Thursday, January 29, 2009

Chutzpah. That's what deez boys have got.




I came across a punk band randomly one day called Dustin's Bar Mitzvah and I absolutely loved them. They were really hard to place in time. I couldn't tell if they were from the '70s, '00s or what. They sounded like the Ramones or The Killers from song to song. They have now since gone on to do other projects. Three of the guys from Dustin's Bar Mitzvah started The Von Erich Family named after the famous pro-wrestling family. I only found three songs as this incarnation. I think it was short lived because when I tried to go to their MySpace page I found they were called The Beetles now. The Google search for them was hell because a lot of people spell The Beatles wrong. Numbskulls. I listened to The Von Erich Family stuff and it sounded like they went pop punky for a minute and then The Beetles comes back to their real punk sound and I was very happy about that. It's great to find punk bands that are actually from England and not some popular band that tries to sound like they are from England in their vocals. (I won't name names here, Billie Joe! Ahem!)











I suggest getting the release of singles mainly released in Japan if you can get your hands on it. It is called Dial "M" For Mitzvah. It was my jam when I was closing The Filcks kitchen in Boise. Great stuff.





<--This is a drawing of the band as the von Erich family of wrestlers. Funny guys.




The Beetles on MySpace.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Who is this man they call Portugal?





I went to a concert with my buddy Austin a few years ago @ the Holocene with Grizzly Bear headlining. The opening band was a band that Austin knew and had been doing some design work for, Portugal. The Man. I was impressed with Portugal. The Man's sound. The studio work was great and I could only listen to Austin's advance copies of the mp3s for now but I was hooked. Soon they released Waiter: "You Vultures!" to the public. I got a copy of it and listened to it non-stop. Austin designed the album artwork and the b-sides LP and did a fantastico job!


The description of their music on Wikipedia is great and it sounds like it was written by one of it's members, so I am just going to cite it here:


Musically, Portugal. The Man's style is varied. Their style is rooted in indie,
but their songs also contain elements of soul, blues, and folk music. At times,
the band chooses to utilize drum machines and/or synth loops to anchor their
songs, while at other times, the band chooses to use the more conventional
guitar, bass, and acoustic drum configuration characteristic of rock music. The
band also utilizes keyboards in much of its music. In addition to their instrumentals,
[Lead singer John] Gourley's distinctly higher-pitched vocals add to Portugal. The
Man's unique sound. Lyrically, Gourley provides the band with abstract and/or
enigmatic lyrics that rely heavily on imagery. Gourley's verses are usually
delivered in the first-person singular or plural. (Wikipedia.com)








Waiter: was released on Fearless Records as was their second full-length album Church Mouth which the band themselves "leaked" on the internet before it's actual release. Last September Portugal. The Man released their third full-length on their own independent label, Approaching AIRballoons. My sources tell me that they are currently working on their fourth album and the beloved designer of their first album will be back and awesomer.
Click the covers to visit their site. Love them. They will love you back.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Say Yea!


Yeasayer are four guys based in Brooklyn that describe themselves as "middle eastern-psych-snap-gospel". Their 2007 album and only record that I can find is entitled All Hour Cymbals. I feel like their description does the sound justice. It does have a lot of middle eastern qualities yet blends with their vision of indie music. Very smooth recording value for being their first album. The song 2080 has a great chanting bridge that says: Yeah Yeah we can all grab at the chance and be handsome farmers/Yeah you can have twenty one sons and be blood when they marry my daughters/And the pain that we left at the station will stay in a jar behind us/We can pickle the pain into blue ribbon winners at county contests.


Fantastic. Great album. Give it a listen. Click the album cover to go to their website. Go to their label site here. We Are Free Records.

They cut off the last half of this picture for their album cover. Probably to make it marketable but I found this on their website. I think it's artistic splendor should not have to be censored so I am posting the whole thing here.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

M M M M Thanks to Alliteration




Tally Hall can surprise you around every corner of every melody. They emulate a number of sounds that are current and past. The music stylings range from punk to ska to calypso to indie to beatboxing emcee to bluegrass. I can hear Polyphonic Spree, Ben Folds Five, and Sublime among others while listening to these guys. It is very varied and at times too much but overall they are a lot of fun and since their diversity crosses so many genres it appeals to so many different audiences. I have the album Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum and I like it. Listen to it.
Click the album cover to go to their MySpace page or the pic above to go to their band website. They are on the Quack! Media label.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Those Dancing Days Are Here Again.



