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Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 6-26-12

Every Tuesday I like to give you the list of artists releasing new material, as a way to remind you that music is still for sale and you can in fact buy it if you like it. That said, you can hit up your local music merchant or online retailer for new stuff from Air Traffic Controller, A Place to Bury Strangers, Beachwood Sparks, Cory Chisel and the Wandering Sons, DIIV, Echo Lake, Everest, Exray’s, The Flaming Lips, Henry Clay People, Infantree, Jesca Hoop, Joe Jackson, A Lull, Milk Maid, New Beard (new mp3 featured below), The Offspring, Sonny and the Sunsets, The Soundtrack of Our Lives, and Ty Segall Band. So that’s your notification list. The Pick Your Poison list for today is below, and has a few songs/artists I’d like to personally recommend. Those include tracks from Apollo Cobra, Chris Cohen, Codeine, Crypts, Dragonette, Guardian Alien, John Maus, New Beard and Warm Weather. Lots of great stuff here worth learning more about, if you’re so inclined. Hip hop fans might like to know there’s a new Nas track (with Rick Ross) up for streaming in the Soundcloud section too.

Apollo Cobra – Feel It Break

Buffalo Killers – Hey Girl

Chris Cohen – Caller No. 99

Codeine – Kitchen

Crypts – Fancy

Dragonette – Rocket Ship

Extra Life – Discipline for Edwin

Fractures – Ride (Acoustic)

Guardian Alien – See the World Given to a One Love Entity (Part 1)

The History of Panic – The Chase

Hoverboard – Buzzsaw

Jen Schande – I Really Like Sonic Youth and I Really Want to Have Sex With You

John Maus – Bennington

Jon Lindsay – After Dark

New Beard – Doom

Santigold – The Keepers (The Knocks Remix)

treasureseason – Secrets

Vienna Ditto – I Know His Blood Can Make Me Whole (Blind Willie Johnson cover)

Warm Weather – Stay

SOUNDCLOUD

Kirin J Callinan – Thighs

Nas ft. Rick Ross – Accident Murderers

The Temper Trap – Trembling Hands (Magnus & Timon Remix)

Pick Your Poison: Monday 6-25-12

Sigh. I don’t know about you, but I love Blur. I think they’re one of the more unsung heroes of the 90’s, even though they are/were pretty popular. The thing about Damon Albarn, especially in the last 15 or so years, is apparently that he’s restless. Blur wasn’t enough for him, and so came Gorillaz, then The Good, the Bad & the Queen, then DRC Music and most recently Rocket Juice & the Moon. I’m not even going to get into his soundtrack work. The point is, we’re going on nearly a decade since the last Blur record, and there’s been a bit of back-and-forth about whether they still exist or not. There have been a few Blur shows in the U.K. recently, giving hope to that idea, along with reports they were in the studio recording. Yet Albarn has been coy and has suggested that Blur is over. While we continue to wait and see where that whole saga will go, the band is giving one little nugget of confidence suggesting they’re still around. Next Monday, July 2nd, Blur will perform 2 new songs on a London rooftop. Whether or not they’re trying to recreate The Beatles’ famous Apple Corps rooftop performance, you can watch them play “Under the Westway” and “The Puritan” at 6:15PM BST (aka 1:15PM EST) live via a link they’ll be posting on their Twitter page. I’m excited to hear and see what will happen, and I hope you are too. Okay, onwards with today’s Pick Your Poison. I’ll recommend tracks from the bilinda butchers, Howth, Pixel Memory, Saint Motel, Tassels and thenewno2. In the Soundcloud section don’t miss streaming a new song from Stars.

Anbuley – Oleee

the bilinda butchers – Haibby

Dent May – Shakedown Street (Grateful Dead cover)

Howth – Grand Marais

The Illegitimate Sons – Gillian

Pixel Memory – Guardian

Rude Gentlemen – Never Know

Saint Motel – Benny Goodman

Saturday, Monday – The Slow and Slopy Journey of Little Rhino

Shy Around Strangers – Never Look Down

Stayce Dylan – Y€S

Tassels – Overkill

Teen Daze – Brooklyn Sunburn (Lushlife Remix)

thenewno2 – Make It Home

Vybz Kartel – Money

SOUNDCLOUD

A Girl Called Ruth – You I See (Acoustic Version)

