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Album Review: Cults – Cults [Columbia/In the Name Of]


As oh so many bands know in this day and age, hype can be a very dangerous thing. The cycles move so quickly that you can wind up abandoned just as fast as you were picked up. One of the biggest success stories as of late has been Cults. The duo of Madeline Follin and Brian Oblivion first met in San Diego, transplanted themselves to New York, and quietly composed some music they were self-conscious about sharing with anyone. When they finally did hand over a couple tracks to friends, those songs eventually made their way to the inbox of Chris at Gorilla Vs. Bear, who made quick moves to sign them to his brand new label Forest Family. The “Go Outside” 7″ single turned Cults from unknowns to one of the most hyped acts online in a matter of weeks. The buzz was and remained high for such an extended period that many larger labels sought to sign the band, with Columbia ultimately winning out (and Lily Allen’s label In the Name Of getting UK distribution rights). The hype has died down somewhat, given the amount of time that passed between their initial impact and what will finally be their self-titled debut out the first week in June, but one gets the sense that Cults wanted it that way. The initial impact may be lessened as a result, but this band appears to be in it for the longer haul anyways.

Those that have been paying close attention to the comings and goings of Cults in the last year will likely have already heard the first three tracks on their debut full length. If perchance you missed them, Soundcloud seems to be your friend. Starting with “Abducted”, things take on a very lo-fi aesthetic for the first 40 seconds of the song. It sounds like a microphone was placed in the middle of a room and Oblivion stood on one side playing his acoustic guitar and Follin stood on the other singing and playing a glockenspiel. There’s an all natural impact straight into full stereo sound though, complete with everything cozying up to your traditional studio quality. That’s also the first time the immensely catchy chorus hits, sucking you in not only to the track but the album itself, done in the most lively and fun way possible. That’s the first big sign that Cults appear to be more than just a flash in the pan act with one great single. Speaking of that one great single, “Go Outside” is next, and it’s as hard-hitting and wonderful as ever. If you thought you listened to it too many times last year, taking a short break and returning to it finds the song in just as great of a form as when you left it. With a whole new set of fans ready to discover this band, expect to hear a lot more “Go Outside”. For “You Know What I Mean”, the band makes a much more defined statement as to what the rest of the record will sound like. While anything you’ve heard prior only hinted at it, this is the track that feels truly retro, reaching back to the girl groups of the 60s for inspiration. It’s a very sweet and again catchy song where the waltzy pace, combined with Follin’s syrupy vocals and some well-placed finger snaps only enhance the impact. Those intimately familiar with the “Go Outside” 7″ single from last year will also recognize the b-side “Most Wanted” showing up towards the middle of the record. The retro style continues with a positively lovely piano and glockenspiel groove that mixes together rather effortlessly with everything from keyboards to a light touch of cello.

Nothing else on “Cults” is as strong as those first few tracks hitting you one after the other like a boxer with tremendous speed and agility. Just because there’s not another massive, drool-inducing single on the second half of the record doesn’t mean that it’s slouching in any way whatsoever. It’s like walking into a room full of supermodels and then exiting to find a group of very beautiful women on the other side. They may not be supermodels, but they’re still very satisfying to hear. There are no flat out ugly songs on this album, and being entirely listenable not to mention enjoyable from front to back is a rarity to accomplish anyways. At 35 minutes too, it’s a breeze to get through and you’re almost naturally inclined to hit the play button again and restart the thing. Earworms such as “Never Heal Myself” and the sprinkled electronics of “Oh My God” continue to make strong use of the glockenspiel and help push the band’s material from an indie pop range into something people will likely call twee. There is that certain preciousness present in most of the songs, particularly the Belle and Sebastian-leaning man/woman call-and-response of “Bumper”, but the bits of darkness found within the lyrics help to lessen the cute factor. There’s a distinctive fear echoed in a few of the songs that deals with a range of topics. Relationships is a big one, but also growing up and more general ways we live our lives all have bits of apprehension or paranoia associated with them. Follin wonders, “What’s wrong with my brain/cause I seem to have lost it” on “You Know What I Mean”, and doubts her ability to be genuine on “Never Heal Myself” with the lines, “I could never be myself, so fuck you”. The small bit of irony is how the line is sung, with Follin keeping sassy in a song that feels decidedly upbeat and cheerful.

