English /coloradan/ en 10 Obscure Books Recommended by 欧美口爆视频 English Faculty /coloradan/2021/02/04/10-obscure-books-recommended-cu-english-faculty 10 Obscure Books Recommended by 欧美口爆视频 English Faculty Anonymous (not verified) Thu, 02/04/2021 - 15:35 Categories: List of 10 New on the Web Tags: Books English Grace Dearnley

  

A month into 2020, most people are still staying home. After they tear through everything on Netflix and Hulu, many are turning to the pages of books to occupy their minds. Grab a cup of tea and a fluffy blanket, then get cozy in your favorite reading nook to escape into one of these 10 little-known books recommended by 欧美口爆视频 English faculty.

 

1. by Patrick Leigh Fermor

Recommended by Professor John Stevenson.

A Time of Gifts follows the true story of an Englishman who walked across Europe in the early 1930's 鈥 from London to Constantinople. In this first book, Fermor documents his travels from London to Hungary, after which the sequel, Between the Woods and the Water, recounts the remainder of his adventure. Stevenson wrote that, 鈥渂eautifully written, full of observations and ideas and adventures, it鈥檚 a book for the ages.鈥

2. by Alfred Hassler and Benton Resnik

Recommended by Professor William Kuskin

Martin Luther King and the Montgomery Story, which came back into print nearly 60 years after its initial publication, is a 16-page graphic novel detailing the 1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott in which Dr. King, Rosa Parks and 50,000 others fought against the segregation of city buses. The comic book is credited for inspiring MARCH, the graphic novel autobiography trilogy by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin and Nate Powell.

3. by Kenneth Fearing

Recommended by .

Originally published in 1946, The Big Clock is an American noir novel that takes place in the publishing industry of New York City. The main character, George Stroud, gets tangled up in a murder mystery and must prove his own innocence. Higashida writes that it is a 鈥渟uper fun and thought-provoking novel鈥 that 鈥渞aises questions about time and identity in industrial capitalism.鈥

4. La portentosa vida de La Muerte (The Astounding Life of Death) by Fray Joaqu铆n Bola帽os

Recommended by Associate Professor John-Michael Rivera.

Written in Spanish and originally published in 1792, La portentosa vida de La Muerte was one of the first Mexican novels, written by a Franciscan priest. The book takes the reader through the journey of Death, Adam and Eve鈥檚 daughter, who falls in love with several people but whose husbands keep dying off before their wedding night.

5. by Anna Kavan

Recommended by instructor Jason Gladstone.

Ice takes place in a frozen, apocalyptic landscape where walls of ice tower and governments vie for control. The narrator must take a glacial journey to find and save a glass girl with silver hair before the ice closes in on the world. This science fiction novel is called a warning against climate change and totalitarianism, a feminist exploration of violence and trauma, and an allegory for the author鈥檚 struggles with addiction.

6. by Davis Grubb

Recommended by Professor Ruth Ellen Kocher

In Ancient Lights, a modern epic novel, country bumpkin Sweeley Lynch of West Virginia is the only man who can save the world from the founders of an electronic conspiracy. Kocher called the book 鈥渂izarre in a very druggy, hallucinatory, Hunter S. Thompson kind of way.鈥

7. by Gwendolyn Brooks

Recommended by Assistant Professor Khadijah Queen.

Although Brooks is well-known for her poetry, this coming-of-age story, originally published in 1953, was her only work of fiction for adults. The novella is compiled of a series of 34 vignettes, set in the 1940s, that come together to create what Brooks called a 鈥渒ind of portrait of a young Chicago woman鈥檚 life.鈥

8. by Hallie Rubenhol

Recommended by PhD candidate Grace Rexroth.

The true-crime book The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper tells the stories of the women killed in 1888 by the unknown man who became the media sensation known as Jack the Ripper. Rexroth writes, 鈥淲e seem to have this fascination with perpetrators of violence that often has gendered connotations (usually some version of: male killer becomes infamous while his female victims are elided). This book tackles that very problem.  It 鈥 does the feminist work of making Jack the Ripper's victims visible and legible to a modern audience.鈥

9. The Story of Harold by Terry Andrews/George Selden 

Recommended by Professor Elisabeth Ann Sheffield.

