Browse Category: Music

DR. IAN NUTCAKES ON THE PSYCHIATRY OF TIES, CUBICLES AND OTHER ARTISTIC REPRESSIONS

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(Originally posted on the website Continuum…)

MY LOYAL READERS…

It is my privilege to introduce to you my long time friend, associate and accomplice, Dr. Ian Nutcakes.

Dr. Nutcakes is a distinguised member of the American Psychiatric Society and a high level staff member of the Neggooozian Institute for Mental Research. In addition, Dr. Ian is founder of Concerned Physicians For Censored, Repressed And Otherwise Frustrated Artists, commonly known as CPFCRAOFA, an acronym which no one can pronounce but looks serious. The notorious doctor’s personal interests include bungee jumping, darts, cow tipping and music. Among his musical favorites are Anne Murray, The Bay City Rollers, Yanni, and of course, Frank Zappa.

So…

My friend, Dr. Nutcakes, has allowed me to publish a few short video snippets of recent scientific observations which he has conducted. Since his study is not yet completed and his treatise on the subject has not yet been published (look for it in the July issue of Popular Psychiatrics), what I am able to present to you is a brief introduction by Dr. Nutcakes regarding the premise of his recent experiement. There are three clips of video observation of the main participant in the study (Certain deficiencies in key psychiatric areas were required in order for participants to qualify for this study. The man you will see in the videos is the only one out of 3.7 million who responded to Dr. Nutcakes’ introductory survey who qualified.). The scientific videos are followed by a few concluding remarks by the imminent doctor.

To view the videos, click on the links below in the order they are presented. (PLEASE follow the doctor’s order so as not to confuse yourself. YOU are not a doctor!) (3/26/15 – These instructions don’t really apply in this age of the new and improved internet where we have Youtube and Facebook and other brain-dissolving contraptions of which Dr. Ian disapproves but in which he heartily indulges. But read this paragraph for old time’s sake… and because there’s a little chuckle at the end. Then just click the videos. You know how to do it, you Youtubefiend, you.) You can either open the video files or save them to your computer and then open them. I have found some problems with Winamp, but the Windows Media Player seems to play the videos very well. You can also right click on the links and choose “Save Target As” to save the videos to your computer. MAKE SURE YOUR VOLUME IS ON! These videos have sound! (Nothing but top of the line technology here!) If you cannot figure out how to play the movies, you may use my contact page to ask for help. Just make sure you fill in the “Contact Name” field with “Dummy” or “Moron” so that I know it’s either you or your brother.

Disclaimer: These videos are rated PG-13 due to cursing, cranial nudity (aka – BALDNESS) and acute insanity. Neither Dr. Nutcakes nor I are to blame.

Disclaimer 2: A few of these videos are a little dark. Again, neither the doctor nor I had anything to do with it. It is the fault of the amateur filmographer we hired due to budget constraints.

Disclaimer 3: Some people have had problems viewing these. Other people could see them just fine. Neither the doctor nor I have the technological savvy to understand why.

THE VIDEOS:

Doctor Ian’s Introduction:

Subject Observation #1:

Subject Observation #2:

Subject Observation #3:

Dr. Ian’s Concluding Remarks:

Now to wrap things up and to send you away laughing… Here are BLOOPER VIDEOS! Yes, even distinguished doctors sometimes make mistakes. You’re on the set and behind the scenes with Dr. Nutcakes.

Blooper #1:

Blooper #2:

Blooper #3:

On behalf of Dr. Ian Nutcakes, I thank you for enduring the show. Good night.

Never Flush a…

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(Originally posted on the website Continuum…)

Well, the toilet went crazy
Yesterday afternoon
The plumber he says
Never flush a tampoon!
This great information
Cost me half a week’s pay
And the toilet blew up
Later on the next day-ay-eee-ay
Blew up the next day
Woo-ooo

Lyrics from “Flakes” by Frank Zappa

The first human voice I heard this morning came floating down the hallway with the words:

“Dad! The toilet’s overflowing!!!!”

First, I freaked and ran around looking for towels.

Second, I cursed. Or maybe that was first.

Third, I had a good laugh over it all when Zappa’s lyrics came to mind.

The moral… “Don’t cry over spilt *milk*.”

I BROKE A STRING AT THE RECITAL

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(Originally posted on the website Continuum…)

JUST A LITTLE inside joke in that title there. Ann and Nicole will understand. No, I didn’t say Anna Nicole. Ann AND Nicole. It was nice to meet you, Nicole. I’d love to use that cool new word that you let me in on, the one that starts with “F” and ends with “tard.” But I’m sure the FCC would be all hot and bothered by it, almost as aroused as they are over the sight of Janet Jackson’s breast.

