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Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 9-24-13

The fall continues to be a great time for new music, and the next month and a half or so is going to be ripe with so many great new releases you probably won’t know what to do with them all. As a service and to also help guide your memory, I’m proud to take some time each Tuesday to list off all the artists releasing albums on a given week. That said, look for new material out today from Au Revoir Simone, Chvrches, Crystal Shipsss, Deer Tick, Drake, Ed Askew, Elton John, The Foreign Exchange, Frankie Rose, Girls Against Boys, The Goldberg Sisters, Golden Animals, Ha Ha Tonka, Icona Pop, John Zorn and Thurston Moore, Kings of Leon, Lovers, Madlib and Freddie Gibbs, Matthew Good, Mazzy Star, The Night Beats, Nik Turner, Oh Land, The Smashing Pumpkins, Sons of the Sea, Tanya Morgan, Tim Kasher, Touche Amore, TRAAMS, The Watson Twins and Zachary Cale. Let me take a moment to catch my breath. Okay, we’re good. Beyond all those things, and in case none of them satisfy, perhaps you’d like some free music in the hopes of discovering the next big thing. Well, there’s plenty of options there in the Pick Your Poison below. Don’t miss tracks today from Dead Meadow, Francis International Airport, Meg Hutchinson, Migrant Kids, The Royal Concept, Tape Deck Mountain and Turbo Lightning. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Bright Light Bright Light, The History of Apple Pie, Pelican and Say Lou Lou covering Tame Impala.

The Courtesans – Dirty Killer (Sidewalks and Skeletons Remix)

Dead Meadow – Yesterday’s Blowin’ Back

Francis International Airport – Pitch Paired

Hollow & Akimbo – Solar Plexus

Lukas Freeman – White Knickers

Meg Hutchinson – Beyond That

Migrant Kids – Act I

Mutts – Prizefighter

Okenyo – Persona

The Royal Concept – Radio

The Slims – Tastemaker

Tape Deck Mountain – Half Life

Turbo Lightning – Faster Than Light

Young Moe ft. Black Cobain & Dino – Love Heavy

Pick Your Poison: Monday 9-23-13

I’d like to issue a big congratulations to Godspeed You! Black Emperor, who took hope the Polaris Music Prize earlier tonight. If you’re not familiar with the Polaris Music Prize, it’s an annual music award given to the best full length album by a Canadian band or artist within a given year. Things like genre, album sales or record labels don’t have any bearing on nominations or wins, and ultimately it really is about artistry. The winner receives a $30,000 cash prize. The shortlist this year included records from Zaki Ibrahim, Metric, METZ, Purity Ring, Colin Stetson, Tegan and Sara, A Tribe Called Red, Whitehorse and Young Galaxy. But it was Godspeed that wound up taking home the gold for their 2012 album Allelujah! Don’t Bend! Ascend!. That’s the record that would have gotten my vote too. If you look at my Top 10 Albums of 2012, you’ll notice that Godspeed sits at a healthy #4, and is the highest ranking of any Canadian artists (sorry Grimes at #5…which made the Polaris shortlist in 2012 but lost). So needless to say I’m exceptionally pleased with the results of this year’s voting. Last year’s win by Feist rang a little hollow, perhaps because that’s how her album felt to me when I listened to it. The crazy thing too about Godspeed’s win is that they were pretty much the only nominated band that didn’t attend or perform at the ceremony. Of course they’ve never been a traditional collective by any means, and their fiercely political stances ultimately drove them to take an extended hiatus for close to 10 years before they re-emerged in 2011, There’s no official response from the band on their win quite yet , but I suspect that while they’ll be happy about it, other less upbeat emotions might play into it as well. In the meantime though, I continue to wish them the best with the hope that they remain true to themselves. That’s what’s most important for any artist, in my opinion. There’s a few of those types in today’s Pick Your Poison. See if you can sniff them out. A few good hints would be to keep an ear to tracks from Arliss Nancy, Ducky, England in 1819, EPROM, Midnite on Pearl Beach and Wild Ones. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Jenny Hval (covering Paul Simon), Jensen Sportag, Passion Pit’s remix of The Joy Formidable, Movement, PAWS (covering Elliott Smith) and Xiu Xiu (covering Nina Simone).

Arliss Nancy – Coals

Atlas Genius – If So (Ron Flieger Remix)

*Chi – All My Woes

Ducky – U Turn Me Up

El Ten Eleven – No One Died This Time! (Eliot Lipp Remix)

England in 1819 – Himmel

EPROM – Subroc

Faux Effet – Em Le¨aiu on Citre´

The Harmed Brothers – Love Song for the Assumed

Midnite on Pearl Beach – Modern Gods

Sandra Phillips – My Man and Me

Tee Circus – We Are Lovers

Wild Ones – From Nothing

Wolfmoon – My Kind of People

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 9-19-13

It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for another weekly dip into the pool of music news, interviews and videos that I like to call This Week In Music! Yes, in addition to the normal Pick Your Poison mp3s and Soundcloud streams, I like to toss out links to a bunch of other music-related content that I’ve found interesting or worthwhile over the course of the week. I encourage you to check some, if not all of these things out, particularly if you’re looking to waste some time. There’s plenty to see, read and hear:

Faber will publish Ian Curtis’ lyrics and notebooks

YouTube Audio Stream: Justin Timberlake – TKO

Music Video: Foxygen – We Are the 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace & Magic

