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Pick Your Poison: Thursday 8-25-11

Hey, hey it’s Thursday. I don’t have much time to chat, so let’s get right to today’s Pick Your Poison. Recommended tracks come from Atlas Sound aka Bradford Cox of Deerhunter, The Bird Day, Cheap Time, Rocket From the Tombs, Sorrows, Speculator and Two Suns.

Andrew Danso – Thinking Memories

Atlas Sound – Terra Incognita

The Bird Day – Moody Trudy

Blessed Feathers – Stinging Nettle, Honeysuckle

Cheap Time – I’d Rather Be Alone

Dearling Physique – Up All Night

Dreamers of the Ghetto – Tether

La Chansons – Turquoise Paradise

Memotone – Fractal

OK Go – All Is Not Lost (Keys N Krates Remix)

Rocket From the Tombs – I Sell Soul

Saadi – Take It Easy

Shake Aletti – Inside Out (Toy Tigers Remix)

Shy Mirrors – I’m Not Around

Sorrows – Bad Times Good Times

Speculator – Blue Rose

Treefight for Sunlight – Facing the Sun

Two Suns – Easy Spent
Two Suns – Five Months Gone By

SOUNDCLOUD

Davila 666 – Obsesionao

The Shondes – Ocean to Ocean

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 8-24-11

Apple CEO Steve Jobs resigned today. It has left many in the world of technology very upset, primarily because the man behind such things as the iPhone and iPod and iPad is now largely stepping away from his role as innovator. To be perfectly clear though, we have no real idea how much influence Jobs had over the creation of these devices, except to look at them, decide they were worthy of the Apple name, and then showing up at a big tech conference to unveil them. I’d like to think there’s a team of people that invented the iPod and that Jobs was the guy soaking up all the credit. He is the face of the company, after all. So I wouldn’t worry too much about the future of Apple. I think they’ll be in fine hands for at least the next few years. If you’re reading this on an iPad or a MacBook right now, more power to you. Here’s today’s set of Pick Your Poison cuts. Tracks I can put my stamp of approval on come from BOBBY, Holy Sons, The Morning Clouds, Savaging Spires, The Wombats and Young Circles.

BK-One – Tema Do Canibal (Video Edit)

BOBBY – Sore Spores

Built Like Alaska – Antique Love

CSC Funk Band – Caneca

Holy Sons – A Chapter Must Be Closed

Jonti – Hornet’s Nest

Last Year’s Men – Paralyzed

Luke De-Sciscio – I Want to Hold You

The Morning Clouds – The Wrong Things

The Reminding Ideas – Vegetables

Savaging Spires – Bending the Rules of Time

Socalled – Sleepover

Stereofunk ft. D’ Secret SVC – Get Off

Three Metre Day – Stay That Way

The Wombats – Drop Me Like A Guillotine (WAV)

Young Circles – Asthmatic

SOUNDCLOUD

Anomie Belle – Inky Drips

General Fiasco – The Age That You Start Losing Friends

Let’s Buy Happiness – Dirty Lakes

Man Like Me – Peculiar

Album Review: Active Child – You Are All I See [Vagrant]


Last summer, Active Child released the “Curtis Lane” EP. It was a collection of 6 songs that made for a fascinating introduction to Pat Grossi’s pet project, unique in the way that harp, synths and vocals were all blended, chopped and screwed into an electronic filter with dizzying results. The crossroads that EP presented were directional, with Grossi taking a shot at the slow moving and shimmery synth melodies on one side and more beat-driven 80s dance numbers on the other. Everything worked together relatively well, but the dichotomy suggested that he’d need to make a clearer and bolder choice of direction for whatever he chose to record next. It’s been over a year, one mostly filled with extensive touring around the world, but Active Child finally got around to making a debut full length, titled “You Are All I See”. With his harp and a powerful falsetto voice that even angels are jealous of, Grossi has taken a sharper turn towards ethereal beauty and away from the dance floor, and it’s doubtful anybody will disagree with that decision.

Just because Grossi has made the right decision when it comes to Active Child’s overall sound doesn’t mean that “You Are All I See” is automatically a great record. The title track that starts the record begins with waterfalls of harp eventually leading to touches of synth and that heavenly vocal rising above it all, often overdubbed to create soaring harmonies. Those first four minutes are so gorgeous that you get the sense nothing else on the album will be able to top it from a beauty perspective. That’s pretty much true, but beauty isn’t everything, and a number of other tracks come close to that same level of musical splendor anyways. Electronic textures and synths take over on first single “Hanging On”, and the results sound a bit like something that Justin Vernon’s side project Volcano Choir might put out, but with a little more mainstream R&B influence. The R&B aspect goes into full gear courtesy of “Playing House”, Grossi’s team-up with How to Dress Well aka Tom Krell. If you’re looking for an indie version of a sexy jam to “get it on” to, here’s your track. The slow clap looped beat matched against high-pitched synths and Krell’s expressive vocal (with Auto-Tune harmonies) not to mention seductive lyrics create the perfect environment for taking off your clothes and making some sweet love. Go ahead and give it a try. Let me know how it went afterwards.

As “You Are All I See” fully develops, in spite of a few stylistic shifts the majority of it maintains a delicate 80s electro-synth-pop vibe, its closest cousin actually being the last M83 album “Saturdays=Youth”. The main issue is that it’s not nearly as energetic or engrossing as M83, often adopting a more meditative tone that becomes formless and drags after awhile. Even Grossi’s consistent and dynamite voice can’t quite save much of the middle of the record. “See Thru Eyes” and “High Priestess” in particular fail to inspire in the wake of the first third of the album. When “Way Too Fast” shows up, the minimalist electro atmospherics blended with Grossi’s vocals pitch-shifted through multiple filters makes it sound like an outtake from the James Blake record. It actually makes for one of the most fascinating moments on the entire album even if it doesn’t quite equal the high watermark Blake established earlier this year. Almost like a cast off from the “Curtis Lane” EP, “Shield and Sword” brings the tempo to dance club level but stops short of becoming fully fleshed out and engaging. It also feels just a slight bit out of place.

If there’s hope for “You Are All I See”, it comes in the form of closing track “Johnny Belinda”. There are many ways to describe the track, whether it be operatic, cinematic or even symphonic, but primarily it’s just plain epic. The army of violins and cellos create a massive and ominous rumble while harp gets sprinkled in as a bit of extra spice and beauty. Grossi’s voice, backed by some operatic moans, tells the sad tale of lost love. It is the sonic equivalent of a man adrift at sea in a small lifeboat as a storm rages and waves crash on top of him. And it works. To think that one man (with obvious help) could put together an immense track like that proves that this is a project worth keeping an eye on. If every track on “You Are All I See” was this well written and composed, Active Child would have a game-changing album on his hands. Unfortunately a couple clunkers pushes it off the mark and leaves us to wonder what might have been. The record’s primary issue though is virtually the same problem that has plagued Active Child from the beginning – an inability to commit to one particular style or another. Grossi has broadened his horizons rather than reduced them, going from R&B one moment to synth-pop the next, with shades of soul, classical, gospel and a number of other styles in between. Simply having your record sound beautiful doesn’t mean you’re stylistically dialed in. Hopefully from touring around this record Grossi will learn what works best and streamline that approach for the next record.

Active Child – Playing House (Ft. How To Dress Well)

Active Child – Hanging On (White Sea Remix)

Buy “You Are All I See” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 8-23-11

Do you like the Red Hot Chili Peppers? To some, the response to that question is, “Duh, who doesn’t?”. Those would be the hardcore RHCP fans talking. But in many ways they are a divisive group, and one listen to their last “double” album “Stadium Arcadium” hopefully is all the evidence you need. It’s been 5 years since the band released a new album, and since then guitarist John Frusciante has left the band (again). There is a new member though, and that comes in the form of Anthony Kiedis’ moustache. I’m only kind of kidding on that. But Josh Klinghoffer is Frusciante’s real replacement, and their new album “I’m With You” is your chance to test his mettle vs. the brilliant Frusciante. August 29th is the official release date of the new record, but if you go to iTunes right now, you can stream the entire thing. You know, in case that’s something you’d like to do. For the rest of us, it’s all about the downloads, baby. Today’s Pick Your Poison highlights include tracks from The Duke and the King, Hella, Mint Julep, Netherlands, Sondre Lerche and Wiretree.

Backseat Dreamer – For Starry Eyes (Ghede Iheme Remix)

Bon Accord – Huish Park
Bon Accord – Lopsided

Cataldo – Prison Boxing

Dead Leaves Rising – Shadow Complex

The Duke and the King – Shine on You

Hella – Headless

Jake Leonardo – Coka Cola

Jon DeRosa – Anchored

Kyla La Grange – Heavy Stone

Lips – Everything to Me (Christian Strobe Remix)

Mint Julep – Aviary

Netherlands – Something or Nothing

Pikachunes – Nervous

Remora – My Brothers Guns & Knives

Sondre Lerche – Private Caller

Wiretree – Make Up

You Love Her Coz She’s Dead – Leap of Desire

SOUNDCLOUD

BIGkids – Drum In Your Chest

Breton – The Commission

Coppertone – Clandestiny

Lowe – Breathe In Breathe Out

TV Buddhas – Hello to Loneliness

Album Review: Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks – Mirror Traffic [Matador]


I know what the Senator wants. The Senator wants a Pavement reunion. Last year, the Senator finally got what he wanted, as the seminal 90s band got back together for old times’ sake and toured around the world. Beyond touring there weren’t any solid plans, save to say that maybe, when hell froze over, the guys would stay together and make some new music. The kibosh was pretty much put on that late last year, when as Pavement were nearing the end of their tour dates, frontman Stephen Malkmus announced a new record with his backing band the Jicks. Like clockwork then, the reunion ended and it’s almost like the whole thing was a year-long dream. The difference of now vs. 2009 though is that Malkmus is riding a wave of revived popularity and respect courtesy of said reunion. Whereas his last couple records, either fully on his own or with the Jicks have been released with far less fanfare and attention than Pavement’s stuff, suddenly the name Malkmus is on everyone’s lips. To be perfectly fair though, the last couple albums Malkmus has put out weren’t necessarily worth a whole lot of fanfare or attention in the first place. With eyes back on his own stuff, here comes “Mirror Traffic”, a 16 track, 50 minute musical journey that seeks to keep that wave of newfound prosperity going, albeit this time without his old bandmates in tow.

The last album release that had Malkmus’ name on it was 2008’s “Real Emotional Trash”, a record that was interesting in part because it found the notorious “slacker” taking things in a decidedly noodling, almost jam band-like direction. As the cover to that record featured a swirl, the music often felt like it was going around in circles itself, featuring extended solos and long instrumental passages that went nowhere. Credit at least partially goes to Beck, producer of “Mirror Traffic”, for taking those prog-rock tendencies and effectively muting them. What we get instead is almost a throwback record for Malkmus. Its closest cousin is his 2001 self-titled solo record, the first thing he put out after Pavement’s original breakup. In that respect it doesn’t quite qualify to be called “Pavement-esque”, but the jangly, loose feel of the record is more classic and accessible than most of what Malkmus has put out in recent years. That’s apparent right from the opening track “Tigers”, a playful little fuzzed out garage rocker with a light twang of steel pedal guitar for good measure. With its naturally snarky lyrics and strong hook, it marks one of the most easily likable songs Malkmus has put together in years. That’s not even a single, either.

The first single honor goes to “No One Is (As I Are Be)”, a quieter acoustic folk number that sounds like it belongs more on Beck’s “Sea Change” than it does “Mirror Traffic”. Yet the sound wears well on Malkmus, and though a record full of those kinds of songs would likely be poorly received by a devoted fan base, it’s nice every now and then. Plus you get treated to classic lines like, “I cannot even do one sit-up/sit-ups are so bourgeoisie”, which are simply a delight. Also delightful is “Senator”, which topically speaking would seem to be about sex scandals in government. “I know what the Senator wants/the Senator wants a blow job”, Malkmus starts out saying. In the end, the Senator wants a blow job because “everyone” wants a blow job. The deeper meaning here is not sexual in nature at all, but rather the observation that our government officials (and everyone, for that matter) are simply looking for self-gratification. Whether it’s a blow job or a sandwich or stricter gun laws, we’re all looking to get what we want, everyone else (even constituents) be damned.

While the first few tracks on “Mirror Traffic” can leave you with the thought that maybe the record is front-loaded with all the best material, the great news is how evenly the highlights are spread out. The middle section of the record is buttressed with the breezy “Stick Figures in Love” and the bi-polar tempo shifts of “Spazz”, both of which engage the listener in different ways while never pushing too far in an undesirable direction. Closer to the end you get the brisk earworm “Tune Grief” leading into the brightly hummable “Forever 28”, elevating the mood and tempo prior to the slower and somewhat pointless drag of the closing track “Gorgeous George”. That final 5 minutes of the album are easily the least interesting of the entire record, giving off the sense that maybe there were one too many songs. The good news is that you can always end the record before then, so perhaps saving that one for last was a smart move.

All the while you get the trademark lyrical wit mixed with plenty of dark moments that are endearing as they are disturbing. For as much charm as the guy exudes, he has grown more ornery and in some ways less wise than more recent records might suggest. He’s taken off his smart advice hat to yell at some kids to get off his lawn. Perhaps that mentality is natural the older you get, even as with all your life experience the wiser you get. The better word to be using here is to say that Malkmus is taking a more “mature” approach to the points he’s trying to get across, and while he is cracking jokes along the way, he’s simultaneously trying to defuse their effects by pointing out that such pessimistic attitudes can have an equally destructive effect on your own life. So while he’s not playing the fortune cookie anymore, there are still plenty of lessons to be learned across “Mirror Traffic”. You just need to dig a little deeper to uncover them. It’s small things like that which elevate this record beyond most of what Malkmus has done in the past decade with the Jicks.

Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks – Tigers
Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks – Senator

Buy “Mirror Traffic” from Matador Records

Pick Your Poison: Monday 8-22-11

Does anybody remember the band Fastball? You know, that band from way back in the 90s who did that song “The Way”? They’ve made a bunch of music since that time, but nobody has paid any attention to it. Consider them destined for the One Hit Wonder bin, unless they whip out a surprise and craft some unbelievable record in the future. In the meantime, and the reason why I bring Fastball up, is because the frontman for the band, Miles Zuniga, has a solo record coming out. There’s a song from it available for you to download below. Give it a listen. I think it’ll be better than whatever nightmare you might be able to conjure up in your head. Other Pick Your Poison notables today include tracks from Banded Stilts, The Cave Singers, Future Islands and Still Corners.

Afrolicious – Thursday Night Kinda Swing

Brown Shoe – Colt Rider

Firs of Prey – What You Say

Banded Stilts – Forest, Oh Forest Protect Me)

Carrie Clark & the Lonesome Lovers – Bum Bah Dum

The Cave Singers – Black Leaf

Future Islands – Balance

John Wesley Harding – Sing Your Own Song

Kenneth Bager – The Sound of Swing (Andrea Vittorelli Remix)

Kidstreet – Crazy

Miles Zuniga – Marfa Moonlight

Mwahaha – Rainbow Diamond

Peggy Sue – Cut My Teeth

plumerai – Strike

Red Robot – My Last Home
Red Robot – It Won’t Be Long

Still Corners – Cuckoo

T.W. Walsh – Make It Rhyme

SOUNDCLOUD

Innercity – The Pyramids of Northeast Belgium

Red Wanting Blue – Audition

Subtrakill – Exhaustificated/span>

Pick Your Poison: Friday 8-19-11

Typically on a Friday I like to rant and rave about how exciting the weekend is going to be, and how much fun we’re all going to (or is it supposed to?) have. Today I want to talk not about the weekend, but instead The Weeknd. You’ve hopefully heard of The Weeknd before, and if not, I’ll say this much – look up their “House of Balloons” R&B mixtape and download it. It’s available for free. You know what’s also available for free? A brand spanking new mixtape from The Weeknd, the official “follow up” to the much hyped “House of Balloons”, appropriately released yesterday and titled “Thursday”. More R&B mixtape goodness for your ears. And honestly I don’t mind saying this – The Weeknd make great music for your weekend. So chill out with that goodness and thank me later. But the mp3s in today’s Pick Your Poison are nothing short of excellent too. Plenty to recommend, from new stuff from Cass McCombs and Kathryn Calder to an excellent Okkervil River song through equally stellar moments courtesy of The Caseworker, Color Radio, PAPA, Sleeping Bag and Talkdemonic. Icebird is a side project of rjd2, and he’s remixed his own work below, as has Illvibe. In the Soundcloud section you can stream new tracks from ANR and Twin Sister, both of which I also advise you to check out. If all this doesn’t make your weekend at least sound good, well, we’ve got a problem.

A Lull – Pot Luck

Appetite – Warn Me, Right

The Caseworker – National Runner

Cass McCombs – The Same Thing

Chris Letcher – Phone Booth

Color Radio – Quiet House

Erika Spring – 6 More Weeks (Chrome Canyon Remix)

Icebird – Going and Going and Going (rjd2 Remix)
Icebird – Going and Going and Going (Illvibe Remix)

The John Steel Singers – Rainbow Kraut

Kathryn Calder – Who Are You?

Marmoset – Peach Cobbler
Marmoset – Winter

Okkervil River – Your Past Life As A Blast

PAPA – I Am the Lion King

Pomegranates – Softness
Pomegranates – Morroco Girl

Rows of Arrows – Lasso

Sleeping Bag – Beside

Talkdemonic – Revival

We Cut Corners – Go Easy

SOUNDCLOUD

ANR – It’s Around You

Twin Sister – Gene Ciampi

Album Review: The War on Drugs – Slave Ambient [Secretly Canadian]


My policy towards music tends to fly by the motto of “listen first, ask questions later”. Before all the pitches and “sounds like” comparisons reach my eyes, my ears almost always get the first taste and judge for themselves. It has certainly made for some interesting musical moments, but one of the more twisted pleasures I get out of blind listening is when an artist or band finds a way to genuinely surprise me. I’ve heard The War on Drugs before, but not since giving a cursory listen to their 2008 label debut “Wagonwheel Blues”. They’ve been pulling in a fair amount of hype for their sophmore effort “Slave Ambient” though, so having completely forgotten why I didn’t pay them more attention the first time around, I jumped into the record without a second thought or a second of research.

Track 2 on “Slave Ambient” is “Brothers”. My memory wiped of what this band is all about and who their members are, my immediate thought was that the track sounded exactly like Kurt Vile. From the acoustic guitars through the vocals, the song very much seemed like a missing track off Vile’s latest record “Smoke Ring For My Halo”. It was after that first time through the record that I scanned the text surrounding the band, only to discover that Vile was in fact a founding member of The War on Drugs, leaving to pursue his solo career back in 2008. In essence then, he was one of the people that helped shape the band’s sound in the early days, and his presence is still felt even today. It doesn’t help that frontman Adam Granduciel sounds a bit like Vile too. Considering the praise Vile has been getting these last couple years for his music, the similarities might not be a bad thing.

Despite resembling Kurt Vile on a couple tracks, that’s not nearly the full scope of The War on Drugs’ sound. Unlike Vile’s often hushed and intimate melodies, The War on Drugs will occasionally break out a propulsive, stadium-sized song that bears closer cousins to Arcade Fire than anything else. Grandiosity comes in the form of “Your Love Is Calling My Name”, centerpiece “Come to the City” and “Baby Missiles”. Not only are these tracks massive in scope, but they’re quite catchy too. Where much of the record merely drifts in slow-moving ambience (as the title suggests), those more expansive bits help to break free of what might otherwise be complacent monotony. Yet just because a song has a brisk pace and a widescreen melody doesn’t automatically make it great or better than some of the quieter stuff. The band shows so much restraint across the entirety of “Slave Ambient” that they aren’t quite able to break free of that even when they do go big. That is to say they could have and probably should have tried to go even bigger. As a result most of the more thrilling moments on the album are offset with this air of disappointment at the thought of what might have been.

The slower, more drifting songs typically work well, particularly in establishing an overall mood. A couple instrumentals in the form of the brief “Come For It” and “Original Slave” only add to the drifting elements, though it is questionable as to whether they’re needed at all. Ultimately when “Slave Ambient” finishes, you’re left with this general ambivalence towards it. This isn’t a record that’s difficult to like, but it’s also somewhat easy to forget. You can let yourself get lost in the ether and remain blissfully unaware of when one song ends and another begins. Outside of the more expansive and brass ring-reaching moments, there’s not a ton to grab and hold your attention. Again, that’s not necessarily a bad thing, as it serves the experience. Unless you’ve got your highlights clearly marked though, don’t start this record unless you plan to finish it. Tentpole songs aside, keeping everything bunched together as one 45 minute piece will help you to get the most out of it and provide you with a much greater appreciation for the band as a whole. Kurt Vile or no Kurt Vile, The War on Drugs are on the up-and-up. They may not strike the emotional highs that Vile has achieved on his last record, but they’re more ambitious when it comes to their sound so it kind of balances out. Still, this band has some improving left to do. Unlike their last album though, I think I’ll remember “Slave Ambient”, so at least next time I won’t have to re-educate myself on these guys for a third time.

The War on Drugs – Come to the City
The War on Drugs – Baby Missiles

Buy “Slave Ambient” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 8-18-11

Another day, another violent stage collapse that kills a handful of people. Tragically, in case you haven’t heard, the latest incident went down today at the Pukkelpop Festival in Belgium. The Smith Westerns were performing when violent storms caused the stage to collapse. The band is okay, but unfortunately 3 people were killed and dozens more were injured. This coming less than a week after the stage collapsed at the Indiana State Fair, shortly before Sugarland was set to take the stage. Five people were killed and a lot more were injured in that one. Who is building these stages, and who is running these areas where people are not evacuated prior to the collapse happening? I’m thinking with now a pair of tragedies we’re going to wind up with new, much stricter regulations as to how these stages are put together and under what conditions evacuations are ordered. It could be a great thing, saving lots of lives, but there’s also a tendency towards overkill, regulations becoming TOO strict. Hopefully whatever changes are made will be moderate and smartly composed. Sorry to bring everybody down with this talk of people being killed at concerts. Let’s try to lighten up a bit with today’s Pick Your Poison. There’s not one, but TWO Matt & Kim related tracks today, the first being a remix, the second being a collaboration with Andrew W.K. and Soulja Boy. Totally WTF, am I right? It’s a collaboration for Converse. Other tracks I can recommend come from Hubble, Jelly Jells, Shotgun Jimmie, STS, Thrice and Woodsman. There’s a new track from Weekend in the Soundcloud section that’s worth your time to stream as well.

Andrew W.K., Matt & Kim, and Soulja Boy – I’m A Goner

Argyle Johansen – You Try

Bear & Moose – Wear the Wolf

Daniel Rockwell – I Wanna See You

Hubble – Nude Ghost

Icarus Himself – On Your Side

Jelly Jells – Beautiful

Kenton Dunson – Top of the World (ft. Passion Pit)

Matt & Kim – Block After Block (Echoes Club Remix)

Modest Mouse – Float On (Landis Remix)

Pavy – Hip Hop Is My Home

Rhythm Monks – Candomble

Rubblebucket – Down in the Yards (Rubblebucket Remix)

Shotgun Jimmie – Suzy

STS – Sunshine (ft. Yelawolf)

Thrice – Yellow Belly

Woodsman – In Circles

SOUNDCLOUD

dEUS – Constant Now

Razika – Aldri

Weekend – Hazel

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 8-17-11

Happy Wednesday. Let’s get straight to this. Today’s Pick Your Poison highlights include tracks from 65daysofstatic, Amen Dunes, Canon Blue, Chain Gang of 1974 (covering the Thompson Twins), Eric Sarmiento, Tidelands and Zs. Kirby Kaiser is a Chicago-based singer/songwriter who’s positively a delight, so be sure to check out a track from her as well. And in the Soundcloud section, stream a track from Dibiase – a new project from Matt Talbott of the great band Hum.

65daysofstatic – Crash Tactics
65daysofstatic – PX3

Amen Dunes – Not A Slave

Barn Owl – Turiya

Big Black Delta – Capsize

Broncho – Pick A Fight

Canon Blue – Indian Summer (Des Moines)

The Chain Gang of 1974 – Hold Me Now (Thompson Twins cover)

Eric Sarmiento – These Little Winters

Fionn Regan – 100 Acres of Sycamore

Foster the People – Pumped Up Kicks (The Golden Pony Remix)

Kirby Kaiser – There’s A Boy

The Piney Gir Country Roadshow – Lucky Me

Tidelands – Marigolds

Tyson – Fight

Walls – Sunporch (Holy Other Remix)

Warning Light – In the Tidal Break

Zs – 33~

SOUNDCLOUD

The Boicotts – I Don’t Wanna Be Your Boy

Dibiase – 12 Pound Tooth

Tom Freund – Cruel Cruel World

Lollapalooza 2011: The Photos

Yes, it’s been nearly a week and a half since Lollapalooza ended. I’ve written piece after piece on it. I’ve said all I’m going to say about it for 2011. All I’ve got left is to SHOW you some of the things that went down. So this is a collection of edited photos that I snapped over the course of the 3 day weekend. As it gets later in the day and the crowds built up, my photos got further and further away. Which explains why the headliners look like little dots in the background. What can I say – I did what I could. I hope you enjoy these (mostly good) photos. Perhaps we’ll do it all again next year. Click past the jump to see the assortment, in the order I saw each band in.

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 8-16-11

Today’s Tuesday, and that means it’s new album release day. I’m not going to go into what I recommend and what I don’t, I’m just going to make mention of a few records that are worth paying attention to – good or bad. I’ve featured a few of these bands in previous editions of Pick Your Poison as well, so use the search bar on the right if you’d like to hear some mp3s from them. Tune your ears to records from Botany, The Bottle Rockets, Braid, Canon Blue, Cut Off Your Hands, Fool’s Gold, Her Space Holiday, Mister Heavenly, Natalia Kills, Sundress, Tropics, Veronica Falls, The War on Drugs and Yellow Ostrich. A few of those artists actually have mp3s in today’s edition of Pick Your Poison as well. Which is why I’ll recommend tracks from Annie Crane, Ariel Abshire, Bear Lake, The Clap, Craig Wedren, Grace Jones, Maluca & Party Squad, Sundress, and Chicago’s own Word and Number. Talking specifically about remix mp3s, Chromeo’s remix of Mayer Hawthorne is pretty good, as is Botany’s remix of Tropics.

Annie Crane – Copenhagen Heart

Ariel Abshire – Essex

Bare Wires – Cheap Perfume

Bear Lake – Breaking Me Down

The Clap – Lucy 2

Craig Wedren – Cupid (m4a)

Grace Jones – Well Well Well Dub

Little Fish – Wonderful

Maluca & Party Squad – Lola

Mayer Hawthorne – A Long Time (Chromeo Remix)

Rocketship Park – Stuck With Me

Shitty/Awesome – Hang Up

Sundress – Thirteen

Tropics – Mouves (Botany Remix)

Vadoinmessico – Marzia

Word and Number – The Reds
Word and Number – Juughl

SOUNDCLOUD

Burbank International – Liquor Crush (feat. Nick Sinetos and Alex Musto)

Dark Loft – Backlash

Take Remedy – EyeView

Zenith Myth – Ego Fader

Album Review: Mister Heavenly – Out of Love [Sub Pop]


Joe Plummer is a busy man. For a drummer, that’s not typically the case. Unless you’re a Josh Freese or a Matt Cameron, typically drumming jobs don’t just land on your doorstep. That’s probably more due to drummers being viewed as “outcasts” in most bands, aka the person that groupies least want to sleep with. Here are some fun drummer jokes you can use in your every day life. What’s the last thing a drummer says in a band? Hey guys, why don’t we try one of my songs. What do you call a drummer with half a brain? Gifted. How many drummers does it take to change a light bulb? None, they have a machine to do that now. Okay, enough with the drummer jokes. The point being, brilliant and in-demand drummers are moderately hard to come by, so if you can find one, hang on to him or her even if it means sharing with another band. Such is the situation Joe Plummer now finds himself in. Up until this point, you know him as the drummer for Modest Mouse. Last week, it was announced that he was also the drummer for James Mercer’s revived edition of The Shins, recruited after Mercer fired all the other guys in the band. Last but certainly not least comes Mister Heavenly. A bonified indie supergroup side project, Plummer teams up with Honus Honus (Ryan Kattner) of Man Man as well as Nick Thorburn of Islands/The Unicorns. After announcing their existence and recording a debut album late last fall, they went on a short winter tour that attracted a lot of attention due to actor Michael Cera consistently showing up to play bass. Cera is not an official member of the band, nor does he appear on the Mister Heavenly record “Out of Love”. It’s taken several months to fully work out the details and such, but that full length is finally available in stores and seeks to establish a whole new genre of music that the trio have dubbed “doom wop”.

Technically speaking, “doom wop” is more a state of mind than it is an actual sound. But really you can get away with calling it a little musical subgenre of its own, melding the sounds of 50s R&B music with a touch of grunge here and even a light bit of pop there. The doom part comes in terms of thematics, as the lyrics tend to lean on the darker side of life and tackling topics from mass murder through failed relationships. Upbeat and cheery is not what Mister Heavenly is all about. Similarly, if you closely examine the back catalogues of each of the members of the band, from Island and The Unicorns through Man Man and Modest Mouse, you can definitely hear bits and pieces of all those stretched across “Out of Love”. Despite these familiarities, there’s definitely something about Mister Heavenly that remains distinctive and difficult to put your finger on. Perhaps that’s because in spite of the sonic fusion this trio tries to put together, establishing a genuine consistency across 12 tracks becomes a problem. To move from the driving guitar-heavy stomp of opening track “Bronx Sniper” into the feathery barroom piano of “I Am A Hologram” doesn’t make a whole lot of sense sonically, nor does the distinct 50s throwback song “Mister Heavenly” moving into the 80s-synth-and-surf-rock blend of “Harm You”. 50s R&B may have been the original template these guys were working from, but they divert from it a handful of times on the album and it breaks up the cohesion just enough to be noticeable.

The lack of uniformity across “Out of Love” doesn’t automatically make it a bad record though. Taken as individual tracks, most of these songs are catchy and interesting and often weird. A song like “Pineapple Girl”, so fun and delightful on its instrumental surface, is about the correspondence between Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega and a 10-year-old girl from Michigan. “Diddy Eyes” was inspired by NBA basketball player Rolando Blackman and how his eyes resemble Sean “P. Diddy” Combs’ distinctive eyes. Retro sci-fi strikes hard on “I Am A Hologram”, partly about what the title suggests, but also using the technology to suggest a lack of being physically or emotionally present in a relationship. As they are in so many songs, relationships are the topic du jour, though they’re typically not reflected in a positive light. “Hold My Hand” is basically about a deranged guy that holds a woman captive in the hopes that she’ll fall in love with him. Meanwhile “Your Girl” involves a guy trying to steal his friend’s girlfriend, deviously plotting ways to win her over. It’s loosely charming in spite of its sheer disregard for convention, and that in effect applies to the entire record.

The entire Mister Heavenly project has been in the works for years now, with plans hatched but never any real time to devote to it. Things were so loosely put together anyways, the guys originally planning to record a couple songs for a 7 inch single or something and going from there, but over a brief period of time between Thorburn and Honus they realized there was enough material for a full album. That’s now become “Out of Love”, and the results are merely okay. Yet this trio seems like they wouldn’t have a problem with their record being called mediocre. Okay, they likely would, otherwise they probably wouldn’t have allowed it to be released. The point is, don’t take this record too seriously. Think of it as three friends messing around in the studio, coming up with something enjoyable they can release and tour around, and nothing more. All these guys do much better work in their main bands/day jobs. This may be a supergroup, but it’s also a side project and pretty much demands to be treated as such. The closer you listen, the more faults you’re likely to find. Take it with a grain of salt and you’ll have a great time listening to this album.

Mister Heavenly – Bronx Sniper
Mister Heavenly – Pineapple Girl

Buy “Out of Love” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 8-15-11

Can you believe we’re already halfway through August? It seems like just yesterday we were still in the heat and severe weather-ravaged July. I suppose time does fly when you’re having fun, and considering in the last couple weeks I’ve seen Paul McCartney live and spent 3 days at Lollapalooza, the quick pace makes perfect sense to me. Soon enough fall will be here and colder temperatures along with it. I’m a fan of sweater weather, but there’s still plenty about the sun-drenched summer I love with unbridled passion. Hopefully you’re making the most of the warm temperatures while they still last. Pick Your Poison will not die off with the leaves though, so that might be the one sunny thing in your daily life. Tracks I can recommend today come from The Bottle Rockets, High Places, Little Girls (covering John Maus), Peter Wold Crier and Trans Am. In the Soundcloud section you can stream some good cuts from Feist, Neon Indian and Ladytron, among others.

Adrienne Drake – A Light from the Middle of Nowhere

The Bottle Rockets – Smokin’ 100s Alone

Debbie Neigher – Home

Ghost Bunny – Out of Our Heads

High Places – Year Off

HØLAS – Blown Speaker

Holobeams and Broken Machines – Bocume
Holobeams and Broken Machines – Four

Jordan Bolton – City Daze

Little Girls – Believer (John Maus cover)

Peter Wolf Crier – Settling It Off

Sick Figures – Graveyard Swagger

Something Fierce – Afghani Sands

STS – WWW

Trans Am – Futureworld

SOUNDCLOUD

Canon Logic – Howl in the Night

Clock Opera – Lesson No. 7 (Full Version)

Feist – How Come You Never Go There

Ladytron – Mirage

Neon Indian – Fallout

The Rifles – Tangled Up In Love

Album Review: Jay-Z and Kanye West – Watch the Throne [Def Jam/Roc-A-Fella/Roc Nation]


When talking about modern-day hip hop, you’d be hard pressed to argue there are two bigger names than Jay-Z and Kanye West. They are, to put it one way, at the very top of the talent pool, ruling over all others. Which one is the true #1 is plenty debatable, but according to them it really doesn’t matter. They hold a mutual respect and friendship towards one another, and hip hop is more of a collaborative art than it is a true solo pursuit. Look at almost any rap record and you’ll find a list of guests about a half mile long. Jay-Z and Kanye have each guested on one another’s records at different times in their careers. Kanye’s fingerprints were all over Jay-Z’s last album “The Blueprint 3”, while Jay-Z made appearances on Kanye’s first couple efforts. Those single song collaborations were often special unto themselves, but they never overshadowed the full vision of whichever artist’s name was on the cover. Speaking of visions, Kanye has just been having a banner year since the release of his last record “My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy”, an album so highly praised that many are calling it a masterpiece. To put it another way, he doesn’t particularly need to be working on anything new right now, and even when he does you’d imagine expectations would be high. Yet when inspiration strikes and your buddy Jay-Z is ready and willing to work with you, it can be a tough calling to ignore. Hence “Watch the Throne”, a full length collaboration between the two current kings of hip hop. If it seems like an event record, that’s probably because it is. To treat it with the utmost of sincerity however, might be a mistake.

That’s not to say “Watch the Throne” is a joke record, because by all means it is not. Instead, try to view it as one of those moments where two extremely popular hip hop icons are getting together to just have a little fun. Since neither has to carry the burden of the entire album on their own, they’re able to relax a little bit and worry less about how the songs reflect on them as individuals. Besides that, Kanye West and Jay-Z approach hip hop in markedly different ways, with Kanye being very emotionally transparent in his words and experimental in his beats while Jay-Z is more straightforward and a storyteller. To put it in ruling terms, Kanye is like a crazy dictator, commanding his armies based largely on how he’s feeling emotionally that day. Jay-Z is more like a President in a democracy, in many ways isolating himself from any major decisions by having a hierarchy in place to blame mistakes on. He also adapts to the will of the people somewhat, or the will of his closest advisors, allowing their ideas and influence to be felt in his work as that simultaneously allows less of his own influence and personality to be exposed as a result. On “Watch the Throne” it results in an interesting dichotomy in which Kanye’s dominant personality continues to rule over all, both sonically and lyrically, while Jay-Z allows it to happen and has his arm twisted into trying that hat on himself. In other words, we get the same Kanye we’ve always gotten, but are exposed to a part of Jay-Z that has been rarely seen up until now. The entire record is not one long emotional confession from Jay-Z, but there are a few tracks where he certainly reveals more than he needs to – “Welcome to the Jungle” being the most obvious among them. The thing about such moments is that you can almost hear it in Jay-Z’s voice that he’s a little uncomfortable and it lessens the impact of a couple tracks as a result. A track like “New Day”, in which Kanye and Jay-Z play the “what if” card and dish out advice to their potential future sons is partly ruined because Jay sounds just a little unsure of himself. Funny that it comes up immediately after “Gotta Have It”, one of the record’s best moments, in which Kanye actually sounds more like Jay-Z rather than vice versa.

Topically speaking, a significant portion of “Watch the Throne” is devoted to the hip hop gold standard of bragging about excessive wealth. Given that Jay-Z and Kanye West are both rolling in money and their gold-plated album cover is opulent just to look at, these two have plenty of ideas about what it means to live the “good life”. Listen to or watch the video for first single “Otis”, and you’ll hear an array of high class brands mentioned, likely along with a few you’ve never heard of before because your bank account simply won’t allow you to even research them. That track in particular also misuses and abuses an Otis Redding sample, in that the music legend is nearly unrecognizable thanks to how brief and modulated his vocals are. It likely also cost a pretty penny to obtain all the samples used on this record, from James Brown to Nina Simone to Curtis Mayfield. That’s not even counting the guest vocalists ranging to Frank Ocean from Odd Future on a pair of songs through Jay-Z’s own wife and songstress Beyonce. And while such decadence both sample and lyric-wise can be a whole lot of fun, it’s good to know that these two guys can talk about more than just how big their bank accounts are. “That’s My Bitch” is about women, though not necessarily in the way you might imagine. Not only does Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon contribute some vocals to the track, but Jay-Z gets an remarkably solid verse as he pulls apart the exceptionally high beauty standards women are often submitted to these days. Kanye is the one that makes an ass of himself on the track, which then causes it to lose some of its power. The issue of “black on black violence” is addressed across a couple tracks, most notably “Welcome to the Jungle” and “Murder to Excellence”, which effectively function as two halves of a similar whole. Sandwiched in between them is “Who Gon’ Stop Me”, an ode to many of the famous leaders from our past that were killed for many different reasons – power being chief among them. Kanye spouting off a handful of lines in Pig Latin is nearly reason enough to make it an album highlight. Meanwhile “Made in America” creates a new royal family in its Frank Ocean-sung chorus, making mention of “sweet king Martin, sweet queen Loretta, sweet brother Malcolm” among others while Jay and (mostly) Kanye go on about their rise from the streets to being able to generate millions of blog hits. It’s one part poignant and another part braggadocio, which actually does a great job of again highlighting the differences between Jay and Kanye. Given their past histories, take one guess as to which one of them has a bigger ego.

Admirable though “Watch the Throne” might be, and as packed with talent as “Watch the Throne” might be, the sum of one part Jay-Z and one part Kanye West actually equals something lesser than the two when taken as individuals. When packaged in terms of single-song guest spots on one another’s records, the dichotomy tends to work out of sheer brevity and counterpoint – a momentary yielding of control. Because they’re ostensibly operating as equals here, there’s only so much room underneath the spotlight and gracious though they might be in sharing, you can tell that neither one of them is operating at full capacity. Given Kanye’s strength as a producer and Jay-Z’s strength as a lyricist, they’d have been better off playing to those big pluses rather than trying to evenly balance them. Kanye could easily have done a lot more in generating creative beats, as evidenced by “Why I Love You”, just as Jay-Z could have unleashed more controlled spitfire verses, as evidenced by “Lift Off”. While it’s always great to have an artist step outside of his or her comfort zone, it counts as a misfire if the results are ill-timed and awkward. Not only that, but the lack of a genuinely compelling and memorable single on this album makes it that much harder to fall in love with and generate repeat listens. For the strikes against this album, there are as many, if not more positive ways to view it. Foremost among them is the sheer talent that Jay-Z and Kanye have, to the point where even in a diminished capacity both still manage to shine when the time is right. If this was at all intended to be a battle for the proverbial “throne”, neither side officially wins but both make strong cases in one another’s favor. With the weightiest of expectations upon their shoulders, these two don’t quite meet the high watermark, but they come really damn close. “Watch the Throne” may not be the new gold standard of hip hop records, but do you think either one of these guys would be okay with accepting silver?

Click through to stream the song “Otis”

Buy “Watch the Throne” on iTunes

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