2012-12-06

55th annual Grammy nominees + some quick thoughts

The Grammy list

Some quick thoughts:

-not too many surprises here. Florence + the Machine and LMFAO nominated in Pop Duo/Group Performance vocal certainly is one.

-Pop Solo record: If Adele doesn't win then why bother giving out awards to artists? Just send the hardware over to the engineers and producers who made the other robots in the category what they are.

-My favourite category: Best Score Soundtrack For Visual Media, with Tintin, Hugo, Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, Dark Knight Rises, The Artist, and popular indie video game Journey! I don't recall video games ever being nominated in the past, but I suppose that's why the category title was given its now inclusive title.

-What's up with Spoken Word? I think audiobooks should be split off into their own category.

-Mumford & Sons nominated under Americana? Ironic, no?

-John Adams nominated for Orchestral performance... the classical categories always strike me as odd because it's all music composed by people who have, by and large, passed on from this mortal coil. It's a stark juxtaposition to the top/highlighted categories which all emphasize newness and youth and make up the televised ceremony.

2012-12-03

Pitchfork Reader's Poll

Take the poll!

For my albums I went with Hot Chip, Japandroids, Wild Nothing, Divine Fits and Joel Plaskett Emergency. Although... in a different mood I could have gone with Chromatics, Beach House, Patrick Watson, Darcys... and so on. If I had given more time to Tame Impala or Flying Lotus I may have put them on there as well.

This is kind of the problem with Year-end lists. For instance, how can I objectively rate an album that I've enjoyed for six months against an album that only came out three weeks ago? One I've had the chance to enjoy on commutes and road trips, the other is in a digital pile of listening that I'm trying to catch up on before the next album cycle begins.

Last year the M83 record came out in mid-November, and while it may have been better than the TV on the Radio record, I had a whole summer of late night walks home with it where I really got to know the songs and the flow of the whole thing. It's almost like the album cycle should go from March to March, since January and February are sort of dead months for top/hyped albums.

Consolation prize I guess: I put Flying Lotus down on the Pitchfork poll for best album cover.

I also put Frank Ocean down for most overrated. Not that I don't think it's a good album, I just don't think it's a 9.5 on the Pitchfork scale. Too many filler tracks on that record, which is symptomatic of far too many contemporary hip hop records.

Another prize over to Flying Lotus: My favourite video of the year.

The entire second page of the Poll is some a marketing survey/hipster test. Not terribly surprising but it's always interesting to see 'under the hood' in a way as big websites collect reader data.

2012-11-28

Download: Danger Mouse's 'The Grey Album' Remastered...

The Daily Swarm - Download: Danger Mouse's 'The Grey Album' Remastered...

As I recall the original release was of pretty dodgy quality. Interesting to see if it's been cleaned up at all, and what their definition of 'remastered' is exactly.

2012-10-23

Guardian: An Essential Guide to Steve Reich...

Arguably the most important post-WWII composer.

Two favourite works of mine are missing in the article... Sextet and Electric Counterpoint.

The Daily Swarm - An Essential Guide to Steve Reich...

2012-10-16

Space Leap of Faith - Bad Astronomy

Phil Plait has an interesting take on the recent Red Bull publicity stunt - Space Leap of Faith

On Sunday, skydiver Felix Baumgartner stepped out of a high-altitude balloon and plummeted 40 kilometers back to Earth. I wanted to watch it live but missed it due to an appointment I had to keep. I heard it was heart-pounding, and Twitter went nuts over it. I wish I had seen it!

Still, my feelings on it are mixed. While I really am glad it got people excited, I couldn’t shake the feeling it wasn’t more than a stunt. A cool stunt, but a stunt. It was plugged as a way to learn more about spacesuits and all that, but I had my doubts. Having it sponsored by a sugary caffeinated energy drink marketed to teens also made me a bit wary.

2012-10-12

Did Y'all Hear That?: Clip Of The Week

Did Y'all Hear That?: Clip Of The Week


Paper Bag Records cover Bowie's Ziggy Stardust

To celebrate ten years, Toronto record label Paper Bag Records (or PBR, for those of the hip variety) got a bunch of their artists together to record a tribute album to Bowie's classic Ziggy Stardust.

I know what you're thinking, that my first instinct would be to hate it, and you wouldn't be wrong. Turns out it's not that bad.

It's a free download so if that's something that would pique your interest then it's definitely worth checking out. I wouldn't exactly give any of the cuts five stars, but the whole thing is surprisingly good.

Ziggy is one of my favourite albums of all-time so I really had my guard up when I first listened, but the first few tracks drew me in. It loses me somewhere in the middle, and it's tough for me to tell if that's just my pro-Bowie bias at work or what.

