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Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 7-23-13

It’s Tuesday, which means I run down the list of artists releasing new albums this week. The goal is to inform you about the new music and maybe even act as a reminder if you forgot that one of your favorites was coming out with something new. We’re in the doldrums of summer, so the release list is a bit small at the moment, but that doesn’t mean there’s not some quality in here. Pick up copies of albums from any of these artists via your local independent music retailer or online retailer: Admirers, Baroness, Coke Weed, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, Eric and Magill, Fialta, Fuck Buttons, Gogol Bordello, Grant Hart, Hunx and His Punx, Kyle Andrews, The Love Language, Smashing Pumpkins (reissue), Sombear, Van Dyke Parks, and Weekend. If it’s individual songs you’re looking for, allow me to point you in the direction of today’s Pick Your Poison. It’s below. There’s some sweet treats in this set from The Band in Heaven, Cavalier King, Freddie Gibbs & Madlib, The Grisly Band, Local Natives, M.G. Baker Co., Sleepmakeswaves, TORCHES and Vial of Sound. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream tracks from Chelsea Wolfe, Sebadoh, Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin and Tei Shi.

Afrojack – Funk With me (Team Jaguar Bootleg)

The Band in Heaven – Dandelion Wine

Bundinha – Me Gustas Tu

Cavalier King – Storm

Freddie Gibbs & Madlib – City (ft. Karrein Riggins)

The Grisly Band – Country Singles

Half Waif – Wooden Horse

Local Natives – You & I (Local Natives Remix)

Lungz – Live or Die

M.G. Baker Co. – All I Wanna Do

Sleepmakeswaves – In Limbs and Joints

Tallinn Daggers – Highwire Artists

TORCHES – If the People Stare

Vial of Sound – The Day We Both Died

Pitchfork Music Festival 2013: Saturday Photos


Here’s a selection of photos that I took during Day 2 of this year’s Pitchfork Music Festival. Click past the jump for photos of Belle & Sebastian, Solange, The Breeders, Savages, …And You Will Know Us By the Trail of Dead, Phosphorescent, Ryan Hemsworth, Parquet Courts and Metz. Check out more photos, day-by-day recaps, and a whole lot of other stuff related to the 2013 Pitchfork Music Festival by clicking here.

Pitchfork Music Festival 2013: Friday Photos


In case you missed all of the action out at this year’s Pitchfork Music Festival, I’ve certainly written plenty about it, but haven’t SHOWN you what it all looked like. Well, this and the next couple of photo posts should change all of that. Join me past the jump for a bunch of photos that I took on Day 1. In this set, you’ll find photos of Bjork, Joanna Newsom, Wire, Woods, Angel Olsen, Mac DeMarco and Mikal Cronin.

Pitchfork Music Festival 2013: Final Thoughts


I’m pleased to be wrapping up this week-long adventure into coverage of the 2013 Pitchfork Music Festival with a quick look back at the weekend that was. Having attended the festival for the last few years, you really get used to how things are run and where you need to go for everything from water to food to restrooms. So as you return in a sense it’s like coming home, and that’s comforting. I never once felt out of my element or like I had no idea what I was doing over the three days. Of course I didn’t quite see everything I wanted to see and hear everything I wanted to hear thanks to traffic delays and one too many hits of the snooze button, but what I missed was miniscule compared to what I saw. Hopefully you’ve read all about those adventures in my daily recaps (Friday, Saturday, Sunday). That should give you a pretty good idea of the best and worst of the music side of things this year. But just for fun, I put together a little list of superlatives, helping to highlight some of my favorite and least favorite musical treats from the weekend. Check that out:

Most surprising set: Killer Mike
Most disappointing set: Yo La Tengo
Set that best lived Up to the hype: Savages
Band that sounded better live than on record: Parquet Courts
Most openly fun set: Solange
Most likely controlled the weather during their set: Bjork
Set that proved punk rock is alive and well: Metz
Veteran act that still has “it”: Wire
Veteran act that has lost “it”: The Breeders
Band whose set would have been far more popular in a different decade: Chairlift
Band that felt so right in the middle of a sunny afternoon: Phosphorescent
Quietest set (artist + crowd): Joanna Newsom
Funniest set: Mac DeMarco
Most gratuitous use of the word “SWAG”: Lil B
Flashiest performance with the least amount of genuine substance: M.I.A.
Most pathetic attempt to attract attention: Foxygen

