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Pick Your Poison: Friday 4-13-12

I’m happy to say we’ve reached another weekend. Breathe that sigh of relief, assuming you don’t have to work. Grab a glass or bottle of your favorite beverage, sit down and perhaps enjoy some good music? As usual, Pick Your Poison has you covered. Today I’m recommending tracks from Brother Dege, Channel Cairo, Diamond Rugs, Island Twins, Prinzhorn Dance School, Sleep Party People, and These United States (who coincidentally play a sold out show at Metro with Trampled By Turtles tonight, Chicago friends). In the Soundcloud section I’ll advise you to stream songs from Crystal Fighters, Henry Clay People, Me and My Drummer, and Neneh Cherry’s cover of Suicide. Have a great weekend! (Oh, and by the way, be on the look out for weird stuff – it’s Friday the 13th!)

Afrobeta – Love Is Magic (DiscoTech Extended Remix)

Brother Dege – Wehyah

Channel Cairo – A Year

Diamond Rugs – Country Mile

Doc J – Contagious

Island Twins – The Wolf’s Lair

Little Comets – Waiting in the Shadows in the Dead of Night (Acoustic)

The Neighborhood – Female Robbery

Newtimers – January Love (Yus Remix)

Prinzhorn Dance School – I Want You

Punches – Can I Live? (Skeet Skeet Remix)

Sleep Party People – Chin

The Soundmen – Funny Feeling (ft. All Dom Wrong)

Strangers – Shine On You (Sensual Harassment Remix)

These United States – Born Young

SOUNDCLOUD

Crystal Fighters – Earth Island

Danny Glover With Tits – Campout

Henry Clay People – 25 For the Rest of Our Lives

Lykta – Sweeter

Me And My Drummer – You’re A Runner

Neneh Cherry & The Thing – Dream Baby Dream (Suicide cover)

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 4-12-12

On the record, I hate allergy season. Pollen counts are at dangerously high levels across much of the country right now, and those of us with allergies are suffering because of it. I’ve been a sloppy, congested mess all week long and am none too happy about it. I’m grateful that I’m not one of those hay fever-type people, sneezing like I just fell into a mountain of pepper, but it’s still sheer frustration of trying to keep my airways clear for an extended period of time. If you’ve got allergies, I hope you’re faring better than me through this time of year. Thankfully my ears are working just fine, and I hope yours are too for the sake of today’s Pick Your Poison. There are some strong tracks today from Anabot, Cheers Elephant, Deep Time, Ed Schrader’s Music Beat, Elisa Luu, Modern Time Machines, Sonreal and Warm Weather. In the Soundcloud section there’s plenty worth streaming too, with tracks from Friends, The Paper Jets, and Simian Mobile Disco.

Anabot – I Am Not Afraid of the Dark

Apollo Ghosts – What Are Your Influences?

Black Dots – French Thieves

Cheers Elephant – Falling Out

David Ramos – Digital Memory

Deep Time – Clouds

Ed Schrader’s Music Beat – My Mind Is Broken

Elisa Luu – Se fosse per me

Garrison Starr – Between the Devil’s Rain and A Dying Language

Modern Time Machines – Lucky Lady

Picture Book – Sunshine (June Miller Remix)

Shake Aletti – Lights & Sparks (Mighty Mouse Dub)

Sonreal – Alone

Warm Weather – So Far/Vertigo

Zoon Van Snook – Sculptress

SOUNDCLOUD

Friends – Mind Control

Housse de Racket – ‘Til I Die (DIY Version)

The Paper Jets – Cooking Up an Accident

Porter Robinson – Language

Radio Radio – Sunrise/All Inclusive War Tour (feat. Poncho French)

Simian Mobile Disco – Put Your Hands Together

Snapshot Review: Lotus Plaza – Spooky Action at a Distance [Kranky]



