Monday, December 29, 2008
My Current Obsession: Weird Tapes
My New Year's resolution for 2009 is to try and blog more, which includes keeping my two readers up to speed of what is currently on infinite repeat on my Ipod.
Lately this honor belongs to Weird Tapes. Been listening to the two EPs released on the Weird Tapes blog non-stop for the last few days. I know slim to nothing about who is behind Weird Tapes, but am extremely excited for a full length release from him/her/them in 2009. Assuming this Cyndi Lauper obsessed beatmaker is also behind Memory Cassette, another set of interesting songs from the links between the two myspace pages and blogs etc.
Take a listen, then hit the blog for the full EP download
MP3: Weird Tapes - Party Trash Alt Link
Mistakes Happen, Sorry Dr. Dog!
So I made a big mistake in my Top 20 of 2008, and that was leaving off Dr. Dog's album Fate. To be honest, it wasn't until hearing a few of their other tracks on Sirius XMU's blog radio last week, I think it was My Old Kentucky Blog's end of year lists show, that I decided to pony up and buy the full album, and I'm really glad I did. This album would have easily made my Top 5 of 2008. Dare I say a little Beatle-esque?
MP3: Dr. Dog - The Beach Alt Link
Buy Fate
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
The Giant Panther's Top 20 Albums Of 2008
A Winner Is You!
Buy Volume One
19. Horse Feathers - House With No Home
Buy House With No Home
18. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Dig!!! Lazarus Dig!!!
Buy Dig!! Lazarus Dig!!!
17. Cat Power - Jukebox
Buy Jukebox
16. Ghostland Observatory - Robotique Majestique
Buy Robotique Majestique
15. Kings Of Leon - Only By The Night
Buy Only By The Night
14. TV On The Radio - Dear Science
Buy Dear Science
13. MGMT - Oracular Spectacular
Buy Oracular Spectacular
12. Okkervil River - The Stand Ins
Buy The Stand Ins
11. Calexico - Carried To Dust
Buy Carried To Dust
10. Sun Kil Moon - April
MP3: Sun Kil Moon - Blue Orchid Alt Link
Buy April
9. The Hold Steady - Stay Positive
MP3: The Hold Steady - Constructive Summer Alt Link
Buy Stay Positive
8. Frightened Rabbit - Midnight Organ Fight
MP3: Frightened Rabbit - Fast Blood Alt Link
Buy Midnight Organ Fight
7. Mason Proper - Olly Oxen Free
MP3: Mason Proper - Fog Alt Link
Buy Olly Oxen Free
6. Nada Surf - Lucky
MP3: Nada Surf - Are You Lightning? Alt Link
Buy Lucky
5. Hot Chip - Made In The Dark
MP3: Hot Chip - One Pure Thought Alt Link
Buy Made In The Dark
4. M83 - Saturdays = Youth
MP3: M83 - Kim and Jessie Alt Link
Buy Saturdays = Youth
3. Crystal Castles - Crystal Castles
MP3: Crystal Castles - Vanished Alt Link
Buy Crystal Castles
2. Sigur Ros - Med Sud I Eyrum Vid Spilum Endalaust
MP3: Sigur Ros - Godan Daginn Alt Link
Buy Med Sud I Eyrum Vid Spilum Endalaust
1. Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago
MP3: Bon Iver - Re: Stacks Alt Link
Just Missed The Cut - Albums that just missed the top 20 (why not just do a top 40 you ask?)
