The hottest music from Chicago & beyond

Category: music Page 121 of 188

Album Review: David Byrne & St. Vincent – Love This Giant [4AD/Todo Mundo]



As with so many collaborations betweem famous musicians, having David Byrne and St. Vincent working together seems like a great idea on paper. In many ways, you can envision Byrne as a mentor to Annie Clark, a guiding spirit who’s been through the ringer a time or two with the Talking Heads and other projects, taking a talented young prodigy and trying to mold her on a path towards legendary success. Lord knows he doesn’t need the career boost and could probably get away with playing his classic songs for the rest of his life. Certainly Byrne’s work with Brian Eno has been the most highly regarded of his collaborations, with 1981’s My Life in the Bush of Ghosts being just the sort of strange, boundary-pushing effort to inspire a whole new generation of artists. He’s made plenty of great records since then, though arguably nothing will ever quite match his streak of greatness in the ’80s. As for clark, her ever-evolving sound has only become more potent with time, and the latest St. Vincent album Strange Mercy reaches a new peak of her songwriting and guitar skills. She doesn’t really need any favors either at this point, though the opportunity to work with Byrne is one that few smart artists would pass up.

But maybe it is that lack of necessity that makes their album together Love This Giant so comfortable and safe. Instead of taking the license of such a project and running wild with sonic experiments, what we get instead are concise pop songs punched up with a backing brass band. Such a lack of liberty would be more forgivable if the songs themselves were more compelling and memorable, but unfortunately that’s not the case either. The album’s opening song and first single “Who” is actually a very encouraging start, though it is less addictive and inspired than Byrne’s last big single with Brian Eno, 2008’s “Strange Overtones.” A less apparent highlight on the record is “Weekend in the Dust,” taking a canned beat and the funky horn section and turning them into a melody that feels rooted in ’80s or ’90s funk or R&B. It represents a markedly different approach for Clark, and even her halting Janet Jackson-esque lead vocals don’t sound like anything she’s done before. It’s the sort of boundary pushing this album could have used more of. Actually, it’s probably more of Clark’s take on some of Byrne’s known sounds, which then makes it a shame when he doesn’t really adopt much of her creative guitar work. In fact, her guitar is either absent or put behind brass for virtually the entire record, which is like having a million dollars stored in a safe at home but refusing to spend a dime of it even though you’re in debt. “The Forest Awakes” is about as guitar-heavy as this record gets, and even that provides meager offerings.

Yet it’s still Clark that comes off best on Love This Giant, and whether that has to do with songwriting, melody or general enthusiasm for the project is up for debate. Byrne mostly sounds bored, almost like he’s run out of things to say. Instead of using “I Should Watch TV” as a clever way to comment on today’s pop culture, he uses it to analyze exactly why he’s compelled to do as the song title suggests. You could say that it’s a noble search for deeper meaning, but the melody suggests a playfulness that’s simply not present otherwise. While the brass backing band is something of a bolder choice for both artists involved, one of the real tragedies is how whitewashed and bland they come off sounding. That’s especially true on tracks like “Dinner For Two” and “Lazarus,” both of which could use a little extra pep in their step and injections of instrumental creativity. Thanks to an additional assist from Antibalas and The Dap-Kings, “The One Who Broke Your Heart” is a surprising late album treat and probably the best use of brass on the entire record.

A large part of the disconnect on Love This Giant, instrumental and otherwise, probably stems from how it was pieced together. Recorded over three years in a variety of studios with files passed back and forth between Byrne and Clark, you can sort of tell that not everybody was in the same room or studio when this was created. Such are the potential perils of long distance collaboration. Inspired as this team up sounded initially, both Byrne and St. Vincent have done and will do bigger and better things down the line. Perhaps if they decide to do this again, as Byrne has done with Eno, things will turn out much differently and for the better.

David Byrne & St. Vincent – Who

Buy Love This Giant from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 9-19-12

Sometimes I like to feature an upcoming Chicago show or two on this site, both to keep local readers’ concert calendars updated and also to let everybody know about some great live acts in case the tour also passes through your town. Today I’m going to tell you about two shows happening in Chicago this Friday, one from some high profile artists you may have heard of and the other from a much lower profile but equally exciting act. Let’s start with the higher profile one.

The Aragon Ballroom isn’t my favorite place to see a show, nor should it be yours, but sometimes a lineup is just too good to avoid going there. Friday night’s show features Silversun Pickups, School of Seven Bells and Atlas Genius, and it’s the sort that qualifies as important and nearly essential. Silversun Pickups are touring in support of their latest album Neck of the Woods, which I liked quite a bit even if other publications felt differently. One thing a lot more people agreed on was that School of Seven Bells’ latest album Ghostory is very good and well constructed, even as they suffered the exit of Claudia Deheza, who made some incredible harmonies with her sister Alejandra. Having seen both of these bands perform live before, I can attest that they both put on great shows worth seeing. The wild card on this bill is Atlas Genius, who after releasing their debut EP Through the Glass earlier this summer have quicky become a buzzed about, hypeworthy band. Have you heard their song “Trojans” yet? It’s remarkably catchy, as are “Back Seat” and Symptoms“. You’re definitely going to want to arrive right when the show starts at 7 to see them perform. It’s an all ages show, tickets are $32 and available for purchase here, or possibly at the door.

For something completely different on Friday night, and hypothetically you could go to this once the Silversun Pickups show lets out, UK avant-electro composer Max Cooper will be headlining a show at Vision Lair. The guy is really talented, especially when you look at how he “Reconstructs” Michael Nyman’s “Secrets” or remixes Hot Chip’s “I Feel Better“. His current 10-date U.S. tour is in support of his forthcoming Conditions EP, which features a collaboration with the art rock band Braids. Needless to say, it’s fascinating stuff. I’m sure Cooper doesn’t put on a typical live show either, or at least not the sort of one you’d expect from today’s electronica artists. Given that it goes from 10pm-4am, this is a 21+ show. Tickets will be $15 at the door, which is relatively inexpensive when you look at a lot of other club shows in and around Chicago on weekends. If you’d like additional info, here’s a link where you can find out more.