Watch Kendrick Lamar and ScHoolboy Q perform “Collard Greens” on “Arsenio”

YouTube Audio Stream: The Killers – Shot At Night (Prod. by M83)

YouTube Audio Stream: Best Coast – I Don’t Know How

Music Video: MGMT – Cool Song No. 2

YouTube Audio Stream: Beck – Gimme

Music Video: Daft Punk – Lose Yourself to Dance

YouTube Audio Stream: Grizzly Bear – Will Calls (Marfa Demo)

Lots of videos and audio streams in that bonch above this week. I’ll try to balance it out a bit more in the future. Once you’re done wading through all of that stuff, make sure to check out today’s Pick Your Poison as well. There’s some strong tracks today from Big Deal, Black Hearted Brother, FIGHTs, Junior Astronomers, The Royal Oui and SUn Glitters. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Cass McCombs, Deltron 3030 (ft. Zach De La Rocha), James Blake (ft. Chance the Rapper), Luke Temple (of Here We Go Magic) and Mas Ysa.

Big Deal – Swapping Spit

Black Hearted Brother – This Is How It Feels

Brother Dege – The Black Sea

Calhoun – Reap/Sow

FIGHTs – Beginning

Gim Kordon – Ei Ole Helppoo (Demo)

Junior Astronomers – Before Crimes

Laura Mvula – She (Shlohmo Remix)

LUVV – Us

The Royal Oui – Actual Size

Sam Buckingham – Rabbit Hole

Sun Glitters – Only You

Tiger! Shit! Tiger! Tiger! – Twins

We Are the Brave – Sparrow

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 9-18-13

Oh, the crazy kids these days. In case you missed the headline, Sky Ferreira and DIIV’s Zachary Cole Smith were arrested in New York on Friday. The two have been together for awhile now, and even claimed to be married earlier this year (but apparently not legally married). The arrests happened due to a series of violations, so let me try and break them down one by one. Police spotted the vehicle Smith was driving after it made “several vehicle and traffic infractions.” Basically he was driving erratically. On checking the registration of the vehicle, the license plates came back as stolen, and Smith doesn’t have a valid driver’s license or insurance or general vehicle registration. To say that he shouldn’t have been driving is obvious. Not only that, but Smith was apparently wanted by the Dutchess County Sheriff’s Office for an outstanding vehicle and traffic warrant. To add something extra on that, he was found to be in possession of 42 decks of heroin. For those not in the know, a deck of heroin is a small bag of it, typically the cheapest size you can purchase it in, for about $7 a pop. What fascinates me is that all the charges against Smith are listed as misdemeanors. Of course even though Ferreira wasn’t driving, she was charged with a pair of misdemeanors as well for possession of ecstasy and resisting arrest. After all that, they were taken to jail where they posted bail shortly thereafter and went on their way. DIIV played a show the very next night. So what are my thoughts on an incident like this? Well, what we’re getting are the basic police report facts. Both Smith and Ferreira have been pretty quiet about the whole incident, except to say that they will have their day(s) in court and that the police were overly harsh with them. I don’t want to say that the artists deserve the benefit of the doubt, and when you’re caught with drugs heavier than marijuana it would seem to indicate you might be hanging out with the wrong people and doing the wrong things, but part of me wants the best for them. Happy, healthy and clean living for these two lovebirds would be ideal. If it takes an arrest like this to make that happen, maybe it’s for the better. Time will tell. In the meantime, I have no plans to stop supporting their musical pursuits, which includes a cover of Cat Power’s “Nude As the News“. Speaking of music, there’s a whole set of Pick Your Poison songs to wade through today. Great stuff from The Oyster Murders, The Precious Lo’s, RAJ, Seafloor and Wilder Maker. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream cuts from Body Parts, Darkside, Fort Romeau, ILLLS, Korallreven and RJD2.

Aaron Cohen ft. Grande Marshall – Why You Mad For

Acid Mothers Temple & Space Paranoid – Space Paranoid (Black Sabbath cover)

Atlas Genius – Centred on You (St. Lucia Remix)

Bombay Dub Orchestra – Bohemia Junction

CliffLight – Powerlines

David Carroll – This Land Is Your Land

DCUP – Don’t Be Shy (Wave Racer Remix)

Grenier – Complicated

Manicanparty – Monarch (Acoustic)

The Oyster Murders – Oh Shadow A Dark Crow Grow

The Precious Lo’s – More Than Friends (ft. Maylee Todd)

RÁJ – Ghost

Seafloor – Kuwae

Unlike Pluto – Alien

Wilder Maker – Slow Life

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 9-17-13

So we’ve reached another Tuesday, and another week packed with new album releases as part of the fall season. As I like to do every week, here’s a list of the artists and bands putting out fresh material, which you might want to consider purchasing at your local independent record store: Alvin Lee, Arp, Berlin, Bill Callahan, Blouse, Campfire Ok, Carol Kleyn, College, Crystal Stilts, Cult of Luna, Delorean, Dustin Wong, Elvis Costello and The Roots, Factory Floor, Forest Swords, Gregory Porter, Grouplove, Islands, Jack Johnson, Jessy Lanza, Las Kellies, London Grammar, Mark Lanegan, MGMT, Mike Doughty, Mum, The Naked and Famous, Nightmares on Wax, Placebo, Potty Mouth, Said the Whale, San Fermin, Sebadoh, Sidi Toure, Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin, Trentemoller, Wesley Stace, Why?, Windhand, Wymond Miles and Yip Deceiver. Wow, that’s a lot of stuff. Next week is going to be even bigger too, I think. Save your money so you can buy some of these albums, many of which are very good to great. Of course you don’t have to spend any hard-earned cash on any of the songs I’m offering up as part of Pick Your Poison. There’s plenty of free music to add to your library and plenty of new bands to learn about and perhaps discover a new favorite. Don’t miss tracks from Beautiful Lou, Blessed Feathers, The Fire Tapes, Linda Draper, Schooner, SWF and Teen Daze. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Ejecta, Four Tet, Lolawolf, Sleigh Bells and White Sea.

