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Pick Your Poison: Monday 9-9-13

Let me talk for one hot minute about something that I consider to be pretty serious and important. Okay, so this isn’t going to be super serious, but rather I want to talk about a fun way to support a difficult part of life. Nobody likes it when we get sick. If you’re diagnosed with an incurable disease, it can lead to a compromised life or even death. Organizations like the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society work hard to try and find a cure for things like blood cancer. It’s a very worthwhile cause that has helped millions of people fight this terrible disease. I’m proud to be a supporter of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, and hope that you might consider becoming one too. While a donation to the organization would be great, why not get a little bit of bang for your buck? There’s a benefit concert happening on Wednesday, September 18th at Lincoln Hall in Chicago. Local favorites and worldwide rising band JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound will be headlining the show, with support from How Far to Austin. Chicago’s own funk and soul DJRC will spin tunes between the main sets as well. Tickets are $35, and all profits from the show will go directly to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. If you’re not yet familiar with JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound, they’re a pretty great band both on record and on stage. Their most recent single “Rouse Yourself” has a great music video that stars Jake Johnson (from “New Girl”) and Aubrey Plaza (from “Parks & Rec”). The band also does a pretty great cover of Wilco’s “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart” that I’d recommend checking out. But back to the show: It is all ages, there will be a silent auction, 50/50 raffle and you can also purchase a drink package that gets you discounted beer and wine if you’re into it. Anyways, if you’re in and around Chicago next Wednesday, please please please come out to the show. I will most definitely be there, so we can hang out. Advance tickets are on sale now here. I promise you it’ll be a great time, and you’ll be supporting a very worthwhile cause. Now then, let’s get on to the business of today, which is Pick Your Poison. Don’t miss tracks from Andrew St. James, The High Wire, Lime Cordiale, Parentz and Superhuman Happiness. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Banks, The Darcys, Stars, and Avalanches’ remix of Hunters & Collectors.

Andrew St. James – The Lost, The Vain

Anonymous Conglomerate – Craft Mastered (ft. One Ton)

David Bronson – Living in Name

goodbyemotel – Michael

The High Wire – The Thames & The Tide

Hillary Capps – New Melody

Lime Cordiale – Sleeping at Your Door

LPZ ft. CHVZ – Think for Yourself (CVNT Remix)

Maur Due & Lichter – Faces

May McDonough & Company – Plump Little Fleshies

Parentz – Fly

Superhuman Happiness – Sentimental Pieces

The Superman Revenge Squad Band – A Funny Thing You Said

XNY – Ride On

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 9-5-13

It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for another weekly dip into the pool of music news, interviews and videos that I like to call This Week In Music! Yes, in addition to the normal Pick Your Poison mp3s and Soundcloud streams, I like to toss out links to a bunch of other music-related content that I’ve found interesting or worthwhile over the course of the week. I encourage you to check some, if not all of these things out, particularly if you’re looking to waste some time. There’s plenty to see, read and hear:

Watch Twin Shadow cover Bruce Springsteen’s “I’m On Fire”

YouTube Audio Stream: Oneohtrix Point Never – Zebra

Neil Young has announced that his digital music service PONO will launch in 2014

Music Video: TV on the Radio – Mercy

Watch Passion Pit perform an hour-long set for “Live on Letterman”

Check out a short trailer for Arcade Fire’s upcoming album Reflektor

YouTube Audio Stream: M.I.A. – Come Walk With Me

Music Video: Savages – I Am Here

YouTube Audio Stream: Cults – High Road

Music Video: Sleigh Bells – Bitter Rivals

Once you’re done wading through all of those great highlights from this past week, be sure to check out today’s Pick Your Poison below. There are highlights there too. Don’t miss Little Daylight’s remix of Atlas Genius, The Haxan Cloak’s remix of Cloud Boat, and songs from Dark Colour, Fenech-Soler, Jonny Rodgers, PLOY and Shake the Baron. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, strean cuts from The Blow, Caitlin Rose (covering The National), Slow Magic, Survival Knife, Tourist’s remix of Haim and RZA’s remix of alt-J.

Atlas Genius – If So (Little Daylight Remix)

Bent Denim – Periodic Table

Cloud Boat – Amber Road (The Haxan Cloak Remix)

Clubfeet – Acapulco & LA

Cock & Swan – Inner Portal (IG88 Remix)

Dark Colour – Reach for the Night

Expwy – Scraping blue terra cotta (Waterloo cannibals)

