Welcome to the Sub-Mariner. You may be confused, but don't be afraid. We're just a handful of people with a lot to say about music. We're here to provide album reviews and other little pieces about the music, past or present, that we enjoy. The Sub-Mariner was created because sharing music is fun, but also because we're all busy people that don't get a lot of time to just chill out and revel in what reaches our ears on a day to day basis.
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Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Sam Hunt - Montevallo
Hello, friends. I'm doing something a little different today. I got contacted to do a review for this one yesterday, and I thought it sounded like fun. I'm super grateful for the opportunity to mix it up a little bit, especially because this is about as far as it gets from what I'm normally listening to. So here is Montevallo, Sam Hunt's debut album with MCA Nashville.
First of all, I'm clearly not the target audience for this album, and it's painfully clear that this album has a "target audience." Sam Hunt is pretty much the pop-country darling of 2014 -- He has millions of views on YouTube already (Vevo, specifically), he's a former college football player, and his first single off Montevallo hit platinum last week and is still hanging out at the top of the Country Billboard chart. So, no, I would never listen to this album on my own. Truthfully, I probably would not have even known about it had I not been given the CD yesterday, but I'm going to give genuine feedback, because no one wants me to rip apart pop music just for being pop music. I don't even want to do that. I don't really even have a problem with pop music.
What I do have a problem with is the sheer volume of contrived lyrics that span the entire length of this release. There's nothing on this album that hasn't been done before, and nothing really stands out lyrically at any point. Every song is about girls, having a good time, or having a good time with a girl. You know, heterosexual guy stuff. Musical talent isn't an issue here -- there's no doubt he can sing and he's a solid guitarist, and although Montevallo is thoroughly produced, seeing one of Mr. Hunt's acoustic performances is pretty impressive. That said, it's disappointing that someone can pick up a guitar, play it well, and then want to write a song like "House Party." Surprise, it's about throwing a house party. "Ex to See" tries to offer a tiny bit of clever wordplay with a quirky double entendre, but the rest of the lyrics are so cringeworthy ("I ain't no fool, you rascal, you!), that it dilutes most of the excitement. "Take Your Time" is a pretty standard hook-up song, but I think Carly Rae Jepsen did it better with "Call Me Maybe" back in 2012. It would be nice to see the musicality that Hunt clearly has showcased a little more creatively.
Fortunately, average lyrics don't completely spoil Montevallo, and it all works pretty well when Hunt isn't trying to take things too seriously. "Raised On It" offers a pretty fun take on the American nostalgia that shows up in numerous releases every year, reminiscing about "Snapbacks and Levi Jeans, PBR and burnt CD's." It's not deep or contemplative, but it's not really trying to be, and that makes the lyrical content a lot more forgivable. The same thing applies in "Leave The Night On," the big hit of the album. It's just a track about staying up late and having fun, so there's no point in trying to make it seem like anything more than that.
The production is pretty airtight and there are some interesting arrangements going on every once in awhile. The guitar hook on "Raised On It" is super catchy, backed by a quick snare roll and polished off with gang vocals. Sometimes, Hunt employs a little spoken work to mix up the singing, which can be endearing when it doesn't sound like a cop-out for fitting a bunch of words into one song (See, "Break Up In A Small Town"). Unfortunately, that's about as wild as it gets, and every single song starts off with either a slow piano melody or some acoustic guitar strumming. Maybe I'm just crazy for wanting to see a little more innovation from an album like this.
All in all, I appreciate Montevallo for what it is. It's a total summer feel-good album, released in late October for whatever reason, and it's pretty much what I would expect to hear on the radio. Some of these tracks are undeniably catchy, sure (even as I wrap this up, I have the pseudo-drop from "Break Up In A Small Town" stuck in my head), but it's never provocative enough. Hunt literally censors himself in a couple songs, and in situations where a nice blunt curse word would make him seem like a real human being. There's not a hint of ill-will at any point, which might be good for a country star, but it's not enough if he ever wants to break out of the boundaries that separate country from the rest of the pop music atmosphere. If there's no Twitter beef or ridiculous publicity stunt to supplement the well-behaved vibe that comes from the lyrics on Montevallo, people like me most likely won't see much of an artist like Sam Hunt. So for now, Sam Hunt will probably sit comfortably at the top of the country charts, and who am I to say that there's something wrong with that? In fact, I have the utmost respect for any artist that handles fame with grace, and hopefully, when I hear about Sam in the future, it's because of good music and not because of bad press. Here's to you, Sam Hunt: May your country-tinged reign be just and dignified.
Friday, October 3, 2014
Delta Spirit - Into the Wide
Earlier this week I felt the urge to give this another shot
and contribute a new review to the good ole’ Sub-Mariner, I knew I wanted to
write about Delta Spirit’s new album Into
The Wide, but I had no idea where to start. So as I rode the bus back and
forth from campus this week I contemplated how to tackle this ever so scary
task. Did I want to attempt a Peter style thought provoking, Goshen
college-esque, review? Or did I want to try the Kane White poetic and
professional review of an album? Why not both?
The question I pondered this week, while squeezed in my seat
on an overly full bus of college kids, was what do I want from a new album? Am
I looking for something bigger and better? Something completely different than
their previous albums? Or just more of the same? Eventually I decided that I
just don’t have a good answer. The logical side of my brain wants to see
improvement from album to album. After all it just makes sense, the band was
had more time to play together, write music together, and generally improve on
their musical sound. It should show growth as a band, show growth as musicians.
But to me, just an average joe schmo music listener, this didn't feel like the
right answer to me. I don’t have any technical musical training, I can’t tell
you what chords a guitarist is playing or what notes a vocalist is hitting, I
just know what sounds good to me and what doesn't.
So that left me with, in my mind, two possible extremes of
what I wanted from a new album. Either more of the same, or something
completely different. So I went through the album collection of Delta Spirit,
one of my favorite bands, in an attempt to see what makes them so likable to
me album after album. I quickly realized I was being far too drastic by
thinking of something different and more of the same as polar opposites. What I
want is both, is that too much to ask? I don’t want another repeat of the same
old sound that was in a previous, but at the same time I don’t want my favorite
indie rock band to turn into a death metal band. I want a band to hold on to
that “thing” that makes them who they are, while creating a new, fresh sound.
To me Delta Spirit does just that. They stay true to their roots, but every new
album comes with a unique sound and feeling.
Into The Wide is
Delta Spirits fourth album and was just released in September of this
year. This time they are back with a new feel, a more moody, “dark” (for lack
of a better word) sound. With a mix of stadium rock anthems, slow ballads, and
everything in between. This is who Delta Spirit is. They create music that
makes you feel, and Into The Wide is
no exception. Yet despite the moody sound of the music, Matt Vasquez's ever so
strong voice raises through with the positivity in the lyrics that is all so
familiar. The songs speak of love “The Wreck”, friendship “From Now On”, never
giving up hope “Take Shelter”, and of course the token anti-war song “War
Machine”. To me this is the “thing” that makes Delta Spirit so good. Each album has
a distinct sound; the folksy feel in Ode
to Sunshine, the loud and proud self-titled album Delta Spirit, and now the darker sound in Into The Wide. But through all the different sounds, they remain
true to their hearts and consistently deliver; keeping that “thing” in their
sound that makes them Delta Spirit.
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Cheer Me Up, Thank You: Happy (a few days late) Anniversary, Sub-Mariner!
This
post is going to be some review not only of the album Somewhere, Anywhere which is one of my all-time favorite albums
ever, but also a review of this wonderful, music filled year that we’ve had. On
September 27th 2013, Kane made the first post on the Sub-Mariner and
I’ve been hooked ever since. Being invited to join in and contribute to the
Sub-Mariner was a huge honor and I am ridiculously flattered by the invitation
as well as the support I’ve gotten from everyone here. I may not be the best
writer among us, I’m not even close to being the most thought provoking, but
I’ve genuinely enjoyed every single thing I’ve read and written for this blog
and I genuinely appreciate all of you welcoming me into the fold and the taking
time to read what I write.