Barny Carter – Bouquet

Beautiful Lou ft. Action Bronson & Riff Raff – Long Pinky

Blessed Feathers – Real Song for Emily

D-R-U-N-K & Distrakt – Sightless

The Fire Tapes – Skull & Xbones

Keep Shelly in Athens – Flyway (Tears of Techno Remix)

Linda Draper – Glass Palace

Milwaukee Banks – Pluto Bounce

Schooner – Trap

Sundays – Forces

SWF – Let It Be Told

Teen Daze – Listen

Vita Bergen – A Picture of Before

Pick Your Poison: Monday 9-16-13

When I preview a show on this site, that’s typically the one and only time you’ll hear about it. While there are plenty of Chicagoans who read the site, many of you are located around the country and world, so some of my locally-based rantings don’t particularly appeal to you. Today though, I’m sort of breaking an unwritten rule to give a second mention to an upcoming Chicago show. Why? Because of two things: It’s for a good cause, and I booked it myself. So let me break it down for you once again. This Wednesday, rising Chicago band JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound will be performing at Lincoln Hall. All profits from the show will be donated to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society and their efforts in fighting blood cancers. That means a lot to me, and it also means a lot to my friends, who are the driving force behind putting together this benefit concert. They asked me to find and book a band, and I feel lucky that JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound were willing and able to do this. They are, after all, a band on the rise. Their latest album Howl is a classic mixture of funk and soul, and the music video for their single “Rouse Yourself” stars actors Jake Johnson (from “New Girl”) and Aubrey Plaza (from “Parks & Rec”). They also put on a really fun and engaging live show, which is sometimes half the battle with bands these days. Anyways, if you’re in Chicago on Wednesday night and don’t already have plans, please come out to this all ages show. Tickets are $35, but if you enter the code “LLS” (without quotes) at the online checkout, you can get $10 off. For non-Chicagoans or those who can’t make it to the show but would still like to help out this great cause, please donate if you’re able. Any and all help is greatly appreciated! Now then, let’s get to this Monday edition of Pick Your Poison. Gold star tracks today come from Alice Russell, Chromeo, Junip, Scenic, SETH, Summer Aviation and Whale Belly. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Azealia Banks, Katy B, of Montreal, Phantogram, Swearin’ and Woman’s Hour.

Alice Russell – I Loved You (Acoustic)

Baby Alpaca – Sea of Dreams (Turbotito Remix)

Boys School – Can’t Come Back

Chromeo – Over Your Shoulder

Cloud@Last – Simple

Joie 13 – Ouija Board

Junip – Walking Lightly

Long Long Showers – Red Card

ODESZA – If There’s Time

Scenic – Hours On End

SETH – Don’t Open Your Make

Summer Aviation – Lift

Whale Belly – Bubbles in My Blood

Wolfcatcher – Whisper

Show Review: Washed Out + HAERTS [Metro; Chicago; 9/13/13]


There was a chill in the air all throughout Chicago this past Friday night. It was odd only because not a day or two earlier, temperatures were in the mid-to-upper 90s. You could say that fall showed up from out of nowhere. Or maybe it had something to do with the “eerie” Friday the 13th, where bad things happen because of a random day on a calendar. But if you’re looking for a more honest, completely non-scientific explanation for the seasonably cool weather, it’s because Washed Out (aka Ernest Greene) came to town. Greene was one of the original artists to get wrapped up in the “chillwave” genre descriptor when it first came to prominence around 2008. Chillwave grooves might be quite lovely overall, but they project a rather frigid demeanor as well. You’re invited to sit back and relax, but don’t get too comfortable. The chillwave tag might be all but dead these days, and Washed Out may have transitioned to greener pastures via the latest album Paracosm, but that doesn’t mean the city of Chicago has to accept it. We are the Windy City after all, and just like our weather our opinions about things can change dramatically thanks to even the slightest passing breeze. For the sold out crowd at Metro on Friday however, the physical and mental temperature rose big time thanks to cerebral but immensely fun sets from two bands that ignited a dance party of sweaty bodies.


