Saturday, May 14, 2011

Zombie Prom 2011

For those of you who don't know, I will be deejaying a zombie prom in Danville next weekend.  I have been watching a lot of horror movies in preparation, and have been keeping track of my progress here.  I have also been trying to put together a list of songs for this event: I want to make them danceable, but I also want to keep a sinister feel.  So I've been looking for songs with a sinister vibe, or songs that make reference to monsters or something.
I have also been trying my hand at remixing some horror movie themes, and you can find my results here.  I'm pretty happy with them so far.  Check them out and give me some feedback if you get the time.
Anyway, I thought I would list some of the songs that I have collected for the event, and see what you thought.  Feel free to give me your suggestions.

"Psychotic Girl" - The Black Keys
"The Ghost Inside" - Broken Bells
"Ain't No Grave" - Johnny Cash
"Red Right Hand" - Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
"Revenge" - Danger Mouse & Sparklehorse
"My Body's a Zombie for You" - Dead Man's Bones
"Howl" - Florence + The Machine
"Thriller" - Michael Jackson
"Halloween Remix" - Ronald Jenkees
"Mad World" - Gary Jules
"Monster" - Lady Gaga
"Conversation 16" - The National
"Tomorrow You'll Be Forgiven, But Tonight You Will Have Your Teeth Knocked Out" - Jesper Norda
"Dracula's Wedding" - Outkast
"Ghostbusters" - Ray Parker, Jr.
"Nosferatu" - Parov Stelar
"Stay Zombie Stay" - Elvis Perkins
"E.T." - Katy Perry
"We Suck Young Blood" - Radiohead
"Walk on the Wild Side" - Lou Reed
"The Curse" - Josh Ritter
"She Wolf" - Shakira
"Wolf Life Me" - TV On the Radio
"Alex Descends Into Hell for a Bottle of Milk" - U2
"Living Dead Girl" - Rob Zombie
"Werewolves of London" - Warren Zevon

There are more, but that's a short list.  Thoughts?  Additions?

If you want to get more details about the Zombie Prom, go here.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Lykke Li, Radiohead, Englishman


Lykke Li - Wounded Rhymes

I thoroughly enjoyed Lykke Li's first album, Youth Novels.  It was an off-kilter pop album with some extremely catchy songs ("Dance. Dance. Dance." was my favorite).  If her voice bordered on cutesy from time to time, it was forgivable, because the songs were still really good.
For as much I liked Youth Novels, Wounded Rhymes blows it out of the water.  The cutesy vocals are gone.  The music, once fairly light and happy, has been replaced by a darker, denser mix.  The minimalism of "Dance. Dance. Dance." has been scrapped, in favor of the tribal, threatening "Get Some", the 50s reverb-drenched (and organ-laden) "Sadness is a Blessing", and the positively Bat for Lashes "Jerome". Her voice, while a little odd, mixes with all the music extremely well, to the point where I can't imagine anyone else singing these songs...at least, not singing them as well as she does.
This is a fantastic album, and an early candidate for album of the year.

Rating: 5/5
Favorite Track: "Sadness is a Blessing"

You can listen to the entire album here.



Radiohead - The King of Limbs

This album came out of nowhere.  On a Monday, we found out it would be coming out the following Saturday.  We all knew that Radiohead did things a little differently, but no one expected this.
On the first listen, I wasn't quite sure what to make of this album.  Only 8 tracks, and very heavy on the skittering beats that were found in Thom Yorke's The Eraser.  But they seemed to be more prevalent than on that album...the instrumentation seemed to take on some kind of modernist experimental jazz feel.  "Looks like they've been listening to Flying Lotus a little too much," was my first thought.  And, even after 8 listens, that's still my thought.  It's not a bad thing (I'm quite fond of Flying Lotus, myself), but it seems to be a very strong influence on this album.
I wasn't a huge fan of this on my first listen.  It was different, but nothing really jumped out at me.  But, after multiple listens, I started picking up on the depth of the songs.  There's so much going on in each song, but I didn't really hear it at first.  While the lyrics often leave something to be desired, the music truly is amazing.  The louder I listen to this album, the more I hear, and the more it wraps around.  The instrumentation is so dense that it seems to fill whatever space I'm in.
If you've never listened to Radiohead, this isn't the place to start.  But, if you already like them, you're sure to love it.

