Showing posts with label psymun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label psymun. Show all posts

Friday, May 12, 2017

Flatbasset Radio: Episode #96


Reached the bottom and now we're just looking forward...


Well hello again, podcast fans. Welcome to Flatbasset Radio: Episode #96.

Folks, it's a gorgeous Friday here in Minneaolis, so I appreciate the fact that you've neglected your family, friends, & community to stay inside and listen to me mumble through another show.

This marks three straight Fridays with a new show which, for a purportedly "weekly" show shouldn't be much of an accomplishment, but if you've been following along you know just how rare it is that I get my shit together for three straight weeks.

This week's show if full of jams. Local music, indie rock, hip-hop collectives, classic punk, some anniversaries, some power-pop, some big, dumb, rock music, the Cover Of The Week, & the Flatbasset Flatclassic. Along the way we discuss why I should probably avoid talking politics on the show, prog or not-prog, indie rock in a post-Vampire-Weekend world, shoegaze of the Far East, the worst substitute for Conference Final hockey, some upcoming concerts, the low point of one of America's great pop-punk bands, and the greatest song in the history of mankind. Good stuff, for sure.

As always, Flatbasset Radio is completely free. I've finally set up a decent downloading site, so if you'd like to download Flatbasset Radio: Episode #96 (with all the appropriate iTunes tagging), just click here.

If you don't have the time or desire to download the show, just click the Mixcloud player below and you're good to go.



Here's how Flatbasset Radio: Ep. #96 plays out:





01. Fountains Of Wayne - Someone To Love




02. Dan Deacon - Big Milk




03. Cool Pollution - Paul Bunyan Style




04. Jonathan Rado - Thunder Road




05. Youthmemory - City



06. Psymun - Glitch Tundra (w/Chester Watson)




07. Whitehorse - Devil's Got A Gun




08. Black Rebel Motorcycle Club - Berlin




09. Hippo Campus - Vines




10. Donnie Trumpet & The Social Experiment - Sunday Candy (w/Jamila Woods & Chance The Rapper)




11. Millencolin - Entrance At Rudebrook




12. All - Dot










There you have it, folks! Enjoy!




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

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Flatbasset Radio: Episode #68


Someday you will find me caught beneath the landslide...


Well hello again, podcast fans. Welcome to Episode #68 of the Flatbasset Radio show!

Thanks for stopping by this week, devoted listener(s). I'm coming down with a cold this week and I figured staying inside and playing some jams would be the best way to cope with it. If I have to live with this messed up voice then so do you!

In this week's show I play some jams and talk about being sick, our old friends in Nashville, some new local hip-hop from some not-so-new artists, explain just how late to the party I was on one of the Twin Cities best bands, revisit last week's "good shoegaze vs. bad shoegaze" discussion, scratch my experimental electro-jazz itch, celebrate Sweden's greatest pop-punk export, reminisce about old St. Paul record stores, & give some winter advice.  All that plus coughing and all the popped "P's" you could ever want!

Of course I also celebrate some anniversaries, get in a Cover Of The Week, and take a trip back to an iconic single for the Flatbasset Flatclassic.

As always, Flatbasset Radio is completely free. Just click the Mixcloud player below and you're good to go.










01. Bad Cop - Wish You Well











02. Mixed Blood Majority - Insane World




03. Dosh - Nothing New





04. Social Distortion - Under My Thumb




05. Zoo Animal - Gravedigger





06. Catsax - You Can Find Me In The Tall Grass




07. My Bloody Valentine - When You Sleep




08. Millencolin - Jellygoose





09. Sophia Eris & Psymun - Fight/Love




10. Kudzu Wish - Are We Not Snow?





11. Oasis - Champagne Supernova








Enjoy, everybody!




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.

Monday, December 8, 2014

Album Of The Week: "TheStand4rd" by TheStand4rd


Flatbasset Radio's Album Of The Week for the week of December 1st-7th, 2014:


TheStand4rd - TheStand4rd

01. Binoculars
02. Stay
04. Simple Needs
05. Pretty
06. Vital Signs
07. Too Involved
08. Decisions
09. Tryna Fuck / No Reply
10. Weight
11. AsapRockyTypeBeat
12. Victims

First things first, let me apologize for posting this a day after the AOTW timeframe ended.  On the one hand, I'm very busy.  On the other hand, I needed an extra day to figure out just what the hell is going on with this record.

