Archive for the 'Music' Category

Inos - Colours of the Sun (Nothing More, Unless)

Who says an artist only has one main ability? Just take a look at Danish fashion designer Henrik Vibskov. When he’s getting tired of making almost disturbing colourful garments, he goes banging the drums at his buddy Trentemøller’s live shows. It really proves that people just don’t have to be skilled at one art form, and that the same people could live off what they think is fun even though it won’t generate loads and loads of money (but that’s not why we’re here anyway, right?).

A fairly long known Internet friend of mine told me he had a musical project going on for about half a year ago and the other day he let me listen to the whole thing. Inos is the alias of Victor Jönsson, a 21-year old illustrator from Göteborg, Sweden. Primarily he works under the name Loud Major and nowadays has a whole collective of artists by his side.  Nothing More, Unless is his first (and maybe only) EP and, according to himself, the only reason he compiled it was to get to illustrate a cover sleeve of his own, but since this shit is too good to just wrap in a nice package and then wave off I don’t believe him at all.

Anyhow, think Keith Kenniff influenced IDM/Ambient with a sweeping soundscape and some raindrops and you’ve got a slight idea of what’s going on in the head of Mr. Jönsson. The whole EP can be downloaded for free at the Loud Major Collectives website, but hurry up since it will be gone by Monday!

Inos - Colours of the Sun

Lil’ Wayne Will Always Love You

Video ova here.

Good Night and Good Morning - Studentin (2008)

Would you like to hear an amazing album? Does some melancholy, soothing sadpop sound okay? It’s nothing spectacular. It’s not trying to be. And that’s why it’s beautiful. It’s the kind of music that you’d normally sit and read a book to, or fall asleep to, but you can’t. You can’t focus on anything but the songs.


Good Night and Good Morning - The Book Writer

Beautiful! And you can download it on CLLCT, hooray!

Stole all the flip flap

All on Y'All Da Mixtape cover image

 I fucking love Jib Kidder.  Shit’s raw as hell, and you never know what the fuck is going to happen.  Dude’s got more samples than you can shake a gangsta-ass stick at.  His most recent release (as far as I can tell) is All on Y’All Da Mixtape, which is out now on States Rights Records with a killer Pen & Pixel-style cover (seen above).  All on Y’All (not the mixtape) will be out on States Rights in December according to the Kidder’s virb profile (click on the album links on the side to hear preview tracks from all his releases).Here’s some tracks:

 
Jib Kidder - Flip Flap
 (from All On Y’All Da Mixtape) 

  
Jib Kidder - Bounce Rock Skate Roll
 (from All On Y’All Da Mixtape)

 
Jib Kidder - The Return
 (from “Grown/Groan” States Rights Records Compilation)

Buy All On Y’All Da Mixtape from States Rights Records or from iTunes

The Roaring Nineties

Put together by CLLCT’s Secret Chief (Luke!), better known by most as Secret Owl Society, this Lo-Fi compilation, The Roaring Nineties, covering the greatest hits of the 90s, is like most compilations, brimming with some amazing songs, some good and some bad. To keep this two-disc, twenty-six track beast at bay, I’ll just describe some of my favorites and mention a few others.

The Brooke (a tiny ocean) has graced us with two (that’s right) two awesome covers, her cover of Oasis’s “Wonderwall” being my favorite. Just an acoustic guitar and her dream-like voice, she manages to recontextualize this song, not in its sound or delivery, but in its emotional impact. It hits almost ten times harder than it did originally.

Shelby Sifers, along with help from the Sarcastic Dharma Society, cover Del Amitri’s “Roll To Me” a song I remember instantly, but don’t ever recall the original band’s name (or even the song title). Shelby manages to cover some new ground, articulating her voice in ways that sound more down-to-earth than ever before. It’s sweet and gives us a glimpse into an alternate universe where she would be selling millions of albums and the world was a better place.

Tinyfolk’s cover of the Elton John classic from the hit Disney film The Lion King, “Can You Feel The Love Tonight,” starts off a bit slow, but the Usher-influenced ending is totally perfect. If you like Bill and Valley Forge era Tinyfolk, this is a good reflection of that style with a hip-hop twist.

Dustin And The Furniture’s take on Third Eye Blind’s “Semi-Charmed Life” was probably my most anticipated cover on The Roaring Nineties and it is everything I hoped it would be and more. It is acapella, focusing solely on Dustin’s “sleepy brown bear” voice. What more could you want?

Uggamugga’s acoustic cover of “Wannabe” by The Spice Girls is so hilariously cute. Sung almost off key and featuring boy/girl vocals, there is something so infectious happening here.

