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Pick Your Poison: Thursday 4-5-12

Well friends, let me use this post to keep you apprised of some of the latest happenings with the good ‘ol Pitchfork Music Festival. The complete lineup was finally revealed today, after two separate doses of acts to try and get you interested earlier. The end result? I’m interested in this lineup but also a bit disappointed. Things are certainly less high profile than last year, even as Feist and Vampire Weekend are still pretty big names. My main concern is how good this is all going to sound in an outdoor, daytime setting. Artists like Beach House, Real Estate, Oneohtrix Point Never, and Clams Casino, among others, don’t exactly make music to be enjoyed under the sweltering sun. Now Sleigh Bells, Iceage, Wild Flag, Grimes and Cloud Nothings – those are acts to get you moving. There’s lots more hip hop this year too, none of which can be considered bad at a festival thanks to heavy beats and guys shouting instructions at you (hands in the air!). A$AP Rocky and Danny Brown at least should be good for some high energy halfway crazy sets. So though I might not be totally thrilled with this year’s lineup, I’m convinced things will turn out well anyways. Even if they don’t, it’s kind of nice just to hang out in Union Park with everyone. You can buy single-day passes to the festival for $45 by clicking here. You can have a look at the full lineup by going here. Come on out to the fest this July with me. We’ll have some fun, drink some beer and see some good live music. Okay, onto the business of Pick Your Poison. Recommended tracks today come from Alexander Tucker, Caltrop, Father John Misty (aka J. Tillman ex-Fleet Foxes), jj, King Tuff, Midnight Magic, MNDR, Ólafur Arnalds and Young Hines.

Alexander Tucker – Window Sill

Beast Make Bomb – Flagpole Sitta (Harvey Danger cover)

Caltrop – Birdsong

Conveyor – Mane

Dubious Ranger – The New Eve

Father John Misty – Nancy From Now On

The Funk Ark – Hey Mamajo

Giant Giant Sand – Forever and A Day

The Grey Area – Ourselves

jj – Beautiful Life

Joshua McCormack – The Phantom King

King Tuff – Bad Thing

Midnight Magic – Psycho For Your Love

MNDR – #1 in Heaven

Ólafur Arnalds – Allt varð hljótt

Paul Barker – reSpite

Wazu – Happy Endings

Young Hines – Can’t Explode

SOUNDCLOUD

Mr. Fogg – A Little Letting Go

Ny – Music

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 4-4-12

Once a week or so I like to remind everyone that the site has a pretty brand spankin’ new Facebook page that I encourage you to check out for the latest posts on this site as well as some extra content. Okay, so the extra content isn’t there yet, but it will be soon enough. Go there and click “Like” if you’re a fan. I know I’d appreciate it. I know you’ll appreciate today’s Pick Your Poison selections. I’m liking tracks from Ane Brun (covering Arcade Fire), Vacationer’s remix of The Asteroids Galaxy Tour, Drylight, Midtown Dickens, Mirror Lady, Ravens and Chimes, Sugarman 3 and The Young. In the Soundcloud section you can stream Japandroids’ cover of “Jack the Ripper”, which is certainly a different take on the Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds original.

Alberteen – The Butcher’s Daughter

Ane Brun – Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels) (Arcade Fire cover)

The Asteroids Galaxy Tour – Major (Vacationer Remix)

Channel Cairo – A Year

Drylight – Extralives (ft. thepieces.me)

D’Steph – Getting It On

Go Back to the Zoo – Electric

GPSMYTH – Brewster

Jonas Schwartz – Ideas

Ketamines – Kill Me Now, Please

Midtown Dickens – Walk, Don’t You Run

Mirror Lady – Hands Are Tied

Ravens and Chimes – Arrow

Sugarman 3 – Rudy’s Intervention

The Young – Livin’ Free

SOUNDCLOUD

Ballerina Black – If You Would I

Bass Drum of Death – I Wanna Be Forgotten

Beat Connection – Think/Feel (ft. Chelsey Scheffe)

Cut Your Hair – Utah In Pictures

Japandroids – Jack the Ripper (Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds cover)

The Kill Van Kulls – Impossible Man

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 4-3-12

Tuesdays are usually the days in which I chronicle what new album releases are out there for your personal enjoyment. This week shall be no exception, and as always please keep in mind I’m not outwardly recommending all these albums, just telling you what’s out there. If it interests you, there are new records out this week from Amadou & Mariam, Au, Bear in Heaven, Breton, Great Lake Swimmers, High on Fire, Robert Pollard, Screaming Females, UV Pop, Willis Earl Beal, and Zammuto (of The Books). Today’s Pick Your Poison has no mp3s from any of those artists, but I’ve thrown songs from most of them your way in the past couple months, so use the search function as your friend if you need to. On this list, tracks I’ll recommend come from Chocolate Robots, Christian Strobe, Ghost Loft, Letterist, Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band, A Place to Bury Strangers, Visions of Trees (covering Sonic Youth, and World Blanket (covering Syd Barrett). In the Soundcloud section don’t forget to stream new songs from Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, Lotus Plaza and Mount Eerie.

