Archive for June, 2009

Jesus Christ; That’s a Pretty Face

“The kind you’d find on someone that could save.” “Jesus Christ” by Brand New is one of those songs that just floors you. It seriously just stops all of my functions when I listen to it. You can hear the terrible sadness in the repetitive guitar and the aching vocals. I think of someone shaking their head because someone else is so beautiful and the other person doesn’t even see it in themselves. You can’t help but feel powerful when you sing this song, especially if you’ve heard it before. The bridge begins, and you know that something is building, and building. “We’ve all got wood and nails, and we churn out hate in factories” is screamed like it’s the last thing the voice will get to say for the rest of it’s silent life. It gives me chills every time, and I’ve listened to it probably 5o times. Truly Incredible.

“Do I get the gold chariot? Do I float through the ceiling?”

Broken Window and a Pretty Blue Sky

“Communion Cups and Someone’s Coat” starts off Disc two of Around the Well. Another repeat EP song, this is an Numbered Days era song, along the lines of “Sunset Soon Forgotten” or “Sodom, South Georgia.” It’s only two minutes long, but it’s a fantastic glimpse of a life that seems perfectly happy. There’s not enough of that in today’s music. The next track, “Belated Promise Ring,” stay along the same vein, but it features prominent use of an upright base, giving the base line more umph than it usually has, and giving the song even more of a bluegrass feel. (I think that’s what that is?) It tells the story of the narrator and his Rebecca, a difficult woman who he loves anyway. An example line is “She may kiss me when her girlfriends leave again.” Classic.

“God Made The Automobile” is where you realize you’ve really gotten to the good stuff. It opens with eggshakers and half-hum, half-aahs that continue throughout a la “Trapeze Swinger”. It has a really singable melody, and it keeps moving; the banjo part makes me smile. A lot of his banjo parts have that effect. “God made the automobile, and I made a little boy.” “Homeward These Shoes” is a minute and a half long, but you only kind of notice. It feels just as developed as any of his two and a half minute songs.  I want this song to repeat, with a full choir coming in the second time through. I think that would be awesome. The next track is a cover of some 80′s song. “Love Vigilantes” is the story of a soldier whose wife gets a telegram, and there’s a better version offered as a bonus track on iTunes. This version is faster than the other one, with more percussive guitar, and the harmony his sister adds are sorely missed. I knew the other version already because it was offered on an iTunes exclusive EP a while back and I bought it. But seriously, check this one out.

Huge fans might know “Sinning Hands” from his Live at Lollapalooza EP, but this is it’s first studio release. It’s another Endless Numbered outtake, and the style kind of gets repetetive at this point. The song structure is more similair to something off of Shepherd’s Dog, however, with the verse-instrumental break-verse format, so that’s a nice change. This is another one that would benefit from being faster. But I guess it wouldn’t be the same song then. The ending actually kind of reminds me of Built To Spill’s “Conventional Wisdom.” Huh. There’s a comparison I wasn’t expecting. They might be in the same key or something.

“No Moon” Reminds me off what “Woman King” would be if it was slower. Strange percussion, dissonant but not unpleasant harmonies, a similair styled melody, a repetetive slide guitar part to serve as a break between verses, a guitar part with a big jump in it. It’s almost as though he wrote this song, and then took all the good things from it and made a better song. Works for me I guess. Analysis like this is what happens when you listen to everything someone has ever recorded.

“Serpent Charmer” is the beginning of the Shepherd’s Dog era stuff, as is evidenced by the noise at the beginning. Pure, unproduced Iron & Wine would never have but that in, and I’m so glad that he has matured as a song writer. And if you don’t get it right awaym this song is entrancing. You are the snake. The vocal melody of this song is simple, but as good as it gets, as is the banjo part. I always think of banjo as being a negative thing, but it so isn’t. It’s another short one, but so is “Naked As We Came” and that song’s amazing. This is a standout track.

You know what else is a standout track? “Carried Home.” It has echoes of “Peace Beneath The City” but has more piano, his voice is clearer, and it’s a little slower. It has a piano solo, and then the outro. Oh, the outro. At 2:23, a mantra-like wail of “Carried home, carried home,” begins, slowly adding more harmonies, as well as more off-beat guitar plucks and piano improving. The vocals dissolve away at 4:40, and saxophone comes in, the guitar picking stops, a synth riff starts, a weird bass comes in, and ohmygodmybrainmelted. This song was originally a B-side to “Boy With A Coin.” Imagine those two together and allow you mind to be blown.

