LCD Soundsystem This Is Happening
This is the much anticipated follow up to the 2007 Sound Of Silver release and I have to say, it does not disappoint one bit. James Murphy has done it again. The album is full of danceable, 80′s nostalgia, analog synthy tracks with that flare of rock and punk. The second track in the album “Drunk Girls” is a fun throwback to original tracks such as “Daft Punk Is Playing At My House”, with that sense of urgency that makes you just want to get up and go wild. This album is worthy of your next party. You can stream the whole album from their website: www.lcdsoundsystem.com
Fang Island Fang Island
Hailing from Providence, Rhode Island and now Brooklyn based, Fang Island is definitely a band to watch in 2010. With former members of the mathcore band, Daughters, Fang Island is progressive rock trying to disguise itself as indie pop. The band describes their sound as “everyone high-fiving everyone” and their goal, according to guitarist Jason Bartell, is to “make music for people who like music”. The self titled album is a very ornate and complex formula. Full of interesting guitar stylings and plenty of chanting that will leave you wanting for more.
Caribou Swim
Caribou’s Swim is one of those albums that will take you through a transcendental trip making you rediscover what true good music is. Dan Snaith’s almost whispered lyrics give the songs a sense secrecy and fragility backed against waves of beats and strange exotic synths. According to Snaith, he wants to make dance music which sounds more like water than metal, and the swirling and swishing effects on opener Odessa are perfect examples of this theory. Caribou is very smart music, not easily digestible by everyone, after all, Snaith does have a PhD in mathematics, which is a clear influence over his compositions.
From the upcoming still untitled LCD Soundsystem album: ‘Drunk Girls’. Let’s make it official, I am calling “Drunk Girls” the new party anthem of 2010. MGMT’s new album was a total bust. I’m not even gonna go into that, so LCD inevitably takes the throne.
The track has a very nostalgic 90′s feel to it, sounding more like LCD’s first Self Titled album. A departure from the very electronic and “silvery” sounding ‘Sound of Silver’ album.
You can see behind the scenes footage of the recording process in their transplanted LA studio here: www.lcdsoundsystem.com or you can watch here:
I haven’t been more excited about a band since the Postal Service released their album, and that’s quite a while ago. Broken Bells is the collaboration between the guitarist and lead vocalist from the Shins, James Mercer and artist-producer Brian Burton aka Danger Mouse. Brian Burton is well know for his contributions in The Grey Album and producing albums for artists such as Gnarls Barkley, Beck, and the Gorillaz. James Mercer is the iconic voice behind the indie rock band The Shins, whose music was predominately featured in the movie Garden State.
The pair decided to work together after meeting at a Danish music festival in 2004 and finding they were fans of each other’s work. Mercer and Burton began recording together in secret at Burton’s Los Angeles based studio in March 2008 and describe their material as “melodic, but experimental, too”.
Check out the video for their single “The High Road”:
Saturday night I was DJing at a friends house party with over 200 people. Plenty of alcohol, beautiful people, great vibes all around. It all came to a halt minutes after playing this one song, just as cops busted the party and told us to leave. The song, Zero Machine a remix of the Smashing Pumkins by Le Castle Vania off the Voice Of Treason Album.
