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Month: February 2012 Page 1 of 3

Snapshot Review: Perfume Genius – Put Your Back N 2 It [Matador]



After a criminally ignored debut album “Learning” in 2010, Perfume Genius (Mike Hadreas) is back with a graceful sophmore effort titled Put Your Back N 2 It. Kitschy and fun as that title may be, the music contained within is anything but. Those familiar with his first record will find many of the same or similar painful topics tackled once again with serene grace and aplomb. Physical and mental abuse, drug addiction and sexual trauma are all parts of Hadreas’ world, as they are parts of so many others’ as well. On “Learning” he fully embraced that darkness, which often made the record difficult to listen to. It was the warmth of his sparse, lo-fi piano arrangements that helped to turn these ugly moments into bearable ones. He’s cleaned up his sound quite a bit, expanded his instrumental palette just a little, and injected a touch of positivity to his lyrics to help make Put Your Back N 2 It feel like a good cry and a warm hug. On “Dark Waters” he comforts a victim of molestation with the quavering words, “I will take the dark part of your heart into my heart.” Hadreas also pushes for strength in sad times on “No Tears” by singing, “I will carry on with grace/Zero tears on my face.” Songs such as “All Waters” and “Hood” deal with love in all its forms, the former a meditation on the acceptance (or in some cases non-acceptance) of homosexuality in our world today. A 16-second promotional video for the album, which featured Hadreas being cradled like a baby in the arms of gay porn star Arpad Miklos, wound up being pulled from YouTube under the controversial excuse that it was promoting mature sexual themes (there was no nudity in the video). That’s more tragic than the song itself. Instrumentally speaking, Hadreas keeps things pretty simple: almost every track is either a piano ballad, a quiet acoustic guitar number, or a murky synth soundscape. Only moments like the title track and “17” dare to incorporate some violins and cello to flesh out arrangements for dramatic effect. So much of the emotion on this record is contained within Hadreas’s vocal performances, which at times quake in the precious style of Antony Hegarty and Stephin Merritt or gently whisper with the heft of “Seven Swans” era Sufjan Stevens. Few people have dared to make an album so brave, honest and topical, and that’s a big reason why Put Your Back N 2 It is such a success. With two excellent albums now under his belt, it appears that Perfume Genius is certainly living up to the second part of his name.

Perfume Genius – Dark Parts
Perfume Genius – All Waters
Perfume Genius – Hood

Buy Put Your Back N 2 It from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 2-29-12

Happy Leap Day! Happy Hump Day! Happy Lump Day! Yes, today is that magical one day every four years we get an extension to February and get the chance to do whatever we want. Okay, so pretty much everyone probably did what they would normally do on a Wednesday. The world doesn’t stop simply because we have an extra day. I hope you had some fun though and maybe indulged in a little bit of folklore about Leap Day William. For this special edition of Pick Your Poison, there’s a couple extra tracks in there for you to enjoy. I’ll recommend songs from Autumn Owls, Brave Chandeliers, Grave Babies, Royal Headache, The Valery Trails and Variety Lights. In the remix pile be sure to download Diplo’s remix of Katy B as well as Elite Gymnastics’ remix of Korallreven. And hey, there’s a new Regina Spektor song available for streaming in the Soundcloud section! It’s a Leap Day miracle!

Aaron Cohen – Up & Down

Autumn Owls – Acrobatics of a Patchwork Heart

Brave Chandeliers – Mad Men

Dale Murray – The Wind Is Trying to Kill Me

Emma Grace – Outlier
Emma Grace – Stuck in the Air

Eux Autres – Home Tonight

Grave Babies – Nightmare

Jetsam – Nightshift

Katy B – Witches Brew (Diplo Remix)

Korallreven – Sa Sa Samoa (Elite Gymnastics Remix)

Ladyhawke – Black, White and Blue (Nile Delta Remix)

Mirel Wagner – No Hands

My Toys Like Me – Lost (Ink Project Remix)

Royal Headache – Girls

Shawn Magill – All Fancies Are Motions Within Us

The Valery Trails – On the Perfume River

Variety Lights – Silent Too Long

SOUNDCLOUD

Emergency Bible Study – Birthday Girl

Light Parades – Sparkle

Luise Pop – Fast And Frightening (L7 cover)

Rebel Rebel – Love Songs

Regina Spektor – All The Rowboats

Rizzle Kicks – Traveller’s Chant

Album Review: School of Seven Bells – Ghostory [Vagrant/Ghostly]



One of the first things you’ll hear mentioned in any press about School of Seven Bells surrounding their new album Ghostory is that they’re down a member. After two albums as a trio of Benjamin Curtis (ex-Secret Machines), Alejandra Deheza and Claudia Deheza (ex-On!Air!Library!), Claudia abruptly left the band in the middle of a 2010 tour suporting their last full length Disconnect From Desire. There was no official explanation given for her exit, but it’s very possible that the romantic relationship between Benjamin and Alejandra left Claudia feeling like a third wheel both personally and professionally. Soldiering on without her certainly leaves a twin-sized hole in the band’s sound, as the intertwining vocal harmonies of the two sisters were one of SVIIB’s defining characteristics. As a means of offsetting such changes, the duo uses vocal overdubs and multitracking to keep things stable, even as the overall style of their music continues to evolve as well.