Rating: 4.5/5
Favorite Track: "Little By Little"


Englishman - Englishman

I heard about this album from a friend.  I didn't know much, just that it was supposed to be a nice little folk album in the vein of Iron & Wine.
While that could be a way to describe it, it seems a bit simplistic.  Yes, it could be described as a folk album - definitely in the singer-songwriter family.  But there's more going on here.  This is not a stripped-down, man-and-his-guitar type of album.  Sure, those moments are on here, but there are also moments with more instrumentation.  The songs center around his guitar and vocals, but that is not all there is.  "Pet Cactus" features pulsing drums, some electric guitar, and random bits of percussion.  Even simpler songs ("Planted", "Classically Trained") are perfectly accompanied by a piano.
I can see the Iron & Wine comparison, but only in regards to the stripped-down nature of some of his songs, and the lyrical nature of the songs.  Past that, I don't see it.  Iron & Wine's stripped-down moments were more stripped down than this, and his voice doesn't sound a bit like Sam Beam's.
If you're into the singer-songwriter genre at all, you're sure to love this album.

Rating: 4.5/5
Favorite Track: "Classically Trained"

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Top 20 Albums of 2010

It's a few weeks late, but here it is...my top 20 albums of the past year.  Apologies to those who didn't make it (Joel Alme, Starflyer, Dr. Dog, Lissie, Cheyenne Marie Mize, Black Milk, Jonsi, etc.).


20. God Willin' & The Creek Don't Rise - Ray LaMontagne & The Pariah Dogs

When I first heard the name of this album (and saw the name of the backing back), I thought to myself, "Oh no...Ray has gone bluegrass."  And he has...to a certain extent.  While a lot of the instrumentation has a bluegrass element to it, you'd be hard-pressed to call this a bluegrass album.  I wasn't a huge fan on the first couple of listens, but the more I listened to it, the more I loved it.  The instrumentation may have been veering a little more towards bluegrass than on his previous albums, but it worked well.  The things I loved about Ray (the songwriting, the voice, the melodies, etc.) were all still there.  The more I listened to it, the more I realized that I liked this one more than his previous album.  There's a delicateness to these songs that I haven't really heard since his first album.

Favorite track: "Like Rock and Roll and the Radio"


19. Plastic Beach - Gorillaz

Gorillaz past albums are a mishmash of pop, rock, hip-hop, and, at times, cartoon-level goofiness.  That's what I expected with this album.  And there was some of that, but there was more of a theme to this album.  An overriding atmosphere that permeates the album.  In this album, a world has been created...a world that may seem like paradise, but has a sinister layer underneath it all.

Favorite track: "Rhinestone Eyes"


18. Sigh No More - Mumford & Sons

Mumford & Sons create a dark blend of bluegrass, folk, and rock.  But it's something more than that.  They're able to create songs that sound like they were recorded centuries ago, in a mountain range you've never heard of...yet it still sounds strangely modern.  Their songs start of slow and sparse, then build until they explode.  It's impossible not to tap your foot to this album.

Favorite track: "Little Lion Man"


17. Brothers - The Black Keys

I've been a Black Keys fan for a while.  There was a time (around the release of Magic Potion, I believe) that I thought, "Where do they go from here?"  They had released a handful of albums, but they were all beginning to sound pretty similar.  They had a sound deeply rooted in the blues...but they didn't really seem to pull from any outside influences.  For Attack and Release, they teamed with Danger Mouse, and they changed their sound.  Not dramatically...just enough to where it felt different.  They added more instruments.  They played around with arrangements.  For the first time, it felt like they were being creative, rather than just being content in playing blues.
I can't say that they stepped it up a notch with Brothers, but they definitely took some things away from Attack and Release.  This isn't just a blues album...it's a rock album as filtered through the blues.  There are songs that seem to borrow from T. Rex ("Everlasting Light") and 60s soul ("Unknown Brother') as well as their standard blues sound.  They even throw in some harpsichord and organ for good measure.
It's a terrific album.  It shows that they're able to retain their blues sensibilities, while still branching off into different directions.  The different directions never seem forced; they never seem out of place.  It all seems to fit.  And while the album does feel a bit long (15 tracks), it's hard to find a track that you would want to cut.

Favorite track: "She's Long Gone"


16. Treats - Sleigh Bells

They took elements from rock, pop, and hip-hop, threw the lead vocals to a peppy girl, then distorted everything they could.  The result is about a half-hour of upbeat, manic, ear-rattling music that is ridiculously catchy, and really, really good.

