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Snapshot Review: The Walkmen – Heaven [Fat Possum/Bella Union]



Earlier this year, The Walkmen celebrated their 10th anniversary of being a band by playing a handful of special shows in cities that have special significance to them. It’s a little odd to have a band celebrate an anniversary like that unless you’re, say, the Beach Boys, who are in the middle of a 50th anniversary tour at the moment. With the current hype cycle that chews bands up and spits them out over what often feels like 6 months or less, lasting even a handful of years can be considered an accomplishment. It also takes a fair number of quality records that logically evolve and grow off one another to remain vital and keep an expanding audience from becoming bored. The Walkmen have certainly accomplished that feat, and one listen through their 2002 debut Everyone Who Pretended to Like Me Is Gone along with one of their more recent records like 2010’s Lisbon will immediately hear a difference. They’re not the same scuzzy and fiery rock stars their early work suggested. Age, experience and now marriage and kids have all tempered those wilder ways, and in their place is a group of guys settled and content with their lives. For most bands that means death, as families can distract and happiness can breed boredom or laziness. It’s sort of like how many couples gain weight after getting married, in part because they’re no longer trying to sell themselves to another person. And we wonder why the divorce rate is so high. But conflict and anger are two key elements of rock music, and while they’re not essential to a great song or record, they certainly make both more interesting. What’s unsettling about The Walkmen’s new album Heaven then is just how much it lives up to the title. These guys are loving life right now, and they made a record about it. For some, that idea can come off as a little smug – as if the band is saying they have everything figured out while the rest of us continue to search for answers. The truth is they’re celebrating the things that have brought them such joy, and are encouraging us to join in on their happiness with the hope of learning and gaining it ourselves. Somehow they’re able to pull it off without sacrificing many of the qualities that made them great in the first place. Perhaps the person that has most changed on this record, even compared to the band’s previous one, is frontman Hamilton Leithauser. In the past his vocal style has best been described as whiskey-soaked and strained, but as the songs have become more tempered so has his singing. The album’s opening acoustic-strewn jaunt “We Can’t Be Beat” turns Leithauser into a crooner from the 1950’s, all smooth and dapper with effortless and lovely backing harmonies. Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold does backup vocal on that song along with “No One Ever Sleeps” and “Jerry Jr.’s Tune”, the latter of which is an instrumental with humming that’s more meditative than essential. Still, his contributions enhance Leithauser’s in the sort of beautiful way you’d suspect they might. Fans of the last two Walkmen albums will certainly find their fair share of solace as well in tracks like “Love Is Luck”, “Heartbreaker” and the title track, even if none of them quite match the manic energy of classics like “The Rat” and “Little House of Savages”. Doing something that dark and rushed wouldn’t make sense with the overall feel of this record though, which tries to play up the positive and does so with more retro flair than ever. Long time fans of the band may miss some of those ragers and heavy-handed moments, but songs like “Line By Line” and “Dreamboat” bring touches of despair to an otherwise upbeat album. They’re enough to show that The Walkmen haven’t completely given up on some of the feelings they were founded upon 10 years ago. With a catalogue of such high quality records though, it seems feelings don’t matter when it comes to making great music. As Leithauser sings on “Heartbreaker”, “It’s not the singer/it’s the song.” So long as The Walkmen keep making good ones, happy or sad, we’ll keep listening.

The Walkmen – Heaven

The Walkmen – We Can’t Be Beat

The Walkmen – The House You Made

Buy Heaven from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 5-28-12

Happy Memorial Day! I want to take a moment to thank all the men and women who fight so hard and sacrifice so much for America. It’s also important on a day like today to remember the fallen – those that gave their lives to protect citizens and certain ideals. So thanks again to all who serve, have served and will serve in the future. The world is a safer, better place because of your efforts. I hope that there are some military personnel that visit this site to discover new music, and that those discoveries help make life better or more meaningful when times get tough. Please enjoy today’s Pick Your Poison selections. Stuff you might want to check out today comes from Catcall, The Mommyheads, Permanent Collection, Pujol, Tidelands and Yeasayer. In the Soundcloud section, you definitely don’t want to miss streaming tracks from Beat Connection and Cloud Seeding. I also want to give a very warm shout out to Psychic Twin, the new project from Erin Wraight of the excellent indie pop band Headlights. They’ll have a 7′ single coming out on Lefse Records towards the end of July that you can preorder here. Stream the A side of that release below – it’s quite good and divinely retro.