Let’s talk about Somewhere, Anywhere by New Buffalo. Sally Seltmann, or New Buffalo, is an
Australian musician whose sound is my current obsession. Somewhere, Anywhere is New Buffalo’s second album, and has a
cheerfully mellow sound. Seltmann, who plays all of the instruments and sings
all of the vocals, uses piano most heavily in this album, though clarinet,
percussion, synthesizer, and guitar are all featured. There are multiple layers
to every song, and picking out the different lines is as satisfying and
awe-inspiring as listening to the songs in whole. Seltmann writes her lyrics
with passion and rawness that is tangible and relevant to the listener. It is
difficult to listen to the words she writes without being drawn in on some
level or another. Her voice is high and lilting, but always soft; she’s very
much a crooner. Her lyrics, fantastic piano playing and sweet vocals combine to
make music that is often times dreamlike and dizzyingly intoxicating.
The namesake of this post is a
track entitled “Cheer Me Up Thank You” and is a good song for today’s post.
It’s a gentle, quieter song about friendships that has a strange bouncy feel to
it, despite its sleepy tempo and vocals. Most of the songs on this album have a
similar mood; a strangely upbeat sensation despite a relatively slow tempo. The
thing I admire most about Seltmann, besides her ridiculously impressive
musicianship, is her lyricism. They may seem slightly ambiguous, but ambiguity
is not always a bad thing; Twilight
was intentionally written with Bella’s looks/personality ambiguously described
so that more readers could relate to the character, and I think the same can be
said for Seltmann’s songs. Lyrics filled more with emotion than with specifics
can reach out to a larger audience; a larger audience means more connections
and, after all, isn’t that what music is all about? Take a listen not only to “Cheer Me Up Thank You” but also to the
rest of the album. The feels are real.
From Miley Cyrus, to Cloud Cult;
Andrew Jackson Jihad to Mutual Benefit, we’ve covered a huge range of music.
There were posts that made me laugh, posts that made me think (I’m looking at
you, Peter), and posts that were just really nice to read after a long day of
work/school. I am always excited to read new posts and reviews. Every single
post on this blog has made me all the more glad to have friends like y’all,
people who are thoughtful, caring, musical, and, most of all, fun. I have so
many fond memories associated with this blog and the music I’ve found on it. The
first time I listened to Melt Banana and could do nothing but laugh. I remember
when Josh wrote the review for Bangerz;
a group of us were hanging out at IU and Kane read it aloud, to the delight of
everyone present. Feeling like everything Cloud Cult has ever written speaks to
me on another level. The first time I listened to Kansas Bible Company and got
chills. Going to see Why? live and being completely overwhelmed by Yoni Wolf’s
passion/stare. These are a seemingly unrelated string of emotions and events,
but the thing that ties them all together is The Sub-Mariner. And I have a
sneaking suspicion that I won’t have to explain any of these feelings/reactions
to any of you and that is the true beauty both of this blog and of music; these
connections through music are important and strong. Thanks for a fun, smart,
musical year, guys. Long live the Sub-Mariner, a musical harbor and home for
those who wander.
Happy Listening,
Hanae
“You're cheering me up
And I'm thanking you
Guess what, you're cheering me up
And I'm thanking you.”
And I'm thanking you
Guess what, you're cheering me up
And I'm thanking you.”
Sunday, September 28, 2014
This is how you build something. Probably not a planet. But something pretty swell. (KBC)
It wasn’t always apparent to
everyone that Kansas Bible Company would become a big thing. This band got together at Goshen College, and
then things started going so well that they all (all greater-than-or-equal-to
11 members) dropped out to move to Nashville and focus on their music. Since then, a few have returned to grab their
degrees and go, but the band keeps going, and they all tour together on breaks,
weekends, and summers. KBC is not some
provincial band. Since the release of
their second full album, Hotel Chicamauga, they have played everywhere worth
playing across the Midwest, including Bonnaroo.
Yes that Bonnaroo. KBC is a big deal.
It took me a while to get up the
courage to really write a proper review for KBC, and here I’m really going to
focus just on their first album, “Ad Astra Per Aspera” (a latin cliché: To the stars through rugged ways). This is for a number of reasons. They came from Goshen, and as a Goshenite
myself, I was afeared that no one would take me seriously. I have a certain lack of disinterest—I’ve
taken classes and hung out with members of the band at college (and they’re
swell folks). Their lead singer was
actually a substitute teacher for our high school for a while before they
really got into their music. He timed
the final oral presentation I had for IB English. Beyond this, I don’t know what genre to
square them away in. And I care about
people liking their music.
KBC has a unique sound in the indie
scene (I’ve settled on labeling them as such for lack of anything more
specific). They have a few
guitarists/vocalists, a few bassists, a few percussionists, a keyboard
player. And an up-to four-person horn
line. To clarify, KBC is definitely not a ska band. Their horns give them, instead, a rich sound
unachievable with any other wall-of-sound.
And that’s just it. With so many
talented musicians in one place, you’d expect Ad Astra Per Aspera to be one big
wall of sound, in the style of “Yuck” or “Los Campesinos!.” But KBC doesn’t come off like that. Their opening (and, in my opinion, most
classic) track “How To Build A Planet” has a 45 seconds of minimalist intro
before bringing most of the instruments in, and KBC shows their musicianship
over and over again by easing up and letting just a few voices be heard. I’m a huge fan of this. That said, don’t think that KBC doesn’t know
how to use their size to their advantage.
If Ad Astra Per Aspera is anything, it is solidly a jam album. From the almost vocal-less “Young Professional”
to the lyrically nonsensical “Gondor Primulon,” you get the sweetest riffs you
could hope for, a chill wind-and-string jam for the ages. The fact that they stopped “Young
Professional” before the 20 minute mark made me sad—that is a testament to how
well they work together, and how musical they manage to be. To be honest, if KBC has a weakness, it’s in
their lyric writing, in this album (they’ve improved by album number 2, but
that’s for another day). None of their
tracks, with the possible exception of “Black Books” (and maybe "Tension with Kansas") have terribly inspired
lyrics—not much to keep you engaged in the content of the vocals, which tend
towards the weakly-veiled metaphor, whether that be the repetition of
“Cigarette Mountain” or “Moderation”, or simply the shallow themes of sex and
drugs in “How To Build A Planet” and, well, really most of their tracks. I hate to say it, but if you want to be
forced to think, gifted some new philosophy, this is not the album for you
(Though, for you ethnic Mennos out there, you’ll catch some more nuance tin a
few of these tracks). Go listen to some
punk. But if you want collaborative
music at its finest, not only art but also fundamentally pleasurable, an ideal
summer album (to bring back that feeling at any time of the year) or just to feel good, this is THE album. It’s chill.
It’s dope. It’s the best jam
music you’ll ever hear. If you don’t do
anything else, LISTEN TO “HOW TO BUILD A PLANET.” If you aren’t a convert after
that, I’ll give up. But that track… That
track is genius. Even if KBC doesn’t
really find their thematic direction until Hotel Chicamauga, this track is
still hands down the cream of their crop.
This is what KBC is about. I want
you to imagine this track live. It’s
better than that. Listen to it
loud. Listen to it with the bass cranked
up. Listen to it in your car, windows
down, as the Midwestern summer rolls by, if you can. Just…
Just listen to it.
tl;dr: Listen to “How To Build A
Planet” by Kansas Bible Company. Do
it. Now.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YJjdcytsX40
-Peter
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
milo - A Toothpaste Suburb
Thankfully, A Toothpaste Suburb arrived today, and I don't want to waste any time spreading the word. At the risk of sounding like myself, I'll say this is easily my favorite album from 2014 thus far. Open Mike Eagle's Dark Comedy was my previous contender, which is no surprise - milo makes it clear from the first track that he and his fellow label artist are good friends, and Mike makes an appearance on "Objectifying Rabbits" for a short verse. But milo takes things a little further, and it gets a little weirder on A Toothpaste Suburb.