Okay, now let’s tackle this Wednesday edition of Pick Your Poison. Recommended tracks today come from Black Forest Fire, Drug Cabin, Ending People, Heems, Midtown Dickens, Rosie Flores, The Soft Moon and Xiu Xiu. The Soundcloud section is thick with good songs available for streaming, including 2:54 covering Seal & Adamski, SURES, Teen Daze (ft. Frankie Rose), and Liars remixing The Twilight Sad.

Alexx Foxx & Ninetynine – Together

Black Forest Fire – Live News Feed

CIRC – Girls Thoughts

Drug Cabin – Whatever Never

Dying Machines – Await You

Ending People – Beat of My Heart

The Erratic Man – Back in the Day (Bless Beats Remix)

Get People – Cupid’s Curse

The Golden Pony – About A Minute (ft. T-Dome)

Heems – Let It Go (ft. Cee Gee)

Jack Ladder & The Dreamlanders – Dumb Love

Midtown Dickens – Cross My Heart

Oreaganomics – All Thumbs and No Tung

Paul Avion – Self-Destroyer

Peter Doran – Julia

Rosie Flores – Working Girl’s Guitar

Simian Ghost – Wolf Girl (Slow Magic Remix)

The Soft Moon – Insides

That’s No Moon – According to Ancient Alien Theorists

Xiu Xiu – Quagga

SOUNDCLOUD

2:54 – Killer (Seal & Adamski cover)

Chaos Chaos – My Hands

SURES – The Sun

Swansea – Times Are Low

Teen Daze – Union (ft. Frankie Rose)

The Twilight Sad – NIL (Liars Remix)

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 9-18-12

As is tradition, I like to take Tuesdays to quickly list the artists releasing new material this week, in case you’re looking to buy and listen to some new music. This week is a good one and a nice start to the fall season. Be on the look out for fresh material from Aimee Mann, The Album Leaf, Ben Folds Five, Band of Horses, Brass Bed, Brother Ali, Catherine Irwin, Corin Tucker Band, Dinosaur Jr., Grizzly Bear, How to Dress Well, James Iha, The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Josephine Foster, The Killers, Local H, Lymbyc Systym, Menomena, Mike Coykendoll, Natural Child, Nelly Furtado, Paul Simon, Rangda, Robert Pollard, Sic Alps, Sweet Lights, The Sea and Cake, The Whigs and Woods. Phew, that’s a lot of stuff. If something in there doesn’t appeal to you, perhaps a track or two in today’s Pick Your Poison will. Allow me to make some curation suggestions for you. Be sure to check out downloads from Agent Ribbons, Broke For Free, D A W N S, Fine Times, Firewater, Royal Canoe, Solos, Sombear, Tamarin and WRITER. In the Soundcloud section, tracks from Bassnectar (ft. Chino Moreno) and Benjamin Francis Leftwich’s cover of M83 are both good tracks to stream.

Agent Ribbons – Family Haircut

Beast Patrol – Disbeliever

Broke For Free – Like Swimming

Caviare Days – You’ll Qualify

D A W N S – So Help Me God

Emma – Kisameen

Fine Times – Strays

Firewater – A Little Revolution

Great Deceivers – Phantom Strength

GRMLN – Stand By Me (Ben E. King cover)

Hot Freak Nation – Everything Is Everything Else
Hot Freak Nation – Sunshine From the Heart

Lucem Ferre – Nothing’s Changed

Racing Heart – Soft Voices (Live)

Royal Canoe – Show Me Your Eyes

Solos – Carpe Diem

Sombear – Incredibly Still

Tamarin – Seems A Laugh

Travis Barker ft. Yelawolf – Push ‘Em

Vadoinmessico – Pepita, Queen of the Animals (Derby Sunshine Remix)

WRITER – Hot Days

SOUNDCLOUD

Bassnectar – Hexes (ft. Chino Moreno)

Benjamin Francis Leftwich – Midnight City (M83 Cover)

The Fearless Vampire Killers – Mexico

Karoline Hausted – Tiffany

The Murder Barn – In Every Sea We Drown

Nina Nesbitt – Boy

Pick Your Poison: Monday 9-17-12

Hey, so as you may have guessed because I promised such things, I’m back from vacation. And yes, I want to make sure you know that I had only a moderately good time. I wasn’t really ever able to enjoy myself and “stop and smell the roses,” but I did do a lot of traveling through the Southern U.S. I also got to stop in one of my favorite cities in the entire world, Austin, TX, which is a good time no matter what. Anyways, I’m feeling a bit worn down and tired from all the running around I did, so I’m taking it easy today. Of course this edition of Pick Your Poison is a bit super-sized, mostly because I’m backed up on emails and have a whole lot more mp3s than usual sitting in my inbox. Normally I would have given you most of these last week. But here we are, and it’s this week. Please enjoy tracks from Barcode, Brooke Waggoner, Dance Movie, Hyper Heart, INK, Nervous Cloud, Santah, Star Slinger and Twin Cabins.

Alt-J – Something Good (Zeb Wayne Remix)

Barcode – Corporate Safe + Secure

Brooke Waggoner – Ink Slinger

Calaca Strides – Row By Row

Cuddly Shark – Body Mass Index

Dance Movie – Things Change My Dear
Dance Movie – ANAF

Die Antwoord – DIZ IZ WHY I’M HOT (Dom Dolla’s Bass Revamp)

Drew Ryan – Losing Hope (ft. Dylan Charbeneau)

Eastern Anchors – James the Viking

Eutopia – Life

Hyper Heart – Fill Me Up

INK – Ink Goes On

Khalid Hanifi – Hog Futures

Lilly Hyatt and the Dropped Ponie – Championship Fighter

Nervous Cloud – How to Get Murdered in a Made for TV Movie

Nicky Blitz – Blast Off

Santah – Indigo

Star Slinger – Take This Up

Tunde Olaniran – Brown Boy

Twin Cabins – Lake Love

Vigo Thieves – Forever

SOUNDCLOUD

Azita – It’s Understanding

Brighton MA – Touch

Civil Twilight – River (Ra Ra Riot Remix)

