Remember When We Used to Write Here?

Yeah neither do I.

Maybe soon, though!

Autechre - Oversteps (2010)



Artist - Autechre
Album - Oversteps
Genre - Electronica/IDM/Experimental

I'll have to try more actively to make sure not all my entries here involve the latest Warp-related release I have a boner over, but for this one in particular it's very necessary. The new Autechre album is upon us!

Here she be

Ted Leo & The Pharmacists - The Brutalist Bricks

A CHALLENGER APPROACHES

For those of you who might be reading this (do we have any of those people, guys?) that don't know me -- "Hi". I've been too busy / too lazy / too several other things to write an entry up until this point, despite being listed as a collaborator from the get-go.

It took something special to get me off my ass and writing. That something? The latest album by my favorite band.

Ted Leo & The Pharmacists - The Brutalist Bricks (March 9th, Matador)

Track List:
  1. "The Mighty Sparrow"
  2. "Mourning in America"
  3. "Ativan Eyes"
  4. "Even Heroes Have to Die"
  5. "The Stick"
  6. "Bottled in Cork"
  7. "Woke Up Near Chelsea"
  8. "One Polaroid a Day"
  9. "Where Was My Brain?"
  10. "Bartolomeo and the Buzzing of Bees"
  11. "Tuberculoids Arrive in Hop"
  12. "Gimme the Wire"
  13. "Last Days"

It's no secret that I love TL/Rx. Ted Leo is the consummate punk showman -- he is charming, funny, and can shred like few others of this generation. Some have called him a combination of Billy Bragg and Elvis Costello, for this millennium. While he is certainly not as legendary as either of those esteemed musicians, I won't say that it's an inaccurate description.

This is The Pharmacists' fifth full length, their first since 2007's Living with the Living. It is the first LP with Marty "Violence" Key on bass and the first to feature James Canty on rhythm guitar since 2003's Hearts of Oak, one of the best albums of the last decade. The addition and re-addition truly fill out the band's sound. I was always a fan of former bassist Dave Lerner and his wild mane of hair, but his playing never felt so... purposeful as Key's does here. I don't know if the mix will change any, with a month to go, but the basslines are prominent and driving when they need to be, but slink to the back when they need to, and it works very well, at least to these ears. Rounding out the rhythm is Chris Wilson, whose drumming is better than it ever has been.

Onto the front man, and the album itself. My initial reaction is that Ted has crafted some of his best work on The Brutalist Bees. Leo knows how to open an album -- see "Me and Mia" and "Biomusicology", from Shake the Sheets and The Tyranny of Distance, respectively, for further proof of that fact. He hits another homerun on this album too, opening with the excellent "The Mighty Sparrow", a quick, but solid groove through and through, with a very George Harrison-esque solo. It's followed by a rerecorded version of "Mourning in America" a track that was released on an EP in 2008 to benefit charity Democracy Now!. It sounds infinitely better here. It's more polished on all fronts. Crisp, thundering drums, pulsing bass, and an overall balanced mix that the original lacked.

The third track, "Ativan Eyes", is one of my favorites, but I can't for the life of me explain why. It's just a great song, I think. I could say the same of "Bottled in Cork", another song I love for intangible reasons. Maybe it's that it seems to have a strong connection to World War II, despite being a sort of romanticized punk song, with its closing refrain of "tell the bartender I think I'm falling in love."

The real highlights, though, are "Even Heroes Have to Die" and "One Polaroid a Day". The former is a relatively straightforward song. It's got a great chorus, sung in a sort of half-falsetto by Leo: "Even heroes have to die--- / No one lives forever, love / and no one's wise to try". There's nothing less endearing than a punk who refuses to age gracefully, and Ted shows how aware he is of that fact. The other gem, "One Polaroid a Day", is just fantastic to listen to. It has a sort of staccato riff that is just lovely to the ear, and Ted's vocal is a very understated, near-whisper that suits the song so so well. The bass is simple but functional, and the drums are relatively quiet. Everything complements each other so perfectly. It may be the best song the band has ever written.

