5.01.2012

The Men- Immaculada LP + Live on WFMU

The Men
Immaculada  LP
This is an interesting look at where internet darlings The Men started their rocket fast career trajectory from primary Brooklyn noise rock to Pitchfork arena rock starlets. Immaculada is an extremely bristling, unkempt noisy precursor to the two albums that have followed it up. There are definitely parts in this record that set the blueprint for the spastic, schizophrenic styles that have made The Men so popular in some circles. The vocals sit perfectly resting behind the post-punk sounds that could be likened to some Sonic Youth, but spattered throughout some pretty undeniably punk rock hooks.

 I for one prefer this heavier, gloomy sound to the direction taken on their newest record, and what I am only assuming they will bringing to Matador on the single to be released in the coming months, but
 I for one prefer this heavier, gloomy sound to the direction taken on their newest record, and what I am only assuming they will bringing to Matador on the single to be released in the coming months, but C'est la vie. This is a wonderful record that shows their menacing talent and brooding ideas simmering right ben
eath the surface, seemingly waiting to explode as it did on the follow-up, "Leave Home."

This will be receiving a reissue on Deranged records coming up soon, and I would highly recommend snagging a copy.


2.16.2012

Liquor Store- Yeah Buddy

Liquor Store- Yeah Buddy

Sick and tired of New York, Sarim Al-Rawi (former drummer of Titus Andronicus and livefastdie, the former of which he switched to guitar midway through the band) is in charge of what may easily be the best record to come out of sub urban New York (New Jersey) in a long time. At one point in Liquor Stores industrious career, they were playing with six or seven guitarists, mainly because none of them were particulary capable of playing buzzsaw rock and roll quite sharp enough to hold their own. By this point, they have toned it down to a reasonable three to four guitarists, as far as I can tell. Thankfully, after literally years in the making and some highly questionable cover art, we finally have this New Jersey masterpiece. 

The lyrics and song titles are over the top in the best way possible. It's a record that screams influence ranging from busting donuts in the parking lot of a church while double fisting some Budweiser's, to the obligatory 5 AM pizza run. This is a suburb rock and roll record that just fucking slays. You can still hear the hangover complete with the coke drip in everyone of their infectious NYC Garage songs. The key is the cleverly layered vocals that literally fly all over the place. The influences range from New York Dolls,  Motley Crue, fuzzed out Bay Area psych and everything in between. 

If Liquor store were throwing a house party tonight, my rules would all go out the window. I think the vinyl is sold out, but if there are still any copies left of this double vinyl, you can get them through Almost Ready Records...


Link after the jump...

1.18.2012

Simla Beat 70/71


Simla Beat 70/71

Well here we go for obscurity in garage rock. Simla, an Indian cigarette company, sponsored this battle of the bands competition in 1970 and 1971. It was called the "All-India Simla Beat Contest," and the winners were given a chance to head to Calcutta to cut a track or two onto a 45. It seems as though the early Indian fuzz scene was put in a time capsule like so many other isolated music scenes of the late sixties and early seventies (See: compilations about the Uraguayan Invasion for another great scene). Check out this interesting liner insert/advertisement from one of the Simla 45's.



Once you get into the music though, is when India really shines. Simla reeks of the dirt and fuzziness of physical India. This record is has more blues and southern rock influence than some of the bands playing at the same time. I love how these bands mix traditional Indian music and style with their more western idols sound. A perfect example of this to me is the band Innerlite on this compilation. Their first song uses confidingly Indian melody and strumming, with garage rock drums and beat structure. You are also treated on this record to not one but two absolutely stunning Creedance Clearwater Revival covers. The gravelly growl on the X'Lents cover of "Born on the Bayou" provoked a bit of a chuckle at first from me, but after a few listens I absolutely love it. This record is full of blues damaged, acid taking, schizophrenic rock and roll. Lots of covers, most of which are about four or five years prior to 1970, but what a perfect example of the slowed down globalization of music prior to the internet. Twenty-two stacked tracks of third-world grade, American influenced, delta deranged Garage rock. A must for anyone. India needs more Rock and Roll!



Click after the jump for a link...

12.27.2011

Top Albums of 2011

Okay, so this year end list is fucked beyond belief. I was writing new reviews for some of these records complete with uploads and whatever, but then my old laptop got a gut bug and I am currently building a new hard drive from scratch. Hell on earth. So here is what you get, a requisite top album list that means less than shit. The ones I don't have links to are ones that I lost on my old computer data machine.


In no particular order...


Raw Nerve- Tall Tales






I didn't actually start listening to this record until late in the year and it quickly soared into my favorites. Chicago hardcore put out on Youth Attack! records and carrying the expected traits that such a description entails. Wrenching noisy hardcore that blends the originality and depth of VOID with what could have been a faster and angrier (is it even possible?) version of Drunkdriver. Seriously buy and download every fucking thing that these guys make. Expect to hear more from me on Raw Nerve next year.