The Yamantaka-Sonic Titan cover of the Ziggy bonus track "John I'm Only Dancing" is a nice touch too.

It's interesting to note that The Darcys did a full-LP cover of Steely Dan's Aja earlier this year. I look at this, and other recent full-LP covers by the likes of Flaming Lips as a possible trend towards rock's canonizing of its catalog the same way that jazz and classical have genre standards that are performed and reinterpreted time and again. The maturation of a musical genre, I suppose.

Anyway, all the PBR record will cost you is your email address, so go check it out.

The Daily Swarm - Bargle Nawdle Zouss: 'Weird Al' on 'Smells Like Nirvana' 20 Years Later...

The Daily Swarm - Bargle Nawdle Zouss: 'Weird Al' on 'Smells Like Nirvana' 20 Years Later...

2012-10-05

How Indie Finally OFFICIALLY Died: The Broken Indie Machine. | Hipster Runoff

Awesome takedown/polemic/rant/whatever on the state of music on the Internet in 2012. The best post from HRO in a while, and surprisingly un-ironic for the most part. Definitely says a lot of things that have been on my mind and the minds of many music fans as well. Worth the long read.

our buzz harvest has gone bad, and now is the Winter of Our Buzz Content.

How Indie Finally OFFICIALLY Died: The Broken Indie Machine. | Hipster Runoff

2012-10-03

Gangnam Style production tricks in Pro Tools

via Pro Tools expert:

For some strange reason I can fathom PSY hunched over a Pro Tools rig cutting away through all hours of the night...

2012-09-28

Moody Blues - Classic to CHR

This never ceases to amaze me... It's fascinating to me how a band can go from this:

Moody Blues - "Nights in White Satin" (1967)

to this: (!!!!)

Moody Blues - "I Know You're Out There Somewhere" (1988)

Moody Blues - Your Wildest Dreams (1986)

Twenty years is a lot of time for a recording artist...

Pac-Man Fever!

I'm reading Supercade: A Visual History of the Videogame Age, and in the section about the insane Pac-Man craze of 1981-82, they note that the game was so big that it even inspired novelty songs.

Check Out "Pac-Man Fever" by Buckner and Garcia.

Songs about video games are common enough these days, but remember, this was on the radio. The radio.

The Daily Swarm - The Beach Boys Have Been Fired from The Beach Boys...

The Daily Swarm - The Beach Boys Have Been Fired from The Beach Boys...

I guess no job is secure in these tough economic times... Seriously though it might be time for Mr. Love to have his pills checked.

Super Mario World Sight-reading by Tom Brier

My brother sends me these clips:

What a player! Sight-reading that whole thing? Phenomenal. I almost don't believe it.

And what a song, too! I'm sure this piece can evoke an emotion or two from people who can remember this glorious tune from childhood.

Also check this one:

2012-09-26

Daphni - Pairs

New music from Dan Snaith's side project. Sounds like Caribou-goes-World Music.

2012-09-25

Calvin Harris - Sweet Nothing ft. Florence Welch

Great song, intense clip.

Feist takes Polaris

Expect the unexpected, I guess.

Feist was a good pick. I wonder if the jury will feel the need to go with a less well known act next year on account of picking two huge, internationally known artists in a row?

New Flying Lotus coming soon

Amazing animated clip to go along with this new Flying Lotus track:

One more week!

2012-09-18

1000 posts!

Hey look, a base-10 milestone. It's coincidental more than anything else, especially considering all the unpublished drafts of posts I have sitting in the queue.

For fun here's the most-played track in my iTunes library... Cocteau Twins - "Heaven or Las Vegas"

Baseless Polaris Prize speculation

With the Polaris Prize announcement coming a week from now, I thought I would go for some wild and baseless speculation. I have only heard five of these albums in their entirety, but let's break down this year's list for some likely totally erroneous guesses at who might have a chance to win this year's prize.

The gala will be streamed live on Muchmusic.com on September 24th at 8pm

Here's the nominee shortlist:

  • Cadence Weapon – Hope In Dirt City
  • Cold Specks – I Predict A Graceful Expulsion
  • Drake – Take Care
  • Kathleen Edwards – Voyageur
  • Feist – Metals
  • Fucked Up – David Comes To Life
  • Grimes – Visions
  • Handsome Furs – Sound Kapital
  • Japandroids – Celebration Rock
  • YAMANTAKA // SONIC TITAN – YT//ST


If I'm on the jury, I would take the following into account:

No hip-hop record has ever won the prize.

No artist has won the prize twice.

No female artist has ever won the prize.