Bradford Cox is often seen as the brilliant mastermind behind Deerhunter and Atlas Sound. The amount of music he’s released in the last few years has been astounding, with seven full length records and a couple EPs since 2007. Worst of all, nearly every single bit of it has been very, very good. You could say he’s been putting his Deerhunter bandmates to shame. Most people couldn’t even tell you the names of the other three guys in Deerhunter. Yet that band very much remains a collaborative effort, and it’s likely the loss of one of them would be felt in subsequent records. One person that isn’t taking his role in Deerhunter lying down is guitarist Lockett Pundt, who has done a nice job establishing the fuzzier and more psychedelic elements of Deerhunter’s sound. He maintains his own solo project Lotus Plaza. The Floodlight Collective was the first Lotus Plaza full length, released in 2009 to what could best be described as polite applause. To put it another way, the album struggled to break free from the ambient, shoegaze-laden haze it maintained, drifting by in a nice but unremarkable fashion. Lotus Plaza’s second long player Spooky Action at a Distance seeks to change how the project is perceived a bit by moving away from amorphous blobs of ambient noise and placing an emphasis on more traditional songwriting and arrangements. That’s not to call the album conventional or an easy listen, but it has more easily definable boundaries and a few stand out moments. Virtually every song is propulsive and swirling in that good, psych-pop sort of way that Deerhunter has been doing with relative ease for years now. Lotus Plaza is denser and more shoegaze-inspired, though it’s difficult to describe the album as buried in guitar fuzz in a My Bloody Valentine sort of way. Pundt’s vocals are strikingly up-front and clear, and the melodies maintain strict, often looped patterns that really stick with you after awhile. After the drifting and out of place “Untitled” intro, the drum roll of “Strangers” sucks you in and the guitar gymnastics keeps you there. The percussion base on “Out of Touch” has quite the Animal Collective vibe to it in the best sort of way, and “Remember Our Days” holds this jangly slacker element to it reminiscent of Pavement filtered through psychedelic glasses. It’s good to hear some acoustic guitars used on “Dusty Rhodes” and closer “Black Buzz”, both of which provide necessary moments of calm amid the fray. Even a long number like the 6.5 minute “Jet Out of the Tundra” skates by and feels much shorter than it is as Pundt keeps adding more elements to the mix without disturbing the overall melody. The entire record actually does a nice job of cruising along without any detours into the staid and boring. You may not fully grasp the subtle nature of Spooky Action at a Distance the first or second time around listening through it, but a closer focus on each song reveals gems you probably didn’t notice originally. Sometimes the best albums are ones that sneak up on you. This is one of those.


Buy Spooky Action at a Distance from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 4-11-12

Wednesdays are the one day every week where I like to remind everyone that Faronheit has a Facebook page. It’s there as just another way for you to find out about content on this site without actually having to visit. I’m also working hard on ideas for extra content like music videos and such you’ll be able to check out that wouldn’t otherwise appear here on the site. So I encourage you to log onto Facebook and the site’s page and click the “Like” button. I know I’d very much appreciate it. As for your daily dose of Pick Your Poison mp3s, there’s plenty to like and appreciate here too. Be sure to check out and download songs from Aesop Rock, Black Lips, The Creepy Crawlies, The Sanctuaries, Spank Rock as remixed by Shabazz Palaces, and Torche. In the Soundcloud section, you’ll want to stream songs from Airbird, Clams Casino’s remix of Joyce, and Storms OV Jupiter.

Aesop Rock – Zero Dark Thirty

Anthony Da Costa – St. Therese

Bijan – Molly

Black Lips – Dance With You

The Creepy Crawlies – Mollie the Maggot Part II

Dorsh – The Mulatto (Afrodite)

Josefina Sanner – Don’t Stop

Lost Lander – Afraid of Summer
Lost Lander – Cold Feet

The Sanctuaries – Soft Crime

Spank Rock – Car Song (ft. Santigold) (Shabazz Palaces Remix)

TalkFine – Water’s Gettin’ Too Hot

Terrible Feelings – Intruders

Torche – Kicking

SOUNDCLOUD

Airbird – Goodnight

Joyce – Keep The Lights On (Clams Casino Remix)