Fenech-Soler – Maiyu

Jonny Rodgers – Everything Is Yours

Jupiter Project – Peer Pressure

Kaytranada – At All

MiniBoone – Baby, I Hope So

PLOY – Future Voyager

RII – Black Zombie

Shake the Baron – Ghost Hits

Submerse – Melonkoly

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 9-4-13

Just because Labor Day marks the unofficial end of summer doesn’t mean you need to start bundling up and staying indoors. September is a fine month for a lot of things, live shows being one of them. Even outdoor live shows. Surprisingly, with the Pitchfork Music Festival in July and Lollapalooza in August, September has become something of a safe haven for some smaller music festivals in Chicago that boast remarkably strong lineups. Among them is the A.V. Fest/Hideout Block Party, which takes place this Friday and Saturday night outside of The Hideout (1354 W. Wabansia). Among the artists performing are Neko Case, Mavis Staples, Trampled By Turtles, Young the Giant, The Hold Steady, Superchunk, The Walkmen and The Both (Ted Leo + Aimee Mann). If you’d like to buy tickets to this fun, family-friendly festival, they’re $35 for Friday, $40 for Saturday and $70 for a two day. Go here to learn more. Next weekend, what I like to call the last big music festival of 2013 arrives in Chicago with Riot Fest. It’s remarkably 90’s and early 00’s heavy this year, which some might argue is a good thing. Headliners include Fall Out Boy, Blink 182 and the big one, The Replacements. Other acts performing over the three-day weekend include Pixies, Violent Femmes, Rancid, Blondie, Danzig, Guided By Voices, Brand New, Public Enemy, Taking Back Sunday, Bad Religion, The Dismemberment Plan, Dinosaur Jr., Andrew W.K., Against Me!, Best Coast, Mission of Burma and Stars. Check out the full lineup here. Three day passes are sold out, but you can still buy individual passes for each day here. So the grand lesson we learned from all this is that while we hold on for dear life for whatever shreds of warm weather we have left, there’s no reason to be bored or have a lack of something exciting to do in Chicago these next couple weeks. Of course for the many non-Chicagoans reading this, I hope today’s Pick Your Poison will keep you entertained for awhile too. Don’t miss tracks from Chalk, Hey Champ, Kramies, Pig Destroyer, Signals Midwest and Victory. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream tracks from The Hudson Branch, The Internet, Kevin Morby (of Woods/The Babies), Ryan Hemsworth and Son Lux.

Callow – Strange

Chalk – Next to Useless

Clara May – Badlands

Hey Champ – On Holiday

Jadea Kelly – Lone Wolf

Kramies – The Wooden Heart

Monster Rally – Orchids

Pig Destroyer – The Octagonal Stairway

Pillar Point – Diamond Mine (Generationals Deep Dark Ocean Remix)

Prom Date – X My Heart (Matsy Remix)

Sacha Mullin – Whelm

Scary People – Dreams of Gold

Signals Midwest – In the Pauses

Son of Stan – Corsica (Hatchback Edit)

Victory – This, That or This

Album Review: Washed Out – Paracosm [Sub Pop]



Considering the increasingly short life cycles of trends in music these days, it’s gotten almost difficult to remember that there was once a subgenre of music known to many as chillwave. It’s been nearly five years since that word introduced us to artists like Neon Indian, Toro y Moi and Washed Out. Two years after it started, the sound got tired, produced diminishing returns, and artists were forced to adapt/innovate or die. For Ernest Greene of Washed Out, he spent his 2011 debut album Within and Without both perfecting and updating the sound of his earlier EPs. While it wasn’t a record that lent itself to any particular distinction among its nine songs, what it lacked in establishing singles it more than made up for in cohesiveness of sound and structure. It’s exactly the sort of evolution that was needed at the time, and the increased clarity on the production and vocals spoke to a much greater clarity of overall vision for the project as well.

Now in 2013 with that sound even further removed from many radars, Greene makes yet another stylistic leap on Paracosm in a bid to keep things interesting. You’re certainly not going to mistake his work for any other artist, and these aren’t earth-shattering changes by any means, but subtle shifts in tone and instrumentation do show us a new side of Washed Out. The new album sounds so warm and tropical it’s practically the opposite of the icier textures chillwave became known for, and it’s so lush and crisp that affixing the name Washed Out to it feels like you’re mislabeling it. Of course in case you need to be hit over the head with this idea, one look at the floral arrangement on the album cover or watching videos for “It All Feels Right” and “Don’t Give Up” will do everything but physically take you out into nature and prove it’s a great pairing with this music. Hell, when it’s not little snippets of indiscernable conversations from a crowd of people that’s plays at the beginnings and ends of most tracks, you get birds chirping and the basic sounds you hear when you hit the “jungle” setting on the white noise machine next to your bed. Obvious though it might be, the visual (and in some respects sonic) representations associated with this album are intended to enhance what’s already there, which it succeeds at doing in spades. If you think you’ve heard Paracosm because you played it through headphones while sitting at your desk or on your couch one afternoon, the experience changes dramatically if you’re laying on the grass in a park on a sunny day or wandering through a local forest preserve.