Most of “Cults” maintains that same lighthearted nature, melodies bouncing along practically oblivious to some of the more ominous lyrics paired alongside it. That’s just one part of the appeal of this band and why their debut is so great. The songs they’re making aren’t necessarily doing much if anything new that we haven’t heard before, it’s the WAY they’re doing it that makes them more compelling than average. A little twist on the verse-chorus-verse here, a little extra instrument popping up there, and it goes a much longer way than you might think. There’s also a strong unifying principle across these 11 tracks in the similar qualities that they share. Nothing sounds like it doesn’t belong there, and it’s oddly reminiscent of another much-hyped band’s debut record last year, Sleigh Bells’ “Treats”. Oddly enough, Shane Stoneback produced both “Treats” and “Cults”, though his work on the latter record was much more of a tweaking role than a sonic shift. But while Sleigh Bells and Cults essentially sound nothing alike, the emotions that both their records evoke are close to one another. It’s the energetic, party vibe that makes you want to throw on a pair of sunglasses and spend some serious time outdoors. Seasonally speaking, both are very much summer albums as well, making now the perfect time for Cults to be putting this out there. Prepare for the hype cycle to once again start fresh for these two, because as their self-titled debut proves, Cults are the real thing. Be a good boy or girl and drink the Kool-Aid like the rest of us.

Cults – Go Outside (7″ version)
Cults – Most Wanted (7″ version)

Cults – Abducted

Cults – You Know What I Mean

For a limited time, stream the entire album at NPR

Preorder “Cults” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Friday 5-27-11

It’s Friday and I’ve got good news and good news for you. The first good news is that there’s a long holiday weekend starting now, at least in America, which means not only do you probably get another day off of work, but the weather’s just nice enough to go outside and do some grilling. Delicious. The second piece of good news is that despite the extended holiday weekend, Pick Your Poison will still go down on Monday like normal. I’ve got too many songs to share with you to just skip out because it’s a holiday. But let’s talk your weekend-starting version today. Highlights include tracks from Ash Black Buffalo, EDM, Hooray for Earth, Polls, and Typhoon. Have a great weekend!

Ash Black Buffalo – Buho

EDM – Stereo/Video

Fair Ohs – Summer Lake
Fair Ohs – Eden Rock

Freedom of Death – Rule the World (Nas cover)

Graham Wright – Soviet Race

Gunfight! – Sticks

Helado Negro – 2 Dia

Hooray for Earth – No Love

Mr. SOS – Listen

Paul Dempsey – We’ll Never Work in This Town Again

Polls – Careful Way

Quiet Lights – March

Roadside Graves – Love Me More

See-I – Homegrown (2011 Version)

Smokey Robotic – Uptown (Konrad Old Money’s Kuduro Remix)

Tidelands – Holy Grail

Typhoon – Summer Home

Vandal – Big Dog (Vandal Bites Dog Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

Keb Mo – The Whole Enchilada

Lotus – Destroyer

Nerina Pallot – Put Your Hands Up (Like It’s 1987) [We Are The Chatterleys Mix]

Album Review: Thurston Moore – Demolished Thoughts [Merge]


Feel free to call Thurston Moore an old man. He may only be in his early 50s, but in rock star years, he’s closer to 70. Sure, you’ve still got your classics out and about still making music, your Paul Simons, your Bob Dylans and your Paul McCartneys, but they come so few and far between these days. It’s better to think of aging rock stars when they’re in a band, because the collective whole provides you with a stark legacy and a lack of focus on a particular individual. The last Sonic Youth record, for example, 2009’s “The Eternal”, did not seem like it came from a band that’s now officially 30 years old in and of itself without taking into account how old everyone was by the time they started. And while you have to essentially weigh any new stuff based on what came before it, we really only think of career highlights rather than the entire catalogue, particularly when dealing with 10+ records. In the case of Thurston Moore it’s even more, thinking about his already numerous solo efforts along with the Sonic Youth stuff. Perhaps the biggest and most pertinent question to be asking is how somebody like Moore can keep creating new music without surrendering to complacency or repeating the same old tricks. His new record “Demolished Thoughts” seeks to provide something close to an answer to that question.

One of the more interesting tidbits about “Demolished Thoughts” is that it was produced by Beck Hansen, otherwise known as simply Beck. He and Moore have never worked together before, and it’s a strange wonder as to why that is. It’s clear from this record that the combination of the two is an inspired pairing, and you can hear both of their influences present even if it is Moore doing all of the heavy lifting. The easiest and most favorable comparison you can make given the circumstances is to Beck’s “Sea Change”, a largely acoustic effort with small flourishes of orchestral beauty. There are even brief brushes of harp mixed in, and it is surprisingly graceful and oddly cohesive. And while most of the songs bear a quiet, almost folk-driven psychedelia (track lengths range from 4 minutes to nearly 7), there are moments of vigorous energy and sharp electric guitar. “Circulation” is naturally one of those tracks that gets your blood flowing, and it calls to mind a handful of old Sonic Youth cuts in the process. The same could be said for “Orchard Street”, though that’s more like a subdued acoustic rendition of an unreleased Sonic Youth song. Of course both those make perfect sense, as Moore also tends to save up tracks that are either rejected by or simply won’t quite work in his main band’s canon.

