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Pick Your Poison: Monday 1-10-11

It’s Monday, which would be bad enough, but it’s also a Monday in January. Cold weather, snow, and a host of other unpleasant weather conditions probably await most of you, unless you live in a tropical paradise or are in the Southern Hemisphere, in which case it’s summer. Helping to keep everybody as warm as possible though is today’s Pick Your Poison. Today I’ll recommend tracks for you from Bardo Pond, Daddy Lion, and Yelle. There’s also a new song from Vivian Girls member “Kickball” Katy Goodman under the name of her new solo project La Sera. In the Soundcloud section, you’ll want to be sure to check out tracks from Cloud Nothings and Lord Huron.

adamned.age – Nanof

Bardo Pond – Cracker Wrist

Daddy Lion – The Scientist’s Lament

Jane Lui – Goodnight Company

Jon McKiel – Motion Pictures

Kraddy – Into the Labyrinth

La Sera – Devil’s Hearts Grow Gold
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Metal Mother – Billy Cruz

The Narcoleptic Dancers – Not Evident

Yelle – Safari Disco Club

SOUNDCLOUD

Cloud Nothings – Should Have

Let’s Buy Happiness – Fast Fast

Lord Huron – When Will I See You Again

Sean Finn – My Sharona (Temabes Remix)

The Ting Tings – Hands (DISCOFORGIA Remix)

Album Review: Braids – Native Speaker [Kanine]


By oh so many indications, 2011 is set to be the year that post-rock finally strikes it big. There is no official explanation as to why, save for saying that the sound is simply evolving and other elements are being incorporated into the more traditional post-rock sound. Of course post-rock in and of itself is a hazy term, loose on purpose to be a catch-all for stuff that sticks out like a sore thumb when placed against a standard 3.5 minute pop song. As such it’s experimental and more often than not immensely beautiful no matter if a band is using four electric guitars or a whole orchestra to get a point across. There’s also a solid rejection of verse-chorus-verse structuring, catchy hooks, and short, to-the-point statements. Post-rock is an adventure, a journey into the vast and unknown wilderness where discovery is half the fun. It is the realm of Sigur Ros and Explosions in the Sky and Godspeed You! Black Emperor, along with Mogwai and Tortoise and Pelican. Thanks to a band like Braids and their debut record “Native Speaker” though, a musical genre that has reached something of a standard way of going about things gets reinvigorated with a few curveballs.

When reaching for their comparison chart, there’s probably higher than a 50% chance most people will try to define Braids as supremely indebted to Animal Collective. “They’re like Animal Collective, only if they came from Montreal,” somebody will say or write. While there are some similarities between the two groups, such as the somewhat liberal use of gurgling electronics and an overall natural flow to the song arrangements, there are far more differences worth paying close attention to. Braids doesn’t have much in the way of filtered/warped vocals (outside of the occasional echo effect) or harmonies. You can also understand and make sense of what singers Raphaelle Standell-Preston and Kathie Lee are singing. To put it another way, the vocals are “decipherable and intelligible”. They’re also not nearly part of the hippy-trippy freak-folk movement, because while a number of their songs are in the 6-8 minute range, there’s not a singular moment that feels over-extended or jam band-y. Think less psychedelic and more of a shoegaze-inspired pop thanks to creative arrangements and not a whole lot in the way of instrumental passages (save for the last track on the record). Of course that description doesn’t even suffice for this band, as they are notoriously hard to pin down into any one sound for too long. That’s largely why it’s easiest to put the band underneath the larger umbrella known as post-rock. Despite the apparant variations in styles from one song to the next, there are so many elements that hold steady across the record that everything comes off as striking and organic and exciting. Fuck genre tropes, Braids are content to carve their own path through this wilderness landscape.

“Native Speaker” begins with the first single and much-hyped track “Lemonade”, and it’s one hell of an introduction to Braids. While the sound of a babbling brook or creek may be confined to the opening track alone, it’s largely a statement for the entire record. The music softly and beautifully moves along, twisting and turning and moving around rocks or whatever else might be in the way. Somewhere in the distance a bird chirps, frogs jump around for fun, and occasionally a deer will come by for a drink. It takes over two minutes for “Lemonade” to reach a chorus, but that’s of little consequence since that time was so well spent building layer upon layer as keyboards pile on electronic elements pile on booming drums and finally guitars. Standell-Preston’s vocals hold a calm demeanor when they first come in, but that gets thrown pretty much to hell once she raises her voice to ask, “Have you fucked/all the stray kids yet?”. When the chorus does finally land, it’s a scorned scorcher, as the lines, “what I’ve found/is that we/are all just sleeping around” soar like they were launched off a mountaintop. The immediate lesson, and one that’s equally learned by most every track on the album, is that you don’t fuck with Raphaelle Standell-Preston in both vocal strength/range and personally as well. At seconds under 4.5 minutes, “Plath Heart” is the shortest song on “Native Speaker”, and it’s a synth-fueled dreamscape with an almost Dirty Projectors-esque bent to it. The vocals are practically cutesy and playful and a keyboard-created steel drum pushes that vibe further, but the lyrics betray that with a little bit of anti-relationship sentiment. That’s where the title really comes into play, because if you know how dark and depressing Sylvia Plath’s writing is, you know that a Plath heart isn’t something worth smiling about. A lovely lullaby is how the 8+ minute “Glass Deers” begins, with the keyboards lightly plinking as if singing you to sleep. The vocals play along too, even when Standell-Preston repeats over and over again about how she’s “fucked up”. Eventually though, while the melody remains on a lovely even keel, the vocals soar to an extreme as Standell-Preston begins to yell at the impressive level of Bjork or Karen O. That quiet-loud-quiet-loud singing trend continues for the duration while the lyrics are a bit more upbeat about loving someone even with all their faults. The atmospherics continue with the title track, in which the main part of the melody are a couple of quiet keyboards and a looped electronic bit that simply float in the ether. Not content to just let it sit there though, guitars and random noises begin to permeate the mix, piling on top of one another the way that great post-rock songs do. Harmonies are introduced, the vocals soar yet again, and then in a flash, all is quiet once more before the track goes gentle into that good night after 8.5 minutes of writhing around.