Kurt Vile- Smoke Ring for my Halo






Indie rock darling and Matador Records resident troubadour fucking killed this year with Smoke Ring for my Halo. I remember smoking out of a friends window and hearing his rendition of "Peeping Tomboy" playing faintly from Block Party like it was yesterday. Sadly, I misssed his set, but I spent the first half of this year with this record nearly always playing. Kurt Vile delivered his most palatable, creepy, and intricate record in his career to date.


Iceage- Iceage






http://tryburningthisone.blogspot.com/2011/06/iceage-new-brigade-lp.html
Danish punks with miles of press behind them. Blah blah blah, hype machine whatever. These kids are young and dumb and made one of the best punk records to break out the past ten years. Bold statement, but one I stand by. Sure, they benefit from a near perfect recording, but that is all part of the game. Worth the hype. Also a bonus seeing these guys play a sloppy set situated in a parking lot in Vancouver with Cult of Youth. Again, worth the hype.


Total Control- Henge Beat LP






http://tryburningthisone.blogspot.com/2011/11/total-control-henge-beat-lp.html
I love the Australian scene far too much. This is the best record to come from down under this year, followed closely by the UV Race record, "Homo". Anyways, this album is perfection. Kraut-synth darkwave spattered throughout an amazing rock and roll record. Seriously, the music that has happened in Australia for the past five years is unmissable.  

Mikal Cronin- Mikal Cronin







http://tryburningthisone.blogspot.com/2011/10/mikal-cronin-mikal-cronin.html
This San Francisco rock and roll heart-throb rose to prominence quickly this year with this self titled album, and for good reason. From the venerable San Francisco garage scene, but with a little more heart and breathing some much needed fresh air into said group of unarguably talented musicians. The song, "Apathy" might very well be my favorite song of the year. Watching him play it live last month vindicated my previous feelings on that song and this record. This is a seriously solid release for 2011 and I am genuinely excited to see where he takes his music next.


Atlas Sound- Parallax






Bradford Cox's newest album might very well be his most personal and beautiful one yet. Continuing his streak of dedicating records to his recently deceased artists, this one was dedicated to Trish from Broadcast. It's heart wrenching, confusing, and original as hell, but would you expect anything else? Best interview quote from this year... " I need punk rock. It's the medicine for me, but it's bitter and sickening. I feel like if you don't need it-- if you're happy and healthy-- run toward that. [Deerhunter guitarist Lockett Pundt] is very happy now, and his life has changed a lot. I'm 100% sincerely happy for him that he doesn't need punk anymore."


The Men- Leave Home





I feel like this record really took off with its dizzying ability to effortlessly mold so many different sorts of music into an opus of rock and roll. It is very
 striking how the music can transparently transform with perfect tack. They just announced the follow up to this record that is coming out early next year, and I am patiently waiting for it. 



11.16.2011

Total Control- Henge Beat LP

Total Control- Henge Beat LP

No new records in a month? Horseshit. It has been crazy. To make up for it though, I give you what possibly may be the best album released this year. Iron Lung Records (right?) gives us the long-waited for, critically acclaimed full length that was follows a slew of selectively released seven inches by Total Control. Fuck if this album isn't near perfect. Featuring members DX Stewart (UV Race) and Mikey from Eddy Current, this Aussie record continues the multiple year excursion of bands from down under pushing the envelope.

Nothing like the members former bands, this is a brilliant take on 70's rock a la Swell Maps with a perfect Eno touch. A beautiful, seamless record that slides up and down the post-punk scale. You will find touches of KBD punk followed immediately by confidentially krauty synth leads. In the heart of the album is "Carpet Rash," a perfect synopsis for the band. The monotone vocals reminiscent of darker new-wave, healthy electronics, and sharp guitars all collected with the perfection you would expect from such experienced musicians. Songs like the closer, "Love Performance" provide a striking resemblance to the repetition and hopelessness of prime Joy Division.

I suppose the most impressive part of the album is how educated is sounds. It is obviously an album written by people well-versed in the music that they are playing, both in how it is put together and where it comes from. This is not a thrown together accident, where the shit sticks to the wall. Like I said before, easily one of the best albums of 2011, hands down.
Link after the jump...

10.12.2011

Mikal Cronin- Mikal Cronin

The San Francisco garage scene sure has exploded in the past five years. The newest (public) addition to this ever growing group is Mikal Cronin. While Cronin has been a part of the scene for a while, playing drums for Ty Segall, with The Moonhearts, and releasing a few singles, this is his first foray into long play recording. His eponymous debut is just beautiful. This here is a warm, satisfying and downright sexy pop record with perfect touches of everything from 60's rock and roll and surf to late nineties indie rock.