Just because a track isn’t moving along at a moderate pace doesn’t mean it lacks energy though. A song like “Blood Never Lies” glistens in the sunlight akin to a dew-covered flower at the start of a new day. The harps and strings on “Illuminine” create glowing pinpricks of light in an otherwise pitch black night. It’s the lush warmth that pulls that and many other songs on “Demolished Thoughts” out from the proverbial gutter of depression. An Elliott Smith album this is not, even if the topics of growing older and struggling to find happiness seem to permeate the highly poetic lyrics. What separates it out from your otherwise standard folk-indebted fare are the intelligent ways each song comes together to both acknowledge and destroy what we might otherwise expect from these genre tropes. Like how “Orchard Street” takes an extended instrumental detour for the entire last half of the song. Or maybe the way a light echo is applied to Moore’s voice on “In Silver Rain With A Paper Key” to better illustrate the loneliness and isolation the lyrics speak of. You’ve got to hand it to Beck, who most assuredly had something to do with these little extra touches that help turn very good songs into excellent ones.

It’s worth noting that most of Thurston Moore’s solo career has been of mixed to poor quality. He seems to use the time away from Sonic Youth as a testing ground or an idea dump, which has had a tendency to leave him seeming scatterbrained or incoherent. 2007’s “Trees Outside the Academy” was a lot like that, with a few solid songs smashed between a horde of attempts. There was no real theme or connection between the tracks, just sketch after sketch appearing to resemble something whole. That’s not to say it was a terrible record – in fact it was far from it. Compared with “Demolished Thoughts” though, it’s night and day. These new songs feel well thought out and purposeful, and though they may not be the most upbeat things, they never dwell too long in one darkened corner. It is actually one of the rare times a Moore solo record works on all pistons, giving a clear legitimacy to the venture and providing another outlet through which die hard Sonic Youth fans can get something of a fix. He may be getting up there in rock star years, but from the sound of it this “old guy” clearly has plenty of fight left in him.

Thurston Moore – Circulation
Thurston Moore – Benediction

Buy “Demolished Thoughts” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 5-26-11

It’s Thursday, and you can smell it in the air. It’s anticipation, really, that you’re smelling. The knowledge that the weekend is just around the corner. I want to take a moment here and now to give you a heads up just in regards to what’s really the perfect way to start your holiday weekend. For everybody in and around the Chicagoland area, Friday night at Lincoln Hall is going to be one great show. Damon & Naomi are headlining, with Amor de Dias opening up. Both have new records out, and you can read the kind words I had to say about Damon & Naomi’s “False Beats and True Hearts” by clicking here and also Amor de Dias’s “Street of the Love of Days” by clicking here. Putting these two bands together on a bill is inspired, largely because they compliment one another so well. In fact, Damon & Naomi even contributed to a few songs on the Amor de Dias record. In case you’re not fully aware of where these two bands are coming from either, Damon & Naomi have been around for awhile, first with Galaxie 500 but they’ve since carved a grand career on their own. Amor de Dias is Alasdair MacLean of the great band The Clientele teaming up with Lupe Núñez-Fernández of the Spanish band Pipas. So yes, both bands make beautiful and inspired folk with plenty of other influences to go around as well. Anyways, the show at Lincoln Hall tomorrow night will be the place to be. It’s a 21+ show, and tickets are $12. Buy a ticket. Here’s a couple mp3s to inspire you:

Damon & Naomi – Walking Backwards
Amor de Dias – Bunhill Fields

As for today’s Pick Your Poison, I can wholeheartedly give a seal of approval to tracks from Asa, The Elected (Blake Sennett of Rilo Kiley), Joseph Arthur, Ki:Theory, Mando Diao, and Stephin Merritt (aka Magnetic Fields).

Asa – Why Can’t We

Baby Baby – Kidz

Baby Monster – Russian Lights

Caged Animals – Girls on Medication

David Myles – Don’t Drive Through (Live at the Carleton)

The Devil Whale – Standing Stones

The Elected – Babyface

The Japanese Popstars – Let Go (Luke Walker Remix)

Joseph Arthur – Out On A Limb

Kenton Dunson – Rolling Stone (ft. Garrett Anderson)

Ki:Theory – Holiday Heart

Machine Gun Kelly – Half Naked and Almost Famous

Mando Diao – Dance With Somebody

Neighbors – August

Stephin Merritt – Forever and a Day

Unicycle Loves You – Magic Marker Blackout (Demo)

World’s End Girlfriend – Teenage Ziggy

SOUNDCLOUD

Custom Blue – Summer’s Gone

Fela Kuti – M.O.P. (Movement Of The People) Political Statement No. 1

INTL – Table Talk

Simian Ghost -Transparent Is OK

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 5-25-11

Here come the mid-week blues. Holiday weekend is ahead though, and that’s a comfort. Today’s Pick Your Poison highlights include tracks from Big Pauper, Handsome Furs, James Vincent McMorrow, and Spencer Krug’s (Wolf Parade/Sunset Rubdown) solo project Moonface.