Andy the Doorbum – The Farm

Animal Heart – Un-Extraordinary Man (Dirty Tees Remix)

The Atolls – Pop Song Animal

Chocolate Robots – Summer Krushhh

Christian Strobe – Love Without Love

Dujeous – Spectacular

Ghost Loft – Blow

Hallelujah the Hills – Get Me In A Room

Heavy Cream – John Johnny

Letterist – 100MPH

Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band – Warm Body

A Place to Bury Strangers – You Are the One

Roomdance – Bierdancer

Theatre of Delays – Sophie

Tim Carr – Famewhore

Visions of Trees – Expressway to Yr Skull (Sonic Youth cover)

Wave Machine – Counting Birds

World Blanket – Let’s Split (Syd Barrett cover)

SOUNDCLOUD

Circle – Fashion me a Drum

Dire Con – Pills

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros – Thats Whats Up

Lotus Plaza – Monoliths

Mount Eerie – To The Ground

The Waxing Captors – The Trip

Snapshot Review: Willis Earl Beal – Acousmatic Sorcery [XL/Hot Charity]



The back story of Willis Earl Beal is fascinating enough to make for a great film. A Chicago guy, he moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico for a few years in 2007 simply because he heard it was a very desolate and beautiful environment in which a creative person could pursue art without distraction. Without much in the way of a job or friends, Beal created a flyer that contained a hand-drawn self-portrait, a little bit about his background and personality, and a phone number people could call. He hoped to make some friends this way, and even said he’d play a song for you if you called him. Such an odd flyer eventually caught the eye of a few like-minded creative people who were interested in helping Beal further his art. Found Magazine got wind of him and wrote a feature story on him. They also released a limited edition box set called The Willis Earl Beal Special Collection, complete with his poetry, illustrations and music. Things were looking up for Beal, yet he quickly left Albuquerque in 2010 and returned to Chicago with only the clothes on his back despite having live shows and recording studio time booked. He moved in with his grandmother and brother and once again without a job began distributing flyers with his story and his phone number on them. He wasn’t on the internet and things like email and social media were largely foreign to him. Yet he was still tracked down by the people at XL offshoot label Hot Sorcery, likely after doing well on the reality talent competition The X Factor. Their first release with Beal’s name on it is Acousmatic Sorcery, an 11-track collection of home recordings pieced together over the last few years. The quality is, understandably, nowhere near top notch. Most, if not all of these songs were originally recorded to cassette using a karaoke machine with a busted speaker and a Radio Shack microphone. It winds up sharing many of the same qualities as tUnE-yArDs’ laptop-recorded debut BiRd-BrAiNs, in that it’s messy but gets the point across. That point is Beal’s voice. “Take Me Away” is the official introduction to it on the record, and the song is an excellent showcase demonstrating the power and emotional intensity at which he operates. The track starts a capella before he’s joined by some homemade percussion that sounds like banging on the bottom of a plastic garbage can. Those are all the elements in the song, and essentially they’re all you need. Beal howls and hums with the intensity of a great blues singer, crossing somewhere between Tom Waits and Buddy Guy. By contrast, “Evening’s Kiss” sounds like a completely different artist, where Beal’s voice is so calm and precious it’s somehow less muscular than the sparsely plucked acoustic guitar accompanying it. That and “Sambo Joe From the Rainbow” are very traditional folk singer-songwriter style, also something Beal does quite well. Where he’s a little off though are on the more hip hop flavored tracks. “Ghost Robot” and “Swing on Low” are both based around beats and rhymes, though the former is quite a bit heavier on those elements. Both sound nothing like modern-day hip hop, and instead flounder closer to cheesy 80’s style rap but with more off-putting or weird time signatures. There are a few cringe-worthy lines in there (and other songs) as well, furthering the thought that while Beal is an exceptional singer, he’s not always the greatest songwriter. That doesn’t mean there isn’t a bunch of well-written material on this record, because there is. For every handful of inspired lines, there’s usually one that doesn’t quite match it. Nevertheless, Acousmatic Sorcery is very much a great introduction to the world that is Willis Earl Beal. It is very much the world of an outsider artist, one who lives in the shadows rather than the spotlight, and who in spite of his outgoing personality seems to have a lot of the same reclusive qualities as a Daniel Johnston or Wesley Willis or Jandek. On that same idea we’re left wondering exactly what Beal is going to do next and when he’s going to do it. With some touring under his belt and an actual recording studio to work in, it will most definitely be interesting to see if he can capitalize on the very promising start he’s shown here.

