26 April 2012

Weep Themselves to Sleep

Surprise!!I am recommending Jack White's heavily hyped solo effort, Blunderbuss. I wasn't crazy for the White Stripes and what turned me around was Dead Weather. Thanks to that side project, I am giving this a chance. It could be that I was primed for this sound growing up with Classic Rock and being a HUUUGE Guns N'Roses fan as a kid. Yes, GN'R. Why do I mention them? The piano stylings on this album are straight up Axl Rose circa the Use Your Illusion Tours, when he would dedicate a portion of the live show to sitting at the baby grand and noodlin' away and pouring his twisted heart out. Like Axl, White is putting out something from the heart here. I haven't deeply studied the lyrics, but ya can because a lovely lyric book is part of the album packaging. There is something very familiar sounding on this album, very Nashville with the slide guitar and keys, mixing with a warm guitar sounds from AM radio circa the mid nineteen seventies. I didn't expect to like this album, but after a few listens, it still holds up. I think one might have to be in a particular mood for this, if this style of music isn't your daily thing, but all in all, an album that stands out amongst this month's releases. Try "Weep Themselves to Sleep" on for size. Buy your copy of Blunderbuss on CD & LP here.

11 April 2012

Vava Voom!




Sometimes you just gotta say, "what the bleep" and choose something kinda surfacey, indulgent, and mainstream for a listen. Last we I had Madonna, this week I have selected Bassnectar's Vava Voom. Perhaps I am fixated on my upcoming mini-vacation, but I want to hear some tunes that evoke fun, feeling carefree, and evocative of warmer weather. I found nothing terribly gripping this week to review, but the new Bassnectar is out and I say, "Hail to Bassheads!!"

Bassnectar is the stage name used by DJ, producer, and remixer Lorin Ashton, one of the more popular and influential figures in California's electronic music community. Bassnectar's music is known for its eclecticism, embracing elements of extreme bass, dubstep, breakbeat, and other IDM styles, as well as shifting tempos, contrasting moods, and dynamics that go from gentle to bruising and back during the course of a set. A significant amount of Bassnectar's music also has a strong activist streak, and Ashton uses his work to promote social and political causes and to foster a sense of community.

In 1996, Ashton started learning how to DJ, and coupled with his earlier experience in percussion, he recorded four-track demos with his band and studied electronic music at the University of California in Santa Cruz, soon mastering the basics of spinning and producing dance music. He started producing recordings for other acts in his spare time, and in 2001 he was invited to remix a track by Michael Franti & Spearhead for a single. Later that same year, the first Bassnectar album was released, Freakbeat for the Beatfreaks, which Ashton produced and released on his own label, Amorphous Music. While his first few albums earned him a buzz on the indie electronic scene, the fourth Bassnectar album, 2004's Diverse Systems of Throb, expanded his audience and influence, and since then, Bassnectar has issued a steady stream of albums, singles, and podcasts on which he has collaborated with artists including KRS-One, Ellie Goulding, Perry Farrell, Buckethead, and Gogol Bordello, as well as producers Diplo, BT, DJ Vadim, and Rjd2. Bassnectar also became a popular live attraction, with Ashton spinning up to 150 nights at year at venues ranging from clubs and warehouses to festivals such as Coachella, Bonnaroo, and Lollapalooza. In 2010, he got into the festival game himself, staging his first Bass Center Festival in Broomfield, Colorado, featuring sets by Dan Deacon, That 1 Guy, Brother Ali, and many more, as well as Bassnectar.

Compared to his other albums, Vava Voom seems like the most thrown together just for the fun of it--not a clear directional flow, many guest spots, and offering the producer at his most commercial (the club hit, title track with Lupe Fiasco), his most headphone-oriented (the otherworldly "Laughter Crescendo" sounds like a '70s sci-fi soundtrack outtake), and surprisingly, his most sexy (thousands of little dubstep babies are going to their own "drop" to "Nothing Has Been Broken" and Tina Malia's breathy vocals). Sometimes you just gotta fuggedabouttit. Besides, this is the music that's right on the pulse of the most popular electronic dance festivals and the cross-genre guest spots assure the greatest possible audience and I like that.

Ya might as well watch the video while listening to the first single, with Lupe Fiasco.
Kinda ridiculous, but it even had moms bopping in the shop yesterday! Cheers!



Buy your copy of Vava Voom here.

PS--he is coming to Rochester's Armory on Record Store Day, April 21!!

PPS--We will be opening on 9am on Record Store Day! Come early, get the first picks!!

06 April 2012

I'm Addicted



Perchance I am predictable in that I'd have to feature the new Madonna, MDNA.
It seems trendy these days to spell your album or band name without vowels; we had MSTRKRFT, MGMT, SBTRKT, TRST and now Her Madgesty has jumped the bandwagon, in addition to playing with the acronym for the chemical compound in ecstacy, MDMA. She has always been a clever gal and perhaps she wants us to think that listening to her music will soar our spirits into the upper echelons of bliss.

On MDNA, she is back with producer William Orbit and goes full throttle into the current pop-dance likes of DeadMau5, Benny Bernassi, or David Guetta. It's fist bumping anthems that only Madonna can do--references to turning the radio up, to boys, to girls, to being a sinner. Honestly, I cringe at her referring to herself as a "girl" when she is 53, but hey, she's in shape and doesn't look her age (maybe with some dermatological help?) and can still get men half her age, so mazel tov. I don't care for the single," Gimme All Your Luvin", but the opener, "Girl Gone Wild" gets my attention, as let's remember, I had my come-uppins while listening to dance music and raving with candy necklaces and UFO pants. On a whole, we are told the story of divorce, that Guy Ritchie only wanted her for her money, that there is not enough love in the world for her, that she would give anything and everything of herself for a man willing and capable of providing her with an endless and unconditional love right back. Instead, she is having fun with younger and very handsome males, in a sense bringing her full circle, back to her beginnings as a Boy-Toy.

If you are any sort of music snob, or hate dance music or Madonna, then this might not be for you. If you are a lifelong fan such as me, or looking for something fun to listen to while getting ready for a night on the town or having dranks with friends, give the Material Girl your time and money.

Here's my Jam, "I'm Addicted" (the other hott track, deep cut is "Some Girls", by the way):



Buy your copy of MDNA here
PS--vinyl comes out mid month!