Sunday, January 3, 2010
Flatbasset-January '10
Flatbasset - January '10
01. The Cribs - We Were Aborted
As you all know, I love The Cribs. This is the first song off their new Ignore The Ignorant album. Like I’ve mentioned before, their last two albums (The New Fellas & Men’s Needs, Women’s Needs, Whatever) are perfect, sloppy Brit-punk albums. All drunken singalongs and middle fingers. However, for this new one they enlisted Johnny Marr and decided they were going to write a “grown-up” album. Sadly, this song is the only song on the album that maintains the old thrill. I love Johnny Marr as much as every skinny, white, middle-class 20-something, but c’mon man! Why ruin a good thing?
02. Doomtree - Coup For The King
Before Doomtree Blowout VI the crew decided to put together a new False Hopes so they would have something to new to sell at the show. What makes a song like “Coup For The King” amazing is that this is something they just tossed off. Right now DTR is like The Mats or Smiths in their prime, where even the casual stuff is great.
Plus, as if P.O.S. doesn’t get enough love on this blog, he gets more points for that line about Mario and “King Koopa spit…”
03. The Magnetic Fields - Too Drunk To Dream
God bless ya, Stephen Merritt. Sometimes getting drunk and going to bed is the best way to handle life.
04. Built To Spill - Twin Falls
For a band that’s known to toe the line between indie rock and jam band, it’s a tribute to Doug Martsch’s songwriting ability that he can cram such a vivid little portrait of growing up in a small town into a mere 1:50.
05. The-Dream - Take U Home 2 My Mama
Sometimes you just gotta go fucking Top 40 crazy. I’ve been listening to this song like crazy for the last month and I’m still nowhere near sick of it. I love the line, “I’m tryin’ to get her gone, because I’m already gone…” and the backing voice just goes, “I’m already (nrrrmmmm…)” You should see me and basset dancing to this one in the studio. Good times.
06. Crossing Guards - 51 Weeks Ago
Crossing Guards is Martin Devaney’s good time, old-fashioned rock ‘n roll band. Frankly, I’ve been to a lot of shows since I’ve been back and sometime between 2000 and 2010 this turned into a city full of art rock bands (Alpha Centauri, Colder In Mosow, I‘m looking in your direction). God bless these guys for throwing back a few Tall Boys and turning their guitars up. So what if they’re not breaking new ground? That’s part of the charm. This is a guitar-n-whiskey town.
07. Beulah - Popular Mechanics For Lovers
What a heartbreaker! I do like the sly Magnetic Fields reference.
08. At The Drive-In - Rolodex Propaganda
How far away from the turn of the century do we need to get before Relationship Of Command stops sounding like it came from the future?
I really like this one because it’s the only song where they seem to actually make light of how ridiculous their lyrics are, with Cedric Bixler-Zavala warbling “manuscript replica!” throughout the chorus.
Who’s taking bets on when the ATDI reunion takes place? Sparta broke up, The Mars Volta seems to have stalled out. I mean, if Pavement is back on the road then these guys have to be next. I’m betting on a summer 2012 Coachella headlining slot.
09. Serengeti - Dennehey
As you’re all aware, I love songs that big up hometowns. Even though Chicago is Minneapolis’ nemesis (Copyright: Chuck Klosterman), I can’t help but feel the love for the Windy City on this one.
Vacation Place: Sconsin! I can get behind that.
10. Art Brut - DC Comics And Chocolate Milkshake
This song is a great example of how Art Brut is so much more than just Eddie Argos. I mean, he’s great, but note the pauses, that descending chorus riff, and that killer lead guitar line. No one should be surprised that these guys are still going strong after 3 albums.
11. Portishead - The Rip
This is one of my favorite “put in the earbuds and close your eyes” songs. I love the way that little electronic blip blossoms in the second half of the song, as if Beth Gibbons has given into the morbid curiosity that haunts the first half of the song.
12. T. Rex - Metal Guru
There’s a famous story of Johnny Marr calling up John Porter and telling him that he had a new sketch for a Smiths song and he was going to send him a copy via mail. A week later Porter received a package. He expected it to be a demo of something Marr had put together, but opened it to find the “Metal Guru“ single. Then The Smiths came down and banged out “Panic.” Score one for Johnny Marr’s sense of humour.
13. Jay-Z (w/Rihanna & Kanye West) - Run This Town
Alright, so I went top 40 crazy again. It’s not my fault Jigga’s so good that everyone has to listen.
I’ll even give it up for Rihanna. When I saw her on the “Glow In The Dark” tour, she killed it, even though “Umbrella” was the only song I knew.
14. Pictures Of Then - When It Stings
The winner of my favorite Minnesota song this month. Something about this song has a late 90’s alt-pop vibe. It would have fit nicely between Tonic & Better Than Ezra back on Rev 105.
15. Madonna - Till Death Do Us Part
My friend Inga made me a mix CD and it had this song on it. I’ll be honest, I was confused by how good it was. All those dancey-blippy-Hot Chip-Brazilian Girls bands of the last 5 years can’t touch this shit. Is it possible I’ve been wrong about Madonna all along?
16. Freeway & Jake One - Know What I Mean
Like Slug & Murs, Eyedea & Abilities, St. Paul & Minneapolis, Peanut Butter & Jelly, Coffee & Coconut Creamer, Freeway & Jake One is just a fucking perfect combination. They’re actually playing that RSE Haiti Benefit show in a week and I can’t wait. Freeway’s post-mainstream hip-hop career is going to be killer.
17. Los Campesinos! - There Are Listed Buildings
My favorite Current song of the month, the energy on this track is just too infectious. I never get sick of sharp hooks.