As you've probably read by now, TheStand4rd is made up of four up-and-coming St. Paulites: Bobby Raps, Allan Kingdom, & Spooky Black on the vocals with Psymun providing the beats.  Despite the fact that both Kingdom & Psymun have made appearances on this blog with AOTW posts, I still can't really wrap my mind around what's going on here.

Allan Kingdom has certainly seen his career take off since that City Pages article that declared him somebody who should be bigger.  According to the internet, Spooky Black is an "internet sensation," (though I'd never heard of him before this record, which is crazy, because I'm on the internet all the time).  And yet I came away from this album feeling like Psymun was the star of the show.

As I mentioned above, I've written about Psymun in the past and even played his collaborations with Chester Watson & K.Raydio on the podcast.  Psymun traffics is laid back, spaced out, beats that typically stand up brilliantly whether somebody's rapping over them or not.  From what I've gathered of his personality he's definitely a hip-hop fan (and making beats with the plan that somebody will rap on them), but he's certainly taking a different approach than just about anybody else out there.  I mean, you have to have some stones to put out hip-hop music that puts almost no emphasis on percussion.

Psymun's spaced-out beats are the perfect compliment for Kingdom, Spooky, & Bob.  As I mentioned in my write-up for Allan Kingdom's Future Memoirs, Kingdom's style seems to be the Upper Midwest's answer to the sing-song cadence coming from Atlanta (Young Thug) & Chicago (Chance The Rapper).  Unlike that album, however, the "Minnesota Nice" quality has been tuned down and these young egos are certainly up for a bit of indulgence in success.

Really, that's what I took away from TheStand4rd.  I've been following Twin Cities hip-hop for quite some time and the lineage that traces from Atmosphere, Kanser, & Heiruspecs take on traditional hip-hop to Doomtree's more skewed, wide open version seems to have led us here.  As far as I can tell, TheStand4rd at its core is four talented young men with a completely different idea of what "hip-hop" is supposed to sound like.  They put in plenty of work exploring these ideas as solo artists and, with this album, have combined their strengths to force the Twin Cities to sit up & take notice.  Like I said earlier, I'd be lying if I said I totally understood what was going on here, but if this album really is the opening salvo from the next generation in Twin Cities hip-hop then I think it's safe to say tat Minnesota's reputation for accessible, boundary-pushing hip-hop will remain intact for years to come.

To hear TheStand4rd for yourself take a minute and swing over to their Soundcloud page.


Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Songs Of The Week #85: TCDroogsma


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

Sylvan Esso, Tinariwen, Sally Seltmann, Daniel Ellsworth & The Great Lakes, & K.Raydio & Psymun...


Well hello again, MP3 junkies!  Welcome to Songs Of The Week #85!
 

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, this week MinneSarah took the week off due to what could kindly be called "Current-based fatigue."  Trust us, her words were considerably more harsh.

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. Sylvan Esso - Coffee (from the single Coffee/Dress)


 
TCDroogsma:

     As mentioned up above, MinneSarah is not joining me this week.  We traded text messages earlier this week and she told me that she just didn't have the energy or the patience this week to slog through another batch of Current songs.  I could definitely understand.  If you didn't read last week's reviews, I hit a similar wall with that Yellow Ostrich song.  Spending years with these SOTD tracks has taught me that, more often than not, you're just going to get stuck with very, very average music that aligns with The Current's definition of "relevant" or "trendy."  As such, you have to sift through a lot of sound-of-the-moment bullshit to find the gems.

     Why do I bring all of this up?  Because "Coffee" is just such a gem.  Sylvan Esso is a collaboration between vocalist Amelia Meath of The Mountain Men & producer Nick Sanborn aka Made Of Oak.  On "Coffee," Sanborn works up lovely, synth-heavy canvas for Meath's vocals.  His production hinges on keyboads that create a backdrop for crystal clear plinks, plunks, & percussion.  It's a brilliantly laid back production that perfectly matches Meath's matter-of-fact vocals.

     Meath, in turn, puts together a stellar performance, painting a picture of falling in love from the perspective of somebody who's probably fallen in love a few too many times.  Her vocals are weary, yet hopeful.  When she pulls out the tired hip-hop trope of , "Get up, get down.. get up, get down..." it's tellingly delivered as old news, yet, obviously, always a crowd pleaser.  "Coffee" ebbs & flows brilliantly, with both members of Sylvan Esso sounding absolutely essential. 

Final Score: 4/5

02. Tinariwen - Chaghaybou (from the album Chaghaybou)




TCDroogsma:

     This is Tinariwen's second appearance as a SOTD track.  Their first, a song called "Tenere Taqhim Tossam" was a peculiar song that found success by mixing in airy vocals and guitar work that left plenty of room to breathe.  They caught a nice groove and rode it for over 4:00.

