Wednesday, July 21, 2010

I've spent too long in sinking sand...

...holding breath, only to defy death.

Got some more reviews for you.

Fool's Gold - Fool's gold





This band mixes indie with African influences. They sing in Hebrew a lot, but just like Matisyahu, it never outgrows the 'gimmick'-stage. I'm not even gonna rate this, the only song that could capture my attention is the opening track, which does have an infectious guitar riff. As for the rest, don't even bother and give "Cape kod kwassa kwassa" another spin.







Holly Miranda - The magician's private library (7/10)





Produced by Dave Sitek and with guest appearances from TV on the Radio, you're bound to hear some echoes of the previous work by these artists on this album (especially the Scarlett Johanssen album produced by Sitek). Some tracks remind me of Mercury Rev, and maybe some Portishead. Zero 7 without the dance aspect might also be a reference point. This is a pretty varied album, most of it consisting of 4-5 minute long, meandering, dreamy material, "Waves" being my personal favourite amongst them. Some songs sound a little more poppy, due to the instrumentation, "Forest green oh forest green" and "Everytime I go to sleep" nudge towards playful songs for children, "Sweet dreams" is a little more upbeat and has a catchy trumpet riff. Only track that fails to work, is "No one just is", where the triphoppy rhythm feels a little forced. Personal favourite "Canvas" has a definite "The XX" feel to it. I also appreciate the lyrical side of this record, which seems to focus heavily on relationships. I'd state this album definitely could work as a chill-out record. For the gym, not so much.










She & Him - Volume Two (6/10)





I'm gonna admit to having never heard Volume 1, so I can't compare this record to the previous one. In the second coming of the M. Ward and Zooey Deschanel collaboration, I think I can say the main influences here are country music and The Ronettes-style girl groups, although there are also some pop-moments. This disc contains a couple of winners and some fillers, so I'm a little torn about this. M. Ward does what he can to get the most out of the song material (like the unexpected guitar solo that closes off 'In the sun'), but overall, Zooey's writing isn't always great and -at times- a little bland and unimaginative, especially in the lyrical department (ignored is going to rhyme with bored, blame with ashamed, shoes with blues,... the list goes on), so good for her she's an actress and not a screenwriter. I won't say bad things about her singing, she's definitely trumping Scarlett in that department. For a pop record, I personally feel it's lacking in the singalong department. There's also 2 covers here: one ("Ridin' in my car") does nothing for me, the other ("Gonna get along without you now") is definitely among the best tracks on this album. The slow tracks tend to bore, so the highlights on this album are the more upbeat, emotional tracks: opener "Thieves" goes all-out country and hits the bullseye (intro riff sounds a lot like this though), "Don't look back" has a Greek mythology reference and a really long bridge to the chorus and "Over it over again" has a catchy chorus and offers a nice mix of the country and girl group influences. For those of you that were going to buy this for the Zooey pics in the booklet, tough luck for you, my friend! But you can always take another look at the scrumptious - college video's are always cool in my book - video for "In the sun" or the retro video for "Thieves".










Surfer Blood - Astro Coast (8/10)





In short, a more upbeat and joyous The Shins, coupled with some Weezer powerpop chords, seasoned with some Vampire Weekend-ish african guitar riffs here and there to really get the ultimate summer feel. Maybe a little Sonic Youth too. I have a strong feeling this album is gonna age well and you will be able to enjoy it during summer drives for years to come. Since you can find killer track "Swim" in one of my previous posts already, I'll serve you with 2 other tracks today: opening track "Floating vibes" and the very The Shins-esque "Twin peaks". Some meaningless snippet of trivia to close this off: apparently, these guys don't like surfing at all.










I also got some nice tracks from new(er) bands that you might want to check out.



School Of Seven Bells - Windstorm


The one and only Hendrik Reigarts got me into this band. Fitting right into the stream of dreamy pop songs we've had over the last couple of blog posts, here we have an ex-guitarist from Secret Machines and a lovely pair of twin sisters. "Windstorm" from the new "Disconnect from desire" album has some pretty cool vocal melodies and rhythms, whereas "My Cabal" is a more standard song but with a pretty cool video. I'm not really sure whether I'd be able to listen to this for a whole album, but as far as individual tracks go, I'm liking this a lot.









