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Pick Your Poison: Monday 7-1-13

Site news alert! We’ve now reached the halfway point of 2013, and with that I’d like to use that as a springboard to make some changes to the site moving forwards. Really by “changes” I mean one change, and that’s going to concern album reviews on the site. A little earlier today, I posted my review of Vampire Weekend’s Modern Vampires of the City. If you haven’t had a chance to look at it yet, please do, because it gives an in-depth analysis of one of the year’s strongest records. You may also notice that review is quite lengthy. Like the sort of lengthy that maybe makes you not want to read it, or wait until you’ve got plenty of time to read it. It’s also the first album review I’ve written in a few weeks. Why? Mostly time constraints, and when I did have free time, I kept writing that Vampire Weekend review. It went through an editing process and I didn’t put it out there until I felt satisfied with the end product. This sort of perfectionism and relentless need to dive head first into deep analysis of every record I hear has ultimately crippled my ability to write reviews in a timely and easy to read fashion. In a sense those longer reviews do stand out a little from a lot of other music bloggers, who will toss an mp3 at you with a paragraph about the song and call it a post. Alas, I’m just not getting the diversity and lending my opinion to enough records these days. There’s so many great albums out there I want to write raves about, but simply don’t have the time or luxury to do so. Which is why I’m changing the way I write album reviews. From now on, a vast majority of my reviews will be very short and to-the-point. Certainly something will be lost in these quick hit reviews, but I hope to give you a basic idea about the worth of an album in a nice economical package that’s easy to read and reveals whether or not it’s worth your time and money. Look for that new album review format to start later this week or early next week. I’ll begin by playing catch-up with a few notable releases from the first half of the year that I failed to get to, and then quickly jump to current and future releases. The hope is to put together 4-5 of these reviews each week, which is much better than the 1 or 2 every week…or two that my review rate has fallen to. I hope it will increase your overall enjoyment of the site just a little bit more. One of the other things I wanted to point you in the direction of now that we’ve officially hit mid-year is a new Spotify playlist (U.S. only) featuring 80 songs from the first six months of the year that I genuinely loved. There’s tracks from well-known artists like Vampire Weekend, Phoenix, The Joy Formidable, Kanye West and Justin Timberlake paired along side more interesting discoveries such as Lady Lamb the Beekeeper, Alpine, Daughter, Savages, The Knife and Autre Ne Veut. I encourage you to listen to the whole thing if you have time (take it in chunks), and click the follow button in your Spotify app to keep an eye on things. Of course new music doesn’t stop coming just because we’ve reached July. Here’s your Monday edition of Pick Your Poison as well, featuring tracks from Black City Lights, Flaamingos, Gladiola, Kodacrome, Little Big League, Obits, Sinden, The Static Jacks, Steel Cranes and Walking Bicycles. Wow, lots of good stuff today. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Chelsea Wolfe, Duke Dumont, Holograms, Janelle Monae, Torche and Chicago’s own Twin Peaks.

Black City Lights – Offering

Cadien – Expression of Self

Emeron & Fox – Arms Out

Flaamingos – Walk A Wire

Gallant – If It Hurts

Gladiola – Your Biography

Kitten Forever – Famous Friends

Kodacrome – Strike the Gold

Little Big League – My Very Own You

Obits – Taste the Diff

Sinden – Almost Gone

The Static Jacks – I’ll Come Back

Steel Cranes – Boat Song

Walking Bicycles – So

Album Review: Vampire Weekend – Modern Vampires of the City [XL]



The ship should have sailed on Vampire Weekend a long time ago. As in, the wave of backlash should have hit them right around the release of their second (and previous) album Contra in early 2010 and doomed them to a slow descent into obscurity. Yet every so often, an artist or band finds a way to rise above the fray and continue to persevere in spite of everything. Leave it to the guys with Ivy League educations to solve that puzzle and go from a debut with one hit single to a sequel with three. That’s not even mentioning all the commercial licensing they signed off on, continuing to build their “brand” of cardigans, boat shoes and balaclavas to a predominantly young, white audience. Perhaps most incredible through all this is that the quality of the music they’ve been making has dipped very little, if at all. What started out as a ferocious nod to Afropop and in many respects Paul Simon has since evolved into something darker and more considerate while still largely maintaining a giddy, indie pop vibe. Perhaps that’s the main reason why so many people love this band – they take challenging topics, difficult issues and high class living and make them into very on-the-level, non-pretentious, fun songs. One minute you’ll be bobbing your head and singing along to the chorus of a song, and the next minute you’ll hear a lyric that forces you to grab your dictionary to try and figure out exactly what frontman Ezra Koenig was getting at with that reference. You’re learning new things while you listen, and in a sense that raises the collective conscience and intelligence level for all involved. For whatever reason, Vampire Weekend are working to leave society better than when they found it, and perhaps that’s why it’s so difficult to find fault in just about everything they’re doing. Their new album Modern Vampires of the City is their strongest collection of tracks to date, but it’s also their darkest and most challenging, all of which can be seen as major positives.

Most bands like to throw a single out as the first track on their records, because it provides a nice gateway into the rest of the album. If they don’t go with a single, then it’s usually something upbeat and fun to at least put you in a good mood before moving forward. The last two Vampire Weekend albums have featured “Mansard Roof” and “Horchata” respectively, and both fit right into that traditional first track pattern. For Modern Vampires of the City, the opening song is “Obvious Bicycle,” a track that might best be described as a piano ballad. It’s not exactly a magnet of a song that sucks you in, and the lyrics make it even worse. “Oh you ought to spare your face the razor / Because no one’s gonna spare their time for you / You ought to spare the world your labor / It’s been twenty years and no one’s told the truth,” pretty much spell out deep depression and a complete mistrust of others. Yet there’s also stoicism and beauty in the way it’s composed, and the delicately harmonized, easy to remember chorus gives it a certain replay value you might not otherwise expect. The buzzy, pop-driven side of the band shows up starting with the single “Unbelievers,” certainly one of the album’s strongest moments and most addictive tracks. Yet it too features a rather dark take on things, emphasizing the idea that it can be tough today to truly figure out exactly who or what you believe in, religiously speaking and otherwise. “Girl you and I will die unbelievers, bound to the tracks of the train,” Koenig sings like there’s no escaping the fate that lies before him. There truly is no way of knowing if we’ve made the right decisions for our lives or our futures, which in many ways is crippling and could be considered a metaphorical freight train bearing down on us.

