Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Andrew Bird - Useless Creatures


Wow. I can't believe it's been just shy of 4 months since I last updated this blog! I think it's time to revive it. I don't really even have an excuse for why I haven't posted in so long. I mean, it was summer and I had a lot of free time... I guess I was just being really lazy. That's what summer is for, right? Well now it's October so summer has been over for a bit now and it's time to get back to posting updates.

I suppose one reason I didn't post in so long was because I hadn't heard much of anything that really inspired me to tell people about it. That changed about 30 minutes ago when I got home from the record store with, among other things, 'Useless Creatures' by Andrew Bird.

This album is considered a "sister-album" to Bird's 2009 release Noble Beast. In fact, if you pre-ordered the limited edition of Noble Beast you received Useless Creatures as a special companion disc of instrumental music. This was only offered for the very first run and was subsequently discontinued. I guess it was later reissued as a stand-alone album, or else I don't know how I could have bought it.

Useless Creatures was recorded in the Wilco loft and features percussionist Glenn Kotche of Wilco and jazz musician Todd Sickafoose on double bass. Here's a couple pics of the famed Wilco loft...

(that's not Andrew Bird)

(You can see more of the Wilco loft in the rockumentary 'I Am Trying To Break Your Heart' filmed during the production of their album 'Yankee Hotel Foxtrot'. I would highly recommend it, and it's on Netflix!)

But back to the matter at hand. Useless Creatures is unlike any other Andrew Bird album I've heard for a couple of reasons. For one, it's completely instrumental. No lyrics. No vocals (aside from some head singing on 'Master Sigh'). Bird even holds back on his trademark whistling. Another reason I find this so different from Bird's other musical ventures is because of the inclusion of sounds from other parts of the world. 'Nyatiti' is based on a traditional Kenyan folk melody and 'Hot Math' is based on a West African polyrhythmic groove. Bird described 'Carrion Suite' as "a collection of all the ideas that come out of me when I’m warming up at sound check. A little Dvorak mixed with gypsy-Nuyorican jazz and Afro-Cuban Bach". If that quote doesn't make you want to listen to this album, I don't know what will. Nuyorcian, by the way, is a portmanteau for New York and Puerto Rican referring to the Puerto Rican population in New York. 

The track on the album that Bird was most excited about making is 'The Barn Tapes'. To make this track he and an engineer friend set up in a barn in Illinois and opened all the doors and windows. They hooked up Bird's violin to 6 amps and placed microphones all over, inside and out. Then Bird commenced to record four hours of loops on a quarter-inch tape machine because he wanted to have that sound of the tape machine slowing down and speeding up. He made a loop for every note in the 12-tone scale, major and minor. Bird describes the track as "static in the sense that almost every note in the scale is in each loop and there is almost no forward motion, just this swirling mass of sound."

Well, I suppose this post is long enough. So I'm going to post a link to a video (sorry, I couldn't embed it) and another link where you can listen to the whole album. You should all check out Andrew Bird's other albums as well. I would especially recommend Noble Beast, Armchair Apocrypha, and Andrew Bird and the Mysterious Production of Eggs. I might also recommend Oh! The Grandeur by Andrew Bird's Bowl of Fire if you wanted to hear some swinging gypsy-jazz stuff.

Here's that video:
And the music:

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Thelonious Monk

Thelonious Sphere Monk (yeah, that's really his middle name) is my favorite jazz musician of all time, and has been since I really started listening to jazz back in high school. A lot of that is because my dad is a Monk fan but doesn't really listen to much jazz in general, so we had a few Monk albums laying around but not much else in the way of jazz.

There are a number of reasons I like Monk, not the least of which is his unique style of playing. If you listen to any Monk recording you'll hear some pretty unusual stuff, like how he plays the piano very percussively and how he uses silence and hesitation to add character to the music. He was also known for using a lot of dissonance and angular melodies. Another of the things about Thelonious Monk that made him so great was his attitude and personality. He seems to me to be the epitome of the crazy, cool musician. He was an unusual dude... weird even. While somebody else would be soloing, it wasn't unusual for Monk to just stand up and spin clockwise instead of comping. Or if you watch his feet while he's playing he is usually going nuts and just totally getting into the music. He also looked pretty unusual. He would almost always wear some strange hat and sometimes sunglasses as well. Later in life he had a pretty wicked beard, too.

