11 December 2012

2012 Review Round-Up: November

it's december! here's the plan: as i work my way toward year-end musical festivities (listing! mixing! feasting!), i'm rounding up all (or nearly all) of my writerly output from 2012 with a series of posts, one per day, one for each month, over the next eleven (or twelve?) days. or bust!


now for november...home stretch...lotsa good stuff here, and hey look who's back already!

Lindstrøm
Smalhans

Hans-Peter Lindstrøm threw devotees of his shimmering cosmic disco productions for a loop in early 2012 with the release of Six Cups of Rebel, a wild and wooly joyride through nutty, prog-flavored excess – complete with bizarro cartoon voices – that was by turns campy, grotesque and sublimely gorgeous. It earned a swift and not entirely undeserved appraisal as Lindstrøm's "difficult" third album (not that his earlier work – say, the epic peregrinations of 2008's exalted Where You Go I Go Too – made for instantly digestible listening either.) It also set up a somewhat pat preordained narrative for Smalhans – which was recorded immediately after Cups and released a mere nine months later – as a much-needed back-to-basics corrective. It's certainly true that there's something of a pendulum swing in effect here, but it's also reductive (and unfairly dismissive of the extraordinary Cups) to label this a simple return to form. For one thing, this is almost equally foreign territory for the producer, who has never before turned his hand to dancefloor material quite this focused and streamlined, especially in such a straightforward presentation: the six cuts on Smalhans, each named for a traditional Norwegian foodstuff (from sausage to waffles), each sitting tidily within the four to six minute range, all set up their groove (florid disco; thumpy tech-funk) and ride it out, snugly and surely. At the same time, while it's hardly as overtly eccentric, there's nearly as much complexity, waggish humor and dizzying invention on display here as on Cups, made all the more dazzling by how neatly it fits into such a tight framework. The album was mixed by Lindstrøm's pal and countryman Todd Terje (who also created extended single mixes for several Smalhans tunes), and there are clear parallels with Terje's recent, highly melodic analog-synth fantasias like "Raygsh" and "Inspector Norse" – but there's really nobody out there who shares Lindstrøm's compositional knack for combining melody and misdirection; layering on the time-stretched hemiolas and side-stepping modulations, cycling through keys and textures with a masterful handle on tension and release. "Vōs-Sākō-Rv," in particular, stretches this approach to wonderfully delirious extremes, with each circuitous, contrapuntal build-up growing more daringly suspended than the last until a final, impossibly constrained moment of tension lunges back to earth with two massive snare thwacks. While each of these six pieces adds its own kernel of flavor – from the moody, incrementally shifting shuffle of "Lāmm-Ęl-Āār" to the triumphal, heaven-seeking "Vā-Flę-R" – and each is more than satisfying as a stand-alone bit of celestial dance euphoria, Smalhans is, like its predecessors, ultimately its own complete, unified statement; one that is, in its deceptively humble way, as ambitious and assured as anything he's done.

Bay Blue
s/t

For a while there, around the turn of the millennium, you could've built a small fortress (or at least a swanky bachelor pad) out of all the jazzy sample-based cut-up records filling record bins, from French House types like DJ Cam and St. Germain to Madlib's Yesterdays New Quintet, plus what seemed like half of the Ninja Tune stable (Mr. Scruff, DJ Food.) But it's not an aesthetic or approach that was getting much play a decade later on, which is partly why Bay Blue – the eponymous debut of Oakland-based producer Matt Chang (who's previously provided beats for Sole and Pedestrian, and collaborated with Sixtoo, under the moniker Matth) – is such a refreshing delight. Essentially doing for jazz what Ninja Tuner Kid Koala did for the blues on his similarly time-out-of-joint 2012 release, Twelve-Bit Blues, Chang carefully constructs wholly new compositions out of untold dozens of samples. And while his hip-hop background shines through on occasion with a touch of sly boom-bap, the focus is on squarely on instrumental interplay, which is organic and improvisatory enough (in feeling, at least) that Bay Blue can be classified as a "proper" jazz record about as easily as it can be called anything else. It's hardly beholden to any one era or style, spanning Frankensteined be-bop ("Don't Clap On The One And The Three"), recombinant Dixieland ("Postcard From New Orleans") and throwback Cuban jazz (the roiling "Ulises Takes The Silent Cinema By Storm"), along with the growling, Mingus-like "Take It Back Time" – maybe the most impressive thing here – and the musty, cinematic 78 RPM swing of "To The Cornerstore," which recalls early-period Daedelus at his dandiest. "Only A Sin If You Lose" tops a bossa groove with fluid guitar filligree and playfully mismatched vocal snippets, cut-and-pasted into a light-hearted gambling blues, while the seemingly more straightforward vocal cut "Fish Fried, Birds Blue" welds some vaguely unsettling field recordings onto a straight-ahead country blues stomp, complete with wailing harp. And a few pieces deviate substantially from the general jazz/blues template, landing closer to the winsome, organic IDM of ISAN or Plone ("Bumpin' in A Quiet Way"; the banjo-led folk-hop of "Fundamentals.") It'd be easy for a record like this to succumb to formula or gimmickry, especially given Chang's somewhat tokenist approach ("the Latin one," "the New Orleans one," etc.), but there's enough evident craft and inventiveness on display here – not to mention humor and charm – that Bay Blue stands as far more than a retro-flavored bauble, the album's bland, unconvincing "Blue Note-style" cover art notwithstanding.
originally published at AllMusic.com


Pop Levi
Medicine

"Sound is my first love!" proclaims future-retro space-monkey Pop Levi amid gyrating laserbeam synths and beefy acoustic chugging, and a quick 'n' dirty listen to Medicine's impeccably manicured rock'n'roll mess – whip-tight and righteously ragged in all the right spots, with a zippy sprinkle-topping of digital age mixing tricks – will attest that his passion ain't misplaced, though I've gotta divulge that he's getting some pretty heavy action on the side from Swagger and Groove. A return to the guitar-stroking glam-bam glory of Pop's debut after the crisper plasticine pastures of 2008's (hideously overlooked) Never Never Love, album number three bursts out the gate with the feverish wail and cheerleader-stomp drumbeat of demented dance-craze "Strawberry Shake," and pretty much keeps its pedal to the hard-strutting, hip-swinging boogie from there on out. There's a bit of a mid-album lull, with lower-octane tracks flanking the sole, merely decent ballad (a shame, as he's usually pretty good at them), but on the whole this is the fuzz-popping party-starting pan-galactic prescription you forgot to remember you were waiting for. [7.5/10]

Emeralds
Just To Feel Anything

To reference an earlier Emeralds album (their Editions Mego debut, albeit merely one of the dozen or so they issued between 2006-2010): What Happened? It's not that the Cleveland trio have made any specific, overwhelming alterations to their basic approach or well-established timbral palette – well, except the sudden preponderance of drum machines, which populate over half of these forty-two minutes, generally undergirding the sort of burbling Gavin Russom/Tangerine Dream arpeggiations introduced on 2010's Does It Look Like I'm Here? – but the sheer quantity of musical content, the amount of variation within a given track, is – by their standards – staggering. It's like Emeralds exploded, leaving shiny little shards all over everyplace. "Adrenochrome" is, hitherto unthinkably, actually aptly named; tense, archetypal chase-scene music featuring Mark McGuire's searing guitar leads, while the title track simply sparkles – the brightest, poppiest and most vital thing they've done, perhaps best described as chiptune Balearica (but better than that sounds.) Even the more characteristically droning, beatless pieces cover considerable ground in their collective sixteen-ish minutes. They'd probably appreciate me saying this: it's easily Emerald's least utilitarian album yet. [7.5] originally published in Magnet Magazine

Diamond Rings
Free Dimensional
[Pop]

T-dot pop-bot (and part-time punk) John O'Regan, aka Diamond Rings – he of the burnished baritone and rainbow eye-makeup – ups the glam and the gloss (and occasionally the gothiness) for his second album, Free Dimensional (Astralwerks), and it's probably the feel-good-est thing I've heard all year. Between Robynesque rapping, black-leather-jacket Cars guitars, and synthesizer settings stuck fast on Depeche mode, he gives us party anthems, empowerment anthems and aw-shucks sweetie-pie love anthems, plus, in "Day and Night," a pop-dance counting rhyme that ranks up there with Bill Haley, Feist and Lou Bega.