Gary Paulsen, Instagram, Yoni Wolf (YES!), Guy Fieri, the Nightosphere -- Nothing is too obscure for milo's lexicon. I debated making a graph to map out these references, but that would ruin the fun of listening to every song again and again, trying to decipher every sentence. It's like a game of Pop Culture Trivial Pursuit. Kool AD even references himself and talks about it on "In Gaol," in a pretty hilarious verse about not really anything. It may seem like milo is making fun of anything and everything, but it becomes clear pretty quickly that he's really just making fun of himself for being so involved in the whole mess.
Knowing a lot about the internet isn't where milo's most important skills lie, though. He's talented. milo plays with metaphors like they're Lego blocks and some lyrics hit way harder than you could imagine a line about a dead bird ever could. He mumbles a bit less than he used to on his previous releases, but he still doesn't sound like a guy that realizes how witty he is.
When milo drops his barriers on "Just Us (A Reprise for Robert Who Will Never be Forgotten)," a revisited track about losing his brother, the effect is brutal and stomach turning. "Now kids write me about being their favorite rapper, and I'm the asshole who gets to live forever after," he spits with a level of clarity hardly visited on the album before, and a simple flat-line "I miss you" punctuates the song with so much earnest that I feel undeserved to type those same words in this review. It's a complicated song, and possibly the most real song about death that I've heard in a long time.
Beneath the plethora of name checks and chuckles on A Toothpaste Suburb, milo shows his reverence for life and some pretty complex feelings about death. The perspective is bizarre, but showing it any other way would be selling all of 2014 short. What a bizarre year it has been.
Happy fall
- Kane
Listen to A Toothpaste Suburb on Soundcloud or Bandcamp
Sunday, August 31, 2014
The Hotelier, and Music as Social Action. <-- Can't get a more pretentious title than that.
We need to have a chat.
There's a strong tendency in the indie community to snobbery, to
prejudice, to a privileging of your own tastes above those unknown simply as a
matter of principle. This is a problem. I participate in and am
influenced by this culture myself-- I loved "fun." (the band) until I
realized that the music they made was "pop," and then I couldn't
listen to it without that feeling of shame that most people associate with
taking money from the tithing basket, or, more colloquially, maybe stealing
candy from a baby. Whether or not
pop is fundamentally worse than other genres is up for debate (there’s a post
or two below on that subject). Either
way, simply the application of this label is enough, on its own, to turn people
off of a genre.
This
gets in to a deeper gripe that I have about labels. I’ll save you tens of minutes of reading and
just summarize it: Labels destroy
nuance. They can be handy shortcuts to
meaning, if the context is fully understood, and the communicators have the
same background to be able to appreciate a given label in the same way, but,
more often than not, in serious conversation, which this kind of is (okay, in a conversation of relevance, even if silly),
using a label shortcut has a strong tendency to lead to miscommunication—when I
say anarchist, I mean an individual ascribing to a particular political
philosophy, well-considered, who consequently behaves in society in a way that
is more constructive, often, than another individual. When you hear anarchist, you might hear a
person who has a Molotov cocktail fetish and really just wants to see the world
burn, for funsies. When I say hip-hop, I
mean groups the like of Dessa and K’naan.
When you hear it, you might think of Grandmaster Flash and Run-DMC. Neither of us are wrong (at least in the
latter case, surely) but we are clearly operating with different nuances of the
idea of a particular label. Point being,
labels are silly. Ascribing so much
meaning as to predicate our likes and dislikes on labels alone is also silly. In a negative way.
Most
of the authors of this blog are some variation on the theme of bleeding-heart
liberals, disgustingly left, whatever point on the authoritarian/libertarian
continuum they may be at. Chances are,
if you’re still reading, and especially if you pride yourself on your taste in
indie music, you identify somewhere in the vicinity. You get frustrated at movies that fail the
Bechdel Test, you point out the lack of racial diversity In promotional
materials, you point out the lack of morality represented by the endorsement of
capitalism in promotional materials.
Maybe. You are socially
conscious. And yet you are wrapped up,
in large, in a music scene which is overwhelmingly white and male. For me, when I think of indie music, the
first groups that come to mind are Modest Mouse, Neutral Milk Hotel, Why?,
Amanda Palmer, and Los Campesinos!. In
this group, there are a sum total of two women, and, to the best of my
knowledge, no one who doesn’t identify as white, not to mention only one
individual that openly identifies as non-heterosexual. We, as a population of music-listeners and
livers-in-society, are snobbish about our politics, and snobbish about our
music, but refuse to see any connection between the two. We listen only to music that has been
correctly christened (by whom? That’s
another question that I’ll not pursue for the moment here, but let it be noted
that, now that “Indie” is a “sound” rather than just a literal description of
the independence of a band, there ought to be some wariness of groups that call
themselves indie without being in any way actually independent, or else it
ought to be recognized that we are being predisposed to like music by the Man
just labeling it “good”)(to put it extremely), and are able to be turned off of
other music simply because it doesn't have that golden ticket, that label that
tells us it is good (or because it
has a label that tells us it is “bad,” of course). If you happen to be politically sensitive,
you could note, also, that none of the above artists live below the poverty
line, or would be called anything other than “middle class,” wealth-wise (here
there may be some selection bias, as artists that become popular are
necessarily less likely to be poor after becoming popular, but we also pride
ourselves on listening to artists that no one has ever heard of, so I hold that
my point still stands).
Are
there exceptions to this western patriarchy?
Surely so. But exceptions, while they do not prove the rule, in demonstrating the effort to which we must go to
find them, surely do raise their eyebrows wryly at us while pointing to the
possibility of a soft rule.
The Wingnut Dishwasher’s Union
comments “I don’t need to tell ya / crackers are great with amnesia / when it
comes to forgetting / centuries of racism.” Is this sort of behavior, even in
our music-listening lives, our private lives, conscionable?
In short, no.
It isn’t.
It is exactly this kind of
sentiment that can lead us to forget that there are people out there with fundamentally different life experiences
than those that we have. I would assert
that music is often written out of the struggles of a person’s life, and if we
listen only to people like us, with struggles just like ours, we run the dangerous
risk of thinking that those struggles are universal, or the only important
ones, or even the most common ones, or, hell, even just relevant in any way at
all.
Plato, in “The Republic” makes an
extensive case for the importance of media censorship in an ideal society. The character of Socrates argues very
coherently that a person with no example of unvirtuous action has a much more
difficult time conceiving of acting unvirtuously—thus, it is for the good of
everyone if examples of unvirtuous actions are not displayed publicly, whether
through theater or poetry, television or a web browser. This argument seems abhorrent to us now,
reminiscent of a totalitarian state, or a controlling parent, but I would hold
forth that it is not such a silly idea.
I do not think that it is practical to ever expect there to be an
impartial body that can correctly and without corruption determine what media
ought or ought not be let through to the public, much less which actions are or
are not virtuous, and so I will never argue seriously that such a system really
ought to be implemented at a societal scale, but I think that to discard the core
of the argument simply because it is not always practical is a mistake. Just as Plato argues that a person with no
concept of the unvirtuous cannot act unvirtuously, virtue ethics suggest that a
person exposed to much virtuous action tends to act virtuously. We cannot expect to have all of our media
filtered such to make us better people, but we can surely filter
ourselves. I am a hypocrite, and enjoy
the majority of low budget shitty horror films, but even without watching
“Decadent Evil,” I can tell you that it will contain primarily examples of
unhealthy gender roles and power relationships, and as such, I can elect not to
watch it (even if only because I know I won’t enjoy it as much if I have to
keep complaining about the heteronormative sex fantasies that keep occurring in
the flick—I am a hypocrite) Similarly,
while I surely will continue to listen to a shitton of indie, because it just
feels so good, I can consciously select against the worst of it (which you
already do, if you are reading this blog and taking us “seriously”), and, more
relevantly, I can also consciously select music that is good, and leads abstractly
to personal betterment.
