Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Monthly Cassette Reviews (April Edition in May!)

Super Minerals “Clusters” (Stunned)
New batch of Stunned cassettes and CDRs are proving that this tiny label from California (run by Phil of Magic Lantern and Super Minerals) is clearly digging deep, far and wide to bring you some of the more bent sounds cooking underground. The label's releases tend to last no more than 2 weeks before selling out, so you'd be wise to keep an eye on their blogspot page to keep up. Oh heck, 4 new releases just dropped. See? Already behind on this one. Anyways, first up in the new batch is the newest from Super Minerals, who've managed to squirm from one vibe to the next so's not to be pigeonholed by pesky bloggers like myself. This time around the duo are going for a Terry Riley or La Monte Young piano driven arpeggiation that is dizzying. Two side-long pieces with the first being the dueling pianos and the flip taking a flashback into the tropical jungle morning. Quite unlike anything else I've heard from this confounding duo. Check out Stunned Aside.


Warm Climates “Edible Homes” (Stunned)
Stunned indeed! Second Stunned release here is an incredibly strange folk-ish effort from this LA native. This is my intro to the man, but he's apparently been releasing CDRs for close to a decade now. How the hell did I miss this guy? It's no matter becuase we found and we do likes 'em. The vocals on 'Edible Homes' brings to mind the twisted prog folk of Comus but he's tending a much gothier patch here, maybe more along the lines of early Legendary Pink Dots. The folk angle pops in and out, fighting for space alongside droning organs, fuzzy field recordings, garbled electronics, and even some wild, almost free jazz-style drumming. There are also some great blips of programmed electronics that bring to mind the spazzier moments of Aphex Twin's "Drukqs". Yessum, real mixed bag here, but sewn together well enough to convince me to start paying attention.


Dead Luke “The Black Plague In Mono No.3” (Jerkwave)
Can't get enough Dead Luke round these parts, and even though the man is calling it quits, he still has a fleet of new records dropping this year to keep his name floating around for a bit longer. Apparently there will be LPs coming from Night People, Florida's Dying, Sacred Bones, a split LP on Aurora Borealis, where he'll be joined by Zola Jesus, and a cassette coming out on Bathetic Tapes, which is a label I cannot find much info on. Possible interview with label head here? Where was I? Ok, Dead Luke. This one may only be recommended to the hardcore Luke fans, as the pop that's bubbled through to the surface of his other releases (the best being that 7" on Sweet Rot) is not really present here. This one runs from the bouncy goth synth of those earlier releases all the way to droning sitar bliss-outs. Also some Cramps-style boogie jams for good measure. This is part 3 of Jerkwave's ongoing 'The Black Plague in Mono" series, so I'm sure we can expect some more bent pop on the upcoming full lengths.

The Elks “The Black Plague In Mono No.4” (Jerkwave)
Outside of the black and white cover art adorning the cassettes in 'The Black Plague In Mono' series, and a general bleakness in the music, there's not a whole lot connecting these releases (Hanging Coffins and Absinthe Minds did the first two). Not a concern, just a thought. The Elks are running the same line of gnarly/blown out garage sickness that the likes of The Hunches, Lamps and The Hospitals have already traversed. If yr worried that this is a mere aping then rest at ease, The Elks take things to the next logical extreme by turning up the static, amping up those harsh metallic drums, and even adding in some droning synth. The vocals are especially effective here, flipping from a lock-jawed hiss to ferocious barks. Highly recommended shit here. Check out an earlier CDR the band released here (courtesy of The Elks).




BT. HN. “Valastro” (Cipher Productions)
First of two new collaborative efforts by Vancouver's Sick Buildings and THE RITA. This cassette, which was released on the Australian label Cipher Productions, starts off with a jarring shot of white noise that fire out like a cannon (this writer actually flinched) and is followed by what sounds like a a gathering street mob. Later, a man speaking French for several moments is interrupted by a familiar blast of harsh noise that could only be the doing of THE RITA. The speaker's voice is then interspersed with the same shots of noise that started the tape off, sounding like speaker happens to be under siege. The explosions are eventually wrenched into blow torch-like blasts and are backed up by violent feedback and teethgrinding vocals. This is perhaps the most visual release I've heard from either of these fellers, and brings to mind urban warfare happening well out of ear shot from these cozy Canadian shores. Apparently it has more to do with dynamite fishing than anything else. Go figger.


Lake Shark “Harsh Noise” (Lake Shark/Rundownsun)
Second collab between these two was recorded in a hotel room in NYC while the two were waiting to attend last year's No Fun Fest.
This is a real quicky and was reportedly recording using materials found in the room. There is a low bass rumble that acts as the river bed for a harsh electric trickle to weave its way atop the bass-y flow. Short and well to the point. Nice oversize packaging on this sucker, too. Thick cardstock flap with a nice print job. There's also some nice smut thrown in there for yr viewing pleasure.