Big Pauper – Blue Dawn

Blind Willies – Lord Thought He’d Make Me A Man

Dishes – Redress.Redress.Redress

Eels on Heels – Blank Skin

Eyes Lips Eyes – Ghosts

Falling Andes – San Francisco

Faux Pas – General Practice

Handsome Furs – Repatriated

James Vincent McMorrow – We Don’t Eat

John Gold – Baby It’s Your Life
John Gold – Skyscraper

Las Kellies – Perro Rompebolas

Moonface – Fast Peter

Plant Plants – She’s No One

The R’s – I Love My Family

Radioseven – Distance
Radioseven – To Be Young

Razika – Nytt Pa Nytt

Twiggy Frostbite – By the Ocean

The Wild Mercury Sound – Hope There’s Someone (Antony and the Johnsons cover, Live at London School of Sound)

SOUNDCLOUD

Christian AIDS – Stay +

Field Theory – Olma

Lana del Rey – Video Games (Justin Parker & Robopop)

Mirel Wagner – No Death

Red Wanting Blue – Magic Man

Album Review: Damon & Naomi – False Beats and True Hearts [20/20/20]


In the long-standing tradition of “ampersand” groups, the last few decades have spawned everything from Simon & Garfunkel to Hall & Oates, Matt & Kim, and Iron & Wine. There are tons more, but in terms of jumping off the page at you, it’s a fair set of examples. Often failing to earn a mention among these duos or full bands are Damon & Naomi, otherwise known as Damon Krukowski and Naomi Yang. You can rarely get through a piece about them without hearing how they were the two members of the seminal late 80s/early 90s underground band Galaxie 500 whose name wasn’t Dean Wareheim. People loved Galaxie 500 despite their very short-lived history, and as Wareheim has gone onto his own ampersand band Dean & Britta with his wife (I’ll give you one guess as to what her first name is), Damon & Naomi kept working together and have put out six full-lengths of original material since 1992. So yeah, they’ve been making music for a very long time now and even had a lengthy stint on Sub Pop Records during its steady rise to the indie powerhouse it is today. They started their own label 20/20/20 several years back and have been putting their music (and re-releasing the Galaxie 500 catalogue) out on it ever since. After taking a few years away from writing and recording, Damon & Naomi are back with their seventh effort as a duo, titled “False Beats and True Hearts”.

As with a number of their previous efforts, Damon & Naomi are once again joined by Ghost guitarist Michio Kunihara, who continues to bring a fascinating tweak to the duo’s typically calm and quiet demeanor. Their songs more often float by in dark folk or psychedelic mood pieces than they do straight up rock, so when an electric guitar does buzz its way into the mix it stands out that much more. The album starts with a brief guitar solo from Kunihara before the main melody and vocals come in with a more standard acoustic guitar and drums in support. The electric guitar is by no means gone though, and it flitters in and out of the mix at various times, always a distraction but a relatively welcome one. It’s not the sort of thing that Damon & Naomi would have done several years ago, but their slow evolution towards a broader spectrum of sounds has only enhanced their songs and contributed towards keeping things fresh while still maintaining a strong sense of identity. There are even some that assert the duo has largely stalled out and aren’t doing enough to keep fans interested in their music. The thing is, there are so few groups that share the same genre DNA as Damon & Naomi, so in effect they don’t need to completely revolutionize their sound every couple records in order to continue engaging old as well as new supporters. Just the simple move from the guitar buzz of “Walking Backwards” into the piano-dominant Naomi-fronted “How Do I Say Goodbye” is proof enough that they’re more than willing to mix things up just a touch while mining similar emotional territory. The use of other instruments such as saxophones, trumpets, xylophones and a variety of other bits outside of a normal guitar, drums and piano is also something Damon & Naomi have been lightly working with their last couple records, and again they’re used in an economical fashion to avoid too much exposition or overstuffed arrangements.

Damon & Naomi’s other big assets outside of how their songs are instrumentally composed are their vocals and lyrics. Neither Damon nor Naomi have voices that emphasize strength and forcefulness, but perhaps they’ve been holding back the entire time to match their rather subdued melodies. No matter if one or both of them are singing on a track, their meekness and just above whisper quiet voices actually add emotion and heartbreak to these primarily sad songs. There’s a great warmth added to “Ophelia” courtesy of Damon’s vocals, which are additionally mixed in at an equal level with the lush acoustic guitars to help it work that much better. Naomi’s best and most confident singing to date comes courtesy of “Nettles and Ivy”, a gorgeous song about the earliest of morning hours where the sun is just beginning to peek over the horizon and everything is still glimmering fresh with dew. On the opposite side of the spectrum, “And You Are There” retains the nature imagery but applies it towards the sadness of a sunset, Naomi’s voice bringing forth the heartache of the slow burnout that is much more about ending than it is beginning. The nature imagery is one of the main topics the duo explores on “False Beats and True Hearts”, while life and love also get their fair share of musings as well, at times under the guise of well-crafted metaphors. With everything put together, much of the record sounds remarkably like something Beach House might put out, albeit with more instrumental flourishes and less outright organ.