Milano Sun – Vertigo

My Son the Bum – Money Is The Whip

Stars – The Theory of Relativity

Wax Fingers – Bauhaus

Whales in Cubicles – Nowhere Flag

Pick Your Poison: Friday 6-22-12

If you’re American and care anything about sports, you probably heard that last night the Miami Heat won the NBA Championship. This is a music site and I rarely mention sports on purpose, but this one stings just a little bit. If you’re from Miami or simply love the Heat, now’s the point where you want to stop reading and dive headfirst into the mp3s below. Okay. I’m not going to call Lebron James a bad basketball player. On the contrary, he’s one of the NBA’s best and deserved the MVP trophy he won. It’s the way he goes about it that feels almost criminal. Leaving Cleveland for Miami in an hour-long TV special a couple years ago was a classless move. So was the big “presentation party” where James, Wade and Bosh came out on a stage to confetti and cheers from adoring fans. They assembled a monster team with every intention of winning an NBA championship. I couldn’t have been happier last season when the Heat lost in the finals. Yet if I lived in Miami or Florida in general I’d probably be ecstatic over the collection of superstars the Heat have assembled. Sometimes you just want to see the underdog triumph against such a behemoth. The Oklahoma City Thunder are sort of the ultimate underdog team too, because they’re pretty new and just a bit “off the radar” versus other major cities like Boston, Los Angeles, New York and Chicago. Alas, it was not to be, and the Heat conquered as it has been expected of them. Now I’ve got to hope that doesn’t continue for multiple years. This, from a guy who loved every second of the Chicago Bulls’ 6-peat from the 90’s. Ah, what a time to be alive. Alright, sports talk over. Pick Your Poison talk now. Gold stars today go out to tracks from Barna Howard, Benjamin Francis Leftwich (covering The Beatles), Chomp, Daydream Vacation, Funkywalkman, Physical Therapy, Poolside, Purity Ring and Strand of Oaks. In the Soundcloud section don’t miss streaming songs from Holograms, The New Pornographers (covering Fleetwood Mac), and OM.

Barna Howard – Timber Nails and Tears

Benjamin Francis Leftwich – With A Little Help From My Friends (Beatles cover)

Brownout – Flaximus

Case & Point – Razor

Chomp – Throw Out Your Wish List

David Douglas – California Poppy

Daydream Vacation – Dare Seize Fire

Dr. Michael White – I Love You Too Much to Ever Leave You

Funkywalkman – Los Angeles

Kirk Ross – Break My Silence

Physical Therapy – Drone On (ft. Jamie Krasner)

Poolside – Slow Down

Purity Ring – Fireshrine

The Range – Nothing Left

Strand of Oaks – Maureen’s

Sun Boxes – Frozen Pond

Volta – Keyboard 47 (NEEDS Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

The Birthday Suit – Less Worthless Years

Holograms – Monolith

Hot As Sun – Only a Woman (Blood Diamonds Remix)

The New Pornographers – Think About Me (Fleetwood Mac cover)

OM – State of Non-Return

Splash – Ever Before

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 6-21-12

Happy Summer Solstice! Yes, my friends, today is the day in the northern hemisphere with the most sunlight. If you’re planning to do something outside, such as grill or play sports, there’s no better day to do it. Maximize your productivity and have some fun while doing so. Even the graveyard shifters get a little more light than usual, though that may be a detriment if it makes it tougher to sleep. And hey, solar power earns an extra boost today too. But who am I kidding. Yesterday was really bright too, and tomorrow will be as well. These additional amounts of sun amount more to minutes than hours. Today’s sun is probably no more than 30 seconds more than yesterday’s. I guess the grand point is: it’s summer. Enjoy it. This edition of Pick Your Poison is a nice soundtrack to it as well. Pay close attention to tracks from Acid House Kings (THREE of them!), Chandeliers, Donnis, Lorelai, The Royal Concept, Western Affairs and Zulu Winter. In the Soundcloud section there’s also a great remix by Four Tet of a track from Neneh Cherry + The Thing.

Acid House Kings – First Time
Acid House Kings – Say Yes If You Love Me
Acid House Kings – Do What You Wanna Do

Amanda Jo Williams – Hello Good Morning

Ami Saraiya & The Outcome – Purging

Chandeliers – New Times
Chandeliers – Le Corsage

Donnis – Hello Kitty

Garmiani – Now That We Found Love

James Bowers – Regrets, Damnations, and Dreams

Janes Addiction – Been Caught Stealing (Metranohm Remix)

Jonathan Boulet – This Song Is Called Ragged (Jonti Remix)

Lorelai – Hammer Meets Tongs

Maren Parusel – Castle in the Sky

Outfit – Everything All the Time (Amateur Best Remix)

The Royal Concept – Gimme Twice

Shannon McArdle – Warden (ZIP)

Suburban Living – Float in Clouds

Way Yes – Gino (Larry Gus Remix)

Western Affairs – Laura

What Hearts – Roll Back

Zulu Winter – Bitter Moon

SOUNDCLOUD

Conveyor – Woolgatherer

Neneh Cherry + The Thing – Dream Baby Dream (Four Tet remix)

Patrick Alavi – Just Believe

Album Review: Hot Chip – In Our Heads [Domino]



One of the greatest challenges about the dance music genre is how easily things can become stale. If dance artists aren’t consistently evolving from record to record, they’re prone to stagnation and may fizzle out. Don’t ever let the beat drop or let your audience get bored. James Murphy as LCD Soundsystem played his cards almost exactly right, crafting three of the best dance records so far this decade, each one building off the previous one, before calling it quits at the top of his game. Not every attempt at reinvention works out though, as best evidenced by Justice’s most recent effort Audio, Video, Disco, which boldly sought to bring bits of 70’s prog-rock into their club-heavy, pop single sound. Nice thought, but the end result was far weaker than it could have been.

