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Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 11-24-10

Though he doesn’t know how to use a computer, I’d like to take this moment just to wish my grandfather a Happy 70th Birthday. I can only hope, with my “live fast, die young, leave a beautiful corpse” lifestyle that one day I’ll be celebrating that birthday. But hey, this pre-Thanksgiving edition of Pick Your Poison is not only extended (for her pleasure), but also features quite a great number of notable notables. First up, let me offer you a full mixtape from the band Depressed Buttons, which is a new electro group that features a few members of The Faint. They’ve put together a collection of “influences” that range from Gonzales to Bob Dylan to ZZT to Underworld. The link below is to a direct download, and it comes with a full track listing. You’ll also want to keep an ear out for songs from Daniel Martin Moore, Giant Sand, Paul Simon (yes, THAT Paul Simon), Retribution Gospel Choir, and Treasure MammaL. Have a GREAT Thanksgiving my fellow Americans, and normal posting will resume…probably Friday, but maybe Monday, depending on how much I eat.

Cajun Gems – Hat Trick (ZIP) 

Cours Lapin – Cache Cache
Cours Lapin – Un Deux Trois

Daniel Martin Moore – Dark Road

Depressed Buttons – Mixmeat Mixtape (ft. Gonzales, Bob Dylan, Underworld and more!)

Giant Sand – Ride the Rail

Hallelujah the Hills – Nightingale Lightning (Live)

Mr. Little Jeans – Rescue Song (RAC Remix)

Paul Simon – Getting Ready for Christmas

Peder – Daylight
Peder – Reverse Your Diamonds

Retribution Gospel Choir – Workin’ Hard

The Spyro – Nippon Sling

Tommy Santee Klaws – Light On

Treasure MammaL – Kokopelli

Yuzima – Science Project

Zac Crouse – Waiting on the Wind

Album Review: Pete Yorn – Pete Yorn [Vagrant]

Pete Yorn has been particularly productive the last couple years, and there’s a couple reasons why that might be the case. Is he in desperate need of money? Well, with album sales being what they are these days, most artists don’t make much if any money from them. Touring is by far the more lucrative method of getting some quick cash, though hypothetically Yorn could do a few years worth of it and maintain strong ticket sales even without some new music to back it up. Yet Yorn is now releasing his fifth album, a mere year after his last one “Back & Fourth”. Previously he’s gone at least 2 years between records. Maybe he’s just feeling exceptionally productive these days. He’s also got a brand new record label after signing to Vagrant, certainly a step down from the massive Columbia but perhaps he likes it that way. He also worked with a new producer this time around in the form of Mr. Frank Black, a name you might recognize in association with the Pixies or Black Francis or any number of other musical projects he’s associated with. It’s most likely that combination of elements, getting a fresh label with a fresh producer that pushed Yorn to make his fifth record self-titled. Given his hit-or-miss history over the past 10 years, on the surface this new one appears to have a lot going for it, the question is whether or not that’s enough.

“Precious Stone” opens the album, and as Pete Yorn tends to write love songs pretty well, this one fares as one of his best to date. Of course comparing a woman to a precious stone isn’t exactly a new concept, but cliched situation or not, Yorn’s smart writing helps greatly. Where it doesn’t aid him is on the song “Rock Crowd”, where the cheese factor is so high that it has become a new anthem for mice. The idea behind the song is this: poor Pete Yorn always feels tired and depressed and down, but then he steps on stage to adoring fans and it’s like a warm embrace that makes him feel all better. Will Yorn play it at virtually every single show from now until eternity? You can probably bet on it, and I’ve not heard a more pandering song in the last several years. “Cutesy” is another way to describe it, along with the song that directly follows “Rock Crowd”, which is “Velcro Shoes”. Surely you’ve heard the Paolo Nutini hit “New Shoes” about how he puts his “new shoes on and suddenly everything is right”. With “Velcro Shoes” he tells the story of buying the shoes, going home and taking a bath with his imaginary friend Billy, then having imaginary adventures with Billy. Let’s hope the song was written from the perspective of a little boy, or Yorn might have some unchecked mental issues. What’s most interesting about that track though is how much it sounds exactly like something that Frank Black would do either solo or with his band the Catholics. A lot of the album actually carries that Frank Black touch, and that largely comes through in the heavy electric guitar work and some of Yorn’s vocals which sometimes get to the point where it sounds like somebody else is singing. One listen to “Badman” and you’ll be left wondering what new artist you’ve just stumbled upon. The words are 100% Pete Yorn though, and there’s no doubt about that, which is good for the wordplay but just a little bland when it comes to concepts and storylines.

Speaking of concepts and storylines, this self-titled record finds Yorn trying to manage the challenges of being bipolar. What’s that, you say? Pete Yorn isn’t bipolar? Perhaps a psychologist can give this record a listen and craft a diagnosis based around that. Hell, the song “Rock Crowd”, as I’ve already attested, features both his light and dark side. But much of the album comes from a very raw and intense emotional place. He appears to be pretty down on himself in general, such as on “The Chase” where he’s pretty much an asshole to this woman he loves, and then basically admits to being a horrible person while trying to convince her to come back to him. For an opposing viewpoint, the song “Always” spends a fair amount of time talking about the challenges that come with falling in love, but maintains all the struggles are worth it in the end just to have that deep connection with another person. “Stronger Than” gets all high and mighty by proclaiming that “love is stronger than fear”, yet Yorn is extremely hesitant to even consider falling in love because “I gotta know myself before I know someone else”. Then “Future Life” takes the high road in the perspective that we’re constantly wanting more out of our lives and because that makes us miserable, we should focus on all the great things we have right this minute. It’s optimism, but the subtext is telling you to give up on your dreams. At least for this song, Yorn ascribes to the mentality of “today is a gift, that’s why they call it the present”. The album closes with a pretty straightforward folk cover of the Flying Burrito Brothers song “Wheels”, and there are two reasons why that’s amusing. First, Yorn has a song called “Burrito”, and though that and “Wheels” are completely unrelated, how weird is it that the guy has two burrito-related songs to his name? Secondly, you’ll never guess who covered that same Flying Burrito Brothers song on his last album. If you said Frank Black, you’d be right.

What “Pete Yorn” the album puts on display, if anything, is that Yorn is a rather shapeless, faceless singer-songwriter that has gotten by on his sheer ability to write a pretty damn dynamic and catchy hook. His first four records were all about that, and both brought him pain and good fortune. The best fortune he could have gotten was in the form of “musicforthemorningafter”, his debut album, which was amazing in how it took all his best hooks and lyrics, leaving everything else in the dust as he scrambled to put together two more albums as part of a proposed “trilogy”. “Back and Fourth” was a recovery of sorts, no longer constrained by the conceptual nature of his prior three records, and allowing his band to do their fair share of heavy lifting on the instrumental side. Yet if the stories are indeed true, the main reason why Pete Yorn has been so “productive” these last couple years isn’t so much because he’s writing at a speedy pace but instead because so much of his material gets shelved. The second album Yorn released last year was “The Break Up”, a duets record with Scarlett Johansson. That had been gathering dust for a number of years before it was finally put out. Similarly, word on the street is that this new album was actually recorded with Frank Black prior to “Back and Fourth”, but the songs were held back, presumably because Columbia didn’t want to release them. Vagrant put them out, and the full painting finally comes into view, but like a Monet it’s just a bit blurry. Black largely succeeds in his mission to strip Yorn down to his most basic core, the problem is what we find upon going there. It’s a man in an identity crisis, unsure about life and love while allowing himself to be easily influenced by others (such as Frank Black). What suffers most because of this are the hooks, because even though a handful of choruses may surge and swell, not much of it remains memorable. Despite this, nothing sounds outright bad either. The good news is we get to explore this different side of Pete Yorn, and it’s one of the most interesting things he’s done in awhile. The bad news is interest gets lost with relative quickness and never picks back up. Best of luck to you Pete Yorn, hopefully you truly “get to know yourself” better before setting foot into a studio to record your next album.

Pete Yorn – Velcro Shoes

Buy “Pete Yorn” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 11-23-10

Can you taste the impending turkey? If only we could celebrate Thanksgiving every day. Of course then we’d all be about 100 lbs heavier than we are now. As we continue to ramp up this holday week, another good set of tunes in Pick Your Poison. Personal choices today include songs from Aidan Knight, Black Whales, Eux Autres, and Oreo Jones + Jookabox. You’ll also definitely want to download the track from Sonny and the Sandwitches, which is a combination of the Sandwitches and Sonny of Sonny and the Sunsets.

Aidan Knight – Friendly Fires

Amanda Jo Williams – Late Bloomer

Black Whales – Rattle Your Bones

Bob Mandelbaum – Greene
Bob Mandelbaum – It’s Easy (It’s So Easy)

Bomarr – Exchanges Among Systems

Brass Bed – How to Live In A Bad Dream

Emily Reo – I’ll Never Live By the Coast

Eux Autres – Queen Turner

Jim Sullivan – Highways

The Knocks – Dancing With the DJ (Monsieur Adi Remix)

The Olympics Symphonium – Settle Down

Oreo Jones + Jookabox – Guiding Light

Sonny and the Sandwitches – Throw My Ashes From This Pier When I Die

Talk – Holy Mountain

Album Review: The Corin Tucker Band – 1,000 Years [Kill Rock Stars]

Let’s break down the basics before we begin. There was Sleater-Kinney, a three-piece punk rock girl group made up of Carrie Brownstein, Corin Tucker and Janet Weiss. They released a bunch of great albums, fiery and brash each one, but chose to take an “indefinite hiatus” in 2006. Going their separate ways, drummer Janet Weiss kept working hard, making albums with Quasi and Stephen Malkmus (with The Jicks). Guitarist and sometimes singer Carrie Brownstein expanded into other artful projects, blogging for NPR and doing a bit of acting work both as one half of the comedy duo ThunderAnt (with SNL’s Fred Armisen) and even starring in an upcoming indie film with The Shins’ James Mercer. All of this happened before we’d heard a word from Tucker, who had practically dropped off the face of the Earth. No worries though, she’s been working hard at that thing many of us have known as family. She’s got a couple kids and a husband and sometimes you just need to take a step back from the fame to spend time with those most important to you. The good news for fans of Corin Tucker is that she’s been working on some songs during her free time and was able to eventually piece together a small band to help her play them for a record titled “1,000 Years”. And just to keep everything completely up to date, Weiss and Brownstein have just recently announced they’ll be in a new band with Mary Timony that’s being called Wild Flag. Expect material and touring from them in 2011.

