Friday, January 28, 2011

Demdike Stare - Tryptych



Woke up this morning, had breakfast for my friend's birthday at his fiancee's house, drove back, on what's a nice sunny day, to a dingy cabin down the road. Walk in, grab my computer, check tinymixtapes for the daily music reviews and news and whatnot. I see something new's been EUREKA!ed, so I skim the review, which labels the album as "electronic, dark ambient, experimental, dub(step?)." And while I'm not as big a fan of electronic music as many of the other bloggers here, I do enjoy ambience and experimentalism quite a bit. So I google "Demdike Stare Tryptych mediafire," and I can't really find what I'm looking for. But then I find that, surprisingly enough, NPR is streaming the whole album on their First Listen site. So I check it out, read the blurb saying that it's not witch house, but it's creepy. So I pop in my earbuds so as to not awake the other person sleeping on the other couch in the living room, and here we go.

The first two songs total to about 25 minutes, but it's got enough swirling background noise next to the straightforward drumbeat to keep me interested. It's ambient for sure, but catchy enough to attract a follower. And then it sounds like horror-dubstep (Forest of Evil (Dawn) at about 5:00 gives a little taste of dubstep before it falls apart back into whatever this is), and then it's piano tinklings, then it's straightforward pulsing, it's overall pretty interesting. Why is music like this getting cool now? Makes you think if Liars had released They Were Wrong So We Drowned today rather than 2004, they'd be seen as heroes of witch-core-art-punk or whatever we're shifting into these days. Anywho, head over to NPR and stream this bad boy before it gets taken away on February 1st, then look for it elsewhere (I'm pretty sure it drops on the 1st, too).

If you don't want to listen all the way through the 3 discs right now, I recommend the "Forest of Evil" suite, "Caged in Stammheim," and "Repository of Light" for some nice samples.

Demdike Stare - Tryptych

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Pogo, Novelty Act or SRS Musician?



By now, many of us have experienced Australian bloke Nick Bertke's remix videos, under his stage name of Pogo. His work remixing Disney films like Up, Toy Story 3, and Alice in Wonderland into enjoyable viral videos is certainly unique, and his widespread success speaks to the catchiness and novelty of the medium. Pogo's certainly carved out a niche with this video remix thing (Disney has actually hired him to do remixes), but how does the music stand up without the animated fun?

Right at the end of last month, Pogo dropped an LP, Texturebox, that detailed some of his archival material, before he got in the movie remix game. Texturebox does sound like a mishmash of archival tunes, and not a fully fleshed out LP. With track titles like "Excerpts Of Whatever The Hell" you can tell Pogo was just experimenting, but many of the same principles are present here as in the popular videos (smooth atmospherics, tiny snippets of vocals, light and airy glitches). I personally wonder what the source material for "ADD Is Only The Beginning" was. In all, Texturebox is not as complex or impressive as offerings from many electronic musicians, and Pogo may be derided as a fad artist. I remain undecided, except that the album is enjoyable enough to listen to, if seemingly lacking the attitude of most electronic artists in my rotation. Turn up the bass, man!

Pogo's latest gig is something he calls "Remixing the World," a CD, DVD, and online release project to create a track and video for every culture in the world, sampling all manner of sounds, man-made and natural. Such a grandiose endeavor would, according to Pogo, be funded only by donations from his viral army of supporters. Now that would be quite the novelty.

Pogo - "UPular"


Pogo - "Bangarang (Hook Remix)"


Pogo - "Gardyn"

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Ladies in the front row, TOUCH DEM TOES



Kid Sister, the Chi-town debutante, is back with the Kiss Kiss Kiss mixtape produced by Fool's Gold's Brooklyn-based co-founder Nick Catchdubs. I've had many misadventures trying to see Kid Sister live, ever since her cuts "Control" and "Pro Nails" became routine anthems a few years back (one such debacle consisted of a Biblical downpour in Central Park, quite unpleasant). 

Kid Sister has always shown an electronic affinity, guesting on "Beeper" a track produced by The Count and Sinden, and with strong electro singles like "Right Hand Hi".  I mean, her debut album Ultraviolet featured production from Yuksek, Herve, and even dubstep darling Rusko (who might be criminally overrated, but that's a whole other post).