Fossil Collective – On & On

Nightlives – Underneath

Spring Offensive – Not Drowning But Waving

Snapshot Review: The xx – Coexist [XL/Young Turks]

The xx

Here is a simple question: Did you fall madly in love with xx, the 2009 debut album from The xx? If your answer is somewhere in the range of, “Yes! OH GOD YES,” then clearly the prospect of a sequel to that album gets you salivating with anticipation. If you’re one of the arguable few that simply “didn’t get it” the first time around, but are hoping that maybe something new and different from them will push all the right buttons, let me break this down for you. The new xx record Coexist is for this band what Antics was for Interpol or Room on Fire was for The Strokes: an attempt to repeat success by not messing with what’s already been done perfectly the first time. This is minimalism taken to the extreme; a record that absolutely sounds like it was recorded by a couple people alone in a room. You get the lone guitar carefully plucked note by note, the casually light splashes of piano and occasionally skittering beats that seem like they don’t want to be there. Atop it all are the voices of Romy Madley Croft and Oliver Sims, always relaxed to the ultimate degree and providing the impression they’re speaking to one another in the quietest, most intimate moments life has to offer. That’s the way it was on xx, and that’s the way it is now. Is it just as affecting as it was before? Well, that one’s up for debate. The lack of innovation in their sound, amounting to what’s really more of a scaling back than moving forward, isn’t exactly a bad thing considering they were a very unique band from note one. “Reunion” certainly makes its own mark thanks to some carefully placed steel drum that would otherwise be unexpected. The pulsating and rather sly energy of “Swept Away” feels like a step in the right direction too, the gorgeous piano adding a little Balearic flavor to what will ultimately be the song that lends itself best to future remixes. Everything else is largely business as usual, which you can take as good or bad depending on your own expectations. The opening track and first single “Angels” pushes forth the impression that The xx could well be a slowcore version of Beach House, but that’s a little deceptive the more you listen to the other tracks. The intimacy of a record like this gets pushed to the extreme on “Tides,” a song that starts with Croft and Sims’ vocals entangled and absolutely nothing else. It’s impressive in just the right ways. The tragedy of this album is it doesn’t try to do more. It mostly finds its comfort zone and stays there, which eventually winds up being to its detriment. There’s nothing outright bad on Coexist, and it’s a rather easy record to listen to and get lost in, but it feels like they could have done something more or at least taken a risk or two. The lyrics don’t help at all either, closing off some of the more detailed confessions from the first album with greater mystery and generalizations. When they sing, “We used to get closer than this/ Is it something you miss?” on “Chained,” the answer is a resounding yes on the listener’s end, a response to their lack of open-hearted candor through most of the songs. If you’re not going to expand your sound, you’d do well to at least try and improve your songwriting. So while Coexist is largely a nice and enjoyable sophomore effort from The xx, it isn’t quite the landmark album their debut was. As their current sound begins to wear ever thinner, hopefully they find some new and interesting ways to keep fans invested for years to come.

Buy Coexist from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 9-12-12

Hey, while I’m still away for the week, please enjoy this Pick Your Poison post in my stead. Unless I find some wifi, and have some serious time to do some work, this will be the last post on the site this week. Regular posting will resume on Monday, Sept. 17th. With any luck though, I will find wifi and things will continue uninterrupted. For now, please enjoy these mp3s from BRAINSTORM, City Brat, KOPPS, Lyke Giants, Picture Book, Turtle Giant, Ungdumskulen and Warning Light. In the Soundcloud section stream new stuff from Band of Horses and Mist Glider.

BRAINSTORM – Flat Earth

City Brat – Yeah It’s There

Dominic Lord – Pierce (Remix ft. Pusha T and Grimes)

Fort Fairfield – Danziger Straße

Jez Dior – Candles

KOPPS – Bastard Baby

Lyke Giants – The Reins

Makoto – 73 (Dynamic Remix)

Paris Jones – Everywhere I Go (ft. J. Valle)

Picture Book – In My Head

Turtle Giant – Germany I & II)

Ungdumskulen – Facemask

Vinca Minor – The Time of You

Warning Light – Exile of the Coast

SOUNDCLOUD

Band of Horses – Slow Cruel Hands Of Time

Disclosure – Latch (ft. Sam Smith)

Hidden Orchestra – Vorka

Kevin Daniels – Crazy Kind of Life

Lapalux – The Hours

Mist Glider – Chapter 14

Snapshot Review: California Wives – Art History [Vagrant]



Let’s take a quick history lesson for the artsy Chicago band California Wives. They formed in 2009, self-released an EP in 2010 to a fair amount of buzz, and started touring nationally. One of their biggest career highlights so far came last fall when Peter Hook, formerly of Joy Division/New Order, invited the band to open for him on the Chicago date of his tour demoralizing performing Joy Division’s Closer. Considering California Wives sound a lot like classic New Order, the selection made a lot of sense. After fully solidifying their lineup earlier this year, the band signed to Vagrant Records in the spring and began to prepare their debut full length album. The result is Art History, and like so many bands it features a collection of the best songs they’ve written since their earliest days. That means 4/5ths of the Affair EP is here, plus a bunch of stuff they’ve been performing for awhile now but have never officially recorded before. Producer Claudius Mittendorfer (Interpol, Neon Indian) helped the band reinvent their sound a bit though, and as a result even the stuff you might otherwise have been familiar with is tweaked in such a way that it feels like you’re hearing it for the first time all over again. Songs like “Blood Red Youth” and “Purple” get 30-60 seconds chopped off their runtimes in the interest of being more concise. Some of the more jangly guitar parts and heavy bass lines get whitewashed over or placed further back in the mix to streamline the songs just a bit more too. The New Order comparisons aren’t quite so apt anymore, though they retain that ’80s sheen thanks to the heavy use of synths. Now they’re probably best classified as The Cure filtered through the more modern lens of The Pains of Being Pure at Heart. That works well enough for them, as Art History winds up being a day-glo pop journey that satisfies at every turn with melodies and hooks that will get stuck in your head for days. The highlights are mostly carryovers from the Affair EP, and they’re spread out generously across the album, making minor moments like “Los Angeles” and “Better Home” seem like better songs because they’re sandwiched in between two great ones. A couple brand new songs like “Marianne” and “The Fisher King” do well on their own too, with the former perhaps making the band’s strongest single to date. So yes, there are plenty of things to love about this album. There are also some not-so-great things too. Creatively speaing, Art History doesn’t break any new ground, nor does it even try to. It is by all accounts a very “safe” record, and that lack of exploration can make you feel like you’ve heard some of these songs before and done better. While many of these songs have memorable hooks, you’re sometimes left wondering if they stick with you because they’re genuinely good or simply because they repeat them so many times. How many times, you ask? Well, in the nearly four minutes that are “Tokyo,” the hook hits you 10 times. On “Twenty Three” that grand total is 8. Both are quite a bit higher than average, and that’s just two examples of many on the album. And while they don’t have to abide by traditional song structures to make an impact, the lack of a bridge in pretty much every song is just a little confounding too. What Art History amounts to in the end is a promising debut from a band that needs more time to develop and find their own niche. These songs are superficially pleasing enough to build a strong worldwide audience for California Wives, and if popularity is what they want it’s within their reach. As for critical acclaim, that one’s going to take some work.

