Aught Not To Forget: The Most Underrated Records of the Decade

November 30, 2009 at 10:09 pm | Posted in Aughts, Best of, mp3, Music | 23 Comments
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I was going to do a list of my favorite records of the 00′s, but as I was getting my list together I started to realize it was kind of boring.  Really, how many music blogs do you need to tell you the same thing? That’s when I began thinking about the records that came out over last 10 years that I thought were criminally ignored, or just didn’t seem to get a fair shake.   So what I’ve got for you is a list of my most underrated albums of the decade. Every one of these records shoulda been a hit, but because the world is a cruel, cruel place they never were.

Putting this list together was a lot of fun, because it allowed me to make amends for some records that I missed the year they came out.  There is not a year that goes by that I don’t discover my favorite album from the previous year in March of the next year.  And so it goes….you’ll find a lot albums on this list that never made one of my year end lists from the past ten years.  I can assure you though, that everyone of these would make my top 100 albums of the aughts. I just thought focusing on the underdogs would be a little more interesting than seeing some list with the same records as every other list out there.  Hope that I have half-succeeded. Oh, and yeah, I know that the decade is officially over at the end of 2010, but I start counting at zero.

It’s Jo and DannyLank Haired Girl To Bearded Boy (2000: Double Snazzy)

This was one of those buys where I was in a record store flipping through CD’s and saw a cover that caught my eye.  I remember opening it up and seeing that Dan Treacy of Television Personalities had written the liner notes and thinking, that it’s got to be good.  Unheard, I bought this at some overpriced record shop in Paris (I’m so cosmopolitan) and it soon thereafter became my favorite record for months on end.  It’s got elements of Mazzy Star and shoegaze, but seems to carve out it’s own space making it kind of unclassifiable and kinda special.  They would put out three more albums in the decade, but none came as close to perfection as Lank Haired Girl.  To this day, I have no idea which one is Jo and which one is Danny.

mp3: It’s Jo & Danny – Repentant Song


mp3: It’s Jo & Danny – Solar Plexus


The FallThe Unutterable (2000: Eagle)

It’s just like Mark E Smith to come back from near disaster with an amazing album. After being arrested for assault of his then girlfriend Julia Nagel in New York and having his long time band quit on him Smith returned with an entire new band and the Unutterable. He’d done it before, releasing Extricate after Brix left him, so there is some sort of precedence. It’s amazing how the Fall can still sound vital some 30 years into it, but they do, and this is example number one for the aughts (see also Heads Roll and Country on the Click).

mp3: The Fall – Cyber Insekt


mp3: The Fall – Dr. Buck’s Letter


MooseHigh Ball Me (2000: Le Grand Magistery)

Moose never officially broke up, so I still hold out hope.  High Ball Me was their fourth and last album. All three previous records were criminally ignored, so why should this one be any different.  The perennial underdogs, Moose made such great albums to the delight of those lucky enough to hear them.   High Ball Me is no different except that this one got released not only in the UK but in the US, a first for the band.  There was no slide in quality on High Ball Me.  Incorporating Nilson, Buckly, Hazlewood and House of Love into an intricate wall of sound that Phil Spector would envy.  It’s downright lush!

mp3: Moose -Can’t Get Enough of You


mp3: Moose -Pretend We Never Met


Broadcast - The Noise Made By People (2000: Warp)

Before Broadcast became a laptop band, they were actually a real band and The Noise Made By People was the culmination of their autumnal space-age pop.  It had an icy cold and unfeeling demeanor like Nico, but there was a glow to it like the Mamas and the Papas and a fiery intensity like Jefferson Airplane.  You get the picture, it has a definite 60′s feel to it, but it has it without sounding too derivative.  I remember seeing them at the Knitting Factory in LA for their tour to promote the album, and Broadcast as a full band in a live setting so greatly surpassed what they had put down on tape.  Trish Keenan’s voice, the retro light show, the noise created by the keyboards, but mostly the guitars filled the room with a hazy shade of winter.  Take note chillwave/laptop groups, you need a band, otherwise it’s just watching a guy clicking a mouse.

mp3: Broadcast – Come On Let’s Go


mp3: Broadcast – Echo’s Answer


Goldfrapp - Felt Mountain (2000: Mute)

Some of the sounds on Goldfrapp’s debut album are otherworldly. It’s all strings and computers, but it sounds like it came from outer space.  Outer space circa circa 1960, something akin to Peter Thomas’s soundtrack to Raumpatrouille.  Alisson Goldfrapp looks like she could have been a Bond girl and has a voice to match. Before making Felt Mountain with Will Gregory, she had appeared on albums by Tricky and Orbital, so this record and its cinematic trip hop didn’t come out of nowhere, but the yodeling kind of did.

mp3: Goldfrapp -Lovely Head


mp3: Goldfrapp – Utiopia


The Aislers SetThe Last Match (2000: Slumberland)

You know what I do with this album?  I probably shouldn’t say this, but I only listen to the Amy Linton songs.  No offense to Wyatt Cusak (he sings 3 of the 14 songs on the album), but I’m a sucker for that girl group sound augmented with a big wall of guitars and that is what Linton specializes in.  The Aislers Set are kind of the Rosetta Stone of Slumberland, the linchpin of the label that links the seminal Black Tambourine to the current crop of bands like Lichtenstein, Brilliant Colors, Grass Widow, and Frankie Rose.  If there was a song that came out in the year 2000 that is better than the lead off track The Way To Market Station, I have yet to hear it.

