Monday, December 29, 2008

Ben Davis - Aided & Abetted

Ben Davis
Aided & Abetted
Lovitt Records

Grade: A-

The ever present enigma of Ben Davis knocks out his second solo album from the international headquarters of indie rock - Chapel Hill, NC. You all may be more familiar with his work with such bands as Milemarker, Sleepytime Trio and Bats & Mice. The short of a really long story is that I used to see Davis in the gym at UNC like everyday for several years before realizing who this non-buffed Anglo with some tats and dark clothes was. For this latest project, Davis recruited almost everyone who he has worked with in the past including the Lovitt Records' family and members of such bands as Denali, Engine Down, Milemarker and Rah Bras to name a few. On the cd-rom part of the cd he has a list of all the musicians and producers who so diligently lent their time and brilliance to this record. The record was recorded off-and-on for several months last year in Chapel Hill. Davis held the mic in all the songs while others aided him at times. Also he plays numerous instruments including guitar, bass, piano and rhodes in the production. The record kicks off on "Departure Warning" with some light piano before Davis comes in on vocals with full instrumentation. Instantly you hear how sweet and refreshing Davis' vocals are - reflecting as a modern day Beatles' sound with an Elliott Smith edge. Musically, the track is thickly layered with guitars and piano. The reason I go into such detail is that "Departure Warning" sets up the rest of the tracks quite succinctly. The next track "Time A Bind" is led on vocals by Aimee Argote (of Des Ark) and contains a hypnotic and consistent guitar riff. This is followed by probably the hottest song on the record "Old and Played" - which Davis uses as the background music for the cd-rom. "Old and Played" is a slow piano driven number featuring Davis' heavenly vocals. As on the first track, Davis has several vocal tracks laid out - mostly minutely off - to add thickness. "Blue-Hearted Sleeve," "Double Daring" and "Green Forestry Ranger" fall out in a similar manner. Tracks that come with a more rock edge include "Underdawg," "In Either Words" and "A Forced Escape Canoe." The latter is a hot poppy number complete with hand clapping and good times. On songs such as "Underdawg," Davis utilizes light distortion on vocals to give a sort of DC indie feel. While Aided & Abetted is not one's first choice for a driving album when you are tired, it is perfect for coming off a black metal high of Dimmu Borgir. As such, this is nice record to have playing when trying to get work done. Seemingly squeezing everything out from himself and others, Davis truly outdoes himself on these twelve tracks. If you are down on Lovitt Records bands and - not entirely mutually exclusively - the bands Davis and his cohorts have been working in then you will love this.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Azure Ray - Hold On Love

Azure Ray
Hold On Love
Saddle Creek Records

Grade: A-

The latest time we heard from this two-piece from Georgia, on the November EP, the songs were slow acoustic-driven affairs with singing that was barely above a whisper. Ultra-cool stuff, but not as cool as the twelve tracks on their latest Hold On Love. Seemingly Azure Ray has found the genius of electronics - not the Miami-beach techno crap, but well-thought out additions to give the songs girth and breadth. Quite possibly, their tour with Moby helped this transformation or the consistent work with their other group Now It's Overhead, but regardless it's awesome. Moreover, it is not that they are suddenly the Faint. The sweet and sultry voices of Orenda Fink and Maria Taylor meet the listener smack-dab on the first track "The Devil's Feet." A slow building piano accompanied with vocals and building electronics sets up the rest of the album nicely. The next track "New Resolution" is more of an electro-dancey track that includes, at least, pseudo use of strings on the chorus. On other tracks, Azure Ray sound as if they are picking up the mantel of the late-Elliott Smith (e.g., "We Are Mice" and "Nothing Like a Song"). "Look to Me" sounds like an Irish folk-ballad and "Across the Ocean" and "Sea of Doubts" are inspiring piano numbers. For fun upbeatness check out "If You Fall," a classic number that makes you think of Fall at some college in an 80s movie (if that makes sense). Azure Ray close out the album with the exceptional "Hold On Love." Except for the odd "Dragonfly," all the tracks are very good and there is little drop off in composition. If Azure Ray's past material got them on tours with artists like Moby, I can't imagine how far Hold On Love will get them.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

The Lawrence Arms - The Greatest Story Ever Told

The Lawrence Arms
The Greatest Story Ever Told
Fat Wreck Chords

Grade: A

As the latest and probably best salvo in the Lawrence Arms' brief but extremely productive time, The Greatest Story Ever Told can do no wrong. Well, that might not be the case, but it still rocks. Twelve tracks of blistering punk harmonies (plus an intro and outro) puts the Lawrence Arms in line for love from all sides of the aisle.

Formed in 1999 in Chicago as a spawn of the hotastic The Broadways, the three-piece of Brendan Kelly, Chris McCaughan and Neil Hennessy formed essentially to have fun, drink and play punk rock. However, they maintained and still maintain themes of leftist comments on political, social and moral matters that strongly characterized the essence of the Broadways. They quickly busted out two splits and two full-lengths for the ever-glorious Asian Man Records. This included the amazing splits with Shady View Terrace (s/t) and the Chinkees (Present Day Memories). The split with the Chinkees contains one of the best Lawrence Arms' songs amongst their releases in "Quincentuple Your Money." While worth the price of admission, their two full-lengths A Guided Tour of Chicago and Ghost Stories lacked the ingenuity and memorability that characterize their present material. Shortly there after they ended their recording affair with Asian Man - an affair that included releases by the members' previous bands including Slapstick and the Broadways - and signed on with the consistently improving Fat Wreck Chords. In 2002, LA released the breathtaking Apathy and Exhaustion as their first on Fat. This record brought the power of kick-ass back to the three-piece and reinvigorated their creativity. Now this, the latest and best offering: The Greatest Story Ever Told.