The Crystal Ark
s/t
[Dance/Electronic]

LCD Soundsystem may be dead, but DFA dances on. The label's latest party platter, The Crystal Ark, is the full-length debut from synth wizard/LCD mainstay Gavin Russom's new-ish project alongside artist-singer Viva Ruiz: an adventurous, bilingual punkfunk fiesta spiked with oscillator weirdness, tribal flourishes and trippy disco. There's a lot going on in these grooves, which share a loose, sprawling multi-culti flavor all their own, even when they also have a curious tendency to make you want to sing "Us V. Them" on top of them.

Ryan Leslie
Les Is More
[Hip-Hop/R&B]

Ryan Leslie wants to be Kanye so hard. The photogenic producer-turned-singer-turned-(evidently)-rapper fills Les is More (released via his own absurdly-named NextSelection Lifestyle Group) with a determined mixture of Watch the Throne-style conspicuous consumption (dubiously convincing, although he can certainly name lots of designers) with 808s and Heartbreak's wounded defiance and dopey hashtag flow (when not aping a higher-voiced, PG-13 Rick Ross) atop fully serviceable lite-funk and silky pop-R&B. Boastfully pretentious though he is, he can hardly touch Yeezy's supreme ego-eccentricity – which just might make him the game's most extravagantly delusional self-promoter.

Brandy
Two Eleven
[R&B]

Melisma is one thing, but Brandy's voice is really all about texture: luscious and creamy, with just the slightest, tangy hint of grit. It's a subtle thing, and almost unfailingly sublime. With a current R&B climate perhaps friendlier than usual to her perennial brand of moody, mature mid-tempo jams, Two Eleven (RCA) offers an especially vibrant set of songs (including one Frank Ocean writing credit); feistier than 2008's gorgeous and ignored Human, that navigates between classic and contemporary, from full-throated balladry to Timbaland-style bangers (and even a dodgy Chris Brown feature) without ever really pandering.

Taylor Swift
Red
[Pop]

Taylor Swift is (feeling) 22, and playing dress-up. Her fourth album tries on Unforgettable Fire-with-banjos anthemics; a couple slices of prime, Max Martin-guided girl-pop; a yawny Snow Patrol duet-ballad; even T-Swizz goes dubstep (for a few seconds.) Red (Big Machine) is too long by half, bogged down by weepy strummers that are neither as catchy nor personal as the ones she wrote at 15 (and it misses a fine opportunity to rhyme "stay stay stay" with "okay, Tay-Tay") but it skirts – at all costs – the mortal pop sin of being boring.

El Perro Del Mar
Pale Fire
[Indie/Pop]

Much like her pal and countrywoman Victoria Bergsman (Taken By Trees), El Perro Del Mar's Sarah Assbring has taken to cushioning her frail melancholy with warmly gauzy synthetics and surprisingly forward, clubby grooves. Which isn't to say that you can necessarily dance to all (or even most) of Pale Fire (Control Group), but its swaying soft-touch house, trip-hop and Swedish reggae grooves definitely help coax an unprecedented fullness and sensuality from the waifish singer, and it's a great look – best embodied on "Walk On By," the album's luscious, Massive Attack-cribbing high point.

Bat For Lashes
The Haunted Man
[Pop/Witchcraft]

We've had more Kate Bush-alikes than you can wave a wand at, from Tori to Florence, but none have matched the art-pop faerie queen's emotional complexity and sonic expanse quite like Bat for Lashes' Natasha Khan. The Haunted Man (Capitol), her typically ambitious third outing, finds Khan and a cast of dozens enacting an opulent pageant of windswept pagan rituals, dark electro-gilded reveries, and heart-stoppingly majestic ballads; it's a big-screen sweep that's at once a richly wrought and seductively intimate.


Brian Eno
Lux
[Ambient]

Not many genres can legitimately claim to have been invented by a single person, but Ambient comes close. Lux (Warp) – seventy-five reverberant minutes of discrete (and discreet) notes that arrive and linger, swell and recede in variable, pleasingly unpremeditated-seeming fashion – is a strong reminder that Brian Eno's contributions to the field go well beyond mere conceptualization, to the point of mastery. "Lux" means light, of course, and very aptly so, but here it also seems to connote luxury: despite its modest means, this music manages to feel gossamer, almost insubstantial, and yet somehow sumptuous.

Tim Maia
World Psychedelic Classics 4: The Existential Soul of Tim Maia: Nobody Can Live Forever
[Soul/Funk/Brazilian]

With The Existential Soul of Tim Maia: Nobody Can Live Forever, Luaka Bop Records revives their intermittent World Psychedelic Classics series in tremendously groovy fashion, paying tribute to a Brazilian icon who was his country's answer to Sly Stone in more ways than one. (Think acid, though, rather than cocaine.) Culled from his extensive 1970s output but leaning heavily on the two volume Racional – cult albums in a very literal sense – this comp is bursting with righteous, Tropicalia-infused soul and searing organ-led funk, sung – in both English and Portuguese – with varying degrees of coherence but unflagging, infectious sincerity.

Andy Stott
Luxury Problems
[Electronic]

With a spaciousness and sophistication recalling fellow 2011 breakout producer (and b&w photography enthusiast) Nicolas Jaar, Andy Stott's Luxury Problems (Modern Love) is subtle enough to make a fine coffee-table soundtrack. But its grayscale expanse also invites deeper, not-so-easy listening; evoking a burnt-out, post-industrial landscape in concrete slabs of foreboding, low-BPM house; torpid dub techno; ambient field recordings and a stray drum'n'bass detour. The chill is tempered, just slightly, by the vocal presence of Alison Skidmore (Stott's former piano teacher), ranging from sultry to airily operatic; forlorn solitude to thrumming, Julianna Barwick-like layering.

Ital Tek
[Electronic]
concert preview

Engaged in a similar sort of naggingly diffuse thinking-feller's future-bass to his Planet Mu peers Machinedrum and Kuedo, Brighton beatsmith Alan Myson prolongs the label's love affair with the buzzed-up beat-rates and jittery micro-loops of Chicago footwork on his third full-length as Ital Tek, the almost-aptly named Nebula Dance. Almost, because while Myson certainly knows from nebulous, swaddling these tracks in lush yet mildly ominous grayscale soft-synths, his dedication to dance in its less abstract, more terrestrial form – the lowly business of working actual feet – seems slightly more contingent. When he does deign to let it bump – with flecks of electro typically filtered through the ragga end of jungle and/or hints of Ninja Tune-style turntablism – it becomes a dance of both cerebral and corporeal dimensions.

Matthew Dear
[Electronic/Pop]
concert preview

Emerging inconclusively from the grime and sleaze of 2010's nightmarish Black City, Matthew Dear blazes a funny kind of light on Beams (Ghostly International), circling back to the elliptically alluring avant-pop of 2007's Asa Breed while sinking ever deeper into mechanistic murk and terse, Talking Heads-y art-funk. The one-time microhouse poster boy's fifth full-length opens in aberrantly sunny fashion: a burbling pseudo-tropical groove, complete with samba whistles – but just as you're thinking he could probably give this a few tweaks, sell it to Rihanna and retire early, in comes that ineffable, dead-eyed monotone – Dear's distinctive double-tracked creepy crooning – intoning characteristically inscrutable-yet-unsettling couplets, as if to underscore the unique if rather uncomfortable interstice he's carved out for himself between techno and pop, and assert that he'll hardly be relinquishing it anytime soon.

