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paperdubs

Row, fisherman, row

day by day, i man step it along the shore

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Music QotD: My Musical Horoscope

  • Feb 5, 2008
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What's your musical horoscope?  (Put your music player on shuffle and write down the first 10 songs that come up.)  - This Question of the Day is weak, allowing more for just a simple listing of random music than for any sort of in-depth writing. So I've split the difference, giving some initial reactions to the songs as they come up. How this becomes a "horoscope" is beyond me. 

  1. Kid Dynamite "Pacifier" - Interesting. I almost never listen to this band, but I do like them. They're one of the few bands that have "snotty" vocals that I can stand, and more than merely tolerating them, I actively enjoy pretty much everything about this album. Solid hardcore punk with an ear for hooks.
  2. Disturbed "Believe" - Disregarding that sorry excuse for a debut album with all its ridiculous trappings, Disturbed actually write some pretty good songs. Their second album is a great, poppy hard rock album. This song is a little weak, especially for being the title track, but it's not bad.
  3. LL Cool J "I'm Bad" - One of the best opening tracks for an album ever, no doubt about it. I cut my teeth on this album, stealing it not from my brother Jon that I so often refer to when writing about my musically formative years, but from my oldest brother, Richard. Between Cool J, Slick Rick, and the Beat Street soundtrack, Rich had a surprising amount of hip-hop, especially considering he also listened to Van Hagar. Ewww.
  4. Nick Drake "Parasite" - Pink Moon is by far Drake's best work. The rest of his small catalog has plenty to offer, but start-to-finish Pink Moon is a singularly profound statement. Falling in the latter half of the album, "Parasite" is one of the stand-out tracks. Drake's quiet vocal melodies over the constantly repeating finger-picked riff are almost hypnotizing.
  5. H2O "Force Field" - Faster Than The World is a decent hardcore album, hooky and pop-informed. It's probably not H2O's best effort, but it's all I have. "Force Field" is one of the weaker songs, but clocking in at less than 2 minutes, I see no reason to skip past it. The chorus is mildly catchy.
  6. The Fairfield Four "Lonesome Valley" - I often forget about the O Brother, Where Art Though? soundtrack, but it really is a great compilation. The Coen brothers put together a solid movie and made all the right choices for the music. This particular spiritual is a nice change of pace from the music I normally listen to, being just a chorus of male voices, a capella, distilling the music down to its bare essence.
  7. Iron Maiden "Flash of the Blade" - I honestly believe that people who do not enjoy Iron Maiden's music have something wrong with them. I simply cannot understand the thought process that ends in the statement "I don't like Iron Maiden." "Flash of the Blade" isn't that memorable of a song, though Powerslave is one Maiden's best efforts. Still, even with middling pieces like this, the melodies, harmonizing leads, and rollicking beat combine to create music that demands enjoyment.
  8. Neil Young "The Old Laughing Lady" - Neil Young has made some bad music in his day, but when he's on point, no one can beat him at his game. Young is pretty much firing on all cylinders for the entire Decade collection, which, of course, is the benefit of a compilation. Thirty-plus songs of brilliant music. Though I'm sure I'm missing plenty of great music, this is all the Neil Young I really need.
  9. Nate Dogg "Concrete Streets" - As with Decade and Neil Young, Music & Me is all the Nate Dogg I really need, though for different reasons. Whereas Decade is a genius's collection of greats, Music & Me simply gives the listener all Nate Dogg really has to offer. His g-funk is the turn-of-the-century answer to Bel Biv Devoe's earlier new jack swing. The vocals are smooth and full of infectious hooks and the beat stays steady, keeping heads nodding, but in the end the music entirely forgettable.
  10. Scientist "Time Warp" - Undoubtedly my favorite dubbist in the traditional King Tubby style, Scientist always keeps the groove rolling along while adding just the right amount of sonic decoration. With a style instantly recognizable, he maintains a serious attention to the dance floor, cutting it with his trademark goofy sense of humor. A true master.
Post a comment Tags: qotd, neil young, pink moon, nick drake, iron maiden, coen brothers, disturbed, ll cool j …

It's a long way back from hell...

  • Feb 4, 2008
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I recently spent a week in Presque Isle, Maine, the northern-most point I've visited in the continental US, being roughly 2 degrees of latitude north of Minneapolis. Traveling on business and being unused to the snow and early sunsets, I didn't get much of a chance to explore, though I did get very familiar with a couple of miles of the main road. I was there to learn, and learn I did, though not just about the job.