Ghostory is at its core a concept album, though you might be wise to simply take it at face value rather than closely analyze plot and characters. As the album’s title suggests, there are plenty of ghosts floating around in these songs, and they haunt the main character of Lafaye in both a positive and negative way. They aren’t literal ghosts but figurative ones, as our memories of people and places and strong emotional events can stay with us and haunt us for much of our lives. It shouldn’t come as much of a surprise that many of the songs are thematically dark, about predators and toxic people that we’ve all mistakenly become friends or lovers with at times. Our judgments are not always perfect. “Low Times” feels fitting as the album’s 6.5 minute centerpiece, an insistent and rather bitter track that pushes back against a particularly bad break-up. Similar themes permeate much of the record, though none perhaps moreso than “Scavenger”, where Deheza angrily criticizes her ex with lines like, “I made you feel something because you could feel nothing.” And though it is never officially spelled out for you, a couple tracks are informed or at least partly influenced by Claudia’s departure from the band. Listening to opening track and first single “The Night”, lyrics such as “The light of day gives me no relief/because I see you in everything” and “You have my arms, you have my legs” seem to reference the physical and mental connections that twins share. Press materials for the album mention that Ghostory is as much about Lafaye’s journey as it is the band’s, so of course making such connections are about as obvious as they can get without somebody spelling it out for you.

As much as SVIIB’s journey the last couple years has been about loss, listening to Ghostory you understand it has also been about growth and strengthening perceived weaknesses. Somehow they seem to have gotten better in spite of everything, as the new album is their most cohesive and exploratory to date. Their first two records Alpinisms and Disconnect From Desire took on gothic synth-pop with the sort of vigor reserved for a band like Depeche Mode in their heyday while also drawing accurate references to shoegaze and My Bloody Valentine. There’s still a lot of that on the new album, but they’re also bringing in a heavier electronica influence to make their songs more beat-heavy and dancefloor ready. The choruses and hooks are better than ever too. If you thought SVIIB’s music was ripe for clubs before, don’t be surprised if they recruit some friends and unleash a remix record several months or a year down the road. Tracks like “White Wind” and “Lafaye” are just two standout moments of a handful best experienced in a dark room with a pulsating light show and bodies writhing up against one another. But in case all of that wasn’t enough, Ghostory wraps up with “When You Sing”, an 8.5 minute thrill ride that stands right next to the even longer “Sempiternal-Amaranth” from Alpinisms as a band-defining moment. Whether their songs are 3 minutes or 10, School of Seven Bells are always careful to not let a melody go beyond its expiration date.

2008 was the year School of Seven Bells toured with M83. The two bands shared something of a sonic bond then, and now a few years later they have even more in common. There are moments on Ghostory that would be right at home on M83’s highly acclaimed 2011 double album Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming, and vice versa. That says something about the evolution of both bands. Heavy reliance on shoegaze textures and hazy vocal performances/lyrics have given way to extremely clean production, up-front and clear vocals, along with a greater openness and warmth to the lyrics than ever before. The fog is gone and we’re now left with the realization there was an even greater band being obscured by it. In spite of all they’ve been through the last couple years, SVIIB are blossoming rather than retreating. They’ve always been meticulous in crafting their songs, but Ghostory is the first time that Benjamin and Alejandra have truly collaborated in the writing and composition of a record – something they used to do separately. The results are right there across 9 beautiful and darkly fun tracks that function best as a defining statement of what this band is all about. Hopefully working their magic and putting out this excellent third record won’t come back to haunt them when they try to settle in and make a fourth.

School of Seven Bells – The Night
School of Seven Bells – Lafaye

Buy Ghostory from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 2-28-12

Okay, as it is Tuesday, allow me to give you a rundown of some of the new albums being released this week. As usual, keep in mind I’m not recommending all these, but rather simply informing you of their existence on store shelves or at your favorite digital music retailer. That said, you may be interested to hear this week sees fresh full lengths from The Cranberries, Cuff the Duke, Dirty Three, Elliott Brood, Erin Passmore, Eux Autres, Fanfarlo, Geographer, Hunx, the 4 man supergroup of Jay Farrar, Will Johnson, Anders Parker and Yim Yames, Jim O’Rourke, Memoryhouse, Mind Spiders, Mouse on Mars, Plants and Animals, Prince Rama, School of Seven Bells, Softoft Techech, Sophia Knapp, Stars in Coma, TRUST, and The Wooden Sky. A very healthy and long list there. Now let’s get to the list of mp3s in today’s Pick Your Poison. I’ll affix gold stars to tracks from Cultfever, Death Grips, Ed Schrader’s Music Beat, Hollis Brown, Radiation City, and White Woods. In the Soundcloud section please be sure to stream songs from Craft Spells, Django Django and Peelander-Z.

