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Snapshot Review: Yeasayer – Fragrant World [Secretly Canadian]



As a general rule, you could well say that whenever the lead singer of a band starts picking fights with random people and things in interviews, it’s a sign of trouble. That doesn’t always mean an epic war of words between two or more parties. More often than not it’s a cry for attention, the idea of saying something inflammatory to get your name in the press because it might not be there otherwise. Billy Corgan has been pulling this trick for decades, and it’s kept the Smashing Pumpkins on people’s minds even during the last decade when they were churning out loads of crap. Which brings us to Yeasayer’s Chris Keating. Chatting with Rolling Stone about the band’s new album Fragrant World, he openly insulted R. Kelly and the current state of EDM (electronic dance music). And while he complimented Frank Ocean’s excellent work in the R&B genre, he capped it off by saying the genre should “gay it up a little,” referencing Ocean’s bisexuality. Of course he’s still better off than Surfer Blood frontman John Paul Pitts, who is dealing with a much more serious situation right now. But Keating’s comments are helpful because they give the band headlines while distracting from reviews of their new record. If your album is good, the attention will find you even if you don’t open your mouth. So yes, pulling a quote stunt like he did feels like an act of pre-release desperation. Hearing the first two Yeasayer albums All Hour Cymbals and Odd Blood, you might imagine that such a talented band with a great ability to avoid being confined to a particular label or genre would continue to flourish. Unfortunately their unique mixture of freak folk and psych-pop has been brushed off in favor of something decidedly more minimalist and dark. Arrangements are no longer packed with an array of colorful instruments, instead synths and electronic beats seem to be the two driving forces on their songs. Sometimes, as in the chorus of “Fingers Never Bleed,” it brings out a very ’80s R&B vibe that wouldn’t sound too out of place on a Janet Jackson record. Other times it can sound like Chromatics filtered through the lens of The xx, as on “Damaged Goods.” That might make it seem like there’s a reasonable amount of variety across the album, as with the previous two Yeasayer long players. Actually, Fragrant World is the most cohesive and sonically solid record the band has ever made.

It’s a shame then that these are also the most uninteresting and unremarkable songs they’ve ever created as well. Even if you have the patience to listen through the whole thing a half dozen times, it’s unlikely you’ll come across many tracks that distinguish themselves from the pack and actually stay with you. The album’s midsection of “Devil and the Deed,” “No Bones” and “Reagan’s Skeleton” do the best jobs of being reasonably catchy and memorable. As much as they do right, they also just sort of drop off without trying anything truly new or different. There aren’t any twists in spots where there should be, and it feels like something’s missing as a result. The shift away from fuller and more complex arrangements also brings the band’s lyrics into a greater spotlight than ever before. Anyone that’s paid close attention to their last two albums knows Yeasayer aren’t the most prolific songwriters. Their skillfully crafted songs have gone a long way towards covering that problem up. Now pushed to the surface, the words are just another way the band stumbles and falls. It might be a little more forgivable if they had kept some of the uplifting and inspiring themes of their last couple records. Unfortunately much of the new album is about death and darkness, so if the bass-heavy melodies don’t bring you down then the lyrics probably will. “My girl says that all the rain promises is to give life to the seeds/Live in the moment/Never count on longevity,” Keating sings on “Longevity.” While it’s probably not intended that way, you could imagine those lines being mirrored back at the band and their career so far. While it’s admirable that they’re not content to sit still and fully commit to a certain style or genre of music for very long, it could also spell trouble for them if they make one too many wrong moves. Fragrant World may be the start of that inevitable downfall, or it could be a small misstep in an otherwise strong career in music. For the sakes of everyone, let’s hope it’s the latter.

Yeasayer – Henrietta

Buy Fragrant World from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 8-20-12

Last Thursday I talked briefly about the Russian punk band Pussy Riot and the legal situation they were facing in court. Well as you may have heard, on Friday the band was found guilty of “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred,” and all three members were sentenced to two years in prison. While many artists, celebrities and important figures have gone on record supporting the band and their actions, the Russian government isn’t about to change their minds. In fact, word today is that they’re busy searching for other members of the band, hoping to arrest them and charge them with the same crime. There are apparently 10 total members of Pussy Riot, so the three that have been convicted and sentenced are only a small part of their whole. In fact, after the sentencing on Friday, the band released a new song called “Putin Lights Up the Fires”. There were also “Free Pussy Riot” rallys held around the globe on Friday to show support for the band. While none of this will probably help the three women whose sentences have already been decided, hopefully such an outpouring of support and protest can help bring about some real changes and discussion about the topics of freedom and religion and feminism across the globe. Okay, I’ve gone over this enough for now, and it’s a heavier topic than I’d like for these Pick Your Poison posts. This is about discovering new music, not incarcerating someone because of it. So please enjoy tracks from Ab-Soul, DaVinci (with Freddie Gibbs), Holmes, The Pauses and Silent Rider. In the Soundcloud section Amateur Best and Deerhoof have new tracks up for streaming, and Peter Bjorn & John’s remix of Norah Jones is a surprising delight for many reasons.