Instead of just flat-out copying what Brendan said about the album in our interview with him last month (www.exoduster.com/lawrencearmsinterview.html) and pretending its what I say, below is an excerpt of his comments on The Greatest Story:

How does the latest record "The Greatest Story Ever Told" differ with previous releases (e.g., in content)? Firstly, we're total dorks, and as such we've made a kind of a "concept album" this time. It just sounds like a regular record, but we snuck in a lot of nerdy, conceptual shit. For example, it's metaphorically consistent throughout, in that it uses the same poetic devices and metaphors in every single song. It also repeats musical themes in every song. Lyrically, the songs refer to one another; the intro and the outro are parts of a song in the middle, the last line is the same on both sides of the vinyl, the last line is also predicted in the middle of the record. All this and it's also a chapter by chapter allegory for "the Master and Margarita" by Mikail Bulgakov, with my songs functioning as the Moscow chapters and Chris's songs as the Jerusalem chapters. I told you, very nerdy.

Did you get that? Quickly, during the first track "The Raw and Searing Flesh" you realize that like a good piece of literature or philosophy or basically anything, its going to take some serious work to unpack all the pieces to the album. Besides from the rich and thick-textured lyrics that are ever-present in the songs by Brendan and Chris, they include footnotes to lyrics in the liner notes. I don't know if I have ever seen that before. It's like the book The Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace where amongst the 1100-page work of fiction, he includes a hundred pages of footnotes. The good thing, though, is they are not trying to be the Dennis Miller of music (read: obscure and esoteric facts). Mostly the footnotes are very helpful. For instance, in one of the funniest notes on the song "On With the Show," they discuss the term ‘Juggalo.' For your enjoyment: "Juggalo - A fan of the (ahem) band, Insane Clown Posse often refers to his/her (almost always him) self as a ‘Juggalo.' They paint their faces, spray soda on each other, and respect the music of ICP and consequently get very little respect themselves." Other times the footnotes pertain to information about the band - like that Chris plays on stage left. The footnotes, then, do provide a tremendous amount of context for the lyrics.

Musically, The Greatest Story travels in familiar circles of previous Lawrence Arms records. Chris and Brendan switch off lead singing roles with each other while Neil provides strong backup. As noted above, the album launches on "The Raw and Searing Flesh" with a slow and deceptively mellow procession - and it builds until a bridge brings us back to blistering punk. The next track "On With the Show" finds the Lawrence Arms firing up the tempo and Brendan grabbing the lead and throttling the lyrics. "Drunk Mouth Kitchen Smile" starts with familiar multi-layered guitars and sufficient bass and drum breakdowns on its way to being the best song on the record. Lawrence Arms follow it up with the catchy "Alert the Audience" complete with dual hushed vocals over muting guitars. Much of the album contains the sort of back-and-forth between the layered and weaving guitar song and the balls-to-the-walls punk numbers. While this at times can drive a divide in the consistency of an album, if you know anything of the Lawrence Arms or their lineage this is the essence of their existence. Other tracks that will force jaw-dropping include "Chapter 13: The Hero Appears," "The Ramblin' Boys of Pleasure," "A Wishful Puppeteer" and the finale "The Disaster March." Consistent with previous releases the finale serves as one of the album's best and a great match of the last song. It is interesting the Lawrence Arms seem to sequence their albums like they may play the songs live.

Now you have the latest information on one of the best independent album's of the year. Will you use this information wisely? Clearly, if you have been entranced by the Lawrence Arms or any of their bloodline in the past, then The Greatest Story Ever Told will renew your faith in this Chicago threesome. The Lawrence Arms are continuing on their quest of drinking and playing shows this winter with such bands as Against Me!, Hot Water Music and These Arms are Snakes. Join them in their debauchery.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Snapcase - Bright Flashes

Snapcase
Bright Flashes
Victory Records

Grade: A-

The boys from Buffalo have been on the cutting edge of hardcore essentially since their first release on Victory in 1991. Since that time, Snapcase have offered consistently unique and challenging song compositions through the course of their recordings. Their 1997 release Progression Through Unlearning absolutely rocked the hard music world and made people recognize that Snapcase were something special. The follow up to Progression, Designs for Automotion (2000) didn't live up to the former, though last year's End Transmission restored faith in the faithful. End Transmission was more of a conceptual album with a strong reliance on electronics and haunting compositions - but it still rocked hard. This is where Bright Flashes comes in. Flashes is a composite record with five new songs, three remixes of songs off End Transmission and four covers. The five new songs are from the initial End Transmission sessions. Amazingly, Snapcase, a band that has excelled in brevity over the years, came to the studio with nineteen new songs. They decided to only keep thirteen and then release the other six at some point in the future - though one is still missing. Well the future is now and the songs don't disappoint. While you can tell the five come from End Transmission, they also have an element of a Progression sound - particularly "Dress Rehearsal" and "Skeptic." The three remixes are of "Believe/Revolt," "Ten A.M." and "Exile Etiquette," spearheaded by guitarist-extraodinaire Frank Vicario. Vicario's mix of "Ten A.M." is heavily electronic with tons of distortion and made to accentuate Daryl Tabeski's vocals. Bill Snow did the arrangement of "Believe/Revolt" and Ocelot Mthrfckrs (of the Rise) programmed and arranged "Exile Etiquette." Snapcase offers up their version of Helmet's "Blacktop," Devo's "Freedom of Choice" and "Gates of Steel," and Jane's Addiction's "Mountain Song." "Blacktop" is true to form with possibly harder guitars but not as much precision (but who can get more precise than Helmet). "Mountain Song" comes close to original, but I think with Snapcase's ingenuity and talent they could have added something really special if they messed around with the parameters. "Freedom of Choice" and "Gates of Steel" are hot numbers and show how elementary catchy Devo was. Besides from the novelty aspect of the record, the added tracks from the End Transmission sessions are stunners - especially "New Academy." Now if there were only unreleased tracks from the Progression sessions we would be in business.

