Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Christmas Music That's Not Christmas Music

'Tis the season for the same ole crappy holiday music that bombards us each year. Tripe like Paul McCartney's "Wonderful Christmastime" invades our ear-brains over and over again.

But just because the typical Christmas jams are clunkier than a fruitcake, it doesn't mean I don't like to get my merry jolly on.

The solution? Re-purposing non-Chritmas tunes. I'm a sucker for seasonalizing my music listening anyway, and you always hear people talking about summer music. Well, the same can be said of winter music and more specifically Christmas music.

Here are some artists and albums that get me into the Holiday spirit even if the content is decidedly non-Christmas.

The Concretes - The Concretes
Although they're better known as a "summery pop" band, this album is perfect for the cold, snowy months. Same can be said for other bands of the Belle & Sebastian/Phil Spector variety.

"Warm Night"


Thursday, February 17, 2011

Best Albums of 2010

2010? Whuh? Yes, I'm a bit late on the whole end-of-year-list frenzy. But I require distance. I need to acquire some perspective. Okay, okay... I'm a procrastinator.

In any case, here's my favourite albums of last year - for posterity's sake.

20. Quest for Fire - Lights From Paradise







19. Harlem - Hippies







18. Curren$y - Pilot Talk







17. Roky Erickson - True Love Cast Out All Evil







16. Anagram - Majewski







15. Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti - Before Today







14. Beach House - Teen Dream







13. Yeasayer - Odd Blood







12. Menomena - Mines







11. Vampire Weekend - Contra







10. Micah P. Hinson - And the Pioneer Saboteurs







9. Steve Mason - Boys Outside







8. Kanye West - My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy







7. The Goodnight Loving - The Goodnight Loving Supper Club







6. Stornoway - Beachcomber's Windowsill







5. MGMT - Congratulations







4. The Arcade Fire - The Suburbs







3. The War on Drugs - Future Weather







2. The Radio Dept - Clinging to a Scheme







1. Foals - Total Life Forever







Honorable Mentions:
Doug Paisley - Constant Companion / Frog Eyes - Paul's Tomb: A Triumph / Das Racist - Sit Down, Man & Shut Up, Dude

Sunday, January 02, 2011

Best Songs of 2010 (that missed my top 20 albums)

Much sweet tuneage was made this past year.

The following are hot tracks from albums that just missed my top 20 album list - which is upcoming.

Enjoy! Farewell MMX.

20. Carl Barât - "Run with the Boys" from Carl Barât


19. Tokyo Police Club - "End of a Spark" from Champ


18. Bedouin Soundclash feat. Coeur de Pirate - "Brutal Hearts" from Light the Horizon


17. The Futureheads - "Hearbeat Song" from The Chaos


16. Plants & Animals - "Jeans, Jeans, Jeans" from La La Land


15. Black Mountain - "Roller Coaster" from Wilderness Heart


14. The Walkmen - "Victory" from Lisbon


13. The Soft Pack - "Answer to Yourself" from The Soft Pack


12. Drake - "Over" from Thank Me Later


11. Suckers - "It Gets Your Body Movin'" from Wild Smile


10. Janelle Monae - "Cold War" from The ArchAndroid


9. Avey Tare - "Laughing Hieroglyphic" from Down There


8. Sade - "Soldier of Love" from Soldier of Love


7. Land of Talk - "Colour Me Badd" from Cloak & Cipher


6. Shad - "Yaa I Get It" from TSOL


5. Adam Green - "Buddy Bradley" from Minor Love


4. Caribou - "Odessa" from Swim


3. M.I.A. - "It Takes A Muscle" from Maya


2. Avi Buffalo - "One Last" from Avi Buffalo


1. Los Campesinos! - "The Sea is a Good Place to Think of the Future" from Romance is Boring

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

2nd Team Allstars: Albums of '08

2008 was such a good year for music (almost as good as 2007 was for movies) that I've decided to post the runners-up for the best albums released this year.

