MBV Music

Archive for October, 2010

October 26th, 2010 12:32pm

Over Backlit City Skylines

James Rabbit - “Options” No one makes neuroses sound as fun and exciting as James Rabbit. “Options,” basically a song in which Tyler Martin freaks out because he can’t figure out a way to get through to an elusive girl who is “free of all media”, places all its emphasis on the thrill of the chase. The song barrels forwards, totally urgent but also quite gleeful, and eager to take on the challenge. It always sounds good-natured and sweet, but that especially comes through when the song drops into a slower waltz section that contrasts a genuine romantic whimsy with the girl-crazy anxiousness of the verses and chorus. And man, what a chorus — it goes from hook to hook to hook, bursting with ideas like a guy who can’t keep his mind in one place despite focusing on only one thing.

Get it for free from James Rabbit’s Bandcamp page.


October 25th, 2010 2:13pm

LHB’s Shorties (Elvis Costello, Squeeze, and More)


Vanity Fair interviews Elvis Costello about his new album, National Ransom (out November 2nd) (and also streams the album).


At the Guardian Music Blog, Glenn Tilbrook explains why he decided to rerecord the Squeeze back catalog.

Having the recordings of my songs owned forever by someone else, with no chance of getting them back, is a little bit like that. So re-recording them is, thanks to a contractual loophole, a little bit like breaking that proverbial child out of prison. Those songs are free now, and back where they belong.


The Huffington Post profiles singer-songwriter Amanda Palmer.


PopMatters is celebrating the 10th anniversary of Radiohead's Kid A album with two weeks of features about the record.


On sale for $1.99 at Amazon MP3: The Clientele's Minotaur album.


PopMatters interviews legendary music and culture critic Griel Marcus.


NPR is streaming Brian Eno's new album, Small Craft on a Milk Sea (out November 2nd).


In the Guardian Music Blog, Rosie Swash says a final goodbye to the Sony Walkman.


Bookgasm lists seven worthwhile new rock and roll books.


October 25th, 2010 12:23pm

Girls – “Broken Dreams Club”

girls-broken-dreams-club-hi-res-cover-art
GirlsBroken Dreams Club
Out 11/22 on True Panther


October 22nd, 2010 11:48am

LHB’s Shorties (Warpaint, The Walkmen, and More)


The Irish Independent glowingly reviews one of my favorite albums of the year, Warpaint's The Fool (out October 25th).

Embracing a wide range of influences -- from post-rock wig-outs to gentle country and dream pop -- they somehow manage not to sound disjointed. In fact, this is an album in the old-fashioned sense -- great thought has been given to the sequence in which the songs appear, and the resulting collection ebbs and flows wonderfully.


The Montreal Gazette reviews Sean Willentz's new book, Bob Dylan in America.

Bob Dylan in America is not a biography, nor is it a linear trawl through Dylan's huge (and very much still growing) body of work. Rather, it is a set of entry points, using Dylan as a living prism through which endlessly subdividing and merging folkways can be seen if viewed in the right light.


The Chicago Tribune interviews Sleigh Bells' Derek Miller about the band's next album.

How would you characterize the new stuff?

It's definitely more metal, it's a little less dance-y. I think the arrangements are much stronger, and it's more melodic. Some of the stuff on "Treats" has a party vibe, like fist-in-the-air type of songs. There may be less of those.


Blare interviews Jenny and Johnny (aka Jenny Lewis and Johnathan Rice).


Guided By Voices has opened its own digital music store, with both studio albums and live recordings available.


Hypebot lists 10 truths about the modern recording industry as an addendum to MediaShift's list covering the same topic.


Playbutton is an mp3 player in a pinback button preloaded with music.


The Walkmen visit The Current studio for an interview and live performance.


At the Guardian Music Blog, Warpaint's Emily Kokal remembers Ari Up of the Slits.