C.O.D.E. – Machine

Cultfever – Collector

Daymoths – Back in Time

Death Grips – Get Got

Ed Schrader’s Music Beat – When I’m In A Car (ft. Randy Randall of No Age)

Family Photo – Popular Phrase

GodWolf – Another Me

Hollis Brown – Spoonful
Hollis Brown – Gypsy Black Cat

PLS DNT STP – Digital Drugs

Radiation City – Find It of Use

Silver Medallion – The Young and the Reckless

Summer Camp – Losing My Mind (Dawn Golden & Rosy Cross Remix)

Two Suns – Feelin’ Today

White Woods – Where Did You Go?

SOUNDCLOUD

The Chakras – Build Me A Swan

Craft Spells – Still Left With Me

Django Django – Storm

Metronomy – The Look (Two Inch Punch’s Shook Shook Refix)

Peelander-Z – Star Bowling

Waves of the Echo – Better Than Ever

Pick Your Poison: Monday 2-27-12

I realize that many of you visit this site for the mp3s. It’s the reality of the world we’re living in these days. But did you know there’s more, genuine content on this site? Like, I write album reviews and show reviews and do the occasional artist interview? Believe it, friends. Anyways, I’ve made mention of it already in a non-Pick Your Poison post, but wanted to bring it up again for those nosediving straight to this page, that I’ve started a new little thing called Snapshot Review. Unlike the very in-depth analysis of albums I’ve been doing a couple times a week since the site began, the Snapshot Review is a much quicker and broader take on an album. I’ll still be doing the longer reviews like normal, but the Snapshot Reviews will enable me to generate more overall writing pieces without sacrificing too much more of my time. Believe it or not, my days are pretty packed, which is why I manage this site the best I can. Okay, that business is done, let’s get to the mp3s. Today I’ll advise you to give a fair shake to tracks from Coast Jumper, Crystal Bright and the Silver Hands, Flosstradamus, Hunx, Work Drugs and Yellow Ostrich. Oh, and Cuff the Duke’s John Lennon cover isn’t half bad either. In the Soundcloud section you may want to stream the song from New Multitudes, which is the supergroup of Jay Farrar, Will Johnson, Anders Parker and Yim Yames. They worked together on this tribute album to Woody Guthrie that will be out tomorrow.

All Will Be Quiet – Wide Eyes and Space Flights

Coast Jumper – Windowsill

Crystal Bright and the Silver Hands – Drowned Out

Cuff the Duke – Instant Karma (John Lennon cover)

Daytona – You’re in Beijing

Dead Mellotron – Stranger

Flosstradamus – Total Recall

Hunx – Always Forever

Peh Per Ghost – Slow Train

Pyyramids – Don’t Go

Rags and Ribbons – Even Matter

Supreme Cuts – Silkk

Tigercats – Full Moon Reggae Party

Vato Gonzalez and Aldair Silva – Digital Lies (Birdee Remix)

Work Drugs – License to Drive

Yellow Ostrich – The Shakedown

SOUNDCLOUD

Eyes On Film – Something Wicked (This Way Comes)

GreyMarket – The Soloist

I Am the Avalanche – Brooklyn Dodgers

Mike Delinquent Project – Evacuate (Instrumental)

New Multitudes – My Revolutionary Mind (ft. Yim Yames)

Therapist – I Know What I Want (Blake Miller Remix)

Snapshot Review: Frankie Rose – Interstellar [Slumberland]



You may know Frankie Rose from any number of bands she’s been in the last few years. She’s been the drummer for Vivian Girls, Crystal Stilts and Dum Dum Girls, which if you know all those bands you know they’ve got a lot in common sonically. They were all part of the lo-fi garage rock revival that took place not so long ago, and her leaving those bands also pretty much coincided with the hype dying down on that sort of music. In 2010 she took matters into her own hands and started Frankie Rose and the Outs, an all female band that had a very retro 60s girl group vibe to it. Once again restless and discontent with what she was doing musically, the Outs became out of a job late last year. Rose is now continuing on her own, under her own name, though with a couple supporting players to fill out the sound. She’s also changed her sound again, and her new album Interstellar takes a cue from 80s new wave. Listen carefully and you’ll hear shades of New Order, The Cure, and The Human League in their finer moments. The synths sparkle, the drums burst open and echo, and Rose’s light, airy vocal keeps it all afloat. There are great retro pop moments all over this thing, from the beat-heavy “Know Me” to the ridiculously catchy “Night Swim”. She’s overdubbing her own vocal harmonies now too, and it adds a precious beauty to ballads like “Pair of Wings” and “Apples for the Sun”. The focus and strength on display across the record is remarkable, and it’s a real pleasure to hear her embrace that and excel despite the continued tweaks to her style and band personnel. Interstellar isn’t the sort of album you deeply analyze, but the more time you spend with it the more the little moments make their presence felt. In some ways, those are the most rewarding kinds of albums.

