Victoria LeGrand of Beach House: interviewed at Sound of the City. In related news, said band’s new album Bloom is fantastic.

Douglas Wolk looks at the solo work of the Velvet Underground’s Moe Tucker.

Jessica Hopper chats with Willie Nelson for The Daily.

Tim Horvath’s “The Conversations” can now be read at The Collagist. (For good measure, here’s our review of his Understories.)

Sarah Schulman discussed gentrification at St. Marks Bookshop.

Nitsuh Abebe discusses his favorite smells.

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Christopher O’Riley, host of NPR’s From the Top, has recorded several albums of solo piano, including collections of music written by Radiohead and Nick Drake. His latest album, Shuffle. Play. Listen., a collaboration with cellist Matt Haimovitz, is a wide-ranging collection, encompassing everything from Stravinsky’s Suite Italienne to Blonde Redhead’s “Misery Is a Butterfly.” He’s also composed music to accompany a sequence of Anton Chekhov short stories, and — as I’ve learned — may have a collaboration with Mark Z. Danielewski on the horizon. I checked in with O’Riley recently to learn more about this and some of his other recent projects.

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Michael Robbins really hates living in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. The poet, whose book Alien vs. Predator was recently released by Penguin, is teaching there until June, and then he’s getting out of dodge. “Hattiesburg smells like a sewer,” he emphatically told me in the middle of our conversation. “You can go online and Google the Hattiesburg smell, it’s an actual thing. I think they actually have wooden water wheels to aerate the sewage. There’s just way too much sewage to properly aerate everything.” Robbins needs to be in a bigger city, and reading his poems it’s easy to see why. His work is energetic and irreverent, giving equal space to Rilke and Buju Banton in the same poem. Even though each line is heavy with allusions, a few of which he admits will be lost on almost everyone who reads him, the tone of Robbins’ work is actually at odds with obscurantism. There are references and jokes and meaning in there for everyone, from a casual hip hop fan to the student of 20th century poetry to the fastidious obsessives who have memorized every word of Dylan pre-Desire. We talked about TV, boring rap, Occupy, and countless other topics, always returning to the contradictions in what we like and why.

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Grow Up
by Ben Brooks
Penguin, 272 p.

The high school story is an odd thing. Most of the ones I think of come from movies—whether it be Project X, Can’t Hardly Wait, American Pie, or Sixteen Candles, and the billion beyond those. What are constant are the clear societal lines—who’s in and who’s out. In those stories, there’s usually at least one sympathetic character that we hope succeeds through whatever antics fall their way. But Brooks refuses to play that way. Instead, he takes a direct attack with a vicious, selfish young male.

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Three Guys One Book take a look at why rock novels rarely work, then list a few that do (Great Jones Street by Delillo, The Gospel Singer by Harry Crews, etc.)

Gabriel García Márquez’s Twitter death hoax.

Julia Jackson talks to Mike Doughty at The Outlet.

Today is Brian Eno’s birthday.

Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry plan to team up again.

GOOD asks if we can we save the Potomac and America’s other polluted rivers?

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