If you’re looking for a more “traditional” Vampire Weekend song, look no further than “Step,” which drops references to Angkor Wat, Dar es Salaam and Croesus amid sparkling harpsichords. Such challenging names and phrases are used in this case as more of a wink and a nod to their highly intelligent, “upper class” past rather than a legitimate attempt to go highbrow simply because they want to. The real deal behind this song is that the band borrows a couple of the main lines from the chorus from an unreleased track from the early ’90s called “Step to My Girl” by hip hop group Souls of Mischief. That track borrowed a saxophone melody from a 1972 song by Bread, which additionally Vampire Weekend also recreated with the harpsichord for this song. It’s fascinating how it all came together, and how the worlds of hip hop, smooth jazz and rock music from the past intersect via what sounds like a completely original and modern track. With that kind of history, maybe that is just a little more pretentious and challenging than it might otherwise appear. Similar things can be said for first single “Diane Young,” because while it is a whirlwind, roller coaster of a fun song complete with purposely goofy vocal modulations, there’s deeper meaning below the giddy surface. The subject matter is death, and the song title isn’t so much about a girl as it is, like the vocals, a slight modification of the more common expression, “dying young.” The lyrics support it, particularly with a reference to the Kennedy family, who are known for dying young. The music video also supports the idea, with a Last Supper-like scenario involving Jesus, who of course reportedly died at age 33.

Yet “Diane Young” also speaks to one of the overarching themes of Modern Vampires of the City, which is more about time running out on you than it is actual, physical death. Sure, death is certainly one of the possibilities of things to happen when the clock reaches zero, but it’s equally important to look at where the band is at in their personal lives. At the moment, they’re right at the border of what some might designate as “adulthood,” and all the “responsibilities” that come along with that. While there is no official hard line in the sand definition of what constitutes an adult, the ideas of getting married and starting a family certainly get wrapped up in that. In your own way, when you become an adult it marks the death of your youth, because there are new challenges and people to worry about and care for, taking away those times of freedom when you could do anything (…or anyone) you wanted to. Instead of staying out at some bar until 3 a.m. on a weeknight and showing up to work hungover a few hours later, you’re in bed by 11 and have to get up again at 4 because the baby is crying. The track “Don’t Lie” is actually all about that idea, and the quest to get in all the crazy and fun experiences you want to before making a full commitment to another person. “Young bloods can’t be settling down,” Koenig sings early on, but he’s also in love with a girl and feels just about ready to make that leap. The lines, “It’s the last time running through snow / Cause the fire can’t last and the winter’s cold,” speak to the need for love between two people, which should be fully appreciated, lest it be extinguished and you’re left alone in a harsh and loveless environment.

This path towards adulthood truly reaches its peak with the centerpiece of the record, “Hannah Hunt.” In many ways it seems like Vampire Weekend’s own maturity as a band gets unveiled in this track, like it’s something they’ve been purposely building towards for the last few years. Within this single ballad contains a multitude of sonic and textural innovations while the the lyrics and especially Koenig’s vocals overflow with emotion in a rousing and powerful way. The story line is a familiar one, in the sense that this could well be picking up on the lives of two characters we’ve spent time with previously in other Vampire Weekend songs on other albums. Here they’ve made the decision to escape from their own lives and hit the road to drive across the country in the hopes of starting over fresh. You may recognize this inclination as a more literal version of trying to outrun adulthood and other responsibilities that life hands us. Along the journey, this couple meets a gardener who talks about how plants move as they grow, and a man of faith who tries but fails to instill the narrator with a sense of personal accountability. Yet the real focus here is between these two people, our narrator and Hannah Hunt. Though their trip starts out promising enough, by the second verse of the song their relationship has grown cold, like the freezing beaches of Providence, Rhode Island which Hannah says she misses now that they’re on the opposite side of the country. And while the narrator wanders off to buy kindling for a fire, aka an attempt to get the flames of passion burning once more, Hannah chooses to burn a copy of the New York Times instead. The frustration builds, and eventually explodes outwards in the final 90 seconds of the song, going from a slow and meditative ballad to a soaring and gorgeous crescendo. Koenig’s voice follows suit, and he yells the chorus with such force you can almost hear tears rolling down his face: “If I can’t trust you then damn it, Hannah / There’s no future / There’s no answer / Though we live on the U.S. dollar / You and me, we got our own sense (cents?) of time.” It’s as harrowing as it is beautiful, and for those four minutes, that fictional clock through which we count the seconds and watch the hours stops completely.

While there are a few (perhaps arguably so, depending on personal interpretation) religious references in the first half of Modern Vampires of the City, it’s on the second half of the record where religion really come into topical focus. “I took your counsel and came to ruin / Leave me to myself, leave me to myself,” Koenig gripes at the start of “Everlasting Arms.” The song title itself alludes to the old hymn “Leaning on Everlasting Arms,” which is about the Day of Judgment. In his own way, Koenig spends the song passing judgment on God, trying to break off that relationship because it has caused him nothing but pain and suffering. An even greater indictment shows up on “Worship You,” which asks whether or not God deserves the love and praise given to him around the globe. There are references made to God’s “red right hand,” which play on the phrase of getting caught red-handed, implying guilt and wrongdoing. There’s also a political angle to the track, primarily dealing with the Middle East and Israel and the supposed protection offered to the Holy Land. “Finger Back” deals with similar issues, though the focus in this case is more on the cycle of violence in the region and how religion is the main reason for many conflicts. That also ties into the sharply depressing but stylistically intriguing penultimate track “Hudson,” which uses the historical context of explorer Henry Hudson and his death as a springboard to envision a post-apocalyptic New York hellscape in the years following the nuclear holocaust that is World War III.

Looking solely at the lyrics on Modern Vampires of the City and attempting to delve into the meanings and intentions behind the songs can make everything seem like a truly depressing march through sludge. The themes are dark and unpleasant, from the ticking clock of youth and life running towards its ultimate finish to the anger towards God and religion, and you might expect the music itself to match those tones. Yet that’s not the case by any means. The band has come a long way from their debut, but they haven’t lost their ability to write compelling melodies and hooks that grab your ear and refuse to let go. Listen to this album enough and you’ll find that a different track stands out each time, even some of the slower ones like “Ya Hey” and “Step” will give you a reason to keep coming back for more. A very lyrically bleak song like “Finger Back” is only dark and depressing if you can fully comprehend what’s being sung about, and Koenig’s rapid fire vocal delivery paired with a bouncy melody seem to suggest upbeat pop more than anything else. And that’s really the crux of this record as a whole: it deals with a lot of heavy issues, but always with a little wink and a nod to let you know that it’s not all bad. That sense of relatability and inclusiveness which gets developed while also ushering in a new found maturity makes this Vampire Weekend’s strongest effort to date. For a band that spends so much time on this record worrying about getting older and the proverbial deaths that go along with it, there’s a terrific amount of irony in the fact that they’re only getting better with age. It’s certainly something most other artists should look at with envy.

Watch the video for “Diane Young”
Watch the lyrics video for “Ya Hey”
Watch the lyrics video for “Step”

Buy Modern Vampires of the City from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 6-27-13

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 two new Franz Ferdinand songs, “Love Illumination” and “Right Action

Music Video: Smith Westerns – Idol

Watch the trailer for Morrissey’s upcoming concert film

Music Video: M.I.A. – Bring the Noize (Gold Edition)

Watch Soko’s short film Monster Love feat. Ariel Pink

Download the Run the Jewels (Killer Mike + El-P) self-titled debut album in exchange for your email

YouTube Audio Stream: Zola Jesus – Avalanche (Slow)

Music Video: The Weeknd – Kiss Land (NSFW)

Stream the new Blondes record Swisher in full

YouTube Audio Stream: Willis Earl Beal – Everything unwinds.

Once you’re done with those distractions, there’s a whole bunch of mp3 downloads for you to enjoy and distract you further should you like. In the set today, I’m pleased to recommend tracks from The Anatomy of Frank, The Blank Tapes, Dawn of Midi, Fur Trade, Moska and The Petticoat Tearoom. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new stuff from The Dodos, Fort Romeau, Glasvegas, Metz and Twin Lakes.

The Anatomy of Frank – Saturday Morning

Benjamin Russell – Miracle (Miracle of Love) ft. Mike Bessette

The Blank Tapes – Holy Roller

Comfort Fit – Hatphones

Dawn of Midi – Algol

Del Sur – Lifeguards

Desert Stars – Off the Cliff

Fur Trade – Voyager

Johnny Rodgers – Everything is Yours

Moska – Sick Kick

The Petticoat Tearoom – I Have Been Lost

Powerkompany – Real Boy

Sonya Titus – Now

Svavar Knútur – While the World Burns (ft. Marketa Irglova)

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 6-26-13

Chicago, what are you up to tomorrow (Thursday) night? Nothing, you say? You’re still on a massive bender after the Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup? You’re camping out all night to try and get a good spot for that huge victory parade set for Friday morning? Ah, whatever it is, it can wait. There’s a pretty great show going down at the Empty Bottle, and I want you to be aware of it. Lady Lamb the Beekeeper and Torres are currently on a co-headlining tour, and the Bottle is where the whole thing ends. Actually, it wasn’t initially announced that way if you watch the YouTube clip I just linked to. They don’t even mention Chicago. That’s because even though it immediately follows the Iowa City date that was originally announced, the Chicago show was supposed to be Torres only. Don’t ask me why. I mean, Lady Lamb the Beekeeper did just play a Chicago show a couple months ago, but what was stopping her from coming back? Nothing I suppose, which is why she was added to the bill a couple weeks ago. So why exactly should you drop everything and go to this show? Well, both Torres and Lady Lamb the Beekeeper have put out excellent albums this year. Torres’ self-titled debut has gotten great critical praise, as has Lady Lamb’s Ripely Pine. Both acts are fronted by strong female singer-songwriters, with Mackenzie Scott using the Torres name and Aly Spaltro using the Lady Lamb the Beekeeper name. Check out the Torres track “Honey” for a taste of what that project has to offer. Lady Lamb the Beekeeper’s “Bird Balloons” is absolutely incredible too, and you can understand why this is a co-headlining tour. By the way, Chicago’s own Judson Claiborne is opening the show, and I think frontman Chris Salveter is performing solo for this one. Just another reason to get tickets if you haven’t already. They’re only $10 too, which is a bargain if you ask me. The show is 21+ in case you didn’t know, and starts at 9. Here’s a ticket buy link for you if you’re so inclined. I hope to see you at the show! Now then, let’s wrangle up a mid-week edition of Pick Your Poison. Key tracks today come from A.S., Back Back Forward Punch, Dead Boots, Jacuzzi Boys, Leftover Cuties, Manzanita Falls, Natureboy and Tedo Stone. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Andrew Cedermark, My Gold Mask and TRAAMS, plus Cadence Weapon’s remix of Doldrums and Tiger & Woods’ remix of Escort.