Icona Pop
[Pop]
concert preview

Several singles in, 90s bitches Aino Jawo and Caroline Hjelt exploded into heavy rotation this summer with the unstoppable, Charli XCX-penned "I Love It," which might be the most euphoric break-up song of all time: a sawtooth sugar-rush shout-along that's too busy reveling in reckless release to even bother sounding spiteful. (The titular "it" has no referent more specific than the liberation of crashing your car into a bridge. Not that it needs one. I don't care!) Excepting the screechy bro-step (sis-step?) of "Ready for the Weekend," The Iconic EP (Atlantic/Big Beat) mostly finds the Swedish duo displaying a touch more subtlety – not that that's saying much – while remaining just as ingratiating. Touchstones include The Knife's vocal warpage and burbly electro-tropicalia and Robyn's bubble-disco populism, but the Nordic-pop princess whose spirit they most evoke is the stylishly sassy, too-long-absent Annie.

Men Without Hats
[Pop/Dance]
concert preview

They may be most readily associated with the frolicking dwarf jester of "The Safety Dance" video, but Men Without Hats were, at least, two-hit wonders (remember "Pop Goes The Word"? It will become fleetingly relevant again in approximately one month!) Granted, there probably weren't many clamoring for the Canadian synth-poppers' resurgence, but that's part of what makes delightfully superfluous Love In The Age Of War (Cobraside) – the product of the band's second "reunion" in twenty years (with frontman Ivan Doroschuk the sole original member) – such an unexpected blast. For all the '80s-rehashing of our young century, MøH's trademark sound – those chintzy, ultra-precise synths; dogmatically rigid new-wave rhythms; Doroschuk's vehement, comically stern delivery – remains instantly recognizable and emphatically their own.

R. Kelly
[R&B]
concert preview

Robert Kelly's had a productive 2012: issuing his spectacularly-titled memoir (Soula Coaster: The Diary of Me) in June; providing the inspired opening to Kanye's otherwise spotty posse record and, most recently, re-upping his tireless Trapped in the Closet saga for a promised eighteen new episodes. Meanwhile, Write Me Back (RCA), his twelfth album in twenty years, continued the retro-minded vein of 2010's Love Letter, drawing inspiration from the silky-smooth 1970s disco-soul – blatantly hearkening to Teddy, Smokey, Barry and Songs In The Key-era Stevie – along with two of the corniest '50s-rock pastiches this side of Smokey Joe's Cafe. (All suffused with that ineffable Kellsian wit, complete with outlandish extended metaphors like "Fallin' From The Sky"; essentially the anti-"I Believe I Can Fly.") Hard to say whether tonight's setlist will favor the family-friendly sincerity of this recent mode or look ahead to the forthcoming, presumably self-explanatory Black Panties (due next year), but it's rather curiously dubbed the "Single Ladies Tour," which could constitute a clue.

Nas
[Hip-Hop]
concert preview

Holding true, perhaps, to his Jay-Z-decreed "one hot album every ten year average," Nas dropped his eminently enjoyable tenth album this summer, close to two decades after his much-beloved debut. And now I'll stop alluding to Illmatic, as it's an unfair and irrelevant reference point in this and most other contexts: nobody but nobody makes rap albums with that kind of single-minded concision anymore, and Life is Good (Def Jam) is no exception. Rather, it's a gleefully disparate mish-mash: hardened-thug tough talk, Hallmark-card sentimentality, "back in the day" chin-stroking (both musical and lyrical), a summery pop-leaning trifle or two, plus an assortment of vitriol and fond remembrance for ex-wife Kelis, and noteworthy posthumous contributions from both Heavy D and Amy Winehouse. Nas' storied verbal skills are in greater evidence here than they've been in a while; even if he falls off again, here's looking forward to 2022.

A$AP Rocky
[Hip-Hop]
concert preview

Hailing from Harlem, but professing an aural and lyrical allegiance to Houston, A$AP Rocky may be the most preternaturally poised among the recent crop of net-abetted underground-to-worldwide rap stars. He ain't saying nothing new – but he says it with the waggish nonchalance of a smirking, perennially faded playboy who's still got a hint of baby fat between his French braids and gold-crusted grill; in easy-flowing, sometimes Spanish-tinged rhymes; atop woozy, artfully lavish productions from a who's-who of right-now beatmakers (Clams Casino, Hit-Boy, 40, Burn One); broadcasting unbounded confidence, style for days, flawless curatorial instincts – swag, however you wanna slice it. We'll wait a few more months for the (ironically?) delayed LongLiveA$AP (RCA/Polo Grounds) to properly follow last year's similarly-titled banner mixtape, but its eponymous tour rolls right on, folding in the six-deep A$AP Mob – complete with Ramones-style matching monikers – and West Coast homeboy Schoolboy Q, whose Habits and Contradictions (Top Dawg) pairs a comparable syrup-addled smoothness with deeper-pitched gangsta gravitas.

Kid Koala
[Blues/Turntablism]
concert preview

Eric San isn't much of a kid anymore, but he's definitely still a whiz – one of the most playfully expressive (and jaw-droppingly talented) turntablists out there, and an impishly clever musical and visual humorist to boot. For 12 Bit Blues (Ninja Tune), his first proper full-length in six years, the perennially sweet-natured Montrealer cobbled countless crackly moans, wails, harmonica peals and blue-note piano licks into a dozen slices of (literally) warped, shambling hip-hop blues, folding woe into whimsy and back again. It's quite a feat, but the accompanying "Vinyl Vaudeville" stage show should offer more than just a technical scratchmaster nerd-out: besides the koala-suited Kid recreating his tracks on three turntables and a pair of classic/archaic 1987-vintage SP-1200 samplers, we've been promised puppets, dancing girls, comedy, parlor games, "almost life size" robots, and a giant functional cardboard gramophone.

Tame Impala
[Rock]
concert preview

Influential as they obviously are, it's truly rare to encounter a record that actually, legitimately sounds like the Beatles. Strictly speaking, Lonerism (Modular), the fantastically swirly second full-length by Perth's Australia's Tame Impala, doesn't either – they'd never issue an LP so relatively monolithic in sonic texture and coloration (that's no knock; by any other measure it's practically kaleidoscopic) – but it's a remarkable facsimile of what might've emerged had the Fabs stuck it out through '74 or so, dropped deep into a Floyd-ian trip, returned to their formative Germany to dig the nascent Krautrock/Kosmiche groove, retained Lennon on all lead vocals (Kevin Parker's laconic, often-Leslie'd voice is a dead ringer) without sacrificing McCartney's preternatural melodicism (in the bassline and everywhere else), and taught Ringo some killer slow-motion psych-funk fills.

David Wax Museum
[Folk]
concert preview

David Wax Museum's terrific fourth album, Knock Knock Get Up (self-released), finds the Boston-based outfit expanding and enriching their already exuberant brand of hybrid Mexican-American folk-pop to practically transcendent proportions, slathering on the horns, organs, sparkling synthesizers, accordion and tubular bells for a big, boozy NPR-approved party. But even stripped to their core duo – the debonair Mr. Wax on assorted jaranas (five-string Mexican chordophones) and guitars; the fantastically-named Suz Slezak on fiddle and her ever-popular quijada de burro (donkey jawbone) – they're still capable of raising plenty of righteous ruckus, while offering helpful bon mots and romantic advice: "Don't trust lovers who fail to recognize you from a distance/they should know you better than to need visual assistance."