Ab-Soul – Nibiru

Bjork – Mutual Core (The Adamski Kid Remix)

DaVinci – MYOB (ft. Freddie Gibbs)

Dinowalrus – Grounded

Donnis – Absolutely (ft. IAMSU & Jay Ant)

Eli & Fur – Tonight (Jimmy Edgar Remix)

Four Rounds & The Sound – Nothing But Time

Holmes – Stereo

How to Dress Well – Again (Janet Jackson cover)

Jaggery – No Sympathy

Natural Child – B$G P$MP$N

The Pauses – The Beginning of Things

Qualms – Pressure

Silent Rider – Beggar

Zucchini Drive – Howler Than Thou

SOUNDCLOUD

Amateur Best – Ready For The Good Life

Deerhoof – Fête d’Adieu

I Am Giant – Purple Heart

Milkman – Neon Eyes (Original Mix)

The National Rifle – Coke Beat

Norah Jones – Miriam (Peter Bjorn & John Remix)

Pick Your Poison: Friday 8-17-12

Every now and then you need one of those weekends where you can just spend some quiet times with friends and not have to worry about going places or doing much. Sit back and relax on the couch with a beverage and enjoy shutting the world out. That sounds like a great idea to me, and so I think that’s what I’ll be doing all weekend. You should join me in doing the same. I’m not inviting you all over to my place, but we’ll each spend time in our respective places without a care in the world. If you have a second and are so inclined though, a quick click of the “Like” button on this site’s Facebook page would be very much appreciated. I promise not to spam you at all or clog up your Facebook News Feed. I’m a respectful Facebook user and I hope you are too. Now let me get to today’s Pick Your Poison. Solid set of songs today, in particular from The Dandelion War, Dan Melchior, Franz Nicolay (formerly of The Hold Steady), GRMLN, Karlie Bruce, Lonely Drifter Karen, More Amor and TEEN. In the Soundcloud section there’s streaming goodness from He’s My Brother She’s My Sister, King Krule and Neon Hitch. Have a great weekend!

The Dandelion War – Drifters

Dan Melchior – All the Clocks

Delicate Steve – Afria Talks to You (Oorutaichi Remix)

Franz Nicolay – Did Your Broken Heart Make You Who You Are?

GRMLN – Coral

Jay Rock – YOLA

Karlie Bruce – Paperback Lover

Lonely Drifter Karen – Comet

Marenberg Kollektiv – Sun Goes Down

Minta & the Brook Trout – From the Ground

More Amor – Heart

Nick Ferrio & His Feelings – Popular Flower

Squadda B – Love U

TEEN – Unable

Tesla Boy – Fantasy (SoundSAM Remix)

Tilly & the Wall – Love Riot (Cycad Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

AJ Edwards – Let Down Your Guard

Dan Croll – From Nowhere

The Fades – Be Your Man

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister – Electric Love

King Krule – Rock Bottom

Neon Hitch ft. Tyga – Gold

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 8-16-12

So there’s a Russian punk band known as Pussy Riot. I hope you’ve heard of them, especially since they’ve been attracting a lot of attention worldwide because they’re in trouble with the Russian government. Here’s what happened. The three members of the band held a performance on February 21st at Moscow’s Christ the Saviour Cathedral during which they shouted, “Virgin Mary, Mother of God, become a feminist!” and “Put Putin out!” while raising their fists into the air. The whole thing lasted under a minute and had political protest intentions. Now the government maintains the band tried to offend the Orthodox Christian community, so last March they threw them in jail on charges of “hooliganism.” They’ve remained in captivity since then, and in recent weeks have finally been to court for a full trial. Final arguments have been made, and tomorrow we will find out if these three women will serve any time in prison. Amnesty International has gotten involved, warning that if they are sentenced to prison they could wind up in labor camps where they will face mental, physical and sexual abuse. In other words, this isn’t a good situation. I hope you’ll learn more about what’s happening and try to help in whatever way possible. Go here for the latest information and to find out what you can do. Okay, with that bit of music and politics out of the way, let’s talk about today’s Pick Your Poison. I’ll give gold star points to downloads from all boy/all girl, Heems, Keel Her, Piney Gir, Rubblebucket, The Soft Moon and Spook Houses. In the Soundcloud section, don’t miss streaming tracks from Brother Ali, Rangda, and The Sea and Cake.

all boy/all girl – Summertime

Cultfever – Knew You Well (Eight Bit Tiger Remix)

Dr. Beat – FormulaMarzAgain

Hauschka – Radar (Michael Mayer Remix)

Heems – Killing Time

The Interns – Shudddup

Keel Her – Prize Catch

Piney Gir – Outta Sight

Public Enemy – Harder Than You Think (Featurecast Remix)

Romans – Somedays

Rubblebucket – (Focus) Oversaturated

sean0sean – Don’t You Worry About A Thing

Shawn Lee – Black Hole

The Soft Moon – Die Life

Spook Houses – Bad Sound

XOV – Tomorrow Is My Day

SOUNDCLOUD

Beast Patrol – Plaster

Brother Ali – Mourning in America

Groundislava – Suicide Mission (ft. Baths)

