Rapper Aesop Rock and illustrator Jeremy Fish have collaborated on a new limited-edition book aimed at adults but crafted as an old-school children's book, complete with a seven-inch record that tells the reader when to turn the page with the beat. Entitled The Next Best Thing, the Upper Playground release deals with the "creative block" that all artists go through. Fish's artwork is amazing - check out (http://www.sillypinkbunnies.com) - and catch his work on tour this summer and fall in art galleries in Los Angeles, Dallas, and Philadelphia.

 

Graciously A new benefit CD is worth putting your money where your heart is, created when the Wavelab recording studio in Tucson, Arizona, wanted to reach out across the desert and aid Habitat For Humanity's Musician's Village project in New Orleans. Graciously: A Gulf Relief Compilation features a dozen exclusive new tracks from artists who've recorded albums at the studio, including Robyn Hitchcock, Devotchka, John Doe, Howie Gleb, Friends of Dean Martinez, and Calexico. Look for it next week on store shelves from the Funzalo Records label.

 

Let's Rock Again Two terrific new "rockumentary" DVDs were released earlier this week, aimed at the heart of Baby Boomer punks who formed their political ideology under the passion of The Clash and mixed it up to the hyper, free-thinking, free-jazz scramble of punk's 90-second jam band, The Minutemen. Image Entertainment offers up Let's Rock Again!, a loving portrait of Clash frontman Joe Strummer in his final year and a half, touring with his band The Mescaleros before his death in 2002. Far too mentally spry and sly to be called grandfatherly, Strummer was newly humble and motivated, stepping out from a self-described "11-year layoff" and climbing up again from the bottom, even cheerfully resorting to handing out advertisements on Atlantic City's boardwalk. Filmed on stage and off by personal friend Dick Rude, Strummer muses on how going from "a hero to zero is good for your soul," and shares an earnest goal of breaking even on his new record.

 

Best of the Land of Nod Store Music Volume 2 Following up on a collection of kids' music that won't drive adults bonkers, the manufacturer of exceptional children's bedroom furniture, The Land of Nod, has released a second CD to entertain the little one in all of us. For the XTC fan, the 14-track disc features two lost songs by Andy Partridge, "Don't Let Us Bug Ya" and "Everything'll Be Alright," originally written in 1996 when he thought he had sealed the gig to score the film adaptation of James & the Giant Peach. Other tickles for your ears come from Cake, which turns in a zippy take on the classic ditty "Mahna Mahna" (sound it out; you'll recognize it!) and the Mr. T Experience, getting its learn on with "Unpack Your Adjectives."

 

Four new cover projects have caught my attention, with Pat DiNizio's classy cocktail-lounge croon topping the list. Big thumbs up to Fuel 2000 Records for putting the Smithereens founder in such an intimate setting with pianist Jay Rowe, as they ply their talents on 16 selections from the American songbook.
A new punk-rock super-group of sorts has received the coolest pop-culture recognition in recent memory, as Osaka Popstar becomes a collectible Wacky Packages trading card.
Still brutal - and baked - after all these years, the Melvins are back this coming Tuesday with Houdini Live 2005: A Live History of Gluttony & Lust, a live opus that squeals and cascades the sickest guitar tones in memory.
• Long gone are the days when the search for that out-of-print LP required hours of thumbing vinyl in used-record shops, tingling to find that goofy, rare oddity for a lovelorn mix tape, or that missing link in the history of an artist you're really digging lately.
• I've got goose bumps - and an urge to pogo - from the time-traveling rush of two new books that wonderfully chronicle the magic age of punk and "post-punk," a faraway time when creative, disenfranchised youth on both sides of the pond were set free to try anything, encouraged by a vibrant, young record industry.
• This coming Tuesday Rhino Records offers an open microphone for a wild list of celebrities to show off their vocal chops. Opening with Scarlett Johansson's take on the George Gershwin classic "Summertime," Unexpected Dreams: Songs from the Stars also promises John C.

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