Tapes N Tapes - Walk It Off
Ra Ra Riot - The Rhumb Line
Santogold x Diplo - Top Ranking
Santogold - Santogold
Beck - Modern Guilt
Friendly Fires - Friendly Fires
Foals - Antidotes
Bonnie Prince Billy - Lie Down In The Light
Dept. Of Eagles - In Ear Park
Blitzen Trapper - Furr
Vampire Weekend - Vampire Weekend
No Dice - Albums that I just don't get the hype, or I expected more from
My Morning Jacket - Evil Urges
Mason Jennings - In The Ever
Devotchka - A Mad and Faithful Telling
Black Keys - Attack and Release
Wolf Parade - At Mount Zoomer
Portishead - Third
Monday, December 22, 2008
The Dreaded Top 20 Albums of 2008 Post
As I sit here watching the first big snowfall of the winter of 2008-2009 I feel like I'm under contract to produce a Top Twenty for the year we just experienced. As much as I consider myself fairly learned on the subject of popular music, the way I absorb music isn't always very conventional. Take a band like Coldplay. I know going in, particularly as good as they are coupled with their fanatical female following, that I won't have to work very hard to have the top three or four songs on their latest CD creep into my consciousness. They'll be played in retail stores, coffee shops, supermarkets, TV shows and in all formats on the radio. In fact, I don't even have to buy the CD for the short term. It'll just be there wherever I go. U2 has the same type of cache. The demand is there so I just let it happen. I don't feel the urge to be at Newbury Comics on release Tuesday or play the thing night and day for two weeks until I have it down. Unfortunately I find myself in catchup mode an awful lot nowadays. I have chosen my favorite releases of 2008 to date, but I feel like I'll know much more about them a year from now. Of course, by then I'll have to choose another twenty for 2009. It's a vicious cycle, but I wouldn't have it any other way. I am probably now more qualified to talk about 2007 than I ever was, but fat lot of good it does you folks now huh? Hindsight is still 20-20 isn't it?
A couple of Christmas Eve's ago two friends and I were driving around Cambridge and Somerville, MA looking for a bar that was open. After we stumbled on the aptly named Thirsty Scholar on the Cambridge/Somerville line and settled in one of my friends starts going off about how little good music there is these days. Sounding like my father circa 1968 when he went off after hearing Crimson & Clover by Tommy James & The Shondells one too many times on my Close and Play, I started whaling on him. You won't find any new young bands listening to talk radio 24x7 in your car I told him. What was the last CD you bought I asked him. Naturally he couldn't recall, but he realized he hit a sore spot with me. I told him I'd put together a spreadsheet covering the last 15 years with a top five and, as a bonus an additional honorable mention five. Ten records from each of the last 15 years. That's 150 CDs he'll never buy I figured, but I had a blast putting the list together. The reason I tell you the story is because I came to realize how much the passage of time can skewer your perspective. As I pared down the list of 150 or so CDs to 10 for each year of the 90's I had to make some hard decisions. Some of the CDs I swore by in those days fell by the wayside. It was an interesting exercise and one I could not have done at the time with the same historical perspective.
I guess what I'm saying is consider this a rough draft starter kit for the year 2008. I guarantee it will change in the coming years. Don't pay a heckuva lot of attention to the exact order here either. Just be thankful you aren't Portishead, Elbow, Steve Winwood, The Pretenders, Bon Iver or any number of a handful of bands eventually cut from my original 2008 list. It's a no win situation, but since we are apparently a comment free web site there are no repercussions to be had right? So without further adieu the dreaded list...I haven't seen The Giant Panther's list yet, but I'm placing the over/under at 7 artists overlapping our lists. And it could be less...
20. Metallica - Death Magnetic - Well, we know for sure this one is not on the GP's list. I was listening to this one the other day and thought not bad...why not them? They're good for Rock & Roll.
19. Guns N' Roses - Chinese Democracy - I wanted to crucify this one. No record needs ten years of maturation, well, unless you're Brian Wilson, but it isn't the chocolate mess I expected. Axl Rocks.
18. Edgar Winter - Rebel Road - This one bashed it's way onto my list with a late charge. Glad he's rocking again. Slash guest stars for some delicious Chinese irony. Better go find The Ju Ju Hounds.
17. Lenny Kravitz - Love Revolution - The GP hates Lenny Kravitz. I love him. Go see this guy live and I promise you will too. A smokin' version of Bring It On on David Letterman sold me on the spot.
16. AC/DC - Black Ice - Hey, 0-5 versus The GP's list. Are we sure about that over under? Nothing new regarding the AC/DC catalogue, but that is precisely the point I guess. More wicked big fat fun.
15. Mudcrutch - Mudcrutch - I guess ten years is nothing when you consider this one was basically on the shelf for 30. The truth is Tom Petty could record feedback and I'd still be buying. The ugly truth.