Avicii – Silhouettes (Disco Fries Remix)

Catcall – The World Is Ours

Chaser – Blood (Demo)

Deathline – Ten of Clubs

Dent May – Best Friend (Osborne Remix)

Jonas Schwartz – Excited

The Mommyheads – Science and Reason

Motel Mari – According to Who

Permanent Collection – It’s Alright

Pujol – Providence
Pujol – DIY2K

RAC ft. Penguin Prison – Hollywood (The Magician Remix)

Salem – King Night (Rotterdam Terror Corps Remix)

Tidelands – The New Black

White Violet – Lays Around Lazy

Yeasayer – Henrietta

SOUNDCLOUD

Beat Connection – The Palace Garden, 4am

Cloud Seeding – Newer Testament (feat. Greg Hatem)

Eric Copeland – Tarzan and the Dizzy Devils

Lindstrøm – Call Me Anytime (Oneohtrix Point Never Remix)

Psychic Twin – Gonna Get Her

Street Chant – Frail Girls

Pick Your Poison: Friday 5-25-12

If you’re an American, this is a pretty big weekend. Memorial Day is often regarded as the official “start” to the summer season, and judging by the number of cookouts and pool parties set to happen this weekend, the tradition continues. It also means an extra day off of work, something that everyone likes. As far as I know, the site won’t really be taking Memorial Day Monday off, but I might call a last minute audible on that one. We’ll have to wait and see. But no matter what country you’re from, I hope the weather’s nice by you. Maybe have some friends or family over for good food and conversation? Sounds like a plan to me. Here are some mp3s to get you through it. I’ll recommend tracks from Alberta Cross, AVAN LAVA, Infernal Devices, The Mynabirds, The Spy From Cairo, Woodpecker and The Darcys remix of Zulu Winter. In the Soundcloud section you’ll want to stream tracks from Metric, Onra, SBTRKT and Ski Lodge.

Alberta Cross – Magnolia

AVAN LAVA – Tear It Down

Billy & Dolly – Oh Yeah

Homeless Raga – Looks the Same

Infernal Devices – Passengers

The Mynabirds – Body of Work

Nomadic Firs – Cover Bombs

Passion Pit – Take A Walk (Peking Duk Remix)

Radiation City – Find It of Use (Palmas Remix)

The Spy From Cairo – Alladin Dub

Tango in the Attic – Easy Bones (Inspired Flight Remix)

VSP – Svenska Sauna

White Widow – Miss You Bad

Woodpecker – Every Boy in NY

Zulu Winter – Silver Tongue (The Darcys Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

Fawn – Pixels

Metric – Speed The Collapse

Onra – L.O.V.E

SBTRKT – Gamelena

Ski Lodge – A Game

Zedd – Spectrum (feat. Matthew Koma)

Snapshot Review: Mount Eerie – Clear Moon [P.W. Elverum & Sun]



Phil Elverum has always been a bit of an odd creature. That’s not to call him difficult or some sort of an outcast, though maybe he’d prefer those descriptors. After folding up his band The Microphones almost 10 years ago, he’s operated in the most independent way with the creation of Mount Eerie. He’s foregone signing to any record label, instead starting up P.W. Elverum & Sun as a way to operate. He’s also notoriously hesitant to do any press surrounding his releases, perhaps feeling that those who want to find his music will know where to look. He lives in Anacortes, Washington, which is a somewhat remote town about an hour outside of Seattle. You’d think he’d want to be left alone, except he keeps making and releasing music. His current project is a double album of sorts, two sides of the same coin set to be released four months apart from one another. The first half of that arrives now with Clear Moon. For those that have heard a Mount Eerie or Microphones record before, there are a lot of familiar markers that have shown up in Elverum’s work before that continue on this new album. There are the short instrumental and experimental tracks that have no title other than “(something)”, there’s the gratuitous use of the “pt. 2” signifier even if pt. 1 is nowhere to be found, and let’s not forget about some similarly worded song titles. None of these things truly matter in the end, but they are part of the guy’s unique charm. The last Mount Eerie record Wind’s Poem was a small departure for Elverum, taking a new love of heavy metal to heart and bringing a new ferocity to an otherwise docile sound. Almost amusingly, though the melodies got bigger and much louder on that album, his vocals maintained his classic calm and even mumble the entire time. The paradox was palpable but engaging all the same. The metal and volume get largely shelved on Clear Moon, in favor of the more sedate, folk-based beauty that Lost Wisdom espoused. Only the brash, horn-infused “Lone Bell” pumps some serious and somewhat terrifying muscle into the proceedings. It brings forth the sort of intensity nightmares are made of, but more the kind where there’s something terribly wrong in paradise but you’re not exactly sure what. Unsettling is a great descriptor not only for that song, but the entire record. The underlying theme is all about trying to find what defines “home” for you personally. Opening track “Through the Trees, Pt. 2” has Elverum on a quest across mountains, wilderness and even the Internet to try and find things “just to remind myself that I briefly live.” That follows with “The Place Lives” and “The Place I Live,” wherein he gazes upon nature and questions his importance in the scheme of the universe. The poetic lyrics are worded precisely enough to keep you questioning whether he feels bothered or content with where he’s at. They’re also designed to probe our own consciences and provide us with some food for thought. The places we live and the homes we build for ourselves are in many ways as temporary as life. It’s a comfort to be able to settle somewhere and form a life around it, but how much of an impact on the world we have in that setting is entirely our own choice. Through beautiful bits like “Yawning Sky” and heavier dirges like “Over Dark Water”, Clear Moon does a sharp job of balancing the light and the dark so we’re not completely overwhelmed on either front. Elverum says that the other Mount Eerie record he’ll be releasing this year, titled Ocean Roar, will be darker, weirder and heavier. Let’s just hope it doesn’t lose any of the lush beauty and contemplative lyrics that this one has in spades.