Friday, December 19, 2008

The Shins - Chutes Too Narrow

The Shins
Chutes Too Narrow
Sub Pop Records

Grade: A-

When Clay Aiken shares lyrical brilliance like, "Hey butterfly, open up your weary eyes," and "Everybody knows shadows fall across the sun sometimes/Shine, you're gonna shine," then you really start to get a stronger appreciations for the poetry of The Shins. Coming out of Albuquerque, NM, though spread out a bit now, the Shins started out as a side project of singer James Mercer and cronies. After other fuller-time bands disbanded, the Shins finally cemented in 1999. The first Shins album, Oh Inverted World, was incredible. Indie pop of a beautiful and melodic subtlety. So I personally wanted their latest, Chutes Too Narrow, to avoid sophomore tendencies to grow and evolve and instead be more of the same. Unfortunately, they do decide to go for a more mature sound. Everyone I ask says the second album is even better than the first (n=2), but I personally still love Oh Inverted World more. The first two tracks on CTN are among the biggest departures for the Shins - more aggressive, more uptempo - I like the album better when I skip these over. The next tracks - "So Says I," "Young Pilgrims," and "Saint Simon" - are among my favorites in that they are much more in the aesthetic of the first album. Among these, "Young Pilgrims" comes closest to beauty of the Best Shins Song Ever - "New Slang." Other songs stray more from this sound - "Fighting in a Sack" is cool and has a great harmonica section. "Gone for Good" has a country vibe that works well with the Shins' sound. Anyway, even though the first tracks are not very lovable, the overall album is still one of the better ones in my collection.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Try Me Bicycle - Voicings

Try Me Bicycle
Voicings
Self-released
Grade: A-

The breathy acoustic opener “Two Stern Feet” and follower “Lessons on Love and Junk” doesn’t do much to make Try Me Bicycle’s Voicings set well in your ear and mind. Yet, when this Phoenix outfit offer the Simon & Garfunkel-style “Of Things Sworn,” your ears take notice and you begin to get chills. With some shoegazer elements pressed into lush and graceful vocals and well-present rhythms, Voicings takes off for me when comparisons to uber-crooner Sondre Lerche are present. You hear a mix of both Lerche and S&G on “Big Small,” but the big take occurs on lounge piano “April Sky,” “The Hard Line,” and “R Brown.” When you sound like classic crooner Lerche who is channeling classic lounge sounds, you got something terrific going for you. A smattering of more uptempo numbers should allow Try Me Bicycle to crossover to a wider audience.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Chad VanGaalen - Soft Airplane

Chad VanGaalen
Soft Airplane
Sub Pop Records
Grade: A-

Thankfully, Canadian Chad VanGaalen has scaled back his Ryan Adams-style productivity in order to focus more on a single effort – his latest LP Soft Airplane. VanGaalen’s previous Sub Pop releases – Infiniheart (2005) and Skelliconnection (2006) – had strong moments, but both were very eclectic and spotty. Although VanGaalen has been doing a lot of producing and orchestrating of other acts, the thirteen songs on Soft Airplane all seem well-planned, smart, and consistent. There are probably fewer songs here that will knock you on your ass, but overall the listening experience is considerably better. Check out opener “Willow Tree,” the great “Inside the Molecules,” the Sonic Youth guitars of “Bare Feet on Wet Griptape,” “City of Electric Light,” and “Poisonous Heads” for your listening enjoyment.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Foals - Antidotes

Foals
Antidotes
Sub Pop Records/Transgressive Records
Grade: A-

Admittedly, this review of the Foals’ Antidotes is coming significantly late after the record’s original release – in early April 2008. One of the reasons is that I have been rocking to Antidotes in my car for months, and it always seemed awful to me to replace the disc with something possibly not as sexy. Whatever the reason, Foals are our artist of the month with their grand fourteen-song debut Antidotes.

Coming out of Oxford, England, the Foals are a five-piece that create dancey indie-punk songs – something that crosses the cool of Brooklyn indie rock with the European desire for something electronic and sexy to dance to. They’re like a clean, rock-centered Bloc Party, and better for it. After fine crafting songs for a debut record, Foals crossed the ocean to work with TV on the Radio guitarist David Sitek in Brooklyn. The band and Sitek also brought in during the recordings the afro beat band Antibalas for horns and Celebration’s Katrina Ford to offer vocals. The result is a tightly crafted, catchy-as-all-hell, dance rock record; the type of record that reinvigors your interest in the spectacle of music.

Antidotes starts slow on “The French Open” with Wolf Parade-esque awkwardness with a smattering of horns and bass before the guitars tighten to high picking notes – a common practice – and the song starts moving to sexy levels. Reportedly, the song is a kind of ode to tennis player Andy Roddick. The follower “Cassius” is really the first place where the dance and excitement builds up with dance bass line and keyboards. Other tracks that are as sexy dance love fests include “Electric Bloom,” “Balloons,” “Tron,” and the sweet ass bonus track “Hummer.” It is not all dance club for these boys though. Ohter songs on Antidotes are similarly appealing but don’t necessarily make you want to dance in a club. Among the best of these are “Red Socks Pugie,” the bombastic “Big Big Love (Fig. 2),” and bonus track “Mathletics.”

