Wednesday, August 10, 2011

On Watch the Throne



- Watch the Throne: Starring Kanye West as himself and a luxury goods catalog as Jay-Z.

- Admittedly, Jay-Z's current "Selected Readings from My Credit Card Statement" rap style is strongly preferable to the cranky old man pathetically whinging about being "forever young" on The Blueprint 3, but it's still far from being any good. For one thing, the only people who will get half these brand-name references probably scoff at hip-hop as too bourgeois on their way to the opera anyway. It's worth noting that Jay's only good verse on the album name-checks nothing classier than Ballantine Ale and seed-heavy marijuana - "The Joy" comes from a place of heartfelt memory and actual connection to humanity, while the rest of his verses seem like tossed-off telegrams from some lonely Xanadu.

- Of course, it's not like you'd call Kanye relatable exactly, but when he goes on about his own obscene indulgence, he's always interesting - he's uniquely vivid ("Coke on her black skin make a stripe like a zebra/I call that jungle fever") or goofily clever ("Prince William ain't do it right if you ask me/Cuz if I was him I would have married Kate and Ashley") or just unpredictable in some way, which rarely happens with Jay here. Except for "New Day", Ye's verses here have him in not-trying-that-hard silly punchline mode, as opposed to Dark Twisted Fantasy's more reflective, thoughtful mode, but it mostly works in this context.

- That context is a pretty lightweight collection of beats, although a few are brilliant (the prog-rock stomp of "No Church in the Wild", RZA's shockingly successful autotuning of Nina Simone on "New Day"). A few of these suffer from that Blueprint 3 problem of wanting to be "futuristic", which translates in practice to lame retreads of last year's dance music model (dubstep samples are a bad idea as it is, but sampling Flux Pavilion only amplifies the problem). Judging from the beats Kanye actually made for himself, you can blame this one on Jay-Z entirely. When is he going to figure out that the future of hip-hop is going to be something much weirder than whatever music played at the club last night?

- This is not going to be good for Frank Ocean's career. It doesn't matter how much good will Frank gets out of his decent album-opening hook and his much-better-than-decent debut album - a large proportion of mainstream listeners will now remember him as that goofy guy who sang the insanely corny hook about the baby Jesus on "Made in America".

- "Lift Off" strikes me as one of the worst transparent stabs at a radio single I've ever heard. It's not just that Beyonce's hook is kind of bland - it's that with repetition of the hook alone she seems to sing twice as many words as the actual rappers on the track rap combined. Did they forget to finish this track? Was Bey going to make Jay sleep on the couch if anyone dared to upstage her mediocre contribution?

- Not to get all Upper East Side blue blood on him, but Jay's constant art-world namedropping (Basquiat! Rothko! A thousand goddamned mentions of the MOMA!) is so fucking nouveau-riche, isn't it?

- Andy was telling me that the terrible things about this album can be explained by thinking of the whole thing as a big old tongue-in-cheek Trapped-in-the-Closet self-parody. If you're willing to be that generous, that's not a terrible way to look at it, but if it's all a joke, I wish it was a funnier one!

Friday, August 5, 2011

SRS TRAX: Das Racist - "Michael Jackson"

Bruce Springsteen! Four Hundred Fifty Thousand Dollars! MC Hammer! Twelve dollars and thirty cents!








Das Racist - "Michael Jackson" (8.5)


RAJ: #1: The few active detractors of Das Racist that I've heard take issue with the duo's hipper-than-thou bored-stoner flow, but with "Michael Jackson", that charge is even more iffy, because Heems is downright theatrical with his Jadakiss-in-two-decades raspy voice (Kool A-D even tries out this squeaky Weezy thing in the last verse).

#2: There's something pretty zen about the way that hook distills the vast majority of rap braggadocio (fame, money, and the demand that aforementioned fame and money be acknowledged) into nine words.

#3: If other rappers learn nothing from Das Racist, they should at least get back to Bollywood-sampling beats again, like the stuff Timbaland made in his golden age.

#4: The third verse here is a fun parody of rap clique circle-jerks, but it's interesting to see how straight these guys are playing their rapper roles otherwise - Heems' excellent opening shit-talk verse is as non-jokey as he's ever been. That is, until his last lines and the song's peak - screaming out "I'm fucking great at rapping!" could be the logical extension of Waka-Flocka-Flame-esque bluntness, but it also scans as giddily sincere. That really gets to the heart of what is so great about these guys - the parody is clever, but the deep love of what they're parodying is why it doesn't just seem like snotty hipsters taking shots at hip-hop.

#5: Is Janet Jackson really 10,000 times less valuable than Michael Jackson?