Favorite track: "Crown on the Ground"


15. O Ye Devastator - Doug Burr

Doug Burr makes beautiful music.  He's a folk singer, but the thing that struck me first about him is the atmosphere of his music.  It's not just the instrumentation...it's the feel of it all.  There's a lushness to it, even when there's not much going on.  I can't fully explain it, but there always seems to be something going on that you can't quite hear...something filling in the spaces.  It doesn't make sense, but, for some reason, that's how his music feels.  On top of all that, he has a terrific voice (it's unique, but it works really well with his music), and he's a fantastic songwriter.

Favorite track: "High Blood and Long Evening Dresses"


14. The Wild Hunt - The Tallest Man on Earth

A new album, but the same formula: man plays guitar and sings, then throws in some banjo a little later (the last song on this album features a piano, but that's the exception rather than the rule).  The description doesn't look like much, but he has a way of drawing you in.  He sings with such passion that you can't help but love the songs.  His voice is gritty, but full of depth.  He plays guitar with a delicateness that can turn into violence in an instant.  He is The Tallest Man on Earth.  If you haven't listened to him yet, this is a good place to start.

Favorite track: "King of Spain"


13. Buzzard - Margot & The Nuclear So & So's

I fell in love with the sound of Margot.  For their first two albums, they built songs up with a wall of instrumentation.  They took folk songs and enveloped them with horns and percussion.  It was a beautiful sound.
With this album, they ditched all of that in favor of a more rock-oriented sound.  Because of that, I didn't like it right away.  Seemingly everything I loved about this band had been stripped away.
But the more I listened to it, the more I realized there were still some elements of that sound left over.  The songwriting was still there.  They still had songs that started off stripped-down and heartbreaking that ended up exploding into noise.  Sure, the "noise" didn't include the standard horns and percussion, but it was still there.
Margot has changed their sound on this album.  I still don't love this album the same way I love their past albums, but it's still a terrific album.

Favorite track: "Lunatic, Lunatic, Lunatic"


12. IRM - Charlotte Gainsbourg

This album was produced by Beck, and you can definitely tell.  In fact, at times it sounds like a Beck album with a female singer...but that's not a bad thing.  The trashy instrumentation.  The slightly out-of-tune guitar.  The off-kilter melodies.  Charlotte doesn't have what I would call a great voice, but she has a voice that works very well with the music.  Sometimes it soars over the building strings (as it does on "Time of the Assassins"), and sometimes it sounds a little odd (as it does on "Me and Jane Doe"), but it always fits perfectly with the music.  Charlotte Gainsbourg and Beck seem to have found a kindred spirit in each other...and we can all be thankful for that.

Favorite track: "Me and Jane Doe"


11. Volume Two - She & Him

There are no surprises here.  The fact that this album is called Volume Two makes sure that you know what you're getting: it picks up exactly where Volume One leaves off.  It's an album full of 50s-60s inspired pop songs.  While it's not quite as good as Volume One, it's still a great (and catchy) album.  Here's to hoping there's a Volume Three on the horizon.

Favorite track: "Thieves"


10. Heart That's Pounding - Sally Seltmann

Having put out a handful of albums with her band New Buffalo and being a fairly successful songwriter (she co-wrote Feist's "1 2 3 4"), Sally Seltmann is no stranger to the music scene.  But this is her first solo album, and it's obvious from the get-go that she knows what she's doing.  She has a sound that has roots in 50s girl-group pop and the smoky soul of Dusty Springfield.  It's a terrific album that feels older than it is.

Favorite track: "Dream About Changing"


9. My Best Friend is You - Kate Nash

Kate Nash's first album was a piano-based pop album.  It had some great songs, but it had a handful of songs that I didn't care for too much.  This album is great, start-to-finish.  While there's not anything on here that ranks up there with the best songs on her first album ("Foundations", "We Get On"), there are some that come extremely close ("Kiss That Grrrl", "Doo-Wah-Doo", "Don't You Want to Share the Guilt?"), and the album itself is stronger.  She seems to draw from a bigger pool of influences on this album (the doo-wop sound is evident on a handful of songs), but the pop sensibilities from her first album are still very heavy here.

Favorite track: "Don't You Want to Share the Guilt?"


8. Odd Blood - Yeasayer

An odd combination of electro, space-funk, rock, and world music.  It doesn't sound like that would work well, but it does.  Surprisingly well, in fact.  It all melds into a strange combination of sounds to create a truly unique and oddly catchy album.  Give it a little time, and you won't be able to stop listening to it.

