Friday, July 29, 2011

Download Now: Stay+'s Quite Excellent Four-Track EP



With a name like Christian AIDS, is there any way you're not getting attention from music bloggers or the indie press? This UK band's been getting a lot of love from some hype machines lately thanks to their deft combination of witch house and four-on-the-floor aesthetics. Thankfully, the duo (since renamed "Stay+") have all the talent to back up the recent-ish interweb fanfare.

Coming off like a combination of Salem, The xx and Crystal Castles, the group trades in grimy bangers that are as appropriate on dimly lit dance floors as on 4 a.m. lonely subway rides home.

Though they don't have any official releases yet, Stay+ have a slew of remixes to their moniker, as well as the hosted-below four-track EP. Right now, it's only streaming on their Bandcamp page, but look for it to make a bigger splash sometime soon--these guys have come damn close to mastering this murky brand of genre hopping. I submit exhibits A, B, C and D...

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Stay+ - Fever
Stay+ - Scum
Stay+ - Young Luv
Stay+ - Stay Positive

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Lisztomania: 6 Reasons You Should Listen to The Mummies



Lisztomania - Because everybody loves lists...

Ah, The Mummies. These guys were a garage punk band that operated out of the Bay Area in the late '80s/early '90s. Other than some pretty radical mummy costuming--which you can clearly see above--the band was known for touring in a Munsters-esque 1963 Pontiac ambulance, performing on specifically lo-fi/damaged equipement and their utter committal to released material on vinyl only. All those quirks made their Stooges-by-way-of-The Misfits and The Beach Boys sound that much better.

Man, bands like this just don't come around today...

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The Mummies - Your Love
The Mummies - I'm Down (Beatles Cover)
The Mummies - Stronger Than Dirt
The Mummies - Justine
The Mummies - The Red Cobra #9
The Mummies - (You Must Fight to Live) On the Planet of the Apes

MP3: New Neon Indian - "Fallout"



What's that? You haven't heard the lastest Neon Indian single, off his forthcoming album Era Extraña? Is the rhetorical nature of this post trying your patience?

Either way, "Fallout" isn't half bad, though it does find Neon Indian (aka Alan Palomo) ditching the lo-fidelity sounds of his '08 debut and embracing the production styles of his VEGA project. Still, the track's strong enough to build excitement for the eventual LP and I suppose that's what matters most...

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Neon Indian - Fallout
Neon Indian - Should Have Taken Acid With You

Album of the Week - Rainforest EP by Clams Casino



At 18 mintues, Clams Casino's Rainforest EP hardly qualifies as an album, but after spending a few weeks with the hip-hop producer's smothering instrumentals, it's certainly deserving of some spotlight attention, though you've probably heard the story by now.

Clams Casino, otherwise known on Twitter as Clammy Clams, is Mike Volpe, a New Jersey native who first got heaps of attention producing for rap's prolific "based" rapper, Lil B. While his production duties made the newcomer a star in some circles, Clammy didn't become a household name on the blogosphere until releasing his own instrumental mixtape last year.

When that tape dropped, the shoegaze beauty of songs like "Motivation" or "I'm God" were on full display and sounded even better without the idiosyncratic hip-hop freestyles. Unlike most producers, whose instrumentals are symbiotes to the talent they back, Clams Casino's tracks stood even taller on their own two feet. That, in part, explains the release of Rainforest, five cuts of brand-new, purposefully instrumental content.

It's quite an accomplishment that, in little over a year, Clams has become somewhat an autuer. After hearing "Motivation" a couple of times, it's easily to herald all the tracks on Rainforest as Clams Casino tunes. Even his latest release, "Wizard" for the Adult Swim Singles Program, bears several staple trademarks.

What you get with nearly every Clammy production is relatively straightforward: overblown bass, ghostly synths, tons of quarter-note high hat and economic use of abstract vocal samples. For better or worse, nothing Clams does on Rainforest is new, really. He uses the same production techniques and flourishes that make so many of his hip-hop instrumentals work, but hardly experiments. For a full-length LP, this might be frustrating, but for a quick EP, the results scratch all the right spots on a listener's ears.

If Clams Casino is going to rival any potential contemporaries, say Four Tet, his sonic palet is going to have the expand tremendously--he hasn't quite mastered the solitary electronic song and still seems to produce with rappers in mind. For a first batch of songs created specifically to be heard on their own though, Rainforest shows a hell of a lot of promise and just might be one of the finest EP releases of the year...

MediaFire Link:

Clams Casino - Rainforest EP

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Clams Casino - Motivation (Instrumental)
Clams Casino - I'm God (Instrumental)
Clams Casino - Wizard

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Today's Best Song Ever - "What Do I Get?" by Buzzcocks



Just me digging up rare, awesome or obscure tracks.

