<3 you Memoryhouse. 2k11 has been so absent without your wistful melodies and melodramatic whispers. Can’t wait for Sub Pop to wake up from the dream state you put them in with your music so that they can release your LP. Hope it happens soon… Until then, I will be watching these videos all day, every day:
Posts Tagged ‘Sub Pop’
Memoryhouse // A lot of Videos
Thursday, June 16th, 2011Memoryhouse // Sleep Patterns
Saturday, May 7th, 2011
They’re back… After their massive output of 2010 had been reduced to a trickle piano snippets and half composed songs at the start of 2011, my favorite Canadians, and recent Sub Pop signees, Memoryhouse are back with a new track via Sub Pop’s sampler. “Sleep Patterns” is just the latest example of what Memoryhouse does best: instant hypnotism courtesy of Denise Nouvion’s sleepy vocals and Evan Abeele’s lightly shimmering guitar work. Man, I really missed this band….
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:
King Tuff // Sun Medallion [Via: GvB]
Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba // I Speak Fula
Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010
It’s a way of relegating this ‘thing’ into the realm of something exotic and therefore cute, weird but safe, because exotica is beautiful but irrelevant.”
-David Byrne on the term “World Music”
Although I wouldn’t go as far as 100% agreeing to what Byrne says, I do think that the lumping of music anywhere outside North America/Europe and branding it “world” neglects to acknowledge the diversity of sound from different regions as well as being pretty damn condescending. Putting South American rhythms, Asian pentatonic scale-based tunes, and Caspian region instrumentation all under the same moniker is like saying drone metal, indie-pop, and electronica can be classified in a sub-genre — which no matter how hard you try, Sunn O))))‘s music is nowhere near comparable to that of of Montreal.
So after hearing respectable critics claim the latest album from Bassekou Kouyate and his ngoni group is “a contender for African album of the year” or “there’s unlikely to be a better African album this year”, it just makes my blood boil. I Speak Fula is one of the best albums anywhere, period. No qualifications necessary.

Now I’m not going to sit here and tell you I’m an expert on the nuanced sound of the ngoni (for that, head on over to the good folks at NPR), but I know good music when I hear it. I Speak Fula is filled with so many intricate rhythms and delicate melodies produced by that tiny gourd string instrument that it’s tough to keep count. At times enlisting the help of famed musicians Toumani Diabaté and Vieux Farka Touré — both of which put on killer live shows that I can personally vouch for — the album features a who’s who of modern day musical Malians whose collaborations produce some of the best tracks on the record.
In an effort to not embarrass myself further due to my lack of West African music knowledge, I am just going to give you a listen to their track “Musow” to better show you how mind blowing Kouyate & Co. are:




