Dog Food On the Floor and I Been Like This Before

August 31, 2011 at 10:29 am | Posted in Music, Video | Leave a comment
Tags:

Every 20 years comes the nostalgia. So the 90′s wayback machine seems to kicking into full throttle this year with too many bands to name looking back on that decade for inspiration. Swedes by way of the UK with an Italian name Francobollo have got their slacker poses pretty well perfected at this very early stage of their career. How early? Cassettes and CD-R’s early, but they’ve got a handful of songs that take some of the weirdness of Braniac and Beck, pave it over with slackness add some of their own Euro eccentricities and come up with newly minted lovable weirdness. I say weird, but in this day and age, it takes quite a lot to be weird. Francobollo are more like your geeky, off-beat little brother who has come up with something to match.

mp3: Francobollo – Try?

Weekend In the Red

August 22, 2011 at 9:00 pm | Posted in Frisco, Music, Shoegaze | Leave a comment
Tags: ,

If you’ve already heard the new song from Weekend that slipped out last week you know that the San Francisco band have shed a few layers of white noise to further reveal their pop skills. Oh, we knew they had the skills from their previous efforts, you just had to work a little to realize them. Hazel is from their forthcoming EP on Slumberland and doesn’t pull any punches or bury any hooks. It hits you like a smack in the face. A new shoegaze classic to make you stop pining for the old days.

Stream: Weekend – Hazel

Stone Circles ‘N’ You or Total Control

August 21, 2011 at 10:12 pm | Posted in Australia, Music | Leave a comment
Tags: ,

After a string of singles Total Control slip out an album in the dark of night when no one is looking. Comprised mainly of the duo Daniel Stewart fromUV Race and Straightjacket Nation, Mikey Young from Eddy Current Suppression Ring and UV Race, etc. but also including Alistair Montfort,  Zephyr Pavey and James Vinciguerra, the band may seem like a side project because it consists of guys moonlighting from their main bands. Discounting Total Control as a side project would be a mistake. Typical side projects contain one or two ok songs, and a bunch of experimentation or noodling. Not the case with Total Control. Their album Henge Beat is total top shelf. Here’s my track-by-track review.

See More GlassJulian Cope said that Neu!‘s Hallogallo changed how he listened to all music. Cope went on to become obsessed with Henges, stone circles and other various and a sundry ancient monuments. Total Control skip forward to the end and kick off their debut album with a direct descendant of Hallogallo.

mp3: Total Control – See More Glass

Retiree – The album bounces back and forth between longer motorik kraut influenced songs and shorter tense punk ones. Retiree is the latter. Singer Daniel Stewart delivers a detached angst free vocal advocating not retiring with the refrain ‘Keep them at work’, while the band lay down a maelstrom. Makes me want to never retire. Ha!

One More Night – Even the  punk songs have a repetitiveness that is influenced by Krautrock. That said, this one sounds a lot like guitarist Mikey Young’s other band Eddy Current Suppression Ring. No bad thing in this neck of the woods.

The Hammer – We click back over to the motorik beats for the Hammer which leans into Kraftwerk and Gary Numan territory. The entire track is synthesized. There isn’t a guitar or live drum sound in earshot. Sublime and intense at the same time.

Stonehnage – Side one ends with this two minute punker. A sped up march with someone trying to tune in their short wave radio to listen to ancient souls that will tell of how they stood those giant stones up and why in the hell they did it.

Carpet Rash – At nearly seven minutes, Carpet Rash which kicks off side two is the longest song on the album. The guitars take on any icy clinical feel. It’s almost like they’re being played by robots. Stewart’s cold unfeeling vocals give the impression that having sex is as cold and unfeeling as this song. The song is called Carpet Rash, but he sings No Carpet Rash. The Brave New World of Total Control.

Shame Thugs – A short interlude that has a Japaneses feel to it which brings me to the other Henge which are the mythological creatures in Japanese folklore that can shapeshift into human form. This record certainly has a henge element to it in the way that it transforms itself from icy electronic repetition to raw punk rage while still maintaining its singular personality.

No Bibs – Trashy punk number with a vibrating bass line. Makes you feel like you’re at an ancient feast where the savages are gnawing food off of the bone and not using a napkin.

Meds II – This song gets dark and dismal and the louder I play this one the better it sounds. How dark you may wonder? The music sounds like Pornography era Cure and the lyrics aren’t far from that mark either. “To take pills to remember to take pills to forget” is the infinite loop refrain while bass plummets and the stark guitars swirl around you.

Sunday Baker – After that comedown, you need a rest. What better way than to head to the bakery for a pastry? That’s a roundabout way of saying this is a short instrumental interlude.

Love Performance – Total Control save one of their most straightforward, immediate songs for the very end. Stewart’s apocalyptic lyrics are tempered by the refrain, ‘these are not the last days’ over a bed of 80′s synths akin to John Fox Era Ultravox. Hiroshima Mon Amour without the sax.