Silver Futures “From The Swamp Rot Rises My Baby’s Dreams” (Future Sound Recordings)
Newest release by Future Sound Recordings, who are also responsible for those early Ducktails cassettes, is a duo featuring Mark McGuire (Emeralds) and Etienne Pierre Duguay, who is the drummer in Predator Vision. This effort definitely leans more towards the Emeralds end of things here with a cascade of twilight synths, dream sequence guitars and hushed xylophones (I think). Everything is wrapped in a warm tick-tocking swirl of ambient hum that gives this release a comforting new new-age vibe that I just can't get enough of these days. I've seen the future. It is silver.







Jeans Wilder “Antiques” (Night People)
Night People, who have always been dependable for their quality releases of disparate new sounds, have unearthed a gloomy pop cretin from somewhere along the US West Coast. Yup, another avant bedroom composer that seems to have dropped out of nowhere. Well, this one is gonna go in the pile that is already occupied by Night Control, Blank Dogs and Kurt Vile, though this doesn't really sound like any one of those. There are a few similarities, however, including warbled keyboards, echoed vocals, and some b-movie synths. What does separate him is his use of the acoustic guitar, giving this cassette a much more intimate feel while still remaining distant and out of grasp. Upcoming releases include a split cassette on Bathetic (seriously, someone wanna get me some info on this label) with the brooding a gal out of the UK, and a few 7"s and 12"s on tba labels.


Peaking Lights “Two Songs For Ceremony” (Night People)
Freshest, newest jams from one of my personal favorite groups running right now. Two songs, two sides, silkscreened covers, and 100% quality from Night People. Unfortunately, my wholesale copies vanished like a Record Store Day 7", but it looks like the label still has copies, so get's 'em while you can. Anyways, those who've heard their fabulous full length LP/CS on Night People/Not Not Fun can expect the same hazy head rush. Repetitious guitar waves, post-war electronic squiggles rising like fireflies, a lightly thudding drum machine, and those dreamy and distant vocals wrap around yr skull like a thundershot of THC. A brilliant cocoon of gauzy lo-fi dreamadelica. Oh so recommended. The duo seem to be outta merch right now, but hopefully they have some new material dropping soon. In the mean time, we can expect a new collaborative effort between Aaron of Peaking Lights and Luke of Dead Luke. They've dubbed themselves Bone Patrol and will have a cassette on Luke's own Jerkwave sometime soon. Couldn't be more excited 'bout that one. Check Peaking Lights blog here for infrequent updates. There's even a photo of Temptation from their opening slot at last year's show at the Sweatshop (RIP), which was stolen from yours truly! That one's on the house, guys.


Knitted Abyss “Winter Barn” (Night People)
Ok, one more from Night People, and it sure is on the same dub tip that Peaking Lights are rockin'. Knitted Abyss hail from New South Wales in Australia and consist of two members, one of whom calls Naked On The Vague home. That's right, we have a bonafide NOTV side-project here. Not exactly on that tip, but NOTV aren't exactly the kinda group you wanna even bother trying to replicate. The front end is chock full o' echo canyon drum machines and low end throbbing bass that brings to mind that overlooked Siltbreeze LP from fellow Australians Fabulous Diamonds LP. There are also some intense but muffled vocals which must have caught the ear of Shawn Reed, Night People's label head who also rocked the same style with Raccoo-oo-oon and continues the tradition with Wet Hair. Though this release tends more towards the hypnotic end of the spectrum rather than going for the full freak. The flip is a little different and see's the group heading into some groovy kraut blues that eventually gives way to rolling hits of noise. A mighty debut effort.


Treetops “Deep Purple Infinity” (Taped Sounds)
The never ending train of Treetops cassettes continues on, and thee Expressway is here to make sense of the mess. First up is a new one on the mysterious and plainly-named Taped Sounds, of which I have no information about. The recording here is a mid-pace drone creaker that's got a nice tapestry of wave-y synths that are layered up until it reaches an almost Tim Hecker-like ambience, though of a much more lo-fi quality. The flip is crammed with shaky, crystalline synths that are accompanied by cymbal rushes, which creates a nice underwater-with-the-sun-rippling-through kinda vibe. This would be a top notch release if it wasn't for the crap taping job. Must be low quality cassette used or just a crappy tape deck. Check out the Tomentosa site here for some other releases by Taped Sounds.


