All posts by Kevin

Queens of the Stone Age news

Billboard got a listen to the upcoming Queens of the Stone Age album, Era Vulgaris, in Austin this week.

After hearing nine tracks, Billboard says Josh Homme and Co. are “peddling fast, powerful riffs (Sick, Sick, Sick, Battery Acid, 3’s + 7’s) as well as more psychedelic, boogie-ish rhythms (Suture Up Your Future, I’m Designer).” Guests on the album, due in June on Interscope, are rumored to include Trent Reznor, Julian Casablancas and Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top.

Here’s a YouTube clip of a making of Era Vulgaris; I’m not sure if it’s officially sanctioned by QOTSA, but it is on the group’s MySpace page.

The Besnard Lakes: Devastation

jag106.jpgI have been waiting for a song of the year candidate to rear its head, fall in my lap, reach from my speakers and shake me. It’s March, I know. I hate premature song/album of the year blather as much as you do. But perhaps you haven’t heard Devastation by the Besnard Lakes.

Quite simply, it kills. Everything in its path. It appears on the group’s LP, The Besnard Lakes Are the Dark Horse, which NPR says “demonstrates a remarkable flair for dramatic shifts between initial fragility and walloping dynamics.” NPR forgot to mention the album cover art: a black stallion engulfed in flames! I think if I spent a lot of time at coffeehouses reading philosophy books I could attach a metaphorical meaning to this imagery. But I don’t, so I can’t. However, I will say this: It’s a black stallion engulfed in flames! And I sort of want a poster of it, but it has to be made of that fuzzy, velvet-y fabric.

But back to Devastation. This is nearly six minutes of major ambition, a juxtaposition in sound of thick classic-rock riffs and modern, swirling synths. The group’s Montreal home means obligatory comparisons to the Arcade Fire and the like. But I take more of a Low-ish vibe from the album – spacious sounds and distant vocals; maybe something closer to Pink Floyd (though I claim to be no expert on Floyd).

Judge for yourself: You can stream Are the Dark Horse at Jagjaguwar. Also, the Besnard Lakes are at the Paper Heart in Phoenix on March 19 with Dirty on Purpose.

If somehow they could incorporate a real, live stallion galloping through flames at the venue, I might just follow them around the country.

  • The Besnard Lakes | Devastation

The Besnard Lakes Are the Dark Horse is available at eMusic.

A-Plus: Patna Please

aplus.gif

It’s hard to ignore the independent and resourceful nature of the Hieroglyphics crew – Del, Souls of Mischief, Casual, Pep Love, Domino. This was a group whose members were jilted by a semi-major (Jive), so they simply struck out on their own to form their own label (Hiero Imperium) and pretty much became the prime example of a business model that could succeed sans label support.

On top of all that, they continually put out quality records, even if it’s sometimes difficult to keep track of because of how much they pump out. A couple projects are in the works, including a solo album from Souls of Mischief member A-Plus (that’s A-Plee, if you’re down).

The first single is Patna Please, a low-end gem with a menacing keyboard loop and bouncing bassline that screams Bay Area.

As is the case with most Hiero-affiliated albums, My Last Good Deed has guest spots from the crew, including Casual and Del. It drops May 1.

  • A-Plus | Patna Please

New Brendan Benson?: Feel Like Taking You Home

If you stalk check up on Brendan Benson’s MySpace page every now and again, you’ll see he’s pretty active in posting demos and such for your streaming pleasure.

Well, with the Raconteurs noise dying down now, we can probably expect a new album from Benson very soon. And he’s planting the seed by dropping in a new tune on his MySpace called Feel Like Taking You Home.

It’s darker – in both sound and lyrical content – than what we’re used to hearing from Benson, and the driving beat steadily reaches a crescendo as guitars layer and crash over it.

  • Brendan Benson | Feel Like Taking You Home

(Via)

AT CIRCA 45: A rip of Zager & Evans’ apocalyptic In the Year 2525.

Menomena in Phoenix on Sunday

menomena.jpgLately, there seems to be no shortage of excellent shows running through the Valley, and the trend is continuing in the next few weeks. Unfortunately, one band seems cursed by its travels through our state. We’re sorry, Birdmonster. Come back, won’t you?

Sunday is particularly exciting, for Menomena comes through to play Rhythm Room, a show I am eagerly anticipating. I wanted to resist Friend and Foe originally, as I tend to flinch at what the masses are feeding me. And, yet, it now seems all very justifiable because these are songs heavy in texture (the horns are so wonderful) and catchy, to boot.

I tortured my wife over and over with the album opener Muscle’n Flo (which I couldn’t figure for the life of me why that wasn’t the first single) until she was waking up with it in her head. And now I’ve come to terms with Wet and Rusting as the single, though you could certainly make a case for Boyscout’n.

Also, the word “Menomena” is hard to type.

Local bands the Threads and the Morning Kennedy Was Shot open the all-ages show on Sunday.

  • Menomena | Wet and Rusting

Visit MTV’s Subterranean Blog for the very cool video for Wet and Rusting.

Stream Friend and Foe via Barsuk.