Have you ever been in an apartment or hotel room when a very loud rave is happening right next door? You can hear a muffled version of the beats through the wall and they totally keep you up as you’re trying to sleep. “Lammicken” exploits that sort of noise as the backing melody, along with a looped and melodic “ohhhhaaahhhohhhh”, both of which are the only two constant things about the track. “I can’t stop it,” Standell-Preston sings over and over again with varying degrees of forcefulness. Through it all, white electro-static builds and builds up in the mix, and as already mentioned, there’s no way to stop it. It overtakes everything else near the end of the song, before finally abruptly quitting in the last 30 seconds as the original backing melody plays the track out in a much more ominous fashion than before. A series of synths layered on top of one another mixed with some drum rim hits is how “Same Mum” begins, and once the playful vocals come in it becomes one of Braids’ poppiest and most immediate songs despite lacking a legitimate chorus. Some lightly picked Grizzly Bear-like guitar comes in about mid-way through the track, shortly before a 2 minute instrumental breakdown that also has some xylophone making an appearance. The final 90 seconds brings a slow down in tempo as the guitars disappear and vocals return with Standell-Preston providing interesting variations on the phrase, “We are from the same mum”. That’s the last thing she says on the entire record as we’re then led into the instrumental closer “Little Hand”. Beginning as a spacey, pulsating deep synth, keyboards begin to plink out a jaunty little melody that’s practically the sonic equivalent of twinkling stars. Carefully picked guitars weave themselves in and out of the mix as there’s just a hint of Sigur Ros-like atmosphere, even if there is no build to a huge crescendo. Instead, the melody slowly fades away as gently and calmly as things began.

What makes Braids so interesting is their ability to sustain a melody no matter how long or short a track might be. Their five minute songs are just as great as their eight minute ones because they all feel like they’re going somewhere. Even if a track only has one line in it, repeated ad nauseum, it’s the WAY the line is sung, along with the sounds surrounding it that keep the listener fully engaged. As such, Raphaelle Standell-Preston deserves much of the credit for her powerful and highly expressive vocal performance that soars far above and beyond your average female singer. The rest of the band are by no mean slouches either though, as the tracks on “Native Speaker” end up being not so much songs but immense compositions that are complicated even when they sound remarkably simple. The only spots where the quality dips on the album is near the end. After establishing a moody intensity on the two 8+ minute epics in the middle of the album, attempts to rise back up again at a more brisk pace don’t ever fully succeed despite their best efforts. It never gets boring, it just all sort of blends together in one cohesive piece of slow burn, synth-filled post-rock that’s simply not as distinctive as everything that came before it. Despite this, “Native Speaker” is most definitely one of the best records that will be released this month, and Braids one of the best up-and-coming bands you’ll hear about in 2011. There was a pretty heavy load of hype surrounding the band heading into their debut, and the good news is that most of it is justified. There’s room for improvement, but when your first album is as good as this one, Braids might just be one record away from truly becoming a universally respected and beloved band. It’s almost ironic that they also just happen to be from Montreal.

Braids – Lemonade
Braids – Plath Heart (via Pitchfork)

Preorder “Native Speaker” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Friday 1-7-11

First Friday of the new year, and I hope your weekend is going to be a blast. I’m doing my best to make every weekend of 2011 count, so fun is very much on the menu. Hopefully the weather isn’t too bad where you are, especially you East Coasters. Hopefully this flurry of free downloads will be better than the flurries of snowflakes that will be falling from the sky. Some good tracks today too. My personal highlights are songs from Akron/Family, Grails, Keith Cansius and Telekinesis. You can also stream (via the new Soundcloud section) new songs from Lower Dens and The Smith Westerns. Chicago band Campfires is also set to make some waves this year, so have a listen to a song of theirs below as well.

Akron/Family – So It Goes

Coin Operated Boy – Bad Driver (Demo Mix)

Grails – I Led Three Lives

Greater Pacific – Distance

Guitaro – Come Get Sums

Keith Cansius – People’s Faces
Keith Cansius – The Beach House

Lady Lazarus – Sick Child

Poor But Sexy – Hotter Than A Pop Tart

Telekinesis – Car Crash

Thomas Bryan Eaton – When You’re Dancing

X-Ray Press – Holy Ghost, USA

SOUNDCLOUD

Chasing Planets by Campfires

Lower Dens – Batman

Smith Westerns – “All Die Young”

Trophy Wife – The Quiet Earth

Album Review: Cake – Showroom of Compassion [Upbeat Records]


Seventeen years. Six albums. That’s how long we’ve known Cake. It has been seven long years since their fifth effort “Pressure Chief” came out, and it feels like longer. They may have tried to keep fans satisfied with a couple EPs and a b-sides collection, but for the die hard fan, that stuff was just a poor substitute for new Cake material. Why they’ve kept us waiting this long seems to be a mystery, save for John McCrea’s pretentious explanation of the band trying to “detach from the subjective and move into the objective”. In simpler terms, it seems the guys were taking a long, hard look at their past records and where they were as a band, and then trying to unlearn the habits they had fallen into to try and obtain a new and different perspective. A few years off and away from making music probably helps in working towards that ultimate goal. The fruits of their efforts will be revealed next week in the form of “Showroom of Compassion”, an album that’s less a redefining of the band and more a wildly refreshed and forward-thinking version of them.

