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5/9/16

I Can’t Believe This

James Blake “Radio Silence”

James Blake’s deconstructed R&B has gradually shifted from strange outlier to mainstream trend over the past few years, to the point that his own music doesn’t quite have the same “whoa, what is this??” quality it had when he started releasing songs with vocals. He’s still a bit too weird to pass for normal, but his tracks are far more rich and sophisticated these days, with “Radio Silence” feeling so lush, dynamic, and emotional that it’s easy to miss how odd it is in compositional terms. Blake’s voice is great here, circling just a few sad sack lyrics with varying degrees of anger, self-pity, and loneliness as his piano and keyboard parts clank, hum, and sputter around him. The song captures the feeling of being stuck in a single negative thought, and your mind doesn’t just snap into a monotonous rhythmic pattern but instead makes the rest of your brain riff around it.

Buy it from Amazon.

5/2/16

1983 Survey Mix

1983cover

Here’s the seventh in my series of 1980s survey mixes, which are moving backwards in time from 1989 to the start of the decade. These compilations are designed to give more context to the music of the ‘80s, and give a sense of how various niches and trends overlapped in this cultural moment.

I can’t tell you how nice it is to get out of the mid-’80s after spending months focused on that period for the past few surveys. The early ’80s have a very different vibe, and are much more rooted in elements of disco, new wave, and punk that have aged better than the cheesy extremes of the mid-80s. There’s a lot of great stuff going on in this set, and I think when this project is complete, this will end up being one of the most listenable surveys.

Thanks to Paul Cox, Chris Conroy, Chris Ott, and Rob Sheffield for their help in compiling this survey. All of the previous 1980s surveys are still available: 1989, 1988, 1987, 1986, 1985, 1984. The 1982 survey should be ready sometime in the middle of June.

DOWNLOAD DISC 1

Michael Jackson “Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’” / New Order “Blue Monday” / David Bowie “Let’s Dance” / Human League “(Keep Feeling) Fascination” / Eddie Grant “Electric Avenue” / Stevie Nicks “Stand Back” / Loose Joints “Tell You (Today)” / ESG “My Love for You” / Liquid Liquid “Cavern” / Herbie Hancock “Rockit” / Run-D.M.C. “It’s Like That” / Donna Summer “She Works Hard for the Money” / Prince “Little Red Corvette” / R.E.M. “Pilgrimage” / U2 “New Year’s Day” / Echo and the Bunnymen “The Cutter” / The Smiths “This Charming Man” / Spandau Ballet “True”

DOWNLOAD DISC 2

Madonna “Borderline” / Dolly Parton and Kenny Rogers “Islands in the Stream” / The Isley Brothers “Between the Sheets” / Mtume “Juicy Fruit” / Talking Heads “This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody)” / Paul McCartney and Michael Jackson “Say Say Say” / Huey Lewis and the News “Heart and Soul” / Billy Joel “Uptown Girl” / John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band “On the Dark Side” / New Edition “Candy Girl” / Naked Eyes “Always Something There to Remind Me” / Eurythmics “Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)” / “Irene Cara “Flashdance…What A Feeling” / Yazoo “Nobody’s Diary” / Cybotron “Clear” / The Cure “The Lovecats” / Culture Club “Karma Chameleon” / Ludus “Breaking the Rules” / Cocteau Twins “Sugar Hiccup” / Siouxsie and the Banshees “Dear Prudence” / Sonic Youth “Making the Nature Scene”

DOWNLOAD DISC 3

Styx “Mr. Roboto” / Yes “Owner of a Lonely Heart” / The Police “Every Breath You Take” / Elton John “I’m Still Standing” / Genesis “That’s All” / Miles Davis “U n I” / Bob Marley “Buffalo Soldier” / X-Visitors “The Planet Doesn’t Mind” / G.L.O.B.E. & Whiz Kid “Play That Beat Mr. DJ” / Afrika Bambaataa & Soul Sonic Force “Renegades of Funk” / Gwen Guthrie “Padlock (Larry Levan mix)” / Beastie Boys “Cooky Puss” / Vanity 6 “Nasty Girl” / Pat Benetar “Love Is A Battlefield” / ZZ Top “Sharp Dressed Man” / Suicidal Tendencies “Institionalized” / Circle Jerks “Parade of the Horribles” / Bad Brains “Big Takeoever” / Minor Threat “Out of Step” / The Minutemen “Sell Or Be Sold” / The Verlaines “Death and the Maiden” / Bauhaus “She’s In Parties” / Einstuerzende Neubauten “Zeichnungen des Patienten O.T.”

