Saturday, September 15, 2012

6 September 2012

Elvis Costello and the Attractions - Armed Forces - 1979 - There is only one true king of rock, and it is Elvis... Costello. I don't know who you thought I was going to say, but "Accidents will Happen," "Oliver's Army," and "Busy Bodies" are really good tracks. It is surprising that there are songs that stand out since they are all so good.

5 September 2012

Doris Day & Andre Previn - Duet - 1962 - Weird album. The cover really says it all, Doris' goofy smile and and Andre is looking at her thinking "why did I do this?" pensive and sorta french sounding jazz mixed with dorky MGM musical vocals. Again... weird.

4 September 2012

 Dave Brubeck - Brubeck Plays Brubeck - 1956 - This is improvisational Jazz, it is sort of like stream of consciousness music, one minute he plunks away happily and then plunges into a moody attitude. Just feel it bro. You might also recognize his style from some Charlie Brown cartoons.

 M83 - Saturdays = Youth - 2008 - Like their name seems to suggest M83's sound is sort of a throwback to synth heavy 80's pop, but there is also a deep shoegazer aesthetic. It sounds like a magical dream world populated by unicorns, luck dragons, and Molly Ringwald. It has all the pretentious yet serious sadness of youth. It's like a musical version of a John Hughes film.

 Loretta Lynn & Conway Twitty - Country Partners - 1974 - this is one of those "so cheesy it's good" albums. You can really tell that they have fun singing and recording together even if the pedal steel saturated songs get a tad annoying.

 Wendy O Williams - Kommander of Kaos - 1986 - This music would really be a lot cooler if Motorhead hadn't done it first. But that isn't the point, Wendy O is all about the visceral and material world of explosions, chainsaws and car crashes.


Hans Wurman - The Moog Strikes Bach - 1969 - Moogs are awesome (and yes i will correct you if you don't pronounce it "mogue" like "rogue") the best track is "Toccata and Fugue in D Minor." Sometimes though this guy uses the mod wheel a bit too much for my liking.

3 September 2012

 Country and Western Album - Forum 7G-501 - 1960 - It is obvious the selling point was the tearful southern style of Patsy Cline, but there is a whole slew of other stuff, some silly, some serious, all country & western. YEE-HAW!

 Blue Öyster Cult - Agents of Fortune - 1976 - The sheer amount and quality of mustaches that went into the making of this album makes it worth-while. I always get sentimental hearing "Don't fear the Reaper" because I remember Steve Tye playing an acoustic version at a show in a garage. The song following "E.T.I." really rock also.


Ray Charles - Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music - 1962 - Nothing makes Country 7 Western sound better than when it is sung by a, R&B / Jazz singer. "You Don't Know Me" is heartwrenchingly good. The only thing that would make this album better would be if there were no WASP / Disney backup choir on every song.

 Lionel Hampton - Swingin' With Hamp! - 1956 - This album is pretty fun Jazz. My wife said it was a little chaotic, which I can see since when I hear it I think of Tom & Jerry cartoons. It's Good none-the-less.

Johnny Cash - Greatest! - 1959 - Let me start by saying that I have way too many Johnny Cash albums (which you will soon see). This one always catches my eye first though. It doesn't have my favorite songs, though there is a Roy Orbison song, but it is still good.

2 September 2012

 Yes - Sorcerer's Apprentice - 1975 - This is some kind of rare live recording from the Hollywood bowl on a Norwegian record label.

 5ive - 2001 - instrumental metal? Heavy does not come close. It is like two yeti warriors charging on wooly mammoths into a battle to the death with bazookas and machine guns in slow motion. Some call it sludge metal, I call it beautiful.

Hum - Electra 2000 - 1993 - If most emo bands emerge from hardcore or punk beginnings, I think Hum are metal emergent emo. There is waveringly sung emotion but with incredibly distant, slow, and heavy music.

28 August 2012 (Eno day)

 
 The Apples in Stereo - #1 Hits Explosion - 2009 - Do you get the reference in their name? They are the Beatles reincarnated in America in the nineties. The best way to describe this band (I think) is optimistic. They take the serious things seriously (like awesome rock songs) and the unimportant things with a grain of salt. They are probably the best band to listen to if you are in a bad mood.

 David Bowie - Low - 1977 - I think that Brian Eno's influence on this album is very obvious. Many of the songs are a bit darker, maybe less tongue in cheek as Bowie's typical faire. Lots of spooky synths and "sonic landscape" tracks.

 DEVO - Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! - 1978 - Again Brian Eno's fingerprints are all over this album (he produced it) but his touch turns songs to gold. Devo is funny in a robotic nerdy way, but also serious which is kind of scary. They cover The Rolling Stones' "Satisfaction" which is awesome, and I think that "Mongoloid" is just about one of the best songs ever written.