Have you heard “Showroom of Compassion”‘s first single “Sick of You” yet? You can stream it online or just turn on your local alternative rock radio station for awhile and hopefully they’ll play it. One listen to that track and you’re automatically re-introduced to Cake like they never left. It’s the sort of catchy and fun song that has made for some of the band’s best and most popular singles, though they probably haven’t had a song this good since the 90s. To all the young kids that haven’t heard albums like “Fashion Nugget” or “Motorcade of Generosity”, this is the sort of greatness you’ve been missing. For those of us that grew up knowing and loving Cake, here’s a singular reason to love Cake again. In terms of defining Cake’s sound, “Sick of You” is a perfect example, and a great testament to why they haven’t needed to change their game plan in 17 years. McCrea does his talk-sing vocals, gets all snarky about relationships, the electric guitar has just the right amount of fuzz on it as it rambles up and down octaves, the horn plays around a little, and all the other guys in the band do their trademark spoken-word backing shouts. Quintessential Cake, but interestingly enough, it’s one of the only moments on the record that is.

“Showroom of Compassion” opener “Federal Funding” gets the record off to an innocuous start, putting a hotly psychedelic spin on your traditional Cake model as the guitar swirl, the drums hint at Ringo Starr on “Tomorrow Never Knows”, and the horns play it cool and understated. The title of the song is not deceptive in the least, as McCrea bemoans government bailouts of absurdly rich executives and companies. On “Long Time”, McCrea stretches his seemingly limited singing voice to lengths he normally doesn’t go to, which is interesting to say the least. The buzzing, Mates of State-ish keyboard and vocal harmonies work quite well too, even if there is a very standard horn and bass solo mid-way through the track. If Cake were to ever make a full-on legitimate 60s AM pop song, it’d sound a whole lot like “What’s Now Is Now”, with a dense collection of instruments that include both electric and acoustic guitars along with some keyboard and mellotron. The vocal harmonies are highly impressive, and though the song is mid-tempo, it’s bright as all daylight, even incorporating some chirping birds towards the end. At the mid point of the album is “Teenage Pregnancy”, an instrumental that starts out as a slow piano ballad before taking a decidedly darker turn with some grimy guitar work, ominous horns and creepy circus keyboards. It’s most definitely one of the most interesting things on “Showroom of Compassion”. A song like “Easy to Crash” can appear to be an almost standard, Cake-on-autopilot track, but closer examination reveals a few subtle elements that take it beyond that level. The verses may not have much worth paying attention to, but keep a careful ear out for the sounds of cars driving down a highway. The power in this song really lies in two parts – the chorus, which is ridiculously well constructed and anthemic, and the bridge, which features a great Krautrock-inspired instrumental portion. It’s this care and deeper display of influences that’s pushing this band forwards even when they may not always sound like it. And hey, do you like alt-country? John McCrea has made note recently of how he’s grown fond of the genre, and “Bound Away”, the acoustic ballad dosed with slide guitar, is his tribute to it. Who knows what the reaction would be if they tried to do an entire country-tinged record, but as a singular moment on the new album, it’s kinda nice as just a general shake-up from everything else. If you’ve never heard a Cake song begin with piano and violins before, closing track “Italian Guy” has you covered. There’s even a touch of harpsichord (more likely keyboard imitation harpsichord) amid what’s otherwise a pretty sparsely arranged song and possibly the greatest example of today’s Cake vs. the pre-2011 Cake. There’s really not much more of a fitting way to end the record.

Perhaps taking seven years between albums was the best thing Cake has ever done. No, that doesn’t mean “Showroom of Compassion” is their best record, but it does come really damn close. What you really come away with courtesy of this new album is a renewed sense of what made this band so attractive in the first place. It’s a back to basics record but in a 2.0 form. They have rebuilt themselves. Better. Stronger. Faster than before. They’re showing much more range, both in the instruments they use and where John McCrea takes his vocals. They’re lightly dabbling with genre as well, but never to the point where the Cake essentials fully disappear. If you loved Cake before, there’s nothing here that will take that love away. If you’ve only kind of liked the band but thought they showed limited range, now’s the time to look again. And if you’ve always kind of despised Cake, well, you’ll still despise them. Mostly it’s just a pleasure to have them back again and in great form. Let’s hold out hope they stay that way.

Preorder “Showroom of Compassion” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 1-6-11

It’s Thursday, which means we’re just about done with the first week of 2011. I don’t know about you, but so far this new year feels a whole lot like the old one. Ah well, 2010 was fun enough, so high hopes ahead right? Solid edition of Pick Your Poison today too, and I’ll recommend tracks from Big Eyes, L’ALTRA, The Moondoggies and Moving Units. The Soft Province is a band that features members of The Besnard Lakes, which makes them additionally excellent in my mind. And in the Soundcloud section there’s a b-side from The Pains of Being Pure at Heart you should check out.

Big Eyes – Why Can’t I

Billygoat – Dioscuri II

James Curd Presents Ziggy Franklin – Shelter

L’ALTRA – Winter Loves Summer Sun

The Moondoggies – What Took So Long

Moving Units – Pink Redemption

Old Monk – Butter and Toast

Sidi Touré & Dourra Cissé – Bon Koum

The Soft Province – One Was A Lie

Spring Breakup – It’s Not Me, It’s You

Ursula Rucker – So What..?

SOUNDCLOUD

Dj RASCAL – EHH Ohh [ Banana Boat ] by djrascalmusic

The Holidays – Broken Bones (CFCF Remix) by PressHereInge

The Pains of Being Pure At Heart “The One” by Slumberland Records

The Jupiter & the 119 (edit) by Railroad Earth

Album Review: British Sea Power – Valhalla Dancehall [Rough Trade]


Let’s talk for a minute about Vikings. No, not the football team that hails from Minnesota, but rather the Nordic warriors of ancient times. They’re an important part of our world history, and a bit of a blemish on it too. See, the Vikings started the whole “rape and pillage” movement, which while popular at the time, isn’t the way we do things anymore for good reason. The other side of Vikings was the cool part, huge moustaches and beards, those cool hats with the horns on top, braids and furs as far as the eye can see. They also were big fans of the axe, and after plenty of pints of mead, fights would often break out and people would die. It was a way of life for those Vikings. Anyways, according to their mythology, should you die in combat, your spirit goes to Valhalla upon which it will be recruited for the ultimate “Battle to End All Battles”. It’s sort of an ancient “Battle Between Heaven and Hell” thing, further details of which I do not care to explain. The point in all this? British Sea Power have a new album coming out next week, and the title is “Valhalla Dancehall”. If you’re looking for perspective on where the band might be coming from, on this record, look no further than the title.

British Sea Power have never been a band that makes “small” music, but their relatively unknown status in America is amusing considering how massive their songs tend to get. They draw constant comparisons to U2, mostly in the size and scope of their vision and less for the ways in which they sound similar. And while stadiums are surely where their songs sound best, hardly anyone gets to hear them in such a venue. Officially, the last British Sea Power record was 2008’s “Man of Aran”, which was a soundtrack to a fictional documentary of the same name about life on the Aran Islands. That was a different sort of album than what they’ve done in the past, so it’s fair enough to say their other 2008 record “Do You Like Rock Music?” is their last normal-sounding release. Even then, normal-sounding isn’t quite the operative word for this band, because while they trade often on some huge songs, they’re also tricky in avoiding the easier descriptions that box them into a stylistic corner. In between all those stadium rockers have always been little oddities that will graze on light indie pop one minute and delve into dark experimental post-rock the next. Not much has changed on “Valhalla Dancehall”, except for maybe the continued years of making music and performing has them sounding just a little smarter and better than they did last time. Of course last time they also bent over backwards “going big” to the point where the songs were overblown beyond recognition. We’ll fondly remember how this little band burst onto the music scene in 2003 with “The Decline of British Sea Power” and one hell of a great single in the song “Blackout”, but those days have long since passed and they remain ostensibly a charicature of what they once were.

In the realm of gigantic rock songs, “Valhalla Dancehall” starts out with a doozy. “Who’s In Control” is a highly political anti-government anthem that seizes the zeitgeist of the times by actively protesting all the cuts being made to programs in Britain and the cost being handed down to the citizens. If you paid enough attention to the news in the last couple months, you may have seen loads of angry British students on the streets screaming about the increased cost of university tuition. Prince Charles and his wife Camilla had their vehicle attacked and pelted with rocks and other things when they drove through the crowds. With Scott Wilkinson’s scruffy and brash vocals, along with a more than healthy amount of cursing, “Who’s In Control” deserves to serve its function as a modern-day protest song. Somebody latch onto it, please. After such a rousing start to the record, British Sea Power try to go even BIGGER with “We Are Sound”, and quickly they head right back into the excessive and bland territory that got them in trouble last time around. A bit better is “Georgie Ray”, a piano ballad that strongly echoes 80s David Bowie. There’s a certain cheese factor to it, but the band doesn’t push it and so it turns out to be one of the better songs on the album. “Stunde Null” is another quick and dirty rock song with buzzsaw guitars and a very healthy tempo. The real problem it has is with the lyrics. The song title is repeated over and over and OVER again to the point of ad nauseum, probably in the hope you’ll get it stuck in your head. It succeeds, but does so while annoying. If you heard the band’s “Zeus” EP last year, you got a preview of a couple “Valhalla Dancehall” tracks in the form of “Mongk” and “Cleaning Out the Rooms”. The former is actually titled “Mongk II” on the full length, as the track is re-worked a bit from its original version to throw Wilkinson’s vocals into a vocoder and roughing up the electric guitars a little more. Does it make the song any better than the pretty mediocre original? Not really. “Cleaning Out the Rooms” is the same between EP and album, and it’s still a 7 minute giant of a song that plays beyond its means. This time there’s a full orchestra to help bring some serious post-rock Sigur Ros swells to the proceedings. It’s nice as a concept and as something that breaks away from the overall blandness of the standard stadium rock fare, but with all the excess still happening instrumentally there’s still some issues. Perhaps the most interesting track on the album is also the shortest. “Thin Black Sail” is a quick slap in the face, psychedelic punk rock track that’s over almost as soon as it began. It’s rather exciting to hear British Sea Power try something so white hot and off the rails. Positioned between the two longest songs on the album though, it’s an extra tough transition into the eleven minute “Once More Now”. That really does push an experimental and post-rock edge, and while it isn’t as busy of a track, there are still flutes and violins and weird scratching sounds that pop up over the course of it. The issue “Once More Now” has is that there’s very little reason to extend it to 11 minutes because it becomes a drag after about 6 or 7. The slightly more modest arrangement suits the band, but here’s one case where they try to do too much with too little. It’s the sort of song that’d work as an adrift album closer, but the band apparently felt differently. “Heavy Water” officially ends “Valhalla Dancehall”, and the mid-tempo rock song comes across like British Sea Power on autopilot. It’s a disappointing way to end a record that boasts a couple of interesting and different things from the band than we’re normally used to.

Essentially, “Valhalla Dancehall” would be seen as “just another British Sea Power album” had it not followed the massively bland offering that was “Do You Like Rock Music?” (again, casting “Man of Aran” aside). As a result it’s easy to say the band has improved since their last full length, even in some respects over the randomness that was last year’s “Zeus” EP. They’ve toned down a majority of their bad habits, though those still rear their ugly heads on a handful of tracks. They also try and venture into new territory, and that’s both admirable and a poor choice given that they aren’t always successful in those attempts. Better to try something new over doing something you know doesn’t work. Really though, British Sea Power have proven they absolutely can write big stadium rock songs and make them great, the issue is that those flashes of brilliance typically only show up once or twice an album. The rest is just gross, marginal excess. What remains interesting about British Sea Power though is that despite how continually huge their sound tries to be, they always throw in a few curveball tracks in the form of minor pop arrangements or weird soundscapes. They haven’t yet come upon true balance in their sound, something that would sustain for one entirely solid album, great or horrible. Their debut “The Decline of British Sea Power” came closest, and they haven’t looked back ever since. When they pull for mainstream audiences by trying to be larger than life, it comes off as phony and excessive, which turns the intended target off. When they get down an offbeat path trying to curry favor with indie kids and innovators, the attempts are offset by the crap that surrounds it. In other words, British Sea Power can’t win. They haven’t been able to do so thus far in their careers and “Valhalla Dancehall” falls right in line as well. When we’re talking about where this new record stands in terms of the band’s catalogue, somewhere in the middle is the proper answer even though it doesn’t mean much. Until they can find some true focus and are able to make a record that doesn’t ever sound like it was intended to be played in a room full of thousands of people, they won’t ever actually play to a room full of thousands of people. Funny paradox, isn’t it, having to “go smaller” to get big. Not many bands have that problem, but British Sea Power are one of them. We’d give up on them if they didn’t make those three or four songs each record that were genuinely great and showed serious promise for their future. “Valhalla Dancehall” has that quality about it, and if you want to do the band a favor, you’ll take the free downloads below and nothing more. One can hope that the wake up call they so desperately need might be delivered in the form of poorer than usual record sales. The call is yours though, and if you’re reading this before or around the album’s release date, take the full stream link below into account before jumping in with both feet. You may be looking to soak in the hot tub, but a pool of tepid water is no hot tub.