Starting the night off right was New York band HAERTS. They’ve spent the last few months gathering more and more attention for their singles “Wings” and “All the Days,” both of which are bouncy and dynamic pieces of synth pop. You could call them part of a trend in 2013, boasting a similar sound and style to that of Chvrches, another band poised to hit it big despite not having an album out yet. At least Chvrches have got an EP right now. HAERTS are readying their debut EP, titled Hemiplegia, which has been in the works for awhile but will finally be out on September 24th. This tour with Washed Out provides a nice preview of what to expect from this young band in the immediate future. The good news is that the outlook continues to appear bright, and the new songs tend to be as strong as the pair we’ve already been exposed to. They played all four tracks from their EP, including the aforementioned singles, then dove into material that will presumably be on their full length, which is still tentatively due later this year. This is material they’ve been performing and essentially sitting on for at least a year now, if producer Jean Philip Grobler (aka St. Lucia) is telling the truth. One of the best and catchiest of the new tunes is “Heart,” and you can watch the band perform a live rendition of that as part of a recent Yours Truly session. Outside of all that, I’m not sure about the titles of anything else they performed, except to say that there was another fun one and also a slow ballad. On stage, HAERTS sound good and look good too, but those two elements alone don’t win you awards for being a great live band. Their faithful renditions of their recorded output left little room for sonic detours, and the overall stoicism stripped back any genuine emotional impact the songs might otherwise have had. In other words, they might do even better than they currently are if they adopted a looser and more playful attitude on stage. Maybe that’s a quality you attain with time. For now though, HAERTS packed a lot of punch into their opening set, and the crowd got a little bit into it. Hopefully the next time they come through town it will be on a headlining tour in support of their record, and they’ll be better than ever.

The first thing that amused me about Washed Out’s set happened before any notes were even played. It was that the entire stage was decorated in flowers and vines and even patches of fake grass, all in service of fulfilling Ernest Greene’s grand, nature-laden vision. After an album and an EP of intimate but emotionally cold music, the new Washed Out record Paracosm seeks to change things by adding warmth and more organic elements overall. It very much sounds like a summer album to help connect you with the world around you, and all the album art and music videos push this theme even further with flowers, plants and jungle animals. That’s why the look of the Metro stage was so appropriate and equally fascinating. But as far as organic elements go, the biggest positive the new record has to offer is a lot of live instrumentation. In the past, Greene has used samples played off a laptop both in recorded versions of songs as well as in concert. When I last saw the band in fall of 2012, there were more people playing live instruments than I expected, but a laptop was still used from time to time. Now in fall of 2013, all of that computer technology has been eliminated. A handful of people joined Greene on stage to help bring everything to life, and the results were positively lovely.

Starting with Paracosm‘s opening track(s) “Entrance/It All Feels Right,” the crowd got into it right away and bounced along with its upbeat rhythm. Greene strummed an acoustic guitar and sang in tandem with one of his bandmates to create a dual, echo-laden vocal. That vocal style would be adopted for much of the set, and it begs the question of whether or not this choice had anything to do with a lack of confidence/vocal weakness or is intended to be an aesthetic that’s there solely to provoke certain vibes. Whatever’s behind it, everything sounded (and felt) right/well constructed. There was a surprise early on in the set when the band played “Belong,” off the 2009 High Times EP which is the first and probably least recognized Washed Out recording. The live version on Friday night was a bit different from the studio version, which is understandable given how much the show and on stage personnel has evolved since then. The same went for “New Theory” and “Get Up” from the Life of Leisure EP, though there was a certain faithfulness to the recorded original, just recreated by people instead of a computer. Overall the dozen songs performed were pretty evenly split between the varying Washed Out albums and EPs, and actually it could be said the new album was slightly underrepresented by only squeezing three (technically four if you count the 90 second instrumental “Entrance”) of its songs in. Of course they were the poppiest and most enjoyable tracks on the record, and that was perhaps the underlying strategy when performing live – to never let the energy drop. The crowd was dancing and having a great time, so why slide one of the slower and less engaging cuts into the set? The second half in particular was heavy on the hits, with new single “Don’t Give Up” leading into “Feel It All Around” (aka the Portlandia theme song), and “Amor Fati” to close things out in a fun way.

Greene wasn’t a man of many words during the Washed Out set at Metro, but he did introduce the first song of the encore as “one for the old school Washed Out fans in the house.” The band then launched into “Despicable Dogs,” which is actually a cover/remix of a Small Black song that was put together for a split EP back in 2009. Of all the unexpected surprises during the set, that one probably qualified as the biggest. Technically speaking, the band took that song and made it their own, but it wasn’t that far removed from the chillwave original anyways. The novelty was the main selling point. Reflecting on the show afterwards, there were a lot of those unique touches that popped up throughout the 65 minute set, all the way down to the decor. Chillwave may be a subgenre of music on its last legs, but not only did Greene prove himself to be at the top of that pile, he managed to prove there’s still plenty of life left in that particular sound. His continued evolution remains our gain.

Washed Out – Amor Fati

Paracosm full album stream:

Buy Paracosm from Sub Pop

Set List
Entrance/It All Feels Right
Belong
New Theory
Get Up
Soft
You and I
All I Know
Don’t Give Up
Feel It All Around
Amor Fati
Encore
Despicable Dogs
Eyes Be Closed

Pick Your Poison: Friday 9-13-13

It’s Friday the 13th! (thunderclap) Try not to be too spooked or superstitious on a day like today. To me, it’s just another Friday and just another start to the weekend. If you don’t have any grand plans already set in place and are hanging out in Chicago, let me recommend checking out Riot Fest for all of your live music needs. Single day passes are still available, and I will wholeheartedly recommend going on Sunday to see the Pixies and The Replacements. Speaking of The Replacements, while they’ve had a reunion gig or two already, I suspect Chicago will be a big deal for them since it’s the city where they broke up. Ironically enough, they were performng at a festival (Taste of Chicago, to be exact) and mid-set walked off the stage to never return. Their roadies came out and played the rest of the show. With only two of the original members alive and healthy enough to play shows, I guess burying the hatchet wasn’t so difficult. You may be disappointed that it’s not all the guys, but in this situation you take what you can get. Same with the Pixies, because Kim Deal has left that band to focus on The Breeders. Overall I expect Riot Fest to be a fun time and a fun weekend on the whole, so come on out and we’ll have some early fall music festival fun. If you won’t be in town or simply have other plans, that’s cool too. Maybe you’ll like today’s edition of Pick Your Poison. There’s some good stuff in this batch from Anamanaguchi, Deadbear, Fronds, FUZZ (Ty Segall side project), iNCH., Pascal Barbare and Taffy. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Bottomless Pit, High Highs (covering College’s song from the movie Drive), Jacco Gardner and Geoffrey O’Connor.