Did I just name one of the Jackson F-tards on my very own website??

Well, it wasn’t really a recital. And it definitely wasn’t a “recital” of the inside joke kind. But I did get to jam out tonight at open mic night at the Pattenburg House. Finally. I broke the Pattenburg ice. I’ve been going there off and on over the past two years and hardly anyone even knows me. What’s the only way to fix that? Get up on stage and recite. Or at least get up on stage and play some drums, man!

Those of you who know me in person will realize that I haven’t been doing much playing lately. I haven’t been going to practice with Gnome Dust on Monday nights. I sort of disappeared on those guys and feel rather like an F-tard myself. (Sorry John.) Even my private practicing has dwindled to just a few minutes here and there each week. Life has sort of piled up on me and I can’t seem to get out from underneath it at the moment.

I ran into my cousin, Stephen, at a pizza place last weekend. He asked how the drumming was going and encouraged me to come out to open mic night at the Pattenburg. “Dude, there are never any drummers there on Wednesday nights.” I thought about it for the past few days. Then I tried not to think about it today and get anxious. “What if they ask me to play Neal Peart’s drum solo for the first live Rush album?” “What if they ask me to play ‘Wipe Out’?” “What if I end up just having a freakin’ stroke in the middle of everything?” What an F-tard!

After wrapping up my fatherly duties tonight, I headed out to the Pattenburg. My kids were so cool and gave me nothing but positive incentive to go. “Go! Good luck and have fun!” And then Sarah added, “Don’t just sit there and do nothing! Play!”

As it turned out, there were two bands that played tonight. And there was at least one other drummer besides myself in the crowd. The first band was hosting the evening. They were called Soul’s Release. The second band was called Heavy. Heavy did some cool 70’s covers. The singer looked kind of like Rob Zombie with a slight Robert Plant vibe. Soul’s Release did several original tunes that sounded great. Then they did a cover of The Who’s “Teenage Wasteland.” That was cool.

A few of us were hanging out near the pool room, making sarcastic remarks about people and just laughing like the F-tards that we are. After Soul’s Release played their first set, my cousin, Ann, told the singer, Joshua, that I was a drummer and that I played with all kinds of bands. (What?) He chatted with us for a bit. We continued to act like idiots. But that was cool.

After Heavy finished their set, Joshua asked me if I’d like to play a few songs with them. At first I declined, chicken that I am. But then I said, “Sure, I’ll play with you guys.” It was a blast. We played a few bluesy tunes and had a great time. It felt tremendously good to me to finally play at the Pattenburg, where I’ve seen so many good bands. A few people were dancing. I think I heard Ann and Nicole shouting something about a recital from the back of the room. (Silly girls.)

It always feels good to play music. It always feels good to do anything that your heart and soul completely love. If only I could do it all the time! “I don’t want to work! I just want to bang on the drum all day!” The difference between sitting in my cube with a damn tie on all day and sitting behind a drum kit playing my heart out is the same as the difference between being in jail and running through endless fields of freedom and pleasure.

I gotta get free!

SKATE AND SURF FESTIVAL, ASBURY PARK, NEW JERSEY

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(Originally posted on the website Continuum…)

IF YOU have read anything at all on this website, you probably know that I’m a little bit into music.

Let me re-phrase that.

I am passionately into music.

So, it comes as no surprise to you to hear that I went to another concert this past weekend. My son, Tim, and I went to the Skate and Surf Festival in Asbury Park. The festival is a yearly three-day event. We bought tickets for just one of the days. We were actually so laid back about it when the day came that we didn’t leave our house until 4 PM. We saw two of the bands that performed on the main stage and then left.

The bands featured at the festival are primarily punk and ska. Over three days, close to 150 bands perform on five different stages. That’s a lot of music! That’s a lot of setting up and tearing down! That’s a lot of egos screaming into mics, thrashing guitars and pounding on drums!

I get a kick out of some of the creative names these bands come up with. Mugshot. Blind and Driving. Outsmarting Simon. Taking Back Sunday. Planes Mistaken for Stars. Boysetsfire. Monster Squad. One Line Drawing. Bear vs Shark. Slightly Stoopid. Bargain Music. Army of Freshmen. These are just several. (But my favorite band names are those of two local bands in our area: Lima Bean Riot and Steamroller Picnic.)

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Asbury Park is 80 miles from our home. That’s not too bad. One of the nice things about New Jersey is that there is such a variety within driving distance of where we live. We can be in the city in an hour, the shore in an hour and a half. Then we can get back home to the country just as quickly. Nice.