I learned that even when it gets "cold" in Louisville, it's not cold. The temperature was 22 degrees below zero when I arrived and 23 below when I left, though it did warm up to a balmy 8 degrees in the middle of the week. I have never felt temperatures so cold, and it's unlikely I will again for some time. Having the congenial attitude of a taoist, I actually enjoyed the cold, though I was glad it was temporary. I didn't risk offending my coworkers, but I wondered why anyone lives in this place. The winters are unforgiving, the summers short. The town is tiny, lacking any decent coffee and, more importanly, a live music scene of any sort, even including shitty bar bands. I would go insane. The people seemed relatively happy, though, at least from the little interaction we had. I'm sure friendlier weather conditions would have impressed the charm of the place upon me more than the bitter cold I was met with.

I learned that I actually like cable. Sitting in my hotel room, eating fried cheese and sucking down a Coke, I hopped back and forth between Fletch Lives and some Peter Fonda number that involved a lot of driving, criminal protagonists, and power-mad backwater cops. Afterwards, I watched The Hunt for Red October, Bill Maher's show, and some special effects featurette on the latest Die Hard movie. If I'm going to be watching TV, I sure as hell would rather be watching that stuff than most of the crap I end up watching.

The most profound thing I learned on my trip -- more important than any of the work-related information I absorbed, more self-affirming than successfully navigating six flights and five airports on my own, more sublime than learning what it's like to be a complete stranger in what might as well be a foreign land -- is that Danzig II: Lucifuge is one of the best hard rock albums of all time, sitting comfortably with Back in Black and Led Zeppelin IV. Some could argue that Lucifuge is a metal album. Like Black Sabbath's Vol. 4, it does fit within both genres, and I won't argue that point. In my mind, though, it's a hard rock album and as such, it's one of the best hard rock albums ever made. I'll grant that the vast majority of music I think of as hard rock is total fucking garbage. Van Halen, Aerosmith... I'm looking at you. Still, I count Zeppelin, Sabbath, AC/DC, and many other great bands among the hard rock legions, and for my money, Danzig and Co. are sitting right alongside those hallowed names with this album.

 

Danzig - devils plaything

Post a comment Tags: metal, cable, movies, travel, cold, led zeppelin, aerosmith, hard rock …

Two more, quickly

  • Jan 17, 2008
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33 1/3. Again. Thought I was done with these, didn't you?

Recently I hit something of a dry patch with the 33 1/3 books. I read several in a row that, to varying degrees, did not work for me. After thoroughly enjoying volume 20 on The Ramones, I meandered through books on People's Instinctive Travels..., Doolittle, and Unknown Pleasures, finding fault with each, though they all had something to offer (1). This dissatisfying selection culminated with one book in the series that I would not recommend other people read: Pernice's novella based on The Smiths Meat is Murder.

The Smiths' Meat Is Murder (Thirty Three and a Third series)
The Smiths' Meat Is Murder (Thirty Three and a Third series)

Exercising the full extent of the freedoms allowed the authors in this series, Pernice writes not a non-fiction book about the album itself, but a story -- likely much of it autobiographical, in setting and mood if possibly not as much in historical fact -- of a Boston teen falling in love and coming of age to a soundtrack of the Mozzer and Co. The narrative begins with a completely unnecessary latter-day sequence which gives way to the flashback that comprises the rest of the book. The rest of the book, the actual story being told, does little for me. As a member of what is likely the last generation of pre-internet kids that had to discover new music through friends and trading tapes, I can sympathize with that condition of Pernice's characters, but otherwise the personalities and situations generally just fall flat. Joe Meno's Hairstyles of the Damned is more effective on every level, including when it comes to music. Overall, I found Meat is Murder very disappointing, not least because I feel the Smiths entry in the series has been squandered. I can only hope they'll change their one-book-per-band rule and we'll get another shot at this band in the future.