2AM Club ft. A1 – Black Liquor (Bassy Remix)

Adam F – Circles (Moduloktopus Remix)

A.S. – Do What You Want

Back Back Forward Punch – Tipsy

Dead Boots – I See You Coming

The High Wire – LNOE (Ghost Loft Remix)

Jacuzzi Boys – Domino Moon

Join the Riot – Queen Marmalade

Leftover Cuties – What’s the Matter?

Manzanita Falls – Fortnight

Natureboy – Lexies

Picture Me Broken – Nothing Further From the Truth

Tedo Stone – Taste

Xela Zaid – Twelve

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 6-25-13

Can you believe that we’re already halfway through 2013 already? This is the last Tuesday of June, meaning that six months of new albums have been released so far this year. There’s been some truly great ones, more than most other years in my recent memory. It feels kind of like we’re blessed to have so much great music coming out this year, and there’s another six months to go that’s going to be hopefully equally as good. Anyways, here’s a list of artists putting out new stuff this week to help round out the first half of the year: Bass Drum of Death, Bosnian Rainbows, Candy Claws, David Yow, Dessa, Femi Kuti, Her Royal Harness, Lightning Dust, Mavis Staples, Middle Class Rut, oOoOO, Palms, Rose Windows, Scott Lucas and the Married Men, Smith Westerns, Statistics (featured below!), Wale and Wise Blood. Pick something out and buy it at your favorite retailer this week, physical or digital, whatever your preference. Support music, because if we don’t then the artists we love might just go away, and nobody wants that. But hey, there’s always new artists and bands in the pipeline to learn about as well. That’s what Pick Your Poison is all about. Don’t miss tracks today from Angel Haze, The Blunt Sinatras, Filligar, Mission Dorado, Toy Soldiers, Weird Womb and White Dove. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Boat Club, Diarrhea Planet, NGHBRS, and Typhoon.

8th Grader – Diamonds, Silver and Gold (Strangeheart Remix)

Angel Haze – Initiation

The Blunt Sinatras – Drink in My Cup

Elisapie – The Love You Gave (Bridge & Law Remix)

Filligar – Photos of Madrid

Mission Dorado – On the Range

Paul White – Find A Way (ft. Homeboy Sandman)

She Speaks in Tongues – Gloria G-U-I-T-A-R!

Sioux Falls – Big Krackel

Statistics – Menu Screen

Toy Soldiers – Throw Me Down

Vondelpark – Always Forever (Tuesday Born Remix)

Weird Womb – Pale Piss

White Dove – Sister

Pick Your Poison: Monday 6-24-13

I’m fully committed to attending this year’s Pitchfork Music Festival. It’s one of, if not THE weekend I most look forward to every year. But this year, I was slightly disheartened to learn that one of my favorite bands would be playing a show in Chicago during, but not at, this year’s fest. Of course they’re also a little too big and expensive to hold court over Union Park, which is why they’re going to be at Wrigley Field instead. A classic band playing a show at a classic ballpark. Eddie Vedder (or as I call him, Ed Ved), is an Evanston native and devoted Cubs fan, so this show must be like a dream come true for him. He even wrote a song about the Cubs called “(Someday We’ll Go) All the Way”. Clearly this isn’t the season for the Cubs this year, and their 100+ year drought from a World Series win certainly weighs heavy on a lot of people. Yet you can put down a million dollar bet that Pearl Jam will play the song at Wrigley that night of June 19th, and I’ll be kicking myself for not being there to see it. But maybe you’re a Chicagoan and a Pearl Jam fan and would love to see the band play the show but you don’t have tickets and the show is sold out. Scalpers or “ticket resellers” are an option, but nobody wants to pay those inflated costs. How’d you like to go for free instead? I don’t have any tickets to give away, but I know where you can win some. Jim Beam’s Devil’s Cut Bourbon and WXRT are hosting a mini bar crawl (or “bar tour” as some might say) in downtown Chicago on the evening of Tuesday, July 2nd. They’ll be giving away tickets to the Pearl Jam at Wrigley show at each of the three stops made in three hours. If you want to show up, the stops are Blue Frog Local 22 from 6-7 p.m., Untitled from 7-8 p.m. and American Junkie from 8-9 p.m. Yes, all three bars are close enough to one another that you can walk between them. Don’t know where they’re at? It’s called a map, and I encourage you to use it. So maybe you get off work that Tuesday, cab it or walk it over to Blue Frog at 6 and see where the night takes you. Even if you don’t win Pearl Jam tickets, you’ll likely win the prize of getting drunk on Devil’s Cut Bourbon, which has its own rewards. Hahaha. Which reminds me, you’ve got to be 21+ to get in on this, in case you somehow thought otherwise. That said, let’s get to today’s edition of Pick Your Poison. There’s some delicious tracks today from Acquaintances, Coloured Clocks, Georgia’s Horse, His Electro Blue Voice, Liam Singer, Joey Bada$$, The Oarsman, Porcelain Raft and Royal Forest. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Black Joe Lewis, Bloc Party, Dent May, Medicine, Queens of the Stone Age (covering Mark Lanegan) and Groundislava’s remix of CHVRCHES.

Acquaintances – Skin

Buffalo Tales – Amsterdam

Coloured Clocks – Orion

Dark Age – First Rate People (Challenger Remix)

Drake – Jodeci Freestyle (ft. J. Cole)

Georgia’s Horse – Thistlebomb

His Electro Blue Voice – Sea Bug

Joey Bada$$ – Amethyst Rockstar (ft. Kirk Knight)

Liam Singer – Nine Ten

M83 – Steve McQueen (Freak You Remix)

The Oarsman – First Flight

The Pedaljets – Conversations

Porcelain Raft – Think of the Ocean

Royal Forest – John Denver

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 6-20-13

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:

Third Man Records is releasing a vinyl box set featuring exclusive live sets from The Shins, The Kills and Seasick Steve

Watch DIIV perform a demo of a new song called “Dust”

Check out the set times for this year’s Pitchfork Music Festival

Music Video: Majical Cloudz – Bugs Don’t Buzz

Learn more about the “Station to Station” public art project train tour coming up this September, featuring Savages, No Age, Eleanor Friedberger, Dan Deacon and many more

Lyric Video: Okkervil River – It Was My Season

Music Video: Wavves – That’s On Me

Music Video: The Postal Servce – A Tattered Line of String

Music Video: Arctic Monkeys – Do I Wanna Know?