mp3: Aislers Set -The Way To Market Station


mp3: Aislers Set – Hit the Snow


Animals That SwimHappiness From a Distant Star (2001: Snowstorm)

Admittedly Happiness from a Distant Star is not the best Animals that Swim album, that honor would got to I was the King, I Really Was the King, but Animals that Swim are so good that their third best album (they only made three) is better than anything someone like Sufijan Stevens could ever, ever come up with in his wildest dreams.  Singer Hank Stars is like the UK version of Silver Jews’ Dave Berman.  He paints vivid pictures of the down on their luck and downtrodden characters and does it with such an eye for melody and melancholy that you find yourself swept up in stories about Uncle Mackie, aliens and letter writing.

mp3: Animals That Swim- Mackie’s Wake


mp3: Animals That Swim -The Moon and the Mothership


The American Analog Set - Know By Heart (2001: Tigersyle)

Up until Know By Heart, American Analog Set were background music to me, but with this record they seemed to grow some teeth and develop a pulse.  It’s still mellow, but there is a welcome tension to their songs.  The band create a hypnotic swirling sound that is so crisp and clean you could eat off of it.  Although the playing is at the forefront (the drumming is lovely), front guy Andrew Kenny comes to bat with some really strong pop songs.  The Postman is pretty unforgettable and Aaron & Maria is the poppiest thing that AmAnSet have ever laid to tape.

mp3: American Analog Set – Aaron and Maria


mp3: American Analog Set – The Postman


The TydeOnce (2001: Orange Sky)

Back in 2001 I wrote that the Tyde answer the question: What if Felt were from Southern California?  Darren Rademaker is an obvious fan that Birmingham, UK band, but you can also tell he knows his local history, showing an appreciation of the Byrds and Buffalo Springfield.  When this record came out in 2001 I was living down in San Diego, the perfect place to hear it.  Once was meant for the beach, surfing, getting good and high and eating at Swami’s Natural Food Cafe on a sunny Encinitas day.

mp3: The Tyde -All My Bastard Children


mp3: The Tyde – North County Times


Cornelius - Point (2002: Matador)

Japanese pop alchemist Cornelius is a master of precision and layering on texture after texture onto the frame of a pop song.  A song might start with a water drop, become a trickling stream and end up a waterfall.  Each part taken by itself seems so basic and simple, but as they layer upon one another the complexity in it all becomes apparent.  Cornelius has this uncanny ability to create these engineering marvels and still make them sound vibrant, catchy and exiting.  If you ever have the chance to see him live jump at it, you will not regret it.  A true master builder at work.

mp3: Cornelius -Drop


mp3: Cornelius – Fly


Radio Dept. - Lesser Matters (2003: Shelflife/Labrador)

Lesser Matters has not lost a spec of goodness since I first heard it back in 2003.  I never get tired of Johan Duncanson’s sleepy singing over top of  the band’s over-modulated drums and feedback tinged guitars. I hesitate to call it Swedish shoegaze, but they do seem to worship at the alter of the Mary Chain, albeit with synthesizers and cheap drum machines.  Later on in the decade Sophia Copula would put their music into movies and they would become somewhat more well known, but the band still seem to be a secret.

mp3: Radio Dept. -Where Damage Isn’t Already Done


mp3: Radio Dept. – 1995


A Frames2 (2003: S-S Records)

Any one of the A-Frames records could be on this list. The Seattle goth-punks birthed three albums in the early aughts and every single one of them was worthy.   Their paranoid, doom-laden, angular take on punk rock comes off as it was made in A Brave New World.  Everything is sterile, there is no emotion, and the skies are gray with nuclear fall-0ut.  Their second album, intuitively titled 2 has just enough pop juxtaposed with dread to make it a winner.  The band would go on to sign with Sub Pop for their third album, before drummer Lars Finberg would leave to concentrate on his other band the Intelligence.  The A Frames are what so-Cal punks DI would have been if they lived in the Pacific Northwest deprived of sun, surf and girls.  Feel the angst!

mp3: A Frames -Ionic


mp3: A Frames – Modula


Graham CoxonHappiness in Magazines (2004: EMI)

Blur. Bleh. Blah. Kind of sums up my opinion of Blur as their career progressed.  I just kind of lost interest.  Blur guitarist Graham Coxon always seemed  like he was the conflicted member of the group, not really embracing their super-stardom, keeping his foot in the lo-fi with his solo albums.  After he left the band, his records moved away from the feedback drenched jams to became a lot more structured and pop focused and Happiness in Magazines is easily his best record.  He drafted Blur producer Stephen Street to twiddle the knobs and he showed up with his grade A songs.  There’s the straightforward pop of Spectacular and Freakin Out, but he delves into the blues on Girl Done Gone and is downright funny on Bottom Bunk. I think with Happiness In Magazines Coxon reaches a level of comfortable with who he is and it shows.

mp3: Graham Coxon – Bottom Bunk


mp3: Graham Coxon – Spectacular


Katerine - Robots Après Tout (2005: Rosebud/Barclay)

When this came out, I called it a freak-show in a jewel case.  I stand by those words, but I mean them in the best possible way.  Just by glancing at the cover you might get the idea that this is not your normal album.  Yeah, Katerine is French, so maybe it was cool to walk around in pink silk turtlenecks and women’s underwear back in 2005 somewhere in France, but I kind of doubt it.  Philippe Katerine’s records seemed to be getting stranger and stranger and this is the wacked out amazing culmination.  I think I like the really over the top songs the best.  The club-y strangeness of Borderline, the disco of 100% VIP and the funky Cornelius-like Qu’Est-Ce Qu’Il A Dit ? No matter what shade of strangeness you gravitate to, you will undoubtedly find it on this record and probably end up dancing to it.

mp3: Katerine -Borderline


mp3: Katerine – Le Train De 19h


Rough BunniesRough Bunnies Saved My Life (2005: Self-released)

Frida and Anna are the Rough Bunnies.  They’ve also been The Flame and Inside Riot, but Rough Bunnies is their favorite band.  They’re kind of Riot Grrl, they’re kind of Moldy Peaches, but mostly they’re Swedish punks releasing cd-r’s.  The songs are immediate and the Bunnies greatest concern seems to be to get it on tape before they forget it.  So everything has a ramshackle, but endearing feel to it.  The Bunnies are prolific as they are obscure, popping out CD-r’s like, umm rabbits.  They nearly signed to Alan McGee’s Poptones and Fine Arts Showcase did an entire album of Rough Bunnies covers.  Where do you start?  Rough Bunnies Saved My Life might be their best album, and if you like it there’s a treasure trove waiting for you.

mp3: Rough Bunnies -Rough Bunnies Saved My Life


mp3: Rough Bunnies – Dance With Your Shadow


Human TelevisionLook At Who You’re Talking To (2005: Gigantic Music)

Ahh, the jangling 80′s.  You know the saying, they don’t make ‘em like they use to.  Human Television take it to heart and conjure the ghosts of the Rain Parade, Dumptruck, the Feelies and Let’s Active.  They write melancholy sounding songs punctuated by bright chiming and jangling guitars.  It’s a tried and true juxtaposition, and Human Television do it so well that they are excused for not bringing something new to the table.  Each and every one of these songs will make you shake your head in wonder at how good it is.  How good?  To paraphrase the album: sunshine on your face, room spinning round your head good.

mp3: Human Television -People Talking


mp3: Human Television – Tonight’s the Night


The Go-BetweensOceans Apart (2005: Yep Roc)

2000 marked the release of the first Go-Between album in 12 years, Friends of Rachel Worth, and 2005 marked the release of this, the final Go-Betweens album because of Grant McClennan’s sudden death in 2006. On Oceans Apart, McClennan was ever-present with his classic wistful pop songs as always. He always seemed to be able to reel off perfect pop without even trying and Boundary Rider and Finding You are among his best. But, on Oceans Apart it was Robert Forster that put this record on the map as my favorite Go-Betweens album. His frantic opener Here Comes a City, historical reminiscing rampage of Darlinghurst Nights and beautiful Lavender put this Go-Betweens album in the hallowed company of 16 Lovers Lane.

mp3: Go-Betweens -Darlinghust Nights


mp3: Go-Betweens -Boundary Rider


Tom VekWe Have Sound (2005: Go-Beat)

I can’t help but think that if this album was released two or three years later it would have been much bigger. Of course I’m usually wrong about things like this, but singles like Nothing But Green Lights and A Little Word In Your Ear mine similar veins as what James Murphy gets called a genius for.  Vek was in his early 20′s when he made We Have Sound, writing and playing everything.  It was such a stellar debut, and the future looked so bright the guy was wearing shades.  That was 2005, oh Tom where have you disappeared to?

mp3: Tom Vek -Nothing But Green Lights


mp3: Tom Vek – If You Want


BlumfeldVerbotene Fruchte (2006: Sony/BMG)

The number one album of 2006, well at least here at the Finest Kiss.  Obviously the band were nonplussed about the dubious honor,  deciding to break up in early 2007.  Verboten Fruchte is probably the German band’s most fleshed out record with lots of keyboards and even strings and horns.  Like Love circa Forever Changes they’ve thrown off their garage rock roots and blossomed into a more nuanced and textured way of doing things.  All of that fancy stuff can’t mask the garage rock origins of the band, it just shows their restlessness, and wanting to stretching out and trying new things.  If you’re like me, this record will have you reaching for your German-English dictionary, so you know what exactly you’re singing along to.

mp3: Blumfeld – Strobohobo


mp3: Blumfeld – Heiß Die Segel


Kelley Stoltz - Below the Branches (2006: Sub Pop)

There is one group of people who I know loves this record. Advertisers and marketing dickies have latched onto Below the Branches and won’t let go. You can’t turn on the TV these days without hearing a song from it. Kelley Stoltz can sell other people’s products with his music, but has trouble selling his own records. Below the Branches is chock full of classic pop, one listen and you’ll want to start a marketing company.

mp3: Kelley Stoltz – Memory Collector


mp3: Kelley Stoltz – Birdies Singing


HollandThe Paris Hilton Mujahideen (2006: Teenbeat)

