Elvis Costello & The Attractions - Watch Your Step
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Watch your leap
Wow, has it really taken 694 posts to get to one of my all-time faves?! The pre-1983 Costello catalogue is pretty intimidating, and you could pick just about any track out of a hat and have a great day of it. Here's one that probably wouldn't have made it onto a personal best-of mix, but has been rattling around my head lately. Also, it's the leap-year bonus day, which offers a tenuous segue by way of title. Cheers!
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Dark is the color
I don't know much about this Alan Shearer, but he has now impressed me twice, so he goes on my good list. Listening to this one, I think back to my imaginary boyhood in mid-'80s Tokyo, stepping out of the arcade into the neon dusk and all its perfumed confusion.
Alan Shearer - Sons Of The Snake
Monday, February 27, 2012
Where the moon is, that's where I am
Having wasted a few hours half-watching the Oscars, I can't think of a better corrective to the movie industry's desperate self-promotional ploys than the sweet intonations of Daniel Johnston. I'll take his sad madness over the sorry entertainers of the red carpet almost any day.
Daniel Johnston - Sorry Entertainer
Friday, February 24, 2012
French re-fried
Gonna keep it going with French dudes and their audio bong hits. This tune comes from a more hip/less fantastical source — Jean-Benoit Dunckel, taking a little solo break from Air. All Music Guide characterizes this one as a "cybernetically enhanced George Harrison song," and I'd say that's about right. Except that George's voice never sounded so noncommittal about its gender.
Darkel - At The End Of The Sky
Thursday, February 23, 2012
French fried
Ever wonder what you should be listening to when you're lying on the grass watching the clouds drift and suddenly the nature of infinity becomes as clear and real to you as the sight of your own hands? Here it is.
Richard Vimal - Metamorphoses
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Fighting and suffering
First there was twinkling and flickering that seemed to exist without beginning. Which gave way to a mighty gallop of crunching guitars and rolling drums that stampeded across the landscape. From the one house left undestroyed, there came a naive, unsure voice pitched a bit plaintive and a lot blank. Which then stopped as a new flickering began. That happened in a recent dream. And it sounded like this.
Mice Parade - Passing & Galloping
Labels:
2005
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
A world so sweet and true
Love or hate, you can't deny the basic sweet-spot appeal of dreamy synth pop. I've spied curmudgeons who breathlessly grasp for pejoratives absently tapping their feet when they think no one's looking. I embraced the candy full-on a while back, and I've never found it hard to equally love "serious" music at the same time.
Which may be why it's cool to hear '70s proggers and other musos getting hip to such simple joys. Case in point — today's tunes, which by way of segue, feature Barbara Gaskin (faire maiden vocalist of yesterday's song) teamed up with Dave Stewart, who played in just about every Canterbury art rock band in shaggier-haired days (not the guy from Eurythmics).
This duo had some '80s hits, but generally played it under the radar. Honestly, they're hit or miss, but these two are surely hits in my mind. And mischievous ones at that, being radically rethought cover versions (check the originals here and here). The chorus of the first one, in particular, does transport me to a different world — accessible only for a few moments, and all the more sublime as a result. Plus, pitch bending!
Which may be why it's cool to hear '70s proggers and other musos getting hip to such simple joys. Case in point — today's tunes, which by way of segue, feature Barbara Gaskin (faire maiden vocalist of yesterday's song) teamed up with Dave Stewart, who played in just about every Canterbury art rock band in shaggier-haired days (not the guy from Eurythmics).
This duo had some '80s hits, but generally played it under the radar. Honestly, they're hit or miss, but these two are surely hits in my mind. And mischievous ones at that, being radically rethought cover versions (check the originals here and here). The chorus of the first one, in particular, does transport me to a different world — accessible only for a few moments, and all the more sublime as a result. Plus, pitch bending!
Dave Stewart & Barbara Gaskin - I'm In A Different World
Dave Stewart & Barbara Gaskin - Roads Girdle The Globe
Dave Stewart & Barbara Gaskin - Roads Girdle The Globe
Monday, February 20, 2012
Unpresidential
I often think Presidents' Day is a holiday cooked up by auto dealers and electronics shops. I'm not sure why Washington's and Lincoln's birthdays are an occasion to go buy stuff on sale, and I also think it's pretty awkward to try linking these anniversaries to some non-specific honoring of US presidents. Regardless, I have the day off, and hopefully, so do you, and let's be happy about that. Meanwhile, here's a tune that's about as far from American pseudo-holidays as I can think of. Let's raise a flagon of mead to these troubadour faeries of olde English woodplaces!
Spirogyra - The Future Won't Be Long
Friday, February 17, 2012
Alien industry
Still kinda digging this tendency toward wordlessness. You may be familiar with Jean Michel Jarre from his flamboyant and atmospheric work, but it's good to know that he had a fair bit of musique concrète in his genes too. Talk about industrial music! This should be playing in a power plant breakroom on Venus.
Jean Michel Jarre - La Cage
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Audio peace
Intense workdays call for palate cleansers that don't kid around. I'd take floaty, skyward-looking synth dreams like this almost any day. But today, it's a special helping of audio peace. It also sounds like the soundtrack for curing diseases.
Steve Hauschildt - Already Replaced
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Contemplating impossible enormousness
Well, I was right. My current Tangerine Dream immersion has pulled me into the outer reaches. And I have no choice but to take you with me. You'd be surprised how good this stuff sounds when you wake up and stretch in the morning. Something to do with greeting day in all its giant formlessness. And I'm sure it sounds better the further you get out into the solar system.