Willis Earl Beal – Evening’s Kiss

Buy Acousmatic Sorcery from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 4-2-12

Class of 2012 alert! Class of 2012 alert! I don’t know why anyone would call this “inevitable”, but many have: 2 of my Class of 2012 artists are collaborating. Which ones? A$AP Rocky and Lana Del Rey. The track is called “Ridin”, and it will be featured on a mixtape out tomorrow from production team KickDrums. If you’d like a preview of the track, with slices of both artists’ contributions, you can watch this video to hear a minute of it. I’m also looking forward to seeing A$AP Rocky for the second time this year at the Pitchfork Music Festival, where he’s joined in the lineup by other Class of 2012-ers Grimes and Purity Ring. The announcement hasn’t been made yet, but you may also want to keep an eye out for a couple more members of that exclusive class, including Frank Ocean, Azealia Banks and perhaps even Nicolas Jaar. We’ll have to wait and see for sure on those. I’ve got nothing new from the Class of 2012 in today’s Pick Your Poison, but there’s a whole lot of good music anyways. I’ll suggest making sure you download songs from Italian Japanese, Chicago friends JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound, Maps & Atlases, P.G. Six, The Spinto Band, Supreme Cuts, Waco Brothers & Paul Burch, Wes Willenbring and White Birds. In the SOundcloud section have a listen to tracks from Dirty Projectors, Dragonette, Karin Park and Mariee Sioux.

Baby Baby – Nothing to Lose

Heaven – Falling Apple

Hope for Agoldensummer – Daniel Bloom

Italian Japanese – NYC

JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound – Sister Ray Charles

Little,Big – Wasted

Many Places – Helmet Hug

Maps & Atlases – Fever

Mean Jeans – Anybody Out There

P.G. Six – Palace

The Spinto Band – Take It

Supreme Cuts – Lessons of Darkness (Apology)

Terrible Feelings – Intruders

Waco Brothers & Paul Burch – Great Chicago Fire

Wes Willenbring – Consequences of Recklessness

White Birds – Hondora

SOUNDCLOUD

Audiograffiti – Animals

Dirty Projectors – Gun Has No Trigger

Dragonette – Let it Go

Karin Park – Restless

Mariee Sioux – Swimming Through Stone

River Accorsi – Mynx

Pick Your Poison: Friday 3-30-12

Another Friday, another short and sweet, get-to-the-point Pick Your Poison post. I’m anxious to try a new experiment with friends, inspired by an episode of How I Met Your Mother. The grand plan is to get drunk at a bar, then go play laser tag. Sure, it’s been like 10 years since any of us played laser tag, but we’re reappropriating a childhood source of fun into something decidedly more adult. Hopefully some teenage “laser marshall” doesn’t put the brakes on this little fun experiment by forbidding people to play while intoxicated. We’ll see how it goes. As for today’s Pick Your Poison, there’s plenty to like in this set, including tracks from The D.A., Field Report, Fixers, Twin Cabins and Volcanoes. Oh, and I shouldn’t forget CFCF’s remix of Elite Gymnastics. There are new songs up for streaming in the Soundcloud section from Maximo Park, Reptar and Van She, all of which are worth your time as well. Have a great weekend!

Andy Kuncl – In Your Arms

Brodie Lumsden – Undertow

Capital Cities – Kangaroo Court

The D.A. – We Hungry

The Dig – Red Rose in the Cold Winter Ground

Elite Gymnastics – h e r e, i n h e a v e n 4 & 5 (CFCF Remix)

Field Report – I Am Not Waiting Anymore
Field Report – Fergus Falls

Fixers – Another Lost Apache

Flosstradamus – Hood Fantasy

Huoratron – New Wave of Mutilation

Julia Stone – Let’s All Forget All the Things That We Say (Oliver Tank Remix)

Twin Cabins – Cool Kids

Video Love – Le Bruit des Machines

Volcanoes – With Black Gloves

SOUNDCLOUD

kindlewood – Give & Take

LCTRISC – Please Wait On Yourself

Maximo Park – The National Health

Reptar – Orifice Origami

Steve Fentriss – Before I Give In

Van She – Idea Of Happiness

Album Review: Chromatics – Kill for Love [Italians Do It Better]



The journey of Chromatics’ new record Kill for Love is a fascinating one. Upon gearing up for a follow-up to the group’s 2007 record Night Drive, main man Johnny Jewel began talks with director Nicolas Winding Refn about crafting an 80’s-style synth pop soundtrack for his next film. The finished product was a little movie from last year some might remember called Drive. You know, that one where Ryan Gosling plays the ultra-cool driver who falls in love with his neighbor and basically goes on a killing spree to keep her safe. Yeah, that one. Anyways, upon completing work on the soundtrack to the film, Refn decided it wasn’t quite what he was looking for, and wound up using a score primarily composed by Cliff Martinez. Still, a couple of Jewel tracks still wound up on the soundtrack under the names of his three projects Chromatics, Glass Candy and Desire. The rest of the music was left on the cutting room floor.