Sleigh Bells - Tell 'em


While we're on the subjects of ex-guitar players, one guitar player from Poison The Well now has this 2-man project. While the other tracks I checked have some elements in common with The Ting Tings or The Kills (and thus, fail to really surprise or spark interest), this track sounds simply sounds like Aaliyah singing over some loud guitar solo and mean elektro. Pretty awesome.







The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart - Say no to love



Keyboard player Peggy Wang stars in the video for this new track by these modern day The Cure adepts (well, the extrovert, poppy side of The Cure anyway). This track is by no means a great departure from their previous efforts, and... I'm not complaining. Are you?







Bombay Bicycle Club - Ivy & Gold


The previous album by these lads from London was more generic indie-rock, on their most recent album however, they're jumping the whole (more acoustic sounding) folk-rock bandwagon a little, and this track more particularly sounds like a track by Mumford and Sons, albeit slightly more relaxed maybe. The singer looks a little like Chris Martin, not sure if that's going to convince you to check it out, but I'm mentioning it anyway.


Friday, July 9, 2010

Can't you hear my motored heart?

...you're the one that started it.

This post is long overdue because of the World Cup. Go Spain!

Starting off with some reviews:

The Airborne Toxic Event - The Airborne Toxic Event (7/10)





Picked this up, not expecting a whole lot, but this isn't all too bad. Some tracks on this album sound like a more energetic The Strokes. Definitely more hits than misses, among them "Papillon" and the excellent closing track "Innocence".








The Gaslight Anthem - American Slang (7/10)





This rock outfit gets compared to Bruce Springsteen every time, and it is in fact a good reference for their sound. So many people were hyping this that I had to check it out, doesn't quite meet the expectations, but a good listen nevertheless. For me, it lacks a little punch, which my favourite track "Stay lucky" does have.








Beach House - Teen Dream (6.5/10)





(The album cover of this album is actually just a white surface.) Chillwave is a hype music genre from a couple months back, but is better suited to survive the tropic temperatures we're experiencing/enduring here at the moment. Listening to this, you can almost feel the drops of sweat forming on your forehead, as they are doing right now while I'm typing this, seeing that it's 31 degrees celsius in my bedroom. Umph. Ten tracks on the album, they're all about 4 to 5 minutes long, and most of them are more or less interchangeable. Since you might already know the first single "Norway", I picked the track "Zebra".








Regina Spektor - Far (6.5/10)





On her previous album, I liked 4 first tracks, the rest was kind of hit or miss. On Far, I like the first 7 tracks, then my attention fades away while listening. She seems to uphold a more constant level of songwriting here, although "Begin to hope" was a little more varied stylewise. Found a very nice live version of "Folding chair" from last year's edition of the Glastonbury festival. Enjoy!





Weezer - Red Album (0/10)





Words fail to describe how awful this album really is. Avoid at all cost!






Rock Ahoy, one of the coolest radio shows in a long time, recently broadcast its last episode. Mimicking pirate radios from the sixties, Katia V. mixed classic/cult songs from the sixties and seventies with modern day songs that were influenced by that same period. The three compilations (themed Madness, Badness and Sadness) this show spawned, are all a good listen. Next 2 tracks are also on those compilations:



The Drums - Saddest summer


It takes a couple of listens to get into this track that sounds just silly at first. Kind of reminds me of the "Girls" track by Beastie Boys. Note the cheesy saxophone at the end, these guys get away with just about everything.




Dum Dum Girls - Jail la la


A slight noise influence coupled with some nice vocal harmonies on this one.







Time for some rock?



The Swellers - Fire away


These guys were on tour with Paramore some months back, which makes a lot of sense. Think Foo Fighters with a slight emo-touch.