Aimes – Give It to Me

Anamanaguchi – Endless Fantasy

Bear Scout – Two Moons
Bear Scout – Let It Go

Deadbear – Wabi Sabi

The Difference Machine – Futuristic Blast

Fronds – Crush

FUZZ – What’s in My Head

iNCH. – Dear Paramour

Pascal Barbare – House of Mirrors

Saint Max & The Fanatics – Soul Surrender

Taffy – No Endings But Only The Beginnings

Taka Perry – Lunar

Temporary Pharaohs – The Smoked Mirror

Vintage Moon – Tyro

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 9-12-13

It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for another weekly dip into the pool of music news, interviews and videos that I like to call This Week In Music! Yes, in addition to the normal Pick Your Poison mp3s and Soundcloud streams, I like to toss out links to a bunch of other music-related content that I’ve found interesting or worthwhile over the course of the week. I encourage you to check some, if not all of these things out, particularly if you’re looking to waste some time. There’s plenty to see, read and hear:

Watch Janelle Monae perform “Dance Apocalyptic” on Letterman

Music Video: Glasser – Design

Check out the shortlist of artists nominated for this year’s Mercury Prize

Stream a new live EP from Nine Inch Nails on Spotify, recorded during their Fuji Rock and Lollapalooza festival dates

Watch Kurt Vile cover The Clash’s “Guns of Brixton”

Entertainment Weekly reports that Sigur Ros will appear on “Game of Thrones” next season

Watch Kanye West perform “Bound 2” on Fallon

Watch the Anton Corbijn-directed music video for Arcade Fire’s “Reflektor” (Also experience the second, interactive version)

Music Video: Franz Ferdinand – Evil Eye

Watch Julianna Barwick perform “The Harbinger” in the middle of nowhere Iceland for a Take Away Show

There was so much fun stuff this week for music fans! All this stuff is just the tip of the iceberg of course, and the set of songs below helps to prove it. This is overal a pretty cover-heavy selection in today’s Pick Your Poison, but they’re all fun and enjoyable renditions so I hope you take that into account. Don’t miss cuts today from Apricot Rail, Clare Maguire, Jessy Lanza, Kaylee Johnston, Los Waves, Nat Baldwin (ft. Dave Longstreth of Dirty Projectors), Neon Hitch and Phaeleh. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Heavenly Beat, Jungle, Kaskade & Project 46, Parade of Lights and Fang Island’s remix of Tera Melos.

Apricot Rail – Dore Strauch

The Bootlegs – All In

Clare Maguire – The Last Time I Saw Richard (Joni Mitchell cover)

James Fox Higgins – Stand Up

Jessy Lanza – Move Closer (Phyllis Nelson cover)

Jitterbug Vipers – Stuff It

Kaylee Johnston – Gone

The Landing – Strange Charm

Los Angeles Police Dept. – The Only One

Los Waves – Got A Feeling

Mood Blanc – On the Radio

Nat Baldwin – Look She Said (ft. Dave Longstreth)

Neon Hitch – We Can’t Stop (Miley Cyrus cover)

Phaeleh – Make You Feel

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 9-11-13

I don’t mean to bring everybody down, but if you look at the date or check the news, you’re sure to be reminded that today is the 12th anniversary of the 9/11 attack. It’s not something that I really like talking about, yet I struggled to come up with something more fitting on a day like today. While it truly was a tragic day for the United States, I wonder if we’ll ever get to the point where it becomes “just another day” again. I don’t mean to trivialize what happened, or even throw out the memories of lost loved ones, but my thinking is to eliminate what the date symbolizes. That doesn’t mean forgetting the lessons we learned on that fateful day either. It’s about reclaiming what was taken from us, which was largely our sense of security. A group of terrorists achieved their goal and terrorized a nation. While most, if not all of those terrorists are now dead or in prison, the mark that they made will be felt for the foreseeable future, and perhaps all time. It will appear in history books and live on through memorials in New York. In a sense we can celebrate because we are a stronger and more vigilant nation today than we were 12 years ago, but we had to pay a hefty price to get there. I guess what I really want is something great to happen on a 9/11 in the future to help balance things out, you know? So we can say, “Yeah, on this day in 2001 we were attacked, but then on the same day in 2015 we achieved world peace.” Being able to neutralize a hallmark of tragedy, like the eventual fade of our own scars, changes our character but also has a remarkable restorative power. I’ll be so happy if we can eventually get to that point. Anyways, let’s have a “just another day” edition of Pick Your Poison. Don’t miss tracks from Astrid Swan, Blair Crimmins & The Hookers, GoNorthToGoSouth, The Herms, Miguel, Otonana Trio and The Wyld. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Blitzen Trapper, Cate Le Bon, Cut Copy, The Dismemberment Plan and Young Galaxy. Blood Diamonds remixing Chvrches is pretty great too.