Beyond all the physical representations injecting additional mood and meaning into the music, one of the key influencers on this record is the use of more than 50 total instruments rather than sampling. The early recordings were extremely sample-dominant, and while Within and Without started to incorporate a wider variety of organic elements (particularly as part of the live show), this is really the first time guitars and live drums have been used on a Washed Out album. There’s also a host of other, stranger instruments that were used on various songs that might not be so easy to pick out unless you’re really listening closely. Some of those instruments and sonic influences have been chronicled as part of a short documentary by The Creators Project (Part I, Part II), which is insightful and worth your time to watch if you like geeking out about that sort of stuff.

Focusing on the actual songs of Paracosm, as with most albums this one is front-loaded. Outside of the 80 second instrumental intro “Entrance,” the first four actual songs on the record could each serve as potential singles. It’s fitting that “It All Feels Right” really kicks things off, as the track is a spiritual (but not really sonic) cousin to the most popular Washed Out song to date, “Feel It All Around,” which you may recognize as the theme to Portlandia. Both are relaxed but bouncy in their tempo, and lyrically invite you to “feel” positive about life. One of the things that’s more apparent on the new album are Greene’s lyrics, which are never without a touch of reverb but are still clearer than any previous records. If you pay close enough attention to what’s being said, there is some realization that maybe these words would be better if we couldn’t hear them so well. Lines like, “Weekend’s almost here now / It’s getting warmer outside / It all feels right,” might as well appear on the next Black Eyed Peas single because they’re so pedestrian. This has been Greene’s biggest problem since day one, and unlike the forward progress in composition and live instrumentation, he doesn’t seem to be making any effort to improve his writing skills. We understand the theme, along with the overall vibe of a song, is going to place emphasis on laid back, fun in the sun with friends. It’s a great thing to be known for, but it starts to come across as really repetitive the closer you look.

What saves “It All Feels Right” and many of the other poorly worded songs on Paracosm are the arrangements. Official single “Don’t Give Up” does a particularly spectacular job with this, resulting in such a complex melody you’ll keep discovering new layers buried within it several listens later. That chorus is an incredible earworm too. While “Weightless” may not be the most engaging track from the first half of the album, the mixture of synths creates an overall sound that skirts the line between M83 and Cocteau Twins. If it’s commercially viable you’re looking for, “All I Know” might just be the poppiest Washed Out song ever, and it doesn’t feel like anything was sacrificed or lost to get to that point. It’s impressive in its own way, and gives us a glimpse into a potential future for this project where commercial accessibility leads to a broad fan base and hordes of commercial opportunities (see again, M83). “Great Escape” does a fantastic job of tapping into the more soulful side of Greene’s vision, even if that means conjuring up memories of Marvin Gaye classics in the process. Sure it might draw some unfavorable comparisons, but at the same time it adds layers to what we’ve already heard while not straying very far from the overall relaxed and tropical vibe.

As Paracosm starts to wrap up around the lengthy title track, the tempo slows and the synths pretty much take things into cruise control. It doesn’t necessarily get boring, but it can feel a bit whitewashed (word use intentional) and eerily reminiscent of some moments on Within and Without. You could argue that these final songs help to balance out the record, set against the pop-oriented first half. It all flows well thematically, but just because you have that doesn’t automatically make it good. It just makes it more bearable. The positive outlook is that this is the overall best and most advanced Washed Out record to date. It’s issues involving poorly written lyrics, Greene’s limited/always obscured vocal range, and pacing issues towards the end all ultimately pale in comparison to the goal of this music, which is to provide a soundtrack to your relaxing day of fun in the sun. That’s one thing it definitely succeeds at, and what kind of people would we be if we yelled at him for it?

Stream the entire album on Soundcloud for a limited time!

Buy Paracosm from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 9-3-13

And we’re back! I hope you had a great Labor Day holiday. Like most Americans, I got together with some friends and family and had a great BBQ. It was a lovely way to unofficially kiss summer goodbye. The good news about that though is fall is fast on the way, and with it comes cooler temperatures, pumpkin spiced everything, and sweaters. All good things in my opinion. Also, fall is traditionally a great time to catch a live show or discover a new album. Speaking of which, today is Tuesday, and there’s a bunch of new records out for your consumption. Here’s the list of artists releasing things this week: The 1975, Bastille, Caged Animals, Califone, Chelsea Wolfe, Dave Holland, Ditt Inre, Esmerine, Glasvegas, Gorguts, Grooms, Holograms, Holy Ghost!, John Legend, Jonathan Rado, The Julie Ruin, King Khan and the Shrines, Neko Case, Nine Inch Nails, Okkervil River, Richard Buckner, Richard Youngs, Sleepmakeswaves, Stereophonics, Surf City, TV Ghost, Volcano Choir and White Poppy. Wow, there’s a few strong records in there, I can tell you that much. Of course if you’ve heard of those already or none of those artists are your cup of tea, maybe you’ll discover something new and great as part of today’s Pick Your Poison. Allow me to recommend tracks from Armani of York, Imaginary People, Leftover Cuties, Michael Persall, Moving Units, The Swiss and Tiger Forest Cat. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Bardo Pond, Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr., Freddie Gibbs & Madlib, HSY and Mount Eerie.

