Showing posts with label no. Show all posts
Showing posts with label no. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Songs Of The Week #86 & #87: TCDroogsma


(THIS POST ORIGINALLY APPEARS ON THE TWIN CITIES BLOG NEWEST INDUSTRY)

No, Lost In The Trees, Trust, Gardens & Villa, Howler, The Drive-By Truckers, Tycho, Stone Jack Jones, Stepdad, & And The Professors...


Well hello again, MP3 junkies!  Welcome to Songs Of The Week #86 & #87!
 

For those of you who are new to the SOTW column, here's the story:  TCDroogsma and MinneSarah are both fans of The Current's Song Of The Day podcast.  They're also both opinionated and have access to computers.  Seeing an opportunity to let them indulge in their MP3 habit and put them to work writing reviews we created the Songs Of The Week column.  Over a year later later and here we are.


Unfortunately, MinneSarah is continuing her sabbatical this week. Without his co-reviewer, TCDroogsma got lazy and took a week off.  Fortunately, taking a week off from reviewing songs didn't mean taking a week off from listening to the songs. He's back this week & making up for lost time with a double-dose of reviews.

As always, we strongly suggest that you follow this link and subscribe to the podcast yourself.  It's free and it's fun for the whole family!

To that end, once you've given each song a spin or two, feel free to cast a vote for your favorite song of the week in the poll to the right side of the page.  The artist who accrues the most votes wins the validation that comes from winning an anonymous internet poll, arguably the loftiest height to which a modern musician can aspire.

So... Droogsy... thoughts?


01. No - Leave The Door Wide Open (from the album El Prado)


 
TCDroogsma:

     Back in SOTW #15 MinneSarah & I reviewed No's single "What's Your Name?"  Both of us came to the conclusion that, while it was an OK song, it was basically a case of the sum of a bunch of other indie band's traits not adding up to an especially compelling whole.

     "Leave The Door Wide Open" still sounds like it's aping somebody else's sound, but fortunately the sound that it's aping is The Killers circa Sam's Town.  Singer Bradley Hanan Carter & Co. aim for a sweeping, epic sound and, for the most part, succeed.  Carter's lyrics, particularly, strike the tongue-in-cheek-tone that Brandon Flowers used to be able to nail in his sleep.  "We make some noise inside a room and call it art..." is, at different times in the song, delivered with nonchalance & passion, leaving the listener to wonder whether he's serious, super-serious, making a commentary on his band's commercial ambitions, or mocking the concept of pop music as art altogether.  No may or may not be finding their own sound (it's legitimately difficult to say), but until they do they'd be wise to keep crafting songs with hooks like this.

Final Score: 4/5

02. Lost In The Trees - Past Life (from the album Past Life)


 
TCDroogsma:

     Their must be something in the water in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.  Lost In The Trees is yet another band to come out of the college town to somehow strike the delicate balance between epic & personal, aiming for big ideas while providing just enough little flourishes to make it feel like you're hearing something in the song that nobody else hears.

     "Past Life" provides enough "indie rock 2014" signposts to leave the song sounding very much of the moment.  There's echoing vocals, keyboard pulses, and some nonsense about staircases, lover's eyes, and nature.  The real star of "Past Life," however, is the guitar work.  The band aims for hooks in just about every manner possible, but the lead guitar work provides the most memorable wrinkle.  The bouncing guitar figure that opens the song (and returns halfway through each verse) is light & catchy in a song that threatens to be bogged down by ideas.  When the riff is finally spun into a full-on solo at the end of the song it feels like everything that was holding the song together comes unraveled brilliantly.  There's a lot of very good ideas at work here and Lost In The Trees deserves credit for balancing them well.

Final Score: 3.5/5

03. Trust - Capitol (from the album Joyland)


 
TCDroogsma:

     "Capitol" is a peculiar track that grew on me over the course of the week.  The song opens with some garbled noise before giving way to a clear, catchy keyboard line.  That, however, gives way to Robert Alfons' mumbling, which then gives way to a clear, catchy chorus that somehow thrives on Alfrons' nasal delivery.  You see the pattern here?

     While "Capitol" is a frustrating song due to it's essentially non-existent verses, at its core it's a lesson in pop song structure.  The song ebbs & flows brilliantly (if predictably).  By letting the pieces fall apart during the verses, Alfons is able to make the chorus sound like a glorious payoff even if, in a vacuum, it wouldn't amount to much.  Alfons deserves a ton of credit for playing to his strengths to turn "Capitol" from a struggle to a single.

