Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Live Review: Holograms, Eraas at NYC's Mercury Lounge (9/4)

For a minute, it looked like Holograms were totally fucked. The four young Swedes held several pow-wows onstage while their suddenly and inexplicably defunct Korg keyboard stood on the periphery like the proverbial elephant in the room. 'Yeah, it's going to be a bad show,' guitarist and vocalist Anton Spetz said to synth player and brother Filip, who gamely stood in the audience while the rest of his band played on. 'This thing doesn't work, so we're going to play without it,' he told the audience in a much more audible aside. And, remarkably, play they did.

Swedish proto-punkers and recent CoSign Holograms headlined a late show at New York's Mercury Lounge last night, their stone-cold riffs and dead voices a perfect fit and foil for a humid, gloomy night literally pissing rain. Brooklyn quartet Eraas (pronounced 'eras') opened, and their timeless, tribal synth-punk encapsulated their name. They took the stage in various cuts of black'dress, tank top, crew neck, and collared shirt'and between one and a half drum kits banged out dual-syncopated rhythms conducive enough to the idea of moshing. Everyone perked up when the drum machines kicked in and Eraas really started to sound like Cold Cave, embracing a facet that until then had taken a backseat to the uncannily Liars-like setup.

After aforementioned technical difficulties, Holograms took the stage only about 15 minutes later than they were supposed to. Setz looked like he was going to kill himself for the majority of the set, which I suppose suits the band's ethos. It got to the point where bassist and vocalist Andreas Lagerstrom said, as much to convince his bandmate as the audience (who couldn't have cared less as they head-banged away), 'It's really weird playing without a synthesizer. Sounds okay. Let's go.' He even walked over at one point, one-arm hugged Setz, and ruffled his hair.

Band drama aside, Holograms doesn't seem to need their keyboard. 'Monolith' rang true and stark without the added padding, just the four cornerstones of vox, bass, guitar, and drums. Even 'Chasing My Mind' sounded solid without its opening salvo of trumpeting synths. In surprising contrast to their record, which thumps sometimes too loudly with the kick drum, their set was well-mixed.

It was just on the right side of too loud, and if you closed your eyes you could just barely discern the difference between Setz and Lagerstrom's verses. 'ABC City' was especially anthemic this close to Avenue A, and 'You Are Ancient (Sweden's Pride)' was a string-wrenching closer, hopefully reminding Setz that Swedes are an ancient, proud people. Or, you know: 'It won't be dark forever.' Since they didn't really stick to the setlist verbatim, Holograms didn't play an encore. Perhaps, in this case, it was better to go out with a bang than another potential technical whimper.



of Montreal announce rarities compilation: Daughter of Cloud

of Montreal will follow up February's release of Paralytic Stalks with a new rarities compilation, entitled Daughter of the Cloud The 17-track effort comprises unreleased tracks and rarities recorded between 2007 and 2012. 'Sails, Hermaphroditic' is one of those tracks, and you can stream it below (via Pitchfork). The entire compilation will be released digitally, on CD and 'cyan colored' double LP, and as as a limited edition purple cassette via Polyvinyl/Joyful Noise on October 23rd.

Also below you'll find the itinerary for of Montreal's latest U.S. tour, which kicks off in Gainesville, FL later this month and keeps the band on the road through mid-December.

'Sails, Hermaphroditic':

Daughter of Cloud Tracklist:
01. Our Love Is Senile
02. Obviousatonicnuncio
03. Sails, Hermaphroditic
04. Steppin' Out
05. Hindlopp Stat
06. Partizan Terminus
07. Georgie's Lament
08. Jan Doesn't Like It
09. Feminine Effects
10. Tender Fax
11. Psychotic Feeling
12. Alter Eagle
13. Kristiansand
14. Micro University
15. Subtext Read, Nothing New
16. Noir Blues to Tinnitus
17. Expecting to Fly (Buffalo Springfield cover)

of Montreal 2012 Tour Dates:
09/25 ' Gainesville, FL @ Reitz Union Rion Ballroom
10/06-07 ' Los Angeles, CA @ Culture Collide Festival
10/19 ' Halfiax, NS @ Halifax Pop Explosion
11/27 ' Athens, GA @ Georgia Theatre
11/28 ' Miami, FL @ The Stage
11/29 ' Tallahassee, FL @ The Moon
11/30 ' Orlando, FL @ The Plaza
12/01 ' Mobile, AL @ Alabama Music Box
12/02 ' New Orleans, LA @ Howlin' Wolf
12/03 ' Houston, TX @ Warehouse Live
12/04 ' Austin, TX @ Mohawk
12/05 ' Dallas, TX @ Granada Theater
12/06 ' Oklahoma City, OK @ ACM
12/07 ' Omaha, NE @ Slowdown
12/08 ' Milwaukee, WI @ Turner Hall
12/09 ' Chicago, IL @ Metro
12/10 ' Cleveland, OH @ Beachland Ballroom
12/11 ' New York, NY @ Webster Hall
12/12 ' Boston, MA @ Paradise
12/13 ' Philadelphia, PA @ The Trocadero
12/14 ' Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club
12/15 ' Carrboro, NC @ Cat's Cradle



Video: Ellie Goulding ' 'Anything Could Happen'

Ellie Goulding channels her inner Daenerys Targaryen in her new video for 'Anything Could Happen'. Following a tragic car accident, the UK songwriter awakens on a beach littered with Phantasm-like orbs and other alien geometric shapes. There's a lot of smoke, jagged rocks, and one bloody lover. If this is her idea of a beach day, we'll opt for sunnier afternoons with Katy Perry, but if it's a preview of the afterlife, remind us to pack our dancing shoes come reckoning. Catch the clip below.

Goulding's sophomore record, Halcyon, hits stores October 9th via Polydor.



Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Album Review: Cat Power ' Sun

As George Harrison might have said, it's been a long, cold, lonely winter for Cat Power's Chan Marshall. The tumultuous musician has dealt with more than her fair share bad press, bad habits, and bad relationships over the past decade. But when she sings, 'here comes the sun,' on the title track of her ninth album, Marshall emerges from a long hibernation, casting off the unadulterated guitar parts of her earlier catalogue for a rejuvenating new sound. Beat-friendly (thanks to Beastie Boys' mixer, Philippe Zdar) and production-heavy (thanks to herself), Sun is Marshall's most evolved work. With a little light and a new perspective, Chan Marshall reveals yet another beautiful way she maneuvers in the dark.

Sun's unique direction is expressed in a slew of rebellion songs that are refined with delirious Eastern influences ('Always On My Own') and Dylan-esque pioneering ('Human Being'). Despite the pop-oriented sound, all of Marshall's songs on Sun are imbued with dimensions of debt. The two songs that bookend the album ' 'Cherokee' and 'Peace and Love' ' plait personal conviction with historical guilt.

On 'Cherokee', Marshall's lyrics identify with the fatalism of the native world, just as the muted vocal and heaving synths sound strangely prehistoric. The song gains immediacy in the moments when the word 'buried,' sounds like 'married.' Perhaps, in Marshall's view, that institution is as permanent and polluted as the earth.

At the end of the album, Marshall delivers a bolder history lesson. 'Peace and Love' has the psychotic cowboy anger of Clint Eastwood yelling at an empty chair. Her strident 'na-na-nas' slip into unintelligible words. The guitar fades in and out like a bad signal. But the lyrics, like on 'Cherokee', reveal another disturbing reality: 'Constitution's fine if we choose the school/ So your kid knows who's spinnin' the globe.'

Between the bookends, Marshall probes more world problems that resonate as much with her life as on a dance floor. 'Ruin' is Marshall's 'We Didn't Start The Fire'. She rattles off city names like 'Chile, Meh-hee-co, Great Britain,' while the tick-a-tick loop builds into an anxiety-ridden dance jam railing against global passivity. Or as she puts it: 'bitching.'

Like Joel, she likes to wrestle with the contradictions of 'Manhattan'. Big Apple view from her bleak hotel room includes 'free speech and lipstick in the moonlight' and she is as fascinated as any singer-songwriter with 'dark rooms' and 'secret lives.' But her lyrics are never specific enough to believe she ever actually left the hotel room. In that sense, the song sounds more like an ode to an interloper and the transient harmonies are as appealing and as the lights that inspired them.

Marshall's robust, Georgia-born vocals are proliferated on Sun with enhanced production values. It sounds like she's singing through a kaleidoscope, but the multiplicity never sacrifices her singular vision. This is clearest on 'Real Life', a song about the disappointment of unfulfilled aspirations. Doctors who want to be dancers, mothers who wish to be alone, dogs without bones: the stories sometimes sound generic. But with a help from her synthetic selves, Marshall delivers the lyrics in a round, affecting a childhood rhyme. Elegant and eerie, it seems that for those in Marshall's rowboat, life is anything but a dream.

This yearning for escape returns on '3,6,9', a song that obliquely addresses her struggles with substance abuse. Marshall gently forgives without diminishing the pain of feeling like a 'joke.' Catchy, relentless beats evoke the ease of addiction; like a jump-rope rhyme ready for the A.A. parking lot ('3,6,9 / You drink wine / Monkey on your back / You feel just fine').

Self-forgiveness is at the heart of Sun, and it is anchored in the 11-minute 'Nothin But Time'. 'The world is just beginning,' Marshall intimates to a kid who sits alone in a room, 'just trying to get by.' The 'kid' is unequivocally Marshall, herself. The major key resolves the jilted instrumentation (piano and laser lines), just as Marshall's vocals vanquishes the demons that dominated her life. As it turns out, the angel on Marshall's shoulder is none other than the high holy lust-er of life Iggy Pop, who lends his baritone on the brief duet.

Whatever Chan Marshall has been doing all this time, she certainly wasn't taking a break. Transformed in both sound and spirit, Sun is a passionate pop album of electronic music filtered through a singer-songwriter's soul. In the past, she was known for performing at the mercy of her moods. This time, Marshall decided she was in the mood for a melody. And she's got us feeling alright.

Essential Tracks: '3,6,9', 'Ruin', and 'Peace and Love'

Feature artwork by Dmitri Jackson:



Video: The Cribs ' 'Anna'

What: 'Work #1431' by Turner Prize winner and musician Martin Creed also serves as the video for his tourmates The Cribs' new single, 'Anna'. Photographs shot by the band flash by in quick succession, lasting only long enough to give you an impression. It's like flipping through their Instagram account really fast, only without the lighting filters.

The Cribs' latest release, In the Belly of the Brazen Bull,is out now via Wichita Recordings.

Directed by: Martin Creed



Video: Damon Albarn kicks off Africa Express tour

Over the weekend, the Africa Express departed from North London to begin its six-day trek through England. Aboard the train is an all-star collective of 80 musicians led by Damon Albarn and featuring Amadou & Mariam, Bombay Bicycle Club, The Temper Trap, The Libertines' Carl Barat, Yeah Yeah Yeahs' Nick Zinner, Tony Allen, and more.

Along with their six scheduled performances, the collective will perform pop-up shows at railway stations and schools and pen new material together while en route to their destinations, all with the goal of inspiring new audiences and exploring the UK and Africa's vastly different musical frontiers.

Below, you can watch footage from the tour's launch including Albarn and Rokia Traore performing 'Melancholy Hill' by Gorillaz, Albarn performing 'Down with the Trumpets' with Rizzle Kicks, and a tour of the train shot by BBC News. In addition, Pulp's Jarvis Cocker interviewed Albarn for BBC Radio, which you can listen to below.



Monday, September 3, 2012

Stream: David Byrne & St. Vincent ' Love This Giant

St. Vincent and David Byrne are currently streaming their collaborative album Love This Giant on NPR.org ahead of its September 11th release (via 4AD/Todo Mundo). Spanning 12 tracks, the album was recorded at the Water Music studio in Hoboken, New Jersey with assistance from a brass section that included members of the Dap-Kings and Antibalas.

In support of the release, Annie Clark and Byrne will hit the road together this fall, and you can find their full itinerary mapped out below.

St. Vincent and David Byrne 2012 Tour Dates:
09/15 ' Minneapolis, MN @ State Theater
09/16 ' Milwaukee, WI @ Riverside Theater
09/18 ' Chicago, IL @ Chicago Theatre
09/20 ' Toronto, ON @ Queen Elizabeth Theatre
09/21 ' Montreal, QC @ POP Montreal
09/23 ' Boston, MA @ Orpheum Theatre
09/25 ' New York, NY @ Beacon Theater
09/26 ' New York, NY @ Beacon Theater
09/27 ' Philadelphia, PA @ Tower Theater
09/29 ' Brooklyn, NY @ Williamsburg Park
09/30 ' N. Bethesda MD @ The Music Center at Strathmore
10/02 ' Nashville, TN @ Ryman Auditorium
10/03 ' Atlanta, GA @ Cobb Energy Center
10/05 ' Austin, TX @ Bass Concert Hall
10/06 ' Houston, TX @ Hobby Center
10/07 ' Dallas, TX @ McFarlin Memorial Auditorium
10/10 ' San Diego, CA @ Humphrey's
10/11 ' Santa Barbara, CA @ Arlington Theatre
10/12 ' Costa Mesa, CA @ Segerstrom Theater for the Arts
10/13 ' Los Angeles, CA @ Greek Theater
10/15 ' San Francisco, CA @ Orpheum Theatre
10/17 ' Seattle, WA @ 5th Avenue Theatre
10/18 ' Portland, OR @ Arlene Schnitzer Auditorium
10/20 ' Vancouver, BC @ Centre in Vancouver for the Performing Arts



Video: Green Day ' 'Kill the DJ'

Green Day Kill the DJ

When last we saw Green Day in a music video, they were rehearsing their new single 'Oh Love' in a practice space littered with models. Today, the band returns with visuals for another ¡Uno! track, 'Kill the DJ', and this time the setting is a disco club and the audience isn't afraid of a little blood. There's also a random scene of the band riding dirt bikes through the desert, which doesn't really make sense in the context of the video but seems like a good way to spend an excess video budget.

¡Uno! arrives September 25th via Reprise Records. The band's other two new albums, ¡Dos! and ¡Tré!, will be released on November 13th and January 15th, respectively.



Video: Jay-Z joins Pearl Jam for '99 Problems'

Jay-Z Pearl Jam

On night one of his Made in America festival, Jay-Z closed his own headlining performance by bringing out Kanye West and G.O.O.D. Music for a surprise set. And on night two, Hov himself served as the night's big surprise, joining Pearl Jam for a rendition of '99 Problems'. Watch a clip of the once-in-a-lifetime performance below, and see how it stacks up to another Jay-Z one-off live cover of '99 Problems' with Phish.



Sunday, September 2, 2012

Video: Jay Electronica performs at Made in America

Jay Electronica Made in America

Jay Electronica made a surprise appearance today at Made in America, the music festival curated by his Roc Nation boss, Jay-Z. Below, you can watch footage of Electronica performing 'Exhibit A' and 'Exhibit C'.

During the set, Electronica explained that he wasn't planning to perform live prior to the release of his debut album, but couldn't turn down an invitation from Jay-Z or the chance to take the stage in Philadelphia, where he lived for years.



Webcast: Jay-Z's Made in America festival

The inaugural Made in America music festival will webcast a number of this weekend's performances, including festival curator Jay-Z, Run-DMC, D'Angelo, Janelle Monáe, Miike Snow, Passion Pit, the Rick Ross-led Maybach Music Group, Odd Future, Santigold, DJ Shadow, Gary Clark Jr. and Dirty Projectors.

You can watch live on YouTube, and listen live on Pandora.

Saturday, September 1st:
02:00 ' Gary Clark Jr.
02:45 ' Prince Royce
03:30 ' Maybach Music Group
04: 15 ' Janelle Monáe
05:00 ' D'Angelo
05:45 ' TBD
06:15 ' Passion Pit
07:00 ' Dirty Projectors
07:45 ' Miike Snow
09:30 ' Jay-Z

* = EST



Video: Kanye West's G.O.O.D. Music performs at Made in America

Jay Electronica wasn't the only surprise performance at the Jay-Z-curated Made in America festival. Kanye West and members of his G.O.O.D. Music label (Common, Big Sean, Pusha T) appeared during Jay-Z's headlining set on Saturday night, and performed tracks from their upcoming group album, including 'I Don't Like' remix, 'New God Flow' and 'Mercy', along with Kanye solo cuts 'Can't Tell Me Nothing' and 'Cold' and the Watch the Throne smash hit 'Niggas in Paris'. Watch footage ripped from the webcast below.

The G.O.O.D. Music group album is due to arrive on September 18th.

G.O.O.D. Music Setlist:
I Don't Like remix
Cant Tell Me Nothing
New God Flow
Cold
Ass
The Light
Mercy
Niggas in Paris



Saturday, September 1, 2012

Rock It Out! Blog joins Consequence of Sound

CoS RIOB feat

Consequence of Sound is proud to announce that it will serve as the new home of Rock It Out! Blog beginning Tuesday, September 4th.

Founded by former Fuse TV and Sirius Satellite Radio personality Sami Jarroush in 2008, the Rock It Out! Blog has emerged as one of the most watched and respected video blogs on the Internet. With nearly 50,000 subscribers tuning in each day, Sami reports on the latest rock music news headlines, introduces viewers to new and unsigned bands, and poses rock music queries of the day for viewers to debate. He's also interviewed a wide array of bands and artists, from The Kills' Alison Mosshart to Reggie Watts to Slipknot's Corey Taylor.

New Rock it Out! Blog episodes will be published daily on a brand new section of Consequence of Sound (see the preview below.) In addition, Sami has been made the Video Director of Consequence of Sound, and will be working to create new and original programming.

Make sure to follow Rock It Out! Blog on Twitter and Facebook, and subscribe to its YouTube channel.

Watch Sami discuss the partnership below:

RIOB design



Album Review: Animal Collective ' Centipede Hz

Looking back at their early years, it's hard to believe that Animal Collective would sound so comfortable sitting at the top of the indie music world. At one point, Feels sounded remarkably mainstream for the Baltimore four-piece, but their organic, space amoeba-like growth led to progressively larger audiences without losing any of their weird edge. They migrated all the way from manatee dancing and campfire singalongs to headlining festivals in trippy glory akin to the Grateful Dead. While no one would accuse them of resting on the laurels of Merriweather Post Pavilion ' arguably their most accessible work ' the follow-up, Centipede Hz, explores its own labyrinthine interior rather than take advantage of the intense anticipation generated by Merriweather's newly massive, crossover footprint.

The biggest differences between Centipede Hz and the band's earlier albums lie in tone. This is a band that can draw from gurgling synths and raga rhythms, from obscure Eastern European folk, Latin American psychedelic rock, and from packets of jam served with an airplane breakfast; which is to say, their tonal shifts are vast. While many of Merriweather's most successful songs felt festive to the point of indulgence, the successive, building layers on tracks like Centipede's celestial, Beach Boys-y 'Rosie Oh' seem to push deeper inward, much like Avey Tare's Down There. Their latest album may not be quite as viscerally dark as that record's production (the haunted house bridge on 'Mercury Man' hits closest), but Tare's solo claustrophobic musings still seem to be just as intrinsic, especially since Tare takes a large slice of the vocal spotlight. He doesn't bark as hard as he has in the past, but he still noticeably leaves Panda Bear's gliding, easily digestible moans on the sidelines.

Centipede Hz is upfront about its intentions of difficulty, announcing them with a tone equal parts self-aware and challenging. A mechanized voice opens the album' 'This is the new centipede FM'' followed by bursts of gritty, rhythmic noise. The song that unfolds, 'Moonjock', establishes the ensuing futuristic textures and reflective lyrical themes. Tare's discussion of road trips with his family is exactly the kind of bleary nostalgia for childhood ease that buoyed the band's early material. However, while tracks like Campfire Songs' blissfully eerie 'Doggy' left space for wonder, here synthetic wobbles bounce insistently and distractingly from ear to ear, pushing into discomforting territory.

The bigger hooks on Centipede Hz similarly distinguish themselves with crowded propulsion. The stuttering of the word 'let' in 'Today's Supernatural' is a fluorescent ear-worm backed by twisted versions of Tare's own voice and hand-pumped, organ-like warbles, building to an explosion that decimates everything. On songs like 'My Girls' or 'Derek' from Strawberry Jam, the joys of family and new growth seem to lie at the forefront of the songwriting process, leading to the overwhelming positivity that many felt from Merriweather. Then Tare's life took a dark turn, and it showed on the intensely personal Down There. Centipede, then, attempts to fight past that bleakness, finding a grayer area tinged with interior uncertainty. 'Monkey Riches' perfectly captures that questioning tone: Tare wonders aloud 'how I even wrote this song' as tides of concussive, rhythmic electronics pour over him. He's singing about existential uncertainty so smoothly that the cluttered instrumentation does as much insisting as the question itself.

