Archive for the 'Creatively awesome' Category

The Pirate Bay Starts its Summer Tour 2008

pirate-bay-bureau-on-tour.jpg

Being the Anti-RIAA kids that we are, we figured that hopefully some of you would enjoy this as much as we did:

Today, the Pirate Bay and the Bureau of Piracy start their journey throughout Europe, that will reach its climax at the art festival Manifesta by the end of next week in Bolzano, Italy. The good news is that if you’d like to join them en route, everyone is welcome.

The pirates will be touring in an old bus they bought and prepared for their trip road trip through Europe. After several days of preparation in Stockholm, the bus stops tonight, July 10th, in Malmö, where the Pirate Bay and the Bureau of Piracy have declared “mixtape amnesty”.

They invite everyone who’s ever stared at the torrent clients’ speed graph, cursed Kazaa, carried a hard drive to a friend or made a copy of their mother’s cookie recipe to join them, as long as you bring drinks, your mixtapes and at least two peers.

The bus will then move on this Friday and reach its second stop, Berlin, the next day. After Berlin, the Pirate Bay and the Bureau of Piracy will set course to their final destination, Bolzano, where they will be participating in the Manifesta7 art event….

You can read the full text over on Torrent Freak

LINKS: Manifesta7 | http://piratbyran.org/s23m/





Girl Talk - Feed The Animals

Girl Talk - Feed The Animals


I’d be a liar if I said “ZOMG I’VE BEEN WAITING MONTHS FOR THIS” –I actually woke up this morning and saw a few updates about it, downloaded it, and realized how much I’ve missed the antics Greg Gillis throws down on record. I’m about 3/4 of the way through the first listen (and 3 cups in of coffee from my wonderful new french press) and thought it would be wrong for me NOT to post about it.

So here it is! Girl Talk brings the heat again, same old antics -hip-hop/top40 tracks mashed up with classic rock, 90s, 80s, and just about anything else you can put on vinyl- and the same entertaining, smile-inducing results. And the best part? Its available free and/or cheaply at your own discretion. $0 gets you 320kbps MP3s, $5 gets you high quality FLAC files, and $10 gets you a physical copy of the cd.

Need more convincing? Well here’s a sampling of one of the tracks that totally caught my attention. 3:00 and on is by far the best part, IMO.

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Girl Talk - Let Me See You
LINKS: Girl Talk MySpace | illegalart.net

Its all available via illegalart.net, so get your early morning mash-up/mix cd on!

Its on once again.

<hacks/>





Dance Pop ‘Splode Repeat

Every so often, music comes along, sneaks up behind you and puts a damn groove in your step. Drops your jaw. Does that sort of cheesy-ass thing from old cartoons where the sun comes from behind a cloud, starts smiling and bobbing back and forth, whistling a jolly lil’ tune accompanied by bluebirds and robins (or whatever, I didn’t major in ornithology).

It’s even less often that I find one of these bands in the urban hipster haircut wasteland of Atlanta.

Enter, then, Blue Screen Love Scene, from the front (the front), the back (the back) and both sides:

These three kids, (r-l: Richy, Lauren, Matt: Richy and Lauren formerly of the best band to never record a song, Teenwich, and Matt formerly of the best band to implode over the price of Cheez-Its in China, Engineering) brand themselves “unapologetic dance pop”, and, if that’s a goal, they hit it square on the head. Like Resonator’s 2007 Faves (and also Atlanta natives) One Hand Loves The Other,Blue Screen Love Scene toss electronic manipulation into a blender with a cheeky sense of style. Unlike OHLtO, the equally-abbreviatable BSLS pour a decent amount of no-wave quirk and humor into their sound, and polish with a hazed, bedroom-gaze quality.

