Random 15 Music Meme

I got this one from Beth (awesome blog – please check it out!) via facebook. I’m popping it on there and also on this blog for those of you who have not yet succumbed to Zuckerberg‘s evil invention.

1. Turn on your mp3 player, ipod or the music player on your computer.

2. Go to shuffle songs mode.

3. Write down the first 15 songs that come up, song title and artist, no editing/cheating please

4. Choose 15 people to be tagged.

Either drop me a note/link to your list on your blog in the comments, or do the facebook version. That is, go to the “Notes” tab on your profile page, click “Write a note”,  paste these instructions in the body of the note, enter your 15 shuffle songs, tag 15 people under the post then click publish.

  1. Paradise Lost – Your Own Reality
  2. Kiss/Peter Criss – You Matter To Me
  3. System Of A Down – Attack
  4. The Wildhearts – Splattermania
  5. Megadeth – Disconnect
  6. Cavalera Conspiracy – Must Kill
  7. The Calling – Unstoppable
  8. Megadeth – Symphony of Destruction
  9. Hayseed Dixie – Donkeys in Morocco
  10. Death – Killing Spree
  11. REO Speedwagon – Ridin’ The Storm Out
  12. T’Pau – Heart and Soul
  13. Slipknot – Liberate (live)
  14. Norther – **** You
  15. Kiss – No No No
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Annihilator – Glasgow Garage, Nov 14th 2010

Annihilator, Glasgow Garage 6
Annihilator, Glasgow Garage

[Photos: Flickr set for the gig]

Just a quickie little review of a great little show. The last time I saw Annihilator (in fact I think the last time they were in the UK) was around 20 years ago. I saw them opening for Judas Priest on their Painkiller tour at Newcastle City Hall. If memory serves, they were touring on their second album Never, Neverland. I was with Jon Toward and we were late so missed them hitting the stage.

This time I arrived about ten minutes before they came on. Just enough time to wait at the bar, fail to be served and save myself four quid. Bargain.

In honesty, I was a little taken aback by Jeff Waters‘ lack of hair. As I said, I’ve not seem them in 20 years, even if I have kept up with the music! The sound was excellent, though, and the crowd very receptive although it was nowhere near a packed house. Plenty of room to move around and get some good photos.

I’m old (school), so was waiting for the material that matched my wrinkles. I wasn’t disappointed with a great variety of it amongst some of the newer stuff. “King of the Kill” and “Hell is a War” were superb, the intro to the latter sending chills up my spine.

A surprise sit-down session occurred towards the end of the set as the band played two oft-requested tracks that haven’t been given a live airing before (we were told). “Phoenix Rising” had Jeff playing away with an expression on his face which spoke volumes. It said “I have the best job in the world and I ******* love it”.

Chants of “Jeff is God!” rang out as the band closed with a final flurry of thrashy goodness including “The Fun Palace”, “Phantasmagoria” and “Alison Hell”.

A great set, no showboating, an obviously happy band, mad crowd and top sound quality (thanks to the Garage once again). I only find it a shame that despite Waters being consistently rated one of the top guitarists in metal and a huge influence on many bands, Annihilator never reached the size of the likes of Metallica.

Having said that, I’d still rather pick up a new Annihilator album than one from the greedy Dane and his mates.

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Skyline

You know sometimes you see a trailer and you think “Wow, that looks good”? And you know sometimes that the trailer just doesn’t match up?

Skyline

Plot-in-a-nutshell: Aliens appear, start snatching people for no reason and stuff blows up. Erm… yeah. That’s it.

Skyline is kind of like seeing a gorgeous pizza covered with all your favourite toppings, taking a huge bite and finding it’s made out of polystyrene. It’s all air, fluff and appearances with no actual nutritional value. It has its use as eye candy but it’s ultimately completely unsatisfying.

It starts very promisingly, with the aliens arriving pretty much in frame one. This lasts five minutes then we’re taken back to “15 hours earlier” for some pointless character development of our small group of “heroes”. We than catch back up and get to enjoy the same footage we just saw repeated.

The film hinges on the effects which are very well done. Sadly, even an effect-driven movie needs a decent story and that’s where Skyline falls down very badly. Even Independence Day has a plot of some kind and some fairly witty dialogue. Skyline even lacks witty one-liners. One of the biggest jumps in the film is in the trailer, so that’s been spoiled.

Despite the incredible effects, they’re unoriginal. The floaty aliens look like squids from the Matrix movies. Until they land when they become more like the bugs from Starship Troopers. Then there’s the huge, towering monsters which bear more than a passing resemblance to something I remember from the first Quake game.

As far as highlights go, the helicopter scene is pretty cool. And the aerial battles with what’s left of the air force. That’s about it, frankly.

Oh, and the ending. Good grief, how awful. While I’m fine with there being no explanation for the technology, or the reason for the invasion (it’s missed only as ever other films ends up going down this road, but it’s realistic – would we ever find that out?) what I couldn’t stand was the rushed and incredibly cheesy naffness of the closing five minutes. It’s almost as if it was tagged on as an afterthought. Alternatively, someone looked at their watch during production and decided the film had gone on too long and they only had 10 minutes including end credits left so they just had to shoehorn in the first piece of crap that came to mind.

And despite all  this, Empire magazine gave it film of the week on their weekly email with 3/5 stars. Which makes even less sense given that another film on the same mail was awarded 4/5. I’ve never understood magazines that do that.

Worse, though – Skyline 2 is already in production. I’m fairly sure that’ll be joining Avatars 2 and 3 on my “don’t bother” pile.

