Archive for the 'prerelease hype' Category

Republic: Now With More Serene!

[population]

This Republic not what one might think. Musically: a powerhouse of a band that sits comfortably among the ranks of another Arts & Crafts borderline-white-noise electro-pop act Broken Social Scene, The Republic is the embodiment of tranquility in the notion of sensory overload.

Having matured since their debut, the newest offering is instrumentally a powerful series of cascades in the grandest sense one might think that layerings of drums, bass, guitars (three), piano, and horns/bowed instruments may produce.

In calculus everything is a matter of limits. The way each mathematical concept will approach infinity, and most importantly, the speed at which that is achieved. It’s no grand stretch to put music into these same terms, with white-noise as our aural anchor of infinitude we can think of music as growing, expanding, approaching its own limit. Yet, the idea is never to reach it, as we all know white noise is not a pleasant thing (think: your TV’s snowy cackle). It’s enough to drive a man into the outer-reaches of madness.

We’re not there though. The snow is absent as this Republic makes clever use of its cast of seven members, in a way that each participates in order to build toward that central point. Each instrument adds a proverbial floor, wall, and cathedral ceiling to the body of sound all the while keeping a steadfast harmony, a clear and decisive plotted course, and more often than not leaving some head-space for vocals.

“Humble Peasants” is the most illustrative track of the band’s direction. It picks up pace as you hear each member don their instrument and find a place in the sound until the inevitable climax (infinity it is not). I can imagine this track playing inside the cabin of the space-elevator as it launches clear through our bubble, emerging from a made-for-theatre dust cloud meant to represent the atmosphere (fainciful, yes).

Population is a fitting title for the album, especially with a track like “Present of Future End” which dawdles around one lowly voice harking unto the world until at around the 2:20 mark it erupts into a crowd. You know those musicals where everyone has the same fanciful dream, and everyone’s mind is running the same circle of inner monologue as their feet run imagined dance-steps around the drabness of their everyday lives? Yeah, it’s just like that, only with drums and fuzz and horns.

The album is a hard thing to describe, but as Ryan Lenssen remarks (in one awesome article):

    “[Population’s] juxtaposition between the music and the lyrics is just so grand,” Lenssen says. “The music itself sounds almost—almost—happy. People will look at the cover and see all the beautiful graphics but then they’re going to get into the philosophy of the record and that is much, much darker.” “If people were to truly understand what we were really saying and all of the musical choices and why they were there…this is way more calculated. This is murder in the first degree. This is malicious, unbridled anger and I think we’re sort of a little insane because of the way we present it. We are that scary clown. We are stabbing you in the front and smiling, brushing your cheek, saying ‘Isn’t it lovely? Isn’t it lovely?’”

It is, it really is.

listen (headphones recommended):
The Most Serene Republic - Humble Peasants
The Most Serene Republic - Present of Future End
The Most Serene Republic - Sherry And Her Butterfly Net

Population will land October 2nd, and A&C should like to have your back on the pre-ordering front soon enough.

We are Wolves perform Magic.

Montreal’s own We are Wolves are pretty damn notorious. Whether we are discussing their frigging awesome live sets, their minimal yet sleek web-site, or their debut album - the inimitable Non Stop Je Te Plie en Deux - that still gets constant rotation around here… To put it bluntly: I am dying to hear their next album, Total Magique.

The good news? We don’t have long to wait… as it drops September 4th from Dare to Care Records.

But! I have even better news: a sampler for the album has started making it’s rounds to the media featuring two tracks off the forthcoming album. And, it must be said, they are definitely on par with anything on Non Stop. These songs are, quite possibly, the best shit the band has ever recorded.

And so, I am ridiculously proud to present to y’all the dirty dirty dance, scream & drinkin’ tune “Fight & Kiss” alongside the title track off Magique. Love it.

We are Wolves - Fight & Kiss.
We are Wolves - Magique.

(you’ll be able to order the album here.)

Tim Harrington is to Wolves, as Dan Deacon is to Candy.

[tim]

After a loosely defined 2 year hiatus, NYC indie rock outfit Les Savy Fav (lay-SAH-vee-FAHV) is really back. As if the singles and compilation stand-ins weren’t enough to keep them in step, they’ve hit the touring circuit already a month before their record is slated for release. I’ve been waiting for this for the last 3 years, and not without good reason.

These guys have always had a vibe that is much more drenched in screaming vocals than it is in experimentalism. A sound that is distinctly idiosyncratic and imbues the same decade that gave birth to such notables as Q and Not U, and The Dismemberment Plan. One part punk, and one heavy part rock they’ve always made use of bass hooks and angular guitar work to bleed fuzz and drums around Harrington’s vocals, and the vocals (the words) are the shining point to the whole act.

The words, often a stinging air of critique for the very industry they participate in, and sometimes almost bleakly autobiographical like “Meet Me In the Dollar Bin” from Inches. “Meet me in the dollar bin” Tim pleads, “it’s a band I once was in; haven’t done much better since.” It reads as a tribute to all the artists who try and fail at the game; the lightning crashing, the day-job at the cannery, and the poor performing conditions all leave the impression of a struggling youth in the biz, “we passed and we passed, we passed out when we could”. That was probably my favourite of their last offerings, and it demanded to be on a dozen different mixtapes in the last 3 years.

Let’s Stay Friends showcases the same energy these guys had back in years prior, however modernized it is in terms of a playlist-begging pop-repeato drill-into-your-brain appeal, and laid out in the same distinct bleeding-throat vocals Tim does (that are horribly lacking among contemporaries - where is all the sensical screaming at?).