Blue Screen Love Scene: Perfumery

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“Perfumery” is exactly what was lodged in my head when I wrote the bit above about “jaw-dropping”. You could also file it under “glorious”, “gorgeous” and “how the hell did three kids who never raved come up with this sort of back-room sunrise ambiance”

That’s a question I keep asking myself, and “Perfumery” glides and dreams away any necessity for an answer. There may truly be Paxil and Vicodin in the Atlanta water , if one was to compile the lost-love closet shoebox 4track wisp of the Atlas Sound album’s better songs on a mix tape with the softer, silkier BSLS moments. Lauren’s voice, part instrument made of anticipation, holds the hand of the swells of sound and leads the song along as though she was putting the thing to bed. I’m not gonna say “Eno”, cause that’s obvious. I already said Atlas Sound, so that one’s out of the way. I should also mention, then, that last night, when the new Portishead album utterly and absolutely failed me in that sort of way that only beloved friends you haven’t seen in forever who suddenly change beyond recognition for the worst, I turned to “Perfumery”. Granted, BSLS don’t inject themselves with Northern Soul, but they don’t need to. Not yet, at least.

Blue Screen Love Scene: Cheetah Belly

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Other than “I’m A Scientist” (which is streaming on the trippy, HAL 900-meets-Small Wonder BSLS myspace page), “Cheetah Belly” is the best example of all three concise facets of BSLS coming together to make something cute, quirky, memorable and unforgettable. What the hell’s Lauren on about here? Who knows, but it sounds total No New York-via-Berlin back alley, and there’s something about cheetahs, I think. Meanwhile, the laptopsthetic keeps the pace and Matt’s low-slung low-end gives the thing an anchor in an authentic realm, the sort of tune that spreads over that “unapologetic dance pop” sweet spot.

Trixie and I have been blathering, drooling uncontrollably, over these kids for days, weeks really.

shaun: give me a word, or a portmanteau, to describe BSLS

trixie: LUSH

trixie: your favorite word.

trixie: dreamy, crushworthy, delirious, intoxicating, sexy.

trixie: like feeding cotton candy to your hot new girlfriend in a park on a 78 degree day.

 

And that, really, is what BSLS are-the new TeenBeat pin-up idols of the thinking DancePop confectionery world. Hot kids who actually dance to their own stuff while dishing out their only expectation-that everyone move along with them. Their music is crush-worthy, and they’re about to set out to prove their live mettle with their first show on March 29th in Athens.

 

The massive response to the handful of finished tracks they’ve put together is proof of one major thing: this is less a breath of fresh air than a new (world) order. Color me blue, and color me obsessed.

 

 

Blue Screen Love Scene on myspace





Monae love

This is less something “current” or “cutting edge” in terms of release timing than it is “current” and “cutting edge” in terms of the fact that you have never, ever heard anything quite on this level before. Around the midpoint of 2007, self-released with little fanfare, a quiet storm dropped on the city of Atlanta in the form of a time-traveling futuretro funk-rock goddess calling herself Janelle Monae and her debut E.P. Metropolis.

She would then proceed to tear shit up.

Metropolis took a little time to grow on the city, and it’s still spreading itself thick and oozing, but one listen to the too-brief five tracks and there’s an immediate hook, evidenced so not just by the amount of critical in-city “Best Of” lists this EP (an EP! on Best-Of lists!) ended up on, not just by sold-out shows, but by the fact that her biggest fans are the duo who last changed the face of southern urban music forever: Outkast.

Big Boi’s proven himself to be more than just a fan by signing her to the now-defunct Big Purp, and Andre himself has shown her Janelle studio time. So what, pray tell, does this seeming wunderkind sound like?

In this case, a picture’s worth a thousand notes:

This IS the sound of Janelle Monae-a futuristic blend of old-school classic funk, hard-ass rock and some sort of crazed electroglam stomp that both Marc Bolan and Prince would pawn their souls, pool their money and yet still be unable to afford. Metropolis, the story thus far, involves a far-flung society and a forbidden robot/human lovestory. Metropolis, the sound, is even more impossible, and instantly catchy.

Janelle Monae: Violet Stars, Happy Hunting

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The first real “song” off of the E.P., this is an absolutely perfect example of the nutsoid, cyber-hop funplex of candy-colored terrorbliss Janelle and her band are carving out for themselves. That stuttering beat in punk/funk time, Janelle’s way of phrasing, the fact that this is both a love song and a death march…holy holy crap.