Last year's winner, Arcade Fire, could be considered a pretty big act compared to its fellow nominees. This may cause the jury to favour more 'indie' artists. However, the fact that Arcade Fire won at all was a surprise, in my opinion, considering they had recently won the Grammy for Album of the Year.

The jury is not afraid to go with an unexpected or underdog choice (Karkwa, Final Fantasy).

Past winners have been pretty much split between Toronto (and area) and Montreal (and area).

Adventurous musicality seems to be rewarded.


Considering all this, here's what I'm thinking. Since I haven't heard all the albums fully, and simply for the purposes of this possibly foolhardy exercise, I will assume that they are at least perceived to have equal artistic merit:

Good bets to win: Cadence Weapon (genre, geography), Cold Specks (relatively unknown artist, female)

Could go either way/I'm not sure: Handsome Furs, Japandroids, Grimes, YT//ST

Unlikely to win: Fucked Up (previous winner), Feist, Drake (pretty big artists), Kathleen Edwards (perhaps not 'cutting-edge' enough)


Welp, there you go. Totally uneducated, wild guesses.

Thoughts?

2012-09-17

Popular post from the past month

Here are a few popular posts from the past month or so:

Can - Vitamin C

Florence + the Machine - Spectrum

Eno by train

Monterey Pop Festival 1967

Today in awful - Willie Nelson covers Coldplay

I guess web crawlers like when I write artist and song names in the post title. Looks like I'll try more of that.

2012-09-15

Sleigh Bells - End of the Line

Great song.

I love that you can embed stuff from their official soundcloud page. The little things like that let me share this track with you quite quickly, and go a long way to getting a band's music out to a wider audience.

2012-09-09

Saigon Sunday - Bronski Beat

Here's an iconic new wave song with a music video that proved in the early days of MTV that there was not only artistic merit to the art form but also that these silly vids could have a message too.

2012-09-07

CCR's "Grapevine"

This version, however, actually IS pretty good. CCR had a few great R&B covers. That is, besides aping their entire style from the genre.

Smooth it through the grapevine

So bad... it's good...

2012-09-06

Florence + the Machine - Spectrum

Apparently it's three months old, but it's new to me!

2012-09-03

Labour Day playlist

Kyuss - Welcome to Sky Valley

Going through my fav albums list today... Hadn't heard this one in a while.

Oddly, the wiki page lists each song with its own individual track. There are only four tracks on my CD version, of which only the first three make up the "official" album.

Listening to it now there's an eclectic element to the whole record that I hadn't really thought too much about before. Kyuss's spiritual successor Queens of the Stone Age are pretty eclectic at times as well.

Hard to believe this one is 18 years old now. Somehow weirder that Queens' Rated R is ten though.

2012-08-24

Monterey Pop Festival 1967

My friend Ian and I watched this Monterey Pop Festival doc the other night, and I was absolutely blown away. The performances are spectacular, and the film itself is great.

Some highlights for me were the Mamas and Papas, Simon & Garfunkel, and obviously Hendrix.

Get yourself some incense and a couple of pops and fire this one up, before the video is taken down:

Unbelievable rock photo archive

Lots and lots and lots of rock photography goodness here. You will definitely recognize some of these photos, a bunch of them are iconic artist photos, others were for album cover shoots.

Scroll all the way down, it's fun to play 'name the artist'.

[via NIN Hotline]

Rocking Out On A 1926 Fotoplayer

A very cool demonstration of a Silent film era Player Piano/One Man Band contraption called a Fotoplayer.

2012-08-23

Today in awful - Willie Nelson covers Coldplay

This is a real thing, it exists. And it's horrible. Poor Willie has been pitch corrected to all hell... There is so much processing on his voice it might as well be one of those robotic screen readers. You may know that I'm not the biggest Coldplay fan in the world either, which doesn't help this compound mess.

Who thought this was a good idea?

Yecch.

Part of the guy's appeal is his folksy, natural talents. If you listen to "On the Road Again", you can hear the charm in his voice. This cover smooths out all the edges and completely neuters what made Mr. Nelson so interesting in the first place.

Zero stars.

Can - Vitamin C

I never get tired of this track... Can had some epic pieces but this is taut and funky in a way that their long proggy stuff could never be.

Side note - the YouTube page says they're playing tonight at the Sony Centre... when I saw that my jaw dropped. How could that be? Then I clicked on the link and it was actually Dead Can Dance playing tonight. Damn you, auto-ticket ads!

Pitchfork's People's List

Great web presentation over at Pitchfork. Lots of infographics and colours. Definitely some music nerd info-porn here.

I smell an iTunes playlist!

2012-08-12

Tonight: Getting our smooth on with the Dukes of September

Dukes of September Rhythm Revue at the Ampitheatre tonight. Hopefully the rain stays away for clear sailing on the seas of smooth.

The setlists are looking pretty sweet too.

Not looking forward to the $15 beers, however...

2012-08-04

Cookie Duster - Two Feet Stand Up

Been digging this really catchy summer tune... a familiar face in the group plus a band not taken off the shelf since '97 screams nostalgia. I dig this one.

2012-07-30

Latest from the shop - MuchMusic specials

Here are a few shows I've done post audio on lately at the shop. All of these are part of New.Music.Live., the daily show on Much.

No embed links are available for either of these two, for whatever reason:

NML - LA Complex On Set

Hedley On Tour

There it is. Now you can tell your friends that whine about MuchMusic 'not playing music anymore', you can tell them they're wrong, cause there is indeed music on the channel... if you don't dig what they're doing these days, you're probably not in their target audience.

Buried RIAA Report Shows the Majority of Music Piracy Happens Offline...

Ha! Why is this not surprising?

The Daily Swarm - Buried RIAA Report Shows the Majority of Music Piracy Happens Offline...

2012-07-24

Song from Breaking Bad Season 5 Ep 2 - Whitey's "Stay on the Outside"

Breaking Bad continues its streak of stellar integrations of pop songs into the show. There's not much on Whitey's allmusic or Wikipedia pages... Discogs has the best overview of his work. Looks like I'll be losing a few more bucks from my chequing account this week.

Take a listen even if you haven't seen the show... my best comparison would be LCD Soundsystem meets Faithless.

Best Albums of partway through 2012

Blog neglect! Yes it's been far too long, mostly on account of... you know... life... vacation... the summer... July and August are usually slow months on this blog, but here's a half-assed attempt at making up for a few weeks of lean posting!

Yes, it's my favourite albums of 2012 (so far) partway through the year!

I had briefly (very briefly) considered doing a five day series sort of thing with this, but I have made blog-promises before and broken them. I dare not continue that trend, dear reader.

And so here it is... five albums plus some honourable mentions that you should definitely go get legally, in my opinion. I won't bother linking to your favourite review site or YouTube, since I don't know what your fav review site is, nor do I care for presenting these fine albums and their great cuts in crap compression YouTube formats... I digress.


5) Chromatics - Kill For Love

A double album, which usually means lots of filler. In this case even the filler is highly listenable. Kicks off with a Neil Young cover, furthering the group's reputation for great covers.

4) Japandroids - Celebration Rock

I loved their last record, and this one is right in the same vein. The only knock would be that it sounds mostly like Post-Nothing, but more developed. It's also pretty abrasive, and doesn't exactly reward repeat listens. Or maybe I should just listen to it more. To be played at maximum volume, for sure.

3) Joel Plaskett Emergency - Scrappy Happiness

The return of the Emergency. It's a spontaneous, playful rock album with great songs, great performances, and monster riffs and solos. Not much I can say really... c'mon, it's Joel, and he never disappoints.

2) The Darcys - Aja

I hadn't heard any of their songs before this album, but a Steely Dan cover album is enough to make me take notice. I was skeptical at first, but the band won me over. It's a solid update of a timeless classic, and they made it their own by bringing it into their musical space and giving it a distinctive spin. Well worth it, and free. You don't have to be familiar with the original, but it'll definitely help with your appreciation of what the band has done here.

1) Hot Chip - In Our Heads

The cold hard fact of the list format structure would suggest that I think this album is one better than the #2. This is actually far and away my favourite album of the year.

Before this record, I felt like Hot Chip was a great singles band with hit-and-miss albums, some cuts too quirky, other cuts made me just want to go grab my Devo LPs. All that has changed with In Our Heads. It's a cohesive, unified collection of very strong songs that really feels like an 'album', in that its whole is greater than the mere sum of its parts. And oh the parts, how they are amazing. "Flutes" is my standout favourite, but the whole thing is filled with bangers, ballads, and epic tracks. Fantastic production, interesting ear candy, killer musical performances, hooks upon hooks, and timely, contemporary lyrics, this one has everything that I could ask for in an album.

It will be interesting to compare this list to my end of year list, but something is going to have to knock Hot Chip off with a vengeance because I can't say enough good things about this one.


Honourable mentions category:

-Patrick Watson - Adventures in Your Own Backyard
-Twin Shadow (aka Twin Shadbro) - Confess
-Frank Ocean - channel ORANGE

2012-06-17

Saigon Sunday - Papa's Day edition

Torontoites and Canadians out there will recognize this as the theme to the now defunct NewMusic, a show that totally blew my mind as a kid.

In any case, this track goes back to 1981 and could broadly be defined as 'post-punk', though the group has not much to do with any other artist you would typically find in that category. "Punk-funk" kind of fits, but that really doesn't do the song or the group justice. Whatever the label you feel needs to be applied, it's a pretty good song, notable for being instrumental, funky, and absolutely unique.

2012-06-15

Morning Track - R. Kelly "Ignition (Remix)"

Cause why not? Everyone loves a remix that knows it's a remix. It's a sentient club track.

2012-06-14

The AV Club takes a look at Weird Al's UHF

One of my favourite movies...

Weird Al’s UHF is uneven, but that just made it ahead of its time

8-bit Radiohead

My friend Adam sent me this one recently, but I didn't get around to posting it. The idea is cool, but I can't see myself listening to this for more than a few minutes and a flip through before I realize I'd rather be listening to the real thing.

Cool stuff though, when I'm listening to it I imagine an alternate universe 8-bit NES platformer where Thom Yorke shoots flying daggers at paranoid androids in order to ensure the "OK-ness" of the all-seeing, all-knowing "Computer".

Oh yeah, there's a Kid A version too. That one works better for me, I guess cause it's a largely electronic-driven album. And perhaps also because I don't have the same emotional attachment to that record as I do to OK Computer

The concert this Saturday should be killer.

Sexy Sax Man

Whenever I need a laugh, I pull up this clip:

2012-06-03

Saigon Sunday - Peter Gabriel + David Bowie

"Games Without Frontiers", featuring Kate Bush on backing vocals, is an interesting clip that parallels Bowie's "Ashes to Ashes" in style and some of the provocative imagery. Both tracks were from established artists dealing with the challenges of the "new wave" of alternative bands and the nascent music video industry.

These tracks are both from 1980, but for the most part that's where my little comparison ends. It's interesting to see these two videos back to back and think about where music videos started out, that is, emphasis on the 'video' medium, and the way both artists played with the technology that was available at the time.


Gorilla vs Bear: M83 – “Reunion”

video: M83 – “Reunion”

This clip reminds me a lot of the amazing sci-fi manga Akira... kids with incredible psychic powers.

2012-05-23

New Cadence Weapon - Conditioning

Holy shit this is awesome. Great stereo ear candy happening here... nice to hear him branching out into some singing. Looking forward to this album.

My only critique - needs more of that sweet chorus.

2012-05-21

Saigon Sunday - The Fall

I've probably used this one for Victoria Day before... but what the hell. The Fall always deserves another play. Great Kinks cover.

2012-05-19

Smooth Saturday: Smoothpocalypse '84

Cheesy and totally lame. 1984, ladies and gentlemen.

This is probably what people have in mind when they think 'bad 80s adult contemporary.

2012-05-16

Galaxie gets an update

Not the Quebec band I so admire, but the cable/satellite music channel service, which as I learned writing this post, is no longer run by the CBC.

If you haven't checked those channels in a while, they've finally brought the service into the new millennium by setting each channel to a rotating been bunch of stock photography shots.

I dig that they've finally refreshed the stale visuals (or lack thereof), but the 'next song' updates have killed my little game of guessing the next track in rotation.

In any case, that was a nice surprise for my between-program channel flipping. The new owners got around to doing what the CBC probably couldn't fit into their budget.

2012-05-14

Virgin Airlines Install A Pro Tools Studio For Customers At Heathrow Airport

Virgin Atlantic installs music studio for rock stars at Heathrow airport

The next stage in brand partnerships, and a pretty good PR piece disguised as news. But will their gear support my plug-ins? Not like I'd ever have to worry about such a thing...

[link via]

2012-05-03

The Darcys cover Steely Dan

Toronto band the Darcys recently released a full album cover version of Steely Dan's classic Aja.

This release works as a great stealth promo for the band's self-titled album, which you can also conveniently grab at their website for free.

"Peg" isn't quite the same without Michael McDonald. But hey, you can't argue with free music, right?

For me the original is untouchable, an absolutely exquisite piece of songcraft and studio excellence. However - that's clearly not what the Darcys are going for. It feels more like a deconstruction, but I'm not entirely sure it succeeds. My bias might be getting the better of me here. What do you think?

[band link]

Morning Track

If you're going to have a song stuck in your head all day, it might as well be a good one, right?

Chic - Real People

United State of Pop 2011 (World Go Boom)

A couple months late... but here it is. I've been going through some 'top tunes' playlists lately, and one of DJ Earworm's tracks came up, prompting me to check if there was an update from last year... As if there was any doubt...

