February 24, 2010

Surfer Blood - Astro Coast

Palm Beach natives Surfer Blood, despite their ridiculous name, have recently crafted a debut album which manages to give off enough of a uniquely nerd-rock weezerish vibe to punch through the layer of crap created by other surf rock/lo-fi albums to come out recently (see: Wavves, Best Coast, Smith Westerns, etc.) Although they aren't really even garnering comparisons to those bands, I feel like that is the bracket most listeners automatically put them into. Wikipedia says they've been compared to Weezer, Pavement, and Built to Spill, which I would agree with for the most part.

Anyway...

(buy album from their "about" section via PayPal)-
-try-

"Swim"

February 23, 2010

Joanna Newsom - Have One On Me

New album from insanely talented, quirky, Andy Samberg-dating harpist Joanna Newsom. Much more expressive and personal than her older, more distant albums about nature and sewing. Highly Recommended.




-Stream
-Try-
-Buy-

December 12, 2008

Washington DC in the late 90s and early 2000s



When music in Washington DC comes to mind, I immediately think of two bands: The Dismemberment Plan and Q And Not U. Both of these bands released 3 albums that were very similar: the first energetic and impulsive, the second more refined and catchy, and the third more mature and contemplative. The difference is that the D-Plan did it all about 2 years in advance of Q And Not U, who were not as popular and I personally don't like as much.

Since the discographies of the two bands are very similar, I'll post my favorites of each of the 3 sets of albums in order:

Q And Not U- No Kill, No Beep Beep (2000)



Download (rapidshare)

The Dismemberment Plan - Emergency & I (1999)



Download (mediafire)

The Dismemberment Plan - Change (2001)



Download (rapidshare)

Out of all of these, Emergency & I is definitely my favorite. It got 9.6 Pitchforks, and it has a place very close and near to my heart.
The end.

We'll build skyscrapers together...

The St. Louis indie rock "scene" is considered by some to be almost non-existant, but this post is meant to show that it does exist, and at times can be very strange. Here's a list of indie bands that are currently playing (with varying degrees of success) in the St. Louis area. Click on the pictures.

So Many Dynamos

The best band in St. Louis, in my opinion. Dynamos have released two albums already and their 3rd (recorded by Chris Wall from Death Cab for Cutie) is set to be released on Vagrant Records on April 7th. The band's style can be described as a mathy, dance-rock mix of Weezer and The Dismemberment Plan, which happens to be totally rad n stuff.

Download: Progress (from Flashlights, 2006)

Target Market

Used to play music similar to that of So Many Dynamos: spazzy, melodic dance rock. Then they got obsessed with Pavement and drifted off into non-productive land. Last time I saw them live was about this time last year, and they kinda sucked.

Excercise

Used to be called Berlin Whale and play music similar to that of So Many Dynamos: spazzy, melodic dance rock. Then their bassist and drummer moved away and they drifted off into non-productive land. Last time I saw them live was about this time last year, and they kinda sucked. Hmmm...

Gentleman Auction House

Kindof popular in other places besides here, I guess. They go on tour sometimes. Last time I saw them was around Christmas time last year and they were actually pretty good.

There are other indie bands in the area, of course, but none that have grabbed my attention the way these ones have. There are also tons of other bands I chose not to mention that play lovely genres like screamo, modern rock, and ska.

Awesome New British Bands

Two music styles that have become increasingly popular in England over the past year or two are:
  • Angular, melodic, guitar driven post-punk rock, and
  • British Anti-Folk.
The first of these two was established by bands like Franz Ferdinand and Bloc Party in 2004 and 2005, and has since been enhanced and re-defined by folks like Klaxons and Meet Me In St. Louis, among others. Two bands new to this genre are Elle Milano and Johnny Foreigner, both of which dropped their debut albums this year.


Download: Elle Milano - Acres of Dead Space Cadets (2008)

Elle Milano is a three-piece that incorporates mathy sounding stop and start structures into their songs while still managing to sound extremely catchy and awesome. This is very impressive, especially for having a girl bassist.

The second band is Johnny Foreigner, who approach the style with a more straight-forward, guitar driven style. Their guitarist has some ridiculously sweet riffs, especially on "Our Bipolar Friends" and "Hennings Favorite."


Download: Johnny Foreigner - Waited Up Til It Was Light (2008)

There's not quite as much to say about the Anti-Folk genre, since it's pretty self-explanatory. Mainly acoustic, soft folk music that slightly goes against its traditional roots and at times even mocks itself. This band, Noah and the Whale, is really awesome.


Download: Noah & The Whale - Peaceful, The World Lays Me Down (2008)

The next example of Anti-Folk is Lightspeed Champion, the new project of Dev Hynes, who used to play guitar in the electronic dance rock band Test Icicles. He recorded it at Saddle Creek studios in Omaha, Nebraska with members of Tilly & The Wall and Emmy the Great on vocals.



Jay Clark and Johnny Whitney are both awesome, but Jay Clark is cooler.



Let me explain.

Jay Clark (the black guy on the left hand side of the picture) used to be in a band called Pretty Girls Make Graves, which took its name from a song by The Smiths. He played really awesome guitar riffs all the time, and PGMG was a really solid band in general. They played post-punk influenced melodic indie rock and released 3 albums before breaking up in 2006. Élan Vital is the most well known of these.



Johnny Whitney (the pasty guy in the middle) was the singer in The Blood Brothers, and his voice has been described as "a ten year old boy screaming while being strangled." When my friend Taylor first heard Whitney's voice he thought it was just a beefy sounding woman.



There was a lot of hype surrounding the breaking up of both PGMG and the Blood Bros, and speculation about what projects the members would be working on next was all over the place. When I first heard of Clark and Whitney combining forces to make an album under the name Jaguar Love, it sounded almost too good to be true. The album mixes the two band's styles together perfectly, implementing both PGMG's melodic indie rock stylings and The Blood Brother's hardcore, distorted attitude. Here it is. Awesome.