Celine Dion's Let's Talk About Love: A Journey to the End of Taste (33 1/3)
Celine Dion's Let's Talk About Love: A Journey to the End of Taste (33 1/3)

After all of these let-downs, I was beginning to fret. Could I find another volume in the series to reignite my passion? My answer arrived via UPS the day I finished Meat is Murder. As I've mentioned before, I've eagerly awaited Carl Wilson's exploration of taste and art as examined through the lens of Celine Dion's Let's Talk About Love. After reading the first two chapters during the promotional period, my expectations ran very high. I'm pleased to say that Wilson delivered on every front, vaulting neatly over even my highest of bars. Wilson is a skilled writer. His volume in this series shines a harsh light on many of the less polished entries, and future authors would do well to compare the quality of their prose to Wilson's.

The book itself is well-researched, nicely balanced, and very well organized, flowing from topic to topic in a way that makes sense and draws the reader further along the author's journey into aesthetics. The more academic aspects, discussions of the cultural traditions that produced Celine or historical analyses of the origins and meaning of taste, are tempered with Wilson's own experiences of seeing Celine in concert, meeting a variety of her fans, and, eventually, learning how to listen to her music. Never dry or stuffy, Wilson also manages to not become too conversational. Whereas some books in the series read like blog postings, this reads like what it is: a finely crafter work of non-fiction. I'm gushing, but I'm blown away by this book. I can't recommend it highly enough.

--

footnote

1) NB: Only one of the dozen or so entries I've read has been a waste of time; at the risk of repeating myself for the thousandth time, this series is really a must-read for people who love music.

current music: Bohren & der Club of Gore "Black Earth"

Post a comment Tags: music, reviews, books, the smiths, celine dion, carl wilson, 33 1/3, joe pernice …

Still Searching

  • Jan 14, 2008
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As I've written about before, I cut my teeth on metal, but I grew up on punk, more specifically hardcore. These days I don't actually find myself listening to much hardcore music, and it's becoming more of a rarity for newer hardcore bands to catch my ear. It's simply a side effect of having a taste that grows to include more types of music while simultaneously becoming more selective within genres or styles. Whereas 17 year old Bigtime spent his time listening to nearly any youth crew or traditional style hardcore band that came around, 28 year old Bigtime mostly hears a bunch of unoriginal clones regurgitating meaningless hosannas to the holy trinity of pride, unity, and pride (with some extra unity and pride for good measure). Still, due likely as much to nostalgia as to the quality of the music, a select few hardcore records have stood the test of time for me, regularly finding their way back first into my CD player and now into my iPod playlists.

Cheaters and the Cheated
Cheaters and the Cheated
Cause for Alarm

Gorilla Biscuits, Beyond, 108, and Shelter all have the dust blown off every month or two to spend some serious time in rotation, but Cause for Alarm possibly trumps all of them with Cheaters and the Cheated. While I still enjoy other music from the Cause for Alarm catalogue, Cheaters, released originally in 1997, eclipses the little that came before it, and everything that came after. While many hardcore bands at the time aspired to get as brutal as possibly, sacrificing songcraft for heaviness, CFA stuck to a more traditional New York Hardcore formula, blending old school thrash speed with youth crew and crossover rhythms. Adding the slightest bit of dynamic to their tempos, the songs end up with just enough breathing room for catchy hooks, half-time breathers between circle pit igniting verses, and pile-up singalongs. With much of the album having been written by former member Alex Kinon (also of Agnostic Front), it's telling that the following albums never again managed to find this perfect balance of hardcore and pop sensibility.

From its inception in the early 80s to its demise in 2000, CFA revolved around vocalist Keith Burkhardt, whose clear, expressive voice has always stood out of the hardcore pack. His lyrics here (again, some written by Kinon) beat some of the typical drums of more socially or politically-minded hardcore, railing against materialism, hypocrisy, and vague oppressors, both political and economic. There are strong hints, however, of the more overt Krishna devotion that would come on the following albums, including one catchy but laughable song about the origins of the universe. Followed by a song inspired by Anne Rice's Interview With A Vampire, these six minutes definitely turn the WTF knob up a few notches. Still, I'd rather have something to disagree with or just wonder about in a hardcore band's lyrics than nothing at all.

