Friday, August 30, 2013

Off the Record: Desert Island Discs

So my wife had the wonderful idea that for this week's 'Off the Record' I should let you all know what I consider to be my favorite albums to give you a better idea of where I'm coming from musically. It will also give you a glimpse of auditory horizons that I haven't yet explored. And on top of all that, I love making lists so I couldn't say no. So I'm pleased to present this week's Off the Record: Desert Island Discs!

I've found over the years that my favorite albums change and that this list looks quite different from one I would have made even 5 years ago. Some of the records that at the time I thought I could never be without (Animal Collective's 'Strawberry Jam', for example), I hardly ever listen to anymore. Not that I don't enjoy them, but I've discovered others that, for one reason or another, I enjoy more. But as of August 30, 2013, these are the 10 records (presented in alphabetical order) that I would take with me to listen to forever and always on my lonely desert island. They are records that I consider to be basically perfect and ones that I listen to on a regular basis and enjoy more and more with each listen. I wholeheartedly recommend each and every one of these albums and if there are some that you haven't heard, I've linked a video to a song from each of the albums so you can give it a sampling. So without further ado:

1. The Beatles - Revolver (1966)
The Beatles are my favorite band and its always a challenge for me to pick my favorite of their records but 'Revolver' is really the cream of the crop for me. It hits the perfect balance of earlier 'I love you-ya-ya-ya-wooooh!' Beatles and their later more "mature" stuff. It never gets old for me.

Choice Cut: I Want to Tell You

2. Blur - Parklife (1994)
This is the Blur album that I find myself returning to the most. A great 90s British album with solid tunes wall-to-wall. It's a shame that to most American's they are just the group that did Song 2. This is a great place to start if you are new to Blur.

Choice Cut: To the End

3. Bob Marley & The Wailers - Catch a Fire (1973)
'Catch a Fire' is Bob Marley & the Wailers' overall strongest album in my opinion; probably because Bunny Wailer and Peter Tosh were still with Bob and sharing vocal duties. I also prefer the original Jamaican version of the album (which is the one that I heard first) to the touched-up more Westernized version that was release originally by Island Records. A great place to go once you've worn out Marley's best-of collection 'Legend'.

Choice Cut: High Tide or Low Tide

4. Daft Punk - Discovery (2001)
This is my go-to feel-good record. Inventive, fun, and full of energy. It's a modern day classic. If you are looking for a good time, you can't do much better than 'Discovery'.

Choice Cut: Digital Love

5. David Bowie - Hunky Dory (1971)
This is the record where Bowie really clicked for me. A lot of people say that 'The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars' is Bowie's best early record (and it is a great one) but for me 'Hunky Dory' just edges it out. It's packed with so many great songs: Changes, Life on Mars?Oh! You Pretty Things, and more. So very good.

Choice Cut: Changes

6. Joanna Newsom - Ys (2006)
Oh, Joanna. This is the only record on this list that I would recommend with slight reservations. At 56 minutes and only 5 tracks, it's a bit dense and overwhelming. Then when you mix in Joanna Newsom's "acquired-taste" vocals, it can turn many people off to the whole thing. But if you sit down with it and follow along with her wonderfully complex, literate lyrics and her beautiful harp playing; it reveals itself to be a truly magical album. Plus it taught me the differences between meteorites, meteors, and meteoroids.

Choice Cut: Emily

7. Kate Bush - Hounds of Love (1985)
Kate Bush rules. Plain & simple. One day the whole world will come to realize it. And 'Hounds of Love' sums up pretty perfectly everything that is great about her. Side 1 of the record contains great pop songs and Side 2 contains crazy, weird, experimental Kate. It's all there and it's all good.

Choice Cut: Hounds of Love

8. The Knife - Silent Shout (2006)
My favorite electronic album. Both insanely catchy and incredibly bizarre and spooky all at once. The opening track, Silent Shout, is probably my favorite opening to an album ever. It sets the mood and captures your attention and The Knife keep you fully engaged until Still Light fades out 48 minutes later.