14. The B-52's - Funplex - Another band the GP doesn't care for. Why won't he dance with me? I'm not no Limburger. A sixteen year hiatus and they come out with another kitsch classic. Unbelievable huh?
13. Radiohead - In Rainbows - I know this is sacrilege, but Radiohead should consider righting the ship a bit. I don't find them nearly as musical or interesting as I once did. Still, they rank somehow.
12. Weezer - The Red Album - I have totally reversed course on Weezer over the years. I hated the name, I hated The Sweater Song, I hate that they name every CD Weezer. Now I think I love them.
11. The Black Crowes - Warpaint - I'm a sucker for the battling Robinson brothers. I really think they have only had one bad CD and this one isn't it. As long as they record, I will buy. I don't question it.
10. Airbourne - Runnin' Wild - Good old fashioned Foot Stompin' Rock & Roll. Yeah, the AC/DC comparisons are there, but this CD rocks. Rock & Roll is Dead? Long Live Rock! End to end rockers.
9. The Raconteurs - Consolers of The Lonely - I like this one better than the first and I didn't want to like that one because it wasn't The White Stripes. I loved Many Shades of Black. Just like this site.
8. Death Cab For Cutie - Narrow Stairs - I loved The Postal Service. I've never really been on this band's bandwagon, but Cath is a tremendous song. I love that it might be a true story too. Emotive.
7. TV On The Radio - Dear Science - I have to admit, I struggled with these guys initially, but they represent a return to outside the box recording. It sounds like they answer to no one. Now that's cool.
6. Beck - Modern Guilt - I've been digging Beck for 14 years and I don't plan on stopping any time soon. Some of his catalogue is a bit uneven, but this one is pretty solid. Color me satisfied...again.
5. Neil Young - Sugar Mountain Live at Canterbury House 1968 - Even as a lifelong Neil Young fan I was still surprised to find myself loving this one as much as I do. It's superb acoustic buried treasure.
4. MGMT - Oracular Spectacular - Chicken Soup For The Ears. The unexpected underdog dragon slayer of the year. Synthpop back in full force and for a change I'm loving it. Very easy on the soul.
3. The Black Keys - Attack & Release - Nothing affects these two. A throwback band for the ages, The Keys rule. Blues and Garage gettin' their freak on. I just love this band. Go see them play live.
2. Kings of Leon - Only By The Night - I'm in the minority, but I don't even think this is their best record and I'm already sick of Sex On Fire. That said, buy this record. This band is great and very hip.
1. Coldplay - Viva La Vida - This band is polarizing. Do they deserve all the praise or half the criticism? I don't know, but chicks dig 'em and that's good enough for me...every now and then.
OK, that's a wrap. I didn't leave any links this time because I didn't want to short change anyone, but I'll be back in 2009, if not before, with more interesting suggested Music For The Masses. A Happy and Healthy New Year to all of our readers!
Friday, December 19, 2008
One Track Mind - Treat Her Right
Saturday, December 13, 2008
My Insipid Record Collection - The Silencers
A Letter From St Paul.mp3
A Letter From St Paul.mp3 YSI
The Silencers Home Page
One Track Mind - Marillion
Marillion - Neverland.mp3
Marillion - Neverland.mp3 YSI
www.marillion.com
Tuesday, December 09, 2008
My Insipid Record Collection - Grant Lee Buffalo
The reason I mention this little tidbit is because I usually spend about two hours of his four hour shift just hanging around shooting the bull when I can. From time to time the GP will say things that illustrate some of the different perspectives we have about music from time to time. Of all the folks I know personally, The Giant Panther is probably the only one who loves music as much as I do. We are GIANT consumers of rock music in all its forms. Our collections are laughable because, truth be told, we could never ever listen to everything we own consistently even if we landed jobs as hit makers, as if such a job existed anymore. I just love that Tom Petty line in one of his songs called Into The Great Wide Open where he sings "their A&R man said I don't hear a single." I worked locally at a radio station called WBCN as a producer in the early 80's for four years and all seen or unseen payola legends aside I could never understand why some seemingly superior songs got never got any airplay while you could never get them to stop playing some really crappy ones. I'd like to believe I would have been great at getting a band's absolute best songs into the fore on any given record. I watched huge records like John Mellencamp's Uh-Huh, Cyndi Lauper's She's So Unusual and Bruce Springsteen's Born in The USA get four, five and even six of the songs from these records played for months on end. I love The Boss probably more than the next guy with my Jersey roots, but none of these records would be in my top 1000 all time. Yet there they were, ruling the day on major market radio right next to crossover artists like U2, Prince and, on other stations, Her Madgesty. Madonna though was her own genre in fairness. Still is for that matter.