Hot Chip probably fall towards the middle of the pack when it comes to building a successful career in dance music. Their 2005 debut album Coming On Strong was filled with smarmy bedroom pop, the kind that needed work instrumentally but was quite funny lyrically. Building off that, 2006’s The Warning hit almost all the right notes and generated hits like “Boy From School” and “Over and Over.” That trend continued on 2008’s Made in the Dark, though it peppered in more mature themes and slower balladry to calm the waters a bit. Such an adjustment suggested they were growing up, but the end results were more mixed and off-balance, like a teen going through puberty. 2010’s One Life Stand was the band’s full-on attempt at maturity and adulthood. It was a skillfully moderated meditation on love and settling down and the pleasure one could derive from that, and many loved how well it balanced the band’s celebratory and fun side with something calmer and more mature. Others balked under the impression that a more domesticated and ballad-dominant version of Hot Chip wasn’t what they signed up for based on their earlier material. In the time since that last record, band members took time out to work on some side projects. About Group, The 2 Bears and New Build were the three results, and while each carved their own distinct paths musically, they all had one thing in common: an upbeat and playful demeanor.

Thankfully, that seems to be where the members of Hot Chip’s heads are on their new album In Our Heads. This past March, Joe Goddard said in an interview that they intended for the album to exude “positivity.” That means an increase in tempos and moods and a return to some of the dance-addled style their first couple records played up so well. This time though, the band isn’t retreating so much as they are refining. The lessons learned in One Life Stand are not lost, but incorporated into the album both lyrically and in how some of the songs are structured. The electro-funk of “How Do You Do?” might function as the best distillation of what the entire record is about, with a chorus that includes the line, “You make me want to live again.” “Dont Deny Your Heart” smartly lays out a case for why a partner should “say yes” to love, using an 80’s-style synth pop base to make it that much more memorable.

Perhaps the greatest moments on In Our Heads come from the longest songs. It’s not because they’re long that makes them good, it just so happens to work out that way. The seven minutes of “Flutes” makes for one of the darkest yet most exciting tracks on the album. It’s a swirling techno beast that morphs into this shining dance party pillar before you can fully grasp what’s going on. Hot Chip have never made a song quite like it before, and it speaks exceptionally well towards their continuing evolution as a band. The same can be said for “Let Me Be Him,” which brilliantly skirts the line between ballad and dance track by placing a soft rock melody atop skittering beats. The longer it glides, the more beautiful it becomes, eventually breaking down into bird chirps and spaced out electric guitars that will make you salivate with sheer passion. Joe Goddard and Alexis Taylor’s vocals swim in these fertile waters and set the right tone thanks to a line like, “My soul, my love is running away with me.” Played differently, the song could very well have fallen into the realm of excess or even poorly concocted parody. Its escape from such a fate only makes it stronger.

For those that prefer their Hot Chip funky and loud, as on a past single like “Ready for the Floor,” In Our Heads has “Night & Day” for your enjoyment. The groove is built around a wobbly bass line, and the chorus splits open with some laser-guided synths that send things into the stratosphere. Hot Chip’s trademark humor is well in place too, and if the video for the song doesn’t cause you to crack a smile, hopefully the deadpan faux rapping during the bridge will. “These Chains” also does excellent work by playing the darker cousin of “Boy From School,” quietly pulsating as Taylor and Goddard trade verses and harmonize with one another. It’s one of the record’s more subtle numbers, but pay close enough attention and you’ll find it sticking with you far longer than expected.

The greatest thing about In Our Heads is how ecstatic and joyful Hot Chip sound from start to finish. As One Life Stand could be a bit of a drag for those seeking the band that churns out dance hit after dance hit, that album remains a necessary step in their continued growth. Finally reaching maturity and adulthood doesn’t always mean putting away childish things though. In fact, maintaining a positive attitude and staying active can help keep you young. That seems to be the lesson the band is trying to teach us with this record. Even as they sing about love and holding onto the key relationships in your life, they’re still compelled to craft melodies that bring a euphoria of a different sort. Whether that pleasure lasts a minute or a lifetime, Hot Chip seem intent on spreading and sharing it with us. We should consider ourselves lucky.

Hot Chip – Night And Day

Hot Chip – Don’t Deny Your Heart

Buy In Our Heads from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 6-20-12

If you’ve not heard already, there’s a new supergroup lurking about the indie world these days. They’re known as Divine Fits. The trio is made up of Spoon’s Britt Daniel, Wolf Parade/Handsome Furs’ Dan Boeckner and New Bomb Turks’ Sam Brown. Sounds intriguing, right? Well, their first single “My Love Is Real” is finally available for you to hear and stream, but in order to do so you need to “Like” them on Facebook. Here is their Facebook page so you can go do that immediately. So long as you’re logged into Facebook, maybe head over to the Faronheit page and click “Like” on that too? I don’t have any content you can unlock by doing so, but I do post a number of great music videos and links to posts on the site there as well. It’s just another way we can keep up with each other. Okay, now onto today’s Pick Your Poison. I’ll advise you to download new music from Br’er, Cat Power, Dazzletine, I Come to Shanghai, Museum and White Violet.