This blend of musical hyperactivity and worried vocals continues, luring the listener into the album's anxious incertitude. The chilly, amorphous 'New Town Burnout' haunts in its squeak-bloop electronics and blurred backing vocals, Panda Bear's words fading into minor key echoes as the song closes.'Wide Eyed' marks Deakin's debut as a lead vocalist on a proper Animal Collective album, and he sounds similarly comfortable in both the darkness of life and his attempts at getting past it. 'I'm still finding what's sure/ And not getting lost in my mind/ I know I can try,' he croons over heavy bongos, washing away in its repetition before finding an answer, a common trope on Centipede Hz.

It's possible that some will have issues with the lack of a crossover mega-hit on Centipede Hz ' especially after the last album was soaked in that potential ' but that comes from an unfair place. Merriweather merits tons of 'modern masterpiece' discussion, but it's hard to believe that the band felt then (or feel today) that it's anything but the moment they had to make in that specific moment in their lives. And that's precisely how this album feels: another personal moment, another link in a chain leading into an as yet unclear ether. This link happens to be a little less certain, a little darker, but connected to all of the ones before it, and leading ever forward.

Essential Tracks: 'Monkey Riches', 'Wide Eyed', and 'Today's Supernatural'

Feature artwork by Steven Fiche:



Friday, August 31, 2012

78 weeks later, Adele's 21 exits top 10 albums chart

546 days, 78 weeks, and 5.8 million albums sold later, Adele's 21  failed to make the top 10 of the Billboard charts for the first time since the album debuted at #1 in early March 2011, according to Billboard (via MTV). The album fell to #12 in this week's charts, putting an end to Adele's record-breaking streak of most weeks in the top 10 by a female artist. Only Bruce Springsteen's Born in the U.S.A. (84 weeks) and The Sound of Music soundtrack (109 weeks) spent a longer time in the top 10.

Below, you can watch the video for 'Rolling in the Deep' from 21.



Prince announces 'Welcome 2 Chicago' residency

On site at the United Center, Prince and Rebuild the Dream will offer opportunities to learn about, support, and take part in rebuilding vibrant and sustainable communities. Socially-conscious businesses, tech start-ups, entrepreneurs, and other innovators will offer specific tools that individuals and communities can use to improve their economic situation in the short- as well as long-term.'



Academy Awards change rule for Best Original Song category

If you recall, of the 39 songs shorlisted for Best Original Song at last year's Academy Awards, only two made the final cut and received a nomination.'Real In Rio' by Siedah Garrett (Rio) and 'Man or Muppets' by Flight of the Conchords' Bret McKenzie (The Muppets) beat out original compositions by The National, Jónsi, Mary J. Blige, and more.

The Academy required a song to receive an average vote of 8.25 or higher on a scale of 10 in order to secure a nomination. While this doesn't explain why voters gave lower scores to The National or Jónsi, this rule set the stage for funky scenarios like what happened last year, which led many to criticize the Academy, especially when the performance aspect was scrapped.

So on Thursday, the Academy announced new rules for the Best Original Song Category which makes it a lot easier to find five nominees.

 Billboard explains:

The new voting procedure in the category, approved by the Academy's board of governors, is much more straightforward. Branch members will receive a reminder list of submitted works and a DVD copy of song clips. After watching the clips, members will vote in the order of their preference for not more than five choices. The five songs receiving the highest number of votes will become the nominees for final voting on the award.

Of course, it's the Academy Awards, so there's a catch'

If there are 25 or fewer qualified songs submitted, the branch's executive committee can recommend to the board that nominations be limited to three. And if there are nine or fewer qualifying works, the committee can recommend that no award be given that year.

Below, you can watch the video for last year's Best Original Song winner, 'Man or Muppets' by Flight of the Conchords' Bret McKenzie.



Thursday, August 30, 2012

New Music: Mr. Muthafuckin' eXquire ' 'The Message'

Photo by Michael Roffman

Yesterday we awoke to Mr. Muthafuckin' eXqure's NSFW video for 'Position of Passion'. And early this morning, the Brooklyn rapper was back online, uploading a brand new track called 'The Message'. It features eX messing around in his way with several different kinds of flows, a whole lot of food references, and while he claims he doesn't remember who made the beat, eXquire did tweet a picture of him in the studio with El-P, who's rumored to be producing his next LP. Do with that what you will.



The Rolling Stones announce new film: Crossfire Hurricane

Rolling Stones Crossfire Hurrican

It looks like The Rolling Stones' 50th anniversary activities are finally taking shape. Last night a report surfaced claiming that the band will perform four shows in October, followed today by the announcement of a new film chronicling the band's storied history. As announced on the band's website, Brett Morgen's Crossfire Hurricane will receive a theatrical release in the UK in October, and will be premiered on HBO in the United States and broadcast on BBC Two later in the year.

Featuring never-before-seen footage and interviews with the band, the film 'invites the audience to experience firsthand the Stones' nearly mythical journey from outsiders to rock and roll royalty. This is not an academic history lesson. Crossfire Hurricane allows the viewer to experience the Stones' journey from a unique vantage point. It's an aural and visual roller coaster ride,' according to an issued statement.



Gary Clark Jr. announces debut album

Given the numbers of festivals guitar wiz Gary Clark Jr. ended up playing this year, I'm not really sure how he found time to record his debut album. But he did, and it will arrive on October 23rd via Warner Bros. Records.

Clark Jr. co-produced the album alongside Mike Elizondo (Mastodon, Fiona Apple, Dr. Dre). Stay tuned for a title and tracklist.

Ahead of the album's release, Clark will play even more festivals, including Made in America, Voodoo Experience, and Austin City Limits, plus he'll make several television appearances in October.

Below, you can watch Clark performing his song 'Bright Lights' on the Late Show with David Letterman late last year.



Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Video: Mr. Muthafuckin' eXquire ' 'Position of Passion' (NSFW)

By Alex Young on August 29th, 2012 in Music Videos, News



Video: Yeasayer ' 'Longevity'

Yeasayer - Longevity

The new Yeasayer video for 'Longevity' certainly lives up to its name with scenes of frontman Chris Keating gradually aging as the band performs the song in the studio. Warning: if you're one who is squeamish by eyeless skeletons, then this video isn't for you (via Pitchfork).

'Longevity' appears on the band's new album Fragrant World, which is out now via Secretly Canadian. We recently discussed the album with Anand Wilder, which you can read here.



Frank Ocean, Mumford & Sons to perform on Saturday Night Live

Photo by Jeremy D. Larson

It looks like Frank Ocean is ready to return to the stage following the recent cancellation of his European tour. The crooner has confirmed two marquee television slots in September: he'll perform on the 2012 MTV Video Music Awards on September 6th, and he'll serve as the musical guest for the premiere of Saturday Night Live's 38th season, which airs on September 15th. Family Guy creator Seth McFarlane will host that night.

The following week's episode of SNL (Sept. 22nd) will feature host Joseph Gordon-Levitt and musical guest Mumford on Sons, whose new album Babel will be released on September 25th. And on the October 6th episode, host Daniel Craig will be joined by musical guest Muse, who will be supporting their new album The 2nd Law (due out October 2nd).

Below, you can watch Ocean's recent performance on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, which was pretty great:



Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Video: Coheed and Cambria ' 'Domino the Destitute'

As previously reported, Coheed and Cambria's forthcoming double album The Afterman begins a new story within the band's concept story arc 'The Amory Wars.' Specifically, the albums tell the fictional story of Sirius Amory, the astronomer who discovered Keywork, the beam of light that connects the planets and stars in the Heaven's Fence universe, allowing for transportation and the generation of sustainable resources.

Upon entering the Keywork for the first time, as Coheed frontman Claudio Sanchez explained on the band's Facebook, Sirius 'realizes this energy force is wholly made up of human souls. This is their first contact with a human since they were living ' The first soul to take over Sirius, to possess him, is Domino the Destitute. Sirius must now experience Domino's life as he lived it. Keywork Entity Extraction I.' It this journey which is captured in the video for 'Domino the Destitute', the lead single off The Afterman: Ascension. Watch the Robert Schober-directed video below.

The first part of the double album, The Afterman: Ascension, is set to hit stores on October 9th. Its counterpart, The Afterman: Descension, will follow in February 2013. The band self-financed and co-produced The Afterman, alongside Michael Birnbaum and Chris Bittner, who produced the band's first three albums, in Woodstock, NY. The album also marks the return of original drummer Josh Eppard, who the band parted ways with in 2006.



Stream: Jens Lekman ' I Know What Love Isn't

By Staff on August 28th, 2012 in Album Streams, News



New Music: Wickerbird ' 'Tripoli' (CoS Premiere)

Musicians of many genres ' from indie t0 folk to hip hop ' flock to the great lights of New York City for inspiration and a shot at making a name for themselves in the thriving scene. Blake Cowan bucked that trend when creating his identity as Wickerbird. Feeling smothered by impending adulthood and the bustle of city life, Cowan left NYC after his sophomore year of college, and returned to his home state of Washington. There, in a borrowed trailer at the foot of Mt. Rainier, Wickerbird was born.

On his upcoming The Crow Mother, Cowan seeks to express the tranquility he found at home in his ambient folk songs; 'Tripoli' is one such tune. Deep and heart-beat steady guitar strums are speckled with lo-fi crackling, and voices provide the only other music. As he sings, 'And oh my God, I fear what we were sent for,' the harmonies recall a haunted bedroom version of fellow West Coast folkers Typhoon. Check out it out below.

The Crow Mother is due out September 25th.



Monday, August 27, 2012

Album Review: Dan Deacon ' America

As the career path of Dan Deacon progresses, it gets easier and easier to use words like 'mature,' 'serious,' and 'orchestral.' The days of 2006's 'Drinking Out of Cups' seem to be the product of an entirely different person, or perhaps just a recorded experiment from the teenage years of a newly minted composer. With his latest record, one has to wonder: Was Deacon just messing around with pop music while secretly writing string section parts for an album that encompasses an entire nation, or did he stumble upon classical songwriting while coming up with dayglo nonsense ('We're talking paper forks now!') to play on the news at six in the morning? With Bromst, critics and fans alike began to see that Deacon's genius went beyond insane pop; and with America, those depths begin to be plumbed.