Favorite track: "Mondegreen"


7. Loveless Unbeliever - The School

An album that borrows their sound heavily from the girl group pop of the 50s and 60s, but borrows just as heavily from The Smiths.  It's an album that sounds simultaneously classic and modern.  It's immediately catchy, but there's a depth to the songs kept me coming back to the album.

Favorite track: "I Want You Back"


6. Broken Bells - Broken Bells

Danger Mouse's involvement all but guaranteed that I would love this album before it came out.  Then it came out, and my love was immediately justified.  It has a lush and unique pop sound, one that is extremely addictive.  James Mercer's voice fits perfectly with the music.  It's a short album...concise.  But it's catchy, and there's enough going on in each song to guarantee that you will never get bored.

Favorite track: "October"


5. The Age of Adz - Sufjan Stevens

To say that this is a radical departure for Sufjan is to completely miss the point.  It's not a huge departure: while this is not the same sound as Illinois or Michigan, those influences aren't completely gone.  They just seem a little less prominent and a little more sinister than on his previous albums.  There's a dark undertone to the arrangements, and the strings seem to signal that something bad is coming.  More often than not, when those strings come in, they're behind a skittering, glitchy beat.
Some of those stripped-down Sufjan moments show up from time to time (most notably the opening track, "Futile Devices", and at the end of "The Age of Adz"), but they're not a prevalent as they have been.
It's a strange album.  Even though retains some of the same sounds as he had used on his previous albums, we see them here in a different light.  This is a different direction for Sufjan, but it's still terrific.

Favorite track: "The Age of Adz"


4. The Lady Killer - Cee Lo Green

Cee Lo has been around for a while, but he really burst onto the national scene in 2006 with the release of Gnarls Barkley's St. Elsewhere.  With this album, he seems primed to show people that his name is not really Mr. Barkley.  This is an album that combines retro soul (which comes from his obvious love of Al Green) with modern pop.  It's a big, polished soul album, and it's amazing.  His voice was made for this kind of album, all big horns and building strings.  Even the "non-soul" songs (the 80s inspired "Bright Lights Bigger City" and the murderous "Bodies") work extremely well, which is a testament both to Cee Lo's voice and the stellar production.  If you like soul, or even a good pop album, you're sure to love this one.

Favorite track: "I Want You"


3. So Runs the World Away - Josh Ritter

With each album, Josh Ritter just gets better and better.  His songwriting is amazing (he's currently my favorite songwriter), and his instrumentation seems to improve with each album.  He writes beautiful love songs about mummies ("The Curse"), heartbreaking tales of murder among characters from classic songs ("Folk Bloodbath"), and a loving ode to a ship named The Annabelle Lee ("Another New World").  He tells beautiful stories at ease, and backs them up perfectly with music.  Josh Ritter is amazing, and he shows no signs of slowing down.  In a career filled with terrific albums, this is his best.

Favorite track: "The Curse"


2. The Suburbs - Arcade Fire

My expectations were unreasonably high for this album.  How could it not, after how great their first two albums were.  The sign of a great album is taking high expectations and exceeding them.  This album did exactly that.  It's a strong and tremendous album, start-to-finish.  While there are a couple tracks that aren't great on their own, they fit extremely well into the album as a whole.  
As I've said before, this may well end up being my favorite Arcade Fire album.  I have listened to this album a ton of times, and that opinion has only gotten stronger.  With as impressive as Funeral and Neon Bible were, that's a truly impressive accomplishment.

Favorite track: "Suburban War"


1. High Violet - The National

Where Boxer was loud and thunderous, High Violet has a kind of delicate thunder to it.  Those huge drums are still there, but it's clear that the album is not based around the heavy percussion this time.  That's evident from the first track, the muddled, distorted "Terrible Love".  When the piano kicks in, it seems to be breaking out of the gloom and doom.  It's the first clear thing you hear on the album, and it's certainly a sign of things to come.  For me, the album seems to revolve around that piano...that beauty in the midst of turmoil and thunder.  And, while it does not appear on every song, the piano seems to be the central instrument here.  It's a dark, beautiful album, and it only gets better with each listen.

