MBV Music

Archive for November, 2009

November 23rd, 2009 11:59am

CANDLELIT WORF

photo source

Tune-Yards - “Hap-B (Congo)” A song that feels less song and more feeling. The judder and shake of a long train journey, clattering along tracks, blinking eyes awake at sudden sun, strange trees whizzing by, thin birds, arid fields, homes hardly glimpsed. [MySpace / this track from the Lifted Brow's extraordinary ATLAS issue (aka Browrovision 2010), featuring new music by all sorts (from Chip Kidd to Little Wings), and unpublished writing by the likes of, er, David Foster Wallace - buy!]

Arrington De Dionyso - “Tak Terbatas” Arrington De Dionyso is to klingons as Marvin Gaye is to human beings. Which is to say that this man's voice is like the stroke of a k'takh, his saxophones like the pursed lunging h'kra of a live harkh'me'faw. Like a sheep in wolf's clothing. [buy]


November 23rd, 2009 11:32am

Download Animal Collective’s “Fall Be Kind” EP Right Now

Download Animal Collective’s Fall Be Kind EP Right Now


November 23rd, 2009 11:22am

I Like It, I May Not Like It

Idiot Glee - “All Packed Up” In the glowing shade of an evening nap this song floats in the open window. Between sleep and awareness, this shapeless thing is like second-hand smoke, like practiced violin, like curry. In a closed courtyard, with rugs out of windows and soccer games playing, this song swims lazily up where the sky starts, floats up past the rooms like laundry steam, and swirls up the silence like a ribbon of colour. [MySpace]


November 23rd, 2009 10:58am

The Silent Treatment Isn’t Helping

Lacrosse - “I See A Brightness”The verses of “I See A Brightness” are less like a conversation and more like a split-screen. The girl is the optimist, hoping for a resolution to her conflict with the guy, who is far more hurt and insists that their relationship is over. There’s no back story provided, but it’s pretty clear that if someone has caused this rift, it’s probably her — she certainly sounds like someone who wants to force someone else to compromise while having everything work out in a way that is totally convenient to her wishes. Even still, the guy is being petty and unreasonable as he attempts to shut off an intense emotional bond. The chorus is where the communication comes in. He’s not totally on board with her desire to mend what’s broken, but he’s coming around. The brightness she is promising could just be a brief flash of joy and forgiveness before falling back in the same old negative patterns, but it’s probably worth a shot.

Buy it from Amazon.


November 23rd, 2009 10:47am

Rough Trade’s Top 10 Albums of 2009

I was just perusing the respected Rough Trade Shops’ 2009 Albums of the Year List, and noticed something awesome: all of the Top 10 have RT-exclusive bonus CDs bundled with them. AND, I noticed something else awesome: in addition to some names you might expect to see in a Rough Trade Top 10 (The XX, Grizzly Bear, The Pains of Being Pure at Heart), there’s one I certainly didn’t expect to see:

(#9) Forest FireSurvival

…which RT calls “an absolute revelation.”

Forest Fire - Survival - Album Cover Art

To recap, Catbird released this album back in June, 2008 — on CD, on ridiculous “Giant Size CD”, and as a totally free 320kbps MP3 download. At the end of 2008, Survival had the honor of being crowned Le Blogotheque’s Album of the Year. In 2009, the record was picked up by the great French label Talitres (home to the National, Destroyer, & the Walkmen) for European release, and by Broken Sound for a UK one. Then in July ‘09 — almost exactly a year after we first released Survival — the record was graced with a full U.S. re-release, courtesy of Brooklyn’s own Infinite Best (which included a (yes!) limited-edition vinyl version (!). Cut to 5 months later and there’s Survival sitting comfortably in Rough Trade Shops’ 2009 Albums of the Year List.

In my eyes, that’s a hell of a long way to go for a record that started its life as a free download. It’s continued to go on, to keep rolling along and picking up new admirers, DESPITE being (even still) largely ignored right here in the US. And I’m so incredibly proud to have been part of it. Congratulations, Forest Fire!

