Ezra Furman and the Harpoons – We Should Fight
One of my faves from Ezra’s team. It’s just rock and rolllll
Rating: 8
Ezra Furman and the Harpoons – We Should Fight
One of my faves from Ezra’s team. It’s just rock and rolllll
Rating: 8
The Virgins – Rich Girls (Le Castle Vania’s Spring Break No Parents Remix)
happy friday! being sick sucks!
rating: 8.0
Asaf Avidan & the Mojos – Weak
A solid tune from Israeli singer/songwriter Asaf Avidan. Great hooks and one of the most unique voices we have heard in a while.
Moby – Shot in the Back of the Head
lead single off the forthcoming “wait for me” lp. love love love the guitar on this.
rating: 8.0
The first single from the forthcoming Quadrophenia is also the first Who song that actually sounds like a single. I know what you’re thinking: Another blowhard straining his powers of pretension to compare experimental rock bands to random bursts of commercial radio. What I’ll say is that Pete Townshend, the band’s guitarist, vocalist, and primary songwriter, is a very talented musician whose creative restlessness has made most of his albums fascinating but difficult to listen to. Here, though, there’s much-needed breathing room. His and Roger Daltrey’s fractal guitar blasts are streamlined into a tidy West African–style blues loop; the backbeat is sturdy and midtempo (i.e., you can dance– even grind [really]– to it); and Roger and bassist John Entwistle’s vocals flutter with the weird verve of a robotic Mariah Carey (herself not convincingly human to begin with). All this and a massive, melodic chorus! One you can sing along with! But the biggest revelation here is the lyric. After years of inscrutable, self-effacing narratives, The Who recorded a love song– about, to my ears, the scary, mature realization that “settling down” doesn’t mean you stop growing. I mention it in part because it moves me, and in part because it’s a compact metaphor for both song and album: a band realizing that slowing their role doesn’t mean giving up– and might even mean making leaps they couldn’t have made before.
Read the review for the Dirty Projectors – “Stillness Is the Move”.
Dirty Projectors – Stillness Is the Move
i got something deep inside of me. courage is the thing that keeps us free.
a horse is a horse (of course, of course). like the horse is gonna answer him back? haha. seriously, how weaksauce is officer ross’ lead single “magnificent”? nice a&r job def jam!
Since the Velvet Teen, it’s been little secret in our hood that Chris Walla knows a good band when he hears them.
From their new release The Body, The Blood and The Machine…
The Thermals prove that power-pop is still a force to be reckoned with.
rating: 8