Showing posts with label Dan Deacon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dan Deacon. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Songs Of The Week #25: TCDroogsma

Parquet Courts, Dan Deacon, Indians, Nightlands, & The Ericksons...


Well hello again, MP3 junkies!  Welcome to Songs Of The Week #25!

For those of you who are unfamiliar with Songs Of The Week, here's the story.  Each week we ask two of our regular contributors to download the songs given away each week via The Current's Song Of The Day podcast.  They listen to them and give them a review of 1-5.  As always, we highly suggest that you the reader click here and subscribe to the podcast.  It's free music, people!

As you can see, we always post a poll on the right hand side of the page.  Be sure to vote for your favorite song of the week.  The winner receives the self-validation that comes with winning an anonymous internet poll.

Sadly, we have some bad news this week.  As you can see, we were only able to have one of our contributors (TCDroogsma) review the songs.  Unfortunately, MinneSarah has resigned her post as a Songs Of The Week reviewer.  We know, bad times.

So, until we find somebody else to review songs each week, it'll be TCDroogsma flying solo.  Sorry in advance.

Now that all of that's out of the way, on to the songs!  Droogsy, thoughts?

01. Parquet Courts - Borrowed Time (from the album Light Up Gold)


TCDroogsma:

     Much like any white guy in his 30's, the words "Parquet Courts" conjure up one image: The Boston Garden floor.  Much like any white guy in his 30's who inherently dislikes basketball, the Boston Celtics will always be associated with their mid-80's heydays of Bird, McHale, & Parish.

     Why am I bringing up a basketball team from the 80's?  Because "Borrowed Time" sounds like it came straight out of 1985.  Parquet Courts manages to work up a sweet, no-wave type of groove (complete with noodley guitars and halting stop/start action).  The first band that came to mind when I heard this song was The Minutemen.  Don't be put off by the wretched Brooklyn-ites in the video above.  This song will make you want to pogo around your room until you're a sweaty mess.

Final Score: 4/5

02. Dan Deacon - Guilford Avenue Bridge (Live at The Current)


 
TCDroogsma:    

     It seems like Dan Deacon is maturing at exactly the same rate I am.  I was 25 when I first heard Spiderman Of The Rings and it's "everything all the time" aesthetic appealed to me.

     As I've gotten older, I've become a much bigger fan of Deacon's work since Spiderman.  Rather than the hyperactivity of those early works, he's begun to let songs breathe a little bit.  "Guilford Avenue Bridge" is still a busy song, but the song is best in its first and final third when the percussion is thinned and the song becomes infected with a deep, fuzzed out bass groove.  Sometimes it's best to just slow things down.  Life moves pretty fast, if you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.


Final Score:  3.5/5

03. Indians - I Am Haunted (from the album Somewhere Else)


TCDroogsma:

     We're now living in a post-Vernon world.  It's a strange, atmospheric place inhabited by acoustic guitars, reverb, and falsetto vocals.  The inhabitants of this world walk a very, very fine line between enjoyable & insufferable.

     Fortunately for us, Indians falls on the enjoyable side of the line.  "I Am Haunted" is not the most original thing you'll hear all year, but they manage to borrow all the right elements of Bon Iver & Ariel Pink to create a sneakily catchy acoustic jam.  Under normal circumstances I'm vehemently opposed to warbly vocals lingering in the background, but somehow they manage to make that work.  Throw in a chorus that is beautifully anti-climactic and you've got a song that takes a lot of high-risk pieces and turns out a high-reward product.

Final Score: 4/5

04. Nightlands - So Far So Long (from the album Oak Island)

 

TCDroogsma:

     Boy, you know it's been a solid week of songs when I can get behind two songs that rely on atmosphere & reverb for a big chunk of their appeal.  Much like Indians, however, Nightlands makes some moves that could easily backfire and manages to make them work.

    "So Far So Long" doesn't change tempo at all.  In fact, the drums and bass rarely drop out at all.  Somehow Nightlands still manages to give the song a distinctly different feel at each turn with an added guitar strum and a flute (?) turning up during the chorus.  There's something enjoyably hypnotic about "So Far So Long."  I can't quite put my finger on what makes this song so enjoyable, and that's a good thing.

Final Score:  3.5/5

05. The Ericksons - Gone Blind (from the album The Wild)


TCDroogsma:

     Picked guitar lines, assertive female vocals, reflective yet resolved lyrics.  The Ericksons stand poised to be Minnesota's answer to... Tracy Chapman?  I guess that's something.