Kids In Glass Houses - Matters at all


Only incorporated this one because the video has a nice twist at the end. As it turns out, this band is on the roster of the Roadrunner label, which used to be metal-only, but I guess this is no longer the case. According to Wikipedia, The Wombats are also on the label.








It's ironic, just when The Shins are in hiatus and singer James Mercer just released the (mediocre) first single by Broken Bells (his collaboration with Danger Mouse), two bands pop up that sound a lot like The Shins and gain a lot of popularity. I guess it's the whole My Morning Jacket vs. Fleet Foxes story all over again.



Avi Buffalo - What's in it for


Here, the organ distinguishes a little from the standard The Shins formula.




Surfer Blood - Swim


Definitely adds a little more rock to The Shins equation, and some African influences (not unlike Vampire Weekend) in the middle part of the song. Like this a lot.







Next up, three tracks with an inherent fun-factor.



Caribou - Odessa


And now for something special, some jungle sounds on this track.





Miss Li - Oh boy


You probably know this already, it has been picked up for a commercial or something. Simple yet infectuous. Scandinavia does it again.





Mark Ronson - Bang Bang Bang


Sounding distinctly different from the tracks on his previous album, Mark Ronson goes more elektro on this track. The tempo change in the chorus makes me think of Santigold.







And closing off with a random nineties track, I forgot what a good Foo Fighters single this song is. From "There is nothing left to lose" and with some vocoder, excellent stuff. Listening to this now, the lyrics strike me as slightly odd though. Some lyrical snippets: "Eating deep inside you/If it was me, it was all I'd ever do" combined with "...and everyone starts going down (on you)". Orly, Dave?



Thursday, July 1, 2010

Radio singles top 10 01/01/2010-30/06/2010

Chose not to embed the videos, because browsers go a little crazy if you embed too many youtube videos on the same page (well, at least, mine does). Just click the titles (or better still, open them in a new tab) of the videos you're interested in.

01/2010 - 06/2010


TOP 10 NON-BENELUX


01 Lindstrom & Christabel - Lovesick

Hands down the most sensual/sexy track of the last half-year. Some people apparently mishear the first line as the Dutch sentence "Jeuk aan mijn billen", I am not one of them, however. I'm not really sure whether this is the official video or not, it's LSFW and seems to fit the song though.



02 The Drums - Let's go surfing

As far as revenue from use in tv show trailers and advertisements goes, this one might have come out as a winner. Supercatchy track with a propelling bassline, some surf guitars and the most infectious whistling riff since "Young folks". New single "Forever and ever amen" is also really good. Here's a quote from the band for no reason whatsoever:
"We only write about two feelings: one is the first day of summer when you and all of your friends are standing on the edge of a cliff watching the sun set and being overcome with all of your hopes and dreams at once. The other is when you're walking alone in the rain and realize you will be alone forever."
In the video, the singer goes for the 'bles'-hairstyle, popularized in Belgium by the singer from Das Pop.




03 Vampire Weekend - Cousins

I'm pretty sure Vampire Weekend is going to wreck the competition and bring home the "Most fun set of Rock Werchter 2010"-award back to NY. "Giving up the gun" and "Holiday" were A+ singles too, but this up-tempo, jubilant track is my personal favourite among those 3 singles. The video is pretty fun too.



04 The XX - VCR

The XX was all over the place until March, then everything went a little quiet. At Rock Werchter, they'll have to prove if they can survive the hype. This song features some glockenspiel and a slo-mo surf guitar riff, and their typical quiet vocal style.



05 The National - Blood buzz Ohio

The new Interpol record is coming out sometime in September, until then, their niche in the rock spectrum is open to a frontal attack from the "High Violet" album by The National, which gets excellent reviews everywhere and is bound to propel them to a similar popularity. All well deserved when you hear this single. "I still owe money to the money I owe/the floors are falling out from everybody I know". The singer suits up for this video and even dances around a little.



06 The Swiss - Bubble bath

Silly but not too silly, this is a nice, danceable track that keeps all hopes for a disco revival in 2010 intact. The video is spacy and not really worth checking out.