Frankie Rose – Know Me

Frankie Rose – Night Swim

Frankie Rose – Interstellar

Buy Interstellar from Amazon

Introducing – Snapshot Review

This is just a quick administrative post to let you know that a couple times each week I’ll be publishing what I like to refer to as “snapshot reviews”. The idea behind the snapshot review is to provide an album review in shorter form. For a typical album review I’ll spend around 5 hours composing an in-depth analysis of a record’s strengths and weaknesses. As I only have so many hours in a day and I’ve been publishing less and less written content the last few months, the goal of these snapshots is to provide more analysis and give more exposure to more albums and artists without sacrificing some of the bigger picture elements. I’ll still be publishing longer form album reviews 2-3 days a week, but the other days I’ll be padding out with these shorter reviews. I hope you enjoy them. The first one goes up in a few hours. Thanks for your patience, and keep listening to new music!

Pick Your Poison: Friday 2-24-12

In honor of it being Friday, I’m going to keep this short and sweet like usual. I will make a quick mention though that starting next week I’ll be trying something new on the site. I’m not going to reveal the details of it just yet, but let’s just say it allows me to get more done and provide more content to you on a daily basis. We’ll see how it goes and if it works out then great. In the meantime, enjoy these songs to give your weekend an extra boost. I’ll recommend tracks from Baby Teardrops, The Clean, The Dead Ships, Gorillaz collaborating with Andre 3000 and James Murphy, The Great American Canyon Band, Mystery Pills, Pond and The Wooden Sky. In the Soundcloud section there’s a pretty good remix of Bombay Bicycle Club, and new stuff from Lazer Sword and Reptar, among others. Have a great weekend!

Baby Teardrops – I Can Live My Life Alone

Born With Stripes – …You Stole the Laces From My Shoes

Carly Maicher – See You Soon

The Clean – Tally Ho
The Clean – In the Dreamlife U Need A Rubber Soul

The Cuban Brothers – You Don’t Have to Take Your Clothes Off

The Dead Ships – Bones Cracked
The Dead Ships – Before You Go

Fay Wrays – Cars

Gorillaz, Andre 3000 and James Murphy – DoYaThing (ZIP)

The Great American Canyon Band – Tumbleweed

Mystery Pills – The Glass Traditions

Night Beds – Wanted_You in August

Pond – Mystery

Romanthony – Hold On (Logo’s Hold-Up Remix)

The Sweet Serenades – Moving On

The Wooden Sky – Malibu Rum

SOUNDCLOUD

Bombay Bicycle Club – How Can You Swallow So Much Sleep (Scuba Remix)

Lazer Sword – Pleasure Zone

Quantic & Alice Russell with the Combo Barbaro – Look Around The Corner

Reptar – Sebastian

Tango in the Attic – Paw Prints

Willy Mason – Restless Fugitive

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 2-23-12

What to talk about today. Oh, I don’t think I’ve officially weighed in on Chris Brown yet, so long after the fact, let me talk about that briefly. There’s been a bit of talk about Brown these last few weeks after a few things happened. First, they let him into the Grammys. Then they let him on stage at the Grammys. And let him perform. More than once. Brown stepped up his swagger a bit on Twitter, basically condemning those “hating” on him. Throw onto the fire some girls Tweeting that they would let Brown beat them up. Plus all sorts of evidence that Brown and Rihanna had become very friendly again, possibly even reignited their relationship. Plus, they recorded a song together. All these things happened within the last month. Most recently, and we’re talking days ago, WWE Superstar CM Punk got into a bit of an online feud with Brown, resulting in some rather hostile exchanges. Punk took to YouTube to give his side of things, and his response has gone viral. Personally, I’m in agreement with Punk and a whole lot of other people that feel like Chris Brown should just go away. I’m not saying “go away” like no longer exist, but instead just retreat from the spotlight. The doors of success and fame should be closed to him. So should every woman. If you hit a woman, you don’t deserve to be with one. Period. Sorry to go all dark and social issues and talk about artists that really have nothing to do with the content on this site. Some mp3s will make it better. In today’s Pick Your Poison, I’d advise you to have a listen to tracks from Bosco, Cadence Weapon (who samples Grimes on the track below), Crocodiles, Dustin Wong, Morningbell, Ryan Monroe (of Band of Horses), and Wooden Wand. Have a look in the Soundcloud section too for new stuff from M. Ward and TV Buddhas.