Final Score: 4/5

04. Gardens & Villa - Colony Glen (from the album Dunes)


 
TCDroogsma:

     Going over the lyrics to "Colony Glen," Gardens & Villa seem to paint a picture of a mutually-maintained secret that involves the murder at Colony Glen.  It's a curious subject, but they manage to pull it off reasonably well.

     Unfortunately, the lyrics are matched with a very "2014-by-the-numbers" synthesizer bounce that actively detracts from the devious lyrics.  The song is aching to breath, to give more weight to the lyrics, but in the end the can't (or won't) concede aiming for the instant pleasure of dance-pop to take the chance on something darker, more memorable, and potentially terrible.  It's a risk/reward proposition and Gardens & Villa played it safe.

Final Score: 2.5/5

05. Howler - Indictment (from the album World Of Joy)


 
TCDroogsma:

     I don't own a Howler album, and yet they just might be my favorite local band.  Everybody jumped on Jordan Gatesmith when he (justifiably) called on the Twin Cities music scene as insular, narcissistic, & thin-skinned.  He was right on all accounts and the fact that he was deemed a pariah by the local music "press" essentially proved his point.

     However, none of that would matter much if he & his bands didn't have the tunes to back up their smartass remarks.  With "Indictment" as the lead single off their World Of Joy LP, it's pretty clear that they do.  The band works up a pretty straight-forward rave up while Gatesmith (who sounds like he spent his time between albums smoking filter-less Lucky Strikes) spits some early-20's lessons about not wasting your time on fading youth, pitching fits... really giving a shit about of the trivialities of young manhood.  It's hardly groundbreaking stuff, but the band bring enough snotty conviction to the track to remind you that there's no gimmick in rock music quite like youth.

Final Score: 4/5

06. The Drive-By Truckers - Pauline Hawkins (from the album English Oceans)


 
TCDroogsma:

     Despite the fact that I own three of their albums and have seen them live, I've never totally bought into what The Drive-By Truckers are selling.  I realize that it's ridiculous for a guy who's a huge fan of The Hold Steady to criticize a band for writing fictional narratives as songs, something about their old-timey Southern tales just fails to get me too enthused.

     "Pauline Hawkins" is a fine, harmless number that is unlikely to make believers of the non-believers.  Patterson Hood (who sounds more & more like Wayne Coyne everyday) fires some mean-spirited shots at a lover while the band works up their typical southern rock racket.  Frankly, the most telling description of "Pauline Hawkins" is also the most basic.  "Pauline Hawkins" is a new single from The Drive-By Truckers.  You don't really need any more information than that to have a good idea of what it sounds like.

Final Score: 2.5/5

07. Tycho - Awake (from the album Awake)


 
TCDroogsma:

     Tycho is the working name of Scott Hansen, a musician & photographer out of San Francisco.  He's also an artist who frequently turns up on my "suggested artists" list on Last.fm and is being played frequently by my Last.fm friends.  I was kind of excited to see what all the fuss is about.

     "Awake" is a a fine instrumental song that is difficult to place.  It's built mainly on some smooth electric guitar work with a canvas of ambient keyboards underneath.  Hansen works up a pleasant, inconsequential sound that's less club-friendly and more Volkswagen commercial.  It's sunny sound provides pleasant background noise but not much else.  Hansen seems to understand that it's hard to make a grand statement in a song without lyrics and, as such, just aims for something pleasant and harmless.

Final Score: 3.5/5

08. Stone Jack Jones - Jackson (from the album Ancestor)


 
TCDroogsma:

     I don't know much of anything about Stone Jack Jones and it seems neither does the rest of the internet.  He's from West Virginia.  He was unable to serve during the Vietnam War due to bouts with epilepsy.  He released an album back in the 2006, relocated to Nashville, and returned in 2014 with Ancestor.  Also, he can ride a horse.

     "Jackson" is a delightfully off-kilter song that, while owing something to the old Nashville country sound, remains rough around the edges.  Jones recounts a searching Jackson for a lost love, but meanders into descriptions of the townfolk, the sky, & the corn along the way.  He sounds like a man who knows what he wants (or, rather, knows what he doesn't, which is to "lose you"), but he also sounds like a man who's spent enough time in his life looking that he's not going to waste his time.  By the end of the song Jones has found a glass of whiskey rather than his lost love. The cycle begins again.