 

Cause For Alarm-"Lies"

Post a comment Tags: music, metal, punk, crossover, hardcore, thrash, cause for alarm …

Perspective

  • Jan 8, 2008
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Yours Truly, Angry Mob
Yours Truly, Angry Mob

Listening to Yours Truly, Angry Mob, the second effort by Kaiser Chiefs, I'm yet again struck by my enjoyment for an album that I had previously written off. When I purchased ...Angry Mob back in the early part of 2007, I was underwhelmed at best, but hearing it again, having cleansed all memory of it in the ensuing months, it's a solid, mature album, in some ways much better than their debut. Where Employment has more catchy, cheeky hits, ...Angry Mob, possibly anticipating in that title the inevitable backlash, cuts the sass in favor of stronger songwriting. And while I lament the absence of some of the catchier and edgier aspects of the debut, the newer album will likely have more staying power, now that I've given it a fair shake.

As with Blackalicious's The Craft, I'm finding that I now disagree wholeheartedly with my first impressions of an album. Just a few weeks ago I decided to give the latest 31 Knots opus, The Days and Nights of Everything Anywhere and was pleasantly surprised to find that I actually like it. While it's still nowhere near the level of perfection of their previous record, Talk Like Blood, it has plenty to offer that for whatever reason fell on deaf ears with my initial listens. I must be unconsciously building expectations for new albums based on my previous experiences with the bands, falling into the all-too-common trap of not approaching each album as its own work, on its own terms. Musicians, for the most part, grow and change, their music along with them, AC/DC being the exception that proves the rule. While that doesn't mean I should give a pass to any musician that tries something different (DJ Shadow - Jesus H., man, seriously), I do need to take a moment and keep my knee from jerking so quickly when I hear something new from an established artist. So far, giving myself some months of palette cleansing and revisiting the music has worked out fairly well for me, a lesson I should keep in mind in the future.

Post a comment Tags: music, reviews, dj shadow, blackalicious, kaiser chiefs, 31 knots, intellection …

Top Albums of 2007

  • Jan 4, 2008
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While I spent the majority of the year listening to dub, goth, and post-punk from the late 70s and early 80s, I still acquired some thirty-odd albums released in 2007, most often via paid download (1). Narrowing these down to my top 10 albums (2) of the year was no easy task. Among the also-rans, local d-beat heroes Coliseum just missed the list with their raging Relapse debut No Salvation, as did Bloc Party with their sophomore effort, A Weekend in the City. 31 Knots made a strong late-year bid when I gave The Days and Nights of Everything Anywhere another listen, blowing away my original misgivings about the album. Angels of Light nearly made it on based solely on the strength of the opening track of their very enjoyable We Are Him. Panda Bear's Person Pitch was actually on the list up until the last minute; the problems with that album finally broke through the things that I love, and I'm starting to realize just how flawed it is. Shellac and Modest Mouse both put efforts that were just too hit-and-miss, the highs being some of the best music I've heard this year (3), and the lows dragging the albums down. Many others entered into consideration, and on any given day they could probably take the place of one or two of the albums that made my list. Twenty-o-seven was a great year for music, even if I did sleep on much of it until late in the year.


I thought about ranking these, but I don't think that I could. The rankings could too easily change to have any real meaning. So, in no particular order, here are my top ten records of 2007.


Mirrored
Mirrored

Battles Mirrored

An early front-runner for album of the year, Mirrored still rides in high esteem. While I had found Battles' earlier EPs enjoyable, they never did much for me that the seemingly endless instrumental math-rock legions couldn't also deliver. Imagine my surprise, then, when I was introduced to Mirrored and had my mind quite thoroughly blown. With the addition of Tyondai Braxton and what can only be described as child-like glee and creativity, Battles made an album that will forever outshine their contemporaries. When the grueling work week ends, I imagine this is the sound of Willy Wonka's Oompa Loompa laborers cutting loose with wild abandon. It's the celebratory feast of the Ewoks or the peyote freak-out of the Jawas of Tatooine, the triumphant joy of all peoples small and mischievous. (4) It's pure joy in rock-and-roll form.