Fudge’s almost acapella cover of the Red Hot Chili Pepper’s “Suck My Kiss” is so ridiculous you have to love it. Featuring a chorus of kazoos, handclaps and vocal sound effects, it reminds me of Weird Al Yankovic at his most insane.

Perhaps the most stunning cover is SFIAS with The Anchorites’ cover of Donna Lewis’s only hit, “Love You Always Forever.” Essentially a wall of noise, they only hint at the melody lying deep within the chaos. It is beautiful, heartbreaking and sublime.

Now I’m sad to say that both of Patrick Ripoll’s covers didn’t do much for me, although the first bit of “How’s It Gonna Be (originally by Third Eye Blind)” is actually quite cool and very different for Patrick, it sort of teeters off aimlessly. I do like the nice use of the Amen Break though.

Both Fire Island, AK covers are a bit dreary and I wanted to like Manipulator Alligator’s cover of TLC’s “Waterfalls” more than I did.

But, I can see what some of the artists were doing here. Some were trying to take these glaring monuments of mainstream ideology and turn them into what they are, manufactured dribble. I think that’s taking the easy route. Many of these songs, no matter how manufactured still spoke to us and the best covers here are ones that reflect the deep loving or enjoyment we had of these songs back when we were growing up.

Sold to raise money to help maintain CLLCT, the amazing community of artists and musicians that ALL OF YOU should be a part of, it is now available to download for free! Enjoy!

The Roaring Nineties

Links:
The Brooke (a tiny ocean)’s site
Shelby Sifers on Myspace!
Tinyfolk on Myspace!
Dustin And The Furniture on Myspace!
Uggamugga on Myspace!
SFIAS on Last.fm!

*anyone know anything about Fudge? I can’t seem to find anything on them.

Belly Boat - Dear Robert Hanoy (2007)

I first found Belly Boat thanks to Tinyfolk, who is an absolutely wonderful lovely fellow for uploading their music.

Belly Boat is two girls that are quite possibly faeries. They make wonderfully strange music reminiscent of the Microphones* on LSD, and they make it with piano tunes and sweeping accordion bleats.


Belly Boat - City

You can download Dear Robert Hanoy at CLLCT! Hooray!

*Also, they totally were on an album with Phil Elvrum. That alone is worth a listen.

Tuberculosis: Live on the Late Show Edition

I’m exhausted from denying my albums right to live. No jokey today. Just some Paul Schaffer.

Audioslave - “Cochise”
They Might Be Giants - They’ll Need a Crane
Golgo Bordello - Wonderlust King
Tom Waits - Chocolate Jesus
Rage Against the Machine - Guerrilla Radio
Antony and the Johnsons - You Are My Sister
The Beastie Boys - Ch-Ch-Check It Out (Fucking incredible performance)
The Red Hot Chilli Peppers - Higher Ground
The Vines - Get Free (in which Craig loses his fucking mind)
Andrew Bird - Plasticities
Tilly and the Wall - Bad Education
Arcade Fire - Rebellion (Lies)
Radiohead - Karma Police
Radiohead - 2 + 2 = 5
The National - Fake Empire
Feist - 1234
Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova - Falling Slowly
Interpol - PDA
Primus - Wynona’s Big Brown Beaver

Enjoy it.

Tycho - Cascade (Ghostly Swim)

tycho

Tycho happens to be one of my favorite musicians, and if you haven’t heard him, you are missing out. He reminds me of the Boards of Canada and PBS, and his graphic design is a constant inspiration and influence to my own.

There’s a new track on his myspace, and it’s absolutely brilliant. I can easily listen to it over and over again, it’s lovely and trip-hoppy and ambient and I think I’ve just listened to it six times while writing this.

It’s called “Cascade” and it’s from his album “Ghostly Swim”.
Check it out on his myspace, or listen here.


Tycho - Cascade

Album Review: Kiki and Peepee - The Sun Floods the World With It’s Vomit (2008)

Hey, look who’s back? Mr. “I’m gonna post on this blog every day, seriously”. Well, here I am. I’m sorry I’m late, but my alarm didn’t go off. For months.

To quote Michael Iaconelli, “Never underestimate the power of the hook.” Showtime at the Apollo knows it, Tony Todd knows it, and twee folksters Kiki & Peepee (Kendra Senrick and Stephen Hollinger respectively) sure as hell know it, as evidenced by their addictively catchy debut album “The Sun Floods The World With It’s Vomit”.