Final Score: 2.5/5

09. Stepdad - Running (Does That Mean You Care?) (from the EP Strange Tonight)


 
TCDroogsma:

     One of the most difficult things a musician can accomplish in 2014 is writing a synth-based song that stands out from the crowd.  Stepdad accepted that challenge and very nearly pulls it off.

     "Running (Does That Mean You Care?" pulses along predictably, but becomes memorable thanks to a good old-fashioned sped-up sample that sounds like Kanye West remixing an old Cut/Copy track.  Singer Ultramark fashions a world-beating hook out of the chorus, giving the song more personality than a sample every could.  Stepdad's aiming to be the kind of a the well-populated synth-pop hill and with "Running" they've staked their claim.

Final Score: 3.5/5

10. And The Professors - Turn-Of-The-Century Recycling Blues (from the album Our Postmortem)


 
TCDroogsma:

     I spent a whole week with "Turn-Of-The-Century Recycling Blues" before realizing Adam Levy of The Honeydogs was the man behind the song.  Suddenly, this well-crafted, expertly executed pop song made a lot more sense.

     I'm sure Levy has no desire to read about his full-time band in relation to this one, but it's difficult to make the distinction.  Frankly, he should probably consider it a compliment that he's been crafting pop songs with such consistency that it doesn't matter what he calls the band he's fronting.  "Turn-Of-The-Century Recycling Blues" finds levy & company going full McCartney, bouncing along on percussive piano, swooping strings, & group harmonies.  The song's texture is rich & pleasant while it's lyrics, which recount the World's Fair, appeasing Hitler, & the Dust Bowl.  I barely understand what Levy's getting at, but it doesn't really matter.  If you like pop music you'll love this one.

Final Score: 4/5

Well there you have it, MP3 junkies!  Two week's worth of songs downloaded, reviewed, & filed away!

As always, please keep in mind that neither Newest Industry nor our contributors are in any way affiliated with the artists above, The Current, or MPR.  We're just music fans with laptops and a bit too much time on our hands.





For more TCDroogsma be sure to give him a follow on Twitter (@TCDroogsma).  He can also be found right here on Newest Industry hosting our free weekly podcast Flatbasset Radio






For more Newest Industry be sure to give us a follow on Twitter (@NewestIndustry1) to stay up on the work being done by all of our contributors.  More importantly, we have a Facebook page here.  Trivial as it seems, stopping by and giving us a "Like" is a free & legitimate way to support the blog.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Newest Industry Presents - Flatbasset Radio: Episode #35


(THIS POST ORIGINALLY APPEARS ON THE TWIN CITIES BLOG NEWEST INDUSTRY)

Yeah, I called you fat, look at me I'm skinny...


Hello again, free music fans! Welcome to Flatbasset Radio: Episode #35!
 
For those of you who are unaware of the Flatbasset Radio format, here's what you're looking at: TCDroogsma is our resident MP3 junkie. As you've probably noticed in his Songs Of The Week column, he's not always the most positive music fan. In an effort to prove that he is, in fact, a fan of music, we give him an hour each week to play the songs he's digging and talk a little bit about them. Once he's recorded his podcast we put it right here on the website for free to stream and/or download!


In this week's episode TCDroogsma is flying solo from Planet New Basset yet again.  In the process of trying to get his podcast game "back on track" he's feeling extra "saucy" because of the warm weather, celebrating the anniversary of one of independent hip-hop's great albums, buying CD's on Amazon for a penny, lamenting the 20 year anniversary of a generational icon, celebrating Rex Manning Day, anticipates a summer of Rhymesayers, finds himself coming around on a couple artists he didn't care for, (yet again) mispronounces a band's name, explains why St. Vincent is one of his "desert island" artists, vows to get MinneSarah back into the fold for next week's show, and discusses the song that best embodies old Modest Mouse & new Modest Mouse!

You can download the podcast for free by clicking the episode's title or stream the episode by clicking on the Mixcloud player below.