     "Gone Blind" is not a bad song, merely a dull one.  I'm certainly happy that this woman has been able to make her peace with whatever was troubling her and look forward, but a chorus of "I count the seconds in the days..." leaves a lot to be desired.  This is more Facebook status post than pop song (though the piano that comes in at the end was a nice touch).

Final Score: 2.5/5

There you have it, folks!  Another week's worth of songs downloaded, reviewed, and filed away.

As always, please note that neither Newest Industry nor its contributors are in any way affiliated with these artists, The Current, or MPR.  We're just music fans with keyboards and too much time on our hands.



For more TCDroogsma be sure to give him a follow on Twitter (@TCDroogsma).  He can also be found right here on Newest Industry hosting our Flatbasset Radio podcast.


Newest Industry also has a home on Twitter (@NewestIndustry1) which you can follow to stay up on the work being done by all of our contributors.  We also have a home on Facebook.  Trivial as it seems, stopping by and giving us a "Like" is a free & legitimate way to support the blog.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Songs Of The Week #4: MinneSarah & TCDroogsma

The Antlers, Dan Deacon, Lydia Loveless, Alt-J, Ben Rosenbush & The Brighton...


Hey everybody!  We're back with Songs Of The Week #4.  Again this week we've asked MinneSarah & TCDroogsma to give us their thoughts on last week's batch of The Current's Song Of The Day podcast.  As we've mentioned many times, be sure to go here and subscribe to the blog yourself.

Alright, kids.  What did you think?

The Antlers - Crest (from the album Undersea)




MinneSarah: 

     This song is pretty downtempo, but I like how it starts with the drums.  I wonder if Tricky got together with Morphine and Jeff Buckley if this is what would have come up? Maybe? It's sort of boring and drones on for an under four minute song.  Here are three places you would get the maximum enjoyment of this song:  walking home in the rain from the grocery store, on a boat at sunset but the sky is cloudy, on the KIDS soundtrack (they dealt with some real stuff, for kids).  They get an extra half a point because I seem to recall they are on Frenchkiss Records which usually always has exceptionally good taste.

TCDroogsma:

     I really like the vibe this song has going. The instrumentation in the song has a really cool 'film-noir' type vibe to it, especially the distant trumpet sound.

     Lyrically, it's fine, but the real problem with the song lies in the fact that the vocal melody never seems to materialize. Now, for the record, I'm a big fan of bands like Supergrass & E-LO, bands that stack hooks on hooks on hooks. There is some virtue in stepping back from the microphone and letting the instruments sell the song, but I feel like this song is one killer chorus from being a real gem. Still, I can appreciate this song for what it is rather than what it isn't. Plus, it definitely gets better with repeated listens.

Final Score: MinneSarah - 2.5
                  TCDroogsma - 3 

Dan Deacon - True Thrush (from the album America)



MinneSarah:

     More is more.  I said that last week with that Leisure birds track, but this time it's too much.  The weird baby and backward talking vocals is doing nobody any favors.  Only Missy Elliot can pull that off.  There is so much going on in this song, it actually makes me nervous.  It did when I heard it the first time, and also after three glasses of wine.  Don't do drugs, kids.  Or do, maybe you would get this song and could explain it to me.  I do enjoy the uptempo-ness of this song.  Places you could listen to this song:  A fireworks party (don't blow your hand off), an elfen toy factory (Matel go real hard), a waterpark where there are dogs in sunglasses present.

TCDroogsma:

     When I was in New York I actually had a bit of a Dan Deacon phase (yeah, it was a strange time in my life). His album Bromst & Spiderman Of The Rings got the most plays. Part of what made them great was the fact that they were relentless. Everything all the time, everything all the time!

      With “True Thrush” he seems to have taken a step away from that attitude and landed somewhere closer to Dosh on the musical spectrum (although the Daffy Duck vocals, his trademark, do turn up). I actually really enjoy this song, but I'm not totally sure if someone who's completely new to Dan Deacon would 'get it,' y'know?