If there’s a complaint to be had about “False Beats and True Hearts” it’s with Damon & Naomi’s commitment to mood and atmosphere over anything that resembles pop music. If you’re looking for something catchy with a solid hook to it, look elsewhere because there’s little to none of that on this album. They’ve done some of that on previous records, but obviously felt like it wasn’t a priority anymore. That will make it harder for those just discovering them to enjoy the record, and by that same token you might have issues with how immensely quiet the whole thing is. Still, if you’re in a darker mood, or even a more ponderous mood, this is a good record to soundtrack that. It’s not the best thing Damon & Naomi have done either, but it’s a gentle reminder that they still know how to make compelling records despite rolling up on what will soon be their 20th anniversary of making music as a duo in the post-Galaxie 500 era. It’s a shame they don’t get nearly enough recognition for it.

Damon & Naomi – Walking Backwards
Damon & Naomi – Shadow Boxing

Buy “False Beats and True Hearts” from Amazon

Catch Damon & Naomi on tour with Amor de Dias:
Wednesday, May 25 – Toronto, ONT, Horseshoe
Thurday, May 26 – Pontiac, MI , Pike Room
Friday, May 27 – Chicago, IL, Lincoln Hall
Saturday, May 28 – Minneapolis, MN, Triple Rock
Tuesday, May 31 – Seattle, WA, Tractor Tavern
Wednesday, June 1 – Portland, OR, Bunk Bar
Friday, June 3 – San Francisco, CA, Bottom of the Hill
Saturday, June 4 – Los Angeles, CA, The Satellite
Sunday, June 5 – San Diego, CA, Soda Bar

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 5-24-11

Tuesday, here we are. It’s still early in the week, but not too early that we can’t have a little fun. An intense basketball playoff game is on tonight, among other things, and I know I mentioned it yesterday, but going to a location in which there are lots of televisions and perhaps some alcohol would make for a good evening. When it gets warm(ish) out you can do those sorts of things on weekdays. Or stay home and hang out, who am I to dictate what you do with your evening. Pick Your Poison though, I can help you out there. Recommendations today for tracks from Follow That Bird, I and I, Kyla La Grange, Niki and the Dove, and Ty Segall.

Azalia Snail – Spaceheater

Brice Randall Bickford – Songstress

Electric Bird Noise – Morning Mother Mourning Dove

Floorshow – Don’t Get Me Wrong

Follow That Bird – The Ghosts That Wake You

French Horn Rebellion – What I Want (Golden Pony Remix)

He’s My Brother She’s My Sister – Escape Tonight

Hungry Kids of Hungary – Arrest This Heart

I and I – Headcleaner

Johanna & the Dusty Floor – Witch Shoes

Kyla La Grange – Been Better

Metal Mother – Shake

Monster Rally – Siberian Girls
Monster Rally – Surf Erie

Niki and the Dove – The Fox

Radical Dads – Walking Wires

This Is Head – 0011

Ty Segall – You Make the Sun Fry

SOUNDCLOUD

NewVillager- Rich Doors

Pony Pony Run Run – Hey You (Youth Kills Remix)

Robert Ellis – What’s In It For Me

Pick Your Poison: Monday 5-23-11

Can you feel summer just waiting for you right around the corner? Memorial Day (in America) is this upcoming weekend, and that’s the unofficial start to the summer season. Break out your short pants, your flip flops and your cabana wear, because things are about to get nice. Also make sure you’re privy to all of the wonderful summer beers that emerge in time for the season. A bit of summer ale or even a bit of summer shandy can do wonders for a person, provided you’re of age and consume alcohol. So many great choices in what to drink, as there are so many choices in today’s Pick Your Poison. I can point out a few key tracks for you today from notables like Alina Simone, Bosco Delrey, some old(ish) and also previously unreleased Black Moth Super Rainbow, Sea Things, Star Anna and Young Rebel Set. In the Soundcloud section you’ll find a new one from Abandoned Pools, which is better than I thought it would be.

Alina Simone – Beautiful Machine

Baby Monster – The Fear of Charlie Sunrise

Black Moth Super Rainbow – Sun Lips
Black Moth Super Rainbow – Old Yes

Bosco Delrey – Baby’s Got A Blue Flame

The Botaniks – Fond of Jane

Debbie Neigher – Evergreens

De Montevert – Skyall på mig

Diggs Duke – Get Up
Diggs Duke – Last Night

Josh Madden and Troublemaker – Veronica Sawyer

Lauren Shera – Endless Sea
Lauren Shera – Storyteller

Lightouts – And It Comes And Goes

Ockums Razor – A New Thing

Riz MC – All of You

Sea Things – AM

Star Anna – Alone In This Together (Radio Edit)

Termanology – Say It (Remix ft. Bun B)

Tyson – Love’s on the Line

Work Drugs – Golden Sombrero

Young Rebel Set – Fall Hard

SOUNDCLOUD

Abandoned Pools – In Silence

Pick Your Poison: Friday 5-20-11

Happy Friday! I’ve got a million things to do, including getting my weekend started, so let’s get right to it. Highlights today include tracks from Candle, DMA, Here We Go Magic, Iretsu and Shoreline Is. Also be sure to check out the new Tom Vek and Army Navy tracks in the Soundcloud section.

