Thursday, December 30, 2010

Happy New Year- Now for Some Satanic Disco Shit

I only joined this blog this year, and since relocating to Seattle I haven't checked in or contributed often. Collectively, though, you guys have enriched my musical life in this short time more than I could attest to in a court of law. I never would have gotten into Wild Nothing or Kurt Vile if not for following the trail of taste crumbs you guys dropped this year, and I know there were lots of other leads I got here that I'm not remembering off the top of my head. Kurt Vile though- thanks.

Since I haven't been carrying my weight around here, I wanted to crawl a couple inches toward returning the favor.

First, the Satanic disco shit. If you're into Front 242, My Life with the Thrill Kill Kult, or Black Devil Disco Club, you might get a kick out of the retro-sinister industrial stomp and end of the world sampling shitstorm of Gatekeeper and their EP Giza . I don't know much about them, but sometimes that's the way I like to keep it. Facts just get in the way, make us weak, give Beelzebub meaty human form and body image issues. No good. I was trolling blogs and checked this out spurred on by the Jean-Michel Jarre record art alone, and I kept listening because of the subliminal messages telling me I had to.




Second thing- if any of you fans of Kurt Vile haven't listened to this already, you should really check out Sweet Lights. This is Philadelphia musician Shai Halperin, former member of The Capitol Years and The War on Drugs (for whom the inimitable long-haired turtle man Kurt Vile also played), and his self-titled record here is just good, clean amazing.


Happy new year.

Monday, December 27, 2010

Big City

Back when I first moved to the city. Sound Library was the THE spot. It was like the top shelf beat diggers paradise record store. Japanese tourists would fly here and drop G's there. This Madlib video was shot there. The kind of place where you would be like "Oh damn! I've only heard about that!" then check the price tag and get bummed because the record is between $60-$100 bucks...

Anywho, i guess it was owned by these two British guys. They had a falling out, and one of them kept the name and moved the store to the LES. The other guy opened "Big City" records like a block over from Academy in the East Village.

The Big City guy decided to open a new store, and of all the places in the world he could pick, dude chooses my town in New Jersey, like 5 minutes away from my house! So, on the one hand i'm psyched... on the other hand, my checking account will surely feel the wrath.

This dude was in "good-will mode" with the opening, with a ton of killer records, a little chewed up, under $10 bucks. I hit it up three weeks in a row. Here are some of the gems I got. For any of you WWALT members feeling bad for not paying money for music in 2010, I got us covered.

Here are the pics, excuse my stir crazy children getting in on the act:
















Happy New Years.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

2010 wrap-up

Since my main ninja DC Loochatron threw down the gauntlet about the 2010 "best of" post, I gotta answer the call. I feel like, overall, this year was slow for me in regards to acquiring, digesting, and appraising new music. Some years are just like that. I feel like it was a year of "comfort music," where I really just relied on tried and true tracks from the past to take me to my happy place.
However, I wasn't completely asleep at the wheel in 2010, so the little that I came across in my musical endeavors I will share with you now...

Best Album: "Halcyon Digest" - Deerhunter. Everyone's kinda jocking this band hard right now, but eff it. It's a really really great listen. I do hope that Deerhunter brings back more of their Sonic Youth/noise/experimental influence in the future, though. Don't get me wrong, there are some tracks on this record that are basically sonic perfection. I must have listened to "Desire Lines" 100 times in the past two months.


Best older stuff I finally got around to: The Misfits. I never really ever listened to these guys. I think the whole "horror" thing turned me off for a long time and put me off listening to any of their stuff. For some reason I thought I'd get (read: download) a bunch of their stuff and check it out. It's really amazing. They carve out two-minute gems of high-energy punk with lyrics about demons, monsters, and aliens. Pretty cool.

Old Boards Of Canada EPs - There are a lot of fakes out there claiming to be BOC EPs, but there are some legit ones as well, like "Hi Scores." I've been rocking this one nonstop. Favorite tracks are "Hi Scores," "Seeya Later," "Everything You Do Is A Balloon."

Best video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAAET-VLAxI&feature=related

Best "electronica": "Oversteps" - Autechre
"Cosmogramma" - Flying Lotus
"Combed Over Chrome" - Raleigh Moncrief
"Songs For Trees And Cyborgs" - Robot Koch

Blog I found most of my 2010 downloads on: http://earpussyhm.blogspot.com/

Best album coupled with best use of bizarre "ET porn" in a live show: "Maniac Meat" - Tobacco. Killer album. And yes, the live show featured some visuals of esoteric German pornography depicting ET having sex with humans. Ew.