Favorite track: "Conversation 16"

Friday, December 24, 2010

Kanye West - My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy


I did this last year with a couple of albums, so I thought I would bring back the tradition.  Last year I chose a couple of albums that got a ton of terrific reviews, but that I just didn't seem to "get" (Phoenix's Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix and The Avett Brothers' I And Love And You).
This year, I will talk about Kanye's My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy.
Pitchfork gave it a 10.0/10.0 (#1 on album of the year list).
Rolling Stone gave it 5/5 (#1 on album of the year list).
Spin gave it a 9/10 (#1 on album of the year list).
It was the top-ranked new album on Metacritic, getting a 93/100 (in case you don't know, Metacritic takes the scores of hundreds of reviews, then gives them a ranking based on those reviews.  Basically, it's like Rotten Tomatoes).
Even Paste, one of my favorite publications, gave it a 9.4/10 (#4 on album of the year list).

I could go on and on, but you get the point.  After suffering a wave terrible reviews for 808's and Heartbreak, the public seems to love Kanye again.  They're calling this album "brilliant", "a new wave of hip-hop", "a genius' masterwork", and other such things.
The nicest thing I can say about this album is "extremely uneven".
I won't deny that there is some great production on this album.  There are a couple tracks on here that could rank among my favorite Kanye tracks.  But there are also a couple that could rank among my least favorite, too.
Let's start at the beginning.
The album kicks off with Nicki Minaj's faux-British accent on "Dark Fantasy".  Eventually the chorus kicks in, and it reemerges throughout the song.  It really is a terrific chorus, and, while I didn't love it the first time I listened to it, it really started to grow on me with repeated listens.  It's a slow track, and a little long (it's under 5 minutes, but it still feels like it drags on for a bit long).
The next track ("Gorgeous") is decent.  Not great, but not terrible, either.  It actually works pretty well between "Dark Fantasy" and the third track, "Power".  The production on "Power" is great, starting off with handclaps and stomps before eventually kicking in with everything else.  When the bass drums kicks in, you can feel the room shake.  It's a terrific song...but even this song has its problems.  Kanye has never been a great rapper, and it shows again here, with bad lyrics rapped extremely clumsily (the lyric, "I was drinkin' earlier, now I'm drivin'" never fails to make me cringe).
After "Power" comes "All of the Lights", a massive song, featuring a hook sung by Rihanna, and guest spots by Nicki Minaj, Kid Cudi, and about 12 others.  With the building horns, Rihanna's voice, and some psycho bongos, this track really is amazing.  You won't be able to get it out of your head for days.
Then comes "Monster", which is my favorite track on the album, and quite possibly my favorite Kanye track.  It features Bon Iver, Rick Ross, Jay-Z, and Nicki Minaj (Nicki kills her verse...far and away the best moment on the album).  It's kind of an odd song...dark and driven and angry.  It's almost as if there actually is a monster, lurking somewhere in the background.

At this point, the albums falls off.  I like the production of "Runaway", but I hate the chorus (almost as much as I hate Kanye trying to sing the chorus), and the song eventually ends in about 3 minutes of Kanye talking through some heavy autotune (the song itself is 9 minutes long).  "Blame Game" is not a terrible song, but it ends with about 2 minutes of Chris Rock doing a terrible phone skit (the song itself is close to 8 minutes long).  "Lost in the World" (featuring a sample of Bon Iver's "Woods") is not bad, but it's a bit long, and there's really not much to it.
"Hell of a Life", "Devil in a Red Dress", and "So Appalled" are terrible.  Of all the times I've listened to this album, I think I have only made it through each track once.

So, a little summary.  The album has 13 tracks.  I like tracks 1-6 pretty well (with one of those being a one-minute interlude to "All of the Lights", so it barely counts), and parts of 2 others ("Runaway" and "Lost in the World").  Everything else is either forgettable, or something I wish I could forget.
So, what it boils down to is this: I like about half the album, and it's the first half.  After "Monster", I could just shut off the album, forget about the last half, and never have any regrets.
For that, I guess I can thank Kanye.
Thank you for putting all the songs worth listening to in the first half of the album.  I have no reason to ever venture past track 6.  If you had mixed in the good songs with the bad songs, I would have to do a lot of skipping.  As it is, I don't have to do that.  Thank you for saving me time.

If you like Kanye, give it a listen.  But, if you feel the urge to shut it off around the halfway point, you can do so in the knowledge that you've heard all the best tracks.

Rating: 2/5
Favorite track: "Monster"

Friday, September 17, 2010

The School, Arcade Fire, Margot & The Nuclear So And So's, Maximum Ballon

Here are a handful of albums that I have been enjoying recently.