There’s this wail that Corin Tucker did on every Sleater-Kinney album that was often so intense you could stop the rest of the music and your attention would still be completely drawn to it. That’s one of the main things that set Sleater-Kinney apart from so many other punk bands as well as other girl bands. Combine that with some seriously hardcore guitar work by Carrie Brownstein and it’s little wonder why that band reached indie stardom. For those of you (like me) that have missed Tucker’s classic yell, there’s bad news afoot on “1,000 Years”. It’s a relatively quiet, introspective singer-songwriter sort of record. So much of it keeps a cool head about it that tends to bring to mind someone like Neko Case or PJ Harvey. Of course Neko Case and PJ Harvey have written some incredible solo albums, and they’re proof positive that just because your voice can reach the rafters doesn’t mean it needs to be used that way every time. Tucker’s relative calm through much of the album means there’s more time to focus on atmosphere and lyrical content, and there’s plenty of both to go around.

The first two tracks on “1,000 Years” understandably feel front-loaded to ease you into the record without taking many chances. It’s still a long way from the heavier punk that Sleater-Kinney so easily released into the world, but there’s some electric guitar that’s not half bad in these mid-tempo melodies. The song “Half A World Away” is about missing somebody you love, and Tucker’s vocals sound like she’s genuinely upset in a surprisingly emotional moment. A small bit of experimentation emerges on “Handed Love”, which starts out as a really sparse, bland and ineffective ballad with little to nothing going for it. There’s no easy verse-chorus-verse to guide you around, and just as it becomes a chore to sit through, it bursts open at the seams into a cathartic release that somehow feels worth it. The spitfire side of Tucker really starts to emerge on “Doubt”, and there are slices of her tour-de-force yelp, but the mediocre electric guitar work holds the song back from being something exceptional. Meanwhile the balladry of “Dragon” just does most everything wrong, thanks in large part to a string section that is probably one of the most ineffective and pathetic string sections you’ll ever hear. The song stands out as exceptionally poor as it’s sandwiched beween two harder rock numbers that do so much more with so much less. Near the end of the album, a couple of the songs almost start to blend into one another. “Thrift Store Coats” has some nice piano at the beginning, but the electric guitars eventually take over and ruin the mood. Thankfully that piano is given its full due on the closing track “Miles Away”, and it works quite well to become one of the album’s biggest highlights.

When she’s not driving forwards at full volume, Corin Tucker proves she’s still a very capable and strong vocalist. The passion she injects into her singing stands largely apart from everything else that’s going on throughout “1,000 Years”. There’s a number of pretty good songs on the record, but nothing quite so gripping that it’s essential listening. Arguably, the greatest problems here result from the “Band” part of The Corin Tucker Band. Whoever these people are playing on this album with her, they’re talented enough to play in a band, just a pretty crappy one that doesn’t make waves beyond a local music scene. They should be called a backing bland rather than a backing band. Perhaps, one might argue, they’re just following orders and are ensuring to give Tucker the spotlight she so richly deserves. Whatever the reasons might be, a few of the songs on “1,000 Years” had the potential to be mindblowing but just never made it that far. Or perhaps the issue isn’t so much who’s there as it is who’s not. With Carrie Brownstein digging in deep on her guitar and Janet Weiss slamming the drums like there’s no tomorrow, combined with Tucker’s vocals, Sleater-Kinney was a trinity of amazing musicians. We can’t even judge how Brownstein would do solo because she has yet to release any post-S-K music (at the moment). Weiss’s utility player role will serve her well in any band she joins, as we’ve already seen. The Wild Flag album’s going to be a small test, but that in itself is a supergroup so great things are expected from them anyways. Corin Tucker is effectively going it alone with some faceless musicians helping her out. Expectations were high anyways, and so “1,000 Years” feels like a mild disappointment. Nobody’s going to fault her for trying though, and if she keeps making music under the Corin Tucker Band name it could very well get a whole lot better. Time will tell. In the meantime, let’s keep our fingers crossed for that Sleater-Kinney reunion.

The Corin Tucker Band – Doubt

Buy “1,000 Years” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 11-22-10

Welcome to Thanksgiving Week, where much like all the food that will wind up on your table (and in your stomach), Pick Your Poison is overindulging with mp3s. Feel free to gorge yourself on songs from the “30 Rock” soundtrack, Acrylics, Ethan Gold, Lyrics Born, Tyvek and Wow & Flutter. There’s also a pretty cool remix of a Phenomenal Handclap Band song by Fujiya and Miyagi.

30 Rock – Werewolf Bar Mitzvah (RAC Remix)

Acrylics – Nightwatch

Bleeding Heart Narrative – Perun  (ZIP)

Burt Rocket – Santa’s Hot Rod

Ethan Gold – Come On Beat It Down

Hard Nips – Release It

Holcombe Waller – Risk of Change

I Only Date Models – This Ends Tomorrow…

Kermit Ruffins – Hey Look Me Over

Lyrics Born – Lies x 3 (Amp Live Remix)

The Phenomenal Handclap Band – The Journey to Serra Da Estrella (Fujiya & Miyagi Remix)

The Puppini Sisters – Last Christmas

Shunda K – Dancing

Tyvek – Underwater To

The Winebirds – The Solution

Wow & Flutter – The Puget Sound

Live Friday: 11-19-10

In a Live Friday that’s sure to get all kinds of people all kinds of excited, today’s session is with Mumford and Sons. The band has gotten HUGE in the last 6 months or so, while at the same time surviving what some might regard as a critical snubbing. Okay, so they’re not the most brilliant band in the world, but they can write a catchy song and that’s half the battle right there. Digging back deep into the archives for this one, as I do try and keep the sessions featured on here pretty current, this set comes from that crazy time known as 2009. Back then, Mumford and Sons were just some young group of guys from overseas preparing for their first album to be released in America, where nobody had heard of them yet. Perhaps due to censorship issues, they avoid doing the hit single “Little Lion Man”, but happily throw four other songs our way. In the interview, which you can stream via the link below, they talk about how the band started, what their sonic influences are, and why Mumford is the “band dad” and the other guys are only “sons”. It’s kinda fun. So are the songs.