     "Chaghaybou," unfortunately, brings none of that subtlety to the table.  The guitar work on this song is similar to "Tenere Taqhim Tossam," however it's significantly more claustrophobic than before.  Lyrically, not a word is sung in English.  While it's completely unfair to criticize a band from Mali for not singing in English, that doesn't change the fact that songs I can't understand do not appeal to me.  Were "Chaghaybou" an even mildly interesting song, I could understand its appearance as an SOTD track.  However, it's not.  Frankly, the fact that The Current is pushing a 30 year old band from Saharan Africa reeks of the kind of, "They're great, you've probably never heard of them..." music snobbery that pervades just about everything The Current does these days. 

Final Score: 1.5/5

03. Sally Seltmann - Seed Of Doubt (from the album Hey Daydreamer)




TCDroogsma:

     You may know Australian singer-songwriter-producer Sally Seltmann better by her former stage name New Buffalo.  Or, if you're like me, you may not.  No matter.  "Seed Of Doubt" is lovely, if somewhat cliche-riddled song.

     As I've mentioned many times before in these reviews, sometimes sequencing is everything.  I spent the week listening to Sally Seltmann's middle-of-the-road piano-pop immediately after that pointless Tinariwen song.  As such, it's familiarly warm hooks and lyrics of relationship confusion felt like putting on a warm, familiar sweater.  Seltmann's vocals are clear & pretty.  When she sings, simply & plaintively, "I love you, I love you, I love you-ooh..." in the last 30 seconds of the song, it's delivered with such little pretension that it's difficult not to become immediately smitten with Seltmann.  Sure, "Seed Of Doubt" sounds like it was meant for the next Cities 97 compilation, but so what?  Great pop is great pop.

Final Score: 3.5/5

04. Daniel Ellsworth & The Great Lakes - Sun Goes Out (from the album Kid Tiger)




TCDroogsma:

     Daniel Ellsworth & The Great Lakes is a Nashville-based band, however, Mr. Ellsworth hails from the Land Of 10,000 Lakes (many of which are great, though only one is labeled as such).

     "Sun Goes Out" actually sounds exactly like a Minnesota boy leading a Nashville band.  The hooks are sharp, but the performance is loose & open.  Lyrics like "I don't know why we fight just to get along..." sound like they're coming from a man who knows the true definition of "Minnesota Nice."  The song remains sunny as the band builds to a rock n roll chorus and finally explodes with an odd, wordless group vocal bridge.  While not a particularly memorable song, "Sun Goes Out" is a pleasantly familiar four and half minutes that takes small risks & yields small rewards.

Final Score: 2.5/5

05. K.Raydio & Psymun - Joyride (from the album LucidDreamingSkylines)




TCDroogsma:

     I was very excited to see a new single from K.Raydio & Psymun in this week's batch of songs.  If you're a frequent reader of SOTW, you should already be familiar with K.Raydio's voice from MaLLy's "Good One" & Homeless' "Get Gone."  If you're a frequent reader of my Flatbasset blog or listener of my Flatbasset Radio podcast, you may know that I spent the first week of February with Psymun's excellent Heartsick as my Album Of The Week and played their single "Jupiter" on Flatbasset Radio: Episode #24.

     So, for better or worse, I'm already exceedingly familiar with K.Raydio & Psymun's sound.  That said, "Joyride" does not disappoint.  Psymun builds one of his brilliantly off-kilter beats around percussion that drifts from speaker to speaker, a twinkling keyboard figure, and saxophone bursts.  As is typically the case with Psymun, the beat aims for the stars and hits the mark (even the inherently risky use of saxophone pays off big time).

     It should be noted, however, that for 2:50 seconds of the 3:12 song, the beat doesn't really go anywhere.  It doesn't push or pull or really have any say in the song's hook.  As such, K.Raydio (who's voice has proven so adept at selling hooks) is left to craft her own melody.  Fortunately, she's up to the task.  While she never crafts the kind of hook that will have you humming, she returns to the same melody enough times that the song maintains a structure.  While this sort of song could lend itself to vocal embellishment, she manages to keep her vocal flourishes strictly in the "tasteful" column.  Frankly, much like Sylvan Esso up above, K.Raydio & Psymun both bring their own ideas to "Joyride" and manage to compliment each other exquisitely.

Final Score: 4/5

Well there you have it, MP3 junkies!  Another 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.


