The hottest music from Chicago & beyond

Month: September 2011 Page 1 of 3

Pick Your Poison: Friday 9-30-11

So if you keep up with the latest goings-on with Radiohead, then you know they’ve spent the last week in New York. In that time, they’ve done a surprisingly large number of things. Considering how quiet they’ve been since the release of “The King of Limbs” early on this year, it’s remarkable they’ve been doing so much press now. From “Saturday Night Live” to “The Colbert Report” to 2 shows in NYC to an appearance on “Late Night With Jimmy Fallon” early next week, the band seems to be making the most of their visit to the city. One wonders if they were to spend a week in several major cities whether or not they might do similar things. Tragically, we’ll probably never find out. Also, given that New York is one of the most highly populated cities in the world, you can hardly blame them for taking advantage of the opportunities offered to them there. Okay, let’s get to this Friday edition of Pick Your Poison. It’s a little larger than usual, populated by a host of excellent choices. Chief among them are tracks from Cate Le Bon, The Fatty Acids, Inca Gold, and Mild Mannered. How to Dress Well’s cover of the Elite Gymnastics track is probably the biggest piece of awesome up for download below. In the Soundcloud section, there are great tracks from Alberta Cross and Shannon Curtis to soothe what ails you. And should you like some reggae versions of Beatles classics, be sure to glance at Yellow Dubmarine. Just for, you know, kicks.

Amtrac – Came Along

Built Like Alaska – John Henry

Cate Le Bon – Puts Me to Work

Cherub – My Time…

THE-DRUM – Euthanasia

The Fatty Acids – Oven Mitts
The Fatty Acids – Creature

Favors – D.D.D.
Favors – The ATM

Filip Filipi ft. Mansions on the Moon and Work Drugs – Big City Chaser

Giant Sand – Recovery Mission

Gross Magic – Sweetest Touch

The Handcuffs – Baby I Love You

How to Dress Well – h e r e i n h e a v e n (Elite Gymnastics cover) (ZIP)

Inca Gold – League

Matadors – The Matador’s Mission (ft. Katy B)

Maximino – Quitters

Mild Mannered – Wonder

Patrick Wolf – Time of My Life (No Ceremony Remix)

Sick Figures – Murdercycleaire

Steven Smirney – Deeply Wrong Merits

We Cut Corners – The Leopard

SOUNDCLOUD

Alberta Cross – Money For The Weekend

Mustang – Shooting Love (Original Mix)

Shannon Curtis – Let’s Stay In

Shark Vegas- Pretenders Of Love

Yellow Dubmarine – Something (Beatles cover)

Album Review: Twin Sister – In Heaven [Domino]


Most bands arrive at our doorsteps fully formed. That is to say, lead-in single or not, the first major release from a majority of bands is their debut full length. The material on it is often culled from years worth of early demos, the tracks that got the band noticed in the first place. Most artists live or die based upon how that first record is received. Yet there are a select few that choose to forego releasing a full length right off the bat, instead dipping their toes in the proverbial musical waters by unleashing a smaller EP first. If you’re a band like Voxtrot, you put out two EPs before getting around to a whole album. There was a lesson to be learned from Voxtrot’s example, where they earned loads of hype via by releasing small sets of songs at once, but then fell flat on their faces when it came time to extend that out to something bigger and more traditional (even if the album is a “dying format”). The EP just works much better for some bands. Enter Twin Sister, one of those bands solely defined by the EPs to their name. The first was “Vampires With Dreaming Kids”, unleashed in 2008 right on the verge of the “Twilight” craze. It did earn the band some healthy buzz, but last year’s “Color Your Life” EP served them even better, boosted by the band’s best track to date “All Around and Away We Go”. That last EP also brought them interest from some larger indie labels, and they struck a deal with Domino to release their debut full length “In Heaven”. So does the band come away clean in their transition from EPs to albums? To start, they’re certainly faring better than Voxtrot did.

Technically speaking, Twin Sister were never a lo-fi band, but the audio quality of their EPs was far from perfect. They were most likely working on a shoestring budget both times. With decent financing for “In Heaven”, there’s a notable difference in quality that reflects positively on the band. Such crispness brings out qualities in the music you wouldn’t have caught before, and that’s particularly true when synths are one of your main instruments. Singer Andrea Estella’s vocals get the biggest boost out of it, her high-pitched and lush songbird pipes get pushed to the forefront and take the reins, keeping you invested in every song even when it might not be prudent to do so. The band also learned a thing or two about economy, stepping away from any of the longer 6 and 7 minute space out sessions on the “Color Your Life” EP and instead averaging out around 3-3.5 minutes across the entire album, never making it to the 5 minute mark once. That’s perfectly fine, actually – they use most of the tracks to experiment just a touch while the more manageable track lengths give them greater commercial viability. That they’re able to add a few more quirks to their more traditional bedroom pop sound helps them to stand out just a bit more from their peers, even if not everything they try works. Still, you can hear the influence of a band like Broadcast in the bombastic “Spain”, while “Bad Street” goes almost straight for the 80s electro stylings of Blondie. Sprinkle a little 80s R&B in with the duet “Stop”, a little alternatve universe shoegaze via “Kimmi in a Rice Field” and a touch of Sterolab-ish odd pop courtesy of “Gene Ciampi” and you’ve got a record filled with fascinating curios.

Delightful as it may be to listen to, the one thing that “In Heaven” truly lacks is any sense of consistency. They happily journey from a more spacey dark wave number like opener “Daniel” into the sensuous R&B of “Stop” without blinking an eye or caring how well the two blend together. Truth is, that doesn’t make for a bad combination, nor does much on this record feel markedly out of place, but that’s probably due to the effortless but key vocals from Estella and bandmate Eric Cardona. Also the instruments stay largely the same, often some form of synth-guitar combination with beats that tend to be more programmed than performed. Think of Twin Sister as if they were this really great cover band, running the gamut with a mixture of popular favorites across four decades, every attempt accomplished with the same set of tools. Not everything works out to perfection, but 8 or 9 times out of ten they birth something far more impressive than it has any right to be. What is Twin Sister’s sound then? If you consulted their first two EPs, they were relatively well-defined and cohesive statements pushing a spacey, retro electro-pop aesthetic. “In Heaven” breaks away from that mold save for “Luna’s Theme” and presents a whole lot of other avenues the band might take. Given how well they tackle that spread of ideas, the band is now faced with the challenge of regaining focus on their next effort. Any number of stylistic doors have been opened for them as a result of this record, and which one they’ll choose to step through is anybody’s guess.