The Story of Harold follows a man named Terry鈥檚 journey through a life of tortured and unfulfilled relationships, first with a woman whom he cannot fully love, then with an unreciprocating father of six, and another with a young boy who is already doomed to a life of insecurity and failure. Terry strives to redeem the boy 鈥 even as he prepares his own suicide.

10. by Geoffrey Household

Recommended by Professor John Stevenson.

Set in the 1930s, Rogue Male is the story of a hunter passing through an unnamed central European country controlled by a vicious dictator. In his self-appointed mission to kill the ruler, security catches up with him just before he pulls the trigger. Stevenson called it the 鈥渦nputdownable story of a man on the run 鈥 Clever escapes from certain capture follow one after another, right up to the potent conclusion. The best thriller I have ever read.鈥

 

Other great books submitted to the list:

All-Negro Comics #1 by Orrin Evans

Kari by Amruta Patil

Woman on the Edge of Time by Marge Piercy

Square Haunting: Five Writers in London Between the Wars by Francesca Wade

A Swim in the Pond in the Rain by George Saunders

The Talking Room by Marianne Hauser

Among Family by Marie NDiaye

The Word for Woman is Wilderness by Abi Andrews

The Monk by Matthew Lewis

Grab a cup of tea and a fluffy blanket, then get cozy in your favorite reading nook to escape into one of these 10 little-known books recommended by 欧美口爆视频 English Faculty.

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Thu, 04 Feb 2021 22:35:55 +0000 Anonymous 10495 at /coloradan
What's in My Phone: Adam Bradley /coloradan/2019/10/01/whats-my-phone-adam-bradley What's in My Phone: Adam Bradley Anonymous (not verified) Tue, 10/01/2019 - 00:00 Categories: Q&A Tags: English Phones

English professor Adam Bradley is the author of The Poetry of Pop and co-author of The New York Times bestseller One Day It鈥檒l All Make Sense, the 2012 memoir of rapper and actor Common.

How soon after waking up do you look at your phone? Under three seconds. I鈥檓 checking whether my six-year-old鈥檚 waking me up at 5 or 5:30 a.m.

App you can鈥檛 live without: It鈥檚 a tie between Audible and the podcast apps. My brain eats words.

App you wish you had the inner strength to delete: Any social media app, starting with Facebook and working my way up.

Last person you called: Probably my wife, the law professor Anna Spain Bradley.

Duration of longest call last week: Just under three minutes, to my wife.

Location of last selfie: Took one with my two girls next to the six-foot inflatable rainbow unicorn lawn-sprinkler I bought them. Father of the Year.

Does anyone else have your passcode? I wouldn鈥檛 put it past my eight-year-old.

Most-used emoji: The thumbs-up emoji (brown-skinned version) is my new version of 鈥淜,鈥 which was my new version of 鈥淥K,鈥 which was my new version of 鈥淥kay,鈥 which was my new version of actually writing people messages with substance.

First thing you鈥檇 do if you lost your phone for a day: Enjoy the silence. 鈥hen call AT&T and get myself back up and running.

 

Apps 

Last downloaded:

Waze (to explore the Cayman Islands)

Favorite app:

Audible

Most-used app: 

Apple Podcasts

Most-used emojie:


 

 

Photo courtesy Adam Bradley 

English professor Adam Bradley is the author of The Poetry of Pop and co-author of The New York Times bestseller One Day It鈥檒l All Make Sense, the 2012 memoir of rapper and actor Common.

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Tue, 01 Oct 2019 06:00:00 +0000 Anonymous 9507 at /coloradan
The Puritan Cosmopolis: The Law of Nations and the Early American Imagination /coloradan/2018/05/29/puritan-cosmopolis-law-nations-and-early-american-imagination The Puritan Cosmopolis: The Law of Nations and the Early American Imagination Anonymous (not verified) Tue, 05/29/2018 - 10:43 Categories: Books by Faculty Tags: English History Jewish Studies

By Nan Goodman
(Oxford University Press, 216; 2018)



In Nan Goodman鈥檚 book, The Puritan Cosmopolis: The Law of Nations and the Early American Imagination, she traces a sense of kinship that emerged from within the larger realm of Puritan law and literature in late seventeenth-century New England. She argues that these early modern Puritans 鈥 connected to the cosmopolis in part through travel, trade, and politics 鈥 were also thinking in terms that went beyond feeling affiliated with people in remote places, or what cosmopolitan theorists call "attachment at a distance." In this way Puritan writers and readers were not simply learning about others, but also cultivating an awareness of themselves as ethically related to people all around the world. Such thought experiments originated and advanced through the law, specifically the law of nations, a precursor to international law and an inspiration for much of the imagination and literary expression of cosmopolitanism among the Puritans.

