Archive for July, 2010

Las Robertas // V For You

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

I haven’t been excited about a Latin American group since I feel in love with Jóvenes y Sexys a full six months ago, but Las Robertas changed that in a flash yesterday when I watched the above video for their track “V For You”. Hailing from San José, Costa Rica — one of the happiest places on earth — Las Robertas make some of the best fuzzed out pop gems, or ‘fuzzy buzzy’ as Carles would say, I’ve heard all year (and trust me, I’ve heard a lot).

The group garnered a lot of attention this past May when they exploded onto the scene courtesy of GvB, prompting me to download their LP, entitled Cry Out Loud, from their bandcamp page where, unfortunately, it remained unlistened in my iTunes library until earlier this morning. You can still download three tracks from their site here, as well as listen in to my favorite song of the album below:

Las Robertas // Tele

Out of Office: Autoreply (II)

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

I am the worst blogger on the planet. Until I return (Friday?), do yourself a favor and pre-order the Tennis 7” on Underwater Peoples RIGHT NOW!

Tanlines // Reinfo

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

Don’t know how I missed this video back in April, but better late than never. Thanks to this NY Times piece, I discovered this meta-site Pitchfork Reviews Reviews, which led me to this amazing video to an amazing song. Hyperlinking, ftw!

Here’s the description of the video from the band: “This guy who does a blog called Pitchfork Reviews Reviews randomly emailed us this video that he made for a girl named Anna. We like it, so now it’s our official video!”

Neon Indian & Korallreven // Remixes

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

Came across two great mp3s from the past week that are sure to temporarily scratch everyone’s remix itch. The first is a spaced-out minimalist rendition of ‘chillwave’ pioneer Neon Indian’s first single “6669 (I Don’t Know If You Know)” by Portland’s own musician/culinary extraordinaire White Hinterland.

It’s only been two weeks since I last posted about Korallreven (including a remix by Ghostape), but this reworking of “The Truest Faith” by Canadian electronic artist CFCF was too good to pass up. Enjoy!

Neon Indian // 6669 (I Don’t Know If You Know) (White Hinterland Remix)

Korallreven // The Truest Faith (CFCF Remix)

Jens Lekman // A Summer in 3/4 Time

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

Ushering in a return from a recent hiatus from his website, quirky Swedish songwriter Jens Lekman dropped this killer summertime mix where the common thread between samples is, as expected, their waltz-y time signature. Always known to have an eclectic taste in music, Mr. Lekman provides a fluid 28+ minute mix chock-full of obscure tracks and movie snippets (with some better known songs sprinkled in here and there) that are arranged so brilliantly that you can’t help but think to yourself: “Bravo, Jens! Bravo!”

You can check out the samples Jens used as well as a download for the entire mix below. Also, head over to his site to read more about the origins of this project.

  • Au Revoir Simone // Shadows (Jens Lekman’s remix)
  • Barbara Mason // Oh How It Hurts
  • Thomas Mapfumo // Madiro
  • The Morning Benders // Excuses
  • Dialogue from Gregory’s Girl (1981)
  • Chad & Jeremy // Everyone’s Gone To The Moon
  • Music and Dialogue from Day Of The Locust (1975)
  • Eggstone // Birds In Cages
  • Pete Drake // Forever
  • Armando Mantovani // Around the World
  • Dialogue from Puberty Blues (1981)
  • Jane Morgan & the Troubadours // Fascination
  • Armando Trovajoli // L’Amore Dice Ciao
  • Sharon O’Neill // Puberty Blues
  • Like A Sleepy Blue Ocean

Jens Lekman // A Summer in 3/4 Time Mix

RxRy // VAEIOUWLS

Monday, July 12th, 2010

It’s been a while in internet time since we heard a peep from anon ambient electronic musician RxRy, and evidently it’s because he’s been hard at work putting together his latest LP, cryptically entitled VAEIOUWLS. Sure, there have been a couple of mp3s here and there along with a handful of geometrically dense music vids, but it’s been a full 6 months (yikes!) since his stellar debut was released to the masses for free. I remember it was only a couple of years ago when the online music community would chide an artist for his prolificacy, now in the hype-machine world we live in, we expect a constant stream of new material, putting a strain on the already over-worked/underpaid musician.

Regardless, RxRy has been able to rise to the demands of present-day bloggers, putting forth his best effort to date with VAEIOUWLS. All it takes is a single, continuous headphoned listen to the album to realize that the two months spent on “arranging these tracks, honing them in, sharpening them, and making sure they could cut” was well worth the time invested. It’s refreshing to see that in this single-centric music environment of today, someone goes the extra mile to create a complete album where each track is integral to the work as a whole. It’s musical synergy at its finest.

In my opinion, the thing that RxRy does best with his music is that he can create an incredibly vivid visual image using only auditory data. Forest at dusk (“UUAII”), riding waves on the ocean surface (beginnings of “OIUIO”), rumblings of an active sea floor (obviously “EUIEE”) are all scenes I had pictured in my head while listening to the album with headphones on. So with each track change you not only get different music, but you get teleported to a different — sometimes alien — environment.

RxRy also has a knack for making the complex seem simple and natural. For example, on casual listen, the opening two tracks “AIUIA” and “UUAII” would probably be described as “slow-tempoed”, “gently evolving”, or “ballad-like”, however when intently listening to the amount of individual layers, it’s unbelievable how much texture is present even in these relatively straightforward tracks. Similarly, fast-paced dance songs, such as “EIOAA” and “IIOYI”, contain a plethora of quick bloops/bleeps and precise intros/exits, however the tracks somehow never appear rigid or overwhelming — something that I’d imagine is incredibly hard to achieve when working with so many layers.