Today it's flashy pop-punk from Buzzcocks.

First released as a single in 1978, "What Do I Get?" not only boasts three-minutes of catchy-as-hell British punk, but an all-time classic music video.

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Buzzcocks - What Do I Get?

MP3s: Survive the Heat, Listen to The Drums


Though I've been in Detroit for the past week, I've utterly failed in escaping that New York heat--it feels like 100° out and my brain is fried. That being said, listening to The Drums poolside makes for a pretty efficient cool-down, so I've been spinning these Brooklyn dudes all day.

The indie-pop act released a new single a few days ago and "Money" finds them reveling in their The Strokes-by-way-of-Morrissey schtick, which makes it just as solid as anything else on their debut LP from last year. Now go do a cannonball.

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The Drums - Money
&
The Drums - Let's Go Surfing
The Drums - I Need Fun in My Life

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Lisztomania: My Top 5 Sets at 2011's Pitchfork Music Fest


Lisztomania - Because everybody loves lists...

For the third year straight, I attended Pitchfork's music festival in Union Park, Chicago. For three days, I battled through hot heat and hangovers to see some great--and not so great--bands selected by the indie kingmakers themselves.

Here's a list of my five favourite performances, in no particular order...

MP3: Lindstrøm Remixes Best Coast


Well this is a pleasant surprise: Lindstrøm did your summer a favor by dropping a twinkling remix of Best Coast's "Boyfriend." The Norwegian producer applies his best ABBA impression onto the lovesick track and the results are slinking and shimmery.

Grab the remix and the original down below...

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Best Coast - Boyfriend (Lindstrøm Remix)
Best Coast - Boyfriend

Monday, July 18, 2011

Coming Right Up, Some More of Those Radiohead Remixes


So here it is, Volume 2 of the oft-reported Radiohead King of Limbs remix series. Though this batch isn't as strong as Volume 1, I'm still looking forward to each and every one of these electro installments.

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Radiohead - Morning Mr Magpie (Nathan Fake Remix)
Radiohead - Bloom (Harmonic 3131 Remix)
Radiohead - Bloom (Mark Pritchard Remix)

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

FINALLY - That Fugazi/Wu-Tang Mash-Up Record Is Here


Remember when I told you about that Fugazi/Wu-Tang Clan mash-up album, cleverly titled Wugazi? Well the full mixtape has finally been released.

Having spun through it twice today, it's easily one of your must download mixes of summer 2011 and yes, 13 Chambers is still the best title ever.

Click here to download Wugazi's 13 Chambers


Right-Click + Save Link As:

Wugazi - Sleep Rules Everything Around Me

MP3: New Real Estate - "It's Real"


Even though it wasn't as hot in Brooklyn today, I was blaring this new Real Estate jam non-stop, which makes sense, since this easy-rocker would be apropos thunderstorms or sunshine.

The New Jersey suburbanites have a new record due out this October and "It's Real" is Days very first single. And man, it's about time; the last release from these prolific bros was last year's Out of Tune / Reservoir #3 7".

Real Estate - It's Real
Real Estate - Out of Tune
Real Estate - Reservoir #3

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

MP3: Jacuzzi Boys - "Cool Vapors"


Well, according to the Wall Street Journal, it's supposed to get record-breaking hot in New York today. For me that means sweating through multiple t-shirts and a schizoid embolism for my A.C. unit, but hopefully everyone else reading this finds a way to stay chill.

In related news, Miami's Jacuzzi Boys have released the most apt single of all time in "Cool Vapors," a quick garage cut about staying breezy in this damn heat.

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Jacuzzi Boys - Cool Vapors

New Tallest Man on Earth Track, Courtesy of Adult Swim


I gave a shout-out to Adult Swim's 2011 Singles Program a couple of weeks back, but after all the goodness they've been hosting, the project's more than earned a golf clap.

They've been releasing new tracks from artists you probably love, once a week, for over a month now, and the results have been all hits, no misses. That being said, this week's contribution from The Tallest Man on Earth is a hands down favourite so far.

That track, along with three other highlights, is down below, but feel free to head over to the Adult Swim site to catch 'em all.

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The Tallest Man on Earth - Weather of a Killing Kind
Active Child - Hanging On
Best Coast - Gone Again
How to Dress Well - Us in the Sense of Forever

MP3s: XXXY's You Gotta Do It / Open Your Eyes 12"


I've been a fan of Manchester's XXXY since I first laid my ears on "Ordinary Things," so it's no surprise I'm obsessing over the teeth rattling wobble of his brand new single, You Gotta Do It / Open Your Eyes 12".