October 22nd, 2010 11:08am

MP3: Crystal Stilts – “Shake The Shackles”

Crystal Stilts
Crystal Stilts – “Shake The Shackles” From their new 7-inch, which is now available for ordering at the Slumberland site.


October 21st, 2010 4:52pm

The Coathangers / The Numerators – Split 7″

Coathangers Numerators Cover Art
The Coathangers / The NumeratorsSplit 7″
Out 12/7 on Suicide Squeeze


October 21st, 2010 4:47pm

Live: Ty Segall, Styrofoam Ones and The Modern Men at Halifax Pop Explosion

Photo By Frank YangFrank YangOne of the perks of being my own boss, as it were, is that no one can tell me what I have to cover when I’m out and about, particularly at a festival like Halifax Pop Explosion. And since I’ve already had and taken the opportunity to see many of the big names playing the festival, I went into this week with the mandate of seeing stuff I hadn’t seen before, be it on recommendations from others, positive MySpace first impressions or just because it’s located nearby and I’m lazy.

The Wednesday night festival programme was bit lighter than the rest of the week, basically offering one show per genre of interest. There was the pop show, the metal show, the electro-dance show, the punk show, the GWAR show. Having seen The New Pornographers not three weeks ago, I skipped the pop-friendly bill at The Forum and headed to the Paragon Theatre – conveniently located around the corner from the hotel – for some synth-driven action, kicked off by Halifax’s The Modern Men. Their online samples implied an ’80s-indebted New Wave/New Romantic-ish outfit, and that’s pretty much what was delivered, though more organic and meaty-sounding than expected. Propelled by two drummers with nary an electronic kit or laptop in sight, they had songs that weren’t especially deep – like their influences – but heavy on hooks and groove. The quality of the tunes made up for the general lack of stage presence and mood-killing stage banter – there’s really no need to introduce each song with the title and the style it’s in.

Photos: The Modern Men @ The Paragon Theatre – October 20, 2010
MySpace: The Modern Men


I’d intended to see the next act, Styrofoam Ones, a number of times back in Toronto but apparently we both had to travel to the east coast for that to happen. And interestingly, their set was the inverse of Modern Men’s, in both the positive and negative sense. Delayed by some technical issues, when the trio finally got underway they seemed a bit out of sorts, audibly out of time with one another and when your MO is tightness, that’s a problem. This, however, was offset to a degree by the fact that they didn’t seem to notice or care and kept playing with enough on-stage attitude and swagger that you almost believed that this was how they meant to sound. Within a few songs they did get it together, though, and from then on their showmanship was working with and not in spite of their tunes – good-time synth-rock that favoured vintage combo organ sounds rather than ’80s square waves and reliant more on punkish energy than sophistication.

Photos: Styrofoam Ones @ The Paragon Theatre – October 20, 2010
MP3: Styrofoam Ones – “Blue Lines”
MySpace: Styrofoam Ones


I had been advised to check out San Francisco’s Ty Segall – whom I’d never heard a note of – on the basis that his shows in Toronto not long ago were “intense”. After being in the front line (or kill zone) of his show at the Seahorse Tavern last night, I’d say that yeah, that’s pretty accurate. And it’s not because his stuff – garage rock with a goodly amount of pop melodicism injected – is especially aggressive or even his performance. It’s because his fans – jammed into the small underground space – were intent on creating bedlam and he was perfectly happy to soundtrack it, and woe to anyone who was so unfortunate as to be up front innocently trying to take some pictures. But besides being kicked in the head by a crowdsurfer and mashed into the stage ad nauseum, it wasn’t really that bad – I’ve been in worse – and for the most part it was just people having fun. Amidst material that I presume was from his latest record Melted, we got a cover of Sabbath’s “Paranoid” and the kids going nuts somehow managed to find another gear. Fun times, nothing broken, night one finis.

Photos: Ty Segall @ The Seahorse Tavern – October 20, 2010
MP3: Ty Segall – “It #1″


Spinner has a profile on the Halifax Pop Explosion.


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