Japanese Moon – I Wanna Be Adored (Stone Roses cover)

Rangda – Majnun

The Sea and Cake – On and On

Album Review: Bloc Party – Four [Frenchkiss]



It’s been four years since Bloc Party released their last album Intimacy, and a couple things have happened since then. Frontman Kele Okereke took the more electronica leanings of Intimacy and explored them fully on his own with his 2010 solo album The Boxer. The response from critics and the general public was largely mixed, but in spite of that there were suggestions Bloc Party might not return or would return but with a different singer. Okereke recounted in an interview how he observed all the other guys in the band entering a rehearsal space without him, getting him worried they might be continuing on without him. That was quickly followed by a comment from guitarist Russell Lissack saying they wanted to make new music and decided to have a few jam sessions without the very busy Okereke to try and figure out where they wanted to go next. Hours after it was reported that the future of Bloc Party might be in jeopardy, a post appeared on the band’s website denying that any lineup changes were happening. Now nearly a year later, they’re back with everyone intact and a new full length, Four. If you think they’re going to pick right back up where they left off though, you don’t know Bloc Party.

By calling their album Four, Bloc Party are reminding us of a few things. First and foremost, there are four members of the band. Secondly, it’s been four years since their last album. And thirdly, this is their fourth album of original material. There’s probably a fourth point, just to keep the whole number theme going, but exactly what that is could be considered open for debate. More important than any number games though are the songs themselves. The electronica leanings of Intimacy? They’re almost completely gone. In some respects, so are the dance rock leanings of their first two records Silent Alarm and A Weekend in the City. They’ve been there and done that, more often than not with mixed results. Dance rock mostly died off years ago, and the electronica scene is dominated by dubstep, which isn’t such a good idea for a full band to try (see: new Muse). So for a band that’s made their name on those sounds, what’s the next step on the evolutionary chain? Take what you’ve got and use it to the fullest. Say hello to Bloc Party: alternative rock band.

Four opens with an element that a lot of bands try when they’re trying to sound raw and underproduced – they insert some “sounds of the studio.” In this particular case a comparison can be drawn to the beginning of Radiohead’s Hail to the Thief, where you’re greeted with the sound of a guitar being plugged into an amp. That was to signify their move away from the electronic-based textures of Kid A and Amnesiac and their return to more guitar-based rock. Bloc Party are making a similar move, which is why you hear some guitar scrapes amid a snippet of dialogue before the band launches into “So He Begins to Lie.” The effect is not nearly the same however, especially since Bloc Party are coming off a streak of increasingly mediocre records. While you’d expect their return to rock music to perhaps reinvigorate their creativity like it did early in their careers, they trip and fall right out of the gate. “So He Begins to Lie” has some angularly heavy guitars that wind up sounding like a mixture of 311 and early Muse. There’s nothing particularly inspiring about it, as it’s missing a brisker pace and a hook that genuinely grabs your attention. First tracks are designed to suck the listener in and make them want more, but this comes off sounding like a Silent Alarm b-side.

When Four truly begins is with “3×3,” a very meaty and metal-inspired track that races with fury matched by a heroic vocal performance from Okereke. The bridge, with a whispered “no means no” building to a cathartic scream of “Yes!” makes for one of the album’s early highlights. Okereke also does great work on “Kettling,” his voice cutting like a hot knife through the dirge of what feels like a cross between The Smashing Pumpkins and Stone Temple Pilots. But his singing aside, much of the record actually does seem like a collection of influences from the ’90s and early ’00s. The acoustic guitar first half of “Coliseum” is an almost blatant rip-off of one-hit wonders Days of the New, with the nightmareish punk-metal second half might best be classified as Arctic Monkeys with a Metallica twist. Soundgarden are channeled on the album closing “We Are Not Good People,” in what might be the most intense and loud songs Bloc Party have ever made. That doesn’t make it good however, because what Four really suffers from is an identity crisis.

Mixed between all the heavy stuff are softer songs and the lighter dance numbers that bear the familiar markings of the earliest and best Bloc Party material. Four‘s first single is “Octopus,” a track that seems designed in every way to convince you that the band you know and love is back. The jittery guitar riff that’s the basis of the song feels eerily reminiscent of Portishead’s “Machine Gun,” and while it’s ripe for remixing, it doesn’t quite have a high enough BPM rate to make it dance-worthy on its own. The chorus isn’t as instantly memorable as some of the band’s greatest hits either, likely leading to its inability to gain the massive sort of popularity the band wants and needs right now. By contrast, “Team A” does have the energy and instrumental groundwork to succeed, but it sorely lacks transitions and an actual chorus. Where the band fares best are in the moments when they don’t come off like they’re trying too hard. “Day Four” may fall somewhere in between The Temper Trap and Minus the Bear with its stylistic references, but it’s a genuinely beautiful and heartfelt moment that recalls a Bloc Party classic like “Blue Light” and nearly lives up to its high bar. Fans of “This Modern Love” can probably find plenty to love about “Truth,” which is one of the few moments where it seems like the band is being honest with us about who they are. If only the record’s other ballads “Real Talk” and “The Healing” were as creative and interesting.