Best music news of 2010: Godspeed You! Black Emperor announced their North American tour.

Lamest news: John Mayer is still allowed to make music.

Saddest news: The death of Captain Beefheart.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Best of 2010 Post



Humbled by a venerable WWLTN tradition, I submit to you, dear reader, my best of 2010 in no particular order. I just checked and the grand tally is just under 33 gigs of music this year. Is that a lot or a little? Not all of the albums below came out this year (though most did), it’s just this year that I got hip to them.

Megafortress: Stumbled into Zebulon one night after being ambushed by giant litres of beer at Radegast and this dude blew my mind. In 2010 I spent many a night at Zebulon checking out the experimental music they tend to feature early in the week, never a cover charge, across the street from my apartment in Williamsburg, that dynamic itself was a musical highlight in 2010 for me. Anyway, Megafortress is Bill Gillam and it’s just him sitting Indian style in front of a whole row of effects, he’s got some flute-like mic and he gets these deep Gregorian monk vocals going over god-like electronic pulses and it’s pretty amazing. You can download his EP off myspace and he posts stuff a lot on his soundcloud page.

Koen Holtkamp, Field Rituals: Koen H. is one half of the ambient duo Mountains, if you like their stuff you’d like this, I listened to it a lot in 2010.

Deerhunter/Atlas Sound: I saw Atlas Sound, Deerhunter lead singer Bradford Cox’s solo project, at the Bell House last Saturday night. Dude has marfan syndrome, is often in drag, and is kind of freaky looking. He’s also super-talented, kind of a weird shaman. I’m scared of him and awed by him. I like Deerhunter, but they are kind of hit or miss to me. “Fountain Stairs” is the catchiest thing they’ve written and I loved that song right away, and “Earthquake”, the first track off their new album, Halcyon Digest, became one of my favorite songs of the year (the hissing sounds, the weird electric/acoustic robot guitar, the underwater vocals). But I’m not crazy about the whole album. I’m a bigger fan of Atlas Sound, which has some great "songs" but is half brilliant ambient music. I didn’t know what to expect live, but thought he’d actually have a few people playing with him. But it was just him solo, acoustic guitar through effects and a harmonica and vocals. Fucking amazing, I’ve never seen someone make music that way. The Bell House was sold out and people we’re hanging on every moment (see attached photo), you could hear a pin drop between songs, the whole place waiting on every mumbled sentence Cox uttered, the bashful weird kid, effeminate and bullied, who became a rock god.

The Black Keys, Brothers: These guys just put out good albums, great driving music. “Everlasting light” and “Sinister Kid” are best of 2010 status.

Kurt Vile, God is Saying this to You: I like the other Kurt Vile albums but I like his acoustic low-fi stuff a lot more than his full-on rock band. Great song-writer, manages to be weird and still write killer melodies. “My Sympathy” and “My Best Friends”, top 2010 tracks.

Storm & Stress, Under Thunder and Fluorescent Light: This is a band from the early 2000s I think, a trio with the unique Kevin Shea on drums. Kevin plays in dozens of bands and is one of the most deeply weird and distinctive musicians I’ve ever been around. Word is he hates Storm & Stress now, despising it’s hipster indie-rock milieu, and he’s certainly now moved into way more bizarre territory. This year one of the most memorable shows I saw was a show he put on at the Kitchen, the famous Chelsea performance space. My friend Tim Dahl came out in a platinum wig to “Move Bitch” and got on a platform where a synthesizer and mic awaited him and rapped along with Ludacris to start things off. The rest of the crew came out, including a bassist dressed as Jesus, and they basically destroyed pop music for an hour, all with a screen of the movie 300 and it’s scenes of gore violence going on silently at the front of the stage. It was alternately excruciating and hilarious, but also had moments of musical synchronicity, as the stillborn child of melody occasionally peered its head out of the abortion that actually was the music. Anyway, I first heard Storm & Stress this year, and to me it’s more jazz on the thrill-jockey tip than it is indie-rock. Check out the band and also all of Kevin Shea’s shit.

Child Abuse, Cut & Run: another local act, Tim Dahl’s main band, a few of their shows make my top 2010 list and their album came out this year as well. No one really knows what to make of these guys. They tour with metal bands sometimes but they are not really metal; I’ve heard some extreme math rock bands that sound a little like them, but the screaming vocals and laser-sounding synth take it out of that area; and beneath it all there is a core of avant-composers like John Cage or Stockhausen. Not music to be taken lightly.