18. Kid Cudi - Up Up And Away
This is my 2010 theme song. I don’t know if you know, but my friends and I are taking MPLS this year. We’ll be up up and away. Just you watch.
I highly recommend that everybody track down a copy of Kids Cudi’s Man On The Moon album. That shit is gold.
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Yeah, We Do Our Own Damn Thing...
01. P.O.S. - Purexed
This is a very personal choice and I’m going to spend too many words trying to explain it.
As you know, I spent more than half our 2009 living out in New York City. It was amazing, difficult, fun, terrible, fuck… I wouldn’t change it and I certainly don’t regret it. But that’s another blog. Or not. Whatever.
I arrived in Queens on January 31st. On February 2nd, Never Better was released and I played the fuck out that record. This basically was my New York album. My last little piece of home. I’m actually a little disappointed that I wasn’t around the Twin Cities while this album was blowing up, but that’s no real loss. It’s a wrecking ball no matter where you’re living.
I remember listening to this album while I rode the trains all over tryin’ to find a job, when I went to meet Sarah or her friends, while I walked around Williamsburg or walked Margo around the block. This album got me through what was unquestionably the biggest, craziest thing that I‘ve ever undertaken.
After a month or so, things weren’t going great. I still hadn’t landed a job, I was running out of money, I was homesick, hadn’t made any friends… I was unpleasant to be around, honestly. And the Never Better tour rolled into The Mercury Lounge. We went down, had some gin and tonics, maybe a PBR, and watched Mictlan & Beak (with a “Blessings“ cameo by F. Stokes), Sims, & P.O.S. and play all those songs that I just lived for. Hand Over Fist, Doomtree, just about everything off Never Better. I remember standing around a bunch of jerk off hipsters while being the only dude yelling “DTR” during “Suicide Jimmy Snuffa.” Honestly, it was just what I needed. After being confused and unpleasant in NYC, that show reminded me who I was (for better or worse). It was MPLS coming out for a visit and it was great.
So, things took a turn for the better over the next few months. Got a job (a bad one, but it was a start), I met a few people, Phil came out and visited, Sean Avery and Molson turned us into the most hated people at MSG for a night, summer came, things were, y’know, coming around.
However, for reasons I won’t get into here or now, things didn’t quite work out. It’s complicated and it’s none of your business. Eventually, it became clear that I was going to have to make a choice: Stay in NYC and build a life with Basset or come back to MPLS and try to build a life here. Now, it’s no secret that I love MPLS with all my heart, but NYC was starting to feel like home. It was like that great part of a relationship when you finally let your guard down and quit watching what you say around your new girlfriend. I honestly could not make up my mind about this for a while. Then this happened:
The whole video takes place in my old, and now present, neighborhood. That’s my street, that’s my coffeeshop, that’s my snow and my fucking skyline and you know what? I’m taking it back.
Now I know what you’re thinking, “You made the biggest decision of your life based on a music video? Do you have some kind of mental deficiency?” Well, shut up. I told you, it was complicated. But this song and video reminded me that I had a home waiting for me. That I had amazing friends, family, and a whole culture that I missed. That Minnesota was in my blood and this is where I belong. I still believe that. I think about New York all the time. Honestly, not a day goes by where I don’t wonder. But I’m happy here. What else could you ask for, really?
I don’t know if any of that makes sense and I’m really not sure it sounds the same in your brain as it does in mine, but that’s that. Thanks for checking out the list.
Sunday, December 20, 2009
Favorites Of The 2000's: 20-2
However, I did have the Top 20 hammered down months ago and I still felt like posting them. So, even if you ignored the previous posts, please download this one. The song quality, obviously, is stellar or it wouldn't be the end of the list.
Favorites Of The 2000's: 20-2
I'll be back next Sunday with a track by track and my number one absolute favorite song of the 2000's.
20. Martin Devaney - Flowers On The Doorstep
I first heard this one while listening to The Local Show on The Current one Sunday when they were doing an all request show. It took me about nine seconds to be totally enthralled and about 45 minutes to get to Cheapo and pick up the album.
Martin Devaney certainly has a way with tales of heartbreak, but setting this one to waltz time seems to have given it a little extra sense of formality and sentimentality. And that violin line is the audio equivalent of a sad, long-winded, inevitable but not desired break up. Plus, the lyrics just kill. “Boys, you should see the way she dances/a drunken compass of a blur…” is the kind of description that’s remarkably vague, specific, and completely relatable.
19. Aesop Rock - No Regrets
Only Aesop Rock would frame his mission statement in the third person. Aesop’s portrait of Lucy and her misunderstood life and misunderstood work doubles as Aesop explaining that even though we may never understand the art he creates, it’s something that he (or any other artist really) has to do to find fulfillment. “I knew what I wanted and did it until it was done, so I’ve been the dream I wanted to be since day one.” In short, the journey is its own reward.
Sidenote: Phil and I freaked the fuck out when he dropped this song at Soundset. Not really a song you’d expect at an outdoor festival.
18. Of Montreal - Bunny Ain’t No Kind Of Rider
For nearly four minutes, Kevin Barnes finally got it. Of Montreal manages to wrap at least four good hooks into this one, yet each one is allowed to breath and find its way into your frontal lobe. Plus, it makes you feel fucking great to refer to some girl who has rejected you by explaining to your friends that she, “Ain’t got no soul power.”
17. Lupe Fiasco - Kick, Push
This song is the textbook example of that special place rap found after gangsta rap became a joke (thanks Fiddy!) and Eminem finally became a joke (We get it, your wife sucks, your mom sucks, your kid’s great, you only have 4 things to say. I‘ll still watch 8 Mile though).