Bosco – Joker

Cadence Weapon – 88

Coke Weed – Magpie

Crocodiles – Sunday (Psychic Conversation #9)

Dot Hacker – Order/Disorder

Dustin Wong – Pink Diamond

Go Back to the Zoo – Beam Me Up

Gotye ft. Kimbra – Somebody That I Used to Know (Francis Prève Remix)

Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires – Centreville

Les Jupes – If This Is the Light

Mind Spiders – On the Radio

Morningbell – You Think I Don’t Know (But I Know)

Pink Mink – Earthquake on the Loose

Ryan Monroe – Any Way, Shape or Deformity

Spottiswoode – Beautiful Monday

Wooden Wand – Motel Stationary

SOUNDCLOUD

Dani Deahl Ft. Oh Snap! – Diplo Hates You (Original Mix)

The Enemy – Gimme The Sign

FACULTIES – Cold Hands

M. Ward – Primitive Girl (Single Version)

Swaying Wires – Blinding Nights

TV Buddhas – Don’t Tell Me It’s Gonna Be OK

Album Review: Sleigh Bells – Reign of Terror [Mom + Pop]



Sleigh Bells have an expiration date. That expiration date is sooner rather than later. Quite simply, their sustainability factor is very low. They are in many ways the equivalent of a ribbon of magnesium set aflame – igniting quickly, burning white hot for a few seconds and then going dark. The reason why they’re working on such a limited time frame has less to do with the hype cycle and more to do with the niche they’ve carved out for themselves. Their heavy metal riffage and schoolgirl innocent vocals are unique to a fault, because as exciting and headbangingly good as the songs on their debut album Treats were, they failed to expand beyond that realm. There’s only so much that can be done with the tools the duo is currently using, meaning that unless they get truly inventive, they’re liable to go stale at any minute. Enter their sophmore record Reign of Terror. For those that thought Treats was a wild experiment in volume and excess, it appears that was just the tip of the iceberg. Now the band is looking to take down the unsinkable Titanic.

Reign of Terror opens to the sound of crowd noise and singer Alexis Krauss shouting from a distance, “What the fuck is up? Come on!” If you’ve ever seen Sleigh Bells’ intense and fun live show, you know that intro is pretty true to life. Fists in the air and devil horns held high, the band wants you to know that this record is more than just a collection of songs – it’s an Event with a capital E. After a solid minute of shouting slogans behind some riffs to pump people up, “True Shred Guitar” actually kicks into full stereo mode sans crowd. “Push it, push it, push it,” Krauss insists beneath a healthy layer of vocal fuzz. That seems to be the band’s mantra for the entire album as they attempt to go bigger and bolder than ever before. If the guitars were cranked up to 11 last time, they’re now at 12, buzzing hotter than a nest filled with angry hornets. Yet in spite of the much more heavy metal nature of the songs courtesy of Derek Miller, the vocals are decidedly more stable and pop-oriented than they were on the previous record.

For much of Treats, Krauss resorted to cheerleader-like shouting that often wound up being obscured by an already crowded and red-level mix. Listen to “Infinity Guitars” or “Crown on the Ground” or “A/B Machines” and you’ll find they have more in common vocally with straight hip hop verses than they do pop songs. That record’s best moment came via “Rill Rill”, where acoustic guitars calmed the noise level and Krauss delivered a sugary sweet schoolgirl vocal. They seemed to take that song as the vocal model for most of Reign of Terror, which as a result makes it sound that much deeper and more balanced on the whole. It helps that Krauss is much more up-front and unobscured in the mix, sharing equal weight with the supremely heavy guitars. The best example of how the two opposing forces meet in the middle comes via the album’s first single “Comeback Kid”, which is bouncy and poppy without losing its harsh edge. One of the record’s quietest and most ballad-infused moments comes on “End of the Line”, where Krauss is given enough room to whisper parts of her vocal while Miller puts the power chords on the shelf and settles for some snaking 80s-esque guitar solos. “Road to Hell” holds a remarkably similar constitution to it, only the execution is a little choppier and less catchy on the whole.

Those craving something more in line with earlier Sleigh Bells material will find a couple moments to take in some fist-pumping nostalgia. “Crush” feels like it should have a music video that’s thematically similar to Nirvana’s classic “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, which is to say the band should be performing with cheerleaders at a high school pep rally inside a smoky gymnasium. And “Demons” works exceptionally well when paired with the delusional, drug-induced visions that Beavis and Butt-Head experience while lost in the desert in “Beavis and Butt-Head Do America”. Considering the main riff in the song was ripped almost directly from that TV series, the comparison makes even more sense. As the record winds to a close, the band chooses to try a few different things that work well thematically but turn in mixed results. “You Lost Me” is about suicide, but plays up a sympathetic angle to it that results in the most beautiful track Sleigh Bells have ever composed. From there it only gets darker and less distinctive. “Never Say Die” is unable to stave off death, and “D.O.A.” takes what little signs of life it has and sends it spiraling downwards. Both bear the marks of 80s metal ballads, but fail to be inspiring or memorable.