Choice Cut: Silent Shout

9. Super Furry Animals - Rings Around the World (2001)
After the Beatles, Super Furry Animals are my second favorite group (though they are currently in a turf war with Blur; I'll let you know how it turns out). And like so many of the records on this list, 'Rings Around the World' captures every element of the band that I love. It has great storming rockers, beautiful ballads, and loony electro numbers. They really go all out on this one. Heck, it even features Paul McCartney eating a carrot and celery on one of the tracks.

Choice Cut: Juxtapozed With U

10. XTC - English Settlement (1982)
Out of all of XTC's wonderful records, this is the one that has given me the most mileage thus far. While it may not contain the pastoral perfection that you see on 1986's 'Skylarking' (which most consider their best album), 'English Settlement' has plenty to offer. 70 solid minutes of XTC goodness without a dud on it; a real treat. 

Choice Cut: Senses Working Overtime

Honorable mentions (if the universe saw fit to provide me with another bag):
Radiohead - Kid A; Gorillaz - Plastic Beach; Joy Division - Unknown Pleasures; ABBA - Gold; Arctic Monkeys - Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not; Fleet Foxes - Helplessness Blues; Talking Heads - Stop Making Sense (Live); Arcade Fire - The Suburbs; Kraftwerk - The Man Machine; Burial - Untrue

What about you? What are your favorite records? What couldn't you live without? Let me know in the comments, if you like!

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Check the Rhime...

So I'm really enjoying 'The Low End Theory'. Quite a bit. I'm very excited to report back to you all on Sunday. In the meantime, please enjoy the first single released from the album, Check the Rhime, and its awesome, totally-early-90s video.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

'You're a Long Way Off from Yippie-yi-yay': A Week with 'Call of the West'

I started this week queuing up Wall of Voodoo's 'Call of the West' with no prior knowledge other than their song, Mexican Radio, before pressing play. And I feel that this is where knowledge of the band ends for most people. Unfortunately for the average listener, Mexican Radio, although a wonderful pop song, is not really a good representation of what 'Call of the West' has in store for them. It's probably why most people don't know who sings, "that Mexico radio song" (as one of my co-workers referred to it this week) and why Wall of Voodoo never really hit it big. That is a real shame because in 'Call of the West' they have delivered a real lost gem of an album.


As I listened to the LP, I was first struck by what an interesting sound Wall of Voodoo has conjured up on this 1982 album. Imagine if in the middle of one of Sergio Leone's great Spaghetti Westerns ('The Good, the Bad, & the Ugly etc.) all of its characters were magically given keyboards, drum machines, electric guitars, and a whole host of other interesting music-making devices and were set loose to jam away. It really is a sound that I can honestly say I don't think I've heard on any other album: a sort of synth-western. It has the jangle-ly epic guitar lines & wailing harmonica's that mark a lot of Ennio Morricone's western movie scoring alongside keyboards, drum machines, and angular melodies that mark a lot of 80s post-punk/new wave bands. And to my surprise it works really, really well. The instrumental track On Interstate 15 serves as a perfect summation of their style; featuring awesome Morricone guitar lines and strong synth presence working in beautiful harmony.

This interesting musical esthetic is combined with lead singer Stan Ridgway's lyrics that paint vivid stories throughout each of the record's tracks. I mentioned earlier that Mexican Radio is not really a good marker for the rest of the album; it is most obvious thematically. Comparatively, the rest of the record is kind of a bummer. Many of the tracks wrangle with a disillusionment of "the American Dream" and even, maybe to a lesser extent, the idea of American exceptionalism. The first three tracks on the album deal with these themes, all showcasing characters trying to make it big and then failing. The heartbreaking Lost Weekend has a couple dreaming of what their life could be, the businesses they could start, and the places they could visit only to lose their money time after time trying to catch that break. Factory details the life of a man stuck in his daily routine of getting up, going to work at the factory, coming home, eating, sitting in his chair, beating his wife, and going to bed; all for the sake of "a living" and a "little plastic pool for the kids to wade in".