For years and years hip-hop spoke to black kids the same way punk rock spoke to white kids. With “Kick, Push” Lupe tried to make it clear that whether it’s skateboarding, beats, or guitars, kids are always looking “for a place to be.”
16. Modest Mouse - Ocean Breathes Salty
“Float On” gets a lot of credit for being the song where Isaac Brock quit being Mr. Negativity and embraced a good hook, but compared to “Ocean Breathes Salty” “Float On” sounds like, “C’Mon, Get Happy!.”
Anyone can put on a smiley face, but lyrically, “Ocean Breathes Salty” shows the kind of introspection that marks Brock’s turn toward maturity. Punctuated on several occasions by the line, “I had to think a while,” it’s clear that he’s finally able to see both the good and bad. “That is that, and this is this…” Life’s complicated.
Musically, this song still blows me away. I don’t know how they got that high guitar noise that seems to float over the whole song, but it was a stroke of genius. Only Modest Mouse could have written this song, and thank god they did.
15. Jay-Z - Heart Of The City (Ain’t No Love)
No song in the last 10 years has sounded better blasting out of car speakers while tearing down the highway. I don’t even know what’s second. Probably “99 Problems.” We all owe Kanyeezy a drink for this beat.
Lyrically, with the exception of one misguided “faggots” line, Jay just crushes it. He’s gone from, “I’m gonna go get it,” mode to “I got it, show some respect” mode. “Jigga held you down 6 summers, damn, where’s the love?”
Of course, Jigga put out one more classic album (The Black Album) before he fell too far over the line, demanding respect for subpar albums. But right here, in the middle of The Blueprint, he wanted it and you had to give it to him.
14. The Plastic Constellations - Black Market Pandas
I absolutely love this song, but it always makes me a little sad. With Crusades and We Appreciate You The Plastic Constellations had finally struck the right balance between post-punk guitar, hip-hop lyrical pacing and absolutely fucking killer hooks (You should see me sing that, “South Minnnesoooota!” line while I’m driving. Not pretty.). I know it took a long time for them to find that balance, but they were right there At this trajectory they would have been running the Twin Cities by the end of the decade. Ah well… TPC, motherfucker, cop a feel or two!
13. Doomtree - Gander Back
I was torn with which DTR track was going to crack the Top 20, ultimately “Gander Back” over “Kid Gloves” for a couple of reasons.
1. Doomtree is a hip-hop collective. Hip-hop. I don’t say this to take anything away from Cecil Otter or Dessa because lord knows I love what they do. They are absolutely indispensable parts of the DTR equation. That being said, Mictlan, P.O.S., and Sims are pure MC’s. I bet the chorus was the very last thing they wrote for this song. I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s a twelve minute version of this song on the cutting room floor with these three just tearing off verse after grimy verse.
2. Lyrically, this song encompasses exactly what makes independent hip-hop great. It reminds you that there’s no shame in picking a vision, setting a goal, and working your ass off to make it happen. “You want the view from the roof, don’t wanna build from the bottom? Truth is we got ‘em, brick by brick over fist, with or without ‘em.” It’s yours to build and you shouldn’t let anyone tell you otherwise.
Sidenote: I was talking to Mictlan a couple days ago about this song and he mentioned that when he says, “Doing that MC Hammer dance,” he was actually doing the Hammer dance. Real recognize real.
12. Radiohead - 2+2=5
You’re probably wondering how something off Hail To The Thief went top 20 while “The National Anthem,” “Knives Out,” & “All I Need” are nowhere to be found. Good question. Those songs are all probably better than this one, but this is my list and this one’s personal.
As far as I know this is the only Radiohead song that Phil knows and I can’t ever listen to it without picturing him singing along in his best Thom Yorke voice (which is ten times funnier when we’re drunk). And I can’t think of that without grinning like an idiot. It’s my list and I can make up whatever criteria I want. I think “Song makes me smile from ear to ear” is a legit factor and this one scored big.
11. Murs (w/Joe Scudda)- Silly Girl
Another personal choice. This song has so many lines that have become regular fixtures of Phil & my conversation that I’ll have to break it down.
1. “I’m at where I’m at and I’ma be where I’ma be and that’s about all you need to know…”
When girls text one of us at random or when we’re out painting the city gold.
2. “It’s not hot, it’s not cute, it’s not getting you anywhere, and it’s about to get you fired…”
Usually referring to the slightly angrier text follow-up text from aforementioned girl when the first text is ignored.
3. “One day at the crib she gonna let you break ground…”
Um, self-explanatory
4. “That’s how it be when your falling in…um… I wouldn’t say that…”
Ha! We’re bad people.
5. “Silly little girl, simple little girl, you didn’t want me when I wanted you…”
Instant “my girl and I broke up and I’ve gone super-fucking-emo” antidote.
6. “I took Tasha to the Hyatt, oh yeah, I went there again…”
As far as I know neither of us has actually brought a girl to the Hyatt. Or even set foot in a Hyatt. Still, fun line to drop.
7. “That story about that cow and that milk ain’t a fact, ‘cause if you wait too long that milk goes sour, and I like my lovin’ hot no more cold shower.”
I played this song specifically for that line while driving Phil and his girl home from Minnehaha Lanes once. There is nothing as fun as an inside joke between two people when there’s four people in a car.
10. Wilco - Impossible Germany
For the record, I have no clue what Jeff Tweedy’s singing about, but he sounds absolutely perfect singing it. No one else’s voice could pull this song off. Plus, when you’re feeling down, the line, “This is important, but I know you’re not listening…” will cut straight to your heart.