Another – Night

Arc In Round – ||

Candle – Goodnight Firefly

Chrome Canyon – Branches
Chrome Canyon – Suspended in Gaffa ft. Phoebe Oglesbee (Kate Bush cover)

DMA – Riding Holiday

Emilie Simon – Small Town Boy (Bronski Beat cover)

Femme Fatality – Show Me the Way

Gavin Friday – Able

Here We Go Magic – Song in Three

Iretsu – Sexy No

Shoreline Is – Living Things

Short Circuit – How We Speak

These Trails – El Rey Pescador

Turner Cody – Back in the Land of the Living

United Fruit – Go Away, Don’t Leave Me Alone

SOUNDCLOUD

Army Navy – The Long Goodbye

Sebastian – C.T.F.O. ft. M.I.A.

Tom Vek – A Chore

Album Review: Amor de Dias – Street of the Love of Days [Merge]


There’s been plenty of talk concerning the state of The Clientele these last couple years, primarily about whether the band would continue to exist beyond 2010’s EP “Minotaur”. The main issue on frontman Alasdair MacLean’s part was apparently a lack of inspiration, the thought that perhaps the project in its current state had reached all the potential it could possibly muster. “Maybe if we were asked to score a film,” he said several months back. So while we wait for an official decision as to whether The Clientele will ever make new music again, MacLean has been busying himself with a new project, one that he’s been working on sporadically in the last few years. Amor de Dias is his collaboration with Lupe Núñez-Fernández of the Spanish band Pipas. You might think that taking one part British 60s folk and another part Spanish indie pop would create an interesting mixture of sounds and textures, and on paper the concept most definitely seems frought with potential. Instead though, “Street of the Love of Days”, the debut album from Amor de Dias, showcases just how much the two apparently diverse projects its members came from have in common.

Acoustic folk seems to be the common thread between The Clientele and Pipas, and though it wasn’t exclusive to either band, it’s what comprises many of the songs on “Street of the Love of Days”. Of course there’s more to it than just that, including a few infusions of stylistic traits such as flamenco and bossa nova. Additionally, there are numerous guests that provide additional instrumental work on the record, ranging from Damon & Naomi to Gary Olson of Ladybug Transistor. The styles and additional instruments help to keep things varied just enough to maintain interest, which would otherwise be a huge problem considering how sleepy the entire record is. There’s not much that rises above lullabye status, and Núñez-Fernández’s whisper soft vocals trading off against MacLean’s smooth-as-silk calm voice fails to ignite anything. The thing is, exciting and lively compositions are probably the antithesis of what they were aiming for – not that they wanted to put people to sleep either. Subdued beauty is probably the best descriptor of “Street of the Love of Days”, and the album goes a long way towards avoiding anything that doesn’t fit that mold. As a singular work with such intentions, it succeeds brilliantly. Yet it’s also somewhat flawed.

As the record progresses, or simply to say virtually the entire final third of the album’s 15 tracks, there’s something of a breakdown that occurs. Most of those last few songs are under 2 minutes in length, and you get the impression they could all use an extension. It’s like they had more ideas or more to say, and instead of completing the thought/song the choice was made to just end it early. Nothing ever feels outright cut off, but when most of the songs on the first two-thirds of the album average between 3 and 4 minutes in length, all these quick cuts seem just a little suspect. The other issue with Amor de Dias in general is that the two parts that make up the whole, Núñez-Fernández and MacLean, have both made better music in their main bands. Something that’s been brewing over the course of three years deserves a little better than what we’re given on “Street of the Love of Days”, even if the album has a lot going for it. The creative energy, the variations in influences, and even in some cases the emotion in the vocals, are the bits and pieces that made The Clientele and (to a lesser extent) Pipas bands worth spending time with.

Though Amor de Dias may not quite live up to the promise it shows on paper, “Street of the Love of Days” is still an album worth both your time and money. With summer fast approaching, it’s not exactly coming out during the right season, but should you wait a few months for the leaves to start turning colors, you may find it to be the perfect soundtrack. After all, a re-done version of the Clientele track “Harvest Time” isn’t on here only because it’s a great song. There are lovely and great songs peppered across the record, more standouts in a field of beauty. “House of Flint” is one of the first and most interesting tracks, with MacLean operating at his most dynamic. A Núñez-Fernández highlight comes in the form of mid-album cut “Dream (Dead Hands)”, while MacLean strikes back again immediately afterwards on “I See Your Face”. And just before the final third of the record begins, the title track brings an extra dose of sweetness that carries through those shorter and shakier moments that follow. So as we wait to see what will become of The Clientele, Amor de Dias serves as a nice distraction. It doesn’t quite deserve to be considered a main project, but if this little band chooses to put out more records, there’s definitely still untapped potential that can and deserves to be explored.