Tallest Man on Earth, The Wild Hunt: Great album, and one of best shows of the year was this guy’s show at Webster Hall. Sweden’s pride, Kristian Matsson, is getting a lot of recognition and all of it is well deserved.

Future Islands, In Evening Air: Another memorable show that introduced me to a band this year. Saw these guys at Death by Audio on my birthday. Death by Audio is a total dive, wires hanging from the ceilings, weird bathrooms; off-label whiskey, PBR cans and cheap red wine are sold from a table in the back. Future Islands are a trio from Baltimore, Animal Collective meets Danzig, ecstatic crowd, small venue, great time.

Local Natives, Gorilla Manor; The Morning Benders, The Big Echo: I was listening to both these albums in the spring a lot, both debuts, really solid. One of my best memories of 2010 is listening to the Morning Benders (and lots of dub) in Jamaica at a friend’s wedding with a huge spliff, seaside.

Das Racist, Bike for Three!, Blakroc: These were the only three albums/bands (in that order) that hit my radar hard in terms of hip hop.

Washed Out, Twin Shadow, Neon Indian: I actually got Neon Indian at the end of 2009, but I listened to a lot of electronic stuff like this in 2010. Twin Shadow’s “Tyrant Destroyed” and “Castles in the Snow” are on my top tracks list, as is Washed Out’s “Feel it All Around”.

Spoon, Transference: They just put out quality album after quality album, “Who makes you money” is one of my favorite tracks of the year.

Warpaint: I guess their debut album was self-released in 2008 (and is either self-titled or called Exquisite Corpse), their latest, The Fool, came out this past fall, but I got both this year and I’m a fan of this band.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

DC 2010 Best Of Joint



OK, so maybe "face melting" was a little strong, but here's the DC Loocha 2010 year end wrap up.

Best Old School Thing I learned about this year: Relatively Clean Rivers. http://whatwearelisteningto.blogspot.com/2010/03/relatively-clean-rivers.html. My man Record Mike tipped me off to these guys saying he heard a RCR influence in the Monastics. Well, I'm not feeling that, especially, but it did get me running to Captain Crawl pretty quick, and the result was huge. Top shelf borderline cheese garage, CSNY-wannabe, Skip Spence level shit. So good. Some solid gold bangers on here, best song of all time category, especially "Hello Sunshine" which is my kids' favorite song of all time. PLUS, an OG copy of the vinyl sold on eBay for almost fucking $800 dollars ?!?!?!?!?! Check it out. That shit's crazy. You know what that breaks down to on a per-song basis?!?! But it's totally worth it. If i stumbled on this randomly in a thrift shop somewhere my fucking brain would have exploded.

Best catch phrase of 2010: "Stay Liquid"

Most epic vinyl score: Meh, I'll say that Eno box set I got at a Garage Sale 4/25 but i reserve the right to renig on that statement.
http://whatwearelisteningto.blogspot.com/2010/04/garage-sale-scores.html

Most poignant question asked in 2010: "Do you think Devo got a lot of ass back in the day?"

Best Album of 2010: Best album that came out in 2010? I don't even know, I feel like I'm kind of out of touch on the Pitchfork/Rolling Stone level of shit, so I'll go with the last Deerhunter album, that's a pretty sure bet. It was very very good.

Best New Thing I Scored: I'm going to go with that live Emeralds bootleg from 10/4, I'm a big fan and those recordings sound great and the shows were intense. http://whatwearelisteningto.blogspot.com/2010/10/live-emeralds.html

Best band of 2010: I'm going to say, pound for pound, as far as number of plays in iTunes and true happiness a band brought me in 2010, I gotta go with Das Racist as my #1 band of 2010. After initially being like "Is this too jokey for me?" I very quickly got on board, and proceeded to listen to both of those mix tapes 1,000,000 times. Pretty much all the way through every time, too. And really, every time it starts, I get a little bounce in my step and a smile on my face and a nod in my head. "Who's that? Brown - Brown-B- Br- B- Browwwn!!!" That shit is awesome. Fave band of 2010.

First place I ever heard of Die Antwoord: My man "CS" on 6/25. http://whatwearelisteningto.blogspot.com/2010/06/die-antwoord.html

Most epic mind blowing shit of 2010: That Justin Bieber slowed-down/Sigor Ros sounding ambient thing. That was insane. The fact that something that beautiful and intense could be extracted from a 2 1/2 minute slice of throw away pop. After a minute I was like "hahaha, it sounds like Sigor Ros!" Then at 4 1/2 minutes I was like "Wow, this is actually really good!" and at the 15 minute mark I was like "OH MY GOD! OH MY GOD! DOUBLE RAINBOW ALL THE WAY! I FEEL SO GOOOD! BOO HOO HOO HA HA HA!!"