Perhaps this late review will give the record a second wind and get more folks to check out the terrific Foals. Whatever your entry point, you should give a few good minutes to discovering Foals.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Roy - Big City Sin and Small Town Redemption

Roy
Big City Sin and Small Town Redemption
Fueled By Ramen

Grade: A-

After releasing their hot EP Tacomatose on Initial over the summer, Roy come back to rock you on their first full-length and first record for Fueled By Ramen. Roy comes out of the Great Northwest and is a side project of sorts for members of Botch, Harkonen and These Arms are Snakes. It seems though that this project has begun to spread to center stage for the members of Roy. While the fourteen tracks are not as tight as their latest EP, Big City still finds the four-piece rocking out to swirling and jangly song structures set in an indie rock framework. Touring with like-minded the Weakerthans certainly helped Roy focus on such constructions (see especially "Calimucho"). Lyrically, Roy always offers up interesting and compelling stories and words to describe events - sometimes serious, sometimes comical. When we interviewed Roy's Brian Cook, he commented on the band's lyrics as: "Our lyrics are basically just us talking shit. We're all hardcore kids, and that's what most hardcore lyrics are, right? All the people we normally wouldn't call out become easy targets when we get behind the microphone. To quote David Bazaan: "I could write it in a song, but never say it to your face." Lyrics are pretty important to me. Good lyrics can save pretty bad bands, and bad lyrics can ruin good ones. The vocal lines are usually the first thing I write in a song, so the lyrics are definitely a focal point early on. The first line alone can dictate the mood of an entire song. Aside from that, I really don't know."Musically, we still find Roy lifting off influences from notables such as the Pixies (see, "Better Head North"). The guitar work along with matching vocals is what burns the good songs into your memory. The tracks that excel is this respect include "Something That's Real," "Don't Overdub My Heart," "Wipe That Brow," "They Cut the Cord" and "Calimucho." The promise that Roy demonstrated on their three previous Eps comes to full fruition on their first full-length. When they are not spending their precious time with their bands, look for Roy taking over your world at a venue near you.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Azure Ray - Hold on Love

Azure Ray
Hold On Love
Saddle Creek Records

Grade: A-

The latest time we heard from this two-piece from Georgia, on the November EP, the songs were slow acoustic-driven affairs with singing that was barely above a whisper. Ultra-cool stuff, but not as cool as the twelve tracks on their latest Hold On Love. Seemingly Azure Ray has found the genius of electronics - not the Miami-beach techno crap, but well-thought out additions to give the songs girth and breadth. Quite possibly, their tour with Moby helped this transformation or the consistent work with their other group Now It's Overhead, but regardless it's awesome. Moreover, it is not that they are suddenly the Faint. The sweet and sultry voices of Orenda Fink and Maria Taylor meet the listener smack-dab on the first track "The Devil's Feet." A slow building piano accompanied with vocals and building electronics sets up the rest of the album nicely. The next track "New Resolution" is more of an electro-dancey track that includes, at least, pseudo use of strings on the chorus. On other tracks, Azure Ray sound as if they are picking up the mantel of the late-Elliott Smith (e.g., "We Are Mice" and "Nothing Like a Song"). "Look to Me" sounds like an Irish folk-ballad and "Across the Ocean" and "Sea of Doubts" are inspiring piano numbers. For fun upbeatness check out "If You Fall," a classic number that makes you think of Fall at some college in an 80s movie (if that makes sense). Azure Ray close out the album with the exceptional "Hold On Love." Except for the odd "Dragonfly," all the tracks are very good and there is little drop off in composition. If Azure Ray's past material got them on tours with artists like Moby, I can't imagine how far Hold On Love will get them.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Coheed and Cambria - In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3

Coheed and Cambria
In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3
Equalvision Records
Grade: A

A phone call, some steps, a voice then a crash of orchestration starts off Coheed and Cambria's second album and second in their trilogy. In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3 blows away almost anything you have heard recently (save the Mars Volta) and make you redefine what great music really is. For the first three weeks I had this album I couldn't stop listening to it. I listened to it at least several times a day. A day couldn't go by without listening to Coheed. I had to find all the minute parts, how they swerved and intertwined and how to unpack all of the packing became some type of mission.

Coheed formed several years back in the stretch of land between Albany and NYC in order to rock your socks off by bridging worlds of rock to create a unique product. They were signed after providing a bunch of demos to EVR and EVR finally deciding to take a shot with this foursome of prog-rock, emo, metal amalgamation. Coheed and Cambria are the lead characters in a sci-fi epic devised by lead singer/guitarist Claudio Sanchez and realized by Sanchez, drummer Joshua Eppard, bassist Michael Todd and guitarist/vocals Travis Stever. Their first album The Second Stage Turbine Blade (Equalvision Records, 2002) was Coheed's proper introduction to the music world - though the second part of their epic. That album received extreme praise and placed them on the map as being one of the coolest bands in the indie world. Yet In Keeping was almost never made. While touring in support of Second Stage, Coheed had a bit of blow up and were on the verge of breaking up. After band therapy and the realization they are awesome, they came together to tour some more and knock out even better tracks for In Keeping.