Mumford and Sons, Live on WXPN in 2009:
Mumford and Sons – White Blank Page (Live on WXPN)
Mumford and Sons – Timshel (Live on WXPN)
Mumford and Sons – Winter Winds (Live on WXPN)
Mumford and Sons – Sister (Live on WXPN)

Stream the entire interview/session

Buy “Sigh No More” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Friday 11-19-10

Thanksgiving is next week, if you’re American that is. There’ll be a couple days without a post next week in observance of that. Basically my body will be too stuffed with turkey and other foods to actually get up off the couch and type something up. Those are the moments to cherish. No, I’ll probably spend that time preparing for year-end listmaking and such. But to wrap up this week, we’re in fine shape with another extended Pick Your Poison, and on a Friday no less. Top picks today include songs from Bardo Pond, Glass Ghost (doing a Bear in Heaven cover), Elk, Suns, and MEN (which features members of Le Tigre). Everything’s enjoyable on some level, so be sure to check all this great stuff out.

Bardo Pond – Don’t Know About You

Birds of Avalon – Invasion

Brass Bed – God Saves the Thieves

Dead Horse – Interstellar Remedies

Debra Dolce – Goodies (Dirty Disco Youth Remix)

Elk – Volleyball

Glass Ghost – Fake Out (Bear In Heaven cover)

Hundreds – Solace (Single Edit)

Joshua English – Nickel In

MEN – Off Our Backs (Lemonade Remix)

Nice Purse – Heart Medley

PO PO – Let’s Get Away

Scott Miller – Joyful Joyful

Suns – Everything Changes

Wires Under Tension – Mnemonics in Motion

Album Review: LCD Soundsystem – London Sessions [EMI/DFA]

A few weeks back, my good friends in LCD Soundsystem threw me a birthday party. Okay, so maybe that wasn’t the intention when they booked their Chicago tour date on my birthday, but I turned it into a birthday party anyways with 4,500 of my closest friends. In my review of the show, which was double billed with Hot Chip opening, I pretty much called it the best show I’d seen in 2010. That’s an endorsement you can take to the bank. It marked the second time I saw LCD Soundsystem within a 6 month period, and over the course of three records they have become an extremely tight knit live force to be reckoned with. There are few bands I can recommend more these days. Naturally then, interest in an LCD Soundsystem live album should be met with a nearly equal sense of enthusiasm. Even if you can’t afford a ticket to see James Murphy and his merry band of misfits perform in a city near you, at least you can get a recorded document of what the show is like. So we have the “London Sessions”, a live record available now on iTunes that was recorded this past June at Pool/Miloco studios in South London, shortly after the band’s performance at Glastonbury.

Yes, there is a certain visual component that goes into your LCD Soundsystem live show that can only be rendered on DVD, but the audio benefits alone would seem to make a live album worthwhile. The band tends to throw a little extra into their sets, carefully planning and arranging them for the best transitional effect. Each individual album is sequenced so carefully, but when you perform, you need to put on a catalogue-spanning set. There’s a reason why the LCD Soundsystem set is exactly the same for almost every single show, and it’s for maximum effect. “London Sessions” unfortunately doesn’t feature that exact set that they’ve been doing these last few months. There’s nothing in the way of transitions here, as every song is neatly capped on both ends. The songs are spread pretty smartly across the band’s albums, with special emphasis on their latest, “This Is Happening”. In the form of an extra special treat, the live record closes with the rarity “Yr City’s A Sucker”, something that few crowds have had the privilege of bearing witness to. If there was ever a time to do it, when you’re being recorded is probably one of them.

So we have the singular issue that plagues these “London Sessions”, and that is the use of a recording studio. In most situations, you get a live album from a band that has been pristinely recorded via the soundboard at a show they played, and while it often sounds good, depending on the situation the crowd noise or overly loud singalongs can get a bit bothersome. That’s the issue with legitimate live albums, though all that stuff goes ignored when you’re right there in the crowd with everyone else. The benefits of playing your songs live in a studio are mostly in audio fidelity form, and LCD Soundsystem’s songs are pretty pristine for these “London Sessions”. It’s very possible they did multiple takes of each song and only chose the ones they liked best. It also stands to reason that though they’re noisy, crowds serve a huge purpose when it comes to pushing a performance on stage. People go to shows to get amped up over live performances of their favorites. Bands play live shows not just for the cash, but because of the love and passion their fans give back to them. This exchange of energy tends to take almost every live performance up a notch. You may be recording your songs 100% live and using no samples in a studio, but without that screaming, singing along and relentless applause, there’s just a little bit of edge missing. The “London Sessions” come remarkably close to capturing exactly what you’d see were you to actively attend an LCD Soundsystem show, but subtract that audience and a certain vitality or the mere possibility of everything going completely off the tracks gets taken away too.