Kiki and Peepee rock The Orphanage in Chicago

Anyone who knows me knows that I have reservations about the twee. I’m weary of the twee. Suspicious of the twee. One side of it is just that I’m a miserable bastard, out to kill everyone’s good time. The other part is that I really value honesty in music, and the fact is that twee and sincereity don’t often go together. It seems like there’s always some kind of irony attached, and it can be hard to tell just how firmly the tongue is planted in the cheek. Kiki and Peepee are a notable exception. Kendra Senrick may have a voice that’s as adorable as kittens re-enacting the Civil War, but her songs often come from a real place of pain. In the incredible “Yellow & Backwards”, Kendra uses jaundice as a metaphor for feeling lost, lonely, and different with a refrain of “What stood on this spot?/Who helped me here? I can’t remember/I was born in November/I came out yellow and backwards/I am still yellow and backwards/I will always be yellow and backwards”.

But if there’s one thing that matches Kiki & Peepee’s introspective lyrics, it’s their energy. With a majority of the songs clocking in at under 2 minutes, The Sun Floods The World With It’s Vomit is a fast paced and frantic pop romp. Part of what makes the energy so strong are the hooks (if songs like “My Day Off” and “Gummy Worm Heart” don’t get stuck in your head, I’d see a doctor immediately) but a lot of credit has to be given to the skilled drumming of Stephen Hollinger. His fast and swinging percussive style keeps each song fresh, fun and completely awesome to dance to.

Kendra rocks dozens of faces at once

This energy is best experienced in the form of their explosive live shows. Mere words can’t do their live performances justice. Seeing Kiki and Peepee live is something akin to spending an evening with the cast of ‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?’. There’s going to be drinking, screaming, singing, and laughing at the things in life that hurt us the most, all at an intensity that can be overwhelming to the unprepared. While “The Sun Floods The World With It’s Vomit” can’t quite hit with the same power, it makes up for it with it’s more experimental sound collages and spoken word tracks like “Charlie” and “Knee-Deep-Deco”. These are always interesting but, more importantly, they do a good job tempering the rest of the album’s fast-paced pop.

Kiki and Peepee’s “The Sun Floods The World With It’s Vomit” isn’t available online, but if you contact them, I’m sure they could mail you a copy for about 7 bucks or so. And for such a great collection of pop music from such an amazing band, it’s well worth it.

Mp3’s:
Kiki & Peepee - Yellow and Backwards
Kiki and Peepee - Becky’s a Prize

Check out Kiki and Peepee on Myspace

We Heart Arts & ACOSM Records Doing The Good Stuff


Is that Shelby Sifers hiding behind that sign?

We Heart Arts is a truly wonderful organization that every Lo-Fi musician or anyone who believes in the power of creativity should get behind. It is non-profit and seeks to raise money for kid’s creative arts programs across the globe. Here are their tenants:

i. Creative arts teaches young people the value of lifelong active personal expressionism
ii. Creative arts teaches young people to question the world they live in
iii. Creative arts teaches young people that thinking outside of the box is an important mental function in life
iv. Creative arts teaches young people to engage in a social network of proactive young people invested in a community built on meaningful, sustained ideas and expressionism
v. Creative arts open up a world of opportunities for young people to grow and help others through arts therapy
vi. Creative arts can open up an avenue of communication for children with learning difficulties
vii. Creative arts can help children process and work through traumatic experiences
viii. Creative arts can provide peer interaction and a sense of community, independence and feelings of control

I for one agree whole-heartedly with these and in today’s world it is a whole lot harder to express yourself freely in the public sphere and kids shouldn’t be ashamed of what they create and love to do.

So if you want to support We Heart Arts in some way now is your chance. Write about it, make posters and take photos, make videos talking about it and buy the digital splits featuring so far Shelby Sifers, Eyes For Volume, Secret Owl Society and Fire Island, AK!

Here your chance to use your creativity to make a difference, and not just awareness either, but the more people take part the more things get done. Go!

My video for We Heart Arts:

In conjunction with We Heart Arts, ACOSM Records is a label that ya’ll are going to hear a lot about in the near future. Also started by Tony Cannings, he says this about ACOSM’s ideals; “Music is about passion, drive and the need to free you creatively from the monotony of everyday life. It’s about being flag bearers of a new cultural revolution, about having a voice and knowing how to use it, sometimes the quietest of voices can make the loudest noise!”

With recent closures or hiatuses of labels like Pop Monster and Valiant Death, we need labels like ACOSM to take up the new mantle of supporting the unbridled creativity of the Lo-Fi world. Like I said, big things will be happening soon, just you wait. But for now check out the likes of Lauren Elle and Everyone Except Me who are already on ACOSM getting the whole thing started.

Mp3s:
Lauren Elle-“I Wish My Heart Was A Stone”
Everyone Except Me-“50,000 Screaming Adolescents Can’t Be Wrong”

Links:
We Heart Arts on Myspace!
Buy The Digital Splits Here!
ACSOM Records
ACOSM Records on Myspace!
Lauren Elle on Myspace!
Everyone Except Me on Myspace!