The Puritan Cosmopolis shows that by internalizing the legal theories that pertained to the world at large, the Puritans were able to experiment with concepts of extended obligation, re-conceptualize war, contemplate new ways of cultivating peace, and rewrite the very meaning of Puritan living. Through a detailed consideration of Puritan legal thought, Goodman provides an unexpected link between the Puritans, Jews, and Ottomans in the early modern world and reveals how the Puritan legal and literary past relates to present concerns about globalism and cosmopolitanism.

Goodman is a professor at 欧美口爆视频 Boulder in English and Jewish Studies and is also the director of the Program in Jewish Studies and the Post-Holocaust American Judaism Archive Project.

In Nan Goodman鈥檚 book, 鈥淭he Puritan Cosmopolis: The Law of Nations and the Early American Imagination,鈥 she traces a sense of kinship that emerged from within the larger realm of Puritan law and literature in late seventeenth-century New England.

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Tue, 29 May 2018 16:43:02 +0000 Anonymous 8408 at /coloradan
Video: Professor or Rock Star? Both /coloradan/2018/05/07/video-professor-or-rock-star-both Video: Professor or Rock Star? Both Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 05/07/2018 - 16:06 Categories: Videos Tags: English Music

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOdtqfjozeo&feature=youtu.be]
 

Professor or rock star? Both. 

Steve Lamos, who teaches English, writing and rhetoric at 欧美口爆视频 Boulder, is also the drummer for American Football, a late-鈥90s rock band that Rolling Stone ranks among the 鈥淭op 10 All Time鈥 emo bands.

Read more about Steve

 

 

 

 

Steve Lamos, who teaches English, writing and rhetoric at 欧美口爆视频 Boulder, is also the drummer for American Football, a late-鈥90s rock band that Rolling Stone ranks among the 鈥淭op 10 All Time鈥 emo bands.

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Books and Movies /coloradan/2018/03/01/books-and-movies Books and Movies Anonymous (not verified) Thu, 03/01/2018 - 16:01 Categories: Business Profile Tags: English Janice Podsada

When Mitchell Kaplan (Eng鈥76) launched Books & Books in Miami in 1982, the business was the size of a one-bedroom apartment. 

Still, Kaplan, then 27, fled the tiny bookstore with more than titles 鈥 he brought in real live writers, unusual at the time. Nobel Laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer was among the first. 

鈥淔rom the beginning we established ourselves as the store where literary events took place alongside the selling of books,鈥 Kaplan has said. 

Early on, he also set about putting Miami on the literary map, helping found the Miami Book Fair in 1984. The annual weeklong festival now hosts hundreds of authors and draws hundreds of thousands of participants. 

鈥淚n the 1980s, Miami was off the radar screen,鈥 said Oren Teicher, head of the American Booksellers Association, a trade group based in New York. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 a place where publishers wanted to send their authors. He helped change that.鈥 

Over the next three decades Kaplan, now 63 and originally from Miami Beach, added seven more South Florida stores. The flagship store occupies a 9,000-square-foot building with a spot on the National Register of Historic Places. 

His labor of love would become a landmark for bibliophiles. In 2015, Publishers Weekly named the business 鈥淏ookstore of the Year鈥 citing its 鈥渙utsized influence鈥 on independent bookstores 鈥渁nd the literary culture at large.鈥 

鈥淵ou have to be able to communicate to your customers that value isn鈥檛 only measured by price,鈥 said Kaplan. 鈥淭here is value in meeting an author, being a place where ideas are shared, value in bringing writers into the schools.鈥 

Recently he developed a publishing arm and a partnership with film producer Paula Mazur. Their first feature-length movie, The Man Who Invented Christmas, with Christopher Plummer, was released in November. 