“Ragin In The Plague Age” is a new track that speaks to me, and not because I’ve been leaking from the ears or eyes or anything like that. Alber Camus’ The Plague is a book I’ve been reading on and off lately, and it concerns itself with the trails of a small town in France inflicted with the bacillus plague back in 194X. Savy Fav’s version is much less dun-dun-mysterious, and told from the eyes of a king back when kings were important. Here’s the gist: Scene one, King goes ill. Scene two, king is sacked. Scene three, the town gets trashed for lack of a solution. It is glorious, to say the least.

Right up until the release date of September 18th, there’s a video contest going on that is as humble as it is enticing, and judging from the looks of it there are some pretty awesome entries going up as we speak. Win 1000 clams and a trophy as they invite you to dress like them, go wild, and most importantly to get it on tape - this ain’t no sunday-morning dress-up, unless of course you like that sort of thing, power to you man.

listen up:
Les Savy Fav - Meet Me In The Dollar Bin (from Inches)
Les Savy Fav - Raging In The Plague Age (don your hazmat suit!)
Les Savy Fav - What Would Wolves Do? (awesome 80s drum machining)
Les Savy Fav - The Equestrian

see also:
Baeble Music has a full video stream of a Savy set from a few weeks ago.
Let’s Stay Friends cover art.

You can pre-order Let’s Stay Friends over at Newbury Comics (with a limited edition autographed booklet that you should be too punk to care about).

None Shall Pass… The Aniticipation Continues.

As previously reported, Aesop Rock will be dropping a new LP, None Shall Pass, by the end of summer. At first, I was kind of indifferent to the news. Despite being one of my most listened to MCs, I felt some of his later releases (most notably Bazooka Tooth) kind of went off-course and so, when I heard about the new album… I had mixed feelings.

Then I heard the title track off the album & my anticipation levels went through the roof.

It embodied everything I loved previously about Aesop - quality rhymes at the front of the mix, placed over an unconventional funky jazz beat… the track is bangin’ & probably is one of my favourite songs of the year so far.

Well! Def Jux has just given me another opportunity to practically die in anticipation waiting for this record. First up, the cover art has been released, and it is badass like Aesop covers should be. I dig it.

None Shall Pass.

Second (and more importantly), they have just sent out the vinyl single for feature None Shall Pass track, ‘Coffee’ which features The Mountain Goat’s John Darnielle.

This vinyl single boasts a full 6 tracks - three versions of ‘Coffee’ (dirty/clean/instrumental), two versions of album track ‘Citronella’ (which was produced by Aesop himself) & an exclusive song, ‘The Next Big Thing’. All of which are crazy awesome. It is a beautiful thing.

coffee really is the next best thing:
Aesop Rock - Coffee (featuring John Darnielle).
Aesop Rock - The Next Best Thing.

(None Shall Pass is scheduled to drop on August 28th from Definitive Jux Records. You can preorder it (getting a signed copy, alongside a poster) from their store. Read more over at Aesop’s myspace and his unfinished official site.)

None Shall Pass - The Anticipation Party.

Aesop.

Aesop Rock is one of the best emcees in underground hip-hop today. I can’t think of many others who possess his ability to make rhymes that both flow and be so quick-witted simultaneously. His first “major” albums (put out on Mush Records and Def Jux respectively), Float and Labor Days, still get repeated spins around these parts.

Like many others, I was kind of put off by the production on Aesop’s last LP, Bazooka Tooth. It sounded too commercial, too abrasive & too confrontational. Perhaps one of these days I’ll give it another spin, but my recollection of that album (in light of my expectations going into it), certainly isn’t a happy memory.

Which is why I am so awesomely surprised by the lead single off of Aesop’s next offering, tentatively titled, None Shall Pass. The single, of the same name, features a clean, if unconventional, beat, perfectly suited to Aesop’s style. I’ve been playing it on repeat all morning and, with each spin, I just dig it more & more. It definitely serves it’s purpose as the prerelease single - I am now ridiculously anticipating the upcoming album.

the funhouse cast:
Aesop Rock - None Shall Pass.
Aesop Rock - I’ll Be OK (featuring Slug, from 2000’s Float).

(None Shall Pass is to be released on August 28th from Definitive Jux Records. You can preorder it (getting a signed copy, alongside a poster) from their store. Read more over at Aesop’s myspace and unfinished official site.)

The Short, The Sweet, The Interpol.

So, it seems like everyone is waiting with baited breath (as they should) for Interpol’s next album, Our Love to Admire, to drop on July 10th from Mammoth Records. I know I am.

That is why, after much scavaging, I am ridiculously thrilled to have found four tracks that will most likely appear on the album, on these here internets. I don’t know if these will all be included, and I do apologize in advance about the lackluster quality… But for those who were looking for a reason to pick up the album? I believe I found you a frigging good one.

Tracklisting:
1. “Pioneer to the Falls”
2. “No I in Threesome”
3. “The Scale”
4. “The Heinrich Maneuver”
5. “Mammoth”
6. “Pace Is the Trick”
7. “All Fired Up”
8. “Rest My Chemistry”
9. “Who Do You Think?”
10. “Wrecking Ball”
11. “The Lighthouse”

mp3s:
Interpol - Pioneer to the Falls. (worst quality of the bunch)
Interpol - The Scale.
Interpol - All Fired Up.
Interpol - Rest My Chemistry.

(Our Love to Admire comes out in early July. You can pre-order it from Amazon as either a typical CD or in Special Format. In the meantime, go get some class over at their website, peasant.)