“Kingdom of the Animals” is the other B-Side from “BWAC” and it’s a piano driven feel-good jaunt. It has some great background vocals, but that’s kinda ll it has going for it. It’s fun to listen to , but I’m not gonna go out of my way for – ACCORDIAN SOLO! What? Yes! That’s fantastic. And now the song is better. *Starts song over* Yep, it’s still boring ACCORDIAN and now it’s good. Incredible songwriting right there.

“It’s a cold, cold place in the arms of a thief.” “Arms of a Theif” would have been at home on Shepherd’s Dog, and I wish it was on there so I could’ve gotten to know it sooner. It’s very electronic, and it’s probably the fastest song on this album. It has Sam’s standard epic backup vocals, but they seriously just make a great song amazing. He also has the octave effect going for him on this one, singing really low and mildly high at the same time.

The collection wraps up with the first, official, Iron & Wine release of “The Trapeze Swinger.” See my post entitled “My Parents Keep Scolding Me” for a full review, but yeah, it’s still amazing.

¡Adios, mis amores!

As They Marvel With Love At The Sunset

Look, it’s not my fault I started this thing right in the midst of rediscovering Iron & Wine. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I’m doing another article on him, suck it up. This one’s on his recently released rarities album, Around The Well, a collection of songs ranging from those that didn’t make it onto the lo-fi and personal Creek Drank the Cradle to the B-sides off of the “Boy With A Coin” single. Another note: Upon writing this review, this will only be the second time I’ve heard most of these songs. I’m sort of using this as a way to but down my thoughts and remember the names of the ones I like.  : )

Disc one starts with “Dearest Forsaken,” a great song that has already been on three other EP/Singles, so die hard fans knew it already. It is from the early days (as are a lot of the early songs,) so the vocals are hushed and breathy, the guitar is mildly fuzzed, and the banjo is echoy. “Morning” is features guitar a la “Naked As We Came” and the standard slide guitar, but I could take it or leave it. “Loud As Hope” has a more interesting melody, and the slide guitar is used more effectively. It’s amazing what that instrument can do for a song; I really think nothing else has the same effect. “Peng! 33″ (which is apparently a cover, although I’d never heard of it before,) is really fun to listen to; it doesn’t have the usual writing style that Sam employs, especially early on, but it’s unmistakeably Iron & Wine. “Sacred Vision” is a gorgeous slow song with great harmonies, something less common in his early work. “Friends They Are Jewels” is boring and way too long. (Sadly, that’s also common in his early stuff… ) “Hickory” would be a really good song if it was about twice as fast; it tells a good story and has a fun chord progression and banjo part. Maybe it would be good live. “Waitin’ For a Superman” is Sam’s voice at it’s breathiest, and I think this song benefits from it. It’s in clear contrast to the crisp guitar and even crisp lyrics.

“Swans and The Swimming” comes up as a surprise; it seems as though this song was the gateway between Creek and Endless Numbered Days. It’s guitar part is really intricate, and less repetitive than the other early songs. This is by far the best song so far. “Call Your Boys” is another slow boring one, and it over uses the slide guitar to the effect that it gets boring and almost annoying. This disc ends with his cover of “Such Great Heights,” which if you haven’t heard, you’ve been living under a rock. The majority of people who know Iron & Wine know him because this song was on the Garden State Soundtrack. (Or at least that was true until “Flightless Bird, American Mouth” was in Twilight. Gag me with a spoon. I hate Twilight fans.)

Disc Two will be up sometime tomorrow! It’s way better! I know that already.

Album Art for Around The Well

Album Art for "Around The Well"

The Glove Compartment Isn’t Accurately Named

And everybody knows it.“Title and Registration” by Death Cab For Cutie was one of the first songs I ever knew by them, and it’s remained one of my favorite songs. It tells a depressing story, Ben Gibbard’s voice is just perfect for it. The imaginative ideas off of the Transatlanticism album are all pulled together in this one song. With it’s syncopated and catchy guitar riff serving as an exact harmony to the vocals. This song sets me into a trance. I seem to forget everything that’s going on in the world; everything but this song. And I can vividly picture everything that he describes. “I was searching for some legal document/as the rain beat down on the hood/when I stumbled upon pictures I tried to forget/and that’s how this idea/was drilled into my head.”