In so many ways, Reign of Terror is a better record than Treats was. Sleigh Bells show promising advancements in their sound and the way they structure their songs that would seem to suggest they’ve got a real chance at surviving far longer than anybody might think. Perhaps the best thing about the changes they’ve made on this new album is how purely subtle they are, remaining close enough to what they did on their debut to satisfy those fans while making it easier to court new ones. But for as smart as the album is, it’s also more limiting than the last one. The band has entrenched themselves further into the metal-meets-pop dynamic than ever before, and it could come back to bite them in time. Also, while built upon a stronger foundation, the songs on Reign of Terror are less immediate and memorable than the in-your-face nature of Treats. In the longer term though the new album grows on you and its charms become that much more evident. Sometimes those are the real treats.

Reign Of Terror Sampler

Buy Reign of Terror from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 2-22-12

Happy Ash Wednesday to you and yours, and if that’s not your thing, hopefully the fact that it’s also National Margarita Day entices you just as much. Today is a little bit of a sad day for the music world, as last night we found out that Women guitarist Christopher Reimer died in his sleep. He was 26 years old. Women have essentially been on a hiatus these last couple years after they fistfought one another in the middle of a show. Still, they put out two damn good records and I was always holding out hope they’d patch things up and start making music again. With Reimer gone that seems less likely than ever. I’d like to offer my condolences to his family and to his bandmates, who in spite of their differences must be putting those aside for at least a little bit. Now let’s get to today’s edition of Pick Your Poison. I’ll advise you to check out tracks from BBU, Ceremony, Ducky, Inca Gold, JD Samson + MEN, Sauna, Sonoi, U.S. Elevator and Violens.

BBU – Please No Pictures (ft. Das Racist)
BBU – Beau Sia

Brian Larsen – Frozen

Ceremony – Adult

Damon Moon & the Whispering Drifters – Lungs, Dirt, & Dreams

The Danvilles – Seemed So Easy

Ducky – Overdose

Inca Gold – Emergency Talks

JD Samson + MEN – Next

Now, Now – Thread

Pulpa – Min Kniv

Sauna – Wanting You

Seun Kuti – The Good Leaf (Spoek Mothambo Remix)

Sonoi – Cotton

U.S. Elevator – All Through the Night

Violens – Unfolding Black Wings

SOUNDCLOUD

Addison Groove – Savage Henry

The District Attorneys – Confusion of Trust

EJ – Mama, I’m Gonna Sing (Pete Tong Remix)

One Finger Riot – Fever

Pepper – Happy Girl (Acoustic)

The Shamefaced Sparrows – Murder In The Dollhouse (Demo)

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 2-21-12

Happy Tuesday, friends. It is my pleasure to once again name some of the artists releasing brand new records on a day such as today, so that you may make purchases wisely. Keep in mind these aren’t recommendations per se, just a list so you know what’s out there. New albums this week come from Barna Howard, Bright Moments (who have an mp3 below), Busdriver, Cheap Girls, Christopher Paul Stelling, Colleen Green, Cursive, Damien Jurado, Damon Moon, Dustin Wong, Field Music, Frankie Rose, fun., Grimes, Guy Capecelatro III, Isidore (who have an mp3 below), The James Low Western Front, Jonquil, Perfume Genius, Pontiak, Princeton, Sara Radle (who has an mp3 below), Sleigh Bells, Tindersticks, Terry Malts, Yalls and Young Empires. Phew. Exhausting. Talking specifically about Pick Your Poison today, I’ll recommend tracks from Bright Moments, Isidore, Mirror Lady, Sara Radle, and Tripwires.

Arbz – Dawn of A New Era

Bright Moments – Travelers

Charlotte Gainsbourg – Paradisco (Gottfried Beyer Remix)

Isidore – You Will Remain

Joywave – True Grit

Mirror Lady – You Left Me

Octavion X – Begun

Picture Book – Sunshine (Justin Faust Remix)

Rossi B & Luca (ft. Flirta D) – Mind the Gap (Teeza Temix Instrumental)

Sara Radle – Last

Tripwires – Emerald

Two Suns – Not the End Pt. 2

Virginia Plain – Electric Eyes
Virginia Plain – Swamp Thing

Wrinkle Neck Mules – Leaving Chattanooga

SOUNDCLOUD

Gazburn – Walkin’ On Another Planet

Rita Ora – Somebody That I Used To Know (Gotye & Kimbra BBC Live Lounge Cover)

