Friday, May 8, 2015

Juventud Juché "Miedo / En tu Casa" (Sonido Muchacho)


[€1.95 to Download //€5 for 7" Vinyl // https://sonidomuchacho.bandcamp.com/album/sm-024-miedo-en-tu-casa]

Two new songs, a mean three minutes each, from one of my favorite bunch of punk rockers out of Madrid, Spain.     Juventud Juche has been in steady rotation here for quite some time, proving the obvious notion that music transcends any sort of language barrier, and now Sonido Muchacho is releasing this single as a 7".   Just like when my dad was a kid.    Should you buy this?  I don't want to tell you what to do with your money, but absolutely you should.

I Saw Daylight // Deceits Split


[€5 for 7" // Edition of 500 (150 pink, 350 white) // €3 to Download // https://isawdaylight.bandcamp.com/album/split-deceits]

These are four songs- two from each band- of German hardcore.   I Saw Daylight reminds me of Grade at times while Deceits brings out some Silent Drive, but this is just the singing, the screaming, the melodies, the breakdowns-- it's just everything you want from a hardcore/metal band in 2015 because so many bands are claiming to be hard and sound like pop punk these days.   I Saw Daylight and Deceits are both the real deal.     If you're a fan of Bane, Thrice, As Cities Burn ("Son I Loved You At Your Darkest" era) and most of the other hardcore that has managed to stay with me since I first heard it.    Yeah, you're going to want to get this one.

Dubcore / Herr Rubin "Kompostownik / 2014" (JASIEN)


[15 PLN for Cassette // Edition of 10 // 10 PLN for Download // https://jasien.bandcamp.com/album/kompostownik-2014]

This begins with three tracks from Dubcore, which I believe would be Side A.    It starts with a sort of muted audio clip so I cannot quite figure out what is being said.  There are car doors opening and closing and then what could be bucket-style percussion.     It's on the quieter side, somewhat minimal in a sense but it also feels like we're out in the middle of nowhere somewhere and someone is just recording what's going on around them.   Slight static and a harmony can be heard in the distance.    The dinging of perhaps a train bell, the percussion is ever-present here.   The cackling of a bird, the ripping of tape, such as one would do if they were about to duct tape someone or something.   A knock and running water.  Digging and a zipper.   It's time to bury this.

Organs come through in a very serious sense because it reminds me of one of the first entrance theme songs for The Undertaker and so the funeral vibe begins to come into play here.    Bass is backing this up and it feels rather tribal, yet also like someone is meeting their ultimate doom-- a feeling that the previous sounds seemed to be leading up to anyway.   Metallic scraping has the bass intensify and it becomes almost hypnotic now.   I feel like I'm on a bad trip, though in all fairness I am about 40% sick so that might be playing its part.     We've moved onto a dredge song: deep bass, a dragging of metal tools and just all around a chanting type of rhythm only without any actual chanting going on.     Static comes in and again you can barely hear someone talking.

It's quieted down now, except for that booming in the background.   People are talking but you can't hear them well enough to know what's going on.   And then the sound of a saw comes in with what could possibly be a train passing by.   Someone laughs and it's quiet.    The low hum of the bass is building back up and birds are chirping.  A car horn now.   Several car horns.   We are walking through traffic.    Back and forth between that tribal feel and the illusion of the city.   Beats come through in the slightest and I'm digging the rhythm.   We jump back to a car horn and then silence again.

Crackling.   Zippers.  Sonic boom of doom.   Children are making children noises.   This is some kind of feverdream, is it not?   There are bass sounds in the background that could be tribal, but the kids making sounds still remains at the front.   Bells ding like a train again and it cuts off into the sound of footsteps.    Waves are crashing.   How can you be walking on such a hard surface at a place with waves, such as the ocean, I do not know.     It gets quiet and then returns loudly.    All of the previous sounds seem to be meshed together, as the people are talking in a state of panic.   I feel like Godzilla is attacking the city.    It only grows louder as static laser blasts are fired.    We're somewhere between a sci-fi/horror movie and a realistic terror type of movie ala "Cloverfield".

It quiets down again but the beats come through.   It's not quite relaxing but is more so than the previous parts.    Beeping, dinging and other electronic sounds take us into the virtual world before we appear to have reached the soundtrack to a crowded train station.   I feel like we are being torn between two different places, two different stories and two different worlds, as car horns are once again beeping.    Those beats keep beating in the background of it all.    Everything stops, then comes back.   It's like someone in the car next to us is listening to loud hip hop.    But now it's coming in loudly with us as well.    Now the sounds of India.

We're quiet again, very faint sounds of something.    It's building in whirrs and little jungle noises-- not crickets, but close.   People are talking and audio clips of songs are being sampled now I think.   Whsitling/chirping sounds come out before we're back to the cars.    It ends like the changing of a radio station and as I watch Windows Media Player I can see that we have switched over to the second track.     The first twenty seconds is just bass drum and tom beats that have that bass sound to them.   It could be made with a drum machine easy enough, as it has that electronic sound to it, and I could probably even recreate it in Garage Band on my phone if I knew more about percussion.    It gets quieter, but then comes back about the same as this was just under a minute of an interlude connecting the first and last song for Dubcore.

The third song comes out ringing and then the sonic boom of doom hits.   It's static filled and it's somewhat terrifying as I imagine the world arround me crumbling.   The first song had more of a story to it, a series of events, and this one just seems to be the hum of all out destruction.     It kind of drones out into the shaking of a tambourine and I'm somewhere between India and Hare Krishna.    This is definitely just being recorded somewhere, as someone coughs, and I picture a diner for some reason.    Birds can be heard, as well as traffic, and this is finding itself back where we were for the first track.     Kids making kids noises, adults speaking as well.    It's a crowded city during rush hour on their way home from a long day's work.

Something like lasers come through again and as this scene is unfolding before us- verbally- I feel as if it is being transmitted through a modem as it has that extra layer of sound over it.     The big bass beats return, the kind that were shaking the earth earlier.    It's making hollow static sounds of gunfire, back and forth with other sounds and once again it is taking something so ordinary and every day and adding an out of this world level to it.    People can be heard walking and talking now.   I'm not sure why, but I imagine someone seated on the ground, as if to appear homeless, but really recording the sounds of those around him.    Static comes through in a somewhat harsh and sharp manner while people are talking in the background of it.   It's not quite your standard drive-thru order but it does have a similarity to it.

Blasts and car horns, somewhere at the seven minute mark we get quiet again.   Some static is picking things up, but not too loudly.    Various sounds in the streets are jumbled together and this just makes for such an interesting experience of hearing the world outside in such a different way, like an abstract painting for your ears.    Traffic again.   Cymbal crashes as people speak in loops.   Some static returns again and I'm feeling like "Ghost in the Machine".     The beats continue to drop and this has just become a theme of this venture that I've almost grown immune to it, as they keep happening so naturally now.    Is that a monkey?   Definitely some birds and high pitched chirps.     It's static, pots and pans being jumbled and the big beats now.