Twin Sister – Bad Street

Twin Sister – Gene Ciampi

Buy “In Heaven” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 9-29-11

In music news today, it has been announced that Courtney Love is set to write her memoirs. I don’t know about you, but a book detailing her life, pretty much filled head to toe with crazy, seems like it’d be remarkably fascinating to me. Particularly the Kurt Cobain years. Funny how this info comes out the same week as the Super Deluxe 20th Anniversary Edition of Nirvana’s “Nevermind”. Consider it almost too coincidental. So that’s something you might want to keep tabs on, because it’s sure to have plenty of juicy tidbits when it gets released. Speaking purely in the here and now though, today’s Pick Your Poison has a few juicy nuggets as well. I’ll recommend tracks from Beef Terminal, Carnivores, Mike Quinn, Pallers, A Shoreline Dream and Vanish Valley. In the Soundcloud section, there are a few great cuts available for streaming, including new ones from Fanzine, Mark Sultan and Yuck.

Beef Terminal – Birthday

¡BORRACHO! – Alpine (Lucy ‘Lo Remix)  

Carnivores – Second Impulse

Christina Bautista – Heartless

Clockwork Radio – Liege

Diamond Life – Just An Illusion

Korallreven – As Young As Yesterday ft. Victoria Bergsman (Girl Unit Remix)

Mike Quinn – Reforming

Oreaganomics – Blanket on the Edge of Town

Pallers – Years Go, Days Pass

Rich Aucoin – It

A Shoreline Dream – Dreamsong  (ZIP)

Sidi Touré – Ir Kagay Alada (Live at Old Town School of Folk Music)

Sola Rosa – Turn Around

Vanish Valley – The Bottom

Visions of Trees – Sirens (Novocaine (The Voyeurist Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

Cave Painting – Rio

Fanzine – Roman Holiday

Icona Pop – Sun Goes Down ft. The Knocks

Last Night’s TV – I Can Picture My Friend

Mark Sultan – Song In Grey

Yuck – Soothe Me

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 9-28-11

I realize we’re already halfway through the week, but I wanted to mention briefly that not only is a Pink Floyd catalogue remastering/reissue campaign kicking off this week, but as part of that celebration the fine folks at “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” are having some great musical guests on to cover classic Pink Floyd songs every day this week. Monday featured The Shins performing “Breathe”. Tuesday had Foo Fighters (with Roger Waters) doing “In the Flesh”. Tonight (Wednesday) will feature MGMT doing “Lucifer Sam”, while Dierks Bentley does “Wish You Were Here” on Thursday and Pearl Jam does “Mother” on Friday. Impressive stuff, both the performances that have already happened and what looks to be the ones coming up. Be sure to watch the show each night, or check out the performances via internet video later. Go to the Late Night With Jimmy Fallon website for that, as well as more details. The details of today’s Pick Your Poison are almost as interesting. I can give a good old recommendation to tracks from The Drift, Jacuzzi Boys, PAPA, Tyler Ramsey and We Can’t Enjoy Ourselves. There are two interesting covers mixed in as well, with PLAINS covering Nirvana and Silent Rider covering TV on the Radio. In the Soundcloud section, the TATF remix of Unknown Mortal Orchestra’s “Ffunny Ffriends” is noteworthy as well.

Atari Teenage Riot – Black Flags (Tony Senghore Remix)

The Birthday Suit – Do You Ever?

The Drift – Horizon

Eric Sarmiento – These Little Winters

Fairwell – Born Under A Bad Sign

The GTW – Sublime

Jacuzzi Boys – Automatic Jail

Kyla La Grange – Lambs (Leopard of Honour Remix)

Mandala – I’m No Echo

Moholy Nagy – Brute Neighbors

PAPA – Ain’t It So

PLAINS – Lithium (Nirvana cover)

Ross and the Wrongens – Summer Sun

Ryan Holiday – Why Can’t I Be Like You?

Silent Rider – DLZ (TV on the Radio cover)

Statue of Liberty – Only

Throwing Up – Mother Knows Best

Tyler Ramsey – The Valley Wind

We Can’t Enjoy Ourselves – Miss Maris Morris

SOUNDCLOUD

General Fiasco – Waves

Surkin – Ultra Light

Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Ffunny Ffriends (TATF remix)

Album Review: Wilco – The Whole Love [dBpm]


Eight albums in sixteen years – that’s the rate at which Wilco has been releasing records since 1995. Like clockwork, you can virtually anticipate a new Wilco record every two years. The consistency in that is impressive, made that much more so when you consider only a pair of those are regarded as lackluster in quality (see “A.M.” and “Sky Blue Sky” for more information). One of the big things that has kept Wilco vital all these years is their dynamic sense of adventure. Evolving out of Uncle Tupelo, the first couple Wilco albums were very much in a similar alt-country vein, something that didn’t do Jeff Tweedy & Co. many favors when comparisons were tossed about. The strongly pop-driven “Summerteeth” was the first sign the band was emerging from that looming shadow, and their true masterpiece “Yankee Hotel Foxtrot” confirmed it fully. Wilco has since evolved into one of the biggest bands in the world, to the point where they can create their own music festival and for the first time, their own record label. Yes, after finishing their contract with Nonesuch Records, Wilco is now officially “going it alone”, stretching their one wing and attempting to fly. Their label is called dBpm, and the first Wilco record released on it is the current one, “The Whole Love”. It’s also the third record in a row with the same band members, which is a good thing considering it’s also their strongest and most consistent lineup out of the many they’ve had.

The thing about consistency is that it breeds familiarity and creates patterns as a result. In spite of their brilliance, the last two Wilco albums have played things a bit safe. “Sky Blue Sky” was like a time warp back to Wilco’s earliest days, a subdued alt-country record that was almost the exact opposite of the immensely experimental “A Ghost Is Born” that came before it. Far better was 2009’s “Wilco (The Album)”, which was closer to a greatest hits record than anything else, with a collection of new songs that each sounded like they belonged on a different, older Wilco release. On “The Whole Love”, the band pretty much picks up exactly where they left off, though with a notable uptick in their more experimental side. That’s evident right from the start of the album, with the 7+ minute “Art of Almost”. Not only is it a surefire replacement for the band’s standard epic opener “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart”, it might just be the best Wilco song since then as well. For those worried or disappointed that the band was simply cruising and might not be pushing themselves anymore, here’s a song that would seemingly suggest otherwise. The thing about it is, that off-kilter edge doesn’t last.