The concept of "The West" represents opportunity, adventure, a final frontier, and a new start in American culture; even now. And in this record, Wall of Voodoo takes a hard look at those ideals and points out that maybe they aren't all they are cracked up to be. It says that maybe this constant striving to live "the life" and get that white-picket fence is what is causing many of the problems the characters in these songs face. The band creates an interesting juxtaposition with its Western-style instrumentation and melodies, and its lyrical content which many times are a critique of the very mythos that it is evoking. It is a true testament to the record that it can still be enjoyed just as much on this more deep, lyrical, and philosophical level as it can be enjoyed as a jangle-ly, synth-wave musical experience.


While I really do enjoy much of what Wall of Voodoo offers on this record, a couple of the tracks never really clicked with me in my week of listens. Look at Their Way and They Don't Want Me could never find that sweet spot as so many of the other songs on this album did. They struck me almost as place-holders in the midst of the really good stuff. The songs themselves aren't half-bad, but in comparison to some of the gems around them; they just don't stand up.

So where does this leave us, then? It leaves us with a really worthwhile album. 'Call of the West' is not a perfect record but it is a very good one and one that deserves to be heard and explored. With its quirky instrumentation and engaging lyrics it really is a great (lost) "American" record. Its themes are ones that are still relevant today; perhaps even more relevant than in 1982. They are ideas and concepts that I think are valuable for every person, American or not, to wrestle with. What is truly worth striving for? And is it worth what we may lose along the way? It's pretty heady stuff and the album doesn't supply many answers but it gets the ball rolling. This record won't change your life or ideals, but it does provide some valuable food for thought in a delicious new-wave, western-flavored package. It is so much more than just Mexican Radio

Up Next!: A Tribe Called Quest - "The Low End Theory" (by request!)

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Off the Record: Franz Ferdinand

This week the stream of Franz Ferdinand's new LP, 'Right Thoughts, Right Words, Right Action', has been side-tracking me quite a bit. Their break-out hit Take Me Out was a very big musical moment for me. It lead me to purchase their debut album which, in turn, served as a sort of gateway drug to all sorts of music and bands that I would have never found otherwise. I've been a huge fan ever since. I wouldn't say they are my favorite band, but they will always hold a very special place in my heart. I'm especially digging the opening track Right Action and its equally awesome video. Check it out and I will see you all Sunday!

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Wall of Voodoo - Tomorrow

Mid-week video time! Today I thought I would share (thanks to the suggestion of one dedicated reader) a live rendition of the opening track from this week's album, 'Call of the West'. Mexican Radio would have been the obvious song choice since it's the one we all know, and by all means you are encouraged to listen to it here. But for now let's enjoy a few minutes with Wall of Voodoo giving an excellent and energetic performance of Tomorrow . Enjoy, kind listeners!



Sunday, August 18, 2013

'Concentrate My Hurt Into a Gold Tone': A Week with 'Wakin on a Pretty Daze'

Kurt Vile is a musician and songwriter that I have been at least aware of for quite a while; living in a little room in the back of my mind with all the other musicians that I'll get around to someday. He's released 5 album's and 4 EPs in the last 6 six years, and with each subsequent release he's received more and more acclaim. The little Kurt in my mind was slowly growing and beckoning to me. 2011's album, 'Smoke Ring for My Halo', ended up on many end-of-year-lists and by the time this year's 'Wakin on a Pretty Daze' arrived to near unanimous praise, I knew that the time had come to give dear Kurt a listen. I've given his newest release about 15 listens this past week and I'm oh-so very glad that I did.