You can get a digital download at Total Control’s Bandcamp. Vinyl lovers, head over to Seattle label Iron Lung.

You’ll Be the Death of Me

August 17, 2011 at 9:24 pm | Posted in Music, Vinyl, Singles, 7 inch | 3 Comments
Tags: , , ,

UK Band Evans the Death (Named after the undertaker in Dylan Thomas’s Milk Wood) sound like the bionic version of the Primitives: bigger, stronger, faster. Their debut single came out last month on Fortna POP! It’s a double A-Side, something that usually leaves me scratching my head because nine times out of ten one of the songs is clearly B-Side material.  No such problem with this record. Threads has a deadpan vocal from singer Katherine Whitaker over a taught and twisting guitar. Whitaker sings, “You put the fear of God in me, Why did I watch that documentary?”  Reminds me of when I was a kid and I stayed up late with my friends at a sleep over and watched Faces of Death. The other A-side I’m So Unclean starts off with rattling bass and crashing guitars is slightly less intense (if you can believe that) but just as good. When Whitaker sings, “When I’m watching the shopping channel, I will think of you.” Evans the Death evoke the Smiths. This is a great debut single and worthy of its double A-side status and the gold that it’s pressed on. Looking forward to a full length.

stream: Evans the Death – Threads (head over to Fortuna POP! to download and purchase the single)


In other Fortuna POP! news, you may have heard that Comet Gain have a new album out called Howl of the Lonely Crowd. It’s been out over in the UK courtesy of Fortuna POP! for a couple months and will get released next month in the US by What’s Your Rupture so keep your eyes peeled. Howl was produced by Edwyn Collins and is an instant classic. If you are a Comet Gain fan you will likely want to snatch up the 7-inch single for An Arcade From The Warm Rain That Falls. It’s limited to 500 copies and contains two exclusive B-sides, a cover of Carla Thomas’s northern soul classic I Take It To My Baby and album outtake You’re Just Lonely.

mp3: Comet Gain - An Arcade From The Warm Rain That Falls (from the single on Fortuna POP!)

Hello Moon

August 16, 2011 at 9:26 pm | Posted in Ireland, mp3, Music | Leave a comment
Tags: ,

Hello Moon are from Dublin,Ireland and love chiming bright guitars. The band is set to release their debut album entitled Only Count the Sunny Hours next month on Any Other City Records. It treads a line between jangly twee songs that bounce along like they were from some forgotten Post Card single and wintry atmospherics that march through the driven snow like tiny toy soldiers. Maybe it’s an Irish thing, but Hello Moon excel in balancing their sensitive twee side with their bigger dramatic side. Only Count the Sunny Hours is a record that can put a spring in your step and a smile on your face and tug at your emotional side too.

mp3: Hello Moon – Vanity (from Only Count the Sunny Hours coming soon on Any Other City)

Seattle Roundup

August 10, 2011 at 10:58 am | Posted in Music, Round-up, Seattle | Leave a comment
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Even when you are on vacation the cogs of the city continue to grind. The music may slow down a bit in the hazy shade of the summer months, but it doesn’t stop. Seattle radio station to the world KEXP has a summer concert series at the Mural Amphitheatre at the Seattle Center and this Friday’s show is an indiepop lover’s wet dream. Seapony, Math & Physics Club and Arthur & Yu offshoot Gold Leaves will take the stage this Friday afternoon starting at 6pm. It’s free and there’s a beer garden. Music is free, beer is not.

Another free summer show I’m looking forward to is Cairo’s strangely named Vibrations Festival.  With a name like that you would be forgiven for assuming it’s a reggae festival. At least it’s not called the Positive Vibrations Festival. Nothing could be further from the truth. It’s all indierawk man. It all goes down at Veteran’s Park on Saturday, 20 August. You can climb the stairs to the water stand pipe and walk through the conservatory between sets  from Grass Widow, Charles Leo Gebhardt, Purple & Green, Flexions, Metal Chocolates, Stephanie, Witch Gardens, and Seapony (again).

All of the above is well and good if you live around here. If you don’t, just know that Seattleites think summer is when the temperature reaches 70 degrees Fahrenheit and the sun makes an appearance for at least 15 minutes in a 24 hour period. What do you do besides suffer from Seasonal Effective Dissorder year round?  Listen to music I guess.