DOWNLOAD DISC 4

Lionel Richie “All Night Long (All Night)” / Cyndi Lauper “Girls Just Want to Have Fun” / Def Leppard “Photograph” / John Cougar Mellencamp “Pink Houses” / Elvis Costello “Shipbuilding” / Tears for Fears “Mad World” / Depeche Mode “Everything Counts” / Laid Back “White Horse” / Shriekback “Lined Up” / The Fall “Eat Y’self Fitter” / Weird Al Yankovic “I Love Rocky Road” / The Replacements “Color Me Impressed” / The B Boys “Rock the House” / Kurtis Blow “Got to Dance” / King Sunny Ade “Synchro System” / Steps Ahead “Pools” / Shalamar “The Look” / UB40 “Many Rivers to Cross” / Bob Dylan “Jokerman” / Holger Czukay, Jah Wobble, and The Edge “Snake Charmer” / Jandek “If Your Fortune Fails You”

DOWNLOAD DISC 5

Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five “Scorpio” / Rammellzee Vs K-Rob “Beat Bop” / Orange Juice “Rip It Up” / The Fixx “One Thing Leads to Another” / Fun Boy Three “Our Lips Are Sealed” / Kajagoogoo “Too Shy” / Grace Jones “My Jamaican Guy” / Don Carlos “Spread Out” / Black Uhuru “Big Spliff” / Daryl Hall and John Oates “One On One” / Marianne Faithful “Blue Millionaire” / Oingo Boingo “Good For Your Soul” / Jeffrey Osborne “Stay With Me Tonight” / James Ingram & Michael McDonald “Yah Mo Be There” / The Motels “Suddenly Last Summer” / The Kinks “Come Dancing” / Stray Cats “(She’s) Sexy + 17” / Tracey Ullman “They Don’t Know”

DOWNLOAD DISC 6

Quiet Riot “Cum On Feel the Noize” / Mötley Crüe “Looks That Kill” / Big Country “In A Big Country” / The B-52’s “Legal Tender” / Public Image Ltd “(This Is Not A) Love Song” / The Glove “Punish Me With Kisses” / Laura Branigan “Deep in the Dark” / Killing Joke “Let’s All Go (To The Fire Dances)” / Sparks “Lucky Me, Lucky You” / Air Supply “Making Love Out Of Nothing At All” / Peabo Bryson & Roberta Flack “Tonight I Celebrate My Love” / Kenny Rogers and Sheena Easton “We’ve Got Tonight” / Emmylou Harris “Like An Old Fashioned Waltz” / Bryan Adams “Cuts Like A Knife” / Red Rockers “China” / X “The New World” / Jonathan Richman “That Summer Feeling” / Paul Simon “Train in the Distance” / Randy Newman “I Love L.A.” / This Mortal Coil “Song to the Siren”

DOWNLOAD DISC 7

Metallica “Hit the Lights” / Dio “Rainbow in the Dark” / Billy Idol “Rebel Yell” / Greg Kihn Band “Jeopardy” / Class Action “Weekend” / Malcolm McLaren “Double Dutch” / Lex “Fourteen Days” / Olivia Newton-John “Twist of Faith” / Rufus & Chaka Khan “Ain’t Nobody” / David Joseph “You Can’t Hide (Your Love From Me) (Larry Levan mix)” / Chaz Jankel featuring Laura Weymouth “Whisper” / Whodini “Magic’s Wind” / William Onyeabor “Good Name” / Robin Gibb “I Believe In Miracles” / Shakin’ Stevens “Cry Just A Little Bit” / The Call “The Walls Come Down” / Pink Floyd “Two Suns in the Sunset”

