Thursday, July 31, 2008

Influences Paul Simon, Joni Mitchell, Mr. Show, Bill Hicks, Harry Chapin, Gordon Lightfoot

Again with the wikipedia titles, but sometimes they're just some damn pithy. Stephen Lynch is a musician/comedian and this is his music. If you don't find the influence list enough to sell you on the idea, try googling Stephen Lynch and plenty of video's of live performances are available.

A Little Bit Special

The Craig Machine

Superhero

Avant-garde jazz, jazz funk, soul-jazz, post-bop (the wikipedia tags for this album)

Dearest readers i'm afraid i must offer my sincerest apologies to all. The other day i made a mistake. I posted an album by Mediski, Schofield, Martin and Wood and i made quite an error. When i wrote that update i used descriptions like "funky spy soundtrack". What i was thinking of is actually this album which is simply Mediski, Martin and Wood. No Schofield in there. The out louder album with Schofield i posted is a much tighter and traditionally jazzy affair, while End of the world party is the groovy goodness i was thinking of. Now that that's covered you should get this album if only for the oh so charming title.

There are really three tracks you need to listen to to understand this album. first off, the titular track, end of the world party( just in case). People have said that it's overly dominated by Mediski's keyboard playing but that's not a bad thing to my way of thinking. This song sounds like it should be playing at the hippest party the world has ever seen.

Bloody Oil shows why Chris Wood is so renowned for his bass skills and New planet shows how tightly they can play together. Sasa's horn section is prolly worth listening to as well.

Mediski, Martin and Wood - End of the World Party(Just in Case)

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Denies the Day's Demise

Daedelus has quite a bit of critical acclaim under his belt. In my opinion this electronic artist from LA first really found his sound with this album. It's an interesting album and at times almost infuriating but by the by it's a well crafted solid piece of work. The sound is the usual mix of strange and interesting samples from obscure places but unlike most of the electronic genre this has a distinctly Brazilian feel. In many songs carribean beats underly the mashup of sounds and each song is actually an entire song, not just a collection of sounds thrown in a blender like so many other artists end up doing. At 15 tracks it could probably have stood to bear to be cut to 10-12ish tracks but that's not a terribly big complaint, not when compared to the fact that it avoids sounding overly cold and artificial, despite otherworldly sounds at several points it seemed as though i was listening to an analogue recording. This is something you should play for people who scoff at electronica as a viable method making music, not simply sounds.


Daedelus - Denies the Day's Demise

Monday, July 28, 2008

Sometimes thirty minutes is all it takes

Many would say Thelonious Monk was at his best in the early 50's, and it was certainly his most creative period. Sonny Rollins was one of the few people who could keep up with him and in 53 they put out " Thelonious Monk & Sonny Rollins". It's fairly short with only five tracks clocking in at 34 minutes but it's two of the best playing well together, 34 minutes is really all you need.

Thelonious Monk & Sonny Rollins

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Avante Groove

If your the sort of person who would like Mediski Marton & Wood, then your the sort of person who already knows about them. The sort of person person who knows what's worth digging, and how to dig it. You probably have funk flowing through your veins and walk through this world surrounded by the soundtrack of a 60's psychadelic spy movie. Well in 2006 they made another album with guitar legend John Scofield and this time they really clicked, Unlike on A Go Go which sounded like a trio playing with a session guitarist this time it sounds like a quartet. Worth having for the amazing cover of the Beatles song Julia

Mediski, Martin, Scofield & Wood - Out Louder

Comedy-Indie-Folk-Rock

You've probably seen Flight of the Conchordes at a comedy festival, or on their HBO tv series which is also called "Flight of the Conchordes". If you haven't seen the show then i suggest you do, it's well worth watching for the low key deadpan lines of crazy that they dish out every couple of minutes. The second season was supposed to be released 2008 but is now looking like 2009 and to tide you all over here is the soundtrack.

Flight of the Conchordes

Yeah i know that cat, heard his voice a thousand time

You have probably spent more time listening to this man's voice then you have listening to your closest friends, and his name is Ken Nordine. Now he's done a large amount of commercial work but he also created a little thing known as word jazz. Now i know word jazz sounds like some kid in a black beret reciting plagiarism filled poem to an empty cafe on a Tuesday night, but Mr.Nordine has worked for over 80 years thanks to his voice, and his voice can pull off word jazz with authority.

Back in the 60's i think, he was commissioned to do a series of paint commercials that was just him reading Dr.Seuss-esque poems about the colours over a dreamlike background of cool jazz. The adds were so popular and highly acclaimed that he wrote about 30 or so and made an album of it.

The entire album has a dreamlike quality to it, which makes sense seeing as all the material was written at 3am on sleep deprived nights. This is something to listen to while falling asleep so his smooth ringing voice can lull you to sleep, or while taking powerful psychedelics so his voice can calm you while his words take you to strange new worlds of anthropomorphic colours. You'll either love of hate this.