Astrid Swan – Four Months to Kill

Blac Hollywood – Runaways (ft. Bear Mountain)

Blair Crimmins & The Hookers – I Love You That’s All

Colette – Hotwire

GoNorthToGoSouth – Turn It Up

A Grave With No Name – Poltergeist

The Herms – Power Joystick

iLL CAMILLE – Slip Away (ft. Amaru)

Le Trouble – Real Talk (Part 2)

Miguel – Can’t Sleep 2gether

Otonana Trio – Interruption

Qurious – Termina

Truest – Cities

The Wyld – Odyssey

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 9-10-13

Have you had a chance to hear the new Arcade Fire single “Reflektor” yet? It technically leaked over the weekend, but the big deal that was supposed to happen on 9/9 at 9pm was basically that song being released and put up for sale at independent record stores around the globe. Exciting stuff, and I would have attempted to purchase one of those 12″ singles had any stores within a 2 hour drive from Chicago carried them. I fail to fully understand how two stores in Wisconsin get it, but zero stores in Chicago (and only one in all of Illinois) do. I guess some retailers are willing to play ball more than others. Anyways, the new Arcade Fire single wasn’t the only new music released this week. It’s Tuesday, so let me run down (as I do every week) the list of artists unleashing some great new product out into the world: The Albertans, Arbouretum, Arctic Monkeys, Ben Rector, Blair Crimmins & The Hookers, Body/Head, The Clash, Emiliana Torrini, Forest Fire, Goldfrapp, Holy Ghost!, Infinity Shred, Jacuzzi Boys, Janelle Monae, Joanna Gruesome, Juliana Hatfield, Kaskade, Man Man, Mark Knopfler, Miniboone, Moving Mountains, Moving Units, Obits, The Orwells, Peelander-Z, Rise Against, The Rubens, Ry Cooder, The Stepkids, Terry Malts, Toy Soldiers, The Weeknd, and Willis Earl Beal. You’ve got to love the fall, when so much great new music is coming out. If any of the albums from the artists I just listed above aren’t going to meet with your approval, perhaps something in Pick Your Poison below will. Allow me to recommend tracks from Ben Miller Band, Dante, Diane Coffee, The Grisly Hand, Hey Geronimo, Meanest Man Contest, The Pedaljets, and Rue Royale. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Active Child, Ducktails, Goldroom, Grails, Toro Y Moi and Upset (Ali from Vivian Girls/Best Coast).

Ben Miller Band – Get Right Church

Ciara – Body Party (Swish Remix)

Dante – Son

Diane Coffee – Tale of a Dead Dog

The Grisly Hand – That’s Not Affection

Hey Geronimo – Lazer Gun Show

Kool Head – Stick Up Kids

Meanest Man Contest – In the Dark

Mind Spiders – Make Make Make Make

The Pedaljets – Nothing Boy

Raw Geronimo – Magnetic Love

Rue Royale – Set Out to Discover

Tic Tic Boom! – These Motions

Toro Y Moi – So Many Details (Maths Time Joy Rework)

Pick Your Poison: Monday 9-9-13

Let me talk for one hot minute about something that I consider to be pretty serious and important. Okay, so this isn’t going to be super serious, but rather I want to talk about a fun way to support a difficult part of life. Nobody likes it when we get sick. If you’re diagnosed with an incurable disease, it can lead to a compromised life or even death. Organizations like the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society work hard to try and find a cure for things like blood cancer. It’s a very worthwhile cause that has helped millions of people fight this terrible disease. I’m proud to be a supporter of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, and hope that you might consider becoming one too. While a donation to the organization would be great, why not get a little bit of bang for your buck? There’s a benefit concert happening on Wednesday, September 18th at Lincoln Hall in Chicago. Local favorites and worldwide rising band JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound will be headlining the show, with support from How Far to Austin. Chicago’s own funk and soul DJRC will spin tunes between the main sets as well. Tickets are $35, and all profits from the show will go directly to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. If you’re not yet familiar with JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound, they’re a pretty great band both on record and on stage. Their most recent single “Rouse Yourself” has a great music video that stars Jake Johnson (from “New Girl”) and Aubrey Plaza (from “Parks & Rec”). The band also does a pretty great cover of Wilco’s “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart” that I’d recommend checking out. But back to the show: It is all ages, there will be a silent auction, 50/50 raffle and you can also purchase a drink package that gets you discounted beer and wine if you’re into it. Anyways, if you’re in and around Chicago next Wednesday, please please please come out to the show. I will most definitely be there, so we can hang out. Advance tickets are on sale now here. I promise you it’ll be a great time, and you’ll be supporting a very worthwhile cause. Now then, let’s get on to the business of today, which is Pick Your Poison. Don’t miss tracks from Andrew St. James, The High Wire, Lime Cordiale, Parentz and Superhuman Happiness. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream songs from Banks, The Darcys, Stars, and Avalanches’ remix of Hunters & Collectors.