Grant Lee Buffalo were indie rockers in their day. They slipped onto the scene with a CD called Fuzzy in 1993. The song Fuzzy was played on WFNX for about three months, but it would shock me to hear it on Julie Kramer's Daily Leftover Lunch show anymore. I love Julie as a DJ and I've been listening to her for decades, but the woman can't go two days without playing Depeche Mode, Duran Duran or Bob Marley (apparently he's the only reggae artist EVER. They used to play Ziggy Marley back in the day, but now? Forget it). I love those artists too, but it's amazing how this radio station just totally forgets scores of artists and doggedly hangs onto some others. One long time staple, The Pretenders, just put out a new CD called Break Up The Concrete. Julie had Chrissie Hynde on her show playing live recently. It was actually very funny; Hynde was trying to sing a song, Kid if memory serves, and could not stop laughing. She had a band member with her in the studio and the two of them were laughing so hard they had to stop playing that song and had to play another. That's very nice and all, but do you think WFNX would have one of the new Pretender's songs in their rotation? Even if just for a couple of weeks for fear of being labeled "Classic" (got forbid)? No dice. The funny thing is their songs are not seasoned enough to be played on the Classic Rock stations either. And you wonder why some records don't sell.
Where was I? Oh yeah. Grant Lee Buffalo. Let me give you ten songs to go download and love. Fuzzy, Jupiter and Teardrop, Dixie Drug Store, Stars 'n' Stripes, Lone Star Song, Mockingbirds, Homespun, Bethlehem Steel, The Hook and Truly, Truly. I'm sure I'm missing a couple, but that ought to get you started. Grant Lee Buffalo came and went inside of five years and I only got to see them live once warming up for R.E.M. around 1993. I remember Michael Stipe calling Fuzzy the best CD of the year hands down. I was already on the bandwagon, but he was preaching to the choir in my case. I was and remain a big fan. Jupiter and Teardrop, the song I'm leaving with you below, is a killer track for my money. I never get tired of listening to it. Grant Lee Phillips, the lead singer, went on to release several solo CDs, which all basically fizzled, but that doesn't challenge my affinity for these guys. I had visions of them hailing from Buffalo of course, so naturally they were from Los Angeles. I was sorry when they called it a day after Jubilee in 1998. For the uninitiated, the Storm Hymnal compilation (the artwork you see above) puts a nice bow on it for these guys, but I own all of their CDs. If you see a copy of Fuzzy in ANYONE's collection tip your hat. That person is way cool. Neil Young is thought to be one of their influences, but these guys shattered the mold when they surfaced. There really wasn't anyone like them at the time. They never hit the big time, but they hit my big time no questions asked. So there GP; a 90's artist that rocked. And I didn't even have to mention Sugar...oh shoot...
