All posts by Kevin

Devastations: Coal

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Wading through the piles of CDs on my desk recently, I couldn’t believe I haven’t done a proper post on Devastations, other than singer Conrad Standish’s excellent contribution to the I Used to Love H.E.R. series.

Devastations (“Devs” to their close friends) released Coal on Brassland in the United States last year; I believe the LP had a European/Australia release in 2005, but don’t quote me on that (they are from Australia). (Also, you may recognize Brassland as the label run by writer Alec Hanley Bemis and the Dessner twins of the National.)

Anyway, if you’re feeling emotionally vulnerable, maybe you don’t want to listen to Coal. Or then, maybe you do. Standish’s baritone voice can be comforting, in the way the bottom of a bottle might be if you’re feeling lonely. It’s moody and intense, and Standish’s low-register range reminds me a great deal of Mark Sandman from Morphine.

  • Devastations | The Night I Couldn’t Stop Crying

(Coal available at eMusic.)

One more thing: Oh, hell yeah!

Six Parts Seven: Casually Smashed to Pieces

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From the don’t-judge-a-book-by-its-cover department: Knowing nothing about Six Parts Seven, I was sure when I received the band’s latest offering, Casually Smashed to Pieces, this had to be some metal band, and there was no way I’d even bother listening. I mean, just look at that cover what with the menacing viking and all.

Ahhh, irony. Imagine my surprise when I see Six Parts Seven listed as opener on tour for folk-country favorite Richard Buckner (April 3 at Rhythm Room in Phoenix, by the way). Not only is Six Parts Seven opening, it will be the backing band for Buckner during his set (via). In the many times I’ve seen Buckner, never have I seen him with a full band. So, naturally, I was curious (not to mention embarrassed by my shallow first impressions).

This is an instrumental album, which usually sets off warning alarms inside my head … ahem, Ratatat. But Casually Smashed (on Suicide Squeeze) is concise – eight songs, 31 minutes, to be exact. Anyone with a short-attention span can appreciate that. But anyone with a good ear can love the textures here, supplemented nicely by horns and lap-steel guitars. As a huge fan of Buckner, the pairing all makes perfect sense to me now.

M. Ward + Jim James:
Magic Trick (Kansas City Remix)

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In the two-plus years of doing this blog, rare are the times I have received records (the vinyl ones) in the mail; I’d guess about three or four times at the max. (This was my favorite for sure.)

So you can imagine my surprise at the very flat package in the mailbox the other day that contained a 7″ record, the first in a series to be given away by The Fader in conjunction with Southern Comfort (kids, drink responsibly; ahem, I’ll take my free bottle now). Apparently, only 500 of each 7″ will be pressed, and they decided to send one to me. Oh, joy.

The first record has My Morning Jacket’s Jim James joining M. Ward for Magic Trick (Kansas City Remix) on the A-side; the original version is on M. Ward’s Post-War. The B-side is Ladyhawk’s Soap.

I had converted Magic Trick to mp3 for Heather, though I’m not sure if she’s posting or not. So I’ll take the opportunity to do it here. The link where you can find info to enter to win the 7″ was broken when I wrote this. So you may have to contact the Fader about that.

  • M. Ward feat. Jim James | Magic Trick (Kansas City Remix)

Tim Fite: Over the Counter Culture

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“All the best rappers get shot by guns,”
– Tim Fite, I’ve Been Shot

I received my promo copy yesterday of Tim Fite’s new album Over the Counter Culture, which isn’t all that much of an insider’s get considering Fite is making the entire album available for free on his Web site on Feb. 20.

Over the Counter Culture is many things: a statement, a concept, a satire. Mostly, it’s brilliant in its execution and follow through. Fite, an experimental-folk eccentric signed to Epitaph/Anti, is getting promotional backing from the label even after his insistence of making the album available for free. How many labels are going to support that? (Though, it is a swift PR move in that Epitaph/Anti no doubt will ingratiate itself to fans who rail against the major-label model.) Really, Fite probably had no other choice than to give it away, lest he be labeled a hypocrite. As Fite told Billboard, “You cannot address politics about consumerism and put it out in the same way that any record would come out. It would be wrong. It is not classy.”

Over the Counter Culture is a hammer over the head of consumerism, specifically the way it has influenced hip-hop. The mainstream vs. independent/underground tug of war is never going to die, and Fite certainly wasn’t the first to call out the glitz-and-glamour way of rap; De La Soul’s De La Soul is Dead (1991) is mandatory listening in this regard.