I cannot believe the positive feedback I got on this track after playing it, so I thought I’d share it with everyone. It’s a thunderous electro remix, great synth leads, heavy bass drums, and powerful guitars, perfect theme song to a night of mayhem. Check it out:
Being an avid music listener and sometimes a self proclaimed trendsetter I am always scouring the blogosphere for that next best thing. I realized I must be lacking in that department, as this story only came into my periphery 3 years too late. But nevertheless, I am glad to share this with everyone. Music blog Stereogum has been teaming up with Australian music producer and mashup artist team9, to produce yearly mashup albums of the best tracks from that respective year and a few oldies. As they like to describe them, these ‘bastard pop’ albums are a real treat; free down-loadable quality music. Here is a retrospective look at the last 4 years:
Listen: Crystal Holiday MySplice 3: 2008 Mashed Up 1 “Britney Gets Bloc-ed” (Britney Spears “Womanizer” vs Bloc Party “Mercury”) 2 “B.F. Meets T.I.” (Ben Folds Feat. Regina Spektor “You Don’t Know Me” vs T.I. “U Don’t Know Me”) 3 “Good After Time” (Lykke Li “I’m Good I’m Gone” vs Cyndi Lauper “Time After Time”) 4 “Albert And Katy Sitting In A Tree” (Albert Hammond Jr. “GFC” vs Katy Perry “I Kissed A Girl”) 5 “Debbie Does Montreal” (Blondie “Call me” vs of Montreal “Id Engager”) 6 “Bang On A Milli” (Lil Wayne “A Milli” vs The Breeders “Bang On”) 7 “Lockdown Shelter” (Kanye West “Love Lockdown” Vs. The Rolling Stones “Gimme Shelter”) 8 “Disturbed Youth” (Rihanna “Disturbia” vs Beck “Youthless”) 9 “Killer Mirror” (The Killers “Human” vs Arcade Fire “Black Mirror”) 10 “Crystal Holiday” (Crystal Castles “Magic Spells” vs Naughty By Nature “Holiday”) 11 “The Sound Of Roses” (Human Highway “The Sound” vs Guns N’ Roses “Paradise City” vs Stone Roses “Waterfall” vs Extreme “More than Words”)
Listen: Loose Dancing MySplice 2: 2007 Mashed Up 1 “It’s A Sweet Ghost Party” – (Band Of Horses vs. Guns N’ Roses vs. 2 Live Crew) 2 “M.I.A.-Team” – (M.I.A. vs. The A-Team Theme) 3 “Smalltown Apology” – (One Republic vs. Bronski Beat) 4 “Roc Knife” – (Jay-Z vs. Grizzly Bear) 5 “A Forest Prayer” – (Bloc Party vs. The Cure) 6 “Loose Dancing” – (Bangers & Cash vs. The Bee Gees) 7 “My Man My Bomb” – (Feist vs. New Young Pony Club) 8 “Smokey Fire” – (Arcade Fire vs. Smokey Robinson vs. The Gunsmoke Theme) 9 “Countdown To Girls” – (Europe vs. Sean Kingston vs. Calvin Harris) 10 “Ratatat Under Ether” – (Ratatat vs. PJ Harvey)
Listen: Big School MySplice: 2006 Mashed Up 1 “Swan Together” (Thom Yorke vs. The Beatles) 2 “Lets Make Love And Listen To Junior Boys” (CSS vs. Junior Boys) 3 “Daddy And The Thief” (Wolfmother vs. Gnarls Barkley) 4 “Cold War Fiasco” (Cold War Kids vs. Lupe Fiasco vs. Lily Allen) 5 “Silent Saints” (The Knife vs. U2 & Green Day vs. Spank Rock) 6 “Big School” (Hot Chip vs. Peter Gabriel) 7 “When Will My Cheated Heart” (Yeah Yeah Yeahs vs. Diana Ross) 8 “Flaming Clipse” (Flaming Lips vs. Clipse) 9 “Roscoe Eyes” (Midlake vs. Jimi Hendrix) 10 “Young Cats” (Peter Bjorn And John vs. The Cure)
I’ve watched Owl City slowly climb the charts as he blatantly rips off the Postal Service. Owl City is a watered down, stale version of the Postal Service by Minnesota born, Adam Young. In an interview with EW, laptop totting synthpop Adam Young admits his no. 1 single “Fireflies” and the Postal Service in general “are pretty similar,” but at the same time claims he’s “a lot more of a Death Cab fan.” For example, he’d only heard Give Up “a little bit” before people started pointing it out.
EW: A lot of people wish they would put out another album. Is that something you would look forward to hearing?
ADAM YOUNG: I think [Give Up] left everyone asking, “What are they going to do next?” Since no one has done anything quite like it, it’s almost like everyone is naturally saying this is the next step — maybe that’s me, maybe that’s this record.