Saturday, February 15, 2014

Newest Industry Presents - Flatbasset Radio: Episode #31


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

Do you have the time to listen to me whine?


Hello again, free music fans! Welcome to Flatbasset Radio: Episode #31!
 
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.  He spends the week celebrating the anniversaries of several of his favorite albums, uses one of his theories on life to justify playing U2, tells Beyonce to "put it away for a while," concedes to being years late to one of the 2000's great bands, does his best not to get sued, gets "super pumped" for the new Hold Steady album (while firing shots at their tour itinerary), discusses the roots of Kanye's controversy-filled career, misreads song titles, can't figure out how old he was 20 years ago, discusses three albums that shaped "music kids" in 1994, explains just how he spent ten years in a "punk rock wormhole," and plays the song that sent him on the path to music nerd-dom!

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 #31



01. Franz Ferdinand - The Dark Of The Matinee
02. Psymun (w/Chester Watson) - Dead Albatross
03. Damaged Bug - Photograph
04. Future - Drunk In Love
05. U2 - Invisible (Red Edit Version)
06. The Walkmen - The North Pole
07. Beat Culture - Drifter (Saint Pepsi Remix)
08. The Hold Steady - The Only Thing (Live On WYEP)
09. Kanye West - All Falls Down
10. The Autumn Defense - This Thing That I've Found
11. Kelis - Jerk Ribs
12. Green Day - Basket Case

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.

Monday, February 3, 2014

Album Of The Week: February 3rd-9th, 2014


My Album Of The Week for the week of February 3rd-February 9th, 2014:


Psymun - Heartsick

01. myintroheyguys
02. Fuck Bush
03. Banani
04. Dead Albatross (w/Chester Watson)
05. Tape Op
06. Long Ride Home On A Painted Path In The Underground Tunnels (R.I.P. Damacha)
07. Amya
08. King Krule - Neptune Estate (Psymun Remix)
09. Psymun & K.Raydio - Jupiter

Psymun is a producer from Minneapolis whose name just keeps getting bigger and bigger.  After spending the last couple of weeks with The Cloak Ox & Marijuana Deathsquads as my AOTW, I'm sincerely looking forward to spending this week with his beat tape Heartsick.

In a roundabout way I found out about Psymun via Minneapolis rapper MaLLy.  MaLLy got a lot of play out of the excellent single "Good One" from his The Last Great... album.  That song featured K.Raydio (who was new to me at the time) on the hook.  I started looking into her work and found that she and Psymun were working on a full-length album together after finding chemistry on their single "Jupiter" (which, hopefully, you heard on Flatbasset Radio: Episode #24).



Anyway, this beat tape was designed as a stop-gap release between the "Jupiter" single and their collaborative LP LucidDreamingSkylines.  That album came out last December, but I feel like it will be well worth it to spend a week with Heartsick before digging into that album (especially during what will likely be another bitterly cold week).

The album is still available as a "Name Your Price" download over on Psymun's Bandcamp page.  Go give it a listen.

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Newest Industry Presents: Flatbasset Radio - Episode #24


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

All the parts are running, sparks are spilling out the gears...


Hello again, free music fans! Welcome to Flatbasset Radio: Episode #24!
 
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!


In this week's edition Droogsy plays a song for the cold weather, reaches back for a lost Twin Cities R&B jam, laments being too old to attend Doomtree Blowouts, shines a spotlight on some local artists in an Album Of The Week showcase, questions the definition of "extreme hiatus,"  plays an modern indie rock classic, explains that British people are inherently polite, gives us a Flatclassic that doubles as the Cover Of The Week, and, of course, fires a few shots at David Bowie!

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 #24



01.  Mason Proper - Lock & Key
02.  Illogic & Blockhead (w/Lionesque) - Chiseled Masterpiece
03.  Walter Lewis & The Blue Stars - I Have Love At Home
04.  Doomtree - The Grand Experiment
05.  Frankie Teardrop - New Beverage
06.  Allan Kingdom - I Should Be A Pusha
07.  The Persian Leaps - Hard Feelings
08.  The Walkmen - The Rat
09.  Baishe Kings - Yeah
10.  Clinic - Miss You
11.  K.Raydio & Psymun - Jupiter
12.  Nirvana - The Man Who Sold The World

There you have it, music fans! Enjoy!




For more TCDroogsma be sure to give him a follow on Twitter (@TCDroogsma).  He can also be found right here on Newest Industry reviewing singles in our Songs Of The Week column. Previous episodes of Flatbasset Radio are archived on his Mixcloud page.

 


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.