Janelle Monae: Time Will Reveal

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From outside the Metropo-verse, off of one of the Big Purp comps that y’all kids ignored because you were too busy listening to Girl Talk mash up “Kryptonite” with something dumb, probably by Nirvana. Janelle’s early venture into bringing the world into her color scheme, this is actually a hell of a lot more frantic than any of the E.P., and for good reason-she’s singing like her life depends on it here, and who knows-maybe, by the time the full Metropolis suite reveals itself, it will.

Janelle Monae’s official site, with photos, a store to purchase the music, etc.  





Like kissing wet stone

Oh, thank god it happened. The call was answered. a real, honest-to-god electronic ALBUM (read as: not a collection of singles to be skinny-jeans’d) has been released this calendar year.

Now, I have to say that not only am I pleasantly surprised but I didn’t see this one coming. A year or so back, when the enigmatic figure known as Burial’s self-titled debut album was released on Brit-label Hyperdub Records, it was a disc that got a moment of my attention, two handfuls of my respect and not very much more. What I heard in Burial (and from Burial) was a ghostly transmission, a hybrid of my beloved 2-Step (which had fatally bloated itself on cocaine and overpaid vocalists with delusions of US pop-radio success) and UK Garage, Progressive House and minimal Techno, all seemingly radiating from a burning alien radio. It was dark and moody without once ever venturing into rote, treading territory and creating new ground for all of its’ encompassed and assimilated dance genres akin to Superpitcher’s seminal Today mix.

My major problem with Burial: the facet of 2-Step that made it my admitted drug was its’ ability to bridge R&B and dance-though those vocalists cost the genre any credibility, they also proved the emotional lynchpin to the music. Burial lacked any vocals whatsoever. So, for all its’ greatness, for all its’ vast expanse of soundstructure, it mostly felt like listening to Music For Airports inside an echo chamber.

Untrue doesn’t just follow Burial, it perfects it. Just in the knick of time, in a year when electronic music proudly thrusts the virtue of bass-farting and face-chewing without spending a single moment on song-craft, Burial the producer has turned “Burial’ the sound into a universe of dubby, echoing bass, closed high-hats, muted woodblocks and silken, Special Dark vocals.

It sounds naive and plebeian to suggest that the missing ingredient from the first Burial album is the human voice, and after listening to Burial and Untrue back-to-back it becomes apparent there’s both a case for and a case against that frame of thought. While if Untrue had never existed Burial wouldn’t be given a second thought, it is true that when placed in chronological context, the first album feels like a stranded hour of stark and epic loneliness, so much so that the first trickle of voice on Untrue comes across like the oldest friend-until it becomes apparent that it is, in fact, trying to break your heart, a task on which Untrue succeeds too many times to count within its’ hour running time.

Manipulating his drowned take on northern soul songs, pitch-shifting and vocoding to levels of gender neutrality, Burial’s otherworldly electronic love-lorn soul ballads (which, ultimately, is what this album is a collection of) sound ghostly and immediate, a specter of memory. Whereas Telefon Tel Aviv, on Map Of What Is Effortless (one of my favorite wrist-slitting albums of all time, ever) placed their heartbreaking singers and their heartbroken songs upfront, Burial drowns the voices, drowns the ghosts, drowns the pain-in static, in reverb, at times even in silence-and the result is that much more compelling.

It’s easy, really, to underestimate the sheer genius (and sheer beauty) of Untrue when immersed in the first half, all of which centers around the loss of love. Once the title track takes over mid-way through, though, it’s evident that Burial’s crafted something specific: a study in the ways love and the lack of such influence everything, from the color of the sky to the sound of the wind. The dual-pairing, then, of “Untrue” and “Shell Of Light” is like kissing wet stone: reinvigorating, reviving, a reminder of all things human and all things natural. I challenge anyone to find something more gorgeous on any electronic production this year.

Untrue closes mostly restorative, with half-light giving away to a darkened warehouse in the aptly-titled “Raver”, the album’s most (read as: only) uplifting moment. It’s fitting, because as Untrue closes it’s impossible not to think back to “Archangel” and its bleakness, the hopeless beauty of the album’s beginning, the vital, impressive restoration that is the middle and the reminder of small constants-breathing, smiling, days turning into one another-that comes from the ending.

Untrue is an album, a masterful one at that, one that’s earning praise left and right cross-genre for being what it is: a quenching rain in a music landscape desperate for something authentic, emotive and real. This is gonna fight tooth-and-nail for my top album spot of 07.

