May 27, 2011

Vetiver

The Errant Charm

1. It’s Beyond Me
2. Worse For Wear
3. Can’t You Tell
4. Hard To Break
5. Fog Emotion
6. Right Away
7. Wonder Why
8. Ride Ride Ride
9. Faint Praise
10. Soft Glass


The Errant Charm is the new album from San Francisco’s Vetiver, and the band’s fifth full-length overall. Recorded by bandleader Andy Cabic and Thom Monahan, The Errant Charm is a superb soundtrack for an afternoon idyll. And that’s fitting. As he worked on material for the new record Cabic spent hours wandering the streets around San Francisco’s Richmond District, listening to rough mixes, tinkering with lyrics and arrangements. You can hear his strides in the tempo: Not hurried, just excited to be heading somewhere. And The Errant Charm features some of Vetiver’s most unabashed pop songs to date, with songs like the hazy, layered and sunlight-dappled “Hard to Break,” and the driving, propulsive “Wonder Why.” The Errant Charm. Errant as in wayward, elusive. Wandering but not lost. Within that wandering, all manner of small treasures are uncovered and new ones surface with each listen. 

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

Washed Out

Within and Without

1. Eyes Be Closed
2. Echoes
3. Amor Fati
4. Soft
5. Far Away
6. Before
7. You and I
8. Within and Without
9. A Dedication
 Washed Out is the operational alias for Atlanta, GA’s Ernest Greene, and on July 12th, we at Sub Pop Records will be releasing the first Washed Out full-length, Within and Without. We are excited about this, to an almost unseemly degree. Greene recorded Within and Without with Ben Allen, who, among a great many other things, co-produced Animal Collective’s Merriweather Post Pavillion, Gnarls Barkley’s St. Elsewhere and Deerhunter’s Halcyon Digest. In 2009 Washed Out released two critically-acclaimed EPs; Life of Leisure (Mexican Summer) and High Times (Mirror Universe Tapes). Most recently, the Washed Out song “Feel It All Around,” from Life of Leisure, was chosen as the theme song for the new and very funny IFC series Portlandia, which features Saturday Night Live cast member Fred Armisen and Sleater-Kinney Pop alum and current Wild Flag member Carrie Brownstein. In addition to performing at this year’s Sasquatch! Music Festival in May, Washed Out will be touring in these United States in September of 2011.

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
Label

May 25, 2011

Laki Mera

The Proximity Effect


01. The Beginning of the End
02. More Than You
03. Fingertips
04. Double Back
05. Onion Machine
06. How Dare You
07. Crater
08. Solstice
09. Pollok Park
10. Fool
11. Reverberation
12. The End of the Beginning




AWESOME ~ HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

May 20, 2011

Seapony

Go With Me


1. Dreaming
2. I Never Would
3. Blue Star
4. Into the Sea
5. I Really Do
6. Go Away
7. Always
8. So Low
9. What You See
10. Nobody Knows
11. Where We Go
12. With You

The music of Seapony is refreshing in its simplicity. Most songs on Go With Me use no more than three chords, with an average running time around two-and-a-half minutes. In lieu of a human drummer, the Seattle trio entrusts time-keeping to a vintage gizmo the size of a desktop calculator. The lyrics to “Dreaming,” the track that catapulted them into the spotlight, are just six lines long. Like Young Marble Giants and Beat Happening before them, this young three-piece has generated excitement that belies their music’s modest means. And their back story is just as no-nonsense.

Seapony is songwriter Danny Rowland, singer Jen Weidl, and bass player Ian Brewer. Danny and Ian grew up and made music together in Oklahoma. In 2001, they moved to Olympia, WA. In 2004, Danny visited Cincinnati, missed his flight home, and ended up staying in Ohio for four years; he met Jen during his Buckeye State sojourn. After a period of work and study in Lawrence, KS, the happy couple came west in 2010 and were reunited with Ian in Seattle. Seapony was born.

Although Danny has composed many originals over the years, “Dreaming” was the only finished Seapony tune when he and Jen arrived in the Emerald City; the rest of the songs featured on Go With Me were written afterward. Likewise, the friends had only played as a trio once before, while Danny and Jen were vacationing in Seattle. “We were all messing around with an acoustic guitar, a glockenspiel, and an Omnichord,” Danny recalls. The vision for Seapony was more focused: Fuzz-drenched guitar playing simple chord progressions, topped with concise melodic hooks and Jen’s breathy vocals.

Other bands make a fuss…

RECOMMENDED

May 19, 2011

Thomas Dybdahl

Songs

  1. From Grace 
2. A Love Story 
3. The Great October Sound   
4. Cecilia   
5. All Is Not Lost   
6. B.A. Part 
7. Don't Lose Yourself   
8.  Pale Green Eyes 
9. One Day You'll Dance For Me New York City
10. Dice
11. It's Always Been You
12. Something Real
13. Rain Down On Me 
14. Songs



Thomas Dybdahl - The Making Of 'Songs'

The new album ‘Songs' in stores end of April across Europe, and July 12th in the US and Canada features songs from all 5 of his previous albums.