From cover to cover, the album doesn't really have any truly weak tracks. "Tuberculoids Arrive in Hop" is very different, it's got no percussion at all, and has almost a wild-west vibe to it, and sounds like it was recorded outside -- crickets can be heard in the back throughout, and the song ends with about 20 seconds of outdoors-at-night-in-the-summer sounds, crickets, cars passing in the distance. It's not bad, but it's an acquired taste at the very least. Overall, The Brutalist Bricks seems to be the best Ted Leo work, LP or otherwise, in nearly seven years, and it might just be in contention for their best release yet.

Get it here
Buy it here

luke/transience's 2010 listens -- part 1 of however many

Hello everyone - long time no write. I haven't been too active on the music front lately, so I'm going to try and condense the last eight weeks of luke into one succinct blog post.

Dessa - A Badly Broken Code
Genre: trip hop, hip hop



This seems to be the Jukebox's album of the year so far. I don't think any of us are completely in love with it, but all of us like it a lot. Dessa reminds me of a female version of Sage Francis for some reason. She blends singing and rap in a way that's reminiscent of old trip hop, but she is undeniably a rap artist. I like that she isn't one of those female rappers that try really hard to show off how hardcore she is. She's content to just sing/rap about a broken relationship or use her intelligent writing to her advantage. This is the first I've heard of her so I may need to swim around in her back catalogue. God knows I don't have a lot of female hip hop!

The Antlers - Hospice
Genre: indie, music to kill yourself to



I'm about six months late to the Hospice party -- probably because the name of the band is The Antlers and who the hell wants to listen to a band named that -- but it finally clicked with me today. This album is equal parts brutal and beautiful - it is heartwrenchingly sad at times and then oddly inspiring. I'm not sure that 2009 had an album that stood out quite like Hospice. It took me ten listens to even decide if I liked it or loved it. The answer is love.

The Knife - Tomorrow, In a Year
Genre: opera, electronic, fucking weird



Wow. This album is bizarre. Silent Shout was one of the best records to come out in 2006 and the much-anticipated follow-up to it is a concept opera about Charles Darwin's Origin of the Species. It is torturous to listen to at times. There's five minutes of a droning sound, two minutes devoted of a high-pitched beep that makes you want to cover your ears, and some of the strangest opera singing around. It is the kind of album that most bands don't recover from: once they jump off the deep end, there's no going back to the land of normal. The album gets a little bit more Knife-y by the end of it, but at that point it's already past the point of no return.

And yet, there's something bizarrely enticing about this disc. It is fascinating in its own strange way. I find myself listening to it and wondering how the hell they made it, and then when it ends I find myself grateful that my ears are not being pummeled anymore.

Why? Alopecia
Genre: indie rock/emo jewish hip hop



The album I listened to the most in 2009 is the album that should have been my 2008 album of the year, Alopecia. For some bizarre reason I just can not stop listening to Alopecia. Yoni Wolf's brutal honesty and clever as hell wordplay just keeps me coming back over and over and over. It's addicting. I think this album is very close to being my favourite album of all time at this point. I even hooked my girlfriend/fiance/whatever on it recently which makes me like it even more. I need to find a way to stop listening to this before I get sick of it.

Massive Atack - heligoland
Genre: lounge-hop



I was afraid to listen to this album. You see, Massive Attack really defined music in the 90s, first with the seminal Blue Lines and then with one of the best sounding discs of all time, Mezzanine. You couldn't talk about trip hop without somebody mentioning Massive Attack. It was impossible.

Then the 2000s happened and Massive Attack has been irrelevant ever since. 100th Window, while a decent album, never hits the highs of previous albums and while their recent EP was interesting, it wasn't top tier material. heligoland follows this trend of being merely average and therefore extremely disappointing. Massive Attack is a great band that I have great expectations for; when they come up short and merely put out an average album, it's almost worse than not putting out anything at all, especially seeing how this album took seven years to make. I find it hard to imagine a time where Massive Attack is relevant again - time has just passed them by, I think.

RJD2 - The Colossus
genre: instrumental rock, jazz, hip hop



Arrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrgh. This is one of the most frustrating albums of all time.

At first, it's really cool, a varied instrumental album that manages to make you forget about how bad The Third Hand was. Kenna is an old fave of mine and does and his voice fits in well with RJ's instrumentation. The album stagnates a bit as it goes on, but considering how low he set the bar after The Third Hand, it's tolerable.

And then track 9 happens.



