Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Top 10 records of 2007

Top 10 Records of 2007
Cobbled together mostly from memory, hopefully I touched on the important ones. There were a few records that were tough to leave off. Leave comments if you think anything is missing.






1) Brand New - The Devil and God are Raging Inside Me

You're probably tired of my eternal songs of praise for this album, so I'll keep it short. This record finds Jesse Lacey and company further shedding their emo-pop roots. It's powerful, dark and moody. The lyrics are dark and poetic as ever. The soft parts will drop till you're straining to hear them, and the loud parts will rock your brains out. My unquestionable numero uno.


Key Tracks: Jesus Christ, Degausser, Limousine, Not the Sun, Archers

buy




2) Arcade Fire - Neon Bible

Writing a good sophomore album is tough, especially after your first one sets the bar high. Arcade Fire picks up right where they left off on 2003's Funeral. The band expands even more on the huge chamber sound of the first record. Think the E Street Band doing Bowie, or vice versa. The special edition definitely wins the award for coolest packaging job.


Key Tracks: Intervention, The Well and the Lighthouse, Windowsill, No Cars Go

buy



3) The Electric Soft Parade - No Need to Feel Downhearted

This is my "from out of nowhere" album of 2007. Beach Boys vocal harmonies augment the distorted guitars and keyboards, set to modern drum grooves. Influences range from The Beatles to Television to The Strokes, but never quite settle on one. This album deserved much more attention and praise than it recieved.



Key Tracks: If That's The Case Then I Don't Know, Misunderstanding, Cold World, Come Back Inside


4) Wilco - Sky Blue Sky

Wilco has never been content to jog in place from record to record, changing their sound with each cd. Frontman Jeff Tweedy says Sky Blue Sky is more straightforward than recent efforts. The loose, folky vibe recalls the Grateful Dead circa Terrapin Station era. At times, the mood seems a little TOO laid back, but guitarist Nels Cline spashes enough color in all the right places to make the picture interesting.


Key Tracks: You Are My Face, Impossible Germany, Please Be Patient With Me, What Light






5) Matt Pond PA - Last Light

Matt Pond and company keep churning out solid albums. Last Light sticks to their well-rehearsed formula: ridiculously catchy indie-pop. The difference is in the production. Pond produced the record himself, and opted to bring crunchy guitars more to the forefront of the action. The result is a more aggressive sound than usual, but it works. The prevailing theme of the album is twilight, and the mix of emotions that accompany the night. Thoughtful lyrics and infectious tunes make this one of my favorites of 2007.


Key Tracks: Last Light, Honestly, Taught To Look Away, Basement Parties



6) Explosions in the Sky - All of a Sudden I Miss Everyone

A cacophony of noise. A symhony of beauty. This new record by the instrumental Texas quartet showcases the power of dynamic contrasts. The songs build from nothing to hellbent intensity and vice versa. As usual, their sound is anchored by lonesome keyboards, moody guitar and pounding drums. The melodies wander about like lost souls, and this record follows their long journey. I didn't care much for it at first, but I've grown to appreciate the musicianship and sheer magnificance of their sound. Perfect for doing homework or late night road trips.

Key Tracks: The Birth and Death of a Day, What Do You Go Home To?, So Long Lonesome




7) Iron & Wine - The Shepherd's Dog

The third effort from indie-icon Sam Beam is a departure from his previous works. On Shepherd's Dog Beam trades his usual intimacy for songs augmented by impressively ornate arrangements. Take the tune "White Tooth Man" for example. This mid-tempo raga is complete with sitars, tribal drums and tambourine, sounding like vintage late '60s Beatles. There's variety, from the back-porch sunny r&b of "The Devil Never Sleeps" and the vermillion slow accordian cruise of "Flightless Bird, American Mouth." Sounds like a really fun record to make in the studio, I'm jealous.

Key Tracks: Pagan Angel and a Borrowed Car, White Tooth Man, Boy With A Coin, The Devil Never Sleeps

buy




8) Andrew Bird - Armchair Apocrypha

One of the most talented performers and songwriters on the Chicago circuit these days, Andrew Bird has outdone himself yet again. Whether it's the gypsy swagger of "Imitosis", the rolling hip-hop groove of "Simple X" or the primal beauty of the closing instrumental "Yawny At the Apocalypse" Bird always seems to capture the essence he's looking for in each song. The song "Armchairs" is a sprawling seven-minute epic, with lyrics about "ancient sea slugs" and the cruel passing of time. This is probably my favorite Bird record so far.


Key Tracks: Imitosis, Armchairs, Simple X, Spare-Ohs, Yawny at the Apocalypse

buy





9) Bruce Springsteen - Magic

This record has recieved heavy attention from critics already (check out Fricke's review), so there's not much new to write. It's definitely vintage old-Bruce. This record harks back to the days when rock music was simply bigger, the days of Damn The Torpedoes, Hotel California and the Boss' own Born to Run. Springsteen is always at his best when he has a bone to pick, and the songs are chalk full of emotion and edgy when needed. Lyrics aside, these are some of the best melodies Springsteen has come out with in a long time.

Key Tracks: Radio Nowhere, Livin' in the Future, Girls In Their Summer Clothes, Long Walk Home


buy




10) As Cities Burn - Come Now Sleep

Another "out of nowhere" album. One of the most beautiful, hard-rocking collection of songs I've heard this year. This is the first album I've heard by them, which is fortunate because they used to have post-hardcore vocals. Seems like they haven't lost too much intensity though. The chorus for "The Hoard" rocks harder than anything Circa Survive has put out. Songs like "Contact" and "Empire" have some of the best guitar-work I've heard this year, not from a technical but musical perspective, the licks are very fluid like water, seeping around the melodies. Check them out in case they get big.