Amor de Dias – Bunhill Fields

Buy “Street of the Love of Days” from Amazon

Catch Amor de Dias on tour with Damon & Naomi:
May 20 Baltimore, MD – Metro Gallery
May 21 Philadelphia, PA – First Unitarian Church Chapel
May 22 Brooklyn, NY – Knitting Factory
May 23 Allston, MA – Great Scott
May 25 Toronto, ON – Horseshoe
May 26 Pontiac, MI – Pike Room at Crofoot
May 27 Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall
May 28 Minneapolis, MN – Triple Rock
May 31 Seattle, WA – Tractor Tavern
Jun 01 Portland, OR – Bunk Bar
Jun 03 San Francisco, CA – Bottom of the Hill
Jun 04 Los Angeles, CA – The Satellite
Jun 05 San Diego, CA – Soda Bar

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 5-19-11

We’ve already hit Thursday? This week just seems to be flying by. I’d say time flies when you’re having fun, but there’s not a ton of fun I can rave about. Then again, with a Paul Simon show and a bunch of TV season finales, there has been a higher than normal entertainment value for me in the last few days. Anyways, Pick Your Poison is equally enjoyable, going through a burst of extra mp3s for you just in time for sweeps. I can give a hearty thumbs up to tracks from the following artists: Chad VanGaalen, Falcon, Gomez, I’m From Barcelona, Miracle Fortress, Planningtorock and Wise Blood.

Chad VanGaalen – Peace on the Rise

Cliffie Swan – So Long

Falcon – Terrified (Happy Days Are Ahead)

Four Quartets – Pirouette

Ghost Heart – No Canticle

Gomez – Options

I’m From Barcelona – Always Spring

Jerry Granelli – Bones

Miracle Fortress – Miscalculations

Napoleon in Rags – Empty Promises (Black Masa Remix)

Planningtorock – The Breaks

Sandro Silva ft. Isa GT – Told Ya (DJ Melo Moombahton Edit)

Stripmall Architecture – We Are Not Cool

TMS ft. Jagga – I Need You (Maribou State Remix)

Wise Blood – Loud Mouths
Wise Blood – Penthouse Suites

SOUNDCLOUD

Brooklyn Horseman – Whispers In The Dark

Clock Opera – Belongings

Midnight Lion – All Greatness Stands Firm

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 5-18-11

Oh hey Wednesday. Didn’t see you there. You crept up awfully fast this week. All the sooner to get to Friday. Let’s get straight to business. Pick Your Poison today has plenty of the usual highlights. Allow me to point you in the direction of tracks from The Chapin Sisters, Digits, Glorie, GUARDS, People Like Us and Wakey! Wakey!

The Chapin Sisters – Sweet Light

Charlie Simpson – Don’t I Hold You

CIRC – Is Poor Faith

Creep – Days (Azari & III Remix)

Digitalism – 2 Hearts (Amazona Boys Remix)

Digits – Smooth Liar

The Fix – Silverscreen

Giana Factory – Rainbow Girl (Glasvegas Remake)

Glorie – Full Circle

GUARDS – Resolution of One

How to Destroy Angels – A Drowning (Sasha Raskin Orchestral Remix)

Mimas – Vader in Burgos (La Boum Fatale Remix)

People Like Us – The Seven Hills of Rome

Scoot Dubbs – The Time Has Come

St. Lucia – The Old House is Gone

Wakey! Wakey! – Feral Love

SOUNDCLOUD

Fallulah – I Lay My Head

Sophie Ellis-Bextor – Starlight [JRMX Radio Edit]

Towns – Fields

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 5-17-11

I love going to shows, I just don’t get the opportunity to go enough. My schedule is just a little bit crazy and if I can’t find the time or the weather is horrible then I just don’t go. Mid-weeks are toughest, but early in the week and weekends are great when I’m able to get out. I make mention of it because I’m not seeing just one, but TWO shows this week and outside of a music festival that’s halfway unheard of for me. Both are great, too. Last night I caught Paul Simon at The Vic and on Friday I’ll be going to Death Cab for Cutie at the Metro. Both artists normally play much larger venues, so there’s a nice intimacy aspect about it as well. Should be lots of fun. If you’ve already caught (or will be catching) either of the shows just mentioned, give me a holler in the comments. We’ll compare notes. Pick Your Poison today has some nice stuff as usual. I can give a hearty plus mark to the following artists: Beirut, Echo Lake, Handsome Furs, The Morning Birds, Washed Out and Woodsman. Also worth listening to is The Album Leaf’s remix of Scattered Trees.