On our way to the festival, we saw a bad accident on the Garden State Parkway. The express lanes were shut down. We were in the local lanes and they were barely moving. It looked like there was only two cars involved in the accident. That’s fairly amazing considering the way people tailgate in New Jersey. The one car in the accident looked like it rolled over. It was smashed up pretty badly, as you can see in the photo. The State Police brought a helicopter in to fly someone to the hospital. It is a creepy, creepy feeling to sit in traffic and hear a helicopter flying overhead. That is never, ever a good sign. It sure does make one think of his own mortality and the luck of the roulette game that is called driving in New Jersey.

The last time we went to see the Bouncing Souls at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, we ran out of gas on the Parkway. Not this time. I was driving my own car and I made sure that I had plenty of gas before I left home. Other than the accident we witnessed, it was an uneventful trip.

Asbury Park is such a dead, collapsed town. Driving in on Asbury Avenue, it’s ironic to see “the face” near the old arcade. It laughs down upon the decomposition of a formerly exciting Jersey Shore town. Maybe it’s the significant rock music history of the town, or maybe it’s the curiosity of decay, that draws people. I feel it each time I go there. There is something about Asbury Park that gets inside of you and invites you. Maybe it only happens to New Jersey natives. I don’t know.

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The main stage for the Skate and Surf Festival was inside the Convention Hall. Other stages were set up on the boardwalk and on the street outside of the Hall. Plus, a stage was set up inside the Hall, just outside of the main concert hall. It was a chilly day for the bands playing outside in the early spring wind blowing off of the ocean. The main concert hall was a great place for rock bands to play. But the other area inside the building was the worst for acoustics. The bands playing there sounded like plain old noise.

Upon entering the Convention Hall, we were searched by two admittedly cute female security workers. It is no exaggeration when I tell you that I was “groped” by one of them as she searched me. At first, I thought she was giving my upper body a massage. Then, with both hands, she gave my _ _ _ _ a firm squeeze. While I was yet incredulous about the squeezing, she ran her hands up my legs and, uh, grabbed my _ _ _ _ . I kid you not. Then she waved me by without a second look.

What? No cuddling afterwards? Shouldn’t one of us smoke a cigarette and ask, “how was it for you?” No?

I resisted the temptation to go out and get back in line and Tim and I went inside. We soon found ourselves in the midst of a sea of teenage dreadlocks, mini skirts, tattoos, piercings, low cut jeans, bangs hanging over boys’ eyes, naval jewelry shining below the hems of girls’ tight tank tops. All of it bound by the band merchants selling CDs, posters, t-shirts, wristbands, stickers.

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Needless to say, I, at 41 years of age, felt a little out of place. Though I felt somewhat cool because I could honestly say that I love most of the punk music just as much as any of the thousand or so adolescents who are still marvelling at their recently sprouted arm pit hair, my coolness was quickly defeated. As Tim and I came out of a door way into a crowded area, a 20 feet long banner was falling from above the door. It stopped long enough for Tim to get through. But as soon as I stepped beneath it, some brilliant security guard pulled on it and then yelled, “Move it!” Too late. I was nearly decapitated by the heavy plastic sign. My hat went flying. My balding head and I scrambled to pick it up, bent over amid hundreds of near perfect seventeen-year-old female asses. When I stood up, they all looked at me as if to say, “like totally gross!” The girls that is, not their asses.

You would think that the groping and the decapitation would have been enough. Nope. There were the portable toilets to be inflicted upon poor old me. Nasty. Nasty. Nasty! There is no other word for them. I will spare you the details. Trust me. They were nasty.

The two bands that Tim and I saw on the main stage, and really enjoyed, were Less Than Jake and the Bouncing Souls. Less Than Jake was a great band. They played punk/ska. They were full of energy. They looked like they were having so much fun on stage. Their sound was clear. The crowd loved them. And, of course, the Bouncing Souls are always a favorite in New Jersey. Although they didn’t sound as good as they did on Halloween at the Stone Pony (maybe it was just the sound system), they are the kind of Jersey band that we always love simply out of sheer pride and loyalty.

We left at 9:00, after the Souls played. There were two more bands to play. But Tim and I had our three hour punk rock fix. That would be enough to get us back home to our side of the state. The ride home was even more uneventful than our trip to the shore, other than being stuck at a McDonald’s for over 20 minutes waiting for chicken strips. That is certainly not as exciting as being groped at a concert. Although it is to be preferred above being decapitated in the midst of 200 teenage girls.

(This article is brought to you courtesy of the first four Led Zeppelin albums. Yes, that’s how long it took me to write it.)