Following in the footsteps of his past releases, RxRy has released the entire album for free download on his website (on the sidebar), however if you just want a taste, check out two of my favorite mp3s from VAEIOUWLS below. In addition, he’s provided some stubs to some of his tracks that is sure to be fodder for any remix maestros out there. Unfortunately, no physical releases are scheduled at this time, but RxRy is certainly more than open to the idea if you’d like to help finance the undertaking (I smell a kickstarter project…).

RxRy // EIIOA (flint rasp export defect)

RxRy // IIOYI (strategy pulse feed loop)

Stalker // 48 Mix (Zone III Edits)

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

A couple of weeks back, Chicago slo-mo beat-machine Stalker unveiled a new mutilated mix on Pinglewood which, even after a handful of listens, I can’t fully wrap my head around. It’s just about as nuts of a 25 minute listen you could find anywhere, with several (OK, almost all) tracks sounding like nothing you have ever heard in your life.

You can check out the track list as well as snatch the mp3 below, or if you just want an intro, head on over to Stalker’s website to listen to “Scrape”, arguably the most interesting cut in the mix. For those like me who are anxious for a physical release, Stalker is currently concocting something special for Tri Angle Records that’s scheduled for later this year.

Stalker- I Drown
Stalker – Untitled
Stalker – Rryyddee
Hype Williams – The Throning
Grillgrill – ..Sl0WlicKin…
Stalker – Untitled 2
Stalker – Scrape
Ginuwine – In Those Jeans (Stalker Cut)
Ryuichi Sakamoto – Last Regrets
Fleetwood Mac – Prove Your Love
Stalker – Oxy

Stalker // 48 Mix (Zone III Edits)

ceo // White Magic

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

About a week ago was the release date for ceo’s White Magic, one of my most anticipated LPs of the year, and I just got around to listening to it for the first time during my recent vacation. If you don’t want to read my lengthy, unabashedly glowing review, then let me put my opinion in a nutshell: YOU GOT TO BUY THIS ALBUM.

I’ll leave a “proper” review of the album to the professionals, and instead use my time to highlight the three things that blew me away the most with Eric Berglund’s solo debut:

  • The strings: I guess it’s always been present in most of the Tough Alliance stuff (see: closing of “Something Special”, background in “New Romance”) , but the orchestral component on White Magic is certainly more ear-grabbing. The LP opens with “All Around”, a three-minute track of repeated cello-championed melodies and violin lines, and closes with “Den Blomstertid Nu Kommer”, a modern take on what sounds like a religious hymnal featuring a string quartet and a church organ — with much of everything in between including some sort of symphonic component. Surprisingly, Berglund’s blending of high-brow instrumentation with Balearic melodies and beats work out extraordinarily well. The best example of this coexistence is “Illuminata” where the driving force of the song, the oddball percussion-heavy beat, receives support during the interludes from a group of sprightly strings, creating a cheerful dance track.
  • The structure: One of the most common comments I made when listening to the album was the quality of the bridges. Any dude with Ableton Live on his laptop can create a hook or a verse, however, it takes an expert to properly connect the elements into a workable song. Track after track on White Magic showcases Berglund’s talent in this regard: the electric guitar rip on “Love and Do What You Will”, the fluttering electro-elements and spliced up samples on “Come With Me”, the river sounds swelling on “White Magic”, and on and on and on… Equal to his ability of creating these dynamic bridges is Berglund’s savvy constructions of song endings. Obviously fading the melody slowly into the blackness of in-between-track space is nothing new, but ceo songs typically introduce interesting new phrases before closing out a track. The opener “All Around” has your typical violin decresendo at the thirty-seconds-left mark, however, the song doesn’t end as simply as you’d expect. Instead, Berglund opts for starting earthly groans just as the strings finish, using these sounds to connect with the following track “Illuminata”. For ceo, endings are more important than just wrap-ups.
  • The singing: Maybe it’s just me, but there is something endearing about Berglund’s accented English and slightly strained vocals. Obviously, the lyrics are catchy, interesting, and oftentimes ironic when coupled with song’s melody, however I think it’s Berglund’s “Average Joe” appeal that makes his music so sing-song-y. I find myself belting out the chorus of “come with me / COME WITH ME” primarily because I feel like I can sing it, and not only that, but sing it well (a notion that could easily be disproven in a nanosecond with the use of a recording device).

So yeah, White Magic is Swedish dance-pop at its best and one of the best albums of 2010. You can listen to title track, and arguably my favorite song from the record, below and cop the album from either the Sincerely Yours shop or from Modular Records.

ceo // White Magic

Out of Office: Autoreply

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

I should be back in Portland tomorrow from my trip to Utah. Until then, [F5] Altered Zones and see what they got brewing over there (and note a certain “Out There” blog).

The Mantles // Bad Design 7”

Saturday, July 3rd, 2010

For those like me who didn’t jump on purchasing The Mantles’s Slumberland-released 7” back in October of last year, now’s the time to correct that error as I got word that it’s back in stock at the label’s store for a paltry $5. Hailing from San Fran, one of the epicenters of music innovation nowadays, this psych-infused garage rock quartet is a cut above the rest when it comes to making 70s-revival neo-jam band music.

Check out an mp3 for their track “Bad Design” (made available from the Slumberland site) and head on over to myspace to stream the B-side “Rachel”. And if you have deep pockets, you can purchase their Mexican Summer 12” as well.

The Mantles // Bad Design