Flatbasset Radio: Episode #35




01. Superchunk - Precision Auto
02. Madvillain - Money Folder
03. Nirvana - Lithium (Solo Demo)
04. Chance The Rapper - Acid Rain
05. Evan Dando - The Ballad Of El Goodo
06. Blueprint - Respect The Architect
07. CFCF - Lorraine
08. No - Leave The Door Wide Open
09. Straya - Chronologies
10. The Hood Internet - Digital Humpty
11. The Church - Under The Milky Way
12. Modest Mouse - Ocean Breathes Salty

There you have it, music fans!  Enjoy!




For more TCDroogsma be sure to give him a follow on Twitter (@TCDroogsma).  Previous episodes of Flatbasset Radio are archived on his Mixcloud page.  Stop by Flatbasset Radio's Facebook Page & give it a "Like" if you have the time.

For more Newest Industry be sure to give us a follow on Twitter (@NewestIndustry1) to stay up on the work being done by all of our contributors.  More importantly, we have a Facebook page here.  Trivial as it seems, stopping by and giving us a "Like" is a free & legitimate way to support the blog.    

Friday, November 30, 2012

Songs Of The Week #15: MinneSarah & TCDroogsma

(THIS POST ORIGINALLY APPEARS ON THE TWIN CITIES BLOG NEWEST INDUSTRY.)

Menahan Street Band, Body Language, No, Ben Sollee, & BNLX...


Hello again, MP3 junkies! Welcome to Songs Of The Week #15!

For those of you who are still somehow unfamiliar with the SOTW posts, each week we ask a couple of our contributors to give us their thoughts on the previous week's songs given away by MPR's The Current. To download the Song Of The Day podcast for yourself (which we highly recommend), click here. Playing along at home is fun for the whole family! Especially if your family likes pretty average indie music!

Make your voice heard by voting in the poll on the right of the page. This is serious, serious business people. Whoever wins the contest gets... er... some level of validation, we suppose.

This week we asked MinneSarah & TCDroogsma to have a go at the songs.

Kids, what'd you think?

01. Menahan Street Band – The Crossing (from the album The Crossing)


MinneSarah:


     So this band is an instrumental soul group complete with horns and an organ.  The absence of vocals is actually refreshing - as it's hard for a lot of these soul funk revival bands to pull off all the elements - adding a singer is just another thing to have to worry about fitting in to the mix.  This song features some prominent string plucking over the top of signature horns and downtempo funk, which makes the song seem a little more modern than revivalist.  Also, this group has been sampled by Kid Cudi and 50 Cent, so there is a slim chance Kanye is sampling this song as you read this review.
  
TCDroogsma:

     Honestly, when I saw "Menahan Steet Band" in the downloads this week I set my expectations pretty low.  Even though I've really been into instrumental music lately, that tends to be more in the hip-hop instrumental vein and not, y'know, a "supergroup" form Brooklyn consisting of Antibalas and The Dap-Kings.

     And yet, I loved "The Crossing."  Instead of using the "MSB" moniker to indulge in musical masturbation this song is actually tight.  None of the instruments go off on their own and the whole thing is held together by a pseudo-hip hop rhythm.  The horns are bright but reserved.  The guitar is somehow both celebratory and mournful.  This is a perfect soundtrack for strolling around downtown MPLS on a brisk November night.

Final Score: MinneSarah -3/5
                   TCDroogsma - 4.5/5

02. Body Language – I'm A Mess (from the EP Grammar)


MinneSarah:


     This song is an example of the funk/soul revival that is not really working.  The cadence of this song reminds me of that Mayer Hawthorne hit a few years back, so if you liked that song, you won't be disappointed by an even more hipster version.  The singer's voice is not faux soul, and thus stands out by not trying to be something it's not - however, the lyrics are cloying and hackneyed.  If you like to hear pining lyrics served over electronic soul revival lite, this song is a ten. I'd like to make a joke about how this song was written without you and is a mess unto itself, but that's just not true.  It's pretty tight yet overly pedestrian.

TCDroogsma:

     I know I spend a lot of time here making fun of synth-pop bands, but know that those jokes have more to do with how many are in MPLS and not the genre in general.  So, that being said, I really did enjoy this one.

     "I'm A Mess" is an ode to co-dependency soundtracked by Paul McCartney's keyboards from "Simply Having A Wonderful Christmas Time."  I mean that as a compliment.  Although, if you're a co-dependent guy who spends his time listening to old Paul McCartney records I would imagine the only body language you're used to is crossed arms and rolled eyes.

