Monday, August 24, 2009

The (k)Now

where the wild things are: all is love


The first track from the loaded Where the Wild Things Soundtrack is on the film's myspace.  The always spastic Karen O serves as chief architect of the soundtrack enlisting an assortment of her musical buddies (including an untrained children's choir) to partake; hence, the title of the single, "All is Love" by Karen O and the Kids.  As trite as the title is, the song is playful and tone appropriate for what Spike Jonze's film looks like.  It start with a saddened piano and progresses into a sing along lovefest highlighted by the the voices of children.  (where's the sunshine and rainbows)  While this song could have easily slipped into a purple dinosaur suit carrying life lessons like how sharing is caring, Karen O's quirky and spontaneous sensibility keeps it a tad more dystopian.


very best and m.i.a.


"Rain Dance" (feat. M.I.A.) is the newest single from Warm Heart of Africa to hit the internet.  From what I've read, this track isn't the best on the album, but, is the most accessible song, playing it safe with the always stylish M.I.A.  


 

dan deacon: "paddling ghost"













Dan Deacon is one of my favorite discoveries of '09.  His album, Bromst, is a battle of man vs. machine; and within moments shows a world where the two can coexist.  Regardless the strife or the synergy, Bromst is a sonic pleasure.  "Paddling Ghost" is featured on Bromst and is an adequate "slipping into" or starter.


dum dum girls: "be my baby" (the ronettes cover)




Friday, August 21, 2009

The (k)Now


the babies: "meet me in the city"


The Babies is a band made up of Cassie from Vivian Girls and Kevin from the Woods.  "Meet Me in the City" is exactly what that combination of the two musicians would sound like: Kevin's vocals complimented by Cassie's, while staying afloat a garage rock rhythm.  Upbeat, clunky, always with forward motion, "Meet Me in the City" is playful but introspective.  It almost feels carefree about taking life seriously.  I guess that's what happens when you realize life's absolutes.  When you're "too young to think like [you] do" or you just "feel shitty,"  "keep trying, keep trying" and "meet me in the city."



washed out: "belong"



"Belong" is an aquatic 80's melody that shows off Ernest Green aka Washed Out's vocal allure.  It likens to a watered down (in a good way) "Electric Feel."  The vocals then strays from the party-vibe inspired by "Electric Feel" and ventures into more reflective territory.  "Belong" is from Green's High Times Cassette on Columbia, South Carolina's Mirror Universe.


Wednesday, August 19, 2009

sic alps



The past six months have been a tastemaking period for me.  Through reading blogs and exposing myself to new music, film, art, I have been overhauling and rejuvenating my creative in's and out's.  Recently, I got my hands on a few garage rock compilations and promptly added the genre to my sleeve of appreciation.  The music exudes outside the lines rambunctiousness, while maintaining clear direction and artistry.  It is careless as much as it is orchestrated.  This contradiction is never a coincidence.  Sic Alps is my newest find to channel the garage rock style.  "L Mansion" can be found on the band's newest 7" on Slumberland Records.  The single is less lo-fi than most current garage rock, however, it highlights key elements of a good 60's garage rock song: swanky hatch-marked guitar and "whoo" vocals."


Tuesday, August 18, 2009

more of The Very Best



As if Green Owl needs to promote The Very Best coming LP, Warm Heart of Africa, anymore on the indie circuit.  Needless to say, the record company is releasing a limited (500 copies) 7" with tracks "Warm Heart of Africa" (feat Ezra Koenig) and the newest single "Yalira."  "Yalira" is darker and less welcoming than "Warm Heart of Africa," however, it eventually progresses to the Afro Pop optimism we all love about The Very Best.  


Monday, August 17, 2009

look alive



Despot's new track "Look Alive" is an arena jam that is felt from barracade GA to the "touch the wall" back row.  Track was produced by RATATAT and will be featured on Def Jux Presents 4 comp.  All songs that channel "look alive" carry dynamic sentiment.  Does the artist mean "look alive" as a call to action, or, "look alive" in the sense that we need to be aware, "heads up!"  Despot blends the two with the hook, "look alive, nobody move, nobody gets anywhere" (former) and opening words, "some sound advice coming soon, look alive or they'll make an honest mistake and bury you" (later).