A New Beat from a Dead Heart
A New Beat from a Dead Heart

108 A New Beat from a Dead Heart

108's Holyname is probably my all-time favorite hardcore album, and it's usually in my overall top 10 albums. I've never gotten to see 108 play live, and I didn't really get into them until after their break-up in 1996. Their entire body of work was already there for me with little hope of anything else coming out. Ten years later they reunited for a few shows and found that the fire was still there. Two years after that, they've given us the appropriately titled A New Beat from a Dead Heart. Most reunions give listeners diminished returns, the magic of the band having been lost somewhere in the hiatus, but every once in a while it works. The moment I heard the bare chanting opening the album, I suspected that 108 were back in proper form. Confirmation came moments later with a grinding, beautifully distorted bass, pounding drums, and the feedback fade-in building into 50 seconds of mid-tempo sludgy destruction. Not only is the dirge of later-era 108 intact, but the next thirty minutes, filled with the wildly impassioned, edging-dangerously-close-to-chaos paeans to Krshna (5) I originally fell in love with, prove that 108 have lost none of their ardor. While occasionally crossing just a little too far into noise, they always bring it back to head banging hardcore perfection. No one crafts metallic hardcore like 108, and A New Beat... ranks right up there with their previous masterpiece Threefold Misery, even if it doesn't quite reach the height of Holyname.


Neon Bible
Neon Bible

Arcade Fire Neon Bible

This one surprised me. Until I saw the Arcade Fire on Austin City Limits a short while back, I really had little regard for them. The first album was pretty good, but I just didn't care to check in on Neon Bible. The samples I heard did nothing to pique my interest, and I had pretty much written the band off. The strength of that performance, however, made me take a second listen. After reacquainting myself with the debut album, I went ahead and downloaded Neon Bible from eMusic. The one-two (two-three?) punch of “Keep the Car Running” and “Neon Bible” just laid me out. It's apropos that Arcade Fire played with Springsteen this year as Neon Bible strikes me as the modern response to Born to Run and Darkness on the Edge of Town, not so much in sound (6) but in the dichotomy of brooding depression and the desperate hedonism-as-escape. Whereas the Boss's characters are looking to break out of decaying dead-end towns, Arcade Fire seems to be reacting more to a dead-end society. To where do we look for escape? There ain't much hope for survival if the neon bible is true.


Drums and Guns
Drums and Guns

Low Drums and Guns

“All the soldiers, they're all gonna die. All the little babies, they're all gonna die. All the poets and all the liars and all you pretty people, you're all gonna die.” Alan Sparhawk's dry, slightly strained voice comes out of the left (7) speaker, breaking through the ebb and flow of swirling feedback and noise, and in just a few short sentences sets the scene for the album to come. This album is stark resignation. Whether we're helplessly watching the world fall to pieces or just a relationship, the feeling of inevitable ruin is in escapable, made all the more piercing by the beautiful male/female harmonies and mostly spartan compositions. At first a distraction, the production putting most of the vocals in one channel and most of the drums in the opposite makes perfect sense after the fifth or sixth listen. The album wouldn't sound right with more traditional panning. In what could be considered blasphemy among the Low faithful, Drums and Guns is my favorite of their albums, eclipsing even Things We Lost in the Fire.


Red Album
Red Album

Baroness The Red Album

Growing up here in Louisville, the gateway to the South, I've had the benefit of being able to both see the South from the inside and out, of being able to examine the problems of the South both from experience and through the Yankee lens. It goes without saying that the South has had a very troubled past (8), but strife often creates the fertile ground in which rich, diverse cultures can grow and flourish. The home of American music, every native form of music aside from hip-hop was born in the South, and sometimes bands play music that is undeniably Southern, even if what makes them so is hard to define or describe. Baroness is one such band. When I hear their hazy, stretched-out metal, a heady blend of Sabbath doom and Allman Brothers harmonized guitars, I can almost feel the humidity in the air or hear the cicadas buzzing in the night. Baroness are, hands down, one of the best metal bands making music today, and The Red Album is a shining achievement, a dynamic, sophisticated album that deserves to be heard end to end.


[no picture] Bridge and Tunnel s/t 7"

In the mid-nineties, The Get Up Kids released the Woodson EP that, to me, was the distilled essence of what was at that time considered “emo” (9), and it fucking rocked. A form of punk born from the disparate parents of Dischord records and heartland rock, the mid-90s emo that I enjoyed very quickly turned into the saccharine, overly precious garbage that polluted CD racks for the rest of the decade. I don't know what happened, but this form of rock music virtually disappeared, buried beneath an avalanche of GAP clothing and a headache-inducing legion of simpering, wimpy poonhounds. Bridge and Tunnel have answered my unspoken prayers and delivered an excellent four song slab of rock that evokes the earliest days of TGUK more than anything I've heard in years. It's punk strained through a power pop sieve, replete with driving, extra-tight rhythms, big guitars, and bigger harmonies, all with the added bonus of intelligent lyrics that aren't just self-obsessed plays for attention or sympathy. I can't wait until Bridge and Tunnel record their LP, which, as luck would have it, is being recorded here in town. Maybe I should buy these folks breakfast one day in thanks for this fantastic 7”.