Arc Rev One – Beam

Armani of York – Sigh of Relief

Daughter – Youth (Lane 8 Remix)

Imaginary People – Better Minds

John&Garry – Hide Away

Leftover Cuties – Clarity

Liam Gale and the Ponytails – Antipodean Honor

The Meets – Even When the Time Comes

Michael Persall – Back to Bed

Moving Units – Bright Nights

The Swiss – Connect

TIDEUP – A Dance in the Dark

Tiger Forest Cat – With the Winds of Despair

The Worriers – Little Lucy

Xela Zaid – Twelve

Pick Your Poison: Friday 8-30-13

Well what do you know. It’s a rare Friday edition of Pick Your Poison. I feel like the last couple Fridays that I’ve done this I’ve commented on how it only happens rarely because I don’t have enough music to give you to make a Friday edition worthwhile most of the time. On those occasions when I do meet the quota, there are Friday editions. This is one of those weeks, and it’s even better because it marks the start of a holiday weekend. If you’re American and reading this, Labor Day is on Monday so I hope you enjoy a day off and have some BBQ or whatever. There won’t be a Monday edition of Pick Your Poison due to the holiday, but I am going to try and take some time out of that free day to write at least one album review for next week. I’ve been slacking way too much in that department lately, and there’s way too many great records out there for me to keep ignoring them or writing about them only in 140 character spurts on Twitter. So we’ll see what I’m able to get done. Now then, about this weekend-starting Pick Your Poison. Allow me to advise listening to tracks from Deep Well, Infinity Shred, Karen O, Los Campesinos!, The Octopus Project, The Shilohs and Zachary Cale. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from The 1975, The Band in Heaven, Breathe Owl Breathe, Death Cab For Cutie, Frankie Rose and Tony Molina. Have a great extended weekend, and we’ll catch up on Tuesday!

12 dirty lovers – It Seems to Be Dead

Deep Well – Never Turn Away

Dolomite Minor – Let Me Go

Frank Rabeyrolles – Fears

Infinity Shred – Sanctuary

Karen O – The Moon Song

Los Campesinos! – What Death Leaves Behind

The Morning Episodes – Alive

The Octopus Project – Perhap

The Pure Conjecture – I Just Want You to Love Me

The Shilohs – Get Ready Now

Underground Man – Bad Vibrations

Your Fuzzy Friends – The Unicorn Song

Zachary Cale – Wayward Son

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 8-29-13

It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for another weekly dip into the pool of music news, interviews and videos that I like to call This Week In Music! Yes, in addition to the normal Pick Your Poison mp3s and Soundcloud streams, I like to toss out links to a bunch of other music-related content that I’ve found interesting or worthwhile over the course of the week. I encourage you to check some, if not all of these things out, particularly if you’re looking to waste some time. There’s plenty to see, read and hear:

Check out Nicolas Jaar’s new subscription-based record label, plus stream/download the first 11 minutes of the debut album from his new band Darkside

Watch a 13.5 minute mini documentary about the visuals for the new Nine Inch Nails tour

Watch Phoenix perform an acoustic version of their song “Entertainment” at the Palace of Versailles

Stream a new song from Paul McCartney, appropriately titled “New”

Check out the initial artist lineup for CMJ 2013

Watch Franz Ferdinand cover Grimes’ “Oblivion” in an acoustic radio session

Check out a Daft Punk curated playlist on Spotify

YouTube Audio Stream: Glasser – Shape

Music Video: TV on the Radio – Million Miles

Music Video: The National – Graceless

Of course beyond passing the time with those distractions, I’ve got a boatload of free downloads for you to enjoy as well. Today, enjoy some magic from [The] Caseworker, Cate Le Bon, Howe Gelb, Irontom, Quasi (covering Black Sabbath), and Yeah Saint Paul. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from The 1975, Banks, Keep Shelly in Athens, Throwing Muses and CFCF’s remix of Majical Cloudz.

Alias Punch – Micro Machines

Anonymous Conglomerate – Wednesday

Capital Cities – Safe and Sound (KTown Shekki vs. Cave Kings Remix)

[The] Caseworker – Dependence Day

Cate Le Bon – I Think I New (ft. Perfume Genius)

Happy Fangs – Lion Inside You

Howe Gelb – Blue Marble Girl

Irontom – Nitro

Joel Compass – Astronaut (Henry Krinkle Remix)

Nathan Angelo – What Love Is All About

Quasi – War Pigs (Black Sabbath cover)

Richard Lomax – Glamour (Demo)