Almost coming off like a Guided By Voices record with short songs that are so catchy you can’t believe he only made them a minute and a half long.  Shards of guitar crash down on echo-y bass and keyboards as one man band Trevor Kampman croons with an icy disconnectedness.  The production is so clear, yet the songs are so  jarring and choppy that they literally reach out and grab and shake you.  Kampan is jaded, and down about the state of the world.  Paris Hilton Mujahideen is good illustration of the world back in 2006. Not much has changed.

mp3: hollAnd – Boolean Misery Index


mp3: hollAnd – Rapture Is Ready


BOAT - Songs That You Might Not Like (2006: Magic Marker)

Seattle bands that love power pop and have a sense of humor, may sound like an oxymoron, but BOAT picked up the torch that was passed to them from a rich lineage that includes the Young Fresh Fellows, The President of the United States of America, Harvey Danger and even Mudhoney.  Songs That You Might Not Like wasted no time in firing salvo after salvo of funny, sad, heart-on-the-sleeve power pop.  How could you not like a bunch of guys that drink too much soda,  cruise in minivans, destroy noise rock bands, get called reptile boy, have ninjas sitting on their couch at home, and use skeleton keys?  This was their first record, and they would only get better.

mp3: BOAT – Remember the Romans


mp3: BOAT – Last Cans of Paint


Pants Yell!Alison Statton (2007: Soft Abuse)

At first I was perplexed by Pants Yell! naming their record after the Young Marble Giants singer and not sounding anything like them.  Then I thought, I named my blog after a Boo Radleys song and never write about that song or the band.  I won’t deny it, Pants Yell! are twee, but it’s twee with melancholy and attitude.  They actually sound equal parts Housemartins and Lucksmiths. Singer Andrew Churchman has an instantly memorable voice and this record equals any album from either of those two previously mentioned bands.  The only problem with Alison Statton is getting passed the first song More Purple, it’s so damn good you’ll find yourself  hitting rewind and never get to the rest of it.

mp3: Pants Yell! – More Purple


mp3: Pants Yell! – Alison Statton


Pelle Carlberg - In a Nutshell (2007: Labrador)

Pelle Carlberg is a clever fellow. He’s got nothing but bad luck, a wonky wheel on his shopping cart, a crap career as a pop singer, and a broken clock. Carlberg got an ace up his sleeve though, his ability to make his mundane life seem so interesting.  He’s funny, self-deprecating, has a better command of English than most native speakers, and has a pocket full of pop songs that will make your ears prick up.  In a Nutshell was his second solo album after his band Edson broke up and it’s the one where he put all the pieces together to come up with something that people like Morrissey and Billy Bragg have long since stopped making.

mp3: Pelle Carlberg – Clever Girls Like Clever Boys Much More Than Clever Boys Like Clever Girls


mp3: Pelle Carlberg – I Love You, You Imbecile


ElectrelaneNo Shouts No Calls (2007: Too Pure)

One of the great disappointments of 2007 for me was Electrelane.  After making what I would argue is their best album they went and quit.  No Shouts No Calls was the Brighton, England band at their most melodic and immediate.  The production is raw with the drums nice and in your face, they way Albini made the Wedding Present sound on Seamonsters.  The songs contain elements of twee-pop and Kraut-rock combining to form melody driven grooves.  They can be gentle and understated like on Cut and Run or lay it all out on songs like Tram 21 and To The East.  I hold on to the hope that they really meant it when they said that they were going on indefinite hiatus, and not really actually quitting.

mp3: Electrelane – To the East


mp3: Electrelane – Saturday


IntelligenceDeuteronomy (2007: In the Red)

Up until Deuteronomy the Intelligence were decidedly lo-fi, but in 2007 the band’s mastermind Lars Finberg decided to turn up the bass and make a record that didn’t sound like the treble button was stuck at 11.  There are elements of darkness that his former band the A Frames excelled in, but the genius of Deuternomy is it’s skewed take on pop that he would later take to another level on this year’s Fake Surfers.   Intelligence records are like trip into the head of Finberg, and his world is a weird, wild, funny place place.  Weird like the Residents, wacked like Brainiac but catchy as Devo.

mp3: Intelligence – Moon Beeps


mp3: Intelligence – Secret Signals


Gentleman JesseGentleman Jesse (2008: Douchemaster)

Jesse Smith’s likely heros  include Nick Lowe, Paul Collins, Elvis Costello and Paul Weller.  These names certainly command respect, but the style of power pop that they are so well known for is decidedly out of style these days, and the likely reason that this album got no traction when it came out last year.  That’s the only reason I can think of because back in the old days when a record like this came out, it was blasting out of dorm rooms and cars everywhere.  Nowadays it’s all about headphone music and records that need to be heard blasting at full volume into the open air suffer.

mp3: Gentleman Jesse – Black Hole


mp3: Gentleman Jesse – The Rest of My Days

Jochen Is, erm…Still Rochen

November 23, 2009 at 10:37 pm | Posted in Deutschland, mp3, Music | Leave a comment
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Blumfeld broke up back in the spring of 2007, ending a mighty fine 15 year run.  If you’re a longtime reader of this rag, then you may remember their last album Verbotene Früchte was the top pick here back in 2006.  When I found out they broke up, I kind of thought was the end of the story, but of course it wasn’t .