Ideally, Coheed have said they would like to see the story put into a comic form - though that may not be hot enough from my point of view. A better step would be to an animated story with the music as the soundtrack. If done right, there is little doubt that Oscar will come knocking - well maybe not, but he should.

Like Second Turbine, In Keeping is an epic affair with Sanchez's hypnotic and unique singing coupled with spectacular dual-guitar work, sweet harmonies and some pounding for good measure. Though In Keeping has cleaner and tighter production that only enhances your listening enjoyment. Revealing part of the motivation, Sanchez is quoted about the album stating "this sequel is based around a premonition that a character in the story has in a dream, that slowly turns into a nightmare." Besides from the thick orchestration, probably the first thing that hits you is Sanchez's vocals - comparisons abound of Geddy Lee from Rush joining an emo-core band. But Geddy was never this cool. More importantly, Sanchez has some real talent and ability that is sorely missed in the indie world. Imagine taking all these fools singing in lame-ass pop and mainstream rock groups (I'm taking about the ones that have real vocal talent), injecting them with cool and putting them in a band with passion, intensity and a driving force. The result is Coheed and Cambria. The second thing that strikes you is the phenomenal guitar work. The lead guitar is almost always performing some type of soloing or joining the other in heavy riff-rock. When Coheed matches lead guitar timing and harmonies with vocals it is down-right heavenly (e.g., the end of "Three Evils (Embodied in Love and Shadow)").

As is noted above, In Keeping starts off with a phone ringing, a woman answering, and orchestration (which sounds like some of the music from the video game Max Payne) on "The Ring in Return." Towards the end of the "The Ring in Return" there is a rocket taking off or flying past and male voice saying "Well, Apolo, where should I begin." Then there is the issuance of music as the second song "In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth:3" pumps through the speakers. The track starts out slow with guitar meandering on a riff before drums and feedback come in. About forty seconds in, the band throws down with a powerful explosion and some tidbits to sample of what the next eight minutes is about to bring you. See, that's the thing with Coheed. All of the songs are great, epic affairs. But you have to listen to the WHOLE song, not a couple seconds here and there, to full appreciate what is going on. So if I play this for you, I can't just say check this small part out; I'll lend you the disk and then you are hooked and will buy ten for your family. As one of the best tracks on the record, the title track grabs you buy the throat with the vocal and musical intensity of the chorus: "Man your own jackhammer/Man your battle stations/We'll have you dead pretty soon/Sincerely written from my brother's blood machine/Man your battle station/We'll have you home pretty soon." And when you think that track has ended after six minutes, it circles back and their many-member chorus of "oh-ah" (dubbed Two-Tone Tony's Pirate Glee Club) and some more throw down on the chorus. Right, so that is the first real track - fucking amazing!

This is followed by "Cuts Marked in the March of Men" and Sanchez telling the story in fairly straight forward manner. While jammed packed with riffs, it is not nearly as thick as "In Keeping..." - though it breaks about half-way through with some more harmony-laced music. "Three Evils (Embodied in Love and Shadow)" meanders through some upbeat music (though not lyrically), before getting to the final section that absolutely blows your mind away. Coheed builds with codas to get you there before finally pushing through to pure magic with vocals and the lead soloing guitar moving at the same metric while Sanchez sings "Dear my friends/In the time we spent forever after beyond this when you will our nightmare ever end?/ Pull the trigger and the nightmare stops" with the last line sung repeatedly. "The Crowing" is another song with thick riff-rock elements before some crazy guitar segments take over near the end. Yet again, though, Coheed come through with some serious punk harmonies at the very end of the six minute event. Coheed take a more alt-punk approach to "Blood Red Summer" with a hypnotically simple note guitar line. This is one of the few that everyone loves from word go - with its less abrasive and more standard approach to song structure. More importantly, it ends with "wha-oh-ohs" thrown around and the vocal pitch nearing girl scout troop levels. "The Camper Velourium I: Faint of Heart" starts out with guitars a la Santana with "who-cockoo-cho." At heart, this is another harmony driven song that includes guitar soloing in parts that would not be at of place with a more prog version of the big 70s guitar bands (e.g., Led Zeppelin). "The Camper Velourium II: Backend of Forever" and "The Camper Velourium III: Al The Killer" are not as hotastic but have their own elements of wonder - most notably the throw down at the end of II. This mini-trilogy sets up the poppiest track on the album "A Favor House Atlantic." This is some seriously good shit. Sanchez's vocals are at a higher pitch and the song hums along with a standard composition before you get smacked with the uber-catchy bridge and chorus: "Good eye sniper/I'll shoot you run//The words you scribbled on the walls/The loss of friends you didn't have/I'll call you when the time is right/Are you in or are out/For them all to know the end of us all." How this song wouldn't be able to melt any aversion to Coheed is beyond me. Coheed follow this up with the last track of the main section "The Light & The Glass." "The Light..." is very slow with acoustic guitars picking away for sometime before they come in with a powerful electric chorus of "Ignoring the words of your obnoxious little brother/Kill or be killed spilled the words from your mother/I'll lay awake for a while/I'll leave the light on a while." As with the previous tracks - and since the "The Light..." is almost ten minutes long - there is a plethora of sections with the song rounding out on crazy soloing and a choir (this one called Uncle Birmy's Dirty Foot Choir) of "Pray for us all," before some more Max Payne music. After a bunch of empty tracks, comes an untitled track that plays out like the rest of the tracks in ten mintues with heavy riffs, exquisite solos and rich composition. In addition, like the other songs, the bridge and chorus is powerful, catchy and impressive with Sanchez singing "When I fall asleep/Your face is all that I see...."