BOA – Push Remake

Br’er – Sea of Doubt

Cat Power – Ruin

Charlie Big Time – The Liberation of Love

Corduroy Road – My Dear Odessa

Darts – Killer on the Tracks

Dazzletine – Skin Period

Efren – If My Heart Don’t Fail Me

Get People – Grove

Height With Friends – I Can’t Stand to Be Refused

I Come to Shanghai – Nothing to Conceal

Ladyhawke – Sunday Drive (Villa Remix)

Museum – The Law

Preauxx – Monday Morning

Radical Face – Nothing Compares 2 U (Sinead O’Connor cover)

White Violet – Lays Around Lazy

SOUNDCLOUD

First Season – Pilgrim Song

HeavyWeight – Come Alive (Radio Mix)

Honest Engines – Faster Van

The Lighthouse and the Whaler – Venice

Tes Elations – Visceral

Vuvuvultures – I’ll Cut You (Adam Nicholas Remix)

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 6-19-12

If it’s Tuesday, that means there’s new music releases out for your consumption. I like to give a quick rundown of all the artists coming out with stuff, just in case you weren’t aware or forgot that one of your favorites has something new you could be enjoying this very second. So, be on the look out for new full lengths or EPs from Blues Control, Can, Fiona Apple, Glen Hansard, Grace Potter, Hacienda, John Zorn, Men Without Hats, Moby, Neneh Cherry & The Thing, Peaking Lights, Silver Jews, Smashing Pumpkins, Walk the Moon, White Arrows and Zulu Winter. As far as Pick Your Poison goes, allow me to recommend tracks for download from Buffalo Killers, Cold Cave, Cowgill, Drug Cabin, Lockah and Shark?.

Adam Hill – These Vignettes

Black Light Dinner Party – Small Boxes

Blank ft. Noonie Bao – Do This Thing

Buffalo Killers – Get It

Cold Cave – Believe In Our Blood

Cowgill – I Think I’ve Been Breathing

Drug Cabin – Barracuda

E-Dubble – Honors Bio

Fairchild Republic – Stay Young
Fairchild Republic – Arcadia

La Chansons – Candy Party

Little Comets – Language Is Over (Acoustic)

Lockah – The Sour Drink From the Ocean

The Modern Airline – Voyage to the Bottom of the Sky

Oh Laura – California (ZIP)

Shark? – Slap Dash

SOUNDCLOUD

Delta Rae – Bottom Of The River

Forss – Lux Aeterna

General Fiasco – Bad Habits

Marina and the Diamonds – Power & Control (Krystal Klear Remix)

Slug Guts – Stranglin’ You Too

Weird Dreams – House Of Secrets

Pick Your Poison: Monday 6-18-12

Due to some technical difficulties, I was unable to post this yesterday as planned. Please excuse the lateness of this post. That said, there’s some good stuff in this set of music. Highlights include tracks from Blackie, Dead Leaf Echo, Erika Spring (of Au Revoir Simone), Everest, Glass Vaults, Ormonde and Radiant Dragon. In the Soundcloud section you can stream new material from Heavenly Beat and Nigel Godrich’s new music project Ultraista.

The Appleseed Collective – Something New (Changes)
The Appleseed Collective – Evil One

Blackie – Loading Dock Blues

Butchers & Bakers – The Cleaner

Dead Leaf Echo – Act of Truth

DWNTWN – Alamo Square

Erika Spring – Hidden

Everest – Raking Me Over the Coals

Glass Vaults – Crystallise

IlldotLogic ft. Drazah Backwards – Bad Bad Man

New Look – Teen Need (Creep Remix)

Ormonde – Can’t Imagine

The Orwells – Mallrats (La La La)

Radiant Dragon – Landor

Voiceplay – The King Has Returned

SOUNDCLOUD

Brightly – Sarah

Clancy – Lightbox

Heavenly Beat – Tradition

Leitbur – Think of Tomorrow

Noosa – Walk On By

Ultraista – Static Light

Snapshot Review: The Tallest Man on Earth – There’s No Leaving Now [Dead Oceans]



