VIDEO: Arctic Monkeys “Crying Lightning”

Official video for the new, slightly polarizing Arctic Monkeys single, “Crying Lightning.” The Josh Homme influence from behind the boards is readily apparent but hardly overwhelming. The stoner-rock look is more jarring than the musical departure. This video is clearly a piss-take joke played straight, except for the rising out of the seat bit. The song’s a bit of a grower, as it has many Arctic Monkeys fans drawing a line in the sand between old and new. These guys are smart enough to know they couldn’t repeat themselves at this point; they know how the game is played, and I’m on board. Alex Turner is the best lyricist working today. The band’s third LP, Humbug, is out August 25th on Domino.

Comments Off on VIDEO: Arctic Monkeys “Crying Lightning”Posted by eric: July 25th, 2009@ 8:55 am
Tags: video

The Feelies’ Crazy Rhythms and The Good Earth reissued

Discovering a record like Crazy Rhythms by The Feelies was one of those quasi-religious experiences, wherein I felt the need to preach its gospel to anyone who would listen. It’s one of those used record store finds that sounds better the more worn-in your copy is. The songs are a contradictory amalgamation of jitters and pop. It’s dark music played fast and nervously with an acute sense of melody. And the production is earphone heaven. It’s the sort of album that every record store clerk worth talking to owns multiple copies of, yet it never made much of an impact commercially. But its influence on early 1980’s college rock is unmistakable. The Feelies took six years to follow it up with The Good Earth, which is barely recognizable as coming from the same band (which, technically, after multiple line-up changes, wasn’t the same). Bar None records is reissuing these first two Feelies albums in looooong-overdue deluxe editions, complete with heavy graham vinyl editions. Strangely, the bonus tracks will only be available digitally, so the discs themselves will feature just the remastered albums. Supposedly, the band did not want to alter the original artwork. If you have never sat down with a pair of headphones and Crazy Rhythms on the turntable, I am jealous of that feeling you are about to experience for the first time. [via Pitchfork]

Crazy Rhythms:

01 The Boy With the Perpetual Nervousness
02 Fa -La
03 Loveless Love
04 Forces at Work
05 Original Love
06 Everybody’s Got Something to Hide (Except Me and My Monkey)
07 Moscow Nights
08 Raised Eyebrows
09 Crazy Rhythms

Crazy Rhythms bonus tracks:

01 Fa -La (single version)
02 The Boy With the Perpetual Nervousness (Carla Bley demo version)
03 Moscow Nights (Carla Bley demo version)
04 Crazy Rhythms (live)
05 I Wanna Sleep in Your Arms (live) (Modern Lovers cover)

The Good Earth:

01 On the Roof
02 The High Road
03 The Last Roundup
04 Slipping (Into Something)
05 When Company Comes
06 Let’s Go
07 Two Rooms
08 The Good Earth
09 Tomorrow Today
10 Slow Down

The Good Earth bonus tracks:

01 She Said, She Said (Beatles cover)
02 Sedan Delivery (Neil Young cover)
03 Slipping (Into Something) (live)

→ 1 CommentPosted by eric: July 24th, 2009@ 10:15 am
Tags: reissue

Blur: no plans to continue

Though it could easily be another one of Alex James’ coy, pot-stirring sound bites, the legendary louche/bassist of Blur has announced that the band has no plans whatsoever to continue, following its triumphant return to the summer festival circuit. Blur stormed back from self-exile with a string of high profile concerts to celebrate its reunion with estranged guitarist Graham Coxon and seemingly to show the imitators how it’s done. Now that the band has ended its run with showers of praise and a completely rejuvenated fanbase, James has nonchalantly dismissed any further activity, squashing hopes for American fans that the band would continue the parade stateside.

“I’ve spent the last week staring at a bonfire muttering to myself,” bassist Alex James told BBC News. “I haven’t been able to contain the joy that [the reunion concerts] brought to all of us. It was very, very emotional. Everything we hoped it would be and more.”

James is notorious for toying with reporters. So, anything he says has to be taked with the requisite amount of salt. He did call Glastonbury Blur’s “best gig ever”, which would admittedly be hard to top.  But I wouldn’t close the book just yet.