The highlight, for me, of Over the Counter Culture has to be I’ve Been Shot, a parody obviously inspired by 50 Cent, who we all know by now doesn’t go anywhere without his bulletproof vest. The song is preceded by a 14-second skit in which an interviewer is asking kids who their favorite rapper is; the answer, of course, is 50 Cent. Again, subtlety has no place here.

“Every now and then I ask somebody to graze me/
Just shoot me a little bit, man/
Make it look good/
Well, not every rapper does it/
But every rapper should”

The album is an admirable and important message – from both Fite and Epitaph/Anti. Here’s hoping all the fans who cry about label politics put some faith in this (free) record.

  • Tim Fite | I’ve Been Shot
  • Tim Fite | Place Your Bets

Get Fite’s great 2005 release Gone Ain’t Gone (unfortunately, not for free, but only $5.20 at Insound).

Related:
Tim Fite resuscitates Trunk Federation

I Used to Love H.E.R.: Douglas Martin

The eighth installment 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), comes from Douglas Martin, a blogger who used to go by the name the Armchair Novelist and is now heading the folk/experimental act Fresh Cherries From Yakima (Web site / MySpace).

Douglas thoroughly deconstructs an early Wu-Tang solo classic, so much so that I had to invoke the “more” link to jump his contribution. That said, I strongly suggest taking in what he has to say about an album that, in no small part, influenced the modern game of “cocaine rap.”

Photobucket - Video and Image HostingRaekwon
Only Built 4 Cuban Linx (Loud/RCA, 1995)
Note: Cassettes of this album were produced in a purple-tinted plastic, an idea that is analogous to how drug dealers mark their items (via). (And, for what it’s worth, Ghostface Killah was named the all-too-Caucasian-sounding “Ghost Face Killer” on this album.)

“Let’s cut to the chase: concept albums and “coke rap” are two of the most furiously popular musical trends of the past two years. being a fan of not only the album-length narrative, but also of the street-level workings of the drug trade (my next book purchase is the autobiography of “nicky” barnes, one of the most notorious snitches in history), i should let it be no secret that only built 4 cuban linx by raekwon (and co-starring the most brilliant wu-tang clansman, ghostface killah) is my all-time favorite hip-hop record. when sequencing my forthcoming debut album (also an album-length narrative), i took a few cues from cuban linx, which is probably something you don’t hear every day from a folk singer.

Continue reading I Used to Love H.E.R.: Douglas Martin

Wu-Tang Clan & Friends: Unreleased

Photobucket - Video and Image HostingRemixes? Rarities? Wu-Tang Clan? Yes. Yes. And yes. It’s almost impossible to keep up with all their projects. But it’s fun to try.

The latest is Mathematics Presents … Wu-Tang Clan & Friends: Unreleased, a collection of – yup – previously unreleased tracks, including remixes and such. The album, on Nature Sounds, was compiled by Wu-Tang’s DJ, Mathematics. As if you haven’t had your fill of Ghostface with Fishscale and More Fish, this collection brings you remixes of Maxine, Wu-Banga and Wise.

Every Wu member, and then some, is on this album, available on Feb. 6. Seriously. What better way to say “I love you” to your significant other on Valentine’s Day this year than with some Wu-Tang?

I’ve got a couple mp3s, though I can’t promise both will be around for long. There’s some hot Raekwon action on this album, though you’ll get your share of Raekwon on Monday (foreshadowing!).

  • Ghostface Killah, Raekwon | Maxine (Remix)
  • GZA, Method, U-God, Raekwon, RZA | Da “W” (Remix)

Cover art via Nah Right, where you also can see the tracklisting.

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

Fumbling around Google the other night while pretending to do some “research,” I came across this amazing piece of hip-hop history via YouTube. It’s a video press kit (about seven minutes in length) for De La Soul’s seminal debut 3 Feet High and Rising.

It’s a cheesy yet pretty inventive (for the time) way to introduce the group and the record. It starts simple enough, with the guys introducing themselves and giving the explanation for their names (“Trugoy is yogurt backwards … yogurt, I enjoy to eat yogurt. I mean, I eat it a lot”).

The main theme of the clip, though, seems to center on the group almost defending the album, which probably earned as much abuse as praise for its out-there mentality of peace, love and medallions. De La takes umbrage with being labeled “hippies,” a topic that becomes the driving inspiration behind 3 Feet High’s follow-up, De La Soul is Dead.