It was a novel that inspired Kaplan to apply to 欧美口爆视频 Boulder. Captivated by a character in Jack Kerouac鈥檚 The Dharma Bums who writes poetry on a mountaintop, Kaplan envisioned Boulder as an 鈥渆xotic land of mountains and snow,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 saw 欧美口爆视频 for the first time the day I got there.鈥 

Professor Sidney Goldfarb鈥檚 literature courses 鈥 which included histories of the 鈥済reat bookstores,鈥 such as Shakespeare and Co. in Paris and Manhattan鈥檚 Gotham Book Mart 鈥 made a deep impression on Kaplan, not least for their role as defenders of First Amendment freedoms. 

After 欧美口爆视频, he tried law school in Washington, D.C., but found himself spending more time in bookstores than in the law library. He left after two years, returned to Miami, taught high school English, then yielded to his persistent urge: to become a bookseller. 

When he opened the first Books & Books, he had a lot to learn: 鈥淚 knew more about Pablo Neruda and Thomas Pynchon than I did about interest rates or bank charges,鈥 he said. 

It鈥檚 been a risk that paid: 鈥淚鈥檝e been able to make some small contribution to Miami becoming a world-class city.鈥

 

Photo courtesy Mitchell Kaplan

When Mitchell Kaplan launched Books & Books in Miami in 1982, the business was the size of a one-bedroom apartment. 

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Better than Babel /coloradan/2017/09/01/better-babel Better than Babel Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 09/01/2017 - 03:57 Categories: Profile Tags: English Language Eric Gershon

Like millions of Americans before him and after, Samuel Boyd took high school Spanish.

Since then, he鈥檚 learned some other foreign languages, bringing his total, at last count, to 26, including dialects 鈥 and he鈥檚 got room in his head for more.

鈥淚 started to learn Sumerian but had some scheduling conflicts,鈥 said the 38-year-old 欧美口爆视频 Boulder professor, referring to a language spoken about 4,000 years ago in Mesopotamia, now part of Iraq. 鈥淚鈥檇 like to come back to it.鈥

Nearly all Boyd鈥檚 languages are 鈥渄ead鈥 鈥 no longer spoken, except as a scholarly exercise. Few use the Roman alphabet (the 专Cs).

But they鈥檙e all key tools in his work as a professional student of the Bible, the Western world鈥檚 most famous book.

Reading the languages of the ancient Near Eastern and Mediterranean cultures that produced it some 2,500 years ago helps him assess subtleties lost in translation. It also allows him to decipher contemporaneous records that illuminate context and meaning.

Boyd's cover band, The Dead Sea Trolls, nodded cheekily to the scholarly life ahead of him.

Guiding this work are two endlessly ponderable questions: 鈥淲hat is the Bible, and what are we supposed to use it for?鈥

These are not questions with final answers.

But meticulous study of the literary and archaeological evidence left by biblical cultures informs current understanding of what the Bible鈥檚 authors meant to convey. This shapes how people interpret and act on those messages now.

"I'm not here to convert anybody out of or into a particular religious tradition,鈥 Boyd said. 鈥淚鈥檓 here to help people think critically.鈥

Boyd first grew interested in ancient languages while working as a currency derivatives analyst at a big bank in Charlotte, N.C. It was the early 2000s and he was fresh out of college.

Inspired by debates about religious fanaticism after the Sept. 11 attacks, by his upbringing in the heavily Christian American South and by a childhood obsession with Indiana Jones, he enrolled in an online course in ancient Greek. He wanted to read the New Testament as it was first written.

Greek sucked him in.

Professor Samuel Boyd knows 26 foreign languages, including dialects. A sample:

  1. Hebrew
  2. Greek
  3. Akkadian
  4. Hittite
  5. Syriac
  6. Aramaic
  7. Ge'ez
  8. Phoenician
  9. Ugaritic
  10. Moabite
  11. Classical Arabic

鈥淚鈥檝e got the bug,鈥 Boyd told his bosses at the bank, where he also played guitar in a cover band called The Dead Sea Trolls, a cheeky nod to the latent interests that led to a new life.

Within 18 months he鈥檇 left finance and begun a master鈥檚 program focused on extinct languages. He added more as a PhD student.

Biblical Hebrew and Aramaic came after ancient Greek, then Ugaritic and some modern languages, German and French, which he also reads better than he speaks.

Eventually Boyd picked up Akkadian, Syriac and Classical Ethiopic (also known as Ge鈥檈z), as well as Phoenician, Moabite and Hittite, among about a dozen others.