As we approach the twelve minute marker it quiets down.    The bass still there, but a tribal sounding drum coming back through again and I am reminded of the beginning, as if we have come full circle.   More talking and now some sort of notes that sound like a piano mixed with what, I have no idea.     It's minimal noise mixed with a field recording (and by "field recording" I mean that it was something just recorded in a public place, not in an actual field) and it builds, the beats come out and it builds like that one scene from "A Clockwork Orange".   And then it just cuts off.   Silence for a few moments.   Acoustic guitar strings are plucked, something is banged as if with a hammer.    And the loudness comes rushing back in a short burst.      People are heard conversating again as it is quiet once more.

The loud comes through with one more shot and then hip hop can be heard- someone is rapping over those Us3 type of horns.   We're back into the wave of destruction now and this is one of the strangest video games I have ever played.   Another quiet reset.    One final loud blast, then ticking is heard along with a clip of classical music to bring this to an end.    Wow.    You can interpret this in any number of ways, but there is enough going on here for someone to make a short film out of it and I definitely think that someone should.

Sugarmen "Dirt" [single] (Poor Old Soul Records)



This is that rock n roll sound that has groovy bass lines and the vocals sometimes go back and forth between singing and speaking.    It is no coincidence that the name of this band is Sugarmen because it sounds like "Sugar High" by Coyote Shivers and just that overall feel of being part of the "Empire Records" soundtrack.    Will it be on my mixed tape?  Absolutely!   This song rocks.    I want more more more.

I, Us & We "Mono"


Is it odd to anyone else that this band name includes every pronoun of the sort except for "me"?   Is it just me?   Okay then, I'll move on.    These are four songs from I, Us & We- which reminds me of "Me, Myself & I" but isn't.     They have a low-key vibe to them, churning out the softer side of electronic pop.   With piano keys and vocals that can remind me of Muse these are carefully crafted between Blue October and the more redeeming qualities of U2.

In some ways, this reminds me of something more on the electronic side of the coin, such as Twin Shadow or one of those producer types who creates all these beats and uses keyboard and synth.    But then there are enough guitar riffs in here, slow and cutting, that I'm hesitant to put an electric tag on it.     This is especially apparent in the song "Free", in which he can really sing so beautifully about how he is free.

"Lanterns" is a good example of the somewhat electronic side of these songs as it reminds me of Stabbing Westward without all of the teenage angst.     This also somehow brings out hints of a slowed down Duran Duran, which is never really a bad name to find popping up in your head when listening to music.

       As "Lanterns" sings about love being the cruelest game to play and being for dreamers, he ends with "I would say that love brought me to you".    An email, followed by a link I opened, a file I streamed and then a .ZIP folder I chose to download based upon the fact that I liked the first song I heard was what brought me to I, Use & We.    If I am to be what brings you to this wonderful music then so be it, but whatever path you should take I hope you do find this one.   

go nogo "New Folks Remixed" (Emerald and Doreen)


[https://soundcloud.com/emerald-and-doreen-rec/sets/go-nogo-new-folks-remixed-ep]

I had never heard the go nogo song "New Folks" before this EP and as it turns out, the original mix is not on here but rather there are three different remixes of it and two remixes of other songs by go nogo.     The first remix of "New Folks" is by Mal Holmes and so in some ways I do like to think of that as being the original, although I have since tracked down the original and listened to it.     Perhaps because I heard it first though it just kind of became somewhat normal to me, yet it is still a good song.

The second remix is by Ummagma and I'd be lying if I said I wasn't listening to this EP just to hear this Ummagma remix.     If you've never heard Ummagma you're really missing out, but if you have heard them before then it would seem as if you should add this remix to your collection.     Oddly, the third remix is by Go Satta, who I am not really familiar with but has other music on Emerald and Doreen that I will be listening to now because I really liked this remix.    I think going in I knew I'd enjoy the Ummagma mix- which I did- but I had no expectations for any of the other mixes and as such Go Satta just blew me away.

"Let It Show" is remixed by Statickman in a complete pull from the 1980's/The Wedding Singer soundtrack.   I love it.   It's so Human League.    But then the last remix, which is of "Sweet Lullaby" and is by Haioka, is slower, more drawn out in an electronic sense with big beats in the background.    I don't know if there is a proper term for this, so I apologize but you know how rappers figured out that their music would sound cool if they slowed it down and they called it "screwed"?  Does that term apply to electronic music as well?   Because I feel like that's what Haioka is doing and it's simply wonderful.

So this isn't really an EP by go nogo because all of the songs on here are remixed, though the originals are by go nogo.    And there are five different artists having their go at these songs, and the fact that the first three remixes are of the same song by go nogo doesn't seem to matter as each track stands out just as well on its own.   Whatever you call it, you should be listening to this one for sure.

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

"Pop Does Not Mean Popular: A Polite Introduction to Hussalonia (2004-2014)" (Hussalonia)


[$9 to Download // $12 for CD // https://hussalonia.bandcamp.com/album/pop-does-not-mean-popular-a-polite-introduction-to-hussalonia-2004-2014]

I'm not really sure what I was thinking going into this album.   It's a collection of songs that span ten years and I'm still not really sure whether the term "Hussalonia" refers to the artist name or the label that these songs appear on or perhaps in some weird way both.   None of that matters though, and neither does my preconceived notions going into this.    The fact is it threw me for a curve because it isn't pop in the traditional sense of the radio sound (Ummm... Let's say One Direction for right now) but yet it does have elements of pop to it.

There are many kinds of music that can be tagged as "pop".    This has pieces of them with it being a cross between pop rock and bedroom pop, but as it likes to point out- and something that I really never think about- is that in these instances "pop" is never in reference to "popular", which is how it is traditionally used in music.    When was the last time you actually heard a bedroom pop album that was popular?    Even, for all of his many wonders and delights (and as he comes out in these songs also), Elliott Fucking Smith himself isn't really all that popular still.

I suppose I thought that this album might take sounds of a different variety and mix them around to sound like what is considered to be popular music.  (see: hiyohiyoipseniyo)  These are beautifully crafted songs that remind me of an acoustic Weezer, Buddy Holly, Bruce Springsteen, Lou Reed or something from Happy Happy Birthday To Me Records.   The fact that these songs can stay so off the radar for all of these years (and I'm just hearing about them now) does prove the title correct.

It's strange to think that your music can be catchy and all of the things you think of when you consider what the term "pop" represents musically, and yet they can just seemingly go by unnoticed.   And it's not just this-- there is so much more.    It's everything, man.    Should we be renaming bedroom pop to something else?   I'm not sure who to contact about that, but these songs are magnificent and I think we should spread them around so as to try and prove the title wrong: let's make them popular.