California Wives – Purple
California Wives – Marianne

Buy Art History from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 9-10-12

Hello, if you’re reading this, it means I’ve gone on “vacation” for a week. The word “vacation” is in quotes, because I’m not relaxing on a beach somewhere sipping a margarita and generally enjoying life. No, I’m traveling the back roads of the United States, searching for…let’s just say something. Anyways, I’ll be back in a few days. In my stead, I have a couple Pick Your Poison posts, plus an album review. Look for those to show up throughout the week. If during my time away I find a spot with wifi, I’ll be able to answer emails and maybe even write up a few more posts for you to read, enjoy and download from. I can’t be certain that will happen, but if it does, it’ll show up on the main page of the site. Regular site business resumes on Sept. 17, 2012. Until then, please enjoy this Pick Your Poison. Highlights include tracks from Carolyn Mark, Catherine Irwin, Freddie Gibbs, Jackie Scott, Marissa Nadler (covering Fleetwood Mac), Paul Stewart, and Teitur. In the Soundcloud section, you can stream good stuff from Gentleman Reg, I Am Oak, Maserati and Patrick Wolf (covering Lana Del Rey).

Alt-J – Fitzpleasure (jim james apple C remix)

Carolyn Mark – Not Like the Movies

Catherine Irwin – Save Our Ship

Flutes – Auld Archie

Freddie Gibbs – The Hard (ft. Dana Williams)

Ian Place – Pitter Patter (Original Mix)

Jackie Scott – Don’t Mess With Me

Karlie Bruce – The Tulip

Marissa Nadler – Save Me a Place (Fleetwood Mac cover)

Mirel Wagner – No Death

Paul Stewart – Outpatient

Teitur – Jailhouse Gumbo Jones

Thomas Azier – Red Eyes

TKTTSM – Plastic Fantastic

Vinyl Williams – Harmonious Change

You’ll Never Get to Heaven – Drowning Out

SOUNDCLOUD

Elliott Brood – Graveyard (Feist cover)

Gentleman Reg – Make It Better

I Am Oak – Reins

Maserati – Earth-Like

Patrick Wolf – Born To Die (Lana Del Rey cover)

Solidisco – One More Chance (Original Mix)

Pick Your Poison: Friday 9-7-12

Seeing as how it’s Friday, I feel like now’s a good time to tell you that I’m taking a “vacation” next week. At least I think I am. See, I volunteered to help a friend take a road trip down the East Coast for a week, mostly so he wouldn’t have to do it alone. Where the “think” part comes in is that while he told me last week that he was working on a full map and plan for this trip, I haven’t heard back from him with any details. The original word was I’d fly out and meet up with him this weekend, and we’d start driving on Monday. I don’t have a plane ticket booked because I haven’t gotten the additional details yet. For all I know, I’ll get a call on Saturday telling me to be on the first flight out Sunday morning and I’ll have to throw caution to the wind and just do it. Either that, or with the current radio silence I won’t hear anything and will simply go on with life as usual. So the reason why I’m telling you this is because if I do go out of town and hit the road, there won’t be much in the way of posts next week. I’m not sure what sort of internet access I’ll have, making it tough to predict posting frequency and whether I’ll have time to check my email or do some writing. One thing I will tell you is that I’ll have a Monday edition of Pick Your Poison, which will confirm whether I’m on “vacation” or not. Consider this your early warning. Now let’s have a look at this Friday edition of Pick Your Poison. Keep an eye out below for tracks from Balmorhea, DaVinci, Great Caesar, Half Film, Jealov and Nebula Dogs. In the Soundcloud section, stream good stuff from Harouki Zombi (a new project of Orenda Fink of Azure Ray and Nina Barnes, wife of Kevin Barnes from of Montreal), Rubblebucket and Teen Daze. Have a great weekend!