Ken Nodine - Colours

Efterklang (the Danish word for remembrance and reverberation)

Efterklang are a Danish musical group who I'd probably class as a collective along the lines of The Polyphonic Spree, and The Spree are a good comparison. Upbeat and swelling with every sound they can possibly make, this album is a testament to the blurred line that the union of organic and electronic can form. It is positively symphonic is sound and arrangement each note is carefully placed within a palatial amount of space. This is probably the most luscious album i've ever heard and certainly one of the best. The hushed choral vocals that meander through the songs do well not to draw attention away for the complex and intricate melodies. It is intelligent, beautiful and life affirming. It sounds like the soundtrack to the greatest movie never made. I recommend you start with the track 'Mirador'

Efterkland - Parades

Who says synth-rock is dead? it just isn't feeling very well right now

The Birthday Massacre are two thirds of a great band. Any description of them usually throws around works like industrial. These are the bad parts, every so often the guitarists feel the need to start thrashing and when they do it hurts, because when they do the synth and electro side cuts off, I assume out of a certain musical embarrassment and a sheepish desire not to be mixed up with some bland by the books industrial thrashing for thrash's sake "heavy-ness". In the first album Violet it was quite a problem where is ruined some potentially great songs such as 'blue'. Luckily the next album Walking with Strangers has less, and fingers crossed the next album will have even less.

That's the bad part, now lets talk about why i like these guys regardless. They do the electro synth part well, really well. The word Goth also gets thrown around when describing them but pay no attention to that, it's kinda right but it will lead to mistaken preconceptions and if your anything like me, you'll start sneering reflexively. There is a sense of whimsy-meets-reality harshness that could be called goth but really shouldn't be.

I would recommend getting Walking with Strangers first and simply accepting the fact that for at two or three points your going to have to press the next button. This shouldn't deter you because the rest of the album is so good. Once you've listened to Walking with Strangers imagine that ration of 70-30 good to bad changed to 35-65 and you've a pretty good idea of what Violet sounds like.

The Birthday Massacre - Violet

The Birthday Massacre - Walking With Strangers

Thursday, July 10, 2008

You know it's a sin this not being ready, this not being up to it

Lately it's been infrequent and unsatisfying, no I'm not talking about your fat promiscuous mother, I'm talking about my posting habits. Well rest assured i haven't simply been lying in bed eating pie, though there has been plenty of that. I'm building up a bank of posts, I'm up to about 10 so far and I'll probably do another 10 in the next week, this way i should be able to guarantee you a Monday/Wednesday/Friday upload till pretty much the end of the year regardless of how much lying in bed and eating of pie happens in my life. And for my next trick, watch me disappear!

*poof*!

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Two hours into the month and six albums, good hustle, good hustle.

I have a treat for you, this is so far my choice as album for the year of 2008 and it is currently head and shoulders above the rest of the crowd, barring a phenomenal new Modest Mouse album i don't think my choice will change, actually even with a new modest mouse album that beats everything else they've done at best it would match this album. Brian Scary and the Shredding Tears with their second album Flight of the Knife. I've spoken to a few people about this and read a few reviews online and it's been described as simiilar to David Bowie, The Beatles, The Who, Queen, ELO, Alan Parsons and according to one person Ozzy Osbourne. The one thing you'll find in common is that every compares it to the greatest bands they like. It's only their second album but it sounds both so mature and yet incredibly inventive. If you download only one thing from this blog make it this. I think in a dozen or so years we'll still be listening to this and remarking how great it was .

Brian Scary and the Shredding Tears - Flight of the Knife

Please, i'm the coolest cat alive. I could even play jazz on bagpipes, hmm, bagpipes....

Now at first glance the idea of jazz bagpipes sounds like a simply terrible idea, i was in the same boat myself at one point but then i realised i had not lived until i heard chim chim cher-re on bagpipes. After listening to this you'll be wondering why there isn't a whole lot more? Now i can't do justice to this black kilted viking helmet wearing madman so i'll just say his wikipedia entry is worth reading.

Rufus Harley - A few scattered recording i found from god knows where.

In the beginning there was nothing, not even time / No planets, no stars, no hip-hop, no rhyme.

Scientist turned gansta rapper MC Hawking is in the hizzouse. If you don't love physics, and the idea of Stephen Hawking busting out phat rhymes doesn't sound like the greatest idea you've ever heard this is probably not for you.

MC Hawking - A Brief History of Rhyme

The Punters Club Irregulars

Who says australia can't produce wonderful indie-pop? i'm fairly certain no one and this is due in no small part to The Lucksmiths. If you like The Smiths you'll enjoy the clever wordplay and witty lyrics found in all their work, if you like Belle & Sebastian you'll enjoy the underlying music. And seeing as everyone likes The Smiths and Bell & Sebastian you have no excuse not to get this.

The Lucksmiths - Warmer Corners

Swing revival should have never died

Squirrel Nut Zippers is the name of this quirky jazz fusion 1930's swing band. For those of you into fusion all you really need to know is that Andrew Bird is listed as an honourary member. For the rest of you all you really need to do is watch this clip



Squirrel Nut Zippers - Hot

Murder.... by death

Okay so murder by death are a four piece rock band from Indiana and yes they took there name from the 76 comedy movie. Descriptions of them range from punk rock to alt country but the only word that really describes them is Western. I used to have an early concept album by them that was about the devil waging war on a small town in Mexico but checking my audio folder it seems to have disappeared into the ether. Not to worry the album i still have is far better produced and overall a superior album despite not having the astonishingly good song "devil in Mexico".

In Bocca al Lupo is the name of the album and comes from an italian phrase meaning "into the mouth of the wolf" according to no lesser source than wikipedia. The themes of this album are sin, redemption and guilt with every track tying nicely to those themes. Brother and Shiola are probably the stand out tracks with brother being a rock song about the bonds of brotherhood being stronger than the law and shiola having to my ear a fairly dead-on job at pretending to be johnny cash.

Murder by death - In Bocca al Lupo