Fluxblog

Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

3/15/19

Take A Bite Of Life

Drahla “Stimulus for Living”

Luciel Brown’s vocal cadence reminds me a lot of Kim Gordon, particularly in the way her affect can seem both pleading and sarcastic, just enough to make it unclear how much emotional investment she has in what she’s saying because it’s not exactly zero. Brown mostly conveys a suspicious skepticism on “Stimulus for Living,” a propulsive post-punk song that drives along on a chugging bass riff but is spiked by agitated guitar leads, noisy clangs, and nervous clicky rhythmic digressions. Drahla are using a lot of old punk tricks here but they make it feel fresh and urgent – a lot of that is thoughtfulness and expertise, but it’s mostly evidence of a band operating on very good instincts and a connection to some broader ambient anxiety in the world that feels particular to this moment in time.

Buy it from Bandcamp.

3/14/19

Give You A Clue

Cass McCombs “Absentee”

The lyrics of “Absentee” mention gathering firewood, a dead river, and a country road, but he could be singing about anything at all and the song would still sound very, very rural to me. I imagine a cabin in the woods, somewhere in Upstate New York or New England. I’m not even sure why that is – it’s the pace, it’s in the piano, it’s in the soft understated saxophone that fills the air like the scent of burning wood on a crisp autumn breeze. McCombs’ vocal performance here falls in a strange valley between sensitive vulnerability and a stoic aloofness. It’s like he’s attempting to be warm in spite of a tendency to be quite cold.

Buy it from Amazon.

3/11/19

So Alien In This Burnt World

Stephen Malkmus “Ocean of Revenge”

One of the problems of selling new albums by long term career artists is that there’s usually no story to tell about it. Music writers are mostly quite lazy, and it’s generally difficult to spin “talented person makes another very good record” into compelling copy. The entire music media system is set up to favor new things, small discographies with a clearly identifiable peak, and on occasion, a comeback story. Being consistently good for a long time is not sexy and sometimes viewed with contempt, even if that is the ideal situation for being a fan of an artist, or, you know, actually BEING an artist. But it’s never really about art. It’s about stories and images, and a consistent story and static image is borrrrrrring.

Matador Records has been successful in crafting a narrative around Groove Denied, Stephen Malkmus’ eighth album since the demise of Pavement. It’s the weirdest and most casual record he’s made, though there’s precedent for both the tossed-off looseness and dependence on somewhat haphazard and inexpert drum programming on various b-sides and outtakes released in both the Pavement and Jicks phases of his career. The story here is that the album was made prior to last year’s Sparkle Hard, but Matador asked Malkmus to shelve it and focus on his more conventional material. The label was successful in marketing Sparkle Hard as a “return to form,” so the path was clear to release the more peculiar album with minimal risk. With this narrative, the oddball style of Groove Denied was now an asset, and people could come to the record prepared for Malkmus to “go electronic.”

OK, so, it’s not THAT electronic. There’s definitely drum machines and a lot of keyboards, and the first side has a few songs that are legitimately new aesthetic territory for Malkmus, though his Malkmus-ness is so strong that it devours any sound it comes in contact with. The most extreme song is “Forget Your Place,” not just because it’s so slow and meditative, but because his voice is altered so much that the Malkmus-ness of it is muted. This is good and interesting stuff, but the real action is on the second side. That’s where he’s not trying on new vibes, but doing his usual thing with a playful “hey, who cares, I’m having fun here” attitude. This is always an aspect of what Malkmus does, but the trend over the course of his Jicks catalog is a move towards increasingly tight and technically accomplished music. He sings better, he plays better, he works with a strong rhythm section. But here’s informal and a little sloppy. He’s doing all the percussion and drum programming himself, and it’s not his strong suit. But it’s very charming, and it suits the wobbly psychedelic vibes he’s going after.

“Ocean of Revenge” is my favorite, and it’s the most tightly composed song on the record. Sue me, I am a long term Jicks fan. This is what I’ve come to love! The presentation is a bit more sloppy, but the songwriting is brilliant in a very specific Malkmus-y way – long free-floating melodies, casually winding guitar parts, lyrics full of surprising specificity. He’s writing in character here, but the key lines ring out in a way that invite you to ignore the storytelling and focus on the feeling: “I know you thought about me more often than I thought of you / it is true, just admit it!” The song is excellent in its construction but still feels like something he might have written and laid down in a day and forgot about for two years. It’s the kind of thing that reminds you how this all seems to come so easily to him, which is both astonishing and a little annoying. Some people work all their lives to write one song as good as “Ocean of Revenge,” and for Malkmus it’s just another one among the many.

Buy it from Amazon.