News travels pretty slowly from Germany to the United States, stuff gets lost in translation or just totally ignored unless you work at the stock market.  As a fan of pop not sung in English (capitalism is ok too), but lacking the language skills to keep up with Italian, German, Spanish, French, etc. blogs, information trickles in here at the Finest Kiss at a snail’s pace about this sort of stuff.

So I’ve come to discover that after Blumfeld called it a day, singer Jochen Distelmeyer decided that he wasn’t quite finished. His first solo album, Heavy was released in Germany back in September, but I didn’t stumble upon it until last week.  If you were a Blumfeld fan it will fit you just like a comfortable sweater in a drafty house.  It almost feels like the new Blumfeld album.  A couple songs: Wohin mit dem Hass? and Er hail back to 1995 and L’Etat et Moi, the only Blumfeld album to see the light of day in the US.  Other songs on the record have a much slicker feel and at times he sounds like a German version of  Freddy Mercury.  There’s no Bohemian Rhapsody on Heavy, but the video for Lass uns Liebe sein has Flashdance style dancing along with bit of breakdancing.

I realize that German pop is not everyone’s bag, but Jochen Distelmeyer, could maybe, just maybe change your mind.

mp3: Jochen Distelmeyer – Hinter der Musik (from Heavy)


Here are two videos for two other songs on the record. The first one has the Flashdancing.

Location, Location, Location

November 21, 2009 at 11:53 pm | Posted in Funhouse, Gigs, Seattle | Leave a comment
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Real Estate at the Funhouse, Seattle | 18 November 2009

New Jersey band Real Estate, the latest Pitchfork lottery winners, garnering a well deserved best new music ribbon on their debut self-titled album that came out this week on Woodsist were in town on Wednesday night for their debut Seattle gig. The record is often described as conjuring a surf, beach, and bonfires at sunset king of vibe.  It’s not a Beach Boys, southern California vibe, but a down under, New Zealand kink of vibe.  Think the Clean (yes, them again) and you’re half way there.  Throw in a little Byrds, Grateful Dead and Durutti Column and you’re nearly there.

It was a rainy night in Seattle, what night isn’t this time of year, but the sun was setting and the waves were crashing inside the Funhouse. Real Estate are four unassuming guys that look like they could have been a band in the college rock heyday of the 80′s.  Looking at them, they reminded me of bands like Game Theory, Galaxy 500, and Dumptruck who all had a look where if you saw them on the street you would’ve had no idea of their ability to plaster a sunset on the wall with their guitars.  Live, Real Estate don’t really have the same watery effects on their guitars that they do on record, but the interplay between singer Martin Courtney in his thrift shop cardigan and Mathew Mondanile (also of Ducktails) sporting a big ol’ anorak was every bit as effective and engaging.  Bolstered by the grooving Alex Bleeker (also of Alex Bleeker and the Freaks) on bass, and the best sound I’ve ever witnessed at the Funhouse the band created a hazy mellow good-time vibe the almost made me forget that I live in Seattle and it’s November.  Please come back soon.

mp3: Real Estate – Beach Comber (from their self titled debut, buy it from Woodsist)


mp3: Real Estate – Old Folks (from their OOP 7 inch single on Underwater Peoples)


Here’s some video I shot of the last song of their set, Beach Comber.

Back In Denim

November 19, 2009 at 11:42 pm | Posted in Gigs, Music, Neumo's, Seattle | 4 Comments
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Girls at Neumo’s, Seattle | 17 November 2009

“We’re back, back in denim”,  Girls (SF) front guy Christopher Owens told the audience at Neumo’s after being asked how he like Seattle.  He was referring to the fact that they were here earlier this year at the Capitol Hill Block Party, but he was also referencing Lawrence Hayward’s post Felt band Denim.  Listening to Girls’ debut Album I had this inkling that they were Felt and Denim fans.  A lot of the guitars have a spindly feel to them that reminds me of late period Felt, but really it was just a hunch.  American bands liking felt is nothing new, the Tyde come to immediate mind and a couple songs on the new Pants Yell! have a similar thing going on.  I digress, back to Girls’ Felt affectation. On hearing Owens utter the title to Lawrence’s first post-Felt album was pretty much all I needed to confirm my suspicions.

Don’t get the wrong idea.  It’s not all Felt, Denim (and Go-Kart Mozart) with Girls, the album has this watery, twangy, rockabilly sound to it that gives me this hallucination of Roy Orbison and Duane Eddy playing Santo & Johnny’s Sleepwalking in some underwater dive bar. The album also has the huge shoegaze bliss-out of Morning Light and the obvious Beach Boys/Jan & Dean reference in their song Big Bad Mean Motherfucker, and don’t forget Owens singing sounds a little like Elvis Costello.  I’m into all of the above and have been loving this record for past few months, but the overall aesthetic of the record has this Felt/Denim feel to it that seems to transcend all the other influences that color the album.

