Posts Tagged ‘Acid House Kings’

Acid House Kings // Music Sounds Better With You

Sunday, March 20th, 2011

Probably gonna lose a lot of street cred from the witch house followers out there, but ever since the sweet tunes of Acid House Kings graced my ears on Laborador Records Swedes Do It Better compilation, I’ve fallen head-over-heels in love with the group.

After a six-year hiatus, the Swedish trio/quartet (depending on the record) is back with some of their best material to date. Although massively popular in their home country, they haven’t quite broken through Stateside — however, Music Sounds Better With You just might do the trick for them. In preparation for the album’s March 22 release, Labrador has provided two fun-filled, easy-listening tracks that are sure to cleanse the palate after a typical noise-filled, garage-rock adventure that is SXSW. Check out the tracks below and head to the labels site to pre-order the LP:

Acid House Kings // Are We Lovers or Are We Friends?

Acid House Kings // Would You Say Stop?

Videos for the Veekend // 4|16 – 4|18

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Let’s jump head-first into yet another installment of my favorite video finds of the past week:

No doubt, one of the most buzzed about thing in the blog-o-sphere the past couple of days has been Bethany Cosentino and Bobb Bruno’s (aka Best Coast) fast-food inspired video for “When I’m With You”:

Don’t have too many details from the Boston/NYC band Hooray for Earth other than they are set to open for crowd-favorites Surfer Blood and Pains of Being Pure at Heart on most of their East Coast tour dates. The following is a self-proclaimed “muppet-friendly, 80s public access channel-inspired video” for their track “Surrounded By Your Friends”:

This next music video is for arguably my favorite track from my favorite album of 2009: The Flaming Lips‘s Powerless:

Producing one of my favorite albums of 2010, I was shocked to find that I haven’t done a single Toro y Moi post yet. Here is an audio recording posted on youtube of Mr. Bundick covering Beach House’s “Master of None” that I found intriguing:

Another video I’ve been late to post is Kurt Vile‘s three song set he performed for Q-TV back in March:

I’ll end with an old-y but good-y, the karaoke music video for the Swedish sugary-sweet pop group Acid House Kings‘s track “This Heart is a Stone”. Yes, it’s three minutes of them playing ping-pong, but the song is soooo good!

PT Music Mixxx // Laid & Paid: Weak ‘n Mixxx

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

We’ve all had those moments waking up late on a Saturday morning after a long night of partying where the only plans for the day is laying on the couch, mindlessly surfing the net, and drifting in and out of sleep. Well my new mix Laid & Paid: Weak ‘n Mixxx is the soundtrack for these times — keeping it nice and chill so not to exacerbate the hungover headaches.

You can download the mix directly from here (EDIT: rapidshare seems to be having problems this morning, so here’s a more direct link) and after which sit back, relax, and enjoy the 75+ of smooth tunes while drinking your Bloody Marys and downing your Ibuprofen. There’s a good blend of foreign/domestic, popular/obscure, full-band/instrumentals, so you’re sure to be able to pick up a couple of new favorites while revisiting some classic songs you might not have heard in a while. Here’s the tracklist:

Jóvenes y Sexys // El Reloj
Mountain Man // Animal Tracks
jj // Let Go
Jens Lekman // Jag Tyckte Hon Sa Lönnlöv
Broken Bells // The High Road
Acid House Kings // The Heart Is a Stone
Cryin’ Sam Collins // Lonesome Road
Sara Lov // My Body Is a Cage (Arcade Fire Cover)
El Perro del Mar // From the Valley to the Stars
The Wave Pictures // Just Like a Drummer
Woods // The Dark
Beach House // Gila
Chromatic Flights // I Am a Rock (Simon & Garfunkel Cover)
Man Man // Doo Right
Bassekou Kouyaté & Ngoni Ba // Bambugu Blues
The Knife // Vegetarian Restaurant
A Studio // Self Service (Short Version)
Run DMT // St. James
Cass McCombs // Don’t Vote
Moonface // Marimba and Shit-Drums (Excerpt)
Ducktails // On the Boardwalk
jj // My Way

If you like the mix, check out the Pre-Party one I did a month ago.