United State of Pop 2011 (World Go Boom)

2012-04-29

2012-04-28

D'eon - Thousand Mile Trench

This has been on repeat lately. Awesome.

Linking friends

I recently cleared out a couple of seemingly dormant blogs in my 'friends' list down the right side of the page.

Email me about link swapping, I'll be adding to the list in the next couple days.

2012-04-27

The Temptations - Get Ready

Prototype 2 Game Trailer, featuring a song by Johnny Cash: Colour me bored.

Sorry for the link bait in the title. Haven't had a 'hit' in a while.

As for the TV ad I'm referring to... I'm so tired of it being played ad nauseum. Doesn't make me want to play at all. The web trailer is way worse though, and I'm venturing into cranky old man territory when I say "is this the kind of crap that passes for games these days?" A topic for another day, for sure.

In any case, the TV spot, which has been playing during ad breaks on sports shows lately, features Johnny Cash's cover of Nine Inch Nails' "Hurt".

Check out a great live rendition of the original here - best enjoyed in full screen:

^ that was a killer tour.

It's also not the first time that Johnny Cash has lent himself to a commercial.

Reminder: this was a real, actual thing that aired on television, and not a comedy sketch.

2012-04-26

The Daily Swarm - It's Not Easy Being The Houston Astros Stadium DJ...

The Daily Swarm - It's Not Easy Being The Houston Astros Stadium DJ...

Reminds me of the time I went on a tour of the audio facilities at the Air Canada Centre. Modern sports arenas have staggeringly sophisticated media systems as part of their infrastructure.

The ACC's audio system is linked to the emergency alarms, so it's a critical system. The audio control room even controls the sound level in the washrooms. Can you imagine the pranks you could play?

Cool concert neither you nor I went to alert: The Weeknd in Brooklyn

Report: The Weeknd in Brooklyn

Stellar photos at the link.

The guy is doing it the right way with a live band. There's so much more energy in the live performance when you have musicians in the flesh.

"When I found out I was starting my tour in New York, the city that never sleeps," he said during one of the show's few brief conversational interludes, "One song came to mind. I didn't look at it as a motherfucking gig. This is a motherfucking celebration". He then began gyrating-- seemingly involuntarily-- to the Beach House-sampling "The Party & the After Party", its live rendition supplemented with deep, rolling bass. Feeding off the energy of fans so devoted as to smuggle a set of balloons into the venue, Tesfaye seemed supremely excited to share each lyric, narrating his songs like he was telling a juicy story to a close confidant.

Sounds awesome, that would have been an amazing show.

The balloon could have been a clever plant... In any case, to that person, I say: "Classic move. Nice."

2012-04-01

Saigon Sunday pt 2

I decided I wouldn't leave on a sad note, so here's the obvious track to play today, a Canadian 80s classic:

Saigon Sunday

Here's a long lost track from Toronto's 1980s Queen West music scene, "Nyet Nyet Soviet". B.B. Gabor was kind of a thing back in 1980, getting nominated for a Juno and winning a "U-Know" (CFNY's piss-take on the Junos at the time, since revived as the CASBY awards). He was never able to repeat the success of his self titled album, and died of an apparent suicide in 1990.

2012-03-30

Katy Perry's 'Part of Me': Using Music Videos to Recruit New Soldiers | The Vigilant Citizen

Interesting analysis of Katy Perry's latest propaganda release:

Katy Perry's 'Part of Me': Using Music Videos to Recruit New Soldiers | The Vigilant Citizen

The Daily Swarm - Drake Does Drugs, Does Them Correctly...

The Daily Swarm - Drake Does Drugs, Does Them Correctly...

video: Charli XCX – “Nuclear Seasons” (Live From Dalston Heights)

video: Charli XCX – “Nuclear Seasons” (Live From Dalston Heights)

The Art of the Playlist

Building a great playlist, or as we called them in the old days, "mixtapes", is a task requiring a great deal of knowledge, execution, and nuance.

I spend a lot of time making interesting playlists, even going as far as timing them out to perhaps one day fit onto the ancient format of the compact disc - 79ish minutes in length.

Hopefully I can turn this into a series of posts, because I have lots of ideas and suggestions and stuff that's just too interesting to keep all to myself. All of my playlist building happens in iTunes, and as much as it's a memory hog and sort of an unruly piece of software, I'm pretty entrenched with it right now and the fact I use an iPod as my main music device isn't going to do much to change that.