Ian Cohen of Pitchfork said it best:
But I doubt Ben Gibbard is losing sleep over Owl City’s Adam Young squatting on what is essentially vacated property. Death Cab reportedly cleared $5.4 million in revenue during 2006, basically anyone who’s watched TV in the past three years has heard the Postal Service, and Gibbard is married to the fantasy of every guy this song [Fireflies by Owl City] was ostensibly written for…
Don’t waste your money and bandwidth on this guy. True, there is no new Postal Service anywhere in sight but Owl City should not be your rebound. Judge for youself:
This week we released a new album, and it’s our best yet. We also released a new video – the second for this record – for a song called This Too Shall Pass, and you can watch it here. We hope you’ll like it and comment on it and pass the link along to your friends and do that wonderful thing that that you do when you’re fond of something, share it. We want you to stick it on your web page, post it on your wall, and embed it everywhere you can think of.
Unfortunately, as of now you can’t embed diddlycrap. And depending on where you are in the world, you might not even be able to watch it.
We’ve been flooded with complaints recently because our YouTube videos can’t be embedded on websites, and in certain countries can’t be seen at all. And we want you to know: we hear you, and we’re sorry. We wish there was something we could do. Believe us, we want you to pass our videos around more than you do, but, crazy as it may seem, it’s now far harder for bands to make videos accessible online than it was four years ago.
See, here’s the deal. The recordings and the videos we make are owned by a record label, EMI. The label fronts the money for us to make recordings – for this album they paid for us to spend a few months with one of the world’s best producers in a converted barn in Amish country wringing our souls and playing tympani and twiddling knobs – and they put up most of the cash that it takes to distribute and promote our albums, including the costs of pressing CDs, advertising, and making videos. We make our videos ourselves, and we keep them dirt cheap, but still, it all adds up, and it adds up to a great deal more than we have in our bank account, which is why we have a record label in the first place.
Fifteen years ago, when the terms of contracts like ours were dreamt up, a major label could record two cats fighting in a bag and three months later they’d have a hit. No more. People of the world, there has been a revolution. You no longer give a shit what major labels want you to listen to (good job, world!), and you no longer spend money actually buying the music you listen to (perhaps not so good job, world). So the money that used to flow through the music business has slowed to a trickle, and every label, large or small, is scrambling to catch every last drop. You can’t blame them; they need new shoes, just like everybody else. And musicians need them to survive so we can use them as banks. Even bands like us who do most of our own promotion still need them to write checks every once in a while.
But where are they gonna find money if no one buys music? One target is radio stations (there’s lots of articles out there. here’s one). And another is our friend The Internutz. As you’ve no doubt noticed, sites like YouTube, MySpace, and Blahzayblahblah.cn run ads on copyrighted content. Back when Young MC’s second album (the one that didn’t have Bust A Move on it) could go Gold without a second thought, labels would’ve considered these sites primarily promotional partners like they did with MTV, but times have changed. The labels are hurting and they need every penny they can find, so they’ve demanded a piece of the action. They got all huffy a couple years ago and threatened all sorts of legal terror and eventually all four majors struck deals with YouTube which pay them tiny, tiny sums of money every time one of their videos gets played. Seems like a fair enough solution, right? YouTube gets to keep the content, and the labels get some income.
The catch: the software that pays out those tiny sums doesn’t pay if a video is embedded. This means our label doesn’t get their hard-won share of the pie if our video is played on your blog, so (surprise, surprise) they won’t let us be on your blog. And, voilá: four years after we posted our first homemade videos to YouTube and they spread across the globe faster than swine flu, making our bassist’s glasses recognizable to 70-year-olds in Wichita and 5-year-olds in Seoul and eventually turning a tidy little profit for EMI, we’re – unbelievably – stuck in the position of arguing with our own label about the merits of having our videos be easily shared. It’s like the world has gone backwards.
