February 27, 2010

Is this really my first post of the year?  In that case, let me bring you up to date.  We’ve spent the early part of 2010 trying to see how many people we can get on stage with us to perform songs by the Clean. It’s going pretty well.  Times New Viking helped us out with “Oddity” in Lawrence, Kansas in January, and  card-carrying  Clean member, Robert Scott, sang “Secret Place” and “I Wait Around” with us on consecutive nights in Auckland and Wellington earlier this month.   Saw This Is It en route to New Zealand and My One and Only on the way home – guess which flight didn’t have on-demand movies.

Now that we’re caught up, it’s nearly March, which means it’s time for the WFMU Marathon.  For the 15th year in a row, we will take to the airwaves and, with your help and generosity, humiliate ourselves so that this great station can continue the doing of their thing.  In case you’re new to this catastrophe, if you pledge $100 to WFMU between 8 and 11 pm on Friday, March 5, during Pseu Braun’s Thing with a Hook program, you can make a song request.  And we will try to play it.  How is this possible, you ask.  The answer is simple: It’s not possible.  Can’t be done.  But there’s countless ways to get it wrong, and we’ll attempt as many as we can within the constraints of a three-hour show.  As ever, we will accompanied by Mr. Bruce Bennett on chord-missing and word-forgetting.  Air personality Gaylord Fields will be co-hosting.

If you don’t want to wait for Friday, you can donate to WFMU right now and email your request to Gaylord, who will keep it in a hermetically sealed mayonnaise jar on Funk and Wagnall’s doorstep until March 5 at eight o’clock.   Caution: If you’re the person who thinks that Oscar® winners get advance word or the NBA draft lottery is rigged, wait for Friday to make your request.

Please join us.  And please support WFMU.


January 26, 2010

The band is out on tour, giving me a chance to experiment with vegan recipes (shhh…) and to catch up on…

Who Asked You?
A Collection of Interviews & Press What-Nots compiled by Nick “Stewey” Morehouse, YLT personal chef/webmaster

• Overlords? (NZPA)

• Lady Gaga? (The University Daily Kansan)

• Short? (Riverfront Times)

I also wanted to mention that Wilco are offering up some free concert downloads on their website, with the request that download’ers send donations to OXFAM or Doctors Without Borders. One of the shows offered is the July 13, 2009 concert at Keyspan Park, featuring some special guests including YLT.

December 22, 2009

The latkes have all been eaten, but here’s one last holiday treat: a 1987 TV performance with the band doing a Modern Lovers-inspired rendition of a Christmas classic. Enjoy!

December 20, 2009

Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart famously said of obscenity, “I know it when I see it.”  We’re here to tell you that also in that category is the 6.4 on the Richter scale earthquake.  Moments before we went on stage last night in Taipei, our final show of 2009, we encountered something that none of us had ever experienced, but nevertheless recognized instantaneously.  It lasted somewhere between 15 seconds and an eternity, and subsequent news accounts (some which put the quake at 6.8) report just a few injuries, freeing us to lament that we were too rattled to work up an impromptu “I Feel the Earth Move” or “Shakin’ the World.”  (As we all know, the Supreme Court’s decision in Jacobellis v. Ohio was not unanimous.  Along those lines, I feel I’d be remiss if I didn’t concede that one member of our touring party did not realize there had been an earthquake until after the show was over.)

December 13, 2009

Yo La Tengo kick off Paste Magazine’s “Live At Moog” video series with three tracks recorded at the Moog Factory in Asheville, NC. No streaming, but click on the screenshots below to watch each track:


All Your Secrets


Nothing to Hide


Periodically Double Or Triple

December 11, 2009

Stroke is a 2-cd tribute to the great Chris Knox, known far and wide, not only for his contribution to the cover of  Painful, but for over thirty years of amazing music.  David Kilgour, Portastatic, the Chills, Lou Barlow, the Verlaines, Bill Callahan, Hamish Kilgour, Lambchop, the Bats,  Bonnie “Prince” Billy, Alec Bathgate, and Stephin Merritt are just some of the artists who have contributed versions of Toy Love, Tall Dwarfs, and Chris Knox songs, to help cover the costs incurred by the massive stroke Chris suffered earlier this year.  The new Tall Dwarfs “bonus track” alone is worth whatever you pay for this record.  Go here for more information, including how to purchase Stroke, which is also available on download from Merge (who will be putting out a U.S. version in February).  We’re on it too.

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