One of the most fascinating things about Kristian Matsson is how he’s able to take very familiar folk sounds and turn them into something that seems fresh and exciting. His first two albums as The Tallest Man on Earth were built solely on his raspy vocal and either an acoustic guitar or a piano. The songs are also almost entirely home recorded outside of a traditional studio, giving them an additional ramshackle quality that speaks well to Bob Dylan’s earliest material. Matsson is from Sweden, but he uses and reveres classic American folk as his template. His last full length The Wild Hunt was very propulsive and catchy, with an emotional core that often made you feel like the man was playing as if his life depended on it. Just listening to him wail on “You’re Going Back” or “King of Spain” either sucked you in completely or left you out in the cold, as his abrasive yet heartfelt vocal isn’t exactly everyone’s cup of tea. On his third long player There’s No Leaving Now, the gears have slightly changed (or evolved, if you will) for The Tallest Man on Earth. The music still retains that slightly gritty, home recorded quality, however Matsson plays around with multi-tracking a little, creating fuller arrangements with more instruments. “Revelation Blues” is where the extra bits are most evident – a lightly brushed snare drum along with small flourishes of piano and woodwinds compliment the main melody strung together by a carefully picked guitar. Other than that, only the occasional slide guitar on top of an acoustic is an indicator there’s more instrumentation than usual. The alt-country quiet of “Bright Lanterns” is probably where that’s implemented best. Outside of the guitar-driven tracks, the title track differentiates itself simply by being a piano-centered ballad in the same vein of “Kids on the Run” from the last record. Matsson does an excellent job wrenching the sadness out of the song. Such powerful displays of emotion were some of The Wild Hunt‘s strongest points. There’s No Leaving Now loses some of that primarily due to more languid and relaxed melodies where the vocals don’t require so many acrobatics. The album’s two most energized songs “1904” and “Wind and Walls” are also two of its best, even though their lyrics don’t entirely make sense. It’s the way he sings lines like, “But the lesson is vague and the lightning shows a deer with her mind on the moor/and now something with the sun is just different/since they shook the earth in 1904,” that somehow makes them seem far more coherent than they appear when written down. Still, not everything on the record is so convincing or vibrant, as songs like “Leading Me Now” and “Little Brother” breeze past pleasantly but forgettably too. Matsson can and has done better work than this, and three albums in it might be time to start asking if his particular troubadour brand of folk is wearing a bit thin. It’s nice to hear him spreading his wings just a little and fleshing out some of the tracks a bit more, but it means very little in the end if the songs aren’t worthy of that expansion. Ironically, There’s No Leaving Now often comes off like Matsson has gone away on vacation, perhaps to the beach depicted on the album cover. Wonderful as it can be to take some time for yourself and forget about your troubles, it’s no way to live. Sooner or later the world will come find you. Let’s hope for the next album that The Tallest Man on Earth pulls his head out of the clouds and reconnects with the emotions and excitement that made his earlier records so vital and fascinating.

The Tallest Man on Earth – 1904

Buy There’s No Leaving Now from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Friday 6-15-12

Say hello to the weekend, my friends, because it is upon us. Before you pack an overnight bag and head off on a quick trip out of state or whatever, give me two seconds to tell you that The Sadies are coming to Chicago TWICE next month. They have earned the reputation of being Canada’s best live band, which is saying something when Arcade Fire is one of your biggest competitors. In other words, you probably won’t want to miss them when they come through town. July 7th they’ve got a show at Schuba’s. Tickets are $14 and can be bought here. On July 9th, they’ll be playing a FREE show at Millennium Park with James Vincent McMorrow. Just show up at that one if you want as there’s no tickets involved. If you’re wondering what The Sadies sound like, I’ll definitely recommend the mp3 below for a taste. In this set I’ll also recommend songs from Deap Vally, James Apollo, Stereolab’s Laetitia Sadier, Ranch Ghost, Seatraffic, Sic Alps and Suit of Lights. In the Soundcloud section stream new stuff from Dispatch, Iron & Wine and Nguzunguzu. Have a great weekend!

Bailterspace – No Sense

Chew Lips – Do You Chew? (Lieke Remix)

Deap Vally – Gonna Make My Own Money

Dumbo Gets Mad – Marmelade Kids (Sun Glitters Remix)

Garrison Starr and Jason Karaban – Everything Is in Your Hands

James Apollo – The Days

Koko Beware – Beach Babe

Laetitia Sadier – There Is A Price to Pay for Freedom (And It Isn’t Security)

Ranch Ghost – The Water

The Sadies and Andre Williams – I’ll Do Most Anything

Seatraffic – Crimes

Sic Alps – Glyphs

Strip Steve ft. Puro Instinct – Astral Projection (KiNK Instrumental)

Suit of Lights – The Human Beings

Thee Swank Bastards – Getaway Car

Yes…Pink Pink – Seize Me

SOUNDCLOUD

Dispatch – Josaphine

GHXST – Black Camaro

Iron & Wine – Trouble (Little Feat cover)

K Theory – Notorious (Notorious B.I.G. cover)

Nguzunguzu – Delirium

Paaniq – Dictator’s Greatest Speech

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 6-14-12

Usually I save this for Friday, but given my penchant for mixing things up a bit on occasion, let’s talk about it now. All of the site’s social media links are on the upper right corner of the page, but I’ve been working especially hard to generate some “Likes” over on the good ‘ol Facebook page. Twitter’s doing well, as is site traffic, but things have been progressing slowly at Facebook since I started the page a couple months back. So I’m going to keep mentioning it once a week until it’s doing well too. There’s extra, exclusive content over on Facebook too, including music videos I like and Spotify playlists I create. Just sayin’. I’m also just sayin’ today’s Pick Your Poison is solid. There are some pretty damn good tracks up for download from Emily Hane White, Fires, The Inner Banks, Mission of Burma, Mrs Magician, and North Atlantic Drift. Stream songs in the Soundcloud section from Lantern, Mika and Passion Pit, along with A-Trak’s remix of Justice.