At least some of his strangeness could probably be attributed to mental illness. His son, T.S. Monk (short for Thelonious Sphere Monk III) said that sometimes his father wouldn't even recognize him later in his life. There are a number of theories as to how and why Monk was mentally ill. Some people suggest that he probably had schizophrenia or manic depression. One physician stated that Monk was probably misdiagnosed and prescribed drugs that caused brain damage. Sometimes he would become very excited for a few days followed by long periods of pacing, and finally go into a stage where he wouldn't speak for days. Bassist Al McKibbon, who had known Monk for over twenty years and played on his final tour in 1971, said: "On that tour Monk said about two words. I mean literally maybe two words. He didn't say 'Good morning', 'Goodnight', 'What time?' Nothing. Why, I don't know. He sent word back after the tour was over that the reason he couldn't communicate or play was that Art Blakey and I were so ugly."

Thelonious Monk began playing piano at the age of six. He had some formal training, and he would eavesdrop on his sister's piano lessons, but he was mostly self-taught. He dropped out of high school and started playing the organ for an evangelist preacher. In his late teens he started finding work playing jazz. He got involved in the jazz scene at Minton's Playhouse, a nightclub in Manhattan. While playing there Monk got to know some of the other leading jazz musicians of the time including Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, and later Miles Davis among others. It was also during this time that Monk and some of the others began to originate what is now known as bebop. Monk is quoted as saying, "Bebop wasn't developed in any deliberate way."

During his life Monk became one of the most respected and remarkable jazz musicians ever. He is the second most recorded jazz composer with about 70 songs (Duke Ellington who is #1 in that respect has over 1000). Monk is also one of only five jazz musicians to have appeared on the cover of Time (the other four being Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Wynton Marsalis, and Dave Brubeck).

Okay, enough with the music lesson. Here are a few clips of Monk playing. Enjoy!

Blue Monk (Oslo, April 1966)

Evidence (includes bits of rehearsal, song starts around 2:45)

Round About Midnight

Bemsha Swing (taken from 1957s "Brilliant Corners")

It Don't Mean a Thing (Duke Ellington)

I Love You Sweetheart of All My Dreams

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Long time, no post!

Sorry it's been such a long time since I posted last... over two months actually. I stopped around the time finals were coming up and things were getting too busy for me to be able to post very much and I just kinda grew out of the habit. Since graduation I've had tons of time to post, but I've been very lazy... my bad! But I figured it was about time to post again before I got out of the habit completely. So, anyway, here are some videos of some songs that I've been digging lately!

Los Campesinos - You! Me! Dancing!

Peter, Bjorn & John - Young Folks

Volcano Choir - Still
(I know this sounds like "Woods" by Bon Iver, because it basically is. Justin Vernon of Bon Iver is also in Volcano Choir... and this is basically a remix of "Woods" that was renamed for whatever reason)

Josephine Foster - Who Will Feel Bitter at the Days End?

Wilco - I'm the Man Who Loves You

My Brightest Diamond - To Pluto's Moon (Son Lux Remix)
(This track is awesome, but I was really looking for "Inside a Boy" from the same album of Son Lux remixes of My Brightest Diamond Songs. If you go to this link, http://sonlux.blogspot.com/, you will find both songs among others... including a cover of Radiohead's "Nude")

Okay, well that's all for now. Hopefully I'll be posting more regularly than every two months from now on. Thanks for being patient, and don't forget to check back every now and again for when I do update! 'Til next time.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear is one of those bands that I've known about for a while and have liked what I've heard, but never really pursued looking into them further. Recently though, I saw a music video for the song "Ready, Able" from their 2009 album, Veckatimest and decided I was interested in checking out more of their stuff. They remind me in a lot of ways of Fleet Foxes, which isn't bad at all. They play mostly acoustic instruments and use a lot of vocal harmonies. Parts of "Ready, Able" remind me of The Beach Boys, too (check out 1:40 in the video).