Grant Lee Buffalo - Jupiter and Teardrop.mp3
Grant Lee Buffalo - Jupiter and Teardrop.mp3 YSI
www.grantleebuffalo.com
Monday, November 24, 2008
My Insipid Record Collection - Robbie Robertson
Somewhere Down The Crazy River.mp3
Somewhere Down The Crazy River.mp3 YSI
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Your Tour Guide - Robyn Hitchcock
Robyn Hitchcock - Vibrating.mp3
Robyn Hitchcock - Vibrating.mp3 YSI
www.robynhitchcock.com
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Your Tour Guide - Smashing Pumpkins
Monday, November 10, 2008
Your Tour Guide - AC/DC
May 7, 1988 - Worcester Centrum in Worcester, MA
November 15, 1990 -Providence Civic Center in Providence, RI
March 19, 1996 - Fleetcenter in Boston, MA
August 8, 2000 - Fleetcenter in Boston, MA
May 4, 2001 - Fleetcenter in Boston, MA
November 9, 2008 - TD BankNorth Garden in Boston, MA
AC/DC - Sin City.mp3
AC/DC - Sin City.mp3 YSI
www.acdc.com
R.I.P. - Miriam Makeba
African born Miriam Makeba's 1967 single "Pata Pata" was a spectacular example of a song with global appeal. Jamiacan born Desmond Dekker's 1968 single "Israelites" was another masterpiece from that era. Cameroon singer Manu Dibango's 1972 single "Soul Makossa" is yet another one that comes to mind. All of these songs got massive radio play back in the day and were ingrained into my brain at an early age. I had almost forgot about Miriam Makeba until one day I was watching the recently cancelled show Las Vegas a couple of years back. That show was famous for resurrecting James Caan and for the parade of ridiculously attractive women; Vanessa Marcil and Molly Sims in particular. If memory serves it used to show on Friday nights (loser alert) at 10 PM and though it may appear that I am friendless I used to videotape (yikes) it so I could watch it later. Since we are getting held up at gun point by cable companies anyway...DVR is a fantastic invention. So I'm mindlessly wasting yet another hour of my life watching Las Vegas when, at the end of one of the episodes, Miriam Makeba's Pata Pata comes on. I had totally forgotten what a great song that is. I hadn't heard it in years. Of course I went and downloaded it within minutes and actually play it on my computer jukebox fairly frequently when reading other sites.
I guess my point here is unfortunately musicians die every day. I can tell you this one touched me with one single song. It's such a feel good song I can't even express it in words. It's kind of funny coming from a guy who listens to Nine Inch Nails, Stabbing Westward and even Marilyn Manson from time to time, but this song will always have a place in my heart. People love to used the phrase "one hit wonder" as if it is something to be ashamed of. How ridiculous. Making ONE great song is something I always wished I could do. It's like a .203 career hitter homering in his only World Series at bat (who is 1976 New York Yankee reserve shortstop Jim Mason). It's something to be celebrated. Miriam Makeba has had a full life of performing music I'll probably never hear, but she made her mark on this music lover. She was performing when her heart gave out at 76 yesterday. Rest in Peace Miriam. You earned it.
Miriam Makeba - Pata Pata.mp3
Miriam Makeba - Pata Pata.mp3 YSI
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
My 25 Most Played Songs
Some of these songs make sense for me, and some I wouldn't even think to put in my top 50 if I was making a list from scratch. When using hard facts like this smart playlist, my hands are tied on the cool factor. I'm unable to tweak this by adding any kind of obscure noise rock band just to prove I'm worthy of your readership (I actually considered playing a Battles song over and over again until it made the list), or conjure up any visions of me being one of those "hip" people you see walking the streets wearing an outfit that is supposed to look like they don't care, but actually probably took way more effort and money to put together than a normal outfit.
By some minor miracle or act of God, Phil Collins' "Don't Lose My Number" didn't appear in my top 25. So here it is without any edits, and without any shame, my Top 25 most played songs in Itunes.