Happy Merry.

dc

BenoƮt Pioulard/J D Emmanuel

I'm working on best of 2010 list, but thought I'd mention two recent discoveries.

id Reverberations is the blog that Headdress album (which I like a lot) was on. I found Benoit Poulard, aka Thomas Meluch, on there, he's a low-fi song-writer on the Elliott Smith, Kurt Vile tip. I also like J D Emmanuel's early 80s synth album, Wizards, which reminds me a little bit of Mark McGuire.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

WWLTN 2010 reflections


Humbled by a venerable WWLN tradition, I submit to you, dear reader, my best of 2010 in no particular order. I just checked and the grand tally is just under 33 gigs of music this year. Is that a lot or a little? Not all of the albums below came out this year (though most did), it’s just this year that I got hip to them.

Megafortress: Stumbled into Zebulon one night after being ambushed by giant litres of beer at Radegast and this dude blew my mind. In 2010 I spent many a night at Zebulon checking out the experimental music they tend to feature early in the week, never a cover charge, across the street from my apartment in Williamsburg, that dynamic itself was a musical highlight in 2010 for me. Anyway, Megafortress is Bill Gillam and it’s just him sitting Indian style in front of a whole row of effects, he’s got some flute-like mic and he gets these deep Gregorian monk vocals going over god-like electronic pulses and it’s pretty amazing. You can download his EP off myspace and he posts stuff a lot on his soundcloud page.


Koen Holtkamp, Field Rituals: Koen H. is one half of the ambient duo Mountains, if you like their stuff you’d like this, I listened to it a lot in 2010.


Deerhunter/Atlas Sound: I saw Atlas Sound, Deerhunter lead singer Bradford Cox’s solo project, at the Bell House last Saturday night. Dude has marfan syndrome, is often in drag, and is kind of freaky looking. He’s also super-talented, kind of a weird shaman. I’m scared of him and awed by him. I like Deerhunter, but they are kind of hit or miss to me. “Fountain Stairs” is the catchiest thing they’ve written and I loved that song right away, and “Earthquake”, the first track off their new album, Halcyon Digest, became one of my favorite songs of the year (the hissing sounds, the weird electric/acoustic robot guitar, the underwater vocals). But I’m not crazy about the whole album. I’m a bigger fan of Atlas Sound, which has some great "songs" but is half brilliant ambient music. I didn’t know what to expect live, but thought he’d actually have a few people playing with him. But it was just him solo, acoustic guitar through effects and a harmonica and vocals. Fucking amazing, I’ve never seen someone make music that way. The Bell House was sold out and people we’re hanging on every moment (see attached photo), you could hear a pin drop between songs, the whole place waiting on every weird mumbled sentence Cox uttered, the bashful weird kid, effeminate and bullied, who became a rock god.

The Black Keys, Brothers: These guys just put out good albums, great driving music. “Everlasting light” and “Sinister Kid” are best of 2010 status.


Kurt Vile, God is Saying this to You: I like the other Kurt Vile albums but I like his acoustic low-fi stuff a lot more than his full-on rock band. Great song-writer, manages to be weird and still write killer melodies. “My Sympathy” and “My Best Friends”, top 2010 tracks.


Storm & Stress, Under Thunder and Fluorescent Light: This is a band from the early 2000s I think, a trio with the unique Kevin Shea on drums. Kevin plays in dozens of bands and is one of the most deeply weird and distinctive musicians I’ve ever been around. Word is he hates Storm & Stress now, despising it’s hipster indie-rock milieu, and he’s certainly now moved into way more bizarre territory. This year one of the most memorable shows I saw was a show he put on at the Kitchen, the famous Chelsea performance space. My friend Tim Dahl came out in a platinum wig to “Move Bitch” and got on a platform where a synthesizer and mic awaited him and rapped along with Ludacris to start things off. The rest of the crew came out, including a bassist dressed as Jesus, and they basically destroyed pop music for an hour, all with a screen of the movie 300 and it’s scenes of gore violence going on silently at the front of the stage. It was alternately excruciating and hilarious, but also had moments of musical synchronicity, as the stillborn child of melody occasionally peered it’s head out of the abortion that actually was the music. Anyway, I first heard Storm & Stress this year, and to me it’s more jazz on the thrill-jockey tip than it is indie-rock. Check out the band and also all of Kevin Shea’s shit.