The title track has an almost classic Chicago house hook, with a beat that nears reggaeton, but is as fun and sassy as one would expect something called "Kiss Kiss Kiss" to be. As a mixtape, Kiss Kiss Kiss is uneven and eclectic to be sure, but this shit makes you want to get down. "Lookout Weekend" adds the vocal collaboration of Nina Sky, and is nothing but a great time. Gucci Mane's guest spot on "Gucci Rag Top" is a little uninspired by comparison, but it's maybe because Nina Sky and Kid Sister are more natural collaborators. "Click Clack (Show It Off)" shows more verbal muscle than Kid Sister's usual party tracks, and is more successful than her other verse-focused track "Don't Stop Movin". Add a wobbled out verson of "Right Hand Hi" and the wannabe-Sandstorm remix of "Daydreaming" by Douster, and you are really all over the electro map.

Kid Sister has some fun moments here, but at the same time loses her lyrical focus that commanded attention on "Control" or "Pro Nails". It's a little of everything here, but not enough of the lady herself. It's a bit more reactionary than visionary, unfortunately, with the Nina Sky track even featured on the Jersey Shore soundtrack. This mixtape is worth a minute, but not more.

Kiss Kiss Kiss mixtape:

Kid Sister - Kiss Kiss Kiss (Mixtape) by Hypetrak

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Munchi's Moombahton



Let's rewind a little bit. Let's go back to M.I.A's newest release, the Vicki Leekx mixtape. Of course I thought it was great, its exactly the kind of dance music that I enjoy the most but there was something about it that truly made me ecstatic. The inclusion of dutch producer Munchi.

I first heard of Munchi a while back when he released a mixtape of Baile Funk jams and was immediately impressed by his ability to make an already aggressive style of music into something even more wild. Soon after that he put out a Baltimore Club mixtape and then a Dubstep mixtape which both impressed me the same way as the Baile Funk stuff (he's recently put out a Kuduro and Cumbia mixptape!!!). Obviously the man has a great understanding of world dance music but there was one style of music that he really excelled at and made a name for himself, Moombahton.

Moombahton creation can be credited to the DJ, Dave Nada. It is essentially Dutch house music played at the same tempo as Reggaeton, around 108 BPM. The beauty of Moombahton is in its blending of music movements from all across the globe. So it's no surprise that this would be perfect for a producer like Munchi. Although Dave Nada created Moombahton it was Munchi who really put it on the map. His appearance on Vicki Leekx only felt like a tease of his true talent but it's nice to see him get some massive exposure. Now some tunes...

Datsik - Firepower (Munchi Moombahcore RMX)

Munchi - Sandungueo

Heartbreak - Moombahma (Munchi Edit)

Munchi - Hope


Sunday, January 16, 2011

gold flushed more


This afternoon I discovered something totally mindblowing while flipping through Ulysses. On p. 245 of the Oxford World Classics edition, which is the beginning of the "Sirens" section, I found the following:

Bronze by gold heard the hoofirons, steelyringing.
Imperthnthn thnthnthn.
Chips, picking chips off rocky thumbnail, chips.
Horrid! And gold flushed more.
A husky fifenote blew.
Blew. Blue bloom is on the
Gold pinnacled hair.
A jumping rose on satiny breasts of satin, rose of Castile.

Et cetera. Comment what song features these words and win cool points.

Raekwon - "Shaolin vs. Wu-Tang"



If anyone was confused about what I meant when I said Ghostface should start trying again, witness the staggering title track off Raekwon's forthcoming album Shaolin vs. Wu-Tang. It's no coincidence that Raekwon name-checks Supreme Clientele in his verses here - these densely packed, internal-rhyme-laden lines are going after the same kind of ferociously vivid, jackhammer-paced abstraction that fueled Ghost's old masterpiece. Note that there is nothing new about the subject matter here, nor does there have to be - the value is in the precise, intricate construction of the wordplay over a classic horror-film beat by Scram Jones. It's been pretty surprising to see just how well Raekwon and his talent have been aging, and between this and previous leak "Butter Knives", I'm more than a little pumped for the proper release.