Burial: Etched Headplate

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A true masterpiece of aching soul, the closest approximation of the epic, lost feel of the entire album that can be distilled into one select song.

Burial: Shell Of Light

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Untrue’s very real, very intense turning point. I’m not going to sully this with words: hit “play” and close your eyes.

Bloc Party: Where Is Home (Burial remix)

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It’s amazing, what happens when this is left in an iTunes playlist to appear as though it’s attached to Untrue: it fits, Kele’s vocal given the drowned-treatment and the U2-aping of the original album version turned inside itself. The Untrue version makes this true, so to speak.

You can buy any and all of this stuff at Boomkat, who, honestly, are cooler than any of the other music stores we could possibly link to when it comes to cutting-edge electronic stuff. I also can’t recommend to you enough that you sign up for their weekly newsletter: you may *think* you know what’s going on, but unless you see what they’re plugging every Friday, you really don’t.





Tough Guys Don’t Dance… Bitches!

High Contrast


I’m not one who’s been a huge DnB kid through out the years, but there’s always those artists that push the envelope and make DnB tracks that make me dance like no four-to-the-floor beat ever could. High Contrast is one of those who constantly blows me away in his remix/production work and with his crafting of deejay mixes. I remember listening to his Essential Mix about 2 years back on repeat for weeks.

His new album “Tough Guys Don’t Dance” just dropped this month and its a masterful blend of DnB roots with newer electro styles and haunting almost blues lyrics interspersed through out it all. The whole album conveys a feeling of getting down on a dance floor to a late night drive-in thriller’s light and sound.

I think the pinnacle of this album (for me at least –I’m sure everyone will have their own) is this little jewel called “Pink Flamingo”; basically imagine Kavinsky meets 150 bpm’s worth of the the DnB massive on a dark highway with nothing but an old resonate Moog to defend himself with.

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High Contrast - “Pink Flamingo”

I’m totally look for a way to get this in a set without slowing it down to lose the lushness of it to speed distortion (sounds like something trixie and shaun would do @ 5 in the morning!). Regardless, the track rocks it and the rest of the album is masterful and is more than worthy of your highly cultured musical taste buds.

Order Tough Guys Don’t Dance from from Hospital Records and get down with your secret DnB side.

And, in case you missed it back when, here’s one of my favorite High Contrast remixes:

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The White Stripes - “Blue Orchid (High Contrast Remix)”

<hacks/>





ties the other

I’ve never bought into the whole “support your local (insert entertainment or creative media here) just because they’re local” mindset,particularly when it comes to journalistic, critical coverage/review/feature. If proximity was to be the dominant, or a least a major, deciding factor in wielding that ever-lovely binaural label of “good/bad”, every crappy New York band with red Lip Service ties and black Lip Service jackets (ordered together, from the online store, to save on shipping costs-you can bulk order for your band, you know…now THAT’s good B2B salesmanship) would be gushed upon by photocopied upstate undergrad attempts at newspapers.

Oh, wait…

Anyway. I’m probably an ass for saying so (probably?), but how close a band/artist/DJ/producer resides to me really is relatively little concern of mine. There are some, like, say, Deerhunter, that the Fork-Gum folks would kill more babies than they already do to have performing at the local Chuck-E-Cheese, and I basically refuse to *ever*, ever, engage a Deerhunter live show again. And I think in the next week I’d have four opportunities, if I desired. I just can’t find the beauty of their recorded stuff in the audience-punishing live show, but I digress and repeat myself. Then there are some local bands, like The Swear, that I just don’t get to see enough of-consistently rockin’ live, and with a disappointingly small recorded output, the only way to get the full force of Elizabeth and her band is to step into the realm in which they truly excel-live performance.

I am hoping my new local obsession, One Hand Loves The Other, ends up in the sort of category that bridges the cradled-to-my-chest headphoneloving I have for Deerhunter with the rabid desire to catch every show they every play in this area.