The School - Loveless Unbeliever

There are times when you get can exactly what an album sounds like by the album cover.  Just by looking at this cover, I could almost hear the 50s/60s inspired pop music radiating from its cover.  When I hit play on this album, that is exactly what I heard.  It opens with "Let it Slip", a 50s inspired pop tune if ever I've heard one, complete with "bop-bop-ba-lu" background vocals, reverb-laden drums, building strings in the background, handclaps, and, of course, "that" voice.  Liz Hunt has a perfect voice for this kind of music.  It's kind of cute, but not overly so.  She recalls 50s pop music without sounding like she's ripping anything off.  It's an homage...not an exact recreation.  While it is definitely rooted in 50s pop music, there is also more than a hint of 80s pop.  There are more than a couple of times on this album where I hear a melody and ask myself, "Did they take that from The Smiths?"
All-in-all, it's a terrific album, filled with songs that are short, sweet, and memorable.  If you like pop music at all, you'll love this album.

Rating: 5/5
Favorite Track: "I Want You Back"


Arcade Fire - The Suburbs

My love for the Arcade Fire is well-known.  I loved Funeral, and (I think) I loved Neon Bible even more.  With this album, my expectations were high.  I couldn't help it.  I tried to lower them, so that I wouldn't have unreasonably high expectations for it, but I just couldn't do it.  New Arcade Fire.  That's reason to celebrate.
As it turns out, my expectations couldn't be too high.  This album took those expectations and exceeded them.  I was a bit nervous about the length of the album at first...looking at that track listing and seeing 16 tracks staring back at me was a bit daunting.  But it didn't matter...every track is terrific.  Okay...so maybe not every track.  I'm not overly excited about "Sprawl I (Flatland)", but it works as a great intro to "Sprawl II "Mountains Beyond Mountains)".  And that's the thing...this album works so well as an album.  Before the album released, I heard a "Month of May" and "The Suburbs".  They were good, but not great.  But, in the context of this album, they both seem to make more sense.  This is a great, cohesive album.  And it is proof that, no matter how many people say otherwise, the format of "the album" is not dead...it just needs to be done correctly.  That's something that the Arcade Fire understand.  
When all is said and done, this may end up being my favorite Arcade Fire album...and that's really saying something.

Rating: 5/5
Favorite Track: "Suburban War"


Where the Arcade Fire exceeded my expectations for their new album, Margot let me down.  Hard.  I loved the sound of their first couple albums...they were folk songs at heart, but filled out with fantastic instrumentation.  What drew me to their music were their arrangements.  I loved the percussion, the horns, and the haunting keyboards.  I loved how they could start out a song very soft, and end with the perfect combination of beauty and noise.  
On this album, those arrangements are gone.  The subtle instrumentation (and the explosion of that same instrumentation) has been replaced with loud electric guitars.  Between Not Animal and Buzzard, Margot turned into a rock band...and no one even though to warn me about it.  After one listen, I put down the album, extremely disappointed.
But then, of course, I picked it up again.  With one listen under my belt, I knew what I was getting into.  The second listen proved to be a much more enjoyable experience.  Sure, I missed the old Margot...but I couldn't expect them to stay the same for their entire career.  This album still had good songs.  As good as some of the songs on their previous two albums?  No...but some solid songs, all the same.
I sit here now, on my fifth listen.  It has really grown on me.  I'm not sure I'll ever love this album the same way I love The Dust of Retreat or Not Animal, but I do really like it, and it's getting better with each listen.  It's a different Margot...but that doesn't have to be a bad thing.

Rating: 4/5 (this rating is sure to increase with more listening)
Favorite Track: "Lunatic, Lunatic, Lunatic"


Maximum Balloon - Maximum Balloon

Maximum Balloon is the side project for Dave Sitek of TV On the Radio fame.  If you did not know this before listening to the album, it would become immediately apparent.  The opening to "Groove Me" sounds like the funked-up brother of TV On the Radio's "DLZ" (off Dear Science).  That song opens the album with a bang, and lets the listener know what they're in for.  It's a funky, catchy, dance album, featuring dirty synths, slinking basslines, and a different singer on each track (notable vocals come from Tunde Adebimpe, Kyp Malone, Karen O, Holly Miranda, David Byrne, Little Dragon, Theophilus London, and others).  It's an album that has a hint of danger laced throughout...an album that would sound perfect at 2AM in a dark alley.  It's a dance album for those of us who don't really like dance music.
While the album does get a little long by the end, it's still a good listen.  This is an album that you may have to be in the right mood for...but, if you are, it can be glorious.  I dare you to listen to this and not start dancing...it's darn near impossible.

