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Eat Sleep Drink Album Cover Quiz #1

Let’s have some fun, shall we? I’ve taken ten album covers from various periods in rock history and removed the name of the artist and the album title. The first person to write me with the name of the artist and album for all ten covers will receive a CD from my orphans pile, which boasts artists like Erasure, Gary Numan, Scott Sta(m)pp, Stereo Fuse, Jenny Watson and Bloc Party. Write me at davidm[at]bullz-eye.com (aw, damn, I just blew my secret identity) with your answers.

Eligibility rule: if I know you, you’re not eligible. Good luck to everyone else.

You will bow before Lordi!!!

It’s official: Finland rocks…and rocks hard.

The oft-neglected European country took home the victory in the Eurovision song contest this year, thanks to the metal band Lordi and their song “Hard Rock Hallelujah.”

This is Lordi:

I’m sorry, but that’s awesome.

Europe presents us with Lordi, and who do we have to offer as our democratically-voted-upon superstar?

People, George W. Bush is not the only reason people think America sucks.

What is it with Nirvana fans?

Seriously. I don’t mean that as a backhanded swipe, but I just don’t get it anymore. (Some) Nirvana fans are pissed off at the Red Hot Chili Peppers for their video of “Dani California” which features Anthony Kiedis dressed up like Kurt Cobain in one segment. Is it just me or is treating Cobain like some holy grail of rock just beyond the pale anymore? The Peppers went and got permission from Dave Grohl of all people to make sure it was OK that they even had it in the video. But apparently that’s not good enough for some folks. I’ll say it again: Nirvana was just a band who were in the right place at the right time. They had some good songs, but there have been tons of artists who came before Kurt Cobain who wrote the same kind of tortured introspective lyrics, and there will continue to be tons in the future. I wonder if these same fans have ever seen the “Robot Chicken” episode featuring “Zombie Idol”, a parody of “American Idol” in which zombie rockers come back from the grave and try to win the contest. Of course, all hell breaks loose and it soon turns into a parody of the remake of “Dawn of the Dead” and when Ving Rhames is about to kill the Kurt Cobain zombie, Kurty takes the shotgun himself and eats it. Yeah, it’s really dark, but I can’t help but laugh every time I see it because I know some fan out there is undoubtedly screaming about it.

I’m telling you now…

…that, sadly, Freddie Garrity – lead singer of the Liverpool band Freddie & The Dreamers, who emerged in the early ’60s alongside the Beatles with their big hit, “I’m Telling You Now” – has died.

There aren’t many great pictures of him online, but that’s him at the top left:

He had a Buddy Holly thing going, to say the least, and he was downright goofy…but it was a charming goofy that won over fans on both sides of the pond, albeit only for a short time. Still, there were few articles written about the Beatles’ Liverpool contemporaries that didn’t reference the Dreamers, so their name – if not their material – was well-known by many fans of the Fab Four.

Dream on, Freddie…

Now this is just silly: Record labels fighting radio

Far be it from us to support any branch of ClearChannel, but a XM Radio subscribing friend of ours just sent this, and we would find it funny, if it weren’t so sad. Give ’em hell. XM.

Statement to XM Subscribers – The XM Nation

Everything we’ve done at XM since our first minute on the air is about giving you more choices. We provide more channels and music programming than any other network. We play all the music you want to hear including the artists you want to hear but can’t find on traditional FM radio. And we offer the best radios with the features you want for your cars, homes, and all places in between.

We’ve developed new radios — the Inno, Helix and NeXus — that take innovation to the next level in a totally legal way. Like TiVo, these devices give you the ability to enjoy the sports, talk and music programming whenever you want. And because they are portable, you can enjoy XM wherever you want.

The music industry wants to stop your ability to choose when and where you can listen. Their lawyers have filed a meritless lawsuit to try and stop you from enjoying these radios.

They don’t get it. These devices are clearly legal. Consumers have enjoyed the right to tape off the air for their personal use for decades, from reel-to-reel and the cassette to the VCR and TiVo.

Our new radios complement download services, they don’t replace them. If you want a copy of a song to transfer to other players or burn onto CDs, we make it easy for you to buy them through XM + Napster.

Satellite radio subscribers like you are law-abiding music consumers; a portion of your subscriber fee pays royalties directly to artists. Instead of going after pirates who don’t pay a cent, the record labels are attacking the radios used for the enjoyment of music by consumers like you. It’s misguided and wrong.

We will vigorously defend these radios and your right to enjoy them in court and before Congress, and we expect to win.

Thank you for your support.

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