British Sea Power – Who’s In Control
British Sea Power – Living Is So Easy

Stream the entire album at The Onion’s AV Club

Preorder “Valhalla Dancehall” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 1-5-11

Things are picking up. People are waking up from their post-holiday hangovers and the inbox has begun to bear a more normal load. So today’s Pick Your Poison looks pretty promising. I can recommend tracks from Ben + Vesper, The Sound of Growing Up, Swimclub, and Tape Deck Mountain. You should also take particular note of the band Middle Brother, which is comprised of members from Dawes, Deer Tick and Delta Spirit. Sex Beet’s cover of Sonic Youth’s “Dirty Boots” isn’t half bad either, and that’s something you might want to try out.

Ben + Vesper – Knee-Hi Wall

THE DiSCiPLiNES – KiLL THE KiLLJOY

Easter Island – Proud

Middle Brother – Me Me Me

Mind Spiders – No Romance

Sex Beet – Dirty Boots (Sonic Youth cover)

Some Community – Random Words

The Sound of Growing Up – The Kite

Swimclub – She’s A Teaser

Tape Deck Mountain – It Goes Down

Wake Up Lucid – Sugar

Win Win – Releaserpm ft. Lizzi Bougatsos (Nadastrom Moombaton Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

Crystal Bright & the Silver Hands – 01 Little Match Girl by Deus Ex Machina Publicity

MONA – Trouble On The Way by Press Here

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 1-4-11

It’s a little slow going thus far in 2011 when it comes to fresh music. Of course it’s kind of that way at the start of every new year. The “holidays” are still going on, or at least a number of people are still vacationing, and the real new albums don’t begin to hit stores until next week. So apologies for the sparse number of mp3s in today’s Pick Your Poison. Anticipate more of the same probably through the end of the week. My recommendations for today include songs from Broken Records, The District Attorneys and Yellow Ostrich’s cover of Sharon Van Etten’s “Love More”. Also take note of the new Soundcloud section, where you can stream (and in most cases also download) some tracks as well.

Broken Records – A Leaving Song
Broken Records – A Darkness Rises Up

The District Attorneys – Splitsville

ESG – Dance to the Beat of Moody

Hafdis Huld – Synchronised Swimmers
Hafdis Huld – Action Man

The New Slave – Pharmaceutical Son
The New Slave – 1975

Starlings, TN – How Dark It Is Before the Dawn

Yellow Ostrich – Love More (Sharon Van Etten cover)

SOUNDCLOUD

Me And My Gin by Cepia

James Vincent McMorrow – This Old Dark Machine by VagrantRecords

EP Review: Klaxons – Landmarks of Lunacy [Polydor]


It took three and a half years for Klaxons to create the sophmore album that was 2010’s “Surfing the Void”, the space cat artworked follow-up to 2007’s “Myths of the Near Future”. While bands taking that long to come up with a new record isn’t that uncommon, what many didn’t hear about was the band’s failed attempt at recording their second record in the fall of 2008. They lined up Simian Mobile Disco’s James Ford to produce the album and went to France to work with him. Upon completion of that album at the end of ’08, the band’s label listened to it and rejected it for being “too experimental”. An easier way to read into that was to say Klaxons, who had been saying prior to these recording sessions they were looking to move in a far more prog-rock and psychedelic direction on their new album, actually followed through and the result was a collection of songs that were hard to market. It sounded like a different band than the one that by themselves created the term “nu-rave” (a term they had grown to hate), and perhaps the biggest worry was that such a change in style would completely eradicate the solid fan base already built thanks to danceable cuts like “Golden Skans” and “From Atlantis To Interzone”. After the label’s rejection of their prog-rock opus, Klaxons then retreated back to the studio in late 2009 with new producer Ross Robinson to make “Surfing the Void”, a kinetic and loud record that was unique in how it skirted the line between dance record and psychedelic freak out. In other words, it was a compromise between band and label, one that worked out to relatively positively positive reviews but slightly diminished sales. Perhaps to try and pull in some extra good will, or just because they knew nothing would become of them anyways, this past Christmas, Klaxons bestowed upon us a free EP titled “Landmarks of Lunacy”. Posted on their website, it’s a set of 5 aborted songs from their sessions with James Ford that never saw the light of day.