 Fripp & Eno - No Pussyfooting - 1973 - ENO again! I would call this experimental, but it is typically categorized as ambient. It is basically two tracks of guitar & synth sounds recorded on tape loops. Highly conceptual and complex atmospheric layers of shimmering and growling sonic waves.

Neutral Milk Hotel - In the Aeroplane Over the Sea - 1998 - Elephant 6 is a record label co-owned by the singer from this band and the singer from The Apples in Stereo, interesting, huh? It is sometimes difficult to know whether to laugh or cry at these songs. Some are so sad but absurd at the same time, others are so energetic yet express a deep longing. Maybe that is why this album is amazing. "The only girl I ever loved was born with roses in her eyes."

Led Zeppelin - II - 1969 - With all the immediacy of the cavalier poets, this album resonates loudly with uncontrollable emotion. It really is heavy blues with some psychedelic solos. The best part is the obscure references to Tolkien's fantasy novel. Magical.    

26 August 2012

 Phoenix - Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix - 2009 - This is a pop album, an inventive, fresh, comfortable, interesting, evocative pop album. These french guys are basically a boy band minus the spray tan, bleached hair, and horrible songs. In fact, they are so good it makes me want to sell all of my instruments and take up knitting.

 The Dead Milkmen - Beelzebubba - 1988 - I think that it is fitting that I bought this at a public library book sale, if you look closely you can see the "discard" stamp. I think that the best way to describe them is as if Bevis and Butthead learned to play guitars and started a punk band. I don't even know if you can call it punk though. I think that they are just trying to be stupid and funny and happen to be a band. I mean with songs about drinking bleach, living in a trailer park, different smells that emanate from the human body, and numerous mocking references to rock bands like the Who, the Beach Boys and the Beatles... you have to laugh out loud, and I do.


Elvis Costello & the Attractions - Get Happy! - 1980 - Not necessarily a continuous string of hits, in my opinion, but still a characteristically awesome album. It is kinda weird, the track listings on the sleeve doesn't match the one on the disk.

26 August 2012

 The Casket Lottery - Moving Mountains - 2000 - You can certainly tell that this band belongs to the genre spawned by Sunny Day Real Estate. Post hardcore (which just means not as aggressive) confusing time changes and poorly executed vocals, but there is something visceral that you can't just manufacture or plan.


 Sex Pistols - Never Mind the Bollocks - 1977 - This has to be one of THE most annoying yet widely influential albums ever. Talk about staring genres. They are really just blues songs played a little quicker and poorly, but with such a sardonic (anti?)British sneer that you can't ignore it. The title is kind of ironic also if "bollocks" is "nonsense" then really it reads "never mind the nonsense, here's the garbage"

The Cars - 1978 - This album is truly amazing, it is a perfect rock record. Let me explain, "Just what I Needed," "My Best Friend's Girlfriend," "Let the Good Times Roll," "You're All I've Got Tonight," "Moving in Stereo." Just go buy it. Now.

Asobi Seksu - Rewolf - 2009 - This band is typically very VERY loud, but this is an acoustic album. Kind of like a greatest hits but re-recorded quietly. Hauntingly beautiful sounds a little cliche, but that is the best way to describe it.  

The Smiths - 1984 - The Smiths always make me think of sitting in a bedroom alone staring at a wall. Kind of like rain on the windows. it's foggy. 

23 August 2012

 
 Broken Spindles - 2002 - Imagine if you will, an entirely instrumental electronic album that, at times, sounds like an old Nintendo game, creepy industrial music, 80's house music, 70's glam, and you'd have Broken Spindles. The really cool thing about this "band" (pretty sure it's just the bass player from The Faint) is the live show. He had a large screen set up at the edge of the stage which he stood behind and performed, whilst projecting different videos that corresponded to the music he played. pretty keen.

 Talking Heads - Fear of Music - 1979 - This album sounds more mature to me, more of a combined effort, and Brian Eno was involved, so it is good. "Life During Wartime" is the song you know.

 Tristeza - Spine and Sensory - 1999 - All instrumental ringing slow rock. Piano with the sustain pedal held down, open string picking and asymmetrical drum beats make this record interesting. 

Heart - Little Queen - 1977 - Who would've thunk that a chick could sing like Robert Plant, go figure. This is 70's power pop at its best, a little angry, a little sad, but mostly just ROCK. "Kick it Out," "Barracuda," those names ring a bell? 