'Wakin on a Pretty Daze' sounds like an album out of time. Not necessarily an album from the past (though in many ways that could be true) but simply out of time; it sounds like its always been here and it always will be. As I listened to the album over and over throughout the week, I was struck just by how timeless and rock-solid many of the tracks on this record sound. This feeling of agelessness is only magnified by the sounds on the album itself. The whole thing is a beautiful, hazy, and very emotive album. Vile's guitar playing, his conversational lyrics, and the lush production make for a very warm and insular experience. A little 70 minute time-capsule that has been a pleasure to escape into.

Vile's casual and laid-back lyrics as well as his delivery also add to the warmness of the record. He's just hanging out, jamming, and kind of singing whatever comes to mind. And for the most part it works really well. There's not any sort of mystical depths to explore in his lyrics, no complex and vague metaphors; just straight-forward life experience and many times simple life philosophy. He wants to appreciate the world and the people around him for who they are, and contribute positively through his music. The whole of Goldtone lyrically is about him finding happiness in his music and being able to share that with others. He is striving to work out his stress and problems into "golden tones." Its a very positive record overall. There is a sense of hope brimming from it that made it a real pleasure to visit over and over again.

It is a long album and the average track length is about 6 minutes, but the majority of these tracks use their length to great advantage. The record is book-ended by the two longest (and best in my opinion) tracks: starting with Wakin on a Pretty Day and ending with Goldtone. Wakin... is easily my favorite track on the record. The guitar riffs, the wonderfully catchy melody, the way the drum beat changes halfway through to a more propulsive beat, that slide guitar, the slow crescendo of the song working toward an awesomely epic guitar solo, the low-farty synth/organ/feedback (?) in the background towards the end of the song, and perhaps best of all: it never gets boring in its almost 10 full minutes. That is a difficult feat, but both Wakin... and equally lush and beautiful Goldtone pull it off with aplomb. 



The track Too Hard was the only one that I felt wore out its welcome with its lack of melodic development and almost bored sounding delivery from Vile. Not to say that it is a terrible song. There is a perfectly great 4 minute song to be found, but those 4-ish minutes worth of awesome are stretched over 8 minutes on the album. It just goes on a tad too long and was the only real faltering point on the album for me. But this stumble is quickly rescued by the punchy and (relatively) short Shame Chamber that follows it; with its driving beat and great background vocal yelps. The rest of record is smooth and sunny sailing.

In 'Wakin on a Pretty Daze', Kurt Vile has delivered something very valuable: a genuinely optimistic experience. It wants to be enjoyed and to bring joy to its listeners. There are no grand political or socioeconomic machinations, no hidden deep, dark secrets. It just wants you to be happy. If you will allow me to climb up on my high horse for a minute, I think that focusing on the good we can bring to those around us can be a helpful thing. Doom and gloom has its place (especially in music) but I think that there is great value in occasionally, to borrow the phrase, focusing on the positive. Yes, the world is full of terrible things - horrible things happen everyday and at times it really does seem overwhelming. We can still affect change and bring joy to those around us even through something as simple as a beautiful song. 

Up Next: Wall of Voodoo's 'Call of the West' (by reader request!)

Friday, August 16, 2013

Off the Record: Kyary Pamyu Pamyu

Since I'm imperfect human, I often find myself listening to things that aren't the weekly record. So I thought I would give into temptation on Fridays and start posting other musical stylings that I have been enjoying when not giving my undivided attention to the assigned album. So welcome to: Off the Record.
This week, Kyary Pamyu Pamyu's (of PONPONPON fame) new LP, 'Nanda Collection', has been distracting me quite a bit; especially the single, Invader Invader. Yes, it's Japanese. Yes, it's insane. Yes, it has a girl singing in a high-pitched-cutie-voice. And yes, it is also a killer pop record. Inventive, fun, bright, shiny, and totally loony. It's a wonderful time. Un-ironically wonderful. Don't believe me? Check out the single below and I promise (or I at sincerely least hope) that by the time the chorus hits at 1:20, you will be totally on board. If you are still interested after that, check out Anthony Fantano of The Needle Drop's excellent review of the album here. Enjoy and see you Sunday!