Atlas Genius – Trojans (Lenno Remix)

Balmorhea – Days

B.Fleischmann – I’m Not Ready for the Grave Yet

DaVinci – Paper, Power, Pussy

Devereaux – Capri

Dragonette – Live in This City (Davey Badiuk Remix)

Great Caesar – Rearview

G R E A T W A V E S – Into the Blue

Half Film – Machine Hawks and The Perfect Equation

Jealov – AATO

Life in Film – Needles & Pins

Lili Haydn – Tyrant

The Linus Pauling Quartet – She Did Not Know

Nebula Dogs – The Ballad of Cosmic Jack

The Parson Red Heads – Another Chance

Seeing Eye Dog – Intricate Splatter Art

SOUNDCLOUD

De Montevert – Jag vill ha mer

Harouki Zombi – Objet Petit A

House Of Wolves – There She Goes

Rubblebucket – Oooh Wa

Teen Daze – New Life

Vex Ruffin – Take It

Album Review: Animal Collective – Centipede Hz [Domino]



Animal Collective have put themselves in an extremely tough spot. They dared to make a great album, and vastly succeeded in doing so. 2009’s Merriweather Post Pavilion became the poster child for psychedelic pop music, and it was at or near the top of virtually every year-end “best of” list. As recently as last month, the album claimed the #8 spot on Pitchfork’s People’s List, a poll voted on by close to 28,000 readers. It took the band nine albums and nine years to finally find that sweet spot in their music. Great as success might be, the expectations that bloom from it are anything but easy to handle. Do you try and build upon the things you’ve done before, stay in a holding pattern by trying something similar, or go off the grid altogether and hope for the best? Anyone that’s listened to enough Animal Collective over the years knows they don’t pander to an audience and they don’t sit still. They don’t even know what or where the “grid” is.

In many ways, their courage to always try new and different things is admirable. There’s brilliance in the unknown, and somebody’s got to go looking for it. The problem is you can take a lot of wrong turns along the way. Animal Collective have fared better than most, because even when their songs sound positively nuts, there’s still that slight pop sensibility that keeps them grounded. Jumping through their catalogue, it’s a little tough to find a lot of similarities between Here Comes the Indian (2003), Feels (2005) and Strawberry Jam (2007).Where they are similar is that all of them are very good albums, and all are challenging to a multitude of unique degrees. It’s not hard to understand why the band failed to gain a large audience in the pre-MPP years, even as they jumped record labels from the smaller Fat Cat to the larger Domino in 2007. Taking three years and keeping many music obsessives waiting patiently for a follow-up, Centipede Hz is what they’ve finally handed over. Whatever your expectations are, don’t think for a second that they’ll be met.

One of the main things worth noting about Centipede Hz is that multi-instrumentalist Deakin has rejoined Animal collective after taking an extended break back in 2007. It’s difficult to quantify exactly how much or how little of an impact he’s had on the band over the years, but his absence from the last album may have played some part in its success. That’s not meaning to suggest Deakin is a harmful presence, but rather a catalyst that caused Avey Tare, Panda Bear and Geologist to rethink their approach to songwriting and composition at least a little bit. Sometimes less is more. In the case of the new album, the sentiment turns out to be the exact opposite. Virtually every song is jam-packed with sonic dissonance, and with so much going on it’s tough to know what to focus on at any given time. Some would call it layered and practical, rewarding multiple listens by giving you new elements to explore each run through. While it does become easier to penetrate the more you listen to it, this album forgets the one key that has made Animal Collective such a compelling band over the years – patience. They used to grow their songs slowly, adding more parts and elements until you’re left wondering how you wound up so buried in sound. The cacophony of opening tracks “Moonjock” and “Today’s Supernatural” don’t build to anything. They start with the dam already broken and millions of gallons of water bearing down on you. It’s overwhelming if you haven’t battened down the hatches in anticipation.

Animal Collective also used to have the “freak folk” descriptor attached to their name, a label that was justified for their emphasis on acoustic guitars with a splattering of odd time signatures and polyrhythms. Listen to an old song like “Leaf House” off of Sung Tongs to get a fair grasp of what that sounded like. Their movement away from guitars and towards synths and electronic textures changed things a bit, but it also gave the band a better lower end with some severely heavy bass that cranked up the danceability factor of their music. Take “Peacebone” from Strawberry Jam as an example. By contrast, virtually all of Centipede Hz sounds thin because it ignores that heft and replaces some of the bass and rhythm parts with bells and whistles and other random sounds that all stay in the shallow end. “New Town Burnout” and “Rosie Oh” both skitter by without ever bringing the sort of boom they might otherwise deserve. Even tracks like “Mercury Man” and “Amanita” where you can hear things that are almost definitively bass drums and guitars don’t impact and rattle speakers the way they should. The effect may be intentional though, designed to mimic the effect of listening to the radio on tinny speakers. The mixture of varying radio broadcasts which serve as interstitial moments between tracks and give fluidity to the record seem to support this theory. Is that sort of a move necessary on an album like this? Not really, but who knows what goes through these guys’ heads as they piece together songs.

Maybe one of the main points of Centipede Hz is to push you into liking it, because at their heart these are really simple psych-pop songs dirtied up by a lot of challenging excess. The more you listen to it, the better you can process all of it. That doesn’t make the songs good though. Some of them just sort of wander without much purpose or direction, or take detours down paths that otherwise betray strong melodies. “Wide Eyed” and “Father Time” are both guilty of this, and they sit right at the center of the record. The former is surprisingly straightforward and bouncy, but overstays its welcome and has some so-so vocal work from Deakin. The latter is just utterly forgettable. On an album with so many distinguishing moments for better or worse, it stands as a shrug-worthy effort that even the rather slow and boring “New Town Burnout” doesn’t stoop to minutes later. After pointing out so many apparent flaws, it’s important to note that there are a bunch of very good to great moments on Centipede Hz too. Besides the opening two tracks that have their charms, “Applesauce” has some weirdly great energy going for it, as does the closer “Amanita.” The powerhouse cut of this album though is “Monkey Riches,” a nearly seven minute freak out that comes across like a breath of fresh air. If Animal Collective had done the entire record using that song as an inspirational point, we would have another Merriweather Post Pavilion on our hands, but in a different sort of way that likely would have stood up well amidst their varied catalogue.

You can’t really say that Centipede Hz is a bad record. It’s bad by Animal Collective standards, which are heights that are tough for almost every other artist to reach. If you’re in search of an entry point and a way to ease into the band’s world, this isn’t it by a long shot. But that also raises a great point about these guys: no matter which of their albums you listen to, you’ll never think it’s another band. They may have jumped from acoustic guitars to thumping beats to sound effects and radio snippets in the last dozen years, but they’ve always retained a challenging conceptual sonic structure uniquely their own. There’s comfort in that, even when they release something that might be considered subpar. So they’ve finally hit a creative speedbump, which more than anything else has been a long time coming. Consider this also a way to temper excitement for whatever they’re going to do next. Not that they ever felt any pressure before. At least fans won’t be expecting another miracle. The greatest and best hope you can have is that Animal Collective remain Animal Collective. Everything else is a proverbial roll of the dice.