Now, if you’re reading this, you probably know me. You know that I am not a guitar junkie by any stretch of the imagination. I usually view guitar solos as a kind of non-sexual masturbation. And if you’re gonna take the sexual aspect out of masturbation then, y’know, what’s the point?
However, the second half of this song is a perfect little storm whipped up here by Tweedy and Nels Cline. With Cline taking the lead for the first half, it sounds like vintage Steely Dan, professional, clean, and enjoyable. Then, halfway through, Cline freaks the fuck out and starts fuzzing up his part like crazy while the Tweedy side catches a brilliant groove, eventually taking over the song until the two-parts come crashing back into each other. I saw them do this song live in Duluth, outdoors, in the rain, and neither missed note. It was absolutely mind blowing.
09. Kanye West - The Glory
I already gave this one 200 words a while back, but I’ll talk this shit again. Kanye’s ego (always his most intriguing trait) is in full on you-can’t-sit behind-me mode. “I’m pop, The Barkers, I’m hood, The Parkers…” He’s everything to everyone. And, in case that’s too cryptic, we get, “With my ego, I could stand there in a Speedo and still be looked at like a fuckin’ hero!” and, “When you meet me in person, what do you feel like? I know, I know, I look better in real life!” I can’t get enough of this.
If you really want to be blown away, try to tune out Kanye and just listen to this beat. He’s certainly got the talent to back up the ego.
08. Graham Wright - Medicine Hat
This is my absolute favorite love song from the 2000’s. Unlike Coldplay’s “The Scientist” (which is about a love that probably shouldn’t have ended, but Chris Martin’s a fuck up and, hey, “Nooobody said it was eeeeaaassssyyy”) and Death Cab For Cutie’s “I Will Follow You Into The Dark” (which is about a love that actually seems to come to fruition, even if it is romantically morbid), “Medicine Hat” blows them both away in a scant 138 seconds.
How? Because somehow Graham Wright struck the most relatable chord. I don’t know if this song (or the EP it came from, which seems to revolve around this same unattainable relationship) is true or not, but it’s genius.
Look, we’ve all been in love with someone we can’t have. And usually it plays out just like this song. Part of the reason you love this person is because you know them. You’re comfortable with them. You do things like take long car rides with them. You turn the radio up and sing along together. You take weird, platonic naps with each other. You don’t get upset when their boyfriend or husband calls (because that would upset them, and that’s the last thing you’d want to do), but you don’t tell them either. You just pretend it’s not important and enjoy your little shared moment. Graham Wright is a heart-wrenching genius.
07. Cecil Otter (w/P.O.S.) - Traveling Dunk Tank
This is my favorite live song of the last decade. Fifth Element, Triple Rock, Mainroom... It absolutely kills (especially that bonus third chorus).
It's my understanding that P.O.S. & Cecil are the root of this whole crazy Doomtree phenomena. It's easy to see why they've been so successful. Notice the way P.O.S. attacks this beat, sticking a "nuh-uh" before the verse while Cecil waits for the beat to hit, sitting back and making a delayed entrance into his verse. Perfectly complimentary. Add the second best chorus in the Doomtree catalog and you have one hell of a song.
06. Why? - Fatalist Palmistry
A lot of Why? songs leave you trying to figure out exactly what the fuck you just listened to. And that’s why this one stand out. Yoni Wolf brilliantly ties together a bunch of (probably) fictional non-sequitirs about psychics, cats, birds, jet streams, painted ponies and a “song on my palm that you can’t read…” with a chorus that makes it clear that, yeah, life’s OK. In fact, we’re all pretty lucky to be, “alive, and loved, and wide-eyed in (our) time…”
Plus, this song contains the achingly poignant line, “I’m lucky to be under the same sky that held the exhale from your first breath like a ring on a pillow of clouds…” Maybe my favorite line of the decade. With the obvious exception of that “Story about the cow and milk ain’t a fact…” line. Whatuptho?
05. Buck 65 - Blood Of A Young Wolf
If Tom Waits grew up on hip-hop…
A. I wouldn’t loathe Tom Waits
B. He’d be Buck 65
C. He’d never, ever write a song this good.
Taken at face value, the lyrics to this song make no sense whatsoever. However, take as a kind of stream-of-conscious poem, Buck 65 paints a brilliant picture of the complications of modern life, women, technology, music, society in general and a longing for a life that’s simple and pure. “I still love you lying down, k-i-s-s-i-n-g…” Of course, this desire for a different life leads to a couple brilliant lines about losing yourself in the process. “What do I know? Who am I? My two left feet and my big dumb face. I’d do the same if I had the chance, cheat the system, rig the race…” I’ve never heard anyone so eloquently say, “Please, just stop everything for a minute, I’m tired, I’m confused, and I don’t know what I’m doing.” I mean, we all feel that way sometimes.
04. Legion Of Doom - Hands Down Gandhi
I’ve always had kind of a soft spot for mashups and this is easily the best one I’ve ever heard. By mashing together Dashboard Confessional’s “Hands Down” and Sage Francis’ “Slow Down Gandhi,” Legion Of Doom make it nearly impossible to hear either original song the same way again.
Let’s start with Sage Francis:
He’s clearly very upset. I mean, he usually is, but his lines are pointedly venomous on this one. Oddly, the original "Slow Down Gandhi" doesn't sound as urgent. Props to Legion Of Doom for giving this one the canvas it deserves.
“From up here I see Marines and Hummers on a conquest, underdogs with Wonderbras in a push-up contest. All for the sake of military recruitment.”
