Tag Archives: voices

Is "Fragrance" Making Us Sick?

Mother Jones

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For Joyce Miller, a 57-year-old professor of library science in upstate New York, one sniff of scented laundry detergent can trigger an asthma attack. “I feel like someone is standing on my chest,” she says. “It’s almost like a choking feeling—pressure and choking. And then the coughing starts.”

Miller is just one of countless Americans who are sensitive to “fragrance,” a cryptic category of ingredients manufacturers add to products from cleaning supplies to toiletries. This generic term encompasses thousands of combinations of chemicals that give consumer goods their odors, but the identity of those chemicals is rarely disclosed.

For decades, fragrance makers have insisted on treating their recipes as trade secrets, even as complaints about negative health effects have proliferated. A 2009 study, for example, concluded that nearly one-third of Americans were irritated by the smell of scented products on others, and 19 percent experienced headaches or breathing difficulties when exposed to air fresheners or deodorizers.

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Is "Fragrance" Making Us Sick?

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Phantogram’s Confident Second Act

Mother Jones

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Phantogram
Voices
Republic Records

Phantogram has long played a particularly unique form of warm, experimental pop. Their music teems with buzzing synthesizers, shoegaze guitars, and singer/keyboardist Sarah Barthel’s beautiful vocals all coalescing in front of a driving hip-hop drum beat. On Voices—their second LP and their first since 2009’s Eyelid Movies—that sound is even more prominent, with Barthel and guitarist Josh Carter confidently harnessing and perfecting their material with a crowd in mind.

“We didn’t even have an audience at first. We were just trying to make music that we really wanted to hear,” Carter explained. “The same goes for Voices, but we knew that we had more of a platform and we were going to be performing things live.” As a result, there are some real scorchers on this record. “Black Out Days,” “The Day You Died,” and “Celebrating Nothing” are all huge songs well-suited for the year’s festival circuit. I can speak from experience. When they performed at the Treasure Island Music Festival back in October, they had the entire crowd in the palm of their hands—even as some of that crowd held up and danced under a sea of artsy, luminescent jellyfish.

Though surreal, this fusion of art and sound made perfect sense. At their core, Phantogram is a strikingly visual band. As Barthel’s voice resonates overtop Carter’s echoed guitars, the listener is constantly hit with a cinematic sense of space. Electronic textures and ambience are the norm here. Slower ballad “Bill Murray” is a perfect example. “We were talking about what songs reminded us of,” says Carter. “We kept going back to that scene in Rushmore where Bill Murray jumps off the diving board and just sits on the bottom of the pool. So we were like let’s just name it Bill Murray.”

Though the band is convinced they’d make the same music anywhere, some of that sense of space might be owed to the band’s humble origins. Started in Sarasota Springs, New York, they were afforded the opportunity to use a family barn for practice space—an act they continue to this day. According to the band, this laid-back location helps focus their writing by blocking out all the distractions. “Being in the country—there’s a certain beauty that caters to creating.” He explains, “When we started writing for Voices, we were in a very small rehearsal space and were surrounded by several other bands who were playing all the time. We just couldn’t really think. You had like John Bonham on one side and John Paul Jones on the other side practicing bass.”

Even in his speech, you can hear the band’s musical depth. The two listen to everything from Prince to the Cocteau Twins. Carter grew up surrounded by guitarists, pianos, and albums from groups ranging from Pavement to the Beastie Boys to John Frusciante. “When I first started playing guitar, I got really into Frusciante albums when he was all strung out on heroin. I really loved his style of playing, and the gut-wrenching honesty behind his music. He had this real passion and desperation,” he explains. “But I’d say my first love for music that I chose myself was hip-hop. My first two albums were Fear of a Black Planet and License to Ill.”

Voices is a product of this diverse range of influences, but with a sound distinctly all its own, and—considering the growing festival and promotional spots—released at exactly the right time. The band is eventually planning a collaborative record with Outkast’s Big Boi. If Phantogram’s merging of pop, hip-hop, and psych is any indication, the trio should get along perfectly. “We’ve gone from being the band on a bill of a festival that says “and many more” to the smallest band written on the festival bill to constantly graduating up in the lineup. We have a very loyal, cool, fan base, and we just love to play live shows.”

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Phantogram’s Confident Second Act

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Coal-mining jobs on the rise under Obama

Coal-mining jobs on the rise under Obama

Shutterstock

No, Obama is not slowing down coal mining.

Americans are burning less coal every year, but thousands more of them are making a living from mining it.

The average number of coal-mining jobs under the Obama administration has been 15.3 percent higher than the average under George W. Bush, according to a new report [PDF] from the nonprofit Appalachian Voices. The report tries to debunk the claim made by coal-mining companies that Obama is waging war on them. The growth in coal-mining jobs in all of the leading coal-mining states is attributable, the group says, to a surge in exports and to a decline in mining efficiency as workers attempt to scour the last deposits from mines.

(We recently brought you the bad news that U.S. coal exports more than doubled between 2009 and 2012 to more than 115 million tons, counterbalancing the climate-friendly advances made by shutting down coal-fired power plants in the U.S.)

From the Appalachian Voices report:

appvoices.org

From a press release put out by Appalachian Voices:

“These numbers show pretty clearly that the purported ‘war on coal’ is an utter fabrication,” says Matt Wasson, director of programs at Appalachian Voices. “Even as this administration and the Environmental Protection Agency are making some important steps toward controlling coal pollution — from mining, burning, and burying the waste — the job numbers nationwide have been growing.”

While the data show some variations among coal-producing states, each of the top ten has had more mining jobs on average under the Obama administration than under the Bush administration. Nine of those states saw higher coal mining employment in 2012 than at any point during the Bush years. …

“We continue to hear industry’s cries that environmental regulations are unfair and costly. The fact is, the costs have always been there, only they’ve been borne by the people living in coal-impacted communities who can’t drink their water, who are breathing polluted air, who are suffering from cancer and heart disease,” says Wasson.

To all the coal companies out there complaining that rules and regulations are making life hard for you, please, cry us a river.

No, seriously, cry us a river please. You’ve ruined many of ours and we would like some of them back.

John Upton is a science aficionado and green news junkie who

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Coal-mining jobs on the rise under Obama

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