Sam Gray Singing – Bigotry

Softwar – This Time Around

Your 33 Black Angels – Patient Love

Yuzima – My Love Is Your Love (Whitney Houston cover)

Album Review: Grimes – Visions [4AD/Arbutus]



Claire Boucher is nothing if not productive. As the singular force behind the musical pseudonym Grimes, she has released four full length records in the last 2 years. That started with 2010’s Geidi Primes, blossomed into Halfaxa later that year, and then continued building with Darkbloom last year. If you’ve heard approximately zero of those first three records, don’t beat yourself up too much; they sit and taunt from the deepest of deep levels in Canada’s underground electro scene. That is to say they were impressive and influential enough to earn Grimes some attention, but difficult and unfocused enough to keep her out of the spotlight for all practical purposes. Each of those first three albums was intended to play up a different side of her influences, and none of them were really all-encompassing efforts. Boucher herself has basically called them practice records for the real thing, which has finally resulted in her brand new album Visions complete with a brand new home on indie stalwart label 4AD. The end product is a remarkable and rather breathtaking skew on traditional pop music and electronica, complete with a supremely psychedelic edge that slices deep into your emotional reservoir even as it prods the pleasure centers of your brain with seductive beats and hooks.

The first thing you should know about Grimes is that she’s a producer before she’s a musician. Those two things are not mutually exclusive, but the whole point of mentioning it is because it affects the way she puts together songs. In fact, Boucher is doing what so many other forward-thinking artists are doing these days, which is attempting to break the rules of traditional songwriting and composing through the use of technology. At its core, Visions is a record created by a voice and a keyboard. Listening to it, there’s almost no way you’d realize that given all that’s going on. Virtually everything is run through some sort of filter or effect, and portions of songs are dubbed and overdubbed and smashed atop one another like some sort of sonic sandwich. Credit goes to Boucher for knowing when to stop adding more, because in more than a few cases it feels like the depths of some of the songs could be infinite. Her restraint is admirable and a great sign that she knows what she wants and tweaks it ever so slightly until she gets there. The ultimate result is a record that’s equal parts pop music and ambiance, pleasure and pain, not to mention human and computer.

The first track on Visions is “Infinite Love Without Fulfillment”, and it immediately lays out what to expect for the rest of the record. Lasting a mere 96 seconds, it confounds traditional song structure while maintaining a very danceable rhythm and sugar-sweet vocals. Boucher’s voice takes on 3 distinct personalities on the track, and they intermingle with one another with no regard for decency or clarity, to the point where it becomes like trying to listen to a single conversation in a room full of talking people. In spite of the perceived vocal confusion and the challenge of distinguishing lyrics, there’s a symbiosis and elegance to how all the moving pieces of the song work together. Indeed for most of Visions you’ll struggle to understand what Boucher is singing about, and that’s not always because of overdubbing. On the song “Genesis” for example, her singular voice is so drenched in echo it becomes the auditory effect of trying to see the car in front of you while driving through a dense fog. “Eight” turns one of her vocals into a deep-voiced robot and another into a woman that’s clearly been breathing in way too much helium. Despite all the different ways Boucher throws her vocals around, there are a few moments of genuine clarity, and those brief snapshots tend to be about relationships going through some sort of turmoil. “Oh baby I can’t say/that everything will be okay,” Boucher sings on “Circumambient”, signaling right from the start that there’s problems. Towards the end of “Skin”, she’s also in a sad place, espousing, “You touch me again and somehow it stings/because I know it is the end.”

Lyrical content is really the last thing you should be looking for on Visions though, because it’s far more about how these songs come together than it is any message they’re trying to get across. Boucher herself has said in interviews that she often feels the need to cover up her lyrics out of self-criticism over her skills as a writer but also because the melodies themselves should be telling you how to feel and not the words. With so much emphasis placed on what’s being said and not the way it’s being said, that’s a very refreshing take on pop music. Think of this record like a synth-pop inspired version of Sigur Ros, where the vocals are first and foremost another instrument in the mix rather than something intended to sit front and center as a path to deeper understanding. Or, even better, there are portions of the album that are very K-pop and J-pop influenced, and whether you’re a fan of Dance Dance Revolution or simply like those sorts of songs without speaking the language, there’s plenty of moments such as “Nightmusic” that you’ll be able to wholly enjoy. In fact, there’s a whole host of influences on Visions that may tickle your fancy depending on your tastes. Obviously if you’re into electronica and its many subgenres like IDM and Balearic you’ll be impressed with the strong beats that populate much of the record. The same goes for devotees of 80s pop, wherein the strains of a track like “Vowels = space and time” calls to mind Stacy Q or “Oblivion” has something distinctly Cyndi Lauper about it. And while 2011 was the year of the R&B revival, songs like “Be A Body” and “Skin” break out those influences as well, the former even impressing with some sky-high Mariah Carey falsettos. In spite of the various swaths of genres across the album, it all holds together quite nicely thanks to Boucher’s dynamic production style and ability to put together a very strong melody.