Video!

This Is How I Am Repaid

This is my first full out experience with The Decemberists, and it gets better every time I listen to it. I originally looked into it because I saw on My Brightest Diamond’s website that she had contributed vocals to it. Upon listening to a few samples on iTunes, I wasn’t that impressed, but I got it anyway. This album (and it’s a deceptively short one, at 17 tracks and only 58 minutes.) is meant to be listened to all the way through; it tells the story of Margaret (voiced by Lavender Diamond’s Becky Stark,) her shape-shifting lover (voiced by Decemberists front-man Colin Meloy,) an evil queen (voiced by My Brightest Diamond’s Shara Worden) and a few other characters (also voiced by Meloy.)

The “Prelude” kinda confused me; I thought something had gone wrong in the downloading process, but in truth this song is very quiet. I’m pretty sure it’s silent for the first 30 seconds. Once you get past that, though, this album is almost one solid song, divided into movements. The songs flow seamlessly into each other in one continuous opus, reprising and repeating each other. Many of the songs can be listened to by themselves, and in fact, are, often, by me; especially “The Wanting Comes in Waves/Repaid” because it;s the first track featuring Shara, and it’s just so damn powerful. But I’m also very partial to “Won’t Want For Love (Margaret in The Taiga)” which is the first song with Becky. This album is just so masterfully put together; all of the riffs are catchy, all the parts (all two of them) so well cast.

I was originally quite surprised when I saw that “The Rake’s Song” was far and away the most downloaded song off of this masterpiece, but then I gave it another listen. It’s quite angry, and tells a story in and of itself, one of an unwanted marriage, death, and violence. The screaming chorus of  “Alright, alright, alright,” shows the deranged nature of the narrator, and explains the role he plays in the story. Now it gives me chills every time I listen to it.

I recommend this album to any fans of any one I have mentioned on this blog that wasn’t in my “Essence of Me” post.

I love how Jenny is the only one not looking at the camera.

The Decemberists with Shara & Becky

Crouch Like a Crow

Justin Vernon bought a cabin in northern Wisconsin, and locked himself in there for the winter of 2006. The resulting album, For Emma, Forever Ago, was recorded under the name Bon Iver, and was a masterpiece garnering critical acclaim and many fans. Earlier this year, he released and EP, entitled Blood Bank, with similar styles and the cold feeling of winter permeating the sound.

For Emma opens with “Flume,” a mid-tempo campfire-like song. One important thing to know about Bon Iver is that the vast majority of his vocals are in falsetto, but not like Mika or anything. It’s a gorgeous, gentle, sound, and it goes perfectly with the lazy guitar strumming that backs it. The next track, “Lump Sum” is slightly more up-tempo, despite a vaguely-choral beginning, and almost sounds like the opening credits of an indie movie about two days in some teenager’s life. This song brings up images of fall and bicycles in my mind. Another important thing to note about Bon Iver is this; I looked up his lyrics, and I still don’t have a damn clue what he’s saying. It’s all very poetic though, as though if his music career had fallen through, he could’ve become Wisconsin’s Poet Laureate.

“Skinny Love” is probably the most famous song off of the album, having been featured on Grey’s Anatomy. However, the song was already a minor hit in the UK before this. I. LOVE. This. Song. It’s strumming guitar and wailing vocals are perfect for just about every mood, but it does make me a little sad when I listen to it.  “Wolves (Act I & II)” has the first real harmony on the album, and it’s very noticeable. It has a bare bones recording, until the swelling bridge, in which there are harmonies abundant, echoes, crashing cymbals, what sounds like fireworks off in the distance, and… is that autotune? It’s fucking incredible, but you have to wait through the near silence of “Act I” to get there.

“Blindsided” is another one of my favorites. This time, his chest voice is much more prominent, but he’s not afraid to switch into falsetto for the effect of a melody. The melody is simple, but just as powerful as anything else on the album. By this time you figure out that one of Justin Vernon’s most powerful tools is silence. This song features another powerful bridge, though perhaps not as mighty as the one in “Wolves.” “Creature Fear” is the most outwardly fast-tempo song on the album, despite the characteristically mellow verses. The drums go straight on through into “Team,” a short and sweet instrumental that sort of wants to have an encompassing melody, but hasn’t quite gotten there yet. It’ll call you when it does. “For Emma” echoes earlier devices, and “Re: Stacks” is JUST SO BORING.