At the end of last year, Jewel released Symmetry – Themes For An Imaginary Film, a 2.5 hour, 37 track project developed over 3 years as a conceptual tangent between Chromatics, Glass Candy, Mirage and Desire. In spite of the cover showing off the dashboard and steering wheel of a car, Jewel asserted that record was not the rejected Drive soundtrack. He has not said the same thing about this new Chromatics album Kill for Love. Of course he just generally hasn’t mentioned the film at all in relation to this record. Yet the back cover art has the album’s title written in the same font used in Drive‘s opening credits, and that’s just one of a few eerie parallels. The whole thing runs 90 minutes and 17 tracks too, not much shorter than the film itself. It might be fun to try and sync the two up if you’ve got some time on your hands, but it’s probably better just to make it the soundtrack to your own life.

See, Kill for Love, like much of Chromatics’ music, is best experienced while driving at night (I wonder why their last album was titled Night Drive). Get in your car, find an open highway or a country road, and hit the gas with this album pumping through your speakers. It’s not the sort of album you need to pay close attention to over its duration, but rather functions best as a way to enhance whatever it is your doing. The street lights blur into a monochromatic streak, the engine purrs just a little more smoothly, and even the most beat up clunker of a car will somehow seem more badass than before. Something about this music just brings those dark qualities to life, and makes the listening experience that much more special.

Kill for Love starts off in a remarkably fascinating way: with a cover of a classic Neil Young song. “Into the Black” is a piano and electric guitar driven rendition of Young’s “Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black)” with singer Ruth Radelet behind the microphone. It’s not an easy song to cover and walk away from unscathed, and the mere fact they attempted it is a bold move on their part. Their rather brash confidence actually winds up retaining strong ties to the pure emotion of the original, which is a way of saying they didn’t completely fuck it up. The gears shift almost immediately after that, and straight into the territory Chromatics and Johnny Jewel are best known for – synth pop. The title track, complete with bubbling synths and a 4/4 rhythm, shines like a beacon of pop beauty rivaling some of New Order’s finest moments. Radelet’s passionately wounded vocal sets the tone best, weaving a tale of pills, booze, love, murder and desperation into something devastatingly relatable. If this record has one true high point, though arguably there are several, it comes from that title track.

This album is quite front-loaded with the most pop-heavy material, and together they create an impressive streak of hit after hit. “Back from the Grave”, “The Page” and “Lady” all shine individually, and 2/3rds of that trio already have full music videos to their names, intended as early leaks to build excitement for the new album. The real meat and potatoes of Kill for Love arrives with the 8.5 minute Italo house jam “These Streets Will Never Look the Same”. The beats pulse and the piano pounds, the main source of support being an Autotuned male vocal with a hook to die for. Just as you start to think the track is running out of steam at the halfway point, it devolves down to the most basic beat before rebuilding itself with a twist of lime to add a little zest in all the right places. That serves as a transitional piece into a much slower, instrumental part of the record.

“Broken Mirrors” and “The Eleventh Hour” make for 10+ minutes of drifting beauty, with slowcore single “Candy” sandwiched in between as a buffer to keep you from completely zoning out. Piano and synth ballad “Running From the Sun” has all the drama of daybreak on the streets of the city. The sunlight may bring sadness as the signal telling you it’s time to go home after a night of driving, but there’s also an innate beauty that comes along with that small light on the horizon. “You are the black sky/always running from the sun,” Radelet sings on “Birds of Paradise”, the female counterweight to the male themes of “Running From the Sun”. The boy and girl are entangled in this tragic romance, wishing they could be free of the darkness permeating their lives. As the record drifts towards its melodramatic conclusion, the pace picks up again with potential future single “At Your Door”. Hard times have fallen on the boy and girl, dreams have been shattered and he seems hesitant to continue on. “You know love never turns out/the way we all plan/but the door is still open/so give me your hand,” Radelet urges, though her pleads appear to fall on deaf ears. “There Is A Light Out On the Horizon” features a sad voicemail from a girl hoping to hear back from her boyfriend, but he promptly deletes the message as if he wants nothing to do with her anymore. So the story leaves her waiting on “The River”, reflecting on what is, what was and what could still be if he’d just come back to her. As with so many things in life, a happy ending is not guaranteed.

Kill for Love ends not with a bang, but more with a whisper. It’s a long one though, as “No Escape” somberly drifts along for 14 minutes that seems to be a meditation on the tragic themes of the story told. As it washes over you, there’s an almost post-rock sort of serenity that can be achieved if you’re in the right frame of mind. There is no epic crescendo that feels like a glorious explosion of beauty, but the way the track shimmers and fades shows just enough signs of life to offer hope at the conclusion. The sun is rising on a new day, and though it may mean the end of this particular night drive, the warm, dim glow of the dashboard against a pitch black sky is never too far away. Chromatics have crafted themselves something of a masterpiece. It enhances and throws some variation into the style established on their last album without ever sounding boring or staid. There are pure pop moments and pieces to dance to, matched equally by ambient balladry frought with emotion. All of it is sequenced perfectly to maximize its impact. Ideally you should listen to Kill for Love from start to finish without interruption, while cruising around a city with no place in particular to go. Throw on your scorpion jacket and grab your toothpicks, because tonight we’re going for a Drive.