(10)The Black Keys, Attack & Release (9) Kanye West, 808s & Heartbreaks (8) Plants & Animals, Parc Avenue (7) Spiritualized, Songs in A&E (6) Foals, Antidotes (5) The Gaslight Anthem, The '59 Sound (4) Santogold, Santogold (3) Okkervil River, The Stand-Ins (2) Titus Andronicus, The Airing of Grievances (1) Bon Iver, For Emma Forever Ago.

Stay tuned for the 1st Team Allstars....

Monday, August 25, 2008

Best Music of 2008 (so far)


With music prizes on the horizon like Polaris and Mercury, I wanted to put forth a list of my best albums of the year - mostly to massage my obsession to make lists, but also to lessen the listening burdens that come with the year-end list.

So catch up on some great tunes from the past few months (or balk at my lame taste). There are links to myspace pages for your sampling pleasure.

I've got things in alphabetical order only to sustain suspense for the real-deal list in December.
Don't worry I'm not totally wussing out with an unlisted list.

15 Greatest Albums from Jan-Aug (in alphabetical order)...
The Black Keys - Attack & Release
Bonnie "Prince" Billy - Lie Down in the Light
Born Ruffians - Red Yellow & Blue
Constantines - Kensington Heights
Destroyer - Trouble in Dreams
Foals - Antidotes
The Hold Steady - Stay Positive
Islands - Arm's Way
Ladyhawk - Shots
Plants and Animals - Parc Avenue
Sigur Rós - Med Sud I Eyrum Vid Spilum Endalaust
Spiritualized - Songs in A&E
Titus Andronicus - The Airing of Grievances
Vampire Weekend - Vampire Weekend
Wolf Parade - At Mount Zoomer

To be decided... (stuff I haven't listened to yet that portends greatness)
Evangelicals - The Evening Descends
The Great Northwest - The Widespread Reign of The Great Northwest
Holy Fuck - LP
Human Highway - Moody Motorcycle
Quest for Fire - Quest for Fire
Subtle - exitingARM
Times New Viking - Rip it Off
Women - Women
Why? - Alopecia

Still to come...
Bloc Party - Intimacy (digital - Aug 21 / plastic - Oct 28)
Okkervil River - The Stand Ins (Sept 9)
Kings of Leon - Only by the Night (Sept 23)
TV on the Radio - Dear Science (Sept 23)
T.I. - Paper Trail (Sept 30)
Annuals - Such Fun (Oct 7)
Deerhoof - Offend Maggie (Oct 7)
Deerhunter - Microcastle (digital - now / plastic - Oct 28)


Thursday, July 17, 2008

TDK Mixtape

If The Dark Knight was a person, what kind of person would he be?

First off, yes, it would be a "he". And we know his favourite colour would be black, so your next question would probably be: what music does he listen to?

Here's the answer to that burning question. The Dark Knight's playlist:

Listen to the mixtape HERE and the entire songs on Muxtape.com (this nifty site seems a bit buggy, try switching your browser if it doesn't work straight away).

You can also sample TDK's tunes on this imeem player, but some songs are only 30sec long:


The Dark Knight's Mixtape (follow link to imeem to listen to full tracks - must be registered)

I got this idea from my friend over at his Nurture. Check out his take on it, where he connects brand identity to the idea of individual's defining oneself by the music they listen to.

It really does seem more and more that people have a need to publicize their music tastes (eg. myspace likes, ipod parties, etc). And the amount of media attention Barack Obama's recent ipod revelation is testament to how one's ipod has become serious cultural currency.

But still, no matter how this inclination to broadcast taste is manipulated by politicians and/or corporations, I think it's still coming from a pretty great place. It stems from that incontrovertible essence of music as a collective medium that is best appreciated communally. Big record companies might try to force us to believe that music is a personal endeavor that should be savored in the privacy of our bedrooms, as they did in the 80s and 90s or at an officially sanctioned concert in a hockey arena, but technology is making it easier to re-invigorate music's shared capacities.

Technology like... muxtape.com (wiki entry), which apparently isn't likely to be shut down any time soon, since it's more about sharing discovery in music rather than wanton accumulation of mp3s.