Treetops “North” (Arbor)
A nicer fidelity is achieved on "North", most likely due to the pros over at Arbor. More synth work here but of a dreamier, alien vibe. A lo-fi and gentle humming drone accompanies this side, creating a dream-like atmosphere that is easy to drift away in. The flip is another bliss-dream exercise that features some of those nice cymbal washes we heard on the above-mention release. Midnight beach soundtrack complete with whisps of ghosts drifting off the rolling tide.











Treetops “Melancholy” (Arbor)
Up there right alongside the guitar drones of Expo ‘70 (more on that below) is the most recent cassette release by my favorite droner Treetops. The flip begins with a slow mo windmill blast from the ray gun guitar this one man jammer before fading into the darker low-end buzz drone we’ve come to know and love. The flip is a short little come down of twinkling synth drone.













Treetops “Eternal Sky” (Monorail Trespassing)
Finally, we come to the newest Treetops cassette, released on the ever-improving Monorail Trespassing label. This one's a little darker and night nearly as meditative as those above mentioned cassettes. This one starts off with a slow encroaching bass rumble that rides underneath a slow cycling synth drone. The bass eventually outpaces the intensity of the droning synths, but eventually both fade out and give way to a dark piano (keyboard maybe?) lament that resembles some early Stars Of The Lid material. Beautiful drone/bliss territory covered here.









Earn “Down The Well” (Monorail Trespassing)
Another great cassette on the label comes from the mysterious Earn, whom I cannot find a lick of information on (privy parties please drop a comment). Whoever this is has dropped one of the finest tapes so far this year (truth), and I cannot stop flipping this (double truth!). The cassette starts off with a slow droning, plaintive cello that's apparently played by Scott Reber (of Work/Death infamy) before veering off into a warm swarm. The warmth is eventually subdued by a sharp wall of shoegaze noise that goes from calm to frighteningly shrill. Earn is definitely exploring the depths of shoegaze noise here, in fact, it almost feels like walking in on My Bloody Valentine as they perform the "bridge" of 'You Made Me Realise'. Not quite as damaging as that, but you get the idea. Brand spanking new tape on Ekhein sounds promising too. Check the samples on Mimaroglu, and, while you're there, pick up a tape or two. One of the best distributors online right now.



Expo ‘70 “White Ohms” (Peasant Magik)
One of a slew of new releases by this one-man guitar drone overlord, White Ohms is another advancement of the man's sound. Not quite as bleak as "Black Ohms" but still immobilizing and works as great companion piece. Though their influence is deep and their name gets tossed around a little too often, the Sunn O))) vibe is strong here. But, rather than the weigh of the recordings focusing on the deep tone of the guitars, Expo 70's approach, particularly on a few tracks here and elsewhere, is more about the volume of the buzz his guitar can conjure. Though the entire cassette here isn't strictly amplifier worship, there are a few moments of deep canyon guitar echoes and donging guitar ambience to bring some balance.
Not sure if there are copies left, but Expo 70' has just dropped an excellent LP on Fedora Corpse. Also worth investigating is the Evenings LP on the same label, another artist plunging the bottomless depths for dark ambience. Check an Evenings sample here. There is also a new LP to look forward to, which will also be released by Peasant Magik. You can pre-order that sucker here and even get the "White Ohms" cassette tossed in there.


FNU Ronnies - Golem / BLOOD! - Evacuted Materials (Skrot Up)
After kicking out the harsh garage jams on their debut 7" last year (on the up and coming Philadelphia based Richie Records), FNU Ronnies turn in another hellish trip through gnarly industrial/kraut/garage territory. The group's rhythm section find a deep groove to ride out while the keyboards screech, the guitars shred and scrape, and the seething vocals come out in wavering assaults. This is heavy on the Chrome vibe here. BLOOD, who take over on the flip, are almost indiscernible from FNU Ronnies, which is fine by me, because, outside of Six Finger Satellite, no one has taken the Chrome essence and roughened up the edges quite like these two. The FNU Ronnies side has just been released as a one-sided 12" on Night People, which seems like an odd pairing, but the who the hell am I to argue? As a side note, there are some upcoming releases on the Danish label Skrot Up by some groups that I know shit all about, including Balaclavas, SFHHH and Thetlvmth. After an hour of myspace "research" I have deemed these groups to be the new breed of damaged art punk, and This appears to be just about the most exciting new cassette label happening right now. New releases are in the mail and will hopefully be devoured in time for the next monthly issue. Until then, keep diggin'

Friday, May 1, 2009

Hip-Hop Fridays: Main Source "Breaking Atoms" (1991)


