Saturday, April 24, 2010
Cypress Hill Performs "Insane in the Brain"
Check out Tom Morello trade scratch-4s with DJ Muggs. Sickest shit televised for a very long time....
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Dr Dog's brilliant new 'Shame Shame' from Matt Rothstein
Matt emailed me this review and a simple, one-line command that also sums up my feelings about this band perfectly:Then lo and behold, a week or so after that, I see that a new Dr. Dog album had just arrived. How fitting, I thought. As good an excuse as any to get a review down while delayed at Cleveland-Hopkins airport, a fact which annoys me not even a little bit – all that means is I have more time to love up on the new album, Shame, Shame.
This album has nearly called into question my way of evaluating music. Making perfect rock music can’t be as easy as it sounds here, can it? Dr. Dog has got to be doing something different from all the other indie bands trying to effectively update 60’s rock, but for the life of me I can’t figure out what it is, other than that they’re just better songwriters and musicians.
“Where’d All The Time Go?” is the perfect example of this, and the best song on the album, hands down. It might even be my favorite song of the year so far. Its build and release is a fucking clinic, a pinnacle of joy, and the final guitar solo could not feel more organic/orgasmic.
And yet Dr. Dog also has progressed their sound. “Mirror, Mirror” does, in fact, contain the woefully predictable line the title implies, but it also contains some perfectly bouncy vocal phrasing over a walking bass line and backbeat, with Apples In Stereo-like filtered harmonies that pop up in a few other places on the album as well.
The album just plain doesn’t have any weak points, unless one doesn’t go for the slow, soulful slide guitar on “Station”. Even so, “Shadow People”, directly preceding it, would overpower any doubts with an exuberant sing-along that wouldn’t be out of place soundtracking an awesome indie movie trailer – probably one about an adolescent renewing their sense of wonder at the world, or something like that.
I’ll stop there so I don’t dilute the message any further, because I cannot say this strongly enough: if you want to find music with a level of effortless grace and beauty that hasn’t been reached in seemingly forever, look no further than Shame, Shame by Dr. Dog.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010
A bunch of stuff, old and new, that I've been listening to for the past few weeks
This is mostly because I've been rotating a few different bands at one time and can't decide which ones I like most. And why should I have to, really? Isn't that the beauty of those little 'ipods'?
The Morning Benders- Big Echo (2010)Hmmm...What do you get when you mix solid songwriting, a big reverb-y sound, and production and arrangement help from Grizzly Bear bassist Chris Taylor? Whatever your thinking is exactly what this is- freakin awesome music.
Bibio- Ambivalance Avenue (2009)This one was a tip from friend and a music blogger much better then I, Pete Spengemen (http://underthepurplesun.b
Bibio is the alter-ego of producer Stephen Wilinson, who makes this other-wordly folk/hip hop/rock combo alone in his basement somewhere in West Midlands in Britian. He released 3 albums in 2009, and while the other two are just OK, this one is truly something to behold.
LCD Soundsystem- Sound of Silver (2008). And really everything these guys have ever made.
So I've always known about this band, and often heard some of the bigger hits at parties and occasional mornings when my roommate would throw it on while getting ready to greet the day. But for some really I just never really got into it myself.Until now, when Sound of Silver has been blowing my mind this entire weekend. I think it started when I was traveling around Europe, and just couldn't help but feel like North American scum. Something deep within my sub-concious led me to seek out that song I had once heard about how were all 'North Americans', and when I actually listening to the other tracks I really had to stop everything I was doing and sit down.
I mean, not only has James Murphy mastered dance music in both the electronic/DJ world AND the Talking Heads-post-punk world, but he also tackles sentimental ballads with the Steve Reich approach. 'All My Friends' has been on repeat for the last 3 days (both in my head and on any device I own that plays music).
I can't wait for their new record.
Hmmmm....I might get used to doing things this way. Stay tuned....