Hannah Epperson "BURN"


[$5 CAD to Download // $15 CAD for 7" Vinyl // https://hannahepperson.bandcamp.com/album/burn]

I've been trying as much as I can in recent months- and really it was most of my mantra for the end of 2014 going into 2015- to not compare artists with other artists in a negative way.   This is simply to say that I no longer wish to say: "This sounds like <fill in the blank> only better!" because it's kind of that belief of putting someone else down to pick yourself up.    (Though I'm technically not picking *myself* up, just the other artist who sounds how I would like the first, not as good artist to sound)

These two songs from Hannah Epperson begin with beats, strings and an overall mix of electronic pop rock that musically has the makings of something like Gotye.     As strings are delicately plucked in the second song you can hear this as well.    It's very easy to please the ears with these intricate wonders of music on both of these songs.   I've listened to this through at least once trying to focus only on the music and pretend that the vocals do not exist (I sometimes wish I had the technology to pull the vocals out in some sort of music program way) and it is just fascinating to hear the many layers at work here.

On one hand, you have earth-shattering beats that make you believe this could be some sort of hip hop, and yet the style and grace of something classical in the string sense.   Now just imagine the stereotypical person who you would think of as liking classical music (snooty) meeting the stereotypical person who you would think of as liking hip hop (gangsta)   They seem so different, but when these two sounds clash on "BURN" it creates an all new form of beauty.

As you stop picking apart the music, listening for the various levels on which it operates, you do realize that, yes, this does indeed have some beautiful female vocals singing over it as well.    It reminds me of the first time that I heard Polly Scattergood or Kimbra, but back to what I was saying in the first paragraph-- one song particularly stuck out to me when listening to this and that was the theme song to the Netflix original series "Orange Is The New Black".    Of course that song, easily searchable for the artist behind it, is a song that I do enjoy because it gets stuck in my head when I binge watch OITNB but I am not a fan otherwise of her music.

Now I'll say something tired and cliche about how if that other artist sounded more like Hannah Epperson then I would certainly be listening to her as well.    But it doesn't really get much better than these two songs right here and regardless of what other artists you happen to like or dislike or maybe have just not heard of yet, "BURN" should be in your playlist if not your vinyl collection.

Boom! Bap! Pow! "So Heavy"


[https://soundcloud.com/boombappow/sets/so-heavy]

Somewhere between the dreamy rock of something out of the 1940's or 1950's (Think Buddy Holly era, but not) and the more recent ska revival of a band such as Save Ferris comes the music of Boom! Bap! Pow!.   The multi-instrumental songs with vocals that would make Gwen Stefani herself blush could be the soundtrack to a great spy film or simply contest with Jessica Hernandez & the Deltas.

How do you describe something that borrows from genres but doesn't have one of its own?   You can only say what it isn't, rather than what it is.   This isn't Shannon and the Clams.   It's not Save Ferris or No Doubt.    It's not quite doo-wop and it's not any of the pop acts from when songs like "Teen Angel" were first tearing up the radio waves.  (Though sometimes, yes, this does sound like the soundtrack to "Cry Baby")

As strange as it may sound, a song like "My World" can also pull out those hints of The Jackson 5 and, wow, the fact that a band can stay true to their own sound and yet cross these various genres just shows you how incredibly talented they are musically.    This is just overly addicting.   I don't want to write about it.   I just want to listen to it.   You should be listening to it too.   Hear her belting that line out?   If that doesn't convince you then nothing will and you're not worth my time.

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Crimson Calamity "All In The Cards"



Back when it was all the rage to sing songs about the President of the United States, there was a group called the Dixie Chicks who seemed to be rather outspoken and I do believe- though I'm not entirely sure why- I actually even watched their documentary "Shut Up and Sing".   Unlike those who took political sides with the Dixie Chicks, I chose not to like them because of their actual music because it just wasn't for me.    There was something that it seemed to lack and Crimson Calamity seems to find it on "All In The Cards".

The vocal patterns can remind of me Delta Dart, though this is more of a country feel overall.   It has some elements of pop mixed in as well because these songs both get stuck in my head and are fun to sing along with as they blast out of my speakers.  

These songs may or may not have a country comparison that I am simply unaware of due to my lack of country knowledge, but I don't like to think of it as sounding like anyone imparticular anyway.   These are songs that are delivered in enough harmony that they are easy on the ears.  Combine that with the fact that these ladies are singing about guns, playing cards and booze and you've got yourself a combination that I want to be a part of for sure.

You just have to imagine a time in the old west when a group of women would have walked into the saloon and asked to play cards.   The men would all have a good laugh, but when they flashed the cash they'd say deal 'em in.   When the men realized they'd been taken it'd be too late because the women are just quicker to draw their guns.   So then they all buy a beer and have a laugh together about it.  

That's one of the songs is about and maybe even the plot of that one movie about all the cowgirls (Was it called "Bad Girls"?)  Either way, even the most jaded of country fans would certainly find something to enjoy about this because it isn't as much country to me as it is a story being told in the old west.     If you can't appreciate that I don't know what to tell you because really it's just history.

Giant Claw "Soft Channel No. 1" [single] (Heligator Records)


[$1 to Download // https://heligatorrecords.bandcamp.com/album/soft-channel-no-1]

If you are not a fan of Giant Claw already then I feel rather badly for you because you must be missing out on some rather great music.   Most times, I like to put artists in genres that are general for any number of them.   Giant Claw, as proven on "Soft Channel No. 1", is just a genre within itself.    It's not "vaporwave" or "electronic" or "chillwave" or any of those things.    Giant Claw is its own genre.

Interestingly enough, the proceeds from this song will be donated to maintaining a library at the Malindza Refugee Camp in Swaziland, Africa.    You don't have to know anything else about that other than the fact that libraries are good and this music is good so show your support.   Most people within the United States have public libraries they can access for free so any way you can support a library- in my opinion- is a good cause.

      I would probably say you should put your money down for this even if the song was by a most horrible artist or at least someone I didn't enjoy.  But now you can hear great music while feeling like you're doing something good for humanity.    There is really no reason for you not to do this.

SBSR: Tape Runs Out "Friends / Flowers" (Ear to Ear Records)


[http://www.taperunsout.co.uk/ // http://www.eartoearrecords.com/]

<1> "Friends" -  We begin with quiet whirrs that seem to be building to something big.   Guitar notes like FNL now and we're going into full on dreampop/bliss mode.   There is a certain rhythm to this, as it is rock and post-punk and other sounds all combined.   The vocals are somewhat monotone and bass-filled.   They are complemented rather nicely by the backing of the female vocals, adding more of just sounds than words.    There is certainly a nice rhythm to this and I can't quite place what it sounds like in terms of other bands but that's okay.   It goes into this verse that ends with the line "I was not your friend" and the song just ends right there as well.   To say that it cuts off somewhat abruptly would be an understatement but I can pull out any number of cliches about leaving them wanting more and how less is more sometimes, etc. so I don't mind that it does that because then I usually just hit play again if I don't have it on repeat already.    I'm stuck between thinking of something from the 1980's or early 1990's to compare this with and then something more modern, like you would have heard on the radio within the past five or so years.    It's got me thinking Men Without Hats and The Killers, but neither of those seem fitting.   Perhaps the best compromise vocally at least is Interpol but even then you need to hear this song still.