I am certainly not alone in liking the record.  Girls seem to get tons of glowing reviews for their album, but live they don’t seem to light people up.  Actually, I don’t think I’ve read anywhere that said Girls are amazing live.  I can’t really say that they were amazing, but they were really good.  Most of their songs don’t really make you want to dance, they’re mellow dark affairs that revel in the kind of atmosphere they can create and live that is what they did.  Songs like Solitude and Ghost Mouth were prime of examples of that gloomy outlook set to ethereal atmospherics.  The heart of their set cranked up the energy level a noticeable amount with the trio of songs Lust for Life, Hellhole Ratrace and Morning Light getting everybody going.  Owens seemed to be feeling it too, at times crouching down with his guitar in an almost Chuck Berry pose during some of the big guitar parts.  I especially liked how the noise freak-out they did at the end of Hellhole Ratrace overlapped seamlessly with the shoegaze miasma of Morning Light.  The rest of the set, the band settled back into a few more moody, but no less compelling songs.  For an encore Owens came back out with his acoustic guitar, donned a gold trimmed baseball hat from someone in the audience and did few songs solo, one of which he called Broken Dreams Club which you can download from Living Ears along with a few other acoustic songs they did for radio station KDHX.

Something that may also be of interest to those who think I’m off my rocker with the Felt and Denim references, the French website MagicRPM has a three part conversation between Girls’ Christopher Owens and Chet “JR” White with Lawrence of Felt/Denim/Go-Kart Mozart. Dig Lawrence’s baseball cap with tinted blue visor.

mp3: Girls – Lust for Life (not the Iggy Pop song from Album, buy it here)


mp3: Girls – Broken Dreams Club (from KDHX session)


Some Persian Raks & Roll

November 12, 2009 at 11:32 pm | Posted in Garage Rock, Iran, mp3, Music | 3 Comments

Raks!

The last few years records of rare and current pop from Africa have been coming out from the likes of Analog Africa, Mississippi Records and Sound Way, Sublime Frequencies and Honest Jon’s  on a weekly basis. The heightened exposure of African pop has been a boon, but if you’ve been looking stuff outside of Africa the pickings have been a bit more slim.  Say you were looking for for garage sounds from Persia you probably been coming up empty handed.  The other day I was flipping through records over at Sonic Boom in Ballard and came across this beautiful cover (above) in the new release bin.  Who knew that Iran even had a psychedelic garage scene in the 1960′s?  I sure didn’t, but there it was as plane as day, 17 Golden Garage Psych Nuggets from the Iranian 60′s Scene (released back in April of this year).  My curiosity had been piqued and I pulled the record from the bin, paid more than I probably should have for it and with a rush of excitement went home and put it on the turntable.

I’m pretty sure that the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Sea have little to no surf.  Lack of any big waves along the Persian coast did not seem to stop the Ventures from becoming a  pretty big influence in Iran in the 1960′s because more than a couple of the songs on this compilation have that surf, twang sound that the Tacoma band perfected.  That kind of makes sense, because the Ventures specialized in instrumental rock and thus there were no lyrics to decipher or translate just the primal stomp of the guitar, bass and drums.  It wasn’t all Ventures influence in 1960′s Iran, Ojooba Ha  get a little psychedelic Circa the Beatles‘ Revolver on one song and then go all Morricone on another, the Littles have a Mamas & the Papas thing goin’ on,  and Group Takhala La could be the Iranian Animals.  There is also some funk courtesy a strange cover of Respect from Googoosh.  Based on this record it seems like the scene in Iran at this time was both diverse and exciting.

The record has extensive liner notes that set the scene and try to explain how Iran has always been at a tug of war between religion and a Western affectation that many people in the country have.  It also tries to piece together a history of the bands on the record, but because of Iran’s closed society the task is left up to afficionatos from the Netherlands and Turkey.  The liner notes, like the record, leave you with a vague sense of the 60′s rock scene in Iran and wanting to find out more about it.  The entire thing leaves me hoping that this isn’t just a one-off release.  There is more, and if this has you curious about rock n’ roll in Iran I found a compilation that came out in 2004 of the Iranian punk scene called The Persian New Waves (Mawdj-e Naw e Farsi), but it looks to be out of print.  I haven’t found a copy (digital or otherwise) yet, but I’ll keep hunting.

mp3: Moha Jamin – Sheshwa Heshat Moho Jamin


mp3: Kousash – Hadjme Khali


You can get the record at Bomp , Insound or Rough Trade. All three currently have it in stock.

Sunshine or Headlights

November 9, 2009 at 11:23 pm | Posted in Gigs, Seattle, Sunset Tavern | 2 Comments
Tags: ,

Headlights at the Sunset Tavern, Seattle | 8 November 2009

headlights at the sunset tavern

Headlights third album Wildlife, which came out on Polyvinyl last month, is something of a departure from this Champaign, Illinois band’s previous records. For starters it’s a much more confident, relaxed, prettier and not as straightforward as the previous two records. I kind of like the fact that it’s not so obvious.  That’s not to say it doesn’t have pop songs on it, it’s just that the band seems to present them from odd perspectives. One moment embracing Chicago-style post-rock, the next they’re going for the orchestral pop jugular, and then sneaking in some fancy ethereal guitar pop effects.