You would think that with a member of Simian Mobile Disco behind the boards, making a fast-paced dance album would be pretty easy to do. That’s not what Klaxons had in mind on the songs that make up the “Landmarks of Lunacy” EP though, and they were true to their word in venturing out into much more psychedelic territory. There’s a certain calm and trippy atmosphere permeating these tracks, even if it doesn’t quite reach its full potential until the 7+ minute “Marble Fields” that closes the EP out. On the opening track “The Pale Blue Dot”, the booming drums seem to have dominance as most everything else is pretty sparse until the chorus hits home. That’s when the watery guitars make a bit of racket and veer off the reservation for some brief moments before getting back on track. The doubled over, often harmonized vocals work well in this case, matching well with your traditional oddball Klaxons lyrics referencing everything from a “terra rusty tone” to the “infinite being clouds”. That being said, the track is also just a little bit boring, primarily because it doesn’t have enough going on to justify the direction it takes. The same could be said for “Silver Forest”, though it does have a bit more going for it on a few different sides. The more liberal use of piano is nice, as are the echo effects applied to some of the vocals. The only thing missing from the song is tempo – were the pace to move about 1.5x faster than it currently is, a hit single would emerge. “Ivy Leaves” gets really out there, choosing to float in the ether of spacey electronic background noise as the vocals sit front and center. There’s not much in the way of a chorus while drum machine beats build and grow louder and more insistent to the point where they almost explode. Just when you expect the whole track to break wide open and skyrocket into this massive heavy guitar hook, the bottom drops out and you’re back to the quiet provided by that anti-gravity electro minimalism. It can come off like wasted potential, but there’s something to be admired in the restraint the band shows in such a situation. Guitars are entirely absent from “Wildeflowers”, a slow march that gets by on keyboards, a quivering organ-like instrument, and percussion that feels like it comes from banging around random kitchen objects at the same time. Thematically it’s in perfect alignment with the trippy vibe the EP is supposed to exude, but unlike the previous three tracks there’s little redemption to be found here. The melody stays almost exactly the same from start to finish while the chorus just doesn’t quite have the strength to stick with you long enough to be memorable. The singular track you’re sure to not forget on this five track ode to experimentation though is closing number “Marble Fields”. Pink Floyd is not a name to be referenced lightly, and to be clear Klaxons are no Pink Floyd, but were that seminal band to get back together and make a new record, “Marble Fields” might be what it’d sound like today. It is the one song that holds echoes of modern psychedelia through and through, with the band utilizing most everything in their arsenal to create this epic and rather exciting track. The opening piano line comes off as dark and paranoid, and then the fuzz-riddled guitar enters the picture and pushes that idea further into the “bad trip” scenario. There’s an uptick in the mood around the pretty catchy chorus, and the vocal harmonies and roundabout backing vocals are nothing short of impressive. Somewhere around 4 minutes in, the track begins its slow descent into overwhelming noise. Starting with a rather strong drum freak out, waves of guitars and electronic drone build up and wash over the vocals until they’re completely buried. The final minute sounds a whole lot like a person trying to sing underwater, just a whole bunch of nonsensical electronic gurgles. It’s a good thing the band chose to end with that, because you don’t really come back from it, with good reason.

Undoubtedly, Klaxons unleashed the “Landmarks of Lunacy” EP to see what kind of reaction these heretofore rejected songs would generate. The unfortunate truth seems to be that it was a wise move to not include them on the band’s second record. That’s not to say there isn’t value in most of these songs or that the band needed to make something more marketable like they eventually wound up doing, but it’s more about the fine line between good and bad. There are so many great psych-pop records out there that don’t work on a verse-chorus-verse system or have a listener-friendly angle to them, Klaxons just haven’t created one of those. A couple of these tracks are great on paper and show all sorts of potential, but there’s always a thing or two they’re lacking to make them truly excellent. The lone exception is “Marble Fields”, which puts everything else to shame while proving the band has it in them to craft something both wildly experimental and engaging. If they could make an entire record with songs as great as the last one on this EP, that’d be worth putting out, record label be damned. As it stands, the band is handing you this entire EP as a free download, so paying absolutely nothing for it feels like the price is right. You may very well like or even grow to love some of these songs, meaning they’re worth at least listening to once out of curiosity. For those with the time and a bit of hard drive space to spare though, take the full download as there’s no harm in it. What can we expect from the next Klaxons record? It’s still way too early to speculate, but if songs like the sharply experimental ones on the “Landmarks of Lunacy” EP were originally intended for release back in 2008, we truly can’t tell what sort of headspace they’ll be in come 2011 or 2012.

Click here to download the full “Landmarks of Lunacy” EP

The Pale Blue Dot by klaxons

Silver Forest by klaxons

Ivy Leaves by klaxons

Wildeflowers by klaxons

Marble Fields by klaxons

Pick Your Poison: Monday 1-3-11

Welcome to the very first Pick Your Poison of 2011. For those just joining us, let me offer up a very quick primer on what this daily segment is all about. Each day I shuffle through the collection of emails that gather in my inbox, then throw all the mp3s your way and let you take what appeals to you. I’ll recommend some stuff, sure, but the choice as to what you download is up to you, and if you find something new to love, great. If you wind up with a bunch of crap, well, that one’s essentially on you as well. But it all comes from a place of love and discovery and I hope you’ll love it. New for 2011, I’ve now added a Soundcloud section to the daily posts, so you can stream (and in many cases also download) more music than ever before. Highlights for today include songs from Carol Bui, In Tall Buildings, Laura Peek, Puro Instinct, and Silver Swans doing a cover of The National’s “Anyone’s Ghost”. This might not be the most exciting collection of songs to kick off the new year, there’s still enough to enjoy and I anticipate things picking up as the week goes on.

Carol Bui – “Geisha” Means Open Minded

Chris Hickey – I Can’t Wait to See You

Snow Caps – Moonbroken Heart
Snow Caps – Beauty and the Beauty

Eric and Magill – All Those I Know

In Tall Buildings – Alarm Will Sound

Laura Peek – Stay Sharp

Nic Bommarito – T27

Ori – Milka’s Dream

Puro Instinct – Stilyagi

Silver Swans – Anyone’s Ghost (The National cover)

To Light A Fire – Damned

SOUNDCLOUD

The Prodigy – Omen (TEMABES Remix) [Free Download] by TEMABES

Album Review: Gorillaz – The Fall [EMI]


Without a doubt, the hot gadget for 2010 was the iPad. Apple seems to have a monopoly lately on must-own items, and many a person will testify to the high quality and innovation the company consistently strives toward. Good for them, they’re probably doing more good than harm with their products, even if a tablet computer such as an iPad doesn’t have the processing power of your average laptop and has a tendency to break if you drop it from a countertop. Those things are inconsequential, because it’s cool, and the apps created for it allow you to do cool things. Case in point, whilst on tour in North America for 32 days this past fall, Damon Albarn wrote and composed 15 new Gorillaz songs using his iPad as the primary tool and musical instrument for the entire thing. It’s an impressive feat in and of itself, particularly because it sounds as good as a record made the traditional way, in a studio with industry standards such as ProTools or GarageBand. Released this past Christmas Day as a free download for fan club members ONLY (it only costs…$45 for a year’s subscription), “The Fall” is the official title of this iPad-made album. It may not boast the extensive list of guest stars and dramatic orchestral moments, but it remains a Gorillaz album through and through, with plenty of electro-pop style, found sound samples, and anchored by Albarn’s vocals.