Quite possibly one of the most influential, yet largely ignored, hip-hop records of all time. 1991 saw the release of Main Source's "Breaking Atoms", which introduced Large Professor and Nas to the world. Nas would obviously go on to become one of the most well known MCs of all time, but it was the Large Professor who would tinker away in the shadows, producing some well loved tracks from the early 90s. In fact, Large Professor went on to produce three tracks on Nas' "Illmatic", including 'Halftime' and 'It Ain't Hard To Tell', with the latter being my favorite beat on the record. Large Professor went on to produce tracks by Kool G Rap, Tribe Called Quest, Mobb Deep, Common, and Organized Konfusion among many others. Compared to his mid 90s production, which was definitely during his peak, the tracks on "Breaking Atoms" are fairly simplistic: drum break, jazz/soul loop, and a few other odd samples layered atop taught beatwork. Easily digestable now, but it was rather groundbreaking at the time and influenced many up and coming DJs and producers.


Download "Breaking Atoms" here.


'Live At The Barbeque' (feat. Nas)



'Just A Friendly Game Of Baseball'


'Fakin' The Funk' (not on the original release)



'Lookin' At The Front Door' (personal favorite track)


Snatch up all the Main Source 12"s here. (via Nation Of Millions)

'Fakin' The Funk' video



'Lookin' At The Front Door'



'Just Hangin' Out'

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Casino Versus Japan Update!


After about 5 years of silence it looks like Casino Versus Japan is about to make up for his long absence. I recently received two comments from Erik Kowalski on my Casino Versus Japan Mega Post, and he went on to spill the beans on a slew of upcoming releases. Looks like there will be at least 7 collaborations and splits, a 3" CD subscription series, a new album, and, almost unbelievably, a 10 CD/DVD boxset...of what, I have no idea. Until then, you can keep an eye on his myspaces here and here.

Here are those comments....

New album in late 2009 (being peeled from 60 demos) -- tons planned for 2010 and a subscription/based 3" CDEP *12 total / 1per.mo.) TBA mid summer... DREAM COLLABS W/ Bradford Cox/Atlas Sound/Deerhunter / LOVESLIESCRUSHING / BUILDING CASTLES W/ MATCHSTICKS and more... SPLIT/Collabs RELEASES W/ AUBURN LULL / FREESCHA (PART II) / ALIAS/ ULRICH SCHNAUSS... NOT DEAD YET.

Much to follow five year hiatus: New album late-2009 // subscription-based 12x3"CDEP collection TBA mid-summer 2009 // The 2010 DREAM ON: COLLABS: Bradford Cox / Atlas Sound / Deer Hunter / Freescha / Ulrich Schnauss / Alburn Lull / Building Castles Out Of Matchsticks) Lovesliescrushing... ALSO TBC: 10 CD/DVD CvsJ boxset. Love to all, cvsj

Again, apologies for the lack of recent updates. Hip-Hop Friday is coming tomorrow and the next batch of cassette reviews should be up soon. Get some fresh air in the meantime...

Sunday, April 19, 2009

2009 Expressway Rundown

I have to say that keeping up with the rest of the internet can be difficult. Blogs like Raven Sings the Blues, who I share very similar tastes with, updates almost everyday with whatever new psych/garage/underground gunk has dropped, and usually the second that it does. Other blogs, like Cassette Tape Superstar, 7 Inches, the now-weekly Bull Tongue, Microphones In The Trees (all of which I highly recommend you add to yr daily reads), or the by-the-minute tumblrverse are covering a lot of bases. Regular readers will probably have noticed a slight dip in updates here on Thee Expressway, and it's not for lack of trying...the re-emerging sun and warm weather here in Vancouver aren't exactly conducive to blogging, and neither is the Canucks entry into the playoffs. Hip-Hop Fridays are a mainstay and the occasional obscure-o 90s rock action uploads are still going strong, but, admittedly, it's been difficult keeping up the writing for new jams that are dropping every day. This post is meant to be a quickie run down of the best of '09, with a few relevant oldies added in for good measure. Sure, you've read about it elsewhere, but right here you've got the proof and the pudding that these albums are all worth checking out.

First up are those last few batches from the unstoppable Mexican Summer label.



Managed to nab some copies of the Golden Triangle before it went out of print. For those a little behind, Golden Triangle are 3 ladies and 1 dude who have kicked all those loners outta the garage and brought the party back. Incredibly infectious garage anthems have one this 4 piece some accolades and a solid fanbase, and this is only after a handful of shows, a couple cassettes and a 7 incher. The 12" on Mexican Summer is the next best document to seeing these ladies and dude live, which I can only imagine is the best way to see them. Images of those long-forgotten, turn of the century, party punkers The Rogers Sisters definitely come to mind. Interested parties should get a hold of Thee Expressway for a copy of this out of print 12" parry shredder.