Watch/Listen to “Today’s Supernatural” at YouTube

Buy Centipede Hz from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 9-6-12

Are you on a constant “Thom Yorke Watch”? That is to say, are you always hungry and looking for the latest happenings with Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke? If that’s not a priority for you, perhaps it should be. Even the most mundane things the man does are entertaining. Of course the problem is information pretty much only leaks out when he allows it to. He’ll post something on Dead Air Space or let a juicy tidbit slip in a rare interview. It’s radio silence otherwise. Well, today there was movement. As you may be aware, Yorke put out a solo album called The Eraser back in 2006. He never toured in support of it until a couple years ago. He recruited a band to help him perform the songs, the members of which included Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers and long time Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich. Because they were now a band and not just one man, they chose Atoms For Peace as their new name. There have been a couple Atoms For Peace songs released, but things have been pretty quiet for the last year or so. Word on the street is that the guys actually wrote and recorded an album together, but nothing was really official on that…until today. First iTunes listed a song by Atoms For Peace called “Default.” After people started to notice, Yorke posted about the song online. You can buy “Default” from iTunes on Monday. If you don’t want to wait that long to hear it, YouTube has you covered. Expect at 12″ vinyl version to come out next month, and a full length Atoms For Peace record next year, Yorke said. Does the new song get you excited? Personally I’ve yet to hear a bad song with Thom Yorke on it, so it’s a super easy sell for me. Beyond that new song though, there’s plenty more new stuff from people not named Thom Yorke. Today’s Pick Your Poison recommendations include tracks from The Album Leaf, Crooked Cowboy and the Freshwater Indians (with Becky Stark), Floating Action, Machine Birds, Psychobuildings and Red Wanting Blue. In the Soundcloud section you’ll also want to stream tracks from Field Music, of Montreal and The Postelles.

The Album Leaf – Descent

The Bohannons – Goodbye Bill

Crooked Cowboy and the Freshwater Indians – Bed Bugs (ft. Becky Stark)

Floating Action – Not What I Came For

Goldhouse – Everything

Holy Ghost Tent Revival – Alpha Dogs

Jason Karaban – Devil That I Know

Jonquil – Mexico

Los Jardines de Bruselas – Why Are We Here

Machine Birds – The Way It’s Meant to Be

Night Fruit – Human Touch

Private ft. Genasis – Everywhere (Its Overture Remix)

Psychobuildings – Hearts

Red Wanting Blue – Audition

Tara Simmons – Weekend of Hearts

The xx – Angels (Case & Point Bootleg)

SOUNDCLOUD

Blood Command – Cult Of The New Beat

Field Music – If There Is Something

of Montreal – Sails, Hermaphroditic

The Postelles – Running Red Lights

Room Full of Strangers – Lets Build An Idol

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 9-5-12

For my fellow Chicagoans, let me tell you for a brief moment about a worthwhile show happening in town. It’s happening tomorrow (Thursday), so take note that if you’re reading this after 9/6/12, you’re already too late. For those that aren’t though, there’s a strong triple bill happening at Township. Noise FM, Birds & Batteries and Moritat will all be performing at this 21+ show. It starts at 9pm and tickets are only $8. If you ask me, it’s definitely worth it. A small bit of background on these bands. The Noise FM are one of Chicago’s hardest working bands. They always seem like they’re touring and playing shows either nationally or in and around Chicago. If you go to enough shows in the city, you’ve probably seen them once or twice or a bunch more than that. Their sound is bouncy and fun rock that’s both danceable and intelligent. Listen to their music at Bandcamp. I’ve featured Birds & Batteries on this site a few times, but if you missed those tracks and want to know what they’re all about, stream their new EP Stray Light on Soundcloud. They’re a really high energy synth pop band, which really meshes well on a bill with The Noise FM. As for Moritat, they’re a pretty hotly rising Chicago band whose sound is challenging to define. That’s a good thing though, because one minute they’re awash in ethereal synths and the next they’re driving hard with guitars. Above all though they’re impressive musicians with a bunch of catchy songs that are quickly gaining them attention from all the right places. Their new album Clill Blanzin is the perfect 10-track example of what they do best. Stream or buy the whole thing at Bandcamp, or for a quick taste download the mp3 for their song “Cats” with a simple click. So yeah, a great bill at a small venue for a small cost which I’m recommending you go and see. It’d be nice to claim that you saw them before they became big. Buy tickets to the show via this link. Okay, now let’s tackle today’s Pick Your Poison. Track recommendations? I’ve got those covered. Don’t miss downloads from Cajsa Siik, Easy Lover, Erin Costelo, Midnight Magic, Swim and The Valery Trails. In the Soundcloud section, stream good stuff from Prince Sunarawma (the collaboration between Sun Araw and Prince Rama) and Savoir Adore.

Cajsa Siik – Was I Supposed To

Cheval Sombre – Couldn’t Do

Easy Lover – End of the Season
Easy Lover – New Maggie

EP’s Trailer Park – Another Sun

Erin Costelo – Oh Me Oh My

Florence and the Machine – Falling (From Jupiter Remix)

Glitches – No Prisoners

Jo Mango – Cordelia

Le Roi Crocodile – Youth Decay

Midnight Magic – Same Way I Feel

Russell M. Harmon – Without You, I’d Cease

Sudakistan – El Movimiento (Teenhaze Edit)

Swim – Hold On

Theatre of Delays – Alpha (Vangelis cover)

Tidy Street – Love is a Verb (Rough Mix)

The Valery Trails – Too Soon Forgotten

XOV – Black & White

SOUNDCLOUD

Mock & Toof – My Head

Prince Sunarawma – Irene

Savoir Adore – Regalia

Ummagma – Lama

Vices – Dying Day

Album Review: Cat Power – Sun [Matador]



If you do even a little bit of reading about Cat Power’s new album Sun, you’re almost guaranteed to be exposed to a few key details. Yes, the album was written in the wake of her breakup with actor Giovanni Ribisi. Yes, her finances wound up in shambles and she nearly had to declare bankruptcy. She plays almost every instrument on the album and produced it almost entirely on her own because she didn’t have money to pay other people. Let’s also not forget about her battles with alcoholism and stage fright, to the point where up until a few years ago going to a Cat Power show involved the risk of it not happening at all or shutting down early. You’ll hear all these things, many of which are intended to provide back story and increase your interest in the final product that is this new record. What you can really call them are distractions from what’s actually happening in the music. Forget what you’ve read before this and throw away your expectations. Chan Marshall has just pulled a 180 on us, and there’s no way to prepare for it.