The biggest difference between Deacon's new LP and his first forays into the public eye is that now he seemingly can't be contained by traditional pop song structures. There were flashes of expansive meditation as far back as 'Woody Woodpecker', but then demand came for the dance floor show jams. On his second album, the instrumentation shift began with manipulated player piano washes and the like. But even then, it'd be difficult to be prepared for a four-part suite like 'U.S.A.'. The tracks may be separated, but the seamless transitions and unified scope result in the most grandiose music that Deacon has ever produced.

The first half of the album, while perhaps not as epic as 'U.S.A.', is still large. The churning, twinkly landscape blurring outside of the neon-edged car window in 'True Thrush' is the next logical step past 'Snookered'. The pitch-shifted harmony vocals and the twisted vocal counterpoint are trademark early Deacon, and the humming buildup from layer to layer entrances. 'Lots' crushes in its dense noise, a vocal hook adrift in a sea of rough-hewn jigsaw synths. That density may be the key to the issues that Deacon has with America, the dark undercurrent that runs throughout the album. After spending time visiting Occupy movements and touring throughout lonely stretches populated by fast-food chains, he seems ready to hold up a mirror.

These aren't split personalities, but two palettes used on the same canvas. The chugging marimba that unify 'USA II: The Great American Desert' and 'USA III: Rail' and the grating synth multitudes of 'Guilford Avenue Bridge' meet throughout the album, rushing at each other and connecting like magnets. The lyrical themes show Deacon's maturity and also link the two halves of the album. When he sings about 'only the earth and the mountains' living long on 'USA I: Is a Monster' (named after the similarly cynical defunct noise band USAISAMONSTER) and goes on to wonder about the potential of roaming the vastness of a dying country, he's explaining his newly grand, epic vision, justifying his adjusted worldview.

The cinematic clarinet and strings of 'Prettyboy' suggest that Deacon is more than ready to start that soundtracking work we've all heard about. Similarly, 'USA III: Rail' finds the Wham City weirdo standing in front of an orchestra, commanding it like a conservatory maestro, and coming away with something awe-inspiring. The marimba flutters along at the bottom, like a river cutting across the open string fields, soaring trumpets swarming like  eagles. There is nothing of Twacky Cats within several miles of a track like this, and 'Lion with a Shark's Head' sounds like child's play in comparison.

The fact remains essential, though, that the same artist who produced this expansive album also did Spiderman of the Rings. Just as Deacon's Technicolored view of the United States incorporates both an epic orchestra and square-wave synths, Dan Deacon is both the party starter of 'Trippy Green Skull' and deft composer of America. He's always had big, post-everything ideas after all, as on the square-drone of 'My Own Face Is F-Word'. After taking in an album like this, there's no remaining uncertainty about how he got here. There should only be reveling in the achievement, the artistic growth, and the pleasure of the experience. This is a sonic representation of the grandeur of America as it stands, a classically inspired composition built with all the tools available.

Essential Tracks: 'True Thrush', 'USA I: Is A Monster', and 'USA III: Rail'



New Music: Bob Dylan ' 'Duquesne Whistle'

Tough we've already heard snippets of 'Early Roman Kings' and 'Scarlet Town', today Bob Dylan is streaming the first-full length track from his new album, Tempest. 'Duquesne Whistle' belongs in a 19th century saloon, a chugging number that finds electric guitars mimicking the locomotive at focus in Dylan's tale. Listen to it now at NPR.org.

As previously reported, Tempest was produced by Jack Frost, spans 10 tracks, and will be released by Columbia Records on September 11th. The release coincides with the 50th anniversary of Dylan's eponymous debut album.

Tempest Tracklist:
01. Duquesne Whistle
02. Soon After Midnight
03. Narrow Way
04. Long and Wasted Years
05. Pay In Blood
06. Scarlet Town
07. Early Roman Kings
08. Tin Angel
09. Tempest
10. Roll On John



David Bazan taking Pedro the Lion's Control on tour

As previously reported, Jade Tree Records will reissue four LPs and an EP from Pedro the Lion on October 30th. Included in the vinyl repressings is their 2002 concept album, Control, which celebrates its tenth anniversary this year. In further observance of the milestone, Pedro the Lion founder David Bazan will play the entire album with his new band on a fall tour. With 34 stops on the itinerary, you've got plenty of chances to join the party, so check the schedule below, followed by Control opener 'Options'.

The Jade Tree reissues (It's Hard to Find a FriendWinners Never Quit, Control, Achilles Heel, and The Only Reason I Feel Secure EP) are out October 30th, and pre-sale orders placed before August 31st receive a screen printed turntable mat and a signed and numbered 10×10 art print.

David Bazan Band Plays Pedro the Lion's Control Tour Dates:
11/01 - Boise, ID @ Neurolux
11/02 - Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge
11/03 - Denver, CO @ Hi Dive
11/05 - Kansas City, MO @ Record Bar
11/06 - Minneapolis, MN @ Fine Line Music Café
11/07 - Milwaukee, WN @ Cactus Club
11/08 ' Chicago, IL @ Metro
11/09 - Grand Rapids, MI @ Pyramid Scheme
11/10 - Ann Arbor, MI @ The Blind Pig
11/11 - Toronto, ON @ Horseshoe Tavern
11/13 ' Allston, MA @ Brighton Music Hall
11/15 ' Brooklyn, NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg
11/16 ' Philadelphia, PA @ Johnny Brenda's
11/17 ' Washington, DC @ Black Cat
11/18 ' Carrboro, NC @ Cat's Cradle
11/19 ' Knoxville, TN @ Pilot Light
11/24 ' Nashville, TN @ Exit/In
11/25 ' Birmingham, AL @ The Bottletree
11/26 ' Atlanta, GA @ The Earl
11/27 ' St. Augustine, FL @ The Original Cafe Eleven
11/28 - Orlando, FL @ The Social
11/30 - Houston, TX @ Fitzgerald's
12/01 ' Austin, TX @ The Parish
12/02 ' Denton, TX @ Dan's Silverleaf
12/04 ' Albuquerque, NM @ Low Spirits
12/05 ' Phoenix, AZ @ Rhythm Room
12/06 ' San Diego, CA @ Casbah
12/07 ' Los Angeles, CA @ Troubadour
12/08 ' Santa Ana, CA @ Constellation Room
12/10 ' San Francisco, CA @ The Independent
12/11 ' Sacramento, CA @ Blue Lamp
12/13 ' Vancouver, BC @ The Biltmore Cabaret
12/14 ' Portland, OR @ Mississippi Studios
12/15 ' Seattle, WA @ Neptune Theatre



Sunday, August 26, 2012

Live Review: Archers of Loaf at Chicago's Bottom Lounge (8/24)

'We're Archers of Loaf, not Archers of Loaf's Dad,' quipped bassist Matt Gentling upon taking the stage. Despite the statement's comic intent, it might have seemed like a necessary proclamation' until the band started playing.

It's been 14 years since Archers of Loaf released a proper album, and although the members are now in their 40s, they've lost none of their trademark live ferocity. Even during the starker, sludgier material from later albums All the Nation's Airports and White Trash Heroes, Gentling plodded with drunken spark, guitarist Eric Johnson teetered at the edge of the stage to interact with the crowd, drummer Mark Price executed each beat with oil-drum resonance, and frontman Eric Bachmann whooped and snarled with the gravel of his college years.

The quartet front-loaded their set primarily with their later material, inducing marionette head-nodding and hazy swaying from a crowd roughly the same age as themselves, particularly during the breezy white noise of 'Scenic Pastures' and the squawking grunge of 'Distance Comes In Droves.' The second half of the evening was almost entirely devoted to the caffeinated distortion of their first two records, Icky Mettle and Vee Vee. 

There was something endearing about seeing a crowd of 30- and 40-somethings erupt into half-moshing sing-alongs during college radio mainstay 'Web In Front' and 'Fabricoh' during the encore. Although the latter's coda tells of wanting to escape a crowd that's rocking out, Bachmann gushed at being in front of an audience doing that very thing. What was once an indictment of underground snobbery became a sincere celebration of the band's legacy and the fans' enthusiasm at seeing these guys live again after such a long hiatus.

The retrospective atmosphere of the evening was further enforced by opening act Metz, who could have been a younger, if more abrasive version of the Archers (thanks in no small part to Bottom Lounge's perpetually thunderous speakers). Tracks such as 'Wet Blanket' screamed from the stage with monsoon mathematics, offset only by their demeanor, which, like that of Bachmann and company, was gracious and unassuming. Nice guys know how to shred, too.

Photography by Kelli Hammock.

Setlist:
Form and File
Scenic Pastures
Distance Comes In Droves
Lowest Part Is Free!
Freezing Point
Audiowhore
Dead Red Eyes
You and Me
Might
What Did You Expect?
Plumb Line
Greatest of All Time
Bumpo
Web In Front
Wrong
Nostalgia
White Trash Heroes
Encore
1985
Fabricoh
Harnessed In Slums
All Hail the Black Market



Tom Waits to appear on The Simpsons

'We did a lot of research into the 'prepper' phenomenon, where people are convinced that some horrible catastrophe ' like an electromagnetic pulse ' is going to occur, and that people will have to survive without the grid,' he says. So naturally, 'Homer becomes a prepper.'

Jean says that the Grammy-winning Waits won't sing in the episode, titled 'Homer Goes to Prep School,' but fans will recognize the singer's trademark growl 'in a second.'



Saturday, August 25, 2012

New Music: Trey Anastasio ' 'Let Me Lie'

Photo by Debi Del Grande

As previously reported, Phish frontman Trey Anastasio will release his guest-heavy eighth solo album, Traveler, on October 16th via Rubber Jungle Records/ATO Records. Despite cameos from The National's Bryan Devendorf and Matt Berninger and Mates of State's Kori Gardner, our first listen, 'Let Me Lie', is actually a reconfigured Phish track (it was originally released on 2006's Bar 17 and then re-released on the limited-edition Party Time). Though having a few miles on it, this latest version is decidedly fresh, transformed from a simple folk tune into a multi-layered giant of strings, xylophone, and gorgeous harmonies, profoundly demonstrating that even already-good songs can always get better. Stream it at Diffuser.fm.