Chilljren – You Got It

Dots Will Echo – I’m A Monkey

Emily Jane White – Oh Katherine

Esperi – Silo the Fire

Fires – Blood On Black

Grace Jones – Williams Blood (Aeroplane Remix)

The Inner Banks – Box and Crown

Jhameel – Let’s Run Away

Jon Sandler – Late Night Champ

Mission of Burma – Second Television

Mrs Magician – Fools Paradise

North Atlantic Drift – Waiting in the Afterglow

Rah Rah – I Could Tell You I’m Sorry

The Sometime Boys – Summer Solstice

Tiger! Tiger! – Cut Them Where They Bleed

White Light Parade – Want You to Know (Is Tropical Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

Justice – New Lands (A-Trak Remix)

Lantern – Out of Our Heads

Mika – Make You Happy

Passion Pit – I’ll Be Alright

Society – All That We’ve Become

Tan Sister Radio – Flashing Vents

Album Review: POP ETC – POP ETC [Rough Trade]



When talking about the self-titled debut album from POP ETC, it’s almost essential to forget what you know and think you know about The Morning Benders. The storyline plays out as follows: upon learning that their band name was being used as a homophobic slur in the UK, The Morning Benders made the executive decision to change their name to POP ETC. With the name change came a lineup tweak and a move from San Francisco to Brooklyn. It’s close to the musical equivalent of gender reassignment or witness protection, and such radical adjustments also provide the opportunity to reinvent yourself however you like. The old Morning Benders liked guitars and indie pop. They wrote a super catchy song like “Excuses” that found placement in a Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups commercial and on “Best of” lists back in 2010. They corralled their musician friends from San Francisco like John Vanderslice and members of Girls into a small studio to play a song or two for fun.

By contrast, POP ETC like synths and commercial pop music. They use AutoTune liberally and even apply it to a cover of Bjork’s “Unravel”. They release mixtapes titled “New Influences Weekend Mix” and “1986 Weekend Mix” full of artists like Mariah Carey, Janet Jackson, Tears for Fears and Boys II Men. The moving parts might be the same, but this is an entirely new model and should be regarded as such. Those still in denial need only listen to the appropriately titled opening track “New Life” on POP ETC’s new album to best understand the group’s aim. Synths warble next to drum machines, and singer Chris Chu mourns the death of a relationship through R&B flavored sentiments and AutoTune. Somewhere, the 808s & Heartbreak version of Kanye West can relate. Top 40 and Urban radio stations should be licking their chops over the sparkling Drake-like bounce of “Back to Your Heart,” if only the lyrics weren’t so cringe-worthy. “She said, ‘Why do we bother?’/and I said, ‘I’m not your father,'” is just one moment in the song that might make you wince. First single “Keep It For Your Own” is perhaps the best four minutes of pure pop on the entire album, where light bits of acoustic guitar, bass and piano actually support the verses, the hook in the chorus is strong, and all the vocals/harmonies haven’t been modulated. It’s the only track on the record produced by Danger Mouse, and considering how well it works, they might want to have him do the entire thing next time.

So much of the rest of the album feels like a blatant attempt at mainstream pop it can be almost disturbing at times. “R.Y.B.” stands for rock your body, and not only did Justin Timberlake do a song about that very topic that was a whole lot better, but it’s easy to get the impression that ‘NSYNC would probably pass on it too. That and closing track “Yoyo” are both obnoxiously loud too, as if the synths have been turned up to 11 to distract you from how utterly mediocre they are. The faux R&B seductions of “Live It Up” and “I Wanna Be Your Man” have decent melodies and even some impressive harmonies in them, but stumble and fall from downright painful lyrics. “I ain’t never disrespect no woman/never called a girl a ho,” Chu AutoTunes on “Live It Up,” a song about sleeping with groupies while on tour. The chorus of “I Wanna Be Your Man” is the song title repeated over and over and over again ad nauseum, to the point where if you play this song for a girl you’re trying to woo she’ll likely say yes by the halfway point so the begging doesn’t have to go on any longer. You could say POP ETC are trying as hard as they can to develop a relationship with as many people as possible on this album, beating you over the head with a sonic lead pipe until you finally come around to the idea that they’re a good band.

They’d fare far better with a touch of moderation, as songs like “Halfway to Heaven” and “Everything Is Gone” display. Unfortunately such moments are too few and far between to make much of a difference. One thing that does make a difference is how and where you listen to the album. Like a blockbuster action film, sometimes you need a good popcorn record to mindlessly enjoy for awhile. If you’re out on a deck with a cold beverage and a good book or are at a party with your friends, a little POP ETC can be quite nice. Don’t be too surprised if the band starts to pick up some mainstream success from this album either. I mean it IS better than Ke$ha. That last sentence probably tells you all you need to know. In an ideal world, the transition from The Morning Benders to POP ETC would have gone a lot smoother. Chris Chu has proven he can write smart and addictive pop songs with guitars, and it stands to reason he could do the same without them. Let’s hope that next time the band returns they learn from this misstep and come up with some music that’s truly worthy of their new name.

