Saturday, September 26, 2009

Music of the Weeks 38 + 39

Skipped last week, 'though that was not due to a shortage of songs or albums as I've been listenng to plenty of good music lately. I'm late to the Jonatha Brooke record, which is both beautifully crafted and executed. The Henry Threadgill tracks that was posted on Destination-Out sound terrific and bode well for the album, and on the upcoming Lightning Bolt record, the wonderfully titled Earthly Delights, the duo occasionally slow things down, which may dissappoint those who enjoy them purely as an impact band. But fret not, their gung-ho instrumental post-hard core/thrash/punk/impro seems more purposeful as a result.

My "best of 2009-lists" needs to be updated. They've has barely been tweaked since mid-summer, and tens of records need to be added.

  • Jonatha Brooke: The Works (Bad Dog Records)
  • Henry Threadgill: "To Undertake My Concerns Open" and "After Some Time", This Brings Us To, Vol. 1 (Pi Recordings)
  • Vijay Iyer Trio: Historicity (ACT)
  • Lightning Bolt: Earthly Delights (Load Records)
  • Digital Primitives: Hum Craclke & Pop (Hopscotch)
  • Deer Tick: Born on Flag Day (Partisan)
  • Pill: "Glass" (4180: The Prescription (mixtape))
  • Pixie Lott: "Here We Go Again" (Mercury)


Monday, September 21, 2009

Threadgill previewed * Destination: Out!

Head on over to Destination: Out! now for a preview of Henry Threadgill's upcoming album This Brings Us To, vol.1. Some thoughts by the man himself in that very same post.

Closing with a qoute from Studs Terkel:

“It would be difficult to overestimate Henry Threagill’s role in perpetually altering the meaning of jazz..…He has changed our underlying assumptions of what jazz can and should be.”

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Quick round-up: new Henry Threadgill, the Feelies and Horace Tapscott re-issues

As mentioned in the recent Destination-Out post, the great Henry Threadgill will release a new album, called This Brings Us To, with his group Zooid on 27th of October (US date?). While I love his work with Air and his 80's Sextet and Sextett records, I've not been quite as taken with his later work. But the man is a favorite nonetheless and I am very much looking forward to this one. Destination-Out will preview the record next monday. There's a review of the record at Music & More (I've yet to read the whole thing myself, though).




The re-issue of the Feelies classic Crazy Rhythms is finally out on Bar/None after some trouble with the previous attempt by Water. Sasha Frere-Jones has some thoughts and valuable info on the Feelies and that record on his New Yorker blog.



Also re-issued is the great 1989 record The Dark Tree by pianist Horace Tapscott. Stef at Free Jazz has revied it here.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Music of the Week 37/09

  • Luis Lopes, Adam Lane & Igal Foni: What Is When (Clean Feed)
  • Raekwon: Only Built For Cuban Linx II (EMI)
  • Q-Tip: Kamaal the Abstract (Arista/BMG Records)
  • M.O.T.O.: "Crystalize My Penis", Single File (Criminal IQ)
  • Natalie Imbruglia: "Want" (alright, so I'm slightly smitten. Who cares?)

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Beatlemania...again.

It's to be expected, of course, with the arrival of a remastered back catalogue where the sound is x-times better than the 1987 versions + elaborate box sets.

Pitchfork reviews the albums, all of 'em, as I'm sure many others will do too. Still, one could hope these reissues would allow for at least some degree of revision of the Beatles and their music. Not so, according to Pitchfork at least. Rubber Soul (their best by far), Revolver (quelle surprise), Sgt. Pepper's... (great dream pop avant-fun), and Magical Mystery Tour (good songs, but very uneven) all getting perfect scores.

I'm still baffled by those who pick Revolver as the foursome's best (not to mention "best ever"). Plenty of great songs, sure, but the gaping void of stupidity that is "Yellow Submarine" ruins the listening experience for me. No matter how I look at the album (either counting songs or listening to it as a whole - e.g. how one song relates to the others etc.), "YS" simply does not work. It's silly, dumb, the singing is flat, nor does it work as an experimental break. Yet Plagenhoef has the gall to call it "an inventive and charming track too often derided as camp". Too often? Too rarely is more like it.

Well, that's my two cents, anyway. Rant over.

Saturday, September 05, 2009

Fairytale...

...in the Supermarket. The Raincoats style. Their classic self-titled LP will be re-released (for the second time, but it's been a while since the previous) on Oct. 13th, but the LP can be pre-ordered directly from Kill Rock Stars here.

The Raincoats: "Fairytale in the Supermarket"

Friday, September 04, 2009

Music of the Week 36/09

  • JD Allen: Shine! (Sunny Side Records)
  • Polvo: In Prism (Merge)
  • Marcus Strickland: Idiosyncrasies (Strick Muzic)
  • White Denim: Live @ Garage, Oslo 03.09.09
  • Brad Paisley: "Welcome to the Future", American Saturday Night (Arista)
Honorable mention: Units: History of the Units, The Early Years: 1977-83

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