Mount Eerie – House Shape

Mount Eerie – Lone Bell

Buy Clear Moon from P.W. Elverum & Sun

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 5-24-12

If you’re not already familiar with my good friend Marissa Nadler’s work, her records are definitely worth your hard-earned money. Each of her most recent full lengths has improved on the one before it, and she hit a new peak last year with her self-titled record. When I talked to her last summer, she mentioned that she recorded around 18 songs for her album, and not all of them made the cut. It was less that they weren’t good enough and more about the way they all fit together. At the time, she also said that the extra songs would appear on an EP that’d be out in the near future. Well, it’s been about 10 months, but the Sister EP will finally be out on Tuesday. It is intended as a companion piece to her self-titled album, however it can also be enjoyed on its own. I’m pleased to be able to present a full stream of the new EP right here. Please give it a listen, and buy it if you like what you hear.

Marissa Nadler – The Sister

As for today’s Pick Your Poison, don’t miss downloading tracks from Anabot (covering Japandroids wonderfully), Foxygen, Ozarks, The Shrouded Strangers, The Slowdown, and Stagnant Pools.

Anabot – The House That Heaven Built (Japandroids cover)

Black Pistol Fire – Long Tall Sally

Chris Forsyth – East Kensington Run Down

Darlingside – Sweet and Low

Foxygen – Make It Known

Imperial China – Limbs

Jhameel – Shadow of a Man

Lioness – They Clip the Wings of Birds

Ozarks – Pyramids of Love

Preauxx – Don’t Be Upset

The Shrouded Strangers – Drinking the Spider Silk

The Slowdown – A Mirror, A Torch

Stagnant Pools – Dead Sailor

Theo Berndt – It’s Complicated

Will Bailey – Spider

World Blanket – Got to Give It Up (Thin Lizzy cover)

SOUNDCLOUD

Atlas Genius – Back Seat

Brendan Ryan – Scientist

The Joys of Sleeping – Dude York Pt.1

Kara Ali – Whisper My Name

Leisure – Plastic Soul

Saint Saviour – I Call This Home

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 5-23-12

Let me use this time in the middle of the week to play that fun weekly game where I tell you that this site has a Facebook page. There you can find links to all the posts on this site, along with additional “bonus” content that includes music videos and special Spotify-curated playlists. I’m not asking for your personal information or something, and I’m not going to spam you if you click the “Like” button. The goal is to provide another way to connect with you and keep up with the latest happenings in the music world. If that doesn’t interest you, then that’s fine too. No pressure. Let’s just enjoy today’s Pick Your Poison and we’ll take it from there. You might want to put a close ear on tracks from Beachwood Sparks, How to Dress Well, The Late Show, Rec Center, Diplo’s remix of Sleigh Bells, The Sun Parade and The Wild Rumpus. In the Soundcloud section there’s some good tracks to stream from No Joy and Teengirl Fantasy.

Beachwood Sparks – Forget the Song

Dubious Ranger – 1999

Esperi – Come Dine With Me

How to Dress Well – Ocean Floor for Everything

Kitten – Cut It Out

The Late Show – Take A Chance

The Projection – Florida

Rec Center – Soft Pursuit

Red Collar – American Me

Sleigh Bells – Demons (Diplo Remix)

Subaqueous – Gypsy Splash

The Sun Parade – Need You By My Side

Volkova Sisters – Prince Migdale

The Wild Rumpus – Moonshine & Crosses

SOUNDCLOUD

Arcane Roots – Habibty

Elspeth – The Taster

Get People – Something Better

No Joy – Junior

Teengirl Fantasy – Motif

Touch Tone – Home Away From Home

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 5-22-12

Every Tuesday I like providing you with a list of artists that are releasing new EPs or full length records. As this week is no exception, have a glance at the wealth of options that may or may not whet your musical whistle. New stuff this week from Amateur Love, Blue Foundation, Cold Specks, Cory Branan, Craft Spells, The Cult, The Danks, Dope Body, El-P, Exitmusic, Garbage, Gossip, Hallelujah the Hills, JBM, John Mayer, John Zorn, Kimbra, Modern Time Machines, Mount Eerie, Rec Center, Slash, Young Man and Zulu Winter. As far as today’s Pick Your Poison goes, there’s a number of good tracks worth the seconds spent downloading. Those include songs from Alan Watts, Amanda Palmer, The Broken Needles, Twin Shadow’s remix of Hooray for Earth, Jenee Halstead, Leonard Friend, Lemonade and Teenage Sweater. In the Soundcloud section enjoy streaming tracks from Dressy Bessy, Girls Names and Vince Clarke’s remix of Liars.

