Updates

May 4th, 2006 by peter >

Two things:
1. In case anyone doesn’t know, there are sweet White Limousine t-shirts at the marketplace now. The other night Duncan was all “What happened to the White Limo shirts?” and I was all “Good question…”, and, lo and behold, Todd and Jerrod were way ahead of us and had already put them up in the store.

2. There are four new remixes over at limoremix.com. Let us know what you think.

Also, I think this amaztype thing is cool.

I guess that was three things.

Francis Fukuyama’s new book

April 30th, 2006 by duncan >

I have always enjoyed reading Mr. Fukuyama who, even though he was a neocon policy wonk, always seemed lucid and insightful in his writings. His new book, “America at the Crossroads” is no exception, and the fact that he has bravely spoken out about the wrong-headednesss of our administration’s recent forign policy is, to me, a good sign that even some conservatives are starting to see the light of reason. He is still too distrustful of institutions like the U.N. for my taste, but there is much in this little book that is very worth reading.

Cheers,
DS

what’s on your mind?

April 19th, 2006 by duncan >

I’m in Spring Awakening rehearsals everyday so my focus is a bit narrow at the moment, I’m afraid. Sooooo…tell me anything interesting: this is the first ever official DS.com open thread.

Cheers,
DS

limoremix update

April 6th, 2006 by peter >

Duncan’s out on the left coast for a few days. San Fran show is tomorrow night, so to all those attending: have fun, and show him the love. I think he’s also catching some Nero shows while he’s out there.

Before he left, we sorted through the remixes people have sent in thus far and picked out the coolest ones. There are six of them streaming now, in addition to Jamie’s, over at limoremix.com, so check them out and then head back over here and let us know what you think.

Duncan’s especially partial to the “Star-Field” ones (obvs, since three of them made the cut), but I’m going out on a limb and awarding “permanent iPod inclusion” status to Nathan Schoensiegel’s “Dawn’s Request” remix. That’s what’s known as “bringing the rock”, Nathan. I approve of this remix.

To everyone else: keep them coming!

UPDATE: A few people have been having trouble submitting remixes thanks to a problem with attaching large files to emails. We opted to handle submissions this way because the PHP uploader we were using initially turned out to be really buggy, and email seemed easier and less prone to failure. If you’re having an issue emailing files, drop us a line at limoremix@gmail.com and we’ll try to find a work-around. Cheers!

limoremix.com

March 31st, 2006 by duncan >

O.K. ?h Thanks to Todd and Peter’s tireless efforts, limoremix.com is up and running. Even if you don’t have a remix of your own to send in, please go check out Jamie Myerson’s “I Don’t Believe In Ghosts” in the upper right hand corner of the page ?h I like it better than mine.

Cheers,
DS

Two More Things

March 28th, 2006 by duncan >

1) In reference to the previous post: just because Peter is capable (and all too willing) to perform intellectual smackdowns on people who post less than legit responses, doesn’t mean that anyone should be afraid of posting their own opinion about any of my posts. Come on, it only gets interesting when people really say what they feel and don’t hold back.

2) Chris Garneau is touring on the west coast next week. Do yourself a favor and go see him if he comes anywhere near your neighborhood.

two things …

March 22nd, 2006 by duncan >

Go see V for Vendetta. There are some ideological problems with the film, but I think it’s important for pop culture cinema to articulate a sense of outrage at the creeping facism of our times. (Cue outraged pajamas media types.) Also, N. Portman is a very smart actress and, let’s face it, not too hard to look at.

Read Daniel Dennett’s Breaking the Spell. It’s about how religiosity may in fact be a “naturally” occurring phenomenon in human beings and part of an evolutionary process. (Cue outraged biblical literalists.) Even if you don’t agree with him, it’s very interesting food for thought.

Tour Over (for now)

March 1st, 2006 by duncan >

Thank you guys so much for coming out to the shows these past few weeks. I hope you had fun. I certainly did. I had my first day of Spring Awakening rehearsal today. The new cast was very, very surprisingly good so it should be quite a show.
We’ll see.