<2> "Flowers" - Our second f-song begins with something like an audio clip and piano notes.  I can't tell if it's birds or people talking only sped up.    It's an interesting effect that Blue October might have used.   The drums come in next with the rest of the band but the drums still stick out the most here.    The words are a cross between singing and speaking, which brings my mind of musical influences back to Blue October again.    It's very solemn, very serious feeling.   When it kicks in I hear something between post-punk and shoegaze.   Is there a comparison point for this with another direct band?   Probably not.    The guitar note pattern cuts at me as the vocals hypnotize.   The background female vocals seem to be luring you to sleep, or at least furthering the hypnotic state this puts me in.    The music reminds me a bit of Thursday in that post-punk way but the vocals don't match it so it does create a rather unique sound.    It's slowing down, back to where we started and it has a definite FNL sound to it now.    I can't peg it down still, but these are two most excellent songs which will certainly lead to more awesomeness from Tape Runs Out.   I also feel like they might have been living up to their name at the end of this song here.

Pillow Talk "What We Should Have Said" (Animal Style Records)



"What We Should Have Said" begins with an instrumental song which is full of dreamy instrumental bliss and thundering bass.    The next four songs all have vocals and seem like traditional songs in that sense.    They at first reminded me of a cross between Blink 182 and The Beautiful Mistake, as I saw them as being somewhat post-rock, but I still couldn't quite put my finger on what this sounded like exactly.

I just knew that there was something in here that I was missing, that Pillow Talk had the sound of a band I had heard before but was simply overlooking for whatever reason.    And then as I played the name game it dawned on me.   I was drawn to The Early November for some reason, but this doesn't really sound like them but rather a band I saw play with them once-- Park.   Yeah, these songs pretty much sound like Park.   Is that good or bad?  I don't know, Park isn't making new music as far as I know and they could sound like something worse (like The Early November)

I enjoy how the song "Room" is about his bed being big enough for two, as it plays into that idea of the band name being Pillow Talk, but I'm not sure they're doing themselves any favors with the line "Everyone is the same and I am no exception".    While I agree with that on the whole of humanity too many other lazy writers will take it in reference to this music sounding like other music and they'll attribute it to a lack of originality. 

These aren't the worst five songs I've ever heard by a long shot and no matter how much I can hear Park coming through they're still not a complete clone of one of my all-time favorite bands.    Should Pillow Talk release a full length album one day (and I don't see why they wouldn't) I'd definitely be willing to listen to it as I feel that could be the push they need to really find their own sound and appear to me as something more than influences.

I overall just feel like Pillow Talk is a victim of circumstance.   Imagine you have a pet fish or something and when it's first born it's in a small fish bowl.   But as it grows, it needs a bigger fish bowl to accomedate it.   Well, I just feel like Pillow Talk has such a big and vast sound that five songs cannot do it justice and it needs to be spread out over maybe thirteen or fourteen songs to truly be appreciated.     Still, this isn't the worst EP I've ever heard and those maybe who don't share the same love/knowledge of Park as me will likely be blown away by it.  


Big Shug "Triple OGzus" (Brick Records)


[http://brickrecords.com/]

I grew up listening to hip hop on cassette.   This was back when 2Pac was still alive.   I loved Dr. Dre's "The Chronic" like no other album at the time and it remains one of my all-time favorites.    When I got into my later teens though- maybe 18 years old or so- I took the switch to punk rock.   I found Fabolous and Nas in the late 1990's/early 2000's but otherwise I've had an on and off relationship with hip hop because I feel like, on a mainstream level at least, it just doesn't have what it once did.    And I think it would be fair to say that Big Shug agrees with me, though he is the rapper and I am the writer so perhaps I should say that I agree with him.

These songs have a great flow to the rhymes and they take me back to that time of Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, 2Pac and even Biz Markie.    It can be hard, like gangsta, or as he likes to say at one point "soul music with a hip hop twist".    As it pays homage to the hip hop of my youth, back when rap music was just all around excellent, there is a little something modern in here, even if it comes out by way of Nas.

The guest spots are right on and Big Shug brings something to this that only he can deliver.    On the song "All In" he says "You original but you sound like him" and I think a lot of that is true in hip hop nowadays, where you think of how good one of these mainstream rappers is and yet it's only because they sound so much like somebody else.    Big Shug makes it clear on "Triple OGzus" that he is pulling no punches and like Frank Sinatra said, he is going to do it his way.

If you are a fan of hip hop- and I mean real hip hop- or you've always just been curious as to what the appeal of it might be, then I suggest you listen to "Triple OGzus" as it is quite possibly the finest hip hop album of 2015 if not all time.    They just do not make 'em like this anymore and it is a damn shame.


Danny Darko ft. Julien Kelland "Say Goodbye" (Original Mix) [single]


[https://soundcloud.com/dannydarko1/danny-darko-ft-julien-kelland-saygoodbye]

It's hard for me to describe the music going on within this song.   It's not full on "pop" in the way that you would think of something being on the radio and thus becoming obnoxious to me because the vibe is a lot more chill.   It's also not really rock, as there are beats and tones of bliss, but yet somehow I want to call this "pop rock" in the way that Blue October would make one of their songs (see: "Approaching Normal") rather than the more traditional route.    The vocals remind me a bit of Polly Scattergood but they do stand out as something unique and for that I do want to listen to anything with Julien Kelland in it now.

There are guitars but not in the sense that you might think of as being upbeat and annoying.   They're strummed along to the synth bass and this is just all around chill.   I'd call it chillwave but it might not be quite that but rather a combination of that, pop, rock and something else I cannot quite place.    Still, this song is a lot of fun and I'd put it on my mixed tape for sure so you should be listening to it as well.    Volume up, windows down.

Pikara "This Hollow" (Åiö Soundings)


[Name Your Price Download // http://store.aiorecords.com/album/this-hollow]

While this can begin with the style and grace of a circus show ala Gatsbys American Dream-- that sort of spectacle-- it can find itself jus as easily turning into something like an orchestra.    It has piano melodies that can first remind me of a bar in an old western movie but then eventually does turn into the piano as well of something such as Adele because I'm pretty sure I keep hearing the singer sing "set fire to the rain" in the song "Every Glass is the Last".

So this is the third album from Pikara and it makes me sad that I haven't heard of them before now.    These songs are so delicate yet strong at the same time that you don't feel so much like they're going to shatter like glass but rather shatter the glass themselves.    At times it can appear as just a voice (though there are backing instruments, they just sort of take a backseat if you will) and at others it can be an orchestra.

If you are like me and are one of the people who had never heard of Pikara before this album then do yourself the favor of giving this one a listen.   Now I am going to go back and listen to their previous albums as well because I just do enjoy this one that much.