Andrew St. James – The Lost, The Vain

Anonymous Conglomerate – Craft Mastered (ft. One Ton)

David Bronson – Living in Name

goodbyemotel – Michael

The High Wire – The Thames & The Tide

Hillary Capps – New Melody

Lime Cordiale – Sleeping at Your Door

LPZ ft. CHVZ – Think for Yourself (CVNT Remix)

Maur Due & Lichter – Faces

May McDonough & Company – Plump Little Fleshies

Parentz – Fly

Superhuman Happiness – Sentimental Pieces

The Superman Revenge Squad Band – A Funny Thing You Said

XNY – Ride On

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 9-5-13

It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for another weekly dip into the pool of music news, interviews and videos that I like to call This Week In Music! Yes, in addition to the normal Pick Your Poison mp3s and Soundcloud streams, I like to toss out links to a bunch of other music-related content that I’ve found interesting or worthwhile over the course of the week. I encourage you to check some, if not all of these things out, particularly if you’re looking to waste some time. There’s plenty to see, read and hear:

Watch Twin Shadow cover Bruce Springsteen’s “I’m On Fire”

YouTube Audio Stream: Oneohtrix Point Never – Zebra

Neil Young has announced that his digital music service PONO will launch in 2014

Music Video: TV on the Radio – Mercy

Watch Passion Pit perform an hour-long set for “Live on Letterman”

Check out a short trailer for Arcade Fire’s upcoming album Reflektor

YouTube Audio Stream: M.I.A. – Come Walk With Me

Music Video: Savages – I Am Here

YouTube Audio Stream: Cults – High Road

Music Video: Sleigh Bells – Bitter Rivals

Once you’re done wading through all of those great highlights from this past week, be sure to check out today’s Pick Your Poison below. There are highlights there too. Don’t miss Little Daylight’s remix of Atlas Genius, The Haxan Cloak’s remix of Cloud Boat, and songs from Dark Colour, Fenech-Soler, Jonny Rodgers, PLOY and Shake the Baron. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, strean cuts from The Blow, Caitlin Rose (covering The National), Slow Magic, Survival Knife, Tourist’s remix of Haim and RZA’s remix of alt-J.

Atlas Genius – If So (Little Daylight Remix)

Bent Denim – Periodic Table

Cloud Boat – Amber Road (The Haxan Cloak Remix)

Clubfeet – Acapulco & LA

Cock & Swan – Inner Portal (IG88 Remix)

Dark Colour – Reach for the Night

Expwy – Scraping blue terra cotta (Waterloo cannibals)

Fenech-Soler – Maiyu

Jonny Rodgers – Everything Is Yours

Jupiter Project – Peer Pressure

Kaytranada – At All

MiniBoone – Baby, I Hope So

PLOY – Future Voyager

RII – Black Zombie

Shake the Baron – Ghost Hits

Submerse – Melonkoly

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 9-4-13

Just because Labor Day marks the unofficial end of summer doesn’t mean you need to start bundling up and staying indoors. September is a fine month for a lot of things, live shows being one of them. Even outdoor live shows. Surprisingly, with the Pitchfork Music Festival in July and Lollapalooza in August, September has become something of a safe haven for some smaller music festivals in Chicago that boast remarkably strong lineups. Among them is the A.V. Fest/Hideout Block Party, which takes place this Friday and Saturday night outside of The Hideout (1354 W. Wabansia). Among the artists performing are Neko Case, Mavis Staples, Trampled By Turtles, Young the Giant, The Hold Steady, Superchunk, The Walkmen and The Both (Ted Leo + Aimee Mann). If you’d like to buy tickets to this fun, family-friendly festival, they’re $35 for Friday, $40 for Saturday and $70 for a two day. Go here to learn more. Next weekend, what I like to call the last big music festival of 2013 arrives in Chicago with Riot Fest. It’s remarkably 90’s and early 00’s heavy this year, which some might argue is a good thing. Headliners include Fall Out Boy, Blink 182 and the big one, The Replacements. Other acts performing over the three-day weekend include Pixies, Violent Femmes, Rancid, Blondie, Danzig, Guided By Voices, Brand New, Public Enemy, Taking Back Sunday, Bad Religion, The Dismemberment Plan, Dinosaur Jr., Andrew W.K., Against Me!, Best Coast, Mission of Burma and Stars. Check out the full lineup here. Three day passes are sold out, but you can still buy individual passes for each day here. So the grand lesson we learned from all this is that while we hold on for dear life for whatever shreds of warm weather we have left, there’s no reason to be bored or have a lack of something exciting to do in Chicago these next couple weeks. Of course for the many non-Chicagoans reading this, I hope today’s Pick Your Poison will keep you entertained for awhile too. Don’t miss tracks from Chalk, Hey Champ, Kramies, Pig Destroyer, Signals Midwest and Victory. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream tracks from The Hudson Branch, The Internet, Kevin Morby (of Woods/The Babies), Ryan Hemsworth and Son Lux.

Callow – Strange

Chalk – Next to Useless

Clara May – Badlands

Hey Champ – On Holiday

Jadea Kelly – Lone Wolf

Kramies – The Wooden Heart

Monster Rally – Orchids

Pig Destroyer – The Octagonal Stairway

Pillar Point – Diamond Mine (Generationals Deep Dark Ocean Remix)

Prom Date – X My Heart (Matsy Remix)

Sacha Mullin – Whelm

Scary People – Dreams of Gold

Signals Midwest – In the Pauses

Son of Stan – Corsica (Hatchback Edit)

Victory – This, That or This

Album Review: Washed Out – Paracosm [Sub Pop]



Considering the increasingly short life cycles of trends in music these days, it’s gotten almost difficult to remember that there was once a subgenre of music known to many as chillwave. It’s been nearly five years since that word introduced us to artists like Neon Indian, Toro y Moi and Washed Out. Two years after it started, the sound got tired, produced diminishing returns, and artists were forced to adapt/innovate or die. For Ernest Greene of Washed Out, he spent his 2011 debut album Within and Without both perfecting and updating the sound of his earlier EPs. While it wasn’t a record that lent itself to any particular distinction among its nine songs, what it lacked in establishing singles it more than made up for in cohesiveness of sound and structure. It’s exactly the sort of evolution that was needed at the time, and the increased clarity on the production and vocals spoke to a much greater clarity of overall vision for the project as well.