Thursday, August 13, 2009

The (k)Now


best coast: "something in the way"


"Something In The Way" is a new track from Best Coast.  I discussed their previous "The Sun Was High (And So Was I)" back in June and it has been part of my summer soundtrack ever since.  "Something In The Way" doesn't divert from the tone harnessed in "The Sun Was High," but, it does feel more reflective.   

Best Coast:: "Something In The Way"


family portrait: "on the floor"


Family Portrait was another band featured on the Underwater People's Showcase earlier this year.  While the tracks "Snow" and "Mega Secrets" were spaced day dreams, "On The Floor" is a rampant surge towards the girl "On The Floor."  Summer Love has never sounded so unobtainable nor so prevalent.



pterodactyl: "share in the shade" video





So Pterodactyl (never heard of you) chose to tackle the myth of what happens (if anything) when you lick a toad in the forrest.  According to them, you actually do hallucinate, and your visions are quite extraordinary or (to me) hilarious.  I hope their wizard of imagination land is wearing pants.  There is no visual evidence that he is...so I can only hope.





Monday, August 10, 2009

I Got it On Vinyl!


I Got it On Vinyl! is meant to be a tongue-in-cheek discussion of vinyls (new and old).  While a certain degree of snobbery is associated with vinyl, "I like it because it sounds brighter," I simply collect vinyl because its a more grown up means of collecting comic book cards.  More gratifying than a '94 Fleer Ultra set of X-Men, the albums I collect play and communicate.  I Got it On Vinyl! is my discussion of what these albums say.  Enjoy.

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The front cover of With a Little Help From My Friends is the typical characteristic of Joe Cocker with his puddy face molded into distortion beneath a twisted head of hair.  Ironically, it is a picture of just Cocker, leading me to wonder, “With a Little Help from My Friends…where are the friends?  Why isn't there a picture of Joe Cocker and his buddies in a group hug, all smiles, skipping around in circles, maybe one friend bent over in laughter, looking at the camera as if to say, ‘only if you were in our group of friends, you would get the joke."  This isn’t the case and I believe this irony keeps the album sounding honest. This album is all about Joe Cocker and that is understood by the front of the jacket.  However, where there is Joe, you best believe there are a collection of musicians and artists (his friends) backing him up when is voice wont stretch as far or taking a step back, allowing him to roam into the oddest of territory.

 

Flip the cover and you'll see just who managed to come around for a good friend.  Cocker was accompanied by an arsenal of whose who musicians:  Matthew Fisher, Henry McCullough, Chris Stainton, B.J. Wilson, Stevie Winwood, Mike Kelly, and Jimmy Page.  If you recorded with a collection like that, you better name the album something about friends, friendship, or buddy-o-pals.  Just below their respective pictures is a listing of each track with detail credits of each person's contribution to the respective song.  Notable are the hand full of covers like Dylan’s “Just Like a Woman,” and of course Paul McCartney and John Lenin’s “With a Little Help From My Friends.”  Whether Dylan, McCartney, or Lenin were friends were in Cocker's speed dial (or Roladex to be era-correct), their music appears on Cocker's album because of what they meant to him.  Through the multitude of talent on the page and in the air, it is made clear that this album was a group effort even if it was to prop up one man.

This particular Cocker album, isn't all around exceptional and perhaps isn't his best work.  This album is less about what the music sounds like and more about what it represents.  As a result, I am not going to dissect the album but merely point out what makes this album special (insert sentimental line about friendship).  The album jumps off to an amazing start with "Feeling Alright," which next to the title track, ”With a Little Help From My Friends,” is my favorite song on the album.  "Feeling Alright" does exactly that.  It’s boisterous, it’s energizing, and it’s celebratory with soulful back up vocals.  It sounds like it was recorded in a room full of people that all agree to feel one way only.  Rivaling “Feeling All Right” on the a-side is "Marjorine."  It’s a perfect example of how a strong supporting cast can allow an artist room to breathe and explore.  Joe Cocker and friends create a schizophrenic rambling of obsession.  As a listener you are forced to wonder does this woman exist at all, does it matter that she might not, does it make this man any less vulnerable.  Cocker's obsession and fixation of this woman, true or imagined, leaves him vulnerable and the quirky track he sings over helps make some sense of the madness that surrounds her.  The song comes to a bouncing conclusion that feels like a fleeting moment of increased chaos.  There is resolution in more madness and there will never be clarity regarding Marjorine.