Milo's Planes "Aural Palate Cleaning Exercises"


[€5 for CD or Download // https://milosplanes.bandcamp.com/album/aural-palate-cleaning-exercises]

When I first started listening to this- and I mean the very first time, within the first song or two- I could hear some Cheap Trick but that actually ended up changing as the album went on and the more that I listened to it the more I could only hear this as a sort of punk rock n roll or punk n roll even.

Somewhere between Local H by way of their first album and Refused this has a definite quality of loud rock that also reminds me of just the first time that I heard Trail of Dead and that in and of itself should be enough for this to be in your top rotation not just this year but forever.

You know, even if Milo's Planes are my age or around it anyway there is no guarantee that they listened to and are influenced by the same things as me so when I hear what I hear some other people might hear something more recent in a sense.   And that's what you have to love about this heavy, sing it till you lose your voice rock because there is so much of it out there you can pick and choose the good bits of it to create an amazing album such as "Aural Palate Cleansing Exercises".

Portia Winters "epicotyl" (Exotic Pylon)


[€10 for CD or Download // https://portia.bandcamp.com/album/epicotyl]

This is my first time hearing Portia Winters but for once I don't feel badly about that because this is said to be her debut album.     What you have to understand about "epicotyl" is that it's a pop album at its heart but the pop qualities of it are then chopped up and screwed.     It's that beauty of Polly Scattergood mixed with something that Bjork only wishes she could create.

Through strings, beeps, electro blips and a twisted water dripping sound comes some of the most delicate and wonderful vocals you will ever hear.    You're going to need to listen to this one multiple times to truly experience it because it is just that complex.     Though there is quite a bit of audio manipulation, especially with the vocals, a song such as "There My Rest" seems to go untouched and is more reserved, almost as if a lullaby.

A song like "Revolution" though can come out much louder, closer to something electronic and mechanical-- an anthem if there was one on this album.     Phil Collins drums and vocal loops do come into play though maybe not literally.    It's funny because on a song like "I Won't Be There" it seems as if there are no instruments until steel sounding drums kick in, yet on "Now Go Down" it feels like it will be strictly instrumental with something that sounds like spoons.    That is until the vocals kick in and overpower everything else in the world.

This is one of those albums that you're going to listen to and think about afterwards because you knew that these things were possible with music because they've been done before but they've never been done this way.    Certain elements might not be touched upon as much as others previously but this is a pure work of genius and one of the best albums I have heard in a very long time.

The Boy I Used to Be "Grip" EP


[£4.99 for Cassette or Download // https://pieandvinylrecords.bandcamp.com/album/grip-ep]

Video for "Try": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XglvILdz6gY&feature=youtu.be

I spent quite a while trying to think of the name of the band that sings "All the little kids with the pumped up kicks" because it's been quite a while since I listened to that band, but luckily for The Boy I Used to Be their name is still fresh in my mind and so they shouldn't suffer a similar fate of being that one hit wonder (Though it could be more a case of them having one EP I review and then they go unnoticed and forgotten after that)

In fact, this EP, "Grip", should solidify them as some sort of great rock band and since they have a habit of selling out of cassettes you're going to want to get your hands on this one early.    It's somewhere between Wheatus and Local H, Soul Coughing and Replacements.    There is a bit more shoegaze on here than I remember previously but then again the song "Rust" also has hints of Marilyn Manson's "Lunchbox" so it kind of balances itself out, no?

With other bands such as Silversun Pickups present the one thing you need to know is that for all of their rock influences none of them are bad and this mix of them makes for a stellar EP at that.   I'm not really laughing at the song title "Pissy Elliott" (probably created before the Super Bowl) but then again they also have "Maucauly Sulkin'" so who cares about song titles anyway, right?

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Texas Never Whispers "Texas Never Whispers"


[http://www.texasneverwhispers.com/ // http://texasneverwhispersband.bandcamp.com/]

The term Americana can get used far too often these days but it's what Texas Never Whispers reminds me most of still.   That and I can hear a lot of The Wallflowers in here and I've never been a big fan of Jakob Dylan and company but Texas Never Whispers just somehow makes it work for them.

Like something off of the "Empire Records" soundtrack combined with a honky tonk there are elements of Counting Crows in these songs as well as Phantom Planet and The Hold Steady.    The singer can really belt out these melodic songs about being poor and making music.    One of my favorite lines on this entire album is about "the words we never figured out, we still sung along" as it does hit home for me.

I think there are a lot of songs out there that I've heard growing up from Nirvana to Pearl Jam to Smashing Pumpkins even and I might not have known the exact lyrics to the songs so I'd just sing it my way- something I still do to this day- and I'm not sure why.    I remember only really looking up lyrics to specific Nirvana songs maybe three or four years ago and thinking, "Is that what he said?"

There is a sort of mystery in that though-- making up the lyrics yourself as opposed to singing the correct ones.    When you learn the actual lyrics it's like the reveal of a magic trick or something, right?    It has that peaking behind the curtain effect which sometimes can make things seem less fun.

Texas Never Whispers is actually from Texas and they have that sound that you would expect to find from such a great state when you think of any sort of rock n roll or country artist such as Robert Ellis.     They don't lean as close to the country and western side of things as most artists from Texas do though, and that's okay by me, and they're not really folk either so I'm hesitant to call them Americana so... is there a genre yet for Texacana?   That would be where I put them.

Dan Deacon "Gliss Riffer" (Domino)


When I first heard of Dan Deacon he had just released "Spider-Man of the Rings".   As I look back at it now, I can see that was released in 2007 (really?) and so it's been about eight years since I last wrote about Dan Deacon.   I listened to his album that came before this, "America" (from 2012), but apparently didn't write about it.

From what I remember there was a lot of electronic experimentation on "Spider-Man of the Rings" and that doesn't seem to come out as much on "Gliss Riffer" or at least not right away.     On the first song this is more of a traditional distorted electronic rock with elements of pop and even female vocals accompanying him at times.     There are drum machines that offer up dancing beats and it kind of reminds me at times (on the second song at least) of "The Safety Dance".

But as this goes on it can shift from that rock sound of, say, Modest Mouse to what I remember in that far out way from Dan Deacon.    But I think the moral of the story here for me is that there were two albums released between "Spider-Man of the Rings" and "Gliss Riffer" so I should probably familiarize myself with both of them and maybe even the ones that came before "Spider-Man".

I don't remember much about "America" and am not even sure if I heard the one that came before that ("Bromst") but I will go back for them.     All I know is that I liked "Spider-Man of the Rings" and this seems like a bit of a jump from there (Again, missing pieces for me and all) but I still enjoy the hell out of it.