Outside of those superlatives, I want to talk for a brief minute about how things went overall. Since we’re on the topic of music, let me say a few words about this year’s lineup. To me, it felt just a little bit weaker than in the last few years, though all of the headliners were certainly nothing to sneeze at. Perhaps that’s where most of the budget went this year. I suspect it was telling that unlike the last couple years, the festival wasn’t a total sell out this year. Sunday was sold out, most likely due to obsessive R. Kelly fans who camped out at the Green stage for much of the day just waiting for him. But Friday and Saturday didn’t sell out, as far as I’m aware. I did keep hearing that there were a “very limited number” of tickets left for Friday, so maybe that eventually sold out too. When I look at it, I like most of the artists on the lineup for this year, but I’m not overly passionate about a lot of them. It made for another fine festival overall and I’m glad I saw what I did, but for whatever reason it sometimes felt like something was missing. Not a whole lot of artists really jumped out and grabbed me by the ears, so maybe that’s what it was. If I were put in charge of naming one act each day that was my favorite, the list would be the following: Friday – Bjork, Saturday – Savages, Sunday – Killer Mike. Of all the days, I’d classify Friday as my least favorite, primarily because many of the artists that performed that day were either relatively bland (Woods, Mikal Cronin) or didn’t quite feel like they belonged at an outdoor festival (Angel Olsen, Joanna Newsom). Perhaps I should have made it to Union Park in time for Trash Talk, I heard their set was crazy.

Music aside, let me comment on the amenities this year. Considering the capacity of Union Park every year, festival organizers have gotten everything at just about the right levels to make things comfortable. The restrooms are plentiful and you’ll never wait too long for one. The food booths offer a wide variety of cuisine for even the most sensitive of palates or dietary restrictions. I had some amazing tacos on Sunday. The return of Goose Island as the provider of alcoholic beverages was an inspired move. The availability of key beers like 312 and Green Line was nice, but even nicer was the special Goose Island booth that had a rotating cast of different beers from the brewer’s catalogue, not to mention two beers crafted exclusively for the festival. I tried both of the fest-exclusive beers, and they were delicious. The singular gripe I have, and it’s basically always been a problem, is with water fountains. Union Park has a distinct lack of water fountains, and therefore the few it does have resulted in long lines. There’s nothing that can really be done about that, but I’ve got to hand it to the volunteer crew at the festival for often walking around with cases of bottled water, handing them out to anybody that wanted one. A lot of people were likely spared a trip to the medical tent as a result of such gestures, though I did see at least a few people go down due to heat exhaustion and dehydration. On the whole, this year’s festival went rather swimmingly, where the sets all started on schedule and the lines were never astronomically or annoyingly huge. It’s a sharp reminder that no matter what the lineup might be, this is one of the best-run music festivals in the country. As I stated in my earlier coverage, Pitchfork Music Festival weekend is my favorite weekend every single year I attend. I wouldn’t be surprised if that were true again by the time we reach the end of 2013.

Pick Your Poison: Monday 7-22-13

Woof. I hope your weekend was fantastic. Mine absolutely was, and if you’ve been following the site and my Twitter feed all weekend I’m sure you got a good idea of the many things that went down at Pitchfork Music Festival. Like previous years, it was a whole lot of fun with a whole lot of great people. If you’ve never been I strongly encourage you to go. Full coverage, including daily recaps of all the bands I saw, is available here. I’m a bit out of it after taking an aggressive approach to each day over the weekend, so I’m going to need today to recover. I’ve still got one final Pitchfork Music Fest report to write, an ending summary along with a million and one photos. It’ll get done…sometime this week. Stay tuned on that. But in the meantime, the music continues and Pick Your Poison continues. Don’t miss tracks today from Art Decade, The Chill Marks, Flashlights, Grooms, Las Kellies and TOTEM. In the Soundcloud section, stream new songs from Drew Price, Explosions in the SKy with David Wingo, James Ferraro, Modern Hut and TRAAMS.