Coheed and Cambria is the best thing to happen to music in a long time. In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3 extends the epic mapped out on Second Turbine while crushing it to pieces. The amount of work that has gone into to this seventy-minute offering is baffling and in no doubt well worth the effort. It is just a matter of time, maybe minutes, before Coheed become absolutely huge and changes rock as we know it. Coheed as been playing shows this fall with Thrice, Thursday and Straylight Run. But just imagine a tour with Coheed and the Mars Volta - it would be fucking sunshine and butterflies abounding!

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

The Strokes - Room on Fire

The Strokes
Room On Fire
RCA Records
Grade: A-

Naturally, as this is one of the most anticipated releases of late 2003, critics, fans and everyone else waited with baited breath for the sophomore releases from the Strokes. Room On Fire has already been named by some as Is This It - Part 2 for its sound likeness to their debut. Although in many respects that designation is true, it is not such a bad thing to have given that Is This It absolutely ruled and helped usher in the rebirth of stripped-down garage rock. On the other hand Room On Fire comes across with tighter production value but without any drop off in sheer rawness from this NYC fivesome. An infinitesimal amount of ink and space has been devoted to exposing members of the Strokes' oddities - particularly lead singer Julian Casablancas (see, e.g., recent issues of Rolling Stone). Yet, what makes them unique outside of the rock, makes them unique when they are rocking. It is finally nice to see the Strokes in the news about something rock-orientated then just being in the social tabloids.

Room On Fire kicks off on "What Ever Happened?" with familiar guitar buildup to Casablancas' distinctive crooning. More importantly, the straight strumming and simple-yet- catchy guitar solos sets the foundation for the rest of the record and brings you back to the world of the Strokes. This is followed up "Reptilia" with bass serving as the intro to Casablancas' lazy vocals exploding on the chorus. The chorus to "Automatic Stop"'s guitars sound like that classic music piece about fall and leaves or some kind of shit like that. Once you hear it you know what I'm talking about. The next track "12:51" is the first single off the record and with good reason - it is reassuring the best song on the record is being targeted as the first single by the label. The song hardly has an off moment and the use of minimal electronics to accent the main riff and match the vocals - along with gently hand clapping - is genius. These first four songs certainly are the best on the record. Though not to be outdone, special attention should also be given to "Meet Me in the Bathroom," "The End Has No End," "You Talk Way Too Much" and the finale "I Can't Win." Clearly, the Strokes prove with this sophomore breakthrough that they are not a one trick pony or a here-today-gone-tomorrow sensations. The true test for the Strokes is to survive the next year's media frenzy and knock out another sensational record a couple of years from now.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Howard Hello - Don't Drink His Blood

Howard Hello
Don't Drink His Blood
Temporary Residence Ltd.
Grade: A-

As their second record as Howard Hello, Kenseth Thibideau (Pinback, Tarentel, Rumah Sakit) and Marty Anderson (Dilute) wind through nine tracks of acoustic guitar and electronic pop bliss. Often I'm not taken by chill instrumentals if they rack up too many esoteric crap points. But the music Thibideau and Anderson produce is heavenly and they top it off with either whimsy angelic vocals or raspy old woman singing from the likes of Chelsea Rose Owen, Patricia Kavanuagh, Simeon Flick and Anderson himself. Either way and anyway the songs drill a hole in your head and make a serious lasting impression on your brain. As the harmonies dance and present a waterfall appearance on the "Intro," you start to realize that you are really liking what is going on here. The next track "Giving Up" stands out as the best on the record with mesmerizing guitars and electronics coupled with the heavenly vocals. It's a wise decision to start off a mainly instrumental album in this splendid way. By "Parasite," we find Lightning Seeds' harmonizing by backups and Anderson's straight up spoken-vocals and then the clincher of raspy and crackled vocals. It is also worth checking out "Way to Go" for listening pleasure. This is one of the biggest surprise records of the winter.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Explosions in the Sky - The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place

Explosions in the Sky
The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place
Temporary Residence Ltd.
Grade: A-

Two years after their breakthrough record Those Who Tell the Truth Shall Die..., Explosions in the Sky offer their second for TRL in an amazing and dazzling display of instrumentation. Lauded over by many a critic, including those at Rolling Stone, the Texas four-piece of Explosions in the Sky have further honed and hammered their craft to present us with stunning five tracks (in forty-five minutes) on The Earth.... As is often the case, or at least should be, with instrumental pieces you have to submerge yourself in the song to really get a feel for it and appreciate what is going on. You can't say ‘just listen to this small part;' you have to take in the whole. This is probably the only instrumental record that I was able to drive to and not get sleepy. Inexplicably, everything became clear and concentration came easily and convincingly with Explosions in the background as I drove the desolate I-85. You know how they say that listening to classical music helps the analytical side of your brain in short-term problems? Well, the five tracks here smack Mozart's ass in that respect. As a friend is fond of saying: this is perfect music for coming off your Cradle of Filth high.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Challenger - Give People What They Want in Lethal Doses

Challenger
Give People What They Want in Lethal Doses
Jade Tree Records
Grade: A-

As the opening salvo from Challenger, Give People What They Want in Lethal Doses rocks the bow from word go and knocks a little punk into the serious indie rock tradition. It is not as though you don't have the essence of Challenger in your record collection right now and it is not as if the members of Challenger are rookies to this game. Read on to learn about your new favorite band.