Subject of conversation number
two: Social consciousness sorted, you
are surely now convinced that you need to broaden your tastes. But to what?
There are things closer to the indie scene that are excellent listens—Dessa
is a feminist artist from Minnesota, often labeled as rap or hip-hop that gels
well with the indie palate. K’naan is a Somalian refugee, now naturalized
U.S. citizen who makes music often labeled similarly to the above, but with
such a different cadence that arguing that it belongs in the same category as
Nicki Minaj is as difficult as is saying that the music isn’t influenced by his
life story. But I’ll admit it, I have an
ulterior motive. I’m driving at
something.
Indie culture and left youth
culture (whether that be hipster or something else) are difficult to
disentangle (for reasons obvious enough to obviate statement). This is a culture that has a serious fondness
for dramatic irony and sarcasm, an endearment for isolation from emotion. Modest Mouse is surely emotive, but it
conveys an emotion surrounded by the biting self-criticism and sarcasm that are
an integral part of the music that they make—Why? often says one thing meaning
the exact opposite. Amanda Palmer has
whole songs that are satires of a particular aspect of pop culture, or of
themselves. I like this. I am a part of youth culture today, after
all. However, I am finding more and more,
that I like sincerity. I like the
bravery that it takes for a person (or group) to come out and say “This is my
stance. I am not perfect, and cannot be
perfect, but this I believe, the hell with absolute idealism, and the cynicism
that comes of falling short thereof.” I think
genuinely caring about things unreservedly is pretty cool, and you don’t
find this, often, in indie music. Much
as I love metaphor, just coming out and saying something is sometimes more
powerful. Tl;dr: In the words of Kane White: “Sarcasm is killing sincerity,” and sincerity
is pretty alright.
So
here, indecorously in the last paragraph, is my thesis: You need to give punk a chance. That’s one hell of a vague label, and a lot
of things are shoved in there that are really squarely on some sort of “indie-‘true’
punk” continuum. Punk gets a bad rap as “just
a bunch of screaming” or “three-chord high school bands” or, god forbid “plebian.” But I’m going to tell you to listen to one
thing. Listen to “Home, Like Noplace Is
There” (sic) by “The Hotelier.” “The
Hotelier” is a group so small that they don’t even have a Wikipedia page
yet. They dropped this second album out of nowhere,
other than Worcester, and, apparently, the depths of their hearts, in February
of this year. This is an album that you
can’t ignore. I listen to music mostly
casually, but this album is one of the few that I can just sit down, doing
nothing else, and just listen straight through.
And then again. And then
again. And then again. If you’re into labels, this album has often
been identified as a part of the emo-punk revival. There are a few tracks that scream at you,
but once you reach them, you don’t even care, because it’s so clearly out of
genuine emotion. Will those tracks ever
be my favourite? No. I am still too
influenced by the cult of the indie. But
would the album be the same without them?
Absolutely not. This is an album
made by someone who’s been through things that you, dear affluent reader,
probably have not. This is an album for
the downtrodden to identify with. This
is the first 100% honest album I have ever listened to. This is not to be missed. Other, wealthier, more well-known websites
have written about this album better than I ever can, and I won’t take their
words from them—what remains to be said is this: The Hotelier frontman probably lives below
the poverty line. He is white, and male,
and so isn’t so much broader than what you are likely used to, but it is
different. This is a thing to listen
to. This is a genre to listen to. If you care about social change, this is the
place to find people who are behind you all the way, whether it be The Wingnut
Dishwasher’s Union, The World/Inferno Friendship Society, or The Hotelier. Is the punk scene also pretty white? Yeah.
I don’t think you should listen exclusively in this domain. But if you want unveiled emotion, this is the
place to dabble, and “Home, Like Noplace is There” is most certainly the place
to bathe.
-Peter
Below is a link for the first track on the album, which is, as titled, one hell of an introduction, if you catch the lyrics.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PHsBgcwOw6Y

Death and Henry Stewart
The classic tag-line attributed to listeners of indie music-- "You've probably never heard of them." Want more hipster fodder? Have I got a gem for you. Henry Stewart is a recent graduate in music composition from Goshen College, a college so small you've probably never heard of it. Lest this put you off his music chops, this guy composed a piece for a competition in London, for which he placed in the top three, and got the Villiers quartet (yes that Villiers quartet) to perform it, by his sophomore year. (proof: http://record.goshen.edu/2013/11/28682-villiers-quartet-visits-goshen-performs-student-composition ). Stewart doesn't compose classically for the piano or orchestra, though. He samples, he mixes, he computers. To whit; he's a hip cat. More relevantly, he knows what he wants to write about: Sad things. As an avid fan of the ilk of Los Campesinos! and Why? and We Were Promised Jetpacks, I've listened to a lot of angsty music, a lot of music that focuses on death and the inevitable tragedy of the human condition, while sounding really good. Stewart fits in with this company admirably, with a particular emphasis on programmatic composition, that, in the words of one listener "makes me want to just step onto the tracks and wait for a train to come take my life away, but in a good way." I'll let you judge for yourself, and so, without further ado, here is the contents of Henry Stewart's senior recital, for the low, low price of free:
https://soundcloud.com/henry-breneman-stewart/sets/senior-recital-april-25-2014
Full disclosure: I go to Goshen College. I know Henry Stewart. He's a pretty solid human being. That said, I really do value his music for the value it brings to my life apart from all of that-- I don't often listen to this sort of genre, but this stuff makes you feel.
-Peter
https://soundcloud.com/henry-breneman-stewart/sets/senior-recital-april-25-2014
Full disclosure: I go to Goshen College. I know Henry Stewart. He's a pretty solid human being. That said, I really do value his music for the value it brings to my life apart from all of that-- I don't often listen to this sort of genre, but this stuff makes you feel.
-Peter
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Blu & Exile - Give Me My Flowers While I Can Still Smell Them
Imagine Blu, headphones on, teasing out rhythms and lines, trying to find a flow over the frantic jazz beat in "I Am Jean." When it comes together, the finished product sounds as natural as if he'd produced the track himself. In "Mask Your Soul," Blu drops the register to match the gentle guitar plucks and flute melody. Blu spends the entire album in Exile's passenger seat, reacting deliberately as Exile pilots the vehicle through streets, suburbs, and countrysides. Sometimes, Exile ditches the automobile for a tandem bike, dropping lazy beats that wind and crawl, Blu in the back smirking and laughing as he lets loose a smooth flow. It's a powerful chemistry that the duo shares, and even before intention or lyrical content, it makes Flowers work.
Beats are just the beginning, though, and lyrically, Blu has a lot to say -- not as much about getting older or struggling to make ends meet, but more about ignoring it all and finding the energy to just be happy. And although Blu keeps it humble from beginning to end, when he spits, it exudes confidence that makes braggadocio seem completely unnecessary. It's a unique trait for an emcee to have, and Blu shows it off in every track he touches. Fortunately, Exile's beats are the perfect platform for that skill, and Blu savors every blissful moment, rapping about love past and "peeping the subtle stuff." But don't be fooled by the apparent lack of urgency -- when the beats get a little darker on songs like "More Out of Life," Blu proves that the drive from Below the Heavens is far from gone.