Here's the video for "Ready, Able" from Veckatimest

This is their music video for "Knife" from Yellow House
...by the way, if you thought that music video was weird, read this quote from one of the band members, Daniel Rossen...

"I was very skeptical of them when they first came around. The ideas that they had before that one were so much more insane. You have no idea. Fucking absurd. It was all this weird symbolism and a lot of really sexual stuff. Initially it was like Ed with a replica of himself on his back and out of the replica of himself is birthed this weird phantom beast that is some kind of monster version of himself. And he like makes out with the monster on the beach and the rest of us were like water nymphs screaming and swimming in circles. It was totally crazy."

And finally, this is a recording of "Deep Blue Sea" from their Friend EP


That's all for today, but I'll keep you guys updated with more music soon!

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Finally... more music!

Sorry it's been so long since I last posted, but I've been really busy (and maybe a bit lazy as well). There's definitely not a lack of ideas for stuff to put on my blog, so I guess I'll share a bit with you now.

Not long ago Radiohead released their eighth studio album, The King of Limbs. I haven't had a chance to listen to all of it yet, but from what I have heard, it should be amazing. The mood of this album is very eerie, even haunting. I went on YouTube briefly and found a couple videos that I think should give you guys an idea of what the album is about.


For starters, a live performance by Thom Yorke doing "Give Up the Ghost" back in February of 2010...


...followed by a nice serving of "Codex" (my favorite song on the album)...


...and finally, the music video for "Lotus Flower".

(Thom Yorke sort of looks like a Droog in this video)

Well, that's all I'm going to post today. Hopefully I'll be better at getting regular posts on here. Make sure to check out the rest of The King of Limbs and maybe even buy it when it hits stores on Monday (03/28). If you just can't wait that long, you can already buy it from Radiohead's website as an MP3 or WAV file. 

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Some Great Female Singer/Songwriters

If you read this blog you are probably aware that I like folksy singer/songwriter type stuff a lot. I especially like female singer/songwriters, because I usually prefer their voices over guys' voices. I don't know why really. Why do some people prefer the sound of a violin to a cello? Interestingly enough, I prefer cellos to violin... but that is kind of irrelevant. Anyway, here are a few female singer/songwriters who I like and maybe you will too.

Joanna Newsom

One of my favorite singers of all time. It used to be that her voice was described as "ragged", "shrill", or even "child-like", although those words are perhaps too harsh. Her voice was definitely distinctive and had a unique character to it, but it wasn't bad sounding. However, her vocal style has dramatically changed since 2009 when she had some health problems. She couldn't talk, sing, or even cry for two months. Then, in 2010 she released "Have One On Me" and her voice had completely changed. Although her voice won't ever sound the same, she is still one of my favorite singer/songwriters (actually, singer/composer would be more accurate).

Cosmia - Ys

'81 - Have One On Me


Josephine Foster

Josephine Foster is a relatively new discovery for me, but she is quickly becoming one of my favorite singers. She was classically trained from a young age to be an opera singer, but eventually decided to write and perform her own songs instead. Her music often includes instruments like guitar, harp, ukulele, and often some winds... and of course voice. Being that she was trained as an opera singer, her voice is absolutely beautiful, but can be very haunting at times. I couldn't find any videos on YouTube, but Foster also put out an album of "Lieder" or "art songs" by Schumann, Schubert, and Brahms which is also amazing!

Hazel Eyes I Will Lead You - Hazel Eyes I Will Lead You


Karen Dalton

Karen Dalton was involved in the Greenwich Village scene in the '60s. Bob Dylan said of her, "My favorite singer in the place was Karen Dalton. Karen had a voice like Billie Holiday and played guitar like Jimmy Reed... I sang with her a couple of times." She played banjo and guitar and had a bluesy, gritty sound. 

Katie Cruel - In My Own Time


Meg Baird

Meg Baird is the lead singer for Espers as well as having a solo career. She also provides background vocals on other people's albums a lot, including on Bonnie "Prince" Billy's "Ask Forgiveness". Her uncle was a famous folk singer I.G. Greer, so she was exposed to folk music from a very early age. Baird took piano lessons from a young age and taught herself to play guitar.