DOWNLOAD DISC 8

Kraftwerk “Tour de France” / Duran Duran “Union of the Snake” / Wham! “Club Tropicana” / Michael Sambello “Maniac” / Peter Schilling “Major Tom (Völlig Losgelöst)” / Heaven 17 “Temptation” / XTC “Wonderland” / Liliput “Yours Is Mine” / Dub Syndicate “Drainpipe Rats” / Ministry “Work for Love” / Lou Reed “Legendary Hearts” / Pulp “My Lighthouse” / Tom Waits “In the Neighborhood” / Journey “Separate Ways (Worlds Apart)” / Jonzun Crew “Pack Jam” / The Rake “Street Justice” / African Head Charge “Timbuktu Express” / Marshall Crenshaw “Whenever You’re On My Mind” / Madness “Tomorrow’s (Just Another Day)” / Violent Femmes “Blister in the Sun” / Bonnie Tyler “Total Eclipse of the Heart”

4/29/16

This Ain’t A Rhetorical Question

Elijah Blake “Whatever Happened”

“Whatever Happened” is right on the edge of self-parody, with vulnerable sentiments about being rejected presented in a way that seems like it’s at least partly meant to be taken as a self-deprecating joke. But…maybe not? Some guys are not very self-aware. Elijah Blake is singing about a college girl he hooked up with after a Future show at SXSW in Austin, and he’s totally incredulous that she’s ghosting him now after he spent so much money on taking her on trips to Paris. (Three times, exactly.) “I was ’bout to pull you out that dorm and put you up in a suite,” he sings. “It could have happened!” Blake is totally flabbergasted that this young woman – possibly a teenager still – didn’t just drop everything to live a fancy life off his money, as if desiring some agency or following through on her own ambitions are totally outlandish concepts. I’d like to think that the joke’s at his own expense, and that we’re meant to laugh at his thinly veiled insecurity and his inability to deal with being used by this girl when he thought he had all the power in that relationship. But he really does seem upset about this, and I’ve come to side against men in most contemporary R&B songs, so who knows.

Buy it from Amazon.

4/27/16

When We Were Strangers

Little Scream “Dark Dance”

“Dark Dance” is essentially about the private moments of clarity and joy we can have quite suddenly, which you can never plan for but can have the power to entirely shift the focus of your life. In this case it’s dancing alone in the dark, but it could be anything, really. The sound of this track tilts between haziness and ecstasy, and approximates this very specific late night feeling of being both exhausted and totally wired at the same time. The beauty of that sensation is in connecting two very different states of being — the mind relaxing and fading into dream, and being so alert that your mind is just racing. It’s the best of both worlds, really, and maybe the easiest state to be in to have a random epiphany.

Buy it from Amazon.

4/26/16

The Only Good Thing That I’ve Got

Formulars Dance Band “Never Never Let Me Down”

It’s pretty easy to get sucked into the gravitational pull of this song. There’s something about the way that gentle groove, tinny guitar, and softly buzzing keyboard come together that’s slightly off in exactly the right way. The notes seem to shake slightly in the air, the treble sounds like a dim glow. And then there’s this guy’s voice, which is the richest, deepest tone in the mix, and delivers English lyrics with what sounds to me like a Nigerian accent approximating an American accent. He’s singing about this fraught relationship, and though his passion is obvious, there’s also this sorta serene quality to his voice.

There’s one lyric in this song that really gets to me, partly because I know it in another context: “You’re the one good thing that I’ve got.” George Michael sings that in “Freedom ’90,” and it’s something that always stings me. I know that feeling too well, that desperate, sad thing of clinging to something you feel sure of – a talent, an achievement, a person, whatever – because it’s the only thing that keeps you from thinking you’re pathetic. The line feels different here, though. Whereas George Michael sings it with a lot of ego, this guy sounds very humble. He’s holding on to something, but more out of love for someone else than a fear of losing his sense of self.

Buy it from Amazon.

4/25/16

They Don’t Love You Like I Love You

Case/Lang/Veirs “Honey and Smoke”

“They don’t love you like I love you” is a poignant phrase to hear in a song because as earnest as it may be, it can only come from a position of insecurity. The one being addressing is obviously not convinced, or perhaps sees the difference in how you love them and how others love them and has decided they prefer the latter. Intensity of feeling is not a guarantee of a stable, healthy relationship. The singer is an unreliable narrator; maybe they’re delusional or in the wrong. Who can say?