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Seriously. Having just popped up on my radar, and making it a little cloudier yet crisper, One Hand Loves The Other’s self-titled debut album (the name, I assume, comes from a line in Bjork’s “Unison”), released this year by Atlanta indie stalwart Stickfigure (home to one of my favorite, and coincidentally local, bands of all time-the cathartic screamo collective with the greatest band name ever, I Would Set Myself On Fire For You), is the sort of emotional, orchestral, classical composition-infused glitch pop that doesn’t seem of this world. Too crystalline, too textured, too fragile and open, pumping with real blood augmented with chasmic, silver-electronic veins.

From One Hand Loves The Other’s myspace bio

Lou, the lyricist and voice, emerged from a background inspired by blues and soul artists of the twentieth century female persuasion. Nancy, the flautist and fingers of the synthesizer, blossomed out from classical piano and flute instruction. Mikey, the electronics engineer and composer, came from the pits of electronic haze with a clear idea of the ability to merge the organic and synthetic. Lastly, Mary, the cellist extraordinaire, picked up the bow where her precursor left it. She can make like the dickens on the strings of the cello.

Gotta love a band bio that sounds like Dave Eggers wrote it. More to love, though, than the quick-witted press material (or even the ramped-up pr push that’s building fans like Liza with a Z…we at Res sure as hell can’t compete with that, though My Chem can), are the actual songs on One Hand Loves The Other. Having shattered the windows of contemporary post-WARP glitch aesthetic, and re-assembling it with fragments of smart pop stained with sunset hues of opera and neo-classical composition, One Hand Loves The Other isn’t the Stupidisco that’s oozing from everyone’s musical pores right now-this is smart, pretty stuff.

One Hand Loves The Other: Don’t Know

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As Lou’s vocals climax and soar, the rhythm rides, and strings wrap around each other, it’s possible to get lost in the sheer musical bliss of “Don’t Know”. The lyrics, though, providing a vocabulary and vocal exercise like Anthony Kiedis’ smarter brother who aced the verbal part of the SATs, need their own attenion:

complications evaporation
subtle stasis is all encased in you
subliminal lift the weights off my chains
no more days where i dream in blue

Poetry. Gorgeousness. Like a lucid, drunken dream, achingly clear at the moment but a warm blur immediately post-awakening, this is the sound of One Hand Loves The Other.

They’re playing a handful of shows in the Atlanta area and surrounding locations in the near future, and all that info can be snagged at their myspace. You can pick up the record on iTunes, or at Stickfigure’s site.

I have not been this excited about an Atlanta band in a long, long time. For an electronic music scene that’s just now discovered the last decade of German and French electro, One Hand Loves The Other sounds fresh, real, clear as water and cool as a fall day. This may be an autumn album, but you’re going to hear more from them here at Res very soon. Believe me.





Follow Bushwick’s White Rabbits

I’ve been promising to put up some White Rabbits tracks for awhile. The Rabbits are from NYC, and I keep seeing their name on fliers for shows and parties all over the world, but I’ve yet to see them on anything for the city in which I live and from which they hail. What gives? Did I just miss their conquering of New York while I was finishing graduate school?

White Rabbits

In any case, their dramatic, beer hall meets Muse sound evokes pint glass swinging cabaret but is still decidedly NYC. At a time when everyone and everything seems to be moving to Berlin, it’s nice to remember that the city can also be a deep, dark, drunk place of mystery just as much as our European cousin. Blending piano styles borrowed from honkey tonk and Argentine Tango, guitar lines reminiscent of the Clash and the Specials, beats by turns afro-Carribean and militaristic, and the yearning bombast of a lead singer comparable to Matt Bellamy with cheeky backing vocals straight out of Revolver era Beatles, the White Rabbits may very well be the weirdest and coolest new band on the planet.

Opening with “Kid on My Shoulders,” Fortnightly is no-holds barred dance music that sounds unbelievably fresh to ears tired of the disco-wonkiness of Justice and Simian Mobile Disco but who want something with the same hip-shakin’ energy. As perhaps all six band members join in singing “We held our tongues through out it, one day we’ll laugh about it” alongside the jangling saloon piano, the boys evoke an energy rarely heard on record. If this doesn’t make you want to see them live, waving your beer glass in the air as you sing along, just wait for the reprise of the chorus at the end of the album.