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Jackass 3D / Due Date / Let Me In

A three-film weekend, and the final one of the list due to Gillian being a horror fan. Nice to get off my backside and see an extra movie, though. Next week’s releases look amazing. Oh dear.

Jackass 3D

“Oh god, why do I have to be Steve-O?”

Plot-in-a-nutshell: Plot? It’s a Jackass film. Good grief. Get to the back of the class.

First up, the 3D is pointless. The film doesn’t benefit at all, though they have tried to make it a little more grim with some ****, vomit and the like coming out of the screen. As with pretty much every 3D film I’ve seen, though, it just doesn’t need it.

More importantly, how is the Jackass formula holding up? Not too badly, to be honest, although I found myself laughing less hard than I did at the original movie. That one had me completely creased up unable to breathe at points. This third outing got more than its fair share of guffaws, a moment or two of queasiness, but on the whole I’m thinking this may be a good point for the series to finish.

Sacrilege? Maybe. But let’s be honest, Dirty Sanchez were doing ruder things on TV by the time Jackass were finally allowed to show their arses without black bars over them. The budget of the first Jackass film allowed for bigger and sillier stunts, and this had progressed on with this third film.

Thinking back, I was more laughing at the ideas they’d dreamt up rather than the actual execution of them. The simple fact is that Jackass simply isn’t outrageous any more. It’s had its life span and I really hope they go out on a relative high.

Fans: see the film. Mr Knoxville and crew: retire with your heads held high and your arms in plaster.

Due Date

“I’m sorry we drank your father”

Plot-in-a-nutshell: Two unsuited guys end up sharing a car across the US for a couple of days.

Due Date is the bastard child of Planes, Trains and Automobiles and The Hangover, having the plot of the former and the level of humour of the latter. Sadly, though, it doesn’t match up on either count. In fairness, I never really “got” P, T &A aside from the hilarious Steve Martin “****” scene which the BBC continue to deny us when screening it. The Hangover on the other hand was incredible.

The film suffers from one major problem which afflicts so many releases these days – virtually every funny bit is in the trailer. Had I not seen that (several times) I genuinely feel I’d have enjoyed the film more.

As a saving grace, Robert Downey Jr puts in another great performance though I still think he’s better wisecracking in Iron Man. Zach Galifianakis returns to stereotype as “fat, stupid bloke”. Yawn.

The main problem is that Due Date doesn’t offer anything new. It’s a plot that’s been used before, as have many of the jokes. The performances are fine, but the whole thing’s ridiculously predictable, especially if (as I’ve already said) you’ve seen the trailer. In all honesty I’d say there were maybe 5 jokes which I’d not already seen before I sat down to watch the actual movie.

It’s not an utter dead loss as far as films go, but it’s a huge let-down after the side-splitting Hangover. Oh, and it has an incredibly well-filmed “inside the car as it happens” car crash. Which is weird as that’s also a highlight of…

Let Me In

“I’ve been twelve for a very long time.”

Plot-in-a-nutshell: A little girl moves in next door to a little boy, but she can’t be friends mainly as she burns in sunlight, has superhuman strength and drinks blood. Erm. Few clues there?

Now, this one I enjoyed. It’s no perfect, but it has a lot going for it. Gillian’s seen the original (Let The Right One In) which I haven’t, and apparently this is a lot more accessible – it’s in English for a start – but has lost of a lot of the artistry and beauty of Tomas Alfredson‘s 2008 Swedish version. In other words, it’s a typical American remake.

Having said that, with nothing to compare it to I quite liked it. The young actors are excellent across the board, from Kodi Smit-McPhee and Chloe Moretz as the two central characters (Owen and Abby) to the support there isn’t a complaint to be made. Moretz manages to be scary yet conjures up sympathy in her more human aspect. Smit-McPhee is perhaps a little too “soft” but that’s more the character than the actor.

While adults certainly appear in the film, it’s very much a story about these two characters. In fact, we never get to see the face of Owen’s mother.

It’s quite a grisly film and includes some rather disturbing imagery, especially given that the children are in many scenes. As disturbing as the horror aspects the the bullying and victimisation that Owen suffers at school. However, the fate that befalls his tormentors leaves the viewer a little unsure as to whether they deserved it.

The whole film generates conflicted emotion. Abby is a creature suffering from something that’s not her fault. She’s a child, in a child’s body with a child’s mind… but she’s also a dangerous creature when the mood takes. So should we feel pity for her or should she be treated as a monster? I suppose we’ve been asking questions like this since Mary Shelley had a certain book published over 100 years ago.

Having read a little more about the differences, I’m definitely interested in seeing the original – and the book on which it’s based.

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File conversion

Zamzar
Zamzar

I’ve not had a geeky post in ages, so here’s a nice little one which hopefully people will find handy.

A friend just sent me a copy of her CV in MS Works format, which is an awkward one for a lot of people to work with. She asked if I could convert it to Word DOC format for her. “No problem,” think I, then find out that I’d not installed the right filter when I put Office onto my machine. After an age messing about with the discs, I found that the required files are missing or the disc’s unreadable.

Hum.

After a quick search, two solutions presented themselves:

1) Microsoft provide a Works 6.0, 7.0, 8.0 and 9.0 converter as a download. Simply close Word, download and install the converter and you can open the WPS files in Word. Easy.

2) Very handy for those who are using a third party machine and thus can’t install anything, is a website called Zamzar. The free system allows conversion of files up to 100Mb and the from/to list of file formats is around 60-70 long (without counting). You upload the file, select the conversion and wait for an email to come through (mine took 5 mins) with a link to the converted file, which they will hold for 24 hours.

They also offered a paid account with secure HTTP access, larger file allowance and longer storage.

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