Four minutes later, you're reminded of how good RJD2 used to be and how he used to completely own the world of instrumental hip-hop. It doesn't help that Illogic is one of my favourite guys in the world of hip-hop. Suddenly he's invalidated the whole album by daring to compare it to Dead Ringer. It's not even close to being as good, but that doesn't even matter. RJD2 is officially a tease. RJD2, I hate you.

A 2009 Review - Giggs edition

Seeing as my topic purged and all, I felt I should document this somewhere rather than keeping all three of my fans hanging. And, you know, so that I can laugh at this in a few years time when I only actually like one of my current top five anymore. I don't think there has been a single year this decade that I heard my favourite album from the year during that calendar year. Well, except maybe 2008, but that was such a musical write-off that it barely even counts.

If anyone wants links to / write-ups for any of this stuff, I'll happily oblige. And it'd be awesome to see everyone else's lists posted on here too!

Anyway:

Top 25 Albums of 2009

1. Maudlin of the Well - Part the Second
2. Rome - Flowers from Exile
3. Shpongle - Ineffable Mysteries from Shpongleland
4. Converge - Axe To Fall
5. The Antlers - Hospice
6. Levon Helm - Electric Dirt
7. Sunn O))) - Monoliths & Dimensions
8. The Ruins of Beverast - Foulest Semen of a Sheltered Elite
9. Raekwon - Only Built 4 Cuban Linx...Pt. II
10. Natural Snow Buildings - Shadow Kingdom
11. Mos Def - The Ecstatic
12. Amesoeurs - Amesoeurs
13. Cunninlynguists - Strange Journey Volumes 1 & 2
14. Animal Collective - Merriweather Post Pavilion
15. Clipse - 'Til The Casket Drops
16. P.O.S. - Never Better
17. Lady Gaga - The Fame Monster
18. Mastodon - Crack the Skye
19. Wu-Tang Clan - Chamber Music
20. Drudkh - Microcosmos
21. Bohren & der Club of Gore - Mitleid Lady (EP)
22. Burial & Four Tet - Moth/Wolf Cub
23. The Necks - Silverwater
24. Cobalt - Gin
25. Crippled Black Phoenix - The Resurrectionists

Top 25 Songs of 2009

1. Converge - Cruel Bloom
2. P.O.S. - Let it Rattle
3. Mos Def - Life in Marvelous Times
4. Drudkh - Ars Poetica
5. The Antlers - Kettering
6. Clipse - Freedom
7. Converge - Dark Horse
8. Shpongle - Invisible Man in a Fluorescent Suit
9. Maudlin of the Well - Laboratories of the Invisible World (Rollerskating the Cosmic Palmistric Postborder)
10. Animal Collective - Brothersport
11. Grizzly Bear - Two Weeks
12. Rome - To Die Among Strangers
13. Sunn O))) - Alice
14. Rome - We Who Fell in Love with the Sea
15. Bohren & der Club of Gore - Mitleid Lady
16. Raekwon, Cormega & Sean Price (Wu-Tang Clan) - Radiant Jewels
17. Sole & the Skyrider Band - Black
18. Levon Helm - When I Go Away
19. Jay Electronica - Exhibit C
20. Joss Stone (feat. Nas) - Governmentalist
21. Lady Gaga - Alejandro
22. Why? - Eskimo Snow
23. Big Boi (feat. Gucci Mane) - Shine Blockas
24. Animal Collective - Bluish
25. Patrick Wolf - Thickets




2010: The Year of the Giggs - Part 1.1

It seems I work through a year's releases significantly less rampantly than some of my colleagues here - while icon could probably make a top twenty already I'm taking it easy.

Still though, initial impressions and rankings for a few choice albums:

Dessa - A Badly Broken Code
Dixon's Girl: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eQL3BrRqM8

Can't quite boast the same highs as her debut False Hopes EP, but this is still a thoroughly excellent slice of hip-hop melancholia. There's something about this woman's voice and lyricism that just melt me - I can't think of a single female rapper quite as comfortable showing her tender side in her songs, and it's precisely that which makes her stand out. She focuses more consistently on the topic of failed relationships than on her EP; and while no one in hip-hop has covered that area as well as she does here, it still comes across as slightly contrived at times. It's also probably telling that the very best songs here (Children's Work, Dixon's Girl) are largely the ones which deviate from that lyrical formula. But after listening to A Badly Broken Code I don't want to marry Dessa any less than I did before it, so I guess that's mission accomplished on her part. She definitely has the potential to make an album better than this in the future, but for now I'm very happy with this one, thank you very much. 8.6/10

