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Friday, May 28, 2010

THE BREAKDOWN (FT. DJ SUB PAR): Caribou - Swim


DJ Sub Par Says:
One man electronic wrecking crew, Dan Snaith, must have made a pact with the Devil never to make the same album twice. He has torn through flavored his albums with over-loaded psychedelia (Up in Flames), Beat heavy Kraut Rock (Milk of Human Kindness) beach-boy tinged pop (Andorra). Here he returns with a album that sounds if it was actually recorded under the sea with bleached out cassette tapes. He takes the strange summery sounds of a wave of pitchfork approved indie bands (Memory Tapes, Neon Indian, Real Estate) and out does them all with the track, "Sun." My only suggestions is give these tracks a few spins - what might first appear as calculated beats eventually shows itself do be as comfortable as worn-out walkman on a summer day.

DJ Responsible Says:
"Odessa" is amazing. Dance floor ghosts, a mesmerizing bass beat, Prince-lite guitar twangs, salt shakers, hand claps, Chromeo drum rolls, church bells, synth archipelagos, and thoughtful lines like "Turn around the life she let him siphon away": this is one impeccable opener. And, indeed, an impossible bar for the rest of the (impressive) album to match.

"Sun" is quite bliss as well. As is "Lalibela" (a.k.a. maple syrup electronica).

Swim (I always want to call it simply "Odessa") succeeds in its density, texture, and cohesive experimentation. There's not a dud in the bunch. But it lacks in two regards: 1) occasionally, Caribou drift too far into straightforward electronic music (as on the Pantha-du-Prince-but-not-as-good "Bowls"); 2) more broadly, sometimes I just miss the real, double drum set sound of the eternal "Melody Day" (and the rest of Andorra, really). Maybe next album.

This one'll do for now.

Essential Tracks

"Odessa"
 
 
"Sun"
 

"Lalibela"

Monday, May 24, 2010

WORTH A LISTEN: MGMT - Congratulations

A great, laid-back cut from MGMT's latest. I wouldn't mind another "Time to Pretend," or at least another "Kids," but I guess this is a nice lil' summer strum-along...

Sunday, May 23, 2010

FYI...David Cross's Bigger and Blackerer


It's no Shut Up, You Fucking Baby (clever, too-soon post-9/11 observations drawn over two fairly-packed legendary discs). It's more of an It's Not Funny (same shock and political insights without as much longevity and/or humanness).

I mean, the brotha's 45-years-old. This stand-up comedy plateauing is pretty much the industry norm. Still worth a listen, from one of my favorite Hollywood outsider-insiders.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

THE BREAKDOWN: Local Natives - Gorilla Manor


Local Natives surprised me with their adult contemporary-ness. I mean, look at the formula: much-hyped L.A. quintet releases much-hyped debut, complete with artsy could-be-Vampire-Weekend album cover and incongruous album title (Gorilla Manor). Here we go again, I thought.

But not quite.

It's not that I don't like their adult contemporary-ness, it's simply not as compelling as their more adventurous (and, paradoxically, more traditional) first half of the album. The second half couplet of "Who Knows Who Cares" and "Cubism Dream" could be The Fray with a respectable ghost writer and less restrained drummer. John Kerry wouldn't be offended to hear "Airplanes" on his ham radio. It's nice to see a band with range, it just happens to be at odds with the rest of the album. And schmaltzy, I suppose.

There's a lot of good stuff: "Wide Eyes" and "World News" put the bands amazing-yet-not-overbearing percussion work on full display. These guys are talented, obviously, but still need to solidify their sound.

Essential Tracks:

"Wide Eyes"


"World News"


"Camera Talk"

Friday, May 21, 2010

QUICK RIFFS: Ray Wylie Hubbard


It's always nice to see songwriters get weirder with age. Too much of the American populace melts into suburbia never to be relevant again.

I literally know nothing of Mr. Hubbard and his storied discography. But I do know a song like "Opium" drips with experience, pain, and grace: "It's such an elegant decay/such an elegant decay."

Thursday, May 20, 2010

THE BREAKDOWN (FT. DJ SUB PAR): New Pornographers - Together



DJ Sub Par Says:
For those of you who don't know the New Pornographers, please for the love of music give them a listen. In an alternate universe this is the pop music that plays on the radio and gets covered on American Idol. This Canadian super group crafts three and half minute songs that are hooky and fun with cryptic lyrics that bare repeated listens.

For those who know this band: You may have been thrown off by the last album by A.C. Newman and the gang - "Challengers." The prevailing opinion was that they had abandoned the energy-cranked-to-ten approach for a mellower (read: boring) sound. I couldn't disagree more. "Challengers" was a natural progression from the Hey-la-las of stellar song "The Bleeding Heart Show." While the last album may have slowed things down it allowed them to bring in a complexity of sounds and find a strange highlight from weirdo contributor with "Myriad Harbor." So some critics may be calling this a come back of sorts, the bad-ass cello hits that start this album, the whistling bridge on "Crash Years" and fuller sound are a natural continuation.

DJ Responsible Says: 

Normally my least favorite contributor, Dan Bejar, is on fire here. I used to think he was sprinkled in for the sake of indie cred--Electric Version's wordy "Testament to You in Verse" just couldn't keep up with A.C. Newman's splendour-pop like "It's Only Divine Right." No more. Maybe I've matured, or maybe last year's whimsically epic Destroyer single "Bay of Pigs" was simply a turning point, but try not to love "Silver Jenny Dollar."