The value, or the real reason why “London Sessions” is important enough for you to purchase is that you’re offered a different perspective on LCD Soundsystem than you get from their records. When the rhythm section goes completely nuts in an extended jam session at the end of the live version of “Get Innocuous!”, that’s something you can’t get on the original “Sound of Silver” version. The funkier and guitar dominant live rendition of “Daft Punk Is Playing At My House” shows just how much careful sampling went into the final album cut. The grand point is that the small little changes that happen between non-live and live editions of songs provide new insights into things you’re already familiar with from one angle or another. Given LCD Soundsystem’s prowess as a live act, this takes on additional importance. The conditions may not be ideal, but they’re about as close as you’ll get from this band. Of course after all this waxing poetic on the virtues/drawbacks of this “London Sessions” album, in the last week the band decided to make their November 10th show at Alexandra Palace in London available for purchase. That gives you the full LCD Soundsystem live audio experience, complete with crowd noise and a killer set list. Links to purchase that and the “London Sessions” are below. As James Murphy says himself in the song “Pow Pow”, there are “advantages to both (advantages! advantages!)”. Make your choice, or buy both – you’re getting quality either way. Now if only they’d do a live DVD…

Buy “London Sessions” from Amazon MP3

Buy the “Live at Alexandra Palace, London” November 10, 2010 record

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 11-18-10

Another collection of good songs in an extended edition of Pick Your Poison today. You can get you first taste of a new British Sea Power album due in 2011, a remix of an excellent track from Salem, and Innerparty System’s remix of a Deluka song. Other recommendations come in the form of Glass Vaults, The Hush Now, and Scattered Trees.

Bomarr – Exchanges Among Systems (Fancy Mike Remix)

British Sea Power – Living Is So Easy 

Construction & Destruction – Bear

Deluka – OMFG (Innerparty System Remix)

Fresh Millions – Forever (ZIP)

Glass Vaults – New Space

The Hush Now – On Holiday

Los Chicharrons – Ma Do Nar

Pregnant – Wiff Of Father

Salem – Asia (Jokers of the Scene Remix)

Scattered Trees – Love and Leave

Sensual Harassment – NYC Beast  (ZIP)

The Shape of the Earth – You Can Only Get So Lonely

This Is Phantom – Voodoo Romantic

Album Review: Badly Drawn Boy – It’s What I’m Thinking, Pt. 1 – Photographing Snowflakes [One Last Fruit]

“I’m a failure at heart/but it seems I succeed when my heart feels the need to be helpful”

The lines above are the first things that Damon Gough sings on the title track of his new Badly Drawn Boy album. The song itself is placed midway through the record, but it largely sums up his career in music thus far. Somewhere around the year 2000, Badly Drawn Boy was being touted as the “next big thing” built largely on the strength of his debut album “The Hour of Bewilderbeast”. The “About A Boy” soundtrack was an additional strong point, though the quality of his songs and songwriting in general began to decline with “Have You Fed the Fish?” and continued a downward trend all the way beyond 2006’s “Born in the U.K.”. When all that prediction of major success didn’t fully pan out, Gough felt creatively tapped out and walked away from making music, perhaps forever. Perhaps it was out of the need for some cash, or just that he was friends with people involved in the show, but last year Gough agreed to write some songs for the soundtrack to the British TV show “The Fattest Man in Britain”. Upon releasing those tracks in the form of the album “Is There Nothing We Could Do?”, it didn’t exactly re-ignite the hype that he had earned much earlier in his career, but after being forced to write music he was creatively stimulated like he hadn’t been in quite awhile. So now Badly Drawn Boy is back in full effect, and Gough has set about to release a trilogy of records, the first of which came out earlier this year, titled “It’s What I’m Thinking, Pt. 1 – Photographing Snowflakes”.

One of the most compelling and exciting things about the early Badly Drawn Boy records was how much Gough was able to do with a simple acoustic guitar and voice. Not only did his songwriting suffer in quality as time went on, but he constantly felt the pressure to expand his sound with each new album, to the point where everything became completely overblown with extensive string sections among other things. For one man his compositions were often backed with dozens of others that often hurt more than they helped. As “It’s What I’m Thinking, Pt. 1 – Photographing Snowflakes” begins with the track “In Safe Hands”, you’re left with an acoustic guitar, a light splattering of drums, a minimally invasive bit of electronic skittering, and Gough’s voice treated with a bit of an echo effect. The song probably sounds just as good with only the guitar and no vocal effects, but the added bits do make it more haunting and dramatic. It’s a minimalist song at heart, and extremely un-busy compared to what he was doing back in 2006. The same goes for the next track, “The Order of Things”, which is a bit brighter sonically and utilizes a drum machine for percussion while a hazy radio broadcast hides far back in the mix. As the swell of strings dominates over “Too Many Miracles”, it’s automatically easy to assume that Gough has fallen back into old patterns and is preparing to unleash some epic composition on you. The good news is that the strings avoid becoming too invasive or overbearing and instead just stick with the upbeat melody while Gough waxes poetic about the beauty in the world. It’s quite nice, really. Thankfully, though those strings stick around for much of the record, there’s ample restraint applied to them so they’re not problematic. The 6.5 minute title track is extremely self-loathing but well written as the words slide past amid rather pleasant balladry of piano and slide guitar. Though “You Lied” has an almost soft rock quality to it that you might find on a Seal or Sting album, its bare bones instrumental approach is again very welcome and brings back the early days of Badly Drawn Boy. Speaking of those early days, after a pretty depressing first 8 tracks, the record’s final two songs are a bit poppier and lighter on their feet, which is really what Gough does best. It’s a nice way to close things out, but you’re left wondering why there couldn’t have been more of those types of songs across the entire album rather than just confined to the end. Most albums are front-loaded with hits, but in this case, outside of “Too Many Miracles”, the hits come at the end.