Cold Specks
[Folk/Soul]
concert preview

The music of Cold Specks – 24-year-old Canadian songstress Al Spx (not her real name either) – feels as remote and, well, cold as her native Etobicoke sounds like it must be. (Actually it's just a part of Toronto.)  I Predict A Graceful Expulsion (Mute) embodies the epic, enigmatic weight of its quasi-biblical title: a collection of sparse, dark, modern-yet-timeless folk hymns, rife with a bluesy fervency that's at once shadowy and soothing – thanks mostly to Spx's astonishing, craggily soulful voice. It's the sort of startling, ear-turning sound that might prompt the coinage of entire new genre contrivances, like "gothspel" (or Spx's own description, "doom soul") if that didn't feel so pointlessly, imprudently flippant around music this nakedly elemental.
originally published in Philadelphia City Paper



10 December 2012

2012 Review Round-Up: October

it's december! here's the plan: as i work my way toward year-end musical festivities (listing! mixing! feasting!), i'm rounding up all (or nearly all) of my writerly output from 2012 with a series of posts, one per day, one for each month, over the next eleven (or twelve?) days. or bust!

continuing with october, the king of months; action-packed, full of dynamic, fascinating characters and unexpected plot twists.  i mostly just remember the goofy promo videos for it (like the one which showed them making the cover art...live action collage!) but i think i'm gonna have to go back and listen to this why? album again; this review makes it sound pretty good!
Why?
Mumps, Etc.

Returning to the brighter, bolder strokes of 2008's much-beloved Alopecia after its relatively somber sibling record (and follow-up), Eskimo Snow, the fifth album from Yoni Wolf and company is their most assured work to date; the sharpest expression of an aesthetic that remains undeniably, wholly their own. It's also probably their most balanced offering, with equal weight given to emotional heft, melodic sweetness, Wolf's deft, rap-like lyricism and the band's richly colorful arrangements. Mumps, Etc. doesn't entirely break new ground in any of those areas, except perhaps the latter – beyond the now-familiar layers of keyboards and mallet percussion, they called in orchestral musicians and a choir to further flesh out the album's sonics. Indeed, pretty much everything here could easily have fit on Alopecia. In other words, you can expect reams of Wolf's witty, diaristic verse, peppered with wry quotables and frequently dazzling internal rhymes, set against lovely, unpredictable backdrops full of instrumental ear-candy – this time out they're positively sumptuous, with an abundance of harps, marimbas, strings, flutes, and female harmonies, plus a bit more boom-bap in the percussion department. As for Wolf, he's in top form throughout. Riffing on malady and disease (per the album's title; both mental and physical); death and aging (he is, after all, "pushing past thirty"); life's absurd detritus (from "G4 motherboards with '90s porn in their cache" to "the angular Etruscan tchotchke mom-mom got me at the Met gift shop"); a bit of sex, and his music career (as well as the prospect of retirement – he envisions himself, like your mom, smoking weed and listening to "that Garrison Keilor"), he is, by turns, bleak, sardonic, bemused and humbly, philosophically hopeful. He also lays out his (typically downbeat) themes in a series of atypically straightforward chorus hooks: "I am not okay, boys." "I'll never shirk this first world-curse: a steady hurt and a sturdy purse." "I know with no uncertainty/that I'm uncertain and I don't know." That last is from "Kevin's Cancer," one of several lyrics wherein Wolf grapples with religion more directly than he has in the past – a natural enough topic for the mortality-obsessed son of a rabbi, though interestingly there are nearly as many Christian references here as Jewish ones. Opener "Jonathan's Hope" finds him addressing the Lord directly: "Will you spell out love in the lashes life serves up/or am I just a red bump in the rash of cash worship?" He also comes up with a handful of excellent new epithets for himself: "the blundering braggart," "the doctor of ramble and world scramble." Sure, you could call it solipsistic – a word that's crying out for a labyrinthine Yoni rhyme, if ever there was one – if self-deprecatingly so – but Wolf is as honest and, in a greater sense, as generous a songwriter as we have, and Mumps, Etc. may be his finest gift yet.

Ultraísta
s/t

A trio of inevitably unequal proportions, Ultraísta consists of London-based artist/singer-songwriter Laura Bettinson (whose other musical endeavors include Femme and Dimbleby & Capper) and Los Angeleno session drummer Joey Waronker (Walt Mink, Ima Robot, Beck, R.E.M.) along with the headline-stealing Nigel Godrich – longtime producer for (and sometimes-designated "honorary member" of) Radiohead. The easy and obvious comparisons (and the pre-release anticipation from Radiohead fans) are readily borne out by the music on Ultraísta's self-titled debut, whose dense, dreamy matrix of buzzing synths, precise but bloodless drumming, digital stutters and liquid clicks immediately recalls the similarly dominant textures on The King of Limbs and, to a lesser extent, Kid A and Thom Yorke's The Eraser. (Waronker and Godrich, who've previously crossed paths on projects with Air, Beck and Paul McCartney among others, also play together in the Yorke-led Atoms for Peace.) That's not to underplay Bettinson's contributions to the project, which, according to interviews, was conducted as a full three-way collaboration. Her vocals, while not always the most prominent element of a given track – the clearest indication that this is undeniably a producer's record – definitely help give the album its distinctive character, one which hearkens back to the '90s-era arty ennui of Broadcast, Stereolab, and early Goldfrapp. Like those groups' singers, Bettinson's presence here is human and personable but not overly demonstrative, equally able to step forward, on more melodically inclined pieces like "Bad Insect," "Static Light" and the bewitching "Smalltalk" (not coincidentally, the same three cuts that were made available prior to the album's release), or to blend in to the shimmering expanse of sound, as with the drifting, incantatory fragments permeating "You're Out." As a collection of songs, and particularly as a "pop" record (inspirations for the group reportedly included Rye Rye and Whigfield, which seems far-fetched at best), Ultraísta feels a bit unfulfilled, but as a work of sound and atmosphere it's captivating, predictably excellent work, worthy of attention not only from fans of Godrich's better-known buddies (and especially those who might have found The King of Limbs to be slightly too distant or understated), but anyone with an interest in the still-fertile interstices between atmospheric electronica and indie rock.
originally published at AllMusic.com

Crime & The City Solution
A History Of Crime, Berlin 1987-1991: An Introduction to Crime & The City Solution

This Australian post-punk group's entry in Mute's idiosyncratic, artist-selected "An Introduction To…" series – timed to coincide with an unexpected revival/resurgence – opts, per its title, to focus on only the final, most fertile incarnation of the long-running ('77-'91) band – one which shared members with both Einstürzende Neubauten and Nick Cave's Bad Seeds. A History of Crime includes the lion's share of material from their last three albums, and it's an abundance of riches, especially for such a short period, from the gothic, funereal drone of "The Bride Ship" to the surprisingly bouncy, driving, quasi-country of "On Every Train" and "I Have The Gun"; from 1988's brooding, incantatory "All Must Be Love" to the slightly warmer, wider-ranging material from 1990's Paradise Discotheque. This was clearly a fiercely adventurous and unusually inspired outfit, weaving together musical and conceptual strands that would later be picked up by acts as disparate as Pulp, Morphine, Afghan Whigs, Tindersticks and their compatriots Dirty Three, with the expressive, slyly theatrical vocals of frontman/songwriter Simon Bonney serving as a magnetic, incandescent focal point. [8]
originally published in Magnet Magazine

Wanda Jackson
Unfinished Business
[Rock'n'Roll/Country]

There probably aren't too many septuagenarians who go around telling off fast-talking "boys" with "come-hither stares," or warning women that she'll steal their men in her smooth-riding Cadillac. Thank goodness no-one told Wanda Jackson. The once-and-future rockabilly queen – who'll be 75 next week – reaffirms her crown on Unfinished Business (Sugar Hill) a ripping set of rock'n'roll chestnuts, classy country stylings and a heartfelt touch of gospel. Justin Townes Earle, producer (and occasional duet partner) here, keeps things considerably looser than last year's rather overcooked Jack White-helmed date.