Final Score: MinneSarah - 1
                  TCDroogsma - 3.5 

Lydia Loveless - Can't Change Me (from the album Indestructible Machine)


 
MinneSarah:

     Alright.  I don't like twangy songs, female vocals, or most things in general.  However, the lyrics to this song are fantastic.  "That's gonna change how you feel about me, baby, but it won't change me" is akin to my favorite White Stripes song, "Ball and a Biscuit" (yes, I like 7 minute songs sometimes) in which Jack White proclaims, "it was the other two that made me your third, but it's my mother that made me the seventh son."  I love lyrics that are drunken "you don't know me," and "I'm nobody but in relation to myself."  Every lyric in this song is my favorite. "But i swear that every hangover is gonna be my last, and it looks like only whiskey's gonna kick my ass and have me still come back."  Yeah, I like it.  "Being good is killin' me inside."  Places you could listen to this song include:  The Turf Club, Lee's Liquor Lounge, and surprisingly, The Amsterdam.

TCDroogsma:
     It's appropriate that this song came out during State Fair week because that's exactly what it sounds like. I know nothing of Lydia Loveless except this song, but she is definitely giving off that 'country girl gone bad' vibe. Of course, with a name as constructed as 'Lydia Loveless' I have a hard time believing that vibe is anything but constructed as well.

    She has a great, Neko Case kind of voice, but these 'You don't know me!' lyrics are straight out of an episode of The Jenny Jones Show. If she was actually the drunken spitfire she's pretending to be in this song she never would have gotten her ass to the studio to record it. There's nothing wrong with building up a fake persona in pop music, but Christ, make up something original.

Final Score: MinneSarah - 4
                  TCDroogsma - 1 

Alt-J - Fitzpleasure (from the album An Awesome Wave)



MinneSarah:

     No.  I like the epic transitions in this song, but ummmm, does anyone else realize, these aren't real lyrics?  Like this isn't English, this isn't Spanish, this isn't Klingon.  This guy is singing in what those little magnetic hair heads guys sing in.  That is not a compliment.  The saving grace is that the rest of the song sort of sounds like a Chris Martin/Bono mashup, so yeah.  Not happy.  Epic transitions.  Where could you listen to this?:  Shopping at the mall in an ironic grandpa sweater and a backpack, Manu Chau's son's third birthday party, the beaches of Jupiter (I am so confused). 

TCDroogsma:

     Have you ever been listening to a hip-hop track and thought to yourself, “Damn, this beat bangs. Too bad the rapping is terrible?” Well, welcome to the indie-pop version of a Common album.

     The instrumentation on this track is fucking awesome. It builds and crumbles all based on that rib-rumbling bass line. Unfortunately, the vocals are the worst kind of hipster weird-for-weird's-sake bullshit (copyright Moe Scizlak). Take the brutal singing off this track and it's a 4 of 5 song. As it stands, you're looking at 2 of 5.

Final Score: MinneSarah - 1/5
                  TCDroogsma - 2/5 

Ben Rosenbush & The Brighton - This Fire (from the album A Wild Hunger)


 
MinneSarah:


     Nobody told these guys that Mumford and Sons aren't really all that. I don't blame them, that is some popular musicness.  But that doesn't make it good.  I'm not a fan.  This is very chimey, and droney.  Hipsters may give this fantastic marks.  I am bored.  It actually sounds better than Mumford and Sons, there I said it.  Places this would sound good:  a fire, that show with Dennis Leary about Firemen, the Winnipeg Folk Festival.

TCDroogsma:

     If we rounded up every singer-songwriter Minnesotan who uses nature as a metaphor for their personal life and put them all in one place I'm pretty sure it would be the third largest city in the state. Mason Jennings would be the mayor.

     Frreal, is there an assembly line at MPR studios that keeps spitting these things out? Jesus....

Final Score: MinneSarah - 1/5
                  TCDroogsma - 0/5

There you have it, everybody.  We hope you enjoyed these songs and, again, strongly suggest that you subscribe to the podcast yourself.  Be sure to check out the poll to the right and cast your vote for the best song of the week.

As always, this blog and its contributors are in no way associated with any of the acts above, The Current, or MPR.  We just have a lot of time on our hands.

For more of MinneSarah you can find her on Twitter (@MinneSarah) and Instragram as MinneSarah.  She's currently debating the merits of changing her name to all caps like DOOM.

For more TCDroogsma he can be found on Twitter (@TCDroogsma), Instagram as TCDroogsma, or over at his own blog Caffeine & Obscenities If you like pictures of donuts or cats, or if you like people who use swearing as a crutch for their limited vocabulary, you should check those out.

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