Friday, November 27, 2009

top 10 singles (01/06/2009 - 01/12/2009)

Top 10 Foreign singles:


01 The Raveonettes - Bang!

The Danish duo strikes again. No songs of their fuzzy,noisy previous album 'Lust lust lust' made the daytime radiowaves, but they go all out pop on the excellent new 'In and out of control'-record. Supercatchy, sparkling guitar pop with a slight retro touch and straightforward lyrics ("You're as cool as icecream", brilliant line). Nothing more, nothing less. Being slightly to very subjective here, a well-deserved #1-spot.



02 Chairlift - Bruises

Bassline reminds me 'The Love Cats' by The Cure, some vocal parts and the quirky lyrics kind of resemble Regina Spektor. But this is a pretty good, mysterious, almost ethereal poppy song nevertheless.



03 The Temper Trap - Sweet Disposition

The intro with echo on the guitar reminds me of 'Elegy for a lost summer' by Anne Clark, and there's a Bloc Party riff hidden somewhere at the end of the track. These guys are originally from Australia but relocated to London, this dynamic track with remarkable vocals was picked to feature on the '500 days of summer'-soundtrack. Judging from the music video, they must be disco fans.



04 Death Cab For Cutie - Meet me on the equinox

Ben Gibbard does it again. Back in the day, his band was featured on 'The OC' soundtrack, propelling them into the public eye. And now he landed the main track on the soundtrack on one of the most popular movies of the year, 'New moon'. No complaints here, the track is excellent, with dreamy guitarplaying, nervous percussion, circular song structure, and some excellent lyrics coupled with good vocal melodies. Seems to fit the movie well too.



05 Miike Snow - Animal

At first, I thought this was a Tv on the radio-track, voices are kind of similar. One of the most hyped and remixed post-summer tracks of this year I think. These guys are actually Scandinavian, and well, I don't know what else to say about this.



06 The Juan Maclean - Happy house

"Laaauunncchhh mmeeee inttoooo spaaacceeeee." Supercatchy dancy track. The vocalist Nancy Whang (also in LCD Soundsystem) had/has a thing with one of the Soulwax brothers, and their drummer (also in !!!) tragically died just recently, falling down an elevator shaft. RIP.



07 Jay-Z - Empire state of mind

I am not a hip-hop connaisseur, so I'm not sure how the fans feel about this, but I'm giving this a number seven spot. I'm guessing the title is reference to Nas, but I might very well be mistaken.



08 VV Brown - Leave!

VV Brown apparently tries to cross over between a retro vibe and a punky attitude, and succeeds well in this track about break-ups. A theme she likes to explore apparently, the follow-up single 'Game Over' brings across pretty much the same message.



09 Maria Timm - Dirty place

Probably the weirdest track in the top 10, starts out a-capella, elektronic but never really danceable, cryptic lyrics. Interesting stuff.



10 Vampire Weekend - Horchata

Looks like somebody slipped these Brooklyn dudes the 'Give up' record by The Postal Service. Apart from the electronic bleeps, this sounds like a weird and pretty confusing mix between a mellow summer track and a christmas time single.





Top 10 Belgian singles:


01 Customs - Justine

2009 saw the rise of Belgian's own Interpol/Editors. "Rex" was an excellent debut single, and follow-up "Justine" does even better. Good song structure, top notch production (most notably the drumming and the guitar riffs), strong chorus. Well done.



02 De jeugd van tegenwoordig - Deze donkere jongen komt zo hard

Personally, I attribute 90% of this band's success to Bas Bron (= Bastian), whose beats are so good that you could give them the world's worst rapper and the resulting track would still sound pretty good. "De donkere jongen des heils" is on top of his game here with a supergroovy, smooth track with rocking drums that is very hard to resist.



03 Das Pop - Never get enough

Das Pop is apparently hot in Japan right now. This poppy, supercatchy track hits all the right spots. Bright, happy melodies, not your ordinary run of the mill lyrics, good production. In a way, this is the Belgian counterpart of UK pop masters The Feeling.



04 Isbells - As long as it takes

Continuing with the Belgian answer to Bon Iver. Excellent track from this guy's debut album; for a slow track, it's still pretty dynamic and never gets boring, and it really has the warm, cosy, home-y sound that it's aiming for. Hearing this track, you just wanna curl up in front of the fireplace or something.