Django Django
s/t
[Brit-Pop]

Django Django's buzz-stoking (and Mercury Prize-nominated) self-titled debut (Ribbon Music) – which opens with two of the year's funnest, catchiest rock singles – sounds a bit like XTC and Hot Chip on holiday in the highlands with Super Furry Animals and Tunng, all singing and dancing round about the campfire. Yep, it's another bunch of UK art-school lads (Scotsmen in this case) having their wiry, whimsical way with us, mingling pastoral folk and fizzy pop into a patchwork of their own design, replete with woodsy harmonies, bleeping synths and peppery acoustic riffs. Jolly good show Djangos, jolly good.

Woolfy Vs. Projections
The Return of Love
[Balearic/Downtempo]

Drifting on an endless luke-warm lilt; awash in acoustic strums, steel drums and starry-eyed synth pads; so fragrantly lush and fluffy you could sink right through it (even the uptempo funk numbers are smooth enough to nap to) – Californian slow-disco dreamers Woolfy vs. Projections' second album is practically dreary in its loveliness. What saves The Return of Love (Permanent Vacation) from utter anhedonia – and separates it from the vast majority of modern Balearica – is a batch of songs that actually manage penetrate the haze, even if they have to quote Steely Dan to do it.

Daphni
Jiaolong
[Dance/Electronic]

A far cry from the pastoral paisley flourishes and kraut-fuzz of his early Caribou days, Dan Snaith's full-length bow as Daphni is less a wholesale reinvention than the logical extension of 2010's EDM-embracing Swim. Basically, he's just been having way too much fun with vintage synths. The dancefloor-primed cuts on JIAOLONG (Merge) – Afrobeat recastings, slow-burn swingstep shuffles, acid-zapped hard house – are more impulsive than anything he's done; fresh, zingy and a little dangerous. But while melody takes a definite backseat, Snaith's instinctive musicality gets filtered through gut-busting soul-horn samples, Eastern-tinged noodles and angry-robot blurts.

Miguel
[R&B]
concert preview

Miguel's arsenal of lines ranges from pseudo-erudite ("let my love adorn you") to obliquely salacious ("arch your back; point your toes") to bluntly calculating ("how many drinks will it take...") to flat-out dopey ("do you like love?...me too!") But it hardly matters what he's actually saying – his delivery's so throbbingly smooth he could be crooning the proverbial phonebook. Plus he's clearly a total softy – invoking God in the feminine, interpolating the freaking Zombies (and William DeVaughn, almost) plus the album's called Kaleidoscope Dream – and if Prince taught us anything it's that sensitive types are the true freaks. (And, yeah, the beautiful ones will hurt you every time.) Stuff it: you can keep yr Weeknds, your Frank Oceans, even (the mixtape was better anyway) – I'm going home with Miguel.

Le1f/Das Racist
[Hip-Hop]
concert preview

They might not appear to have too much in common – well, apart from killer mic skills and identities that run defiantly counter to established hip-hop conventions. But Das Racist – everyone's favorite multi-culti trickster-hipster "not joking/just joking" rap group – and Le1f – a flamboyantly gay electro-rap diva with strong connections to New York's drag ball scene – go way back. To Wesleyan University, in fact, where Das Racist's Himanshu Suri and Victor Vasquez met in a "Students of Color for Social Justice" dorm, and where Le1f – a.k.a. Khalif Diouf – produced the beat for the duo's name-making hit/meme "Combination Pizza Hut and Taco Bell." Four years and three full-lengths later, DR (who've been keeping busy with a steady stream of guest spots and solo mixtapes) issued Le1f's debut Dark York mixtape via their Greedhead imprint: a soupy, intergalactic beatscape that feels simultaneously cartoonish and sinister. It also boasts the tremendously catchy "Wut," whose one-note bari-sax snap beat and lightning tongue-waggling scream for "Combination"-level virality.

Willis Earl Beal
[Soul/Folk]
concert preview

The anomalous means by which Willis Earl Beal came to attention – a crudely-drawn flier that made its way to the cover of Found Magazine; a colorfully improbable, oft-repeated personal backstory – have generated an inevitable focus, bordering on fetishization, on the 28-year-old Chicagoan's outsider oddball status. And the scratchy, years-old home recordings presented on Acousmatic Sorcery (Hot Charity/XL) hardly discourage that emphasis. But while there's no denying Beal's eccentricity, there's real artistry here, not just a freak show. Even with the makeshift instrumentation, rudimentary musicianship and nonexistent production values – Beal's professed some justifiable embarrassment about his songs seeing wide release in this form – his impressive stylistic range (raw, field-holler-like blues; gently poppy strummers; seasick Tom Waits surrealism; glinting lap-harp instrumentals; sing-song proto-hip-hop) and his commanding, richly soulful singing voice shine right through. His live show, if hopefully more deliberate in presentation, should be every bit as intimate – and it's our best chance, for now, to glimpse beyond the reductive folk-art savant caricature.

The Mountain Goats/Matthew E. White
[Singer-Songwriter]
concert preview

John Darnielle's fourteenth-ish Mountain Goats album bursts open with surging strums, seething intensity, and a lyric – "Do every stupid thing that makes you feel alive..." – that grits teeth in the face of near-unendurable circumstances. It's characteristic almost to the point of self-parody, instantly recalling the raw urgency of classic MGs anthems like "This Year," and it's potent as hell. The rest of Transcendental Youth (Merge) follows suit, rife with the darkness and desperation that is Darnielle's richest métier – though the characters given voice in these songs, mostly sufferers of some form of mental illness, are particularly troubled even by his standards. The proceedings are augmented (or perhaps tempered) by several sumptuous, chorale-like horn charts penned by Richmond, VA's Matthew E. White, who'll be on hand tonight to share some of the gentle, devotional folk-soul epics from his debut Big Inner (Spacebomb/Hometapes) – an unlikely intermingling of Van Dyke Parks, Curtis Mayfield and Spiritualized – which occupies almost precisely the opposite end of the emotional spectrum.

Jens Lekman/Taken By Trees
[Indie/Pop]
concert preview

In the half-decade (to the day, almost) since his previous album, Swedish softy Jens Lekman spent several years in Melbourne, Australia, where he engaged in his usual regimen of romance and heartbreak; to judge from the barely-veiled poignancy which permeates his characteristically charming I Know What Love Isn't (Secretly Canadian), it was mostly the latter. Meanwhile, his labelmate and fellow globetrotting Gothenberger (and former Concrete) Victoria Bergsman seems to have had a somewhat easier time of it elsewhere in the Pacific: to follow up her overlooked 2009 gem East of Eden, which she recorded in Pakistan, she teamed with Henning Fürst of Balearic electro-popsters The Tough Alliance and traveled to Hawaii, emerging with the suitably sunkissed, blissfully woozy and positively love-drunk Other Worlds.

Jeffrey Lewis
[Singer-Songwriter]
concert preview

Jeffrey Lewis' songs have grown more nuanced and poetic since his debut; his themes have gotten more philosophical (although lovelorn loneliness still features most prominently), but the waggish wit, quirky topicality and earnestly conversational sensibility that reached fuller flower on last year's "A Turn in the Dream-Songs" and 2009's great, mortality-oriented "'Em Are I" were already fully established by his charmingly scruffy earliest official release. The Last Time I Did Acid I Went Insane (and Other Favorites), a compilation of DIY cassette recordings issued by Rough Trade in 2001, is now available on vinyl for the first time, in a ten-year anniversary edition (well, almost) from Don Giovanni Records. It's as good as any excuse for a tour, not that we need any justification for a chance to catch New York's most entertaining (and most endearingly neurotic) songwriter-cartoonist in action. Hopefully he brings along some of his ingenious "low budget videos" – large-format lyric-illustrating flip-books – which are perhaps the best expression of his twin supertalents.