Raekwon - "Shaolin vs. Wu-Tang"


Raekwon - "Butter Knives"


*A note to our thousands of readers - I'll be on hiatus for a few weeks for travel, but keep checking in for all kinds of other assorted BZNZ. I'll be back with a review of the follow-up to what was probably my favorite album of 2008.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Young Circles

Just listened through the Bones EP by Young Circles. It is very, very, very good. They've put it up for free on their site, so long as you give them your e-mail address so they can send you e-mails asking for money to help them fund an LP in the future probably. It's worked for Miracles of Modern Science, Keepaway, why not Young Circles? Anywho, the music is not banal nor is it fangless. In fact, I'd say it's pretty ravaging at times, but is brought to the ground with a pop-structure of sorts? Genre-hopping, noisy, dubby, rocky, poppy, rappy at times even? Big shifts around the corner in each songs, but not quite prog. I don't know anything about the group, except I'll be keeping them on my radar.


Thursday, January 13, 2011

CUFFS

It's going to be a short post, unfortunately I'm still in school and finals are winding down. Today we've got a short 3-track demo from CUFFS, a Cambridge-based band that's 2 members ex-Pants Yell!, and then 2 dudes from other bands that I haven't heard of. More or less, Pants Yell! and now CUFFS just make it seem like putting together longing, self-depricating, 20-something white male pop songs ridiculously easy. The makeup of their music screams simplicity, never anything really technically advanced, but just so much more well done than most of the indie/twee pop you hear, which usually just bothers me. Head over to their bandcamp site and grab the recent 4-track demos, Privilege being my favorite of the three new tracks, attached below. Also attached is the now-defunct Pants Yell!'s cover of Jens Lekman's Tram #7, a nice slow take, which I'd say is better than the original. Keep on the watch for future releases from CUFFS, and go explore Pants Yell!'s discography. I recommend the album Songs For Siblings. Then go on a long trip with your friends, bring your favorite tape cassettes, roll the windows down, and roll your jeans up above your ankles. That's about the vibe they give.



Tram #7 (Jens Lekman cover) - Pants Yell!

Enjoy. Once I get through finals I plan on putting up responses to Raj's reviews of the new Ghostface, James Blake, and Deerhoof; I feel pretty differently about 2 of them. But don't expect the Andy-Raj rage that Kanye West provoked. In fact, ever since "H.A.M." dropped, it seems like we've seen some growing unity about Mr. West, unfortunately for how terrible the song was.

FYI: Considering Pants Yell! is defunct, and 2004's Songs for Siblings is 100% OOP, here's a mediafire link for it:
http://www.mediafire.com/?2mrd2hm23tj

Monday, January 10, 2011

Deerhoof Vs. Evil



Real talk, hipsters - does anyone actually enjoy the sound of Satomi Matsuzaki's voice? Any Deerhoof fan (and I loosely include myself in this category) will tell you that there's more than enough compensatory musical joy in every other element of a Deerhoof record to make up for whatever issues you have with Matsuzaki's neutered Ono wail. But is there anyone who sits there listening and thinks to themselves, "Man, I love hearing this childlike Asian woman sing!" My theory about Deerhoof has always been that the experimental-noise-rocker-bros who started the band recruited Matsuzaki because they were worried about their indie cred - Deerhoof may jam together shards of music into complex and unpredictable song structures, but those shards are pretty straightforward grabs from psychedelic rock and pop and things that aren't abrasive at all! So they throw a cra-aaaa-zy sounding Asian lady into the mix to instantly up their weird factor, which always struck me as a touch Orientalist and icky.

In any case, the rest of Deerhoof generally pulls off things that can be exhilarating, and their latest album Deerhoof vs. Evil has the explosive creativity of much of their best work (not to mention toned down weirdness in Satomi's vocals). I haven't spent too much time with this album yet, but it's already clear that this is a very, very solid piece of work that combines unclassifiable genre-melding with off-kilter time signatures and killer songwriting. Cases in point linked below: "The Merry Barracks" finds vicious riffs and guitar spasms at war while straight-up hummable melodies waft above it all. "Super Duper Rescue Heads!", on the other hand, is a relatively straight-forward synth-powered pop track with some meaty electric guitar work that helps to cut the song's overall sweetness. I'll even go as far as to classify it as chillwave, because it's basically gotten to the point where anything with a synth gets that label tacked onto it, and I'm a big fan of lazily latching on to trends.