And by the way, I know you were wondering... what's TDK's favourite movie? Batman Begins. Despite being a manic loner, he values family a great deal.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Man Man & Yeasayer: A Contrast in Fashion



Finally made it to the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco's always interesting Tenderloin neighbourhood. I wish I would've got here sooner, because it is definitely one of the most visually appealing music venues I've ever been to. The sightlines aren't great, but the sound was exceptional and you've hit the jackpot if you can find a space on the mostly reserved balcony.

The concert was Man Man, supported by Yeasayer.

I was there for Yeasayer and had been eagerly anticipated how All Hours Cymbals would come across live. Well, it came across fantastic. There was an added heft to the songs, which were played with a real passion and talent. They played a couple that weren't on the album too, that were immediately gripping. Every member of the band caught my attention at one time or another, both by their stage presence and their technical ability. I was surprised with their confidence too since they're a pretty young band. I can't wait to see them again when they're the headliners.

Then came Man Man. The lead singer from Yeasayer had introduced them earlier as "the greatest live band in the world" (as his bassist scoffed). And I get that that's their identity to a great extent, that they are a wild, leave-it-all-on-the-stage kind of band. All dressed in white casual summer wear, with white war paint splotched on their faces, these guys definitely are exuberant. And I was willing to give them a chance (even after they underwhelmed me a couple years ago at the Silver Dollar in Toronto).

But after watching a sold out crowd be whipped into a frenzy (relative to the Yeasayer reaction and SF crowd behavior in general), I felt like I was in an episode of the Twilight Zone. I do not get Man Man. Their music is nursery rhyme simple, with a diluted Tom Waits thing going on that even 5 guys singing and clanging at the same time can't match. Maybe the reason they're so "wild" on stage is that they can't believe people are actually buying into their antics, and they're waiting for other shoe to drop at any moment. I'm all for an interaction of rock music and performance art, but with Man Man it just seems like a charade - a meaningless pantomime.

I don't know, like I said, I don't get it and maybe I'm missing something. So if anybody can explain to me why Man Man isn't bullshit, please do. I really can't picture anybody listening to their Man Man records 5 years from now, like I know I'll be doing with Yeasayer. Man Man screams fashion band to me... which sucks for them because when they come back to San Francisco in 2010 and play to a half empty room, they'll be wondering where all their old fans went.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Song of the Week

Treating you to a Special 2for1 Edition of "Song of the Week" is Mclusky.

The now defunct three-piece from Wales are as hilarious as they are pulverizing. Here's a taste from their final proper LP, The Difference Between Me and You is That I'm Not On Fire.


"Forget About Him I'm Mint" (right click for MP3)
"1956 and All That" (right click for MP3)

They're short little ditties, but the economy is part of the genius (so is the Star Wars reference).

Thursday, February 07, 2008

The "Muthafu**in'" Tracks!


Who said folk music was tame?

Came upon this band, the Tracks, playing an in-store at a used bookstore. I was walking by and I heard this cacophonous din and I look inside and there's people with masks on with a girl on the mic repeatedly yelling, "We're the Muthafuckin' Tracks!"

Beside the spectacle, they pretty much had a standard folk set up (guitars, paired down drum kit) along with some bells and whistles. (and a toy piano!) Although there were a bunch of people that seemed involved only two of them really touched any instruments. At the end of it all, it was reminiscent of a really primitive Animal Collective, or a more tongue-in-cheek CocoRosie.

Afterward they handed out some CDRs to the crowd. All that was on it was one track, Sorry Scenes (right click to download), and a JPEG of them doing their best Knife impression.

Monday, December 24, 2007

Music MMVII

So 2007 eh, pretty darn good year for albums, I say.

Voila mes favoris...


10) The White Stripes - Icky Thump

Not the riveting prod that Get Behind me Satan was (Jack even lost the mustache), but nonetheless it includes some memorable tunes - both straight ahead and some with new curves ("Conquest", "Rag & Bone"). All in all, a solid addition to one of the most exciting rock catalogues currently in construction.


9) Liars - ~

Holy shit. Liars go mainstream, and at the same time stay completely vital and essential. Creepily beautiful and beautifully creeping, it combines their more straight-ahead post-punk tendencies with what I always wanted kraut-rock to sound like.