XO
DS

Remixes

February 10th, 2006 by duncan >

I hope you guys are working on your remixes because Todd, Peter and myself are getting ready to launch the “White Limousine Remix Area” very soon. The initial plan is for people to upload their remixes to the new site where they will be reviewed by a top secret arbitration committee and the ones that are “approved” will be streamed from the site for anyone else to hear. So please make them hottt.

Cheers,
DS

It’s ON on iTunes.

January 28th, 2006 by peter >

The issues the iTunes Music Store was having with White Limousine have been remedied. Everyone can now head over to iTunes and (legally) download the record with wild abandon.

Also, if you buy the whole album from iTunes, you get “In This Town” as an iTunes-only bonus track. That’s what’s known as the “Sweet Notes”. And thanks to everyone who posted/posts positive customer reviews on iTunes.

I like “deek md”

January 25th, 2006 by duncan >

It is not really appropriate for me to comment on the reviews for White Limo, but I have to say that I do appreciate “deek md’s” take on the “polarization” that seems to be going on with the critical response to the record (you’ll find his post on sheikfreik.com). Even though I didn’t understand why the reactions were so wildly divergent, his post put the reviews into some perspective. And I do need some perspective right about now. Anyway, I may post a more “fun-filled” response to the “bad” reviews soon, but it may take a minute to get to that.

Cheers,
DS

“YOURS” DVD

January 23rd, 2006 by duncan >

Hi,

So it seems that there is a little confusion (and disgruntlement) with respect to the software situation on the “YOURS” DVD. Let me clear a few things up. Up until the eleventh hour we were going to include the trial version of Ableton’s LIVE on the DVD itself, but due to some last minute (very annoying) legal wrangling we had to leave it that the user download the software from Ableton. It only takes a minute, and it is the exact same version of the software that was initially going to be on the DVD. And, yes, it is a trial version of the software because, obviously, I can’t put a $500 piece of software on a $14 CD/DVD. They would throw me in jail. : ) That being said, if you do a cool remix using the trial version of the software, you could certainly make an “analog” recording of it onto a CD recorder or some such device.

Also, although LIVE is a great program and perhaps best suited to doing the kinds of remixes I’m interested in, the “stems” of all the individual instruments are all 16 bit WAV files so you could put them into any other piece of music production software you may have (Logic, Pro Tools, Garage Band, Digital Performer, etc.) and go to town. And remember to move all the files onto your hard drive before launching the program, because thats the only way the files can be accessed quickly enough for any of the programs. Lastly I’d just like to say that unless you are already a laptop music production wiz, there is a fairly steep learning curve with all these kinds of music production programs, especially LIVE. They are not kid stuff. The easiest way to get started is to just mute or solo different instruments and see what that does to the song. Then you can get into deconstructing the parts and transforming the song into something completely different. Anyway I hope you have fun with it, and don’t get mad at me that I didn’t engage in software piracy!

Cheers,
DS

David Poe sent me this today …

January 21st, 2006 by duncan >

The New York Times …

Wayward Christian Soldiers

By CHARLES MARSH
Published: January 20, 2006

IN the past several years, American evangelicals, and I am one of them, have amassed greater political power than at any time in our history. But at what cost to our witness and the integrity of our message?

Recently, I took a few days to reread the war sermons delivered by influential evangelical ministers during the lead up to the Iraq war. That period, from the fall of 2002 through the spring of 2003, is not one I will remember fondly. Many of the most respected voices in American evangelical circles blessed the president’s war plans, even when doing so required them to recast Christian doctrine.

Charles Stanley, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Atlanta, whose weekly sermons are seen by millions of television viewers, led the charge with particular fervor. “We should offer to serve the war effort in any way possible,” said Mr. Stanley, a former president of the Southern Baptist Convention. “God battles with people who oppose him, who fight against him and his followers.” In an article carried by the convention’s Baptist Press news service, a missionary wrote that “American foreign policy and military might have opened an opportunity for the Gospel in the land of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.”