Arc Rev One – Funk N It Up

Art Decade – No One’s Waiting

Charlie Greene – I’m Going Inside

The Chill Marks – Missing

Colette – When the Music’s Loud

Damon Albarn – Monkey Bee (Nosaj Thing Remix)

Emma Heartbeat – The Machine (Freakatronic Remix)

Flashlights – Don’t Take Me Seriously

Flowers Groove – Strange Feelings (DeLix Remix)

Grooms – I Think We’re Alone Now

Las Kellies – Melting Ice

Matt Script – All Day

Profecy – Standing in the Rain (ft. Matt B)

TOTEM – Rich Girl

Pitchfork Music Festival 2013: Sunday Recap


Phew, what a weekend! As usual, I’m feeling quite a bit drained from three long days of experiencing the dizzying highs and physical tolls of attending a music festival. It doesn’t get any easier as you get older, I can tell you that. Judging by the average age of the attendees this year, I’m beginning to fall on the older half of the spectrum. In spite of this, I’m never less than excited to attend the Pitchfork Music Festival each year, as I consistently claim it is my favorite weekend of the 52 that take place annually. So I may be tired and writing about the festival in a timely manner has brought its own set of unique challenges, but I’m not anything less than satisfied with how everything turned out. I’ll have my final set of thoughts on how I think the festival went this year, along with a massive photo set from the entire weekend, coming up in the next few days. In the meantime, please enjoy this summary of all the acts I saw perform on Day 3 of the festival, aka Sunday.

Pitchfork Music Festival 2013: Saturday Recap


It always bothers me when things don’t work out according to plan, and the start/end to my Saturday at the 2013 Pitchfork Music Festival was one of those times. In what was supposed to be an early arrival to catch sets from White Lung, Pissed Jeans and Julia Holter, bad traffic turned a short drive into an extraordinarily long one. Thank goodness I finally made it in time for Phosphorescent. Then of course there was the weather. On checking the weekend forecast on Friday afternoon shortly before heading out on Day 1, it said a chance of severe storms on Friday night, then partly cloudy for the rest of the weekend. All was going according to plan until about 9 p.m. on Saturday when it started to pour. Of course it would. Let’s hope the park stays dry enough for Sunday that there’s not mud/sand pits everywhere like last year. As for the music itself, most everything on Saturday was an improvement over the somewhat shaky or mediocre sets on Friday. Let me break things down for you, band by band.

Pitchfork Music Festival 2013: Friday Recap

Most things about Day 1 at the 2013 Pitchfork Music Festival could be considered challenging. Or, perhaps described a little differently, most things except the performances. The main factor on Friday was the weather. A glance at the temperature would tell you the heat index was in the upper 90s, and therefore it bordered on oppressive. Then again, it’s nothing particularly new for this festival or mid-July in Chicago. Still, the volunteer staff could be credited as doing a fair to good job of distributing bottled water to the sweaty masses, even walking around with cases of it through the crowd during sets. Yet if you went to one of Union Park’s few water fountains, the lines were long. The same could be said for all the beverage tents. Everyone was in need of some fluids. And while outside of the heat it was a nice and sunny day, it became less so when severe storms rolled in during the evening hours and effectively shut down Bjork’s set 30 minutes early. It hadn’t rained a drop when organizers pulled the plug on the evening, but there was a pretty great lightning show that could hypothetically have put people in danger. The actual rain, as it was reported to me, started about 30-45 minutes after the park was cleared. Hopefully it won’t be a soggy mess for the rest of the weekend. Beyond weather and lines though, let’s talk about the music itself. Here’s a recap of the artists I saw:

Pitchfork Music Festival 2013: Sunday Preview


I’m pleased to say that we’ve arrived at Day 3 of the Pitchfork Music Festival preview guide. This of course falls during Pitchfork Music Festival Week here on the site, which kicked off on Monday with an Artist Guide, and featured a preview of Day 1 on Tuesday and a preview of Day 2 on Wednesday. So yes, we’ve covered quite a bit of ground so far, and there’s plenty more to go. After today’s preview guide of Day 3, I’ll have day-by-day recaps of all the festival action, and we’ll wrap things up with a final look back at the weekend, plus look at a whole bunch of photos. This is going to be fun! If you’re headed to Union Park this weekend, please remember to dress for the weather (it’s going to be HOT, but will get progressively cooler with each day, and with the potential for severe storms all day Friday). Sunscreen, bug spray, etc. will be your best friend. Also remember to stay safe. Drink plenty of water, and if you’re moshing at any point, keep an eye out for your neighbor. This is one of the friendliest, nicest music festivals you’ll ever go to, so please don’t be “that guy/girl” and take away the enjoyment factor for so many. Sit back, relax, and party with great music and amazing vendors. Here’s your preview guide to all the artists you’ll see on Sunday at this year’s Pitchfork Music Festival!