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Wakin On A Pretty Day...

Here's our mid-week video! It's the title-track (of sorts) from this week's album. Though the video is essentially 10 minutes of watching paint dry, the song itself is a thing of beauty. Slap on a good pair of headphones and enjoy!

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Your House is on Fire; Your Children Are Alone: A Week with 'Rain Dogs'

A Quick Aside:
I've listened to Tom Waits' album 'Rain Dogs' approximately 13 times this week: sitting at home, at work, in the car, and lying in bed at night. And on about day three it hit me that I can't remember the last time I did this with an album. There is just so much music out there, good and bad, that spending a week exclusively listening to the same thing seemed almost wasteful to me. Think of all the other new things I could be listening to! All the undiscovered horizons! The quest to discover the next big thing! I so often make snap judgements with music that to really delve into an album was more difficult than I thought it would be. I realized that it takes more than a cursory half-listen to really decide how I feel about an album. That music isn't simply 'good' or 'bad,' but a lot of little things that add up to how I feel about it and why. I learned that I can't really discover the ins and outs of an album and place it in the 'keep' pile or 'discard' pile so quickly. Not to get mystical or anything but focusing all of my listening energy onto a single cluster of 54 minutes of music, over and over again, made me really think about why I enjoy music and what I get out of listening to it. But I suppose that was the whole point. 

'Your House is on Fire; Your Children Are Alone': A Week with 'Rain Dogs'
I think it was about 6 years ago at college that I first gave listening to Tom Waits a try. I made my way down to the local library and checked out 'Rain Dogs' excited about listening to what I had read in many reputable sources was one of the best albums of the '80s. I made it about half-way through the first song, Singapore, before switching it off. What was this? This was terrible. I can sing better than that. This was the best album of 1985? And that's about as far as I made it into Tom-Waits-land until recently.   


I think my favorite description of Tom Waits' voice that I've read was that it sounded "like it was soaked in a vat of bourbon, left hanging in the smokehouse for a few months, and then taken outside and run over with a car." That's about right. And I think for many people, including myself, that first exposure to his signature growl is where the interest in exploring his work ends. That is a real shame because I've learned that our dear friend Tom has a lot to offer and that 'Rain Dogs' is one of the best albums I have listened to in a while.

'Rain Dogs' is almost a concept album of sorts. Each song is a different vignette of a down-on-their-luck character trying to scratch out a living in the damp, cold city they live in. Almost every song also jumps musical genres from blues to rock to jazz to pop to folk to gospel to country and even polka. And while this carnival ride of styles might sound like a recipe for disaster, I think it's a testament to Mr. Waits that the album works as well as it does. This circus of 19 tracks are held together by the ringmaster that is Tom. His voice (which while maybe not 'technically' good) is one of the most expressive ones I have had the pleasure of listening to. His cadence and style morph from song to song; from a huge, clunking roar on Big Black Mariah to a soft, hurt, and even beautiful whisper on Time. It's his voice that guides us along through the weird and wonderful journey of 'Rain Dogs.' What I found so unappealing a few years ago, I now find very expressive and engrossing.

This album also has a very strong sense of place; both in sound and lyrical content. It reeks of the city. Dim, dank, gin-soaked alleys. Washed-up people just trying to get by. Seedy characters carrying out dark deeds. Everything is just a tad left of center. The instrumentation adds to this feeling. The percussion on many of the tracks sounds like people just whacking wooden chairs or bashing trash can lids together . Bells, marimba, organ and other interesting sounds find their way onto the record adding a unique underpinning to many of the tracks. And while it may not be a 'fun' listen, 'Rain Dogs' is never a boring one. It's a ride that never lets up. Each track is a different journey, a different sad, lonely person to meet. Waits' lyrics are also vague enough to let the listener fill in some of the gaps and add their own spin to them; the lines being both somehow clearly drawn and open to interpretation at the same time. I've never been a master at figuring out what lyrics mean, but the weird and kooky world that Tom portrays in 'Rain Dogs' was one that I could follow and appreciate most of the time.