K.D. Lang sings “Honey and Smoke” with the suggestion that her character is a bit deluded, but totally respects that perspective. She’s looking on as other people attempt to woo her ex, in awe of how easily they attract suitors while seething with jealousy and desperate to relive the seduction rather than observe it happen for others. She dismisses her rivals’ sentiments as “all honey and smoke,” insisting that there’s no way these others could understand or fully appreciate them. It’s romantic jealousy as aesthetic snobbery – sure, these people can fall in lust, but only she can fall in love. She’s a connoisseur. This is echoed in the sound of the music, as any anger or overt jealousy is buried beneath a slick, sophisticated affect. Lang’s voice conveys a bit of sadness, but the real emotional truth of the song is in Neko Case’s backing vocals, which condense all the bitterness and sorrow in the song to a few plaintive notes.

Buy it from Amazon.

Beyoncé “Hold Up”

Beyoncé is singing “they don’t love you like I love you” too, this time directly quoting the chorus of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ “Maps.” “Hold Up” is the second track on Lemonade, and it’s the point in the album’s narrative about infidelity in which she’s processing the reality that she’s being cheated on by her husband. Beyoncé has approached this before, notably on “Ring the Alarm,” but unlike that song, which said more or less the same things with an apocalyptic rage, “Hold Up” is serene and composed. She’s furious, yes, and cycling through severe anguish and anxiety, but she’s graceful and confident through sheer force of will. You probably can’t get to where she is on “Hold Up” without having experienced “Ring the Alarm” first – it’s easier to be composed and collected when you’ve been through it before, right?

A good chunk of “Hold Up” is Beyoncé deciding how much of her emotions she should be comfortable sharing with everyone else. “What’s worse, lookin’ jealous or crazy?,” she sings, aware that any honest display is likely to get dismissed by misogynists. She comes down on the side of not giving a fuck, and that opens the floodgates for the rest of the record – one song later she’s approaching “Ring the Alarm” levels of righteous fury with Jack White at her back, and that keeps up through the middle of the album. “Hold Up” is the crux of the album, though, and her mature approach to dealing with emotional catastrophe here is what sets the table for the reconciliation at the end of the record. If there’s a message here, it could be that you should honor your jealous, crazy feelings, but not let them consume you. In this case, the “they don’t love you like I love you” sentiment could actually be the very thing that holds everything together.

Buy it from Amazon.

4/21/16

Mighty Man Of War

Thao and the Get Down Stay Down “Fool Forever”

Merrill Garbus of Tune-Yards produced the new Thao record, and it’s very obvious, as her aesthetic is all over it – the emphasis on bass and percussion, the ever-shifting planes of musical texture, little eruptions of noise, a slightly feral quality to the performances. Thao Nguyen doesn’t totally surrender herself to Garbus’ sound, but she seems very home within it, sharpening her songwriting and moving her vocal performance into more aggressive and nakedly expressive territory. “Fool Forever,” one of the best tracks on the record, is built on a reggae-translated-into-punk groove that reminds me a lot of The Clash’s “Guns of Brixton,” but when the chorus hits, it abruptly shifts into a sound that’s simultaneously much lighter and far more abrasive. Even having heard this song many times in the past couple months, it always feels a bit sudden and exciting, like this sudden cathartic moment from out of nowhere.

Buy it from Amazon.

4/20/16

I Want To Destroy Everything That’s Mine

The Scary Jokes “Catabolic Seed”

The Scary Jokes’ Liz Lehman reminds me of a young Kevin Barnes with her seemingly effortless gift for melody, tendency of tying her songs together into long suites, and focus on writing about her emotional state with great precision and a high level of self-awareness. Like Barnes, Lehman’s lyrics have this cutting critical tone, whether she’s writing about herself, or her feelings about someone else. I like the way this contrasts with the girlish timbre of her voice, and suggests that you’re listening to the musical equivalent of an unusually eloquent teenage diary. “Catabolic Seed” is essentially about trying to pull yourself together after getting rejected by a crush, feeling frustrated by chasing fantasies, and just having poor luck in general. But Lehman’s words dig a bit deeper than that, and tip back and forth between self-loathing and reasonably decent self-esteem. You can hear that tension in the music too, as the colorful keyboard tones and the crisp snap of the beat suggest an assertive quality that is at odds with – but does not undermine – the self-crimination in the lyrics.