Rating: 3.5/5
Favorite Track: "Groove Me (feat. Theophilus London)"

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Albums I've Been Listening To


The National - High Violet

The National found many new fans with their last album (Boxer), and with good reason.  It was a dark, melodic album with shimmering guitars, thundering drums, and the ever-present baritone of Matt Berninger.  High Violet picks up where Boxer left off.  The album kicks off with "Terrible Love".  The first couple of times I listened to this track, I thought there was something wrong with my copy of the album.  The guitars are fuzzy, and the drums sound like they were recorded behind a curtain of mud.  But the piano is crystal clear...and it gives the song a haunting sense of beauty.  It starts slow, but the song ends in a cacophony of noise and beauty.
Where the drums seemed to be the central instrument on Boxer, the piano seems to be the central instrument here.  When it shows up, it takes over the song...whether you realize it on first listen or not.  Much like Boxer, this is an album that needs time to sink in.  You may not love it right away, but, with multiple listens, you'll find that each song has more going on than you originally thought...and that all the songs work perfectly together to make a terrific album.  Boxer is great.  High Violet is better.

Rating: 5/5
Favorite track: "Conversation 16"


The Black Keys - Brothers

The Black Keys have been releasing a steady stream of blues albums since 2002's The Big Come Up.  They released a number of albums, all pretty much the same as the last.  They were good, but there wasn't much to separate them from the last.  You knew what you were getting with The Black Keys: blues music, played by two guys.
That changed with 2008's Attack & Release.  On it, they teamed up with master producer Danger Mouse, who took their traditional blues sound in a different direction.  The blues was still very much present...but there was something else.  A little more atmosphere.  Some more inventive arrangements.  More instruments.
With the exception of one track on Brothers, Danger Mouse is gone.  But some of that experimentation remained.  To call this a blues album would be accurate...but not 100% accurate.  They channel T. Rex on the opener ("Everlasting Light").  They throw a harpsichord into the mix on "Too Afraid to Love You".  They bring out an old-soul sound on "Unknown Brother".
Yes...The Black Keys are still a blues band.  But, rather than just playing straight blues, they play music with a blues base...but they're still free to throw in different arrangements and influences as they see fit.  These past two albums have shown a new Black Keys...and I like it.
I do have one complaint: at 15 tracks and clocking in at nearly an hour, it's a little long.  By the time I got to the end, I felt like I had heard a couple of the songs twice.  Yes, they have expanded their music...but not enough to keep you interested the entire time.  It's a good album...but it's just a little too long.

Rating: 3.5/5
Favorite Track: "She's Long Gone"


Dr. Dog - Shame, Shame

Dr. Dog hasn't changed much over the years, but there's not really anything wrong with that.  They make 70s-inspired pop music, and they do it extremely well.  Those sweet backing vocals.  Those slightly fuzzy guitar solos.  The songs that all seem to be building to something.  Those head-nodding bass lines.  I can't explain what it is about this album, but it's hard not to smile when you're listening to it.
This is one of those albums that I liked immediately...but some of the sheen started coming off with repeated listens.  Listening to it now, I realize that I like it...but there are a couple of songs I'm not fond of ("Unbearable Why", "Later", "I Only Wear Blue").
Most unexpected moment of the album: around the 2:30 mark on "Someday", the band breaks into a guitar solo that sounds a lot like a moment from Disney's Robin Hood.
It's not a great album...but it's a very good album.

Rating: 3/5
Favorite Track: "Where'd All the Time Go?"

I'm trying to get back to this on a regular basis.  I have a backlog of albums that I want to talk about, so hopefully I'll get to more of those in the not-too-distant future.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Summer Albums to Listen To

It has been entirely too long since I've updated this thing.  For that, I apologize.
Here are a handful of albums that I've been listening to lately...all of which will make for terrific summer listening.




Sleigh Bells - Treats

Take a healthy mixture of rock, pop, and hip-hop.  Crank the levels up until everything is in the red.  Then take a female vocalist who is half cheerleader and half girl-group popstar, and you have Sleigh Bells.  I listened to it a couple of times, and didn't think much of it.  Eventually I brought it with me in the car on a nice day, rolled down the windows, and cranked it.  All of a sudden, it clicked.  What I'm saying is this: give it a couple of listens before you decide whether you like it or not.  If it's still not clicking, take it out with you and give it a spin on a nice day.  It's perfect.