There Was A Boy - Loving Takes This Course

Byss & Abyss - Espers


Mariee Sioux

Mariee Sioux (pronouced Mary Sue) is a folk singer from California. Her dad is of Hungarian and Polish descent and her mom is Spanish, Mexican, and Paiute (Native American). Sioux's songs tend to have a very Native American vibe. Many of her songs include the traditional Native American flute. Even the themes of her music tend to focus on nature and Native American culture. Her beautiful voice and unique style really set her apart from other folk singers. 

Wild Eyes - Faces in the Rocks


Orion Rigel Dommisse

Creepy. That's the best way I can think of to describe Orion Rigel Dommisse... that, and "coolest name ever". She tends to use piano, synthesizer, harmonium, and cello. Her songs sound like a musical version of an old fairy tale. And I don't mean the Disney-fied versions where everyone lives happily ever after. No, I'm talking about the kind where the evil step-sisters cut off parts of their feet so they can fit into the glass slipper, and then birds pluck out their eyes. Seriously, that's how the story goes. Look it up.

Drink Yourself (To Death) - What I Want From You Is Sweet


Well, that's all I'm going to write today. I could probably add a few more... Kath Bloom, Laura Veirs, Scout Niblett, Vashti Bunyan... but I'm tired and this post is long enough. Maybe I'll add a Pt. 2 later.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Fleet Foxes - Helplessness Blues

Fleet Foxes recently announced that they are going to release their second full length album called "Helplessness Blues". The album is due out May 3rd. The band also released the title track as a single available for download at http://soundcloud.com/subpop/fleet-foxes-helplessness-blues. If you haven't listened to Fleet Foxes before, they are kind of like a CSNY meets Beach Boys meets Appalachian folk-tunes. They are probably on the list of my top-five favorite bands of all time. They are generally considered "Freak Folk" or "Baroque Pop".



Saturday, January 22, 2011

The Flaming Lips

Recently I've been listening to The Flaming Lips a lot. I've been a fan since sometime in High School, but haven't always listened to them all that much. Sometime last semester I got a few albums from interlibrary loan; The Soft Bulletin, Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots, At War With the Mystics, and Embryonic. That lasted me a long time as far as having new material to listen to, so I wasn't looking to get anything else for a while. In fact, until a couple weeks ago that was all of their music that I had in my iTunes at all. But then I read about an album that they made with Stardeath, White Dwarfs, Henry Rollins, and Peaches. What they did is they remade Dark Side of the Moon track for track, and let me tell you, it f**king rocks. It really captures the same ideas and moods as the original Pink Floyd album but with the bands' distinct characteristic sounds and styles. So, following this discovery it was with renewed interest that I looked up the Flaming Lips' discography and subsequently got every album that I could find. So, much like the earlier Sufjan Stevens post, I've decided to go through all the Flaming Lips albums that I have and give a brief review.

Hear It Is - 1986

One of the albums that I've only had for a brief period of time, but already one of my favorites. This album is a lot different from what you might expect from the Flaming Lips if, like me, you started listening to their later stuff before hearing this. It's much more.... normal. I don't mean that as a necessarily good thing or a bad thing either. It definitely rocks, but there aren't as many computer effects or synthesizers as you might expect from the Lips. In fact, without listening to the whole album right now to double-check, I don't think there are any. I would actually classify this album as being punk rock.

My Favorite Track: Jesus Shootin' Heroin


Oh My Gawd!!! - 1987

Another album which I only recently started listening to. Like Hear It Is this album is very heavy with a punk rock vibe. In a lot of ways listening to this album reminds me of older heavy metal bands like Black Sabbath and the like. It still has a punk feel, but is more psychedelic, foreshadowing the direction the Lips would take in future endeavors. The band kept on sticking with guitar, bass, drums, and vocals for the most part, but did add some piano in on this album... including on my favorite track, "Love Yer Brain".