The Glasses are about to release their third album and in the absence of Tullycraft they are taking over the crown of the Emerald City’s writers of undeniable, saccharine-twee songs. Their new record is called Love Is Queer and they play a record release show down in Georgetown on Friday, 26 August. Grab the album for free over at their bandcamp page.

mp3: The Glasses – Love Is Queer

It’s not often that a new label is birthed around here so we should all give thanks for Fin Records which has a bunch of 7-inch singles available for your consumption. My favorite so far is the Seacats single. Both songs are plucked from the band’s Metal Music album that came out a few months back, but sometimes it’s nice to have the best songs on a slab of wax and that is what Fin Records has done. Seacats evoke a bunch of NW bands. Long Winters, Boat, Modest Mouse and Young Fresh Fellows  all come to mind. What are you waiting for?

mp3: Seacats – We Don’t Sleep (from the single in Fin Records)

The Dutchess and the Duke have ceased to be, but as you may have heard, the Duke Jesse Lortz has a new thing he’s calling Case Studies. It’s not a far cry from his previous band. The album is about to be released on Sacred Bones. It was recorded in the rain shadow of Sequim (pronounced Skwim) over on the Olympic Peninsula with the help of some Crystal Stilts.

mp3: Case Studies – Lies (from The World Is Just a Shape to Fill the Night on Sacred Bones)

Supposedly Arthur and Yu are still a thing, but Grant Olson has put that band on ice for the time being and donned the moniker Gold Leaves.  The Seattle Weekly wrote a nice piece on the album where Olson describes the record as his R & B, doo-wop, country record. If you appreciate obscurities like Fred Neil, Moose, Jack Nitzsche, and Jim Sullivan then this record is meant to be in your house.

mp3: Gold Leaves – Cruel/Kind (from The Ornament on Hardly Art)

Not quite Seattle (though I hear they’re trying to trade up to Seattle from Portland), Orca Team have a cassette release on Seattle label GGNZLA. Kissing Cousins is more of their uncanny 50′s zombie sock hop vibe. Not only are they good, but apparently they are prolific as well.

mp3: Orca Team – Michael (from Kissing Cousins on GGNZLA)

When making a mix tape I always liked to put a mellow song at the end. For this post Seattle’s Emuul provide that effect. Emuul is the moniker that Kyle Iman goes by. His new EP The Drawing of the Line isan excercise in how to be sublime. It will pick you up and set you on a pillowy cloud, massage your temples and put you in a dreamlike state.

Surf Punk Goes For the Pop Jugular

August 8, 2011 at 7:57 am | Posted in mp3, Music, Surf Punk | 3 Comments
Tags: ,

Moonheart and Ty Segall collaborator Mikal Cronin is set to release his first solo album and it’s a stunner. It’s not quite from out of nowhere, but the quality here surpasses anything he’s done previously. Here’s my track by track take on this very good record.

Is it Allright – Beach Boys oohs but with crunchy guitars and a flute freakout courtesy of John Dwyer. A grand statement for the first song that sets the bar high.

Apathy – To say that Cronin sounds like his sometimes collaborator Ty Segall is stating the obvious. Listen closer and you notice that Cronin’s voice is sweeter and mellower, plus he knows how to use a saxophone to great effect.

mp3: Mikal Cronin – Apathy

Green & Blue – starts out with Tomorrow Never Knows drums and then a huge soaring riff swoops in with the vocals arriving buried in the mix. This isn’t so much a song, but instead one mega-giant riff.

Get Along – Two favorite parts in this song: 1) Cool backwards guitar solo in the middle. 2.)Near the end he strips away the noise and it’s just acoustic guitar and Cronin singing “I’m not thinking about you”

mp3: Mikal Cronin – Get Along

Slow Down – slow mood piece that reminds me of Hollow Life by Frankie Rose. Where Hollow Life was the lead track to set the mood on Roaes’s album, Cronin puts his in the middle to give you a rest from the intense first half of the record and let you know that the second half is going to be something of a different beast.

Gone – few records these days put the best song as track one on side two, but in the current vinyl resurgence we may start seeing more of this again. A huge bassline in this one bubbles up out of the depths and a huge chorus to match it. Gone is the go to track on the record.

Situation – How do follow a giant pop song? With another one of course. This minor key hook that is quite sublime. A two minute pop song with no fat on it.

Again & Again – I like how this album progresses it seems to mellow. Less distortion and reverb here and Cronin is all the better for it. Again & Again has a hook that may or may not have been swiped from Steve Miller.

Hold On Me – The mellowness continues. Hold On Me is like a lullaby that conjures a hallucinogenic version of Buddy Holly. Complete with whistled outro. Sweet.

The Way Things Go – Epic final song. It’s like the Electric Light Orchestra where The kitchen sink gets thrown in an it nearly works until Cronin seems to purposefully fuck it up at the end. It’s as if he’s saying yeah I could do this, but I’m gonna warp it into something unlistenable because I don’t want to make the perfect album….yet.

Mikal Cronin’s self-titled debut comes out 2o September on Trouble In Mind.

Blog at WordPress.com. | Theme: Pool by Borja Fernandez.
Entries and comments feeds.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 35 other followers