Trey Anastasio Band 2012 Tour Dates:
10/18 ' Detroit, MI @ The Fillmore
10/19 ' Chicago, IL @ Chicago Theatre
10/20 ' Columbus, OH @ LC Pavilion
10/22 ' Stroudsburg, PA @ Sherman Theater
10/23 ' Richmond, VA @ The National
10/24 ' Silver Springs, MD @ The Fillmpre
10/26 ' New York, NY @ Beacon Theatre
10/27 ' Boston, MA @ Orpheum Theatre
10/28 ' Port Chester, NY @ Capitol Theatre



Festival Recap: CoS at Pukkelpop 2012

Flanders is more than a field, it's also home to about a bazillion festivals. Putting last year's tragedy in the rearview, Pukkelpop ' dubbed the European Coachella by DJ Martin Solveig and held August 16-18th in Kiewit, Belgium ' was this year a celebration of great music. So how does one girl plan her attack of 14-hour days, eight stages, 200+ bands and DJs, in 97°F heat? With good shoes, bottles of water, and a long lens.

The first day saw Paris' drum n' bass assassins Dirtyphonics nail the Dance Hall and its inhabitants with quadruple deck chaos. Santigold invited fans on stage to dance, Bloc Party played new tracks, The Horrors looked bored, Hot Chip brought their white-boy swagger, and new UK indie darlings alt-J and Django Django blew apart their tents with awesome. I watched Björk and her choir, lightning cage, and red fireworks from the pit with High Contrast and Tommy from Django, then headed over to see The Big Pink rock the Club tent followed by tUnE-yArDs' Merrill Garbus looping 'Gangsta' into the end of the night.

Reunions and accessible rock fleshed out day two. Maxïmo Park and Two Door Cinema Club packed the main stage with commercial ear-janglers, while Friends' Samantha Urbani broke mainstream ranks by scrawling 'HOOLIGAN' on her clavicle, talking about Pussy Riot and fashioning a headpiece from bits of the backstage artists' village. But the big winners were Eagles of Death Metal with their cheesy big rock 'n' roll, and, naturally, The Stone Roses, whose much-loved/missed anthems reverberated in the night sky. And if that wasn't enough for this '90s throwback? Grandaddy's set actually induced shivers (personal highlight: hanging out afterwards and having dinner with them). And to sing along to the regenerated Afghan Whigs as they blasted through much of Gentlemen? Sublime.

The final day rolled down a curtain of sweat. The Shins were sluggish, The Hives brought the tops n' tails, The Black Keys were meh, and festival closers Foo Fighters played a high-energy hitlist to 97% of Pukkelpop's populace. But the real fun happened elsewhere: Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks slacked through their set, followed by an utterly epic performance of Copper Blue by Bob Mould (flanked by Telekinesis' Jason Narducy and Superchunk/Mountain Goats' Jon Wurster). Lower Dens got dark and trippy, then LD singer Jana Hunter and I went off to watch The Antlers be lush. Buraka Som Sistema partied with water pistols, Diplo sent the Dance tent bonkers with a sample of 'Tequila', and then reformed Swedish punks Refused exploded minds to close out the Shelter tent. But here's the question: Can we do it all over again next weekend?

Mikala Taylor is a contributing travel writer for Consequence of Sound. She currently runs Backstage Rider.com. Follow her on Twitter or Facebook.



Video: The Flaming Lips & Amanda Palmer ' 'The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face' (NSFW)

The rumors were true. Wayne Coyne and The Flaming Lips have rerecorded and reshot the infamous video for 'The First Time I Ever Saw Your Face' with The Dresden Dolls lead singer and Kickstarter kingpin Amanda Palmer.

The original video, which featured Erykah Badu and her sister Nayrock Badu, was taken down per Eryka Badu's request. The new version keeps a similar concept, only the array of viscous, dubious substances that the Sisters Badu found offensive are replaced with some good, clean water. Not replaced is the whole nudity thing or the obligatory slow-motion art film shots, however Palmer's voice on this new recording sounds fantastic. Watch the whole NSFW video below (via Fake Walls).



Friday, August 24, 2012

New Music: Dosh ' 'From the House of Caesar' (CoS Premeire)

Chicagoans may remember a particularly harsh string of thunderstorms back in the summer of 2010. Ryan Graveface, sole proprietor of Graveface Records, certainly does; the intense rain flooded his stocking space, destroying a majority of his product. Thanks to an outpouring of support from friends and fans alike, Graveface recovered. Inspired by the love, he's looking to give something back with a new Charity Subscription Series.

Graveface has put together a collection of a dozen 7' and three 10' singles from the likes of Xiu Xiu, Shearwater, Mike Watt, Monster Movie, Appleseed Cast, and more. Each artist selected a charity that will receive a large portion of the profits from their particular single's sale. The singles have been split into groups of three to be released once a month, with the first installment coming August 28th and featuring contributions from Mount Eerie, Serengeti with Tobacco and Advance Base, and Dosh, whose offering can be heard below. It's a swirl of electronics entitled 'From the House of Caesar'.


As if great music for a good cause wasn't enough, Graveface has made this charity series even more enticing. Three different vinyl pressings have been done for each release, and what you get depends on how you order. For example, if you go 'full monty' and subscribe to the complete series, you get the Dosh single on tie-dyed deep purple and bone vinyl; if you buy the Series 1 triple pack, it comes on grimace purple; if you nab a retail copy (available at only 25 stores nationwide), you get classic black. Tag on a VIP option with the complete subscription and get all three versions.

Each purchase option is limited to under 300 pressings, and the full subscription includes a custom 45 adaptor, tote bag, poster, and exclusive hand-numbering of the singles. For more information and to place your orders, head over to Graveface's website.



Album Review: Wild Nothing ' Nocturne

Two years ago, Jack Tatum released Gemini, his first album under the Wild Nothing moniker, and turned heads of the entire indie rock world. We hypothesized that Tatum was 'too young to mine the '80s for the rest of his life', yet Wild Nothing's sophomore effort, Nocturne, easily lends itself to a bevy of '80s music descriptions. When I went back to my stream-of-consciousness first listen notes, I found them full of 25-year-old cultural references: The title track 'sounds like something out of a John Hughes film'; 'Through the Grass' has 'a Peter Gabriel 'Biko' type feel, but without the politics'; 'Paradise' 'almost starts off like 'Time After Time''; and 'The Blue Dress' 'starts to sound a little like an outtake from a Tangerine Dream session'.

But is that something to fault Wild Nothing for? Absolutely not. Our modern aesthetic has completely absorbed the fact that contemporary artists emulate '80s sounds. Besides, the title track uses a modern-styled guitar arpeggio (or: The Ellie Goulding 'Lights' Effect) and just enough digital tricks to remind the listener that it's 2012, not 1982.

There are things to love about Nocturne, but ultimately, it's a sophomore slump. Well, maybe more of a gentle lean than a slump. Tatum's sound boasts bright production values, such as the acoustic guitar strumming that augments the optimistic sound on album opener 'Shadow'. That song highlights another trait that Tatum carried over from Gemini: his uncanny ability for delicious riffs. The syncopated hook on 'Shadow' starts off in the guitar, eventually echoed by orchestral strings.

The lyrics don't probe too deeply into the mind of the author, distance that allows for a purely aural connection without getting too emotionally invested: Dance, enjoy, and feel good, but don't look here for transcendence or a visceral connection. He gets close at times, such as 'I try to feel something for you/ But that's all that I can do/ Keep a shadow to you,' yet these still feel like love song cliches.

On 'This Chain Won't Break', Tatum reveals something of himself: 'I don't know just what I got myself into/ All I know is that I can't let go.' While he could be singing about any number of pop tropes (love, drugs, fame, the road), these lines could also speak to Tatum's inability to let go of his successful songwriting formula. Unlike Gemini, many of the tracks on Nocturne feature a homogeneity that begins to tire by the eighth or ninth track.

Tatum traffics in pretty basic rock elements. He always incorporates powerful back beat (sometimes with that wonderful '80s relic, the gated reverb snare drum), syncopated riffs, distorted strummed guitars, and a repetitive staccato guitar part. By the time we get to the album's closer, 'Rheya', there's an almost hackneyed, prototypical Wild Nothing structure at work. Perhaps it's a statement on the depleted mental state of the subject in 'Rheya', who sings 'I don't want to remember this life,' but the formula has become too predictable to attribute any strong lyrical connection to it.

As a whole, Nocturne does not present enough variety to succeed as an artistic unit. Naturally, the songs that do contrast jump out at the listener, even on an album where most tracks are above average. 'Through the Grass' immediately suggests early '80s Peter Gabriel with its sparse, atypical drums and a vaguely exotic guitar tone. Another highlight, 'Paradise', develops slowly despite a fast drum beat and hard percussive strumming. Like most tracks on Nocturne, here Tatum favors a gradual and repetitive building up of the many instrumental parts rather than a solo, erupting finally with those grandiose snares.

Listening to Gemini again, it becomes clear that the nouveau-'80s sound is even more pronounced on Nocturne. Perhaps this is exactly what Tatum was after. On his label website, he admits, 'I don't think it's going to be a secret to anyone that I care about pop music, but it's definitely more my sense of what pop music used to be, or even what pop music would be in my ideal world.' Nocturne embodies one artist's sense of what pop used to be, so maybe the future will bring the perfect balance between his two albums, his ideal world.

Essential Tracks: 'Shadow', 'Through the Grass', 'Paradise'



Com Truise announces fall tour dates

New Jersey electro guru Seth Haley (aka Com Truise) has announced a fall tour in support of his recently-released sophomore album In Decay. Following festival gigs at North Coast and Counter.Point in September, Haley will be on the road from mid-October through early November.. Brazilian electro-pop outfit Bonde do Rolê and Los Angeles disco duo Poolside will act as support.

Haley recently contributed a track called 'Chemical Legs' to Adult Swim's Singles Program. Stream that cut and consult his tour schedule below.

Com Truise 2012 Tour Dates:
08/31-09/02 ' Chicago, IL @ North Coast Festival
09/01 ' Ann Arbor, MI @ The Blind Pig
09/27 ' Fairburn, GA @ Counter.Point
10/10 ' San Francisco, CA @ Mezzanine * #
10/12 ' Seattle, WA @ Chop Suey * #
10/13 ' Portland, OR @ Branx * #
10/14 ' Vancouver, BC @ Fortune Sound Club * #
10/17 ' Minneapolis, MN @ Triple Rock Social Club * #
10/19 ' Pittsburgh, PA @ Altar * #
10/20 ' New York, NY @ The Gramercy Theatre (CMJ Music Marathon) * #
10/21 ' Washington, DC @ Rock N Roll Hotel * #
10/22 ' Philadelphia, PA @ Theatre of Living Arts * #
10/25 ' Orlando, FL @ The Social * #
10/26 ' Tampa, FL @ The Orpheum * #
10/27 ' Miami, FL @ Eve * #
10/29 ' Dallas, TX @ Trees * #
10/30- Austin, TX @ The Mohawk * #
10/31 ' El Paso, TX @ Lowbrow Palace * #
11/01 ' Phoenix, AZ @ The Crescent Ballroom * #
11/02- Los Angeles, CA @ Echoplex #
11/03 ' San Diego, CA @ Casbah #
11/04 ' Santa Ana, CA @ The Observatory * #

* = w/ Bonde Do Role
# = w/ Poolside



Thursday, August 23, 2012

Album Review: Jessie Ware ' Devotion

The radio is going to try to ruin Jessie Ware for you.