8) Kings of Leon - Because of the Times

These guys are slick. Oil on steel slick. The production on this album is precise and huge, and the songs mostly keep up. The vocals inevitably get annoying at times, but for the same reasons they lend this band a sense of purpose and style.



7) Vietnam - ~

Maybe the only album on this list that's not on a hundred other end-of-year lists. Vietnam's first full length has their Dylan meets Spaceman 3 sound fleshing out into a full blown ruckus. At times sweet, wild, asinine - everything that makes for solid rock n' roll.




6) Akron/Family - Love Is Simple

Not many bands could pull off such a flood of new sincerity; with songs like "Love, Love, Love (Everyone)" or "Love, Love, Love 2 (Reprise)". But A/Family does it with such ferocious naiveté that it's irresistible. Not to mention the jaw-dropping fragmentation and collage of sound and idea that raise this album up to the heights of their debut. Even my grandmother likes Love Is Simple.


5) Okkervil River - The Stage Names

Okkervil River made a very melancholy album with their last kick at the can (Black Sheep Boy is the kind of record you want to listen to but can't always find the occasion or mood), and now they've turn around and made one of the most irrepressibly listenable albums of the last few years. Triumphant and catchy as all get out. (Too bad the cover art is shit).

4) Arcade Fire - Neon Bible

Win and the gang went darker and little more succinct on their follow-up to their fucking smash hit Funeral. It's really a wonder that they didn't falter too, but the songwriting (eg. "Intervention", "My Body Is A Cage") on Neon Bible is so ace that it's almost a wonder this record didn't get more praise than the first. Too bad Regine didn't get a chance to sing more though.

3) Spoon - Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga

It seems like a lot of people didn't care much for Ga5's predecessor Gimme Fiction. I am not one of those people. Still, this band has put together a seriously engaging string of records. And this latest one is the best yet. Classic rock with a contemporary brain.



2) Menomena - Friend and Foe

Straight off from the cover art, this album is an intricate and inspiring work of art. Each song carries new surprises... and these songs are fucking gooood. I'm probably most curious about Menomena's future trajectory than any other band on this list. Even if they stand still, it'll likely be brilliant.


1) Animal Collective - Strawberry Jam

I've listened to this album more than any other on this list, but I still feel like I haven't listened to it enough. Pure joy has never been so complicated. Part !! of the best album tandem of this decade, along with Feels (as well as featuring the best back-to-back hitting tracks on any album this year in "For Reverend Green" and "Fireworks").


Honorable Mentions...

Brutal Knights - Feast of Shame; Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - Some Lound Thunder; The National - Boxer; Black Lips - Good Bad Not Evil; Arctic Monkeys - Favourite Worst Nightmare; The Hives - The Black and White Album


Hypothetical Honorable Mentionees (the truly great thing about the phenomenon of the year end list, is the potential tip or reminder to check out something you've missed. here are some albums i'm excited to give more of a listen to in 2008)...

Bruce Springsteen - Magic;
Celebration - The Modern Tribe
Blitzen Trapper - Wild Mountain Nation
No Age - Weirdo Rippers
Dizzee Rascal - Maths + English
Yeasayer - All Hour Cymbals
Panda Bear - Person Pitch
Radiohead - In Rainbows
M.I.A. - Kala
Vieux Farka Toure - ~

2007 Best Songs (according to Pop Gunning and a survey of 300 fisher cats)...

10) Fall Out Boy - "This Ain't A Scene, It's An Arms Race"
9) Bright Eyes - "Four Winds"
8) Kanye West - "Stronger"
7) Patrick Wolf - "The Magic Position"
6) Modest Mouse - "Dashboard"
5) Black Kids - "I'm Not Gonna Teach Your Boyfriend How to Dance With You"
4) Black Lips - "Bad Kids"
3) Battles - "Atlas"
2) The National - "Fake Empire"
1) Animal Collective - "Fireworks"

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Le Kool




Yoopie!

After hearing his new single which "reappropriates" Daft Punk, I'm all for Kanye jumping on the Justice/Simian Mobile Disco/French Electro Bandwagon.

Kanye West - "Stronger" MP3 [Buy]