Once you’re through with the many distractions I’ve passed along above, there’s a bunch more below in the form of your dose of Pick Your Poison. That includes highlights from A Grave With No Name, Grant Olney, Jake Bellows, Motorama, Psychic Twin and Vial of Sound. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream some good tunes from Bitchin’ Bajas, Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, NOVI and Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin.

A Grave With No Name – The Steps

Dufvan – Fly

Extended Days – Deep Magic (Brighter Days Remix)

Futurecop! – Maladaptive Daydreaming

Grant Olney – Who You Are For Me

Jake Bellows – I Know You

Kanye West – On Sight (Its Overture Bootleg)

Miguel – Sure Thing (Quasimo Remix)

Motorama – To the South

Movement – Feel Real (Morgan Geist Remix)

Plump DJs – Son of a Gun

Psychic Twin – Unlock Yr Heart

Speedwell – Calling On Columbia Pike

Vial of Sound – A Lifetime Passed

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 6-19-13

Have you ever had to deal with the unfortunate tragedy of spilling a beverage on your laptop? Unfortunately, for the first time in my life, I’m learning that lesson right now. My normal laptop is out of commission for at least 24 hours, meaning that I’m going to do my best to continue to operate the site like normal, but if things get a little slow, delayed or nonexistent for a couple days please bear with me. I’m typing this on a borrowed laptop, so I should probably be quick about it. I don’t think the hard drive on my now waterlogged laptop is fried, but I may have a couple of smaller problems to deal with once things have dried out. I may have more details on that in the coming days, we’ll see. For now, please enjoy this Wednesday edition of Pick Your Poison. Key tracks today come from About group, Frank Lenz, Jessica Hernandez & the Deltas, Metals, The Toxic Avenger and Yassou Benedict. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new stuff from Blouse, Brendan Benson, Drake, Duck Sauce, MY BODY and Sophie.

360 – Killer

About Group – Walk On By

The Bangerz – Legends Never Die

Cameron the Public – Apple Pie

Frank Lenz – Pentasynth

Gentlemen Hall – Sail Into the Sun (RAC Remix)

Havilah Tower – Out to Sea

Jessica Hernandez & the Deltas – Gone in Two Seconds

Kill the Captains – Disco Nazi

Metals – That Ain’t Real Love

Niv Ast – Goodbye

Sinden Presents the Crystal System – Step Back

The Toxic Avenger – Romance & Cigarettes (Edit)

Yassou Benedict – The Cloisters

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 6-18-13

Two of my favorite albums from 2013 so far get released today. I’m not going to mention which ones specifically, and instead I’m just going to give you a full list of artists and you can make your own assumptions/decisions on what to pick up this week based on that. So then, here’s what artists are releasing new records this week: Austra, Hospital Ships, Kanye West, The Mantles, Midnight Faces, The Mowgli’s, Primal Scream, Quasimoto, Saint Motel, Sigur Ros, Spectrals, Tunng, and Valient Thorr. So yeah, there’s definitely something out there for everyone this week, including, as I mentioned, a couple of key releases. Shouldn’t be too hard to figure out which ones. Should full albums not be your thing, or perhaps just none of this appeals to you, there’s always some single songs via the mp3s below as part of today’s Pick Your Poison. Allow me to recommend cuts from Admirers, A Grave With No Name, Bells Atlas, Emperors, Garrett Kato and Lust for Youth. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Deer Tick, DeLooze, Glass Animals, Lolo, Pond and Ski Lodge.

Admirers – Spirit Lamp

A Grave With No Name – Dig Me Out

Aleos – Frogs

Atlas Genius – If So (TheFatRat Remix)

Bells Atlas – Kazoo

Casey Black – Dig Together (ft. Inara George)

Emperors – Be Ready When I Say Go

Frida Sundemo – A Million Years

Garrett Kato – Hipster Kids

Ghostpoet – Meltdown (Squarepusher vs. Ghostpoet Remix)

Lust for Youth – Vibrant Brother

M + A – When

TECHNICULT – Ghosts

Walking Shapes – Pusher

Pick Your Poison: Monday 6-17-13

What a weekend for Kanye West. I’m not the sort of person that soaks up gossip and reports it to people like it’s news, but when you had as crazy of a weekend as Kanye did, it’s basically reported everywhere. First, in advance of its Tuesday release date, Kanye’s new album Yeezus leaked, and people freaked out. Prior to it leaking, nobody had heard a single proper studio version of any of the songs set to appear on the album. In fact, the track listing wasn’t even officially revealed until last week. It was a project shrouded in mystery, only truly gaining interest and traction because Kanye kept performing songs from it in various live settings, be it at a festival show or on Saturday Night Live. Then there were video projections at cities all around the world that showed different Kanye videos and played different songs depending on the location and such. That happened again over the weekend in addition to the album leaking. Some musicians say that each new album or new song is like a brand new baby birthed into this world, and you want to love and protect it until the day you die. Funny then that the day after his album leaks, Kim Kardashian has her baby. In case you’ve been living under a rock, Kanye is the father of that baby. There’s been no word on a name yet, but most everyone suspects it’s going to start with the letter “K”. Personally I think that at least part of that baby girl’s name is going to be Donda, as a tribute to Kanye’s somewhat recently deceased mother. Needless to say, Father’s Day on Sunday held extra special meaning for Kanye West. He probably went out and bought himself a “World’s Greatest Dad” mug, upon observing that it was clearly intended for him. So yeah, I wish him all the luck in the world with fatherhood and I suppose with his music career. The guy may be completely full of himself and the farthest thing from a good father and role model, but he’s got undeniable talent, which I guess…makes it okay to overlook his faults? I don’t know. Let’s just get to today’s Pick Your Poison. I’m happy to recommend tracks from BEACH, Brian Irving, Esmerine, Irontom, Junior Astronomers, Kitty, Kyle Andrews and The Mallard. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Bendik, Dornik, M.I.A., Schoolboy Q (ft. Kendrick Lamar) and Soft Metals.