Sandwiched between two beautiful instrumental tracks (if you listen to one song, make sure it's "Cent From Heaven"), Give Me My Flowers While I Can Still Smell Them is a solid hip-hop album with some interesting beats, but for those that find these tracks at just the right time, it will assuredly be something a lot more meaningful. Sure, it's not always flawless, but when an album feels this good, who really cares?
Sandwiched between two beautiful instrumental tracks (if you listen to one song, make sure it's "Cent From Heaven"), Give Me My Flowers While I Can Still Smell Them is a solid hip-hop album with some interesting beats, but for those that find these tracks at just the right time, it will assuredly be something a lot more meaningful. Sure, it's not always flawless, but when an album feels this good, who really cares?
Check out the classy boat video for "Ease Your Mind."
And seriously -- listen to "Cent from Heaven."
- KaneMonday, July 21, 2014
[A] Music Theory (Or, one amateur's unfounded claim about a ridiculously subjective art form)
I'm interested in how we humans interpret the world differently. How we taste, see, feel, and hear virtually identical things, yet come away with different emotional responses and preferences. "Pop music," to me, offers an interesting window into this discussion, as it's a great example of a polarizing preference that seems to avoid any notions of objective interpretation, and yet, it just is bad. Right?
To start, let's address the genre's name: "pop," as in "popular." I've decided to go from the gut 1 and refrain from doing any research, and assume that this genre, like others, were named after their original defining aspect (like, "Indie" being independent of labels, "country" being solely written in/sung in/about the countryside, "metal" being the exact equivalent of repeated blows to the head with a metal rod 2 , etc.) And yet, these genres have adapted over the years to mean something new. One might hear a song on the radio and vaguely describe it as "indie-esque" without having any idea how independent it is. Similarly, there are pop songs that are by no means popular. For evidence, look at the pop genre on iTunes, and along with the mega-popular hits, there are bands and songs no one's heard of. Writing a pop song doesn't mean you've written a popular song.
So "pop" therefore refers to a style of music that's pretty varied, but is still connected by certain aspects. Off the top of my head, I'd define pop music as generally more heavily produced (less natural sounding, more "clean") with greater importance given to the vocal melody than other instruments/harmonies, greater emphasis on repetition, simple in form, thinner (either fewer instruments, or digitally created instruments), and all centered around that one "hook" that gives the listener the satisfaction they're looking for. Being pretty general, these defining characteristics can easily apply to other genres, too, such as pop-rock, pop-country, etc.
I'm slowly but surely getting to my point. I once heard that pop is the musical equivalent of comically-sweet candy. I'm going to roll with the food analogy here, because taste is also sensory with lots of disagreement on value, yet food seems to be further removed from the realm of art and subjectivity. Re: candy: most everyone likes it, at first. We can't help but enjoy the sugary goodness; we're biologically wired to crave it. Yet, it also makes us sick. It's too much of one thing (sugar) without any real foundation. It's fake, in every sense of the word, from it being a "food" at all (no actual nutrients) to how it's made (no natural ingredients). Alright, you get the point. Basically I'm asserting that everyone initially enjoys pop, but since there's inherently no substance to the genre, it is far less rewarding/enjoyable/good in the long run. We can't help but be attracted to a hook, but the very simplicity and obnoxious repetition that initially got it stuck in our heads quickly becomes a detriment to the song. Music shouldn't become annoying, for if it does, it calls into question the (lack of) innate quality it ever had.
Does all this make me a music snob? Or, do I just want to exude hipster-cred by bashing the mainstream? Hopefully not. But at the same time, I doubt I'll be offending anyone who happens to read this post. Because, as far as I know, there's no such thing as a pop-music snob. Being a snob doesn't sound great, but the opposite isn't great either, and it seems to fit my caricature of the pop-listener: someone who wants whatever "sounds good," wants it easily, and is only concerned with short-term happiness/instant gratification. This description seems to be in harmony with modern western culture, and at this point this post could spin off into a scathing critique of that, but instead I'll (more mildly) say that patience, delayed gratification, being mindful of what we ingest, and investment (as in, being aware and invested in what you're doing, in the moment) are all worthwhile values to have.
I'll change the analogy away from candy, which has connotations of being childish, because I don't want to seem to suggest "good music" is too prestigious for younger/less mature listeners. Again, I don't really think there's an elitist element to this. Instead, I'll say pop music is like fast food: it serves a purpose, and you know what you're getting out if it. In the long run, if you value "food," I'd recommend limiting fast food intake. There's something that a home-grown, slow, home-cooked, fresh meal has on the alternative that's beyond its health value or taste. It just is better food. Right? Maybe it's how it makes you feel hours after eating it (not filled with regret). Or maybe it's just the fact that you could go back to it day after day and not get sick of it.
I can't fault anyone for listening to pop music, but I also sincerely hope those same people give other genres a genuine listen. I think they'll find music to be powerful and rewarding and good in ways pop could never be.
To start, let's address the genre's name: "pop," as in "popular." I've decided to go from the gut 1 and refrain from doing any research, and assume that this genre, like others, were named after their original defining aspect (like, "Indie" being independent of labels, "country" being solely written in/sung in/about the countryside, "metal" being the exact equivalent of repeated blows to the head with a metal rod 2 , etc.) And yet, these genres have adapted over the years to mean something new. One might hear a song on the radio and vaguely describe it as "indie-esque" without having any idea how independent it is. Similarly, there are pop songs that are by no means popular. For evidence, look at the pop genre on iTunes, and along with the mega-popular hits, there are bands and songs no one's heard of. Writing a pop song doesn't mean you've written a popular song.
So "pop" therefore refers to a style of music that's pretty varied, but is still connected by certain aspects. Off the top of my head, I'd define pop music as generally more heavily produced (less natural sounding, more "clean") with greater importance given to the vocal melody than other instruments/harmonies, greater emphasis on repetition, simple in form, thinner (either fewer instruments, or digitally created instruments), and all centered around that one "hook" that gives the listener the satisfaction they're looking for. Being pretty general, these defining characteristics can easily apply to other genres, too, such as pop-rock, pop-country, etc.
I'm slowly but surely getting to my point. I once heard that pop is the musical equivalent of comically-sweet candy. I'm going to roll with the food analogy here, because taste is also sensory with lots of disagreement on value, yet food seems to be further removed from the realm of art and subjectivity. Re: candy: most everyone likes it, at first. We can't help but enjoy the sugary goodness; we're biologically wired to crave it. Yet, it also makes us sick. It's too much of one thing (sugar) without any real foundation. It's fake, in every sense of the word, from it being a "food" at all (no actual nutrients) to how it's made (no natural ingredients). Alright, you get the point. Basically I'm asserting that everyone initially enjoys pop, but since there's inherently no substance to the genre, it is far less rewarding/enjoyable/good in the long run. We can't help but be attracted to a hook, but the very simplicity and obnoxious repetition that initially got it stuck in our heads quickly becomes a detriment to the song. Music shouldn't become annoying, for if it does, it calls into question the (lack of) innate quality it ever had.
Does all this make me a music snob? Or, do I just want to exude hipster-cred by bashing the mainstream? Hopefully not. But at the same time, I doubt I'll be offending anyone who happens to read this post. Because, as far as I know, there's no such thing as a pop-music snob. Being a snob doesn't sound great, but the opposite isn't great either, and it seems to fit my caricature of the pop-listener: someone who wants whatever "sounds good," wants it easily, and is only concerned with short-term happiness/instant gratification. This description seems to be in harmony with modern western culture, and at this point this post could spin off into a scathing critique of that, but instead I'll (more mildly) say that patience, delayed gratification, being mindful of what we ingest, and investment (as in, being aware and invested in what you're doing, in the moment) are all worthwhile values to have.