Alan Watts – Lee’s Child

Amanda Palmer – Do It With A Rockstar

The Amends – Come & See

Bijan – Blow

The Broken Needles – Cheap Gin

Hooray for Earth – No Love (Twin Shadow Remix)

Hyper Heart – Eris

Janka Nabay and the Bubu Gang – Feba

Jenee Halstead – Raised By Wolves

The Last Days of 1984 – River’s Edge

Leonard Friend – Every Woman

Lemonade – SOftkiss

Silver Medallion – Wild Ones (Flo Rida cover)

Superspecter – Reversals at Land and Sea

Teenage Sweater – Coconut Water

SOUNDCLOUD

Adrian Villaverde – Articul8

Dressy Bessy – Hey, Alice!

Girls Names – A Troubled See

Left of Manila – At Your Side

Liars – No.1 Against The Rush (Vince Clarke Remix)

My Preserver – King Jesus

Album Review: Beach House – Bloom [Sub Pop/Bella Union]



In the span of six years, Beach House have gone everywhere and nowhere at the same time. Their 2006 self-titled debut was met with warm embraces by virtually everyone that heard Alex Scally and Victoria Legrand’s soft and somber take on bedroom pop. The interweaving of carefully plucked electric guitar and lackadaisical keyboards next to Legrand’s emotional vocal style made for a grand base to build off of, and that’s essentially what they’ve spent their last couple records doing. Their popularity has continued to increase with each new effort, and in late 2009 they signed a new record deal with major indie label Sub Pop that only bolstered that profile more. It helped that their third record Teen Dream turned out to be one of 2010’s best, sending their subdued melodies skywards with all the grace of a freshly lit firework. The moving parts remained the same, but the dynamics had changed. It stands to reason that album put the band at a precipice, and the only way they could go from there was down. The real surprise is that their new record Bloom does nothing of the sort. If anything, the album title alone suggests that Beach House has finally blossomed into one of the most talented bands making music today. That the music is tighter and better than ever before only helps to prove that.

Perhaps the first thing you should know about Bloom is that you probably won’t fully grasp its power from a single listen alone. It’s a complicated piece best experienced in one 60 minute chunk rather than in singles or jumping around to perceived highlights. Each track is in many ways its own highlight, but together they build upon one another both instrumentally and emotionally. The main contrast with Teen Dream is that record primarily took the idea of a break-up and spent each track hashing and rehashing through the scars left behind. Great (and sad) though it was, the central idea often tried to cram too much into one song, and the consistent commentary on being mentally wounded by another person seems rather simplistic in retrospect. That was sort of the idea though, as Legrand and Scally said in interviews for that last album. They felt as if their first two records were a bit too slow moving and emotionally terse, and the idea with the third one was to open up a wider expanse with greater heft. Successful though it was, the thought of “too much, too fast” also applies quite well. Bloom seeks to smooth out those not very rough edges by keeping the big songs but trying to do less with them. They’re no longer shoving a truckload of food for thought down your throat in 3 minutes, but instead are exercising portion control.

The lyrical ideas and concepts that Legrand sings about are better organized and clearer on the whole, even as they tackle more abstract subject matter. What do you do and how do you feel about the loss of innocence in your youth? Can you hang onto those qualities that brought you such joyful moments as a kid? How does the divorce of your parents or your sibling falling victim to disease affect your life? Those aren’t lighthearted topics, but Beach House have never been a lighthearted band. Still, like any good memory bank there are thoughts on good times too; those fever dream moments that put a calm smile on your face. There’s an intimacy to them as well, because the emotional response such nostalgia triggers is unique to your own personal experience. This record does a fantastically subtle job of lending itself to become exactly what you want it to be at certain times. In that respect its brilliance lies with how much of yourself you invest in it. As a kid, did you ever have a toy or stuffed animal that you spoke to and had very personal “conversations” with? You hay have shared things with that inanimate object that nobody else knows about even today. Yet that toy or stuffed animal was manufactured in a plant somewhere and there were millions more like it shipped around the world to kids who also shared their unique hopes and fears with them. What we were looking for then was a sympathetic ear that passed no judgment and didn’t talk back. Bloom is kind of like the adult version of that. You can’t hug an mp3 (even if you can do that with a CD or vinyl record) or go on adventures with it, but you can listen carefully as Legrand’s voice draws you in and puts you at ease. Her words, though dark at times, are plainspoken and broad enough to give you the impression she’s singing to you and only you. “What comes after this momentary bliss?” she asks into the void on “Myth”. Instead of pondering that future, perhaps it’s best to simply enjoy the present.