The Bangerz – Beam

BEACH – Love Was A River

Brian Irving – Eyes Wide

Esmerine – Translator’s Clos Part II (Edit)

Frank Rabeyrolles – Poets and Walls (Demo)

Irontom – What Will Happen to All the Indie Stars

Junior Astronomers – Touching War

Kitty – Barbie Jeep

Kyle Andrews – Crystal Ball

Lana Del Rey – Young & Beautiful (Unlike Pluto Remix)

Love Inks – Skeleton Key (RUN DMT Remix)

The Mallard – Crystals & Candles

MASS:LIGHT – Motherfuckers

Selebrities – Temporary Touch (Rush Midnight Remix)

Warships – Heater

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 6-13-13

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:

YouTube Audio Stream: No Age – C’mon Stimmung

The long list of Canadian artists nominated for the 2013 Polaris Music Prize has been unveiled

Music Video: These New Puritans – Fragment Two

The band Fucked Up has been given two special breakfast platters on the menu of the Toronto restaurant Sneaky Dees

Music Video: AlunaGeorge – You Know You Like It

Read Kanye West’s extended interview with the NY Times

Music Video: Polica – Tiff (ft. Justin Vernon)

Lyric Video: Washed Out – It All Feels Right

Music Video: The Lonely Island – Go Kindergarten (ft. Robyn, Diddy and Paul Rudd)

YouTube Audio Stream: Neko Case – Man

Once you’ve made it through that pile of distraction, let me offer another pile of them. Today’s key songs to watch out for come from Belladonna, Deadstring Brothers, Elusive Parallelograms, The Pharmacy and Solblomma. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Celestial Shore, Hooded Fang, Lone, Maps and Painted Palms.

Back Back Forward Punch – Don’t Stop Now

Belladonna – In My Demons’ Name

Bingo Players – Devotion (Stanton Sessions 4 Re-Thump)

BRTSH KNIGHTS – Hazed (Mono Poly Remix)

Cadien – A Million Little Pieces (Futurizm Remix)

Deadstring Brothers – Like A California Wildfire

Ducky – Air (Day Version)

Elusive Parallelograms – 8-Bit

Marika Hackman – Bath Is Black (Hackman Remix)

Mortar and Pestle – Lighthouse (Kraddy Remix)

The Pharmacy – Baby Be

Sixfingerz – Rhode Island

Smash the Box – Addicted (Darc Marc Remix Dub)

Solblomma – (COme Count The) SHEEP (With Me)

Show Review: Japandroids + Crocodiles [Metro; Chicago; 6/11/13]


Japandroids like to refer to themselves as a touring band. They’ve said in many an interview that if they could get away with it, they’d simply tour all the time and never actually record new albums. As such, in the last year since the release of their second record Celebration Rock, they’ve been around the world and back a couple times. They’ve played shows in Chicago at least three, if not four times in the last 365 days and show no signs of slowing down. Crowds love the band, and in turn the band loves the crowds. Their albums purposely sound like their live performances, because they design them that way to achieve maximum quality control. A Japandroids show at this point has become less of a concert and more of an event. You don’t just go to a Japandroids show, you experience it, and that requires preparation. They’re such a thrilling live act, especially for a duo, that they can sell out the 1,100 capacity Metro well in advance, even though they already came through town a few months earlier. The people that love this band truly LOVE them, and their dedication shows when they turn up in force time and time again.


Before getting to the intense and dynamic show that Japandroids put on this hot summer night in mid-June, I want to turn the attention to the band that opened the show, Crocodiles. If you’ve never heard a Crocodiles song before, you’re missing out on one of the great lo-fi, garage rock revivalist bands of this current era. That’s intended to be a compliment, however this band hasn’t exactly won the affection of a lot of critics as they draw unfavorable comparisons to The Jesus and Mary Chain and Echo & the Bunnymen. The basic reaction from many seems to be that they’re a one trick pony who have found their sound and plan to stick with it, each new album providing slight variations on the same melodies. It’s not hard to agree with that sentiment, however the real truth is that this band has been refining and focusing their talents with each new album on a quest to be the best at what they do. Their situation (and sound, actually) remind me a lot of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, another band that’s been critically misunderstood over the years, but who have managed to establish a strong, loyal fan base anyways. We can’t help what attracts us to a particular sound, even when we know plenty of others will disagree with us. While I’ve heard their first three albums as well as their fourth coming out in August and can definitely verify that they keep getting better on record, what I can’t tell you is if the same thing is true for their live shows. This was my first time seeing Crocodiles perform live, and in that regard I can proclaim it a rousing success. The band sounds absolutely great, not only accurately recreating the sound of their records, but doing so with additional energy and aplomb. The four guys on stage appeared to be having a good time, and with a set that featured old favorites and a couple of intense new ones, the crowd seemed to soak in that same vibe. While most were undoubtedly there to see Japandroids, there were some that already knew what Crocodiles was capable of and wanted to make sure they were present for that set as well. Those such as myself who had never seen them before but had heard good things were pleasantly surprised at how accurate the rumors truly were. These guys remain a band to keep an eye on, with the thought that maybe sometime soon they’ll be able to sell out a venue like Metro all by themselves.