Slipped Through the Cracks // Swedes Do It Better

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

For the critics, listening to CDs and mp3s is a year round job, so they’re able to keep up with the massive amounts of monthly releases without even batting an eye. However, for us casual fans it’s more difficult to keep tabs of the daily happenings of the music industry, and some great albums are bound to go undetected. This is the second installment of a reoccurring feature highlighting those albums that may have slipped through the cracks when initially released but have since been resurrected from the dead.

(Courtesy: ubiquity_zh)

As attested by the map detailing where the musicians of my favorite albums of 2009 are from, I love Swedish artists more than any other country not named The United States. There must be something in the water over there in Scandinavia (or most likely the lack thereof since it’s probably glacial H2O), because, for a population of just over nine million, they certainly churn out a disproportionate amount of great musicians. Just to name a few off the top of my head: José González, El Perro del Mar, Jens Lekman, Studio, Air France, and The Tough Alliance — and that’s just from Göteborg (pop: 500,000)! So when I saw on iTunes a compilation album released this past summer put out by Labrador Records featuring some of the freshest talent this country has to offer, I knew I had to get it!

Featuring only a handful of tracks from well-known artists Stateside (Sambassadeur, The Mary Onettes, and The Legends are the only three I recognize), part of the appeal of the album is that you’re given a chance to discover some music few people in the US are aware of (call it the “hipster draw”). Also, the potential for exposure affects the artists as they are more inclined to put out some of their better tunes to take full advantage of this opportunity to reach a worldwide audience. Although I usually only listen to compilations once just to get a feel of the type of music a particular label puts out, Swedes Do It Better is so chalk-full of great indie-pop that it’s tough for it to not seep into my regular rotation.

The 20-track double LP features sixteen artists, each with their own endearing style; however, in the interest of not writing a review that could rival most dissertations in length, I’ll just cut to some of my favorites. Although Suburban Kids With Biblical Names take there name from a Silver Jews lyric, after hearing their track Phoenix-ly titled “1999″, I think it’s safe to say that’s the only thing they share in common with David Berman & Co. With brightly played keyboard and a voice sounding like a less draggy/more upbeat Jens Lekman, SKWBN is probably the best music to play to keep your case of the Mondays at bay.

I have to say, my expectations were high after I dug up this gem-of-an-album-cover researching Stockholm’s Acid House Kings. Fortunately, I was not disappointed with their song “This Heart is a Stone” which is sugary enough to give you multiple cavities. Fluffed up by incessant jingle bells, vocalist Julia Lannerheim — with her candy-coated sound — has a hard time convincing us the calloused nature of the song’s protagonist as revealed by the track’s title. Regardless, the Acid House Kings pull out one of sweetest sounding “love is tough” diddies since The Pipettes “It Hurts to See You Dance So Well”.

However out of all the songs, the one I get most giddy about is [ingenting]‘s “Halleluja!” (yes, with brackets). One of the few sung in Swedish, [ingenting] certainly have that Dungen allure to them. With a wall of sound that would make Spector’s hair stand on end and a one-word sing-along chorus (hmm, I wonder which word…), I wouldn’t be surprised if this is a stadium anthem in their home country. Wait, let me check youtube — well close enough.

I don’t know, maybe it’s because I spent over a year in Copenhagen and traveled extensively throughout the Nordic region, but I think there is something to be said — something great — about Scandinavian music. Maybe it’s their more carefree lifestyle or their prevailing sense of happiness, but whatever it is, the whole world has them to thank for their extraordinary musical exports.

To give you taste, here are two label-released mp3s mentioned in this article:

[ingenting] // Halleluja!

Suburban Kids With Biblical Names // 1999

Also, you can download another Labrador sampler featuring most of the artists in this compilation for free from the pirate bay (don’t worry it’s legal). [via: It's A Trap]