Here are some ideas off the top of my head that would be interesting to explore:

-The way the context and meaning of a playlist can change and grow as new songs are added over time

-Audio quality has to factor in at some point- a remastered version of an older song would fit the playlist flow better than that same song in amongst a bunch of old CD rips where the mastering level is much lower

-My own internalized Can-Con bias- In regards to general playlists, I always try to toss in some Canadian stuff where appropriate. Obviously this would not work a playlist like 'Madchester Bangers', 'Japanese Noise Rock short cuts', or 'Kosmische Anthems'

2012-03-28

The complete new Chromatics album

Here's the new Chromatics double album in its entirety.... plus it kicks off with a Neil cover!

[link]

2012-03-26

E.L.a.I.C. trailer: Stranger than Fiction

If you were to make the ultimate YouTube parody trailer, satirizing the entire Hollywood movie industry, you couldn't do it better than this trailer for a real live actual real thing that was actually made and everything: the trailer for Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close.

Ingredients:

  • A-list actor: Tom Hanks
  • A-list song: U2's "Where the Street's Have No Name"
  • National tragedy
  • Little kid who is sad
  • Some other stuff
Result:
  • Profit

I can barely stomach five consecutive seconds of this drivel, so I admittedly am not familiar with the source material.

2012-03-25

Charli XCX - Stay Away

Been listening this quite a bit lately. The harmonies in the chorus remind me of Cyndi Lauper's "Time After Time"... some Chromatics and the XX in there as well. And maybe a little late-80s Fleetwood Mac in terms of the vocals and chord progression.

2012-03-24

Gang Gang Dance - Adult Goth

Killer payoff at the chorus, so let this one play out:

2012-03-20

What happened to action movies?

What happened to action movies? Interesting rant asking the above question, with great analysis of a golden age of Hollywood action flicks.
Consider this stunning fact: within a 16-month span, the following four movies were released theatrically:

Lethal Weapon (March 6, 1987)
Predator (June 12, 1987)
RoboCop (July 17, 1987)
Die Hard (July 15, 1988)

Not only is each one of those movies not your standard brainless macho fare (not even Predator -- we'll get to it), they're four of the best action movies ever made. Why? Because they've all got something more happening under the surface.

2012-03-13

Kony 2012 as State Propaganda

KONY 2012: State Propaganda for a New Generation
I have absolutely no intention of defending Joseph Kony or to say “he’s not that bad”. He, along with many other guerrilla factions across Africa, has committed despicable atrocities. However, the problem of child soldiers has existed for decades and there are literally hundreds of Joseph Konys across the African continent. In some cases, some of the armies are actually funded by Western countries. If we would truly go to the root of the issue, we’d discover that Africa has been plagued with the problem of warring factions and rebel guerrillas ever since Western forces “liberated” their colonies and divided the continent of Africa according to Western interests. Indeed, instead of setting the boundaries of each country according to the geographic location of the ethnic groups and tribes that live there, countries were created according to the economic needs of colonizing forces such as Great Britain, France and others. The net result is: A bunch of artificial countries that each contain several tribes, ethnic groups, languages and religions. When one group takes power, the others are repressed, which leads to violence and rebellion. Add to the mix extreme poverty due to resources being siphoned out of Africa by Western countries and you’ve got a breeding ground for merciless warlords. As long as this problem exists, Joseph Konys will continue to emerge in Africa.

I'm sort of attuned to all this stuff happening right now, I'm reading Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, an outstanding read if you're interested in geo-politics.

2012-03-05

Finally got my hands on Galaxie's Tigre et Diesel album

I love this stuff - raging electro power pop. And it's French. I can definitely see why this was nominated for the most recent Polaris Prize... definitely check out this album...

2012-02-29

My favourite Red Hot Chili Peppers song

Soul To Squeeze

Probably fav video too.

Good trivia question: On which album does this song appear?

Allmusic Guide:

On this by-the-books pop soundtrack hodgepodge, the sole highlights are a mediocre R.E.M. outtake and "Soul to Squeeze," The Red Hot Chili Peppers' rewrite of "Under the Bridge."

2012-02-24

Mastered for iTunes

How audio engineers tweak music for the iPod age [Ars Technica]

Interesting techie article here

Reggie Watts - Watch/Listen and learn

Unbelievable. A true 21st century artist. I first heard about this guy on Radiolab a while back. Thanks to my friend Jim for posting this on Facebook. Find yourself 15 minutes and enjoy. The guy's a force of nature.

2012-02-15

David Lee Roth explains the "brown M&M" thing

I've heard this before, but it's very cool hearing it straight from the man himself:

Brown M&Ms from Van Halen on Vimeo.

2012-02-11

St. Vincent 4AD session

Amazing live performance... the video has a really cool look to it as well.

Apparently this is a real trailer for a real movie

It has a website and everything... I think it might be a comedy. Only explanation.

