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All Things Go
 

Hold Your Tongue Boy

January 26, 2010

There are a handful of names you can drop that will bring any scene boy or girl to their knees.  One of these is John Nolan, the former sharp-tongued guitarist/songwriter for Taking Back Sunday and current front man for the less-angsty indie outfit Straylight Run.  Having already proved himself as a man of many genres, Nolan released his first solo album, Height, in October of last year.  If his work with Straylight wasn’t enough of a departure from his emo past for you (after their last full-length, I don’t see how that could be the case), then Height should come as a pleasant surprise.  Although I wouldn’t go as far to say that it’s a phenomenal album, Height is definitely a commendable piece of work supported by a number of standout tracks.  My favorite of these by far is the album’s first single, “Til It’s Done to Death”.  Sporting one of the catchiest drum lines I’ve heard in a while, “Til It’s Done…” weds acoustic guitar and bubbly synth lines in the best way possible.  I just got my hands on the album today and I’ve probably played the song twenty times over already.  Enjoy.

MP3: John Nolan – “Til It’s Done to Death”

Love,
Adrian


Couldn’t You Take the Second Bus Home?

January 19, 2010

UPDATE: Should have mentioned that there are a few other covers you can download here.  It seems that Forrest has decided to record a few until issues surrounding the release of a new Hellogoodbye album are sorted out.

Hellogoodbye continues to amaze me.  Not long ago I wrote about the band’s latest single, “When We First Met,” a significant departure from their synthy pop-punk past and a large step towards a more accessible, cheery, indie-pop sound.  I for one found this to be quite an unexpected nonetheless welcome change.  Most recently, Forrest Kline and co. have released a cover of the Promise Ring’s “A Picture Postcard.”  I know, right?  I’m not denying that these guys have been fans of the quintessential emo band (not the bad kind) for a while already, but why couldn’t they have been releasing awesome stuff like this before?  Better late than never I suppose.

MP3: Hellogoodbye – “A Picture Postcard” (Promise Ring cover)

Also, don’t forget to check out Hellogoodbye’s Daytrotter sessions.  Back in December the guys recorded renditions of “When We First Met” and “Oh, It Is Love” as well as other songs that are all definitely worth checking out.

Love,
Adrian


Because I Spent Years of My Life Being a Douchebag, Loser, Criminal, Drug Addict, and General Piece of Shit, I Learned What Not to Do.

January 18, 2010

What up gang? Long time no post… my bad, I’m lazy. However just because I’m not posting does not mean I’m not searching for the dirtiest house jamz to melt your face with. It’s in that mindset that I bring the track I have for you in this post, which truly is an amazing remix. The DJ, Wolfgang Gartner, is an American (rare) from California, and has an impressive background. Gartner, whose real name is Joey Youngman (coolest name ever) taught himself to DJ at 12 years old with some tape decks and a tape recorder (damnnnn sonnnn). For years he tried to get record deal but never succeeded, because, like myself, he laments that “I did lots of drugs. Lots and lots of drugs…[and] and totally fried on ecstasy and every other snortable substance.” Also like myself Gartner checked in rehab at age 20, and within two years of completing his treatment he had three top ten singles on Beatport (I’m only three singles away from following in his footsteps!). This jam, a bassy, nasty remix of the Fugees’ classic “Ready or Not,” which samples Lauryn Hill’s unbelievable voice, blew me away when I first heard it and I hope it does the same for y’all. Rockwell Out… peace bitches

MP3: The Fugees – “Ready or Not (Fugees vs. Gartner Bootleg)

Also, as an added bonus, check out a Gartner original; “Flashback.”

MP3: Wolfgang Gartner – “Flashback (Original Mix)”

-Nick


Odds and Ends

January 11, 2010

To those of you expecting a Top 20 albums coming from me (which I failed to make last year or the year before), it..IS coming. Soon. Promise.

To those of you hoping for more activity here, that is coming as well. We’ve got a lot on our plates at the moment. Adrian is headed back to the U.K. and I am starting up a new semester here at GW. Regardless, excuses are lame, and we’ll be back and rolling A.S.A.P.

To those of you wondering if I have been keeping up with the cool kids these days, don’t worry. I am still up on it. Expect plenty of delicious gooey musical goodness coming in a very short while.

To those of you hoping that you didn’t waste your time reading this boring post without at least one cool song attached, I got you. Check out “Crysteena” by Mille, the newest artist in the Neon Gold stable. The song is an epic synth jam, building steam throughout (much like a Justice track) but with a much more 80s-centric vibe than Parisian DJ crew music.

