Archive for 'Music'

Slow Dancing with Jeremy Jay

Slow Dancing with Jeremy Jay

Posted on09. Sep, 2009 by .

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words by Devoe Yates Nothing has given me more pleasure of recent than jamming out to the latest album from Jeremy Jay, Slow Dance. I bought it on a lark recently, and have since gone back and hunted down every rare 7” morsel of music he’s given birth to and spun it on repeat for [...]

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Bat For Lashes,  Two Suns – Music Review

Bat For Lashes, Two Suns - Music Review

Posted on09. Sep, 2009 by .

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Two Suns, the sophomore effort of Bat For Lashes, is an album of dualities.  Combining soft piano and atmospheric production with the bass and beats of Brooklyn’s nut-bustingest experimental act Yeasayer, multi-instrumentalist Natasha Kahn has crafted a record that could soundtrack both your mother’s bedtime romance novel reading session and your quasi-goth chick kid sister’s [...]

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Ear Pwr,  Super Animal Brothers III  – Music Review

Ear Pwr, Super Animal Brothers III - Music Review

Posted on09. Sep, 2009 by .

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I get it. Ear Pwr isn’t ironic because the Baltimore duo wears neon and performs electro-dance songs about cute animals and video game characters, it’s ironic because the group is a parody of obnoxious bands that do that. Right? Please tell me that’s right. Because if it’s not, this record is bullshit. This stuff stopped [...]

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Phoenix, Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix - Music Review

Posted on09. Sep, 2009 by .

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Although Phoenix’s brand of indie rock is only “indie” in the most contemporary sense—all clean guitar jangle, dance beat and polished pop hook—there’s something about the band’s unrelenting energy and Thomas Mars’ playful and French-accented vocals that should win over even the most critical listener. When album opener “Lisztomania” kicks off with its manically plucked [...]

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Green Day , 21st Century Breakdown - Music Review

Posted on09. Sep, 2009 by .

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With 21st Century Breakdown, Green Day has fully transformed into the kind of rock band that used to draw hordes of pimpled teens to stadiums during the height of album-oriented rock. Apparently American Idiot wasn’t just a one-off experiment with a more progressive sound, it was a permanent re-shaping of Green Day’s sound for the [...]

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Lindstrom & Prins Thomas, Lindstrom & Prins Thomas II - Music Review

Posted on08. Sep, 2009 by .

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An instrumental cosmic odyssey like no other.  A bit like Pink Floyd and Tangerine Dream teaming together for the soundtrack of your best science fiction dream. Alternately driving and wandering, it’s a jam-out that moves effortlessly from synthesizer to bongos while the band works out your journey to another dimension. Jazz for the year 2094. [...]

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Pink Mountaintops, Outside Love - Music Review

Posted on08. Sep, 2009 by .

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This album is psych-folk at its finest; haunting male/female vocals layered over a densely packed wall of guitars, strings, and other ethereal bits of instrumentation. The majority of the songs are also serious exercises in lethargy, plodding along warmly like the longest days of summer, allowing only those with patience to be fully rewarded. The [...]

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Danger Mouse & Sparklehorse (with photos by David Lynch), Dark Night Of The Soul - Music Review

Posted on08. Sep, 2009 by .

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Dark Night Of The SoulDark Night Of The Soul is a collaboration between Danger Mouse, Sparklehorse (Mark Linkous) and a number of top-notch guest vocalists and, amazingly, features a book collection of original David Lynch photographs apparently inspired by and related to the music. With Iggy Pop, James Mercer of the Shins, Julian Casablancas of [...]

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Death…for the Whole World to See - Cult Pick - Music Review

Posted on08. Sep, 2009 by .

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Death…for the Whole World to See Death was punk before there was punk, when “punk” was just prison slang for the new and soon-to-be abused inmate. You could even argue that Death invented the sound that would be associated with punk towards the end of the 70s. In the early half of that decade these [...]

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Natureboy - Internet Darling - Music Review

Posted on08. Sep, 2009 by .

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Natureboy—the musical project of Sara Kermanshahi—is laced with the kind of bittersweet instrumentation and longing vocals that could grip even the most detached listeners. The songs merge atmospheric compositions with gently strummed guitar melodies and transcendent vocals that hover ever-so-slightly over the instrumentation. “Famous Sons” opens with a poignant guitar part and Sara’s equally sublime [...]

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