I was searching for some Swedish artist and I came across this website that featured videos of bands playing a song in a setting they would not normally play in, (outside, in an empty room, in a train station, etc.), and I found a song by Those Dancing Days called Home Sweet Home. I loved it so much I downloaded the album In Our Space Hero Suits which had that song on it. The sound of the song in the video and the studio recorded stuff was completely different but it didn't matter I liked it just the same. The album has a drum-driven punky-pop treble-emphasized sound that is very "get up and dance".




I'm going to post the video for y'all to watch 'cause it's great. This is an all female band and they seem like they love what they do which is very refreshing to see.







>




You can go to their label site Wichita Recordings here or click the album cover to go to their MySpace page.

I failed.

In my first post I set a goal to talk about an Artist/Band every day for thirty days but I failed to write one yesterday due to my bad day. (See B.logging L.eaves O.ne G.lib) I'm just going to try and get up new posts as often as I can. I have realized that going to school full time and trying to set aside an hour to do the posts well is too ambitious.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

No Acid In This House

The Acid House Kings are a perfect example of the style of pop music coming from Sweden right now. Everything I've heard from the Swedes lately have been reminiscent of some indie bands in the U.S. mixed with a new pop feel that seems to work somehow.


Mondays are like Tuesdays and Tuesdays are like Wednesdays is very lazy, light and breezy I see lots of bright colored laundry blowing in the wind as a picnic is being set up throughout the majority of this album. It is almost a throwback to sixties innocence before acid use exploded heavily on the scene. This Love Is All We Need is a quiet gem that can at times sound like Frente mixed with Kings of Convenience.


Their latest album, Sing Along With The Acid House Kings, is the graduation and culmination of what they've been doing all along. The melodies are smoothed clean and the progression of each individual song seems like it does exactly what it should do next. Near the end of Sing Along the Nick Drake feel of Will You Love Me In The Morning is placed well between Sleeping and A Long Term Plan. Their titles are just part of the story they tell throughout this cutesy pop diamond. Listen to it as you walk down the sunny street and I guarantee a head bop or two.


Click the album cover to go to their MySpace page or click the pic above to go to their band site.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Smalc Yob Elbatalfni?




No recollection of how I came across Inflatable Boy Clams. They are completely in a class all their own. When searching for information about them I found other people talking about how obscure and cool they were and called them post-punk. What does that even mean anymore? Anyway, IBC is humorous, kooky, simple, complex, creative and annoying. I love it. Most people I introduce it to have a hard time getting through two songs in a row. Skeletons is the first track on their self-titled double 7" and it is a jumpy, tooting, whiny song that has an on the verge of being annoying melody that is provided by something that sounds like a synth pipe organ and a synth sax. Snoteleks is right after it and as it's name suggests it is Skeletons backwards. No really. It is the song Skeletons played backwards. It gives a whole new dimension to the forward version. The other track worth mentioning is called ImSorry. ImSorry has some haunted chanting in the background while there are stories told about how one of the members did something horrible to another member and they are nonchalantly sorry about it at the end of the statement. The horrible things keep getting worse throughout the song and they are hilariously delivered. It almost seems like they are improvising in this funny deadpan way trying to outdo each other each time. Please listen to this album @ least once. It's worth it if you can.
Click the album cover to go to their MySpace page or the photo to go to their website.


Sunday, January 18, 2009

The Grates are great!

I was watching TV late one Friday night and this show came on that showcased bands as they played in a studio with horrible sound production and a cramped little black space to play in. One of the bands showcased that night was The Grates. They played this punky little ditty that sounded good, even though the recording was sub-par, and it stuck with me. I couldn’t remember which song it was or who was in the band or any real details but it didn’t really matter. I ended up downloading one of their albums and an EP and they are all great punky little ditties with the occasional slower song that has a waltz beat or a nice melody to mix it up on the album. At times I heard bits of L7, The Breeders and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs sneaking in but I think they have their own unique sound that shouldn’t be labeled by sounding like other bands. Then why the hell did you compare them you ask? Reference points I guess. If you like anything about those bands you’ll probably like The Grates. Check out Gravity Won’t Get You High or The Ouch, The Touch EP. Some of the songs are on both but the differing versions are good all their own. Unfortunately one of my favorites on their EP, the last track called Wash Me, is only 2:15 long and it is not repeated or extended on the album. Oh well. I like ‘em.