Chromatics – Into the Black (Neil Young cover)
Chromatics – Kill for Love

Buy Kill for Love on iTunes
Buy Kill for Love on CD from Italians Do It Better

Click past the jump to stream the entire album!

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 3-29-12

I realize I’m a day late in commenting on this, but time flies and there’s other things happening in the world. Still, this is almost too good NOT to mention. What I’m talking about is the video that’s emerged this week of Nine Inch Nails performing on a super cheesy late 80’s/early 90’s live dance TV show called “Dance Party USA”. They played “Down In It”, Trent Reznor has long hair wrapped in a scrunchie, and white teens are “dancing” to it. Hilarious? You’d better believe it. But it also says something about NIN, which Trent Reznor naturally took to the Internet to help clarify: “Many years ago, a young and naive Nine Inch Nails were asked what TV shows they’d be interested in appearing on. As a joke (and likely drunk), they thought of the most absurd choice they could come up with at the time. They were then informed their bluff had been called and were actually booked on said show… They hopped in their Honda Civic touring vehicle (hatchback) and travelled many miles to (I think) NJ for the big show. They had a laugh making fun of the people, their fashion choices and hairstyles.” Good times, right guys? Okay, let’s talk current, hot off the presses new music right now in today’s Pick Your Poison. Today I’ll recommend tracks from Dntel, The Forty Nineteens, Magic Trick, OFF!, Parlovr, and Teen Daze. In the Soundcloud section you may want to stream tracks from A-Trak ft. Juicy J and Danny Brown, or maybe even some Patrick Watson.

American Royalty – I’ve Been Fighting for You (J. Philip Dub)

The Blood Arm – Over Your Head

Doe Paoro – Born Whole (Egon Brainparts Remix)

Dntel – Bright Night

Ebo Taylor – Yaa Amponsah

The Forty Nineteens – Trucker’s Song

Induce – Hot As Love

Johnny Bertram & the Golden Bicycles – Miracle

Magic Trick – Torture

OFF! – King Kong Brigade

Olivier Jarda – Diving Bell

Parlovr – You Only Want It Cause You’re Lonely

Pocketknife – Pillow Talk (DoublePlusGood Remix)

A Silent Film – Danny, Dakota & The Wishing Well

Slam Donahue – It’s Scary

Teen Daze – Fantasy

SOUNDCLOUD

A-Trak ft. Juicy J & Danny Brown – Piss Test

Georgia Anne Muldrow & Madlib – Kneecap Jelly

Greg Reve – Put’em Up! (ft. Anti-Pop Consortium)

Marina and the Diamonds – Primadonna (B U R N S Remix)

Patrick Watson – Into Giants

Zedd – Shotgun

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 3-28-12

Let’s talk a little about some housekeeping notes today. First of all, I mentioned it all last week, but want to mention it again: Faronheit has a Facebook page. It’s slowly developing and taking shape, but I want to encourage you to stop over there and click the “Like” button so I might help you out in discovering new and interesting music-related content on a daily basis. That’s kind of what Pick Your Poison does, but of course I’m talking about on a grander scale than these daily mp3 posts. Additionally, I want to mention that if you’re not already following me on Twitter, now would be a good time to do so. I’ve been spilling little bits of this year’s Lollapalooza lineup leading up to the official announcement in a couple weeks, so if you’re interested head on over to Twitter for more on that. For the here and now, let’s talk this set of songs below. Today’s hot picks come from Acid Invaders, Bogan Via, Cains & Abels, Chromatics, Marriage, and Tyburn Saints.

Acid Invaders – NOW!

Basement Batman – Chemistry

Bogan Via – Afternoon Wonderland

Cains & Abels – Money

Chromatics – Kill for Love

Cool Fun – House

Fletcher C. Johnson – Messin’ Up My Mind

Folklore – The Party

The Human Race – No Excuse

Le Le – No

Marriage – Ride in My Place

Peh Per Ghost – Loose Changes

PUNCHES – Can I Live? (Ducky Remix)

Theo Berndt – Supersized

Tyburn Saints – You and I in Heaven

SOUNDCLOUD

The Albertans – The Hunter

Bjork – Crystalline (Current Value Remix)

Dave Castaldo – When You Say

Kiriyama Family – Weekends

Visions Of Trees – TURN 2 U

Zebra and Snake – Money In Heaven

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 3-27-12

On Tuesdays I like to try and give you a quick rundown of some notable album and EP releases so you know what’s out there and can buy accordingly. This week sees new music out from Civil Twilight, Damon Albarn, La Sera (Katy Goodman of Vivian Girls), The Mars Volta, Miike Snow, Paul Weller, RACES, Retribution Gospel Choir, Rusko (see below for an mp3), THEESatisfaction, Way Yes, and Young Prisms. An interesting slate to say the least. As for the songs in today’s Pick Your Poison, I’ll advise you to give at least a once over to tracks from 200 Years, Arbouretum, Dream Cop, I Am Dive, Rusko, Ty Segall and White Fence, and Violens. The Soundcloud section is quite good as well, with new music from Azealia Banks, The Men and Silversun Pickups.

