All posts by Kevin

Nada Surf on KCRW, 2/5/08

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Seems like it’s been awhile since I’ve cut up one of these sessions, but there’s no better reason to pick up the habit again than a Nada Surf appearance on KCRW’s Morning Becomes Eclectic.

The new record, Lucky, has crept up on me. Certainly it’s what you’d expect from a Nada Surf album: catchy melodies with sing-along choruses. But the band’s unabashed positive spirit comes through stronger than ever; hell, singer Matthew Caws (or, at least, I’m assuming it’s Caws) writes a treatise on the word “lucky” in the liner notes. It’s either the hokiest thing you’ve ever read or the most uplifting. It all depends on your outlook, and I suppose that’s the point the band is trying to get across on this record: Are you appreciative of what you have or do you take it for granted?

At the very least, we can be thankful the band made exquisite use of liner notes, a lost art in our digital world.

Remember: Nada Surf and Sea Wolf at the Clubhouse in Tempe on March 17 (tickets).

A quick note about this set: See These Bones, the final song they played, faded out before conclusion, so I didn’t include it here. You might try streaming this performance (with interview) at KCRW Web site. (I got it from the podcast.)

Nada Surf on KCRW’s Morning Becomes Eclectic, 2/5/08:

1. Whose Authority.
2. Weightless.
3. Ice on the Wing.
4. I Like What You Say.
5. Are You Lightning?
6. Here Goes Something.
7. Beautiful Beat.

Tim Fite: Out on the Line (B-side)

Anti sent out a release about Tim Fite’s upcoming release, Fair Ain’t Fair (more below), which gave me good reason to poke around his MySpace page.

Lo and behold, Fite is offering a download of Out on the Line, a B-side to a 7-inch released in the UK that I actually found at Academy Records in Brooklyn in September for $2. (white vinyl; A-side is No Good Here [mp3].)

Small detail: On the 7-inch, the song is called On the Line; Fite lists it as Out on the Line on his MySpace page. Either way, it’s a downer of an acoustic track, a bit out of the ordinary for the eccentric Fite (remember his I Used to Love H.E.R. entry?).

  • Tim Fite | Out on the Line

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As for that new record, Fair Ain’t Fair – the proper follow-up to 2005’s Gone Ain’t Gone – is due out May 6. Fite earned plenty of praise for his free 2007 album Over the Counter Culture (previous post), a send-up of/commentary on commercial rap culture. (You can download it here.) So it’s not like we haven’t heard from the man in three years.

Tracklisting for Fair Ain’t Fair:
1. Roots Of A Tree.
2. Trouble.
3. The Barber.
4. Big Mistake.
5. Inside Man.
6. Rats And Rags.
7. Yesterday’s Garden.
8. Thought I Was A Gun.
9. The Names Of All The Animals.
10. Motorcade.
11. More Clothes.
12. Harriet Tubman.
13. My Hands.
14. Heaven Is War.
15. Sing Along.
16. Line By Line.

Mobius Band: Love Will Reign Supreme (free EP)

In the spirit of Valentine’s Day, Mobius Band is offering a free six-song EP of covers called Love Will Reign Supreme. I got particularly excited to see they covered the National’s Baby, We’ll Be Fine, a song, in my estimation, that is romantic in its vulnerable and contrite writing (“I don’t know how to do this / I’m so sorry for everything.”).

Mobius Band definitely gives the track an imaginative reworking, one that feels uplifting … like the clouds are parting from the original’s somber tone.

Tracklist for Love Will Reign Supreme:
1. Razor Love (Neil Young)
2. Baby We’ll Be Fine (The National)
3. True Love Will Find You In The End (Daniel Johnston)
4. Mobius Band In A Green Cotton Sweater (Casiotone for the Painfully Alone)
5. I’ll Keep It With Mine (Bob Dylan)
6. Digital Love (Daft Punk)

Download individual songs or the album in a zip file (which includes cover art jpg) here.

  • Mobius Band | Baby, We’ll Be Fine (The National cover)

Gangsta Rap Coloring Book

I stopped by Red Hot Robot on my way home from work Wednesday evening. Though the store didn’t have the Legends of Rap trading cards, the owner turned me on to the Gangsta Rap Coloring Book by artist Aye Jay of San Francisco.

With a foreword by J-Zone and afterword by Sacha Jenkins, the book features 48 pages of drawings of rap artists that you can color. Cypress Hill, Mobb Deep, Ice Cube, you name it. Apparently, the book has caused a bit of controversy as well.

But District Attorney Lynne Abraham calls the book a disgrace. “With all the terrible things happening, shootings, gang warfare, Mac 10’s, Tec-9’s and here is this company that is supposed to be a responsible company that’s totally unresposible, so I’m disgusted, I’m horrified.”

Well, I hate to tell District Attorney Lynne Abraham, but I think this is a great intersection of art, irony and music. Though I gotta say, I’m kinda nervous to even put a crayon to the book, even though Aye Jay has kindly left the last portrait blank for you: “Draw your own gangsta rap superstar here.”

If I were to color the pages, I’d probably have to start with the rendering of KRS-One from the cover of Boogie Down Productions’ By Any Means Necessary.