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 7-18-13

At this point in the week I typically put together the Thursday segment I call “This Week In Music,” which features some of my favorite non-mp3 music things for you to read and watch and generally enjoy. Due to the work I’m putting in on Pitchfork Music Festival-related duties right now (it starts tomorrow afternoon!), that segment is going to have to wait until next Thursday. As I continue to mention, you can see all of my Pitchfork Music Fest coverage by following this link, but you can also follow me on Twitter for direct, on-site band-by-band updates from the festival all weekend long. It’s set to be a great time, and I wish they were streaming it online for everyone who can’t go. Alas, not this year. But maybe instead of sitting on your computer all weekend watching bands perform you can download and stream some great new tracks from some great new bands instead. That’s what Pick Your Poison is all about. In today’s edition, don’t miss songs from Alexia Coley, Franskild, Kim Lenz, Migrant Kids, Therese Aune, Toy Soldiers and Yuck. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Elvis Costello & The Roots, Forest Swords, Sarah Neufeld, We Are Scientists and Sally Shapiro’s remix of Young Galaxy.

The African You – Not Sure

Alexia Coley – Love at First Sight

The Band of Strangers – The Black Bird Song

Dally – Incest Breeding

Dark City Agent – I Need More

Franskild – Shards

Jay Stolar – Like You Do

Kim Lenz – Follow Me

Migrant Kids – Canvas of Me

Sundays – Delicate

Therese Aune – In My Quiet Place

Toy Soldiers – Tell the Teller

Tre David – Brain Dead

Yuck – Rebirth

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 7-17-13

We’ve reached the middle of the week, and while I’d typically spend this intro writing about some music news item or offering some sort of pop culture commentary, during this particular week I’m a bit pressed for time. There’s a lot going on, the most important of those things being preparing for this year’s Pitchfork Music Festival and the week-long coverage I’m working on for that. Sadly, something must suffer as a result, and these intros are that. So, if you click this link, you can view all the Pitchfork Music Fest coverage I’ve written so far, and will continue to write for the next few days. Beyond that, please enjoy the tracks that are part of today’s Pick Your Poison. Recommendations include cuts from Alligator Indian, Breakbot & Irfane, Ducky, Glimmermen, Stout Cortez and Walking Shapes. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new stuff from The Dismemberment Plan, Keep Shelly in Athens, No Age, and the Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs remix of Disclosure’s “F For You”.

Admirers – Spirit Lamp (Joywave Remix)

Alligator Indian – Corpsing

Breakbot & Irfane – Bedtime Stories

Cleo Sol – Borderline

Ducky – Air (Night Version)

Faux Effet – Boeter öi Xai

Gita – Let That

Glimmermen – This Town

The Lawsuits – Arts & Crafts

Mist Glider – Going Away

Nina Yasmineh – Seven Years

Stout Cortez – Evolution is Fleeting

Unlike Pluto – Focus

Walking Shapes – Bison

Pitchfork Music Festival 2013: Saturday Preview


If you’re headed to Union Park this weekend, I sincerely hope you’re following along with this 2013 Pitchfork Music Festival preview guide. There’s a lot of great and interesting artists playing the festival this year, as there are every year, and I just want to make sure you have the absolute best time possible. That’s why I try my hardest to educate you on all the artists on the lineup and try to help you make choices about what bands to see during what hour of each day. Yesterday we previewed Friday, and that’s a shorter day than Saturday and Sunday. So now here’s the guide for Saturday, which is longer and ideally more compelling. I think much of the day on Saturday is beset with fascinating conflicts, so you may want to skip around and catch pieces of different sets all day just to get a fully rounded experience. Now then, without further ado, let me present to you a guide to Day 2 at the 2013 Pitchfork Music Festival!

Pitchfork Music Festival 2013: Friday Preview


Welcome to Day 1 of the preview guide to the 2013 Pitchfork Music Festival. In this guide, the purpose is to take a look at the artist schedule hour by hour and recommend the which acts to see when. I’ll be doing this for each of the three days of the festival, for the next three days leading up to the festival. That will be followed by daily recaps of all the action happening in Union Park in Chicago each day. In case you missed it, yesterday I started off Pitchfork Music Festival week with an Artist Guide, providing web links, audio streams, mp3s and even a Spotify playlist to help get you more familiar with the full lineup of this year’s fest. It’s gonna be a great one, I suspect. Now then, let’s get right into this preview of Day 1 (Friday) at the Pitchfork Music Festival. If you’re going, I hope you find this guide helpful!

