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Like Pavement, but a little more in control. I'm not quite sure what it is, but I've listened to little else than their latest album "Bits" in the last few days. Thing is, if this band is playing, you'll like it. Maybe you won't know why. That's why they're great.
P.O.S. - Never Better
I don't quite know what to say about this album -- it's pretty much everything that's right with hip-hop today. The cd packaging is ridiculously complicated, and you can design your own cover art at the below link (as well as listen to the whole cd.) I recommend the tracks "Savion Glover", "Purexed", and "Low Light Low Life".
http://www.rhymesayers.com/neverbetter/ Stars - Sad Robot; Set Yourself On Fire
Reminiscent of Shiny Toy Guns but more mellow and pop-y. (Also, Canadian.)
Andrew Jackson Jihad - People Who Can Eat People Are the Luckiest People in the World
There's a newly-described music subgenre called "Anti-folk". This is that. Banjo and old-tyme feel, with punk-rock stylings.
The Great Outdoors - Food, Booze, and Entertainment - If I Were a Car
I'd heard this song before, certainly, but as of last night I'm totally smitten with it. Yearning, plaintive harmony, in three, on the edge of country music, it's really obvious that I would love this song. And I do, so there.
Pavement
Here's the deal about Pavement: I first listened to them after the waitress in a wine bar in St. Louis loaned me a Matador compilation cd from the bar sound system after she learned that I knew something about Leonard Cohen (thanks Mom.)
So, until today, I've known one song. And that song always made me think, "Do these guys just need to practice more? Or tune more? Or do they just sound like this?" They just sound like this. If you get over that part immediately, you will be quicker to realize that Pavement is doing something awesome. It took me a couple years. But the chorus off the first track off their "Brighten the Corners" album is "Hey, listen to me! I'm on the stereo!" I've never had a signature band. But maybe this is it. Marnie Stern - This Is It and I Am It and You Are It and So Is That and He Is It and She Is It and I
OCTOBER 22 IS INTERNATIONAL CAPS LOCK DAY. THIS ALBUM IS PERFECT.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l3oxU9-zeiA LISTEN TO THAT. THEN LISTEN TO "STEELY", WHICH IS MORE WISTFUL, WHILE STILL SHOUTING. THIS IS THE ALBUM YOU LISTEN TO WHILE HAPPILY BREAKING LAND SPEED RECORDS. The Monks - Black Monk Time
So, a while back, I and a death-metal guy were lecturing a heavy-metal guy on the origins of punk-rock. We both started describing the movement as starting from the '60s group The Monks. A few nights ago, I found myself talking to someone who knew the lead singer, who now lives in Minnesota.
Allmusic.com says, "To prove that they meant business, the Monks shaved the top of their heads and performed their songs -- crude diatribes about the Vietnam war, dehumanized society, and love/hate affairs with girls -- in actual monks' clothing." If you wonder what punk music might be like in the 60s, this is it. It's really pretty great. Barcelona
Near the beginning of the movie "Vanilla Sky," Tom Cruise's character is offered a few choices for driving-around music. Barcelona is first.
"Gonna be a teenage one-hit washed-up messed-up megalomaniac. Yeah." "Have you forgotten the bomb? Everyone around me looks so happy now Who am I to bring this party down?" I found out about them 2 years after they disbanded. Synth-heavy nerd-rock. I think this band was responsible for this thought: "If these people have a rock band, then people like me can certainly go to rock shows." There's no telling how many times I've gotten my hand stamped in the last year, and I fully intend on becoming one of those weird old dudes at shows with no obvious connections to the band, but who fully appear to be having the time of their life. Recommended songs: "Indian Names"; "Have You Forgotten the Bomb?"; "Teenage Pop Star" |
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