I'll change the analogy away from candy, which has connotations of being childish, because I don't want to seem to suggest "good music" is too prestigious for younger/less mature listeners. Again, I don't really think there's an elitist element to this. Instead, I'll say pop music is like fast food: it serves a purpose, and you know what you're getting out if it. In the long run, if you value "food," I'd recommend limiting fast food intake. There's something that a home-grown, slow, home-cooked, fresh meal has on the alternative that's beyond its health value or taste. It just is better food. Right? Maybe it's how it makes you feel hours after eating it (not filled with regret). Or maybe it's just the fact that you could go back to it day after day and not get sick of it.
I can't fault anyone for listening to pop music, but I also sincerely hope those same people give other genres a genuine listen. I think they'll find music to be powerful and rewarding and good in ways pop could never be.
Thursday, May 1, 2014
Safe Finals, Don't Die: Lisa Hannigan and Self-Care in the Midst of Finals
It's that time of year again, dearest readers. Finals. DON'T PANIC. It's gonna be okay. But, because we are American college students working in a system that encourages us to abandon all thoughts of self care for academia, this post is a combination of feel good, relaxing music (specifically Lisa Hannigan's because her music is way chill, she's talented and she always relaxes me) paired with self-care tips during finals. I recommend everything she's ever done, but I chose a song to go with each tip just 'cause.The song recommendations are in green, a color that is shown to be relaxing.Each tip is bolded and underlined and was selected because these are things that I've found helpful, so even though this post is way long, it's not (entirely) pointless. So take a big breath, hold it, then exhale through your nose. It's gonna be okay!
Step One: SLEEP. It is so tempting to stay up all night and just chug caffeine 'til finals are done (trust me, I think about doing this all the time). DO NOT DO THIS. Get at least 5 hours. Your body, your brain and your memory bank (which is ultimately the key to finals) will thank you and do better. There's lots of science that says you remember things better if you review them, go to sleep, wake up and review them again. Basically, you need sleep to do stuff, so go to bed!
"O Sleep" from her album Passenger is a super great song to use as a study break or sleep add. It's a soft duet about making up after a fight, featuring Ray Lamontagne. The lyrics paint lovely pictures of oceans, quiet rooms, dreams of sleep and reconciliation. If you're looking for a lullaby, this one knocks me out every time.
Step Two: Be Like a KitKat Bar. Take a break from your studying! Do something fun like read a chapter in a good book or, if you're sick of reading, knit a little, color in a coloring book, take a short walk, talk to a friend, etc. Get yourself away from screens, stand up and do some stretches. The key here is to relax so that you can be refreshed when you start studying again. Humans are not built to a) sit all day, b) do one task all day, and c) be inside all day. Go outside if you can; sunlight is shown to boost endorphin levels which can only be a good thing when you're way strung out and/or depressed about an upcoming exam, plus you need the Vitamin D.Your brain and body will thank you for the breaks, plus you'll zone out less and ultimately gain more. It's a win-win.
Lisa Hannigan's "Paper House" (another song from Passenger) is my personal favorite walking and thinking song. It's gently upbeat and it makes I feel like I've just stepped out of a cool lake on a hot summer day when I listen to it. It's refreshing and will put you in a good mood to hit the books.
Step Three: Heed Veggie Monster's Advice. Before you roll your eyes and skip this step, I'm definitely not saying that you should eat only healthy things (because I would have a breakdown during finals week without access to candy) but even just eating a small plate of salad, an apple, or a handful of berries like twice a day will help your brain (and body) feel better. High protein snacks, like nuts, eggs, fish and tofu, are good choices too 'cause your brain is a big fan of the fatty oils and Vitamin E that you get from those.
Choosing a song that corresponded with this tip was pretty tricky, but I decided to go with "I Don't Know" from the album Sea Sew because I have no idea what healthy foods y'all will eat, I just hope you'll pick something. And also because the song is about getting to know friends and I care about all of you!
Step Four: Wear a Jewelry to Your Final. Sometimes brains have a tough time deciding on what is dangerous and what is not. Tests tend to trigger the part of your brain that recognizes threats, which will kick up your adrenaline, heart rate and blood pressure. When these things happen, your brain is focused on getting you out of what it perceives to be a dangerous situation, and makes it harder for you to recall information. Wearing a ring, necklace or bracelet that's familiar to you can help. Having a familiar object to touch and hold is soothing and can help you remind your brain that you are not in danger and that it's time to settle down (using an object as a reminder is called a grounding technique and is very effective for many people, including myself, so I encourage you to try it). Also, deep breathing (even just while you count to ten) is proven to lower blood pressure, heart rate and adrenaline levels, which will help a LOT in reminding your brain that you are very safe and going to completely ace the test!
"Venn Diagram" from Sea Sew was chosen for this one simply because it's a sweet song about looking after someone, feeling safe and the chorus reminds me of deep breathing.
Step Five: Be Like the Scientists Who Walked Into A Bar. Unconscious! Hahahaha, get it? Okay, but for real, caffeine, while delicious in many forms and good for cramming, dehydrates you so much. And, because your brain is the Scrooge McDuck of body resources, it needs the most water of every system of the body. This means that if you're dehydrated, the rest of your body is gonna get fatigued, ache, and just generally not be cooperative. Headaches, nausea, and the urge to take a nap are common symptoms of dehydration, all of which are hindrances to doing your best on tests and studying. SO, to counter all the delicious coffee and Dr. Pepper you down, drink lots of water. Your brain can then guzzle all it can hold and the rest of your body won't have to suffer for it and everybody feels good!
"An Ocean and A Rock" (from Sea Sew) was my choice for this tip because it's about water and remembering things. Isn't it obvi? It's chill, a sweet sentiment, beautiful text painting, and a good reminder to drink up!
All in all, remember that you are most important! You should be your number one priority, so please take care of yourself! If you get really overwhelmed, need a study break or a hand, remember that you've got friends all around you (including myself) who are more than willing to help you out (I'm always here if you need to talk, vent, study break, etc. and I'm good at editing papers too)! If you want more tips or chill songs, I've got a bunch!
I'll close with a link to the song I parodied in the title, "Safe Travels (Don't Die)" from Passenger, for obvious reasons. Take care, dear reader; I'd wish you luck on your exams, but I know you're going to do fabulously. :)
Happy Listening (and studying!),
Hanae
Step One: SLEEP. It is so tempting to stay up all night and just chug caffeine 'til finals are done (trust me, I think about doing this all the time). DO NOT DO THIS. Get at least 5 hours. Your body, your brain and your memory bank (which is ultimately the key to finals) will thank you and do better. There's lots of science that says you remember things better if you review them, go to sleep, wake up and review them again. Basically, you need sleep to do stuff, so go to bed!
"O Sleep" from her album Passenger is a super great song to use as a study break or sleep add. It's a soft duet about making up after a fight, featuring Ray Lamontagne. The lyrics paint lovely pictures of oceans, quiet rooms, dreams of sleep and reconciliation. If you're looking for a lullaby, this one knocks me out every time.
Step Two: Be Like a KitKat Bar. Take a break from your studying! Do something fun like read a chapter in a good book or, if you're sick of reading, knit a little, color in a coloring book, take a short walk, talk to a friend, etc. Get yourself away from screens, stand up and do some stretches. The key here is to relax so that you can be refreshed when you start studying again. Humans are not built to a) sit all day, b) do one task all day, and c) be inside all day. Go outside if you can; sunlight is shown to boost endorphin levels which can only be a good thing when you're way strung out and/or depressed about an upcoming exam, plus you need the Vitamin D.Your brain and body will thank you for the breaks, plus you'll zone out less and ultimately gain more. It's a win-win.
Lisa Hannigan's "Paper House" (another song from Passenger) is my personal favorite walking and thinking song. It's gently upbeat and it makes I feel like I've just stepped out of a cool lake on a hot summer day when I listen to it. It's refreshing and will put you in a good mood to hit the books.