Cuddle Magic
[Chamber Folk/Art-Pop]
concert preview

Semi-local acoustic chamber ensemble Cuddle Magic manage the neat trick of being utterly adorable in a way that doesn't make you take their warmly cerebral, obliquely poignant classical-jazz-folk-pop – they don't exactly play any of these kinds of music, but they don't exactly not play them either – any less seriously. Their third full-length, Info Nympho (Fyo), includes compositions by fully half of the band's ten members, and while its title is an apt idiom for our contemporary instant-gratification search-engine culture, and there is indeed the occasional hint of internet-era supersaturation here – the terse, touching "Hoarders," or "Disgrace Note," which scans like a Wikipedia page ("Category: Suicides by Creative Curmudgeons") set to verse – they generally operate at a deliberate, old-fashioned pace that invites and occasions some welcome mental readjustments.

The Sea and Cake/Matthew Friedberger
[Indie Rock]
concert preview

On parts of Runner (Thrill Jockey), their ninth LP in almost twenty years (tenth if you count last year's concise Moonlight Butterfly), The Sea and Cake hew closer to conventional indie rock/post-punk archetype than ever before, augmenting their typical cleanly fluid structures with almost shoegazy guitar noise – without ever ceasing to sound entirely like themselves. Their labelmate and fellow Chicagoan Matthew Friedberger – best known as the Fiery Furnaces' fraternal half – is as erratic and willfully difficult as they are affably dependable; he, by contrast, has released nine-or-ten LPs in the last two years (!), the latest of which, Matricidal Sons of Bitches, stretches four mostly-instrumental "suites" across forty-five mostly minute-or-so tracks. With buckets of wheezing synths which sound about a hundred years old, and snatches of creaky old jazz and misterioso beatbox ballroom, it's expectably quirk-heavy, but surprisingly listenable – it'd work equally well as a soundtrack for a comically heroic silent film or for cleaning your cuckoo-clock collection.

Calexico
[Rock/Roots]
concert preview

The big story with Calexico's seventh proper full-length is that Joey Burns and John Convertino decamped from their long-time home base of Tucson – evidently, at least in part, to escape the distractions of new fatherhood – to record the album in New Orleans, more specifically the sleepy West bank neighborhood which gives the album its name. It's good copy, but Algiers (Anti-) turns out to have almost no audible connection to the City that Care Forgot (even if that nickname has a distinctly Calexican ring to out.) In fact, it's just as steeped in the romance and mystery of the Southwest as anything they've done; moody, slow-rolling desert rock laced with Norteño, Mariachi and dusky, dusty blues.

Kimbra
[Pop]
concert preview

Kimbra is every bit as much of a pop chameleon as her duet-partner and fellow Antipodean Gotye, whose "Somebody That I Used To Know" has served as her international (musical) calling card. The quiet intensity she deployed so effectively on that song, however, is markedly little in evidence on Vows (Warner Bros), which instead flits from sound to sound, alternately recalling Janelle Monae, Feist (the domestically-inclined doo-wop of "Settle Down" is basically an even scattier "Mushaboom") and sunshine-pop glitter-princesses like Lenka or the Bird and the Bee's Inara George. She's not afraid to layer on the Disneyfied sonic excess – strings and chimes, harpsichords and xylophones, funhouse samples and backing vocals galore – and her approach to retro (frequent injections of swing, soul and sixties pop) is more glitzy Broadway revival than historical re-enactment. And she's got both the gumption to cover Nina Simone and the poise (and voice) to pull it off.

MNDR
[Pop]
concert preview

Amanda Warner may draw lyrical inspiration from Patty Hearst, Marina Abromovic, Henry Ford, and the Chinese economy, but Feed Me Diamonds (Ultra Records) is ultimately brainy only in the manner of the best pop art – she (and MNDR cohort Peter Wade) are smart enough to engineer bright shiny electro-dance confections, with just the right ratio of polish to crunch; layer them with Warner's equally heady, sugar-rush vocals, with just enough personality to keep us interested; and pretty much leave it at that. For all the vibrancy and variety in their fizzy, fuzzy productions – eurodisco, electroclash, flashes of dubstep and diva house, and loads of lushly Romantic, '80s-soaked synth-pop – the Brooklyn duo aren't striving for anything that the likes of Robyn, La Roux and Yelle haven't already mastered in recent years. But they nail it – for twelve whole tracks – and that's a rare and precious thing in itself.
originally published in Philadelphia City Paper

09 December 2012

2012 Review Round-Up: September

it's december! here's the plan: as i work my way toward year-end musical festivities (listing! mixing! feasting!), i'm rounding up all (or nearly all) of my writerly output from 2012 with a series of posts, one per day, one for each month, over the next eleven (or twelve?) days. or bust!

la la la september.  a nice hearty, rootsy, reasonably tasteful autumnal assortment, though first up we have this decided oddity which slipped fairly below the radar, unfortunately if not unsurprisingly:

Rudi Zygadlo
Tragicomedies

Scottish producer Rudi Zygadlo's 2010 debut, Great Western Laymen, was a dizzying, kaleidoscopic affair, an even more overstuffed, color-saturated elaboration on the maximalist "wonky" school of fellow Glaswegians Rustie and Hudson Mohawke. Although it could be almost as easily filed under prog and/or pop, it had a recognizable (albeit strained-to-bursting) dubstep current running through even its most iconoclastic tracks. Tragicomedies, while (thankfully) more focused, is – almost unimaginably – an even odder fish; forgoing any dancefloor pretensions (and most "beats" altogether) and drawing most of its sonic material from keyboards, voice, and strings, it's difficult even to soundly classify as electronica, let alone anything more precisely descriptive. Every bit as playful and cerebral as its predecessor, and with fellow UK eccentric Max Tundra as perhaps the only readily relevant reference point, it finds Zygadlo staking out a hitherto uncharted intersection of AM soft-pop schmaltz, classically-informed instrumentalism (Bartók, Janáček and Schnittke are among his avowed and more than plausible influences) and a sort of "interventionist" use of technology, wherein – notwithstanding the lustrous, detail-oriented synth textures and some skittering programmed beats here and there – electronics serve mostly to structure, sequence and gleefully, transparently twist and manipulate sound, rather than generate it per se.

On some deep, perhaps at times purely theoretical level, this is a singer-songwriter album, although our access to the songs themselves is rather contingent. The first, perhaps most straightforward example comes within the opening seconds of "Kopernikuss," whose quaint piano and voice chorale, all stately trills and virginal Beach Boys harmonies, starts to wobble on and off pitch – just subtly screwy at first, then in increasingly erratic, seasick swoops. Elsewhere, alongside more foreseeable squelching synths and digi-funk glitchery, we're plunged into rabbit-hole mazes of criss-crossing, quantized piano and demonic accordion ("Melpomene") or vortices of stridently bowed strings and zinging, cartoony Raymond Scott percussion ("Black Rhino.") Keeping with his oft-cited interest in post-modern literature, Zygadlo approaches composition with a puzzle-lover's mentality – as he sings on "The Domino Quivers": "it's a plot with no ending, only many beginnings." What does emerge, songwise, through all the digital manhandling tends toward a cheery, mawkish lushness reminiscent of '70s studio twiddlers like Todd Rundgren, Steely Dan and Electric Light Orchestra, with wryly earnest vocals (Zygadlo proves himself a deft, versatile singer, veering from a serviceable blue-eyed croon to dippy scatting to oddly creepy, syrupy falsetto) and bone-dry drollery to match. Viz, setting perhaps the album's sharpest hook with the words "I think I'm losing my hearing." Or the almost-title track (apparently inspired by true events), which runs, in part: "You saved my life/how embarrassing...the trauma made me a little selfish/that's why I forgot to thank you." Then there's the twinkling "Waltz for Daphnis," wherein an unusually fervent-sounding Zygadlo laments: "I'm not garish enough for your love." It's an assertion that, musically speaking, is remotely plausible only if directed at listeners single-mindedly anticipating Great Western Laymen II. Tragicomedies itself is, unquestionably, garish (not to mention inventive, befuddling and delightful) enough to be fully deserving of anyone's love.
originally published at AllMusic.com


Cat Power
Sun

Chan Marshall has always trodden her own path, and it's been a long, fraught, often circuitous one – from her boho New York early days to the Australia and ruralia of Moon Pix to her recent, extended soul sojourn in Memphis. She returns to us, after the longest recording hiatus of her career, with her first album of originals in six years, and this time she is truly on her own: save for a vocal cameo or two, and a rather unlikely mixing assist from Cassius' Philippe Zdar, Sun is entirely a one-woman affair.