Oooh, I just found that they have a new album called Teeth Lost, Hearts Won. I'm downloading it now and I can't wait to hear it. Turns out they are a three piece from Australia on the Dew Process label. Click the covers to go to their MySpace page. Click their name to the right under Artist/Band for info.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

The Felice Brothers and their folky Splendor



I heard of The Felice Brothers a year or two ago in a funny only on the internet kind of way. I was Googling my brother, (That sounds worse than what it actually is doesn't it?), Greg Farley. I found out there was a solo artist with a MySpace page with the same name. A click or eight later and I was listening to the transportive roots folk of The Felice Brothers. It turns out Greg Farley was playing a gig or two with them and has been part of the band ever since. They are currently a quintet touring extensively and released their first label album (self-titled) in 2008. Band Members Are: James Felice on accordion & vocals, Simone Felice drums & vocals, Ian Felice, vocals & guitar, Christmas on bass and Greg Farley on vocals, fiddle & washboard.

(I'm not going to focus on the artists too much because you can link on the right hand side of this page under Artist/Band Links and learn all about them.)



Tonight At The Arizona starts off with Roll On Arte, a swaying tune of coming home to change and the inertia of the need to leave your hometown . The second track Ballad of Lou the Welterweight is a fantastically written song about a boxer's story that has great lyrics like: Powder your nose/Pull off your pantyhose/Let me love you from behind/My darlin'. This album is filled with dusty, glimmering tracks that recognize the importance of Americana story-telling and real lyrical tales. The final song on this album Take This Hammer is in honor of the brothers' "daddy", a carpenter, and has a mention of the southern dish cornbread and molasses. This may be a tribute to Sonny Terry & Brownie McGee who sang of Cornbread, Peas and Black Molasses in one of their collaborations or maybe they just didn't want any of the "goddamn" stuff.




The newest album by The Felice Brothers is self-titled and released on the Team Love record label co-founded by Bright Eyes' Conor Oberst. I've only given it one listen so far but it has just as much whiskey, guns and broken hearts as Arizona with a sleeker production value. Their wall of sound has been fleshed out with some horns and a piano on select songs. It is definitely worth adding to your collection for multiple listenings.






Friday, January 16, 2009

I'ma gonna try

This here blog is dedicated to sharing knowlege of music that I have heard recently. I come across a wide range of genres every day and I don't really have time to tell anyone about all of it. I'm going to try this method. Goal: to tell you about an artist/band a day for one month. I am going to school full time so this may be a bad idea. We'll see.
I got this idea from going on too long about a band on my other blog and I thought I should devote this one to my music musings and make the other one more personal.
This starts my first artist/band post because I'm just going to paste what I said over there on here since I have other shit to do.

Animal Collective, New Album-Merriweather Post Pavilion
I don't know much about the personal lives of the members of the Collective but I do hear some hints to their musical influences in their body of work. Personally I hear the Beach Boys, Slint and the occasional solid hoedown beat coming through when I give Sung Tongs and Feels a listen. In some of their more "noise" based albums like Hollindagain and Here Comes the Indian and even in the melodic percussives of Strawberry Jam it sounds as if every utencil, appliance and common household item comes alive for a few minutes to attempt a conversation that sometimes ends in an argument where there is no winner. That is if your house is filled with disembodied hands clapping at will and vocal chords that take drifting canoe rides at sea not caring if there is a storm a blowin'. All in all I feel like their music has a purpose and a story to tell me. I find it very listenable (mood dependent of course) and have liked 90% of their work.
Merriweather is no different it is very approachable and I think I may like it just as much as I loved Sung Tongs when I first heard it.

Anyway, check it out. I like it. Animal Collective, Merriweather Post Pavilion
Click their name above to go to their label wesite.(Paw Tracks)

Or click the album cover to go to a kooky page----->