200 Years – Solar System

Airiel – Flashlight Tag

Arbouretum – New Scarab

The Bland Band – What’s On Your Mind

Crystal Bright and the Silver Hands – The Misplaced Zygote

Dream Cop – Nasdaq

Glass Eyes – Coastal Scents

Goldroom – Angeles (Le Youth Remix)

I Am Dive – A Morning Walk

JD Samson & MEN – Make Him Pay (Ezekiel Remix)

R.M. Hendrix – Summer Dresses

Rusko – Skanker

Strawberry Whiplash – Now I Know It’s You

Ty Segall and White Fence – I Am Not A Game

Violens – Der Microarc

SOUNDCLOUD

Azealia Banks – Fuck Up the Fun

Jonathan Boulet – Trounce

The Men – A Minor

Silversun Pickups – Bloody Mary (Nerve Endings)

Tanya Lacey – Letter To My Ex

EP Review: Daniel Rossen – Silent Hour/Golden Mile [Warp]



Daniel Rossen is best known for his exceptional work in Grizzly Bear and less known for his side project Department of Eagles. The man is in many ways a wellspring of creativity and gorgeous melodies, boosted all the more by his unique guitar playing. You don’t even need to hear his voice to know he’s had a hand in a song. He’s also exceptional when it comes to arranging songs – breathing plenty of life into a track without overstuffing or cluttering it up. The last couple years Rossen has been working hard and touring with Grizzly Bear in support of their 2009 album Veckatimest. That record brought a somewhat unexpected dose of legitimate popularity to the rather subtle indie band, and all those guys did a great job handling the additional responsibilities that came along with an increased profile. Last year Rossen wrote a bunch of songs to prepare for the next Grizzly Bear LP, but a handful of them didn’t quite fit for one reason or another. It was mostly an issue of collaboration, in that he’d done about 90% of the work on these songs and felt like a more evenly balanced approach would benefit the band as a whole. Instead of ditching the tracks entirely or saving them for a rainy day re-working, Rossen chose to throw some polish on them and push them out into the world on his own. The Silent Hour/Golden Mile EP is the result, and it highlights exactly what makes the man an asset to whatever project he’s working on at the time.

Like The Beatles, Grizzly Bear is made up of four distinct personalities, and their working in tandem with one another creates beautiful records with intense vocal harmonies. It makes plenty of sense then that Rossen’s solo EP sounds an awful lot like something Grizzly Bear would put out, mixed with a touch of his other, similarly styled band Department of Eagles. Every song except for “Saint Nothing” features a lush acoustic guitar base, often supplemented with a smart variety of other instruments from electric and pedal steel guitar to piano, bass drum and even a string section. In its full glory you get the impression it’d make for the perfect soundtrack to time spent alone reflecting on the immense power of nature.

From start to finish, the EP plays like the storyline of a man retreating to the woods in search of serenity and meaning in his life. Opening track “Up On High” makes the lyrical observation of, “In this big empty room/finally feel free.” Though it’s not explicitly stated, that “big empty room” could very well be a forest devoid of people. “Silent Song” continues that trend with mentions of hills and fields and digging. Rossen’s lyrics aren’t exactly what you’d call poetry, but everything else about the songs is so impressive it’s tough to pass too much judgment on the guy for a few clunky or bland lines. When all else fails, you can look to the immense spectacle that is “Return to Form” for guidance. What starts as a babbling brook of acoustic guitar work builds to an orchestral crescendo complete with some electric guitar riffs stolen almost directly from “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band”. Ok, consider it more of an homage than anything else.

By the time “Golden Mile” turns up after the meditative piano dirge of “Saint Nothing”, the mood has become sprightly and upbeat. “There is bliss in this mess/there is madness all around,” Rossen sings, and you can almost hear a wink and a smile tacked onto it. Our world-weary main character has returned from his retreat into nature having learned a valuable lesson; when life becomes a burden and your emotional reservoir fills with despair, take a few moments for yourself and appreciate the little things. That same lesson can be applied to the Silent Hour/Golden Mile EP itself. At 5 tracks and 23 minutes, this is a small, elegant delight to enjoy when you need a few moments of peace. It’s also a nice stopgap for those unable to wait for this fall’s new Grizzly Bear album. Daniel Rossen may just be one leg of the Grizzly Bear table, but this EP goes a long way towards proving that should he truly want to, he can stand on his own.