Eluvium - Similes
Leaves Eclipse the Light: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VpVzxGtyN6c

Matthew Cooper is a guy I'm glad the music industry has around. The best description of his music I've ever heard was "baby's first ambient," a quote which I've shamelessly stolen from a Copia review, but I don't see why that needs to be a disparaging comment. Sure, parts of Talk Amongst the Trees aside, he's never put out anything especially captivating or truly worth canonizing. But every single one of his albums have been cleverly put together, easy to listen to, and more importantly good. And despite what the internet might be telling you, Similes doesn't change that. Cooper's voice might not be the greatest, but it fits with his sound pretty seemlessly, and he has a pretty damn good ear for vocal melodies. I won't be praising this as anything mindblowing, but not everything needs to be. Similes is a consistently enjoyable and very pleasant album, and as far as reading music goes it's hard to do much better. 7.2/10

Jaga Jazzist - One-Armed Bandit
Bananfleur Overalt: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h3kOVxteDAQ

Hell yeah, this is the album I've always wanted Jaga Jazzist to make. All of their releases before now have appealed to me on some level, but this takes all of their electronic, post-rock, modern classical and jazz influences and tosses them into a big fusion melting pot. It's barely possible to describe the sound of the thing as it's just so diverse, but it comes out sounded roughly akin to Zappa's more jazzy material filtered through the music scene of the last decade. The nine-minute centrepiece Toccata is arguably the most impressive thing here, with its Steve Reich percussion and booming brass, but the whole album barely puts a foot wrong anywhere - of the record's eight songs, only Prognissekongen and Music! Dance! Drama! fall beneath utter excellence. I wouldn't necessarily go as far as to say that this is their best album, but it's certainly their most impressive, and more importantly it's definitely the one which appeals to me most. Anyone with an interest in jazz, fusion or progressive rock owes it to themself to check this out. 8.1/10

I'll do the other four albums I've heard so far later on, perhaps tomorrow.

Jordan/Icon's Listening Log - 17/01/10 - 23/01/10

Little bit late this week, due to events coming up at school, like essays and mid-terms. Fun stuff! As such, no comments for now. Those'll be added in later, and probably, finally, an upload of that Extra Life album. Put it off because we also had new Four Tet and Wu Tang vs. The Beatles to listen to!

8. Extra Life - Made Flesh - 17/01/10
9. Dessa - A Badly Broken Code - 17/01/10
10. Spoon - Transference - 17/01/10
11. Alexander Tucker and Decomposed Orchestra - Grey Onion 18/01/10
12. The Besnard Lakes - Are the Roaring Night 18/01/10
13. Four Tet - There is Love in You 19/01/10
14. Wu Tang vs. The Beatles - Enter the Magical Mystery Chambers 20/01/10
15. Max Roach - We Insist! Max Roach’s Freedom Now Suite 20/01/10
16. Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy - Master and Everyone 21/01/10
17. Gillian Welch - Revival 22/01/10

A massive ten new listens last week. Thanks, waffles free leech! The only album that stands out here is Spoon's Transference, and that's because it's a bit of a bore to listen to. It's almost as if they forgot that they can, occasionally, write interesting hooks, and not just atonal indie rock. Everything else is class: those Dessa and Extra Life albums will, most likely, be among my favourite of the year; Max Roach's album was brilliant as always; Alexander Tucker continues to impress in short, EP form; and Will Oldham and Gillaim Welch provided some nice country sounds. Good week!

Listens incoming this week: new Liars, Jaga Jazzist, and a bunch of what I picked up for free leech, which was a lot of jazz.

Wu-Tang vs. The Beatles - Enter The Magical Mystery Chambers (2010)




Okay, I'm really just posting this for Giggs. I'm still kind of speechless.

You can listen and download it for free here.