First single “I Might” shows up and puts the epic oddities on hold as it bounces around with some fuzzy, lighthearted pop energy. It is in many ways the antithesis of “Art of Almost”, but still fits well within the boundaries of the best of Wilco’s catalogue. It’s the sort of song that the band can do in their sleep, and there seems to be at least one of them on each of their records. That doesn’t make it bad, it just makes it overly familiar. There are a few tracks on “The Whole Love” that once again work from that same template. See “Dawned On Me” and the title track for a pair of strong examples. If you’re looking for some of those classic Tweedy ballads, this album has you covered on that as well. “Black Moon” and “Rising Red Lung” are two somber acoustic numbers that are sobering but inspired and beautiful. Meanwhile “Standing O” features the band at their most brash and rocking, heavy on the upbeat electric guitars and with some strong assistance from buzzy keyboards and handclaps. Nels Cline does some positively raw work on that along with “Born Alone”, among others. He’s by no means underutilized on this record, he just takes the back seat a little more often to let the spotlight shine elsewhere as needed. After all, the way that drummer Glenn Kotche and bassist John Stirratt work with one another as a rhythm section is more than dynamic in its own right.

If you’re looking for something a little more unique from Wilco, “Capitol City” has a quirky 1920s vibe to it, like it deserves to be played at a county fair with a gentleman selling nerve tonic nearby and posters of pinup models everywhere. It’s the bouncy bass line, mellow organ and brushed snare drums that truly sell the track. But like “The Whole Love”‘s auspicious and adventurous beginnings, the record is bookended with the 12-minute closer “One Sunday Morning (Song for Jane Smiley’s Boyfriend)”. With such an extensive length, the song has been given more than its fair share of breathing room and ample reserve to go off on whatever wild experiment the guys might have up their sleeves. What’s surprising is that it doesn’t do that. It remains firmly grounded and consistent – the pace never moves above a light toe-tap, and it’s the ideal sort of soundtrack for a road trip through open pastures. The acoustic guitar and xylophone, when paired with Tweedy’s sublimely relaxed vocal performance lends the song an intimacy and beauty that wraps you up like a warm hug from a close friend. It doesn’t need to take any tangents or try anything fancy to succeed, and in spite of the melody not changing much, there’s not a single dull moment over the course of those 12 minutes. That in itself is a big key to the song’s brilliance – that Wilco is ambitious enough to extend a single track to an absurd length yet remain content with a largely basic melody. Even the best jam bands never seem to achieve that same remarkable grace.

As with every Wilco record, one of the highlights are Tweedy’s lyrics. He’s a poet in his own right, even if we “don’t give a fuck”. There are always some puzzlers in terms of what he writes, yet the wordplay is never anything less than compelling. How one “assassin’s down the avenue” is irrelevant, save that it sounds cool. Tweedy has said himself that a number of his lyrics are developed straight from his own mublings, in which he’ll simply get the sounds out of his mouth and come up with actual words for those sounds later. So when he references “Slim Jim blood” and the Magna Carta in one single breath on “I Might”, we don’t have to worry what he means by that because it legitimately means nothing. But not every song is comprised of silly gibberish that has no context. “Dawned On Me” is about realizing you’re still in love with somebody you’ve already broken up with, “Open Mind” is about trying to convince your partner to broaden his or her horizons, and “One Sunday Morning (Song for Jane Smiley’s Boyfriend)” is close to what the title describes – a confession to the titular author’s boyfriend about having an illicit affair with her. Does a song with a storyline or sensible lyrics make it better than one of the random word collections? In the end, not really – even the songs with no meaning keep it interesting in creating word combinations you’d never think to put together. So long as Tweedy isn’t diving head first into cliches, Wilco’s lyrics will always retain some semblance of brilliance.

Where “The Whole Love” puts Wilco is on the track back to their finest moments. After coasting for the most part on their last two albums, they’re showing a little more willingness to experiment and break from the patterns that have come to define exactly what a “Wilco song” should sound like. To put it a different way, they’re starting to regain the spark that fueled career highlight records like “Yankee Hotel Foxtrot” and “A Ghost Is Born” again. While this new album may not go down as Wilco’s best, it can certainly be regarded as falling on the better half of their catalogue. There’s not a single song to dislike on this album, even if it lacks a cohesiveness that the band’s best had. Whether it’s finally reaching a new comfort level or simply being bored with the ground they’ve already traveled, the more these guys can play with our expectations, the better. Feel free to take more chances, fellas. You’ve earned it.

Buy “The Whole Love” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 9-27-11

As usual, Tuesday is new album release day. I’m not explicitly recommending any of these albums, at least not in this space, but simply informing you that these bands are putting out records that you can purchase today via your favorite retailer, online or physical or other. I’ve featured a number of these bands in the weekly Pick Your Poison roundup, and if a name strikes you right and you’d like to hear something from one of these bands, the search function on the right side of the page might be able to help you out in finding an mp3 or song to stream. So new albums this week are out from Alessi’s Ark, Apparat, Big Troubles, Blink 182, Carolina Liar, Dominant Legs, The Duke Spirit, Dum Dum Girls, Gem Club, The Gift, Kasabian, Mark McGuire, Mastodon, Matthew Sweet, Mekons, Pallers, Radiation City, Soley, Twin Sister, Tyler Ramsey, Van Hunt, VHS or Beta, Walls, We Were Promised Jetpacks, Wilco, Youth Lagoon, and Zechs Marquise. Oh, and lest I forget, Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy is putting out a new EP and Nirvana’s “Nevermind” gets the Super Deluxe Reissue treatment filled with more extras than you can shake a stick at. That’s just a short list of a much longer one. Happy hunting in what I hope will result in an actual purchase of new music for you this week. For today’s Pick Your Poison, let me offer some actual recommendations as to tracks worth your time. Be sure to have a listen to songs from Autumn Owls, Binary (covering Ministry, no less), Boots Electric, The Immaculates, Moon Bounce, Parentz, Radiation City, and Sunbears. There’s also a new track from Is Tropical in the Soundcloud section you might want to give a listen to, among others.