Lyrically speaking “It’s What I’m Thinking, Pt. 1 – Photographing Snowflakes” deals a lot with the first half of its title. Gough does a whole lot of introspection about his life and career thus far, and a fair portion of it is from the perspective of a guy that hit his peak 10 years ago and has constantly struggled ever since. Tragic though that may be, the time away from making music these last few years sharpened his wordplay a bit, and in some respects it’s comforting to hear him lay those emotions out like he does here. He also doesn’t spend the entire album talking about himself, as that’d come off as egotistical and selfish. There are ruminations on life and nature and love as well, all big topics that are far more relatable than personal failures. The guy could use some significant cheering up though, and hopefully subsequent volumes of the “It’s What I’m Thinking” series will bring that back with greater ease. For the time being, consider this “Photographing Snowflakes” chapter as something of a rebirth for Badly Drawn Boy. If 2006 was the year Gough reached the bottom, 2010 is the year he starts clawing his way back up the mountain. Progress has been made, and this new one is by no means a redemption, but more serves as a hopeful look at things to come. It’s unlikely that Badly Drawn Boy will ever make good on that “next big thing” tag once applied to him, but with the pressure of that now fully taken away, perhaps he can finally find a consistency in his sound that will satisfy fans and critics for years to come.

Buy “It’s What I’m Thinking, Pt. 1 – Photographing Snowflakes” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 11-17-10

The next couple days of Pick Your Poison are going to be what I like to call “extended” editions, simply to highlight the fact that there are more mp3s available to download than usual. Not that much more, but it’s a few extra just to keep things interesting. Also because I’m being sent a lot of stuff. Today’s highlights include songs from Eastern Conference Champions, Happy Hollows, Radical Face, Sky Larkin and Twilight Hotel. Should you have seen the Amazon Kindle commercials that ran for much of the summer, chances are you’re also familiar (but may not know it) with Little & Ashley and their song “Stole My Heart”, which you can also download below.

Eastern Conference Champions – Middle of the Night

Eksi Ekso – Kills of the Flood Tide

Elves of Heaven – This Christmas

Happy Hollows – High Wire

Indie Folker – The Eyes, The Beard, The Nose, The Stomach, The Lungs

Jon and Roy – Any Day Now
Jon and Roy – Boon Elm

Little and Ashley – Stole My Heart

Murder Mystery – Problems

Radical Face – The Deserter’s Song

Sharron Kraus – Evergreen Sisters

The Sights – Guilty (ZIP)

Sky Larkin – Still Windmills

Space Siren – This Radar

Twilight Hotel – Mahogany Veneer

Album Review: Tim Kasher – The Game of Monogamy [Saddle Creek]

If the name Tim Kasher somehow rings unfamiliar to you, perhaps you’re just not aware of some of the music the guy has been behind. Kasher is at the moment responsible for two excellent and distinctly different bands, Cursive and The Good Life. It’s Cursive that has been around the longest, having put out about 8 albums worth of highly emotional punk rock with increasingly dramatic flair. The Good Life is arguably a bit quieter and personal in nature, and though the music doesn’t always fully back it up, there’s plenty of drama in that too. To call Kasher a drama “queen”/king wouldn’t be out of line, and that only becomes clearer the closer you examine his remarkably personal lyrics. Kasher is also a fan of the concept album, and he’s used everything from “The Wizard of Oz” (Cursive’s “Happy Hollow”) to chronicling the good and bad moments a relationship goes through in a year (The Good Life’s “Album of the Year”). Somehow though the main theme always seems to get back to good love gone bad and winding up desperate and alone. No matter how “impersonal” he claims these stories are, the characters in Kasher’s songs are almost never happy, or if they are, it’s not for very long. Why do we pay attention to these sad sack tales Kasher keeps throwing our way? Well, part of it is probably the relatable aspect of it all, because almost all of us have had a relationship go bad at one time or another in our lives. The other part is that Kasher always has such well-rounded wordplay. He’s not quite Shakespeare, but there’s such a vividness to the stories he tells that not many people can do or at least do well. All that said, Tim Kasher has finally decided to release an album under his own name, and true to form he’s titled it “The Game of Monogamy”.