MP3: Mille – “Crysteena”

Love,
Zack


It All Comes at Once.

January 5, 2010

I liked “Horchata” with its clever word play and obscure references to Spanish drinks I wasn’t aware existed. That’s the type of pretention we’ve come to know and love from Vampire Weekend. But I was not super impressed with “Cousins,” I’ll be honest. Pitchfork referred to it as a “the closest these non-punk punks have come to making a punk song” and frankly, I just wasn’t buying it.

But “White Sky?” I LOVE IT. It sort of re-news my fascination with the band after being disenchanted with their intense over-exposure. Ezra Koenig seems to use his voice as an echo-y windpipe against the backdrop of the bubbly, richly-layered beat and the contrast is intense and quirky and delightful.

Plus the line, “A thousand little Julias that come together in the middle of Manhattan” is a great GREAT lyric.

Fingers crossed that I can make it to a show here in NYC later this month and report back.

MP3: Vampire Weekend – “White Sky”

xo,
Linds


Guest Post: Chris Rowe Music Time!!!!?!!11!

December 31, 2009

Hi from Maine!

Having been an avid ATG follower, I thought maybe I should throw my hat into the guest-post ring.  I’m a 6’1” white kid, attend college in New England, wear vans from time to time, rant about politics, and enjoy listening to music.  Oh, and Zack’s my cousin; people are pretty, pretty jealous.  Oh, so ere’s some tunage:

MP3: Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros – “Home”

The entire self-titled album is complete joy, but “Home” jumps out from the rest of the songs.  It is as if Andrew Bird wrote a Fleetwood Mac song.  From the catchy whistling, the stomping rhythm, to the endearing vocal back and forth – you’ll be screaming Alabama, Arkansas ‘til you find a home of your own.  Trust me!

MP3: The Milkman’s Union – “Emerald Flares”

I couldn’t do a post without giving props to Bowdoin’s very own The Milkman’s Union.  This tune is my personal favorite off of their first album, Roads In, but it only scratches the surface of the depth to this band.  Folksy, country-twanged riffs, with rhythmic surprises layered amongst a driving beat.

MP3: Dent May & His Magnificent Ukulele – “Meet Me In The Garden”

Mississippi keeps on giving.  This tune is almost a capella, almost barbershop, but then the guitar and violin jump out.  I’d love to know what those jungle noises are in the beginning of this sing-along, and I’d also love to meet this beautiful blonde in the garden.


Lindsay’s Favorite Album of 2009

December 29, 2009

I’m not going to do a top ten albums of the year list (cause I’m lazy!) because it’s pretty much a random shuffle of the albums that comprised my top ten songs depending on what I’m feeling that particular day (and I’m lazy!). But I would like to take a minute to write a short ditty about my favorite album of the year for several reasons.

St. Vincent’s Actor became increasingly important to me over the course of 2009 as I realized that more and more of the music I listen to is comprised of male musicians. Now, I’m not suggesting that one should choose the music one likes based on gender. I’m merely highlighting the importance of this artist to me and I can’t ignore that one of those reasons is her ability to play hard ball right alongside her male contemporaries.

Annie Clark is a brilliant musician and lyricist. (Whenever she sings, “I sit transfixed by a hole in your tee-shirt” I want to keel over and die at its sheer simplistic agony.) Also, she is unabashedly fearless when it comes to highlighting feelings that might make her appear unattractive. She will implore others for help on “Save Me From What I Want” (later again in “Marrow”) yet, she will return with blunt honesty to be a downright bitch on “Actor Out of Work.” She explores the gritty underbelly of being drunk and needy in “The Party,”but her quest for personal change and growth is highlighted in “Laughing With a Mouth of Blood” and “Just the Same But Brand New.”

Throughout the course of all the tracks on Actor, Ms. Clark refuses to be one thing or the other, rejects all categories, and demonstrates that, while women struggle with the various roles they are cast in, they need not play the part. The dark, droning turns in her songs shout with forceful strength, even when her voice remains sweet and soft. She is, in a word, tremendous.

In a male-dominated industry, she deserves kudos for having one of the most outstanding albums of the year. And as a female who blogs about music in a blogosphere niche where the boys come to play, Actor will always mean a great deal to me.

MP3: St. Vincent – “Laughing with a Mouth of Blood”
MP3: St. Vincent – “Just the Same But Brand New”

xo,
Linds


Lindsay’s Top 10 Songs of 2009

December 25, 2009

IT’S HERE! My top ten songs of the year and a wonderful chance for you all to tell me what I excluded. HA. Keep in mind, lists are never objective. They tend to very personal and eventually take on a life of their own. I’ve been sweating over these choices ever since June and now here they are:

Super Secret Surprise #11! Because it’s (quite literally) one louder.