Child Abuse, Cut & Run: another local act, Tim Dahl’s main band, a few of their shows make my top 2010 list and their album came out this year as well. No one really knows what to make of these guys. They tour with metal bands sometimes but they are not really metal; I’ve heard some extreme math rock bands that sound a little like them, but the screaming vocals and laser-sounding synth take it out of that area; and beneath it all there is a core of avant-composers like John Cage or Stockhausen. Not music to be taken lightly.


Tallest Man on Earth, The Wild Hunt: Great album, and one of best shows of the year was this guy’s show at Webster Hall. Sweden’s pride, Kristian Matsson, is getting a lot of recognition and all of it is well deserved.


Future Islands, In Evening Air: Another memorable show that introduced me to a band this year. Saw these guys at Death by Audio on my birthday. Death by Audio is a total dive, wires hanging from the ceilings, weird bathrooms; off-label whiskey, PBR cans and cheap red wine are sold from a table in the back. Future Islands are a trio from Baltimore, animal collective meets Danzig, ecstatic crowd, small venue, great time.

Local Natives, Gorilla Manor; The Morning Benders, The Big Echo: I was listening to both these albums in the spring a lot, both debuts, really solid. One of my best memories of 2010 is listening to the Morning Benders (and lots of dub) in Jamaica at a friend’s wedding with a huge spliff, seaside.

Das Racist, Bike for Three!, Blakroc: These were the only three albums/bands (in that order) that hit my radar hard in terms of hip hop.

Washed Out, Twin Shadow, Neon Indian: I actually got Neon Indian at the end of 2009, but I listened to a lot of electronic stuff like this in 2010. Twin Shadow’s “Tyrant Destroyed” and “Castles in the Snow” are on my top tracks list, as is Washed Out’s “Feel it All Around”.


Spoon, Transference: They just put out quality album after quality album, “Who makes you money” is one of my favorite tracks of the year.

Warpaint: I guess their debut album was self-released in 2008 (and is either self-titled or called Exquisite Corpse), their latest, The Fool, came out this past fall, but I got both this year and I’m a fan of this band.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Saharan Cellphones Again



If anyone was digging on the Saharan cell phones tape, the second volume is up at ghostcapital right now.  I loved the first one, can't wait to get to the second one . . .

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Rob Crow EP and home recording question



Rob Crow is the main singer/guitarist of Pinback. I saw him do a little acoustic set recently in LA and it was pretty nifty. He knocked out something like 30 songs in about 45-50 minutes, mostly playing them all back-to-back-to-back with a few hilarious stories and personal anecdotes woven in for good measure.

One thing that's really cool about Crow and the Pinback guys in general is that they tend to bring a lot of random home recording projects and "tour-only EPs" to sell as merch when they're on the road. But it's not just throw-away shit; the quality level is usually pretty damned high.

Case and point, here is a 6-song tour-only CD that Rob Crow was selling, that I've put on yousendit for anyone who's interested:

https://www.yousendit.com/download/cEd0ZFhqSEJRYTljR0E9PQ

This one is all cover songs that he recorded himself. Here's the tracklist:

1. Fear - I Am a Doctor
2. Snake Finger - Man in the Dark Sedan
3. Devo - Deep Sleep
4. Wall of Voodoo - Call Box
5. Captain Beefheart - Click Clack
6. Samhain - Archangel

If you're into any of the above artists/bands, I hope you'll check it out, b/c these are some pretty great little covers.

Which leads me to my question about home recording..... I know that Rob Crow recorded all of these tracks himself, and obviously the guy has a lot of recording experience. But one thing I'm trying to figure out is how he might have recorded the drums on these tracks.

If anyone has any ideas on that, please post them here or email me at: ator_iv AT yahoodotcom

Monday, December 6, 2010

Headdress - Turquoise



This is a record I picked up in the used bin at Other Music a while back. It had a good vibe and it was on Mexican Summer label (home of Valet, Real Estate, and Kurt Vile releases...) and it was under $10.00. Maybe $5.00? So i gambled on it with no other knowledge.

It has slowly grown on me. It is in heavy rotation for the crucial after-10:00PM-on-a-weeknight slot. It's super mellow, reverby guitars, I don't even think there are drums.

Because the music is kind of anonymous and since i bought it in a vacuum with no info about the band, i think i took it for granted. But the other night I had the A-HA moment where i realized "Hey, this is really great record!"

I found it on this blog, here you go my friends.

Check it out.

There is one track where these guys do coyote/wolf howling sounds for like a solid minute... don't let that turn you off, just fast forward it.

I got a mega post in the wings, and my epic 2010 wrap up which will blow minds.

dc