Tadzio – Lying in the Grass

Yeah Saint Paul – A Universe in the Grain

Zacho Fraser – Making Fiction

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 8-28-13

The connect and disconnect of artists around the world will always be fascinating to me. By that, I mean sometimes bands and singers will obtain popularity in one corner of the globe, and be completely ignored in the other. One of the more memorable stories I recall from the last 10 years was hearing how The Strokes became massively popular in England long before they found any sort of success in America, despite being from New York. One of the bigger case-in-points today, Flume is an electronica producer who released his self-titled debut album earlier this year. In the U.S., not a ton of people have heard of him. In his native Australia, the album did so well it beat out One Direction for the top spot on the country’s iTunes chart. The man behind Flume, Harley Streten, is in his early 20s and has already played to 10,000+ person crowds in a few spots around the globe. His single “Sleepless” is a chilled out and chopped up piece of dance music that holds its own against similar R&B flavored electronica producers such as SBTRKT, Disclosure and Flying Lotus. Flume is currently in the middle of a U.S. tour, and makes a stop at the Metro in Chicago this upcoming Wednesday, September 4th. As evidence that certain places around the world don’t entirely understand an artist’s appeal, there are still tickets available for that show despite the relatively small venue size. I suspect that most people have no idea what they could be getting themselves into, otherwise it would have sold out rather quickly. A fair number of electronica artists and producers don’t do much with their stage production, resulting in sets that feature them standing behind a laptop or some turntables and pushing buttons. Well, most modern DJ-types would argue that’s not what they’re REALLY doing, but my point is it tends to be not very pretty to look at. Unless you’re Girl Talk and you’ve got a team of toilet paper canons and are willing to ride on an inflatable raft across the crowd, people are there more to hear your beats than to see how you put them together. But then you have your Daft Punks, your DJ Shadows and your Deadmau5, all of whom clearly care about stage production and keeping things interesting. It can take a simple dance set and turn it into something far greater and more enjoyable. Flume is the sort of artist who invests in production, which is why the creation of The Infinity Prism is a real game-changer for him. The setup is impressive and cool and unique to every show, as Streten can tweak things at his own leisure along with the songs. So if you’re 18+, live in Chicago and aren’t busy one week from today, I strongly recommend you check out the Flume show. Tickets are $18 in advance and are available here. Now then, let’s tackle today’s Pick Your Poison. There’s some great stuff today from Bad Sports, The Bynars, Eureka Birds, Papermoons, Seth Smith, This Frontier Needs Heroes and Tim Hecker. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Angel Haze, Digitalism, Gap Dream, Icona Pop, Sebadoh and Shearwater (covering Xiu Xiu).

Angel Katz – Genuine Zeal

Bad Sports – Terrible Place

The Bynars – Never Gonna Die

Campfires in Winter – Picture of Health

Eureka Birds – Mila Don’t Make A Sound

Jaymes Young – Dark Star

Loves It – Wild

LPZ – Without You

Marie Lala – Surrender My Soul

Papermoons – No Love

Seth Smith – Red River

There’s Talk – The Salt

This Frontier Needs Heroes – It’s Over Now

Tim Hecker – Virginal II

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 8-27-13

As we do every Tuesday, let’s talk new album releases. Another bunch of artists are pushing new product out into the world, and even though you may love some of them, you might not be fully aware of said releases. So n an effort to give you a proper heads up, here’s the list of artists with fresh albums out this week: Belle & Sebastian, Black Joe Lewis, Bob Dylan, Dent May, Disappears, The Dodos, Ellie Goulding, Flaamingos, Franz Ferdinand, Ghost Wave, Drumgasm (drummers Janet Weiss, Zach Hill and Matt Cameron), King Krule, Lucy Schwartz, Lumerians, Robbie Fulks and Spineriders. If you can’t find some new music sustenence in that pile, or simply can’t afford to pay for much of anything these days, let alone music, perhaps some of the free downloads in today’s Pick Your Poison will be helpful. Let me recommend tracks from Andy Stott, Cub Sport, Empra, Fairchild, HDSPNS, Migrant Kids, Silver Soul and Tal National. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Blitzen Trapper, Dean Wareheim, Destruction Unit, Dosh, and Matthew E. White.

Andy Stott – Anytime Soon

Baron Rouge – Holy Clock

Cub Sport – Paradise

Dot Dash – (Here’s to) The Ghosts of the Past

Empra – Strange Condition

Fairchild – Dancer

Gravious – Rolling Thunder (Octo Octa Remix)