'Red Coats'





Still in print, and very worth getting a hold of, is the newest dreamy drone bliss that is the new Valet 12". Side-long opener 'Angels Can't Sleep' is worth the price of admission alone, and stands as one of the finest concoctions of bliss that Honey Owens has dropped in, well, ever. The flip is comprised of two tracks, including a cover of Boris and Michio Kurihara's 'Rainbow' from their 2007 collaboration on Drag City.

'Angels Can't Stop'





One final Mexican Summer release comes from the blowin-up-all-over-the-place Kurt Vile. Another great collection of songs he'd recorded from 2003-2008. The vibe here is pretty much what I raved about HERE, but maybe a touch on the mellower side of things. Vile also just dropped this 12"er on Philadelphia's Richie Records, which I haven't heard yet, but I would assume is also the bee's knees (wholesale copies on the way...). Woodsist also just dropped that aforementioned "Constant Hitmaker" on LP. Looks like my begging and dreaming to get that sucker pressed to wax helped. Thank you Lord, I knew we had the same taste.

'Beach On The Moon (Recycled Lyrics)'





Speaking of all those loners kicked outta the garage, new-to-the-scene Night Control just dropped a winning batch of loser jams on the wallet busting Kill Shamen label. Hints of shoegaze shimmer, Velvets-y swagger, and a lo-fi aesthetic put this guy up with the best of those other pedal pushin' pop addicts that seem to be infesting the underground right now. Night Control is the next in line, and worthy of any hype bestowed upon him, not that there's a lot right now. I'm sure that's about to change.


'Good Looks'





The very beginning of the year saw the release of the supposed final Hunches jam. I've been a fan for some time now, and when it came time to kiss the band goodbye, admittedly, I shed a tear or two. A gleam or two of pop rises to the surface of 'Exit Dreams', which is a nice respite from their two albums of relentless garage thrash that arrived before this. If the rumours are true, then this will serve as an excellent final document of one of the harsher bands to come out of the In The Red stable.

'Your Sick Blooms'




Not quite out yet, but in heavy rotation, is the new heartbreaker from those two cats that make up the Magik Markers. This time the group make the jump from Ecstatic Peace to major-indie Drag City. Fans of those noisier days will probably be once again disappointed, as the group have advanced on their proper rock debut, Boss. "Balf Quarry" is another lustful push towards the style of avant out-rock that Sonic Youth have helped carve out for countless bands. Not that this is straight up SY homage (you'll never stop hearing comparisons, and I certainly didn't just help matters), but more like the band have taking those distortion and feedback weilding tendencies and concocted their own lustful push to end rock and roll once and for all. Unlikely, but we can dream.

'7/23'





Peaking Lights came through Vancouver late last year and blew the minds of the faithful few that managed to make it out on that dreary night. A few cassettes that night were sold and eventually heard, am infatuation was built up, and, with their LP debut on Night People, this infatuation has become full blown love. This is some top 10 of 2009 material here, and this LP has the eye-crossing packaging to go along with such accolades (beautiful silkscreen job on a wrap around sleeve). Peaking Lights, much like similar-minded groups like Pocahaunted or High Places, have taken their love of seemingly disparate genres like drone, dub, ambient, and space rock and made an irresistible soup that has bloggers and the like scrambling to invent new genres or tags to try and pigeonhole the duo. Peaking Lights are concocting a heady sound for uncertain times. New cassette on Night People is also worth gnawing on. Get hungry, people.

'Silver Tongues, Soft Whispers'





Once again, things are looking pretty grim for hip-hop this year. Sure, new albums by veterans like Doom are excellent and so is this Dalek record, but I haven't heard a peep from any new contenders. Am I wrong on this? Is my head just lost in a cloud that hasn't dissipated since 1994? Either way, Dalek is here to push things forward whether the rest of hip-hop cares to acknowledge it or not. That being said, "Gutter Tactics" isn't exactly re-inventing the Dalek brand of hip-hop, but it has refined it down to their most listenable album yet. Gone are the exploratory soundtracks into post-industrial gloom, and instead we have 11 tracks that have been tightened and worked into a cohesive beast of a record. This is a hip-hop record for those that are angry with the current stagnation of the genre.