Give 'Wildest Moments' one listen and the inevitability of it playing endlessly everywhere emerges pretty blatantly. It's so obvious that you might consider telling yourself you're pre-emptively sick of it, if it wasn't so damn awesome (see: 'Rolling in the Deep'). The instrumental simplicity is akin to 'Bleeding Love,' from fellow British vocal powerhouse Leona Lewis. This allows the 26-year-old's vocals to dazzle over the sparse drum beat and smoothly twist around the bare piano, 'Baby in our wildest moments/ We could be the greatest.'

If we're talking pop singers, Ware could be one of the greatest. After a few more-than-noteworthy guest spots on several SBTRKT songs, fervor for Devotion ran deep, and this British darling manages to stomp on all expectations and does so in some bitchin' black studded boots; the girl's got style and sass. Her successful construction of a pop bridge between the past and present makes Devotion both classic and modern. While the impeccable 'Running' sounds like a long-lost Whitney Houston or Janet Jackson mega-hit, the record, without batting an eye, then transitions into 'Still Love Me', a track whose growing loop of effects and instruments could pass for something SBTRKT concocted.

Ware has the pipes to come out on top of a TV singing competition, but it's her control, style, and musical choices that make Devotion so interesting. Even 'Night Light', whose chorus somewhat lamely reads, 'You'll be my night light/ there when I go to sleep,' is infectious, with Ware sounding thunderous over intricate guitars and a haunting instrumental arrangement. She bounces between past and present again when she transitions from '110%' ' a quick track with soft vocals reminiscent of Jackson's 'All for You' and lyrics that recall Robyn's Body Talk hit, 'Dancing On My Own' ' into the powerhouse ballad 'Taking in Water', which yet again calls to mind the late, great Whitney Houston. If you played the track for a listener out-of-the-know, they'd be hard pressed to guess what year it came out. But 'No to Love', with its grungy guitar loops, ADD beats, and rap verse from a Flight of the Conchords sound-alike, is creative and avant-guard (and, like the rest of the album, perfectly produced).

The icing on this delicious pop music tart is that Ware doesn't have the diva bone. 'My ideal crowd would be people who are smiling, and people who are nodding their heads, and just like, listening,' she's said in an interview. We're listening, Jessie, and pretty soon the whole world will be, too. And even the radio won't be able to put them off you.

Essential Tracks: 'Wildest Moments', 'Running', and 'Taking in Water'



Album Review: TEEN ' In Limbo

Former Here We Go Magic keyboardist Kristina 'Teeny' Lieberson moved on to front her own project, and every detail in the TEEN bio seems tailor-made for home-brewed nostalgia. She's got her sisters Katherine and Lizze on board, as well as long-time friend Jane Herships. The band name screams youthful heartbreak and fervor, and the rich synths and smoky vocals evoke John Hughes soundtracks. But the quartet's debut LP, In Limbo, isn't just '80s posturing; the musical idiosyncrasies and thematic shifts propel this album rapidly past the expected and the easy.

The bullet point-ed group history may read like a paint by numbers replica taken off the seemingly endless conveyor built of female-fronted fuzz-rock of the last few years, but there's nothing assembly line about In Limbo. When a track called 'Come Back' would seem to be begging for the one and only to find his way back, Lieberson transforms it into an admission of kissing a lot of guys, begging one to come back because she simply doesn't 'want to sleep another night alone.' Even when they're aping tight genre constrictions, there's always some wiggle room. The '60s pop balladry of 'Charlie' finds haunted guitar depths (territory familiar to producer Sonic Boom of Spacemen 3), while the kitchen sink aux. percussion of 'Better' stutters the pulse of a New Wave gem.

The angular pop of the opening half of the album fades into oozier territory. While this shift loses some of the fun of the twisted pop, it certainly makes up for it in psychedelic punch. The heavily trippy warps of sound help Lieberson's almost Lou Reed-ian repetitions of the title of 'Why Why Why' tumble off of the tongue. The track's clacking percussion and swarming wall of guitars further that comparison. The Velvet-y lurch of the bass continues that connection, the track bubbling and smacking for nearly six minutes, Lieberson's lost-angel vocals soaring over the top. If the pacing of the album hadn't been so stratified, these later tracks would hold even more impact in the juxtaposition. There's a little something for everyone on In Limbo, and all just a little off from what you'd expect. For a debut album, that's a massive accomplishment.

Essential Tracks: 'Boom', 'Come Back', and 'Why Why Why'



Smashing Pumpkins announce North American tour

Beginning in October, Smashing Pumpkins will play their first North American tour dates in support of their new album Oceania. The band has already announced the full itinerary for the Canadian leg, which kicks off in Winnipeg on October 2nd and includes stops in Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal throughout the rest of the month. The U.S. leg will begin in Seattle on October 10th; however, only routed cities have been announced thus far. Exact dates and venue information will be revealed shortly.

For the trek, the Pumpkins will be backed by visuals prepared by Sean Evans, whose most recent project was assisting Roger Waters on the newest staging of The Wall. As a press release explains, the band 'will be using new technology in video-mapping to create something new and previously unseen.'

Check out the current tour schedule below. And in case you missed it, listen to our recent episode of Audiography featuring a discussion with the Smashing Pumpkins' Billy Corgan.

Smashing Pumpkins 2012 Tour Dates:
09/22 ' Mexico City, MX @ Arena Cirudad de Mexico
09/23 ' Monterrey, MX @ Arena Monterrey
10/02 ' Winnipeg, MB @ MTC Centre
10/04 ' Calgary, AB @ Saddledome
10/05 ' Edmonton, AB @ Rexall Place
10/07 ' Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena
10/25 ' Toronto, ON @ Air Canada Centre
10/28 ' Montreal, QC @ Bell Centre

Confirmed U.S. Cities:
Seattle, WA
San Francisco, CA
San Diego, CA
Los Angeles, CA
Denver, CO
St Louis, MO
Chicago, IL
Minneapolis, MN
Detroit, MI
Boston, MA
Brooklyn, NY
Camden, NJ
Fairfax, VA
Uncasville, CT



Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Album Review- The Darkness ' Hot Cakes

Hot Cakes starts off with a dick joke, and not a very funny one at that. After detailing his past decade's hardships with cocaine and fame, newly returned frontman of The Darkness Justin Hawkins wails about how every man he met during his formative years wanted to suck his cock.

These opening lines to 'Every Inch of You' are indicative of the content on the rest of the album (their first since 2005's underrated One Way Ticket to Hell' and Back). Over 11 songs, the words begin to scrape the surface of something serious and human before reverting to the band's usual glam rock tropes. That a group known for dork-fingered shredding, leopard print, and general buffoonery even thought to discuss their personal turmoil in the first place is a small step toward musical growth, but sadly, The Darkness squanders these seeds of opportunity. The party is always waiting, the humor is always cheeky (you'll be hard-pressed to find mention of 'sabre-toothed cave ladies' on another album this century), and, despite Hawkins' troubles, the drugs are always a laughing matter.

Even though no one expects The Darkness to churn out a gloomy, self-loathing opus in the vein of Alice In Chains' Dirt, it would be nice to see them channel their travails into something that combines more grounded subject matter with their signature brand of nostalgic fun. Instead, we get more of the usual cock-rock posturing and exaggerated machismo. 'Nothing's Gonna Stop Us' charges forward with Dan Hawkins' syrupy harmonies and soloing, and 'Everybody Have a Good Time' reels in ears with exuberant cowbell and an anthemic chorus. And even these songs fail to capture the raw energy of Permission To Land or the orchestral pomposity of One Way Ticket, instead falling limp between the two.

Surprisingly, the album's most effective moment ends up being a cover. The band jolts the moody lullaby of Radiohead's 'Street Spirit (Fade Out)' with '80s hair metal thrash, adding an element of surprise to something familiar. If only The Darkness could do the same to their own songs.

Essential Tracks: 'Nothing's Gonna Stop Us', 'Street Spirit (Fade Out)'



New Music: ON AN ON ' 'Ghost' (CoS Premiere)

The story of ON AN ON is only a few months old. Earlier this year, brothers Jason and Baron Harper informed their bandmates in Scattered Trees that they would be departing the group. Hard as it was to see their friends go, remaining members Nate Eiesland, Alissa Ricci, and Ryne Estwing were now left in a bit of a bind: studio time had already been booked to record the followup to Scattered Trees' Sympathy. Should the trio carry on with the name and find some new players? Or would the Trees be chopped down, with a new band sprouting up from the remains?

Two weeks before their trip to Toronto to record with producer Dave Newfeld (Broken Social Scene, Los Campesinos!), the three were waiting in line to catch Miike Snow at SXSW when the decision was made. Scattered Trees would play the remainder of their tour schedule, and then ON AN ON would begin. Eiesland, Ricci, and Estwing headed into the new project with caution tossed to the wind. They would break the boundaries of their previous band's smooth indie-pop sheen, working with Newfeld to craft a sound strewn with scattered electronics and hazy atmospheres.

The end result is Give In - a fitting title for a band that has acceded to their musical impulses. With the album coming January 29th, 2013 from Roll Call Records, ON AN ON has released one of the ten tracks for early consumption. 'Ghosts' has all the textures we can expect from this new outfit, haunted yet exquisitely exposed, and you can check it out below.


For a further preview of Give In, catch ON AN ON out on tour this September with Reptar and Rubblebucket. Opening with hometown parties in the bandmembers' respective hometowns of Chicago and Minneapolis, the full itinerary is below.