“I don’t care how half-naked or fake she looks, she smells like dirty cash and aged paper books.”
“If they could sell sanity in a bottle they’d be charging for compressed air.”
“When push turns to shove you jump into your forefather’s arms.”
“When the cameras stop rolling stay the fuck out of the picture pilgrim!”
“Republicrat, Democran, one party system, media goes in a frenzy? They’re stripped of their credentials”
“When the music’s dead I’ll have Ted Nugent’s head hanging on my wall.” (Amen.)
“6 in the morning police at my crib, now my nights consist of two toothpicks and eyelids. A crucifix and vitamins, music that is pirated, new favorite food made of mutated hybrids. They tell me that ‘it’s not that bad. It fucks you up good, but it’s not that bad.’”
And lastly,
“You support the troops by wearing yellow ribbons? Just bring home my motherfuckin’ brothers and sisters.” (That one just kills me.)
Onto the Dashboard Confessional aspect. “Hands Down” is a song about meeting a girl and it being “the best day ever,” however, when juxtaposed with Sage Francis’ rage at a pretty screwed up society, that sounds like the most trivial fucking thing on earth. For making Dashboard Confessional sound even more trivial and ridiculous (no easy task), Legion Of Doom are geniuses.
03. Low - Step
You think the words just walk away?
But they’re creeping through my brain
Sinking straight into my step”
What makes this song great is it’s essentially an ode to Midwestern, ’Minnesota Nice,’ passive-aggressiveness, a subject that I know tooooo well. If someone says something upsetting, we may not say anything (after all, we’d rather be polite than honest), but you better believe that we have long memories. Words never “just walk away.” They’ll creep into our brains and into our steps for a long time.
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
They Try To Stop The Growth...

Or, do you expect artists to challenge themselves and, by extension, you? Plenty of great art has been born of this approach as well. The best example of this that I can think of is The Beatles. If The Beatles had wanted to crank out remake after remake of Help! they certainly would have still made a dump truck full of money. They’d probably be spoken of in the same breathe as Herman’s Hermits and The Rascals, but they would have done fine for themselves. As we all know, they didn’t rest on their laurels, instead choosing to continue to push the envelope, giving us classics like The Beatles & Revolver. Of course, they also gave us The Magical Mystery Tour & Yellow Submarine. With the benefit of history, however, we’re able to place those albums in the “Misguided Idea” piles. And don’t forget, “Hey Bulldog” indirectly led to The Beatles
For those who don’t know, Felt is the project of MC’s Murs and Slug. On their first collaborative album, Felt: A Tribute To Christina Ricci, they were backed by Living Legends producer The Grouch. While that album was no great conquest, it was the textbook definition of a “side project.” Two talented MC’s clearly enjoying each other’s company and “letting their hair down” for a bunch of none too serious jams.
So with that as our background, it should be clear what we’re getting into with Felt 3: A Tribute To Rosie Perez. By enlisting Aesop Rock, and taking a look at what Slug and Murs have been up to since Felt 2, we should have all been prepared for this version of the Felt side project to be a way for them to push themselves and test out new ideas, rather than just another victory lap.

The one thing that Felt 3 has in common with the previous releases is that it features a producer letting his hair down. Of course, when Aesop Rock loosen the reins it means something completely different than when your average producer does it. Clearly having fun, Aes fills the beats with compelling little twists and turns. “Ghost Dance Deluxe” has a horn line that sounds like it came straight from The Specials classic “Ghost Town.” While the wah-wah guitar and sped-up samples that hover below the drums in “Felt Good” and the Bomb Squad-style “We Have You Surrounded” are both great examples of the attention to detail he puts into his beats. And this is to say nothing of the little instrumental breaks (most notably “Kevin Spacey,“ and “Get Cake”) that break up the album, all of which re 50-100 seconds of bouncy beats, a welcome reprieve to those tired hip-hop skits. This is what happens when a producer lets his hair down.
Which brings us back to Slug and Murs. If they were out to be tested, tested they were, and the results are mostly high marks. While they lack the playful vibe that permeated the first two albums (oddly, leaving that to those aforementioned Aesop instrumental breaks), they do sound like they are enjoying the kind of satisfaction that comes with pushing your own limits. “Protagonists, ““Felt Chewed Up,” and “She Sonnet” all find our boys sticking close to their usual lyrical themes of bragging up their own skills, but branching out into flows we’ve never heard before. “G.I. Josephine” provides a peculiar portrait of a single mom hitting up the town (“She got her hair done, and her go-getter breasts on…“). “Permanent Standby” is a cautionary tale of drugs and debauchery in the big city (and contains my favorite Slug line on the album. Referring to Minneapolis, “Fuck this weather, it’s not fucking funny…”). The even a quick touch of social commentary on “Deathmurdermayhem.” The best melding of all three styles comes on the aforementioned “Ghost Dance Deluxe” which finds Slug and Murs talking about women (nothing unusual there), but, perhaps due to the beat or maybe from just spending too much time with Aesop, they are talking about how they need a ghost instead of a living girl. Murs claims he should, “forget material girls, I need a paranormal chick from an ethereal world.“ I don’t know what that means, but I hope he finds her. Hell, she might get that wedding ring.
If there is one drawback to the album, it’s that both MC’s sound too damn serious all the time. As if focusing on catching these beats has taken all of their concentration. The only thing even remotely close to the lighness of previous albums is “Henrietta Longbottom,” on which Slug and Murs paint bizarre pictures of one of the local weirdos. But even on that one Aesop gets the last laugh.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Flatbasset-December '09
Flatbasset - December '09
01. Iggy Pop - Tell Me A Story
I was listening to The Current on Thanksgiving and they were running a bunch of episodes of Theft Of The Dial. I heard this song during Black Francis’ set. He was singing the praises of this album, New Values, from 1979. After listening to it a few times it made perfect sense that Black Francis would recommend it. You can hear it all over those old Pixies records.