Daniel Rossen – Silent Song

Buy Silent Hour/Golden Mile from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 3-26-12

I hope you had a great weekend. Mine was spent with friends and also attempting to catch up on all the things I missed last weekend when I was at SXSW. I want to take a moment at the start of this fresh week to make mention of an upcoming show to add to your calendar. The Breedings will be in Chicago playing a show this Wednesday at Miska’s Bar in the Roscoe Village neighborhood. If you’re around and looking for a good show to see that night, look no further than that. Download a song from The Breedings below, I think you’ll like what you hear. I also think you’ll enjoy tracks from Castanets, Stereolab’s Laetitia Sadier, Moonface, She Makes War and Yyou (with Miike Snow). In the Soundcloud section there’s a new song from Mission of Burma that is really quite good and worth streaming.

Astrid Swan – Cream of Gold (Serefe Sound System Remix)

The Breedings – Come Summer

Castanets – Pretty Little Eyes

finite_infinity – Next

Laetitia Sadier – Resistance Dans L’ombre

La Chansons – Ice Castle (Ice Princess Remix)

Leland Sundries – Monitor Arms

Moonface – Headed for the Door

mwvm – A Total Knew

Northern Valeintine – White Mountains

Plumerai – Loss

She Makes War – Exit Strategy

Television Keeps Us Apart – Death By Sister Five

Yyou – Crash (ft. Miike Snow)

SOUNDCLOUD

Deep Sea Arcade – Girls

Effi – Distance

Mission of Burma – Dust Devil

Nick Santino – Call Me Maybe (Carly Rae Jespen cover)

One Era – The Ocean

Reptile Youth – Speeddance

Pick Your Poison: Friday 3-23-12

It’s the Friday edition of Pick Your Poison, where I try to keep things light and quick. I’ll just take one more opportunity this week to mention that the site now has a Facebook page, so you can connect and learn more about things happening and being posted about through those channels. Please hit the “Like” button if you’d be so kind. Today’s Pick Your Poison tracks getting the thumbs up come from Gangstagrass, Ian McGlynn, Joshua McCormack, Nite Jewel, Orpheum Bell, PS I Love you and S. Carey. In the Soundcloud section you can stream a new song from Mount Eerie that I think is just plain excellent.

Clayton Autumnsun – Faster Than A Minute

Gangstagrass – Western (ft. Kool Keith)

Ian McGlynn – Gold Morning Mend

Inspired & the Sleep – Take Pills (Instructed Bliss)

Joshua McCormack – Galaxy of Doom

Mecca:83 – Chapter 2 (for Lucie)

Nite Jewel – One Second of Love

Orpheum Bell – Daddy’s Crying

Past Presents – Only Singing

PS I Love You – Princess Towers

Savior Adore – Dreamers (The Golden Pony Remix)

S. Carey – Two Angles

Specimens – Assemblage

tree – Warrior

SOUNDCLOUD

Danielle Parente – From the Start

Ender Belongs To Me – Start

Mount Eerie – House Shape

Soulsavers – Longest Day

Substatic – Opened Up

Tongue Bundle – That Is A Thick Cake

Album Review: The Shins – Port of Morrow [Columbia/Aural Apothecary]



Hard to believe it’s been eight years since Natalie Portman told Zach Braff that The Shins would “change your life” during a key scene in the little indie film that could Garden State. Since then, so much has happened. Braff’s career has flamed out, Natalie Portman’s has not, and The Shins all but disappeared for awhile courtesy of Danger Mouse. Yes, after their early 2007 album Wincing the Night Away became Sub Pop’s biggest selling record ever, James Mercer stepped away from the project to focus on collaborating with Danger Mouse on a side project known as Broken Bells. Obsessive Shins devotees would follow Mercer anywhere of course, and the 60s-styled psych-pop jams that populated the self-titled LP and Meyrin Fields EP made it pretty easy to pick up new fans as well. After the first couple years some began to wonder whether The Shins would ever return, and Mercer didn’t exactly make any promises. Adding fuel to the fire was Mercer’s announcement that keyboardist Marty Crandall and drummer Jesse Sandoval had left the band, with Sandoval later claiming he was flat out fired. Whatever actually happened there, the loss of those two amicable and talented musicians would appear to not bode well for whatever The Shins might choose to do in the future. Yet Mercer has always been the man behind the name, writing and piecing together most of the songs on his own anyways.