#6: Anyone want to take a crack at explaining that 9/11-y cover art? Because I'm at a loss.
(8.5)

Thursday, August 4, 2011

August Mudmix



Posts have been few and far between these days, but here's a mix for you to sink your teeth into. This one is strictly non-electronic. Sort of a shame, because that new Hudson Mohawke EP is just waiting to be blasted, but I decided to just go back in time for these tunes. Basically all oldies, but two newer ones (one's a cover and the other sounds old). Enjoy.

Care of Cell 44 - The Zombies
You Monopolise Me - The Ogyatanaa Show Band
Eerie Body - Radiator Girls
A Song For You - Gram Parsons
Yes, My Goodness Yes - Velma Perkins
If I Stay Too Long - Thee Oh Sees
Tramp - Otis Redding & Carla Thomas
Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere - Neil Young & Crazy Horse
Put Out The Fire - The Mystiques
遇 - 劉文正

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Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Wayback Machine: Comets on Fire - Bong Voyage [2004]



I think I've mentioned Comets on Fire before. Every time I listen to Blue Cathedral or Field Recordings From The Sun, I simultaneously have my mind blown and get in a little slump, the latter due to the band's unofficial permanent hiatus. Ben Chasny's still going strong with Six Organs of Admittance, Ethan Miller was doing the Howlin Rain jam for a bit, but I haven't followed it much, but when these Bay Area dudes got together, the joyful noise was too good, too perfect. I remember around 2006 reading about Bong Voyage, a compilation live album, and really wanting to hear it. I've never been much of a torrent user, and mediafire wasn't as easy to access, so it wasn't until earlier today that this album finally popped back up on my radar, and is currently bringing me into a nice, blissful comfort. It's bringing me back to their show I went to during a hurricane at the Black Cat in DC the day before I left for college in 2006. The most spiritual experience I've ever had at a musical performance; I went crazy. The echoplex, the dueling guitars, the thumping bass, it's exactly what psychedelic rock should be. Noisy. Long hairy & Beardy. Indecipherable lyrics. And the lo-fi quality of the recording doesn't take away from the grandeur. And we got a Ben Chasny Eastern-influenced acoustic jam in the middle of it. Snag it if this is what you're into.

Mediafire

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Punk Ain't Dead: Fucked Up's "David Comes to Life"




About a month ago, Canadian hardcore/punk band Fucked Up released their third full-length album David Comes To Life while I was too busy working crazy hours to notice or care. I mean, can you blame me? The album definitely falls into the category of hardcore, which is a genre mostly oppressively loud and repetitive, and generally I'd be down with just about anything else. But when I finally listened to the album biking home the long way to my apartment in Bed-Stuy, the music, colliding with the wind coming off the river and the potholes in the pavement finally started to make sense.

The first thing that you notice is that this album is unapologetically loud and full of raw youthful energy. Pounding drums and the lion's roar of Father Damian/Pink Eyes' voice let you know immediately what musical territory you've entered for the next 78 minutes. Simple distorted riffs and tones carry most of the album and are mostly reminiscent of The Who overlaid with Hot Water Music, but Fucked Up manages to push these trite melodies forward with the force of sheer willpower and enthusiasm (especially on tracks like "Ship of Fools" and "Running on Nothing"). Actually, the whole album feels like it's being violently shoved up a hill by a gang of grinning lunatics only to be released on free wheels all the way back down (perfect for biking over bridges).

But as I carried David with me through the streets of Williamsburg, noticing that there was not a silly moustache in sight, something else hit me: There is nothing ironic about this album. It's a four-part rock opera about a boy named David professing his tortured love for a girl named Veronica (spoiler alert: she DIES). It's a love story based on protest music. It's hardcore for chrissakes. To do all of these things at a time when even the lamest of the cool kids have turned their noses up at self-serious punk music (and let's be real here: Green Day's American Idiot pretty severely killed off most of punk's appeal as a genre while at the same time eliciting groans whenever the words "rock" and "opera" were used in the same sentence) requires the kind of raw energy that only Fucked Up seems to have these days. The result is a highly respectable album that may yet start a reawakening of heady punk within the mainstream (David Comes To Life ranked 12th a few weeks ago on the Billboard "Tastemaker Albums."). Personally, I've been sick of this New York version of standing-around-at-concerts-with-your-arms-folded bullshit for a while. I'm ready to thrash again.



Thursday, July 14, 2011

"Digital Lows" Cities Aviv



Did we review this one yet? I don't even remember anymore. Here's to lazy summer postings and Mermaid Parades! Check out theis guyz and theyr almbum on bandcamp.


Monday, July 4, 2011

July Mudmix



to celebrate freedom:

download

nicolas jaar - what my last girl put me through
frank zappa - any way the wind blows
kelis - milkshake (shlohmo remix)
heRobust - grief case (star slinger wwhrd remix)
young circles - dreams
devonwho - fedoraworm (dibiase's microwave flip)
odb v. king tubby - dubbing it raw
noel davy - under me fat thing [version]
pink reason - holding on
kurt weisman - rainbow blues