The one trump card that Bloc Party unleash on Four is “V.A.L.I.S.” It might not be a barn burner equivalent to say “Banquet” or “Helicopter,” but it’s an intelligently crafted, catchy song with a healthy bounce to it. That foundation is really the basis for what made Bloc Party such a well-respected band in the first place. The off-kilter guitar work of Russell Lissack and driving drum hits of Matt Tong are at the heart of what makes the band great, and not using either to the best of their abilities as on Intimacy causes the overall results to suffer. For this album, Lissack is relegated to loud and heavy riffs instead of punchy hand-picked creativity, while Tong exercises brute force trying mostly to keep up with everything going on around him. The record’s unsettled variety pack of styles doesn’t do them many favors either. In other words, Bloc Party sound lost. Perhaps they made the conscious decision to throw a bunch of things at a wall to see what would stick. While it is nice to hear them taking some real risks, it’d be even better if they would jump in with both feet instead of dipping a toe in the water. Hopefully their next one will do exactly that, even if it is unlike anything we’ve heard them try before.

Buy Four from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 8-15-12

Every now and then I like to cater to my fellow Chicagoans by mentioning an important show or two happening in town. In this case the show holds special significance, as it’s all great Chicago bands playing at a great Chicago venue. This Friday at Empty Bottle, Football, Outer Minds and Mannequin Men are on the bill. They’re three of the city’s more prominent live acts, and I’ve either seen or heard great things about all of them. For Mannequin Men in particular this could be their last show for awhile, as bassist Miles Raymer is leaving the band to pursue other interests. He will be missed, so come out and give him a proper farewell at the show. Tickets are $8 in advance and $10 the day of the show. You can buy them here. Please also enjoy the mp3 from Mannequin Men below. I also recommend downloading tracks from Attaque, Blonde Summer, Cold Showers, Death Rattle, Dirty Beaches, The Mommyheads and Riverboat Gamblers.

Amicus – Goodbye

Arc in Round – Said Astray (Void Edit by Benoit Pioulard)

Attaque – Intensify

Blonde Summer – Robots on Command

Cold Showers – BC

Death Rattle – The Dig

Decomposure – Readymade

Dirty Beaches – Elizabeth’s Theme

Feist – Graveyard (TRUST Remix)

Gaytheist – I’m Procrastinate and I Vote

Mannequin Men – What’s Your Favourite Colour?

The Mommyheads – Right Where They Should Be

OLGWI – Magic

Riverboat Gamblers – Good Veins

Tussle – Yume No Mori (Alexander Hacke Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

AnimalZOO – 1000 Spacecolours

Barny Carter – Castel

Kids With Teeth – Hell Hole

LexiconDon – Burn

My Preserver – You Know Something That I Don’t Know

Slowolf – See U In My Dreams

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 8-14-12

It’s a surprisingly quiet week for new album releases, and in fact I think the last few weeks have been. With Animal Collective and Grizzly Bear both coming up quite soon though, don’t expect this lull to last very long. For now though, here’s your weekly listing of artists that have new material out this week. Look for stuff from Asteroid Shop, Blur, Corb Lund, Dead Can Dance, Denver, Dignan Porch, Shoes and Why?. There’s also the double disc collection of Fleetwood Mac covers that features a great list of contributing artists including Best Coast, Antony Hegarty, Washed Out, Tame Impala, The Kills, MGMT, St. Vincent and Lykke Li. I won’t speak to the direct worth of any of those records, but if you see something you like, by all means check it out. Also check out today’s Pick Your Poison, which has some stuff I will recommend. Specifically look out for tracks from Amanda Palmer, Dog Bite, Feature Cuts, The Helio Sequence, Leftover Cuties, Lord Huron and Warning Light. In the Soundcloud section please enjoy streaming a new Ty Segall track.

Akello Light – This is Winston-Salem

Amanda Palmer and the Grand Theft Orchestra – The Killing Type

Bad Bibles – Nearsighted

The Cast of Cheers – Human Elevator (Citizens! Remix)

Diamond Messages – The Look (Metronomy cover)

Dog Bite – My Enthusiasm

Dolfish – I’d Rather Disappear Than Stay the Same

Feature Cuts – Decisions

The Helio Sequence – Hall of Mirrors

I Killed Kenny – Originator

Jahan Lennon – Don’t Come Around Here No More (Tom Petty cover)

Leftover Cuties – Smile Big

Lord Huron – Time to Run

Neonfaith – Tied Together

ViliFl – Anguish

Warning Light – Brisk Western Winds

Zebra and Snake – Maid of Orleans (OMD cover)

SOUNDCLOUD

Everyman – Take The Block (Original Mix)