Not that you'd guess that from listening to it. Even next to the relative gloss of 2006's The Greatest, this is easily her fullest-sounding, most animated record to date, dense with layers upon layers of sound: buckets of drum loops; swarming, slithering synths; some surprisingly righteous guitar work; plenty of piano (advance single "Ruin" boasts a loop of nine playing simultaneously) and copious multi-tracking of Marshall's inimitable, elusive, dispassionately soulful voice, which is richer and more versatile here than ever before. It's a bold, energetic new look, and a great one. Even if nearly all of the musical elements here have turned up somewhere in her past work, Sun is – like nearly every Cat Power album – like no other Cat Power album. (Imagine the livelier moments of You Are Free with about twice as much going on, and you're partway there.) But this also couldn't have been anyone else: Marshall's trademark starkness and intimacy are here even in arrangements that could easily have felt distractingly cluttered; so is her uncanny gift for imparting an artful intentionality through music that feels casual, almost arbitrary, in its construction.

So where has she gotten herself to now? "Saudi Arabia Dhaka Calcutta Soweto Mozambique Istanbul Rio Rome..." begins a breathless litany in the chorus of "Ruin." But while there's a vaguely discernible global tilt to proceedings, and a tendency toward lyrical universalism that scans as equally platitudinous and profound ("you've got your own voice, so sing"; "sometimes you gotta do what you don't wanna do"), this is clearly Cat Power's (Great) American album – from the opening Amerindian invocation of "Cherokee" (shades of Tori Amos' Scarlet's Walk, perhaps) to several frank, pointed assessments of our national state of affairs. Composition-wise she's still mostly a minimalist, content to stretch out indefinitely on just two chords – as on lone dud "Nothin But Time," an eleven-minute empowerment anthem that aims for epic but mostly just feels long (even with an appearance by real-life superhero Iggy Pop.) A more fitting, punchier summation comes with "Peace and Love," a post-Occupy war chant (complete with po-mo dada-rap verses) declaring "I'm a lover but I'm in it to win." It's not quite all sunshine, lollipops and motivational cheerleading ("3,6,9," for instance, rewrites Shirley Ellis' "Clapping Song" to marvelous but questionably kid-appropriate effect), but the album title is nonetheless an apt one – this is a near-inversion of Moon Pix's fatalism and isolated moodiness. If it's a call to action, Chan Marshall is leading by example.

Stars
The North

Stars started small, and while the sweetly simple electropop miniatures of their debut grew increasingly melodramatic and string-swaddled – reaching for a grandeur that, at its worst, tended to drown out the band's defining, heart-tugging dynamic pull between ardency and wimpiness – their best work has always retained a sense of intimacy. The North signals, if not a wholesale reorientation, at least a refocusing for the Montreal wimperhearts, a partial scaling back that lends a renewed punch to the rockers ("Backlines"), poppers ("The Theory of Relativity" – a synthy nostalgia trip complete with a shout-out to "the dude who sold us ecstasy") and cute, '50s-ish duets (the slightly bombastic "Do You Want To Die Together?") alike. As usual, Stars shine brightest in moments of unabashed emotionalism – from its immaculate title on down, "Hold On When You Get Love (and Let Go When You Give It)" is a soft revolutionary blood-pumping anthem nonpareil, an authoritatively grand synthesis of their finest impulses. And while not everything in the limper, bloatier back half hits its mark, they're mostly aiming in the right direction. [6]
originally published in Magnet Magazine

Jens Lekman
I Know What Love Isn't
[Indie-Pop/One Track Mind]

I Know What Love Isn't (Secretly Canadian) – which is, throughout, as witty and devastating as its title, or, as you could hope for from a Jens Lekman (post-)breakup album – may contain more perfectly-formed moments (the previously-aired "...Cowboy Boots" and "Every Little Hair..." remain sparsely immaculate), but none shine brighter than its centerpiece/microcosm, "The World Moves On," a breathless dash from infatuation to heartache to resignation set against an anecdote-filled lifescape of heat waves, wildfires, possum-feeding and bike accidents, in six minutes of punchlines and poignancy, flutes and fingersnaps. Lesson learned: "You don't get over a broken heart, you just learn to carry it gracefully."

Bill Fay
Life Is People
[Folk/Rock]

It's taken an almost unheard-of interval – forty-one years – for British songwriter Bill Fay to follow up his two little-known, cult-beloved LPs with a third, his first album of new material since 1971. But Life Is People (Dead Oceans) would be a wondrous thing under any circumstances: a collection of poignant, humbly heartfelt ruminations on existence, mortality, self-acceptance and religious toleration, imbued with the patient wisdom of a lifetime and an uncommon sense of compassion. These songs, delivered with sturdy, gospel-hued folk-rock directness (and one Jeff Tweedy cameo), are as necessary as it gets.

Firewater
International Orange
[Rock/World]

In the revolution you can dance to department, it doesn't get much livelier than Firewater's topical, tropical International Orange (Bloodshot), recorded in Istanbul and Tel Aviv amid the Arab Spring uprisings and pulsing with a boundary-defying mix of ska, maqsoum, mambo, rebetiko and good old punk rock, triggered to ignite several possible forms of incendiary social movement. Tod A. – he of the mordant humor and richly gravelly baritone – and his troupe have been infusing their party-hearty indie-punk with worldly cabaret and gypsy-music tinges since well before the last decade's balkan-rock boom, but this might just be their finest and fieriest – and funnest – manifesto yet.

Chilly Gonzales
Solo Piano II
[Instrumental/Neo-Classical]

Jason "Chilly "Gonzo" Gonzales" Beck has led a showbiz career that more than lives up to his nickname's nickname (Feist; Peaches; gag-rap; Guinness Records...oh, just Google him), but you'll hear precisely none of that on Solo Piano II (Gentle Threat.) Per its title and its 2004 predecessor, there's nothing here but some thoroughly, thoroughly pleasant ivory-tinkling: gentle yet playful; more meditative than virtuosic; romantic but not overly effusive – not unlike a slightly jazzier Satie. It is, above all, highly functional music – just the thing to accompany tea parties, silent films, bubble-blowing, ripples in ponds, etc. – but it's even nice enough to just listen to.

David Byrne & St. Vincent
[Pop/Rock]
concert preview

The rare intergenerational collaboration that feels like it was conducted on truly equal footing, this meeting of two art-rock titans – the indefatigable Byrne and alien-pixie superwoman Annie Clark – finds an amiable synthesis of two aesthetically aligned but highly distinctive voices. As predictably off-kilter as it is – full of self-consciously stiff musical settings and capricious rhythmic switch-ups, and hopscotching lyrically between domesticity and myth; paleolithic prehistory and urban modernity – Love This Giant (4AD) winds up hugely likable and almost human in its heartfelt, whimsical eccentricity. It's also rife with dense, meaty brass-band counterpoint, navigating everything from jagged party funk to hymnlike chorales. Live, expect a spirited, eight-strong horn section, plenty of playful choreography, and generous side-servings from each artists' back-catalog (how perfect would it be for them to segue from "Cruel" to "Road to Nowhere"?) Just don't show up late – there's no opener!