He even helped identify and decipher a lost Aramaic dialect inscribed on a nearly 3,000-year-old monument discovered in Turkey.

Scholars of the Bible tend to know many languages 鈥 often half a dozen or so, according to Jeffrey Stackert, one of Boyd鈥檚 graduate school professors at the University of Chicago. It鈥檚 really the only way to do the job. Stackert himself knows 12, including dialects.

But even among his peers and mentors, Boyd stands out.

Two big questions guide his work: "What is the Bible and what are we supposed to use it for?"

鈥淭his level of language competence is pretty uncommon,鈥 said Stackert, who called Boyd 鈥渁 natural鈥 who 鈥渃ombines a remarkable memory with a keen interest and indefatigable drive.鈥

Boyd candidly noted another secret to his success: Many languages in his repertoire are related.

Phoenician, Hebrew and Moabite, for example, belong to the northwest Semitic language family and share many common features, including certain characters used to form words and convey ideas, aspects of grammar and some vocabulary. Punic and Ammonite, once spoken in North Africa and what is now Jordan, respectively, in turn resemble Moabite.

In a Western context, this is like someone knowing Italian and Spanish and adding Portuguese or French 鈥 other Romance languages.

Still, it takes a lot of study, and Boyd spent years heads-down.

It helped that 鈥淚 was a single guy鈥 during graduate school, he said.

Now married with children, Boyd emerged as an uncommon talent whose linguistic abilities make him a versatile scholar.

鈥淗e is able to address complex research questions that span significant time, geography and culture and that require considering a number of different types of evidence in ways that few scholars can,鈥 Stackert said.

Sometimes the dictionary is wrong.

At home at night, Boyd reads Goodnight Moon and Where the Wild Things Are aloud to his children in Hebrew.

Despite his linguistic aptitude, Boyd doesn鈥檛 consider himself a hyperpolyglot 鈥 a person who speaks lots oflanguages. (Zaid Fazah of Lebanon claims to read and speak about 60.)

鈥淭exts are my thing,鈥 he said.

Predictably, Boyd's office shelves all but sag with dictionaries, which he consults freely 鈥 and skeptically.

鈥淪ometimes, the dictionary might be wrong," he said.

[soundcloud width="100%" height="300" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" allow="autoplay" src="https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https%3A//api.soundcloud.com/tracks/437866647&color=%23ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false&show_teaser=true&visual=true"][/soundcloud]

Illustrations by Michael Waraska

Samuel Boyd has a way with languages.

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Fri, 01 Sep 2017 09:57:00 +0000 Anonymous 7330 at /coloradan
The Poetry of Pop /coloradan/2017/03/28/poetry-pop The Poetry of Pop Anonymous (not verified) Tue, 03/28/2017 - 14:13 Categories: Books by Faculty Tags: English Poetry

 (2017, Yale University Press) By Adam Bradley, professor of English

By Adam Bradley

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Extended Version: Drummer Has a PhD /coloradan/2017/03/01/extended-version-drummer-has-phd Extended Version: Drummer Has a PhD Anonymous (not verified) Wed, 03/01/2017 - 00:00 Categories: Q&A Tags: English Music Andrew Daigle

Steve Lamos, who teaches English, writing and rhetoric at 欧美口爆视频 Boulder, is also the drummer for American Football, a late-鈥90s rock band that Rolling Stone ranks among the 鈥淭op 10 All Time鈥 emo bands. The group recently reunited after 15 years and released a second album, American Football (LP2).

American Football returned to the stage in October with three sold-out shows at Webster Hall in New York. Were you expecting this reception?

I sort of knew Webster Hall was a big deal, but I thought we were playing the basement. The venue said, 鈥榃e鈥檙e going to book you upstairs and see what happens.鈥 Within one minute of tickets going on sale, all 1,500 were gone. Webster Hall suggested adding a Saturday show since the Friday sold out so quickly. The Saturday tickets went in 10 minutes. Then they said, 鈥淲e should try Sunday.鈥

How was it?

I had never played anything the size of Webster Hall. People kept introducing themselves and telling us they flew in from Europe or Malaysia or Scandinavia or Australia. People were taking pictures with us and showing us their band tattoos. I鈥檒l never forget that weekend.

Were you aware of how popular American Football has become since it originally disbanded?