Fuzzy Empire – Chroma

The Knocks – The Feeling

Ty Segall – The Hill

The xx – Chained (Common Citizens Remix)

Pick Your Poison: Monday 8-13-12

On Saturday night, I was spending time with friends doing what we sometimes to, which is drinking at a bar. Upon stumbling back to my apartment a little intoxicated, I immediately sat down at my computer and discovered a little music news story that made my night. It said The Dismemberment Plan played a show at Baltimore’s Metro Gallery and performed what amounted to EIGHT new songs. To make things even better, frontman Travis Morrison took to Facebook to explain things. In a nutshell he said that after playing those new songs, the band is going back into their “lab” to work on some more. Right now there are no set plans to record, but it’s certainly being discussed. So it looks like we’ll be getting a new D-Plan record sometime in the future. That news alone is good enough for me, though if we get several years down the road and nothing happens (like Kevin Shields promising a new My Bloody Valentine record) then I’ll be impatient and upset. When the band first reunited in 2011, they said there were zero plans to make new music or a new record, but that they’d “take it day to day” and figure things out in time. With Morrison’s post-Dismembermen Plan records getting hated on consistently and his 2009 announcement that he was “retiring” from music, the remarkable success of this reunion must have provided him with a new lease on the rock star life. It makes sense that he and the rest of the band want more. If their output now is as good as their output from 10-15 years ago, we’re absolutely in for a treat. Want to see a bunch of the new songs performed live from that show over the weekend? Simply go here to watch six of them on YouTube. Great stuff. Also great is this Monday edition of Pick Your Poison. I’ll advise checking out tracks from Agents of Change, Cars & Trains, Eraas, Lindstrom, METZ, Nat Lyon, Poor Moon and Talibam!. In the Soundcloud section, I will recommend that you stream every single track in there, from Airbird (aka Joel Ford of Ford & Lopatin) to The Darkness (covering Radiohead) to Matthew Dear and beyond.

Agents of Change – Chicago Got Me Sweatin’

Alameda – Summer Dharma

Cars & Trains – Nations

Diamond Messages – The Look

Eraas – Briar Path

Francisco the Man – Tiger

Jennah Barry – The Coast

Kraak & Smaak – Forget About You (ft. Lee Fields (Valeron Remix)

Krink – Here I Come

Lindstrom – Rà-àkõ-st

METZ – Headache

Midnight Magic & Tommie Sunshine – I Found Love (Tommie Sunshine & Disco Fries Remix)

Nat Lyon – LCRV

Poor Moon – Birds

Slam Donahue – Bug in the Sun

Talibam! – It’s A Tough Day, Hard Day

Vonnegutt – Fresh Like Me (ft. Mic Terror)

SOUNDCLOUD

Airbird – Long Lake

Beacon – Feeling’s Gone

Buke & Gase – Misshaping Introduction

The Darkness – Street Spirit (Radiohead cover)

Hooray For Earth – Never

Matthew Dear – Earthforms

Album Review: Passion Pit – Gossamer [Columbia]



Most of the world probably thinks that Passion Pit are a fun synth-pop band. Go to one of their shows, and you’ll dance, sing and jump around with a smile on your face. Hear one of their songs on the radio and there’s a good chance you’ll sing along mindlessly only to have a chorus stuck in your head for hours afterwards. But how much do you really know about Passion Pit? How closely have you listened to their songs and taken to heart what’s being said in the lyrics? We so often listen to music as an escape or a distraction from our own lives that we can forget somebody’s heart and soul might have been poured into a song or album. That’s particularly true of pop music, which is more often thought of as a disposable treat. It’s the equivalent of auditory candy, never actually substantial or healthy enough to constitute a musical meal. Not every pop song or pop record is as light and fancy free as it might appear on the surface however, and it’s only through seeing that depth that we can truly begin to understand music as an art form. As the frontman for Passion Pit, Michael Angelakos writes songs about his own life. The initial Passion Pit recordings that formed the Chunk of Change EP were written and pieced together in Angelakos’ bedroom by himself, in an attempt to win the affections of a girl. There’s both a sweetness and a sense of desperation coming out of it, and though it caught on like wildfire with music lovers via Myspace, the girl it was about didn’t feel the same way and things didn’t work out. With the loss of that girl came success, and all the pressures that came along with it. Over the course of a year, the band would secure a major label record deal and put out their debut album Manners to widespread critical acclaim. Singles like “Sleepyhead” and “Little Secrets” were radio hits as well, and the band toured in larger and larger venues.