Yes this is a Top Ten list but who can resist the urge to toss in a This is Spinal Tap joke when there is a chance? Not me! Sleigh Bells is my true surprise of the 2009 year. (And unfortunately the only artists on this list who I have yet to see live. Boo.) This unsigned duo have captured my heart in such a way that even I am at a loss to explain the love. In my opinion, music needs more front women like Alexis Krauss. Totally frickin’ bad ass. Therefore, “Infinity Guitars” is my sneak attack addition to this list.

MP3: Sleigh Bells – “Infinity Guitars”

10. Dirty Projectors featuring David Byrne – Knotty Pine

The best of the best off the fine compilation Dark Was the Night. Amber Coffman’s vocals soar in a way that might seem grating to some, but truly capture the spirit of the song. These lyrics are not meant to be smooth. They are about objects being rough and cobbled together. The edge of Coffman’s voice only adds to the visual that the song offers us. Then you have one of my own personal heroes Mr. Byrne in the mix, with his own personal stamp of approval, and it’s almost enough to forget what an insufferable hipster David Longstreth is on occasion.

MP3: Dirty Projectors ft. David Byrne – “Knotty Pine”

9. Cymbals Eat Guitars – And the Hazy Sea…

I think it’s a bit unusual to pick the opening track of an album as your favorite, but this was the moment where I fell in love with the power of Joe D’Agostino’s voice and the group as a whole for their sprawling sound that was often used to carry me out of my cubicle during the middle of the day. The fact that I can remember exactly where I was when I first listened (walking down Madison towards Whole Foods) is a testament to the effect this song had on me and around the 3:36 mark I am blown away every time.

MP3: Cymbals Eat Guitars – “And the Hazy Sea…”

8. Animal Collective – What Would I Want? Sky

AnCo released Fall Be Kind right in time to mess my list ALL UP. As much as I have sweated and slaved over understanding this group, they always seem to fall just short of becoming one of my favorites. My love of Panda Bear keeps them dangling on a finely tuned thread. Then they go and make their most listenable song ever with the first legally cleared Grateful Dead sample just to shove their musical talent in my face. Well done boys. Well done. My attention is now captured. I concede.

MP3: Animal Collective – “What Would I Want? Sky”

7. Fanfarlo – Harold T. Wilkins or How to Wait for a Very Long Time

I owe a debt of gratitude to IGIF for turning me onto Fanfarlo. In the midst of all the more experimental stuff I listen to, Fanfarlo is my foothold on good old fashion instrumentation and song-writing. They are proof that what was once a band is always a band; and that having faith in an ensemble and a beautifully crafted chorus will never steer you wrong.

MP3: Fanfarlo – “Harold T. Wilkins or How to Wait for a Very Long Time”

6. The Antlers – Two

While at times there might have been tracks on Hospice that received more of my attention, there is no denying that “Two” best captures the feel of this heart-breaking album. And the memory of watching the group perform this song while the audience shouted “your daddy was an asshole, yah he fucked you up” is pretty chilling. This is also the song that lends to my theory that Hospice is not necessarily just about watching someone die as much as the cancer of loneliness and unrest that can creep between two people. Therefore, it has to have the top spot.

MP3: The Antlers – “Two”

5. Grizzly Bear – While You Wait For Others

I could go on for ages about nearly any song off Veckatimest but this is the one that really grabs me and tugs on all my heartstrings. Perhaps because you can hear the anger coming through Droste’s voice during the verse, only to give way in the chorus to the sad contention that “we all fall through.” The whole package is so genuine in its bitterness and disappointment. While “Two Weeks” is beautiful without a doubt and I want to sing “Dory” to a lover, “While You Wait for Others” has a driving force I cannot ignore.

MP3: Grizzly Bear – “While You Wait For Others”

4. Phoenix – 1901

This one was a very tough call to make between the two singles. And the whole of Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix is such a brilliantly crafted pop masterpiece. I spent lengthy amounts of time drooling over “Rome” and “Armistice” as well. But if I am to be honest, “1901″ was my go-to. Also memories of standing in the crowd wailing “falling, falling, falling, falling,” along with Thomas Mars are not likely to fade anytime soon.