Anyone thinking that “The Game of Monogamy” is a record looking to endorse the values of marriage should probably check the title more carefully. The word “game” is the trick here, because apparently keeping happiness and fidelity with a partner is about as challenging as Monopoly or Trivial Pursuit. So the album is by no means positive on relationships in general, though if you’re single or suffering from breakup-itis, there’s wisdom to be found in these words. Of course that “wisdom” could also put you off taking on a partner for the rest of your life, so interpret things quite liberally and without too much weight. Just because Kasher (or the “characters” he’s created) is unhappy with how his long-term relationships have turned out doesn’t mean you have to be. But lyrics do come first in any Kasher project, and this is no exception. “I’m Afraid I’m Gonna Die Alone” deals with the topic the title describes, though the main point is more about how two cheating partners stay together because of that fear. “You said baby, you worry so much about dying/you forget to really live/well maybe so/now tell me, who you been with?” he exclaims amid some rather pleasant organ and a very peppy horn section. In other words, the song has all the hallmarks of a pretty good single, save for the dark lyrical content. One of the two is probably implied sarcasm, though it’s difficult to tell exactly which. At least “Strays” has some good intentions, holding down this simple ballad with an acoustic guitar and a melodica. The storyline revolves around a man wanting to prove he still loves his partner many years into their relationship, even though they’ve seemingly grown apart. In Kasher’s world they’re just two weary people, wandering the streets together under the realization that maybe they’re best off together because they won’t find anyone better. “Cold Love” is another bouncy pop song with jangly guitars mixed among the organ and horns, and despite its apparent warmth the title describes it best. In other words it’s a whole lot of fun as Kasher talks about being “tired of this vanilla existence”. One of the most interesting songs on “The Game of Monogamy” is “There Must Be Something I’ve Lost”, in which Kasher tries to figure out where his life went from full of promise to completely marginalized. This exercise mostly involves re-examining his youth and past relationships and delivering such intricacies as “I wanna have sex with all my old girlfriends again/I swear it’s just the familiarity I miss/Aw, fuck it/It’s just typical male conquest/You know the world don’t revolve around your prick/just ask your old girlfriends”. Speaking of sex, “No Fireworks” is all about the lack of them in the bedroom. You may be surprised to learn that not every long-term relationship results in a completely satisfying sex life, so Kasher just reminds us all of that fact (as he does a few times on the album). As if you needed another reason to avoid doing something so “foolish” as to get married. And hey, “The Prodigal Husband” is about cheating on your spouse and the destruction that leads to. To sum it all up, Kasher closes the album with the 5+ minute epic “Monogamy”, which uses a full string section and virtually every instrument in between to tell the tale of a bright young couple. They get married, buy a house, furniture and a dog, lose touch with friends, attend their kids’ sporting events, lose intimacy in the bedroom, get buried underneath a mortgage, and then wonder where all the love went. So nice to end this wildly upbeat record on yet another upbeat note.

For those of you happily married, giving a listen to “The Game of Monogamy” basically tells you just how wrong things might turn out for you down the road. It’s not exactly something you should want to hear, and Tim Kasher isn’t exactly the kind of guy you want to be hearing it from. Just because the guy has so much trouble in his relationships with women doesn’t mean you’ll experience the same things. At the very least though, he’s brutally honest and deals with a reality that so many people don’t want to believe in. The divorce rate is somewhere around 50% these days, and that’s not counting those still trapped in loveless marriages or cheat on their spouses and never get caught/are forgiven. To put the nicest spin possible on this, Kasher is a realist. The thing is, we live in a world that tries so hard to look at the positives, even if watching the news gives us the opposite. And despite all the issues that tend to reveal themselves the longer you’re in a relationship with someone, there’s a distinct lack of focus on the great benefits a long-term partner or marriage can bring you. If we all bought into the hype that this album spreads, most of us would wind up far unhappier with our lives than we are now and largely alone for the majority of it. There’s something to be said for monogamy, and perhaps not listening to this album and its overall pessimism can help you avoid the pitfalls it describes. Should you be bearing the battle scars of love or just are content to call yourself single at the moment, there’s some interesting music on “The Game of Monogamy” you may want to check out. Instrumentally these songs are pretty damn good, and though unpleasant, Kasher’s way with words is second to none. Sometimes it’s fun just to hear the intense details he hands out like candy on Halloween. This certainly isn’t a record for everybody, but if you’re not too uncomfortable with a bit of anti-relationship music, there’s enjoyment to be had. Fair warning though, while you could fall head over heels in love with “The Game of Monogamy” and listen to it intently over and over again, there’s a good chance you’ll become tired of it and eventually cheat on it with another album. Ah well, you weren’t the kind of person that can commit to one record for the rest of your life anyways.

Buy “The Game of Monogamy” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 11-16-10

The most excellent of the already excellent songs available in today’s Pick Your Poison include tracks from Bikini, Computer Magic, Other Lives, Swim Party and Weekend.

The American Dollar – Age of Wonder (Live in Brooklyn)

Bikini – American Mourning

Computer Magic – Immediate Cause of Sleep (Way Yes Remix)

Kriget – Martyr

Other Lives – For 12 (Demo)

Sane Smith – Arrivederci

Star & Micey – Memphis Christmas

Subswara – Steam
Subswara – Bend You

Swim Party – The Glory of Economy

Ten Million Lights – Fast Asleep

Trey Lockerbie – Moving to Montauk

Turzi – Baltimore (Turzi vs. Zombie Zombie Live Version)

Weekend – End Times

White Pines – Woods

Album Review: Weezer – Death to False Metal [Geffen]

If you want to get technical, Weezer have released(/re-released) a total of 3 albums in 2010. If you want to get even more technical, Weezer have released(/re-released) those 3 albums within a 3 month span. Is this too much in the way of material? Hardcore Weezer fans might not think so, but really what all this material does is roll up into one massive bunch where confusion runs rampant and it’s difficult to focus on a singluar release. In other words, if you really liked “Hurley”, you may not have noticed that “Pinkerton” was re-released with 25 extra tracks attached, or that the band also put out a rarities collection in the form of “Death to False Metal”. Of course that’s also assuming your average Weezer fan could ignore the cash bait of a deluxe edition reissue of one of the band’s two greatest records. So really it’s “Death to False Metal” that suffers most, in particular because it’s an odds-and-ends collection rather than something brand new or at least previously great. Still, the 10-track record does contain a host of songs that have never been released in any official format beforehand, and bear dates of creation back to the late 90s and early 00s when they were still making relatively good music. Chances are most if not all of the record is new to you, and though it’s easy to imagine so, this is less a case of throwing music out there just for the sake of it and more a case of carefully piecing together a set of songs that work well together to give fans a gift of material that was good, but didn’t make final albums for one reason or another.