07 Beach House - Norway

The whole chillwave hype came along a couple of months too early, tracks like this seem ideally suited to get through one of those way too hot, sweaty summer days like we've been experiencing the last couple of days (I hate those, apart from the outdoor swimming). Check it out, and tell me, do you really believe the singer from this band is actually female?



08 Erykah Badu - Window seat

Always refreshing to hear this track among all the pop, rock, and old tracks that make up the playlist on my default radio station. Usually a controversial video has the purpose of masking the lack of quality in the songwriting (yup, that one was aimed at you, OK GO!), but this is not the case here. Ms. Badu is nearing her forties, however, I'm not complaining about the stripping going on in this video. Common and Andre 3000 know/knew what's up, that's for sure.



09 Gorillaz - Superfast jellyfish

Whereas "Stylo" was probably the best single (but kind of hard to get into), this track is just the most fun. The guys from De La Soul do an excellent job here. The official video is now removed from youtube, it was a 3D cartoon with jellyfish and microwaves. You're not missing a whole lot.



10 Eels - Little Bird

The most fragile track in this top 10, Mr. E sings about his broken heart. It doesn't happen that much that one gets sincerely moved while hearing a new single on the radio for the first time, so it deserves the number ten spot.



JUST DIDN'T MAKE THE TOP 10 (ALPHABETICAL ORDER):



  • Chemical Brothers - Swoon : Repititive, slightly hypnotic track, not their regular dance chart hit material.

  • Crystal Castles - Celestica : Superpoppy track from the überhip electronica duo from Toronto.

  • Delphic - Doubt : The new hope for New Order enthousiasts in the UK.

  • Empire of the Sun - Halfmast (slight return) : The debut album from this Aussie duo spawned 5 singles, this is the last one and my personal favourite. There's a lot of different stuff going on, and the peculiar voice from the singer usually brings a smile to my face. You can skip the first minute of the video (looong intro), the video features the singer in one of his outrageous (native american meets middle ages or something) costumes.

  • Florence & The Machine - Dog days are over : Florence tends to annoy me when she reaches the high decibel area, but she keeps it pretty sober here. The (new) video looks truly amazing too, with redheaded and long-legged Florence incarnating national vestimentary stereotypes, from Africa to Asia.

  • Goldfrapp - Rocket : After the folk escapades from her previous album, Goldfrapp is right back where she started, so catchy synthpop with generous doses of camp and kitsch this is.

  • Gossip - Pop goes the world : Adrenaline-packed third single from this bands breakthrough record.

  • Hot Chip - I feel better : A vocoder/auto-tune overdose in the verse balanced out by a killer chorus in the second single from the last album from these UK dance nerds. The official video involved some fictional boy band and has disappeared from youtube. It was pretty silly actually, you're not missing much.

  • Hurts - Better than love : New, promising UK duo going for the eighties synthpop sound. The video is retro-styled, and features some slo-mo playbacking, and eighties earrings and waxed haircuts, not unlike Human League videos were prone to be.

  • John Mayer - Heartbreak Warfare : Is it me, or does his voice resemble John Hiatt a little at times? "Noone ever really wins in heartbreak warfare".

  • LCD Soundsystem - I can change : I like the silly bleeps in this one.

  • Local Natives - Airplanes : Vocals and percussion stand out here, and give some rhythm and variation to the post-rock-ish guitar melodies.

  • Maria Timm - Did you get it? : The Scandinavian Lily Allen? Cute little track.

  • Marina and the Diamonds - Hollywood : Marina usually gets accused of being a Florence copycat jumping the bandwagon, whereas this song sounds nothing like Florence at all. Supercatchy chorus and a video displaying every USA cliche imaginable with Marina going for the cheerleader-look. I'm definitely seeing the Catherine Zeta-Jones resemblance she jokingly sings about.

  • Passion Pit - Little secrets : This single by the American dance collective with the infamously high-pitched singer sounds a lot like the Rex The Dog remix of Heartbeats by The Knife.

  • Phoenix - Lasso : Phoenix doing what they do best: making catchy pop singles ideally suited for radiostation airplay.