I Used to Love H.E.R.: Honeycut

To be honest, I’m surprised it took 11 installments of I Used to Love H.E.R., a series in which artists/bloggers/writers discuss their most essential or favorite hip-hop albums (read intro), for someone to write about this album. But I’m more than pleased to hand over a post to Tony Sevener, drummer/beats programmer of San Francisco trio Honeycut, whose LP, The Day I Turned to Glass, was released on Quannum last year. (Read previous post.)

delasoul3feethighandrisingalbumcover.jpgDe La Soul
3 Feet High and Rising (Tommy Boy, 1989)

One of the most important (and favorite) hip-hop albums in my collection is De La Soul’s 3 Feet High and Rising. At the time of its release (1989), sampling had already taken over as the method-of-choice for hip-hop production. Hot producers of the time were pilfering every James Brown breakbeat known to man, and for the most part, the art of sampling hadn’t strayed too far from James and other “classic” funk breaks. Rhyme styles of the time were still largely bragadocious, and in the wake of Run DMC and LL Cool J a few years earlier, it seemed that MC’s were all trying to out-yell each other.

Enter: De La Soul.

From the second you approach the album cover to 3 Feet High you get the hint that this rap album is a horse of a different color … literally – day glo! Florescent flowers replaced the usual tough-guy posturing seen on rap record covers. Leather medallions replaced the obligatory dookie gold ropes of the time. And asymmetrical dread styles replaced…well, any orthodox hairdo I’d ever seen.

Once you dropped the needle on the record, your suspicion that this was something new was quickly confirmed. The first surprise was something that has now become commonplace on rap records – the skit (a hip hop facet pioneered on this album.) “Hey all you kids out there, welcome to 3 Feet High and Rising”… you were suddenly in the middle of a wacky game show, complete with nerdy host, and idiotic sounding contestants. It’s immediately apparent that these guys have a sense of humor – an odd one at that. Then the first track kicks in – a Led Zeppelin break sampled by way of Double Dee & Steinski’s Lesson 3. “The Magic Number” hits you over the head with a fat beat coupled with a vibe and lyrics that sound more influenced by Sesame Street than The Juice Crew. Track after track, the genius of producer Prince Paul is revealed to you thorough multi-layered sample collages which broke down the boundaries of what was then considered “sample-able.” Hall & Oates, The Turtles, Johnny Cash, Schoolhouse Rock, bits of French language instruction records, were all digested into a most unexpected sampledelic stew. Not only what was sampled, but how they were incorporated was next level.

As playful as the tracks and cuts (courtesy of PA Pasemaster Mase) were, so followed the rhymes conducted by Posdnous, and Trugoy. No LL-style yelling going on here. Their style was a sing-song, limerick-like flow that had yet to be heard in the rap arena. Although fun and funny, they were also smartly constructed, full of inside jokes and cryptic brilliance sometimes only revealed after a few swipes at the rewind button.

Surprisingly, the first track I heard from 3 Feet High and Rising was not the P-Funk inspired hit “Me, Myself and I.” I first heard the track “Eye Know” which dared to blend a Steely Dan’s hit “Peg”, Otis Redding’s “Sitting On The Dock of the Bay”, and thick Sly Stone break, with the MC’s spitting game to a girl in a manner which I’d never heard (and probably never will again). Growing up in the ‘70s, I knew Steely Dan’s “Peg” all too well, and when I heard this track, I bugged the f*** out! I couldn’t believe they had the balls to sample something this … soft (for lack of a better term). It was the complete opposite of what most hip-hop artists were trying to achieve at the time … and THAT’s genius. This track had me running to the store the same day to cop the record.

Front to back, De La’s debut is one of the biggest musical coups in hip-hop that I can remember. It, with one fell swoop, broadened the scope of rap music tenfold. The artistic door, which was slightly ajar, was now kicked wide open. It now seemed like anything was possible. It was not unlike a hip-hop Sgt. Pepper. Writing this piece makes me smile and long for those days a little. The days when it seemed like anything might happen. The days when people still valued something so sorely missing from much of today’s hip-hop … originality.

  • De La Soul | Eye Know
  • BONUS:

  • De La Soul | Eye Know (The Kiss Mix)

Related:
De La Soul: 3 Feet High and Rising (video press kit).

Aqueduct in Phoenix tonight

I urge my fellow Phoenicians to head over to Rhythm Room tonight to check out Aqueduct, whose latest LP, Or Give Me Death (Barsuk), I have been wearing out for the past two weeks. Unfortunately, I work and will miss the show. Boo.

Or Give Me Death should be the constant companion of anyone in the post-breakup confusion of anger and regret, resentment and resolve. Just sayin’, I’d hate to be the girl on the other end of missives like Keep it Together: “You’ve been flying blind / people never change / bitch, don’t even try.”

Annuals and Bark Bark Bark (from Tucson) open.

You can also stream Or Give Me Death in its entirety at Barsuk.

Jonah Matranga: The Three Sketchys (1995-2005)

If ever there was proof of Jonah Matranga’s prolific output, it’s all here in one nice package on The Three Sketchys, a collection of three homemade EPs that were self-released and distributed in various ways.

This release combines all three (19 tracks) and includes a bonus remix of The Big Parade by Ian Sefchick, formerly of Creeper Lagoon. For some reason, the eMusic version includes a 20th track 14-41 (Prom-style)+Thoughts that doesn’t appear to be on version at Jonah’s store.

And if we weren’t already aware of Matranga’s keen ability for choice cover songs, he adds three more here: I Want You Back (Jackson 5), Got My List (7 Seconds) and, my favorite, Savory (Jawbox).

The Three Sketchys collection is available at eMusic or through Matranga’s online store, where he allows a very progressive and fan-friendly “pick your price” purchasing plan.

Also, Matranga is at Modified on March 18 with Frank Turner and Joshua English.

Previously:
I Used to Love H.E.R.: Jonah Matranga.
Jonah Matranga/Frank Turner split 12″.
Lupe Fiasco/Jonah Matranga: Never Lies.
Jonah Matranga live CD/DVD: There’s A Lot In Here.