Archive for the 'videos' Category

Animal Collective’s Picnic With Aliens

Animal Collective wants to bring you along on this strangely surreal picnic & misdemeanor lovefest with the new video for “Peacebone”. The video does a pretty good job at dressing up the music, especially with its Aliens-inspired mid-section vying for a “best kiss” scene. (no not really).

And yes, we’re still excited about Strawberry Jam which will be in stores in little over a week (you can pre-order your copy here!).

Animal Collective - Peacebone
Animal Collective - Winter Wonder Land
Animal Collective - Safer

Dude Freestyles to Rough Gem (Remix)

We all need our own kind of release from a day at the office.
(we just don’t all have the cerebellum for it).

track stylez:
Islands - Rough Gem (Remix)

P.S. I think this is what’s going on in the first 30 seconds (lyrics wise):

    “my cornea should be dissected
    on a small table
    in a bunker, basement to a silo
    that we false comboble information of a location
    the curators of my interrogation
    would be three men varied in age of 36 to 51-to-2 months
    they were a captive too (once)
    and they rapped attention to the LED rhythm of my heart
    of the beep-beep-beep sound”

Anyone think they can get the next 30 seconds?

Amazon has the import of this 7″ Islands single over here, but word is it may be coming over the seas (soon?).

Battles Live @ The First Unitarian Church (7/07)

These guys pull off such a stellar show that I’ve been long awaiting the day when I could share a live recording that would at least capture some of the live magic that goes on. Last time they played here in Montreal, Stanier’s drumming was such a fury that wood chips were flying all over the place, half-way through the set he had to switch them out for new ones, and towards the end, with sweat pouring from his brow, he was sitting on top of his stool surrounded by debris.

This here is probably the best audience recording I’ve found of them, and they play it so tight it just makes me squirm in delight. The only thing lackluster is how the camera caught the vocals, which isn’t such a bad thing considering the (distorted) extent to which these guys use them anyway.

I know it’s not very timely, what with their North American tour over, but if you happen to live in one of the cities across the waters where they’re playing: heed my advice and be sure to get tickets. Without further ado, here’s “Tonto” in all its glory:

high-res version (far more glorious):
Battles - “Tonto” @ The First Unitarian Church

Video is courtesy of eattapes.

Dance, California & Wooden Shjips

[Wooden Shjips]

As far as music videos within the noise-psychedelia realm go, this one takes the cake. Set in California at what seems to be the largest dance party ever. This semi-political (note the flashes of war) video collage is taken from a multi-span of decades (mostly the 60s), documenting one craaazy night of people gettin’ down with their freaky-selves.

The party begins with all lights on, and everyone fully dressed, but then someone spins a record that ain’t never quit. One three-note guitar riff will drive everything instrumentally, everything being a vesicating wash of 60s verve psychedelia. The night pushes forward, clothes are lost, minds are shot from dance & binge, but it all comes together with the obvious east-coast run-through-the-beach-at-midnight scene, and everyone wakes up to carry on with their placid, innocent lifestyles.


(high res version)

Wooden Shjips have a new self-titled 7″ coming out on Holy Mountain not too long from now, and it’s more of the same, psych-repeato drone and orbital space-guitar fuzz, always set to something funky. Whether it’s the bass riff on the opening track “We Ask You To Ride,” or the organ on “Losin’ Time”.

The music found within is the kind you can fall back on a couch and lose yourself in. It never fails to take you on a journey with its laid-back attitude, one that only really embarks for somewhere when the mood strikes, and otherwise drones on as if in a void.

When it picks up, it’s often by peeling some brazen improv guitar riff, which brings you to rapt attention so the feeling of the song can gravitate toward something else, only to come back again. Always back again. It’s a careful balance like that, never departing for anywhere too foreign, and as focused as it is like that, it has a sort of meditative vibe, and a listening session is not unlike staring into a candle flame at night.

I’d tell you to go find somewhere to buy this, but it’s not out yet, and my guess is when it does deliver it’ll be on a limited run, so all I can say is good luck to you. If you happen to live in CA, you might catch them at one of the few festivals they’ll be at (Fuck Yeah Fest, and Diamond Days), but otherwise, you can just sink your teeth into these.