Such popularity and praise are the dreams of many musicians, but Angelakos doesn’t quite feel that way. Fortune and fame can bring out the worst in some people, and the pressure it can put on the artists can only add to that. In the three years since Passion Pit released their last album, the band has not stopped working, which turned out to be to their detriment. Unknown to most except those very close to Angelakos, he’s been diagnosed as bipolar for a few years now. While he has taken plenty of medication to help manage the roller coaster highs and lows the disorder brings, he still has severe bouts of depression and has attempted or thought about committing suicide on several occasions. He’s spent the last few years in and out of mental health facilities, and much to the chagrin of his record label, spent months trying and failing to make progress on new music as he dealt with these issues. Most recently, the band has been forced to cancel many of their tour dates so Angelakos can work on some of his symptoms. He maintains the band will try and tour as much as possible for now, however it’s unlikely that will continue for a whole lot longer. There’s a distinct impermanence affixed to Passion Pit’s work now, and the hope is they make the most of it. From all this pain and strife and difficulty comes Gossamer, the band’s second album. If you failed to fully grasp or take seriously some of the darker moments on Manners, hopefully this new record pushes you to more closely examine and think critically about what these songs are about before blindly jumping around and memorizing the hook.

The first single and opening track on Gossamer is “Take A Walk,” a light and bouncy number about how Angelakos’ parents struggled financially when he was growing up. It’s a fun-sounding song about a not-so-fun topic, which is how most of the album goes. There’s something just a little off about that track though, and it has nothing to do with lyrics and everything to do with structure. The verses and chorus don’t mesh as well as they should, creating an imbalance that diminishes its overall effectiveness. It may bear the band’s signature sound but doesn’t ignite as intended. The following track “I’ll Be Alright” is a far better example of Passion Pit 2.0. Filled with skittering synths and a hyperactive melody, its hook may not have incredible staying power but it’s complex oddities can still give you a total sugar rush. Yet all that betrays what the song is actually about, which is about his battles with depression and how it’s affected his romantic relationships. “Well I’ve made so many messes/And this love has grown so restless/Your whole life’s been nothing but this/I won’t let you go loveless,” he sings in the chorus, trying to tell his girlfriend he’ll be fine without her. Of course when he talks about drinking and taking pills and manipulating people to selfishly get his way, you get the sense that might not actually be the case. He’s had a change of heart by the end of the song, instead of telling her to leave, he now says he won’t let her unless he knows he’ll be alright. That’s not a very nice thing to do to somebody – jerking them around like that – but that’s almost par for the course sometimes for people with emotional problems. Angelakos being able to acknowledge that is a great sign though, with the hope of learning from such lessons.

If Gossamer has one sure fire hit on it, “Carried Away” is it. The verses build perfectly to the gigantic jump around chorus that’s both airy and memorable. The topic du jour this time is a much more universal one too, playing up the disparity between rich and poor. At the end of the final verse, Angelakos leads what’s sure to be a live staple chant of “We all have problems,” suggesting that no matter if you’re rich or poor, mentally stable or instable, that nobody is in great shape all the time. The album’s first ballad, the R&B jam of “Constant Conversations,” finds his relationship in bad shape due to excessive alcoholism. “I’m just a mess with the name and the price/And now I’m drunker than before babe/Told me drinking doesn’t make me nice,” he bemoans knowingly. Those same issues surface again via “On My Way,” only this time they come off even more sad and desperate than before. While he proposes in the chorus that they get married to “consecrate this messy love,” he later makes the argument that, “We’re both so broken, long done hoping/Is that we’ll stumble upon our love again.” It comes across as a plea to spend your life with somebody because you’re both screwed up to the point where nobody else would want you. Lines like, “All these demons, I can beat them” and “Everyday’s another chance” shine glimmers of hope across the track, as do the various glockenspiels, bells and xylophones, which help make it sound like Sigur Ros turned pop. Yet one of the key things about this album is that despite the platitudes that strive to create positive vibes in bad situations, we’re never entirely sure that Angelakos truly believes in himself or what he’s saying.

The most positive and uplifting moment on Gossamer comes almost right at the end of the album with “It’s Not My Fault, I’m Happy.” It’s certainly not the poppiest moment on the record, but it’s one of those slower sort of anthem-ballads where people raise their lighters (or cell phones) to the sky and sing along like they truly believe in the lyrics. Instead of ending on that high note, the final track on the album is “Where We Belong,” which is about Angelakos’ suicide attempt a few years ago. With pulsating electronic beats and dramatic violins as the instrumental backing, his tone comes across as very reflective as he recounts the experience (“And then I’m lifted up/Out of the crimson tub/The bath begins to drain/And from the floor he prays away all my pain”). He has said in interviews that in his mind the archangel Gabriel was present with him at the time, hence the line, “Do you believe in me too, Gabriel?” The last line of the entire album is, “All I’ve ever wanted was to be happy and make you proud.” The “you” in that is likely his fiancee, but could also be anyone from his family, friends or it might even be directed right at the listener. Angelakos might never be able to be truly happy the way that he wants to be, but at the very least with Gossamer he’s created something that he can and should be proud of. Hopefully he keeps seeking proper treatment and is able to get the help he needs. Smart, challenging and emotionally stirring pop records like this don’t come along often, so the longer he’s around and able to make them, the luckier we are to hear them.