The B-side achieves exactly the same as the a-side, with songs that make up a harsh bark exterior, surrounding those that ooze of sappiness.  While heartfeltness is always apart of friendship, the sentimental songs poke holes in the momentum that songs like "Feeling Alright" and "Marjorine" create.  The highlights of the b-side are "Sand Paper Cadillac" and the title track, “With a Little Help From My Friends.”  "Sand Paper Cadillac" is a doomsy expedition to self-freedom, "my call is to be free...and it’s calling escape out of me."   The piano tip toes past the guitar guard of our own prison and in brightening moments gives us a glimpse of what it is like to be free of ourselves.  “With a Little Help From My Friends,” the title track, Beatles Cover, Wonder Years theme, however you can relate to it, is the epicenter of the album.  It comes out at you from a distance with a maudlin guitar riff, then tumbles with a roll on the tom drums, and is accompanied by Joe Cocker's whiskey soaked voice singing, "What would I do if I sang out of tune?/would you stand up and walk out on me?/Lend me your ears and I'll sing you a song/And I'll try not to sing out of key."  Like in "Feeling Alright," Joe is backed by soulful back up singers Madelene Bell, Sunny Wheetman, and Rosetta Hightower, "I get high with a little help from my friends/Gonna try with a little help from my friends."  Like Cocker and the original authors of the song, I often wonder what if my talents are self aggrandized or imagined, what if I "sang out of key," what do I do when I am single and alone, what would I do if I didn't have my friends to humor me?  For me, I don't think it’s ever a question of if but when.  When I speak out of turn, or take up too much of the conversational stage do my friends tolerate me?  Do they ever walk out?  Fortunately, they have never walked out, and still sit to listen to my continuous song.

Perhaps I've taken it to far, made it too personal, put words in Joe Cocker's mouth, made this album far more sentimental than it should be, further exemplifying my hypocrisy (are there holes in me because I sometimes sing sappy songs).  However, beyond the neurosis, is the grounding idea that perhaps that’s what music intends to inspire.  It can allow us to contemplate, to over analyze, to use as a catalyst for self-examination.  To call this the power of (music), is to simply assume that it isn't apart of.  Music and its interactive property is a part of life and we, along with the creators, share in its power.  It’s a part of my persistent over analysis, ability to think, to speak, to write loosely, to collect records, watch the 2009 Dodgers, and drink Tecate on a lazy Sunday.  It is within this room to breath that everything comes easier, sounds sweeter, and looks brighter.  Whenever I run into a Marjorine, feel alright, or scale the walls of myself, it's always with a little help from my friends.


Abacus:" Beach Wail"



The title might be clever, but, Abacus' interpretation of sea life is more than just a catch phrase.  Clap happy with aqua guitar and "whale" oohing vocals, "Beach Wail" bobs about much like a buoy.  Abacus presents a music double entendre fit for the last two months of summer.


Thursday, August 6, 2009

The (k)Now


raekwon: "house of flying daggers" 
(feat. Ghostface Killah, Inspectah Deck, and Method Man)


Raekwon's Only Built for Cuban Linx still sits on my Amazon Wish List, but, this track gets me cocked and ready for Raekwon's upcoming  Part II.  I am a rap novice extraordinare, so I won't pretend to know what I am talking about, but, I can say that this Jay Dilla produced track creates a mob-like-mood for some vengeful flows from Raekwon, Ghostface Killah, Inspectah Deck, and of course Method Man.  This album is starting to sound like a true second part because as I listen to "House of Flying Daggers" I want to hear the "more" from where it came from.










truman peyote: "new wife new life"


Truman Peyote is more than a clever psyche band name.  As pointed out on the Forkast, their new jam "New Wife New Life" sounds like a derivative of Animal Collective's more rootsy Stawberry Jam.  While I agree, I also think this track shows more direction than most tracks on Strawberry Jam and as a result is more palatable.  The stomp beat mixed with twinkling, not frilly, guitar is a great build up to a too common realization: "she's not the one for me."  Or in other words, just because you have a new wife, doesn't necessarily make it a new life.  Running themes in multiple story lines currently unfolding in my world.