ON AN ON 2012 Tour Dates:
09/11 ' Chicago, IL @ Lincoln Hall *
09/14 ' Minneapolis, MN @ Icehouse *
09/22 ' Santa Ana, CA @ Constellation Room *
09/23 ' Los Angeles, CA @ Echoplex *
09/26 ' Austin, TX @ Beauty Ballroom *
09/27 ' Little Rock, AR @ Juanita's *

* = w/ Reptar, Rubblebucket



New Music: The Gaslamp Killer ' 'Flange Face'

Los Angeles' The Gaslamp Killer has already built himself a reputation for putting on supreme live shows, and he's finally ready to encapsulate that energy on record with his debut album, Breakthrough, due September 18th from Brainfeeder. The first single is called 'Flange Face' and features guest work from composer Miguel Atwood-Ferguson.

The 'Flange Face' digital single is available now, and comes with an edit from Low End Theory and a second track, 'Seven Years of Bad Luck for Fun' featuring Dimlite.



Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Album Review: Teengirl Fantasy ' Tracer

Lush, dreamy pop has historically inhabited lush, dreamy places. Think 'I Feel Love' in New York City or 'Smooth Operator' in the UK. The lights, the beats, the cooing vocalist ' these songs evoke the glamorous side of life, even if the club isn't on the glamorous side of town.

Both of those songs inform the experimental ambience of Tracer, Teengirl Fantasy's sultry second album comprising of all original material. The layered pop samples from their debut LP 7AM are absent, but the duo still builds from the past ' sculpting something both innovative and vaguely familiar. Logan Takahashi and Nick Weiss produce material indebted to R&B and extended dance floor jams, as on the Romanthony-assisted 'Do It'. The subdued hook is stretched out like a distant cousin of the dub-step drop before unraveling straight into the next song, 'Timeline'.

'Mist of Time' is more ambiguous. Playfully arranged, the jingling synth could have fallen straight from Madonna's 'Lucky Star'. Teengirl Fantasy, though, replaces Madonna and her heavy drums with soft percussion and Laurel Halo, a fellow Brooklyn electronic artist, who lends her voice to a sea of divergent rhythms.

Teengirl Fantasy's interpretation of dance-pop through a technical EDM filter recalls Sonic Youth's re-interpretation of hardcore punk through indie rock. Like Daydream Nation, Tracer has impressive scope, from the druggy 'EFX', with Kelela's smooth vocals over odd syncopation, to the piano/panpipe flirtation of 'End'. And this is definitely an album for those who like their wind instruments. Combined with 'Inca' and 'Eternal', Tracer packs more panpipe love in one listen than an entire Polynesian Island resort. The lush production values of Tracer also evoke surreal, exotic locales. These locales aren't the bright, bleary world of Donna Summer or Sade, though ' they're the pop-oriented sound draws from areas colored by industrial gray and youth in decay.

Takahashi and Weiss met as undergrads at the Oberlin College conservatory before moving to Brooklyn to pursue music. If that path sounds familiar, it's because it's the same genesis as another Oberlin alumnus project: HBO's Girls. In fact, Girls writer/director Lena Dunham only graduated a couple years ahead of Takahashi and Weiss. If Girls represents the Titanic-bound tragedy of being a 20-something in New York City, then Teengirl Fantasy are like the musicians who continue to play, even as the ship verges on vertical.

So, here's to a future remix of 'My Heart Will Go On'. That flute solo is full of Teengirl Fantasy potential, and if Tracer is any indication, these guys have all the vision, humor, and skill to 'Do It' well.

Essential Tracks: 'Mist of Time', 'EFX'



Album Review: Bloc Party ' Four

The waters have been choppy for the members of Bloc Party in recent years. After lighting the indie world on fire with their 2005 debut, Silent Alarm, the artful post-punks branched out from their math-like guitar rock ways with mixed results, and by 2008's Intimacy, the band (having more or less turned a new musical leaf into more expansive electronic territory) had been reduced to an odd shell of its former self. The band's 2009 hiatus only cast further doubt as to when, if ever, the Bloc Party of old would return.

All of which has made Four, the band's long-awaited fourth full-length album, one of the most curious releases of the year. The questions were many: What effect, if any, would the band's extended retreat have on the album? Would the band push itself further into the electronic abyss or circle the wagons back toward its post-punk origins? Or would it take a stab at finding the civil middle ground between its guitar rock past and its more recent Radiohead-esque electronic endeavors?

Fortunately, Four addresses such questions in short order. The time off seems to have refocused and re-energized the band, which doesn't simply reverse course, but pulls a screaming U-turn toward those long-lost art punk sounds first heard on its debut. It's a jerky, dark, and layered record, complete with the kind of adept musical craftsmanship the London band first built its name on. On Four, Bloc Party learns the valuable lesson that sometimes the only way to move forward is to go back where you came from. And like a musical game of Jenga, the band rips out the pieces and starts again with equal parts precision, raw force, heart, and intellect.

Album opener 'So He Begins to Lie' starts off with a little bit of studio trickery. The track opens with what appears to be an aborted take, complete with back-and-forth discussion amongst band members, something which cleverly plays as a commentary on the disjointed nature of the band over the past few years. But the track soon takes glorious flight, immediately locking into the fragmented, postmodern rock of the band's heyday. The production is crisp and vivid, and the band sounds more alive and in its element than it has in years.

Most everything else on Four falls into place from there. '3×3' is a dark, driving slab of guitar rock featuring several cryptic non sequiturs from frontman Kele Okereke ('No one loves you', 'No means no'), while 'Kettling', perhaps the record's heaviest track, calls to mind 'Adrenaline'-era Deftones, complete with Russell Lissack's crunching guitar lines and Matt Tong's ample, well-defined drumming. Both tracks find the band firing on all cylinders, which only makes their missteps all the more confounding.

But the album is more than just a cranked-up return, as Four also excels in its quieter moments. 'Day Four' pulsates with dreamlike guitar timbre reminiscent of The Cure, its sweetness counterbalanced by Okereke's dark lyrics ('I've felt death/ Rising from me/ From my fingers/ And out my mouth'). 'The Healing' is a similarly textured, New Wave-inspired track, and it is every bit as forceful and magnetic as the record's more high-decibel fare.

But that said, Four is ultimately a loud, turbulent statement of re-purpose, and it doesn't go out with a whimper. 'We Are Not Good People' closes by pushing back against the record's more delicate tracks with buzzsaw energy, tapping into a fuzzed-out, low-register ethos that calls to mind Death From Above 1979.

The back-to-basics record is hardly a foreign concept. But while Bloc Party isn't the first (and won't be the last) band to retreat into their old sounds, they needed it, and Four wins by virtue of the band's willingness to give in to the urge. The tendency for so many bands is to push forward and find new terrain, to avoid getting trapped in one place. But reaching too far outside of the band's musical safe place would have put it in an equally tenuous position. If Bloc Party had to stray from what they know best on their most recent records in order to gain some perspective, the end results on Four prove that time worthwhile.

Essential Tracks: 'So He Begins To Lie', 'Ketting'

Feature artwork by Steven Fiche:



Video: Milo Greene ' 'Don't You Give Up On Me' (CoS Premiere)

Milo Greene is taking a cinematic approach to the videos accompanying their self-titled debut. When viewed in sequence, the clips form a short film called 'Moddison', which the band wrote and produced themselves alongside director Chad Huff. Filming took place in the Sierra Nevada Mountain's Shaver Lake, where the band recorded many of their demos.

Three videos have been released thus far, and here's a brief refresher:

Our ruggedly scruffy protagonist meets a bewitching red-wigged woman at the local market, and the two share a dance and a dip in the lake ('1957'). Mysteriously, the woman vanishes, and our leading man turns to a bottle of whiskey and his typewriter ('Perfectly Aligned'). The next morning, he clears his head on a kayak drifting in the open waters of picturesque Shaver Lake ('Silent Way').

'Don't You Give Up On Me' picks up with the depressed writer on the road, where he spots a familiar wig atop a playful hitchhiker. Is this the girl from the store, or someone else entirely? Was she ever really there to begin with? Perhaps most puzzling, is this even the correct order of events? We'll have to wait for the story to unfold, but for now, check out 'Don't You Give Up On Me' below.

In further support of the album, Milo Green has also announced more tour dates, which you can find mapped out below.

Milo Green 2012 Tour Dates:
08/23 ' Visalia, CA @ The Cellar Door
08/25 ' Seattle, WA @ The End 107.7 Presents Summer Camp '12
09/08 ' Portland, OR @ Mississippi Studios (Musicfest NW)
09/09 ' Dana Point, CA @ Doheny Days at Doheny State Beach
09/12 ' Los Angeles, CA ' John Anson Ford *
09/14 ' San Diego, CA ' House of Blues *
09/16 ' Phoenix, CA ' Crescent Ballroom *
09/18 ' Norman, OK ' University of Oklahoma *
09/19 ' Dallas, TX ' Granada Theatre *
09/21 ' Houston, TX ' Warehouse Live *
09/22 ' New Orleans, LA ' Tipitina's *
10/05 ' Tucson, AZ @ Club Congress
10/06 ' Phoenix, AZ @ Sail Inn
10/10 ' Dallas, TX @ La Grange
10/16 ' Nashville, TN @ The High Watt
10/17 ' Birmingham, AL @ Bottletree
10/18 ' Atlanta, GA @ The EARL
10/19 ' Chapel Hill, NC @ Local 506
10/20 ' Charlottesville, VA @ The Southern
10/23 ' Washington, DC @ Rock N Roll Hotel
10/25 ' New York, NY @ Bowery Ballroom
10/26 ' Philadelphia, PA @ Johnny Brenda's
10/27 ' Boston, MA @ Brighton Music Hall
10/28 ' Montreal, QC @ La Sala Rossa
10/29 ' Toronto, ON @ The Horseshoe Tavern
11/01 ' Ann Arbor, MI @ The Blind Pig
11/02 ' Chicago, IL @ Lincoln Hall
11/04 ' Minneapolis, MN @ Varsity Theater
11/07 ' St. Louis, MO @ The Firebird
11/08 ' Lawrence, KS @ Bottleneck
11/09 ' Denver, CO @ The Bluebird Theater
11/10 ' Salt Lake City, UT @ Kilby Court
11/13 ' Vancouver, BC @ Media Club
11/14 ' Seattle, WA @ The Crocodile
11/16 ' San Francisco, CA @ The Independent

* = w/ The Walkmen



Monday, August 20, 2012

Album Review: Dispatch ' Circles Around The Sun

It's sad when a favorite band goes on hiatus, but an unnecessary reunion album is a fate worse than death. It's embarrassing for fans, who saved up for tickets or have been plugging the band all the while, and it certainly seems embarrassing for the bands who play on as shadows of their former selves. So when a beloved band comes out of hibernation, it's natural to feel a twinge of nausea along with the excitement. Can they still pull off a full record? Should they? Worse, will anyone care?

Dispatch gave us an encouraging sign with 2011's Dispatch EP, which was disappointing only in that it was not a full record from the long-silent kings of indie jam. 'Valentine', 'Broken American', and 'Beto' fit so well in the Dispatch catalog that it's hard to remember they're only recent additions to the canon. Following the fevered response to that disc and the subsequent reunion tour, fans have been pining for a full-length, and Dispatch has answered with Circles Around The Sun.

From its first seconds, the opening title track burns with a front-end intensity that marks a select few Dispatch tracks, most notably 'Elias'. That track is warm, though, the opening bongos beckoning the listener closer. The guitar riff that explodes 'Circles Around The Sun', in contrast, jangles like an alarm bell, at once disconcerting and captivating, the sound melding with that of the band's more characteristic string harmonies to create a sound that's both new and recognizable. It's urgent, thrilling'it's necessary. It is, without hyperbole, one of the best tracks Dispatch has ever written, and if there's a better way to kick off your first album in over ten years, it's hard to imagine.

The intensity drops a notch into the ominous twang and quick-fire lyrics of 'Not Messin', the first song from Circles that was played for an audience. This is the first album Dispatch has recorded before touring'previously their extensive live schedule has given them time to 'battle-test' songs, in the words of guitarist Chad Urmston, before committing them to record. The full orchestration on this song and throughout the album represents something of a departure from the band's earlier work, where often a single guitar and vocal harmony dominate (prominent examples include 'Two Coins', 'Bang Bang', and even the more recent 'Valentine'). The rhythm lines obscure the lyrics at times, though further investigation yields a mix of grassroots political ideology and chill-out repetition ('They resist/ I'm going easy/ Bankin' on the hearsay/ They all know the man with the copay,' plays one section from 'Not Messin').

Although the sound is thicker throughout Circles, it's inaccurate to call the music overproduced. It's just differently produced, denser than older tracks ' and that's not a bad thing. The album fronts a more rockish intensity than the 'jam band' label would suggest, and while it's easy to picture Urmston, Brad Corrigan, and Pete Heimbold jamming out to these songs live, this sound has a broader appeal. As Dispatch is sampling the festival circuit before embarking on their fall tour, they may actually have some non-familiar listeners to woo for once, and their expanded palette is a good bet to entice even the jam-band haters.

The album's heat is consistent through the first four tracks, but loses a bit of steam when they indulge in the jammy wander stereotypical of their genre. This is particularly evident on 'Josaphine', which can really lose you in its repetition. Presumably that track will be more entertaining live, when one can watch the guys rock out during the incredibly repetitive chorus'but on record, it just doesn't translate. The lost speed is never fully regained in the second half; though the cooler songs are still laced with extra instrumentation (percussive flairs on 'Come To Me', for example), they meander through rhythms, lacking the energy that makes the first half so explosive.

But just when your brain has nearly wandered off the deep end, closer 'Feels So Good' comes in with a sing-along chorus that is genuinely heart-warming. The track appears to end at 2:35, but the intrepid listener is rewarded with a charming coda: 'I'm a little frog with big yellow feet', sings Heimbold in a deep, twangy vocal, followed by radio call numbers ' and then a reprise of the chorus, sunshine-warm and bare over a single acoustic guitar' that traditional Dispatch sound after all.

Though the album's intensity flags in the middle, Circles Around The Sun is on the whole a successful album. A cynic might assume that most bands reunite only for the money, but Circles shows that Dispatch had some moving and complex music left to write, and it makes a number of significant contributions to the band's catalog. At ten tracks and 38 minutes, it's both ambitious and humble, taking some risks while still keeping a realistic sense of scope. It evolves the mix but keeps the inherent qualities of the band intact. It's, at last, a necessary reunion album, both worthy of standing with Dispatch's older material and rewarding in its own right.

Essential Tracks: 'Circles Around The Sun', 'Not Messin'

Feature artwork by Mike Zell:



New Music: Muse ' 'Madness'

Here's 'Madness', the first single from Muse's new album The 2nd Law. It doesn't go full dubstep like 'Unsustainable', but the track is driven by an underlying loop of twisted bass which eventually culminates in a Matt Bellamy guitar solo. Bellamy also does a great job impersonating Bono's vocals.

'Madness' impacts the radio today, and is available for purchase digitally. You can listen to it here.

The 2nd Law arrives October 2nd via Helium 3/Warner Bros Records.



Album Review: Lower ' Walk On Heads EP

Considering Denmark stocks itself with 'the happiest people in the world,' it's a bit bizarre then that Copenhagen has become an agreeable exporter of hardcore punk rock. Just last year, Iceage floored everyone with its debut LP, New Brigade, and now its fellow Escho labelmate Lower arrives to rupture similar ear drums. The outfit's latest four-track EP, Walk On Heads, is a couple of dimes past eight minutes and yet it'll take hours out of your day.

Sparing no time, frontman Adrian Toubro explains his aggression on 'Craver', screaming his head off on how he's 'ignited by boredom' and has a 'craving for oxygen.' On each track, he's always at the frontline, echoing the leading post-punk charisma of Wire's Colin Newman, but he's aptly supported by bright folks. Drummer Anton Rothstein and bassist Kristian Emdal shine as a kinetic rhythm section born out of the basement, while guitarist Simon Van Formann runs alongside Toubro with lethal injections of fuzz and reverb. On 'Craver', especially, Van Formann exhibits extraordinary control at the wavering reverb, almost to the point where it resonates like those old military alarms.

'You better save yourself,' Toubro warns on the EP's closing track, 'Lethargy'. It's a fitting bookend to 'Craver', working off paranoid rhythms that evolve from previous track, 'Escape', an assaultive two minutes that spawn from the lyrical horrors within other previous track, 'Pictures of Passion'. This lyrical symmetry sketches out a terrified prophecy, where danger stomps around every corner and angry thoughts turn to fearful rebellion. It's pretty clever ' again, all at around eight minutes.

Last September, Iceage's Johan Wieth told The Guardian: 'I don't know if I want to do music forever. Not this music'' That's not surprising in the slightest, especially since it's doubtful any of them will stay angry for too long. Still, if Copenhagen continues breeding material this urgent, this aggressive, and this earnest, then us American kids are gonna have to start skipping the band-aids and hydrogen peroxide. Seriously.

Essential Tracks: 'Craver', 'Pictures of Passion'



Sunday, August 19, 2012

New Music: Bob Dylan ' 'Scarlet Town'

Bob Dylan has let loose the second track from his new album Temptest, and once again it comes courtesy of the Cinemax series Strikes Back. Whereas 'Early Roman Kings' premiered in a trailer for the show, 'Scarlet Town' was previewed during the end credits of last night's world premiere. Stream a 60-second clip here, or in the video below (scroll to the 46:30 mark).

Tempest is out September 11th via Columbia.

Tempest Tracklist:
01. Duquesne Whistle
02. Soon After Midnight
03. Narrow Way
04. Long and Wasted Years
05. Pay In Blood
06. Scarlet Town
07. Early Roman Kings
08. Tin Angel
09. Tempest
10. Roll On John



The Avalanches may release a new track tomorrow

Tomorrow may the day we finally hear The Avalanches' first new track in over a decade. On Twitter today, the band wrote 'ok lets do this. trax coming tommorow xxx' and included a link to Rosalinda Ruiz's Twitter account. Ruiz is the manager for Dallas hip-hop duo A.Dd+, who are rumored to have recorded with The Avalanches.

In recent months, The Avalanches have teased their long-in-the-works sophomore LP on Twitter, alluding to various album and track titles. However, as of now, the album has no confirmed title, tracklist or release date.

Below, you can watch the video for 'Frontier Psychiatrist' from the band's acclaimed 2000 debut Since I Left You.



Video: Beyoncé ' 'I Was Here'

To coincide with the first-ever World Humanitarian Day (which is tomorrow), Beyoncé has released a new video for 'I Was Here' which features a live performance filmed at the United Nation's General Assembly Room. Displayed in the background are images of various relief efforts from across the world.

Beyoncé has also launched a website where fans can take participate in 'the biggest social media message in history,' encouraging the world to spend the day doing good deeds.



Saturday, August 18, 2012

Pussy Riot found guilty, sentenced to two years in prison

Maria Alyokhina, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, and Yekaterina Samutsevich ' the three members of Russian feminist collective Pussy Riot who were arrested on charges of hooliganism following a protest against the Kremlin ' were found guilty in court today and sentenced to two years in prison.

Alyokhina, 24, Tolokonnikova, 22, and Samutsevich, 29 were charged with 'hooliganism motivated by religious hatred or hostility' in February after performing a one-minute protest song, 'Our Lady, Chase Putin Out', at Moscow's Christ the Saviour Cathedral. The women were denouncing the ties between Russian President Vladimir Putin's regime and the Russian Orthodox Church. (Watch footage of the performance below.)

According to The Guardian, Judge Marina Syrova said Pussy Riot was 'motivated by religious enmity and hatred, and acted provocatively and in an insulting manner inside a religious building in the presence of a large number of believers.' She frequently referenced the colorful nature of the band's clothing and said it was not acceptable for church.

Pussy Riot remained resolute even as it became increasingly apparent that they'd be found guilty. One of their lawyers Mary Feygin tweeted shortly before the verdict: 'Well, they'll be convicted. No use in harboring any illusions. However, no one is afraid.' Another, Nikolai Polozov, said 'We will oppose any illegal sentence that envisages their imprisonment, and we will appeal it in Russia and in international courts.'

Shortly before the verdict, Tolokonnikova sent a handwritten letter to Putin saying the trial had united disparate forces of dissent against those who 'threaten destruction of the liberating, emancipating forces of Russia,' reports The Telegraph.

'There is no personal malice,' Tolokonnikovasent's letter continued. 'But there is a political one. Our term in prison is a clear and distinct sign that freedom is being taken away from the whole country. And that threatens destruction of the liberating, emancipating forces of Russia. That's what makes me angry.'

After being convicted, all three women were seen smiling as the judge read out witness testimony against them, reports The Wall Street Journal.

The trial gained international attention, and the punk band garnered support from countless members of the music community including Pete Townshend, Bjork, and Jarvis Cocker.

Today has been declared Pussy Riot Global Day, with calls of protest and support planned across the world. Find out more information at freepussyriot.org.