Please read more about Michael Angelakos’ mental issues and how they’ve influenced Passion Pit’s music

Passion Pit – Take a Walk

Passion Pit – I’ll Be Alright

Buy Gossamer from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Friday 8-10-12

It’s Friday. Do you have big plans for the weekend? There’s not a whole lot of these “summer” weekends left, so get in your fun while you still can. Me, I’m headed to see Huey Lewis & The News. If reading those words just made you do a double take, well, take solace that I’m not the biggest Huey fan in the world. My main goal will be to hear “The Power of Love” because of my love of Back to the Future. Beyond that, I’m going to spend time with friends and consume alcohol. Sometimes those things are enough to tempt you into things you might not otherwise go to. Besides, do I really have to defend Huey Lewis & The News? They’re one of those bands that are so uncool it’s cool to like them. Or something like that. Anyways, have fun this weekend and stay safe. Enjoy this edition of Pick Your Poison too, which features great tracks from Cat Power, Chrome Canyon, John the Conqueror, Modern Skirts and Theresa Andersson. In the Soundcloud section, be sure to stream new stuff from Earlimart, Lavender Diamond, Simian Mobile Disco and Stars.

Angel Snow – Lie Awake

Astronauts, etc. – Mystery Colors

Capital Cities – Nothing Compares 2 U (Prince cover)

Cat Power – Cherokee (+ Nicolas Jaar Remix)

Christopher Paul Stelling – Never Been There

Chrome Canyon – Generation

Coldplay – Charlie Brown (Jacques Lu Cont Remix)

Earth Science – Devil’s Tower

Fast Planet – Columbus (Vindata Remix)

John the Conqueror – Time to Go

Mile Me Deaf – Troubles Caught

Modern Skirts – Tennessee

The Natural Shocks – Change

The Sound of Arrows – Wonders (The Knocks Remix)

Theresa Andersson – Fiya’s Gone

SOUNDCLOUD

Earlimart – 97 Heart Attack

High Highs – Once Around The House

Kasket – August Fades

Lavender Diamond – Everybody’s Heart’s Breaking Now

Simian Mobile Disco – A Form Of Change

Stars – Backlines

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 8-9-12

Good news for all you LCD Soundsystem fans. Their documentary Shut Up and Play the Hits, which screened in select theaters around the country last month, will be on DVD and Blu-Ray this October. The exact date of its release is October 9th, and it’ll be a 3-disc set. The extras aren’t announced yet, but the reason it’s 3 discs is because the first will be the documentary while the second and third will be their final show in its entirety, which lasted close to 4 hours. Yeah, they absolutely need 2 discs to hold all of that show. I promise it’ll make a great stocking stuffer for the music lover in your circle of friends and family. And hey, if you want to jump on it right away, the preorder is up. Okay, how about there here and now of today’s Pick Your Poison. You won’t want to miss downloading tracks from Blessed Feathers, Dressy Bessy, John Butler Trio, K Theory, Modern Rivals, Netherfriends and Paradigm. In the Soundcloud section be sure to stream tracks from Dragonette and Young Magic.

Blessed Feathers – Hey! All You Floridians

Buffetlibre – The Sun in the Shade (Bonde Do Role Remix)

Dressy Bessy – Something to Love
Dressy Bessy – Wind Me Up

The Jar Family – Getting Better

John Butler Trio – Ocean (2012)

K Theory – The Master

Labyrinth Ear – Urchin

The Lytics – Stay Calm

Mister 1-2-3-4 – Vermilion Sands

Modern Rivals – Clocks vs. Darts

Nacosta – Secret Destroyer

Ned Collette & Wirewalker – Il Futuro Fantastico

Netherfriends – Summer Sex

Paradigm – Share/Love

Passion Pit – Constant Conversations (St. Lucia Remix)

Thomas Azier – How to Disappear

SOUNDCLOUD

Dragonette – Live In This City

Her Vanished Grace – Fade Away

Magatha Trysty – Want to Stay

Young Magic – You With Air (Tape Flip)

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 8-8-12

In today’s edition of WTF news, Beck has announced the release of his new album, Song Reader. Ordinarily this would be great news, except things are not what they seem. See, Song Reader will not come in mp3, CD, vinyl or cassette formats. It will only come in sheet music format. If you want to hear what the songs sound like, you’re going to need to play them yourself via instruments you may or may not know how to use. So basically, Beck is giving us all a 20-song homework project. Of course it’s also entirely optional, and I suspect 90% of the people that buy it won’t learn more than a song or two. I think I’ll wait for a really good band to record all the songs themselves and give them away for free. Additional details about the project include a couple song titles, such as “Do We? We Do” and “Don’t Act Like Your Heart Isn’t Hard,” plus mentions of original artwork from a variety of people that will expand the set to 109 pages. It’ll be sold by McSweeney’s, and you can find more details here. Now let’s get to some songs that have already been recorded and are sheet music free. In this edition of Pick Your Poison, highlights include tracks from Bear Mountain, Ghost Wave, Grand Resort, Levek, and Space Fight.