3/11/19

This Place Is Designed To Kill Us

Black Dresses “Death/Bad Girl”

Black Dresses’ sound is a collision of harsh industrial rock and sassy electroclash, two adjacent genre aesthetics that didn’t crossover nearly as much as they should have back in the day. But here it is, and it sounds incredibly fresh – my first thought upon hearing “Death/Bad Girls” was basically, “why did people ever stop doing this?” The timing feels right, though. The boldness of this music is in stark contrast with a music ecosystem overwhelmingly dominated by low-key sadness, drab aesthetics, and comatose rhythms. This sound is like a splash of color and the slash of a knife, and the vocals nail a perfect balance of aggression, dark humor, and introspection. “Death/Bad Girls” moves through a four distinct phases in four minutes – I’m most fond of the heaviest and most abrasive bits, but the outro section in which they get more philosophical and emotionally vulnerable is where they really pull it all back and show you what they’re really on about.

Buy it from Bandcamp.

3/8/19

Some Toxin In Me

2 Chainz “Threat 2 Society”

There’s a lot of ways of framing a rags to riches story in hip-hop, ranging from euphoria to rage, but 2 Chainz mostly just sounds pleasantly surprised on “Threat 2 Society.” He sounds exhausted, even when he’s boasting. Everything good in his life seems to be above all else a relief, as he’s extremely aware of what things could have been. 9th Wonder’s track is similarly ambiguous in tone. It’s slow and meditative, with its central vocal sample – “it’s so good just to be alive” – manipulated and recontextualized just enough to make it seem more weary than celebratory. It’s not about thriving, it’s about surviving.

Buy it from Amazon.

3/8/19

Please Don’t Do It

KH “Only Human”

This is Kieran Hebden, or Four Tet. You might have noticed that just by hearing it. The beat is a bit more thumping and aggressive than he usually gets, but the approach to slicing up and reconfiguring a vocal sample is extremely Four Tet. As far as I’m concerned, there are very few producers on par with Hebden when it comes to manipulating vocal samples. There’s a subtlety to his style – it’s never merely just about bending a sample into a hook and matching a tempo, it’s more a lead line in a dense arrangement. He plays around with time and phase, and focuses on the emotion in a voice rather than lyrics. “Only Human” is a bit of an outlier for him in the sense that more of the lyrical content is legible to the ear, but even with that it’s more abstracted than something than a pop vocal that’s meant to be clearly understood. It’s more about the movement, like this mad spiral spinning through this otherwise clean and orderly composition.

Buy it from Amazon.

3/4/19

Staple Your Tongue

Billie Eilish “Bury A Friend”

“Bury A Friend” feels both anxious and playful, a contrast of a thud-thud-thud rhythmic pulse and a sing-song hook that’s just a little off from The Doors’ “People Are Strange.” Lyrically and musically it’s like Marilyn Manson reconfigured into precocious teen pop, with Billie Eilish’s youthful voice making the refrain “I wanna end me” feel a little more unsettling than it might with a more adult vocal. Eilish says it’s written from the perspective of the “monster under my bed,” but it’s more specifically about self-sabotaging anxiety given a voice separate from one’s consciousness. She makes the “monster” seem sympathetic, even when it’s taking credit for driving her to succeed. She still wants the voice to shut up, though.

Buy it from Amazon.

3/3/19

Bathe In The Delight

Solange “Down with the Clique”

Solange is a rare example of a pop singer catering to the market and chasing trends by becoming more arty and esoteric. This is not to say that her work is contrived or insincere, but rather that pivoting away from mainstream pop and R&B – the domain of her extraordinarily famous sister – and towards a general “Pitchfork reader” demographic has allowed her to follow her muse and synthesize sounds from the more out-there Brainfeeder-ish reaches of contemporary jazz and funk into something more palatable to a wider audience. I’m a firm believer that the music ecosystem needs artists who can play this part, and Solange does it well enough to occupy an Erykah Badu-like role for a Millennial cohort.

“Down with the Clique” is not a cover of the Aaliyah song, but rather a meditative ballad that might qualify as a “slow jam” if it didn’t feel so ambiguous in tone. The arrangement sounds a bit like a fragment from electric period Miles Davis that’s stuttering a bit too much to settle into a tranquil loop. The smooth but off-kilter quality suits Solange’s voice, which can be a little character-less but sounds quite lovely when she pushes into the highest end of her range. The effect of her phrasing here emphasizes the sensuality of the chords, and softens the more jarring elements of the rhythm.

Buy it from Amazon.

2/28/19

More Kid Than Criminal

Julia Jacklin “Body”

“Body” is muted in tone and emotion; it’s the grey dull vague sadness you get after exhausting much bigger feelings. Julia Jacklin sounds spent as she sings about an incident with a fuckup boyfriend that has made it clear that their relationship could not go any further. This anecdote takes up most of the song, but the really intense part comes after a brief instrumental break. With a bit of distance, she realizes he’s got a nude photo of her, and wonders if he’ll use it for some kind of revenge. She’s not sure, but she sorta comes to terms with that happening – “I guess it’s just my life, and it’s just my body.” It’s a sigh, it’s a shrug. It’s letting a bit of you die. There’s no emotional resolution here, the song ends as elliptically as it begins.