Tangerine Dream - Mysterious Semblance At The Strand Of Nightmares
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
World of echo
It doesn't take much to get me into an Arthur Russell state of mind. Sometimes, it's just the winter air chilling my bones that makes me want to float in the warm ocean that is his voice. Add in the invigorating bristles of that cello and you've got pure audio therapy. Let's go swimming!
Arthur Russell - Place I Know/Kid Like You
Monday, February 13, 2012
My signals in your brain
Having recently come across this Television-esque band from Norway, I'm reminded why groups aped this sound so thoroughly throughout the 'aughts. But these sadly unheralded guys got everything right about this aesthetic back in their day — zippy, angular, nice Gary Numan-like synth warbles, and in no hurry to get through it. Somehow, I continue to be a sucker for oh-so-serious voices like this.
The Cut - Atmospheres
Friday, February 10, 2012
Smooth criminal
Been catching up on movies I should've watched in film class. Melville's Le Samourai is justly legendary for smooth n' icy French gangster chicness as personified by Alain Delon. There's nothing more I can really add to that piece of iconography, except to note how much I really do appreciate the minimal amount of speaking not just in the movie, but also in many parts of life. Which may mean that I'm putting myself in the wrong situations. Or that I'm getting crankier with time. But with 4 of 5 songs this week being instrumentals, I think it's that I'd just rather hear music most of the time. Including awesome soundtracks like this one.
François De Roubaix - Le Samourai
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Moving and not moving
More instrumental evocativeness. Conrad Schnitzler had his hand in a bunch of krautrock cookie jars, though was never a luminary in his own right. (In a just world, he'd be a tycoon of a pretzel company.)
I love this piece, but it seems mistitled. Far from static, it sounds like anticipatory preparations for some Big Event. Good for tightening ties and setting headbands. Or both, preferably.
I love this piece, but it seems mistitled. Far from static, it sounds like anticipatory preparations for some Big Event. Good for tightening ties and setting headbands. Or both, preferably.
Conrad Schnitzler - Ballet Statique
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Synthesizers in crisis
If you dig The Cars (debut album, at least) as much I do, today's song will be quite a treat. Aside from looking awesome in their videos, keyboardist Greg Hawkes clearly had some ideas of his own. They seem to involve a kid running from both FBI and KGB agents in a downward spiral of plot twists in my made-up film. They also involve some sweet pitchbending (perk your ears up at 2:32). The fact that some of my own synth adventures seem at home in this soundworld only make me fonder. Thanks to Jason for hipping me to this one.
Greg Hawkes - Block Party
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Procession into the beyond
Uh-oh, it seems I've entered into a Tangerine Dream vortex. Which means there's a real chance I may disappear into the depths of space or melt into the floor. Before I meet either of these fates, allow me to give you a solo tune from frontdude Edgar Froese. While it's tempting to embark on a 20-minute epic drift from TD's far-out heyday, I'll go with an anomaly instead — a linear groove with flesh n' drums and some baked guitar action.
As for this album's cover art, gotta say I really don't need to be reminded that it's humans making the music. Talk about a face made for light shows.
As for this album's cover art, gotta say I really don't need to be reminded that it's humans making the music. Talk about a face made for light shows.
Edgar Froese - Icarus
Monday, February 6, 2012
Saturday for Monday
In previous years, a twee-ish piece of curatorial, '60-reconstructing pop might have been all wrong for a post-Super Bowl morning. But since the ritual watching of the game is pretty much all we have left to unify us a nation and with pro football marketers savvy enough to bring the ladies into the jersey-wearing, wing-chomping fold, we find ourselves in a different world. Which is to say, at least some pallid indie rock boys and girls will enjoy the transition from gridiron heroics to these precious 3 minutes.
Pitchfork actually got its head out its ass and hit the nail on that head with these guys. My view on nostalgia for other people's pasts—constructed entirely out of memorabilia consumed out of order and from second-hand sources—is still evolving, but I'm always happy to hear a well-executed tune. And these parts of the '60s are always welcome around here.
Pitchfork actually got its head out its ass and hit the nail on that head with these guys. My view on nostalgia for other people's pasts—constructed entirely out of memorabilia consumed out of order and from second-hand sources—is still evolving, but I'm always happy to hear a well-executed tune. And these parts of the '60s are always welcome around here.
Saturday Looks Good To Me - Since You Stole My Heart
Friday, February 3, 2012
Silver age
The thing about being "ahead of your time" is that you never get full credit for your innovations if time never actually catches up to you. So it went with the Silver Apples, who used a fairly limited sound palette to produce some of the coolest, most distinct music of the '60s (also some of the least '60s sounding). There are so many ways the space age could've gone. These guys charted a course we still haven't even embarked on.
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Lovable loser
I love that ELO have been thoroughly rescued from the dustbin of AOR history, and that Jeff Lynne's insistent fusion of Beatles and bombast seems to have the respect it always deserved. Still, I suspect their '80s output will remain stashed in the attic. Which is a pity. Secret Messages has some killer moments. This is my favorite, with its preposterous rainy day verses (synth sax!) and equally preposterous chorus (TR-808 handclaps!). Totally mismatched and totally worth blasting out loud. I'll stand this one next to "Evil Woman" any day. Dig this one too from the same album.
Electric Light Orchestra - Loser Gone Wild
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Give the drummers some
Moving from grainy Euro/African fusions to a more wide-screen form of exotica. Via a pair of drummers doing it all with electronic percussion and sampling. I give a big thumbs-up to my fellow stickmen getting their melody on. Strangely, I love those new agey '80s synth drums more and more. Maybe it's something about the charm of limitation.
Michael Shrieve & David Beal - Mon Amie
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