Comments Off on Blur: no plans to continuePosted by eric: July 24th, 2009@ 9:08 am
Tags: gossip · news

MP3: Love and Rockets gets its due

Love and Rockets were another one of my gateway bands in high school that opened up a whole new world of music to me. The band’s fluke Top 40 hit, “So Alive”, represents very little in terms of the breadth of its myriad musical styles. Despite being 3/4’s of the legendary art-punk pioneers, Bauhaus, Love and Rockets successfully threw off that heavy gothic shadow to explore a slightly more optimistic worldview. Introducing bizarre humor by way of its alter-ego, The Bubblemen, Love and Rockets certainly elevated its strange, albeit, mysterious appeal. Over the course of its first four records, Love and Rockets traversed disparate terrain from psychedelia to fuzz to garage to folk to pop and back again. After 1989’s eponymous self-titled smash, which saw the band playing stadiums opening for The Cure, the trio retreated into various solo and side projects. It would be five years before Love and Rockets would return, unrecognizably, in 1994 with a heavy dance and electronic bent. With a few exceptions, it’s the music on these first four albums that comprise the forthcoming tribute record New Tales To Tell. The contributors vary wildly. Some makes sense (Black Francis), while others do not (Better Than Ezra). But the diverse list of artists and interpretations is a testament to the band’s impact on the underground and that which bubbled over. New Tales To Tell is out digitally on July 28th, while the physical release is not until August 18th via Arsenal RocknRoll/Justice Records. The artwork was designed by Shepard Fairey of Obama poster fame.

Tracklist:

1. All In My Mind – Black Francis
2. Holiday On The Moon – Puscifer (MJ Keenan) (Tool & A Perfect Circle)
3. Love Me – War Tapes
4. No New Tale To Tell – Blaqk Audio (Davey & Jade of AFI)
5. I Feel Speed – Dubfire
6. Inside The Outside – The Dandy Warhols
7. Life In Laralay – Sweethead
8. An American Dream – Film School
9. The Light – A Place To Bury Strangers
10. Mirror People – Monster Magnet vs Adrian Young (No Doubt)
11. Fever – The Stone Foxes
12. No Big Deal – Frankenstein 3000
13. It Could Be Sunshine – VEX
14. So Alive – Better Than Ezra
15. Haunted When The Minutes Drag – James Hall
16. Lazy – Chantal Claret (Morningwood) vs Adrian Young (No Doubt)
17. Sweet F.A. – Lossy Coils with Ian Moore
18. No Words No More – Snowden
19. Sweet Lover Hangover – Charlie & The Valentine Killers
20. Yin And Yang & The Flowerpot Man – Halloween Jack (Stephen Perkins & Gilby Clarke)
21. Seventh Dream Of Teenage Heaven – The Manichean
22. Bound For Hell – Johnny Dowd & Billy Cote
23. Saudade – Halls Of The Machine

Bonus
24. Kundalini Express – The Flaming Lips
25. Mirror People – The Invisible Humans
26. No New Tale To Tell – Astra Heights

Black Francis – All in My Mind.mp3

[Read more →]

→ 1 CommentPosted by eric: July 24th, 2009@ 8:30 am
Tags: mp3 · new release · news · stream · touring

Lazy Friday: Coconut Records – Summer Day

Comments Off on Lazy Friday: Coconut Records – Summer DayPosted by k: July 17th, 2009@ 7:37 am
Tags: link

Courtney Love prevented from digging bigger Hole

It’s no secret that Courtney Love is a conniving opportunistic freak. So, it’s good to see little things like the law preventing her from reneging on a contract. Back in 2002 when Hole officially disbanded, Love and guitarist Eric Erlandson signed an agreement stating that Hole could not exist unless both persons were involved. Well, either Love signed that piece of paper in a blitzed-out cloud of prescription drugs (likely) or she just flagrantly disregarded its existence (also likely) because she recently announced her intention to resurrect the Hole moniker as the sole original member to save her fledgling solo album. À la one Billy Corgan and his Smashing Pumpkins brand. No doubt, Love took a page from her former fluid-swapping partner’s book of sleazy corporate tactics.

Comments Off on Courtney Love prevented from digging bigger HolePosted by eric: July 15th, 2009@ 3:30 pm
Tags: gossip · news

Yet another Strokes side-project delays actual Strokes record

I really don’t understand bands that take years and years in between albums. The more time that passes, the higher the expectations. Plus, you’ve got crazy short attention spans to deal with, thanks to the shuffling of iPods and whatnot. The kids that bought Is This It are practically moms and dads now. And do we really need side-projects from every single band member? I’ve always kind of been against solo albums if your band is still functional. Does the market really need to be saturated with your every whim? The Strokes’ last record came out over three years ago- an absolute eternity in today’s culture. And instead of news of new Strokes material, the blogs are bogged down today with word that frontman Julian Casablancas has a solo record ready to go. Of course he does. So we have to sit through that promotional machine’s life-cycle before a new Strokes record will see the light of day.

So, Casablancas’ debut is called Phrazes for the Young and was recorded in L.A., Nebraska, and New York with Jason Lader and Bright Eyes mainstay Mike Mogis. This video at juliancasablancas.com hints at the record’s tone:

Comments Off on Yet another Strokes side-project delays actual Strokes recordPosted by eric: July 15th, 2009@ 2:59 pm
Tags: news