For all the emotion and careful arrangement that went into making Bloom such a solid, singular piece of music, it winds up being Beach House’s most pop-friendly work to date. The verse-chorus-verse structure is in full effect on each track, and the hooks are hammered remarkably hard to make sure they stick in your head. Listen to the album enough times and you’ll be able to hear the chorus of almost every song in your head simply by reading its title. Strong as they all are, it’s “Wild” that earns the first spot on the mantle next to the band’s other classic tracks like “Master of None”, “Gila” and “Zebra”. Scally’s guitar work bounces off the figurative walls as the synths glide just beneath them with all the grace of a piece of ice on a hardwood floor. The drum machine motors along in classic Beach House style, and Legrand’s vocals both soar and ache at the same time. Somewhere around the middle of the record, it’s tempting to get lost in tracks like “The Hours” and “Troublemaker”, both of which don’t quite have the same effect as everything leading up to them. The purpose those songs serve though is to build towards the next peak. Like any number of post-rock bands that start a song quietly and get louder until the tension results in the bursting of a musical dam, that moment arrives in all its glory on “Wishes”. It’s a remarkable track on its own, but when paired with the couple songs leading into it there’s just a little more shimmer and sparkle in its step.

In more ways than one, shimmer and sparkle is a great way to describe Bloom as a whole. The experience of listening to it is akin to viewing a sunset on a placid lake or running through a lawn sprinkler on a hot summer’s day. Its gauzy beauty envelops you in its arms and comforts as much as it unsettles lyrically. Alex Scally and Victoria Legrand have found a way to make their already established sound come off as fresher and more gorgeous than ever before without sacrificing their best qualities. Very few artists have it in them to conjure up such a brilliant record in the direct wake of what many believed was a career watermark a mere two years earlier. This is their 1-2 punch like Radiohead’s OK Computer and Kid A or The Beatles’ Revolver and Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. People will not only be talking about this album for the rest of 2012, but likely well beyond it too. For a record whose title and subject matter are all about the impermanence of life, love and relationships, Beach House have made something that may just last forever.

Buy Bloom from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 5-21-12

Beep! Beep! Beep! Class of 2012 update time! Let’s take a moment to check in with some of my Class of 2012 artists to see what they’re up to. First up, Kreayshawn. I’ve been a little hesitant to talk about Kreayshawn, possibly because I chose her for rather nefarious reasons. I don’t consider myself an admirer of her music, but I think she’s going to go far in the music industry i.e. “become popular”. Step one in that process will be when her debut full length album Somethin’ Bout Kreay finally arrives in stores on August 14th. In the meantime, she just unleashed a new music video for her song “Breakfast”, which will be on that aforementioned album. Check that out if you’re intrigued. Next up, Nicolas Jaar. While we wait for him to unleash The Prism, he went ahead and pieced together a 2-hour “Essential Mix” for the BBC. It’s an excellent collection of songs that includes some original Jaar pieces as well. You can download the entire thing simply by clicking here. As for Azealia Banks, I’ve got no real news to report on her, save to say that her 1991 EP will officially be released (after delays) next Tuesday, followed by a mixtape called Fantastic on July 4th, and her debut full length Broke With Expensive Taste will arrive this fall. Have you seen A$AP Rocky’s video for “Goldie” yet? In case you missed it, it’s NSFW and viewable here. Oh, and how’d you like to hear a new Frank Ocean track? This one’s tentatively called “Summer Remains”, and he recorded this performance video of it at home. Finally, for you Lana Del Rey fans out there, you can now buy a handbag she designed for Mulberry. For those who have $1,250 in pocket change lying around. Anyways, that’s all the updates I’ll be giving for now. We’ll check in with these guys and gals of the Class of 2012 again soon enough, including the ones I’ve neglected to mention here. Now onto today’s Pick Your Poison. Highlights today include tracks from Andrew Johnston, Elite Gymnastics, Guided By Voices, JOhn Maus, Markus Mehr, School Knights, Unicycle Loves You and Young Moon. In the Soundcloud section you can stream good songs from Big Science and Castanets, among others.

Andrew Johnston – Beat Down Your Stereo

Crystal Shipss – My Dark Slimy Soul

Elite Gymnastics – Life/Trap

Guided By Voices – Class Clown Spots A UFO

John Maus – Mental Breakdown

LRN GRN – Quilts

Markus Mehr – Flaming Youth

Michael the Blind – Sympathies

Rachael Sage – Invisible Light

Saint Motel – 1997

School Knights – Powerslut

Sons of Fathers – Burning Days

Stagnant Pools – Dead Sailor

Twin Trip – Man on the Moon

Unicycle Loves You – Bitch Eye

Volcano! – Long Gone

Young Moon – Winds Light

SOUNDCLOUD

Big Science – Blind Our Eyes

Castanets – I’m No Stranger to the Rain

Cosmo Jarvis – Love This

Hunt in Pairs – Prayers

Kevin Daniels – Crazy Kind of Life

Pick Your Poison: Friday 5-18-12

Ah, good ‘ol Friday. I seem to recall not being too psyched about the impending weekend last week. I think I was in some sort of funk. I took a trip to New York and it threw my whole schedule and lifestyle out of whack. I did get to visit with family and do copious amounts of drinking though, so those were the positives. It’s nice this weekend to get back to normal though. For me that means plenty of movies, couch time, alcohol and seeing friends. I wonder how I’ll feel about all that 10 years from now. It’s great for the time being, I say. Before you head out for some equally ambitious fun, let’s tackle this edition of Pick Your Poison together. I’ll recommend tracks from Blackchords, Enola Fall, Holograms, Lunic, SUnglasses, VHS or BETA, and Videoing. You also probably don’t want to miss streaming songs from Mystery Jets and Summer Camp in the Soundcloud section.