Mombi – Time Goes

My Tiger My Timing – Wasteland

Shields – All I Know

Storms OV Jupiter – Dying Screams Of An Imploding Star

Lollapalooza 2012: The Lineup


It’s that time of year, friends: Lollapalooza lineup time. Spring is in the air, but soon enough summer will be here and so will Chicago’s great music festivals. Unless you bought tickets well in advance, I’m sure this year’s Lollapalooza lineup will be the deciding factor as to whether or not you make your way to Grant Park this August 3-5. Ticket prices have risen this year, no doubt in part because the supreme tax deal the festival was getting from the City of Chicago has all but gone away. Early bird tickets have all sold out, and general 3-day passes are currently on sale for $230 (service fees included). Is it worth the cost? Well, that’s for you to decide. The full lineup is listed below, and is headlined by Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Black Keys, Black Sabbath, Jack White, Florence + the Machine, and At the Drive-In. Okay, so those last 2 headliners don’t really seem like they deserve the official “headlining” slot. I’d argue that The Shins and Sigur Ros are more deserving of headlining than Florence + the Machine and At the Drive-In are. That said, I’m still excited that reunion acts Black Sabbath, At the Drive-In and The Afghan Whigs will be there. Other noteworthy acts include Passion Pit, M83, The Weeknd, Bloc Party, Metric, Childish Gambino, tUnE-yArDs, The Tallest Man on Earth, Of Monsters and Men, Alabama Shakes, Tame Impala, The Walkmen, Neon Indian, Dum Dum Girls, Washed Out, Givers, Chairlift, Sharon Van Etten, Polica, First Aid Kit, FIDLAR, Bombay Bicycle Club, Bowerbirds, JEFF the Brotherhood, and Chicago’s own JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound. If you’re a fan of Perry’s electronica stage, Avicii, Justice and Bassnectar will all be headliners, with others sets from Kaskade, Calvin Harris, Santigold, and Little Dragon, among others. Again, have a look at the full lineup after the jump. If you ask me, this is pretty damn good. Worth the price of admission? I’d say so. Buy tickets here.

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 4-10-12

It’s Tuesday, time for the weekly roundup of new album releases. If you’re shopping for new music today, be aware you can buy records from the following artists starting now: Alabama Shakes, Alex Winston, Amadou & Mariam, Bassnectar, Black Dice, Choir of Young Believers, Dinosaur Feathers, Eight and a Half, M. Ward and oOoOO. As for today’s Pick Your Poison, I’ll recommend tracks from Anna Ternheim, Broncho, Caravan Palace, Fallon Cush, I Am Dive, Tiger High, Unicycle Loves You and Zulu Winter. In the Soundcloud section enjoy streaming tracks from Dappled Cities, Electric Guest, Solar Bears, and The Malex Kings (with a song about Chicago).

Ancient Astronauts – Anti-Pop Song (TimeWarp Inc Remix)

Angel Rene & Johnny Rodriguez – Sister Sue

Anna Ternheim – The Longer The Waiting (The Sweeter The Kiss)

Broncho – Try Me Out Sometime

Caravan Palace – Dirty Side

Carrousel – 14
Carrousel – Where Do We Go From Here

Damon Moon and the Whispering Drifters – Restless Roads End

Fallon Cush – Honey Honey

I Am Dive – I Was So Sad So I Was Dancing

Michael the Blind – Another Circle of Fifths

The Mowgli’s – I’ve Been Around

Sam Densmore – She’s Going to Want You

Tiger High – Don’t Want to See You Till You Go

Unicycle Loves You – Garbage Dump

Zulu Winter – Silver Tongue

SOUNDCLOUD

Dappled Cities – Run With The Wind

Electric Guest – This Head I Hold

The Malex Kings – Welcome to Chicago

.message – Under The Gun

Nemesis – Alone

Solar Bears – Cosmic Runner

Snapshot Review: Bear In Heaven – I Love You, It’s Cool [Hometapes/Dead Oceans]



2012 is arguably the year of the excellent synth-pop record. Releases from Grimes, Chromatics, Chairlift and Tanlines all have made great use of synths and dance-heavy electro beats to suck you in and leave you addicted. Now Bear In Heaven look to continue that trend with their third record I Love You, It’s Cool. This follows their 2009 breakthrough album Beast Rest Forth Mouth, a record that defied easy description with its psychedelic twists and towering pop choruses. The singles “Lovesick Teenagers” and “Wholehearted Mess” were two of the most addictive songs of that year, and proved they could also work on multiple levels thanks to Beast Rest Forth Mouth Remixed that came out a year later. Bear In Heaven must have learned quite a bit from those experiences the last few years, because they seem to have a firmer grasp on where they’re headed with this new album. The overall format is locked down pretty firmly, that being huge, synth-infused pop melodies made even denser than ever before thanks to some heavy use of sequencers. “Lovesick Teenagers” seems to be their point of inspiration when composing these songs, and it’s a smart choice to have made, allowing the record to sink into a groove that positively shimmers as it keeps your toe tapping. “Idle Heart” is an icily beautiful way to start things off, the synths washing over you like waves, the peace only disturbed by a distorted beat that pushes its way as far to the forefront of the mix as possible. There’s so much going on in first single “The Reflection of You” it even threatens to overwhelm Jon Philpot’s vocals, but it’s balanced just precariously enough to prevent that from happening. That actually happens multiple times on the album, and it’s almost enough to turn great songs like “Sinful Nature” and “World of Freakout” into something less impressive and catchy. Perhaps it’s all in how you listen to I Love You, It’s Cool that determines what truly catches your ear. Headphones seem to invoke fears of claustrophobia, every single available space filled with one element or another. Listening in the car is a little better, but a large theatre or outdoor concert venue is probably ideal for the breadth of these intense melodies. Huge as these songs may be, not to mention remarkably danceable, Bear In Heaven somehow fail to fully capitalize on the things they do right. With all the electronica elements splattered across every inch of this record (again making it ripe for remixing), the band seems unable to fully flesh out their ideas in 3-4 minute spurts. On most tracks they seem poised to build tension and then have an explosive release, but almost every time they do it too early, too late or not at all. Sometimes they just settle into an ambient section that fails to add to a song, leaving it to stagnate instead on the thought it could go on forever without interruption. The pieces of the puzzle are there, just not necessarily put together in the right order every time. Tracks like “Cool Light” and “Warm Water” wind up more as boring filler than engaging moments that keep the record going. That’s unfortunate, because at 10 tracks and 44 minutes, I Love You, It’s Cool turns out to be only a little more than half of a great album. Then again, maybe when they perform it live at a packed venue with people that came to dance, it’s a great record from beginning to end.