Listen:
Wooden Shjips - Lucy’s Ride
Wooden Shjips - Losin’ Time

Wooden Shjips: Official Site | Myspace

Gravy Blurbs #02

[gravy blurbs]

[Your first helping of Gravy was back in June.]

I’m guessing you’re all familiar with the Now That’s What I Call Music! series of compilations, where big-wig corporation EMI tries to commercialize even further singles that were, to be frank, whored way too much throughout the industry already. The formula is simple: blindly throw together 40 chart-topping hits, slap a brand on it, and sell it to the slathering masses. There’s no discretion, there’s no sequencing appeal or concept behind it. Just full-out party cds for the kids who don’t listen to enough music to define their own tastes, but can quickly and easily fake it with a NOW mix.

Usually I glaze over things like this, you know, like the fact that they now have their 66th edition out, and the fact that it has dear Lily Allen right next to U2 and Beyoncé. As if that wasn’t heartache enough already, they’re now trying to capitalise on the indie market with their This Is NEXT compilation (it was originally thought to be called Now That’s What I Call Indie!). Maybe I’m a little protective of my baby, but seriously, just look at this tracklist:

    01 Bloc Party - “The Prayer”
    02 Yeah Yeah Yeahs - “Cheated Hearts”
    03 Sonic Youth - “Do You Believe In Rapture?”
    04 The Shins - “Phantom Limb”
    05 Spoon - “The Underdog”
    06 Bright Eyes - “Four Winds”
    07 Cat Power - “Lived In Bars”
    08 Neko Case - “Hold On, Hold On”
    09 Of Montreal - “Heimdalsgate Like A Promethean Curse”
    10 Deerhoof - “The Perfect Me”
    11 The Hold Steady - “Chips Ahoy!”
    12 Cold War Kids - “Hang Me Up To Dry”
    13 Ted Leo & The Pharmacists - “Colleen”
    14 M. Ward - “Chinese Translation”
    15 Clap Your Hands Say Yeah! - “Satan Said Dance”

So now, even if you’re such a casual listener that you want in on the indie scene, but are too lazy to inquire into anything yourself, you can just snap up one of these priceless babies (sic) and rejoice! It saddens me that songs like Of Montreal’s can be taken out of context like that (Hissing Fauna, is afterall, a concept album), or that Clap Your Hands’ track is one of the least defining tracks that could have possibly been chosen to represent them. Clearly, we all need to start using the term post-indie now before it’s too late!

In some other news, there’ve been a few sweet covers I’ve been meaning to share. The first one I was turned onto by YANP, a cover of The Magnetic Fields done at a live performance by John Vanderslice & the sweet St. Vincent, like a match made in heaven:

… and here’s the original Yeah! Oh Yeah! by The Magnetic Fields.

Second comes to the tune of a song I’ve heard WAY too much. Peter Bjorn and John’s “Young Folks” ohh that whistling… it haunts. There wasn’t a single bistro in all of North America that didn’t play this for the last three(?) seasons. Despite how many times I’ve heard it though, it still makes me grin like a fool. Kanye West does some rapping over-top the familiar sound, always and again rapping about who else but himself: Kanye West - Young Folks. (cheers to lycanthropy for finding this first).

And finally, to end on an even more laughable cover, the culture of me dug up one of Smells Like Teen Spirit over on the Tubes, and it’s not your typical band. They’re uh, Korean, and so there’s some missing “s” sounds on the end of words, and a lot of “l”s become “r”s, but you gotta give it to them, they really have the energy (and the lights).

just the sauce:
Kanye West - Young Folks
The Magnetic Fields - Yeah! Oh Yeah!
St. Vincent & John Vanderslice - Yeah! Oh Yeah! (The Magnetic Fields cover)

Flight of the Conchords extend their play.

I was turned on to these guys a while ago, but I live in the underground so I hope by now you’re all savvy with these guys. They began their career like most comedians, doing the stand-up routines, (the comedy hard-knocks), then found themselves with a BBC Radio gig, and eventually wound up with an HBO special. The HBO show is really a damn funny one in all regards, and I recommend you look it up.

What it amounts to is two guys who have no idea what love means, spending all their days being infatuated with someone or other, making every sort of faux pas you can imagine. Oh, and also it’s a folk musical. Without that last part it wouldn’t amount to much, I suppose; did I mention it’s funny?