Buy it from Amazon.

2/27/19

Y Olvídate De Tus Problemas

Ximena Sariñana “Lo Bailado”

The appeal of “Lo Bailado” mainly comes down to the way the music plays on the tension between airy minimalism and tight, disciplined structure. It mostly feels breezy and carefree, but you still feel the tautness of the rhythm guiding every soft gesture. It’s not a rigid vibe or anxious feeling – it’s more like setting yourself up with the mental and physical awareness it can take to get loose. The lyrics, as near as I can tell, mirror the form. Sariñana is basically singing about letting go of a bad feeling and focusing on the positive aspects of having an experience. In a way, it’s her equivalent to “Thank U, Next” – appreciate your experiences, but move on when you need to.

Buy it from Amazon.

2/26/19

Someone Throws A Sandwich At You

Royal Trux “Suburban Junkie Lady”

Royal Trux haven’t made an album since literally half my life ago, but here they are, sounding like no time passed at all since they recorded “Sunshine & Grease” and “Blind Navigator.” But it’s not like they have any choice but to be themselves. Neil Hagerty and Jennifer Herrema’s sound is sui generis; a mutant strain of rock aesthetics so peculiar that they sound more like a hyperbolic description of weird music than any other existing rock band. Everything in “Suburban Junkie Lady” is exaggerated and blown out; the vibe is always scuzzy and bewildered. They lock into a groove, but even that feels like chaos. Hagerty mutters most of his vocal parts while Herrema mostly sounds more like she’s singing along to a record she enjoys on her own in her bedroom than actually fronting a band. It’s hard to tell what they feel about this suburban junkie lady – Hagerty seems a bit removed from her in his observation and bemused by details like someone throwing a sandwich at her, while Herrema seems kinda impressed by her attitude. Maybe because it’s basically her attitude?

Buy it from Amazon.

2/15/19

Together We Can Be At Ease

Teen “Connection”

“Connection” is placid and lovely, with gentle synth tones hovering in the air like a fine pastel mist. Kristina Lieberson’s vocal is exceptionally delicate and intimate as she sings lyrics that get so vulnerable in their declaration of needs and desires that it can feel a little intrusive to listen. The lines that ring out are sweet and romantic – “how your presence brings me comfort, when I’m with you I am at ease” – but a closer listen reveals a love built on insecurity and desperation for approval. I don’t think this is meant to be some kind of ironic twist, though. It’s more just a realistic portrait of love with all the unflattering needs and feelings that drive us to seek out a connection.

Buy it from Amazon.

2/14/19

The Way You Go To My Head

Unloved “Devils Angels”

Unloved make a kind of exotic, heavily atmospheric groove-based post-trip-hop music that was once ubiquitous in the late ‘90s and early ‘00s but is now somewhat rare. Their new record Heartbreak has a welcome familiarity – not just in evoking a vibe that was very hip when I was younger, but in the way it seems to scramble together aesthetics pulled from decades of cool film soundtracks into music that has the patina of oldness but sounds like no moment in particular. “Devils Angels” is one of their grooviest numbers – a bit sleazy and menacing, but sung with a flirty tone. It’s like a theme song for a femme fatale in a movie from the past about the future we’re living in right now.

Buy it from Amazon.

2/11/19

Make It Stick

Ariana Grande “Make Up”

Ariana Grande shines brightest on songs in which her voice seems to hover just above the beat, and chords seems to float around her presence. “Make Up” has the same head-in-the-clouds infatuated tone as the best songs on last year’s Sweetener, but with a little more edge to it. The lyrics about make up sex are cute, but they are just scaffolding for Grande’s impressively nimble and expressive vocal melody. She’s drawing a lot from the vocal syncopation commonly found in rocksteady and dancehall here, but without putting on some horrible faux patois. There’s one melodic bit in the verses that sounds extremely Studio One to me, but I can’t quite figure out whether or not it’s reminding me of a specific song. I just know that I wish I could hear a Studie One legend like Marcia Griffiths, Willie Williams, or Sugar Minott take a crack at singing it. Either way, this approach suits Grande’s voice rather well – she’s very graceful around a beat, and makes parts which require a great deal of focus and breath control sound breezy and casual.

Buy it from Amazon.