Regardless, Posdnuos, Trugoy and Mase break it down in the clip. Check for great guest spots near the end.

Low: Drums and Guns (new album)

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting I got my first listen yesterday of new albums by the Shins (Wincing the Night Away) and Low (Drums and Guns). To be fair, there is absolutely no basis by which to compare these two, other than a common label in Sub Pop.

But I have to admit: I was far more intrigued by getting a crack at Low’s album than the Shins. Nothing against the Shins, really; they’re swell and all, though I’ve never been particularly floored by what they do.

More likely, the spacious and aggressive (for Low, anyway) tones of Low’s previous release, The Great Destroyer, still resonate, and the group’s evolution is far more appealing to me than that of the Shins.

As such, I’m sure it was someone’s idea of a joke to tag the genre ID as “pop” on Drums and Guns. Sure, Low took a more accessible approach on The Great Destroyer, but “pop” might be stretching it a bit, even on a new album that incorporates vocal/electronic loops and drum machines. The more I listen to this album, the more I’m sure Low played a couple of these tracks when we saw them in Tucson last March (Sandinista and Violent Past, specifically).

Low maintains its “slowcore” roots here, but this added layer of electronic assistance pushes the group into more a abstract place. Yet these ambient and almost incidental blips/bleeps (best appreciated on headphones) hardly clutter the sound; given Low’s minimal foundation, there certainly was room to add on without interfering with what they do best. Of course, Low likely threatens to turn off traditionalists with these new arrangements (if The Great Destroyer didn’t already), but, again, none of it feels excessive; the mood is still stark and haunting.

And Alan Sparhawk’s lyrics are dark as ever. On the macabre and lovely Murderer:

“One more thing before I go /
One more thing I’ll ask you, Lord /
You may need a murderer /
Someone to do your dirty work.”

Drums and Guns is due out March 20 on Sub Pop.

  • Low | Violent Past (Edit: Taken down at request of label.)

Panther: Secret Lawns

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The little I know about Panther comes from the praise my wife and my boy Royce heaped upon him after seeing him open for Ratatat in September. (Ratatat … not so great.) Unfortunately, I arrived late, so I missed his set.

In fact, I know so little about Panther (aka Charlie Salas-Humara) that I’d rather just let the music speak for itself instead of trying to feign knowledge or cut-paste PR material. I will say that Panther is the type of artist I seem to be drawn to more and more of late: solo, creative, unorthodox (much like the Gray Kid).

Anyway, Panther is releasing the full LP Secret Lawns on Fryk Beat on March 6.

  • Panther | How Well Can You Swim

Horse Feathers: Words Are Dead

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting(Disclaimer: This group has made the blog rounds, so you may be bored/amazed by my keen ability to somehow remain constantly behind the curve. What can I say? It’s a special talent.)

That I let Horse Feathers’ Words Are Dead (available at eMusic) slip through the cracks in ’06 is either a sign of my slowly deteriorating brain cells or that I was really wrapped up in my favorites of the year. (I’ll pick the latter; please, indulge me here.)

I even saw the Portland, Ore., duo in Los Angeles (along with the Drunkard, Ben and Robot Mark, who did a fine job of putting on the show). Justin Ringle and Peter Broderick use an assortment of stringed instruments (and a saw; yes, a saw) to great effect – creating a haunting quietness you’re almost sure to disturb if you so much as breathe wrong. Try whispering to someone during the set and watch dirty looks descend upon you.

That makes for both an unsettling and enthralling atmosphere. I’ve only ever felt that when I’ve seen Richard Buckner (many times) and, more recently, Jose Gonzalez. Though I’m not as taken with Ringle’s voice pitch as I am with Buckner’s husky tones, Ringle carries plenty of feeling through more nervous tendencies: jumpy inflections and quick crescendos. He probably works harder to coax more out of his voice than a lot of the monotone indie-folksters.

Add to that the mood-setting string arrangements – witness the tempo/emotional burst of change on Falling Through the Roof – and Words Are Dead has a more commanding presence than you’d initially expect.

  • Horse Feathers | Falling Through the Roof

HOWEVER, words are not entirely dead. I have been intrigued by the American Dialect Society’s choice of “plutoed” as its 2006 word of the year. From Associated Press:

To “pluto” is “to demote or devalue someone or something,” much like what happened to the former planet last year when the General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union decided Pluto didn’t meet its definition of a planet.