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

May 18, 2011

Bon Iver

Bon Iver

This incredible new record by Bon Iver, Bon Iver, is the follow-up to the debut, For Emma Forever Ago. It will be released in North America on June 21st, 2011 and June 2oth in the UK.
After the jump we have the official track listing as well as a short piece written about the album by author Michael Perry.
Side A:
Perth
Minnesota, WI
Holocene
Towers
Michicant
Side B:
Hinnom, TX
Wash.
Calgary
Lisbon, OH
Beth/Rest




First it was For Emma, Forever Ago. The soul in a refraction of icicles. A moment hanging like breath on air. And yet life – even still life – is not still. The story is not a story if it does not unravel. Your eyes you may cast backward, but the heart is locked in the chest and must beat forever forward. Bon Iver, Bon Iver is the frozen beast pressing upward from a loosening earth, one ear cocked to the echo of the ghost choir still singing, the other craving the martial call of drums tumbling, of thrum and wheeze. The desolation smoke has dissipated, cut with strips of brass. Celebration will not be denied, the cabinet cannot contain the rattle, there is meat on the bones.
It’s there right away, in the thicker-stringed guitar and military snare of “Perth,” and “Minnesota, WI.” Anyone who had a single listen to For Emma will peg Justin Vernon’s vocals immediately, but there is a sturdiness – an insistence – to Bon Iver,Bon Iver that allows him to escape the cabin in the woods without burning it to the ground. “Holocene” opens with simple finger-picking. The vocal is regret spun hollow and strung on a wire. Then the snare-beat breaks and drives us forward and up and up until we fly silent through the black-star night, our wreckage in view whole atmospheres below. The vocals in “Hinnom, TX” ease to the muffled depths, while the instrumentation remains sparse and cosmic. “Calgary” is a worship song to everything For Emma mourned, and at the point in the final track “Beth/Rest” when Vernon sings, “I ain’t livin’ in the dark no more” it is clear he isn’t dancing in the sunshine, but rather shading toward a new light.
“Bon Iver is often equated with just me,” says Vernon, “but you are who surrounds you, and for Bon Iver, Bon Iver I wanted to invite those voices as musical catalysts.” Thus on the track “Beth/Rest” and throughout the album, we hear the pedal steel of Greg Leisz (Lucinda Williams, Bill Frisell), the uniquely layered low end of Colin Stetson’s (Tom Waits, Arcade Fire) saxophones, the riffing of Mike Lewis’ (Happy Apple, Andrew Bird) altos and tenors, and the lush horns of C.J. Camerieri (Rufus Wainwright, Sufjan Stevens). Bon Iver regulars Sean Carey, Mike Noyce and Matt McCaughan contributed vocals, drums and production, Rob Moose (Antony and the Johnsons, The National) helped with arranging and added strings, and fellow members of Volcano Choir, Jim Schoenecker and Tom Wincek provided processing.
Bon Iver, Bon Iver was recorded and mixed at April Base Studios, a remodeled veterinarian’s clinic located in rural Fall Creek, Wisconsin. The main recording space is constructed over a defunct indoor pool attached to the clinic. “It’s an unique space and destination; it’s our home out here,” says Vernon, who purchased the structure with his brother in late 2008 with the sole intention of converting it into his ideal recording studio. “It’s been a wonderful freedom, working in a place we built. It’s also only three miles from the house I grew up in, and just ten minutes from the bar where my parents met.” The creation of Bon Iver, Bon Iver was a three-year process, and Vernon says the completion of the studio paralleled the completion of the album. “I was writing and recording in the windows of time snatched between tours in support of For Emma,” he says. “When I finally came home to hunker down for a solid stretch there was a feeling of solid ground and an opportunity for liberation waiting in the space for me.”
In the absence of solid ground, the whirlwind becomes a whirlpool, and Bon Iver,Bon Iver is Justin Vernon returning to former haunts with a new spirit. The reprises are there – solitude, quietude, hope and desperation compressed – but always a rhythm arises, a pulse vivified by gratitude and grace notes, some as bright as a bicycle bell. The winter, the legend, has faded to just that, and this is the new momentary present. The icicles have dropped, rising up again as grass.
- Michael Perry

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED 

May 11, 2011

Love Inks

 E.S.P.


1. Wave Goodbye 
2. Blackeye 
3. Leather Glove 
4. Can't Be Wrong 
5. Skeleton Key 
6. Down And Out 
7. Too Wild
8. Rock On
9. In My Dreams
10. Too Late 



HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

May 6, 2011

Wild Beasts

Smother


1. Lion's Share
2. Bed of Nails
3. Deeper
4. Loop the Loop
5. Plaything
6. Invisible
7. Albatross
8. Reach a Bit Further
9. Burning
10. End Come Too Soon

Smother, the 3rd album from Wild Beasts, is released on Domino on 9th May 2011 on CD, 12" vinyl, and digital download. Smother was recorded in late 2010 in a remote part of North Wales, and was co-produced by Wild Beasts and long term collaborator Richard Formby.

 Album Of The Year!!!






AWESOME ~ HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

May 4, 2011

Summer Heart


Never Let Me Go



1. Broken Hearts
2. Time For A Dreamer
3. Please Stay
4. I Miss You
5. The North
6. Simple Minds
7. Who Said That Time Was All We Had

 RECOMMENDED