US – Sunday, March 14
The week's releases
Metro staff reviews the latest CDs, DVDs and books for your reading pleasure.
 
Run this town
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Back in the trenches
Steven Spielberg makes strikingly vivid, breathtakingly poetic movies about some of the most terrifying conflicts in the history of man. The filmmaking aesthetic he pioneered with “Saving Private Ryan” — and continues to perfect in HBO’s new WWII miniseries, “The Pacific” — was born out of a desire to translate as honestly as possible his conversations with veterans on their combat experience.
 
Is nothing in her life real anymore?
When we first read that Heidi Pratt was firing husband Spencer Pratt as her manager, we thought, “Yay! Heidi’s new face is finally doing something right!” But then we found out that although she did fire Spencer, it seems like she’s replacing him with psychic Aiden Chase to take the reigns on her “career” — and then we got scared.
 
Pattinson: A vampire in Brooklyn
Robert Pattinson has been playing Americans so often that he has forgotten how to talk like a Brit. In his latest, “Remember Me,” the “Twilight” heartthrob stars as a soulful young New Yorker attending NYU, but he insists he didn’t need any help sounding like a native. “I’ve never had a dialect coach or anything,” Pattinson says. “Ironically, I’ve only had a dialect coach for this film I’m doing now, which I’m doing in an English accent. I guess I’ve forgotten how to do an English accent.”
 
Published 20:52, February the 28th, 2008
 
Rock-a-bye, baby: Pinansky, top right, contemplates his roots in power ballads.Rock-a-bye, baby: Pinansky, top right, contemplates his roots in power ballads.
 

Rock ’n’ roll hoochie koo

Township bring ‘Home’ the proverbial power ballad

PROFILE. For all their rock bravado, Township has some soft spots. Three tracks into their first full-length album, “Coming Home,” the Boston four-piece cranks up the cheese with the lighter-ready ballad, “Baby Rock Me.”

“Oh, yes,” laughs frontman Marc Pinansky. “Carter and I had both been in each other’s bands and we were mixing the Tulsa record,” he explains of former Township guitarist Carter Tanton’s other band. “We said, ‘Wouldn’t that be funny if we just took the drum track to one of the songs and made up a whole ’nother song while we’re sitting here?’”

Tanton started crooning the improvised words, “Baby rock me.”

“I was like, ‘Well, what’s funny to you is inspiring to me,’ and then I went in the other room and wrote it,” says Pinansky. “It ended up being our ‘Dream On’ track.”

The remainder of the album is built on classic rock touchstones — the guitar hero worship of Led Zeppelin, the hardened pop edges of Thin Lizzy and The Who’s three-chord salute clangs throughout.

Township’s sonic bend is a continuation of Pinansky’s first band, Runner and the Thermodynamics, which earned a “Band to Watch” tip from Rolling Stone in 2005, and immediately imploded. Getting back on the horse wasn’t easy, Pinansky admits.

“With Runner, there was a lot of holding on. There was a fast rise up and a fast fall down,” he says. “It’s like when a relationship is ending. It’s the most painful thing and you don’t want to go through it again. So, with the next band, you want to make sure it’s the one.”

Within a year, Pinansky found the ones in the form of drummer Greg Beadle, bassist John Sheeran and Tanton, who was replaced last year by Matt Smart.

As the main songwriter in Runner, Pinansky admits he was “kind of a control freak.”

“Because I wanted it to work so bad, but people sort of started to shut down. They would defer to what I wanted, but that was one of the main things I realized — my own limitations.”
With Township he vowed for more collaboration.

“I found people that were inspiring to me and help to push songs in a different direction and bring themselves to it,” he says. “My ideas can’t be more than a starting point.”

Township
With KidNapKin, Handsome Jack and Chris Warren of Viva Viva
Friday 9:15 p.m.
T.T. the Bear’s Place
10 Brookline St., Cambridge
MBTA: Red Line to Central
$10, 18+, 617-492-BEAR
www.ttthebears.com