MP3: Forest Fire – “I Make Windows”
STREAM: Survival at Catbird Records
BUY CD/LP (US): at Infinite Best
BUY CD (EUR): at Talitres
BUY CD (UK): at Broken Sound / at Rough Trade (w/bonus CD)

FWIW, Merriweather Post Pavilion made also Rough Trade’s 2009 List: it came eleventh.


November 23rd, 2009 9:18am

LHB’s Shorties (David Rawlings, Liars and More)


Mother Jones interviews David Rawlings about his solo debut album, A Friend of a Friend.

MJ: So A Friend of a Friend I think is actually funnier than a lot of the Gillian Welch albums that have come out. What are the big differences you see between your own music and Gillian's?

DR: The lead singer isn't as good, which is one thing. But I feel like my singing style is a little more rambunctious. When Gillian and I started playing concerts with just the two of us, but under my name, we both noticed that we played a little harder on our guitars and sang a little louder—that the overall feel was a little lighter in that way. It wasn't quite as moody.


In the Boston Globe, author Steve Almond shares his lifetime obsession with music.


Stereo Subversion explains how Broken Social Scene "changed the communal aspect of music."


On sale at Amazon MP3: Death Cab for Cutie's 13-track 2008 album, Narrow Stairs, for $2.99


The Guardian's Data Blog offers a spreadsheet of NME's best 50 albums of the decade, which includes top chart positions and links to original reviews.


The Scotsman profiles the folk duo Ruby Throat.


Drowned in Sound kicks off its 2010 music preview week with a Liars interview.


The Guardian points out companies that offer legal alternatives to illegal music downloading.


The Guardian's music blog has started counting down its albums of the decade.


November 23rd, 2009 8:13am

The Rural Alberta Advantage, Bahamas and Fox Jaws at Lee’s Palace in Toronto

Photo By Frank YangFrank YangIt was just 51 weeks ago that The Rural Alberta Advantage first stepped onto the stage at Lee’s Palace, there as support for a co-headlining show featuring two of the most lauded indie acts in Canada – The Acorn and Ohbijou. They seemed a bit awed by the scale of their surroundings, having mostly played the smaller, cozier rooms of the city to that point, but were far from intimidated and deliver another wonderful set and as I commented at the time, “I’ve long said that people simply need to hear them to love them, and I think it’s finally happening”. Now I’m not going to suggest that I have any particular soothsaying abilities, but on that point, I daresay I nailed it.

The past year has been a fairy tale for the trio, particularly the last six months or so in which they’ve gone from local heroes to genuine international (hey, America counts as a foreign country) phenomenons, re-releasing their debut album Hometowns on a major independent label and touring the continent multiple times over, selling out larger and larger venues each time out and gaining fans and accolades along the way – people hear them and they love them. Simple. So while their completely sold-out hometown show at Lee’s Palace on Friday night didn’t mark the end of their whirlwind 2009 – they commence another US tour the second week of December – it did provide a tidy, full-circle point for those of us predisposed to tidiness in such matters.

Opening the night was Barrie’s Fox Jaws, whom I hadn’t seen since August 2007 circa their debut Goodbye Doris. They’ve since released their second record and despite the epic-length title – At Odds (or: Exercises In Separation While United In The Fall) – low-frills, spirited and soulful pop-rock is still the order of the day. The raw and raspy vocals of Carleigh Aikens remains their super power but in a sense, it’s also their kryptonite. It’s so evocative of the blues-rock belters synonymous with classic rock radio that even when they try to expand their sound beyond the more straight-ahead, it tends to overpower. Still, it’s not the worst problem to have and when they play to their strengths, they put on an impressive and entertaining show.