- The Knife - Heartbeats
- Editors - Bullets
- MP3: Panda Bear - Ponytail alt link
- Joy Divison - Love Will Tear Us Apart
- Sigur Ros - Glosoli
- MP3: Bonnie "Prince" Billy, Matt Sweeney - My Home Is The Sea alt link
- Interpol - PDA
- Morphine - All Your Way
- The Arcade Fire - Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)
- Bonnie "Prince" Billy, Matt Sweeney - Beast For Thee
- Broken Social Scene - Fire Eye'd Boy
- MP3: M. Ward - To Go Home alt link
- Rogue Wave - 10:1
- Rogue Wave - Are You On My Side
- MP3: Broken Social Scene - Superconnected alt link
- Interpol - Untitled
- LCD Soundsystem - Someone Great
- MP3: Rogue Wave - Salesman At The Day Of The Parade alt link
- Talking Heads - This Must Be The Place (Naive Melody)
- Tom Waits - Hang Down Your Head
- Neko Case - Hold On, Hold On
- Band Of Horses - Is There A Ghost
- MP3: The Bees - Listening Man alt link
- Beirut - Scenic World
- Talking Heads - I'm Not In Love
Saturday, November 01, 2008
My Insipid Record Collection - Gov't Mule
Knowing I can usually score a great ticket with a little patience I rarely buy tickets for any event too far in advance. Between Craigslist and Ticketmaster releasing the tickets they sometimes have on hold for god knows who the day of the show, I'm usually in good shape by the time the show starts. Last night wasn't one of my better efforts. I ended up waiting about twenty five minutes in line for the box office to open hoping I would score unused band tickets. I wound up with the same fairly awful tickets I could have bought from Ticketmaster earlier that afternoon; right behind the mixing board about 40 rows from the stage. That never happens to me, but I was determined to get in no matter what because I knew they would play a set of covers. Why that fascinates me is odd I suppose, but I love covers; always have. To put this cavalier approach to ticket buying for this show in perspective last summer I wandered down to South Shore Music Circus in Cohasset, MA to see the Mule play a big top tent. This venue would be my favorite, even with the 45 minute drive, because it is tiny and intimate. The big drawback is that for reasons unknown they don't let you bring any beverages that you might purchase to your seat. That means, after selling you a super sized beer, they hang you out to dry by forcing you to consume it on the fly, in the heat, before entering the tent. They make sure you can't see in as well or everybody would just hang out outside because the vibe is so chill. The stage rotates so nobody is missing anything and aside from the post concert parking lot traffic jams the place is great. I always make one trip down there each summer no matter what. The reason I tell you this story though is because the Mule played there not five months ago before MAYBE 1500 people. I'm no crowd size expert, but the place was empty. I felt awful for a couple of reasons. One, because people have no clue what they are missing and two, because Gov't Mule may never play there again with that kind of turnout. I was embarrassed for the concert going public, but I had a blast. I socialized with a couple of Mule fans I figured I would never see again until I ran into one of them last night. That was kind of comical even though the Mule crowd is very loyal and seeing the same folks at each show is not unusual. They are a lot like the Allman Brothers concert going fans for obvious reasons. They do have Warren Haynes in common after all.
Back to the show; ever see those pictures in US Magazine (I read 'em at the gym for free...lighten up) where they say "Stars - They're Just Like US" as they show Jennifer Aniston picking out cereal or some such mundane task? That is what it feels like when Warren Haynes starts doing his Jimmy Page, or in last night's case David Gilmour, impression. It seems Warren Haynes has the same feelings about Pink Floyd that I do. That's pretty cool. I hear he's an extremely nice man, but this kind of makes me want to support him even more. I'm publishing the set list below, but the house was packed as the Mule lit into their second set last night. The first song was One of These Days from the 1971 Pink Floyd album Meddle. I figured this was the record they were going to play, but aside from a positively sublime version of Fearless, one of my favorite Pink Floyd songs, they didn't play any more from Meddle. They started skipping around. You can follow the set list below, but let me just tell you this was a great show and it's doubtful I could have enjoyed myself more. The whole audience sang like a church choir in unison throughout the whole Pink Floyd set. Happy Halloween indeed. Looks like I chose the treat again. Support Gov't Mule! P.S. Warm up act Back Door Slam was excellent. Blues fans should keep an eye on them.
First Set: Brighter Days, Bad Little Doggie, Brand New Angel, Game Face - Mountain Jam - Game Face, Trane - Third Stone From The Sun - Trane - Eternity's Breath Jam - Trane - St. Stephen, Monkey Hill, Child of The Earth, Kinder Bird Jam - Kind of Bird
Second Set: One Of These Days, Fearless, Pigs On The Wing Part 2, Shine On You Crazy Diamond, Have A Cigar, Speak To Me, Breathe, On The Run, Time, Money, Comfortably Numb, Shine On You Crazy Diamond Reprise, Wish You Were Here
Encore: A Million Miles From Yesterday, Blind Man In The Dark
Gov't Mule - No Quarter.mp3
Gov't Mule - No Quarter.mp3 YSI
www.mule.net