Final Score: MinneSarah -2/5
                   TCDroogsma - 3/5

03. No – What's Your Name? (from the 7” What's Your Name?)


MinneSarah:

     
     Is this The National?  This band has gotten that question so many times, they just named themselves No. They then named their single - What's Your Name, as that is the question they got after they responded that they weren't The National.  Okay, maybe that didn't happen, but then again maybe it did.  

     While I feel like this is a National song when I listen to it, it does evoke a little more optimistic moodiness.  The song is broken up a little with bouts of whistling, and punches of percussion.  The lyrics talk about what people are wearing, which is pretty much what caught my attention.  Although I feel like the singer sounds a bit generically indie, the song is interesting enough to get catchier the more often you listen to it.

TCDroogsma:

     This song is like indie rock Madlibs.  Kind of a piano song, kind of a guitar song.  None of the lyrics add up to any kind of coherent whole, but rather they all sound like the first line from a different band's song.  "See the sun turn round and run away..." is Lou Reed.  "Turn around now, I can't stay" - Julian Casablancas.  "Shut the gates if I don't show, I'll send dogs to let you know..."  Paging Paul Banks.  Paul Banks, please pick up the red phone.  What's your name, indeed.

Final Score: MinneSarah -3/5
                   TCDroogsma - 3/5

04. Ben Sollee – Unfinished (from the album Half-Made Man)


MinneSarah:


     So remember last week when I said that I was born in Kentucky?  Guess who else was born and raised in my birth town?  Why Ben Sollee, of course. This music isn't bad, but once again, it's not really my style.  The song is alt-country nouveau, with the inclusion of the cello - which does add quite a depth.  Ben's vocals sound almost Bruce Springsteen-like.  Overall, hometown be damned, I am extremely conflicted whether or not I can recommend a song by a singer/songwriter who has done a bike tour of Kentucky.  Seriously. That could be the most awesome and inspiring or soul-crushingly hipster thing I've ever heard.  Can't decide.  Luckily, as the song indicates, this isn't the last we've heard from Ben Sollee.

TCDroogsma:

     I guess I wouldn't think you could build a whole career around recreating the Billy Bragg tracks from Mermaid Avenue.  I learn something new every day.

Final Score: MinneSarah -2.5/5
                   TCDroogsma - 2/5

05. BNLX – Vibrant (from the album BNLX)




MinneSarah:


     Upbeat guitars, hyper-enunciated vocals, slight electronic backdrop.  I like how clean the song sounds amidst punctuated rouge (or not) guitar.  There is a lot of order in this song, almost formulaic but in a way that works! Basically I love anything upbeat and eighties sounding and will justify that any way I see fit.  Although this isn't the most exciting song I've heard this week, there is something comforting in its design.

TCDroogsma:

     I went on an extended rant about BNLX earlier this week when I reviewed their track "1929." (cough... Singles Mixer #3... cough... scroll down... cough...)

     Oddly, I don't necessarily like this song as much as that one.  My point in that review was that getting a slightly political angle out of Ed Ackerson made for an interesting listen.  It gave me a fuller picture of who he is regarding his Polara/BNLX bands.  "Vibrant" is a pretty great track, don't get me wrong, but this one sounds more like Polara with a drum machine.  Still, you all know I'm a sucker for boy/girl hooks and really, who's arguing with a song that sounds like the love child of New Order & Dinosaur Jr?

Final Score: MinneSarah -3.5/5
                   TCDroogsma - 3.5/5

Blaow! There you have it, everybody! Another week of songs listened to, reviewed, and filed away.

As always we'd like to mention that neither this blog nor its contributors is in anyway affiliated with MPR, The Current, or any of the artists reviewed. We're just people with iTunes & free time.



For more of the always charming MinneSarah give her a follow on Twitter (@MinneSarah). For even more MinneSarah be sure to mention nail polish & vegan donuts.



For more TCDroogsma he can also be followed on Twitter (@TCDroogsma). He seems like he should probably eat more vegan donuts too.

Of course Newest Industry is also on Twitter (@NewestIndustry1). Give us a follow to stay up on all the work being done by our contributors. More importantly, we also have a Facebook page here. Stopping by and giving us a “like” is genuinely the best way to support this blog short of buying us donuts.