Step Three: Heed Veggie Monster's Advice. Before you roll your eyes and skip this step, I'm definitely not saying that you should eat only healthy things (because I would have a breakdown during finals week without access to candy) but even just eating a small plate of salad, an apple, or a handful of berries like twice a day will help your brain (and body) feel better. High protein snacks, like nuts, eggs, fish and tofu, are good choices too 'cause your brain is a big fan of the fatty oils and Vitamin E that you get from those.
Choosing a song that corresponded with this tip was pretty tricky, but I decided to go with "I Don't Know" from the album Sea Sew because I have no idea what healthy foods y'all will eat, I just hope you'll pick something. And also because the song is about getting to know friends and I care about all of you!
Step Four: Wear a Jewelry to Your Final. Sometimes brains have a tough time deciding on what is dangerous and what is not. Tests tend to trigger the part of your brain that recognizes threats, which will kick up your adrenaline, heart rate and blood pressure. When these things happen, your brain is focused on getting you out of what it perceives to be a dangerous situation, and makes it harder for you to recall information. Wearing a ring, necklace or bracelet that's familiar to you can help. Having a familiar object to touch and hold is soothing and can help you remind your brain that you are not in danger and that it's time to settle down (using an object as a reminder is called a grounding technique and is very effective for many people, including myself, so I encourage you to try it). Also, deep breathing (even just while you count to ten) is proven to lower blood pressure, heart rate and adrenaline levels, which will help a LOT in reminding your brain that you are very safe and going to completely ace the test!
"Venn Diagram" from Sea Sew was chosen for this one simply because it's a sweet song about looking after someone, feeling safe and the chorus reminds me of deep breathing.
Step Five: Be Like the Scientists Who Walked Into A Bar. Unconscious! Hahahaha, get it? Okay, but for real, caffeine, while delicious in many forms and good for cramming, dehydrates you so much. And, because your brain is the Scrooge McDuck of body resources, it needs the most water of every system of the body. This means that if you're dehydrated, the rest of your body is gonna get fatigued, ache, and just generally not be cooperative. Headaches, nausea, and the urge to take a nap are common symptoms of dehydration, all of which are hindrances to doing your best on tests and studying. SO, to counter all the delicious coffee and Dr. Pepper you down, drink lots of water. Your brain can then guzzle all it can hold and the rest of your body won't have to suffer for it and everybody feels good!
"An Ocean and A Rock" (from Sea Sew) was my choice for this tip because it's about water and remembering things. Isn't it obvi? It's chill, a sweet sentiment, beautiful text painting, and a good reminder to drink up!
All in all, remember that you are most important! You should be your number one priority, so please take care of yourself! If you get really overwhelmed, need a study break or a hand, remember that you've got friends all around you (including myself) who are more than willing to help you out (I'm always here if you need to talk, vent, study break, etc. and I'm good at editing papers too)! If you want more tips or chill songs, I've got a bunch!
I'll close with a link to the song I parodied in the title, "Safe Travels (Don't Die)" from Passenger, for obvious reasons. Take care, dear reader; I'd wish you luck on your exams, but I know you're going to do fabulously. :)
Happy Listening (and studying!),
Hanae
Labels:
finals,
Hanae,
Lisa Hannigan,
Passenger,
Recommendations,
Sea Sew,
self care,
tips
Monday, April 14, 2014
Thunder, Lightning, Strike - The Go! Team
If the music of The Go! Team works the way it seems to want to, the unremarkable begins to feel a little more important -- A drive through town feels like an extravagant car chase, a walk to the store feels like a victory march, and getting ready for work or school feels like the precursor to a life-altering encounter. The mundane isn't really mundane, and with drums ablaze and trumpets blaring, The Go! Team sets out to prove it on Thunder, Lightning, Strike.
Since the record's release in 2004, not many bands have brought to light the same perfect blend of silliness and intensity cultivated in Thunder, Lightning, Strike, and even fewer can boast the same instrumental lineup. Banjo, trumpet, guitar, piano, and bass all have their moments in the sun, with many appearing in the same tracks. Ninja provides cheerleader-style chants behind a wall of grooves and melodies. The hard-hitters like "Junior Kickstart" and "The Power is On!" sound like fight scenes, but the slightly toned down "We Just Won't Be Defeated" and "Huddle Formation" feel a bit more sentimental, like a well deserved high-five. Each song evokes a very specific emotion, but each of those emotions could be best punctuated with an exclamation point.
The sentiments and title of the final track sum up the purpose of Thunder, Lightning, Strike pretty well: Even though you might not be drop kicking evildoers, rescuing children from burning buildings, or manning a battle-ready robot, you still have a lot on your plate. So go out there, face your demons, and don't you dare believe that we aren't all heroes in our own right. Remember: "Everyone's a VIP to Someone."
- Kane
Watch "Junior Kickstart" and the best Ms. Pacman music video you've ever seen.
PS - Watch the Cowboy Bebop opening with "Panther Dash" as the background music instead of "Tank!" by The Seatbelts. It works hilariously well. Start the video when "Panther Dash" gets to 0:07
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Mutual Benefit - Love's Crushing Diamond
Lyrically, front-man Jordan Lee seems surprisingly purposeful despite his laid-back vocals. "Sometimes my heart and mind conspire/to set everything on fire/just to stop the tyranny/of the minute hand on me," warbles Lee in "Golden Wake," a hopeful tune set to a catchy keyboard hook. Perhaps this song could be viewed as a criticism on the trivialities of human life, but the message is easily missed in the tender lack of urgency in Lee's voice. Don't let the summery sounds fool you, because many of the lyrics illustrate a darker story.
Just about every song on this album has a good hook, however soaked in reverb it may be, and with a small amount of patience -- enough to get through the gentle cacophony of instruments that begin and end these songs -- Love's Crushing Diamond could find a place among records like Helplessness Blues (Fleet Foxes) or Wondrous Bughouse (Youth Lagoon). But though this record could be viewed as a unique take on roots music, it seems much more appropriate -- and maybe even more satisfying -- to just appreciate it as damn good songwriting.
I patiently await the warm days ahead so that the outside world might finally begin to feel as alive and beautiful as this record, and I especially look forward to the day that I can enjoy the two together.
Mutual Benefit - Advanced Falconry (Liiiiiiive)
- Kane
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Have A Nice Life - The Unnatural World
Part 1: Have A Nice Life -- The Unnatural World
As I peruse the internet, scouring the usual medias for new music, I stumble across The Unnatural World, a ghostly looking album with menacing song titles like "Music Will Untune the Sky" and "Guggenheim Wax Museum." Craving a challenge, I start up Have A Nice Life's newest album and buckle in for a new adventure. Half expecting a member of the Metal family, I'm surprised to hear a muffled guitar part build in volume before giving way to another equally muffled guitar part. "What's wrong with my speakers?" I think to myself, slightly concerned, repeatedly unplugging and reinserting the headphone jack. After a few moments, understanding creeps forth. My eyes narrow as an old rival presents itself before me once more. "Shoegaze," I whisper.
The Unnatural World's biggest charm and greatest turnoff are one in the same: For most of the album, creative melodies and vocals are weighted down beneath an ocean of reverb. At first listen, The Unnatural World sounds like a concert stage a half mile away. The bass parts and chord progressions can be heard (or rather felt), but the lyrics are less than vaguely discernible and any sort of melody takes a little bit of digging to get to. Where this style could easily scare off some, Have A Nice Life uses the atmospheric fuzz in a way that shows there's something worth listening to buried away. The proof is in the sweeping melodic lines and grooves ingrained in tracks like "Burial Society" and "Cropsey."
The Unnatural World never comes across as timid or unclear. Every song has a sense of massiveness that stems from the huge instrumentation -- pounding drums, thick bass, heavy guitars -- but like a giant obscured behind clouds, it's hard to make sense of these looming sounds without a few listens.