2/7/19

Resolutely Superficial Yet Obsessed With The Unseen

Default Genders “Black Pill Skyline”

James Brooks’ lyrics focus on vivid portraits of very contemporary characters, with details so extremely specific that it can make you cringe with recognition even when it’s not even a particularly embarrassing thing. For example, in this song he references the Edith Zimmerman (“that writer from the Hairpin”) profile of Chris Evans and writing trip reports on Erowid, and ends on a semi-ironic “that’s the tea.” Brooks’ tone can get a bit glib, but his empathy is much stronger than his sense of detached irony. Even when he’s singing from the perspective of a bitter, judgmental asshole, he’s not asking you to go “ugh, what an asshole.” He’s more interested in just showing you someone else’s thought processes, and little bits of life that add up to not much other than a dissatisfied person. “Black Pill Skyline,” like all the songs on Main Pop Girl 2019, leans heavily on a very early ‘90s production style, and while that could also feel glib and ironic, it doesn’t quite land that way. Brooks is aware that it can seem that way, but just presents it all with as much sincerity as he can bring to it. It’s not a wink. It’s sustained eye contact.

Buy it from Bandcamp.

2/6/19

Dream In Dripping Colors

Lady Lamb “Even In the Tremor”

“Even in the Tremor” has a restless, twitchy feeling to it. It’s not quite an anxious energy – it’s more like having more energy and emotion than feels comfortable, and feeling thwarted in your attempts to shake it off. Lady Lamb sings the song with a tough, confident voice. It’s a very “let’s cut the bullshit” tone, and it’s directed as much outward as it is inward. It seems at first that she’s addressing a romantic partner, but upon closer listening it just sounds like she’s mostly just laying into herself and trying to make sense of both her emotional state and her relationship with the past. The chorus really stands out here: “The future kills the present if I let it.” What a wonderfully ambiguous phrase! I tend to not be a very sentimental person and forget a lot, so it sounds reassuring to me. I can imagine a lot of other people would find that notion totally horrifying.

Buy it from Amazon.

2/5/19

A Thousand Years Of Feedback

Hand Habits “Placeholder”

“Placeholder” is basically the opposite perspective of R.E.M.’s “The One I Love.” Whereas Michael Stipe sang from the point of view of a cold, manipulative person who toyed with people’s emotions so he could have a “simple prop” to occupy his time, Meg Duffy is the person realizing how little they mean to someone who has used them. The song isn’t angry or even all that sad. It’s more about processing emotions than the feelings themselves. There’s a wistful quality to the music, particularly in the distorted lead guitar lines, but Duffy’s lyrics and vocal performance are cold and logical, like they’re meant to counter this other person with their own icy approach. It sounds like someone who is putting up their guard and hardening their heart. It’s a bit tragic in that way.

Buy it from Bandcamp.

2/1/19

The Riddle Itself

Future Punx “Want to Be Wanted”

The lyrical conceit of “Want to Be Wanted” is approaching the basics of human interaction from a scientific standpoint – research, trials, data. It’s a lot of work to explain something very obvious, which is that people need to feel useful and desired. Future Punx play the song in a way that flips the uptight, severe seriousness of Wire-derived punk into a low-key campiness. It’s knowingly silly, but still quite earnest in its thoughts about what motivates people. They’re trying to think clearly and rationally, but can only conclude that desires are inconsistent and confusing. Even in understanding the root of feelings doesn’t make them predictable or sensible.

Buy it from Bandcamp.

1/31/19

Planet Girl

Snail’s House “プラネット・ガール”

The best elevator pitch I could give you for Snail’s House is that it’s like Discovery-era Daft Punk filtered through the aesthetics of J-Pop. It’s a big, bright, bouncy sound that sounds like pure, earnest optimism. There’s something so wholesome about this – it’s music that sounds like it’s from a world where everything is fun and nothing is creepy.

Buy it from Amazon.

MADMADMAD “Gwarn”

And this one is just the opposite. “Gwarn” has very ‘00s aesthetics, like the DFA and Ed Banger discographies colliding at top speed into a Misshapes party. It’s seedy but glamorous, like a pretty rich kid who’s filthy and gross in designer clothes. It’s fun, but largely because it evokes a world where everything is creepy.

Buy it from Bandcamp.

1/30/19

Don’t You Lose Your Halo

Maren Morris “Girl”

Maren Morris sings with a confident, bold voice that fits comfortably in a range of mainstream styles – country, EDM pop, rock – the way a good vanilla ice cream pairs well with most any dessert. There’s a little bit of twang in her voice, and a dash of soulfulness, and a trace of attitude. She doesn’t have a lot of character, but she can sell a big feeling. “Girl,” a country rock power ballad she wrote with the increasingly prolific producer Greg Kurstin, is a pep-talk anthem that makes the most of vocal gifts. The contours of the song show off different aspects of her voice – grit on the verses, warmth on the bridge, and a go-for-broke passion on the chorus. It would not be surprising if this was deliberately written as a vocal showcase, and as such, I’m pretty sure this will eventually be a karaoke hit. It’s got all the right dynamics, and the utility of lyrics that express a genuine love and concern for a woman who’s down on her luck.

Buy it from Amazon.


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