Archive for February, 2010

Software Suggestions // Code Organ

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Caught word of this site Code Organ from the good folks down at woot.com (although it’s been passed around a lot this past week) which basically turns any website into a song. I’ll let them explain it:

Firstly, the codeorgan scans the page contents and removes all characters not found in the musical scale (A to G), and then analyses the remaining characters to find the most commonly used “note”. If this is an even number, the page is translated into the major pentatonic scale of that particular note. It becomes minor if there is an uneven number.

Secondly, the codeorgan defines which synthesizer to use. This is based upon the total number characters used on the webpage — there are currently 10 synthesizer effects and the one chosen is picked based upon the percentage of content.

Lastly, the codeorgan selects a drum loop based upon the ratio of characters on the page versus the number of characters that are actually musical notes — there are currently 10 different drum loops to pick from.

Seems simple enough. Although code organ’s procedure is pretty much equatable to a random number generator seeded by the amount of A through G characters of a site (something any high school computer science student could put throw together in about an hour), the 8-bit graphical user interface makes for a pretty slick web experience. What’s surprising about these semi-random musical pieces is how listenable the results spit out by the program are. In fact, excluding the distracting random piano line, you could really throw down a Garage Band jam with the supplied synth and drum lines! So if I piqued your interest, head on over to their site and see what your favorite URLs sound like.

Two for Tuesday // Jens Lekman

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

If there is anything that Swedish singer/songwriter/humorist Jens Lekman knows best, it’s how to treat fans in the 21st century. In fact, it would be good for a lot of artists to take cues from what Lekman has done, infusing his self-run website with monthly open-dialogues and an endless supply of free mp3s. When it comes to the topic of filesharing, Lekman takes a practical point of view much to the chagrin of the RIAA: “you can download my entire records with filesharing programs, I don’t mind that but if you like my music please support me – buy my records, come to my shows or make a Paypal donation”. Lekman seems to be one of the few artists who can elicit a smidgen of sympathy from the pirate going rapidshare-crazy.

Well Jens has posted a lot more free material since the last time I checked his site. The first track, which you can download below, is from a 2005 split 7” with friend and fellow Swede El Perro del Mar, entitled “I Don’t Know If She’s Worth 900 Kroner”. The 7” is long since sold-out, so going digital is your best bet of hearing the record (the B-side is del Mar’s “Shake It Off” which is from her Look It’s El Perro del Mar! debut). The second recording posted below is a half hour live set Lekman did for the Kortedala Beauty Center — which may or may not be where “Shirin” works. Also meant to be a companion to his latest Night Falls Over Kortedala LP, the recording is very beautiful, even by Jens’s standards.

Check out the songs below and, if you want more, head over to his site:

Jens Lekman // I Don’t Know If She’s Worth 900 kr.

Jens Lekman // Kalendervägen 113.D

SXSW ’10 Preview #4 // Reading Rainbow

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

With a vanity myspace URL of levarmotherfuckingburton, it’s obvious that Philadelphia noise-rock duo Reading Rainbow exploits its PBS namesake (hosted by a certain VISOR-wearing Star Trek alum). However, the similarities end with the moniker, because Robbie Garcia and Sarah Everton’s music is anything but kid friendly.

Lo-fi and noisy even by lo-fi and noisy established standards, every Reading Rainbow track is an auditory assault on the ear drums — it’s like I can feel my cochlea yelling at me everytime I listen to them. However, unlike pure-noise bands like AIDS Wolf and Pre, there are nuggets of melody that help keep you upright when you are being dragged through the rough. Although not used as expertly as Wavves (I can feel the backlash already), the sing-along lyrics, like the closing lines “who can direct us where to go / my mind is made up / the answer’s no” on the recently released “Underground”, are certainly more than enough to pique your interest and at least get you excited thinking about what a 30 minute SXSW set of theirs would look like!

Currently, Reading Rainbow are prepping another album before heading towards Austin in March. They’re slated to play a hell of a lot of shows (most notably Weekly Tape Deck’s AWESOME showcase), so if you’re on 6th St. during the festival, it will be difficult to NOT see them. Here are two tracks to let you in on what Reading Rainbow is about:

Reading Rainbow // Underground

Reading Rainbow // The Sun Is Out

Fennesz // June

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Found a copy at my local record of Austrian avante-garde extraordinaire Christian Fennesz‘s post-Black Sea 12” single entitled “June” which was limitedly released on Table of Elements, and man is it a doozie! This vinyl must be pretty obscure since there is no record of it on his wikipedia page and there are only a few places online selling it, ranging in price from $20 to £17 + shipping — almost as bad as a Mexican Summer release! Showcasing an etching on the A-side of what looks like a cartoon dragon eating a banana, this slab of orange wax is more aesthetically pleasing to the eyes than to the ears.