As if working from a slate of evangelical talking points, both Franklin Graham, the evangelist and son of Billy Graham, and Marvin Olasky, the editor of the conservative World magazine and a former advisor to President Bush on faith-based policy, echoed these sentiments, claiming that the American invasion of Iraq would create exciting new prospects for proselytizing Muslims. Tim LaHaye, the co-author of the hugely popular “Left Behind” series, spoke of Iraq as “a focal point of end-time events,” whose special role in the earth’s final days will become clear after invasion, conquest and reconstruction. For his part, Jerry Falwell boasted that “God is pro-war” in the title of an essay he wrote in 2004.

The war sermons rallied the evangelical congregations behind the invasion of Iraq. An astonishing 87 percent of all white evangelical Christians in the United States supported the president’s decision in April 2003. Recent polls indicate that 68 percent of white evangelicals continue to support the war. But what surprised me, looking at these sermons nearly three years later, was how little attention they paid to actual Christian moral doctrine. Some tried to square the American invasion with Christian “just war” theory, but such efforts could never quite reckon with the criterion that force must only be used as a last resort. As a result, many ministers dismissed the theory as no longer relevant.

Some preachers tried to link Saddam Hussein with wicked King Nebuchadnezzar of Biblical fame, but these arguments depended on esoteric interpretations of the Old Testament book of II Kings and could not easily be reduced to the kinds of catchy phrases that are projected onto video screens in vast evangelical churches. The single common theme among the war sermons appeared to be this: our president is a real brother in Christ, and because he has discerned that God’s will is for our nation to be at war against Iraq, we shall gloriously comply.

Such sentiments are a far cry from those expressed in the Lausanne Covenant of 1974. More than 2,300 evangelical leaders from 150 countries signed that statement, the most significant milestone in the movement’s history. Convened by Billy Graham and led by John Stott, the revered Anglican evangelical priest and writer, the signatories affirmed the global character of the church of Jesus Christ and the belief that “the church is the community of God’s people rather than an institution, and must not be identified with any particular culture, social or political system, or human ideology.”

On this page, David Brooks correctly noted that if evangelicals elected a pope, it would most likely be Mr. Stott, who is the author of more than 40 books on evangelical theology and Christian devotion. Unlike the Pope John Paul II, who said that invading Iraq would violate Catholic moral teaching and threaten “the fate of humanity,” or even Pope Benedict XVI, who has said there were “not sufficient reasons to unleash a war against Iraq,” Mr. Stott did not speak publicly on the war. But in a recent interview, he shared with me his abiding concerns.

“Privately, in the days preceding the invasion, I had hoped that no action would be taken without United Nations authorization,” he told me. “I believed then and now that the American and British governments erred in proceeding without United Nations approval.” Reverend Stott referred me to “War and Rumors of War, ” a chapter from his 1999 book, “New Issues Facing Christians Today,” as the best account of his position. In that essay he wrote that the Christian community’s primary mission must be “to hunger for righteousness, to pursue peace, to forbear revenge, to love enemies, in other words, to be marked by the cross.”

What will it take for evangelicals in the United States to recognize our mistaken loyalty? We have increasingly isolated ourselves from the shared faith of the global Church, and there is no denying that our Faustian bargain for access and power has undermined the credibility of our moral and evangelistic witness in the world. The Hebrew prophets might call us to repentance, but repentance is a tough demand for a people utterly convinced of their righteousness.

Charles Marsh, a professor of religion at the University of Virginia, is the author of “The Beloved Community: How Faith Shapes Social Justice, from the Civil Rights Movement to Today.”

The Complete Package

January 19th, 2006 by duncan >

So I actually got my hands on a box of the White Limousine releases with artwork and the DVD and all that.

Rounder did a great job on the packaging (IMHO) so I’m very pleased. Even though the record isn’t out until next week we do have it for sale at the shows … just so you know.