Friday, February 20, 2015

Braille "Everyone's Crazy" (Friends of Friends)


[$6 to Download // https://fofmusic.bandcamp.com/album/everyones-crazy]

When I looked up Friends of Friends I found out that they release music by Shlohmo who oddly enough was connected with Tropics and I've been listening to this EP with "Rapture" to the point where I want to put the two on a mixed tape together.    Can someone do that for me?  I really don't have the time right now.

In any case, this music is strange.   It's electronic manipulation with percussion that can make it feel like hip hop at times and other times it could be chillwave.     Synth progressions come out like jazz horns and by the fourth song I'm hearing C&C Music Factory which makes me want to get up and dance.

There are a number of ways to describe this but I just like to think of it as being weird.    Even if you only listen to the first song, which happens to be the titular track, then you should be able to enjoy this because even if I don't make that Tropics/Braille split cassette I might make a mixed tape and that would include the song "Everyone's Crazy" (or at least some sort of "Best of 2015" playlist by year's end)

Tropics "Rapture" (Innovative Leisure)


Perhaps one of my best reasons for liking Tropics is because I don't really listen to music like this and of course by my saying "music like this" it implies that other music of this nature exists and for all that I know it simply does not.    There is no good way to describe the music of Tropics using comparisons because there really isn't anything in my collection to compare it with exactly.

Right away I have this pegged as being somewhere between pop and soul.   It has that just overall non-threatening and pleasant vibe to it that I feel puts it somewhere on that pop scale.   Yet at the same time the music reminds me a bit of R&B and as such I can think of this as having soul if not directly being a reflection of soul music.

Between synthwave, new wave and just my banner of being smoov I really have no place to put this percussion filled slow jamz mix that can go from drums to drum machine.    On Spotify, some of the related artists include but are not limited to Giraffage, Com Truise, Mount Kimble, Balam Acab, Sun Glitters, Gang Colours and Shlohmo, who I've admittedly listened to and enjoyed but still don't recall hearing anything like "Rapture" before.

If not for that "it's unlike anything I've ever heard before" tangible, this is going to stand out as one of my favorite albums on 2015 simply because it is that good.    The fact that it is pleasing to the ears just makes me want to listen to it that much more, as it gets stuck in your head but in a good way.   Imagine if you could eat all the candy you wanted without getting sick.

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Father John Misty "I Love You, Honeybear" (Bella Union / Sub Pop)


This is my second time hearing Father John Misty and I seem to recall the previous release "Fear Fun" coming with a lot of hype but me reducing it to simply being a mix of folk and psychedelic rock.    While this remains true on "I Love You, Honeybear" some other qualities are here that either weren't on "Fear Fun" or I was just eager to overlook them.

To say that this is folk meets psych is not quite a combination I've heard before but you can easily enough take bands from either side and put them together to get the general idea.   Or you could just imagine EFS if he had written an album that was explained to him in a dream by Jim Morrison, Jerry Garcia and John Lennon.

What I like most about this album that has an overall acoustic feel of melody to it though are perhaps the lyrics.   Having a chorus with the hook of "people are boring" makes me smile, and yet the other songs tend to tell stories of adolesence and sexual encounters.   That isn't to say that these are your traditional folk songs though, as there are a lot of f-bombs so they seem to have that dirty pirate tale feel to them.  (I believe one did reference a eunich slut)

A foul-mouthed Simon & Garfunkel (?), Father John Misty creates the type of songs that seem safe on the surface but deep down are found on records that kids would have to hide under their beds from parents.     And that is in a much more direct way than most of those artists like The Who and Hendrix who had implied lyrics and Father John Misty just flat out sings about being drunk and stoned.

A Place to Bury Strangers "Transfixiation" (Dead Oceans Records)


I've reviewed A Place to Bury Strangers twice before but both times have been brief and comments about them on the whole rather than the specific album I think.   So I felt that this was as good a place as any to give A Place to Bury Strangers a sort of proper review if only because this is that type of album that makes me want to give it a proper review.  (I could say that they've grown or evolved since I started listening to them but I'm not going to get into something that cliche)

With fuzzy guitars APTBS lands somewhere between garage and psychedelic rock n roll.    They remind me a lot of The Doors at times, yet on a song like "Deeper" they can get even darker and bring out a Marilyn Manson influence.     As other songs can have the static trembling in the guitar notes, "Deeper" also breaks down into sheer pandamonium by the end.

On a song such as "I'm so Clean" the Priests influence definitely comes out.   I also really like "We've Come So Far" if only because the way that the chorus is broken up into "I feel / right now / we've come / so far".     It' just another demonstration of how A Place to Bury Strangers manages to walk that fine line between commercial appeal and not.

Whether you listen to something on the modern rock radio charts or "college radio" (which seems to take on its own genre) or even if you're like me and are all over the place with what you happen to listen to musically (and how) then I still think there is something within these songs you can come to appreciate.  

Now the question is whether or not this is the first time that I've been able to write such a review about this music simply because it is the first time that I've heard it become this good.   Either way, this could be one of my favorite albums not just of 2015 but of all time.

California X "Nights in the Dark" (Don Giovanni)


California X are a band that makes you think about California and the wonderful weather of the west coast.    I don't know myself why it is exactly, but I've had this conversation with a number of people before (some of them as band interviews) and there is just something about growing up on the east coast and dreaming of moving to California because it's all bright and sunny skies and not... Well, if you're in New England look out your window.

The big guitar rock sound of California X reminds me of something between Weezer and Piebald but also has that similar Featherface appeal which I do enjoy so much.     It's fuzzy, yet it's rock n roll at its finest.     Some Replacements come out but I also like to think of this as from that same sort of genre that made Bill and Ted want to save the universe.  (Wyld Stallyns rule!!)

A perfect fit on the "Mallrats" soundtrack or just out in the sun California X is the feeling we all long for of perfect weather and even those who do have still want to sing about it.   Snow might be taking over outside right now as I type this, but you can at least have a warmer weather state of mind by listening to "Nights in the Dark".

Desperate Journalist "Desperate Journalist" (Fierce Panda / Minty Fresh)


[£12 // Edition of 250 // http://desperatejournalist.bandcamp.com/merch/desperate-journalist-12-album]

Falling somewhere between the 1980's and the present, Desperate Journalist combines a good number of sounds to craft one their own.   From Duran Duran, Blondie, Concrete Blonde and R.E.M. to The Cranberries, The Box Tiger, Heart, Thursday and The Cure these songs are somewhere between punk and not because they can be fast paced at times while other times not as much.

It's a musical complexity as there are guitar notes galore and precision drumming and bass lines combined to make something that you might not otherwise think possible.   The songs have this appeal to them where the choruses tend to have hooks that get stuck in your head so in that way I'd also say they're a little pop but I can get metal riffs stuck in my head just as easily so don't quote me on the pop part.

I became a fan of Desperate Journalist listening to this album and hearing the various influence of other artists that I like, and even those which I don't like I can think of this as being a better version of them.    I only truly began to appreciate this though when I realized that for all of its influences I can name this still just stands tallest on its own merits.

