Betrayed by Aggressive Merchandising

Metallica-branded ear plugs are currently for sale at the group’s website: Ear Plugs with Keychain Case by EarPeace icon-external-link-12x12. Only $10.99, what a deal!

These are currently in the clearance section, suggesting that they could soon become a collector’s item. Although, rumor has it that they will be recirculated as a free gift to anyone who has purchased the band’s music since 2000.

Riot Volume

Rock ‘n roll and heavy metal concerts are terrible. They have always been terrible and they’re getting worse. They’re so loud you can’t hear anything except a prescribed hours-long barrage of semi-dizzying percussive blasts, which are caused nearly as much by the guitars, bass, and vocals as by the drum set. If a person doesn’t wear ear plugs, his ears are ringing for the next two or three days—perhaps longer. If he does wear ear plugs, everything comes across sounding muffled and unarticulated.

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How the hell did it become acceptable practice to wear ear plugs to music performances anyway? Isn’t that the same as strapping on leg braces before going skiing, or ordering non-alcoholic beer at a brewpub? Don’t people go to concerts to experience the music? If the vast majority of people cannot properly experience the music, with or without earplugs, how could they possibly be enjoying themselves?

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There are also a lot of sweaty, stinky SOBs at these concerts too… and the tickets can be absurdly overpriced. Here’s a prime example: it costs between $145 and $366 to see a geriatric version of AC/DC icon-external-link-12x12 icon-search-12x12. This is a band that hasn’t released a good rock ‘n roll album since around the time John Lennon was assassinated, yet people are willing to blow a car payment and risk a case of tinnitus for one more chance to “hear” classic songs from a bygone era resurrected in a live setting. Crikey!

Docile Expressions of Love, Adoration and Rebellion

This is a drawing made on butcher paper, carefully and conspicuously placed to produce an illusion of graffiti in a town that is nearly without color.

Choke On the Memory

A Salesman’s Guide to Non-Existence icon-external-link-12x12 icon-search-12x12 (track 02 from the Maps of Non-Existent Places LP by Thank You Scientist icon-external-link-12x12 icon-search-12x12 )
“A Salesman’s Guide to Non-Existence” Song Lyrics icon-external-link-12x12 icon-search-12x12

Thank You Scientist's "Maps of Non-Existent Places" album cover. [Formatted]

Blood on the Radio icon-external-link-12x12 icon-search-12x12 (track 04 from the Maps of Non-Existent Places LP)
“Blood on the Radio” Song Lyrics icon-external-link-12x12 icon-search-12x12
Suspicious Waveforms icon-external-link-12x12 icon-search-12x12 (track 06 from the Maps of Non-Existent Places LP)


The gents in Thank You Scientist icon-external-link-12x12 icon-search-12x12 follow an interesting business model: give music lessons while out on tour promoting an under-appreciated album.