Tonight: Editors in Tempe (and odds and ends)

UK’s Editors make their way to Tempe for a show at Marquee Theatre in Tempe with Hot Hot Heat and Louis XIV on Tuesday night. (Buy tickets.)

I interviewed bassist Russell Leetch and wrote a bit about it here. Favorite quote, after I asked him how critics differ in England and the U.S.: “We always get totally mixed reviews. We’re not one of those bands people wet themselves over like the Arcade Fire or LCD Soundsystem.”

Also, here’s a flier for the March 8 show I’m putting on with Source Victoria and Birdmonster, among others. Come on out, won’t you? (Click for larger image.)

Elsewhere:

Go to Aquarium Drunkard for an acoustic session with Radar Bros. frontman Jim Putnam.

Mr. Mammoth has a new Cadence Weapon track, Juliann Wilding.

I discovered Phoenix boys The Format are breaking up at I Am Fuel, You Are Friends. Drag.

On the topic of Phoenix, Jim Adkins of Jimmy Eat World contributed to a song by Belgian electronic artist Styrofoam. Stream My Next Mistake at Styrofoam’s MySpace page.

Lastly, head over to Macktronic for some Cool Kids.

Meanest Man Contest: new video!

I’m not one to often use exclamation points to get my point across (OK, maybe sometimes). But I think after watching the new video for Meanest Man Contest’s Throwing Away Broken Electronics, you’ll be pretty amped up, too.

What’s not to like about the video, directed by Greg Tuzin? Slow motion. Women in bikinis with boomboxes for heads. Destruction of electronics with baseball bats and sledgehammers. Women in bikinis with boomboxes for heads destroying electronics with baseball bats and sledgehammers. And, oh, the song is pretty dope, too (but you already knew that).

I asked Eriksolo about inspiration for the song: “I was cleaning out my house one day and I came across all this old gear that I used to make music on but was no longer really working right. It made me really nostalgic and sorta melancholy. But then it also felt really good to get rid of it.”

So if you ever wanted to do this, I think you’ll agree this video is the stuff dreams are made of.

Remember to pick up the track as part of a limited 7-inch on Gold Robot Records.

Curious about that sweet Gold Robot Records shirt Quarterbar is rockin’ in the background? Get it here.

Del the Funky Homosapien: Workin’ It

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I’m guessing (hoping) you’ve heard Bubble Pop, the first track off the forthcoming Del album Eleventh Hour, due out March 11 on Definitive Jux.

Without question, Del has provided one of the most unique deliveries and distinctive voices in hip-hop since he dropped 1991’s Parliament/Funkadelic-inspired I Wish My Brother George Was Here. Not only that, he helped usher his crew, Hieroglyphics, into an era of self-sustainment after his falling out with Elektra (and the rest of Hiero’s parting with Jive Records). Del’s work with Dan the Automator as Deltron, Gorillaz and even Dinosaur Jr. (Judgment Night soundtrack, anyone?) shows his willingness to work outside the underground hip-hop safe zone.

So it makes sense for Del to team up with another independent spirit in Def Jux. And it’s not totally surprising: Def Jux head El-P made a cameo on the track Offspring from Del’s Both Sides of the Brain.

Workin’ It shows Del in fine form, both on the mic and behind the boards. The sci-fi-esque raygun loop recalls something like Deltron while Del’s rhyme pattern is decidedly scaled back but tight nonetheless.

  • Del the Funky Homosapien | Workin’ It

New Lyrics Born: Hot 2 Deff

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I miss Latyrx. I’m not saying I don’t like the solo work from Lyrics Born, because I do. Let’s just say if you haven’t heard 1997’s Latyrx (The Album), there’s a major void in your collection.

Anyway, that really has nothing to do with Lyrics Born’s new album – called Everywhere At Once and due for release April 22 on Anti. It just makes me long for the days of the fluid back-and-forth verses with he and Lateef the Truthspeaker. Ah, memories.

On this new track, Hot 2 Deff, Lyrics Born calls on MC-for-hire Chali 2na (seriously, what artist hasn’t he made a guest appearance for?) for an upbeat tune that mixes a club-happy beat with LB’s smooth, nearly breathless flow.

  • Lyrics Born (feat. Chali 2na) | Hot 2 Deff

Everything Flows (Cadence Weapon remix)

superextra.jpgI’ll admit it: I don’t know who Super Extra Bonus Party is. They described themselves in an e-mail as “Dublin-based noise-merchants.” Bonus points for being Irish (I am a Murphy, after all).

But what really caught my eye was the fact that one of their tracks, Everything Flows, was remixed by Cadence Weapon, a favorite in these parts.

The remix comes from the new Everything Flows EP, available digitally and on blue vinyl here, where you can also hear the original version of Everything Flows.

  • Super Extra Bonus Party | Everything Flows (Cadence Weapon remix)

Speaking of Cadence Weapon, he’s here (at the Rhythm Room) on March 17 with Born Ruffians, just a few weeks after CW drops his newest long-player Afterparty Babies (Anti).

Check out the first single off Afterparty Babies, if you haven’t already.

  • Cadence Weapon | In Search of the Youth Crew

Last time Cadence Weapon was here, he was rockin’ a Charles Barkley Suns jersey circa 1993. Looks like he’s gonna have to get a Shaquille O’Neal jersey now. I mean, WTF? I’m not sure this is a good idea for the Suns.