Kid on My Shoulders — White Rabbits

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While many of their tracks depend on a sleazy, spooky, player-piano-in-a-haunted-house sound (”March of the Camels” and “Dinner Party” being two of my favorites), “I Used to Complain Now I Don’t,” is a sunshine-y calypso-tonk gem perfect for sipping frozen dacquiris and doing the cha-cha on a boardwalk– which you can do on July 21st when the White Rabbits play Coney Island’s Siren Fest.

March of the Camels — White Rabbits

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I Used to Complain Now I Don’t — White Rabbits

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The album, Fortnightly is now available on Say Hey records.





Patiently patiently await for sound

Deerhunter have been, for ages, one of the most polarizingly unique bands in the Atlanta scene. Known roundabout these parts for their terrifying, sonically destructive live sound and disconcerting stage presence, when their Kranky debut Cryptograms was released early this year the wave of praise from everyone, everywhere, ever, was deafening. It was also extremely, extremely shocking to me-the praise, and then the album itself. Honestly, given that the last time Hacks and I had seen Deerhunter, frontman Bradford had ended a stalk-across-the-stage-and-scream-into-the-hyper-delayed-mic session by banging the hell out of said live mic against the drum riser.

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Now, I’m obviously the one roundabout these parts who is in love with punishing noise, but this…this was ear-cracking. In fact, I’m pretty damn sure my hearing never recovered. It was after that show that I set into motion my decision to give the hell up on Deerhunter, “local-noise-rock-makes-good” be damned.

And then Cryptograms was released, to maddening hype. I’d heard one song on their myspace, and continuously, vocally questioned why they didn’t make an album with that sound-epic, pretty, droning, hypnotic. One day, at random, after some glowing review somewhere said something and randomly threw out “modern-day Eno producing a White Stripes record”, I gave Cryptograms a spin. It was more to honor the creative music journo than out of any hope for the music.

I instantly ate my words. The “Eno producing White Stripes” is pretty much spot on. At times Bradford’s vocals, which can be grating or endearing but always spot-on in their everpresentness, and in their oft-times use as more of an instrument than as a means to purvey lyrical content, emulate Perry Farrell’s dubbed-out Porno For Pyros sound. The music loops, blankets and divides inside and amongst itself like a living organism, with snaking guitars and some of the most captivating atmospheric percussion heard from a live act.

Cryptograms is split into two halves-the first being more ambient and atmospheric, the latter approaching the sound of a band, in a garage, discovering (as a unit) Remain in Light, Lodger and Taking Tiger Mountain simultaneously.

Deerhunter: Cryptograms (download removed at label’s request)

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After the album’s humming intro, this, the title track, unfurls, and it’s one of the few I remember witnessing the birth of in live settings. Both the opening, from whence the vocal “my greatest…fear” stabs out of the dark, and the end, on which “there was no sound” becomes a mantra, will get lodged inside your head for days.

Deerhunter: Octet(download removed at label’s request)

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This is my favorite Cryptograms song, and illustrates perfectly exactly how lush and itchy can merge in Deerhunter’s sonic palate to create something that’s impossible to turn off, to run from, to not crave. I’ve not yet listened to this in headphones, but it’s begging for it.

During the Cryptograms sessions, a few other songs were recorded and recently released as an EP, Fluorescent Grey. These songs fit at the end of the 12 Crypto-songs (god I hate the way that sounds in my head but I have to use it just once) and turn Deerhunter in the other direction-literally, the four songs turn Deerhunter inside-out, and the inverse of the fierce, confrontational band is presented. In its place, we’re given brushed drums, undisturbed singing, and plaintive dreampop.

Deerhunter: Fluorescent Grey(download removed at label’s request)

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Fluorescent Grey’s opener and title track, this has been pulling me out of lost moments for the past month or so. I can’t pinpoint what it sounds like, other than to say I’m sure I’ve heard it in a dream. It’s easy, with this, to imagine a black oxford-clad Deerhunter, candle-lit, onstage for an MTV unplugged-though I can’t imagine Bradford Cox without his precious DigiDelay.

All in all, the experience of combining Cryptograms with its’ Fluorescent counterpart/counterpoint causes the two albums to coalesce in a way that adds up to one of the most unique listening experience of 2007. This, as a whole, is a full-on album-the kind that starts when it begins, and only ends in terms of no longer playing aloud. The stuff here resonates inside your head permanently after one listen.