  • Roisin Murphy - Momma's place : This jumpy track with the good, jumpy bassline disappeared from the radiowaves way too quickly. The Irish singer still going for the danceable, updated Moloko-sound. Good stuff.

  • Shy Child - Disconnected : Another bouncy, danceable three-minute track with the 2010 obligatory eighties synthpop influences. Nothing too memorable here however.

  • Two Door Cinema Club - Undercover Martyn : This new Irish band pops up with this uptempo, danceable rock track. The video is inventive, but not really spectacular.

  • Wolfmother - White feather : These retro-rock Aussies are on standstill at the verge of breakthrough due to too much festival cancellations caused by everlasting lineup issues and and the singer's health.





TOP 10 BENELUX


01 Balthazar - Hunger at the door

Awards for 'best hook' and 'best group vocals' go to these youngsters, that seem to be doing well across the border among our Dutch-speaking neighbours. Good for them. Groovy rocking tune with their typical lazy-sounding vocal delivery in the verses. The video emphasizes on the 2 main composers in the band (you feel sorry for the 'secondary' band members), the most interesting part of the video is around the 1:20 mark, however.



02 Isbells - Reunite

Another excellent track by our local Bon Iver sound-alike that features at least 2 killer riffs.



03 Customs - The Matador

Another excellent, dynamic track by our local Interpol sound-alikes (and dress-alikes).



04 Amatorski - Come home

Nice, quiet, minimal track about the letter exchange between the singer's grandparents during the war.



05 Marble Sounds - The time to sleep

One half of Plastic Operator is now the driving force behind this band, going for the electronic Duyster sound, and succeeding wonderfully in this track. Sorry ladies, but looks like the thick-glass-spectacled, snowfall-enduring dude is already spoken for.



06 School Is Cool - New kid in town

Supercatchy debut single by the winners of this year's edition of Humo's Rock Rally. The video doesn't make any sense though.



07 Roadburg - Sequences of small-time kings

Bass-driven, mysterious track by the Limburg-band that shares members with (but not the overall silliness of) The Galacticos. The singer's voice is somewhere in the 'acquired taste' spectrum.



08 Admiral Freebie - The last song (about you)

Some really good hooks in this sober track by the artist that likes to (jokingly? I can't really tell) refer to himself as 'The Talent'. Less can be more, as is proven right here.



09 Stijn - Back in Detroit

A+ intro. Sounds less elektrofunk and more house than we're used from Stijn, hence the title, I guess. Duh!



10 The Intergalactic Lovers - Fade away

Song that is highly useful for comforting your English speaking toddler that can't catch sleep due to monsters underneath his/her bed. The video has a nice twist to it. Worth a watch.



JUST DIDN'T MAKE THE TOP 10 (ALPHABETICAL ORDER)



  • Broken Glass Heroes - Let's not fall apart : this new project with members Tim Vanhamel and Pascal Deweze sounds very Beatles-esque. The video features some toddlers waking up to discover their Santa Claus gifts, from a seventies or eighties home video. Pretty cool and nostalgic stuff.

  • Das Pop - Wings : Another near-perfect poptrack from Bent and his boys.

  • Fixkes - N**kvriendje : "Ik zen ier wèr nie goed in" is the Dutch oneliner of the first semester of this year.

  • Harvey Quinnt - Infinite street : The least you can say about this new band is that it doesn't really sound like any other Belgian band.

  • Howie & Lynn - Natural high : Nice complementarity of the jazzy voice and the electronic beats on this up-tempo track.

  • Landfill - Antidote : Nice debut single, nothing too special however.

  • Nona Mez - Counting : Good track by Milow's lesser known partner in crime and soundalike, also operating from Leuven city. Features some banjo, definitely an music instrument with a rekindled hipness in the first half of the year.

  • The Black Box Revelation - Do I know you? : T-Rex meets Mick Jagger? The video looks a little like the boys watched "De helaasheid der dingen" a few too times too many. Missed opportunity, if you ask me (but you're not, I know, I know...)