That’s a lot of stuff to pack in a van and head out on the road with, but Headlights brought all of that and more to the Sunset Tavern in Ballard last night. Besides the harmonies of keyboardist Erin Fein and guitarist Tristan Wraight there was the amazing rhythm section of drummer Brett Sanderson and Nick Sanborn. Watching Sanderson own the drums was easily the highlight of the set and something I hadn’t noticed listing to their records. His drumming had this trashcan staccato sound to it that reminded me of Stephen Morris of New Order, back when he actually played drums.  The Sanderson-Sanborn rhythm section seemed to be mentally joined at the hip and their fluent playing drove the songs into a more immediate and intense directions, but didn’t overpower Fein and Wraight’s bright singing.  Now that winter has decided to set in with its dark skies, rain and general gloom I know I depend more and more on bands being able to bring that summer rush of sunshine back into my life. Sunday night the Headlights did exactly that. An hour long sun-break that provided enough vitamin D to get me through the week.

mp3: Headlights – Get Going (from Wildlife, buy it from Polyvinly)

I’ve Hit a Sourpatch

November 8, 2009 at 12:23 am | Posted in indiepop, Video, Wow! | 1 Comment
Tags: ,

Sometimes it takes me a while to get the message, but I like to think that after a while I smart enough to figure it out, with a little help of course.  It’s 2009, but Sourpatch sound so much like 1992 SpinArt/Slumberland that it’s kind of freaky.  Think I’m kidding?  Take a listen and tell me you don’t hear  parts Lorelei, Velocity Girl, the Swirlies and a little bit of Small Factory and Tiger Trap for good measure from this San Jose, California band.  To date they have a self-released demo, a free EP courtesy of WIAIWYA’s virtual singles series and an awesomely fun video which you can see below.  This flying below the radar thing is all about to change because Athens, Georgia’s Happy Happy Birthday To Me will be releasing the band’s first album early next year.  If you take a look at you calendar, that’s not too far off.

Commentary While Listening

November 6, 2009 at 12:44 am | Posted in 7 inch, Music, Vinyl | 6 Comments
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Sometimes just blurting out what you think is more fun than actually thinking things through and formulating an opinion. I was down in the basement tonight listening to records and what follows are my stream of conscious reviews of what I listened to.

mantles
(Slumberland/Dulc-i-Tone)
Mantles - Bad Design – Cave-like rock, reverb vocals (looking forward to this trend winding down).  Nice guitar solo.  This is as poppy as Don’t Lie, the best song on their album that came out on Siltbreeze.
MantlesRachel – A little heavier and more warped than the A-side, but it still has that ringing guitar that lightens it up a bit.

bestcoast
(Art Fag)
Best CoastSun Was High (So Was I) - And to think I almost didn’t buy this. Wow what a great A-side. Again with the reverb vocals, but it’s not too distracting.  I hope the reverb vocal isn’t to the late aughts what the echo/synth drums was to the 80′s.
Best CoastSo Gone – Simple song that could have easily been a Shangri-La’s song 40 years ago.
Best CoastThat’s the Way Boys Are – This single is easily 3 for 3.  Love the heyyy-eyyy’s.  This record is pretty perfect and the cover of a 70′s jammed LA freeway is nice too.

GirlsatDawn
(Hozac)
Girls At DawnNever Enough – First thought: Tiger Trap.  If you thought the Vivian Girls sounded like Tiger Trap you were wrong.  Girls at Dawn do. Very minimalist guitar strumming, a bit of organ and little girl singing. Catchy, especially for record collector geeks like myself.
Girls At DawnEvery Night - Lots of Da Da Da’s and lyrics about dreaming about you every night…that’s why they call it a b-side.

Nat Johnson
(Damaged Goods)
Nat Johnson & The FigureheadsWonderful Emergency – Okay, finally someone that doesn’t hide behind reverb’d vocals.  Nat has left Monkey Swallows the Universe, but is still walkin’ on sunshine.  It’s bright and poppy with a bass solo at the bridge.
Nat Johnson & The FigureheadsDon’t Worry Baby – Yes, it’s a Beach Boys cover, from Pet Sounds no less.  Not sure about it though, it’s kind of a non-event.  I think my mom would like this song, but she would prefer the original, as do I.

Fergus & Gernimo
(Tic Tac Totally!)
Fergus & GeronimoBlind Muslim Girl – I have no idea what this song is about but it is catchy as hell.  “Blind Muslim girl, if you like me then I will guide you around the world”.  This song is so fast paced that I thought I had it on the wrong speed.  Love the bouncy guitar parts at the bridge.
Fergus & GeronimoPowerful Lovin’ – Blues organ and singing, not unlike the A-side to their Transparent 7″.  These guys bring it, love the soul aspect to their songs.

FratDad4
(Underwater Peoples)
Frat DadGreg the Nerd – This one’s noisy and devolves into more noise.  I like the team singing and the geeky enthusiasm.  They’re like a lower-fi Nodzzz, singing about elementary school.
Frat DadFreak In Nature – Much mellower b-side, well at first, then it swells into a big bombastic chorus.  I like the restraint and then the wild abandon.  B-side wins!

SignedPapercuts2
(Cloudberry)
Signed PapercutsOf My Heart – Airy guitars that remind me of St. Christopher.  This song evokes wind in your face and swirling leaves in a one of those mini-tornadoes and the Icicle Works.  Big Wedding Present-ish crashing guitars at the end. Whew, I’m out of breath!
Signed PapercutsSound of Silence Pt. 2 – The guitars sound almost exactly the same as the a-side except the song isn’t as good and neither is the singing. The a-side is definitely what you want here.

