Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Listmaking

So here is something I found rather interesting that has been (or had been over 4th of July weekend) appearing on several blogs recently:

"List your favorite record from every year you’ve been alive.

You can do it based purely on hindsight, or you can do it by listing the answer you would’ve given in that year (assuming you were aware of pop music at the time)."

Wikipedia helps.


Of course, I decided to make my own list.

1987 - Dinosaur Jr., You're Living All Over Me
1988 - Sonic Youth, Daydream Nation
1989 - Pixies, Doolittle
1990 - Fugazi, Repeater
1991 - My Bloody Valentine, Loveless
1992 - Pavement, Slanted & Enchanted
1993 - Nirvana, In Utero
1994 - Weezer, "Blue Album"
1995 - Foo Fighters, Foo Fighters
1996 - Cake, Fashion Nugget
1997 - Built to Spill, Perfect from Now On
1998 - Neutral Milk Hotel, In the Aeroplane Over the Sea
1999 - The Flaming Lips, The Soft Bulletin
2000 - Radiohead, Kid A
2001 - Daft Punk, Discovery
2002 - Queens of the Stone Age, Songs for the Deaf
2003 – Sufjan Stevens, Greetings from Michigan
2004 - Eagles of Death Metal, Peace, Love, Death Metal
2005 – The National, Alligator
2006 – the Thermals The Body, The Blood, the Machine
2007 – Battles, Mirrored

Obviously, the list culminated in a listing of some of my favourite albums, but it was surprising to see which years garnered records I hold dearest to my heart and which years were lacking records I liked all that much.

1994 was hands down the hardest year for me. So many incredible albums came out that year, albums that are solidified in my personal all-time-favourite-canon. In contrast, 1991 and 1998 were too easy to decide upon.

What does your list look like and what was the hardest year for you?

MP3 of the Day

As you may have noticed, I skipped a mixtape for this week. I've been busier than expect with work and this past weekend, but no worries, new content will be arriving shortly. Here's today's MP3.

It is what it is, a free, web-hosted MP3 of my choice awaiting your download. Click the link and enjoy.


MSTRKRFT - Vuvuvu

I posted a single of this tune's A-side in an April mixtape, but I found myself coming back to MSTRKRFT's "Vuvuvu" quite a bit recently.

The song itself is a pulsing electro-house jam that sounds self-generating and hypnotic, its prime listening location being someone's dank, oversexed basement. Though it's around two months old now, it still holds up to anything off the recently US released Hercules and Love Affair record or Justice's recent MGMT "Electric Feel" remix. Oh why not, I posted both songs below...

Hercules & Love Affair - Blind

Justice - Electric Feel (Remix)

Enjoy.

Sunday, July 6, 2008

MP3 of the Day

It is what it is, a free, web-hosted MP3 of my choice awaiting your download. Click the link and enjoy. Today's a two-for-one.


Jay Reatard - Nightmares

An stellar example of Jay Reatard's lo-fi branded, punk influenced, guy next door garage rock, "Nightmares" is off his 2006 solo debut, Blood Visions. That being said, "Nightmares" is in the middle of the Reatard spectrum; his songs get harder and, at times, softer (see below).


Jay Reatard - I Know a Place

Whereas "Nightmares" was a demonstration of Reatard's straightforward punk rock, "I Know a Place" offers a more subtle listening experience. It's gentle and doesn't operate at a breakneck speed, differing greatly for Reatard's much more fervent material.

Jay Reatard's musical output is incredible. Since 1998, he's released nearly seventeen albums and thirty four 45s/EPs. He's definitely worth checking out.

Friday, July 4, 2008

YouTube Friday


Here's your weekly update of videos I've flagged on YouTube. This week I've listed three clips: new, recent, and old.

First is the new Ratatat video for "Mirando." The song is pretty solid, but the video, which samples from one of my favourite John McTiernan films, is very cool. Thanks to Megan for the heads up.



Second is the "viral video" for the upcoming Tropic Thunder film, which aired during the most recent MTV Movie Awards. There's a chance you may have already seen this clip, however, its too entertaining not to mention.



Last is a 2006 a capella Grizzly Bear performance of "The Knife" on the streets of Paris direct from La Blogotheque. The clip is self-explanatory, but an interesting watch.



Don't forget to check out the Artist Spotlight on Pavement posted below.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

MP3 of the Day

In an effort to update the blog daily (or, at best, every other day), here's my newest feature - MP3 of the Day. It is what it is, a free, web-hosted MP3 of my choice awaiting your download. Click the link and enjoy.


Girl Talk - Play Your Part (Pt. 1)

The first track from Girl Talk's stellar new album, Feed the Animals. The record was made available June 19th on the Illegal Art website in a pay-what-you-want format, very similar to Radiohead's release of In Rainbows.

Although the LP is almost two weeks old now, my Californian travels didn't allow me to get my hands on a copy until earlier last week. That being said, "Play Your Part (Pt. 1)" is one of my favourite songs on the record and certainly one of the strongest. Everything from the opening salvo of "Gimme Some Lovin'" to the mash-up of Lil' Wanye with Sinead O'Connor's "Nothing Compares 2 U" at the 3:41 mark equals syrupy Girl Talk goodness.