Buy it from Bandcamp.

4/19/16

My Heart Beats Like A Fist

Paul Simon “Wristband”

“Wristband” starts off as a joke about a rock musician stepping out for a smoke but getting locked out of a venue, and trying and failing to get back in despite being a headliner. But that’s just the jumping-off point, as Simon’s character reckons with losing his privilege even just for a few minutes, and then snaps back into proper perspective by imagining all the “homeless and the lowly” who will never get that metaphorical wristband granting them access to wealth, success, and comfort. Simon’s voice is relaxed but sardonic, and the groove is funky but a bit busy and vaguely agitated. He gets just the right balance of lightness, aggravation, and introspection, which is pretty key for a song like this – knock it too much in any direction, and I think the sentiment might become ridiculous or kinda douchey.

Buy it from Amazon.

4/18/16

The Queue Of Future Has-Beens

Wire “Internal Exile”

Colin Newman’s voice has a cold and emotionally sterile affect, and it makes pretty much every Wire song feel distant and vaguely cruel. Even when he’s expressing empathy, he sounds as though he must keep a distance, as though he’s concerned about becoming infected by your feelings and misfortunes. “Internal Exile” may be an empathetic song, but it’s slightly unclear – it’s just as easy to interpret this as an indictment of people stuck in drab, boring lives as it is an expression of solidarity with everyone crushed and alienated by capitalist institutions. Newman’s sings the song like an inscrutable deity, with each line right on the edge of pity and indifference. The music isn’t much warmer, but there’s a touch of sentimentality in the lead parts, particularly a synth horn part that gestures in the direction of joy and triumph, but is undermined by its obvious artifice.

Buy it from Amazon.

4/15/16

As The Sky Is Darkening

PJ Harvey “The Ministry of Social Affairs”

I’ve seen PJ Harvey perform twice in my life. The first was an opening act gig for U2 in 2001, and I barely remember anything about it. The second was a solo performance at the Beacon Theater in 2007, and it was one of the most powerful and impressive shows I’ve ever witnessed. A lot of what made that show so captivating was being confronted with Harvey’s full range as a singer, as she performed songs from all the periods of her career up through White Chalk and approaching them with very different vocal techniques. I had always acknowledged that she had a great voice, but up until that point I thought of her mainly as someone who wrote excellent songs. But from then on, it was clear to me that she had a rare gift as a singer, something like being a chameleonic actor. She writes a song, and fully inhabits it. The songs ask her to be different people, and she obliges.

The past few PJ Harvey records have leaned mostly on the high register of her voice, which has been interesting and suitable for the material, but vaguely disappointing in that I think she’s at her best when she’s more connected to the blues and early rock traditions. She’s come back around to that on The Hope Six Demolition Project, and it invests the songs with a level of passion and sense of high stakes that the more fragile or academic songs of Let England Shake and White Chalk lacked. The songs on this record are about desperate people and desperate situations, and so she sings like there’s something to lose. “The Ministry of Social Affairs” is a rock ballad literally built around an old blues song by Jerry McCain, and shambles along while she belts out lyrics about the people who knowingly profit off other people’s suffering. The whole record is about the oppressive institutions that crush the lives of the poor, and this song is essentially the climax of it all, and she just sounds defeated and exasperated. The music isn’t devoid of hope, but it’s bitter and frustrated in acknowledging that the house always wins.

Buy it from Amazon.

4/14/16

Every Outcome’s Such A Comedown

Pinegrove “Old Friends”

Is the most self-absorbed thing you can do to dwell endlessly on hating that you’re self-absorbed? That’s where this song is coming from. This guy is sulking through his life, obsessing on failed relationships and grief and missed opportunities and not being good enough to the people he loves, but it’s just spinning around in circles. “Old Friends” fits in a weird no man’s land between country rock and emo, but it totally works and melds the best elements of two genres of rock that seem disparate on paper but have a lot in common when it comes to addressing male emotional vulnerability, details about ordinary life, and bitter little jokes at the singer’s own expense. Frankly, this song is better for this guy’s twang, even if it’s a put-on. (Which is pretty likely, given that this band is from northern New Jersey, not too far from New York City.)