Four Tet - There Is Love In You (2010)



Artist: Four Tet
Album: There Is Love In You
Genre: Dance/Electro/Techno

Four Tet is currently streaming his new album here http://soundcloud.com/four-tet/there-is-love-in-you which is a big enough deal for me to blog about! Enjoy

Dessa - A Badly Broken Code [2010]



Artist: Dessa
Album: A Badly Broken Code
Genre: Hip-Hop

Heard of Dessa? No? That's a shame, but an understandable one; she's only released one official EP, and been featured on various Doomtree promos/experiments/etc, as well as appeared on a few of Doomtree acts' records -- like P.O.S.'s excellent album from last year. But she's finally getting an LP out there, and it's good. Female emcees are a rare breed, and even rarer are intelligent ones, but that's exactly what Dessa is. A Badly Broken Code is a solid album, an excellent showcase of her talents, and one of the better recent releases.

I'll say more on this album in my weekend summary next Sunday, once I get a better grasp of it, but I'm at loving this. I've had if for a little over two hours and I've already heard it three times. If you want to hear a sample, I've posted the first song, "Children's Work," over at Brave New Waves.

Enjoy!

Jordan/Icon's Listening Log - 10/01/10 - 16/01/10

Another light week for me, with only 3 new listens. This trend stops this week, most likely, as I've heard two new 2010 albums today, one of which will be upped this tonight, the other later in the week.

5. Massive Attack - Heligoland 10/01/10

I want to love this album; I really do. And maybe I will, when a proper rip comes out. It's the first Massive Attack album in years, more attention needs to be paid to it! If you heard the four song preview of this album that came out late last year, you'll know what to expect. In fact, all four of those songs appear on this album, possibly untouched (I haven't done an AB comparison). Portishead-esque drums and typical Massive Attack production, but it feels a little... flat. The last two tracks, "Saturday Come Slow" and "Atlas Air," may be my favourite tracks.

6. Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra & Pierre Boulez - Igor Stravinsky’s Le Sacre du Printemp (The Rite of Spring) 14/01/10

Not my first listen of this piece, but my first listen of this performance. The Rite of Spring was the first piece of classical music that I ever really loved, and this rendition is just as powerful and beautiful as any I've heard. Highly recommended.

7. Nine Horses - Snow Borne Sorrow 14/01/10

Not sure how to describe this one. A mix of jazz and electronic, but not in a trip-hop kinda way. I get Boy Eats Drum Machine vibes from this one, without the chaotic production associated with that act. Listen and decide for yourself.

So, three good-to-great albums. Not bad, eh? But this coming week already promises to be the strongest of the year so far.

Jordan/Icon's Listening Log - 01/01/10 - 09/01/10

It was a fairly light week on my end of new listenings this week; this is, most likely, due to the start of school, as well as a couple other interests getting in my way (finished Batman: Arkham Asylum, watching Dexter/Mad Men/Doctor Who). These four albums happen to be, more or less, the only music I listened to this week.

1. Red House Painters – Red House Painters 1st LP (Rollercoaster) 01/01/10

My first listen of the new year. One thing I'd like to do this year is expose myself to artists that I've had an interest in for some time but never really looked at their back catalogue much. Mark Kozelek is one such name. I think I'll try to work through his career chronologically; my only experience with him has been his Sun Kil Moon records which are, for the most part, quite good. This was, unsurprisingly, quite good.


2. Martin Siewert & Martin Brandlmayr – Too Beautiful to Burn 05/01/10


One more thing I'd like to do this year is expand my musical palette. I've always had an interest in ambient/experimental stuff, but only recently have I been trying out new things. Kreng's 2009 album, L'Autopsie Phénoménale De Dieu, was one of my favourites last year. Yes, I know that has nothing to do with Too Beautiful To Burn. I only gave it one listen, but I was impressed. Tense strings, tape hiss and other such noise on display here.

3. A Silver Mt. Zion – Kollaps Tradixionales 08/01/10

"There Is Light" was excellent. I'll save my judgement for later on this record. It may grow on me, but for now I was left unsatisfied.

4. Basia Bulat – Heart of My Own 09/01/10

The most impressive album of my week, I thought. I'll probably blog about it mid-week. This is such a drastic improvement on her first album. The introduction of string sections to more of the songs give this sweeping folk album more momentum than Oh, My Darling and Bulat seems to be more in control of her already powerful voice.

This week I will (probably) include a few of the more impressive songs from these albums over at Brave New Waves, and will most likely listen to the new Massive Attack album which I just didn't have time for yesterday. As for other stuff, who knows!