The core of Challenger is the backbone of Milemarker - everyone's favorite Chapel Hill to angry Chicago band - in Dave Laney on vocals and guitar and Al Burian on vocals, guitar and bass. Filling out the band is drummer Timothy Remis. As much as Challenger may down play it, the influence of Milemarker is significant, though it is partially a function of the unique vocal stylings of both Laney and Burian. Though the influence of Milemarker is there in the sheer song construction and, at times, complexity, Challenger posture more towards the post-punk stylings of Husker Du and a harmonious Sonic Youth. And that's their goal: to offer more headstrong, aggressive punk but not in a boring three-chord manner. Hence, there is no reliance on electronics of any sort with Challenger - though you still would have trouble distinguishing Challenger songs from the first half of songs like "Frigid Forms Sell You Warmth." Virtually every song contains at minimum one section that sticks to your memory like some virus, forcing you to instantly recognize it if you heard it randomly at some other point in time. This is even more impressive given that the songs vary little in length and average about four minutes - there have been tons of records where this fact can create marginal differentiation between tracks.

The ten track record kicks off in thrashing fashion on "Input the Output" with the line "that seven year itch, became a life long twitch" yelled off over winding guitars and continues on for the next three minutes. The guitars march between muting matching the verse and then opening up for the yelled choruses and pre-choruses. As such, this is a tremendous start to the record, but actually contains probably the least amount of catchiness of the ten songs. "Death Museum" starts more straight forward, but comes around after the first chorus with memorable guitars playing a very simple power chord to riff segment. Consistent with previous positive and happy sunshine lyrics, Laney utters "when we awake from our deep dark sleep/will we crawl, crawl from our self-made mausoleum" as the signature line from "Death Museum." This is followed by the hot "Blackouts" and it sub-chorus oddity of "Can I kick it?/Can I kick it?...." This is the first track were you see a glimpse of the catchiness that Challenger possesses. "Unemployment" comes at you swirling around several times before exploding past a bridge to a super breakdown reminiscent of some Milemarker constructions. "This Is Only A Test" is the second song with an ultra-fetching segment, where a combo of singers lead up to a chorus of "Hey, it's alright if you want to spend the night/It's alright." "Brand Loyalty" is one of the more abrasive tracks in the first couple of minutes before a section of various people repeating the line "You're great, but it's never going to workout between us/After tonight we'll never be together again." "Sweet Vaccine" is similar in structure and sound to "Brand Loyalty." "The Angry Engineer" finds Challenger back to the same aggressive feeling as the opener "Input the Output." Burian offers up the main vocals on the start for the mid-tempo and more DC- sounding "Crushed City." The guitar work - with doubling guitar riffs - gives it a feel like the Dismemberment Plan with balls or a more esoteric Piebald. The finale "The Trojan House" is a slower mover that exudes more indie rock than aggressive punk of earlier tracks. But as the five-minute opus that it is, it's definitely one of the standout tracks on the record and a great way to the end the record.

The major concern with Challenger is whether or not they continue on or simply serve as a fleeting side project of the powerhouse Milemarker. What happens is mostly a function of things that can't be known at this time, but it is certainly difficult in various ways to maintain a successful side project when the main band is drawing you back - just see Conor Oberst with Desa. The morale of this story is get this record immediately when it comes out and make sure to check them out live, since you may not have the opportunity for much longer.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

The Elected - Me First

The Elected
Me First
Subpop Records
Grade: A-

On the first track "7 September 2003," the Elected instantly has a recognizable, warm and soothing sound - one that you could swear you have heard before - somewhere on the same plane as Saddle Creek tremendous offerings and in particular the work of uber-songwriter Conor Oberst. There is a good reason for this. The Elected is the brainchild of Rilo Kiley's Blake Sennett and features an all-star Saddle Creek cast to fill out the instruments, melodies and harmonies. This includes Orenda Fink (Azure Ray), Jenny Lewis (Rilo Kiley), and Jimmy Tamborello (The Postal Service(Subpop)) among others. Me First was also recorded by Saddle Creek's Mike Mogis (producer of Bright Eyes and the Faint). Besides from Sennett, the core of the Elected is Mike Bloom, Daniel Brummel and Jason Boesel (Rilo Kiley). So if you become distraught over the parallels to the product of Oberst then you can rest easy as it is all in the family. I was at first a bit distraught because of similar song constructions and cadences to Bright Eyes (and some to Elliott Smith) - thankfully Sennett stays away from matching Oberst's trembling vocals - but you have to recognize the quality and songwriting ability of the twelve tracks on Me First.

"7 September 2003" starts off as an electro band tuning before country-twang guitars echo in and Sennett starts singing about a minute in. This is a phenomenal start and a great way to set up the rest of the record. "Greetings in Braille" has a more depressing feel but has enchanting underlying keys about half way through. "My Baby's A Dick" is similar to "7 September 2003," while "A Time For Emily" offers up a stronger reliance on piano to produce a very late years' Beatles-esque sound. "Don't Get Your Hopes Up" starts and continues like ‘New York, New York' as the music swirls near psychedelia. "Waves" is gospel-like upbeat number and "The Miles ‘Til Home" and "Go On" put the fear of electronics subtly back in the listener. "Go On" is one of the best and most lyrically intense tracks on the record. Starting with heavy electro-beats and answering machine messages, "C'mon Mom" comes through as a whimsical dream. "A Response To Greed" finds Sennett channeling the harmonies of Smith and "Don't Blow It" displays vocal harmonizing between Sennett and Fink - and is one of the more memorable numbers with a hypnotic closing chorus. Me First closes on "British Columbia" with solo acoustic guitar - utilized throughout the record - and Sennett's singing and harmonizing on parts with Fink (?). Though this a good track, I think it would have been more climatic to end on "Don't Blow It."