POP ETC – Everything Is Gone
POP ETC – Halfway to Heaven

Buy POP ETC from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 6-13-12

Have you heard of The Deer Tracks? I mentioned them a couple weeks ago, but wanted to bring them up one more time quickly before tomorrow, when they’ll be playing a show at Schuba’s here in Chicago. In a nutshell, The Deer Tracks are a duo from Sweden who make electro-pop with sort of an insular edge. Their melodies shimmer and sparkle and often have a fun, danceable edge to them, but at the same time there’s an intimacy and preciousness to them as well. Maybe it’s their wider use of glockenspiel or their male-female vocal interplay that gives it that vibe. Anyways, they’re working on a trio of records known as The Archer Trilogy. Two of the three parts have been released, and the final piece will be out this fall. If you see them tomorrow night or on another one of their tour dates, they’ll be playing material from the entire trilogy. Buy tickets for the Schuba’s show here, and download the songs “W” and “Dark Passenger” to get a feel for their sound. I hope to see you at the show! Now let’s get to today’s Pick Your Poison. I’ll offer up recommendations that you download tracks from Azealia Banks, Finn Riggins, Odd Hours, and Radio Moscow. In the Soundcloud section stream tracks from Attaque, Panoramic & True, Supreme Cuts and Van She.

Azealia Banks – Aquababe

Bart and Friends – There May Come A Time

Don Serata – Disorder

Fair Play Knight – Starlab

Finn Riggins – Big News

Fiona Apple – Every Single Night (Its Overture Remix)

Love and Radiation – Faith Permits No Doubt

Odd Hours – Electric Soul

Radio Moscow – Creepin’

Saint Saviour – Midnight City (M83 cover)

Sam Densmore – Why’d You Let Me Down?

Total Warr – xxx HATE xxx (Is Tropical Remix)

Touch Tone – Home Away From Home (Starcadian Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

Attaque – Flow

Dynasty Electric – Oasis

Panoramic & True – Product On

Supreme Cuts – Ciroc Waterfalls

Van She – Jamaica

Woven Bird – Saw You In Two

Yeti Lane – Warning Sensations (School Of Seven Bells Remix)

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 6-12-12

Tuesdays mean new music release days in America, and I’m pleased to try and inform you each week of what’s out there for you to buy. Here’s a long list of artists putting out new stuff this week, be it an EP or a full length album. If you notice one of your favorites in here and haven’t been keeping up with them, finding out they’ve got new material being release could be a nice surprise. Look for fresh stuff from the following artists: Anabot, Azealia Banks, Bobby Womack, The Bouncing Souls, The dB’s, Dent May, Emily Jane White, Future of the Left, Hot Chip, The Hundred in the Hands, The Inner Banks, Jaill, Joan of Arc, Jukebox the Ghost, Metric, Motion City Soundtrack, Nouela, Phoebe Jean, Piano Magic, POP ETC, Richard Hawley, The Tallest Man on Earth, These United States, Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs, Variety Lights, Wintersleep and The Young. Phew, that’s a long list. It’s almost as long as today’s dose of Pick Your Poison. In this particular set, I’ll give a thumbs up to tracks from The Fire Tapes, The Ocean Floor, She’s So Rad, Warning Light and Wild Ones. Beastie Boy Mike D remixed Bosco Delrey pretty well, as did Mmoths with a Vacationer track. Other than that, stream good stuff from Atlas Genius, Levek and Plant Plants in the Soundcloud section.

Bosco Delrey – My My Race Car (Mike D Remix)

Dogtanion – Islam

The Fire Tapes – Transistor, Monitor (ZIP)

Girl In A Coma – One Eyed Fool

Infantree – What You Wanna Do

Jack Dolgen – Baby I’m Afraid Tonight

Jeremy Fisher – Built to Last

Kimbra – Settle Down (tree & docko Remix)

Le Le – Drunken Cigarettes

Meyhem Lauren – Peruvian Desserts (ft. Action Bronson and Roc Marciano)

The Ocean Floor – The Last Four Years

Sacred Caves – On the Outside

She’s So Rad – Rockin’ Back Inside My Heart (Twin Peaks/Julee Cruise cover)

The Toothaches – Pretty and Loud

Vacationer – Trip (Mmoths Remix)

Warning Light – Whispering Priest

Wild Ones – It’s Real

SOUNDCLOUD

Atlas Genius – Symptoms

ev ree whuhn – Control

Levek – Black Mold Grow

Phantom Limb – Angel Of Death (Hank Williams Cover)

Plant Plants – One To Adore

Race Horses – Mates

Show Review: Radiohead [First Midwest Bank Amphitheatre; Chicago; 6/10/12]


“I have no idea who I am anymore,” Thom Yorke joked near the end of Radiohead’s set at First Midwest Bank Amphitheatre on Sunday night. Plenty of people could say the same thing sincerely about Yorke and his bandmates once the show was over. For incessant Radiohead devotees and casual fans alike, the band’s trajectory since releasing The King of Limbs last year has been anything but normal. They’ve forsaken guitars and more traditional song arrangements for music that’s heavily influenced by the electronica subgenre IDM and kinetic polyrhythms. The response hasn’t exactly been enthusiastic so far, in large part because it’s quite a bit different from some of their most popular work on albums like In Rainbows and OK Computer. The closest cousin to The King of Limbs is Kid A, and even that was more of a subtle art statement than a fidgety dance record. Still, it was the new album with its twists and turns that transformed Radiohead’s live show from a display of superb rock craftsmanship into a morbid dance party. Consummate professionals that they are, the band is in no worse shape because of it.

