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FREE MP3s MIX TAPE

K.Flay Makes MAGNET A Mix Tape

San Francisco artist K. Flay has already established herself as a master of the awesome mix tape. Last year, she released MASHed Potatoes, on which she took existing tracks and put her own twist on them, including adding new lyrics that play on the song’s original title. (She recently revisited this idea with “2 Weak,” her take on Grizzly Bear’s “Two Weeks.”) Therefore, she was the natural choice to provide this week’s mix tape for MAGNET. Flay just completed a U.S. tour supporting her self-titled debut EP, which was released last month.

“2 Weak” (download):
https://magnetmagazine.com/audio/2Weak.mp3

Cat Power “The Greatest”
Her voice is incredible here. Raw and vulnerable. Even though it’s titled “The Greatest,” the track is really about failure, that unshakable sense of defeat when nothing you imagine or want comes true. And no one does disappointment like Cat Power. Video

Girls “Lust For Life”
There’s something about this song. When I listen, I feel nostalgic and exuberant and hopeless, all at the same time. I saw a really interesting interview with Christopher Owens a little while back, and I was just struck by the complete honesty with which he spoke. Their music feels entirely uncalculated, which is what draws me to it, I think. Video

R.L. Burnside “It’s Bad You Know”
My dad used to listen to R.L. Burnside after dinner, and I would run circles around the sofa, bopping my 10-year-old dome like a crazy person. I always loved the rhythm of this song, the way it compelled me to move. Video

Lauryn Hill “Lost Ones”
Sometimes I forget what an incredible and scathing dis track this is. “Every man want to act like he’s exempt.” That line sums up at least half of everything anyone ever needs to know. Video

The Kills “U R A Fever”
It’s hard to be sexy and dirty and somewhat menacing while maintaining badass musicianship, but the Kills have the uncanny ability to do just that. To me, what’s so cool about “U R A Fever” is its versatility. It’s the perfect sonic backdrop for makeout sessions and nurse’s offices. Video

Mariah Carey “Honey”
Whoever wrote the five-note piano riff that kicks in at the end of the second bar deserves some kind of bear hug. As an added bonus, the music video is the pinnacle of late-’90s absurdity, with Mimi getting kidnapped, insulting her captor’s overly Aquanetted hair in bad Spanish and effortlessly swan-diving into a freaking swimming pool. Video

Lissie “Pursuit Of Happiness”
A friend sent me this video a few months back, and I was immediately like, “Who is this chick??” Indie-rock covers of hip-hop tracks can be hit or miss, but Lissie pulls this Kid Cudi track off in a totally authentic, non-cheesy way. Which is pretty amazing. She doesn’t really start rocking out until two minutes in, but she definitely rocks out. Video

Wiz Khalifa “The Statement”
To me, this is the ultimate driving-when-you-have-nowhere-in-particular-to-go song. On a related note, I read somewhere that Wiz Khalifa spends $10,000 a month on weed. I’m not even sure how that’s possible. I guess he’s sharing a lot with his friends. Which is actually very sweet when you think about it. Video

Metric “Handshakes”
Metric’s second album, Live It Out, is one of my all-time favorites. If you ever find yourself riding the bus in San Francisco, pop this baby in. Video

Big Boi “Ain’t No DJ”
Big Boi’s new album is the perfect amount of weird. I have no clue how André 3000 came up with the beat for this track, which is probably why I love it so much. Video

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GUEST EDITOR

Wooden Wand’s James Jackson Toth Must Also Love: “Shop Class As Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into The Value Of Work” By Matthew B. Crawford

Even James Jackson Toth’s most rabid fans probably can’t keep track of the prolific singer/songwriter’s output. The Lexington, Ky.-based Toth has issued numerous solo and group efforts (including cassettes, CD-Rs, limited-edition vinyl, etc.) under his own name as well as such monikers as WAND, Wooden Wand And The Vanishing Voice, H.P. Witchcraft, the Jescos and the Blood Group. His latest release is Wooden Wand‘s Death Seat (Young God), an impressive 12-track album produced by YG label head and Swans frontman Michael Gira and featuring musical contributions from members of bands such as Lambchop, Silver Jews, Mercury Rev, Glossary and Fire On Fire. Toth is heading out on European and North American tours in the new year, but in the meantime, he will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our Q&A with him.

Toth: The subject of valuing skill-based work over knowledge-based work is very dear to the heart of a day-laboring sort such as myself. I’m certainly the choir to Matthew Crawford’s preacher here, having worked almost exclusively in the trades during “down time” from music, but the author’s deft use of philosophy and history to describe the joys and rewards of working with one’s hands (and I don’t mean guitar playing) makes this a most fascinating and inspiring book. It’s one I would wholeheartedly recommend to anyone tired of cubicle life.

Video after the jump.

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VIDEOS

Film At 11: The Octopus Project

“Catalog” is the latest video from the Octopus Project‘s Hexadecagon (Peek-A-Boo), and it was directed by the awesomely named Wiley Wiggins, with quartz programming by Dan Winckler and Jim Bumgardner. Hexadecagon is out both on CD and as a limited-edition gatefold vinyl release with a cut-and-assemble zoetrope and 10 bonus “roulette” tracks that cannot be replicated on CD. According to the band, “The roulette tracks are bonus songs—all exactly the same length—cut to wax in concentric, interlocked grooves, such that the listener never knows which song is played when the needle is placed on the LP. All 10 tracks resolve to the same ending and drop into a single, final locked groove.” (We always thought the members of Octopus Project were from Austin, but now we’re thinking they live in Nerd City.) Watch “Catalog” below.

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TIVO PARTY TONIGHT

TiVo Party Tonight: N.E.R.D., City And Colour, Neon Tree

Ever wonder what will happen during the last five minutes of late-night TV talk shows? Here are tonight’s notable performers:

Late Night With Jimmy Fallon (NBC): N.E.R.D
Hip-hop group N.E.R.D is supporting new album Nothing.

Last Call With Carson Daly (NBC): City And Colour
Rerun from October 14. Dallas Green performed “Waiting” from Bring Me Your Love.

Conan (TBS): Neon Trees
Utah’s Neon Trees is promoting latest LP Habits.

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GUEST EDITOR

Wooden Wand’s James Jackson Toth Must Also Love: “We Never Learn: The Gunk Punk Undergut, 1988-2001” By Eric Davidson

Even James Jackson Toth’s most rabid fans probably can’t keep track of the prolific singer/songwriter’s output. The Lexington, Ky.-based Toth has issued numerous solo and group efforts (including cassettes, CD-Rs, limited-edition vinyl, etc.) under his own name as well as such monikers as WAND, Wooden Wand And The Vanishing Voice, H.P. Witchcraft, the Jescos and the Blood Group. His latest release is Wooden Wand‘s Death Seat (Young God), an impressive 12-track album produced by YG label head and Swans frontman Michael Gira and featuring musical contributions from members of bands such as Lambchop, Silver Jews, Mercury Rev, Glossary and Fire On Fire. Toth is heading out on European and North American tours in the new year, but in the meantime, he will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our Q&A with him.

Toth: With We Never Learn, the former New Bomb Turks frontman chronicles (and ably legitimizes) the “gunk punk” scene, a sort of bizarro mirror image to the hair metal and boring grunge that typified the ’90s. While Davidson’s writing leaves a little to be desired (painful rock-crit adverbs abound), revealing interviews with everyone from Blag Jesus of the Dwarves to Billy Childish make this a must for those of us who hear names like Sympathy For The Record Industry, Crypt and AmRep and are transported back to a simpler, more fun and less pretentious era of underground music.