Blackchords – Dance Dance Dance

Blind Benny – No Honor

California Wives – Marianne

The Child of Lov – Heal (Demo)

Dearling Physique – Terrible Mind

Enola Fall – Andromeda

Fixers – Crystals (Memory Tapes Remix)

Holograms – Chasing My Mind

Hypnosis Ghosts – Erase Yourself

Infantree – Fibber

Jon Lindsay – Vapor

Lunic – Far Away

Sunglasses – Swim

Teepee – Time Meant Nothing

Two Wounded Birds – To Be Young

VHS or BETA – Eyes Dub

Videoing – Night Watch

SOUNDCLOUD

The Dig – I Already Forgot Everything You Said

Elspeth – Quick Exit

Eyrensis – Taipe

Mystery Jets – Greatest Hits

Summer Camp – Life

Tashaki Miyaki – Hollywood Forever Cemetery Sings (Father John Misty cover)

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 5-17-12

I’m not much into disco, particularly because it had its day about 50 years ago, but I do have sincere admiration for a number of songs from that era. Two of my personal favorites are “I Feel Love” and “Last Dance”, both by Donna Summer. In that sense I found it unfortunate to hear she died early this morning at age 63 after a battle with cancer. She may not have been a personal hero of mine, nor was she a very relevant force in my musical life (which Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys was), but it’s still sad to know a music legend has passed away. Her best days were behind her, but the music lives on and continues to get played in clubs and wedding receptions around the world. Her impact has been great, and that’s a big reason why she’s also known as the Queen of Disco. I send my condolences to her family, and wish them the best in coping with this tragedy. She was apparently working on a new record before she died, so there’s a very good chance we’ll hear at least pieces of it in the near future. Speaking of the future, perhaps the next Donna Summer can be found somewhere in this pile of Pick Your Poison. Probably not, but you never know. Today I’ll recommend tracks from Baby Monster, Doldrums, Island Twins, MV & EE, Physical Therapy, Purling Hiss, and Six Organs of Admittance. Oh, and there’s a new song from Yeasayer in the Soundcloud section for your streaming pleasure.

Amanda Mair – Sense (Meridians & Croquet Club Remix)

Baby Monster – City of Lovers

Bravestation – Tides of the Summit

Doldrums – Jump Up

The Driftwood Singers – Come Across the Tracks

Island Twins – Creepaway

Jen Schande – Nice Fez

Jhameel – Are You Free

Josephine Foster & The Victor Herrero Band – Puerto de Santa Maria

Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires – Opelika

Light Asylum – Dark Allies (Live on Snacky Tunes)

Lightouts – Push (The Cure cover)

MV & EE – Sweet Sure Gone

Physical Therapy – Record Sales

Purling Hiss – Lolita

Revolution, I Love YOu – Cotton Shirts

Six Organs of Admittance – Waswasa

Team Me – Weathervanes and Chemicals

SOUNDCLOUD

Ant Brooks – Skreamer

Clubfeet – City of Light

Helium Robots – Silver

Julia Stone – You’re The One That I Want

Yeasayer – Henrietta

Snapshot Review: Best Coast – The Only Place [Mexican Summer]