'Street Diction'






Here's an oldie but a goody for those vibing on the Crystal Stilts, A Sunny Day In Glasgow, or the incredibly bland and over-hyped Pains Of Being Pure At Heart. I also hear their sound in the long-forgotten KRS group The Slumber Party, who have been unjustly, errrr, slept on since day one. Anyways, got hip to this thanks to the trusty Grimmertown tumblr and, since then, the CD (no vinyl currently available) hasn't strayed far from the headphones. Brief history: Black Tambourine was a short lived project featuring two of the guys who ended up in Velocity Girl, a chanteuse named Pam Berry, and Slumberland label boss Mike Schulman. They only released three singles, contributed a track or two to compilations, and played less than five shows before breaking up in 1991. Complete Recordings anthologizes all of these tracks plus an unreleased single. The group lay somewhere between a hyped-up version of jangle-pop and the oncoming onslaught of 90s shoegaze bands (these tracks were recorded between 1988 and '91). Slumberland has re-issued all available recordings on one convenient CD and I highly suggest you hit up yr local grocer for a copy. Any decent record store should be carrying this by now.

'For Ex-Lovers Only'





Not a lot to add to the already heavily reviewed/revered new album by Tim Hecker, just had to pass along that, yes, indeed this is an extraordinary work that deserves every accolade that it's brushed with. Excellent reviews of the album here and here. Favorite track posted below. Pick this one up on 2xLP for maximum absorption.

'Paragon Point'



Already gave this one the thumbs up way back when it was an uber-limited CDR, and my hope for a larger pressing has also come to fruition, much thanks to Uzu Audio, who also released the magnificent Magneticring LP at the same time. My love of this record hasn't budged much, and blasting this fucker on wax has only increased said love. This one is limited to 500 copies and distros are starting to run out, not to mention the label. This will be gone very soon...




On to albums that may never go out of print, the new collaborative effort between PJ Harvey and John Parish has exceeded my expectations. I've been listening to PJ Harvey since the mid-90s and have been an ardent follower since. Her "White Chalk" LP from 2007 may even be my favorite album of hers, so when I heard her next album would be another collaboration with John Parish my heart sank a little. Out of all of her albums, I would have to say that "At Louise Point", her first collab with Parish, ranks pretty low for me. Much to my surprise, then, when "A Woman A Man Walked By" turns out to be one of the better rock albums so far this year. The difference, perhaps, this time around is that Parish takes care of all the music while Harvey focuses on her vocals and lyrics. Rather than keep the same style of vocals the entire record (ala White Chalk etc.) Harvey runs through each of these tracks like it's a vocal exercise. Her voice goes from that haunting falsetto she created on White Chalk (see 'Leaving California below), and all the way to snarling commands. I try not to devote much blog time to major label albums, but this one is worth the shout out. LP version dropping any day now...

'Leaving California'





It appears as if the new Brainbombs album flew under everybody's radar last year, or maybe it was just totally unavailable until recently. But, really, NEW FUCKING BRAINBOMBS ALBUM! Not much has changed in the 10 years since their last full length. You can expect the same jagged rhythm swagger, violent guitar lurching, horrorscape saxophone, and those ultra-violent and offensive lyrics. Though this time around, unlike the recently re-issued 'Obey' album, the lyrics are buried underneath a a layer of distortion and are rather hard to hear, which is very fortunate for those sensitive types who want to get down with the band but can't get behind those vile lyrics. Looks like Aquarius Records still have some copies...





Coupla' great 7"ers have popped up recently, with the new Crystal Stilts being the clear winner. Considering that most of the material on Alight of the Night was already a few years old, it's good to know these guys have a few new tricks up their sleeve. I await the next full length with white knuckles.

'Love Is A Wave'





Since The Brainbombs are still a little fresh in my mind, might as well bring up Vancouver's own version and their new 7". Sex Negatives have grown from a sloppy punk rock riot and into a well-honed attack machine. Their live shows, as infrequent as they are, have recently tended towards tense build ups that burst into frenzied punk squalls. The 7" is a little different. The first side is dissonant sputter of guitar fumes while the flip is a triple (?) tribal drum assault, completed with several sets of howling vocals. Again, expectations confounded and exceeded by this constantly evolving group. The group starts a huge tour at the end of April. If yr reading this from anywhere in the US, I highly suggest you get to yr local noise hole and peep Vancouver's finest in noise rock. Check the myspace for dates.




First 7" by Real Estate has been gettin' steady spins on the deck as of recently. It's not quite as good as others would lead you to believe, but there is a whole whack of potential in this foursome that also features Matt from Ducktails and Predator Vision, both of whom get much pluggage 'round here. Chiming guitars, buried vocals, and an oh-so-simple rhythm section form to create suburban bliss rock. Can't wait to hear some more...