05 Hairglow - Let it go

Alex Callier does the eighties synthpop, all out kitsch. Production is excellent, but Callier sings here, and something tells I shouldn't be very sorry about missing their live performance at the Pukkelpop festival. I guess Callier knew from the start this wasn't going to get as big as Hooverphonic, but the least you can say is that the whole visual look and concept has been well thought out.



06 Lady Linn (and her magnificent seven) - Here we go again

Might be the best track on her debut album. Lyrics don't make a whole lot of sense though. One line they're breaking up, the next they're getting back together? Make up your mind, woman!



07 Team William - Lord of the dogs

This band did pretty good in Humo's biannual Rock Rally contest, and released one of their least obvious songs as a first single, so you have to admire their guts. This is a bouncy, unpredictable, slightly abrasive indie rocktrack, pretty good stuff.



08 The Galacticos - I'm with my girl

"You and me, dragonslaying at the beach". An intro that seems to have been resurrected from the mid-nineties, and a guitar riff that Frank Black simply forgot to write, pretty awesome. Again, these lads from Limburg have come up with a music video that's worth watching.



09 Milow - Darkness ahead and behind

I've made it quite clear in the past that I'm definitely not the biggest Milow fan out there. His voice gets whiny pretty fast. On this track, he shares vocal duties with Nina Babette, renowned studio and backup singer, so that eases the pain a little. Admittedly, on this track, Milow outperforms pretty much every other Belgian songwriter in the lyrical department. Flawless.



10 Superlijm - Michael Jordan

Do I really have to make the Grandaddy comparison again? I always wonder what would've become, had they picked Michael Jackson instead of Michael Jordan as the lyrical subject on this track.



Didn't make the top 10's:


The Horrors - Who can say
More The Jesus and Mary Chain and My Bloody Valentine influences on the second album by these enfants terrible from the UK rock scene.

La Roux - Bulletproof
Live show was a disappointment, but I like the radio singles. This one is my favourite, sang with the most attitude.

Passion Pit - The Reeling
Intro sounds a lot like One month off by Underworld, but still, enjoyable, danceable track with falsetto voice and a catchy chorus.

Guy Boratto - No turning back
Gui Boratto (born 1974 in São Paulo) is a Brazilian electronic music producer. Look at me, I just copy-pasted this straight from the wikipedia page, because I don't know anything about this.

Lenka - The show
The Vanessa Carlton/Sara Bareilles/...-flavour of the month. Track's good and well-constructed, but lacks a punch that propels it above the competition.

The Very Best - Warm heart of Africa
Summer-y vibes with guest vocals from the singer in Vampire Weekend.

Air - Sing sang sung
Very typical but solid Air-track. Music so light, if they ever make a music disc capable of floating through the air, that disc will probably have a track by these Frenchies on it.

Kanye West - Paranoid
Not the biggest Kanye-adept, but who else has got the guts to stand up during an award show to voice his opinion? It's not like any man in his right mind is going to deny his statement about the Beyonce video, right? I think it's mainly the eighties synths that make me like this track.

Chromeo - Night by night
Typical Chromeo track that actually sounds a bit like their debut single 'Needy girl' from a couple of years back. They excel at capturing the whole eighties sound/atmosphere. Cool dudes.

Alberta Cross - Taking control
This track still has to grow on me a little, but it lacks a little something to make it top 10 material.

Lily Allen - Who'd have known Not fair
I sincerely hope Lily Allen is just pulling a Jay-Z and isn't really considering quitting music for good. I'm a big fan of her lyrical style. In a way, Not Fair is pretty much her Jungle Drums. "Who'd have known, when you flash up on my phone, I no longer feel alone". + she's looking all kinds of hot in the first vid.

Julian Casablancas - Eleventh dimension
Something about this song always reminds me of the "What a feeling"-track from the Flashdance soundtrack. Definitely more synths than we're used from Julian in his 'The Strokes'-setting. "I just nod. I've never been too good at shaking hands."

Saturday, November 7, 2009

I've been drifting along in the same stale, old shoes

I recognised a guitar riff in the closing sequence of the move 'The elementary particles', from the novel by Michel Houellebecq.



After racking my brain for an hour, I finally nailed it:



Odelay is still backed.