My Favorite Track: Love Yer Brain

(This video is from the "U.F.O.s at the Zoo" DVD, 2006)

Telepathic Surgery - 1989

Yet another punk rock influenced album. This album seems to have a bit more variety from song to song than their previous two records, however. Their sound is still pretty traditional for the most part, but you can tell the band is starting to get into more and more experimental methods of making music, like in "Hell's Angel's Cracker Factory", a 23 minute musical epic. From what I've read this song is actually a "leftover" from when the band was originally considering making this album a "sound collage". They eventually scrapped that idea for a more traditional approach to the album, but that track remained. "Chrome Plated Suicide" is based around the tune "Sweet Child o' Mine" by Guns n' Roses, which makes it pretty fun to listen to.

My Favorite Track: Hari-Krishna Stomp Wagon (Fuck Led Zeppelin)


In a Priest Driven Ambulance - 1990

This is where I can really start to tell that The Flaming Lips veered away from "punk rock" and began playing in a style that was more "alternative". In some ways it really isn't all that different from previous records since the band continued to stick with pretty conventional instruments and compositional styles. This is the first album with Jonathan Donahue on lead guitar, and he really added something new and interesting to the band with his wild solos and meandering style. If I were to recommend one album to get somebody into the earlier music from The Flaming Lips, this is probably the one I would choose. It's more accessible and I think that the addition of Donahue really rounded out their sound well.

My Favorite Track: What a Wonderful World (awesome cover, one of the best)


Hit to Death in the Future Head - 1992

The band's 5th album and their debut album on Warner Bros. Records. For the majority of the album the band stuck with much the same "punk rock"/"noise-pop" sound, but there are a lot more pop-influenced tracks on this record than on previous ones. This is the last album with the same lineup that had been The Flaming Lips. After recording this album Jonathan Donahue (guitar) and Nathan Roberts (drums) both left the group and were replaced by Ronald Jones and Steven Drozd, respectively, for the subsequent tour. 

My Favorite Track: The Sun


Transmissions from the Satellite Heart - 1993

This album really marked The Flaming Lips becoming a household name, more or less. "She Don't Use Jelly" was their first ever song to hit the charts after being featured on Beavis and Butthead. The music video for this song and "Turn it On", the album's other single, were both played on MTV adding to the band's popularity. In my opinion, Steve Drozd was one of the best things to happen to the Flaming Lips. It was when he joined that the Lips started getting more into experimental stuff and using computer effects and synthesizers. As much as I like their earlier music, when I think of the Flaming Lips I tend to think of their later sound.

My Favorite Track: She Don't Use Jelly



Clouds Taste Metallic - 1995

I would say that it was this album which signaled the Lips really coming into their own as a group. Their sound really matured and includes a lot more memorable melodies and riffs instead of being so aggressive and guitar-driven. On this album the sound is less dense than on earlier albums and you start hearing instruments like xylophone. Drozd also adds backup vocals which becomes a part of the sound which I think of as being "the Flaming Lips". 

My Favorite Track: When You Smile



Zaireeka - 1997

I actually haven't had a chance to listen to this album properly yet. The reason being because it's split up into four discs which are supposed to be played simultaneously. I'm still really excited to give this album a listen when I get a chance. I still need to burn the discs and find three other people to listen to it. Around the same time they were making this album the Lips were also experimenting with their "parking lot experiments". What they would do is get a bunch of volunteers together in their cars in a parking lot and give everyone a cassett. Then they would direct the volunteers as far as when to come in or when to change dynamics. From listening to some of Zaireeka one disc at a time it seems like the music is going to be sweet, but I don't know yet. Maybe once I get a chance to do that I'll post an update about what I thought.