Although some will balk at the price tag for an album which only houses a bizarrely constructed five-minute track, with “June”, Fennesz puts together a hauntingly droney piece that’s a natural fit with the mentally taxing Black Sea. In typical Fennesz-fashion, musical textures are front and center — although much sharper and coarser than anything off its LP predecessor. Somehow included as part of Table of Elements 15th anniversary Guitar Series (featuring a slew of limited edition single-sided 12” vinyls), the spidery concoction of string plucks Fennesz highlights on the song isn’t remotely near anyone’s notion of what a “guitar series” track should song like.

Well don’t take my word on it, you can check out an mp3 of the track below:

Fennesz // June

A Year In… // Brief Recap

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

This past January marked my one year anniversary of running this site (well, taking into consideration my summer hiatus for my thesis, more like 6 months). What started out as a simple section on my personal google sites page while I was overseas for grad. school, PT Music has slowly morphed into a regularly updated assortment of posts with monthly readership in the thousands. While I would by no means classify it as a “successful” blog, the site is a testament on the connectivity of the 21st century and the smallness of the world nowadays.

At this time, I thought I would share some of the more popular things about the site over the past year in a nice little “in a nutshell” post.

Most Popular Concert Videos:
1st // Casiokids Live at Roskilde in 2008 (12,772 views)

2nd // New Song from The National (11,458 views)
3rd // MGMT performing “Weekend Wars” Live at Roskilde 2008 (7,719 views)

A bit surprising when I went to check the stats on my flickr page, but the most viewed concert photos by far were some terribly grainy shots I took at a Tegan and Sara show almost two years ago. Most likely due to getting picked up by some fan forum, it’s nevertheless still sad to see some of my better photo sets be dwarfed in comparison. Oh well!

Most popular Concert Photos:
1st // Tegan & Sara Live in Copenhagen (1,267 views)

2nd // Wavves Live in Munich (206 views)

3rd // Neko Case Live in Munich (64 views)

Most Popular Posts:
1st // PT Music’s Top 41 Albums of 2009 (1,526 page views)

2nd // Keyboard Sample Pad (1,322 page views)

3rd // Guest List: Burgers’s Top 30 Songs of 2009 (862 page views)

The next section I have no solid numbers on, but based on page views of track reviews as well as the number of referenced sites, I think I can gauge roughly which mp3s had the most downloads:

Most Popular mp3 Download:
1st // Moonface: Dreamland EP

2nd // Rainbow Bridge: Big Wave Rider

3rd // PT Music’s Laid & Paid Weekend Mix

Well that does it for the concise recap of the past year or so. Here’s to a musically prosperous 2010!!

Videos for the Veekend // 2|19 – 2|21

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

Ready for another round-up of some of my favorite music-related finds of the past week? Well, here goes:

Starting off is a grainy video that I included more because of the music and the musicians than the image quality. On a summer European tour date in Göteborg, Sweden, Massachusetts chanteuse Marissa Nadler teamed up with local Sarah Assbring (better known as El Perro del Mar) for a beautiful rendition of the Don Gibson classic “Oh Lonesome Me”:

One of my favorite concerts in recent memory was the Best Coast show I caught about a week and half ago. Well the videographers at the San Fran based site Truly Yours brilliantly captured Bethany Constantino and Bobb Bruno’s performance of “Crazy”, along with some back story showing how cool Bruno is (which I can confirm):

The next video is from one of my most anticipated SXSW bands, The Good The Bad. This midly NSFW vid for their simply titled “026″ captures the sex, drugs, and rock & roll this Danish band is known for:

Although the next one is just an audio rip of Gnonnas Pedro et ses Dadjes excellent track “Dadje Von O Von Non” (and a poor one at that, with the final 90-or-so seconds completely silent), ever since Chocolate Bobka featured it on his Sunday morning radio show, I’ve dusted off my copy of Legends of Benin and have been playing it a lot this week:

The guys over at IGIF labeled this video as of their favorites they’ve seen in a while. I tend to agree with them. Here is Fang Island‘s “Daisy”:

This final video is meant to get you pumped for the upcoming SXSW festival in Austin (only one more month!) Sit back, relax, and soak in the genius of Daniel Johnston as he performs “True Love Will Find You in the End”:

Older Stuff // Woods

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Finding anything on Brooklyn based psychedelic folk rockers Woods before their stellar 2009 LP Songs of Shame is like finding a needle in a Burj Dubai-sized mound of hay. Check out their self-run label: nothing but a recently release 7”. Their subsidiary tape-only sister label: Sold-Out. Every single record store in Portland: nadda. Other than a couple of blog postings, it’s like they didn’t exist before 2009. The only opportunity I’ve seen of finding early Woods stuff was when I caught them on tour this past fall, where I purchased a reissue of their 2007 nine-song S/T album, recorded under the moniker Woods Family Creeps, without any hesitation. One would think that with an initial pressing of 300 and a subsequent one of 1000, copies would be at least somewhat available, but it seems that Woods fans are diehard collectors, leaving a $125 copy on ebay as the only alternative for the tardy listener.