What is impressive about Me First is that there is hardly a bad song - no throwaways, all keepers. That is a hard thing to do these days, especially considering the time Sennett puts into Rilo Kiley. But it is the work in Rilo Kiley that raises the expectations for the Elected - or should I say explains the excellence of the Elected. When Rilo Kiley is not touring, I'd be looking for the Elected to rock your house.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Air - Talkie Walkie

Air
Talkie Walkie
Astralwerks
Grade: A-

Coming off of 2003's conception album City Reading (Tre Storie Western) with writer Alessandro Baricco, Air (composed of Nicolas Godin and JB Dunkel) is back with a new and breathtaking studio album Talkie Walkie. When the second the first song "Venus" starts, you know that Air have lost nothing and, in fact, gained since their previous forays into genius.

Many people in the U.S. are familiar with Air's soundtrack for the amazing Virgin Suicides (2000), though less are aware of this French dynamic duo's previous work - Air's "Alone in Kyoto" appears in Sophia Coppola's second movie Lost in Translation. The record that placed Air on the map was Moon Safari in 1998. Back then I wasn't entirely listening to Air, I was only hearing them - a lot. They were on heavy rotation at the station I was at for like the whole year and so I heard tons from that record. Yet, probably like many others, I became intrigued with Air following the Virgin Suicides soundtrack. After diversifying their range through material like City Reading, two world tours with assorted members, a ballet and movie scores, Air seeks to correct for misperceptions from their previous studio album 10,000 Hz. Legend. Not that the album was wrong or ill-conceived, but many perceived it as too esoteric and lacking the drifting pop of before. Though true artists, Godin and Dunkel reach back to what made them them in the first place - or at least what everyone loves - on Talkie Walkie. Now we have ten tracks of electro-pop goodness as well as a bonus DVD entitled Electronic Performers composed of Air on tour. The DVD cuts five live performances with backstage footage during the summer of 2002 for a fan's delight.

As mentioned above, Talkie Walkie starts off on "Venus" with a slow acoustic and drums while heavenly vocals are laced on top. Midway through there is a electronic wave with accents and the basic beat underlying. "Cherry Blossom Girl" begins with male and female vocals accompanied by some woodwinds. "Run" is more robotic and electronic as it coasts along at a moderate tempo. More heaven comes from "Universal Traveler" - a song that parallels an electronic Belle and Sebastian. "Mike Mills" - entirely instrumental - sounds like some classical score that could be the soundtrack to a film like the Royal Tenebaums or anything by director Wes Anderson - maybe it will be. Although I hate the title to the song, "Surfing on a Rocket" is so incredibly catchy that you can't deny its power over you and is easily in the running for the best track. The vocals are at the boundary point of male ability before you reach the screaching phase - and yet are so warm and refreshing. "Another Day" falls off a bit from the first six and unfortunately sounds too close to filler for Air. Yet Air picks up the magic with acoustic guitars picking like mad and nearly annoying whistling on the instrumental "Alpha Beta Gaga." "Biological" begins with warm and watery electronics matched by similar vocals in Beatles-esque form - though a sinister element lies underneath. The record closes on the aforementioned "Alone in Kyoto." If you didn't see the film or if you missed the song - a barely-there sound penetrates for a minute before piano and beeping-type vocals come at you. This repeats before the finale where all we hear is waves.

As Air's return to the standard studio album, they excel and smoke in a big way. Although I don't know if I'd be able to stand through an Air concert without some serious sedatives and a nice chair, they will surely be attacking the stage to support this masterpiece. Not tested - though Air approves - this clear is a record to have on when in love. At the end of the day, this is some of the best electro-pop music on the planet.


Monday, December 1, 2008

EE - Ramadan

EE
Ramadan
Asian Man Records
Grade: A-

This is a reissue of EE's first full-length that was released in 2000 on Curry Records and was, up until now, shortly out-of-print. EE released a memorable disc last year on Asian Man called For 100 We Try Harder that imprinted their sound to a wave of listeners. This recording includes the work of five individuals: Tobin Mori (of Korea Girl) on guitar/vocals, Brian on bass, Esther on cello/keys/vocals and finally Muji and Dan sharing time on the drums. However, the line up today consists of Che Chou on bass, Peter Nguyen on drums and Sooyoung Park on guitar/keyboards. EE prosper on light and smooth instrumentals with soft vocals that look to accent the music but not steal the show. As such, EE would probably feel fine with one of the slew of instrumental artists on Temporary Residence Ltd. "Asian Gangsta Kidz" is an exceptional song with the right mix of low key vocals by Tobin and sweetly added back up by Esther. What makes the song great is that while the allegiance to instrumentalism is there, it has a strong rock element to push it over the top. "Ramadan" is piano-driven that wouldn't be out of place on a light FM station if not for slight noise in the background, while "Battery Davis" is punctuated by Esther's cello. "Retrace" starts out with layers of guitars and Tobin's vocals as it merges with some electronics. "Square Back" kicks off like an indie rock majesty that makes this record at least the price of admission. "One Less Year" is considerably mellower with echoing guitars and Tobin's vocals approaching the world of brooding rock. "Brace" closes out the deal with a poppy and heavy downstroke guitars - this is a great song. After hearing the ten tracks on EE's debut Ramadan, I had to go back to their latest record and taken a renewed listen. While strong, Ramadan smokes it and I'm very surprised we didn't hear more from this on its initial release.