HDSPNS – Awa

Love Is A Burning Thing – Moves

Manicanparty – Monarch

Migrant Kids – Lucktear

Silver Soul – Distinguish

Taiwo Heard – Frontier to Eternity

Tal National – Wongharey

Pick Your Poison: Monday 8-26-13

Sigh. I don’t know about you, but I woke up this Monday morning regretting something that I did over the weekend. Well, as with many of us, it’s one of several regrets. The biggest of them all of course is what happened on Sunday night. I allowed myself to watch the MTV Video Music Awards. Like many of you, I’m a bit outside of the MTV demographic, and actually am one of those people who fondly recalls when the network used to have legitimate VJs and played music programming instead of the nonstop stream of reality shows and poorly scripted original programming. The letter “M” in MTV used to stand for Music, but today it either means nothing or has an alternate m-word that has replaced “music”. That alone is upsetting enough, but then the network continues its annual tradition of hosting the VMAs, which is their sole contribution to pop culture and the music scene in any given year. So they try and make the most of the night. They bring together the biggest stars in music, hand them moon man statues for being popular, and hope that somebody says or does something during a performance or acceptance speech that will make headlines the following days. The more eyes they can draw and the more controversy they can generate, the better. Again, it’s not so much about music as it is the business of keeping yourself relevant and hip. Which is why almost all the performances during the show were from pop stars (Lady Gaga, Miley Cyrus, Katy Perry) and hip hop stars (Kanye West, Kendrick Lamar, Drake) with a little room left over for some soulful singers (Justin Timberlake, Robin Thicke, Bruno Mars). I guess this was the year we forgot about rock and roll, even if Mumford & Sons headlined virtually ever music festival known to man. And while I have more respect than you’d think for Lady Gaga’s art house film-inspired opening song, most everything else was a train wreck of varying proportions. Drawing the most attention, particularly with news organizations and Twitter, has been Miley Cyrus’ overly sexy, twerk-tastic performance as she spent half her time on stage dancing in bra and panties while grinding on Robin Thicke. There was something about it that to me reeked of desperation, though many are arguing it’s just a young girl trying to shake up her image and prove herself to be an adult. Britney Spears went through the same thing, and look at how well she’s turned out (<-- sentence should be read with extreme sarcasm). Whatever. The show is like a bad hangover that I'm now trying to shake and eventually eliminate from my memory. Perhaps some palate-cleansing mp3s as part of Pick Your Poison will help with that. Don't miss tracks today from Blessed Feathers, The Cloak Ox (ft. TV on the Radio's Tunde Adebimpe), Dream Boys, Helado Negro, Left Lane Cruiser, M+A, Minks, ODESZA and Tape Deck Mountain. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream cuts from Cass McCombs, The Dismemberment Plan, Leverage Models (ft. Sharon Van Etten), London Grammar and Roosevelt. Anonymous Conglomerate – So What

Blessed Feathers – Ahbinreedis

Chris Malinchak – So Into You

The Cloak Ox ft. Tunde Adebimpe – King Rope

Dream Boys – Born Yesterday

Flume – More Than You Thought (Orikami Remix)

Helado Negro – Stop Living Dead

Keep Shelly in Athens – Recollection (Selebrities Remix)

Left Lane Cruiser – Juice to Get Loose

M+A – When (ft. EMAY)

Metropolis America – Bittersweet

Minks – Everything’s Fine

ODESZA – My Friends Never Die

Post Honeymoon – Kid With A Gun

Tape Deck Mountain – Pretend Friends

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 8-22-13

It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for another weekly dip into the pool of music news, interviews and videos that I like to call This Week In Music! Yes, in addition to the normal Pick Your Poison mp3s and Soundcloud streams, I like to toss out links to a bunch of other music-related content that I’ve found interesting or worthwhile over the course of the week. I encourage you to check some, if not all of these things out, particularly if you’re looking to waste some time. There’s plenty to see, read and hear:

Check out the trailer for Memphis, a film starring Willis Earl Beal

Watch Cloud Nothings frontman Dylan Baldi perform a new song on an acoustic guitar

YouTube Audio Stream: Death Grips – Birds

Check out Nirvana’s original contract with Sub Pop Records

Download the instrumental mixes of tracks from Italians Do It Better’s compilation mix After Dark 2

YouTube Audio Stream: Glasser – Shape

Stream the new Neko Case album (out Sept. 3rd)

YouTube Audio Stream: Nine Inch Nails – Everything

YouTube Audio Stream: Matt Berninger (of The National) – I’ll See You in My Dreams

Music Video: Spiritualized – I Am What I Am

Once you’re done with all that, there’s a whole bunch of free downloads and equally important audio streams to investigate as part of today’s Pick Your Poison. You’re not going to want to miss delightful tracks from Cameron McGill, Druid Cloak, Gladiola, Jacuzzi Boys, Le1f, Tokyo Hands and Wires in the Walls. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Chelsea Wolfe, Holy Ghost!, Jonathan Rado (of Foxygen), RAC (ft. Kele of Bloc Party and MNDR), School of Night (Darby Cicci of The Antlers), and Young Galaxy.