'Suburban Beverage'


Plenty of other new jams on the way that I haven't exactly had a lot of time to eat up, or just haven't arrived yet, including the newest Wet Hair LP on NNF, the new Pocahaunted joint with Cameron Stallones of Magic Lantern, 5 new LPs on Ecstatic Peace, the next batch in the Hozac Singles Club, the next crop of Sacred Bones 7"s...the list just goes on and on, and my time for listening grows shorter as the sun burns brighter.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Hip-Hop Fridays: Main Source "Fuck What You Think"


Released in 1994, "Fuck What You Think" is the second and final album from Main Source, and, unfortunately, doesn't feature Large Professor, who was a major part of their underground smash "Breaking Atoms". The group, however, still manage to hold their own without Large Professor on the production. K-Cut, who took over production on the album, picks up on the obscure jazz and soul tip that Large Professor had provided for the debut. Check The Breaks sample sources for a taste. Oddly enough, the lead single off the album, 'What You Need', caught the ear of Madonna and she quickly used it as a sample for her 1994 single 'Human Nature' (both tracks posted below), though it failed to crack the top 40. Anyways, consider "Fuck What You Think" a primer for next week's post, which will be Main Source's debut.

'What You Need'


'Human Nature' by Madonna, which samples the above 'What You Need'


Download "Fuck What You Think" here.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Hip-Hop Fridays-Five Deez "Slow Children Playing" (2005) Amplesoul


Five Deez came out of Cincinnati in 1993 and were part of the Wanna Battle Crew that also included Talib Kweli and DJ Hi-Tek. The four members of the group (Fat Jon, Chilly Most, Pase Rock, and Sonic) didn't actually release anything until 2000. The group eventually went on to garner some notoriety, particularly with their 2006 album "Kommunicator", released by Rapster Records. Released at the same time was "Slow Children Playing", which also happened to be my introduction to the group, though I did hear "Kommunicator" immediately afterwards. "Slow Children Playing" is actually an assortment of tracks recorded between 1993 and 1998, and was initially released in Japan only, where they apparently have a large following. "Kommunicator" never really did much for me, I found it a bit formulaic, but "SCP" was very far from that.

The basis of Five Deez (short for Fifth Dimension, changed for obvious reasons) production on "SCP" is jazz. Now, this is hardly anything new for hip-hop, especially considering the years of production (1993-98). By the mid 90s seemingly every decent jazz sample had been mined, sampled, and then sampled again...and again. By 1993 DJ Premier and Pete Rock had perfected what Marley Marl had started back in the late 80s. What makes Five Deez use of jazz a little more interesting was in how many samples they piled together in each track. Rather than finding one horn loop and a drum break and using them as the basis of the track (as was the norm), Five Deez, who's head man on production was Fat Jon, found about a half dozen and mashed them all together to create a dizzying mix. The aptly named 'Cerebral Attax', which heads of this album and is posted below, is a perfect example: funky piano, horn blasts, shuffling drum beats, a little sax in background, and some echo on the vocals turn this into an incredibly heady track that can take several listens to fully absorb. The rest of the album follows suit. There is also a very warm and lo-fi feel to the production that gives "SCP" a restraint that's necessary when combining so many different samples. At times it can almost come off like a demo, but to me this is much more preferable to their slicker, later material.

Over top of this delightful mess is, of course, the MCs, who spin some serious avant-rhyming (ie. there are many lines that tend not to rhyme at all) that can be as hard to keep up with as the thick production. Apparently there are a lot of MCs on these recordings that are no longer with the crew, but these tracks whiz by so fast that it's hard to even bother differentiating between the MCs. It's little matter because what the crew lacks in distinct personalities they make up with in the production.

It looks like this one may still be available on CD, but the LP is long out of print. You may actually have to get yr local grocer to stock this, as I haven't seen this one in a record store in some time. Until then, you can download it below.

Cerebral Attax


Nek Shit


Sunny Day

Friday, April 3, 2009

Hip-Hop Fridays: DOOM "Born Like This" (2009)


Hip-hop Fridays has pretty much been dedicated to uploading and reviewing long lost albums, usually from the early 90s, because that is where my hip-hop lovin' heart lays. Anyways, due to lack of time this week, you'll just have to settle for the new MF Doom, errrr DOOM, which is already all over the internet and has been for some time. Outside of the new Dalek album, "Born Like This" is the only hip-hop record from 2009 that I've had the time of day for. It seems like that's the way the genre has gone--5-6 decent albums a year, at least by my count. It's a sad state for the genre right now, but DOOM is here to the rescue. Not to say this is his best work (that, for me, goes out to the King Geedorah album), but it sure is a breath of the fresh stuff in this increasingly stinky atmosphere. Below is the review I wrote for Color, some tracks leaked on youtube, an interview with Rolling Stone, and a link to a full album download. Of course, I do recommend picking this one up on LP, which should be dropping any week now. The CD is out already and, much like the other CD releases on Lex, this one looks fantastic. Snatch it up any way you can, kiddies.