Autumn Owls – A Thousand Blind Windows

Binary – Everyday Is Halloween (Ministry cover)

Boots Electric – Complexity

The Cinema – My Blood Is Full of Airplanes
The Cinema – Say It Like You Mean It

The Immaculates – Hey, Joe Kelly

Mandolin Orange – Haste Make

Moon Bounce – First of All and In Conclusion

The Moor – You’ll See

Parentz – Big

Publicist – Hardwork

Radiation City – Park

Saint Motel – Puzzle Pieces (Junk Remix)

Smile Now Cry Later – Favorite Song

Sunbears – Give Love A Try

Torkelsen – Lavkarbovar

Vadoinmessico – Pepita Queen of the Animals (Lapalux Remix)

The Whip – Keep or Delete (Blue Satellite Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

Art of Dying – Get Thru This

Chateau Marmont – Receive And Follow

Is Tropical – Lies

The Pierces – Kissing You Goodbye

Young Magic – Night In The Ocean

Album Review: Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – Hysterical [Self-Released]


Hop in your imaginary time machine and take a trip back to the year 2005. At the rate our technology is moving, quite a bit has changed in the last 6 years. Music blogs, for one, were still in their relative infancy, a select few becoming tastemakers for so many. Like weeds though, more kept sprouting up every day, wanting their own piece of the pie and trying to earn some legitimacy by breaking new artists on their own. Sometimes it worked, often it did not. One of the few bands to actually gain traction from those early bits of experimentation was Clap Your Hands Say Yeah. A five piece from straight out of Brooklyn, CYHSY were pretty much the ultimate DIY-ers, recording and distributing their own music without any assistance. After passing along a few free mp3s from their self-titled debut album to some influential music blogs, their popularity suddenly exploded, to the point where they couldn’t really handle all the orders that were coming in. To their credit, they never asked for any help once their popularity skyrocketed, and plenty of labels and distributors came calling. In one of the first cases of good hype going bad though, with their second record “Some Loud Thunder” Clap Your Hands Say Yeah chose to throw a little variety into their whimsical and upbeat indie pop sound, incorporating elements of prog-rock, dance rock, and world music into the melting pot and disappointing a lot of fans in the process. There were some good songs on that sophmore effort, just not enough to keep a positive word of mouth going about the band. So initial negative sentiment began to catch on and soon the band that had been lovingly embraced by the forward-thinking indie music community was now left for dead on the side of the road.

After briefly touring in support of their second album, CYHSY vanished for awhile, only playing a random show now and then while reportedly working hard on their third full length. Rumors of a hiatus emerged, particularly as frontman Alec Ounsworth put out a solo record as well as a second, different album as part of a new project called Flashy Python. Both records were released within months of one another in 2009 and were subsequently dismissed in about that same time frame. A couple of the guys also formed a new project called Uninhabitable Mansions with Au Revoir Simone’s Annie Hart – something that started as a band and art project but eventually became a record label. They’ve released records from Pursesnatchers and Radical Dads in the last year. CYHSY guitarist Robbie Guertin plays drums in Radical Dads, and their debut record was produced by CYHSY drummer Sean Greenhalgh. Realigning ourselves to the present day, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah suddenly and dramatically reappeared last May by announcing they’d be releasing their third album, their first in four years, this September. An mp3 for the song “Same Mistake” was unleashed a month later and quickly began to stoke the flames of hype once again for the band, with early comments seeming to suggest the guys had rediscovered the magic that earned them all that praise in the first place. While a great new song or two certainly bodes well for an entire record, the one lesson to be learned from this hype-a-minute world is to avoid making snap judgments until you’ve heard the whole thing. As it turns out, titling the record “Hysterical” was an inspired choice, primarily because it is exactly that, only we’re laughing at the band instead of with them.

Okay, so “Hysterical” is not really a laughably bad record. First single and opening track “Same Mistake” is actually remarkably good, with Ounsworth’s trademark woozy, off-key wail and a chorus bordering on anthemic anchoring the whole thing in place and reminding you just why this band earned so much hype in 2005. Yes, they deserve to continue making music, provided that music remains lightheartedly catchy. Yet it’s notable that in that very first track Ounsworth espouses, “We’ll make the same mistakes”, not trying to but actually implying they may still screw up this second chance. The crux of the band’s problems lies with the unerring sense that they can just work from their 2005 template and achieve similar success. Tastes and trends evolve from year to year, and unless you’re one of the few bands whose sound is only best described as “timeless”, you’re going to need to prove things have changed from record to record. At least “Some Loud Thunder” took some serious (and arguably too many) chances in the hopes of broadening the CYHSY sound established on their debut. As a contrast, “Hysterical” holds steady on the hope that if you liked songs such as “The Skin of My Yellow Country Teeth” and “Let the Cool Goddess Rust Away”, you’re going to equally enjoy this new material. The good news is that nothing on the new album sounds like an outright failure. Taken completely on their own, every track has some merits to it and is effectively charming. Put them together though, and you’ll notice a glaring sameness to the whole thing. Whether it’s the 3 minutes of “Maniac” or the 7+ minutes of “Adam’s Plane”, the band operates at a cruising altitude that while nice is also supremely safe. Taken in one massive lump, you’ll likely come away feeling the album was nothing short of a delight, but identifying specific highlights or hooks will suddenly prove exceedingly tough. At least moments like the fuzzed out guitar solo over the last half of “Into Your Alien Arms” and the spacey string section on “In A Motel” stand out specifically because they’re small breaks in the pattern. That doesn’t automatically make them better songs as a result.

What “Hysterical” ultimately ends up being is sad. Many of the songs aren’t upbeat in nature even if they have a spring in their step instrumentally. In addition to that, you wind up feeling just a little sad that a band with so much going for them initially have seemingly become tied up in the notion that they can reclaim their status as an important and meaningful band simply by repeating the formula that made them a success from the start. Even if they’d crafted a mixture of their delightfully catchy self-titled debut and their last album “Some Loud Thunder”, by no means would that have earned them any greater shot at the good graces of the hype-a-minute world we live in today. Bands that pander don’t earn a spot at the exclusive table – it’s the ones that take risks and are able to prove their worth via innovation that get the praise. That’s an extremely tough thing to do, and I for one don’t envy any band trying to make something of themselves these days. The game has changed since 2005, so you either adapt or die. With any luck, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah will find a way to do the former rather than the latter.

Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – Same Mistake
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – Maniac

Buy “Hysterical” straight from the band

Pick Your Poison: Monday 9-26-11

Le sigh. Another Monday, another start of another week. Depressing, right? Rain in Chicago isn’t helping matters, so I hope it’s warm and sunny wherever you are. To help get you through those work day blues, I’ve got an extra nice, extra long edition of Pick Your Poison for your downloading pleasure. Today I’m happy to recommend tracks from The Asteroids Galaxy Tour, Death Songs, The Do, Eternal Tapestry, Leema Mountain, Sun Hotel, Walls, Wild Beasts and Woodsman. Mogwai’s remix of the Laki Mera song “Crater” is excellent as well, and available to stream in the Soundcloud section. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got some week-starting ass to kick.

The Adamski Kid – I Dance Alone

The Asteroids Galaxy Tour – Major

COYOL – Pharmacist

Death Songs – Water in the Eyes of Man

The Dø – Slippery Slope

Eternal Tapestry – Doorways in the Sand

Hello Electric – Introduction

Leema Mountain – I See the Summer in You

Marina & the Diamonds – Radioactive (Tom Staar Remix)

Orchestra of Spheres – Hypercube

Ruben & Ra – Street Machine

Sonoio – Can You Hear Me?

Sun Hotel – Alchemy
Sun Hotel – Talks

Walls – Raw Umber/Twilight

We Are the City – Happy New Year

Wild Beasts – Thankless Thing

Woodsman – Specdrum

You Can’t Win Charlie Brown – I’ve Been Lost

Zun Zun Egui – Fandango Fresh

SOUNDCLOUD

Cold Specks – Holland

Jessica Rae – 24 Hour Church (in Memphis)

Laki Mera – Crater (Mogwai Remix)

People Get Ready – Uncanny

Album Review: St. Vincent – Strange Mercy [4AD]


The star of St. Vincent continues to rise. Graduated from the schools of Sufjan Stevens and The Polyphonic Spree, Annie Clark has quickly established herself under that holy moniker as her own force of nature. On her two records so far, she’s crafted delicate and raw songs about people that have it all together on the outside but are on the verge of breaking down on the inside. The title of her last record, “Actor”, was largely an allusion to the roles we play to please others in spite of our own predilections. Of course her debut album, “Marry Me”, was a reference to the cult classic TV show “Arrested Development”, so it’s also quite clear that Ms. Clark is not without a sense of humor. And whether you’ve only heard her on record or seen her live, few can argue that singing and songwriting are only a small part of her immense talents. To put it a different way: she can shred. Big time. Even the songs that sound intense on record take on an entirely new life when performed on stage. They become more jagged, formless and gut-wrenchingly intense. Earlier this year, she blew a lot of people away by covering “Bad Penny/Kerosene” by Steve Albini’s seminal 90s band Big Black. Nearly equal parts punk rager and heavy metal, Clark tackled that storm head-on and came out the other side smelling of roses and adoration. With such heaps of praise consistently lavished upon St. Vincent, it was only a matter of time before enough people caught on and her popularity shot through the roof. Now on the precipice of it all, the phrase “make or break” could well be applied to the third St. Vincent record “Strange Mercy”. Perhaps the most fascinating thing about the record though is in spite of what would otherwise be mounting pressure, Clark appears to ignore everything and everyone by embracing her own pathological whims, no matter how off-putting they might otherwise be.

That’s not to say “Strange Mercy” is all that…strange, though it is far less endearing and easy to digest compared to her previous efforts. In many ways, that’s a good thing – the best artists continue to challenge themselves and evolve, and that typically means kicking normal song structures and simplistic instrumentation to the curb. Case in point, it’s fascinating how much Clark’s fragile upper register at the start of opening cut “Chloe in the Afternoon” resembles Bjork’s. The vocal similarities don’t necessarily hold up beyond those first few lines, but the composition of the track also starts to feel like something Bjork would be proud of. The buzzsaw electric guitar slices through just about everything save for the rhythmic march of the snare drum that very much feels electronica/drum machine-inspired. By the time things wrap up, the song has broken down like a computer gone haywire with a virus. Clark’s vocals drown in a digital bath, obscured to the point where you can’t understand a word but can still make out the melody. Building to a frenzy is nothing new for a St. Vincent song, but there’s something inherently bigger, weirder and darker here than what we’re accustomed to. That carries over to most of the rest of the record.

What we’re essentially seeing on “Strange Mercy” is a more exposed Annie Clark than ever before. Previously, such dark tales were buried beneath the surface revelations. They were the musings of a deeply conflicted person admitting that, like the rest of us, sometimes it’s okay to have fits of rage. You’re almost inhuman if you can’t express such feelings on occasion. The new record strips away the conflict to show human beings much more in touch with their emotions. “Best, finest surgeon, come cut me open,” she sings, quoting Marilyn Monroe on “Surgeon”. The song itself is a bit of a lone wolf on a record such as this, relaxed and more passive in both words and melody. Unlike so many of the other characters on “Strange Mercy”, here is one that is holding everything inside emotionally and resorts to begging somebody else, a proverbial surgeon, to extract those emotions and bring them to the surface. It comes from a place of yearning to belong, and the very finely picked guitar work is handled with scalpel-like precision to go along with it. We’re never really sure if that surgeon finally comes along, but the synth-fueled instrumental breakdown that concludes the song takes things to a rather uncomfortable yet intricate level that isn’t too far removed from the terror many of us experience when we know somebody is about to slice into our skin with a blade.