Cameron McGill – American Health Insurance

Druid Cloak – Sterling Thrones

Everest Cale – Fossils

Gladiola – Breaking Into the Pool

Ioneye – Morning Sun

Jacuzzi Boys – Be My Prism

Le1f – Damn Son

Matthew Sawyer – Don’t Tell the Others What We’re Singing

Midnight Pool Party – I Want, I Need

Mind Over Mirrors – Storing the Winter

Motive – Burn Down Brooklyn

Parentz – F-PBHZ

Tokyo Hands – Valleys

Wires in the Walls – In the Rain

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 8-21-13

Let me take a quick moment here and break away from talking about music to talk a little bit about another great passion of mine, which is film. I realize this isn’t a film site, and while I’ve considered adding film commentary and reviews to what I’m already doing with music, it’s not something I’ve pulled the trigger on…yet. So pardon me if I want to talk movies for a quick minute with an eye on hopefully expanding your pop cultural horizons. If you don’t like it, skip straight to the mp3s. Still, I’ll make this brief. Late August isn’t exactly the best time for movies. Or at least traditionally it hasn’t been. It’s sort of the buffer zone between the big summer blockbusters and the awards bait prestige pictures that really start to emerge in October. But if you pay enough attention to independent films and are equally adept with technology these days, late August is actually a great time to be alive. While I’m a hardcore movie theater attendee (I’ve seen just about every widely released movie from 2013 so far in the theater), I’m not opposed to watching something on my flat screen and surround sound setup at home. I prefer the distractionless, reclining chair, massive screen and pitch black ambiance of a theater, but for some that’s just not a realistic option. Maybe you live in the middle of nowhere and the one movie theater near you is really run down. Maybe you’ve got a megaplex nearby, but ticket prices are so high you don’t have the cash to go as often as you’d like. Independent cinema has got you (somewhat) covered these days, thanks to the advent of Video on Demand (VOD). I’m not going to argue in favor of it, because I firmly believe in the power of the theatrical experience with an audience, but I have found it useful recently to help me see some films that might otherwise have never been able to see. Movies like Drinking Buddies, starring Olivia Wilde, Anna Kendrick, Jake Johnson and Ron Livingston. It’s a great film directed by Joe Swanberg and it features not only some great Chicago locations (Revolution Brewery and The Empty Bottle among them), but has a strong soundtrack with songs from artists like Foxygen, Night Beds and Here We Go Magic. Worth your time? Absolutely. Available on VOD through iTunes, Amazon and some other online media purveyors. If you don’t live in New York or Chicago, there’s a chance the film won’t ever make it to your local art house theater (if you even have one). The same goes for a movie like Lovelace, which has everyone from Amanda Seyfried to James Franco to Sharon Stone and Peter Sarsgaard in its cast. It might seem from the trailer that it’s a basic biopic on Deep Throat star Linda Lovelace, but I assure you it goes way beyond that. Good luck finding it in more than a handful of theaters around the country at the moment, but VOD will let you screen it at about half the cost of a traditional movie theater ticket. I guess my lengthy point is this: There are a lot of good movies out right now, and if you’ve got a movie theater nearby showing them I hope you’ll go. But if that’s not the case or you simply don’t want to wait for a theatrical release, please be aware that VOD is an option you have. If it’s going to expose you to more interesting and challenging films than the ones currently being peddled in mass marketplaces, then maybe a night in is just what the doctor ordered. Speaking of doctors, let me prescribe you 10cc’s of Pick Your Poison. Be sure to ingest tracks from Botany, Buffalo Tales, John Davis, Julie Mar, Lemonade, Shark? and The Tranq. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from A$AP Ferg, Eagulls, Ejecta (Joel Ford of Ford & Lopatin’s new project with Fight Bite/Neon Indian’s Leanne Macomber), M.I.A. and Polica.

Bad Cop – Light On (SOSA Remix)

Botany – Anchor

Buffalo Tales – Puppet Strings

Death Rattle – Fortress

John Davis – Masoch

Josh Damigo – How Am I Not Supposed to Fall

Julie Mar – What It’s Like

Lemonade – Skyballer

Sam Vicari – Normalcy

Shark? – This Is Living

Silent Rider & Camille Corazón – Black Crown

SISU – Harpoons

Sundays – Hope It’s Enough

The Tranq – Dissident

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 8-20-13

I’m officially calling it right now: the summer drought of new music is over! Yes, just in time for everyone to head back to school, an influx of great records hits the marketplace. Don’t believe me? Here’s a list of artists releasing new material this week: A$AP Ferg, Andrew Belle, Andrew Cedermark, Bent Shapes, Braids, Buffalo Killers, Butter the Children, Crocodiles, Destruction Unit, DIANA, Diarrhea Planet, Earl Sweatshirt, The Goldberg Sisters, Gross Relations, The Horse’s Ha, Julia Holter, Julianna Barwick, Kim Lenz, The Kissaway Trail, Laura Veirs, Little Comets, Native, No Age, Paper Lions, Porcelain Raft, Pure Bathing Culture, Sarah Neufeld, Shigeto, Ski Lodge, Still Life Still, Superchunk, Surf City, Terraplane Sun, Travis, Tree, Ty Segall, Typhoon, White Lies, Willy Mason and Zola Jesus. Wow. That’s a lot of records, and there’s at least a few good ones in the bunch. I hope you’ll look into some of these, or are reminded that one of your favorite artists is putting something new out. Beyond those things, there’s still a daily edition of Pick Your Poison to consider as well, where you’re also able to discover new music. In today’s batch, don’t miss tracks from Banana Beach, Captain Murphy (aka Flying Lotus), Grisly Hand, Louis London, Placeholder and Schooner. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Body Parts, The Darcys, The Lumineers (covering Talking Heads), Parquet Courts, The Weeknd (ft. Drake) and YAWN.