Deerhoof - "The Merry Barracks"


Deerhoof - "Super Duper Rescue Heads"

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Breakbot keeps me grindin'

So this cat Breakbot has been crankin out fun remixes for a little while, but still no full-lengths from the Frenchman. Part of the ubiquitous Ed Banger family since 2009, Breakbot first popped out with the Happy Rabbit EP in 2007, and just released the Baby I'm Yours EP in 2010, featuring both the title track (which also had a music video animated in fucking watercolors), and the ever so funky "Make You Mine" (originally released on an Ed Banger Christmas promo). The Siriusmo remix of "Baby I'm Yours" isn't too shabby either. The infectious disco of Breakbot is definitely a breath of fresh air for the Ed Banger crew, which after Justice's explosive ride to fame and popularity, had sort of been coasting. While it's derivative stuff, to be sure, Breakbot's disco jams just feel so right. I've had Breakbot on the mind because I only recently came across his 2008 remix of "What's Up, Fatlip" which goes down real smooth. I'd jump at a chance to see the guy live.

Breakbot - Baby I'm Yours (ft. Irfane)

Breakbot - Make You Mine (ft. Irfane)


Fatlip - What's Up Fatlip (Breakbot Remix)

Saturday, January 8, 2011

The Return of Robert Christgau


Just making sure everyone is aware that Robert Christgau, the "dean of American rock critics," has returned. His "Consumer Guide," in which he reviews albums with letter grades and sometimes astonishingly clever capsule reviews, started in 1969 as a column for the Village Voice and has been going strong, in one place or another, more or less ever since. In the last 40 years he has reviewed nearly every album you can think of. If there's nothing important you need to do in the next few hours, visit his website and see for yourself. His opinions are often startlingly unorthodox, and he defends them passionately—see, for instance, what he has to say about the Black Eyed Peas' latest album. Although I cannot endorse his views on Radiohead, and will never forgive him for calling Kid A "dinner music" even if he deigned to give it an A-, he is still surely the toughest, most hype-resistant, most objective rock writer out there.

It looked like it would be the end of the CG when MSN, which picked Christgau up after the Voice came under new management in 2006 and liquidated their old guard, discontinued it this summer. I was very sad when I heard the news, and was then overjoyed when I learned in November that he would be carrying on after all in a twice-weekly blog entitled "Expert Witness." By now he has already thrown in his two cents on most of the key albums of the latter months of 2010. Anyone who cares enough about music to read our blog should bookmark his and check it often.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Grievous Angel



Mostly, this blog focuses on electronic, hip-hop, indie, noise, or experimental music. I'm going to take a break from that and take us back to the 70s for a true American music legend. For the past month or so, I haven’t listened to much new music. I’ve consistently listened to the new James Blake, and like it more than Raj I think, but for the most part the past few weeks have been filled with either Gram Parsons or Neil Young. Today’s mix is mostly dedicated to the first of the two, a man who died young and left quite an impression on the worlds of Country and Rock, though neither of the two labels can really accurately capture the essence of his music, which he labeled as “American Cosmic Music.” A Harvard dropout, guru to Emmylou Harris, and consumer of way too many drugs, and victim of a nasty morphine overdose, the man led a brief but dense life. Perhaps it’s that I often have the desire to give up on my Ivy League education and go pursue some sort of life out in the country, or just that I’d like to wear the suits that the Burrito Brothers wear in their music videos for Christine’s Tune, but Gram’s music has meant a lot to me. Enjoy.

Luxury Liner - Gram Parsons and the International Submarine Band (Safe At Home)
Parson’s first post-Harvard dropout band, I think.

A Song For You - Gram Parsons & Emmylou Harris (G.P.)
Take me down to yerrr daaaaaaancehalllllll

Hot Burrito 1 & 2 - The Flying Burrito Brothers (The Gilded Palace of Sin)
Passion.

Return of the Grievous Angel - Gram Parsons & Emmylou Harris (Grievous Angel)
My mother prefers my brother Jacob’s version of this song to Gram’s.

You’re Still On My Mind - The Byrds (Sweetheart of the Rodeo)
Great.

Wild Horses - The Flying Burrito Brothers (Burrito Deluxe)
Little known fact that this version was released before the Rolling Stones’ version. Gram convinced Mick Jagger to let them cover it, and the Burritos ended up releasing it in 1970 on Burrito Deluxe, the year previous to the Stones on Sticky Fingers. I do prefer the Burrito’s version, it’s a bit grittier, and well, Gram Parsons and Chris Hillman just kill it.