DS

Wine Tasting / Q & A

January 17th, 2006 by peter >

In several cities along the “White Limousine Tour” tickets will be auctioned off via Ebay for a pre-show wine tasting and Q&A with Duncan. The first one announced is at the Dallas show at Gypsy Tea Room at 5PM on 1/25.

We’re bringing in the local wine rep to conduct the tasting and you can ask Duncan questions about wine, music, or anything you’d like.

You will also receive an autographed copy of “White Limousine” and then you’re invited to stay for soundcheck. You must be 21+. No more than 20 seats will be offered at each venue.

More tastings will be announced.

Nero

January 10th, 2006 by duncan >

For more info on Steven’s and my latest collaboration, check this out …

http://www.magictheatre.org/season0506/nero.shtml

Though “Nero” is not a musical by any stretch, it does have six songs for which I wrote the music.

And it’s very political … so everyone get your claws out. : )

Too much to do !

January 9th, 2006 by duncan >

It’s one of those days … I’m trying to finish an indie movie score, get the songs done for “Nero”, get Chris Garneau’s record further along and get ready for the tour. Best case scenario - not gonna happen. But we do try. (and Peter is helping) I hope most of you are having a more leisurely day than I am.

Cheers,
DS

Happy New Year

January 3rd, 2006 by duncan >

O.K. it’s been fun reading all the back and forth but … let’s give it a rest for a minute.
I hope everyone has an amazing new year … peace, love, and all that.

DS

Strong Armed Christians, relax …

December 21st, 2005 by duncan >

OohKay, I know some feathers have been ruffled vis a vis the lyrics in “Star-field on Red Lines”. So, before it gets out of hand here is where I’m coming from …

First off, the title is simply a description of the American flag - a field of stars on top of red lines.

The “strong armed Christians oiled up and fed” line is a complicated image which I will unpack if it will help. The “strong arms” are really just the “supierior firepower” of our military and its deadly efficiency.

The Christians I’m refering to here are the Tom Delay or Tim LaHaye style of Christians who have, in my humble opinion, twisted the teachings of Jesus around into some scary version of “if you don’t believe what I believe you will (and should) burn in hell forever, and, by the way, capitalism in it’s most extreme form is really great and it doesn’t matter if you’re a corrupt hypocrite as long as you make lots of money”. Now, my Dad and my Grandfather are both devout church-going Catholics and I have nothing but respect for their devotion to their faith. And I’m well aware that there are all kinds of progressive, wonderful Christion churches that do amazing things in their communities and really do live up to the excellent standards that they have created for themselves. David Poe and I talk about this all the time because he comes from that background and I have no problems with that at all. It still doesn’t change the fact that there are “good” Christians and “bad” Christians (sorry about the subjective labels). I would actually argue that the “bad” Christians aren’t really Christians at all but something else that was developed over centuries of misinterpreting the teachings of Jesus and now we have to deal with their close-mindedness and desire for violent Armageddon. I also think that there are “good” Mulims and “bad” Muslims. Has anyone seen “Sleeper Cell” on Showtime? I know it’s just a TV show but it does an excellent job in articulating the idea that the violent Jihadists are in fact going against the “true” teachings of the Prophet Mohammad. As a Buddhist, I know that a lot of my own actions are not always in line with the “good” Buddhism that I try to practice but I feel that the teachings are pretty clear about how you should behave towards others no matter what their faith.

I could go on but it will be tiresome to everybody.

Finally, “oiled up and fed” has to do with the natural resources of a given county and the wealth that it can create and the wealth that, sadly, is often taken from the very people whose land the resources came from. Do with that idea what you will.

I hope I didn’t offend anyone who doesn’t deserve to be
offended at least a little bit : )

Merry Christmas everybody!

DS

White Limo (non-political)

December 7th, 2005 by duncan >

So yesterday was the official “add-date” at radio for White Limousine and it was first or second most added at the AAA radio format (depending on which chart you look at). That’s a great first week so thanks to everyone who called in to their station to hear it. I’m in the middle of another workshop for “The Nightingale”, but I hope to get into some more heated debates with y’all after I’m done with that!

XO
DS