Bear In Heaven – The Reflection of You

Buy I Love You, It’s Cool from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 4-9-12

Hope you had a great holiday weekend, if you celebrated Easter or Passover or just being alive. For my Chicago people, I want to spend a couple minutes talking about some upcoming shows that are worth your time and hard-earned money to check out. First up? These United States. They’ll be at Metro this upcoming Friday, the 13th. They’re opening for Trampled By Turtles, who by the way, are also pretty good. The show starts at 8pm and tickets are $20. Download a song from These United States below, and buy tickets to the show here.

Secondly, we have Said the Whale. Their album Little Mountain came out last month and is quite the indie pop delight. You can stream the whole thing at their website and download a sample mp3 of the song “Heavy Ceiling” here. They’ll be headlining a show at Double Door on April 18th with a fully packed bill that includes Audiences, Otter Petter, Bambi Raptor, and Chains of Love. Tickets are only $7 if you buy them in advance, which ultimately comes out to about to just over a dollar a band. You can buy tickets to that show here.

As for today’s week-starting Pick Your Poison, I’ll recommend tracks from Catcall, Cookies (with Colin Stetson), Dive covering a Kurt Cobain demo, The Great American Canyon Band, Led Er Est, Six60, The Wedding Present and Wintersleep. I also recommend the These United States track, if you didn’t understand that implication when I was talking about their show at Metro a minute ago. Oh, and in the Soundcloud section you can stream some great songs from Alpine and introduce yourself to upcoming Pitchfork Music Festival artist Outer Minds.

Artifice – Dreams (Fleetwood Mac cover)

Blue Foundation – Lost (Sun Glitters Remix)

Brass Bed with Allison Bohl – One (Harry Nilsson cover)

Catcall – Paralysed

Cookies – Crybaby (ft. Colin Stetson)

Dive – Bambi Slaughter (Kurt Cobain Demo)

The Eastern Sea – A Lie

The Great American Canyon Band – Burn

Iman Carol Fears – Manic

Josephine Foster & The Victor Herrero Band – Sangre Colorada

Led Er Est – Kaiyo Maru

Mickey Hart – Slow Joe Rain

Notes Floats – Automatic Friends

Six60 – Forever

Star Slinger – Bad Bitches (ft. Stunnaman and Lil B)

These United States – Dead & Gone

The Wedding Present – You’re Dead

Wintersleep – Resuscitate

SOUNDCLOUD

Alpine – Icypoles

Charles Hammond Jr. – (Re)Introduction

Eamon McGrath – Instrument of My Release

Outer Minds – Gimmie A Reason

Pick Your Poison: Friday 4-6-12

To Christians of a certain belief system, I wish you a Good Friday. To those of the Jewish faith, I wish you a Happy Passover. To everyone else, enjoy this otherwise normal day of the week. Go see the new American Reunion movie or something. I’m pretty sure fucking pies has nothing to do with any religion (that I know of). Also, how about taking advantage of some free music? That’s something people of all races and religions can agree on. Today’s Pick Your Poison is a nice set of songs to kick off your Easter weekend. The collaboration between A-Trak, Mark Foster & Kimbra is something to download, as is the holiday appropriate band name of Easter Island, plus tracks from Lioness, Ourlives, Racing Heart, ex-Shins band Sad Baby Wolf, Two People Playing Music, and XOV. Have fun with colored eggs this weekend, and I’ll check in on your candy coma on Monday.

