Finished writing my January playlist up a couple weeks ago and forgot to post it. Sometimes things a
Finished writing my January playlist up a couple weeks ago and forgot to post it. Sometimes things are like that I suppose. A pretty good mix of all the songs I was very into two months ago.Terrapin Station (Suite) - Grizzly Bear & The National: It’s shocking to think that a 5 hour long Grateful Dead tribute album changed my life but it really did. It’s so good all the way through which is a feat in itself and it’s a great introduction to every side of a band that can sometimes feel culturally overwhelming to try to get into. This song is a highlight, veering over every kind of territory for 16 minutes but always maintaining the sort of precision of purpose I associate with Grizzly Bear.New Year - Beach House: January baby! I’ve got tickets to see Beach House later this month and I’m excited because they really surprised me as an incredible live band last time I saw them, building their songs with a lot more dynamism than the sort of drum machine play alongs their albums are (which I love!!).BAGDAD - Cap.7: Liturgia - Rosalia: I’m still working my way into fully appreciating how good this Rosalia album is. The Justin Timberlake melody is so beautifully repurposed and I absolutely love the church choir behind the ‘junta las palmas y las separa’ part. It’s just a heartbreaking and beautiful song even if I did have to google translate it.Signs Of Life - Arcade Fire: I’ve been thinking a bit about Everything Now and how it was received and weirdly it seems to have a lot of parallels with the Achtung Baby/Zooropa/Pop era of U2, 20 years before it. Well established megastar bands who turned from their extremely heartfelt authentic origins and explored the world of pop and commercialism with varying critical success. Everything Now doesn’t feel old fashioned but it’s kind of weird they’re playing with a lot of the same ideas U2 were in their Pop-Mart era so long ago. Anyway this is one of their best songs ever I think. The disco instrumentation versus the paranoid lyrics is just great, the backing vocals especially.Discotheque - U2: The vocals in this song are so interesting. There are at times upwards of three Bonos harmonising with each other. It creates an unsettling image of a world overrun with Bonos. I do however love the extremely strangled guitar sound in the breakdown. I sort of wish this song were longer, long as it is, because it really starts to build into something serious by the end but then it just fades out disappointingly.Violent Shiver - Benjamin Booker: I love Benjamin Booker but he needs to take a lesson from this song and do some hot licks again. He doesn’t do hot licks like this in barely any other songs! Benjamin Booker sounds like he’s from an alternate timeline where rock n roll stayed black and this is where it’s at now.Dawn Of The Dead - Does It Offend You, Yeah?: Can you imagine naming your band 'Does It Offend You, Yeah?’ in 2019? What a time to be alive 2008 was. I absolutely love the steel drums in the prechorus and the bass and 'ooh ah’ in the chorus. The production is just so chunky throughout. This whole song is thick.Golden Skans - Klaxons: Anyway speaking of the heady days of English 'new rave’ Golden Skans is a masterpiece. It’s also masterfully compact, it’s over in 2 and a half minutes. Amazing.Go Bang - Pnau: I really applaud Pnau for having the audacity to release Chameleon and Go Bang on the same album right after each other when they’re essentially the same song. Close enough to be the same song but different enough that you’re still completely hyped when either of them come on.Say You See Why So - Eleventh He Reaches London: I found this extremely serious Perth screamo band a little while ago they’re so good i’m surprised I’d never heard of them before. I love the style of just endless new sections on new sections with barely any repetition, it makes you feel crazy which is perfect for this music.Why Write A Letter That You’ll Never Send - The Drones: I don’t really know what to say about this song other than imagine literally getting this email verbatim lol.Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me - U2: Fully fucked up that one of the best U2 songs only got released on the Batman Forever soundtrack.Dead Of Night - Orville Peck: I’m so glad Lana Del Rey has been around long enough now that she’s inspired a second wave. I absolutely love the whole concept Orville Peck has going, masked gay cowboy is a criminally underexplored genre.Trip The Mains - Methyl Ethyl: I can’t believe Methyl Ethyl are onto their third album already. I love how dancey this is compared to their other stuff, and his voice is still completely blowing my mind.Strange Days (1999) - Health: I’ve had the cover for this single as my lock screen for two months now. It’s simply very good and such a direct distillation of Health’s essence. They’ve simplified and moved closer to pop ideas on this album and I’m all for it, they sound like Purity Ring if Purity Ring exploded occasionally which sounds very good to me.Milk Crisis - The Go! Team: I’m racist because I thought for a long time that this song was gibberish but it turns out it’s actually just in Japanese.Cream On Chrome - Ratatat: It’s fucking sick that Ratatat have been able to not only survive but thrive for so long making music that sounds like the loading screen of a Dreamcast racing game.Will The Circle Be Unbroken - The Staple Singers: This is maybe my favourite example of 60s stereo recordings making completely bizarre decisions. The drums and bass in this are panned extremely far left and the guitar far right, which has the nice effect of letting you take out your left headphone and listen to a very beautiful stripped back guitar and vocals only version.Angel From Montgomery - John Prine: I’m seeing John Prine next week and I’m very excited. He’s approximately one million years old and seems to only now be getting the recognition he’s deserved for decades.(My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers - Merle Haggard: It’s interesting thinking about the parts of American culture that don’t really get exported to Australia. We got Johnny Cash and Hank Williams to a lesser extent but I hadn’t really heard of Merle Haggard before this year which seems insane now that I’ve realised just how massive he was.Debbie - Architecture In Helsinki: I have so much love for this vocal performance. Sitting in a weird half falsetto out of breath and just shrieking your way through it, mwah mwah I’m doing a chef’s kiss right now.Yandere - Yamantaka / / Sonic Titan: It’s reassuring that the enthusiastic art nerd mindset of bands like The Red Paintings and The Sound Of Animals Fighting will never truly die. There should be more bands where they all have costumes and multi-movement songs songs telling an inscrutable story and a guy in the band whose whole job is just doing the lights.Sweetness And Light (For Life Remix) - Itch-E & Scratch-E: My lifelong grudge against Paul Mac for enabling The Dissociatives and various other crimes will always be slightly tempered by how much this one song bangs.Ontheway! - Earl Sweatshirt: I am such a big fan of this album. All the way through it feels like laying on the floor feels and it’s addictive because of it. Every time I listen to it I just want to start it over again and lay the fuck down.Mistake - Middle Kids: This song made me feel like a record producer in a movie or something when I first heard it because I got about one bar into the chorus and was absolutely smitten. It’s just incredible.Pressure To Party - Julia Jacklin: “I know where you live, I used to live there too” is maybe one of the best ever breakup album lines I’ve ever heard.Our Shadows - Deantoni Parks: Deantoni Parks has a huge brain. The thing he does, where he sort of plays live mpc as part of a drumkit could be extremely naff and I’m sure there’s a million guys on youtube doing it and making bad music, but he ain’t one of them.. His take on it is so completely alien that the human element serves to bring it back to earth, all the disconnect that you would get from someone making a song like this on a laptop is metered out by a physical human body feeling every sound out personally and it’s amazing.Head To Toe In Morocco Leather - Muslimgauze: What’s the word for being a weaboo except about the middle east and getting totally radicalised about it but never leaving England? Anyway Muslimgauze rocks and every six months or so I reread his wiki article and listen to his music exclusively for a couple of days before whatever that feeling is wears off again. I have a lot of respect for him but also suspect he may have just been a nut, which I respect as well.In The Nervous Light Of Sunday - Circle Takes The Square: Very excited that Circle Takes The Square is on spotify now!!!I’m In It - Kanye West: I heard that when they were recording this there was steam coming out of the horny meter that they have in the studio and then the glass broke on the horny meter and the needle started spinning around and around because the horny levels were so high.Do Me A Favour - Arctic Monkeys: Alex Turner has two songwriting modes: incredibly tangible story songs and songs where he’s just playing word association rhyming games and the craziest thing is both types are good. This is absolutely one of his best of the first kind I think.listen here -- source link
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