You’ve got to imagine that there’s a collection of really terrible Weezer songs out there that the band is smartly refusing to release. To put it another way, “Death to False Metal” doesn’t have much in the way of cringe-worthy music on it, and were it not touted as being a collection of unreleased material, the band could have called it a brand new record and gotten away with it. Plenty of bands have taken years upon years and released album upon album before some of their songs finally see completion. Though portions of this Weezer record were re-recorded to assist in fidelity purposes, everything was pretty much in completed form already when the decision was made to release it. That doesn’t mean there’s not a little bit of demo-like fuzz on a couple of the songs, but compared to the two albums’ worth or Rivers Cuomo “Alone” demos or even some of the studio outtakes on the deluxe edition of “Pinkerton”, there’s definitely a higher clarity of both audio and vision when it comes to “Death to False Metal”.

Anyone looking for some magical unearthed gem or perhaps thinks that Weezer has been holding their best music back from us is bound for just a shade of disappointment. Virtually all of “Death to False Metal” echoes a lot of what Weezer is doing currently, even if “Hurley” was a better album than most of us had a right to expect. Somewhere around the release of “The Red Album”, I half-assedly resigned the idea that Weezer would ever do anything truly worthwhile again, choosing instead to write mindlessly fun melodies that were easy to sing along to. In other words, they stopped challenging themselves. If you come in looking for that fun version of the band, they’re more than willing to deliver. Though there are some stylistic variations, moving from straight rock songs to ballads to heavier, angrier material, most of the songs on “Death to False Metal” follow the same format: inconsequential verse to anthemic chorus to inconsequential verse. The verses are only a means to an end, basically, as the hooks dig in and stick in your mind each time a chorus rolls around, and boy do they roll around often.

Topically, the songwriting is about as plainspoken as Rivers Cuomo tends to get. No deep, dark confessionals because he hasn’t done that since “Pinkerton”, and if you ever have trouble remembering the hook in a chorus, just look to the song title. “Turning Up the Radio” is a song about doing exactly that, and the chorus will tell you that a dozen times or more. “Blowin’ My Stack” has Rivers getting angry, but it’s one of those playful sort of angers that’s lighthearted and catchy enough to stick with you. One of the heaviest guitar songs is “Everyone”, and you get one guess as to what singular word is repeated over and over again as the hook. One of the more delightful songs, primarily because it’s so bouncy and easygoing, has to be “I’m A Robot”, with a playful little piano and some snarky lyrics that make it pretty easy to crack a smile. For such a blissful device, you’d expect Weezer’s version of “Trampoline” to be great for jumping up and down to. The tempo flags just a little bit and the guitars are just a little too crunchy to fully recreate the excitement of launching off a springy piece of fabric. One of the album’s biggest missteps comes in the form of “Autopilot”, where spacey keyboards and the use of Auto-Tune apparently seemed like good ideas. It sounds like the kind of track that was intended for “Make Believe”, and that record sucked enough without this song helping it out. Then to close there’s an interesting cover of Toni Braxton’s “Unbreak My Heart”. Weezer’s version makes the song a bit easier to admit to liking, for those afraid to acknowledge that the original version was pretty damn good in and of itself for an R&B ballad.

Should you currently own every Weezer album, or at least almost every Weezer album, “Death to False Metal” is another one to add to your collection without much shame because clearly you already have none. Hahaha, just kidding (sort of). But working on the assumption that You’re not expecting a “Blue Album” or “Pinkerton” or even “Green Album” out of this, you’ll come away from this little collection of Weezer’s past with a fresh set of songs that are plainly fun. Listening to this is like being forced to eat a vanilla ice cream cone – you’re happy just to have ice cream, but there’s definitely more exciting and better flavors out there. One thing that is nice about this record is that Weezer’s diversity is on display, along with how they’ve changed in the last 10 years. There’s some playful numbers, a few with some serious guitar crunch, a pair of ballads, a cover, and one sort of gonzo minor experiment (see: “Autopilot”). There are a few of you out there that think “Make Believe” or “Raditude” mark some of the band’s best material, and it’s almost like this album is especially for you. Everyone else take note – “Hurley” is probably the best thing Weezer has done since the “Green Album”, and you’re far better off keeping your focus on that rather than wasting your time and money on “Death to False Metal”. It’s good to see these songs find a home on an official Weezer release, but there was a reason they were dropped from other records. Perhaps the next time the band thinks about releasing another one of these compilations, they’ll remember that and make a smarter choice.

Buy “Death to False Metal” from Amazon

Pick Your Poison: Monday 11-15-10

It’s pretty much everywhere today, but in case you haven’t heard yet, Girl Talk released his new album “All Day” today. It is available for FREE (no email address or anything else required) by following the link below. Awesome. You’ll also want to check out tracks from Banjo or Freakout, Freebass, Matthew Friedberger (of Fiery Furnaces), and Teengirl Fantasy. Plenty of great music, please check it out.

Banjo or Freakout – 105

Tha Doc – Cheerleader

Freebass – Not Too Late

Girl Talk – All Day (full album)  [follow link]

Levek – Look on the Bright Side

Luv Clowns – K-I-D-S

Matthew Friedberger – Shirley

The Notes – Sheltered

Simian Ghost – Transparent Is OK

SNDTRKR – Inglorious Finale

Super Mirage – Song For A Go-Go Girl

Teengirl Fantasy – Dancing In Slow Motion

Thorn1 – Drone

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