A-Trak, Mark Foster & Kimbra – Warrior

Brendan Losch – Son of a Gun

Easter Island – Hash

Ellis Islands – Broad Street

Feature Cuts – Hello My Love

The Sun The Moon The Stars – Flesh of the Gods

Giant Claw – Dream Love

Lioness – The Night

Modern Time Machine – Lucky Lady

Ourlives – Where is the Way?

Paper & Places – To Berlin

The Plastic Pals – Leave It Till Tomorrow

Racing Heart – Emma

Sad Baby Wolf – Everything Is (Neutral Milk Hotel cover)

Theophilus London – Lighthouse (Jeffrey Jerusalem Remix)

Two People Playing Music – Beehive

Work Drugs – Lisbon Teeth

XOV – Angels Calling

SOUNDCLOUD

The Cast Of Cheers – Animals

Miami Rick – Sea Turtle Heaven

Paije Richardson – Just Like Yesterday

Album Review: Screaming Females – Ugly [Don Giovanni]



Screaming Females have been something of a hit-or-miss band. Okay, so their misses have never been far off the mark, it’s just most of their records lose focus from time to time. In many ways that comes with the territory of crafting blistering punk rock, because it’s a messy genre that requires creative execution to avoid becoming repetitive. Kudos do go to Screaming Females for nicely fleshing out their sound over their last couple albums, moving further away from their namesake description and into a more melodic and structured direction. It’s gone a long way towards giving the band depth many thought they never had without sacrificing their intensity or killer guitar work. And though their name is plural, the trio only has one female member in frontwoman/lead guitarist Marissa Paternoster. She’s a one woman wrecking ball though, with the personality and skill of about three people. Bassist King Mike and drummer Jarrett Dougherty do their best to stay out of her way both on record and on stage, which is the smart move to make. That’s not to say they aren’t useful or essential members of the band. They provide the framework upon which Paternoster builds her kingdom, and my what a kingdom it is. Thanks to their fifth album Ugly, they’re more in control than ever of their sound and destiny.

By most accounts, Screaming Females are only adding to the legend that is Steve Albini. The guy has made some legendary punk records on his own the last couple decades, but these days he seems to be the go-to guy for bands looking for that gritty, yet clean-cut sound. He somehow knows just the right amount of polish to add so there’s a faint glimmer sparkling beneath the mud. Cloud Nothings earned the Albini treatment earlier this year with their record Attack on Memory, and for all the complaining they’ve done about the guy since, the album is one of the best 2012 has to offer so far. Screaming Females have yet to go on an anti-Albini rant, but from the way that Ugly turned out, they won’t have any reason to. Of course it helps greatly the band’s music is well in line with Albini’s producing style, as there are plenty of examples where the opposite is true and things don’t go so smoothly. Paternoster’s guitar and vocals are front and center, exactly where they need to be, but without losing the spiky bass lines or intense drumming in the process.

Paternoster shares a lot of qualities with Carrie Brownstein of Sleater-Kinney/Wild Flag/Portlandia fame. Not only do the two share similar hairstyles and complexions, but they’re musical soulmates too. The intense, menacing voice of Paternoster matched with her equally fierce guitar playing are unique qualities held by very few but very talented musicians, Brownstein being key among them. For those upset with Sleater-Kinney’s hiatus just as they were churning out some of the best punk rock of their careers, Screaming Females do quite the incredible job filling that void. It was almost kismet the way S-K went on hiatus in 2006, the same year Screaming Females self-released their debut album. Feel free to argue in favor of Wild Flag being the heir apparent to S-K’s crown instead, given that Brownstein and drummer Janet Weiss are principal members. What Wild Flag lacks is the same attack dog mentality and sheer intensity of S-K, though there are flashes of it from time to time on their debut album. Screaming Females absolutely have those qualities, and they’ve never been more potent than on Ugly.