In addition to her more plainspoken and confrontational mannerisms in the lyrics, Clark allows her guitar to do a lot more “talking” as well. Whereas many of the melodies on “Actor” were buttressed with dynamic orchestral-like arrangements that included violins and cellos and flute, heavy electrics in both guitar and synth form get plenty raw and show off Clark’s skills that much more. The difference in the song “Your Lips Are Red” from the first St. Vincent album on record versus in a live setting have become like night and day, the latter version often escalating to a 7+ minute guitar freak out that’s the auditory equivalent of bloodlust. While a bunch of the songs on “Strange Mercy” could well take on a similar life when performed, many of them already capture such ferocity on record that you wonder what could be added on stage. On the opposite side of that coin, not every track is an intense, guitar-heavy ripper. Variety is the spice of life, which is why the second half of the record goes down in a smoother and slower fashion than the first. That sort of more subdued yet beautiful balance is essential on a record such as this, and it’s handled with grace and aplomb. “Neutered Fruit” sounds like it’s had its balls clipped at first before it grows a pair towards the end, and while a “Champagne Year” is normally cause for celebration, it’s clear from the mellow tone of the track that Clark is in no mood to have a party. Her somber The first third of “Dilettante” holds pretty static, pairing Clark’s sweet vocals with a very simple and slow drum beat so sparse she might as well have done it a capella. Horns and guitars eventually pick up the slack and bring the track to a rousing conclusion. The buzzing guitars return again for one last appearance via the closing track “Year of the Tiger”, which coincidentally is also the only song on the album to have light brushes with an acoustic guitar as well. The record more plods to the finish line rather than dashes across it, but the sentiments of fear and paranoia that permeate the lyrics don’t particularly call for something peppy or lighter.

Perhaps the lone disappointment with a record like “Strange Mercy” comes at the hands of commercial viability. “Cruel” is the first single, but as bouncy and catchy as it may be, it defies traditional song structures. There’s just something about it that lacks the pure magic of a “Actor Out of Work” or “Paris Is Burning”. No matter though, for the sheer charm of it will win enough people over to keep some of the most casual St. Vincent fans interested. Almost equally great single fodder is “Northern Lights”, driven forwards by a great pace and strong guitar parts, but tempered by an only moderately successful hook and an odd squelching synth solo during the bridge to keep you on your toes. Annie Clark seems to like doing that – keeping us on our toes. It’s all about continued evolution, and through three records now she has been able to do whatever it takes to avoid repeating herself while retaining the core ideas and skills that made her such a dynamo in the first place. In the particular case of “Strange Mercy”, it’s wonderful to hear her kick a lot of the prettier elements from “Actor” to the curb in order to focus much more intently on her immense guitar skills and more directly on the real world issues that challenge her cast of characters. And while synths seem to be one of the most popular instruments in indie rock these days, Clark isn’t using them to recreate a specific era of music but instead as a pure supplement to her timeless rock songs. She continues to do things her own way in spite of otherwise mounting pressure to trade it all in for massive commercial success and popularity. They certainly don’t make many rock stars like that anymore.

St. Vincent – Surgeon

Buy “Strange Mercy” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Friday 9-23-11

Happy Odd Future Prank Day everybody! If you haven’t heard yet, those young, bratty and controversial hip hop stars pulled one over on a number of unsuspecting fans. To be fair, had I not caught onto it after it was all over, I probably would have fallen for it too. The set up is as follows: Odd Future started their own record label a couple months back – that much is true. The idea was to release their own music that way and not really anybody else’s. Well, via a press release sent out by their publicist, Odd Future announced they had discovered this amazing new talent that calls himself Young Nigga and just couldn’t pass up the opportunity to sign him. After teasing that they’d be unleashing the first single from Young Nigga a few hours later via their website, the end product turned out to be good ‘ol Tyler, The Creator changing his voice to try and sound like somebody else. At least that’s what it seems like. If this Young Nigga really does exist and has an album titled “Expensive Pasta” nearly in the can as reported, and he just so happens to sound a whole lot like Tyler, The Creator, well, perhaps it wasn’t a prank at all. But yeah, 95% sure they’re just messing around. Have a listen and judge for yourself. Okay, let’s talk a weekend-starting Pick Your Poison. I can give gold stars today to tracks from Anthem Facility, ARMS, Gardens & Villa, Gauntlet Hair, New Shouts, Rain Over St. Ambrose, and Wooden Wand (with the Briarwood Virgins).

Anthem Facility – Left to Defend

ARMS – Fleeced

Bio Ritmo – La Verdad

Bluom – Hello!

Bus Stop Dreams – The Kiss

Daughter – Love

Dirty Dishes – Slow Curse

Gardens & Villa – Spacetime

Gauntlet Hair – Keep Time

The Go Round – Open Hearted

Jason Corcoran – Kiss the Hive

Mocean Worker – Swagger

New Shouts – The Reins to Your Heart

Pan – Seeking the Sea King

Rain Over St. Ambrose – Campfires

Southerly – All Abandoned

Southern Culture on the SKids – Zombiefied

Wooden Wand and the Briarwood Virgins – Big Mouth USA

SOUNDCLOUD

Altered Beats – Cool Lies

Hello Echo – Birdbeat

Outasight – Tonight Is The Night

Paper Crows – When Friends Survive

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 9-22-11

Today is the first “official” day of fall. I used quotation marks there because I guess there’s a difference between meteorological fall and what the calendar says. Your local weathercaster may have told you a couple weeks back that fall had officially begun, but that was really just when temperatures began to dip. Now that we’re in full fall swing though, there’s the leaves beginning to change color, and my favorite time of year – sweater weather. For me though, it’s closer to hoodie weather. I’m basically happy over bundling up just a little more than usual, but I do love summer and the warm temperatures. I hope you enjoy it too, a precursor before the doldrums of winter finally strike. Pick Your Poison will hopefully wrap you up in sweater-like comfort today. Tracks I can give a thumbs up to come from Amanda Mair, AZITA, Pallers, Van Hunt, The Wandas, and Zechs Marquise. Panda Bear’s remix of Korallreven is a good one to stream in the Soundcloud section, and if you like some hip hop, “Community” star Donald Glover’s music project Childish Gambino has a new cut up for streaming as well.

Amanda Mair – Doubt

AZITA – September

Dylan LeBlanc – If the Creek Don’t Rise (ft. Emmylou Harris)

Evidence – Late for the Sky (ft. Slug and Aesop Rock)

Filligar – Knock Yourself Out

Mr. Miranda – Key to Success

Pallers – Humdrum

Rah Rah – Parkade

Secret Shine – No More Inside

The Seldon Plan – Fractionation

Tyson – After You’re Gone (Solo Remix)

The Unsacred Hearts – Where Are You?