DOOM, who has dropped the MF and gone all caps, is back after four years since his last release and he's made the wait well worth it. It appears as if he's taken a page from his old ally Madlib because this is a serious kitchen sink effort. The beats and interludes, most of which are produced by DOOM, contain a dizzying array of sample sources, including chopped up exotica and classical, ESG, late night television, and even a Charles Bukowski poem. The brevity of these tracks (most of which are under two and half minutes), the lack of breaks between most songs, and the lack of choruses (a rarity in hip-hop) give the album a kaleidoscopic pastiche feel that keeps the album sounding fresh upon each listen. DOOM has also spent some serious time with the pen and the pad, his verbal dexterity has reached an intensity that you’ll have to rewind so you catch everything. Born Like This proves that DOOM, even four years out of the game, still remains the masked villain at the top.

Download "Born Like This" here.

Password: APNSB

Read Rolling Stone interview here.

'That's That'


'Yessir' (feat. Raekwon and ESG sample)


and finally...
'Batty Boyz', a seemingly homophobic song about gay superheroes. Kind of odd coming from DOOM, and I'm still not sure what to think of it. It also happens to be my favorite beat on the album.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Broadcast Origins


Thanks to Luke Meat over at CiTR, who DJs the always amazing and mega-informative ANoiZE radio show (he's also the Music Director up there), for hepping me to some youtube videos that line-up snippets of Broadcast tracks next to the songs that "inspired" them. Three parts in all. They can't be embedded, so you'll have to follow these links...

Broadcast Origins

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Apparently this is an ongoing series, so stay tuned for future additions.

Broadcast are one of my favorite groups going right now and have been since I first heard "Work and Non Work", so hearing some direct influences from a few artists I've never even heard of was a real ear opener. Much exploring to do now thanks to witnessing these clips.

Along with showing me the youtube videos, Luke also compiled a CD of all the full tracks from both Broadcast and the originators that appear in those youtube videos. Hopefully Luke doesn't mind me uploading the mix to the rest of the world. 100% credit goes straight out to Luke for compiling this amazing mix.

Now, to my ears at least, some of these are a bit of a stretch, but quite a few are shockingly similar. In particular is the influence of the short-lived psych-pop group The United States Of America, which I had never noticed in Broadcast's music despite knowing The United States lone album quite well. Also bang on is the small opening section of 'Old Man Willow' by Elephant's Memory, which was nabbed for Broadcast's sublime 'World Backwards' (check the clips below...you only need to hear the beginning bit of both). But perhaps the most overt "sampling" is that of Al Stewart's version of 'Turn Into Earth', which should probably raise the eyebrows of a few copyright lawyers (also featured below). Oddly enough, despite the many Stereolab comparisons Broadcast has endured over the years, there aren't yet any direct connections to the groop.

While on the subject of Stereolab, there is also a Stereolab Origins that was compiled by the same user (The Archives Listening Project). Unlike Broadcast's meager 3 part series, Stereolab get a staggering 13 parts! Any Stereolab fans out there should do themselves a favor and spend some serious time with these videos.



Check out Stereolab Origins here.

'World Backwards' by Broadcast


'Old Man Willow' by Elephant's Memory





'Message From Home' by Broadcast


'Turn Into Earth' by Al Stewart (Yardbirds cover)



Download Broadcast Origins Part 1 here.

Download Broadcast Origins Part 2 here.

Again, I cannot thank Luke and The Archives Listening Project enough for prying these ears open a little further.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Hip-Hop Friday: Diamond Shell-The Grand Imperial Diamond Shell (1991)

Sorry kiddies, not a lot of time for any serious dissection this week (got some other deadlines that actually help pay the bills), but I figured a quicky upload is better than none at all. The album in question this week is Diamond Shell's "Grand Imperial Diamond Shell" issued by Cold Chillin' in 1991. The album was entirely produced by Biz Markie, which was actually a bit of a rarity for the label as Marly Marl was the main man behind the boards for the label. But it makes sense when you learn that Diamond Shell is actually Biz's cousin. And much like the Biz, Diamond Shell comes off as kinda goofy but, ultimately, is a lovable character with a lot of heart and some pretty funny lines. The beats here are pretty light and suit Diamond's fun-loving flow quite well. Not exactly the best from Cold Chillin' or the Biz, but definitely worth a peep.


'Oh What A Night' video featuring Biz Markie


Download "Grand Imperial Diamond Shell" here.