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

RVNES+MASS "ALL MEN ARE PREY TO THE SAME BEAST"


[€5 to download //€12 for record // Edition of 100 // http://rvnes.bandcamp.com/album/all-men-are-prey-to-the-same-beast]

While I have previously heard and reviewed RVNES I'm not sure I've ever heard MASS before.   As I looked at these tracks I was trying to figure out which one went with which artist before remembering it was a collaboration (duh!) so that does make it a bit more interesting I'd say.

Right away this begins with some quieter background static and then the screams come out and random times.    The background tones of some aura do manage to pick up, as if to send us up and into the heavens, and I'm being reminded of I Like You, Go Home because of the screaming.    This takes on an almost eerie feeling, like a cemetary, as it drones on through.     We've gone from something in that uplifting sense to more of a realization and the screams do come back again after a short break as well.

As the first track gets closer to the end it does come out a bit heavier as well.   It's not so much that everything is falling apart or coming crashing down it's just the fact that it's all happening so quickly and all at once it would seem.    Everything you were feeling before about either dying or fear is just being escalated.

The second side begins like the first only without the screaming.    It's that foggy type of basement feel like you might find yourself stuck in during video game play.    Eventually, yes, the screams do come back but they seem muted at first, as if in the distance rather than at the forefront they were before.    As the music grows louder it almost becomes industrial, mechanical.

Interestingly enough this was put out as a record by An Out Recordings who also happen to have released the cassette I do like ever so much by Anna Vo called "The Condition".   Small world, eh?   Whether or not you're a fan of vinyl you should be looking for this one to own in a physical sense because, well, RVNES, you know?

Sylvia Monnier / Class of 69 split (supermalprodelica)


[€5 for Cassette // €7 to Download // https://supermalprodelica.bandcamp.com/album/sylvia-monnier-class-of-69-split]

I was a big fan of Sylvia Monnier's cassette "Lucinda's River" and as such I wanted to hear this one.    It's on a label from Paris though, so I'm sort of okay with just hearing the digital for now but eventually I will probably buy this on cassette if I can because it is rather good.

Sylvia Monnier has two tracks and the first begins with a ringing bowl hum.   There is guitar distortion in the background and then tones like a dialtone begin to beep as well.   Is it cliche to call it tone drone?    How about electronic ambient?   With space laser whirrs come record scratches and then tones begin to drop like gems, to borrow a phrase.     There is an eerie mystique to the next set of tones which come through will full on beats.

From here, Monnier shifts into a long stretch of drone which can only ever remind me of the opening to The Who's "Baba O'Riley" (just sit back, close your eyes and think about it)   Some whirrs come in with sonic lasers before it's over and then it ends on some banging for good measure.

This is my first time hearing Class of 69 and while I was in this split for Sylvia Monnier I must say that Class of 69 is more than just filler.    There is a lot of sharp ringing on repeat, cymbal rim taps and then it just seemingly grows louder until that Jay Peele bowl playing feel comes out.    It's somewhere between angels and ghosts before the change to sonar which reminds me of a submarine.    My point is only further proved by the beeping that presents itself as the sounds begin to come through in waves.

The beeping becomes more distant as the signal is seemingly growing lost and then the sounds of Jay Peele come back before all is said and done.    This split really had me because of the involvement of Sylvia Monnier but Class of 69 makes this a must have cassette.

Breakfast in Fur "Flyaway Garden" (Bar/None Records)


When I was first introduced to Breakfast in Fur it was because of a split record they did with Shana Falana, the poster of which is still on my wall, reminding me of them every day.   I instantly fell in love with them when I bought that record and now they have released their first proper full length and I'm glad to be listening to it.  

For the most part, the songs found on "Flyaway Garden" are dreamy like something from the "Juno" soundtrack but then there is also something else to them where they're not quite from the 1980's or 1990's in that new wave sense but along those same lines.    The first song is fast paced but then throughout the rest of the album they can be moderately paced or slower.

With whispy vocals ala Smashing Pumpkins or Silversun Picksups there are moments where the vocals project sound rather than actual words and at other times they are simply not there.   Woodwinds come into play to set the tone for this feeling like Jim Morrison lost in the desert so, yes, you could also say it has a bit of classic rock/psychedelic appeal to it.

To be fair, the title track is 1:11 with meditated breathing exercises for vocals as opposed to something catchy where the title is sung in the chorus or just once so when you hear it you go, "Ooooh!  That's the name of the record!!" and as such this isn't too much traditional about "Flyaway Garden" but I wouldn't have it any other way.

The Dreaming "Rise Again"


I loved Stabbing Westward and still do to this very day.    The Dreaming is "former members" of Stabbing Westward but, yeah, this sounds exactly like them so I think it's only different in its name.     The thing about Stabbing Westward though is that they haven't had new music since 2001 which was fourteen years ago.   i see them as a 1990's band (even though their last release came in early 21st century) and having them take that break between then and new music (though under a new name) leaves this questionable.

Don't get me wrong: I love these songs.   They are the shot of adrenaline that music needs right now.   For a new generation, a younger bunch of music listeners who have perhaps not heard of Stabbing Westward before, this will be great for them.   But any time an aritst puts out a new album it's always a question of why listen to the new one when I have the old one which I've grown fond of and have had for so long already.

For The Dreaming they're working at an uphill battle because I've had some of those Stabbing Westward albums for longer than most people who might need to hear this one have been alive.    So, yes, I might go to Stabbing Westward more than not but sometimes I will try and slip "Rise Again" into the mix because I still see it as a Stabbing Westward album.

Meat Wave "Brother" (Brace Yourself)


Meat Wave brings forth seven songs of punk rock n roll that can be anything from Trail of Dead and Local H to Foo Fighters.   Elements of Cadillac Blindside can also come out in these songs, which feel like a step above something you'd hear on Burger Records, and it just has that heavier side to it as well, so hence the emphasis on the word ROCK.

Mr Oizo "The Church"


Though this was released digitally in 2014 the CD version came out in 2015 and whatever the date is it doesn't matter because I've been looking for a reason to start listening to Mr. Oizo and this is my- and perhaps your- best way to get into these songs.    They're electronic at their heart but they have so much more than that.    It's audio samplings and beats mixed in ways I cannot describe.

You know, often times when I listen to music it can paint images in my head which in turn makes me think of it being the soundtrack to a movie.   It's hard to think of this as being the soundtrack to anything other than one of his films (I suggest "Wrong Cops") but the fact remains that if you like those films and the music in them then you shall like this as well.   And yes, that works both ways.     Just all around respect for this talented human being.

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Raphi Gottesman "Signed, Noisemaker" (fluere tapes)


[$5 to Download // SOLD OUT on cassette // https://flueretapes.bandcamp.com/album/signed-noisemaker]

This was sent to me as a download and I am reviewing it as such because the cassette version of it sold out rather quickly from what I gather.    As I came to find via Bandcamp this is on a label called Fluere Tapes which has released music by Grand Mal, Strange Mountain and a cloudsound cassette I thought I was getting once upon a time, but anyway it is in good company so the fact that this artist reached out to me coupled with the company this release keeps has me interested before I even listen to it.