I’m kidding. “Re: Stacks” is actually a great song. The guitar is somewhat muted, but it seems less strummy than the other songs; the sound is more pure, more melodic and less rhythmic. The choruses of this song is very rhythmic, however, featuring a staccato, percussive high notes with low notes scattered between. This is the longest song on the album at 6:41, and it almost echoes “The Trapeze Swinger” in it’s wonderful, repetitive love.

Blood Bank‘s title track is about as real and concise as Bon Iver gets; “Well I met you at the blood bank/We were looking at the bags/Wondering if any of the colors/Matched any of the names we knew on the tags./You said “see look that’s yours!/Stacked on top with your brother’s/See how the resemble one another/Even in their plastic little covers’” and that ends up being a love story. Nuff said.

“Beach Baby” is a quiet, smiling song, and features the first use of ant instrument besides acoustic guitar: slide guitar. The inevitable Iron & Wine comparisons are strengthened even further here. It’s a short track, at 2:35, and has just one verse and then an outro. The next song, titled “Babys” (so much variety) enters with dissonant and rapid piano that almost makes you want to skip the track. Don’t do it. This song again fails to disappoint, with weird lyrics (“Summer comes, so multiply.”) the standard haunting vocals, and an actual, active energy that is so often missing in his songs. However, the melody and general instrumentation are nothing incredible, so this song just sinks into the rest of his magnificent catalogue.

I can’t stop listening to “Woods.” It starts, and you think that maybe your iPod has switched to Kanye West accidentally. But no, this track is done entirely in autotune, remeniscent of “Hide & Seek” by Imogen Heap. It has a single stanza that repeats over and over for 4 minutes, adding a new harmony or stylization each time, allowing you to sing along, but noy get bored by any means. This song is one of the most underrated songs ever; it deserves an award of some sort.

Alright. Off to Driver’s Ed.

Bon Iver

Bon Iver

H.E.L.P; Help me, help me.

I got St Vincent’s “Actor” in… what? March? And finally started listening to it about two weeks ago. This entire album has lots of hidden gems that need to be listened to a couple of times before you can truly love them. St. Vincent (aka Annie Clark) originally wrote the songs in GarageBand, and then rewrote them on sheet music so her band could play them. I honestly didn’t think there was a band at all at first however; “Save Me From What I Want” features prominent “strings” that are obviously played on a keyboard or something similar, and solid on-the-beat drums push many of the songs forward. Annie Clark has a very interesting voice; if it wasn’t so open, it would probably be very hard to listen to, but as it is, it has a sort of weird-aunt feeling to it. Some of these songs are just over two minutes, but it feels like you’ve been listening for around five, the songs warp time. Creepy.

The album opens with “The Strangers,” featuring watery “aah’s” and what sounds like a 20′s Radio star from Germany in the background, who half way through the song you realize is urging you to “Paint the black hole blacker.” The dreamy song is almost over when you get hit with grainy guitars, a motif throughout the album that never seems to get tired out – it’s a nice surprise every time you hear it. “Save Me From What I Want” features a fun melody and a warning, rhythmic “watch your step.” It has a guitar strumming that almost reminds me off Iron & Wine, and that ambient noise that always fills out the best songs. “Actor Out Of Work” sounds like something The Beatles would have made in one of their weird phases, you know, late in their career, although, the slight electronic noises betray it’s recording date. “Laughing With a Mouth of Blood” is her most alto-range song, and it benefits from it; it gives a slightly different feel to it, put you still know you’re definitely listening to the same Album.

“Marrow” is my favorite track on the album, and includes the lyrics that are the title of this post. It starts with an airy feeling (as most of these songs do) with a very quiet drum machine going back and forth between speakers, when some rhythmic static comes in. And then the chorus hits. “H. E. L. P! Help me, help me.” again with the grainy guitars. It’s the most dancable song on the album and could probably be a much bigger cult hit than it is if she would only get picked up by a bigger label. Srsly. Get this track.

“The Bed” is an asian- tinged track with trance inducing chorus and probably her most varied drums on the whole album.

The rest of the songs sort of blur together for me at this point, although I’v only listened to them about twice each, so maybe one will jump out and bite me at some point. That happens to me a lot…

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