22 August 2012

 The Who - Who Are You - 1978 - This album is as sad as it is good. Almost every song recognizes that music must change, it can't stagnate, see you later disco. But at the same time, as the cover clearly illustrates, The Who are surrounded and encumbered by the decadence of arena rock. As much as Pete Townsend tried to be the catalyst of change, it would be for the next generation (not yours Pete) to make those innovations. This is also Kieth Moon's last album, marking not only the end of the original Who but also one of the most mental and adventurous rock and roll drummers.

 The Promise Ring - Nothing Feels Good - 1997 - Take equal parts of the raw energy of punk, the intelligence of jazz, the sheer fun of pop, poetic lyrics that sound like they're written by T. S. Eliot, and a touch of mid-western malaise, and you have this album. Really though Promise Ring are a good old rock and roll band who happen to play extraordinary music.

 The Police - Zanyatta Mondatta - 1980 - I know, I know, The Police are all amazing musicians, I could never do what they have, but let's face it Sting is a creepy weirdo. For example, "Don't Stand so Close to Me," Voices Inside my Head," "De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da," "Man in a Suitcase." I think David Byrne of the Talking Heads wrote "Psycho Killer" about Sting.

Cruddy - Negative World - 2011 - Maybe it is just my limited knowledge of punk rock but these guys ensure me that punk is still alive. They remind me a little of a less interesting Dead Kenedys, and a less quirky Black Flag (both band's earliest albums). They seem to grasp the philosophical ramifications of punk music too, just look at their band's name.


Led Zeppelin - Presence - 1976 - Again this one is not one of my favorites of Zeppelin. It always seems like it's their "prog" album, but then there is that smoking old time blues in "Nobody's Fault but Mine," and the last track "Tea for One," and who can argue with obelisks?

21 August 2012

 Sunny Day Real Estate - Diary - 1994 - For one thing this as a "no skip" album, every song is awesome. Then there is the content, it really is like an introspective and melodramatic teenage diary. Yes it's all "Holden Caulfield," but there is something Shakespearean about it, almost like ancient Greek tragedy. And then there is the intelligent and astounding rhythm section. AND this album started a genre!


Big Brother & The Holding Company - Cheap Thrills - 1968 - This record is a little scratchy, but it almost seems more appropriate that way. This band is so unadulterated, which fits Joplin's voice. And it's approved by the "Frisco" Hell's Angels... rock.

 Black Sabbath - Paranoid - 1970 - This album is very accessible. Yeah it is "dark" and mostly about drugs, but Sabbath's humility is the most obvious thing in their music, that and their lack of polish. No other band writes as heavy and catchy grooves, e.g. "Iron Man" and "War Pigs," not to mention my personal favorite "Electric Funeral."
 
The Psychedelic Furs - Forever Now (US release alternate cover) - 1982 - First of all "Love My Way," really is an amazing song. I can't deny the allure of sarcastic British vocals and synthesizers.

The Faint - Blank Wave Arcade - 1999 - I'll never forget the first time I heard this album, it was such a departure but also the next natural step. They are kind of an 80's throw back band, bass, drums, guitar, and heavy synths that buzz and scream like a Nintendo plugged into a distortion pedal.

Mott the Hoople - All the Young Dudes - 1972 - Granted I heard the title track for the first time in the movie "Juno." To be fair I already liked Glam... I don't know what I'm trying to justify. It is a great song. This album also has an early version of "Ready for Love" which is a Bad Company song according to the internets. Also there is a sweet cover of "Sweet Jane" originally by the Velvet Underground. huzah!

20 August 2012


Vampire Weekend - Contra - 2009 - Ok, What if Paul Simon was a twenty-something hipster yuppy who wanted to be a punk = Vampire Weekend. Well, I still like it... a lot.

19 August 2012

  
The Pixies - Trompe Le Monde - 1991 - I like the absurdity and that this is a formative indie rock record. The title track and "Subbacultcha" are proper.

David Bowie - Pin-ups - 1973 - a collection of Bowie's favorite songs can't be bad.

The Spiders from Mars - 1975 - This band backed Bowie. They shouldn't have quit, without him they are lacking.

Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here - 1975 - shine on you crazy diamond. No drugs required this album is a trip on its own. The whole album is good.

Yes - Tales from Topographic Oceans - 1973 - I know epic is an over used adjective but this album has two discs one song per side and each song is roughly 20 minutes long.

Led Zeppelin - In Through the Out Door - 1979 - This isn't my favorite led zeppelin album but the songs "fool in the rain" and "all of my love" make it worthwhile.

Styx - Equinox - 1975 - "Lorelei" is a great song despite the imperative to premarital cohabitation. If you like synths this album is right up your oscillator.

The Talking Heads - More Songs About Buildings and Food - 1978 - frantic jangly guitars, white boy funk bass lines, and vocals that sound like the homeless guy on the corner screaming at you from across the street. This is the "new wave."