Based solely on material from Best Coast’s debut album Crazy for You, we learned four main things about frontwoman Bethany Cosentino: She likes boys (most specifically, Nathan Williams of Wavves), California, weed, and cats. It was remarkably easy to boil her down to those characteristics, and she spent quite a bit of time touring and doing interviews in an effort to break free from those labels. Delving deeper into her psyche via such interviews and her strikingly entertaining Twitter feed, we’ve learned a bit more about her, and it all sets us up quite nicely for Best Coast’s sophmore record The Only Place. First and foremost, Cosentino has said many times that this second album is more “emo” and “pop-punk” than the band’s debut. If you’ve been keeping a careful eye on what Best Coast has been up to the last couple years, perhaps you saw one of their shows where they covered Blink 182. Such moments give you a pretty good idea where some of the band’s sonic inspiration stems from. They’ve given up the lo-fi grunge of the first album and hired producer Jon Brion to add plenty of polish and space. In some respects a bit of the mystery is lost by removing the instrumental layers of fuzz generated by Bobb Bruno’s excellent guitar work. Such purposeful flaws only heightened Best Coast’s overall aesthetic as a crew of plainspoken slackers that were just like us. With everything on The Only Place coming off as pristine, it creates a new imperative that they have to take themselves much more seriously and professionally. The good news is that the melodies seem to take that thought to heart, as the guitars jangle, the vocals soar, and the hooks grab you by the ears and won’t let go. Their sonic palette has expanded a bit too, at least enough to incorporate light blushes of alt-country. It would have worked even better had they thrown in at least a little slide guitar or fiddle, but songs like “My Life”, “No One Like You” and “Dreaming My Life Away” feel like they’re channeling Neko Case in overall tone anyways. That’s probably Cosentino’s hope, though she’d be even more ecstatic to generate comparisons to her role model and personal hero, Stevie Nicks. She comes strikingly close on “Do You Still Love Me Like You Used To”, particularly on the multi-harmonized chorus, however that song and others are cursed with one major flaw: the lyrics. If you’re going to clean up your sound and strive for something more professional, you’ve got to back away at least a little bit from lines like, “The sun was high/and so was I” or “You say that/we’re just friends/but I want this/til the end”. Cosentino has changed her writing style a bit, moving away from the lackadaisical summer fun themes and towards the more personal and emotional. Most of the songs on The Only Place feel like pages pulled from a diary, but from a girl in her early teens and not her mid-twenties. Remarks such as, “My mom was right/I don’t wanna die/I wanna live my life,” on “My Life” are simple to a fault. The opening title track keeps the never ending cycle of songs about California going, and like a pseudo-cousin to Katy Perry’s “California Girls”, features lines like, “We’ve got the ocean/Got the babes/Got the sun/We’ve got the waves.” Don’t be shocked if you hear that eyeroll-worthy beast in a commercial soon, probably for the State of California Tourism Board. Why Cosentino’s lyrics are so poorly written has less to do with how uncomplicated they are and more to do with sheer predictability. Nine times out of ten you can guess what the line-ending rhyme is going to be, and while it may be easier to sing along as a result, that sort of blandness really isn’t helping anyone. A little more energy or even some experimentation in the songs would have offset the lyrical damage a bit, but unfortunately there’s not a whole lot of that to be found on The Only Place. If Best Coast really is planning to continue to grow into a full-fledged, professional band, they’ve still got some work left to do. The majority of that falls straight on Cosentino, who might want to spend just a little less time messing around on Twitter and a little more time trying to avoid becoming a cliche.

Best Coast – The Only Place

Buy The Only Place from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 5-16-12

The last few weeks I’ve been saving this mention for Fridays, but in an effort to get out ahead of it (and because I love today’s set of mp3s) I’ll tell you now. It’s been a short bit since I started the Faronheit Facebook page, and for how much traffic this site does plus my Twitter feed, that Facebook page certainly seems lacking in “Like”s. You certainly don’t have to commit to the site via every social media platform you use, but I do like to try and post a few extras and exclusives in each of this site’s many arms to keep you engaged and engorged with content. So manage your clicks however you want, just know that I’m trying to enhance and educate at every turn. I hope you feel that’s a worthwhile pursuit. For example, today’s Pick Your Poison. There are some great highlights including tracks from Best Practices, Delicate Steve, The Imagineers (who are on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson all week live from Scotland), Letterist, My Great Ghost, The Tallest Man on Earth, Total Warr and Violens. New tracks from HEALTH and The Walkmen make the Soundcloud streaming section worth a look today too.

Best Practices – Future Cougar

Brooklyn Horseman – Hold Me

Capitol 6 – Cold Ride

Delicate Steve – Two Lovers

Foster the People – Call It What You Want (Ron Flieger Remix)

Hands and Knees – Dreamt

The Imagineers – The Legend of John the Terror (Notorious)

Kalen Nash – White Oak

Kyla La Grange – Vampire Smile (Seasfire Remix)

Letterist – Five Alarm

Little,Big – Best Death Party

My Great Ghost – Plain Sight

Of the Opera – Lost in the Ravine

The Tallest Man on Earth – 1904

Total Warr – xxx HATE xxx

Violens – Totally True

Yournalist – Fast Lane

SOUNDCLOUD

Auto Body – Holding Out

Flight Facilities – With You (ft. Grovesnor)

HEALTH – Tears

Ms Mr – Hurricane

The Sexual Outlaws – I Made A Promise

The Walkmen – The House You Made

Snapshot Review: Here We Go Magic – A Different Ship [Secretly Canadian]