In one way, The Unnatural World is an easy listen for the casual observer. Nothing overly difficult presents itself and repetition keeps things from entering the realm of prog-rock. On the other hand, a fully attentive listen leads to a pretty exhausting experience. Extremely rewarding, but exhausting. It's hard to shake a sense of yearning throughout most of the songs. Have A Nice Life makes you work, but they have the substance to make it all worthwhile.
- Kane
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Indie Angsty English
You know what we don't talk about enough? Los Campesinos! That's what. I'm going to apologize right now, because my writing is already getting formulaic in its review of bands/albums, but I can only be so sorry when writing about this particular gem. "Los Campesinos!" is, unfortunately, entirely unrelated to the South/Central American movement among poor subsistence farmers looking for more wealth equality and freedom from harassment by paramilitaries, especially the FARC in Colombia, except in name, leftist leanings, and my undying appreciation for them. "Los Campesinos!" rather, is from Cardiff, Wales, having formed at Cardiff University in the mid-naughts, though no members of the group were actually Cardiff natives. Los Campesinos!'s first recorded album of any relevance was "Hold On Now, Youngster," released in 2008. This album is something special. LC! formed primarily playing live gigs for excited audiences around the University, and it shows. This album is excited, this album is lively, this album is bright, and it's wall of sound. I don't like wall of sound music. But LC! know their balance, and even though it's the rare moment, maybe the start of "You! Me! Dancing!" or some such in which your ears are being assaulted by anything less than their full ensemble, it feels like you always get the relevant melody or lyrics cutting through all that, not simply rising above the waves of the sound of the rest of the group, rather, it rises distinct yet in complementary concert with these nets of sound. I also don't like abstractions, but I'm not going to change that I used that one, either. This album got a lot of critics to label them as "twee pop" and pay them no further heed (twee being a brit slang term for something sickeningly sweet, referring to their bright, upbeat, popping sound). This, I am convinced, is only because these critics didn't bother to listen to Gareth. The self-styled Gareth Campesinos is the primary vocal- and lyricist for LC!, and describes his inspirations as being from Modest Mouse and Broken Social Scene to obsessions with death (I promise, it shows in well-crafted metaphor, not in downer statements) and football (soccer, folks). His lyrics are insightful, poetic, and tend towards the dark. For evidence, I would refer you to, above all, the lyrics to "We are Beautiful, We are Doomed" from the album with the same name: http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/loscampesinos/wearebeautifulwearedoomed.html
As Los Campesinos! have continued on, their sound as a whole has grown a little bit darker to match the nature of Gareth's lyrics, clearly visible in the albums "Romance is Boring," and "We are Beautiful, We are Doomed," and then, with the loss or transition of a few band members, a little bit more produced and synth-heavy in "Hello, Sadness" and "No Blues." No Blues is their most recent album, released in 2013, many of these critics praise it as finally showing a "mature" sound, as this being an example of LC! finally coming into their own. This is utter nonsense. So much of what made LC! so incredible was how raw and youthful and idealistic their earlier albums were (and they fact that they used a glockenspiel of all things. Who does that? It was great). This is a sound that isn't as marketable, but is hella more unique. "No Blues" is still around the pinnacle of art, and still has some stellar tracks, most notably "Avocado Baby," and "What Death Leaves Behind," but the sound is distinctly more poppy, not in the sense of "being bright and exuberant and popping out from the speakers," but as in "like pop music," and the last time I heard them use a glockenspiel was in "Romance is Boring."
But if anyone has any doubt of their continued vitality, they're still killer live. It'll ruin listening to recordings for you. LC! may have lost some of their edge in the studio, but in person, they are every bit the local twee pop band they started as, with none of the negative connotations. There is a magic in listening to any group live, but listening to the ramp up of "You! Me! Dancing!" crammed in tight with a bunch of strangers who all share only that they love a band that no one else has ever heard of in the midwest (and a certain propensity for thick-rimmed glasses) is exactly how Los Campesinos! was meant to be heard. Would recommend.
tl;dr: Listen to Los Campesinos. Listen to their early work. Put in the effort of decyphering the words. It's worth it. Really.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dc4GethJnBg
As Los Campesinos! have continued on, their sound as a whole has grown a little bit darker to match the nature of Gareth's lyrics, clearly visible in the albums "Romance is Boring," and "We are Beautiful, We are Doomed," and then, with the loss or transition of a few band members, a little bit more produced and synth-heavy in "Hello, Sadness" and "No Blues." No Blues is their most recent album, released in 2013, many of these critics praise it as finally showing a "mature" sound, as this being an example of LC! finally coming into their own. This is utter nonsense. So much of what made LC! so incredible was how raw and youthful and idealistic their earlier albums were (and they fact that they used a glockenspiel of all things. Who does that? It was great). This is a sound that isn't as marketable, but is hella more unique. "No Blues" is still around the pinnacle of art, and still has some stellar tracks, most notably "Avocado Baby," and "What Death Leaves Behind," but the sound is distinctly more poppy, not in the sense of "being bright and exuberant and popping out from the speakers," but as in "like pop music," and the last time I heard them use a glockenspiel was in "Romance is Boring."
But if anyone has any doubt of their continued vitality, they're still killer live. It'll ruin listening to recordings for you. LC! may have lost some of their edge in the studio, but in person, they are every bit the local twee pop band they started as, with none of the negative connotations. There is a magic in listening to any group live, but listening to the ramp up of "You! Me! Dancing!" crammed in tight with a bunch of strangers who all share only that they love a band that no one else has ever heard of in the midwest (and a certain propensity for thick-rimmed glasses) is exactly how Los Campesinos! was meant to be heard. Would recommend.
tl;dr: Listen to Los Campesinos. Listen to their early work. Put in the effort of decyphering the words. It's worth it. Really.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dc4GethJnBg
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
The Glass Duo "Tocatta and Fugue in D minor"
I’d like to take a moment and hipster out as I present this
next group, called “The Glass Duo,” because I’m fairly certain you haven’t
heard of them. BUT GUYS, I’M TELLING YOU THEY ARE THE COOLEST THING I’VE HEARD
IN A LONG TIME. The Glass Duo consists of two players, Anna and Arkadiusz
Szafraniec, who started out playing violin and trumpet and now play glass harp.
What is a glass harp, you ask? It’s an arrangement of glasses, much like your
average water glasses, that are sized so that when they’re touched, they sound
a specific tone. The Szafraniecs are the only glass harp musicians in Poland
and one of very few glass harp groups worldwide. They tour music festivals
around the world (though mostly in Europe) showing off their mad skillz.
The ease and grace with which The Glass Duo performs is
astounding. I was stunned the first time I heard them and have a playlist of
their recordings on YouTube bookmarked (also I’m attaching that link to this
post). The fact that they can achieve such a high level of performance and expression
with glasses is just incredible and, quite
honestly, jaw dropping. I can pretty
much promise you that you’ve never heard a sound like this before; it’s
ethereal and strangely beautiful, a similar sound to the glockenspiel, but lighter
and more fragile. It makes me think of sugar being spun or frost climbing a
window, which I am aware is cliché as hell (I’m an English major for goodness
sake), but you’ll understand when you listen.
I’m attaching their cover of J. S. Bach’s “Tocata and Fugue
in D minor” because the piece is pretty complicated for organ-much less two people
and a table full of cups- but they nail it and give it a whole new sound! I
know that I certainly don’t have the
coordination or dexterity to play something like this, with so many cups, with
another person, without breaking something Definitely take a look; watching
them play is half of the magic and intrigue..
Happy Listening!
Hanae
▶ J.S. Bach - Toccata and Fugue in D, glass organ (part 2/2) - YouTube
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