Oh, and Beck was already doing the La Roux sound 10 years ago, just sayin':


Sunday, November 1, 2009

podcast 11

Podcast number: 11
Date: 01/11/2009
Language: none
File Format: MP3
File Size: 73 MB
Duration: 78 minutes
#songs: 26
Genre: eighties compilation #4

Comments:
commercial pop, radio songs, new wave, even some new wave club classics. Anything goes on this one.

Tracklist:
01 The Pixies - Dig for fire (1990)
02 New Musik - This world of water (1980)
03 Trans X - Living on video (1981)
04 Billy Idol - Dancing with myself (1981)
05 Baltimora - Tarzan boy (1985)
06 Aztec Camera - Somewhere in my heart (1988)
07 The Romantics - Talking in your sleep (1983)
08 The Go Gos - Our lips are sealed (1981)
09 Taylor Dayne - Tell it to my heart (1987)
10 The Pursuit Of Happiness - She's so young (1989)
11 The Sisters Of Mercy - Marian (1985)
12 ABC - The look of love (1982)
13 Fleetwood Mac - Little lies (1987)
14 Tubeway Army & Gary Numan - Are friends electric (1979)
15 Soulsister - Like a mountain (1986)
16 The Smithereens - A girl like you (1989)
17 The Jesus and Mary Chain - Happy when it rains (1987)
18 Steve Miller Band - Abracadabra (1982)
19 Was Not Was - Walk the dinosaur (1987)
20 Van Halen - Running with the devil (1978)
21 Lionel Richie - Dancing on the ceiling (1986)
22 Twee Belgen - Operation coup de poing (1984)
23 The Scorpions - Still loving you (1984)
24 Fad Gadget - Ladyshave (1981)
25 Split Enz - Message to my girl (1984)
26 Fischer Z - So long (1980)

Get it here: Click

Bat For Lashes, Ancienne Belgique, 31/10/2009

Bat For Lashes show was at the AB yesterday.

I'm not among the biggest fans of the Ancienne Belgique. As a music fan, once your favourite artist reaches an AB-sized fanbase, you're basically screwed. Ticket prices are really expensive, potato chips get fished out of your backpack (you can buy a mini-bag of chips for 'only' 2 euros in the vending machine inside), plus the club is a little too big for intimate concerts.

Luckily, however, the AB sound quality lives up to the expensive prices. To my own surprise, the Bat For Lashes show ended up selling out in the final week before the show. Bearing in mind the totally undercrowded New Found Glory in the same venue at the end of May, I guess primetime radio airplay is still invaluable to artists seeking an audience.

The opening act (Heceba or something) sounded pretty electronic, nothing too memorable.
The set had a skeleton and some spiderwebs on the microphone, but with Natascha Khan, it was hard to tell whether that was a special Halloween setup or just the standard setup. If I saw correctly, she still has the same supporting band as with the earlier tours for the latest record, with the drummer from New Young Pony Club, en Charlotte Hatherley, guitar player for Ash and solo artist. I was wondering throughout the show whether supporting Bat For Lashes is really that fun, songs center around her voice and piano playing, and some beats are programmed, so the drummer is actually sitting idle a lot, singing background vocals. Some goes for the sparse bass and regular guitar play support. I guess both either like the song material a lot, or like the economic support for their other musical endeavours.

Onto the show, Natascha came dressed in some kind of black dress with a belt, and a wolf mask on her back. Crowd was asked to howl before 'The Wizard' kicked in, no other Halloween references were made. Sonically and vocally, this was an impeccable gig. Khan in her own way is a dedicated, focused performer and even though it probably was a show on routine, I didn't really came across that way. "Glass" is always a strong opener, biggest hits "What's a girl to do" and "Daniel" were played in succession around the middle part of the set, "Trophy" and "Sleep alone" being the interchangeable songs that aid the set buildup but were the weakest moments in my book, with "Siren Song" the heartbreaking highpoint of the set, definitely one of the songs of the year in my book. The crowd was appreciative, and succeeded in shutting up most of the time. A lot of songs had drums that sounded really electronic, some kind of attempt to add just a little element of danceability to the set, but I kept wondering whether more traditional drumming would've done just as well.

Setlist:
Glass
Sleep alone
The wizard
Moon and moon
Horse and I
What's a girl to do
Daniel
Tahiti
Siren Song
Trophy
Two planets
Pearl's dream
----
The Big Sleep
Wilderness
Prescilla