Buy it from Amazon.

4/13/16

Riding High On Low Expectations

Margo Price “Hurtin’ (On the Bottle)”

Margo Price is, to put it very mildly, working within a tradition. She’s aiming for Loretta Lynn and Dolly Parton, and for the most part, she nails it. And that, of course, is a success in and of itself – Lynn and Parton are both exceptional singers with big personalities, and their songcraft is immaculate. Price’s songs, particularly this single, are immediately catchy and charming in that sort of casual, low-key funny way that American country music does better than any other genre. Price’s fundamentals are unimpeachable, but it’s harder to get a read on what makes her distinct, and not just the contemporary iteration of a long-established brand. This is a bit like franchise movies – everyone is going to be on board with a competent version of, say, Star Wars or Batman or James Bond, but you always hope that in addition to giving you the core elements you’ve come to expect from those characters, there’s some fresh take on it. I’m not saying Price isn’t bringing that to the table, but I haven’t been able to figure out what that x factor could be just yet. Seriously great song, though!

Buy it from Amazon.

4/12/16

Maybe Everything’s A Miracle

Bibio “Town & Country”

“Town & Country” is sung entirely in the second person – “you’re tired of working in the city, you fight for life…,” and so on – and it makes me wonder whether we’re meant to interpret it as Bibio singing to someone else, or to some version of himself. I tend to hear it more as the latter even if it’s not strictly autobiographical because it comes out sounding like a litany of complaints being used in a campaign to change your own mind and break bad habits.

The angst and negative vibes in the lyrics are at odds with the sound of the music, which feels extremely relaxed and lovely in this very ‘70s soft rock sort of way. Maybe it’s the fantasy of being somewhere else, and having an entirely different life. Or it could be like visiting some other place, and realizing how much better you feel, and that positive experience forcing you to reckon with problems you’ve put on the back burner for a long time because you’re too busy to take them seriously for long otherwise. I’ve never personally related to the sentiment of this song, but I know a lot of people who have struggled with this “gotta get out of the city” anxiety, and the way Bibio expresses it in this song sounds very authentic to me.

Buy it from Amazon.

4/11/16

A Thousand Tiny Suns That Glow

Andrew Bird “Truth Lies Low”

I ignored Andrew Bird for over a decade, and I’m not sure why. Maybe I just thought he was another Sufjan Stevens, and I’ve always had negative vibes about that guy? Perhaps I heard the wrong random tracks along the way? I probably just associated him too closely with NPR and shrugged him off, just as I do with a lot of other artists in that cultural niche. It’s so easy to be dismissive of pleasant, introverted soft rock, even when you like pleasant, introverted soft rock.

“Truth Lies Low” reminds me a lot of Grizzly Bear in good ways – there’s a gentle grace to the melody, and even if there’s a bit of fussiness to the arrangement, it’s not so neat and tidy that all character is lost. Bird, like the Grizzly Bear guys and the full-band incarnation of Iron & Wine, puts his songs together like a hip interior decorator. A low organ riff gently rumbles through the track, and it sits in the center of it like a handsome table made from “reclaimed wood.” The bright metallic pizzicato notes plucked on Bird’s violin and all those soft snare taps are like bits of intriguing ornamentation that draw your attention without being too distracting. The song feels like a shabby place turned into something quite fancy, or perhaps vice versa. I listen to it and feel like I’m about to pay too much for a cocktail. But it’s going to be a good cocktail, and I’m going to enjoy being in the room even if I’m not certain I belong there.

Buy it from Amazon.

4/5/16

Another Life Some Other Way

Nap Eyes “Mixer”

“Mixer” has a distinct rainy day vibe, evoking the specific feeling of the sort of dreary, chilly, dark days that seem to move verrry sloooowly and sap the energy of pretty much everyone. It’s a feeling that can be quite pleasant under the right circumstances, just the same way sadness can feel comforting and pleasing sometimes. The song lingers in that space, with Nigel Chapman’s doleful Dean Wareham-ish voice describing what it’s like to drift along without a job or any particular motivation, and feeling trapped by inertia and resentful of people who condescend to you about your situation. There’s a bit of bite to the way he sings the chorus, but not a lot. The mood is exceedingly lackadaisical, and just after he pushes back against the notion that it’d be easy to fix his problems, the song just kinda slunks back down into a relaxed, resigned state of depression.