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 7-16-13

Do people get genuinely excited about Tuesdays anymore? I mean, I do, but I’m not sure how many others do. Considering all the piracy that goes on, with albums and such leaking before their official release dates, has that tempered the excitement? I can see how that might be. For me, it’s about the physicality of holding something in your hands, which means actually buying something from a brick and mortar store (or ordering it online). So some weeks I’ll race to the store on a Tuesday and raid the shelves, dropping more money than I might otherwise like. Still, it’s a great feeling from time to time, and I hope it never dies out or goes away. So let me provide the service I do every Tuesday, which is to list the artists with some new stuff coming out, just to make sure you’re aware of it. Look for fresh releases this week from Court Yard Hounds, David Lynch, Frank Black, Gauntlet Hair, A Grave With No Name, Robert Randolph, Soft Metals, Speedwell (featured below!), White Dove and Yoya. Good stuff, but if none of that inspires you, maybe you’ll discover something new and great in today’s Pick Your Poison. Let me recommend tracks from Autre Ne Veut, BEACH, Diplo, Jake Bellows, Kid Karate and U137. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Army Navy, Barbarossa, Earl Sweatshirt, Pure Bathing Culture and TV Ghost.

Autre Ne Veut – On and On

BEACH – O, Packaging

Clang Boom Steam – Clan

Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. – If You Didn’t See Mee (Then You Weren’t on the Dancefloor) (AMTRAC Remix)

Diplo – Crown (ft. Mike Posner & Boaz Van De Beatz & Riff Raff)

Good Friend – Ships That Sink

Jake Bellows – All Right Now

Jay-Z ft. Justin Timberlake – Holy Grail (VOODOO FARM Remix)

Kid Karate – Heart

Kool Head – Leon

Runaway Sun – Let’s Run

Speedwell – This Is Us

Steel Pulse – Put Your Hoodies On (4 Trayvon)

U137 – Dreamer on the Run

Pick Your Poison: Monday 7-15-13

If you’re the sort of person who just clicked on over to this page and didn’t take a look at the main site, let me do my best to bring you up to speed. It’s Pitchfork Music Festival week here at Faronheit. This happens for a full week every year, and it’s a lot of fun even if you’re not attending the festival itself, which takes place this weekend, July 19-21. Have a look at the official site for details on the lineup and set times and a few other key items like ticket prices if you’re so inclined. But say you don’t live in Chicago and can’t afford to make the trip. The good news is the festival will be streamng all weekend long. I can’t tell you exactly where that will be streaming just yet, but you can sort of live vicariously through your computer screen all weekend if you so choose. One of my absolute favorite things about the Pitchfork Music Festival is its lineup. It’s a boutique festival so with only three stages and limited resources it’s a much more friendly and down-to-earth vibe all weekend with good people and not a lot of corporate signage. The lineup largely matches that perspective, with not a lot of big names you’ve heard of unless you’re really deeply into music, and part of the fun is discovering new acts. Well, you don’t need to go too far to find out more about any of them. On this first day of Pitchfork Music Festival Week, I’ve put together a comprehensive Artist Guide to help you learn about and hear music from all the artists on the lineup this year. I’ll have day-by-day previews, along with day-by-day recaps in the coming days as well. So I hope you’ll check some of that stuff out beyond just another edition of Pick Your Poison. Now then, about that. Today’s noteworthy tracks come from Dim Peaks, Jack Wilson, The Mother Hips, Qurious, Shelby Earl, Therese Aune and Chicago’s own Wedding Dress. In the Soundcloud section after the jump, stream new songs from Caged Animals, Dan Croll, Editors, Jackson Scott and Smallpools.

D’Amato – BPA Free

Dim Peaks – Reason

Fialta – Cars

Jack Wilson – Rainbow/Tiger

Moduloktopus – Afuego Limpio

The Mother Hips – Song for JB

Pink Frost – Ruins

Planet Z – Rumor of the Panther

Qurious – Rima

Shelby Earl – Swift Arrows

Therese Aune – We Will Never Be the Ones

Valente – The Distant Lights

Wedding Dress – The Mange

Windbreaker – I Did This to Myself

Young Aundee – Young Small Town Boy (Bronski Beat cover)

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