The Soft Bulletin - 1999

This is my favorite Lips album. This album is a lot more varied in the different instruments that they use. This is when computer effects and synthesizers really started playing a big role in the Lips' sound. The songs are also much more layered, although not necessarily dense. This album has often been described as the Pet Sounds of the 90's. This is also the first album whose personnel includes only the three "actual" (read "lasting", "current") members of the Flaming Lips... Wayne Coyne, Michael Ivins, and Steven Drozd. "The Spiderbite Song" from this album is about how each of the three members had to cope with some really heavy stuff and the band almost didn't make it through. Bass player Michael Ivins got in a bad car accident and was trapped in his car for hours when the wheel of another car flew up into his windshield. Frontman Wayne Coyne's father (or maybe stepfather, I can't remember) died after a long struggle with cancer, but his verse is also often ascribed to back in the day when his brother was in the band and decided to leave when he got married. Drummer Steve Drozd's verse is where the song gets the title. He almost had to get his arm amputated when he got either a) a spider bite, or b) an infection from shooting heroin. Chances are it was the second since it is well known that Drozd was a user. Drozd claimed it was a spiderbite, and Coyne was never the kind of person to be confrontational, so he probably just went with that story. However, the lyric, "The poison then could reach your heart from a vein" seems to point to Wayne trying to let Steven know how he felt without being confrontational. Especially if you take the chorus into account "I'm glad that it didn't destroy you/ How sad that would be/ 'Cause if it destroyed you/ It would destroy me". 

My Favorite Track(s): The Spiderbite Song, The Gash

(not the best recording, but it has some cool commentary by Wayne Coyne)



Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots - 2002

This album starts off with some contraversy over the opening track "Fight Test". It follows the same chord structure of Cat Stevens' "Father and Son", and it was later decided in a settlement that the band would pay royalties to Cat Stevens. I guess it's really no big deal, since Coyne wasn't trying to pull a Vanilla Ice and pretend he didn't do anything. He said, "I know "Father and Son" and I knew there would be a little bit of comparison. "Fight Test" is not a reference necessarily to the ideas of "Father and Son", but definitely a reference to the cadence, the melody, and chord progression. I think it's such a great arrangement of chords and melody". It was during this album that the band really became known for their space rock, neo-psychedelic sound with tracks like "Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots" and "One More Robot/ Sympathy 3000-21" among others. This album also features Yoshimi P-We doing vocals alongside Coyne, and she is awesome.

My Favorite Track: It's Summertime


At War with the Mystics - 2006

This is a close second when it comes to my favorite albums by the Flaming Lips. It still has the psychedelic sounds of Soft Bulletin and Yoshimi, but it also goes back to their roots a bit. It's very guitar oriented, like the amazing guitar solo around 2:30 in "My Cosmic Autumn Rebellion" and the riff from "The W.A.N.D." I feel like on this album the Lips found a way to continue with their more accessible sound but still rock as hard (if not harder) than on their earlier albums, and also keep the whole space rock, craziness vibe going on. "The Wizard Turns On..." won the Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance in 2006, which doesn't surprise me. It's an epic track, not in length, but in it's intensity and imagery. It also has some great drum fills. 

My Favorite Track: My Cosmic Autumn Rebellion (The Inner Life as Blazing Shield of Defiance and Optimism as Celestial Spear of Action) or Goin' On



Embryonic - 2009

When the Lips came out with Embryonic in 2009 they proved yet again that they could keep reinventing themselves. I think that when lead singer of the Lips, Wayne Coyne, put it best when he said it had "a freak-out vibe". I think Pitchfork.com's review of the album puts it well when they say, "The sprawling 70-minute marathon ruminates on themes of madness, isolation, and hallucinogenic horror, translating them into an unrelentingly paranoid, static-soaked acid-rock epic." This album can be a tough listen the first time, but it's worth it once you get to know the songs. 

My Favorite Track: See The Leaves



The Dark Side of the Moon - 2009

Actually this album's full title is "The Flaming Lips and Stardeath and White Dwarfs with Henry Rollins and Peaches Doing The Dark Side of the Moon", but that's just a mouthful. As the title might suggest, this album consists of those groups doing just that... creating a track-for-track remake of Pink Floyd's best known (and arguably best) album. I figure that the reason for listing all the bands in the title is because this isn't really a Lips album featuring other groups; It's really a compilation including all those groups and singers as well. The Lips do play on seven out of the nine tracks, but they are also accompanied by the other groups quite a lot. Both Stardeath and White Dwarfs play on six tracks each, Henry Rollins on seven, and Peaches on two including the spectacular vocal solo during "The Great Gig in the Sky". I love the way this album stays so true to the original (Henry Rollins even recreates the interview bits) but still sounds so unique and different. I feel almost guilty saying it, but there are parts of this album which I like more than Pink Floyd's version. For instance, the Lips' version of "Money" sounds so much more mechanical, industrial, and even robotic. It seems to me to fit better with the theme of the song.