2012-02-10

LCD Soundsystem: London Session

I just listened to the 'live studio bootleg' from LCD Soundsystem, London Sessions... the whole thing is killer, but take a listen to this track.

They actually carry a copy of this at the Toronto Public Library. Now this is a gravy train I can get behind. And don't feel guilty about putting it on hold for pickup at your local branch. Here's the thing: you've already paid for it.

And it is definitely worth it.

2012-02-09

St. Vincent - "Cheerleader"

Amazing video, amazing song, amazing album - highly recommended.

St. Vincent "Cheerleader" from Hiro Murai on Vimeo.

Also, check out the title track from her latest album, "Strange Mercy"... listen to about 1:37 and tell me that doesn't kind of sound like the dungeon music from Zelda: Link to the Past.

2012-02-04

Bon Joviver

I forgot to post this, I think. I saw it a while ago, I forget where...

It's pretty clever:

2012-02-03

More Super Bowl ad stuff

Hey, it's another self aware ad... soon they will gain sentience.

Gimmicky cover song

My friend Josh sends me this link for a video that I apparently missed but 45 million other people didn't...

The thing that bugs me about these videos is that they set it up to make it look like they're playing it "live" in front of the camera. Not that it should be a big surprise or anything, but they're not. They're playing to a backing track. The vocals sound too clean and the mic placement doesn't match the tone of the voices.

As for the song itself... meh. I have no problem with gimmicks or goofy songs, but there's no wink or nudge with anything this band does, it's all so earnest. They're all very talented musicians though, I'll give them that.

The Bark Side - ad for an ad

My Dad sends me this clip of adorable doggies singing a familiar song...

It's a pretty clever spot. My guess is that for the audio they would record each dog individually and pitch correct it with Melodyne. That would have been an interesting couple of days in the studio...

So it's an ad for an ad. Super Bowl Sunday ads are so big that they are spilling out beyond the actual broadcast day, interesting.

2012-01-30

Presenting: the Geocities-izer

This site claims to "Make Any Webpage Look Like It Was Made By A 13 Year-Old In 1996"... so... me, essentially. Of course back then you could have found me hanging out in "Area 51" writing about Star Trek and replying all to mailing lists and flooding my Dad's email account with bullcrap flame wars... Ahh, the 90s.

The Geocities-izer

[via]

2012-01-27

99% invisible

Going through a bunch of podcasts I have to catch up on (I hate deleting), and I thought I'd share this really cool story from Radiolab... it's a feature from another radio show the producers like.

This particular show interviews a guy who does acoustic product sound design... worth a listen.

Edit: Only took me three days to figure out I forgot to put the link... Bah.

2012-01-23

Bowie on 20/20 in 1980

Pretty astonishing to see a piece like this from such a high profile news program. A great watch:

TV Eye: '20/20' Profiles David Bowie In 1980...

2012-01-16

2012-01-12

Player's "Baby Come Back"

One of my favourite baseball podcasts recently used the smooth rock classic "Baby Come Back" by Player. I immediately noticed that the song I was hearing was different than the version that I'm used to hearing.

The version I'm used to hearing is the 7" single cut, which checks in at 3:40. The version on the podcast was the album version, which is 3:56 in length and features a guitar solo. The single cut reached #1 on the Billboard chart back in November 1977, according to Joel Whitburn.

Sixteen seconds seems somewhat insignificant, but every second counted on radio, and anything longer than that would be on the bubble of played/not played. Unless you were a huge artist, the chances of your "long" record getting played were slim.

Here's a rendition of the longer version:

2012-01-11

Reckoner '85

My friend Adam sends me this link to a Radiohead remix of "Reckoner", done to make it sound like it was from 1985.

The track gets the New Order circa Low-life treatment, and it most likely makes use of a Yamaha DX7 or at least samples/patches designed to emulate voices from the iconic sounding synth. Here's a demo that gives you an idea of what the keyboard can sound like... I'm sure you can think of dozens of songs that use this instrument, mostly from the David Foster category.

Here's a recent use of the same instrument, from the album that was at the top of many critics' year end lists, Bon Iver's "Beth/Rest".

2012-01-10

Obligatory New Year's post

It's about time I got that Christmas post off the top of the page. Happy New Year, and all that. It's been a relaxing, and then busy again couple of weeks. Last week I worked on some pretty cool stuff for work that I can post when it airs/goes online, so stay tuned for that.
In the meantime, to get the blog juices flowing again, here's a list of the most visited posts on the blog from the past year:

Bonus: This Resident Evil post from June 2010 was the third most visited post this past year. Go figure. I need to either post more, post more quality stuff, or post more about songs in trailers. And also more concert reviews. Who's up for a show soon?