Antonio Paul – Coloured Screens

Banana Beach – Pelican Bay

Captain Murphy (ft. Viktor Vaughn, Earl Sweatshirt & Thundercat) – Between Villains

Ciara – Body Party (Jacques Greene Remix)

The Courtesans – Dirty Killer (Bad Atom Remix)

Grisly Hand – Country Singles

The Harmed Brothers – When You See Me

Henke Wermelin & Nattskiftet – Eat Your Money

Louis London – Hardly Hear You

Nathan Angelo – Get Back

Placeholder – Above

Richard Beynon – Lazerboy

Schooner – It Won’t Matter

Treasure Fingers and The Knocks – My Body

Pick Your Poison: Monday 8-19-13

Back in February, I tweeted about Prince’s new single, which is titled “Breakfast Can Wait”. Jokingly, I said, “So does that mean he’s not going to make me pancakes after our basketball game?” It was a reference to a 2004 sketch on “Chappelle’s Show” where Charlie Murphy (Eddie’s brother) tells the story about the time he met Prince. They wound up playing basketball at his house, and after Prince won, he made everybody pancakes. It’s a classic sketch, and Dave Chappelle does an incredible job pretending to be Prince. Well to my surprise and I’m sure the surprise of many, Prince unveiled the cover art for “Breakfast Can Wait” over the weekend. What is it? Why it’s Dave Chappelle dressed as Prince with a tray of pancakes. Prince not only revealed it via his newly active Twitter account, but it came with the following line, direct from the “Chappelle’s Show” sketch: “Game: Blouses”. Don’t ever let anybody tell you that Prince has no sense of humor. This is proof positive. Now if only somebody could get actual footage of Prince dominating in a basketball game. Let’s transition from that into today’s Pick Your Poison. Allow me to advise checking out tracks today from 2PPM, Alligator Indian, Lisa Papineau, Matthew Collings, Peelander-Z, The Slytest and Sweet Alps. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from The Fratellis, Kitten, Wymond Miles and YACHT.

2PPM – I

Alligator Indian – PUF//FIN

Bent Denim – Living Room

Hadley Kennary – Otis

Hannah Georgas – Somebody

Lisa Papineau – Out For A Swim

Marquee Mayfield – Breakdown

Matthew Collings – They Meet On the Subway

Mini Dresses – Watching You

Pagiins – Open Up Your Mind

Peelander-Z – Ride on the Shooting Star

The Pluto Moons – No Evidence

The Slytest – Rock’N’Roll Heaven

Suntrapp – All the Seas

Sweet Alps – Ghost Metropolis

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 8-15-13

It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for another weekly dip into the pool of music news, interviews and videos that I like to call This Week In Music! Yes, in addition to the normal Pick Your Poison mp3s and Soundcloud streams, I like to toss out links to a bunch of other music-related content that I’ve found interesting or worthwhile over the course of the week. I encourage you to check some, if not all of these things out, particularly if you’re looking to waste some time. There’s plenty to see, read and hear:

Stream Earl Sweatshirt’s debut album Doris

Music Video: These New Puritans – Organ Eternal

Watch Run the Jewels (Killer Mike + El-P) respond to Kendrick Lamar’s rapper-insulting verse on the Big Sean track “Control”

YouTube Audio Stream: Volcano Choir – Comrade

Music Video: Kim Deal – Are You Mine?

Watch Fiona Apple and Blake Mills perform “I Know” in a living room home video

Music Video: Youth Lagoon – Raspberry Cane

Music Video: Haim – The Wire

YouTube Audio Stream: Yuck – Middle Sea

YouTube Audio Stream: Cults – I Can Hardly Make You Mine

Once you’re done with all of that music excitement, there’s a whole set of other downloads and audio streams you can check out as part of today’s edition of Pick Your Poison. Don’t miss cuts from Big Tree, Camp Counselors, Glasvegas, To Kill a King, Kim Lenz and We Are the Wilderness. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Cold War Kids, Fort Romeau, Ha Ha Tonka, kwes, of Montreal and Zola Jesus.

Banks – Warm Water (Chuck Wild Bootleg Remix)

Big Tree – Wonder

Brundlefly and the Swede – Cabin Music

Camp Counselors – Charyou

Emiliana Torrini – Speed of Dark (Andrew Weatherall Remix)

Glasvegas – Later… When the TV Turns to Static

The Holy Alimonies – All in the Drugs

To Kill a King – Bones

Kim Lenz – Pay Dearly

Lek Fonq – Facebook Lover

Quixotism – Bloodletting

Scary Cherry and the Bang Bangs – Don’t Wanna

Top Less Gay Love Tekno Party – Danger Love

We Are the Wilderness – Leading From Emptiness

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