. So excellent.
2. I am super in love with the series “What Ever Happened to Alternative Nation?” on The AV Club. Steven Hyden has really captured that era—how it was for kids living in suburbs around North America, and the music that served as the soundtrack to our rather mundane histories. The other night I just kept IMing M with lines that I loved from the essays. I think I even threatened to send Hyden fan mail.
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In Which We Party at the Old Kak Tai Airport for the DFS 50th Anniversary Party…with Wyclef Jean
Photo by Winnie Yeung
Before we left for the party, we knew that Wyclef was probably the special guest because he was spotted at MO Bar the night before.
So Wyclef’s on stage dripping wet because he emptied a bottled of water over his head. He says, “I was driving to New Jersey one night when I get pulled over for driving too fast. I was driving too fast because I was listening to this song.” He does a whole car dance motion. You kind of expect him to segue into one of his own songs but… cue “Smells Like Teen Spirit.”
I jumped up and down in my Opening Ceremony heels. My feet hurt now. Winnie and I were among the only people dancing.
I ask, how can anyone stay still during “Hips Don’t Lie”? Not even Wyclef scaling the scaffolding to “Jump Around” could get people moving.
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“Hang with Me” by Robyn—I’m totally obsessed with this song.
Gunnarsas on YouTube comments on Robyn’s video for “Show Me Love”: “Oh my god - all the hipsters and alternative music lovers who love Robyn - I want to show them this - I wonder what they will say.”
Hilarious. It’s as if we’re not old enough to remember when Robyn was famous for “Show Me Love.” Plus, Lukas Moodysson’s film! Robyn is the same as ever: making catchy pop music.