Let’s take a wider view for a second. What we’re really talking about here is the shift in the way we think about music. We’re stuck between two worlds: the world of ten years ago, where music was privately owned in discreet little chunks (CDs), and a new one that seems to be emerging, where music is universally publicly accessible. The thing is, only one of these worlds has a (somewhat) stable system in place for funding music and all of its associated nuts-and-bolts logistics, and, even if it were possible, none of us would willingly return to that world. Aside from the smug assholes who ran labels, who’d want a system where a handful of corporate overlords shove crap down our throats? All the same, if music is going to be more than a hobby, someone, literally, has to pay the piper. So we’ve got this ridiculous situation where the machinery of the old system is frantically trying to contort and reshape and rewire itself to run without actually selling music. It’s like a car trying to figure out how to run without gas, or a fish trying to learn to breath air.
So what’s there to do? On the macro level, well, who the hell knows? There are a lot of interesting ideas out there, but this is not the place to get into them. As for our specific roadblock with the video embedding, the obvious solution is for YouTube to work out its software so it allow labels to monetize their videos, wherever on the Internet or the globe they’re being accessed. That’ll surely happen before too long because there’s plenty of money to be made, but it’s more complicated than it looks at first glance. Advertisers aren’t too keen on paying for ads when they don’t know where the ads will appear (“Dear users of FoxxxyPregnantMILFS.com, try Gerber’s new low-lactose formula!”), so there are a lot of hurdles to get over.
In the meantime, the only thing OK Go can do is to upload our videos to sites that allow for embedding, like MySpace and Vimeo. We do that already, but it stings a little. Not only does it cannibalize our own numbers (it tends to do our business more good to get 40 million hits on one site than 1 million hits on 40 sites), but, as you can imagine, we feel a lot of allegiance to the fine people at YouTube. They’ve been good to us, and what they want is what we want: lots of people to see our videos. When push comes to shove, however, we like our fans more, which is why you can take the code at the bottom of this email and embed the “This Too Shall Pass” video all over the Internet.
With or without this embedding problem, we’ll never get 50 zillion views on a YouTube video again. That moment – the dawn of internet video – is gone. The internet isn’t as anarchic as it was then. Now there are Madison Avenue firms that specialize in “viral marketing” and the success of our videos is now taught in business school. But here’s a secret: zillions of hits was never the point. We’re a rock band, and it’s a great gig. Not just because we get to snort drugs off the Queen of England (we do), but because the only thing we are expected to do is make cool stuff. We chase our craziest ideas for a living, and if sharing those ideas takes 40 websites instead of one, it doesn’t make too big a difference to us.
So, for now, here’s the bottom line: EMI won’t let us let you embed our YouTube videos. It’s a decision that bums us out. We’ve argued with them a lot about it, but we also understand why they’re doing it. They’re aware that their rules make it harder for people to watch and share our videos, but, while our duty is to our music and our fans, theirs is to their shareholders, and they believe they’re doing the right thing.
Here’s the embed code for the Vimeo posting [Note: play the video and click "embed" to copy code]:
Following the very popular trending topic on Twitter, here is my musical suggestion for this glorious Monday.
Max Tundra Imagine yourself in a toy store full of kids banging on toy instruments and playing 8bit games. Keyboards, drums, guitars, old school Nintendos, all coming together into an organized chaos titled ‘Orphaned’. That’s exactly what Max (real name Ben Jacobs) does, he brings a child-like sensibility to what is an experimental glitch-pop tune.
The xx These Londoners have been the recent recipient of much hyped praise from the blogosphere. Their stark melancholic pop tunes are dabbed with a hint of modern R&B, characterized by simple slow compositions and duets mostly about sex. The songs are not musically impressive but do hold on to you with their dark, sparse guitar textures and punchy bass lines.
Conglomatron This was a great find by a friend of mine while browsing through a record store in NYC. I was instantly hooked upon first hearing it. Conglomatron is as stated in the title, a conglomeration of rappers from the Chicago area coming together to create an album. I like to consider them as geekyfied-scifi-futuristic hip-hop. Their song themes range from nostalgic cartoons to smoking weed with Chewbacca, instant hits on my book.
[audio: skyhigh.mp3|titles=Sky High |artists=.Org from Conglomatron]
It’s Tuesday, one of the most boring days of the week. But not anymore, here are a few of my favorite latests tracks:
Chromeo has been a staple in my dance mixes for a while now. This Canadian act can make even white people shake their ass. A mix of funk, disco and dance this is the perfect track for your next dance party.