Though I’d never seen Bahamas before, their scorecard started at a handicap. I’d seen principal Afie Jurvanen a couple times some years back, both solo and fronting Paso Mino, and hadn’t been impressed so while I was wiling to give his newest project a fair shake, it was going to be a tough sell. And the boxscore went something like this: points lost for the popped collar on the lumberjack shirt, points lost for the affected, stoner-dude banter (the “nice, nice” shtick isn’t working) , points gained for a couple of really funny jokes despite the aforementioned demerit though it’s worth noting that he was only genuinely funny when he strayed off script and actually interacted with the audience, points gained for some seriously tasty guitarwork, points gained for having better and more memorable songs than from what I recall from his past shows, points gained for playing a funky old Silvertone rather than the titular Pink Strat of his album, massive points gained for starting to cover Prince’s “Purple Rain”, all points lost for not following through with it – only delivering a couple of verses and ditching it only a little ways into the solo. I know he could have knocked it out of the park, but instead just walked away. Such a shame.

By this point, I think I should be disqualified from trying to offer up any review of an RAA show – I’ve seen them too many times (this was occasion eight or nine) and have too much affection for them as individuals and their music to even try and pretend to be objective. So with that disclaimer in mind, take my declaration that they put on yet another great show for whatever you think it’s worth. Set up in line across the front of the Lee’s stage, the trio were visibly overwhelmed by the size and fervor of the congregation of folks who’d come out to see them. And it’s understandable – as recently as this Spring, they would play constantly around the city and while always appreciated, were probably taken for granted some. But to so quickly be in a situation where outside scalpers were plying their trade and inside the fans were jumping up and down and singing along to every word – that’s a trip.

Over the course of the hour-long set, all of Hometowns was aired (save for “The Air”) and though they’ve been working that material for as long as I’ve been following the band – nigh on three years now – they still perform it with as much energy as emotion as ever and just as they don’t seem to tire of playing the songs, I still don’t tire of hearing them played. That said, it was exciting to hear more and more new material working its way into the set – some of the songs more fully evolved than others, but all carrying the trademark RAA sound and style. With the new year bringing even more touring for the band, it’s hard to say when they’ll have a chance to get down to recording album number two, but you can hardly fault them for wanting to keep riding this wave, which shows no signs of abating. After all, as the cover of The Littlest Hobo theme which they slipped in mid-set says, “Down this road that never seems to end, where new adventure lies just around the bend… Maybe tomorrow, I’ll want to settle down, until tomorrow, I’ll just keep moving on”. There may already be a “Ballad Of The RAA” but for the moment, this is their song.

BlogTO and Narratives also have reviews of the show.

Photos: The Rural Alberta Advantage, Bahamas, Fox Jaws @ Lee’s Palace – November 20, 2009
MP3: The Rural Alberta Advantage – “Frank, AB”
MP3: The Rural Alberta Advantage – “Don’t Haunt This Place”
MP3: Fox Jaws – “Karmonica”
MP3: Fox Jaws – “Quarantine Girl”
MySpace: The Rural Alberta Advantage
MySpace: Fox Jaws

Tallahassee.com, The Star-Telegram and The St. Petersburg Times interview Neko Case.

John Darnielle discusses the Biblical themes of The Life Of The World To Come with Nashville Scene.

Califone has been added as support for Wilco’s upcoming Hamilton and London shows on February 23 and 24, respectively. Their latest album is All My Friends Are Funeral Singers.

MP3: Califone – “Funeral Singers”
MP3: Califone – “Ape-Like”
Video: Califone – “Funeral Singers”

The Von Bondies, last seen in these parts tearing up the tiny Boardwalk Stage at V Fest, have set a December 5 date at the El Mocambo as part of a benefit show for Toronto’s homeless. Tickets are $15 in advance, donations of winter coats or blankets gratefully accepted.

MP3: The Von Bondies – “This Is Our Perfect Crime”
MP3: The Von Bondies – “Pale Bride”

Baeble Music has a Guest Apartment video session with El Perro Del Mar.


Hit 'Tab' to search this site.

 Said The Gramophone
Said The Gramophone
 Large Hearted Boy
Large Hearted Boy
 Fluxblog
Fluxblog
 Chromewaves
Chromewaves
TEAM:Catbirdseat
Catbirdseat
MBV
Ryan Catbird | Founder
Matt LeMay | Contribuditor
Site RSS Feed