Now in 2013 with that sound even further removed from many radars, Greene makes yet another stylistic leap on Paracosm in a bid to keep things interesting. You’re certainly not going to mistake his work for any other artist, and these aren’t earth-shattering changes by any means, but subtle shifts in tone and instrumentation do show us a new side of Washed Out. The new album sounds so warm and tropical it’s practically the opposite of the icier textures chillwave became known for, and it’s so lush and crisp that affixing the name Washed Out to it feels like you’re mislabeling it. Of course in case you need to be hit over the head with this idea, one look at the floral arrangement on the album cover or watching videos for “It All Feels Right” and “Don’t Give Up” will do everything but physically take you out into nature and prove it’s a great pairing with this music. Hell, when it’s not little snippets of indiscernable conversations from a crowd of people that’s plays at the beginnings and ends of most tracks, you get birds chirping and the basic sounds you hear when you hit the “jungle” setting on the white noise machine next to your bed. Obvious though it might be, the visual (and in some respects sonic) representations associated with this album are intended to enhance what’s already there, which it succeeds at doing in spades. If you think you’ve heard Paracosm because you played it through headphones while sitting at your desk or on your couch one afternoon, the experience changes dramatically if you’re laying on the grass in a park on a sunny day or wandering through a local forest preserve.

Beyond all the physical representations injecting additional mood and meaning into the music, one of the key influencers on this record is the use of more than 50 total instruments rather than sampling. The early recordings were extremely sample-dominant, and while Within and Without started to incorporate a wider variety of organic elements (particularly as part of the live show), this is really the first time guitars and live drums have been used on a Washed Out album. There’s also a host of other, stranger instruments that were used on various songs that might not be so easy to pick out unless you’re really listening closely. Some of those instruments and sonic influences have been chronicled as part of a short documentary by The Creators Project (Part I, Part II), which is insightful and worth your time to watch if you like geeking out about that sort of stuff.

Focusing on the actual songs of Paracosm, as with most albums this one is front-loaded. Outside of the 80 second instrumental intro “Entrance,” the first four actual songs on the record could each serve as potential singles. It’s fitting that “It All Feels Right” really kicks things off, as the track is a spiritual (but not really sonic) cousin to the most popular Washed Out song to date, “Feel It All Around,” which you may recognize as the theme to Portlandia. Both are relaxed but bouncy in their tempo, and lyrically invite you to “feel” positive about life. One of the things that’s more apparent on the new album are Greene’s lyrics, which are never without a touch of reverb but are still clearer than any previous records. If you pay close enough attention to what’s being said, there is some realization that maybe these words would be better if we couldn’t hear them so well. Lines like, “Weekend’s almost here now / It’s getting warmer outside / It all feels right,” might as well appear on the next Black Eyed Peas single because they’re so pedestrian. This has been Greene’s biggest problem since day one, and unlike the forward progress in composition and live instrumentation, he doesn’t seem to be making any effort to improve his writing skills. We understand the theme, along with the overall vibe of a song, is going to place emphasis on laid back, fun in the sun with friends. It’s a great thing to be known for, but it starts to come across as really repetitive the closer you look.

What saves “It All Feels Right” and many of the other poorly worded songs on Paracosm are the arrangements. Official single “Don’t Give Up” does a particularly spectacular job with this, resulting in such a complex melody you’ll keep discovering new layers buried within it several listens later. That chorus is an incredible earworm too. While “Weightless” may not be the most engaging track from the first half of the album, the mixture of synths creates an overall sound that skirts the line between M83 and Cocteau Twins. If it’s commercially viable you’re looking for, “All I Know” might just be the poppiest Washed Out song ever, and it doesn’t feel like anything was sacrificed or lost to get to that point. It’s impressive in its own way, and gives us a glimpse into a potential future for this project where commercial accessibility leads to a broad fan base and hordes of commercial opportunities (see again, M83). “Great Escape” does a fantastic job of tapping into the more soulful side of Greene’s vision, even if that means conjuring up memories of Marvin Gaye classics in the process. Sure it might draw some unfavorable comparisons, but at the same time it adds layers to what we’ve already heard while not straying very far from the overall relaxed and tropical vibe.

As Paracosm starts to wrap up around the lengthy title track, the tempo slows and the synths pretty much take things into cruise control. It doesn’t necessarily get boring, but it can feel a bit whitewashed (word use intentional) and eerily reminiscent of some moments on Within and Without. You could argue that these final songs help to balance out the record, set against the pop-oriented first half. It all flows well thematically, but just because you have that doesn’t automatically make it good. It just makes it more bearable. The positive outlook is that this is the overall best and most advanced Washed Out record to date. It’s issues involving poorly written lyrics, Greene’s limited/always obscured vocal range, and pacing issues towards the end all ultimately pale in comparison to the goal of this music, which is to provide a soundtrack to your relaxing day of fun in the sun. That’s one thing it definitely succeeds at, and what kind of people would we be if we yelled at him for it?

Stream the entire album on Soundcloud for a limited time!

Buy Paracosm from Amazon

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