Wednesday, August 5, 2009

C.W. Stoneking: "Ragged and Dirty"






C.W. Stoneking is a blues singer/songwriter from Melbourne, Australia.  His voice comes out of no where, especially after hearing him mumble/slur through his interview.  Stoneking will be playing at the Redwood Bar & Grill in Los Angeles from August 8-16 nightly.

The (k)Now


Heath Ledger's video for Mouse's "King Rat"



The video Heath Ledger directed for Modest Mouse's "King Rat" has been posted on Myspace Music.  Ledger was creating the video just before his death in January of '07, for the film and music company Masses as a means of protesting against the "illegal commercial whale hunts taking place off the coast of Australia."  It begs to ask, what if the shoe was on the other foot?  You can fill in the gaps.


frat dad: "freak in nature"


Underwater Peoples has made a significant contribution to my music adventure this year and they have added another psyche lo-fi group to the list of places to travel.  Frat Dad was featured on Underwater People's Showcase earlier this year and are featured on the Forkcast today.  "Freak in Nature" presents howl at the moon and shroom bonfire vibes similar to the new material by the Ganglians.  The track channels suburban motives for "freaking out" by claiming "my mom isn't home now, she said she'd be back at six, cause she's out playing tennis, so I'll eat up all the sticks."  Childish and in need of a babysitter, Frat Dad's ambition is simple and far out...just to be a freak in nature.


No Deachunter



The No Deachunter tour features Dan Deacon, No Age, and Deerhunter.  The three artists kicked off the tour in Baltimore by playing a 10 minute version of Deerhunter's "Cryptograms."  This is really an odyssey of a track that blends electro, noise pop, and Deerhunter's melancholy melodies into something special.


wale: "pretty girls"

Wale is set to release a studio album later this year, however, his Back to the Feature Mixtape is my favorite rap album of '09 (so far).  While his cred has been taking some hits with his release of "Chillin" which features the much taboo Lady Ga Ga, "Pretty Girls" straddles the line between silencing haters and better defining what Wale brings to the table.  My love for Back to the Feature stems from its  smooth flow that doesn't get obnoxious or tiresome with overused gimmicks. "Pretty Girls" channels the same ease with piano backing, a soulful vocal hook, and of course a hip hop bang.









jack white's solo single



Jack White is a Music Man.  As posted earlier this year, White has a long list of music related endeavors and he keeps adding to it.  There has been a lot of buzz about a possible White solo album.  While these rumors have been neither dispelled nor confirmed, he will be releasing a solo track ("Fly Farm Blues") in support of an upcoming documentary It Might Get Loud (in which he is profiled).  The documentary captures White, U2's Edge and Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page sharing guitar trade secrets and jamming together.  The trailer is pretty epic and features Jack wearing a bow tie while making a slide guitar out of a Coke bottle and piece of wood.  The track was "written on the spot" upon film director Davis Guggenheim's request.  It will be released on a one-sided "7 and digitally.

related:

Jack produced singles for Transit and Dan Sartain for his Third Man Label due out August 11.  Transit is composed of all Nashville Metro Transit Authority workers and wrote "Cmon and Ride"/"Afterparty" about Nashville's bus system.  Alabama singer/songwritter, Dan Sartain, will also release songs "Bohemian Grove"/"Atheist Funeral" on Third Man.


them crooked vultures


For all things mainstream and Best Buy-like, I am curious to wonder what Josh Homme (lead singer/guitarist of Queens of the Stoneage) and John Paul Jones (Led Zeppelin bassist) would want to do with Dave Grohl of the "Foo Foo Fighters."  It is understood that Grohl and Homme have worked together (Grohl playing drums on the QOTS's Songs for the Deaf), but, after Grohl's most recent Foo releases, what could they possibly still have in common.  All bitching aside, I am excited to hear about this undeniable supergroup called Them Crooked Vultures in which Grohl will once again sit behind a kit, Homme on guitar, and Jones on bass.  Let's hope Grohl wipes off the Foo stank from his boots before entering the studio and can get back to basics with some originals.

There are some rumors about a fall album release and tour, however, no official word.  Until then stay connected at the bands official website, Myspace, and Facebook.  Something smells...

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