My Favorite Track: Any Colour You Like

Friday, January 7, 2011

Bonnie 'Prince' Billy

Okay, so here's a hilarious music video that Zach Galifianakis (The Hangover) and 
Will Oldham (Bonnie 'Prince' Billy) made to Kanye Wests song "Can't Tell Me Nothing"


And if you didn't know who Bonnie 'Prince' Billy was before, watch these!





This is the song that actually led me to start listening to Bonnie 'Prince' Billy. It's from Scout Niblett's album This Fool Can Die Now (you should all check it out!) and I liked BPB's vocals so much I looked up who he was and since then I've purchased 2 vinyls and some MP3s of his. He's done some collaborations with a lot of people like Dawn McCarthy (of Faun Fables) and most recently he put out an album with The Cairo Gang called The Wonder Show of the World which is amazing! Anyway, here's "Kiss" by Scout Niblett featuring Bonnie 'Prince' Billy.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Sunday, January 2, 2011

The Decemberists - Hazards of Love


Today I purchased my textbooks for the coming semester on Amazon and for some reason or another (probably because I spent over $250 on 6 books) got a $5 credit on the Amazon mp3 store and another $5 credit towards Amazon on demand TV or something. I know! Great deal, right!? Sarcasm aside, I guess it was nice that I got that stuff since I would have purchased the books regardless of if they gave the "free" stuff to me on the side. I was especially happy when I found out that Amazon has a bunch of mp3 albums on sale for $5, so I could get a whole album instead of just picking and choosing songs. After a lot of searching I decided to get The Hazards of Love by The Decemberists. They actually had a really nice selection of stuff for $5. They had The Black Keys, Devendra Banhart, She & Him, and a bunch of other cool stuff... not just Ke$ha and Katy Perry.

The Hazards of Love is an indie rock opera written by the leader of The Decemberists, Colin Meloy. It tells the story of a girl named Margaret (voiced by Becky Stark of Lavender Diamond) who wanders into the forest and meets what seems to be a wounded fawn. She tries to help it but it ends up being a shape-shifting, forest-dwelling being named William (voiced by Meloy) who is a fawn by day and a human by night. As she tries to help him he transforms into a human being and they fall in love and do their thing (I don't think it was rape as some internet forums suggest). Margaret goes back to town but can't stop thinking of William. She's in love with him, which is why I don't think it was rape. Also because she then willingly goes back to the forest once she starts showing that she's pregnant. She tells the flowers and trees and stuff to let William know she's back, and he comes to her and they do it again. A lot of people don't understand the line when Margaret and William sing "And here we died our little deaths" but a little death, or la petite mort, is actually a metaphor for orgasm. Then William hears his (adopted) mother coming, who we find out is the Fairy Queen (voiced by Shara Worden of My Brightest Diamond). She had found William in the forest when he was a baby and took him in as her own in order to keep him away from the world of men. She is also the reason that he is a fawn during the day. She is upset with William because she sees his relationship with Margaret as a betrayal ("And now, this is how I am repaid?"). She forbids him to go out at night (when he takes human form). He makes a deal with the Queen. He is allowed one night with Margaret but in return the Queen makes him promise to spend the rest of his nights at home with her. Obviously William intends to run away, otherwise he wouldn't make such a stupid deal.

Now that we have the backstory, the rest of the plot can start to move along. Next we hear a song by a character named The Rake (also voiced by Meloy). This song acts as an introduction to his character. A rake is a womanizer and just an all-around bad guy usually. So we learn that The Rake (he doesn't have a real name in the narrative) was married at the age of 21 and at first was happy. "I was wedded and it whetted my thirst/ Until her womb started spilling out babies/ Only then did I reckon my curse". He starts complaining about his wife and children and rejoices when he talks about how his wife and fourth child died in childbirth. He then goes on to tell how he murdered his first three children by poisoning, drowning, and burning them. He is completely unashamed and not sorry for it either, saying, "I expect that you think that I should be haunted/ But it never really bothers me". What a fucking ass!