Right-Click + Save Link As:

XXXY - You Gotta Do You
XXXY - Open Your Eyes

Previous MP3...

XXXY - Ordinary Things

Radiohead Killed It on Their Latest From the Basement


As you may remember, Radiohead were due to play all of King of Limbs on Nigel Godrich's From The Basement web performance series. Well, the show premiered abroad two nights ago, but thanks to the miracle of the internets, you can watch the whole thing on the YouTubes.

The biggest story (for me, anyways) was that the band performed two new tracks, the formerly blogged "Staircase" and the McCartney-eque "The Daily Mail." You can download HQ rips of both standouts below.

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Radiohead - The Daily Mail (From the Basement)
Radiohead - Staircase (From the Basement)

Friday, July 8, 2011

Today's Best Song Ever - "Maggot Brain" by Funkadelic



Just me digging up rare, awesome or obscure tracks.

Today it's the 10-minute guitar epic from George Clinton's Funkadelic...

"Maggot Brain" is the opening track off 1971's Maggot Brain. The titular song features no vocals--save for the eerie spoken introduction--and little more than a soft arpeggio and drum flourishes.

The spotlight shines fully on Eddie Hazel's blistering guitar solo, rumored to have been inspired by an LSD-taking George Clinton telling Hazel during recording to imagine his mother had been murdered, only to learn that it wasn't true.

Further accentuating the greatness: the entire song was recorded in just one take, the solo was played in only one key and scale, and only two pedals were used to create the guitar's lush effects.

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Funkadelic - Maggot Brain

Download: Elite Gymnastics' New EPs + All Their Old EPs


If you haven't heard of Minneapolis' Elite Gymnastics for their club-ready Waka Flock remix ("WΛKΛ"), their chillwave EPs (Real Friends and Neu! '92) or their 90's-neon aesthetic, which seems to have come straight out of Kelly Kapowski's locker, now's the time to hop into their nostalgia pool.

Earlier today, the Elite G'z (what the cool kids are calling 'em) dropped a dual set of five-track EPs that are more than worth the hard-drive space. Ruin Vol. 1 is 20 minutes of up-tempo, hazy electro-pop, while its Vol. 2 counter-part features each track remixed at half-speed for some chopped 'n screwed fun.

Grab the slew of tracks I'm hosting below and if you're a fan, head to their Tumblr to download the new EPs and everything else they've released so far.

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Elite Gymnastics - l i t t l e t h i n g s
Elite Gymnastics - WΛKΛ
Elite Gymnastics - h e r e , i n h e a v e n 2
Elite Gymnastics - o m a m o r i

MP3s: New Tracks from Wooden Shjips' Forthcoming LP


A couple days ago, Stereogum premiered the first single off Wooden Shjips' forthcoming LP, West. While "Lazy Bones" is a chugging psychedelic anthem that could make Jim Morrison blush, I've got a little premier of my own...

"Black Smoke Rise" is West's opening track. With muddy distortion thick as peanut butter, the desert dirge dutifully sets the stage for the album's overarching themes of "the American West and all of the mythology, romanticism, and idealism that it embodies." So in other words, the perfect soundtrack for Captain America, Billy and George.

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Wooden Shjips - Black Smoke Rise
Wooden Shjips - Lazy Bones

Thursday, July 7, 2011

MP3s: Tracks From Greenwood Sharps' Things Familiar EP


What do you get when you cross Panda Bear with IDM? Well, there's no definitive answer to that (yet?), but London's Greenwood Sharps comes pretty close.

The UK post-dupstep producer self-released his Things Familiar EP in May and his wonky beats are sure worm their way into yr ear-space like some sort of Ceti eel.

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Greenwood Sharps - Brothers
Greenwood Sharps - Things Familiar
Greenwood Sharps - Leucosia

Save Wonder Bear's Latest EP For Your Next Night In


I don't know much about New York's Wonder Bear, other than the fact that their songs are more abstract soundscapes than, you know, actual 4/4 pop jams.

While they remind me a lot of early High Places, the band also manages to combine Mountain Man harmonies with early Animal Collective sampling pastiche. Although their latest EP isn't something you'll play at your next rooftop BBQ, the tracks on Avalanche should serve you well during your next lonely night in.

You can download the full Avalance EP on Wonder Bear's Bandcamp page or grab two standout tracks below.

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Wonder Bear - V079
Wonder Bear - Juarez

MP3: Big Troubles - "Misery"


Wasn't a huge fan of Big Trouble's debut LP, Worry--a little too bedroom-avant-lo-fi, youknowwhatimean? Thankfully for my ears, the New Jersey foursome has aimed for higher fidelty on their sophomore effort, Romantic Comedy.