On the flipside, if you only know them by their HBO presence, you should definitely do some digging on YouTube, lest you miss something like this:

And now, these guys are finally kick-starting their real musical career, still with the folk-comedy bit as their game, but at least with some studio material this time. The EP, titled The Distant Future is an amalgam of studio and live tracks - just about half-and-half, and the tracklist goes like this:

    1. Business Time
    2. If You’re Into It
    3. I’m Not Crying
    4. Beautiful Girl - (live)
    5. Robots - (live)

It landed today @ Amazon via Sub Pop, and at a mere $5 it ain’t no wallet-busting business.

you into it?
Flight of the Conchords - Business Time (EP version)
Flight of the Conchords - Robots (Live) (EP version)
Flight of the Conchords - Something Special for the Ladies
Flight of the Conchords - Frodo (2000 L.O.T.R. rejected demo version)

Devendra’s “Seahorse” is epic.

After seeing this over at GvsB and just sitting in awe through Devendra’s “not music video” of the most powerhouse folk-goes-epic tracks I’ve heard, well, I had to say something. It makes my spine tingle even after my fourth listen through, so who am I to keep to myself? Here’s to waiting for the album.

You can see the high-res video over at Devendra’s own site.

dig it mp3 style:
Devendra Banhart - Seahorse

T.C. loves nockFORCE.

Shit, I’ve been loving these guys for a while now & cannot fathom why I haven’t posted about them yet. nockFORCE is produced, written, animated & everything inbetween by two dudes: Jim Gisriel and Ian Jones-Quartey. It is a webcartoon about nock and FORCE and their general badassness. Topics include: living on Vagina Street, hip-hop shows, jokes (and Richard Pryor), mermaids & just about everything else you can imagine.

Out of sheer love, here is the compiled clips the Jim & Ian duo have put out for us to enjoy thus far:

nockFORCE EPISODE #1:

nockFORCE QUICKIE #1 (Elephants):

nockFORCE QUICKIE #2 (Endor):

nockFORCE QUICKIE #3 (Throw Up):

nockFORCE QUICKIE #4 (Vagina Street):

nockFORCE QUICKIE #5 (Playing Shows):

And so, you are now caught up in the fabulous world of nockFORCE. You should definitely hit up the nockFORCE hub for further updates & their mp3 section for some quality tracks.

Bees, Doin’ the Left Foot Stepdown

It’s a fact! In ancient times, the bandit populus of India would use something like this to guard their mountains of treasure. Bet’cha didn’t know that.

[the bees - octopus]

So I may have missed the love train on this one by some few weeks, but it seems my own love pact was sealed when these first keys rang out to the tune of 1960 on my home stereo.

My summer has been, musically, a pleasurable time-warp through decades past, and thankfully there have been a number of bands doing it so well. On the side of IDM, Caribou’s Andorra and Pepe Deluxe’s Spare Time Machine carried their weight through the trodges of the psychedelic decades by pairing up some quality riffs with some equally quality beats. The rock side of the coin has been filled out in part by The Black Lips & Golden Animals (and as pointed out, one’s a little grungier than the next). I’d recommend going back and revisiting them one by one if you have to.

It’s Western, it’s psychedelic, it’s The Yellow Submarine, and I might even have to concede this as the best song of 2007:

In our world where most upstarts forget the importance of cohesion, the seemingly implicit talent of The Bees allows them to keep within such a broad set of bounds, going everywhere on Octopus from south-western folk on “Love in the Harbour,” to bass-culture dub crossed with The Beatles on “Left Foot Stepdown,” to unapologetic reggae on “Listening Man,” to a brass section that just won’t quit on “Got to Let Go,” the proverbial aural glue is stuck, and as it is, coming from this Isle of Wright sextet of multi-instrumentalists, by no means do these boundaries feel like an overextension, but rather they feel like a treat. The album is candy coated in chocolate wrapped in candy foil.

mp3:
Band of Bees - Left Foot Stepdown
Band of Bees - (This Is For The) Better Days

Grab yer own Octopus over at Amazon.

Liars on Tape: “Plaster Casts Of Everything”

So not much to say about this except for the fact that it is AWESOME in the most David Lynch feelin’ “how you doing?” way possible. Once again, all that needs to be said is that we love love love liars.

Check out our review of their latest LP over here, yo.