Okay, so maybe “180” and “no way to prepare” are a little extreme in the case of Sun. After all her last album of original material, The Greatest, was a sonic shift in itself, as she recruited Louisiana’s Dirty Delta Blues Band to fill out her sparse acoustic guitar or piano arrangements in very classic ways. She also conquered her stage fright and became an enigmatic frontwoman exuding confidence and stability even though her personal life was anything but. While her sound has evolved again and the backing band is gone, Marshall puts her confidence on display more than ever before on the new album. Its cover features her with a rainbow shining across her face, and that plus the album title push forward the idea that these songs are the calm after a stormy career thus far. They sound that way too, beaming with more positivity and excitement than ever, and stepping out from the shadows of a black and white past into the full-on technicolor of 2012. This is the first Cat Power album to ever sound like it belongs in this particular era, and that step away from classic or more traditional sounds serves her even better than you might expect.

A very small part of how Sun sounds is likely due to the work of Phillipe Zdar, a French dance producer who’s worked with everyone from Phoenix to Cut Copy to Beastie Boys. He mastered this record and made small production tweaks to it without being too heavy handed or glossy. Its lack of shine actually adds to the overall charm of these songs, which otherwise might have suffered from sounding too clean-cut. Marshall’s very hands-on approach to this album probably benefits her in the long run, and it’s all the more admirable how far she steps outside her comfort zone to evolve. After recording a number of songs for this record and playing them for a friend, Marshall decided to toss them out because she was told they sounded sad and “like old Cat Power.” To her, this new album isn’t supposed to be anything short of a rebirth, a signal that her life and priorities have changed. The dynamic scope and lyrics of Sun go a long way towards proving that too.

On the Cat Power song “Colors and the Kids” off her 1998 classic Moon Pix, Marshall sang, “When we were teenagers, we wanted to be the sky.” Now much older and wiser, she echoes a similar sentiment on Sun‘s opening track “Cherokee,” with a chorus of, “Bury me, marry me to the sky.” While the more recent “sky” reference is actually about death, you can use the metaphor of marriage as a union where two become one to tie it in referentially to the earlier song. Stylistically though, “Cherokee” more calls to mind “Cross Bones Style” in both tempo and lyrical structure. The mechanical drum beat and the repeated mantra that is the chorus are equally gripping in both songs, though “Cherokee” goes places and innovates in a different sort of way. Starting with the electric guitar, then adding piano through the verses, the electronica elements show up in the chorus to take things to a whole new level complete with some chainsaw-like effects and even an eagle cry that may or may not be cheesy. No matter, because the song works as one of the poppiest and most engaging Cat Power songs to date.

The first third of Sun is actually very aesthetically pleasing and hit-oriented. Warbling synths and skittering beats feel right at home alongside some grinding electric guitar on the title track. Of course the lyrics also include a not-so-sly reference to the classic Beatles tune “Here Comes the Sun.” The light piano pop of “Ruin” is actually deceptive as the lyrics are about social justice and starvation, with a hook that includes the lines, “Bitchin’/ Complainin’/ From people who ain’t got shit to eat.” On “3,6,9” synths and handclaps lead an awfully catchy hook that sounds like it should be used in a future hip hop song. There may or may not be a reference to Lil Jon’s “Get Low” or Shirley Ellis’ “The Clapping Song” in the lyrics, but Marshall insists she wrote them after waking up with a really bad hangover, which makes sense with references to wine and the subtle suggestion of alcoholism. AutoTune also gets a little cameo via some of the vocal overdubs and at the very end of the song, where she quite indistinguishably repeats two words that many speculate are “Fuck me.”

Sun‘s midsection is more challenging on the ears as it moves away from easier pop melodies and into a slower, more experimental range. The record actually needs songs like “Always on My Own” and “Human Being” to keep you on your toes a bit and show off some extra artistic flourishes. Not everything works perfectly, but credit goes to Marshall for what’s really an admirable effort. By the time “Manhattan” kicks in with its lonely drum machine beats and looped piano chords, you’ve been transported to a different but no less important final third of the album. The buzzy and robotic “Silent Machine” adds some much needed energy to things after a few downtempo tracks, but it’s the 11 minutes of “Nothin But Time” that makes the biggest statement on the entire record. Written for the teenage daughter of her ex Giovanni Ribisi, the song is an ethereal pep talk that’s inspired and passionate and bears the markings of a classic track like David Bowie’s “Heroes.” Iggy Pop contributes some guest vocals on the second half of the song, and the way he shouts, “You Wanna live!” is like a slap in the face to anybody that’s ever considered killing themselves. Amid the many positive messages Marshall tries to push out there on this album that speak of the human condition with the vibe that we’re all in this together, it’s perhaps this most direct and deeply personal track that offers the best and wisest guidance. Very few tracks that soar upwards of eight or so minutes are actually worth the time to listen all the way through, but this is one that’s absolutely worth the investment.