The Besnard Lakes Are the Dark Horse
The Besnard Lakes Are the Dark Horse

The Besnard Lakes The Besnard Lakes are the Dark Horse

I regularly listen to the podcast of Sound Opinions, a music-based talk show on Chicago public radio. Seemingly all year I've listened to one of the hosts extol the virtues of the Besnard Lakes. For some reason, the clips they played on the show did nothing for me, and the samples on eMusic left no impression on me. Then I heard the track "Devastation", and it singlehandedly proved true every bit of the hype lauded on this group. Based on that one song, I went ahead and downloaded the entire album and gave it serious consideration. Much to my chagrin for sleeping on this for so long, I was highly rewarded for finally giving this a shot. The opening track sets the stage nicely, sounding something like Pet Sounds as channeled by Elbow. Reverb-drenched orchestral pop sounds layered with vocal harmonies follow the more modern extended crescendo-as-song English format. The highlight of the album is still “Devastation”, the loudest and most dramatic of the tracks, owing as much to the Pixies as any of the other influences I've cited. Even if the rest of the album doesn't necessarily live up to the promise of that track, it's still a phenomenal work.


Fort Nightly
Fort Nightly

White Rabbits Fort Nightly

With their debut album, the White Rabbits have produced the album that I wish Spoon or the French Kicks would have produced this year. Where the latest releases from both of those bands have done little to ensnare me, I've become infected by Fort Nightly's irresistible hooks. There's not much I have to say about this album. It's catchy as hell, a nice solid record that stretches no bounds, delivering only straightforward indie rock that you can dance to. I'm not sure if this will stand the test of time, but for now it's at the top of the heap normally occupied by more experienced and/or more hyped bands.

 

 


Aman Iman: Water is Life
Aman Iman: Water is Life

Tinariwen Aman Iman: Water is Life

Still a relatively new album to me, Aman Iman: Water is Life is also a new experience for me. Appropriately described as Saharan desert blues, this album is through and through a “world music” album, which for many western listeners, myself often included, usually means a mildly enjoyable musical novelty. While I would like to believe that it's my own growing maturity of taste that makes this album transcend those bounds, I have to give credit to Tinariwen. They've crafted an album that does not compromise a shred of authenticity and yet still captures the ear of the western listener. Rangy electric guitar weaves together with acoustics, bass, and various percussion and hand claps to create a hypnotizing tapestry against which the strong, guttural Touareg vocal melodies paint a picture of the desert that could be no more clear if I could understand the words. At once a great rock album and a worldly experience, Aman Iman fulfills the promise of “Riders on the Storm” in a way The Doors could only have dreamed.


All Hour Cymbals
All Hour Cymbals

Yeasayer All Hour Cymbals

Quite possibly my favorite record of the year, All Hour Cymbals embodies all of what I liked about music this year. Yeasayer's apocalyptic laments as likely become wild exultations of quasi-spiritual fervor as break down into unbridled fireside chants. Proto-rock vocal harmonies and pan-ethnic instrumentation blend perfectly with a dark sort of modern post-punk, creating a sound that evokes so much of the familiar and yet manages to sound so fresh. The dark night to Mirrored's blazing afternoon, All Hour Cymbals proves there is still new ground to be broken in pop music if bands will just open themselves up to new (or old) sounds. Even the inevitable flood of imitators will be unable to dull the keen edge of this album.

 

footnotes

  1. I frequent eMusic for most of my download needs, though iTunes comes through in a pinch. I feel like I'm overpaying on iTunes, considering the lack of liner notes, but I've given in. Visits to the local music store are becoming increasingly rare. Their selection has suffered a great deal over the past year, and, frankly, it's just easier to find what I want when I want it on-line. The problems with this system are myriad, and I'm particularly concerned about where my money is going. It's certainly not staying in Louisville, a price I'm somewhat willing to pay, if guiltily, until the local stores figure out how to deliver a better customer experience. How a brick-and-mortar store is supposed to compete on price and convenience with the Internet, however, is beyond my ken.

  2. Okay, so one of these is a four-song seven inch. Hardly an album, but the enjoyment I've gotten from those four songs rivals half of my top ten list, not to mention the 20 records it beat out to make the list.