Codeine - Gram Parsons (Another Side of This Life: The Lost Recordings of Gram Parsons, 1965-1966)
A very different sound, but another testament to his storytelling skills.

She - Gram Parsons (G.P.)
Why’d you have to go, Gram? Why’d you have to go.

http://www.mediafire.com/?0yj5aua3z6953pz
(you might have to arrange the tracklisting by yourself.)

Monday, January 3, 2011

Apollo Kids



I'm not one of those "stop-rapping-about-guns-drugs-and-ladies" types - if you're going to attack familiar subject matter with the kind of wild-eyed fervor that Raekwon brought to 2009's Only Built for Cuban Linx Pt. 2, then you won't hear any complaints from me. But the thing with Ghostface Killah is that, at least on his solo albums since 2005's amazing Fishscale, he's seemed as bored with those topics as any of his subject-matter-detractors, but he insists on talking about them anyway. And so it basically doesn't matter that his latest album Apollo Kids has a pretty solid collection of nostalgic soul-sampling beats - it's Ghost on autopilot, and his lyrics have all the ingenuity suggested by song titles like these: "Ghetto", "Drama", "2getha Baby" (just as a point of reference, here's a few from Cuban Linx 2: "Pyrex Vision", "Surgical Gloves", "House of Flying Daggers"). Critics have mostly been giving this stuff a pass because Ghostface at his most listless is about on par with your average rap album, and that's not really wrong, but why should I care about an artist who has no particular interest in proving his vitality?

The only moments where Apollo Kids actually comes alive are at the points where Ghost seems to be displaying any kind of sincerity. The opening track, "Purified Thoughts", is such a tease because it finds Ghostface fed up with the seaminess of ghetto life and instead aiming his spirit higher, with mystical visions of redemption and a return to Africa (this is immediately followed by a track called "Superstar", where the most clever thing Ghost manages is the name-checking of several liquor brands). And later, on "In Tha Park", Ghostface assumes the mantle of hip-hop historian , delivering a clever reminiscence about old-school DJs with equipment jury-rigged to light-pole wires (although Black Thought then proceeds to completely out-rap Ghost with a nostalgic look back at Philadelphia rap).

It's not like Ghost can't rap effectively about the streets anymore - his Cuban Linx pt. 2 verse on "Cold Outside" is one of the most horrifyingly vivid storyteller verses he's ever done ("They found a two-year-old strangled to death/With a Love Daddy shirt on in a bag on the top of the steps"). And it's also not like he really should be urged to try something different, because then he just decides to do something like the atrocious for-the-ladies Ghostdini: Wizard of Poetry. The main issue here is just that he's not really, you know, trying. At all. I'd be more forgiving about all this if he actually had just fallen off and just wasn't capable of top quality anymore, but from the evidence, it seems apparent that he's now less interested in making quality rap than he is in lazy cash grabs.

"Purified Thoughts" - Ghostface Killah ft. Killah Priest and GZA


"In tha Park" - Ghostface Killah ft. Black Thought


"Cold Outside" - Raekwon ft. Ghostface Killah

Body Language


NASTY K: So 2011 may be upon us, but I'm not quite done with some jams from 2010. Brooklyn's Body Language put out this free EP back in October, and it shows surprising variety for 4 tracks and less than 17 minutes. Social Studies has just the songs to cure any leftover New Year's hangovers. "Falling Out" is totally fun disco basslines and funky synths (almost cribbed from Daft Punk's track "Something About Us") paired with an infectious hook. But it's not all Jamiroquaian disco do-overs on Social Studies. The EP opener "You Can" spent most of the day firmly lodged in my brain, prone to such chillwavery as I am. The elementary-schoolness of the EP's title would prescribe far more bubblegum something more bubblegum for the title track and indeed "Social Studies" delivers. (more straightforward maybe than High Places, less zany than YACHT) But as Angelica Bess sings about being "under the influence" she is calling our number. "Tempoture" held my interest less than the other three tracks, being more downtempo and using the bright female vocals only sparingly, but also represents a completely unique sound from the other three. 4 tracks, and 4 very different paths of dance-poppage to choose from. I'll be curious to see which of these directions Body Language goes in 2011.

Download Social Studies from Body Language's bandcamp

Peep recent photos of Body Language at Brooklyn Electronic Music Festival 2010

Falling Out by Body Language

Social Studies by Body Language