Going purely by the song titles, you can tell that “The Fall” was a record composed on a journey across America. Over half the titles reference cities or states, and according to the album liner notes they were all recorded in those locations (see: “Shy-Town” in Chicago, “Amarillo” in Amarillo, etc). It’s not fair to say the actual music embodies the spirits of each city in which they were recorded, but that might be a product of how Damon Albarn views them anyways. If that’s the case, either the weather turning colder or perhaps road weariness may have affected Albarn’s mood as this isn’t the most upbeat Gorillaz record by any means. It’s often slow and lacks some of the pop edge that’s generated the cartoon band’s singles these past few years. The lack of any hip hop on this album is also an issue, though to be completely fair it’s not like you can get all your rap buddies to come out and record something with you as you tour around the country. In place of much of that are various natural sound samples that were recorded in locations around the country, from flipping around Texas radio stations to a forest and stream in Santa Fe to a loudspeaker announcement at an Los Angeles train station. Hell, the last track, “Seattle Yodel” is just a store-bought “yodeling pickle” (which you can buy online as well) held up to a microphone. At the very least these natural sounds make for something different outside of the iPad-crafted beats and the actual instruments that do pop up very infrequently. It’s definitely enough to leave you wondering whether you can call this even a legitimate Gorillaz album if Albarn is virtually the only person composing most of these songs.

While “The Fall” may have its issues, it may also be a little unfair to judge it harshly. First off, the method of distribution exclusively via the band’s fan club seems to suggest that this wasn’t intended to be heard by the masses or in the hope of spawning a radio hit. The only way non-fan club members can get their hands on this record is either by streaming it via the band’s website or pirating a copy. Secondly, writing and recording such an album over 32 days while in the middle of a tour that offers loads of distractions isn’t the way that 98% of bands operate, mostly out of fear what they come up with will be a crap product. Thirdly, to limit yourself and to base an entire record on what you can do with a bunch of iPad applications and a couple instruments is a challenge and a half in and of itself. The liner notes list all 20 iPad applications, along with the couple of actual instruments used to create everything you hear on “The Fall”, to the point where you could make this whole record over on your own should you be so inspired. That nobody has put out a legitimate iPad-recorded album prior to now really also shows how forward-thinking and brilliant Damon Albarn really is. While you were busy playing the latest edition of “Angry Birds” he was writing and composing music. Were he to allow himself more time and resources you can probably assume this record would have been a lot better and a lot more upbeat/fun. Eh, that’s probably the plan for the next, fully legitimate release from the band. So instead of being great “The Fall” is merely good, though better than might otherwise be expected. It’s not worth paying for a fan club membership just to own it, but if you really love Gorillaz and want to take advantage of more than just this exclusive music (a lithograph, webstore discount, ticket presales, streaming live videos, etc), perhaps the Sub Division is for you.

Join the Gorillaz fan club Sub Division and get a free download of “The Fall”

Stream “The Fall” at the official Gorillaz website

Pick Your Poison: Week of 12-20-10

Merry Christmas Eve, my friends. Once again I’ve got yet another week-long dose of mp3s for you in the form of Pick Your Poison. As a quick reminder, in case you needed it, Pick Your Poison will return to daily postings starting January 3rd. Until then, I’m dropping off all the week’s mp3s each Friday for you. There’s a few Christmas tracks in this week’s set, naturally today and tomorrow are the best times to use them, so if you’re putting together a Christmas mix, be sure to check out these tracks from Coconut and the Duke, Goddamn Electric Bill, Hot Sugar, and The Superions expertly remixed by none other than YACHT. Other non-holiday recommendations are for Cowboy Junkies, the Tim Goldsworthy (Thee Loving Hand) remix of a new Cut Copy jam, Danielson, Death, Finn Riggins, Lia Ices and Monotonix. Ah, check them all out. Very few duds to be found this week. Have a great Christmas (or normal weekend if you don’t celebrate), and we’ll catch up again next week in preparation for New Years Eve.

Coastwest Unrest – Rebel Music

Coconut and the Duke – Trim My Tree

Cowboy Junkies – Wrong Piano

Cut Copy – Take Me Over (Thee Loving Hand Remix by Tim Goldsworthy)

Danielson – Grow Up

Death – Can You Give Me A Thrill

Finn Riggins – Wake (Keep This Town Alive)

Georgia Anne Muldrow – Zulu Bounce

Goddamn Electric Bill – Feliz Navidad

Hot Sugar – Don’t Cut Down My Tree

Johnny Hawaii – The Lonely Smurfer

Kopecky Family Band – God and Me

Lia Ices – Daphne

The Lights – New New

Midnight Spin – In the Air (Revival)

Monotonix – Before I Pass Away

Shores – Meanwhile

Sugar & Gold – Bodyaches

The Superions – Fruitcake (YACHT Remix)

Yip Deceiver – Sadie Hawkins Day

Listmas 2010: The Top 50 Albums of the Year [#10-1]