I know I Know, it’s Vampire Weekend, they were so summer ’08. Many found them pretentious and untalented but I could not resist their afrobeat influenced pop tunes. They have finally announced a new album “Contra” and this is their first single.
Speak of hidden gems, Delorean is such a breath of fresh air when it comes to electronic music. Their dark danceable pop tunes are a delicious cocktail of Passion Pit, Phoenix and The Field. They could have become my ’09 summer soundtrack only if they were not too late in their release.
Let me start by saying that this is Wayne Coyne nephew’s band, Dennis Coyne. Stardeath & White Dwarfs mimics many of The Flaming Lips space rock aesthetics but they are by no means a complete copy. Living under your uncle’s shadow must be hard but think of all the benefits, one of them being a deal with Warner Brothers.
Not having actually grown up in the States and immersing myself in the book, I had no idea what ‘Where The Wild Things Are’ was. It was not until seeing the breathtaking trailer with music by the Arcade Fire that I began to understand how deeply embedded the story was with my generation. So I’ve taken it upon myself to really embrace the film and everything about it. Here is the full stream of the soundtrack performed by Karen O. of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and her band The Kids.
Vampire Weekend have announced their sophomore album titled “Contra” to be released on January 12, 2010. The pop superstars created quite a buzz with their viral marketing campaign by releasing images of mystery girl in music blogs linking to ithinkuracontra.com. Now we know the site redirects to Vampire Weekend’s site.
Here is the track listing:
01. Horchata
02. White Sky
03. Holiday
04. California English
05. Taxi Cab
06. Run
07. Cousins
08. Giving Up The Gun
09. Diplomat’s Son
10. I Think Ur A Contra
Honestly, I think Vampire weekend are a bit overated. Although this summer would have not been the same without them. Looking forward to hear what they bring to the table this time. As with most releases nowadays you should keep an eye out for a leaked version to hit the net.
Just in time for last summer, new MGMT video for their single ‘Kids’. Watch as they scare a poor baby with monsters and then explode to a psychedelic animation orchestrated by the likes of Wonder Showzen.
Perhaps they should have just given the kid this monster head kiddie car, this is one scare you can’t get away from.
Phoenix’s song is no more than 2 weeks old and it’s already poised to become the jam of this summer. Fan made videos have already sparked on YouTube here and there and the blogs can’t stop writing about them. The Following video is a tribute of a tribute from Bratpack’s mashup:
Face it, music is part of our daily lives whether we like it or not. But some people just have bad taste in music, here are some of my favorite recent albums that will enhance your palate.
Fringe Element (Short Like me edit) – Beni [audio:fringe.mp3]
This French music label has been putting out these mixes for a while now. They started back in 2002 and have realeased artists such as Alan Braxe, Bloc Party, Boyz Noize, Crystal Castles, Cut Copy, Yelle, Hot Chip and many others. They are considered to be in the forefront of electronic music with some of the biggest names in their portfolio. These mixes are early previews of soon to be released tracks.
2. Phoenix: Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
(Pop, rock, electronic)
3. The Field: Yesterday and Today
(Electronic, minimal, ambient)
The More That I do – The Field
[audio:themore.mp3]
‘Yesterday and Today’ is the sequel to the critically acclaimed previous release by Swedish artist Axel Willner. Combining minimalist techno and ambient music, the album will take you in an ethereal vicodin induced trip through the clouds. Beautiful textures, beats and synths will take you from song to song, some of them expanding more than 10 minutes. If you would like to enhance the experience, drink a bottle of Robitussin listen to this album.
Tune in tonight to NY’s independent free form station WMFU (91.1 FM in New York, at 90.1 FM in the Hudson Valley) where they will be broadcasting completely by solar power. The show will feature live performances from the best of the best in the 8-bit / video gaming music world such as Glomag, Bubblyfish, Natty, Nullsleep and more. Performing music from Game Boys with photovoltaic-charged AAs, of course.