Rating: 4.5/5
Favorite Track: "Crown on the Ground"




Josh Ritter - So Runs the World Away

Josh Ritter is one of the best songwriters alive.  I began to agree with this statement after hearing "Girl in the War" (from The Animal Years).  "The Temptation of Adam" (from The Historical Conquests of Josh Ritter) convinced me even further that this was true.  "The Curse" (from this album) leaves no doubt in my mind.  In "The Curse", Ritter has created a beautiful love story between a mummy, and the archeologist who resurrected him.  In anyone else's hands, a concept like this could come off as a bit cheesy or gimmicky.  But Ritter makes it a wholly believable - and extremely heartbreaking - tale of love and loss.   
But Ritter is not just a great songwriter.  With each album, the musicianship of his songs has improved.  Pounding drums, slide guitars, and a swirling piano bring "Change of Time" to a close.  Clacking drumsticks drive "Rattling Locks".  Finger picked guitars, eerie pianos, and a myriad of atmospheric noises bubble under the surface of "Another New World".
This album is a strong contender for album of the year.  If you haven't listened to Josh Ritter before, now is the time to start.  (If you have a chance to see him live, go do it.  He puts on a killer live show.)

Rating: 5/5
Favorite Track: "Change of Time"




Broken Bells - Broken Bells

My love for Danger Mouse has been widely chronicled here.  I have also loved the last couple of Shins albums.  When it was announced that James Mercer (The Shins' lead singer) and Danger Mouse were working on an album, I was extremely excited.
This album exceeded my expectations.  Danger Mouse proves why he is such a sought-after producer.  Throughout this album, he creates a sound that is somehow unique and familiar.  It's a pop album...but there's something different about it.  It's extremely addictive, and it's a great album for the summer.

Rating: 4.5/5
Favorite Track: "October"




Sally Seltmann - Heart That's Pounding

I had no idea who Sally Seltmann was when I listened to this album for the first time, so I had no idea what to expect.  Upon first listen, I thought it was a good - but not great - album.  After a couple of listens, that view changed.  I fell in love with this album.  From the album cover to the production to her voice...this sounds like a classic album; like an unreleased Dusty Springfield album that was found sitting on a shelf somewhere.  It's a mood that is set early, and one that continues throughout the album.  That's not to say that all the songs sound the same.  Each song has its own personality.  But, through it all, her voice is the constant.  And it works perfectly within the songs.  It's a fantastic pop-soul album that sounds much older than it is.

Rating: 5/5
Favorite Track: "Dream About Changing"




Yeasayer - Odd Blood

Of all the albums here, this one took me the longest to "get".  It's an odd combination of pop, space-funk, soul, rock, world music and electronica.  It is, to put it quite bluntly, a strange album.  It doesn't help that the first track ("The Children") is a seemingly formless blob of distorted voices and clanging noises.  It's still my least favorite track on the album...but I hate it less now than I used to.  Still, it seems a poor choice to introduce the rest of the album.  But, if you don't get past it (or, at the very least, just skip it), you'll never find the true greatness contained on this album.  This album is definitely a "grower".  It took me at least 6 listens to really start to love it.  But, once I did, I'm glad I gave it the time I did.  It's a terrific album.  Put some time into it, and you'll be glad you did.

Rating: 4/5
Favorite Track: "Mondegreen"




The Tallest Man on Earth - The Wild Hunt

It's hard for me to put into words why I love The Tallest Man on Earth.  It's because words can't really describe his uniqueness.  He is a solo artist.  His songs (save for the closer, "Kids on the Run") contain a guitar and gravelly vocals...and sometimes a banjo.  All of his songs sound like they were recorded in a small room with a single microphone.  Nothing about that description makes him sound very special...but he is.  He operates within the "a man and his guitar" musical framework, but he doesn't really sound like anyone else.  Like I said, words can't really describe The Tallest Man on Earth.  So make sure you give this album a listen. You'll be glad you did.

Rating: 4/5
Favorite Track: "King of Spain"




She & Him - Volume Two

Zooey Deschanel and M. Ward return for another album containing more of the same music they created on Volume One.  This is an album that borrows liberally from the girl group pop of the 50s and 60s.  There's nothing wrong with that.  They're so good at this, that it's hard to find any fault with them.  It's not daring in any way...but that's fine.  When you can create a sound so perfectly, it would almost be a disservice to do anything else.  It's a pleasant album.  If you liked Volume One, you'll like Volume Two.  I love them both.

Rating: 4/5
Favorite Track: "Thieves"

I'll return in the not-too-distant future with part 2, featuring The National, Dr. Dog, The Black Keys, and more.