The progression of Here We Go Magic over the course of their now three albums has been nothing short of fascinating. Luke Temple started the project like many others, with some recording equipment in his bedroom. The band’s 2009 self-titled album resulted directly from those sessions, a supremely lo-fi yet strikingly catchy examination of the freak folk and psychedelic genres. If songs like “Fangela” and “Tunnelvision” didn’t get stuck in your head after a couple spins, there was something wrong with you. Things progressed as you might expect – attracting all sorts of attention, Temple expanded the band out into a full-fledged five piece, though the second HWGM record Pigeons was recorded in a house with only slightly better equipment. The fidelity remained relatively the same as the first album, even as the arrangements were a lot more complicated and busy. The band’s sound changed somewhat too, abandoning the white noise instrumentals and most of the African polyrhythms in favor of something more synth-based and dream pop in nature. Good as that record was, it also made the band seem just a little indecisive about what musical direction they hoped to take for the future. They lacked conviction and a truly unified sound. When you hear the wild mixture of echoing drums that begin HWGM’s third album A Different Ship, there’s a remarkable familiarity to it that raises your spirits for just a minute in the hopes that this might finally be the moment when everything comes together perfectly as part of Temple’s master plan. The initial shock arrives on the second track, once the instrumental intro finishes off. “Hard to Be Close” glides out of its gates with clarity and whimsy that tells you they used an actual studio with an actual producer this time. The dirt and grime of the past two records are gone, and Temple’s vocal sits at the front of the mix. It also feels a lot like puberty arrived since that last full length, as Temple’s voice has dropped a couple octaves from the falsetto he typically uses. Once again this band has gone through more sonic growing pains, still unsettled as to what they want to sound like. They jump genres on a whim and while it’s impressive to hear them reasonably balance everything with some degree of uniformity, you come away with no better idea of where this band is headed than you did at the start of the album. The icy drift of “Alone But Moving” feels like a direct tribute to Radiohead, with Temple breaking out his Thom Yorke-ian falsetto and Nigel Godrich producing it. After delving into some serious yet unremarkable psychedelia for a few tracks, “How Do I Know” suddenly roars to life like it belongs on an entirely different record. The song itself is great and catchy, but it really serves as a red flag by pointing out the flaws with much of the rest of the album. By cleaning up their sound and getting Godrich behind the boards, the curtain behind Here We Go Magic is lifted, and we’re left not with the great and powerful Oz but instead a regular man with a special effects budget. It’d help if there was some semblance of deep emotion or heft to fill in the gaps the lack of instrumentation leave behind, but alas Temple prefers to keep his distance from those things. That leads to something like the sprawling finale “A Different Ship”, which spends most of its 8+ minute running time in some adult contemporary haze that devolves into a largely do-nothing drone. Like so much of the entire record, it feels lost at sea with no real idea where it’s headed. Occasionally land will be spotted and you get a nice spark of fun and inspiration, but it vanishes almost as quickly as it arrives. If this is what it’s like on A Different Ship, perhaps the better idea would be to return to your original one.

Here We Go Magic – How Do I Know

Here We Go Magic – Make Up Your Mind

Buy A Different Ship from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 5-15-12

On Tuesdays I like to give you a quick rundown of what artists have new records arriving in stores, just in case you’ve been eagerly awaiting a purchase. This week’s an exceptionally good one, so let’s get started. This week’s new releases include full lengths and EPs from Alexander Tucker, Andre Williams and the Sadies, Apollo Ghosts, Beach House, Best Coast, Birthmark, Cornershop, Craft Spells, The Cribs, Garbage, Guided By Voices, Hot Water Music, Japandroids, Josephine Foster and Victor Herrero, Lee Bains III, Little,Big, Meiko, MV & EE, Parlovr, Plushgun, Richard Hawley, Santana, Simian Mobile Disco, Squarepusher, Tenacious D, Tu Fawning, Violens, White Fence and Willie Nelson. Also, the My Bloody Valentine remastered catalogue is out today too, in case you don’t already own it/want a slightly tweaked and updated copy. In terms of today’s edition of Pick Your Poison, I do have a few recommendations for you. To start, you might enjoy tracks from Azealia Banks, John Butler Trio, Milkman, The Modern Airline, Rainer & Calexico, and XOV. Oh, and lest I forget, Sallie Ford & the Sound Outside will be playing at The Hideout in Chicago with Dark Dark Dark one week from today. Listen to a song from them below, and buy a ticket to that show here. In the Soundcloud section I absolutely recommend that you stream tracks from Oneohtrix Point Never and Nigel Godrich’s music project Ultraista. Wavves’ remix of Mr. Little Jeans is pretty solid too.

Alekesam – Summer Jams

Azealia Banks – Jumanji

The Hawthorne Effect – Drunk Mistake

Helium Robots – Lacrimosa (Blamma! Blamma! Remix)

Ian McGlynn – Gold Morning Mend (TEEEL Remix)

Jericho A.D. – Komputer

John Butler Trio – Mystery Man

La Chansons – Love Dream (Heaven Remix)

Milkman – Aeroplane

The Modern Airline – Accelerated Evolution

Omega Swan – Get Along

Peyton Tochterman – Smile

Rainer & Calexico – Be Prepared

Sallie Ford & the Sound Outside – Danger

Scribbleface – One Drop Forward

Wavre – Acid Parade

XOV – The Evil Eye

SOUNDCLOUD

Airbird – Trust

Allies For Everyone – Move When I Run

Mr. Little Jeans – Runaway (Wavves Remix)

Louis Blaise – Left Something in My Car

Oneohtrix Point Never – I Only Have Eyes for You

Ultraista – Small Talk

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