ExplodeIntoColors
(M’Lady’s)
Explode Into ColorsCoffins - This band is supposedly the best new band in Portland.  Will hyperbole never die?  It’s got a cool drum thing going on.  Big booms, lots of big booms. The singer has this kind of old lady southern drawl to how she sings/chants.  I like the drums.
Explode Into ColorsSharpen the Knife – More drums and more tribal-like chanting/singing.  She’s got kind of a Siouxsie thing going on, but enough to make me really like this.

vibrarians
(K)
The VibrariansRed Light – Great guitar riff. Can’t understand a word the singer’s singing for all the reverb, but that’s not the point I don’t think. This could be an Oh Sees song, in fact you could tell people that and they might believe you. This came out a while ago but didn’t seem to get much attention, probably because Olympia isn’t cool like it was back in the late 80′s and early 90′s.
The VibrariansModern Walker – These guys are all about the riff and sound. This one’s like a marching riff with vocals echoing all over the place. Did I mention they sound like Thee Oh Sees?
The VibrariansThe Woods – I can actually make out a few lyrics here, but I still don’t care because the song just rocks in that same cave stomping style of the other two . I wonder if they take the Liz Frasier approach to lyrics?

Pomplamoose Not Pamplemousse

November 3, 2009 at 11:34 pm | Posted in mp3, Music, Video | 3 Comments
Tags:

How do you incorrectly spell grapefruit in French?

Kids these days with their Twitters, Tumblers, secondLifes, Vimeos and YouTubes, there seems to be an endless number of time wasters or outlets depending on your point of view. Pomplamoose who are a boy-girl duo from San Francisco Bay area have decided to make YouTube their outlet of choice racking 20 plus videos for their original songs and a ton of covers as well. All the videos are of Nataly Dawn and Jack Conte in their home studio playing the songs for the camera with lots of quick cuts, split screens, and other tricks to that make the videos strangely compelling.  Although, some border on goofy and after a while even a little bit annoying, but in the end it’s the music that grabs you and keeps you hitting the replay button. I should also mention that Nataly Dawn is easy on the eyes. She has this kind of innocent deer in the headlights look as she sings into the camera that has gotta keep people coming back to watch. With over 45,000 subscribers to their channel, they seem like they are a kind of cult YouTube phenomenon.
The duo have just put out EP of eight original songs that they’re calling what else, Videosongs. Dawn sings the songs with and ennuie that belies her years, over minimal and spacious backing. Pomplamoose are kind of jazz and kind of pop and they’re not afraid to tackle songs from varying genres of music. Covers include Beyonce‘s Single Ladies, the Chordettes‘ Mister Sandman, Edith Piaf‘s La Vie en Rose, Earth Wind & Fire‘s September and Nat King Cole‘s Nature Boy.  So head on over to Pomplamoose’s YouTube channel and waste invest some time listing and watching.

mp3: Pomplamoose – Twice As Nice (from Videosongs, buy)


YouTube: Pomplamoose’s channel which has videos for all of the cover versions mentioned plus more.

MySpace: You can download a few more songs for free on the band’s MySpace page.


Too Late for Halloween: Basementcast #8

November 1, 2009 at 10:52 pm | Posted in Basementcast, Music, Podcasts | 1 Comment

Le potiron
photo from Providence Journal photo / Sandor Bodo

People are nuts.  Why would you ever want to grow a 1,725 pound pumpkin?  I suppose so that you could say that you did.  Apparently pumpkin growing is like horse breeding, you gotta get the right seed from a sire that has the right genes.  The seed for this big beauty came from a former world record holder.    The funny thing about this picture, besides the obvious, is that it came from northeast Ohio, about 30 miles from where I grew up.  In case you ever wondered what it was like growing up in sl-Ohio, I can tell you it was just slightly more exciting than this picture.  Depending on your point of view (world record pumpkin growers excepted), something a little more exiting is the new basementcast.  It weighs a whole lot less, you can fit in your pocket, and you won’t need five guys to help you with it.

download: basementcast #8 (~170 Mb)


The Sky Drops – Sentimental
Fungi Girls – Pacifica Nostalgia
The Spits – 19 Million A.C.

Fergus & Geronimo – Tell It (In My Ear)
Sam Cooke – Sugar Dumpling

White Wires – Pretty Girl
Firefly Effect – Never by your side
Cosmos- Grapes Of Wrath

The Kindness Kind – Labor Day
Tap Tap – Straight To Hell
Headlights - Secrets

Beat Happening – Bewitched
Black Box Recorder – Up Town Top Ranking
Peter Tsotsi, Nashil Pichen, & The Equator Sound Band – Pole Musa

Cerys Matthews – Into The Blue
Ladytron – He Took Her To A Movie
Rose Elinor Dougall – Fallen Over

Hope Factory – The Folly Of Being Comforted
Kevin Ayers – Stranger In Blue Suede Shoes
Lofty Heights – Eye Contact

Black Whales – Young Blood
Aidan Moffat & The Best-Ofs – The Last Kiss
Dutchess and the Duke – Side By Side

Ganglians – Blood On The Sand
Velez Manifesto – Pop Song
Trailer Trash Tracys – Candy Girl

Bob McFadden & Dor – The Mummy

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