Well he really is a fucking ass, because next he abducts Margaret, who is waiting for William in the clearing where they first met. The Rake ties her up, and takes her away. But then he comes to a river which he needs to find a way across. Well, the Fairy Queen is all to happy to help since she is jealous and doesn't really want William to be involved with Margaret. She whisks The Rake and Margaret across the river. William chases after them but he too comes to the river and needs to find a way across it. He tells the river that if it slows its current and lets him cross in order to help Margaret, when he comes back the river can take his life then. Once he crosses the river he comes to the rescue of Margaret with the help of The Rake's three dead children who come back from the dead to haunt their dad, and drive him crazy. William and Margaret go back to the river and try to cross it, but as per Williams earlier promise they aren't able to make it across. As they are swept away downriver William asks Margaret to marry him. "But with this long, last rush of air let’s speak our vows in starry whisper/ And when the waves came crashing down, he closed his eyes/ And softly kissed her."

But really, what did you expect from The Decemberists? A happy ending? Even though it's a really sad story I can't help but think that it's an appropriate ending. And besides, in reality fairy tales didn't usually have happy endings (Disney lied to you), and this story is definitely a fairy tale.

The music in this album is some of the best stuff I've ever heard from The Decemberists, and that's saying a lot since I really like them. It works just like any opera you've ever heard in a lot of ways. Characters have themes. William's theme is "The wanting comes in waves" which is repeated throughout the album. The Queen is always accompanied by a loud, distorted electric guitar which is unusual for The Decemberists but works well with the emotions the music is trying to portray. I also like the idea that the different characters are sung by different people (except William and the Rake, but Meloy differentiates them). Sharah Worden (the Queen) is an amazing singer and really shines on this album. Her part at the end of "The Wanting Comes in Waves/ Repaid" is chilling. It actually made me shiver when I heard it.

So yeah, if you haven't heard this album yet you should really give it a listen.




Saturday, January 1, 2011

JG Thirlwell and The Venture Bros.

It's a funny thing. I've been a fan of JG Thirlwell's for about seven years now and I really didn't even know it until fairly recently. That might not seem to make sense, so let me explain. Seven or so odd years ago I was watching TV late at night. As per my usual routine, once it was late enough I switched the channel to [adult swim], the nighttime version of Cartoon Network aimed at an older audience (no duh). It was on that fateful night that I first witnessed The Venture Bros, what has ever since been my favorite show. If you don't know, The Venture Bros. is basically a spoof of Johnny Quest along the same vein as Space Ghost, Harvey Birdman, and Sealab 2021. By the way, if you've never seen those shows, you really should! There are tons of reasons why I love The Venture Bros and the music is definitely one of those reasons. Normally the soundtrack for a show doesn't really have much of an effect on me, but that's because normally shows don't have a soundtrack like The Venture Bros does. In fact, Jackson Publick, one of the co-creators of the show along with Doc Hammer, said that the music of JG Thirlwell is the REASON that The Venture Bros even exist. He was originally going to make it into a comic book series until he heard a song by Steroid Maximus (one of JG Thirlwell's brain-children along with Foetus and Manorexia, among others). Here's a quote from Publick about it...

 "Animation was my day job, but on the side my co-workers and I published an annual anthology of our personal comic book stories called Monkeysuit. Which was my intended destination for The Venture Bros until a more musically adventurous friend of mine lent me a copy ofQuilombo because he knew I would dig it. He had no idea how much. Track 4: "Fighteous." That changed everything. Ten seconds into my first listen, and the first thing that ran through my head was "what is this strange, wonderful, Jonny Quest-on-steroids music?!" The second thing that ran through my head was Hank and Dean. Literally. Their now iconic silhouettes from our opening title sequence appeared fully-formed before my eyes and started running in time to the beat."


That is the perfect way to describe it... "strange, wonderful, Jonny Quest-on-steroids music". I couldn't have said it better myself, which is why I used a quote.


So here's some Youtube videos of some of the music from The Venture Bros, by JG Thirlwell.




And just for shits and giggles...