Van Hunt – Eyes Like Pearls

The Wandas – Long Time Running

Wesley Wolfe – Who’s Going to Truly Love You?

Xaver Von Treyer – Device of the Devil (Original Demo)

Zechs Marquise – Everlasting Beacon of Light

SOUNDCLOUD

Childish Gambino – Bonfire

Kathleen Edwards – Wapusk (featuring Bon Iver)

Korallreven – As Young As Yesterday (Panda Bear Remix)

Sam Gray – Brighter Day

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 9-21-11

Tragedy has struck, and its name is R.E.M. More specifically, I mean the break up of R.E.M. While I am saddened to hear that the guys feel like they can’t or shouldn’t work together as a band anymore, we did get 31 years worth of great music, even if there were a few misfires along the way. What disappoints me most is hearing the break up talk from people that obviously aren’t big R.E.M. fans, because they first comment that it’s tragic, then follow it up by saying something like, “it’s not like they’ve done much in the last 10 years”. First and foremost that’s an ignorant statement, especially since their last two albums, “Accelerate” and “Collapse Into Now” were at the very least better than half of the rest of their catalogue. The real R.E.M. fans know that the band appeared to have plenty of life still left in them. Apparently they felt otherwise. So I wish Michael Stipe, Mike Mills and Peter Buck all the best in their future endeavors, and look forward to their reunion tour in 2016. Let’s do Pick Your Poison today. I can say complimentary things about tracks from The Beets, Chris Letcher, Grand Atlantic and White Denim.

Astrid Swan – Zurich Is Stained (Jori Hulkkonen Remix)

The Beets – Doing As I Do

Chris Letcher – Twin Fins

Daft Punk – Crescendolls (Mr. Valentine Remix)

Devereaux – Espejo

Ellie Goulding – Lights (RASCAL Remix)

EULA – Maurice Narcisse

Grand Atlantic – Carved From Stone

Groove Armada ft. Bryan Ferry – Shameless (Tim “Love” Lee Dub Version)

Mad Major Melvin – Pinchero (Original Mix)

The Matador – Señorita Negra

The Weeknd – The Morning ft. Kenton Dunson (Chi Duly Remix)

White Denim – Hot Thought

Woodkid – Iron (Trumpdisco Remix)

You Won’t – Three Car Garage

SOUNDCLOUD

Breton – Kensington System

Canyons – See Blind Through

Daymare – Ice Famine

Far Away Planes – Stow Away

Monarchy – You Don’t Want To Dance With Me (feat. Britt Love)

St. Rupertsberg – In Albania

Album Review: Wild Flag – Wild Flag [Merge]



More times than not, when an artist or band uses the phrase “indefinite hiatus”, it’s a police way of saying that they’re breaking up. Sometimes it really is just a temporary break from making music with the same people, as bands like Broken Social Scene and TV on the Radio have proven more recently. Whether they just want a couple years to decompress or pursue solo/side projects away from the main band, a hiatus is a way to explore those options. For Sleater-Kinney, their indefinite hiatus certainly seemed like it would be brief. Corin Tucker wanted to take some time and really focus on being a new mother, while Carrie Brownstein took to blogging for NPR and doing occasional comedy sketches with her friend and SNL player Fred Armisen. Janet Weiss, not content to sit around on the sidelines, joined up with Stephen Malkmus as part of the Jicks in a move that seemed almost like an afterthought. To put it more bluntly, none of the S-K trio were doing anything they couldn’t give up at a moment’s notice to bring the band back together. In the last year or so though, there’s been something of a sea change. Brownstein got more heavily into acting, both starring in a movie with The Shins/Broken Bells’ James Mercer and taking her team-up with Armisen to a new level via the IFC series “Portlandia”. Meanwhile Tucker apparently spent just enough time raising a family that the music itch struck her again, so instead of going for the reunion, she formed The Corin TUcker Band and crafted a record of alt-country songs. It’s certainly a long way from the brash and fiery punk rock that Sleater-Kinney brought to the table. And with Stephen Malkmus getting Pavement back together for a year of touring and shows, Weiss was seemingly in the wind for that period of time. Well, that small gap quickly vanished when about a year ago Brownstein took to her “Monitor Mix” NPR blog to announce the existence of Wild Flag, a new band with a lineup that included Weiss on drums, along with The Minders’ Rebecca Cole on keyboards and Helium’s Mary Timony on guitar/vocals. It’s now been a year since their formation, and having played a number of shows in that time, the band is now celebrating the release of their self-titled debut album.

It’s easy to pick apart Wild Flag based upon the sum of its parts. That’s really the case with any band that might otherwise be considered a supergroup. Part of you wants to question if this new band lives up to the legacy of the talent behind it. What’s fascinating about Wild Flag is that their debut record appears to be most concerned with the legacy that other groups have left behind. So many bands new and old continue to prime the pump by exploiting a previously established sound from a previous decade by trying to put a fresh spin on it. The Killers had 80s synth pop when they first arrived and created a new wave of new wavers. Bands like Japandroids and Yuck are some of the more forceful acts to bring back some serious 90s nostalgia in the last couple years. Innovative and forward-thinking groups are quickly vanishing as nostalgia grabs hold and comes in waves. Are there any original ideas left out there? That’s a question for another day, because Wild Flag is the antithesis of that. Unlike so many of these bands that make music or become popular simply because a certain type of music is the current flavor of the month, Wild Flag plays it smarter on their debut, something you’d hope would be the case given that all the members are music veterans. Sure, you can hear flashes of that in-your-face punk rock that Sleater-Kinney was best known for on a track like “Boom”, which in this particular case also comes infused with a healthy dose of keyboard. You can almost hear Brownstein sneering behind the microphone at times, which certainly invigorates a couple tracks, particularly the crunchy and intense “Racehorse”. What’s missing as a counterpoint to that is the presence of a wailing, overly dramatic Corin Tucker belting something out to the rafters. Mary Timony’s approach is far more relaxed classic rock than it is punk rock, and it’s what really pushes some genre shifts on the record. With Brownstein and Timony essentially switching off lead vocal duties from track to track, pinning Wild Flag in a particular corner becomes nearly impossible. The energetic and fun post-punk of opening track “Romance” gets quickly tempered by the much more relaxed 60s girl group stylings of Timony’s “Something Came Over Me” before Brownstein exits out the other end with the hard-hitting punk of “Boom”. Technically it’s a miscalculation to disrupt the pace of the record so early on like that, but all three tracks are solid in their own right so that makes it easier to take.