I have no idea what they sound like now, though their recent destruction of New York eardrums was widely chronicled by every this-that-and-there blog short of Gawker-so they’re apparently still huntin’ after all these deers, if you will. On album, though, right here, right now, there’s less hunting and more haunting-as in, for better or worse, this is music that will find you in your dreams.

Deerhunter’s official site

Deerhunter on Kranky records (you can buy there, too)

Deerhunter myspace





Hording in progressing time

I vacillate, especially publicly, in my appreciation for the Immer-ization of schaffel that took over the more MNML-minded clubs for one dark minute earlier this decade. The Berlin version of a spaghetti western soundtrack, schaffel/shuffle-tech has the ability, like most progressive offshoots of House, to be either hypnotic or the inspiration for eye-gouging in its’ repetition. Some, like our beloved lil’ guy Superpitcher, used a unique approach to vocals and composition to turn plodding into a new goth romantique movement.

 I’ve belabored how schaffel, like spandex, is a right-not-a-privilege. So I was a bit fearful, a bit off-put, and more than a tiny bit curious when one of the quiet, back-room forerunners in the surge of amazing electronic music in the past few years, namely old MALARIA! no-punk’er Gudrun Gut, head of Monika Records (one of those labels touched by the hand of any-and-everything able to keep record labels from ever producing anything less than good, usually bordering on tell-everyone-this-is-greatness), announced plans to break her composition silence for a full-length album on her own this year. The little leaks and trickles that slowly made their way to me sounded like someone who’d spent a lot of time with headphones on, obsessing over what made “Love is Stronger Than Pride” so jaw-droppingly anthemic and yet understated (without ever venturing into cheese-anthem hoovers-n-horns).

 

However, let’s restate: shuffle-tech can be tear-numbling stab-me-with-a-rave boring.

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Fortunately, Gut’s I Put A Record On, as an album, skips and stammers but holds together with a dark, dubby ambience. It’s not a car album by any means, but the best stuff coming from Camp Reenvigorate Tech in the past few years has been more meant for the sort of DIY headphone parties that can be held with ample bedroom floor space. Yeah, I’ve been…delayed…in writing about it, but how do you discuss something that uses understatement to establish itself?

(also: busy)

 Gudrun Gut: Move MeÂ

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The album’s opener and first single, “Move Me”, has existed in various forms long before I Put A Record On was complete. With this version, we get Gudrun’s take on a Tech-Waltz, the romance of the future (or current), an almost-polka marrying with familiar shuffling progression into a track that shouldn’t work, by any means. There’s no way that if, as some claim, this entire thing was plotted out on paper it could ever make it past partial conception. Resonating in the ears, “Move Me’ is a unique, spoken-patter love-skip that lives and breathes what wine-drunk sounds like, with Gudrun’s soft, plain-stated statement “I fall to pieces/like a Patsy Cline song/I fall to…” before drifting off and coming back with “…little pieces”. It doesn’t get better, or more creative, than this.

Gudrun Gut: Rock Bottom RiserÂ

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Let me make something clear: I fucking hate Smog, Jandek, and all of those “so-mysterious-ooh-I’ma-strummin-strummer-listen-to-me-strum” sorts of hyper-mysterious, “I ain’t gots no image and that’s my image” singer-songwriter-moonshine distiller bear-killers who go to the woods to make a guitar out of twigs (deliberately).  As such, prior to this, I’d never heard Smogy-mc-flannel-shirt’s original version of “Rock Bottom Riser”.
I now have. It doesn’t come close to the euphoria, the tongue-in-cheek rescue-and-remedy that neither resolves itself nor catharsizes anything, of Gut’s remake.
Smog? Boring. This? Beautiful.

The whole of I Put A Record On is like that, though-unexpectedly beautiful in the echo-chamber, in the head and in the heart. Dance music for kids who want to feel, want a click, a clack, and a heartfelt resonance-not to mention originality. You’ll hear nothing like this record, the one that Gudrun’s putting on, for quite some time.

 Monika Records/Gudrun Gut online (you can and should buy albums there, too)