02. BK-One (w/Aceyalone, Myka 9, & Abstract Rude) - Mega
BK-One is Brother Ali’s DJ, which means he’s tied up most of the time. I read that when he has free time he and his wife like to travel. At one point they went to Brazil and he spent most of the trip crate digging. He took all those old Brazilian records, chopped ‘em up, called some fantastic MC’s (Ali, Slug, Murs, Print, I Self, Black Thought…) and put together this Radio Do Canibal album and it’s fantastic! If I would have told you that the best Brazilian-influenced hip-hop album ever would have come out of Minnesota you wouldn’t have believed me, would you?
03. Thao With The Get Down, Stay Down - When We Swam
My favorite November Current song. “Oh, bring your hips to me…” is one hell of a pick up line.

This is Thao With The Get Down, Stay Down. If you know me you know why this is funny.
04. Death From Above 1979 - Black History Month (Alan Braxe & Fred Falke Remix)
Has there ever been a band better suited for remixes than DFA 1979? I not really a fan of remixes in general, and the original version of this song kills, but Alan Braxe & Fred Falke (whoever they are) did a lovely job of fleshing this song out.
05. Wale (w/Gucci Mane) - Pretty Girls
I like Wale because he’s a great example of the way “mainstream” and “underground” are words that are increasingly difficult to use to describe hip-hop. I guarantee that if I ever host a party, Attention Deficit is going to get major play (and you pretty girls better clap clap).
Sidenote: I had to put this song on there just so I could say Gucci Mane turned up on one of my mixes (“Yellow stones on my wrist remind me of a Slushee”). WTFuck, Gucci?
06. The Hold Steady - Magazines
New York does get pretty heavy, believe me.
07. Har Mar Superstar (w/Karen O) - Cut Me Up
This has to be one of the most criminally underrated singles in the history of Minnesota music. Instead of being over the top graphic, Har Mar toes the line nicely. I also like the fact that this song essentially has two choruses (“Cut me up, break me off baby…” “cut me up, uh uh owww”) Why save hooks for other songs when you can just jam them into one fucking great song?
Sidenote: This song is better then all the songs off It’s Blitz! combined.
08. F. Stokes & Lazerbeak (w/Mictlan) - Blessings
I was at work a couple of weeks back and Mictlan passed along a copy of Death Of A Handsome Bride, Stokes & Beak's EP. I remembered Stokes jumping on stage with Beak & Mictlan at the Mercury Lounge a while back and dropping this song and I was very impressed.
I love Mictlan’s verse on this song for two reasons, 1. It turns the song from Chicago to Minneapolis and 2. Shout out to tofu!
09. Why? - Into The Shadows Of My Embrace
I was a little skeptical when I picked up Eskimo Snow a while back. Alopecia was a nearly-perfect album and Eskimo Snow was being marketed as the songs that “didn’t fit” with Alopecia (they were recorded at the same time in MPLS. That’s right, two of the best left-field pop albums and the best Brazilian-based hip hop album were both out of Minneap. It's not all Slug and Paul Westerberg, kids). However, I guess the reason the songs were left off is because they’re even more “indie rock” than Alopecia, which is a great thing (note the guitar freak-out at the end of this one). This record is going to get so many plays while I try to get through this winter.
10. Attracted To Gods - Demon Girl
Attracted To Gods is the guitar & drums blues band led by Atmosphere’s guitar player Nathan Collis. Their Sinners & Saints album is pretty solid. I mainly put this one on for the Cecil Otter fans who download my play lists (y’know, all, um, none of you). Cecil chopped this one up for his own “Demon Girl.”
11. Brazilian Girls - Losing Myself
Oddly, my friends Jesse & Inga both turned me on to Brazilian Girls at the same time. They’re decent, but they’re kind of a joke too. I mean, French lyrics? If you’re not David Byrne, you’re not gonna pull this off. Great hook, though.
12. The Dandy Warhols - Minnesoter
The Dandy Warhols will always have a fan base in Minnesota thanks to these 180 seconds. Sure, that fan base is getting to be over 30 and probably won’t go to shows past 10:00 PM for much longer, but we’re still here! Nothing but love!
13. Bobby Caldwell - Open Your Eyes
I put this one on for all the Common fans who read my blog (fuck it, there are no Common fans reading this. Hell, there’s no Common fans WRITING this blog). Still, I bet when J Dilla found this song in his crates he fucking lost it. I’ve always said, the best thing about most Common records is the beats. The guys got talented friends.
14. Felt - Ghost Dance Deluxe
Speaking of talented friends, Aesop Rock’s beat owns this song. I won’t get into all again, but listen to those horns. Straight out of “Ghost Town.” Plus, Murs & Slug swearing off living girls to pull dead girls? Don’t you guys have enough girl problems?
15. Total Babe - Barebones
My favorite Minnesota-based Current song of the month. Not to knock the song, but this was more a case of "someone has to win." Come on, Minny, step ya game up.
16. Tom Waits - Christmas Card From A Hooker In Minneapolis
You know I’m no Tom Waits fan, but this one seemed appropriate. More for the Christmas/Minneapolis bit, not, y’know, the hooker bit..