  3. A partial list of my favorite songs of the year: Modest Mouse “We've Got Everything”, Shellac “Be Prepared”, Battles “Atlas”, Arcade Fire “Neon Bible”, Foxy Shazam “Red Cape Diver” (okay, that's technically a 2008 song), Panda Bear “Comfy in Nautica”, Studio “West Side”, Angels of Light “Black River Song”, Stephen Marley “Traffic Jam”... I could go on.

  4. I normally hate descriptions that rely more on esoteric metaphor than attempts to actually describe the music, but I know of no other way to approach this album.

  5. edited

  6. Not that there's not a similarity in sound. The Spector-esque cacophony of sounds is present, but the sax is replaced with accordion and mandolin, the post R&B boogie of Springsteen's more upbeat tracks replaced with a post-post-punk headlong drive.

  7. Actually, it could be the right. I might have my speakers backwards. Or I might not.

  8. No more so than the rest of America, really. Our problems have just been more visible. America still has very real problems with both race and class, and it's still very easy to point to prevalence of both in the South. That doesn't mean the problems do not exist everywhere.

  9. Has any other musical label been applied to so many different types of music in the last 20 years? Emo in the original sense, as embodied by Rites of Spring and Embrace, was just an introspective form of punk that stripped away a lot of the all-go-no-slow trappings of the hardcore scene from whence it sprang. In the mid-90s, The Get Up Kids and about 10,000 other bands changed the meaning of the word. At first, as evidenced by the Woodson EP or the crank! label's Don't Forget to Breathe compilation, this wasn't a bad form of music, but I think it was only like, I dunno, six months before it devolved into the insipid bubblegum collective diary entry that most people of my generation (punk generation = probably a five year age span) think of when we hear the word emo. And don't even bring up the current crop of losers lumped together under this poisonous label.

  10. There is no tenth footnote.

Post a comment Tags: music, reviews, footnotes, arcade fire, 2007, low, white rabbits, battles …

Hello, 2008

  • Jan 1, 2008
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What a way to start the new year. First, I was invited to a get together with people whose company I enjoy a great deal... but I didn't hear my phone ringing and ended up staying home and being way bored last night. Then, this morning I managed to cut my hand so bad that I passed out. Ashley's taking good care of me, and hopefully I can avoid stitches. How do you know if you need stitches or not? It's not bleeding now, so I guess it's okay.

Not the best start to the new year. It's a good thing I don't believe in omens.

Current mood: Sanked.

Post a comment Tags: new year, sanked

Return of the Mack?

  • Dec 28, 2007
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I've been invited via a local message board to sing for a possible new band, something metally. Nothing appears to be solid yet, but color me excited. I'm already thinking of Conan-related names to pitch if this thing gets off the ground.

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CRAZYFEAST

  • Dec 21, 2007
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Wow. What a difference a day makes! Crazyfeast tonight was the polar opposite experience from the previous night's show. Again, there was good music to be had, but the differences were legion. Before the show started there was some super sweet pig-out and hang-loose time with friends, many of whom I've not seen in a long time. There was also some excellent arcade action, including the most intensely fun session of bumper cars ever. While I am completely exhausted and more than a little barfy, I also feel incredibly rejuvenated. What a fun night! I'm bursting.

Plus, Gattiland was down with it and wants to do it again! YES!

Post a comment Tags: music, friends, pizza, fun, awesome, barf, good times …

Shows and things

  • Dec 20, 2007
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I don't think I like shows very much anymore. Despite my appreciation for both Shedding and Siberia's sets, I left the Pour Haus agitated tonight. I'm not sure if it was any one thing or just a combination of all of the things I'm starting to hate about seeing bands play live. It's not even really the bands (though the sheer bore factor of that last band is what finally drove me out), but the circumstance itself. There were several people at the show that I would have liked to hang out and talk with, but in between the bands the sound guy kept playing really loud music. Plus it was really hot in there. And, of course, the show didn't start on time. Not that I expected it to, but as I go to fewer and fewer shows, my patience for that sort of nonsense dwindles. I think more and more I'd much rather hang out with friends and listen to music than go out somewhere uncomfortable and just sort of see people.

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paperdubs

About Me

paperdubs
United States
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Get busy living, or get busy dying.

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