And as with any album there were certain stand-out tracks: Clap Hands, with its marimba infused beat and almost chain-gang style of lyrical repetition; Jockey Full of Bourbon, jammed with evocative lyrics and a wonderful, slinky guitar lead; Anywhere I Lay My Head, closing out the album with a beautiful horn-led snippet of a song where Tom's vocal soars with an astonishing level of growl. And Downtown Train. What a song! There is a reason Rod Stewart's cover found success. This is a wonderful song and it is probably where the whole thing clicked for me on the first listen. It is most likely because it's the pop-iest of any track on the album (if I learned one thing in the past few years of listening to music it is that 'pop' is not a dirty word). 

As you can see, I clearly enjoyed my time with this album very much; and I know that no matter how much I've enjoyed and tell you over and over again about it, for some of you Tom's voice will just be too much of an impasse. And that's ok. We don't have to like the same things. But if you are able to continue on and explore the wealth of goodies that 'Rain Dogs' has to offer I think you will find that Waits has a lot to give you beyond 'a weird voice.' Definitely a keeper, this one.
Til next week!



Up Next: Kurt Vile's 'Wakin on a Pretty Daze' 

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Downtown Train...

I thought that on Wednesdays (halfway through my listening journey) I would start posting a song that I have been really enjoying from the weekly album. This song was made famous by Rod Stewart but I am really, really enjoying the original Tom Waits version. Great video as well. Sorry about the subtitles; this was the best quality version of the full video that I could find.

Excited to write about this one come Sunday.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

The Locked Groove.

I love music. I love the idea of writing about the music that I enjoy. I love that the internet provides me with the ability to just throw my thoughts and opinions out into the void. I've tried my hand at daily blogging and I found that while the first week or two goes quite well, I soon run out of interesting things to say on a daily basis. Slowly but surely, daily posts become weekly, become monthly, become never. Perhaps its that I lack the discipline or time to sit down and write interesting thoughts Monday through Sunday. While that may figure into it, it may also just be that I'm not quite as interesting as I believe myself to be.

But I love the IDEA of blogging. 


So I think that I've come up with a recipe for success that allows me to explore new music and then report back to the world at large on my findings and experiences. And it's an idea that, while not wholly original, I'm quite excited about nonetheless. Ladies and gentleman, I am pleased to present and welcome you to 'The Locked Groove!'

The idea is to pick an album a week and listen to it over and over throughout the week. Spend time with it, learn its ins and outs, its highs and lows; and then at the end of the week report my findings to you fine folk. Everything from classic-all-time-great albums to new releases are up for grabs, and since it's a wild and wooly world of music out there I thought it best to lay down some ground rules.

The Rules of  'The Locked Groove' are these:
1) The albums featured will be ones that I have not listened to in their entirety before but are ones that are generally acknowledged to be worth hearing.
2) I MUST listen to it at least once a day and at least 7 times in the week
3) On one of my listens, I will read the lyrics to each song as they play (if applicable)
4) On Sunday of each week I will post my thoughts on my listening experiences and announce next week's album (suggestions welcome) 

I had a really hard time deciding what to start with. But I think I've decided to rest on Tom Waits' 'Rain Dogs'; I thought it would be an interesting way to kick things off. And its also an artist and album that I've been wanting to spend some time with for awhile. I listened to it yesterday. I'm listening to it now while I type this and it will be keeping me company for the rest of the week.

So that's about it. I hope to see you here every week. And I will do my utmost to be here to meet you.
'Til Sunday then.