Buy it from Amazon.

4/4/16

Slow Motion Discussion

Sales “Ivy”

The sound of “Ivy” is fragile and tentative, conveying the feeling of attempting to communicate someone without disrupting some delicate emotional equilibrium. Lauren Morgan’s words sketch out a vague narrative – she’s concerned about Ivy’s insecurity, there’s some indication of submissive sexuality, a desire to subsume all her needs, and a breakdown in communication. She leaves you wanting more details, but immediately recognizing the feeling of wanting to repair something that was probably never actually working. The one time Morgan sounds totally certain in this song is when she sings “the distance between us, the size of a planet.” It’s a very intimate song, but that’s a bit ironic as it’s really about yearning for a deeper intimacy or lamenting an intimacy that’s gradually disappeared.

Buy it from Bandcamp.

4/3/16

Give A Little Space

Xenia Rubinos “Lonely Lover”

There’s barely anything in this track aside from Xenia Rubino’s voice, her bass, and Marco Buccelli’s percussion, but the song feels so robust that I barely noticed that at first. Rubino’s bass playing is dynamic and nimble, elegantly gliding from groove to groove without overwhelming the negative space or getting in the way of her own voice. I love the way her bass part will suddenly climb up or double back around Buccelli’s incredibly crisp snare hits, and how just a few perfect piano chords enter the arrangement for the chorus. Rubino and Buccelli make everything feel loose and improvised even when it’s clear that they’ve carefully thought out every bit of the song, and that carries over to her vocal, which is highly expressive and soulful, but also sorta low-key and conversational. It’s a gorgeous piece of music, and it pulls off the rare trick of seeming warm and familiar yet very distinctive and unusual.

Buy it from Bandcamp.

3/31/16

Let Life Take Its Time

Zayn “Truth”

It’s funny that although I’m pretty familiar with One Direction, I don’t think I had any sense of Zayn Malik as a singer until he released his first solo singles. One Direction songs are built so the five guys all sorta blur together, to the point that most of them sound like there’s only one lead singer, and the backup vocals have more or less the same timbre. Left to his own devices, Malik strays from the high-gloss rock of 1D and gravitates towards a very Frank Ocean-ish brand of R&B. It suits him well, particularly when he moves towards the extremes of his voice – the deliberately sexy early morning rasp he slips into on “Truth;” the stunning falsetto he uses on the chorus of “It’s You.” Those two songs are not coincidentally the best on his debut record, which suggests that he should probably lean into those strengths later on. “Truth” is particularly well-written, and though it has some of the best hooks on the album, it’s decidedly mellow and low-key. A lot of Zayn’s brand is projecting a very potent yet chill hyper-masculinity, and “Truth” conveys that better than anything else he’s recorded. It’s a sound he can grow into, for sure.

Buy it from Amazon.

3/30/16

Bacon That Eat Donuts

Hundred Waters featuring Chance the Rapper, Moses Sumney and Robin Hannibal “Show Me Love (Skrillex remix)”

Even just a year ago you’d see “Skrillex remix” attached to a song title and reasonably expect it’d be really fast and aggro. He’s a bit more subtle these days, and so this track is allowed to retain its gentle warmth even as he layers in dynamic beats and very sparkly synth notes. Instead of amping up the energy, he amps of the sentiment, and so the song feels like a big, teary hug. Chance the Rapper and the stylistically similar Moses Sumney are perfectly suited to this sound – it flatters their melodic rhymes, and nicely frames the kind-hearted humanity at the core of their aesthetic. Chance’s verse is brief, but it’s a super-concentrated dose of his seemingly effortless charisma and relentless Chicago boosterism that makes me even hungrier for a full album from him than even his SNL appearance or album-stealing verse on Kanye’s “Ultralight Beam.” That record can’t come quickly enough.

Buy it from Amazon.


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