Anaïs Mitchell
[Folk]
concert preview

Vermont-born songwriter Anaïs Mitchell featured Justin Vernon in her 2010 'folk opera' Hadestown, casting the Bon Iver warbler as Orpheus to her Eurydice; he's returned the favor by covering her tunes and, now, enlisting her to open his current tour. It's a move that, by rights, should help expand her audience beyond the core of folkies and Ani-philes (DiFranco being her other major high-profile booster, not to mention her Persephone), much as she's been expanding her craft beyond the conventional parameters of modern folk with her epic, allegorical themes and, most recently, producer Todd Sickafoose's lush, impressionistic arrangements. (Joanna Newsom is a convenient if imprecise reference point on both counts, as well as for her striking, deceptively girlish voice.) If Young Man in America (Wilderland) isn't as expressly conceptual as its predecessor, it's nearly as ambitious and, in its way, just as steeped in mythology; rife with parables of family, struggle, death, and self-discovery set in a hardscrabble pastoral America that feels at once long past and all too present.

Azure Ray
[Dream-Pop/Electronic]
concert preview

When Orenda Fink and Maria Taylor returned to recording together in 2010, following a seven-year hiatus, it was with nary a stylistic hiccup; reviving the wispy, gently folky dream-pop they'd minted during their initial run without a hair out of place. But for their next trick – new six-tracker As Above So Below (Saddle Creek) – they decided to switch things up, citing neo-techno luminaries James Blake and Nicolas Jaar as inspirations and enlisting Fink's husband Todd, of the Faint, as their digital production advisor. This ain't exactly Azure Ray go Dubstep – as femme-tronica Rays go, it's somewhere between a kid sister Fever Ray and the sleepier bits of Ray of Light – nor is it, in truth, all that much of a departure, what with the duo's hallmark warmth and lustrous, drowsy harmonies remaining front and center. But it is a smart and successful attempt at modest modernism; plausibly Blakean even, though probably closer to a blissed-out, soft-focus Massive Attack.
 
Dragonette
[Pop/Dance]
concert preview

Like on-the-comeup mixtape rappers brandishing improbable, aspirational boasts about their success, Toronto electro-poppers Dragonette have basically been swagging like world-beating superstars since their 2005 debut EP, but despite a string of surefire shoulda-been radio killers (and notwithstanding some vaguely flukey international chart action via collaboration with French house wonk Martin Solveig) they've somehow managed to remain incongruously small-time, particularly here in these unexcited States. Bodyparts (Dragonette/Universal) [sample lyric/hook/casually offhand assertion of all-around awesomeness: "I only live in this city 'cause this city can't live without me"] could (but probably won't) change all that: nothing pops quite as hard as early singles like "Take It Like A Man," and there's no wrenching slow jam to match the still-devastating "Easy," but the band are shinier than ever, with their knack for fresh lyrical tacks and neat little melodic twists fully intact; Martina Sobrara still has the sass and style of a spikier, less bananas Gwen Stefani, and – call it wishful mixing – the whole thing just sounds absolutely massive.

Twin Shadow/Niki & The Dove
[Pop]
concert preview

This is as close as we'll get to Peter Gabriel and Kate Bush circa '86: a double-bill of drama-inclined, eighties-indebted synth-rockers behind two of the biggest-sounding, most unbearably urgent and epically Romantic records of the year. It's an inspired pairing, and quite a diptych. Twin Shadow's George Lewis Jr. transmits a smoldering, classically American machismo via his brooding baritone and louche, lovelorn lyrics – he graces the cover of glossy, semi-Springsteenesque sophomore set Confess (4AD) as a sullen, leather-clad lothario (shades of George Michael's Faith.) As for Niki and the Dove (like their sonic/spiritual kin in La Roux and Florence + The Machine, a band that's easily mistaken for a female solo act), their bold, bewitching debut, Instinct (Sub Pop), is as apt to invoke the Earth-mother totemism of fellow Swedes like The Knife and Lykke Li (not to mention faerie grand-babooshka Bush herself) as to indulge in starry-eyed teen-lust nostalgia or the Prince-worship their moniker so blatantly broadcasts.

Wild Nothing/Diiv
[Indie]
concert preview

From the Smiths to the Clientele to Real Estate, the kind of wispy, clean-lined indie guitar music tendered by these two Brooklyn-based bands – it should be called "pop," perhaps, but their melodies feel almost too diffident to qualify – rarely goes out of style. But it does come into season, and that season is now here. Diiv share both a member and zeitgeistily surfy/summery nomenclature with fellow janglers Beach Fossils (the, um, creative approach to spelling is all theirs), but the reverb-happy Oshin (Captured Tracks) – whose signature feature is that its melodies are frequently relayed via guitar rather than voice – is as autumnal as they come. Likewise their delicately New Wave-tinted labelmates Wild Nothing, whose new Nocturne ups the fidelity from their gauzy, homemade debut, and swaps real drums for machines, without losing a whit of their shy, self-possessed serenity.

Fergus and Geronimo
[Indie Rock/WTF]
concert preview

Having established themselves as goofy, irreverent, more than a bit tongue-in-cheek, and ready and willing to leapfrog genres with reckless abandon – in the grand if poorly-defined tradition of Ween, Camper Van Beethoven, and the Mothers of Invention – Denton-via-Brooklyn duo Fergus & Geronimo take it all a bit further on Funky Was the State of Affairs (Hardly Art), staging a cosmic freakout in the form of a screwball concept album involving phone-tapping, surveillance drones, chipmunk voices, an intergalactic dating service, and some very stoned-sounding aliens. Oh yeah, and Roman numerals – of course! – as in a thusly titled song listing their many uses ("Superbowl sweatshirts! Star Wars prequels! Cranial nerves!) Musically, Funky finds the twosome moving beyond their earlier doo-wop and '60s-psych fixations for a post-space-age atomic cocktail of swingin' surf music, Devo-ish robo-punk, B-52s-style kitsch rave-ups and twitchy white-boy disco-funk – basically, they're partying like it's MXCLXXIX.

Alabama Shakes
[Rock/R'n'B]
concert preview

Perhaps no location is as significant to the indelibly intertwined histories of Rock and Soul music as Northwestern Alabama's Quad Cities, home to FAME and Muscle Shoals Sound Studios, the proudly interracial operations responsible for hits from, among many, Wilson Pickett, Aretha Franklin, The Rolling Stones, Lynyrd Skynyrd and, most recently, The Black Keys. It's just an hour down the road from there to the Alabama Shakes' hometown of Athens, and these guys (and gal) clearly hold their allegiance to that hallowed lineage close to their battle-ragged, sleeve-stitched hearts. Their out of nowhere debut Boys & Girls (ATO) sees no need to split hairs between frontwoman Brittany Howard's soul-drenched blues yowling and the amped-up heavy rock riffage of awesomely named guitarist Heath Fogg (they came up as a Zeppelin-covering bar band) – it's all rock'n'roll to them. That is, of course, nothing new under the Alabama sun, but it's not every year you hear a group this unabashedly steeped in tradition sounding this improbably fresh.

Maximo Park
[Rock]
concert preview

Perhaps the spunkiest amongst the spiky spate of post-punky Brit-rockers that emerged around the middle of the last decade (along with their Tyneside compatriots The Futureheads), Maxïmo Park are typically at their best when delivering their precision prickle-pop with a certain degree of speed and intensity – not for nothing were their greatest early singles titled "Apply Some Pressure" and "Our Velocity" – always paired with their mannered, slightly schoolboyish (and very English) punctiliousness. (Stiff Little Fingers meets stiff upper lip, perhaps?) Or maybe that's just Paul Smith's (adorable) Geordie accent. After a lackluster third album and a few years off, they seem to have found the itch again: The National Health (V2) finds the boys in fine fettle, storming back into gear on the rip-roaring, politically-inflected title cut, and somehow still sounding fastidiously polite even when imparting an ostensibly brusque brush-off ("You better write this down/I'm gonna leave without a sound.")
originally published in Philadelphia City Paper