Timony pushes a psychedelic angle into “Glass Tambourine” while also simultaneously channeling a bit of The Breeders vocally, and it winds up being her best contribution on the record. Any time Wild Flag takes some extra time to extend a track beyond 4 minutes it turns into a rewarding experiment in which fascinating musical avenues are explored and all the players prove their worth instrumentally. Janet Weiss in particular stands out with her intense drumming skills, but then again rare is the occasion when Weiss’ talent doesn’t shine as bright or brighter than her peers. She remains one of the best percussion weapons making music today. Of course Rebecca Cole is no slouch either, even if her contributions via keyboard and backing vocals are likely to be the ones that attract the least amount of attention. She’s essential to the Cars-esque new wave vibe of “Endless Talk” and provides a sharp anchor to Timony’s eccentricities on “Electric Band”. If you want to hear the band operating at full power, in which the foursome work best as a cohesive unit but are each given an individual chance to shine, you can’t miss with “Racehorse”. It uses every second of 6.5+ minutes to exploit pure guitar shredding, keyboard jamming, drum fills that overflow, and a vocal performance so visceral that impressive only begins to describe it. For those fleeting moments, you forget entirely the names and the history of the people within this band and just surrender to raw talent. In an ideal world, Wild Flag would give you that same feeling on every song.

The best thing about both Wild Flag the band and “Wild Flag” the album is how purely emotional everything is. The goal is ultimately lack of control – the ability to simply let yourself loose and have some fun. Here is a band that thrives on impulse rather than careful plotting, allowing the wind to dictate the sonic direction they’ll head next with little care if it’s prudent to do so. There’s nothing on the album that’s outright bad, but there are a couple small moments that seem just a touch out of place compared to everything else. Those are the times when the band doesn’t fully gel, primarily derived from trying to bring the two distinct sensibilities of Brownstein and Timony into one singular vision. Assuming this is more than just a one-off effort, those sorts of issues should resolve themselves the more time they spend together as a band. So long as they don’t lose that fresh sense of excitement and wonder, Wild Flag could easily become the sort of band that makes you forget about where they came from and instead hope they continue to show progress and brilliance for years to come.

Wild Flag – Romance

Buy “Wild Flag” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 9-20-11

Tuesday is new album release day, so let me give you a quick rundown of some of the more notable releases that are available in stores and online for you to purchase this week. New albums from CAVE, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Halloween Alaska, Ivy, Korallreven, Megafaun, Needtobreathe, Nurses, The Pack AD, Southerly, SuperHeavy, Tori Amos, Veronica Falls and Weekend are all fresh for your listening pleasure. You may also be interested in EPs from IfIHadAHiFi and Jens Lekman, not to mention Pearl Jam releasing a double disc soundtrack to their Cameron Crowe film “20”, which features a number of live cuts from throughout their career, among other things. Check out what strikes your fancy. The same can be said about today’s Pick Your Poison. Today I’ll give gold stars to tracks from Devo, Jesse Payne, Jim Ward, Katie Herzig, Porcelain Raft (covering Nirvana), Quilt, Still Corners, Trips & Falls and Twin Shadow.

Christina Bautista – Long Divisions

The Daredevil Christopher Wright – The Animal of Choice

David’s Lyre – Hidden Ground

Dead Western Plains – People Beat

Devo – Watch Us Work It

Goldenboy – Sleepwalker

Gregory Scott Slay – Keep It Secret

Jesse Payne – Take Me

Jim Ward – Take It Back

Katie Herzig – Free My Mind

MEN – Simultaneously (LESANDS Remix)

Outasight – Loosen Up

Palpitation – We Don’t Need To, We Don’t Have To

Porcelain Raft – Come As You Are (Nirvana cover)

Quilt – Penobska Oakwalk

Still Corners – Into the Trees

Tensnake – Something About You (Christian Strobe Remix)

Trips and Falls – Marginally More Than Mildly Annoying

The Trophy Fire – Modern Hearts

Twin Shadow – Changes

SOUNDCLOUD

Mozart Parties – Black Cloud

Pick Your Poison: Monday 9-19-11

Happy official start to the 2011 Fall TV Season! That does deserve an exclamation point, if you ask me. Did anyone watch the Emmys last night? There were a number of good, award-worthy shows that actually won, even if many of them were the same shows we’ve seen win over and over again. Great to see Kyle Chandler win for “Friday Night Lights”, and though the show lost in the Best Drama category to “Mad Men”, I am in no real way upset about that, given how great that show is too. “Modern Family” did exceptionally well last night too, snagging a pair of Best Supporting Acting awards along with some writing and Best Comedy Series. Great for them too, they deserved to win. Other good wins include Melissa McCarthy for “Mike & Mollly” and “The Daily Show” in a pair of Best Variety, Music or Comedy Series categories. Congrats to all, now let’s get some new episodes on the air. Okay, so amidst my excitement for TV, let’s get back to music right now. Pick Your Poison today is a delight and I’m excited about that too. I can recommend tracks from A Classic Education, Co La, Empress Hotel, Guineafowl, Jukebox the Ghost, Mezzanine Owls, Reversing Falls and Way Yes.

A Classic Education – Forever Boy

Adrienne Drake – Awake at the End of A Dream

Ankit Love – Mental Revolution

The Chevin – Champion

Co La – Egyptian Peaches

Daisy McCrackin – I Think I’m A Ghost

e-dubble – Life Coach

Empress Hotel – Here Comes the New Challenger

Gigamesh – When You’re Dancing ft. Induce (RAC Remix)

The Glammers – Rock Your Town

Guineafowl – Little Fingers

Jukebox the Ghost – The Stars

Messy Marv – I Need It Back

Mezzanine Owls – Obstacle

MonoMono – Make Them Realise

Odonis Odonis – Ledged Up

Reversing Falls – Is This Thing On?

Snowmine – Beast in Air, Beast in Water

Way Yes – Automail

SOUNDCLOUD

Alex Clare – Up All Night (Skream’s Behind Closed Door’s Remix)

AM & Shawn Lee – Somebody Like You

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