Bear Mountain – Congo

Big Tree – Augury

Bloc Party – Octopus (SLDGHMR Remix)

Conner Youngblood – The Warpath

Ghost Wave – Hippy

Grand Resort – Never Ever

To Kill A King – Funeral

Koko Beware – Stay

Levek – French Lessons

Linus Pauling Quartet – Crom

Lucy and the Daze – Fear and Loathing

Lusjoints – Indy

Mucca Pazza – Boss Taurus (Jon Kennedy Remix)

Philistines – Woo Hoo Hoo

Space Fight – 22
Space Fight – 22 (RAC Maury Mix)

The UFO Club – July

SOUNDCLOUD

Cloud Seeding – The Light (ft. Nadine Carina)

Josephine – What A Day

Kodaline – Perfect World

Mind Enterprises – Summer War

Visitor – Coming Home

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 8-7-12

Tuesdays mean new album releases in America, and I’m pleased to present you with a list of artists putting out something new each week right around this time. The point is, if one of your favorite artists is doing something and you totally forgot about it, maybe this acts as a reminder. So look for fresh records from Antibalas, Antony and the Johnsons, Birds & Batteries, Buffalo Killers, Fergus and Geronimo, Hungry Ghost, Ivan & Alyosha, Los Straightjackets, Ned Collette and Wirewalker, Nu Sensae, Ormonde, The Orwells, So Many Wizards, Stagnant Pools, Sweet Valley and Tidelands. If you didn’t recognize most of those names, that’s because there’s not a whole lot of high profile releases this week. Well, unless you count reissues from Johnny Cash, Archers of Loaf and Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds. But the set of mp3s in today’s Pick Your Poison are surprisingly recognizable, so let me run down some recommended ones for you. Don’t miss downloading tracks from Ali Koehler (ex-Vivian Girls/Best Coast), Gabe Goodman, I/O, King Dude, Kisses, Matmos, Mike Coykendall with Ben Gibbard & Zooey Deschanel, Paul Banks (of Interpol), Paul Stewart, The Slowdown and Wild Nothing. I kind of love this set of music. In the Soundcloud section you can stream new stuff from the legendary Bob Mould, along with Woods and Keep Shelly in Athens’ remix of Reptile Youth.

Ali Koehler – Not Like Me

The Delta Routine – Switchblade

Gabe Goodman – Bent Fiction

Get People – Grove (Rewards Remix)

I/O – Wasted My Time

Kev La Kat – Make It Happen

King Dude – Jesus in the Courtyard

Kisses – Funny Heartbeat

LCTRISC – Ticket

Matmos – Very Large Green Triangles (Edit)

Mike Coykendall – The Hippie Girl (ft. Ben Gibbard and Zooey Deschanel)

Paul Banks – The Base

Paul Stewart – Glass Skull

Phoenix – Fences (Deltafoxx Remix)

Seatraffic – Put Away (Yalls Remix)

The Slowdown – To Wonder

Wild Nothing – Paradise

Wool – The Good in You

SOUNDCLOUD

Bob Mould – The Descent

Cineplexx – Cosas de la Vida Normal

Graph Rabbit – Only Fields

Reptile Youth – Black Swan Born White (Keep Shelly in Athens Remix)

Skeletons on Holiday – Sink Or Swim

Woods – Size Meets The Sound

Lollapalooza 2012: The Photos


Now that all the written pieces are out of the way, I wanted to share with you the collection of photos that I took at this year’s Lollapalooza. Before we dive in, I want to make sure you’re aware of a couple things. First and foremost, I was not given a press photography pass for the festival. That means I didn’t have the opportunity to stand right next to the stages and zoom in to get photos of sweat dripping off the faces of every artist that was up there. When you see Jack White looking like an ant in one of these photos, that was taken from pretty far back. I like to think that most of these photos are still reasonably decent though, and I tried my best to only select the ones that worked. Secondly, what I’m posting below is only a small sample of the total photos I took over the duration of the weekend. If you want to see the all the photos, head over to Facebook for day-by-day sets. Also, if you’d like to gain a little perspective on what bands I saw and the good/bad of it all, simply click this link to see all of my coverage of Lollapalooza 2012. Thanks! Photos are after the jump.

Lollapalooza 2012: Final Thoughts


This was Lollapalooza’s eighth year in Chicago, and in turn my eighth year in a row attending it. I’ve seen it transform from a tiny little four stage festival on one half of Grant Park to a monstrous behemoth of a fest complete with eight stages and multiple blocks of park space. I’ve stood through oppressive heat, severe thunderstorms, a lack of water and restrooms, gate crashers, mud pits, clinically insane crowds/bands, and those tiny little rocks that always seem to get into your shoes. This year introduced a new slice of fun: the total festival evacuation. And here I thought I’d seen everything. In spite of all those things, I’ve managed to have a whole lot of fun and get inspired by music all over again. It’s become a very well run festival, which I suppose is thanks in no small part to a generous volunteer staff and the huge revenues they make from it every year. Are there things that could still be improved? Sure, but it’s more minor stuff that likely isn’t a pressing concern for anyone. I’ll outline some of that, along with the best and worst music of the weekend right now in my Lollapalooza 2012 Winners and Losers.

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