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Flatbasset-November '09
Flatbasset-November '09
01. The Get Up Kids - Mass Pike
If you’ve been regularly downloading my playlists, you know it’s no secret that I have a real soft spot for that late 90’s-early 00’s emo. The Get Up Kids are a prime example of everything that was good about emo before it really mainstreamed (that’s right, I make up verbs) a couple of years later. When you break down a song like “Mass Pike” down, it’s just a pop song about being on the road and missing your girl. Obviously, these are not subjects that only inhabit the world of emo. I mean, we’ve all been there, y’know?
02. Cee-Lo - One For The Road
There’s a great line in this one where Cee-Lo claims, “If I only had 16 more bars to live, I’d get high and hopefully OD on an alternative.” This song perfectly lays the groundwork for what Cee-Lo was about to do, which, as we all know, was Gnarls Barkley.
Props to Phil for passing this one along to me.
03. Lucero - The Devil And Maggie Chascarillo
Tied for my favorite non-Minnesotan song on October’s batch of Current Songs Of The Day. I had heard some Lucero before I heard this song and it was pretty raw stuff. Thanks to the horns and keyboards, this song has that southern swagger that seemed to be missing. Plus, that chorus is a fucking killer.
04. Unicorn Dream Attack - Alone
I caught The Current while I was at work the other day and they were playing their favorite 8-bit songs. You know, songs built around old Nintendo noises and such. I was a little underwhelmed by this phenomena when it came about a few years back, but I had forgotten how great this song is. What a lovely little love song.
05. Rage Against The Machine - Sleep Now In The Fire
Speaking of songs I forgot I like. By no means am I a hardcore Rage fan. I’m barely a fan at all. But every now and then they catch a groove and I’m reminded that this whole rap-rock thing had potential once. Can you believe it’s been ten years since this record came out? Goddamn I’m getting old.
06. John Vanderslice - Fetal Horses
Does anybody who reads this no anything about John Vanderslice? Over the years I’ve ended up with a few of his songs and they are all brilliant little pop gems. For some reason this sounds to me like a super-poppy Ted Leo. Anyone else hear that or am I losing it?
07. Golden Silvers - True No. 9 Blues
The other half of the tie for favorite non-Minnesotan song. Mikko Koivu's theme song when Steph signed with Tampa Bay. Kids, this is how you rip off the 80’s. Please take note.
08. Operation Ivy - Sound System
I can’t hear this song without wanting to get up and skank. Makes me feel like I’m 15 years old again.
09. Brother Ali - The Freshest Kids (w/Toki Wright & Evidence)
That’s right, I put Brother Ali on the mix two months in a row. I think he might be the first artist to be able to put that on his resume (and he should, I’ve put some good stuff on these). Besides, who puts together a theme song for their own tour? I bet this one killed at every date of that Fresh Air Tour.
10. Lower 48 - Miles From Minnesota
My favorite Minnesotan song of The Current this month. While I can’t relate to a desire to leave Minnesota, it does have a charming little melody and a sweet story of the little things that are great about being a couple (“We’ve got everywhere to go, but you should sleep, I’ll see you in the morning). Awww…
11. The Rentals - Please Let That Be You
Return Of The Rentals stands up better than almost every other Alternative Nation album from the 90’s (no offense, that dog). Who would have thought that when Matt Sharp left Weezer that his bands debut album would have more staying power than anything Weezer did after he left?
12. Soul Position - Mic Control
You know, I didn’t really like Blueprint this first time I heard him. It always seemed like he wasn’t quite on the beat. After seeing him a few time and listening to Unlimited a dozen times I figured out how he was rolling. RJ and Al are certainly onto something.
13. The Rolling Stones - Play With Fire
I’m a big fan of Wes Anderson’s films (as are most twenty-somethings with, um, “hipster-ish leanings"). He always uses music so well in his films, even if he has some trouble getting his head out of the 60’s. This one is brilliantly deployed in The Darjeeling Limited. Definitely a soundtrack worth checking out.
14. Deltron 3030 - Madness
This album is about 5 songs too long, but damn if Del doesn’t have a flow that sounds great in my car. It seems like everyone who works with Dan The Automater only works with him once. I’m not exactly sure why that is. That tempo change hook is a stroke of genius.
15. Motion City Soundtrack - Can’t Finish What You Started
I must be the oldest Motion City Soundtrack fan in the world by at least 5 years. Their hooks are so good though. If you ever see me flying down 94 bobbing my head side to side like a 15 year old girl who just discovered pop music, you should assume I’m listening to Motion City.
16. Belle & Sebastian - Stay Loose
The last song off of Dear Catastrophe Waitress finds Stuart Murdoch and the band (Collective? Loose Association Of Well Dressed Scots?) doing their best Talking Heads impression. They pull if off a lot better than a lot of these new bands whose sole goal seems to be a credible Talking Heads impression. Well played, lads.
Friday, October 2, 2009
Flatbasset - October '09
Flatbasset - October '09
01. David Bowie - Space Oddity
I don’t know exactly when it happened, but it struck me at some point that this is probably my answer to the question, “What’s your favorite song?” What’s so great about it? Tough to say. It’s a killer sing along song. It has two distinctly different parts, tied together well. It’s lyrics are nonsensical, yet kind of relatable. It’s the only song I’ve ever heard that is actually improved by the presence of a saxophone. It helps you separate which people you can trust if a fire breaks out in your bar. Fuck it, I dunno. David Bowie is my homey.
02. Red Pens - Street Issue
This is my favorite Minnesotan-based song of the month. That being said, isn’t it a little suspicious that just a year ago Wavves blew up with a single, distortion-filled guitar-and-primitive-drum sound and now Red Pens are blowing up the Twin Cities? I’m not trying to knock ‘em. Hell, the song’s on here, innit? Just a little suspicious, that’s all.