The lyrical content was devised during the winding down of Mikal's college career, but it is really the instrumentation and composition that shines in this record. The first song on the record, "Is it Alright" spends two and a half minutes where you think it could be, whimsical yet crunching garage rock. This song ends with a furious minute that crescendos with Jon Dwyer (Thee Oh Sees) playing a maddening muddle of a freakout flute solo. The record continues down this same path, finely walking the line between ravishing pop music and the true grit of rock and roll. In the song "Green and Blue," mixed up with a true wall of sound for garage rock, I hear a faint Kurt Cobain influence in the vocals of Mikal. I'll take it.

You should too. This is a great record, just dark enough to get you through the coming fall but still positive enough to not drive you off the deep end.


Trouble in Mind Records
2011

Link after the jump...

9.26.2011

Paul Simon- Songs from The Capeman

Paul Simon- Songs from The Capeman

Wow, so it's been a while since I posted, but since the grey has returned to the grey coast, I suppose I can start finding more time to write on here.  I'll come back with a post that comes out of left field.

For almost ten years, the legendary Paul Simon worked on a screenplay for a Broadway show based on the life of Salvador Agron, or "The Capeman." Agron was a real-life Puerto Rican gang member who was convicted of murdering two Irish boys who he had mistaken for opposing gang members.  At sixteen, he was the youngest person at the time to be sent to death row.  His case was polarizing and invited attention from unlikely places. At the time, Elenor Roosevelt campained for a new look at his case and sentencing. In the seventies, there was a made for television movie based on his life as well.

Paul Simon spent over 5 million dollars comprising a band to play the music that he had written for his show.  It's an unusual departure musically for Simon, with a mix of Latin American drumming, doo-wop songs, blues, and rock and roll.  The album is diverse and in a full listen, tells an amazing story of the seedy side of New York in the fifties. The songs are beautiful and thought-provoking, the vocals heartwarming and honest to a point of unnerve.  The fifth song on the album, "The Vampires" will forever be one of the most important songs in my life.  It enthralls me. 

The downside to this rosy review is the fact that the musical was a disastrous flop.  In the lead-up to opening day, the production went through three directors.  Simon was superfluously difficult in his role.  He insisted on having a full hand in almost every stage of the project.  The show only lasted 68 days at the Marquis Theater, and lost 11 million dollars.  Simon stood by his project and eventually released this album, keeping the vision alive.  I described this album recently as "World Music with balls," and I stand by that statement.  Long live The Capeman.



8.11.2011

Masshysteri- Masshysteri

Masshysteri- Masshysteri LP

This now defunct Swedish Punk band has a roster that reads like a who's who of the last ten years in the Umea punk scene. Featuring members of (International) Noise Conspiracy, Regulations, Vicious, Lost Patrol Band, and Insurgent Kid, Masshysteri immediately has quite a reputation to uphold. This eponymous second album meets and exceeds any standards that could be set for a band with this high of a bar set. Robert Pettersson's Swedish-sung vocals sound natural, crisp, and comforting. This album has a darker, slightly more palatable sound than their first album, "Ver Del Av Stan". It seems that they really figured out their formula to complete the seemingly impossible task of writing original sounding punk songs that are easy on the ears while not being tacky.

Masshysteri really popularized the newest wave of bands singing in their native Swedish, and it seems everyone else has followed. I read an interview at one point with Pettersson where he said something along the lines that he was sick of having to use an internet translator to write his lyrics, and if people didn't hearing vocals in Swedish, fuck 'em. It sounds perfect, and I think that this album is close to perfect.


Link after the jump...

7.28.2011

Joy Division- Les Bains Douches 18 December 1979

Joy Division- Les Bains Douches 18 December 1979

Once a rarity, a full set recorded in Paris months before Ian Curtis' tragic collapse. Not much else to say. 



Link after the jump...

7.24.2011

The Omegas- Blasts of Lunacy LP

The Omegas- Blast of Lunacy LP

Best hardcore record so far in 2011. Traditional hardcore that seamlessly transfuses the cream of the crop of hardcore styles. Breakneck riffs lead out into slow chugs a la Regulations "Police Sirens", while molding unnoticeably to brooding parts that could facilely be mistaken for NYHC. For me, Omegas quickly joined a club of contemporary North American bands who correctly and effortlessly have channeled the best of 1980's hardcore (Double Negative, Government Warning, Police and Thieves).

Blasts of Lunacy really the name of the game. Working in waves of starts and stops, the slow and heavy parts are the radical equilibrium to the swift, punch in the face fury that follows. Parts Unknown records delivers with this record.


Link after the jump...