Here they are, my Top 10 Albums of 2010. We’ve been down a long and tough road to get here, but these are the ten records that stood out the most for me in the past year. I love the variety, along with the healthy mixture of veterans and a couple newcomers. The last couple entries may only be from some well-established, hotly hyped artists, but to be fair, they did have banner years. If you’re going to read any entry on this site for the next 365 days, please make it this one. A lot of time and thought went into creating this list and I hope you either agree with my choices, or at least understand why I made them. It’s what the paragraphs below the numbers are for. In case you missed the rest of this lengthy Top 50 Albums countdown, here’s some handy links to check out those other entries:

Top Albums #50-41
Top Albums #40-31
Top Albums #30-21
Top Albums #20-11

Before jumping into this, I just want to note quickly that outside of a couple tiny updates, Faronheit will be on vacation through the end of 2010. It’s been an interesting year for this site to say the least, what with my old Blogspot address and 3+ years worth of archives being wiped clean off the face of the earth…but I actually couldn’t be happier with the current layout and the official “dot com” at the end of the address. Been going revamped and stronger than ever since April. 2011 will bring a couple small site tweaks, but nothing you need to worry about, just some added fun perks. Anyways, I hope your holidays are enjoyable and we’ll play catch up officially come January 3rd.

Without further ado, here are Faronheit’s Top 10 Albums of 2010:

Pick Your Poison: Week of 12-13-10

In hindsight, I shuold have continued with Pick Your Poison for the full week this week. Looks like there’s enough music to have sustained an “at least 10 songs per day” rate, but here I am giving it all to you in one fell swoop. Given that there are 50+ mp3s here, highlights are very easy to come by, so let me rattle a bunch off for you. The Asteroid #4, Fergus & Geronimo, Martina Topley-Bird, Maserati, The Mountain Goats, Porcelain Raft, Rachel Goodrich, Solar Temple Suicides, Toro y Moi, Wise Blood, and Yalls all make the cut. That’s just normal music we’re talking about. There’s a bunch of holiday-specific music in this collection as well. Of those songs, I can recommend the ones from Banjo or Freakout, Beach House, Candy Claws, Craig Wedren, I Like Trains, Robbers on High Street, and Tape Deck Mountain. So check all this stuff out, maybe bookmark this page and come back to it when you have the appropriate time to spend looking it over carefully. And depending on how things go next week, I might just have one more edition of Pick Your Poison to deliver before Christmas Eve.

AgesandAges – No Nostalgia

Arbouretum – Destroying to Save

The Asteroid #4 – Wild Opal Eyes

Banjo or Freakout – Frosty the Snowman

Beach House – I Do Not Care for the Winter Sun

Bird Names – It’s Skin

The Brute Chorus – Birdman

Candy Claws – Snow Bridge

Chamberlin – Dust

Colin L. Orchestra – Hold Tite

Craig Wedren – Lollie Holiday

David Lowery – The Palace Guards

Duchess Leo – Bloom

Fergus & Geronimo – Powerful Lovin’

Fukkk Offf – Worldwide (Fukkk Offf Remix)

Geoff Berner – Wealthy Poet

Harlan Pepper – Great Lakes

HolidayHoliday – Hanged

I Like Trains – Last Christmas

In These Woods – Always
In These Woods – Bear

The Invisible Hand – There’s Room In My Will
The Invisible Hand – Coy Trap

Jay Crocker – Super Disease

John LaMonica – A Ghost (Demo)

Keegan Dewitt – Christmas Eve

Kopecky Family Band – Our Remedy (Christmas Song)

Las Resistance – Understanding

Lonnie Walker – Compass Comforts

Lull Water – One More Time

Martina Topley-Bird – Sandpaper Kisses

Maserati – We Got the System to Fight the System

Matthew Carefully – Space Nurses

Midnight Magic – Beam Me Up (Jacques Renault Remix)

The Mountain Goats – Tyler Lambert’s Grave

Mount Mole – Little Eyes

Pallers – Arctic Hymn

Pigbag – Papa’s Got A Brand New Pigbag

Porcelain Raft – Tip of Your Tongue (Blackbird Blackbird Remix)
Porcelain Raft – Tip of Your Tongue (Keep Shelly in Athens Remix)

Rachel Goodrich – After Hours (Velvet Underground cover)

Religious to Damn – Drifter

Robbers on High Street – The Rocking Disco Santa Claus

Sarah Lee Guthrie and Johnny Irion – Speed of Light

Savoir Adore – Loveliest Creature

Siriusmo – Mosaik

The Sky Drops – Explain It to Me

Solar Temple Suicides – Close Your Eyes

Southern Shores – Grande Comore
Southern Shores – Mauna Loa

Tape Deck Mountain – Christmas Time Is Here Again
Tape Deck Mountain – Blue Christmas

Toro y Moi – Still Sound

Way Yes – Dreadlock Holiday

We Wre the Willows – A Funeral Dressed As A Birthday

Wise Blood – Loud Mouths

Yalls – Germs

Listmas 2010: The Top 50 Albums of the Year [#20-11]

This is the home stretch, the leg of this “race” just before the final one, where there’s light at the end of the tunnel if you could only make it there. Tomorrow I reveal my Top 10 Albums of 2010, and that should be pretty great. RIght now I’ll give you some subtle hints as to what will be on that list. There are two debut albums that crack the top ten, along with one psych-rock band and a handful of other indie darlings. If you’ve been reading up on your year-end lists, there’s a halfway good chance you can guess most of my list. My #1 album of the year though, I’ve yet to see anybody place it atop their lists yet, so some of you might be surprised (but not REALLY surprised). Anyways, enough about tomorrow, let me make quick mention of what we’ve been counting down the last couple days:

Top 50 Albums #50-41
Top 50 Albums #40-31
Top 50 Albums #30-21

As with thet previous sets of 10, I’ve once again included mp3s with the albums (when allowed) to give you an audio taste should you want one. I’m also continuing to solicit comments from you, either in regards to this list or a list of your own. I’m interested to hear your thoughts on the best of the year. So let me delay this no longer, I’m proud to present my Top Albums of 2010, #20-11.

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