"Misey" is a perfect example of the hi-fi pop the band's going for. Here's hoping late September brings more good vibes when Romantic Comedy sees official release.

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Big Troubles - Misery

New Wu-Tang/Fugazi Mash-up Record May Be the Best Yet


It looks like laptop aficionados are getting a lot more creative with their full-length remix records because the latest effort to pop-up online, a mix of Wu-Tang Clan and Fugazi, could be the best one I've heard yet.

The project, cleverly titled Wugazi, has released two singles, but an entire album is due out in a week or so. And of course, it's titled 13 Chambers.

Between this project, the James Blake/Drake mash-up LP, James Drake, and last year's excellent Notorious B.I.G./The xx remixer, summer playlists should be spilling over with mash-up goodness...

Right-Click + Save Link As:

Wugazi - Sleep Rules Everything Around Me
Wugazi - Sweet Release
&
James Drake - Wilhelm's Fucking Best
The Notorious xx - Dead Wrong Intro

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Haiku Review - Go Tell Fire to the Mountain by WU LYF


Haiku Review of WU LYF's Go Tell Fire to the Mountain:

Sounds you may have heard
Before, in dreams or in bars
But hey, still so great

Notes: If you've heard of World Unite Lucifer Youth Foundation (aka WU LYF) by now, it's probably because of the hype (BNM'd by Pitchfork) or anti-hype (see: The A.V. Club's review) surrounding the band. Sadly, those are the two worst reasons to spin this record.

I'd be remiss not to cobble together my own version of the band's now-ubiquitous PR story, so here goes nothing: Formed in Manchester 'round 2008, the quartet captured a whole bunch of attention from the UK music press by doing things like sending them mysterious band photos, charging record labels for demos, declining interviews, running a bafflingly cryptic website, refusing any major label support, self-recording and producing Go Tell Fire to the Mountain in an abandoned church, and telling most journalists and interested parties to literally, "Fuck off."

As the A.V. Club's Steve Hyden eloquently put it, the band's antics "[stand] out against the 24/7 celebrity confessional of the social-media age. By seemingly shunning hype, WU LYF [is] actually embracing one of the oldest show-biz tropes of all: Always leave them wanting more."

And so, we now have bloggers and Tumblr posts dedicated to deconstructing the band and their mission statement, while at once arguing over their legitimacy*.

Let's talk about the record itself, which is very, very good. Right off the bat, any review you read is going to throw Explosions in the Sky, Wolf Parade, Arcade Fire and Animal Collective parity your way, but the most apt comparison to my ears is Modest Mouse.

As early as album-opener "L Y F," the vocal yelps of front-man Ellery Roberts recall the barks of Isaac Brock circa The Lonesome Crowded West, not to mention all of WU LYF's lumbering musical allusions to Modest Mouse's This Is a Long Drive for Someone With Nothing to Think About and Building Nothing Out of Something.

So yes, despite their peculiar background and relationship to the media, WU LYF are a relatively straight-forward indie-rock band, but what sets Go Tell Fire to the Mountain apart as a record in 2011 are two things: energy and the fact that no one else has put out such a bombastic, loud and anthemic LP this year.

While Pitchfork's review goes too far in championing the band's galvanizing call-to-arms**, the indie king-makers are right to recognize the potency of the WU LYF's ad campaign, no matter how juvenile, and the LP itself, no matter how familiar it may sound--"But underneath all that bouncing room echo, you hear a band trying to live up to its own hype, unglamorously woodshedding until every arrangement was tight as hell," wisely concludes P4K's Ian Cohen.

At its worst, Go Tell Fire to the Mountain is a batch of songs perfect to hear live, in some crowded, dank venue, beer in hand, arms around your best friends. What's so wrong with that?

*More on this phenomena in a later post.

**Doing so widely ignores rabble-rousing bands like Titus Andronicus or The Hold Steady, who both share a lot of similarities to WU LYF. I mean, really?

We bros, you lost man / We bros so long / Put away your guns, man / And sing this song

Mediafire Link:

WU LYF - Go Tell Fire to the Mountain

Right-Click + Save Link As:

WU LYF - We Bros

MP3s: Those New Radiohead King of Limbs Remixes


I'm a bit of a purist when it comes to Radiohead, but the first volley of these King of Limbs remixes are pretty great--fitting for an album that so rigidly stuck to electronic music blueprints.

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Radiohead - Little by Little (Caribou Remix)
Radiohead - Lotus Flower (Jacques Greene Remix)