When one listens to the earlier stuff, it’s kind of incredible how much they’ve changed in a span of a couple of years. Where Songs of Shame are an equal-parts blend of catchy pop hooks and psychedelic rock, their Woods Family Creeps stuff is almost entirely composed of mushroom-trip-gone-wrong type of material. The album starts with the cultish opening jam “End to End” which is full of ritualistic chants and spidery guitars that sends shivers down your spine before a 1812 Overture-like audio assault ends the two and a half minute track. The next song, arguably the most interesting in the bunch, “Creeps Collage” has a sound that is true to its name. Featuring a collection of 30-45 second snippets of recordings — ranging from full-on experimental to soothing acoustic folk — smashed together and lumped as a single track, it’s something you hardly ever see outside of a Girl Talk album.

Contrary to the eerie surrounding tracks, the A-side’s third song “Twisted Tongue” pleasant sounding — dare I say sweet — melody could have easily been considered an outtake or B-side to Songs of Shame. Coming in at just over two minutes, the track is a short reprieve from the haunting landscape set by the rest of A-side. Prominently featuring Jeremy Earl falsetto voice (and harmonizing nonetheless!), the track is home to such lyrical gems as “trade your lover for another / lover / you’ve been told you are a mother / fucker” and some other stuff that would appease the apostate youth (“oh you got to run from the fallen son / you got a twisted tongue”).

The B-side continues the mood set by its flip-side counter part. The opener “Howling on Howling” is almost a mirror image of “End to End” with one of the most disturbing Kum Bay Ya circles I’ve ever listened to. With the lo-fi recording method and the constant tape hiss present, it makes you feel as if you are more overhearing intimate bedroom takes rather than bearing witness to a finished product. Maybe this “reading somebody else’s diary without permission” feeling is what makes listening to Woods Family Creeps so, for lack of a better word, creepy. Maybe this ultra-private feel to Woods’s past records is what makes them so damn hard to find; they’re meant to not be heard by a mass audience. This is good for the band’s allure, bad news for the hordes of fans that are thirsty for a full discography of material.

Here are a couple of tracks from the LP to give you a taste of the pre-Songs of Shame Woods. The first two I would say are atypical examples (leaps and bounds more pop than most of the tracks), while the final one, “Sleep Sleep Sleep”, is more representative of the album as a whole.

Woods // End to End

Woods // Twisted Tongue

Woods // Sleep Sleep Sleep

Nurses // Daytrotter Session

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Nurses, one of my favorite local indie-pop groups and title wearer for one of the most ungoogable band names, recently took a trip down to Rock Island, Illinois to record a session with the famed Daytrotter website. Featured are two tracks from their ridiculously overlooked sophomore album Apple’s Acre as well as an unreleased track entitled “Sweet So Sleeping” which you can check out below. For the full set, head on over to the Daytrotter website.

Nurses // Sweet So Sleeping

Fanfarlo // iTunes Session EP

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Ever since I first caught wind of the project a couple months back, I’ve been counting down the days until Fanfarlo’s iTunes session become finally available, and today is the day! Included in the EP are live recordings of five hits from their Reservoir LP as well as a cover of the Smashing Pumpkins track “We Only Come Out at Night”.

I was first introduced to the band through a post made by IGIF this past spring and was subsequently turned into a rabid fan when NPR posted an amazing Tiny Desk concert (which, with five performers, wasn’t that tiny). Although the band has been rigorously compared to Arcade Fire or Clap Your Hands Say Yeah and vocalist Simon Balthazar has gotten plenty of Zach Condon-like references, they have still been able to carve out a niche for themselves, bringing in flocks of fans who appreciate their complex, smooth sounding full-band arrangements.

You can check out Fanfarlo’s version of the classic Smashing Pumpkins’s song as well as a past cover of Bonnie Prince Billy’s track “A Minor Place” below:

Fanfarlo // We Only Come Out At Night (Smashing Pumpkins Cover)

Fanfarlo // A Minor Place (Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy Cover)

SXSW ’10 Preview #3 // Happy Birthday

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

I’m going to go ahead and give the band Happy Birthday my recommendation based more on a hunch than on any built up reputation they may or may not have. Why is this? You see, this Vermont based garage pop band has only one track to their credit: the wildly infectious (and widely publicized) “Girls FM”. It’s true — scour the internets far and wide, and all that you’ll come up with is this lone mp3 that’s made a hit everywhere from Sub Pop loving it enough to sign them and put it on their Cybersex V2.0 mix as the opener to Pitchfork throwing it up on their forkcast.

So you know the track has to be pretty damn good in order for everyone to make such a fuss about it. Take the poppiness of a typical Girls track and square it while still not sounding to incredible cheesy due to the lo-fi quality of the recording, add in some witty lyrics (“see them play like the internet band / try to hear them but you couldn’t understand”) and voila!: the perfect recipe for a summertime hit. Sub Pop is going to make millions…

Happy Birthday’s debut album is dropping March 16, which coincides with the band’s SXSW debut (how convenient!). So if you’re just as excited about the potential of the group as I am, be sure to check the band out at the festival and see what they are all about! Here’s the hit single as well as an older track from frontman Kyle Thomas’s past band King Tuff:

Happy Birthday // Girls FM

King Tuff // Sun Medallion [Via: GvB]