Key Tracks: Contact, Empire, The Hoard, New Sun, Tides


buy

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Live Bandits


WOW. Fresh off the presses..Please go here and purchase the Rx Bandits live set from Bonnaroo 2007 off of itunes. This shit is HOT. Listen to the samples if you don't believe me.
The opening jam is incredible, and be sure to check out the extended breakdown in "Only for the Night."
Other Bonnaroo acts released on itunes today:
Bob Weir & Ratdog
The String Cheese Incident
North Mississippi Allstars
Hot Tuna
Dierks Bentley
James Blood
Ulmer
Xavier Rudd
David Bromberg and Angel Band
Mavis Staples
Dr. Dog
Robert Glasper Trio

80's band 'Journey's to Asia in hunt for singer

So it seems as if the rumors were true. Philipinno singer Arnel Pineda is indeed the new frontman for Journey. He replaces Jeff Scott Soto, the most recent member of what is becoming a line of long-haired mic-wielders.

Journey guitarist Neal Schon reportedly saw the 40 year old Pineda perform on Youtube and invited him to the states for an audition. Cower before the powers of the internet!

here's a video of Pineda performing Journey's "Don't Stop Believing" with his cover band The Zoo:



he's from a cover band? somehow fitting...


Pineda and the band are reportedly in the studio cooking up a new record, which would be released sometime in 2008. "(Pineda) is the real deal. Just phenomenal," record producer Kevin Shirley said.

As for the new record being good...don't hold your breath.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Brand New/Thrice Show



Brand New, Thrice, Mewithoutyou (Sunday 12/1)

Drove off to Baltimore Sunday night with a monsoon-worthy downpour beating against the windows. Arrived at UMBC despite the elements' best counterefforts.

It's a quaint little campus (albeit in the middle of nowhere), however it'd be nice if they had a few signs along the roads so one doesn't have to drive around the circle three or four times! Fortunately a friendly police officer was able to direct me to the 4000 cap. fieldhouse, where the show was being held.

Arrived fashionably late and missed out on Mewithoutyou, but I wasn't too remorse. They put on an energetic live show, but I didn't really care for their last record too much, and my excitement for seeing Brand fucking New was kind of overriding any desire to wait through two sets by other bands PLUS the downtime in between. However I did get to see...

Thrice
Entered the gym to the last chorus of "All That's Left", apparently the opening number of Thrice. I don't have their setlist, but it was the usual mix of 60 percent new record, 40 percent old material. One or two songs from every record but Identity Crisis were played.

I was blown away at how much their sound has improved in the four years since I last saw them. It's much more polished and cohesive now, with few notes wasted. Dustin Kensrue's voice was positively spine-tingling as he serenaded the crowd with "Digital Sea", a haunting cut off Thrice's new record The Alchemy Index: Vols I & II.

Older songs such as "Kill Me Quickly" and "Silhouette" sounded just as good. Of course they played "Deadbolt", with a rocking extended outro, and closed with a monsterous rendition of "The Earth Will Shake."

Wonderful set, had kind of lost interest in them lately, so this show has re-invigorated me to them. I'm going to go buy the new album as soon as I get a chance.

Thrice - Burn the Fleet - this song just KILLED live

buy "The Alchemy Index: Vols I & II" at Amazon!


Brand New

The event I've been waiting years for! Needless to say, having only several rows of bodies between me and songwriting idol Jesse Lacey was nothing short of a religious experience. Despite Brand New's reputation for being pompous assholes in real life, I decided to not to pre-judge.

Setlist:
Play Crack the Sky
Luca
Jesus Christ
Handcuffs
Limousine
Welcome to Bangkok
Sic Transit Gloria (Glory Fades)
Okay, I believe you...but my tommy gun don't
Archers
Jaws Theme Swimming
Degausser
Millstone
You Won't Know
Sowing Season (Yeah)

Encore: Untitled jam

Drawing exclusively from their last two albums, the show began with Jesse alone center-stage, armed with an acoustic guitar and draped in a golden spotlight hue. He busted out with "Play Crack the Sky", a slow ballad from Deja Entendu. It caught the majority of the crowd, who were expecting a rocking beginning, off-guard. Hearing the man who wrote the song deliever the words was great though, and most people were singing along.

The new songs translated live more effectively than I thought they would. The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me is a slow record and I was worried that the energy might sag, but that wasn't the case. Tunes like "Luca", "Jesus Christ" and "Limousine" were skillfully navigated by Lacey and his band, who have the crescendo from nothingness to hellbent intensity down pat.

The crowd seemed a little lethargic at first, sleepy college kids bundled in jackets from the sub-zero rain outside were perhaps less inclined to get into than usual crowds. A lot of younger people, which is suprising to me because the new album is less poppy.
But then Brand New launched into "Sic Transit" and the kids went BATSHIT. I used to hate that song, but it was actually one of the better ones of the night. This began the "Deja" section of the setlist, in which two out of the next three songs were off that abum.

Never a band to shy away from grandeur and excess, Brand New brought out not one but TWO drumkits which were used for only two numbers that I could tell, the semi-pointless instrumental "Welcome to Bangkok" and the encore: an extended jam version of the song "Untitled" on the new album. It would have been nice for a couple of the slower songs to be traded out for "The Boy Who Blocked His Own Shot" or even something off their first album Your Favorite Weapon. Brand New is notorious for shunning their old material though, so I wasn't too suprised or disappointed.


Brand New - The Quiet Things That No One Ever Knows (live) ...wish they had played this

buy "The Devil And God Are Raging Inside Me" from Amazon.



Overall great show, well-worth the 25 bucks.