03. Steely Dan - Peg
Fucking classic. This one’s for you-know-who.
04. Drag The River - Until I Say So
Back when All was still a functioning entity, they turned this Chad Price song into one of the best songs off their Mass Nerder album. I always had the sense that when each of the members of All brought their songs to the table, running it trough the other three members sensibilities was a positive thing, giving the songs their distinctive Allular feel. This one makes me question that whole theory. Clearly, Chad’s DTR version is much better.
Sidenote to Sarah Elise: I would have loved to see just how far your eyes rolled when this song came on.
05. Morrissey & Siouxsie - Interlude
Lil’ Squawk Box shuffled to this song a few weeks back and it blew me away. I had forgot it existed. In fact, given Morrissey’s reclusive and, let’s face it, egotistical, nature, the fact that this song even exists is hard to fathom. Yeah, it’s typically lovelorn, but here we have Morrissey actually sharing the spotlight. Sharing! When has that ever happened? Ever? Not only that, but he’s even a little overshadowed by Siouxsie. If this same song was presented to him today with a comparable pop star (um… I don’t even know who’s comparable. Lucinda Williams? Chan Marhsall?) there is absolutely no way he’d agree to it.
06. Brother Ali - Best @ It (w/Freeway & Joell Ortiz)
Ali’s new album still hasn’t completely grown on me. He’s a much more interesting MC when he’s talking about himself rather than telling stories. I do love his little shot at Weezy and Yeezy on this one.
Freeway has played his cards very well. He couldn’t quite make it in the mainstream, but in his defense he was rolling in a posse with Jigga and Kanye. I mean, that’s not a lot of breathing room. Still, with the music industry gone sideways, he went back underground and hitched his wagon to Brother Ali & Jake One (remember how good “The Truth” is?). Tell me this is a bad career move.
07. Sloan - Try To Make It
A pop song about getting invited to go out with your friends, kind of wanting to, but ultimately deciding that staying in is more fun than going out? I haven’t been able to relate to a song this well since The Ying Yang Twins “Wait (TheWhisper Song).” I’m glad Sloan gets their props up north. These guys are so good. If you’re ever at Cheapo, I highly suggest you find a $4.95 copy of A-Sides Win: Singles 1992-2005.
08. Kill The Vultures - Moonshine
I caught Kill The Vultures a couple months back, just before The Uptown Bar closed. It was just Crescent Moon and his DJ and about 30 of us in the bar and it was still a fantastic show. I definitely get the impression that Crescent Moon has realized that KTV is just too rough to ever get digested by the mainstream, so he’s doing it for the love of it and the respect of the people who have taken the time to embrace it. At least that’s the vibe I get. Maybe he’s just pissed off. Tough call.
09. Dirty Pretty Things - Doctors And Dealers
Carl Barat was always the more driven, less artistically exciting half of The Libertines. Without Pete Doherty, he and what was left of The Libertines managed to put out a great album, Waterloo To Anywhere, as Dirty Pretty Things. This is one of my favorite British albums of the last few years. Sadly, I heard that the band has broken up. Who would have thought Babyshambles would outlast… well, anyone really?
10. Hockey - Too Fake
My favorite Current song from September. I know it’s just snarky, hipster bullshit, but when the chorus kicks in with those keyboards… mmmm… The fact that the band is named Hockey doesn’t hurt either.
11. Local H - All The Kids Are Right
If you have any taste at all you were probably sick of this song 5 years ago. I love the premise of this song. It’s crazy, fan-based, fourth-wall-breaking premise is a thing of beauty. I still can’t figure out if, “They won’t wear our t-shirts now…” is supposed to be an asshole thing to say (like, “Oh, I’m really hurt that you won’t wear our t-shirts”) or if it’s something that a young Scott Lucas would have taken seriously (like, “I really loved Big Black, but I met them and they were assholes. I’m never wearing this shirt again.”). Plus, I miss Joe.
12. MK Larada - Teddy Bear And A Tazer
MK Larada is the man behind the scenes when it comes to Doomtree. He has one album out under his own name titled Break In Two: Music For B-People. It’s like thirty tracks without a break that is meant to be the soundtrack for a breakdancing party. This track is the only time anyone else from Doomtree turns up and it’s the highlight of the album.
13. The Killers - Under The Gun
I haven’t heard the latest Killers record yet, but I’ve heard bad things. That’s why I’m surprised that Sawdust, their collection of b-sides from their first couple albums, is so great. Clearly, these guys had quality songs to spare (did you see that? That was my hipster cred getting up and leaving the room).
14. Elvis Presley - (Marie’s The Name) His Latest Flame
I wonder if Elvis' faith in love is still devout?
15. The Neptunes - Popular Thug
Say what you want about Pharrell the pop star, but don’t knock The Neptunes beat making ability. Clones, their album full of guest MC’s is pretty spotty rhyme-wise (what MC would bring his A game to someone else’s album?), but the beats are phenomenal.
I really can’t believe Nas and Kelis couldn’t make their marriage last. How was Kelis not aware that Nas was, in fact, a popular thug? Tough break. Back to the yard, girl.
16. Silver Jews - Sleeping Is The Only Love
I’ve really come around on the Silver Jews lately. I don’t know exactly why. David Berman seems to share a similar screwball sensibilities with people like Aesop Rock, Buck 65, & Yoni Wolf. Except it’s a little countrified. For some reason that’s the type of stuff I’m digging right now.
17. Dillinger Four - Gainseville
Unfortunately, it felt nothing like summer this October. Damnit Erik Funk! You jinxed it!