Beirut – O Leaozinho

Candidate – You Still Love Me

Echo Lake – Young Silence

Fiction Company – Girls In Uniform

Handsome Furs – What About Us

Liquid Stranger – Bombaclaad Star

The Morning Birds – The Quickening

The Naked Hearts – Pillow Song

Paleo – Holly Would

Rabbits Rabbits Rabbits – Winter Time

Rye Rye ft. M.I.A. – Sunshine (2 Bit Thugs Redub)

Scattered Trees – Four Days Straight (The Album Leaf Remix)

Star Slinger – Mornin’

The Street and Babe Shadow – Forever

Washed Out – Eyes Be Closed

Woodsman – Insects

SOUNDCLOUD

Alex Winston- Sister Wife (Ladyhawke Remix)

Bird Call – The Man With The Child In His Eyes (Kate Bush cover)

Pick Your Poison: Monday 5-16-11

This past weekend in Chicago was a terrible one weather-wise. Rainy and cold virtually the entire time, made that much worse knowing just a few days earlier it was 90 degrees and sunny. The taste of summer was far too fleeting, and now instead we were handed a dose of late fall. But with a new week starts a new weather cycle, one that sees much more sunshine and temperatures steadily rising towards the normal high of 70 degrees this time of year. Damn, I’ve got to stop writing about the weather. Besides, there are people dealing with far worse right now. Let’s make everything feel just a little bit better with today’s Pick Your Poison. Recommendations today? How about tracks from Brad Laner, Darwin Deez, The Great Book of John, Minden, Nik Freitas and Tape Deck Mountain. You’ll certainly want to download Cut Copy’s remix of The Miracles Club, along with Andreas Lust’s (of Frightened Rabbit) reworking of OSLO, while Jim Jones with special guests Lloyd and Girl Talk is great too. There’s also a couple interesting covers in the Soundcloud section that are both worth checking out.

Berlinist – No Love song
Berlinist – My Darling Grace

Brad Laner – Feelin’ Stronger Every Day (Chicago cover)

Clara May – Hush

Darwin Deez – DNA

Duquette Johnston – Roll Baby Roll

The Great Book of John – Let Me Slide

Herbcraft – Fleet Guru

Jackie-O Motherfucker – In the Willows

Jargon V.A ft. Tinie Tempah – Disappoint You

Jim Jones ft. Lloyd and Girl Talk – Believe in Magic

Minden – Swift Way On

The Miracles Club – Light of Love (Cut Copy Re-Vision)

Motorboater – Left Limb

Nik Freitas – Middle

OSLO – Superstar (Andreas Lust Remix)

Sanders Bohlke – Quiet Ye Voices

Tape Deck Mountain – Kellies

When Saints Go Machine – Kelly

SOUNDCLOUD

Agnes Obel – Between The Bars (Elliott Smith cover)

Alex Clare – When Doves Cry (Prince cover)

Benny Benassi feat. Gary Go – Cinema (Skrillex Remix)

The Fiery Piano – Sirens

The Orchard – Gulf Of Mexico

Pick Your Poison: Friday 5-13-11

Friday the 13th! Look out for black cats, everybody. Today’s a dangerous day to be out and about, particularly if you’re superstitious or believe in karma. To me, it’s just another Friday, but I think we all look a little more carefully over our shoulders every time somebody mentions Friday the 13th. Here’s some luck though: a great, extended Pick Your Poison post. Lots of great songs to give your weekend that extra boost it might need. I can give a thumbs up to tracks from Brute Heart, Helios, The Hussy, The Sanctuaries, and White Hills. Also be sure to check out the Johan Agebjörn track featuring Sally Shapiro, along with Jared Mees and The Grown Children’s Beatles cover. Oh, and I can’t forget new songs from Urge Overkill and Yuck in the Soundcloud section. Always worth a look.

Bill Wells & Aidan Moffat – The Copper Top (Radio Edit)

Birdlips – One in Seven
Birdlips – Higher Vision

Boy Mandeville – Gorilla (Thom Thumb Remix)

Buy Without God – Of Cowboys & Other Beautiful Men

Brute Heart – Hunter

Crooks – Downtown

Germany Germany – Too Fast
Germany Germany – Dance

Grand Pianoramax – Sleepwalk

Helios – Sing the Same Song Twice

The Hussy – Sexi Ladi
The Hussy – Pushin’ My Luck  

Is Shepherd – Pine Box

Jared Mees & the Grown Children – All Together Now (Beatles cover)

Johan Agebjörn & Lovelock ft. Sally Shapiro – Casablanca Nights

Labyrinth Ear – How We Walk On The Moon (Arthur Russell cover)

Matt & Kim – Cameras (Alvin Risk Remix)

Rocketship Park – Fast Friends

The Sanctuaries – Heaven Is A Mountain

Ulrich Schnauss and Mark Peters – Balcony Sunset

Ungdomskulen – Elle
Ungdomskulen – It’s Official!

White Hills – The Condition of Nothing

SOUNDCLOUD

Alex Winston – Sister Wife (Starslinger Remix)

Hey Today! – Minor (TWR72 Remix)

Urge Overkill – Mason/Dixon

Yuck – Milkshake

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