Things didn’t exactly get off to a mindblowing start though. Opening with “Bloom,” the live rendering of it felt just a little sluggish and mixed with a little too much bass. With most of the crowd utterly distracted because the band was on stage and they needed documented pictures of it immediately, the so-so launch either went unnoticed or was shrugged off as soon as “There There” kicked in. It’s also worth noting that as with any new album, sometimes it takes a band a bit to figure out the right way to perform certain songs. Perhaps “Bloom” is one of those. But from that point onwards, things only got better. “There There” benefited from the dual drummer attack Radiohead is using to supplement their newest material. Portishead’s Clive Deamer does a wonderful job working in tandem with Phil Selway, and in certain situations even Jonny Greenwood or Ed O’Brien would pick up some sticks and add extra fuel to the percussion fire. That was perhaps most noticeable on “Morning Mr. Magpie,” one of a couple tracks from The King of Limbs that managed to exceed the recorded version.

The middle of the main set attempted to calm things down a bit starting with piano ballad “Codex,” but when you’ve got a crowd numbering in the tens of thousands that can get a little tricky. As Yorke’s falsetto moaned into the night and the keys were tapped with measured grace, some overzealous fans felt it necessary to cover the quiet with quite a few “Wooo”‘s and “Yeah”‘s. It stripped away some of the power that moment could (and was intended to) have had, which was unfortunate. Also just a touch unfortunate was the live treatment given to “The Amazing Sounds of Orgy.” Fantastic as it is that Radiohead chose to perform one of their best b-sides because it was a good sonic match with everything else that night, it was the only other song besides “Bloom” that didn’t hit the way it was supposed to. There’s an underlying dread about a political menace woven through the song, as Yorke himself explained when introducing it, but the band dragged while playing it and sucked some of the raw emotional power out as a result. The recorded version on the “Pyramid Song” single gets it all the way right.

The second half of the main set was about as perfect as anybody could ever ask for. The song selection was a fantastic mix of old and new, a pair of huge hits, and a massive dose of energy that sent the crowd into a frenzy. There was the sing-along to “Karma Police,” Yorke sending his voice soaring on “Reckoner,” the dance party on stage and off for “Lotus Flower,” the fuzz and buzz combo of “Myxomatosis” and “Feral,” with a closing capper of “Idioteque.” No doubt those last several tracks fulfilled the vision Radiohead had to shift their direction towards a much more physical live show. If they can find a way to harness that magic for the entire night and not just a majority of it, who knows what that would do to a crowd. Bodies might explode from sheer ecstasy.

In the last week or two, word quickly spread around the internet that Radiohead had a brand new song called “Full Stop” that they were playing around with during soundchecks on tour. A couple people managed to get some shoddy recordings of the band messing around with it, but it had never been performed during a show before. That is, until this show. With bright tye-dyed rainbows of color splashed across every video screen surrounding the band, the excitement in the air was palpable and every hair on my body was standing straight up. Holding true to the more electronica-based material from The King of Limbs, the song starts fast with a hazy keyboard base. Tension and speed quickly build atop one another until the dam fully breaks about three minutes in. Yorke’s voice yo-yos between normal and falsetto near the end so many times he sounds like a skipping record. Call it euphoria from hearing it live for the first time, but I think “Full Stop” is destined to be a hit. “It’ll get better with age,” Yorke said after they’d finished playing it. If it’s this good now, who knows what it’ll sound like five years from now. It’s tough to even fathom.

The first encore wrapped up with a ripped up rendition of “Bodysnatchers,” which was the most rock and roll the band got all night. Then Yorke stepped back behind the piano and teased a little of R.E.M.’s “The One I Love” before blending it seamlessly into “Everything In It’s Right Place.” That’s sort of typical Radiohead fare, and they’ve been doing those sorts of things for years now. Relatively new to their encore plot is the stark and stripped down version of “Give Up the Ghost,” which Yorke and Jonny Greenwood played to start the second encore while everyone else remained backstage. Thankfully this time the crowd was much more sedate and respectful relative to the emotion and quiet of the song, and it represented one of the more powerful moments of the evening. “Identikit” is another new song they played that hasn’t yet appeared in studio recorded form, and like “Full Stop” it’s a percussive dance juggernaut worthy of getting excited about. After ignoring almost their entire pre-Kid A catalogue all night, Radiohead finally said goodnight with the show-ending classic “Street Spirit (Fade Out).” “Immerse your soul in love,” Yorke sang as the last lines of the song. With their stellar execution, jaw-dropping stage set-up, quite a bit of dancing and upbeat demeanor, the band gave out plenty of soul-immersing love to the Chicago crowd on Sunday night. I’d like to think we returned that love in full.

Watch Radiohead perform “Full Stop” for the first time

Set List
Bloom
There There
15 Step
Kid A
Staircase
Morning Mr. Magpie
The Gloaming
Codex
The Amazing Sounds of Orgy
Karma Police
Reckoner
Lotus Flower
Myxomatosis
Feral
Little By Little
Idioteque
ENCORE 1
Separator
Full Stop (FIRST TIME PERFORMED)
Bodysnatchers
The One I Love–>Everything In It’s Right Place
ENCORE 2
Give Up the Ghost
Identikit
Weird Fishes/Arpeggi
Street Spirit (Fade Out)

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