Buy Crocodiles’ Endless Flowers


The first thing I realized when watching Japandroids launch into their song “Adrenaline Nightshift” at the start of their set was that this would mark the very first time I’ve ever seen the band perform a full set. I’d seen them three times prior to this, but each took place at a music festival or radio session, meaning they had limited time and could essentially only play half-sets. Granted, those 45-minute half-sets were really damn good, but suddenly now that they’ve got 90+ minutes to do whatever they’d like the focus automatically turns away from the immediate new album concerns and instead towards the breadth of their seemingly small catalogue. But despite the fact that they’ve only got two full lengths to their names, they made sure to give each one its due while also tossing in non-album cuts and covers to keep it spicy. So while there was “Heart Sweats” and “Wet Hair” off the Post-Nothing record (those song titles also describe how the band and crowd would feel by the end), there was the great inclusion of “Art Czars” and the brief reference back to “Press Corps” off the band’s little-known 2007 EP All Lies which also later appeared on the Japandroids compilation No Singles. So there was quite a bit of diversity in the set list, with the requisite Celebration Rock cuts like “The Nights of Wine and Roses” and “The House That Heaven Built” fitting right in next to “Rockers East Vancouver” and such.

As great as it is to see a crowd sing and sometimes shout along with the band, the set list itself didn’t matter nearly as much as the band’s blitzkrieg approach in their live shows. See, the duo of Brian King and David Prowse make a whole lot of noise and perform with a whole lot of force to the point where you refuse to believe that they didn’t leave everything out there on the stage that night. No wonder they love performing so much, because the crowds soak it up like what they’re doing is magic. In many ways it is, because so few bands play with such intensity and vigor. Well, maybe passion is the right word to use. How anyone can get excited about performing almost the same set of songs night after night is a mystery to me, but in the end it probably has more to do with the fans than anything else. They want to make sure that when you walk away from their show, you’re going to have a lasting memory of it etched into your brain. Hopefully all the moshing and other intense movements the crowd was doing for most of the show didn’t give anyone brain damage (though if you ask me, if you’re in a mosh pit your brain might already be damaged). Normally those sorts of things are frowned upon at shows, but as King himself yelled at the start of the set, “Tonight there are no rules!” There were even a couple of people that climbed over the barricade and took stage dives, because I’m sure the band is used to it by now. Overall it wound up being a crazy yet incredible evening of live music, and one I certainly won’t soon forget. If you have the chance to see either Japandroids or Crocodiles perform live, jump at the opportunity, for the very reasons I just described.

Buy Japandroids’ Celebration Rock

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 6-12-13

Chicago is great. I love my city, probably in the same way that you’re passionate about a place that you’ve lived for the majority of your life. You probably wouldn’t have lived there for so long unless you liked it…or your parents forced you into it during your childhood. Anyways, What I was getting at about Chicago is how incredible it is when one of our sports teams does well and suddenly “fans” start to come out of the woodwork and claiming they’ve been supporting the team all along. Sure you have, just because you watched a part of that game that one time because the bar you were at had it on. But yes, it seems the fairweather fans have descended for the rest of the NHL season now that the Blackhawks are in the running for the Stanley Cup. Nevermind the fact that I’ve spent quite a bit of time cheering for the team this season straight from its abbreviated post-strike start at the beginning of 2013. But this also isn’t a sports blog, and I don’t like using this time to complain. But I bring this up because in the middle of one of the longest games in Stanley Cup history earlier tonight, something amazing was announced that relates to music in Chicago. Okay, and Denver and Toronto too. What is this amazingness I speak of? Well, it seems that The Replacements are officially back, and have announced three shows that will be among their first in 22 years. All three of the currently announced shows will be in the form of headlining slots at all three Riot Fests taking place in 2013 in the cities I’ve just mentioned. The Toronto Riot Fest takes place August 24-25, the Chicago version takes place September 13-15 and the Denver ones goes from September 21-22. As a life-long Chicagoan, of course I’m most excited about that show. Chicago is also a notable place in the history of The Replacements, because the band officially broke up on July 4, 1991 in the middle of a show at the Taste of Chicago. So now they’ll be making a grand return, and suddenly my Twitter feed deviated from hockey commentary for a bit to report the exciting news. As for the lineup of The Replacements, at this point it’s going to be Paul Westerberg and Tommy Stinson, and the rest of the band will be announced later. Want to hear something even better? Before the festival kicks off in mid-September, I’ll be giving away a pair of 3-day passes to this year’s Riot Fest in Chicago. Beyond The Replacements you’ll be able to see the Violent Femmes, Blondie, Rancid, Public Enemy, Guided By Voices, The Dismemberment Plan, Dinosaur Jr. and many more. Tickets can currently be purchased for either $150 for a regular 3-day pass or $250 for a VIP 3-day pass. It wouldn’t surprise me if the festival sold out this year, and rumor has it single day ticket sales are on the way too. But yes, if going to this festival for 3 days in mid-September in Chicago sounds like a great plan to you, keep an eye on this site for your chance to win some free passes. Now then, let’s get to today’s Pick Your Poison. There’s some strong tracks in the set today from Holley Maher, Inch Chua, Joey Bada$$, Leftover Cutues, Missing Monuments, Run the Jewels (Killer Mike + El-P) and Speedy Ortiz. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Arp, Freddie Gibbs, Smith Westerns and Zero 7’s remix of Ultraista.