I was almost completely oblivious. When murmurs of this reunion began and we started getting offers for more money than we had ever thought about, it started to sink in. It鈥檚 interesting to watch history revise itself. People did not like the first album when it came out, and reviews were lukewarm at best. Fifteen years later, though, we鈥檙e in 鈥淭op 10 All Time鈥 lists for the 鈥渆mo鈥 genre in Spin and Rolling Stone. But at the time, nobody cared. The biggest crowd we ever drew was maybe 100 people, and they were completely bored.

What is it about American Football that has stuck with listeners?

We all had records that were 15 to 20 years old that meant a lot to us when we were kids and we tried to transform those sounds into something we liked. It鈥檚 gratifying to think that there are other people for whom our music occupies some similar niche. I don鈥檛 think you can predict what will circulate, but once something gets picked up and people start connecting with it, that鈥檚 interesting.

Do your students know that you鈥檙e part of one of the 鈥渕ost influential鈥 and beloved 鈥90s rock bands?

Some grad students in English were teasing me about it a while ago. As cool as the whole band thing is, it鈥檚 a tiny piece of life. On campus, I鈥檓 here to do a different job entirely. 

Did you always know there was more in store for American Football?

I always did feel like the band ended prematurely. That said, I never thought it would all come back together. I had to earn tenure and music was very much on the backburner. Not that this has changed. I still love doing my job, but there is a little more headspace when I鈥檓 not on campus.

You play drums and trumpet?

I鈥檝e played the trumpet since I was six. My dad had this dance polka band and he would bring me on stage when I was little. It came about with American Football because there were a couple melodies that it went well with. When we do festivals, we don鈥檛 see too many other brass instruments.

Did you also start playing drums at an early stage?

I didn鈥檛 start playing drums until I was 21. I was ready for a break from the trumpet, and I wanted to be in rock bands, so the drums had an immediate attraction. From years of lessons on trumpet and violin, I at least knew how to practice.

What was it like meeting up with your college buddies to practice again?

I was in Chicago giving a keynote speech and had the opportunity to play with the guys for the first time in 15 years. After four hours of practicing, my wife called. She was eight months pregnant. She tells me, frantically: 鈥淥ur daughter is coming!鈥 After playing with the guys for the first time in forever, I rushed to O鈥橦are, jumped on a plane and drove to the hospital. My daughter was born an hour later.

How did American Football (LP2) come about?

After about 30 shows back together, we started asking, 鈥淒o we want to think about new music?鈥 We did鈥攁nd evidently Polyvinyl Records agreed. We wrote in earnest for about three months. The album was coming out in October, so it had to be done by March. We wrote a lot over long distance. I recorded my parts over Spring Break in Omaha at a studio owned by Conor Oberst and Mike Mogis.

What do you love about the new album?

I鈥檓 awfully proud of this one, especially the slow-burning tracks like 鈥淏orn to Lose鈥 and 鈥淕ive Me the Gun.鈥 Mike [Kinsella] did a nice job imagining what the characters of the first album would be thinking about 15 years later. There was no attempt to sound like the first record. All I can hope is that it will stand up and have legs like the first one has.

Were the bonus tracks on the re-released original LP really recorded with a boombox?

We would practice at this little house that I was renting. We would jam and whenever we鈥檇 stumble upon something, we鈥檇 hit record on the boombox. The 鈥渂onus tracks鈥 on the re-release are simply the contents of old tapes we found.

What鈥檚 next for American Football? 

We鈥檝e got some weekend gigs in the spring and a few longer trips for the summer. The record company has shown a lot of faith in us. Part of the goal is to try to get new fans without making the old fans mad. As long as I can balance it with my life here at 欧美口爆视频 Boulder, I鈥檒l keep doing it.

Condensed and edited by Andrew Daigle (笔丑顿贰苍驳濒鈥16).&苍产蝉辫;

Photo by Daniel Inskeep/Rachel Gulotta (top)

Steve Lamos, who teaches English, writing and rhetoric at 欧美口爆视频 Boulder, is also the drummer for American Football, a late-鈥90s rock band that Rolling Stone ranks among the 鈥淭op 10 All Time鈥 emo bands.

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Wed, 01 Mar 2017 07:00:00 +0000 Anonymous 6390 at /coloradan