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Pick Your Poison: Friday 9-23-11

Happy Odd Future Prank Day everybody! If you haven’t heard yet, those young, bratty and controversial hip hop stars pulled one over on a number of unsuspecting fans. To be fair, had I not caught onto it after it was all over, I probably would have fallen for it too. The set up is as follows: Odd Future started their own record label a couple months back – that much is true. The idea was to release their own music that way and not really anybody else’s. Well, via a press release sent out by their publicist, Odd Future announced they had discovered this amazing new talent that calls himself Young Nigga and just couldn’t pass up the opportunity to sign him. After teasing that they’d be unleashing the first single from Young Nigga a few hours later via their website, the end product turned out to be good ‘ol Tyler, The Creator changing his voice to try and sound like somebody else. At least that’s what it seems like. If this Young Nigga really does exist and has an album titled “Expensive Pasta” nearly in the can as reported, and he just so happens to sound a whole lot like Tyler, The Creator, well, perhaps it wasn’t a prank at all. But yeah, 95% sure they’re just messing around. Have a listen and judge for yourself. Okay, let’s talk a weekend-starting Pick Your Poison. I can give gold stars today to tracks from Anthem Facility, ARMS, Gardens & Villa, Gauntlet Hair, New Shouts, Rain Over St. Ambrose, and Wooden Wand (with the Briarwood Virgins).

Anthem Facility – Left to Defend

ARMS – Fleeced

Bio Ritmo – La Verdad

Bluom – Hello!

Bus Stop Dreams – The Kiss

Daughter – Love

Dirty Dishes – Slow Curse

Gardens & Villa – Spacetime

Gauntlet Hair – Keep Time

The Go Round – Open Hearted

Jason Corcoran – Kiss the Hive

Mocean Worker – Swagger

New Shouts – The Reins to Your Heart

Pan – Seeking the Sea King

Rain Over St. Ambrose – Campfires

Southerly – All Abandoned

Southern Culture on the SKids – Zombiefied

Wooden Wand and the Briarwood Virgins – Big Mouth USA

SOUNDCLOUD

Altered Beats – Cool Lies

Hello Echo – Birdbeat

Outasight – Tonight Is The Night

Paper Crows – When Friends Survive

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 9-22-11

Today is the first “official” day of fall. I used quotation marks there because I guess there’s a difference between meteorological fall and what the calendar says. Your local weathercaster may have told you a couple weeks back that fall had officially begun, but that was really just when temperatures began to dip. Now that we’re in full fall swing though, there’s the leaves beginning to change color, and my favorite time of year – sweater weather. For me though, it’s closer to hoodie weather. I’m basically happy over bundling up just a little more than usual, but I do love summer and the warm temperatures. I hope you enjoy it too, a precursor before the doldrums of winter finally strike. Pick Your Poison will hopefully wrap you up in sweater-like comfort today. Tracks I can give a thumbs up to come from Amanda Mair, AZITA, Pallers, Van Hunt, The Wandas, and Zechs Marquise. Panda Bear’s remix of Korallreven is a good one to stream in the Soundcloud section, and if you like some hip hop, “Community” star Donald Glover’s music project Childish Gambino has a new cut up for streaming as well.

Amanda Mair – Doubt

AZITA – September

Dylan LeBlanc – If the Creek Don’t Rise (ft. Emmylou Harris)

Evidence – Late for the Sky (ft. Slug and Aesop Rock)

Filligar – Knock Yourself Out

Mr. Miranda – Key to Success

Pallers – Humdrum

Rah Rah – Parkade

Secret Shine – No More Inside

The Seldon Plan – Fractionation

Tyson – After You’re Gone (Solo Remix)

The Unsacred Hearts – Where Are You?

Van Hunt – Eyes Like Pearls

The Wandas – Long Time Running

Wesley Wolfe – Who’s Going to Truly Love You?

Xaver Von Treyer – Device of the Devil (Original Demo)

Zechs Marquise – Everlasting Beacon of Light

SOUNDCLOUD

Childish Gambino – Bonfire

Kathleen Edwards – Wapusk (featuring Bon Iver)

Korallreven – As Young As Yesterday (Panda Bear Remix)

Sam Gray – Brighter Day

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 9-21-11

Tragedy has struck, and its name is R.E.M. More specifically, I mean the break up of R.E.M. While I am saddened to hear that the guys feel like they can’t or shouldn’t work together as a band anymore, we did get 31 years worth of great music, even if there were a few misfires along the way. What disappoints me most is hearing the break up talk from people that obviously aren’t big R.E.M. fans, because they first comment that it’s tragic, then follow it up by saying something like, “it’s not like they’ve done much in the last 10 years”. First and foremost that’s an ignorant statement, especially since their last two albums, “Accelerate” and “Collapse Into Now” were at the very least better than half of the rest of their catalogue. The real R.E.M. fans know that the band appeared to have plenty of life still left in them. Apparently they felt otherwise. So I wish Michael Stipe, Mike Mills and Peter Buck all the best in their future endeavors, and look forward to their reunion tour in 2016. Let’s do Pick Your Poison today. I can say complimentary things about tracks from The Beets, Chris Letcher, Grand Atlantic and White Denim.

Astrid Swan – Zurich Is Stained (Jori Hulkkonen Remix)

The Beets – Doing As I Do

Chris Letcher – Twin Fins

Daft Punk – Crescendolls (Mr. Valentine Remix)

Devereaux – Espejo

Ellie Goulding – Lights (RASCAL Remix)

EULA – Maurice Narcisse

Grand Atlantic – Carved From Stone

Groove Armada ft. Bryan Ferry – Shameless (Tim “Love” Lee Dub Version)

Mad Major Melvin – Pinchero (Original Mix)

The Matador – Señorita Negra

The Weeknd – The Morning ft. Kenton Dunson (Chi Duly Remix)

White Denim – Hot Thought

Woodkid – Iron (Trumpdisco Remix)

You Won’t – Three Car Garage

SOUNDCLOUD

Breton – Kensington System

Canyons – See Blind Through

Daymare – Ice Famine

Far Away Planes – Stow Away

Monarchy – You Don’t Want To Dance With Me (feat. Britt Love)

St. Rupertsberg – In Albania

Album Review: Wild Flag – Wild Flag [Merge]



More times than not, when an artist or band uses the phrase “indefinite hiatus”, it’s a police way of saying that they’re breaking up. Sometimes it really is just a temporary break from making music with the same people, as bands like Broken Social Scene and TV on the Radio have proven more recently. Whether they just want a couple years to decompress or pursue solo/side projects away from the main band, a hiatus is a way to explore those options. For Sleater-Kinney, their indefinite hiatus certainly seemed like it would be brief. Corin Tucker wanted to take some time and really focus on being a new mother, while Carrie Brownstein took to blogging for NPR and doing occasional comedy sketches with her friend and SNL player Fred Armisen. Janet Weiss, not content to sit around on the sidelines, joined up with Stephen Malkmus as part of the Jicks in a move that seemed almost like an afterthought. To put it more bluntly, none of the S-K trio were doing anything they couldn’t give up at a moment’s notice to bring the band back together. In the last year or so though, there’s been something of a sea change. Brownstein got more heavily into acting, both starring in a movie with The Shins/Broken Bells’ James Mercer and taking her team-up with Armisen to a new level via the IFC series “Portlandia”. Meanwhile Tucker apparently spent just enough time raising a family that the music itch struck her again, so instead of going for the reunion, she formed The Corin TUcker Band and crafted a record of alt-country songs. It’s certainly a long way from the brash and fiery punk rock that Sleater-Kinney brought to the table. And with Stephen Malkmus getting Pavement back together for a year of touring and shows, Weiss was seemingly in the wind for that period of time. Well, that small gap quickly vanished when about a year ago Brownstein took to her “Monitor Mix” NPR blog to announce the existence of Wild Flag, a new band with a lineup that included Weiss on drums, along with The Minders’ Rebecca Cole on keyboards and Helium’s Mary Timony on guitar/vocals. It’s now been a year since their formation, and having played a number of shows in that time, the band is now celebrating the release of their self-titled debut album.

It’s easy to pick apart Wild Flag based upon the sum of its parts. That’s really the case with any band that might otherwise be considered a supergroup. Part of you wants to question if this new band lives up to the legacy of the talent behind it. What’s fascinating about Wild Flag is that their debut record appears to be most concerned with the legacy that other groups have left behind. So many bands new and old continue to prime the pump by exploiting a previously established sound from a previous decade by trying to put a fresh spin on it. The Killers had 80s synth pop when they first arrived and created a new wave of new wavers. Bands like Japandroids and Yuck are some of the more forceful acts to bring back some serious 90s nostalgia in the last couple years. Innovative and forward-thinking groups are quickly vanishing as nostalgia grabs hold and comes in waves. Are there any original ideas left out there? That’s a question for another day, because Wild Flag is the antithesis of that. Unlike so many of these bands that make music or become popular simply because a certain type of music is the current flavor of the month, Wild Flag plays it smarter on their debut, something you’d hope would be the case given that all the members are music veterans. Sure, you can hear flashes of that in-your-face punk rock that Sleater-Kinney was best known for on a track like “Boom”, which in this particular case also comes infused with a healthy dose of keyboard. You can almost hear Brownstein sneering behind the microphone at times, which certainly invigorates a couple tracks, particularly the crunchy and intense “Racehorse”. What’s missing as a counterpoint to that is the presence of a wailing, overly dramatic Corin Tucker belting something out to the rafters. Mary Timony’s approach is far more relaxed classic rock than it is punk rock, and it’s what really pushes some genre shifts on the record. With Brownstein and Timony essentially switching off lead vocal duties from track to track, pinning Wild Flag in a particular corner becomes nearly impossible. The energetic and fun post-punk of opening track “Romance” gets quickly tempered by the much more relaxed 60s girl group stylings of Timony’s “Something Came Over Me” before Brownstein exits out the other end with the hard-hitting punk of “Boom”. Technically it’s a miscalculation to disrupt the pace of the record so early on like that, but all three tracks are solid in their own right so that makes it easier to take.

Timony pushes a psychedelic angle into “Glass Tambourine” while also simultaneously channeling a bit of The Breeders vocally, and it winds up being her best contribution on the record. Any time Wild Flag takes some extra time to extend a track beyond 4 minutes it turns into a rewarding experiment in which fascinating musical avenues are explored and all the players prove their worth instrumentally. Janet Weiss in particular stands out with her intense drumming skills, but then again rare is the occasion when Weiss’ talent doesn’t shine as bright or brighter than her peers. She remains one of the best percussion weapons making music today. Of course Rebecca Cole is no slouch either, even if her contributions via keyboard and backing vocals are likely to be the ones that attract the least amount of attention. She’s essential to the Cars-esque new wave vibe of “Endless Talk” and provides a sharp anchor to Timony’s eccentricities on “Electric Band”. If you want to hear the band operating at full power, in which the foursome work best as a cohesive unit but are each given an individual chance to shine, you can’t miss with “Racehorse”. It uses every second of 6.5+ minutes to exploit pure guitar shredding, keyboard jamming, drum fills that overflow, and a vocal performance so visceral that impressive only begins to describe it. For those fleeting moments, you forget entirely the names and the history of the people within this band and just surrender to raw talent. In an ideal world, Wild Flag would give you that same feeling on every song.

The best thing about both Wild Flag the band and “Wild Flag” the album is how purely emotional everything is. The goal is ultimately lack of control – the ability to simply let yourself loose and have some fun. Here is a band that thrives on impulse rather than careful plotting, allowing the wind to dictate the sonic direction they’ll head next with little care if it’s prudent to do so. There’s nothing on the album that’s outright bad, but there are a couple small moments that seem just a touch out of place compared to everything else. Those are the times when the band doesn’t fully gel, primarily derived from trying to bring the two distinct sensibilities of Brownstein and Timony into one singular vision. Assuming this is more than just a one-off effort, those sorts of issues should resolve themselves the more time they spend together as a band. So long as they don’t lose that fresh sense of excitement and wonder, Wild Flag could easily become the sort of band that makes you forget about where they came from and instead hope they continue to show progress and brilliance for years to come.

Wild Flag – Romance

Buy “Wild Flag” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 9-20-11

Tuesday is new album release day, so let me give you a quick rundown of some of the more notable releases that are available in stores and online for you to purchase this week. New albums from CAVE, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Halloween Alaska, Ivy, Korallreven, Megafaun, Needtobreathe, Nurses, The Pack AD, Southerly, SuperHeavy, Tori Amos, Veronica Falls and Weekend are all fresh for your listening pleasure. You may also be interested in EPs from IfIHadAHiFi and Jens Lekman, not to mention Pearl Jam releasing a double disc soundtrack to their Cameron Crowe film “20”, which features a number of live cuts from throughout their career, among other things. Check out what strikes your fancy. The same can be said about today’s Pick Your Poison. Today I’ll give gold stars to tracks from Devo, Jesse Payne, Jim Ward, Katie Herzig, Porcelain Raft (covering Nirvana), Quilt, Still Corners, Trips & Falls and Twin Shadow.

Christina Bautista – Long Divisions

The Daredevil Christopher Wright – The Animal of Choice

David’s Lyre – Hidden Ground

Dead Western Plains – People Beat

Devo – Watch Us Work It

Goldenboy – Sleepwalker

Gregory Scott Slay – Keep It Secret

Jesse Payne – Take Me

Jim Ward – Take It Back

Katie Herzig – Free My Mind

MEN – Simultaneously (LESANDS Remix)

Outasight – Loosen Up

Palpitation – We Don’t Need To, We Don’t Have To

Porcelain Raft – Come As You Are (Nirvana cover)

Quilt – Penobska Oakwalk

Still Corners – Into the Trees

Tensnake – Something About You (Christian Strobe Remix)

Trips and Falls – Marginally More Than Mildly Annoying

The Trophy Fire – Modern Hearts

Twin Shadow – Changes

SOUNDCLOUD

Mozart Parties – Black Cloud

Pick Your Poison: Monday 9-19-11

Happy official start to the 2011 Fall TV Season! That does deserve an exclamation point, if you ask me. Did anyone watch the Emmys last night? There were a number of good, award-worthy shows that actually won, even if many of them were the same shows we’ve seen win over and over again. Great to see Kyle Chandler win for “Friday Night Lights”, and though the show lost in the Best Drama category to “Mad Men”, I am in no real way upset about that, given how great that show is too. “Modern Family” did exceptionally well last night too, snagging a pair of Best Supporting Acting awards along with some writing and Best Comedy Series. Great for them too, they deserved to win. Other good wins include Melissa McCarthy for “Mike & Mollly” and “The Daily Show” in a pair of Best Variety, Music or Comedy Series categories. Congrats to all, now let’s get some new episodes on the air. Okay, so amidst my excitement for TV, let’s get back to music right now. Pick Your Poison today is a delight and I’m excited about that too. I can recommend tracks from A Classic Education, Co La, Empress Hotel, Guineafowl, Jukebox the Ghost, Mezzanine Owls, Reversing Falls and Way Yes.

A Classic Education – Forever Boy

Adrienne Drake – Awake at the End of A Dream

Ankit Love – Mental Revolution

The Chevin – Champion

Co La – Egyptian Peaches

Daisy McCrackin – I Think I’m A Ghost

e-dubble – Life Coach

Empress Hotel – Here Comes the New Challenger

Gigamesh – When You’re Dancing ft. Induce (RAC Remix)

The Glammers – Rock Your Town

Guineafowl – Little Fingers

Jukebox the Ghost – The Stars

Messy Marv – I Need It Back

Mezzanine Owls – Obstacle

MonoMono – Make Them Realise

Odonis Odonis – Ledged Up

Reversing Falls – Is This Thing On?

Snowmine – Beast in Air, Beast in Water

Way Yes – Automail

SOUNDCLOUD

Alex Clare – Up All Night (Skream’s Behind Closed Door’s Remix)

AM & Shawn Lee – Somebody Like You

Album Review: Neon Indian – Era Extraña [Mom & Pop/Static Tongues]


Of the many chillwave/glo-fi acts to emerge out of that hype cycle a couple years ago, Neon Indian was easily one of the most unique. Sure, the Alan Palomo-fronted project had that distinctive 80s washed out bedroom electronica feel to it, but there haven’t been a lot of artists that incorporate 8-bit video game noises and distorted guitar lines. Throw Palomo’s overly soft-on-the-ears vocals in as well, and Neon Indian’s debut “Psychic Chasms” turned him into a proverbial indie star. Last year he did a one-off single for Green Label Sound called “Sleep Paralysist”, and a couple months back he recorded a psychedelic freak-out EP with The Flaming Lips. Both of those things marked shifts in direction for Palomo and Neon Indian, yet none of those things quite encapsulate what is going on with his second long player, “Era Extraña”. Then again, if you’ve been paying attention to how things are going with other chillwave artists these days, you’re surely aware that like any hype cycle, it’s lifespan is running short. Changes are all but required to survive, and it’s fascinating to hear how the artists within the genre are reacting individually. If you’re Palomo, you go to Finland by yourself and see what sorts of batshit ideas fly out of your head. Rather than putting him in a straightjacket though, “Era Extraña” actually winds up bringing a greater focus to his unique sound.

As it has played out with a number of other chillwave artists, “Era Extraña” boasts a marked step forwards in production style. “Psychic Chasms” was crafted and recorded primarily in Alan Palomo’s bedroom, and you could pretty much tell that from the way it sounded. Now utilizing an actual studio and with actual producer Dave Fridmann, the new album sounds cleaner and bigger than ever before. There are still a handful of woozy, fully retro-fied moments, in particular the 3 instrumental “Heart” interludes, but while the era remains firmly entrenched in the 80s, we’re now dealing in technicolor rather than something paler and more faded. If this were the last record, a track like “Hex Girlfriend” might otherwise have vocals buried in the mix and filled with so much lo-fi reverb that the lyrics border on indecipherable. Now better produced and devoid of any vocal effects, the vocals come across as clear and dominant, a positive when placed among shoegazey guitars and woozy synths. In almost direct opposition to that, the album’s title track features highly polished synths and strongly driven bass, a combo that feels markedly M83/New Order-ish, but then the vocals wind up lowest on the totem pole and oozing with so much reverb that they’re nearly pointless. A huge positive is that the song is paired next to “Halogen (I Could Be A Shadow)”, a track that is a spiritual and sonic cousin but does a far more interesting job blending textures and pulling off the M83 style. In fact, the sequencing on the entirety of “Era Extraña” is rather inspired, as the grungy, guitar-heavy shoegaze numbers “The Blindside Kiss” and “Hex Girlfriend” wind up neighbors, while there’s an almost LCD Soundsystem-like quality to “Future Sick” and “Suns Irrupt” even if neither track ever quite gets to that level of brilliance. Palomo even has “Arcade Blues” tacked onto the very end of the record with the word “single” in parentheses because he wanted to include it as a bonus track even though it didn’t fit in stylistically with the rest of the record. He’s right about that, and it makes for a great little addendum to everything that came before it.

Palomo also shows off his expanding skills as a composer, building more creatively stimulating and intricate melodies than ever before and utilizing an army of sound effects to accent increasingly complex choruses. First single “Polish Girl” experiments a little with verse structure, namely by placing a bit of instrumental space between the chorus and verses that serves as its own hook. It’s not noticeable unless you’re really looking for it though, which is one of the reasons why the song works so well. In other spots, it’s little moments that make you sit up and take notice. The static-filled, bubbling synth open to “Hex Girlfriend” and the twinkling synths that bring the title track to its conclusion are just two of the more soberingly beautiful bits that bring an extra dose of charm to songs that are far more expansive and party-oriented than most of Neon Indian’s earlier stuff. Yet it never wanders from the singular path it appears to be on, streamlined and to the point more than ever before. And while some of the textures and approaches to most of the songs have changed on “Era Extraña”, the lyrical topics stay within the ballpark. Yes, there’s the inevitable topic du jour of relationships, primarily failed ones, that Palomo gets down about from time to time. That comprises much of the first half of the album, while the second half is more about distancing yourself from the world at large primarily through disconnection. “Future Sick” is all about falling behind the times technologically, while “Halogen (I Could Be A Shadow)” is about the need to carve your own path in life or risk being left in the dark. The melodies themselves may be uplifting and danceable, but by no means do all of them project positive messages.

If there’s one thing “Era Extraña” lacks, it’s a more lighthearted approach. It’s a big part of why “Arcade Blues” doesn’t fit within the solid structure of the rest of the record. Not that “Arcade Blues” is a single overjoyed moment on this album – from the title alone you can tell it’s not a happy song. What it does right though is through the smart and liberal use of video game samples, remind us of those afternoons after school or weekends in which we’d go to the arcade with friends and have a blast pumping those machines full of quarters. Palomo may have preferred another method of distraction, but there was a certain satisfaction to be gained from everything as classic as Pac Man to putting the pedal to the floor in a driving game or knowing that your parents didn’t want you playing Mortal Kombat. That he only finds sadness in an arcade while simultaneously exploiting video game sound effects is almost counterintuitive. This, coming from a guy that used to perform in his early pre-Neon Indian days while wearing a Nintendo Powerglove. It’s that uncertainty, that push towards something darker as the music itself sounds lighter than ever, that makes “Era Extraña” weaker than its predecessor. For all the advances Neon Indian has made sonically, verbally and psychologically Palomo has run the other way. He’s retreated into this more pessimistic and serious place but can’t even be bothered to try a little sarcasm on for size. The record is still a success, but not nearly what it could have been had the outlook been a little brighter. With big, fun-sounding music, you want to have the artist reflect that back at you with their words. LCD Soundsystem had their fair share of sadder songs (“All My Friends”, “Someone Great”), but those were often balanced out with silly numbers (“North American Scum”, “Drunk Girls”). Once Alan Palomo is able to find that same dichotomy, Neon Indian will truly hit the big time.

Neon Indian – Polish Girl

Neon Indian – Hex Girlfriend

Neon Indian – Fallout

Buy “Era Extraña” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Friday 9-16-11

Yes it’s Friday. Yes you have every right to be excited about it. I don’t have much to say, except that I hope you have a nice, relaxing couple of days off. If you’re working this weekend, try not to work too hard. Pick Your Poison is good for what ails you, in spite of the name. I can give some honorable mentions in this set from Cuckoo Chaos, High Places, The JUan Maclean, Mood Rings, Radio Moscow and We Were Lovers. In terms of remixes, Superhumanoids remixing Fool’s Gold is remarkably good, as is Portugal. The Man’s remix of Junip. If you like the lighter singer-songwriter fare, there’s a new song from Rachel Yamagata in the Soundcloud section. That, along with Efterklang’s remix of Trentemøller’s cut “Tide” are both worth streaming.

Cuckoo Chaos – Jamb Song

Fabian – Heatwave

Fool’s Gold – Wild Window (Superhumanoids Remix)

Glenn Jones – Of Its Own Kind

High Places – Year Off

John Heart Jackie – You’ve Been On My Mind

The Juan Maclean – Everybody Get Close

Junip – Without You (Portugal. The Man Remix)

Keith Masters – New Ghost City

Mandela – Flight

Marco Panella – The Aquifer

Mood Rings – Exorcised Painting

Not the 1s – Silverstein Status

Pieta Brown – I’m Gone

Radio Moscow – Little Eyes

Simon Spire – Liberate Your Love

Toy Bombs – Prairie Eye

Tropical Popsicle – The Beach With No Footprints
Tropical Popsicle – The Age of Attraction

We Were Lovers – We’ve Got It

Zun Zun Egui – Fandango Fresh

SOUNDCLOUD

Rachael Yamagata – Even If I Don’t

Trentemøller – Tide (Efterklang Remix)

Visions of Trees – Sirens (Novocaine)

Zulu Winter – Never Leave

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 9-15-11

Is anyone excited for the fall TV season? I’m something of a TV addict, from network shows to cable, so there’s a huge list of things I watch every fall. There’s a wealth of good shows that have made it beyond their first season, but one of the more exciting things are the new shows. As most shows will be premiering next week, is there anything you’re particularly anticipating? Did you see any great shows over the summer that either you’re going to miss or simply caught up with on DVD in anticipation of the new episodes? I’m intrigued to hear your thoughts. Let me know in the comments section if you’re so inspired. Getting back on track with music, today’s Pick Your Poison is a delight. I can recommend tracks from Casiokids, Korallreven, Shimmering Stars, Warning Light, and You Can’t Win Charlie Brown. In the Soundcloud section, you’ll find a new cut from Apparat, along with Trentemøller’s remix of Efterklang, among others.

Adele – Rolling in the Deep (dBerrie Remix)

Boy + Kite – Deciphering Static

Casiokids – Det Haster!

CSC Funk Band – Bad Banana Bread (Live in Providence)

Gabriel Miller Phillips – Memorial Drive

Jonathan Wilson – Desert Raven

Korallreven – As Young As Yesterday (ft. Victoria Bergsman)

Mask Man – Wigi Boards

Right On Dynamite – In Vino Veritas

Shimmering Stars – Nervous Breakdown

Theophilus London – I Stand Alone (Ocelot Remix)

Warning Light – The Universal Rewrite

The Whip – Keep or Delete

Y Luv – All Night

You Can’t Win Charlie Brown – I’ve Been Lost

Yuzima – We Rock For NY

SOUNDCLOUD

Apparat – Song Of Los

Beaty Heart – 2Good

Efterklang – Raincoats (Trentemøller Remix)

Jovontaes – Mountain Pass

Metals – Like/Unlike

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 9-14-11

As the summer fully winds down and fall gets into full effect, weekends spent outdoors are becoming less and less possible. Keep in mind that only applies to places like Chicago, where it gets extremely cold in the winter. The point is, make the most of your time outside these days, because they won’t last too long. Marking the tail end of the outdoor weekend festivals is the first ever Brilliant Corners of Popular Amusements, debuting in Chicago’s Eckhart Park this Friday-Sunday. The goal of the festival is to try and reinvent the traditions of Vaudeville in a modern day setting. In other words, we’re talking about a trip to an old style carnival complete with food and game booths and performers like acrobats and magicians. In updating such an event for the 21st century, they’ll also be incorporating comedians, short films and bands. Attending the carnival and craft fair portion of the festival is free for all, but you can also catch a number of great bands each night for a relatively small ticket price. Friday boasts the lineup of CAVE, Bomba Estereo, Sidi Toure and Bill Callahan. Saturday has Dark Dark Dark, Charles Bradley, A Hawk and A Hacksaw, and School of Seven Bells. Sunday features Fool’s Gold, Dan Deacon, A Lull and Shellac. Tickets for the music portion of each night are $20 and will be available in limited quantities on-site at Eckhart Park. For more information, go to the official festival website.

Now onto today’s Pick Your Poison. I can give the hearty thumbs up to tracks from Daddy Lion, David Myles, Julian Lynch, Mekons, The Strange Boys, Tennis System and Toy Camera.

Alpine White – The Evidence

Daddy Lion – Werewolf

David Guetta ft. Taio Cruz – Little Bad Girl (Amada Bootleg)

David Myles – Nina

Edward Rogers – Porcelain

Henry’s Funeral Shoe – Dog Scratched Ear

Julian Lynch – Temple Dance

Mekons – Geeshie

Mint Julep – Aviary (Mogwai Remix)

Radio For the Daydreamers – Always in Hallways
Radio For the Daydreamers – I Am Not Coming Back Home

ShearGen1us – Bring the Boss Back
ShearGen1us – Get Hype

The Strange Boys – Me and You

Tennis System – Hey We Tried

Toy Camera – Your Heart
Toy Camera – Summer Days

TV Buddhas – Just Another Day in My Head

The Wombats – Our Perfect Disease (Plastic Plates Remix)

Yukon Blonde – Fire

SOUNDCLOUD

2 a.m. – Outsider

Lovedrug – Pink Champagne

Pictureplane – The Art of Feeling (!PAUS3 Mix Part One)

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 9-13-11

As I try to do on Tuesdays, given that it is new album release day, allow me to tell you about some notable artists that are putting out new records today. Again, this is just a selection of artists, and I’m not pointing you in one direction or the other in terms of what’s good and what’s bad among these. If you’re not visiting via the main page though, I’ll tell you that so far this week I’ve given one band an extremely positive review, and another band a very so-so review. Check both those out if you’ve not yet done so. But here’s the rather long list of artists releasing new records today: Barn Owl, Blind Pilot, Blitzen Trapper, CANT (Grizzly Bear’s Chris Taylor), The Drums, Girls, Grouplove, Holiday Shores, Jenn Mierau, Kathryn Calder, The Kooks, Ladytron, Mates of State, Memoryhouse, Mogwai, Neon Indian, Pajama Club, St. Vincent, Toro y Moi, Wild Flag and Wooden Shjips. If you can’t find something to love amidst all those artists, there’s something wrong with your ears. Speaking specifically to today’s edition of Pick Your Poison, I can say nice things about tracks from Big Troubles, Blackout Beach, The Bloody Hollies, Brown Bird, Class Actress, Girl In A Coma, Loney Dear, Luke Temple (of Here We Go Magic), The Morning Clouds and Pterodactyl. In other words, lots to recommend song-wise in this collection too.

Baby Baby – Fight Club

Big Troubles – Sad Girls

Blackout Beach – Beautiful Burning Desire

The Bloody Hollies – Dirty Sex

Brown Bird – Fingers to the Bone

Class Actress – Weekend

Cosmo Jarvis – She Doesn’t Mind

Ed Trauma – Purple High

Girl In A Coma – Smart

Grayson Capps – Jane’s Alley Blues

Gross Relations – When You Go Down

Loney Dear – My Heart

Luke Temple – More Than Muscle

The Morning Clouds – A Walk Home

Neptune – Canine Species

Pterodactyl – Nerds

Red Eye Fugu – Prophecies (I Don’t Mind)

Silver Wren – Crystalline (Expensive Looks Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

Clock Opera – Lesson No.7 (Tom Vek’s Tripping Mix)

Great Mountain Fire – Late Lights

JMSN – Hotel

Album Review: Girls – Father, Son, Holy Ghost [True Panther]


We’ve learned so much about the band Girls in the past two years since their debut “Album” was released. The headlines almost always started by noting that frontman Christopher Owens grew up in a cult. The next attention grabber was the extremely NSFW music video for the song “Lust for Life”, featuring persons of various genders and sexual orientations lip syncing to the song while naked. And yes, one guy did use another guy’s penis as a “microphone”. In spite of these apparent distractions, the music itself was the ultimate selling point, a retro-fitted pastiche of 60s and 70s pop that was extremely earnest and often heartbreaking, equal parts familiar and catchy. It’d be easy to level criticism at the band for staying so firmly rooted in the past, but Girls have done great work trying to make the sound their own while also mixing it up just a bit to avoid getting too trapped in a certain style. One moment they’re channeling 3 minutes of Beach Boys pop, and the next they’re on a 7 minute psychedelic journey that’s a closer cousin to Pink Floyd. Somehow they’ve managed to make it all work, with Owens’ nasally voice playing the anchor and even proving that they can progress to bigger and better things with last year’s “Broken Dreams Club” EP. The hope with their new record “Father, Son, Holy Ghost” was to continue that forward march. By all accounts, they very much appear to have succeeded.

The record opens with the galloping “Honey Bunny”, taking a few cues from surf rock in the way the drums roll along and the guitar riffs tumble over one another like waves washing up on the shore. There are moments where it sounds like a team-up between Dick Dale and the Beach Boys, and the best part is it’s nearly as great. Pop culture aficionados should hopefully also associate the song title with the classic film “Pulp Fiction” and may note the sonic similarities to the first track of that movie’s soundtrack, the Dick Dale-riffed “Pumpkin and Honey Bunny/Misirlou”. In the case of Girls though, this is just a delightful pop song with cool origins. As a matter of contrast, “Alex” feels born straight out of the 90s, taking a much more shoegaze-like approach with some fuzz-inflected chords and some noodling electric guitar solos. The band does it without blinking an eye, and for whatever reason it works beautifully. The fuzzy guitars get a hefty burst of energy and a touch of prog rock ethos on “Die”, a track that rages for 3 minutes that are reminiscent of classic Badfinger or Deep Purple. Things get a bit more spaced out and trippy towards the end though, as a gently strummed acoustic guitar and a flute show up for the final two minutes of subdued instrumental that brings an unexpected grace to something that was so sharp at the start.

If you’re looking for the truly psychedelic though, look no further than the middle of “Father, Son, Holy Ghost”. Starting with “My Ma” and progressing through the two epic 6+ minute cuts “Vomit” and “Just A Song”, let’s just say that it would appear the band has been taking crib notes from some of Pink Floyd’s finest moments. The canyon-splitting guitar work and organ ring out very nicely on “My Ma”, though that’s relatively standard compared to what follows it. Everything hits harder and feels even bigger on “Vomit”, with the organ slamming in the chorus and the gospel choir backing up Owens’ intensely mellow vocals. There’s every chance that things could have gone completely overblown in the 6.5 minutes the song goes on for, but it’s Owens that keeps it grounded and within reason by being more Elliott Smith than Roger Waters. A nice solo acoustic guitar instrumental break for the first 90 seconds of “Just A Song” provides a welcome, intimate respite and introduction to the ballad. By the halfway point, Owens is chanting, “Love, love, love/it’s just a song” as violins, flutes and harps are woven between the acoustic guitar and drums. The song itself is gorgeous and drifting, very much akin to what you’d hear on a Spiritualized record.

Waking you up from the proverbial nap the middle of the record provides is “Magic”, a jangly guitar, AM pop number that operates with a certain Elvis Costello-ish aire about it. It feels very specifically placed in that position on the album so as to serve as a buffer between the nearly 7 minutes of “Just A Song” and the 8 minutes that make up “Forgiveness”. You don’t want two ballads of such length (let alone 3 if you count “Vomit”) piled on top of one another. Unlike some of the other massive songs on “Father, Son, Holy Ghost”, “Forgiveness” doesn’t pull any punches or play around with a whole lot of sonic textures. It is first and foremost a relatively sparse acoustic ballad, pushing us to pay close attention to exactly what Owens is singing about, something most succinctly summed up in the song’s title. For the final 2.5 minutes though, Owens takes a vocal break and thrashes out an electric guitar solo that sounds like pure catharsis. Here he is, begging to be forgiven, and that guitar ringing out into the somber melody is like the burden of all his problems being lifted from his shoulders. It is the album’s true highlight, to the point where it makes the final two songs left feel nearly unnecessary additions. Still, the organ and choir on “Love Like A River” makes it very much classically inspired by gospel/soul music, bringing yet another fascinating twist to what’s already a highly engaging record. Things close out with the somber “Jamie Marie”, in which Owens spends almost the entire track on his own, just a gently picked electric guitar and his voice. In the final minute of the song, an organ and the drums break through, but Owens has said his piece already, and they’ve simply shown up to play him off the stage. It’s an underwhelming way to close, but in light of all that came before it, it feels almost fitting.

There’s so much about “Father, Son, Holy Ghost” that you deserve to find out about yourself. Spending time with the lyrics, which are more often than not musings about relationships be they romantic or familial, only enhance the depth and character of the record. There are small, transitional moments too that you’ll uncover and hopefully find delightful the more times you listen to this album. It rewards your time and commitment to it, a quality that only the best of the best seem to have about them. For a band that apes a lot of classic sounds, Girls sure do an awfully great job with them – to the point where you almost think these guys would be huge were they around in the 60s and 70s. Imitating your idols is one thing, but to cut out your own piece of land among them, that’s impressive. Impressive to the point where “Father, Son, Holy Ghost” appears ready to be annointed as one of the finest records of 2011.

Girls – Vomit

Buy “Father, Son, Holy Ghost” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 9-12-11

Hope everybody enjoyed some quality NFL football over the weekend. I realize that sports and music aren’t always the ideal pairing, unless you’re hard rock or hip hop, but I just thought I’d remind those less sports inclined that everyone and their fantasy leagues will be going on and on about teams for the next few months. Don’t worry – you don’t really have to care about football, at least not until the Super Bowl, during which you can pretend to care while enjoying some creative commercials. So there’s that. Happy NFL season everybody. I probably won’t mention it again until January. What I will mention over and over on consecutive weekdays is the edition of Pick Your Poison. In conjunction with today’s edition, I’d like to mention that three of the bands you can hear songs from on the list below will be playing a show together. Evolove, Stitched Up Heart and Gemini Syndrome will all be performing in Chicago at the Elbo Room on the 18th, which is this coming Sunday. GO pick up tickets if you like what you hear from those bands. Other things I can recommend today include tracks from Blouse, Borrowed Beams of Light, Fujiya & Miyaki, Kurt Vile, Last American BUffalo, Plates of Cake and Slow Animal.

Automatic Writing – Continuous

Blouse – Videotapes

¡BORRACHO! – Alpine

Borrowed Beams of Light – Half Light
Borrowed Beams of Light – Holy Cow
Borrowed Beams of Light – Run Rabid Through the Haze

Comet Gain – Clang of the Concrete Swans

Evolove – Wake Up Call

The Fairchilds – Unbreakable

Fujiya & Miyaki – Chichikov

Gemini Syndrome – Basement

Hunting Foxes – Chasing Thoughts

Is Tropical – The Greeks (Polarset Remix)

Kurt Vile – The Creature

Last American BUffalo – Thieves

Paul Hudson – Charlie

Plates of Cake – As If the Choice Were Mine

The Secret Whistle – Moon Top Mountains

Slow Animal – Heatwave

Stitched Up Heart – Is This the Way You Get to Hell

Tunabunny – Only at Night

SOUNDCLOUD

The Helmholtz Resonators – Hades

NeedToBreathe – The Reckoning

The Q – Mercury

Album Review: The Drums – Portamento [Frenchkiss/Moshi Moshi/Island]


It’s been just over a year since The Drums released their self-titled debut album, and for all the touring they did to promote it, for whatever reason the band had enough time on their hands to write and record a follow-up. This in spite of undergoing a lineup change last fall as well. There are a number of potential reasons for a band to crank out another record so quickly. If you’re like Deerhunter’s Bradford Cox or The Fiery Furnaces’ Matthew Friedberger or Guided By Voices’ Robert Pollard, songwriting comes so naturally that it becomes problematic if you aren’t consistently making new music. Other bands and artists will keep creating new music in order to keep the hype cycle going, keeping your name on the tip of everybody’s tongues. Then you’ve got those that did relatively well with their last album, but are being pressured by their label to hurry up and record something new in the hopes of generating more cash while the iron is still hot. Of course some artists have also been operating with a low profile for a lengthy period of time and have built a large catalogue of songs and demos that are just waiting to get that studio polish on them. Where do The Drums fall in amongst these possible options? Well, with their new record “Portamento”, it’s a little tough to say. Based purely on conjecture and the songs on this new album, it would seem that the band probably should have given some more time and consideration when putting together their sophmore record.

What brought The Drums moderate success in the first place was their whistle-happy song “Let’s Go Surfing” off that debut album, a track that was super catchy and embodied the spirit of its title. In fact, “surf rock” is one of the descriptive labels you could affix to the band’s sound, though they go far beyond that. They earned early comparisons to New Order and Joy Division, along with The Cure and The Smiths, essentially amounting to their sound being well within the realm of 80s synth-pop, but again with that sunnier, surf edge to it. The funny part is that in spite of their lighter and brighter pop side, the band is more interested in poking fun at those elements and recent surge in popularity than they are succumbing to their charms. Plus, though the melodies themselves might be charmingly upbeat, close examination of the lyrics reveal a much darker and more depressed side of the band. That’s a big part of where the 80s new wave influence comes in, along with a bunch of bass-dominant songs. There’s a certain script that The Drums followed on their debut that felt wholly unoriginal while still sucking us in and winning us over. Here appeared to be a band on the verge of either making it or breaking it based solely on whether or not they played their cards right.

“Portamento” does very little to change what we’re already familiar with about The Drums. They’re still all about those super catchy 80s-inspired melodies with just a hint of lighthearted surf, but they do throw in a twist or two to project at least some evolution. The songs go a touch darker in mood this time around, whether it’s discussing the absence of an afterlife in “Book of Revelation” and “Searching for Heaven” or emotional unavailability in relationships in “Hard to Love” and “I Don’t Know How to Love”. Yet there’s still a very toe-tapping and easygoing feel to many of the melodies. Instrumentally speaking, the band has broadened their sonic palette just a little, adding in things like vocal looping and a greater reliance on synths which means pulling away from guitars just a touch. Yet it doesn’t work out too well, especially on “Searching for Heaven” where synths and vocals are the only two elements in play. Pinned to start the second half of the record, the track just limps along with little to nothing going for it outside of Johnathan Pierce’s vocals, which come across as oddly off-key and disaffected. It becomes one of the album’s standout moments for all the wrong reasons. While nothing else ever gets quite so poor in quality, “Portamento” is absolutely front-loaded with all the best moments. Either that, or after the first half the second half starts to sound like virtually the same songs over and over again. The tempo stays relatively quick and the choruses keep pushing hook after hook like they’re going out of style, but they’re rendered as blunt and moderately ineffective on tracks like “If He Likes It Let Him Do It” and “In the Cold”.

The good news is that The Drums still have at least a handful of super addictive songs on “Portamento” to keep us on the leash for a little while longer. “Days” is by no means their most creative effort, but it’s tough to not find yourself humming it to yourself a few hours after hearing it. There’s a saxophone that pops up on “What You Were” that is a nice little treat when paired with the brisk pace and dreamy atmosphere. First single “Money” is super fun and super danceable, even if the chorus strikes far too many times over 4 minutes that it begins to feel uncomfortable. Amidst the lowlights the second half of the record brings, “I Need A Doctor” is either a good song or feels a lot like one because it’s sandwiched between two bad ones. “How It Ended” closes the record on a strong note though, practically rediscovering the energy and playfulness of the first half of the album and leaving you wondering why the entire record couldn’t have maintained that same quality.

In a nutshell, if you liked the first Drums record, you’ll likely feel the same way about the second. There are no tracks on “Portamento” that are as strong as “Let’s Go Surfing” was, but there are still plenty of successes on it in spite of that. Even then, it’s easy to call this new record a disappointment, largely because the band appears entirely reliant on big choruses and brisk tempos to get by. They seem to figure that the more times you hear a hook, the greater chance it has of getting stuck in your head. As the old saying goes though, quantity does not always equal quality. Even when you are faced with a quality chorus that doesn’t necessarily mean the more times you hear it the better. If you were to eat your absolutely favorite meal every single day, eventually you’d grow tired of it and desire a little more variety. The small sonic experiments with synths and looping and horns don’t nearly provide the sort of variety you might hope for. None of the songs on this album make it past the 4.5 minute mark, but with how quickly they bounce from verse to chorus to verse, there are times where you just want to check and see how much time is left because it starts to feel like it’s been going on forever. The same can be said about the entire record, which may only be 45 minutes but feels closer to 60. Time flies when you’re having fun, and it moves like a snail when you’re not. The Drums may have approached “Portamento” with good intentions and the hope of sustainability/increased popularity, but the reality of the situation is that they’re trying too hard. Perhaps if they ease back on that throttle just a little, take their time and write more carefully layered melodies, success will find them instead of the opposite.

The Drums – Money

Buy “Portamento” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Friday 9-9-11

Here we are, another Friday to celebrate the start of another weekend. This upcoming weekend will be the 10th anniversary of 9/11, the tragic day that the Twin Towers fell in New York. Unless you’re reading this site and you’re younger than about 15 years old, chances are you remember what happened like it was yesterday. One of the things that bothers me just a little is how small schoolchildren, almost all of which were born either after or just before 2001 are now being somewhat exploited and brought out to commemorate the events of that day. I’m not talking about the children of the loved ones that were lost, I’m talking about just random, everyday schoolchildren. I suppose it falls under the category of the children being our “future” and how we need to protect this new generation of youth from things like 9/11. My viewpoint is that we need to honor those that were lost, along with all the men and women who did everything they could to save as many people as possible on that fateful day. Even if you don’t know anybody that was directly involved in saving lives for 9/11, perhaps Sunday is a good day to tell a police officer or fireman/woman or a soldier thank you for looking out for our well-being (here or abroad). Okay, I’ve said my piece. On a more positive note, Pick Your Poison is just a touch larger than usual today. I can give my seal of approval to tracks from Blessed Feathers, HTRK, Kosha Dillz, and Night Shining. Big Black Delta’s remix of M83’s new one “Midnight City” is pretty dope as well. You can also stream new tracks from Modeselektor and Real Estate in the Soundcloud section.

Architecture in Helsinki – Escapee (Venice Remix)

The Asteroid Shop – Dandelion

Blessed Feathers – By Song Through the Americas

The Creepy Crawlies – Get Buried!

Deca ft. Ichibon & ROqy Tyraid – Clockwork

Hardboiled Wonderland – Jungle Fever

HTRK – Eat Yr Heart

Jupe Jupe – Suspicion

Kosha Dillz – Bars Mitzvah

M83 – Midnight City (Big Black Delta Remix)

Mag Lev – Gabble

Memory Flowers – Safety Net

The New Division – Shallow Play

Night Shining – The Moon’s Hand

Paper Diamond – Can We Go Up

Pree – Lemon Tree

Tonedeff – What Part of Forever (Cee-Lo Green cover)

Vadoinmessico – Marzia

SOUNDCLOUD

Anomie Belle – Ain’t No Sunshine

Kites – Yellow Letter

Modeselektor ft. Busdriver – Pretentious Friends

Psychic Ills – Mind Daze

Real Estate – It’s Real

Salli Lunn – The Invention of Steel (Manual Remix)

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