Caged Animals – Cindy + Me (Billy Dub Remix)

Glitches – Only Time Will Tell (Tom of We Have Band Remix)

Havilah Tower – Out to Sea

Holley Maher – Whispered Words

Inch Chua – Artful Dodger

Joey Bada$$ – 95 Til Infinity

Kris Menace & Douze – Wall of Love

Leftover Cuties – One Heart

Maps – A.M.A. (Susanne Sundfor Remix)

Missing Monuments – Answer the Call

NOVI – Make A Scene

Run the Jewels – 36″ Chain

Shine 2009 – Eurozone (CFCF Remix)

Speedy Ortiz – No Below

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 6-11-13

Marcia, Marcia, Marcia! Er, I mean Tuesday, Tuesday, Tuesday! Yes, we’ve hit that magical day of the week where the new albums come out in America. As a service to those of you that might not pay so close attention to the release calendar, I’m pleased to provide you with a list of artists releasing new material this week. That said, be on the look out for new records from Black Sabbath, Boards of Canada, Braids, CSS, Date Palms, Dead Meadow, Disclosure, Giant Sand, Jan St. Werner, Jason Isbell, John Vanderslice, Joseph Arthur, The Lonely Island, Piano Magic, Sonny and the Sunsets, Strangers Family Band, Superhumanoids (featured in the Soundcloud section below!), Surfer Blood and WhoaBear. There’s a couple of solid contenders in there, Boards of Canada and Disclosure in particular among them. But if you want to go beyond what’s simply out this week and take a look at all the new songs you can pick up for free today, look no further than right below. I’m happy to recommend tracks from Blake Hazard, Detroit Rebellion, This Frontier Needs Heroes, Future Loves Past, Hunx & His Punx, Ursa Minor and You Me & Us. In the Soundcloud section, stream new songs from Gogol Bordello, Run the Jewels (El-P and Killer Mike), Ryan POwer and Serengeti.

Blake Hazard – Weekends Are For Amateurs

Bonnie Whitmore – Too Much Too Soon

Detroit Rebellion – Some of the Time (Some Other Time)

Escort – Barbarians (CSS Remix)

This Frontier Needs Heroes – George Clooney

Future Loves Past – Grow Up Tall

Hunx & His Punx – Bad Skin

Keep Shelly in Athens – Madmen Love (Braxton/Palmer Remix)

Lid Emba – Daniel’s Wired Mercy

The Noise Figures – A Black Dog

TOTEM. – In & Out

Trails and Ways – Tereza

Ursa Minor – Hurt

You Me & Us – Swim or Sink

Pick Your Poison: Monday 6-10-13

Sometimes you don’t know what you’ve got ’til it’s gone. Many wise men have said that before, and I’m sure they will say it again as the years continue to pass. There’s another phrase that applies to this introduction as well, and that is, “Absence makes the heart grow fonder.” Part of me suspects that’s why Broken Social Scene went on “indefinite hiatus” a couple years back. For many, the use of the “indefinite hiatus” tag effectively means the band has broken up but they won’t rule out reuniting sometime in the future. For BSS, I think that everyone still likes each other, they’d just like to spend some time working on other things. For band frontman Kevin Drew, that means putting out two solo records this year, one being a collaborative effort with songwriter Andy Kim. For guitarist and sometimes vocalist Brendan Canning, he’s re-formed his old band Cookie Duster, and is also working on scoring the soundtrack to the forthcoming Lindsay Lohan b-movie The Canyons. Most everyone else in the loose collection of friends they called a band could either be considered faceless or have other more main projects such as Apostle of Hustle and Do Make Say Think. That, and the main women of Broken Social Scene, who spent the last few years of the band’s existence tending to their own ever-expanding success in bands like Stars and Metric or simply Feist, are still going in remarkably impressive fashion. Perhaps the thing I’ll remember about BSS is the first time I saw them perform live, at Lollapalooza 2006. That was the only time (and one of the last times) that all members of the band were there, and their total numbers ranged somewhere around 20. The trio of Millan, Haines and Feist did “Anthems for a Seventeen Year Old Girl,” among others, and I had goosebumps. Then when the band was supposed to end their set due to time restrictions, they chose to continue onwards and keep playing in spite of that night’s headliner starting at a stage not very far away. At some point there was a rush of adrenaline and zealous enthusiasm when Kevin Drew asked the crowd to scream at the top of their lungs to express the joy we’re feeling simply at being alive and in that very moment. And it was one of my favorite shows that I’ve ever seen. Perhaps that’s why I just recounted it. A 2008 Lollapalooza attempt to recreate those moments with far fewer personnel was a nice effort but overall disappointing. Once you’ve seen the real deal full band, nothing else quite compares. But back to the hiatus. I think it was about time for the band to take a break, and perhaps to re-think their strategy moving forwards. Yet when BSS popped up for the first time in a couple years via a performance on “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” last week, I couldn’t help but feel that tingle in my spine once more thanks to the performance of classics like “Almost Crimes” and “7/4 Shoreline” with Feist. Then thanks to the Arts & Crafts label putting together the Field Trip Music & Arts Festival in Toronto over the weekend, the band performed their 2003 classic You Forgot It In People in full, along with some other key songs throughout the band’s existence. What I would have paid to have seen that. Thanks to the magic of the internet, we kind of can. Here’s the band performing “KC Accidental” and “Lover’s Spit” live at the festival. Great stuff, and I hope this brief reunion inspires the band to do a full You Forgot It In People tour in the next couple years. Come back, Broken Social Scene, and try to get everyone to come with you for at least one more memorial tour. I’d love it. Anyways, speaking of things to love, Pick Your Poison has you covered with some new tracks today. Don’t miss songs from The Blank Tapes, Can’t Dance, The Julie Ruin, Lake Isle, Potty Mouth and White Dove. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Coma Cinema, King Khan & the Shrines, Modern Hut, Owen, Thundercat and TOY with Natasha Khan (Bat for Lashes).

Ain’t No Love – Renegade (Penny Raider Remix)

The Blank Tapes – Don’t Ever Get Old

Can’t Dance – Trust Issues

Caravan Palace – Clash (Jupiter Remix)

Coastal Cities – Entropic (Dorian & the Dawn Riders Remix)

DoubleDownNation – Nico Said

Fenech-Soler – Magnetic (Sane Beats Remix)

Johansy – Castles

The Julie Ruin – Oh Come On

Lake Isle – Blue Angel

Potty Mouth – The Spins

Teenage Mothers – Mother Satan

We Are Temporary – Hurt

White Dove – Cold Mountain

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