The music on "Signed, Noisemaker" is quiet and of the FNL variety.   There are mostly guitar notes played with a trumpet on the first song and piano notes later on (some of which have that church organ vibe)   It's calm, serene and soothing but not enough to put you to sleep.   Sometimes a song such as "Older Than Ferns", the last song, can even remind me of The Cancer Conspiracy.

Overall this seems to grow more solemn from start to finish, almost as if to make the end result- a transition into nothingness because it's over- feel like that much easier to take.    This might not be available on cassette any more but you should still listen to this and keep your ear to the ground for Raphi Gottesman who is sure to do more beautiful things following this one.

Nidhamu "Live Electronics & Drones" (supermalprodelica)


[€5 for Cassette // €7 to Download // https://supermalprodelica.bandcamp.com/album/live-electronics-drones]

This cassette is broken down into three different tracks, which two of would have to be on the first side due to length.   It's hard to imagine this being anything outside of its title but here we go anyway.

The first track is the middle in terms of length (neither the shortest nor longest) and it has high pitched electronics which sometimes can come through too sharply for even these veteran ears.   There are only slight frequency changes and as such it's got those elements of drone, which again is what the title claims.   It's almost like whale sounds or some form of sonar but before it ends there are darker tones of drone with some reverberating waves.

The second track is the shortest but is also "Part 2" to the first track so it makes sense they'd go together on Side A in that regard.    This track is full of stomping beats which have ooooh's in the background like a game of Pong.   They almost can turn into sonic booms with an aura of mystery and though it is the shortest of the tracks it does show the most character (That is to say seems the least bit drone)

Finally we have the third and final track which is also Side B and not coincidentally happens to be the same length as the first two tracks combined.    These are dark tone waves and eventually they have some slight beats in them (but ever so slightly, not too noticeable or heavy) and this is just the pure epitomy of what you think of when you see the word drone.

It is somewhat difficult to say anything about this that the title doesn't already sum up in a much more concise manner but I still do enjoy it and for fans of, um, what the title says you'll be wanting to add this one to your wish list as a cassette.

CVBox "What You Hear Is What You Get" (Lunatic Records)


[€11 for Record // Edition of 300 // €3 for Download // https://lunaticrecords.bandcamp.com/album/what-you-hear-is-what-you-get-lun03]

Moderately paced electronic numbers that tow the line between electronica and 8bit music.   Somewhat of The Prodigy or something else I am unfamiliar with and somewhat of the Beastie Boys these instrumental songs will either have you in a trance or make your body dance.

The first of these four songs is actually exclusive to the record release as well, so if you want to hear that one you're going to have to buy the record because it will not come as a download for you.     After listening to this enough times and without the first track I can tell you that having "Hitchhike the Plain" kick things off does seem to help the overall flow of this.

While I realize that a U.S. dollar is not worth as much as a pound you have to think of this download as being a pound per song (which hence is more than a dollar per song, but still) so in that sense it does kind of work out for you but I'd still say you need that first movement for the complete experience and as any DJ in any club can tell you, yes, this will sound most excellent spinning on vinyl.

Boom Said Thunder "Summer Twin"


[Name Your Price Download // http://boomsaidthunder.bandcamp.com/album/summer-twin]

I'm not sure what helped me find these two new songs by Boom Said Thunder, but Bandcamp is dropping the ball by not telling me that they were released.    Much like with their full length album this is just vocals belted out amidst complex rock and distortion.   It's somewhat like K's Choice and yet also somewhat calmer than certain songs found on their full length.    It kicks in a lot though and reminds me of Hum in other ways.

If you've really ever read what I write then these two songs will be a nice companion to the full length you should already be rocking by Boom Said Thunder.    The thing is, these two songs aren't so much like a single as they are an entire EP because they're just full of so much.    But I wouldn't be surprised to see them released as a 7" or cassingle in the very near future.  (Please?)

Dreamghost "Everything Is Alright" (Shoeboxx Recordings)


[Name Your Price Download // https://shoeboxxrecordings.bandcamp.com/album/everything-is-alright]

When I first got the email about a new release from Shoeboxx Recordings via Bandcamp I was hoping that it was going to be Dreamghost and though it is a digital only release I'll take what I can get from this amazing melody maker

These four songs should put you on an electric cloud between their piano and harp riffs that can only be pulled off in this manner by so many artists.    Basically, it's taking something special to do what is happening here without it sounding wrong and Dreamghost is doing just that.

As much as I was pleased with the Dreamghost cassette I reviewed before this I also enjoy these songs which you could be cliche about and say they put you on "Cloud 9", with their uplifting appeal, but I like to think of them more as being on some sort of bliss cloud and, yes, someone should totally make "bliss-cloud" a thing.

ENL1TE "Five Tracks"




















https://soundcloud.com/enl1te

I downloaded five songs from ENL1TE's Soundcloud and are reviewing them as an EP of sorts even though they seem to be singles.   The first two are with Tammy Infusion and are called "Greedy" and "Way Out".    The other three are with Valerie Broussard and are titled "Silent", "Superman" and "Vertigo".

These are all pop songs as they all have hooks, but they have that soul quality to them as well.    It's electronic on some levels but in other ways it reminds me of something straight out pop on the radio and all I can think right now is back to the songs where Nicki Minaj sings as opposed to raps and Rihanna... that sort of idea.

The thing is that any of these five songs should be on the radio right now and it'd make for an easy number one hit.    To offer up some full disclosure, I've been listening to the radio somewhat lately and I do hear pop songs more because my three year old likes them.    So there is this one particular song I keep hearing and I kind of like it but never hear the artist name.  

One day when I was at home thinking about it (and not driving because I always hear it when I'm driving and can't google then) I googled the lyrics to see who it was by.    I'm not going to tell you who it was by because it's somewhat embarassing and I don't embarass easily, but I will tell you that any of these tracks by ENL1TE would not be embarassing to admit you like.    Play them loud so your neighbors can thank you later.

新しいコンピュータのOS 98 "新しいコンピュータのOS 98" (STC Records)


[$3 for Cassette // Edition of 8 // https://stcrecords.bandcamp.com/album/os-98]

The first song on here is a somewhat acoustic, dreamy, blissful serene number.   The second is a short interlude before the final two songs come on and have that 1980's/Miami Vice/Beverly Hills Cop feel mixed with New Kids on the Block.     This is very nice for what you should release on cassette and I would like to know more.    Everybody wants to rule the world, indeed.

On the last song it sounds specifically like something is about to go down in some movie from the late 1980's or early 1990's, maybe like Christian Slater's "Kuffs".    The description also says that the cassette comes with bonus tracks so I might have to consider buying this one.   I don't know, but I do want to hear more songs like this.