The main shift the band has made on this new album is directly towards commercial accessibility. It’s a matter of focus, really, not to mention the skill required to come up with dynamic hooks. Ugly is filled to the brim with those, the choruses slamming you time and time again until you can’t help but get them trapped in your head. If anything, this album suffers from a glut of catchy songs, and the way they overlap one another is a small cause for alarm. The charm of “It All Means Nothing” is slightly dulled by how “Rotten Apple” forces its way into your brain immediately afterwards. The crunchy 90’s rock of “Crow’s Nest” is tossed aside as soon as “Tell Me No” races past the starting line. There are certainly worse problems to have, and of course one of the good things about it is that different things will jump out at you after each listen. So you may not become addicted to “Red Hand” the first 10 times through, but it’ll finally hit you on the 11th. There are a few moments that genuinely stand out on their own every single time though, and that’s mostly because they offer some variation compared to the rest of the record. “Leave It All Up to Me” goes a little heavier than some of the other songs, and playfully dissolves into nearly nothing before building itself back up again for one more run at the chorus. Closing track “It’s Nice” comes as described actually, a complete 360 from the rest of the record, bringing in acoustic guitars and a full string section for a grandiose moment of beauty. After all the grime and riffs from the prior 13 tracks and 51 minutes, here’s a final respite that proves this band can do more than rock out with their pseudo cocks out.

If Ugly has a piece de resistance, it comes in the form of the 7.5 minute dirge “Doom 84”. The riffs are heavy and intense enough to rival some of Zeppelin’s finest work, and the solos in the middle of the song are head-bangingly good. If you want to know exactly why Screaming Females are so impressive and ballsy, this is the song that will fully sell you on the idea. How they’re able to fill the track with so much noise it hurts while only being a spare three-piece is a mystery for the ages. That sentiment could be applied to the entire record, actually. Whatever their methods, the band and this album go a long way towards proving that rock and roll isn’t anywhere close to being dead. In fact, it’s quite alive and kicking. Ugly might not be a life-changing record or even the best record of a still-young 2012, but it’s huge for Screaming Females. After languishing for the last few years as underground punk rock heroes with a mindblowing live show, here’s proof they’re truly ready for the spotlight. Now it’s up to us to shine it in their direction.

Screaming Females – It All Means Nothing

Buy Ugly from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 4-5-12

Well friends, let me use this post to keep you apprised of some of the latest happenings with the good ‘ol Pitchfork Music Festival. The complete lineup was finally revealed today, after two separate doses of acts to try and get you interested earlier. The end result? I’m interested in this lineup but also a bit disappointed. Things are certainly less high profile than last year, even as Feist and Vampire Weekend are still pretty big names. My main concern is how good this is all going to sound in an outdoor, daytime setting. Artists like Beach House, Real Estate, Oneohtrix Point Never, and Clams Casino, among others, don’t exactly make music to be enjoyed under the sweltering sun. Now Sleigh Bells, Iceage, Wild Flag, Grimes and Cloud Nothings – those are acts to get you moving. There’s lots more hip hop this year too, none of which can be considered bad at a festival thanks to heavy beats and guys shouting instructions at you (hands in the air!). A$AP Rocky and Danny Brown at least should be good for some high energy halfway crazy sets. So though I might not be totally thrilled with this year’s lineup, I’m convinced things will turn out well anyways. Even if they don’t, it’s kind of nice just to hang out in Union Park with everyone. You can buy single-day passes to the festival for $45 by clicking here. You can have a look at the full lineup by going here. Come on out to the fest this July with me. We’ll have some fun, drink some beer and see some good live music. Okay, onto the business of Pick Your Poison. Recommended tracks today come from Alexander Tucker, Caltrop, Father John Misty (aka J. Tillman ex-Fleet Foxes), jj, King Tuff, Midnight Magic, MNDR, Ólafur Arnalds and Young Hines.

Alexander Tucker – Window Sill

Beast Make Bomb – Flagpole Sitta (Harvey Danger cover)

Caltrop – Birdsong

Conveyor – Mane

Dubious Ranger – The New Eve

Father John Misty – Nancy From Now On

The Funk Ark – Hey Mamajo

Giant Giant Sand – Forever and A Day

The Grey Area – Ourselves

jj – Beautiful Life

Joshua McCormack – The Phantom King

King Tuff – Bad Thing

Midnight Magic – Psycho For Your Love

MNDR – #1 in Heaven

Ólafur Arnalds – Allt varð hljótt

Paul Barker – reSpite

Wazu – Happy Endings

Young Hines – Can’t Explode

SOUNDCLOUD

Mr. Fogg – A Little Letting Go

Ny – Music

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 4-4-12

Once a week or so I like to remind everyone that the site has a pretty brand spankin’ new Facebook page that I encourage you to check out for the latest posts on this site as well as some extra content. Okay, so the extra content isn’t there yet, but it will be soon enough. Go there and click “Like” if you’re a fan. I know I’d appreciate it. I know you’ll appreciate today’s Pick Your Poison selections. I’m liking tracks from Ane Brun (covering Arcade Fire), Vacationer’s remix of The Asteroids Galaxy Tour, Drylight, Midtown Dickens, Mirror Lady, Ravens and Chimes, Sugarman 3 and The Young. In the Soundcloud section you can stream Japandroids’ cover of “Jack the Ripper”, which is certainly a different take on the Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds original.

Alberteen – The Butcher’s Daughter

Ane Brun – Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels) (Arcade Fire cover)

The Asteroids Galaxy Tour – Major (Vacationer Remix)

Channel Cairo – A Year

Drylight – Extralives (ft. thepieces.me)

D’Steph – Getting It On

Go Back to the Zoo – Electric

GPSMYTH – Brewster

Jonas Schwartz – Ideas

Ketamines – Kill Me Now, Please

Midtown Dickens – Walk, Don’t You Run

Mirror Lady – Hands Are Tied

Ravens and Chimes – Arrow

Sugarman 3 – Rudy’s Intervention

The Young – Livin’ Free

SOUNDCLOUD

Ballerina Black – If You Would I

Bass Drum of Death – I Wanna Be Forgotten

Beat Connection – Think/Feel (ft. Chelsey Scheffe)

Cut Your Hair – Utah In Pictures

Japandroids – Jack the Ripper (Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds cover)

The Kill Van Kulls – Impossible Man

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 4-3-12

Tuesdays are usually the days in which I chronicle what new album releases are out there for your personal enjoyment. This week shall be no exception, and as always please keep in mind I’m not outwardly recommending all these albums, just telling you what’s out there. If it interests you, there are new records out this week from Amadou & Mariam, Au, Bear in Heaven, Breton, Great Lake Swimmers, High on Fire, Robert Pollard, Screaming Females, UV Pop, Willis Earl Beal, and Zammuto (of The Books). Today’s Pick Your Poison has no mp3s from any of those artists, but I’ve thrown songs from most of them your way in the past couple months, so use the search function as your friend if you need to. On this list, tracks I’ll recommend come from Chocolate Robots, Christian Strobe, Ghost Loft, Letterist, Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band, A Place to Bury Strangers, Visions of Trees (covering Sonic Youth, and World Blanket (covering Syd Barrett). In the Soundcloud section don’t forget to stream new songs from Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, Lotus Plaza and Mount Eerie.

Andy the Doorbum – The Farm

Animal Heart – Un-Extraordinary Man (Dirty Tees Remix)

The Atolls – Pop Song Animal

Chocolate Robots – Summer Krushhh

Christian Strobe – Love Without Love

Dujeous – Spectacular

Ghost Loft – Blow

Hallelujah the Hills – Get Me In A Room

Heavy Cream – John Johnny

Letterist – 100MPH

Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band – Warm Body

A Place to Bury Strangers – You Are the One

Roomdance – Bierdancer

Theatre of Delays – Sophie

Tim Carr – Famewhore

Visions of Trees – Expressway to Yr Skull (Sonic Youth cover)

Wave Machine – Counting Birds

World Blanket – Let’s Split (Syd Barrett cover)

SOUNDCLOUD

Circle – Fashion me a Drum

Dire Con – Pills

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros – Thats Whats Up

Lotus Plaza – Monoliths

Mount Eerie – To The Ground

The Waxing Captors – The Trip

Snapshot Review: Willis Earl Beal – Acousmatic Sorcery [XL/Hot Charity]



The back story of Willis Earl Beal is fascinating enough to make for a great film. A Chicago guy, he moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico for a few years in 2007 simply because he heard it was a very desolate and beautiful environment in which a creative person could pursue art without distraction. Without much in the way of a job or friends, Beal created a flyer that contained a hand-drawn self-portrait, a little bit about his background and personality, and a phone number people could call. He hoped to make some friends this way, and even said he’d play a song for you if you called him. Such an odd flyer eventually caught the eye of a few like-minded creative people who were interested in helping Beal further his art. Found Magazine got wind of him and wrote a feature story on him. They also released a limited edition box set called The Willis Earl Beal Special Collection, complete with his poetry, illustrations and music. Things were looking up for Beal, yet he quickly left Albuquerque in 2010 and returned to Chicago with only the clothes on his back despite having live shows and recording studio time booked. He moved in with his grandmother and brother and once again without a job began distributing flyers with his story and his phone number on them. He wasn’t on the internet and things like email and social media were largely foreign to him. Yet he was still tracked down by the people at XL offshoot label Hot Sorcery, likely after doing well on the reality talent competition The X Factor. Their first release with Beal’s name on it is Acousmatic Sorcery, an 11-track collection of home recordings pieced together over the last few years. The quality is, understandably, nowhere near top notch. Most, if not all of these songs were originally recorded to cassette using a karaoke machine with a busted speaker and a Radio Shack microphone. It winds up sharing many of the same qualities as tUnE-yArDs’ laptop-recorded debut BiRd-BrAiNs, in that it’s messy but gets the point across. That point is Beal’s voice. “Take Me Away” is the official introduction to it on the record, and the song is an excellent showcase demonstrating the power and emotional intensity at which he operates. The track starts a capella before he’s joined by some homemade percussion that sounds like banging on the bottom of a plastic garbage can. Those are all the elements in the song, and essentially they’re all you need. Beal howls and hums with the intensity of a great blues singer, crossing somewhere between Tom Waits and Buddy Guy. By contrast, “Evening’s Kiss” sounds like a completely different artist, where Beal’s voice is so calm and precious it’s somehow less muscular than the sparsely plucked acoustic guitar accompanying it. That and “Sambo Joe From the Rainbow” are very traditional folk singer-songwriter style, also something Beal does quite well. Where he’s a little off though are on the more hip hop flavored tracks. “Ghost Robot” and “Swing on Low” are both based around beats and rhymes, though the former is quite a bit heavier on those elements. Both sound nothing like modern-day hip hop, and instead flounder closer to cheesy 80’s style rap but with more off-putting or weird time signatures. There are a few cringe-worthy lines in there (and other songs) as well, furthering the thought that while Beal is an exceptional singer, he’s not always the greatest songwriter. That doesn’t mean there isn’t a bunch of well-written material on this record, because there is. For every handful of inspired lines, there’s usually one that doesn’t quite match it. Nevertheless, Acousmatic Sorcery is very much a great introduction to the world that is Willis Earl Beal. It is very much the world of an outsider artist, one who lives in the shadows rather than the spotlight, and who in spite of his outgoing personality seems to have a lot of the same reclusive qualities as a Daniel Johnston or Wesley Willis or Jandek. On that same idea we’re left wondering exactly what Beal is going to do next and when he’s going to do it. With some touring under his belt and an actual recording studio to work in, it will most definitely be interesting to see if he can capitalize on the very promising start he’s shown here.

Willis Earl Beal – Evening’s Kiss

Buy Acousmatic Sorcery from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 4-2-12

Class of 2012 alert! Class of 2012 alert! I don’t know why anyone would call this “inevitable”, but many have: 2 of my Class of 2012 artists are collaborating. Which ones? A$AP Rocky and Lana Del Rey. The track is called “Ridin”, and it will be featured on a mixtape out tomorrow from production team KickDrums. If you’d like a preview of the track, with slices of both artists’ contributions, you can watch this video to hear a minute of it. I’m also looking forward to seeing A$AP Rocky for the second time this year at the Pitchfork Music Festival, where he’s joined in the lineup by other Class of 2012-ers Grimes and Purity Ring. The announcement hasn’t been made yet, but you may also want to keep an eye out for a couple more members of that exclusive class, including Frank Ocean, Azealia Banks and perhaps even Nicolas Jaar. We’ll have to wait and see for sure on those. I’ve got nothing new from the Class of 2012 in today’s Pick Your Poison, but there’s a whole lot of good music anyways. I’ll suggest making sure you download songs from Italian Japanese, Chicago friends JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound, Maps & Atlases, P.G. Six, The Spinto Band, Supreme Cuts, Waco Brothers & Paul Burch, Wes Willenbring and White Birds. In the SOundcloud section have a listen to tracks from Dirty Projectors, Dragonette, Karin Park and Mariee Sioux.

Baby Baby – Nothing to Lose

Heaven – Falling Apple

Hope for Agoldensummer – Daniel Bloom

Italian Japanese – NYC

JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound – Sister Ray Charles

Little,Big – Wasted

Many Places – Helmet Hug

Maps & Atlases – Fever

Mean Jeans – Anybody Out There

P.G. Six – Palace

The Spinto Band – Take It

Supreme Cuts – Lessons of Darkness (Apology)

Terrible Feelings – Intruders

Waco Brothers & Paul Burch – Great Chicago Fire

Wes Willenbring – Consequences of Recklessness

White Birds – Hondora

SOUNDCLOUD

Audiograffiti – Animals

Dirty Projectors – Gun Has No Trigger

Dragonette – Let it Go

Karin Park – Restless

Mariee Sioux – Swimming Through Stone

River Accorsi – Mynx

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