It goes without saying that Grimes is one of the most exciting new talents to emerge out of an ever-evolving music scene. Her previous records all hinted at what Visions would be in one way or another, and it’s extremely pleasing to hear her finally fulfill much of that early potential. For all of its oddities, this record is extremely listenable from start to finish, and cuts like “Genesis”, “Oblivion”, “Circumambient” and “Nightmusic” make it supremely catchy as well. In many ways these songs feel like the next step towards a genuine breakthrough in music, one in which a multitude of styles gives birth to a beautiful new hybrid that’s more aesthetically pleasing than any single one of them on their own. The best part is there’s continued room for improvement and growth, even as this record hovers near the precipice of perfection. Grimes has been an artist to watch from the day she first started releasing music 2 years ago, but only now, thanks to Visions will she begin to earn the attention she truly deserves.

Grimes – Genesis
Grimes – Oblivion

Buy Visions from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 2-20-12

Happy President’s Day to my American brethren. Today we essentially roll the birthdays of 2 U.S. Presidents into one day and call it a holiday. It helps that they were two of the greatest Presidents of all time, whom history books have written about both at length. George Washington was our very first President, not to mention a war hero, so his work in freeing America from British rule was clearly unprecedented at the time. Abraham Lincoln held a similar key in his hand, unlocking the freedom of millions of enslaved African Americans, even though the path to true equality wound up being far longer and more difficult than anybody would truly realize. So we salute both of those great men today, not that any of you needed a history lesson filled with the most basic facts you probably already knew. Let’s move on, shall we? In today’s special extended holiday edition of Pick Your Poison, I’m proud to recommend tracks from Black Mountain, Black Tambourine, Charli XCX (part of my Class of 2012), Diplo, Electric Flower Group, Luke Roberts, Nu Sensae, TacocaT and THEESatisfaction. In the Soundcloud section, please by all means stream some great songs from Django Django along with Trentemoller’s remix of The Drums.

Black Mountain – Mary Lou

Black Tambourine – What’s Your Game

Charli XCX – I’ll Never Know

Dan London – Little Bit About Me

Diplo – Express Yourself (ft. Nicky Da B)

Electric Flower Group – Eclipsed

Jonquil – It’s My Part (Co La Remix)

A Little Affair – December

Luke Roberts – His Song

Miike Snow – Devil’s Work (Keys N Krates Remix)

Nu Sensae – Gumbo

Pets With Pets – Pixie Child

Poppet – Wayward Notions

Rusko – Somebody to Love (Skream Remix)

Subburbia – I’ve Got No Friends

TacocaT – Spring Break-Up

THEESatisfaction – QueenS

tree – Universal (ft. Ariel Thiermann)

SOUNDCLOUD

Automusik – General Masses

Django Django – Default

The Drums – Days (Trentemoller Remix)

Evans The Death – Telling Lies

Portico Quartet – City of Glass (LV Remix)

Pick Your Poison: Friday 2-17-12

As I typically am on Fridays, I can’t wait to officially start my weekend. Not that my weekdays were anything worth writing home about. But there’s still that sense of relaxation and having nothing on the calendar or FUN on the calendar for a couple days that always brings some excitement to it. So I hope you’ve got a nice weekend planned, and we’ll start this whole thing again on Monday. Here’s some mp3s to get you going. I’ll recommend tracks from Christopher Paul Stelling, Eyes Wings & Many Other Things, Midtown Dickens, Sophia Knapp, Superhumanoids and The Young. There’s also a nice pair of covers in the Soundcloud section for your streaming pleasure, including Pete Yorn doing the Beach Boys and The Kills doing Velvet Underground.

The Cast of Cheers – Family (Royal Scams Remix)

Christopher Paul Stelling – Solar Flares

Clubfeet – BrightLightsBigCity

Dreamend – Your Apparition Stays With Me Still

Eyes, Wings & Many Other Things – Cruelty

Filewile – You Say I (Electric Blanket Remix)

The James Low Western Front – I Would Have You

The Jayhawks – She Walks in So Many Ways (Live)

Midtown Dickens – Only Brother

Pandercakes – Paint By Numbers

Sophia Knapp – Into the Waves

Superhumanoids – Geri

Uncle Roman’s Jetboat – Floodlights in the Sunlight
Uncle Roman’s Jetboat – Fearless Like Yourself

The Young – Livin’ Free

SOUNDCLOUD

Capybara – Neighbor Crimes

The Kills – Pale Blue Eyes (Velvet Underground cover)

The New Limb – Refugees

Pete Yorn – Surfer Girl (Beach Boys cover)

Skyjelly – Shepherd’s Pantry

Yournalist – C’mon People

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