While “Nothin But Time” would have made a fitting end to Sun, “Peace and Love” provides one last jolt of…something. It’s not an overtly weird song, but the electric guitar bounce and the very rhythmic way Marshall recites the lyrics turn it into an almost hip hop track. There’s not really an ounce of sincerity in it unlike so much of the rest of the record, and you can almost envision Marshall smiling and winking while she spouts out lines like, “100,000 hits on the internet/ But that don’t mean shit.” Such levity is welcome, because though you can’t really say the album is heavy-handed and dark in the least, it still lacks genuine fun to go along with the positive vibes. For once, it’s great to hear a Cat Power record that moves past everything she’s created in the past. Moon Pix and You Are Free are just two of a few important records in Cat Power’s nine album oeuvre, granted that status because of the times in which they were released and the emotion and grace in Marshall’s vocals and lyrics. Sun doesn’t deserve praise because it breaks the mold, but because it does so without fear and a reliance on anything or anyone. Also because it does everything well. Marshall proves herself to be a talent that can defy expectations and surprise us even seventeen years into her career. That’s a rarity worth celebrating.

Cat Power – Ruin
Cat Power – Cherokee

Buy Sun from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 9-4-12

If you spent your Monday celebrating Labor Day like I did, I hope you had a great time. As we’ve now hit Tuesday and it’s no longer a holiday, let’s get back to business as usual. It certainly is business as usual for new music releases this week. Lots of great stuff coming out from Animal Collective, Azure Ray, Bob Mould, California Wives, Cat Power, Cult of Youth, Dave Stewart, Deerhoof, The Fresh and Onlys, Holy Other, Ian Hunter, Imagine Dragons, Jens Lekman, Lovedrug, Mono, Mount Eerie, The Music Tapes, Raymond Byron & The White Freighter (see below for an mp3 from them!), The Sheepdogs, Sondre Lerche, Stars, Two Door Cinema Club, Two Gallants and Young Guns. Wow. Check any or all of those out if you’re looking to explore some new music. Another way to explore new music is via Pick Your Poison. Today’s load of downloads includes ones from The Bergamot, Gilded, Jason Collett, Maria Minerva, Martin Eden (aka Eluvium), and Slam Donahue. Fort Romeau’s remix of Frankie Rose is worth a download too. In the Soundcloud section don’t miss streaming songs from Generationals and The Shilohs.

Ambassadeurs – My World

The Bergamot – In Between

End of August – Shadow Growth

Frankie Rose – The Fall (Fort Romeau Remix)

Frank Rabeyrolles – Cycling (Benoit Pioulard Version)

Gilded – Cluttered Room

Jamie Bendell – Five Little Minutes

Jason Collett – Where Things Go Wrong

Jeremiah Castelo – And Still I Fell

Macatier – Let’s Ride

Maria Minerva – Fire (ft. Chase Royal)

Martin Eden – Verions

Meridian – Stadium

Michelle Karmin – Six Years

Raymond Byron & The White Freighter – You’ll Never Surf Again

Slam Donahue – C’mon C’mon

Team Genius – Everything’s Alright

SOUNDCLOUD

Becoming Real ft. Alice – Slow Memory (Sunless 97)

Generationals – Lucky Numbers

Sam Flax – Child Of Glass

The Shilohs – Private Lives

Pick Your Poison: Friday 8-31-12

Back in high school, I was pretty into a series of Japanese music games that all fell under the category that game maker Konami classified as Bemani. This was in the days before Guitar Hero and all that became a sensation, and there were Bemani games called Guitar Freaks and Drum Mania that were arcade versions of the same thing, but with all Japanese pop music instead of popular American rock. It was actually pretty rare to find a Guitar Freaks or Drum Mania game in an arcade in the U.S., as were other Bemani titles like Pop’n Music and Beatmania. The most popular of the Bemani series was one that eventually rose to a fair degree of popularity in America, and that was Dance Dance Revolution. It even worked its way into a few TV shows and movies (see: Yes Man and Malcolm in the Middle). There were about a dozen DDR machines in and around the Chicagoland area in the early ’00s, and my friends and I would often drive 30-40 minutes to play on one for hours. These days, you can find one in almost every legitimate arcade, getting far less use than they did 10 years ago. The point I’m getting to, and there is a point here, is that I did learn to like a lot of the J-pop songs they put on these games. In fact, you might say that I still carry a slight fondness for that genre of music, even if I don’t really ever listen to it (or play Bemani games) anymore. Enter the new video from Chairlift. I think their latest album Something is one of 2012’s finest so far, and while I like their particular brand of ’80s inspired synth pop, it didn’t exactly become clear to me why until I saw the video for “I Belong in Your Arms (Japanese Version).” Yes, the band recorded a version in Japanese, and made the video to celebrate the release of their album in Japan. It’s essentially a green screen video with computer generated backgrounds and the words at the bottom for karaoke purposes. In essence, it’s a slice right out of the J-pop playbook, and I kind of love it for exactly that reason. Do I like the Japanese version of the song better than the English version? Well, I can sing along with the English version, so that’s a plus. Anyways, that was a long-winded story to a very shallow point. I encourage you to watch the video though, which can be viewed here. That, plus this edition of Pick Your Poison should set you up for a grand holiday (if you’re celebrating) weekend. Please enjoy downloads from Charley Bickers, The Demos, Kate Miller-Heidke, Mighty Quinn, Shipbuilding Co., and Thrive. Have a great weekend!

Ball of Flame Shoot Fire – The Curse

Charley Bickers – Three Little Words (ft. Si Jones)

Crushed Out – Weigh You Down

The Demos – Neon

Electra – Charge!
Electra – Starve

Kate Miller-Heidke – Ride This Feeling

KOAN Sound – Sly Fox

Main Attrakionz – Do It For the Bay (ft. DaVinci)

Mighty Quinn – Vacation

Qualms – Love

The Shamefaced Sparrows – Ride That Seastorm! (Demo)

Shipbuilding Co. – Salt Creek
Shipbuilding Co. – St. Elizabeth

Shysweet Leaves – House in Dreamwing Color Hour

Steel Trees – Stoner Zombie Killer Kids

Thrive – Yeti

Visitor – Coming Home (Viceroy Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

Jethro Fox – Blinding Light

Kaleidophone – Gogglebox

Luciar – Deadly Precious

New Animal – Falling Up

Passion Pit – Take A Walk (Chew Lips Remix)

Page 121 of 188

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén