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Album Review: Explosions in the Sky – Take Care, Take Care, Take Care [Temporary Residence Ltd.]


Explosions in the Sky have reached what some might call an impasse in their careers. After churning out 5 albums in 7 years, almost all of which featured their signature and exciting instrumental post-rock sound, they simply vanished for a period of time. 2007’s “All of a Sudden I Miss Everyone” may not have been their strongest effort, but it did do the best for them sales-wise, a likely response to their relentless cycle of recording and touring over the previous few years. Explosions in the Sky are, after all, a thrill to see live, often attacking their songs four electric guitars at a time and not being shy about meandering into extensive and thrashing solos. When you don’t have any singing or lyrics to back you up, that just puts more pressure to keep crowds engaged in what you’re doing, and these guys handle it better than most vocal-heavy bands. They’re also smart and creative enough to differentiate themselves from a number of their counterparts such as Mogwai and Godspeed You! Black Emperor via the way they approach each song, sticking to their guitars and meandering through soundscapes rather than establishing the long-running dynamic of the slow build to explosive noise. This is the style that has sustained the band for the entirety of their existence, which hasn’t really needed changing because of its originality but nevertheless might have been getting a little tiresome around 2007. So they vanished for just a little bit, hopefully to think about what they’ve done and where they’ve been and if they could creatively sustain themselves for presumably another few records. So unlike the amazing TV show “Friday Night Lights” which they soundtracked, which is ending this year after five seasons, Explosions in the Sky have chosen to return for their sixth record, “Take Care, Take Care, Take Care”.

If you’ve heard an Explosions in the Sky record before, you can take comfort (and care) that “Take Care, Take Care, Take Care” doesn’t do anything to change that dynamic. If anything, this new album is more like a reboot of the EITS sound, bringing things back to their most basic elemental core and doing away with any small indulgences that may have been made on the last couple records (see: piano). Once again the carefully crafted songs are distinctive only to this band, and they prove not only to themselves but everyone else that they know exactly what they’re doing. Many other, relatively similar bands have come and gone these last 10 years, but these guys remain because of their tenacity and smart compositions. The power as well, that invisible driving force behind the music, remains intact along with the ability for these songs to evoke strong emotions ranging from a dark sadness to trembling joy and everything in between. While the band does more often than not take the studious approach with 6+ minute passages, at times they’re able to collapse their ideas down to a normal song length, as “Trembling Hands” does with 3.5 minutes of pure energy, a deft pace established at the outset by some heavy percussion and later met with equal vigor by the guitars. The 8 minutes of “Human Qualities” is purely fascinating for the way it slowly spirals downward into near silence before naturally rebuilding to an even stronger place than where it began. The true highlights of the record though come with the final two tracks. After two sparsely plucked electric guitars spend the first three minutes of “Postcard From 1952” meandering and weaving around one another, the drums begin to stir along with the harmonic mixture of the guitars. The notes themselves prove to be just as compelling as two human voices harmonizing on the high and low end of the same note. The heaviness builds to a tipping point, and as the chords begin to reach red levels, there’s a pull back where everything just calms down and peters out. It’s not about denying what might otherwise be viewed as a tension-relieving payout, but rather exercising restraint in the face of mounting pressure. Very few bands can pull that off in a compelling fashion, and Explosions in the Sky is one of them.

What the closing track “Let Me Back In” does is point squarely in the direction of a future for a band that until recently questioning whether it even had one in the first place. Beginning with a highly muffled tape of a woman speaking slowly twists and turns into a soundscape that is at war with itself. One minute it’s subdued and wandering in a daze while the next it’s charging forwards with the force of a thousand elephants complete with machine gun drumming and white noise guitars that consistently pile on top of one another. It is both a spectacular example of where they came from and their roots inspired by way of Mogwai but also marks progression. There are small pieces in the track’s 10 minute duration that mark new and unexplored territory for Explosions in the Sky. The progression of the song itself is more structured and strategic than before, with not only a clear beginning, middle and end, but also a full circle logic where the song ends exactly where it began – with 30 seconds of this muffled woman crying out into the darkness all alone as the world fades to black around her. Not the most pleasant thought, and it’s not the most pleasant song from the band, but not many people listen to this band to be put in a good mood. It’s the epic closer “Take Care, Take Care, Take Care” needs though. While the record itself doesn’t feature the band at the height of their 2003 “Earth Is Not a Cold Dead Place” powers, it does serve as a strong reminder of exactly how this band has lasted so long, and why they’ll probably survive another 10 years if they really want to.

Buy “Take Care, Take Care, Take Care” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 4-25-11

If you were celebrating Easter this past weekend, I hope you had a wonderful time and got plenty of food/candy. I’ve got my annual shopping bag full of jelly beans and Peeps to deal with, which probably means I’ll be on a sugar high for the next month and a half. Back to the grind today though for most people, and Pick Your Poison is no different. Big deal tracks today come from Butcher the Bar, Chicago’s own Digits (download their EP for free via the link below too!), Jessica 6 (with a special guest appearance from Antony of Antony and the Johnsons), Sea of Bees and Warren Haynes.

account4941172 – The Fifth

Botanical Bullets – We Bleed Fluorescent

Butcher the Bar – Bobby

The Caribbean – Outskirts (Aquarelle Remix)
The Caribbean – Mr. Let’s Find Out (Richard Ingram Remix)

Digits – Pale Green Morning
Download Digits’ “Lost Dream” EP for free

Gross Relations – Blame the Records
Gross Relations – Don’t Beat on Me

Helvetia – On the Lam
Helvetia – Arise, Pt. 1

Jessica 6 – Prisoner of Love (ft. Antony Hegarty)

Just Another Snake Cult – Engaged Withdrawal

Kenton Dunson – Momentum

Sea of Bees – Wizbot

Strange Talk – Climbing Walls

Warren Haynes – Man In Motion

The Weeknd – The Morning (Giraffage Remix)

SOUNDCLOUD

Great Caesar – Sweet Banana

Now, Now – Jesus Camp (Remix)

Toro Y Moi – Still Sound (Voodoo Bear Remix)

Pick Your Poison: Friday 4-22-11

Good Friday to you all, and I mean that in the most secular way possible for all you non-Christians out there. It should be a great Friday, but beggars can’t be choosers, and beside that Chicago’s getting pelted with rain and cold right now. Still, beats tornadoes (sorry St. Louis). I hope your upcoming Easter weekend is delightful and filled with jellybeans and marshmallow Peeps. If not, you’re not celebrating right. Here’s some sugary sweet mp3s to rot your eardrums for the weekend, courtesy of Pick Your Poison. I’ll point you in the direction of tracks by Alexander Ebert (of Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes), Diskjokke, German Error Message, Kenna, Marianne Faithful and Seapony.

Alexander Ebert – Million Years

Baby Baby – Breakin

Broken Bells – Meyrin Fields (Sub Swara Remix)

Diskjokke – Panutup

German Error Message – Reaching Out

Glorie – Lazy Day

Kenna – Chains (ft. Shimmy Hoffa)

Little Bastard and Zubagroove – If It Ain’t Broke (Birdee Remix)

Marianne Faithful – Why Did We Have to Part

Pony Pony Run Run – Hey You (Star Slinger Remix)

The Real Nasty – Whiskey For Breakfast

Saturdays Kids – I Am A Runner

Seapony – Blue Star

Usurper of Modern Medicine – Grill Washington Christ

SOUNDCLOUD

Benji Boko – Where My Heart Is (Ft. Maxi Jazz)

Brasstronaut – Hearts Trompet

Pitch Twit & Bonn Lewis – Splinter Bomb

Album Review: tUnE-yArDs – w h o k i l l [4AD]


The last time we heard from Merrill Garbus, she was operating at such a DIY level that her music suffered because of it. To call her debut record BiRd-BrAiNs a gem buried underneath a pile of crap is probably pretty accurate. That’s not her fault, she was just using the tools available to her at the time. A computer, a microphone and a ukulele were pretty much all that she needed, and the results tended to sound worse than your average garage band’s demo. Still, there was something about that record that shone through in spite of its severe deficiencies. 4AD even liked it enough to release the record as-is, perhaps partly as a good faith in Garbus’ future, or with the sense that forward-thinking music fans would latch onto it no matter how clean or dirty the audio fidelity might be. Either way, it was a daring thing to record along with a daring thing to legitimately release in spite of all the clipped audio and other surface scratches. That gamble paid off, due less to the record itself and more to how its true nature rose to the surface when performed live. With a legitimate microphone and quality speakers to throw it out there, nothing stood in the way of the songs themselves anymore, and those that saw a tUnE-yArDs show ranted and raved not only about the songs but also about Garbus’ larger-than-life stage presence. Now that she has the backing and resources to assist her, the hope would be that a sophmore album might accurately reflect what everyone saw and heard when it wasn’t filtered through the shoddiest of DIY equipment. Guess what? The new record is titled “w h o k i l l”, and just like that everyone is handing their undivided attention over to Merrill Garbus.

Any legitimate attempts to describe the sound and texture of “w h o k i l l” is pretty much an exercise in futility. With so much more at her disposal, Garbus goes all out and packs the record with many things both expected and unexpected. She’s still a fan of the ukulele, but it’s not exactly her primary instrument anymore. More than anything else, her real instrument is that jaw-dropping voice of hers. You could absolutely tell there was a power behind it on BiRd-BrAiNs, but the full range and scope were trapped under a sea of poor fidelity. Hearing it in fully polished stereo on this new album is a revelation unto itself, the unique qualities oozing out on each track as Garbus almost seems to embody multiple characters depending on the song. The reason why are her low vs. high pitch dynamics, along with the scatological manner in which she rattles off lyrics. By all accounts, Garbus is a woman unhinged, unbeholden to any of your typical singing or songwriting tropes, and flippant to the point of flaunting it. In listening to her sing, you realize that everyone else is showing restraint by comparison. If she wants to growl and chirp, Merrill will growl and chirp. If, in the middle of singing a verse, she wants to go on a brief spoken word aside to get snarky about something, she’ll readily do so. Sure it can come across as crazy and certainly odd, but she does it with such reckless abandon and pure joy you can’t help but be charmed by it. Quirky is the best descriptor of it, and there’s very little being released under that category these days, let alone this loose and engaging.

Equally fun are the ways that Garbus blends widely varied styles and genres to her own benefit. The first, most notable instrument outside of the vocals is the percussion. There’s such a wide variety of beats on “w h o k i l l”, but the primary influence is definitely African in nature. As such, thoughts of a completely off-the-wall Paul Simon or even a strange otherworldly take on Vampire Weekend might pop up in your head. But that doesn’t even begin to take into account the flashes of R&B, reggae, jazz, soul, folk, hip hop, psych-pop, and just general world music that all show up at one point or another on the record. Those are what make this album so difficult to classify. With such a huge scope of sounds and instruments, it’s tempting to think that there’s no way any sort of consistency could develop. What this record maintains is an unerring sense of pop structures, hammering on phrases and choruses enough to stick in your head, even as the melodies that surround them can seem confounding. Additionally, what’s standard for this album is that there is no standard, the madness spread quite liberally and evenly. The unexpected thus becomes the expected, to the point where a normal-sounding song would feel out of place and almost a cop-out. The thrill is in the discovery, how you’re on this completely out of control ride with no idea where it will turn next. Mood-wise, “w h o k i l l” is a success because it never gets too dark or slow. There’s plenty of emotion, ranging everywhere from love and hate to happy and sad, but the upbeat stuff outweighs everything else, and the tempo never lets the depression take hold. The drum and bass arrangement of “Doorstep” is made more jovial with the light click-clack of some light wood on wood taps and overdubbed vocal harmonies that render the oft-repeated lyrics of “policeman shot my baby” ineffective in the outrage or horror we might otherwise feel. That’s the point though. Even the lone ballad on the record, the 6 minute “Woolywollygong”, has a bit of light amidst the generally dark lyrics and pace.

Speaking of lyrics, they’re another always key part of the tUnE-yArDs aesthetic. The highly explicit and blunt lyricisms that Garbus spits out are both impersonal yet immediately relatable. She sings in generalizations but with such specificity that it can sometimes feel like she’s putting your own thoughts out there. Most likely to have the hardest time with this are men, because whether you like it or not this is a feminist record through and through. So when there’s a song about body issues and self-mutilation, there’s not a whole lot of guys that have to deal with the psychological pressure of being a size 0. Underneath a very jazzy and funky melody on “Es-so”, you get self-hate moments like, “Sometimes I’ve got the jungle under my skin/drop at the rhythm, stick a fucking fork in/Bathe it all in a wave of disgust/(sarcastically Valley Girl) ‘I can’t believe I ate the whole thing'”. Charming, brilliant, and intensely dark all at the same time, while also remaining firmly grounded. In an equally fascinating methodology, “Powa” frankly champions sex and the pleasure that it brings. The intensely memorable chorus of “Your powa/inside/it rocks me like a lullaby” is wonderful unto itself, but where the song really gains meaning is the moment when it turns from being solely about sexual pleasure and again reaches into body image territory. “Mirror, mirror on the wall/can you see my face at all?/My man likes me from behind/Tell the truth, ah never mind/cause you bomb me with life’s humiliations every day” seems to be all self-hate, but in context the words are meant to convey that sex and intense love pull us out of those moments where we loathe our own bodies and instead embrace pure passion and pleasure. Sex is a refuge from not only the world, but from ourselves as well. “w h o k i l l” isn’t all about bodies and the perception of our bodies though. Opening track “My Country” weighs the positive and negatives of America. “Gangsta” deals with talking a tough game but not being able to back it up. And “Riotriot” finds Garbus infatuated with a police officer that shows up to arrest her brother. No matter the topic though, most every song and lyric on this album is thought-provoking and worthy of exploration, something worth doing when you have the time.

Some people are able to see the treasure sitting on the ocean floor while others just cruise on by it without a second thought because they don’t know it’s there. With a debut album like BiRd-BrAiNs, it was easy to move past tUnE-yArDs without a second thought, or even stopping to wonder what anyone could ever see in those abhorredly poor quality recordings. Turns out there was gold buried underneath, and the few keen ears that heard it the first time around can feel so much more justified with “w h o k i l l”. It is the record that will undoubtedly make Merrill Garbus a star. Every single word of praise you’ve heard about this record is justified, and even those that don’t understand it will likely find something nice to say. Innovative, sunny, funky and spine-tingling are all accurate descriptors for your listening experience, which is unlike any other you’ll have in 2011 almost guaranteed. Keep an eye out for a lot of imitators in the next year or two, though arguably none will fully succeed as well as Garbus herself will. The voice and the words are the two hugest sellers here, and both those things you can’t copy. Garbus is one-of-a-kind, and let’s hold out hope she stays that way for a long time to come.

tUnE-yArDs – Bizness

Buy “w h o k i l l” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 4-21-11

Easter weekend is right around the corner, and I hope you’re celebrating with family. If you’re not the type to partake in Easter celebrations, even with the most secular of Easter bunnies, I still wish you a great weekend. Of course we’re not officially there just yet. Tomorrow is Friday, and that’s reason enough to let your hair down just a little bit. Pick Your Poison is here to help with another classy edition of mp3s for your downloading pleasure. Top picks today include tracks from Ages and Ages, Javelin, Kathryn Calder, KIDCITY, Liturgy, Other Lives and Painted Palms.

Acid House Kings – Would You Say Stop? (Invisible Twin Remix)

Ages and Ages – So So Freely

Baron Bane – Echoes

Candidate – I’d Come Running

Company – Waiting For Saints to Arrive
Company – Heaven Is Gone

Elias Krantz – Tody Motmot
Elias Krantz – Tody Motmot (Pistol Disco Remix)

Javelin – Cowpoke

Kathryn Calder – If You Only Knew

KIDCITY – Bloody Face

Liturgy – Generation

Monarchs – Business Casual

Other Lives – For 12

Painted Palms – All of Us

Sam Bay – Leaning Pine

The Stairs – This Town Let Me Down

SOUNDCLOUD

Natalia Kills – Mirrors [Robotaki Remix]

Vex Ruffin – Losing Control

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 4-20-11

Happy 4/20 to everyone. While today is typically a day reserved for smoking substances of an illicit nature, one look at “This Day In History” shows that a whole lot of tragedy has happened on this date. Hitler was born. The Columbine school shooting happened. BP had the huge oil spill in the Gulf. Depressing stuff. What we really need are for some great events to take place on 4/20. End a war. Declare world peace. Shut down all the nuclear weapons programs. These are things that can turn the tide on 4/20. Until then, maybe just keep smoking ’em while you’ve got ’em to help melt your cares away. Pick Your Poison today isn’t quite going to get you high, but hopefully it’ll make you feel pretty good. Highlights include tracks from Digitalism, Falcon, Fucked Up and Umpire. In the Soundcloud section I can also recommend Bright Spark Destroyer and Starlings, not forgetting the great remix of Cut Copy’s “Need You Now”.

Action Jackson ft. Oreo Jones – When the Night Falls

Andy Petr – Drinking Milk From His Hands

Anti-Social Music – BABEL(greek):)-(:Fracture V

The Asteroids Galaxy Tour – The Golden Age (Prince Vince Remix)

Backseat Dreamer – Moment In Time (La Chansons Remix)

The Bright Light Social Hour – Detroit

Digitalism – 2 Hearts

Falcon – Say Goodbye

Foster the People – Pumped Up Kicks (The Knocks Remix)

Fucked Up – A Little Death

Kyp Harness – Passenger

Lisa Savidge – Fire Exiting

NewVillager – LightHouse (PUNCHES Remix)

Umpire – Green Light District

SOUNDCLOUD

Ben Hogun – In The City

Bright Spark Destroyer – The Shortest Distance

Cut Copy – Need You Now (Carl Craig Remix)

LehtMoJoe – Get It On The Floor

Starlings – Sirens

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 4-19-11

So many people were preoccupied this past weekend, either with Coachella or Record Store Day, that not many stopped and saw that the lineup has been finalized for this year’s Pitchfork Music Festival. Artists like Wild Nothing, Superchunk, tUnE-yArDs, Battles, Cold Cave, OFF!, Julianna Barwick, Toro y Moi, Thurston Moore, EMA, Gatekeeper and Twin Shadow were all added, among others. Be sure to check out the official Pitchfork Music Festival website for all the details, as well as how to buy single day tickets (3 day passes are sold out). Pick Your Poison today is a delight, and though there are no artists in today’s edition that will be playing the festival, the good news is that I’ll be whipping up a post for you exactly about that once we get closer to the actual date in July. But my favorites in today’s exciting new batch of mp3s come from The Antlers, Dead Rider, Det Vackra Livet, Gardens & Villa, and Street Chant. There’s also a new Sade track and an old but remastered Queen track in the Soundcloud section, for your streaming pleasure.

The Antlers – Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out

Artymove – One of These Days

Calm Paradox – Boots

Cowboy and Indian – Ledbellies

Dead Rider – Stop Motion

Deletah – EST91

Det Vackra Livet – Viljan by Lissvik

Gardens & Villa – Black Hills

Kindlewood – This House

Marco Mahler – Hike the Lake

Monster Rally – Island on Fire

Noah and the Whale – Give It All Back (Live from RAK Studios

Street Chant – Less Chat More Sewing

Sutja Gutierrez – Borderline (Hell, I’m The)

SOUNDCLOUD

Parties – Say Something

Queen – Sheer Heart Attack (Remastered)

Sade – I Would Have Never Guessed

Album Review: TV on the Radio – Nine Types of Light [Interscope]


Los Angeles is a cold place, even in the middle of summer. That speaks not of the weather itself, but more the vibe of a city that’s consistently drenched in sunshine and oceanside views. The West Coast does things differently than everywhere else, and depending on your intentions, that’s either a positive or a negative. For those venturing out to Hollywood with stars in their eyes, the unflinching reality of consistent rejection by casting agents the city over can be harder than the minimum wage job waiting tables they had to take on to make ends meet in the meantime. But you’ve also got the vacationing crowd, with plenty of people just seeking out some nice weather and relaxation in a place that has both far more often than anywhere else in the country. When talking about TV on the Radio, it seems they went to L.A. for a little bit of both business and pleasure. The band took a break from recording and touring for awhile to both decompress and also pursue other opportunities. Kyp Malone revived his old project Rain Machine, Dave Sitek produced music for other artists in addition to putting out a solo record as Maximum Balloon while also working at least part time with Jane’s Addiction, while Tunde Adebimpe got bit at least for a moment by the acting bug and had a couple of more minor movie roles. Interesting, the paths each one of the band’s principal members took on their time off. To finish off their hiatus/vacation, the guys met up in the City of Angels and decided to stick around for a bit at Sitek’s studio to record their follow-up to “Dear Science”. Stepping away from their home base in Brooklyn, the new album “Nine Types of Light” is accurately reflective of the change in location and atmosphere a new city brings while keeping many of the TV on the Radio trademarks that has made them one of the most critically acclaimed bands of the past decade.

The first most noticeable thing about “Nine Types of Light” from the very beginning is its brighter outlook. “Every lover on a mission/shift your know position/into the light”, Malone sings in the chorus of opening track “Second Song”, right as the pace picks up and the horn section joins in. Of course it takes its sweet time getting to that chorus, sauntering at a very subdued level like the darkness before the dawn. Similarly, “Keep Your Heart” doesn’t even get your blood pressure to rise moving at such a glacial pace. With so many albums frontloaded with energy and potential singles, TV on the Radio sure kick that notion right in the teeth here. There’s even lyrical similarities with “Second Song”, as a line like, “Shine on light of love” reflects backwards onto the album title and the romance theme that’s been a TVOTR staple from the very beginning. What’s noticeably missing from “Nine Types of Light” are the angrier, politically charged moments along with some of the darker meditations on life, love and history. Then again, with all its ups and downs, love appears to be the overarching theme of the record. A song like “You” looks back on a past relationship with rose-colored glasses, expressing disappointment that things ended but with the kind reflection of, “You’re the only one I ever loved”. The only thematic variation in the first half of the record comes from “No Future Shock”, a high energy, potential future single that gets purposely overreactive and sarcastic about fearmongers consistently anticipating disasters. Though it may not fit in with the surrounding tracks, it does offer a brief respite from what would otherwise be a severely dragging start to the album. Though it may be very calm to the point where you might just fall asleep during it, the album centerpiece is the 6+ minute “Killer Crane”, a gorgeous piece of music that incorporates everything from banjo to acoustic guitar and strings. It makes for one of the most interesting pieces that TV on the Radio have ever done, serenely drifting on a placid lake of sound with hints of psychedelia and the majesty of a creature most of us know precious little about.

Though the second half of the album starts with the somewhat plodding “Will Do”, the song itself rises above its tempo for something a bit more special and heartfelt than some of the most earnest moments that happened on the first half. The catchy chorus, with its jagged guitar line and light plinks of keyboard also help make the impassioned lyrics have that much more weight and general pop. The way that “New Cannonball Blues” develops from a mid-tempo blues (duh) number into more of a turbulent and forceful track makes it one of the more actively engaging cuts on the album. It’s the hornet’s nest of horns that helps to sell it, along with the voracity that “Forgotten” offers up. There’s something inherently fiery with “Repetition” as well, going with the mile-a-minute lyrics until the final push home, when the guitars freak out and Adebimpe digs in hard as he spits out, “My repetition/my repetition is this” a good two dozen times in a row, each with more urgency than the last. Where it all comes together though is at the album’s conclusion, which according to tradition is about the last place you should be looking. If there’s a “Staring at the Sun” or a “Wolf Like Me” or a “Golden Age” on this record, it is closer “Caffeinated Consciousness”. The guitars pound, Adebimpe shouts, the bass thumps, and there’s enough of a groove to get you on your feet and dancing. There’s talk of optimism, rollercoasters, and beds of roses, all designed for sensory overload in the most fun way possible. There’s an album closing party, and TV on the Radio have invited you to it. As nice as having a half dozen or more songs like “Caffeinated Consciousness” on “Nine Types of Light” might be, it’s also largely what the band has become known for. There’s nothing particularly adventurous about the track itself, so having it once as a joyous finale is good enough and prevents us from getting too much of a good thing.

If you didn’t know it already, TV on the Radio have been on a serious hot streak straight from their debut album “Desperate Youth, Bloodthirsty Babes”. The 1-2-3 combination of that, “Return to Cookie Mountain” and “Dear Science” is the first real trio of near perfection since Radiohead’s run of “The Bends”, “OK Computer” and “Kid A”. Funny then that Radiohead too released a very understated and underwhelming record this year. “Nine Types of Light” is the first “blemish” to hit TV on the Radio, though the word is in quotes because most bands would love to put out a record this good. Within their own cannon however, this is their weakest effort to date. Among the positive things it has to offer, it’s still lyrically strong, with the topic of love gluing everything together pretty well. The optimism is nice too, though it primarily fails to make much of anything bright and sunny instrumentally. Still, there’s plenty of great moments on this album, particularly in the second half that has more going on in it. The slower moments in portions of the first part of the record are what’s most taxing, but even that’s not exactly a pain to listen through. The warmth and overall intimacy are what help to make it so compelling and worthwhile, even when the melodies don’t seem to. Was it the ocean air and beautiful sunsets that helped mellow these guys out from the urban sprawl that is New York, or did their time off just put them all in a more lackadaisical and comfortable place? This is the first TV on the Radio album to shift largely away from bitterness and anger and more towards hope. Good for the band – they could use more of that stuff in their lives.

TV On The Radio – Will Do

Buy “Nine Types of Light” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 4-18-11

Hope you had a spectacular Record Store Day over the weekend. After standing in line for 45 minutes, I got about half of what I was looking for. The rest was already sold out. Oh well, these things happen. I hope you fared better. Anyways, here’s today’s Pick Your Poison to kick off your week in style. Personal picks today come from Cassettes Won’t Listen, Eddie the Gun, The Fervor, and Witches. There’s also a handful of covers I can recommend. Cymbals Eat Guitars, La Sera (Kickball Katy of Vivian Girls) and Western Civ all do Guided By Voices, and Dark Dark Dark covers Kate Bush. Good stuff.

Big Scary – Autumn

Cassettes Won’t Listen – The Echoes

Cymbals Eat Guitars – Gleemer (Guided By Voices cover)

Dark Dark Dark – This Woman’s Work (Kate Bush cover)

Eddie the Gun – Kids

The Fervor – Let’s Get Loaded

Java Guidi – Addicted (The Bombjack Remix)

King’s Highway – It’s On

La Sera – Watch Me Jumpstart (Guided By Voices cover)

Sarah Fimm – Yellow
Sarah Fimm – Flames

Waylayers – Big Machines

Western Civ – My Valuable Hunting Knife (Guided By Voices cover)

Witches – Creature of Nature

SOUNDCLOUD

Burlap to Cashmere – Build A Wall

Kites – Art Tastes Better Blind

One Night Only – Can You Feel It Tonight

Album Review: Low – C’mon [Sub Pop]


Nine albums and close to 20 years in, Low are still going strong. There aren’t many bands that last so long, and even fewer that have done so much with so very little. As pioneers in the “slowcore” movement, they’ve essentially thrived in dark corners with little to no energy and the most minimal of arrangements. The constant torpor of what they do has left many a person bewildered, failing to find just what makes their songs so damn compelling. Outside of those times when you just want to be dragged down by some unhappy music, Low have kept themselves vital through strong songwriting and composition while throwing a couple curveballs into their trademark sound these last several years. 2002’s “Trust” was a push and pull affair as the band explored more expansive arrangements and the results of sharply building tension. Glossy producer Dave Fridmann was at the helm for the surprisingly noisy “The Great Destroyer” in 2005, as well as 2007’s “Drums and Guns”, which naturally placed emphasis on percussion and percussive elements. After a bit of a break, Low recruited pop producer Matt Beckley to helm their new album “C’mon”. Given that Beckley has worked with Katy Perry and Avril Lavigne among others, it’s an odd choice for the band to make, but if anybody can help them diversity their sound he probably can.

The fascinating thing is that “C’mon” is what could best be described as Low’s return to their roots. Contrary to that thought, this record isn’t a return to their slowcore days, but does have a far more traditional and normal feel for the band compared to their last few releases. There’s not some theme or sonic exploration, just Low doing what Low does best. They’ve also acquired a few new tricks over the course of their last few records, and rather than completely ignore what they did there, these things get incorporated into the overall sound. As such, “C’mon” is a fuller and richer record than most of the band’s previous releases, but still holding true to the very relaxed and relatively depressing vibe that’s their bread and butter. This album was recorded inside a church, and it carries the echoes and reverent beauty of the location. Call it the auditory equivalent of dimming sunlight streaming through stained glass windows. The thing is, though there are plenty of moments with gently plucked acoustic guitars or a touch of strings, you’re still held back at a distance, as if creating pure intimacy or warmth would ruin what the band is trying to accomplish. Given that’s been Low’s M.O. since their first album though, this is hardly new or unexpected. It can’t hurt to wish though.

One of the more exciting things about “C’mon” is the increase in upbeat melodies and lyrics. Normally listening to a Low record is like being dragged through the mud, and it’s never likely to put you in a good mood. Rather than outright dark though, there’s some uplift and more meditative stuff happening with the new album. The melody of opening track “Try to Sleep” is deceptive in its xylophone glimmer and positively lovely harmonies courtesy of Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker. The lyrics tell the full story, with lines like, “You try to sleep/but then you never wake up”. Sounds lovely, but the words don’t match the tone. A better grasp of the band’s more optimistic outlook comes with “You See Everything”, for example when Parker sings, “On the shore, we recline/come on in, the water’s fine/so fine”. Some songs though, like “Majesty/Magic” and “Nightingale” are less lyric-heavy (or fail to make much sense) but carry a lighter, less dramatic flair about them. It’s by no means perfect, but functions more as a relief from the far heavier disposition of their more recent albums. For fans of their last couple efforts though, fear not, because there’s still plenty to drag you down and hold your mood in a steady brood. Sometimes it just feels right to have that sort of soundtrack when you’re depressed.

The cause of concern on “C’mon” is that it shows a band that appears to have no idea where it’s headed next. The subtle variations in style on the record showcase that challenge while remaining true to that classic Low sound. That’s another issue – after a couple albums of mixing things up in both a good and bad way, “C’mon” is almost a retreat back to familiar territory while also trying to incorporate some of the new tools they’ve developed since their early days. The good news is that if you liked Low before, chances are you’ll like Low now. By that same token, if you’ve found the band difficult before, you’ll have fewer issues with them now. That improvement in accessibility is about the only thing worth writing home about on this record. That is, outside of the generally serene beauty Low normally provides. There’s no clear indicator of exactly what Low can do to advance their sound back to a level where critical acclaim is waiting for them on their doorstep. Maybe after such a long time together and so many records, they’ve finally run out of fresh ideas and are content to hold fast on their current pathway. No matter how the band fares now and in the future though, they continue to deserve our respect – even if that doesn’t count for much these days.

Low – Try to Sleep

Buy “C’mon” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Friday 4-15-11

Announcement! Record Store Day is this Saturday, April 16th! If you already digest vinyl records like they’re going out of style (wait…they’re not IN style right now?), I’m sure you already know this, but let’s say this is a reminder. For those that are unaware, today is the day around the world in which you’re encouraged to stop by your local record shop and purchase something. The idea that physical product in music is still worthwhile is important, and independent music retailers that much moreso. There are so many limited edition things being released in such small quantities that you’re best off showing up right at store open rather than waiting until later in the day. Better later in the day though then not at all, so please buy something, anything from your local record store on Saturday. Check out RecordStoreDay.com for more details. Pick Your Poison highlights for today include tracks from Garden, The Gift, OFF!, Shabazz Palaces, and Thao & Mirah.

Breakfast In Fur – Cripple Creek Ferry (Neil Young cover)

Cisco Adler & The Pigeons – Body Language

Dr. Hyde From The LES – Is It OK?

Gardens – Maze Time

Germany Germany – Take Me Home

The Gift – Made For You

Lotte Mullan – Would You Be So Kind

OFF! – Panic Attack (Live at Amoeba Records)

Oh My! – Run This Town

Planningtorock – Doorway (Creep Remix)

Shabazz Palaces – An Echo From the Hosts That Profess Infinitum

Stuyvesant – St. Cloud

Thao & Mirah – How Dare You

Thorp – We Own the Night

Unknown Mortal Orchestra – How Can U Luv Me

SOUNDCLOUD

Hunting Foxes – Dance Again, Baby

Sophie Ellis-Bextor – Starlight

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 4-14-11

Just saw that Denny’s commercial for a “festival” they’re calling Baconalia. It is a celebration of bacon, and includes a number of specialty dishes with bacon added to them. There’s even a bacon sundae with maple syrup. Don’t get me wrong, I LOVE me some bacon, but there’s a certain point where it can border on obsessive. That’s not even mentioning how healthy all of this is. If you celebrated Baconalia every day with every meal, methinks you’d best be shopping for coffins in your spare time. Sigh, this is probably no worse than KFC’s Double Down sandwich though. One thing that’s sure to not send you to an early grave is Pick Your Poison. Despite having the word Poison in the title, the only harm these mp3s can do is to your ears. Last I checked, that wasn’t enough to kill you. Highlights today include tracks from I Was Totally Destroying It, The Shivers and TV Ghost. The Soundcloud section has a wealth of good stuff too, including songs from Locksley, Manchester Orchestra and Mick Harvey. Delta Maid’s cover of The Strokes’ “Under Cover of Darkness” is solid as well.

Backseat Dreamer – Consider (Coma Cinema Remix)

Candidate – Need It Most

Dave Depper – Oh Woman, Oh Why (Paul McCartney cover)

Dylan Champagne – California Song

Eliot Lipp – Yeah (Big Gigantic Remix)
Eliot Lipp – The Outside (Mux Mool Remix)

Extra Arms – Race to Sleep

Flashlights – Glowing Eyes

I Was Totally Destroying It – The Key & The Rose

J. Brookinz – Future Ninja (ft. Oreo Jones, Flaco, Grey Granite, Lisa Berlin, and Young Carolyn)

Karsh Kale – Malika Jam

Scallion – Our Breadth Was Wide

The Shivers – Used to Be

The Streets – OMG (The Knocks Remix)

TV Ghost – Wired Trap

Xuman – Side By Side

SOUNDCLOUD

Delta Maid – Under Cover of Darkness (Strokes Cover)

Locksley – The Whip

Lust – Heartbeat

Manchester Orchestra – April Fool

Mick Harvey – Famous Last Words

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 4-13-11

It’s Hump Day, and depressing though it may be to think we’re only halfway through this already long week, the positive news is that once we make it over the top it’s all downhill til the weekend. What’s just a little more surprising than that is how quickly we’re approaching the halfway point of April. It seems like just days ago the month was just underway and I was being duped on April Fools Day. Ah well, summer will be here soon enough. Pick Your Poison is pretty large in size and scope today. Thumbs up tracks come from Balkans, Golden Bloom, Miwa Gemini and Yuzima. There’s also a solid Sade track in the Soundcloud section too if you care to listen.

Balkans – Troubled and Done 

Delay Trees – Cassette 2012

Foxtails Brigade – The Hours

Golden Bloom – You Go On (& On)

Gray Young – Vermilion

Jonquil – Get Up

Joypopp – Volupte

Miwa Gemini – Goodnight Trail

Myra Lee – The Flame in the Eye

Napoleon in Rags – Empty Promises

Something Fierce – Empty Screens  

Wiz Khalifa ft. 2Pac – Roll Up (VOODOO FARM Remix)

Yuzima – Glasnost

SOUNDCLOUD

Auction – Statues

The Kick – Rubicon

Miles Kane – A Girl Like You (Edwyn Collins cover)

Sade – Love Is Found

Album Review: Panda Bear – Tomboy [Paw Tracks]


Noah Lennox may be able to see the future. A little record he released back in 2007 under the Panda Bear moniker called “Person Pitch” struck hard amongst those with a love of memorable 60s pop infused with a sharp dose of psychedelia. Think of Brian Wilson’s music with more of a dosed electronica edge. It was a record so dense and complex that many struggled to fully grasp what it was doing, and though the reaction was mostly bewilderment, there was a consensus it was brilliant. Thinking about it in the most practical way possible, one could easily imagine trends in music to eventually head in the exact direction that “Person Pitch” was already showing us, thereby providing us with a glimpse into not what was but what would be. Nobody caught up to that record in 2008 or most of 2009, but somewhere near the middle of that year the rumblings of a new musical subgenre that some called chillwave and others called glo-fi began to seep out into the general populace. Though not exactly the same, the sound bore some of the distinctive fingerprints of music Panda Bear had put out a couple years earlier. Not only that, but upon reconvening with his bandmates in Animal Collective, they subsequently released their miracle of an album “Merriweather Post Pavilion” and it became like anything Lennox touched was turning to gold. That sort of Midas power is either a blessing or a curse, depending on how you look at it. All that praise can be nice, but the pressure can build to the point of madness. Plenty of people were salivating at the mere thought of new Panda Bear material, and as soon as some began to trickle out in the form of sone 7 inch singles previewing a full length without a release date, they were swallowed up immediately and obsessed over. It should come as little surprise then that Lennox waited quite awhile before finally putting the finishing touches on his new long player “Tomboy”, and though he surely hoped some of that anticipation would dissipate, in all likelihood it would have remained just as fevered had he waited another 4 years.

Instead of feeding the beast with a new Panda Bear record that has loftier ambitions than the one before, “Tomboy” shoots for something closer to normal. All those samples and complicated melodies that made “Person Pitch” such a gripping listen have been stripped back in favor of a closer focus on actual instruments such as guitars and drums. What used to be lush pieces that teemed with the life of a fully formed sonic landscape have now been trimmed significantly to the barest of essentials. For the majority of the record, it’s an exercise in minimalism. Despite some of these more drastic changes, the new album is no less of a psychedelic trip down memory lane than last time. If you’re looking for an extended journey in the form of a longer cut a la “Bros”, you’ll be left just a bit disappointed with the more concise songs that are clearly separated from one another yet fail to offer a whole lot of distinction between them. Just because there are no clear highlights doesn’t mean the majority of the tracks are terrible or that the record as a whole is disappointing. It’s far from either of those points actually, as this album is more like a colorful and beautifully painted mural rather than a whitewashed wall of nothing. As one gigantic piece, it’s rather fascinating but difficult to know exactly how to give it a proper listen in individual chunks. Simply dropping in on a centrally located track like “Drone” can create an odd sensation, particularly with its spacious yet direct melody that thrives on only vocals and synths. Start from the beginning with “You Can Count On Me” and it’s just busy enough to build a bridge between old material and new. The progression from that into the title track and so forth comes across as nuanced and refined, more than most might realize. “Person Pitch” may have had those longer cuts to push you into sticking out the entire record, that if you would stay for 12 minutes you might as well stay for 40, but digesting all of “Tomboy” in one sitting reflects a similar mentality despite the bite-sized track lengths. It seems that Lennox is trying to do more with less on most every aspect of this record.

What many fail to realize is that Panda Bear’s attempt to take a lot of the same complex ideas and genre tropes from the last album and work them into “Tomboy” is in many ways more challenging than ever. To put it another way, he’s like the MacGyver of chillwave, trapped inside a room with limited utensils at his disposal and trying to break out without the assistance of the door key that’s actually in his back pocket. Call it the thrill of the chase or just the inclination to try and do something different from all the other acts these days trying to pull off a similar sound, the results are still remarkably effective. The sun bakes and waves crash all over “Surfer’s Hymn”. There’s a slight doo-wop 50s charm smeared across “Last Night at the Jetty” that also makes it one of the most accessible things Lennox has ever created. Meanwhile “Alsatian Darn” shimmers with some of the most gorgeous psych-pop moments on the entire album. The pairing of the two longest tracks on the record right near the end feels genuinely inspired as well, taking the easier, more accessible stuff out front and the expansive mental zone outs of “Friendship Bracelet” and “Afterburner” in the back. Then “Benfica” slides in at the end to sort of tie everything together, to the point where the last few seconds make a firm period at the end of a 50 minute sentence.

Why “Tomboy” isn’t the mindblowing adventure that “Person Pitch” was can primarily be chalked up to the ever-changing musical landscape. As “Person Pitch” was very much ahead of its time, the start of a revolution that has bred countless imitators, “Tomboy” is pretty firmly rooted in the present. Where could Lennox have realistically gone with this new record? The mind can’t fathom because most of us don’t know an inspired or fresh idea until we actually hear it. At the very least, it was admirable of him to try to differentiate himself from similar-sounding counterparts by scaling back the instrumentation and increasing the overall accessibility through hooks and less obtuse melodies. What this album does more than anything else though is continue to prove that Lennox remains one of the most brilliant minds making music today. Even when falling perfectly in line with where the hype cycle is at these days, he takes all these other punks to school and shows them a thing or two about how to make good music great. It’s that angelic voice, twisted in reverb. It’s the structure and the way every piece of every song feels vital even when it isn’t. Everyone attempting to make music like this should feel lucky to have such a great example of how it’s done right. As for the rest of us, we’re lucky just being given the opportunity to listen to it, and as often as our ears will allow.

Panda Bear – Last Night at the Jetty

Buy “Tomboy” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 4-12-11

Absolutely lovely set of songs in Pick Your Poison today. Right to the point, highlights include tracks from Bare Wires, Exlovers, Iceage, Milagres, The Sea and Cake, Secret Cities, and Title Tracks. In the Soundcloud section you’ll find a new song from Arctic Monkeys and a solid one from The Tambourines.

Bare Wires – Ready to Go

Ben Howard – Three Tree Town

Brontosaurus – Beware

Daughter – Landfill

Eclectic Method – Outta Sight ft. Chuck D

Exlovers – Blowing Kisses

Girls in Trouble – We Are Androgynous

Iceage – White Rune

Milagres – Glowing Mouth

Mountains – Thousand Square

The Sea and Cake – Up on the North Shore

Secret Cities – The Park

Space Command – Ryu vs. Chun-Li

Title Tracks – All Tricks

Toucan – On the Run

SOUNDCLOUD

Arctic Monkeys – Don’t Sit Down ‘Cause I’ve Moved Your Chair

The Tamborines – Black And Blue

Two Wounded Birds – All We Wanna Do

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