The return of The Shins finally became imminent last summer, when it was announced the band would be releasing new music and touring “soon”. The new lineup was also revealed, which included Richard Swift, Modest Mouse drummer Joe Plummer, former Crystal Skulls member Yuuki Matthews and guitarist Jessica Dobson. After five years away, The Shins are finally back with a new album called Port of Morrow. Listening to it, somehow it feels like they never left. This is a record entirely ignorant of time and trends, simply seeking to do exactly what The Shins do best – provide straightforward and catchy indie pop. It makes perfect sense that the album’s first single is called “Simple Song”, because it comes as advertised. The ease at which the song draws you close and plants its hooks firmly within your ears is impressive. Mercer doesn’t need any flash or innovation to come up with something excellent, instead preying on our innate love of easily digestible melodies. It helps that the album is produced by Greg Kurstin, a guy known for taking overblown songs and turning them into something warm and friendly to listen to. Instead of “The Rifle’s Spiral” crushing you with its sheer size, keyboards plink and sparkle, handclaps pepper the background, and Mercer plays the gooey and calm center of it all with his vocals. That balance between grandiose and intimate is not an easy thing to achieve, and Kurstin does an exceptional job with it.

Of course no great record is based solely on the work of a talented producer, and Port of Morrow is no exception. Mercer has always been a dynamo in his own right, and previous Shins outings like Oh, Inverted World! and Chutes Too Narrow prove that without question. Listen closely to past gems like “New Slang” and “Kissing the Lipless” to truly get a grasp on the man’s penchant for clever wordplay that sometimes lacks common sense. “When they’re parking the cars on your chest, you’ve still got a view of the summer sky,” is one such confusing gem from “Know Your Onion!”. Wincing the Night Away had plenty of things in common with the band’s previous two albums, but it was a far darker and more personal record that felt less lyrically adventurous on the whole. A few years and middle age appear to have brought Mercer back to writing about characters again, and though they may not always be the most positive songs, the tempo and pacing are far better than they were the last time around. Even a relatively plain-sounding folk song like “September” gets a huge boost thanks to lines like, “Love is the ink in the well/when her body writes.” The Billy Joel-esque “Fall of ’82” might be considered a little too adult contemporary for some, but its message about friends helping you through troubled times is very well handled and softens the somewhat piddling melody. Sometimes the opposite is true though, as on “For A Fool”, where a Beach House-styled slow waltz only loses a slight bit of its potency due to the clunky hook of, “Taken for a fool/yes I was/because I was a fool.” Perhaps the most fascinating song on the entire record is the title track, which is one part psychedelic experiment and another part torch song. The mixture of the two styles is very well done, as are the lyrics which while obtuse are visually stimulating.

There’s a certain point in an artist’s career where you know they’ve officially gone from indie superstars to mainstream darlings. For The Shins, that moment fully arrived with the release of Wincing the Night Away. It was a steady but strong rise to the occasion, and one that was peppered with disappointment for those that gave a careful listen to the record. They may have still been signed to Sub Pop at the time, but the popularity of that album despite its many faults really suggested the band was headed towards the fate of relatively bland pop-rock a la Death Cab for Cutie. The five year break James Mercer took from the project and the comparatively difficult music Broken Bells made during that time apparently did great things for The Shins. The change in lineup and producers may have been a smart move too, because Port of Morrow is the best record Mercer has put out since 2003’s Chutes Too Narrow. To do it, they didn’t even have to get weird or make significant adjustments to their sound. A great record doesn’t require innovation provided it’s well structured and well written, and The Shins have done both in this case. If they keep this up, they may actually change a lot more lives in the near future, including their own.

Buy Port of Morrow from Amazon

Click past the jump to stream the entire album (for a limited time only):

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 3-22-12

I’ve kind of been promoting it all week, so I apologize for doing it again: Faronheit has a Facebook page. I want to once again encourage you to go there and hit the “Like” button. I’d be quite grateful. Think of it as an easier way to get your doses of Pick Your Poison, as well as other content I post to the site. Today’s Pick Your Poison is fascinating in that you may want to check out tracks from Benjamin Francis Leftwich (covering Gillian Welch), Big Baby Gandhi, Big K.R.I.T., Falcon Lake, King of Prussia, Meiko, and Scout. In the Soundcloud section, stream songs from Canyons and Musique Le Pop, among others.

Bearcraft – Honey

Benjamin Francis Leftwich – Look at Miss Ohio (Gillian Welch cover)

Big Baby Gandhi ft. Fat Tony – Lurkin’

Big K.R.I.T. – I Got This

The Black Seeds – Pippy Pip

Dean Cercone – A Reflection of You

Enda Gallery – Hey I Like Your Shoes

Falcon Lake – Shores

Hey Mother Death – You Left Me

It’s A Musical – For Years and Years

King of Prussia – Your Graduating Hours

Meiko – Leave the Lights On

Picture Book – Sunshine (Extended Mix)

Scout – Under Attack

Sneaky Sound System – Really Want to See You Again (KiNK Remix)

Some Community – 73

Waterlaso – Heartbreak Celebration

SOUNDCLOUD

Animal Kingdom – Strange Attractor

Canyons – When I See You Again (Nick Zinner Remix)

Cloud Seeding ft. Marissa Nadler – Ink Jar (John Askew Remix)

Lady Danville – Operating

Musique Le Pop – Time Changes

The Robbie Boyd Band – I Won’t Let You Go

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