Together's best song, however, has been wrapping around my head for almost a week now: "Valkyrie in the Rollerdisco." Holy lovely banjo, I [heart] this duet. "You're a gold mine" New Pornographers. Keep making songs this bliss and albums this cohesive, and you're in for one hell of a discography.

Essential Tracks:

"Crash Years"



"Silver Jenny Dollar"



"Valkyrie in the Rollerdisco"

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

IN THE NEWS: R.I.P. Ronnie James Dio

I know very little of his music (80's Black Sabbath, Dio), so I'll let Tenacious D do the honors with this sweet live vid:

Friday, May 14, 2010

IN THE (FAUX) NEWS: Not Very Good Album Takes a Little While to Get Into

I like to imagine it's Rogue Wave's latest. Or The Dodos' last album.

See the full story here.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

QUICK RIFFS: Devin the Dude - Suite 420


The cover says it all. Old ass Devin the Dude still smokin' and not knowing what else to rap about. Clever or not, listening to Suite 420 is like walking into an errant time machine. It's too bad, because his last album Waitin' to Inhale (get it?) had some stellar cuts--including the surprise "What a Job (ft. Snoop Dogg & Andre 3000). "People Talk" is the best cut here, sadly.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

WORTH A LISTEN: Caribou - Odessa

What genre is this? Don't matter. Stellar, danceable, hypnotic.

The video = drab, but weird enough.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

WORTH A LISTEN: Strong Arm Steady - Best of Times (ft. Phonte)

It's worth a listen for Phonte (a.k.a. the third rapper), who's one of the best at his best.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

THEY STILL MAKE MUSIC VIDEOS: M.I.A. - Born Free


It's gimmicky and takes itself too seriously, but it's also got some really cool shots to go with that bass-y intro/outro and, you know, it's edgy (note: violence, nudity, and attempts at mind-blowing).

You've gotta appreciate the effort.

Check it out here.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

IN THE MIX: DJ Sub Par Loves Rap '09

Mos Def - Priority
Brother Ali - Tightrope
Blakroc - Done Did It (ft. Nicole Wray & NOE) (Edit)
BK-One - Philly Boy (ft. Black Thought)
P.O.S. - Goodbye
Big Boi - Shine Blockas (ft. Gucci Mane)
Mos Def - History (ft. Talib Kweli)
DOOM - Gazillion Ear
BK-One - Blood Drive (ft. Slug)
Brother Ali - House Keys
P.O.S. - Optimist (We Are Not For Them)
DJ Quik & Kurupt - 9x's Outta 10
Raekwon - Ason Jones
Blakroc - Ain't Nothing Like You (Hoochie Coo) (ft. Jim Jones & Mos Def)
KiD CuDi - Alive (ft. Ratatat)
Tanya Morgan - Morgan Blu (ft. Blu)
K'naan - Somalia
Wale - 90210
Sol.illaquists of Sound - Bulletproof
Brother Ali - Begin Here

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

WORTH A LISTEN: New Pornographers - "Valkyrie in the Roller Disco"

New Pornographers get all Iron & Wine on "Valkyrie in the Roller Disco," the most restrained and immediately memorable cut of their much-hyped Together. Enjoy.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

THE iTUNES TOP 100 & THE END OF THE WORLD: Birdman - 4 My Town (ft. Drake & Lil' Wayne)

Faux-urban radio pop at its finest. Birdman is old as shit and can't get over the product placement, consumerism name-dropping. Drake is the worst and/or least coolest lip sync-er ever. And Lil' Wayne can't help but drop sweet lines like "young money, like Ben Frank's baby pictures" and "I'm the shit, y'all janitors." It's a glass half full kind of thing.

Monday, May 3, 2010

FYI...Art Is Everywhere


Or so says MGMT, via Nickelodean quasi-stoner children's program Yo Gabba Gabba!

See here.

Also: Of Montreal somehow-hip dental anthem "Brush Brush Brush"

Also: Chromeo's no-more-tongue-in-cheek-sounding-than-their-usual-songs homage to hand washing, "Nice N Clean"

Sunday, May 2, 2010

THE iTUNES TOP 100 & THE END OF THE WORLD: T.I. - I'm Back

He's back. But pay no mind. Go about your business. This is as bland as white rice.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

QUICK RIFFS: Pantha du Prince - Black Noise


Black Noise is a sumptuous affair. Everything is lush and atmospheric and bedazzling. If it weren't so repetitive, it'd be a classic.

Pantha du Prince is overly reliant on his trademark chimes/bells techno technique (which probably peaked with 2007's brilliant single "Saturn Strobe"). Black Noise's "Bohemian Forest," a perfectly intoxicating song in its own right, gets lost alongisde better tracks like "Satellie Snyper" and "The Splendour." "A Nomad's Retreat," subtly though significantly outside the typical oeuvre, is successful in large part due to its uniqueness. Even the vocals brought into a song like "Stick to my Side" can't stem the feeling of circular motion implicit to Pantha's production.

In other words, Black Noise's singles are perfect techno mixtape fodder.

Essential Track:

"Satellite Snyper"