MP3: Phoenix – “1901″

3. Atlas Sound featuring Panda Bear – Walkabout

Bradford Cox wrote this song to make people happy. And hot damn if he didn’t succeed beyond his wildest dreams. Two of my favorite artists and performers is about enough to make my head explode, but when it also concerns shedding the care and worry of others opinions?! YOU’RE BLOWING MY MIND BOYS. This is what I put on when I need desperately to cheer myself up. And it always works. It’s unfiltered fun and I love it and I want to listen to it everyday and you can’t stop me.

MP3: Atlas Sound ft. Noah Lennox – “Walkabout”

2. St. Vincent – Marrow

Heads-up there will be a future post following shortly about how much the work of Annie Clark means to me. So I’ll keep this short. She’s brilliant and beautiful, but most of all she is unafraid to bare her soul to you, whether you’ll like it or not. The courageous way she tackles music is a constant inspiration, especially in a male-dominated year. (Not to mention a male-dominated industry.) This song demonstrates that even when she is pleading, she is nothing but strong.

MP3: St. Vincent – “Marrow”

1. Bon Iver – Woods

Right. So. Perhaps people will take issue with “Woods” as my pick of the year. To those who do, SUCK IT. This is the track that personally meant the most to me throughout the whole of 2009 and it’s also the song that I listened to the most; occasionally on constant repeat over and over. With the personal story behind For Emma, Forever Ago, many started to question whether or not Justin Vernon was some type of one-hit wonder. Would he be able to move forward with his career? Would he be able to “re-create” this success? Then he released the Blood Bank EP. Keep in mind this was also around the time that there was major unrest occurring about the over-use of things such as Auto-Tune and Vocoder, (he chose the later) and myself in particular was so crazy sick of them I wanted to scream.

But what Bon Iver has done with this track is express the peace, the beauty, the chaos, the calamity, the frustration, and the heart-wrenching sadness of attempting to clear your mind and accept your fate. Beautifully layered over and over, his voice howls and cajoles itself to a quiet place. While a version of it was later recreated with Volcano Choir and packaged as “Still,” I much prefer the original.

Also, a fun bit of trivia for you Northern Exposure fans. In keeping with the namesake, (Bon Iver is a bastardized version of the french expression bon hiver, meaning good winter, which Vernon garnered from an episode of the show.) one of the best characters Holling Vincouer would go to his homemade still in the woods whenever he was troubled. As close contender “Blood Bank” is also based off another episode, I can’t help but think this is where the inspiration behind “Woods” was generated.

Whether that is the case or not, this is truly my favorite song of the year.

MP3: Bon Iver – “Woods”


Got No Money

December 9, 2009

Gorilla vs. Bear posted their “Best Songs of 2009″ list earlier this week and Wavves “No Hope Kids” was on both. Looking back on the year, I still dig Wavves and don’t really care about all the bullshit arguments that everyone seemed to get into about this project. I actually like the music BECAUSE it has the super-stoner lazy feel and all in all I think I have ended up feeling rather bad for Nathan Williams; who (while may need to be put into rehab) was obviously ill-equipped to handle that kind of public attention/bashing. Point blank, he’s really a kid. And blah blah “don’t get into this business if you can’t handle it” blah blah blah I KNOW… BUT. I doubt he ever in a million years expected to stir up that kind of public outrage. And if I ever had a chance to chat with him, I’d tell him at the end of the day it’s just a bunch of geeks sitting behind their computer screens arguing semantics who don’t make music of their own. (I’ll include myself in that category as well.)

I hope he sticks with it.

MP3: Wavves – “No Hope Kids”

xo,
Linds


Oh, That’s Alright! Hey, That’s OK!

December 9, 2009

Sargent House has got an ear for fantastic music.  Their roster’s chock-full of kick-ass artists like Rx Bandits, Good Old War, These Arms Are Snakes, Tera Melos — all different as hell but amazing in their own rights.  Anyways, considering how awesome all these dudes are, I figured I’d check out some of their label mates that I wasn’t too familiar with.  Now I can’t stop listening to Fang Island.

Fang Island’s got a bit of everything I could ask for in a band.  Their music’s both frantic and uplifting, a bit like the frenzied cheerfulness of Los Campesinos after downing a couple of Red Bulls.  But there’s more to them than that.  You can tell from the full-band harmonies, prog-pop guitar riffs, and borderline arena rock solos that Fang Island is on top of their game.  I’ve never come across such a combination of seemingly different musical styles pulled together so well, and I doubt I ever will again.  Of the songs I’ve found, “Daisy” seems to be my favorite of the bunch.  Grab it below.

MP3: Fang Island – “Daisy”

Don’t forget to check out their video for the track.  It’s got enough Patrick Swayze references (two) to make a grown man cry.

“Goddamn! You are one radical son of a bitch!”

Love,
Adrian


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