Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Oh, let the Top 10 Lists Begin:


So its that time of the year when bloggers and writers find that they have to somehow quantify the last 12 months by making thoughtful and carefully crafted lists of things. Being that I'm a little bit lazy, I've shortened my Top Albums list to only ten, but with a few honorable mentions thrown in there at the end.

Just as another preface, I have to say that all of these albums are phenomenal, and ten albums is only about one every 5.2 weeks, so go ahead and listen to these if you haven't already.

1 Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever

Just recently got into this album, and boy did I. It's a great album that stands up to repeat listenings. Its haunting and distant, but it still feels like you're being shown something private and secretive. Gonna find this on vinyl.

2 Beck - Modern Guilt

If you had told me in 2007 that an album by Beck would be on my list for 2008, I wouldn't have believed you. I've had a love / hate relationship with Beck's music, and didn't have plan on returning to his catalog, ever. Then I heard the first 4 tracks of Modern Guilt at a bar, while eating a burrito, and knew that I had to get it and listen to it.

3 MGMT - Oracular Spectacular

Fun is the optimum word to describe MGMT's sophomore effort, because its practically bursting from every synth-y hook and catchy chorus. You should be running to the nearest where-ever-it-is-you-get-music to listen to this.

4 Lil Wayne - Tha Carter 3

Lil Wayne is the best rapper alive. After downloading mixtape after mixtape that were being billed as the lead up to this album, and the itunes only ep The Leak last December, I'd have to say the hype leading up to Tha Carter 3 has just as big of an impression in my mind that the release did. The album turned out to be a grower, to-boot. Wayne is in true form on nearly every track, and the skits are kept to a minimum, making for somewhat of an anomalous mainstream rap album: one that's listenable start to finish. Up there with The Chronic in terms of genre changing releases. I own it on vinyl.

5 David Byrne and Brian Eno - Everything that will happen will happen today.

Surprisingly good album. Not really though, considering how good their first collaboration was (-thanks, mom, for the vinyl), but it really showcases these two unique musicians. And it proves that its possible to still be cool and super relevant when your old, even if it is easier to slip into moments of poignance. Only available online, which sweetens the deal.

6 She & Him - Volume I

Who knew Zoey Deschanel had such a great voice and kept such good company? I guess it makes sense when you sit down and think about it, but the indie actress's collaboration with M. Ward produced a classic country-ish record defined by great songwriting and an even better voice behind it all.

7 Fucked Up - The Chemistry of Modern Life

Couldn't get more different that She & Him, but Fucked Up has fueled most of my skateboarding sessions for the past few months. Aggressive, yet contemplative and thorough post-post-hardcore. That's the only way I can describe this without shouting.

8 Department of Eagles - In Ear Park

A really solid first outing for this band. It's great how diverse folk and alt-country-ish influences hav become so prevalent. Reminds me of a more laid back Band of Horses.

9 Man Man - Rabbit Habbits

Another album on this list that I had a lot of expectations about before it even came out, which is usually a good formula for a letdown (read: Of Montreal), but Man Man gave the world a great, albeit a little bit distracted, album.

10 Girl Talk - Feed the Animals

I'd feel bad if I left this one off the list, even if 2008 marks the year I stopped listening to Girl Talk. The problem is, that's it's way to good to stay obscure and ignored, like it really should be. Maybe its because I'm selfish with things that I've been into since they first showed up like little unknown presents of wonderfulness that I could bump incessantly and tell all my friends about. That's how I felt about Girl Talk, even though I had started to feel that itch of burgeoning popularity as soon as 2007. Now it just seems like he's everywhere, and everyone's really into it--which is cool, minus the fact that I feel robbed from in a little despicable way. So listen to / don't listen to Girl Talk.

Honorable Mention:

Colin Meloy - Colin Meloy Sings Sam Cooke & Colin Meloy Sings Live!

The debut solo album for The Decemberists frontman, and the tour only EP where two great listens this year. Great gifts for fans of The Decemberists.

Of Montreal - Skeletal Lamping


A little bit too hit-or-miss to make my top 10, but Of Montreal keeps surprising just about everyone with each successive release. Had I been blogging, 2007's Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer would have topped my list, easily.

Vampire Weekend - Vampire Weekend

I hate this album. Deep, real, seething hatred. I hate how its played at Urban Outfitter on an endless loop, I hate how it was automatically enshrined as the "cool, hip new album of 2008" when it came out. I also hate how god damn good it is.

The Replacements Rhino Re-Releases
(esp. on vinyl)

Thank you, record company gods for realizing that there's a huge niche market for stuff like this! I've only been able to find Pleased To Meet Me at my record store, but there are rumors that Let It Be, aka my favorite record of all time is going to get a nice 180g pressing too. And that's The Replacements, not the Beatles.
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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Man Man Seek Kitten

From p-fork:

Man Man are apparently seeking a cuddly cute kitten to squeeze into a miniature bowler hat on a video shoot in nyc this weekend. If only betty were a little bit smaller....

link
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Sunday, November 16, 2008

The Tain


A few years ago, The Decemberists, one of my personal favorites, relesed an EP called The Tain.
It was a sinlge 18 miunte track divided into 5 cantos based on the Irish epic Táin Bó Cúailnge. As for the song, it's amazing and just about as epic as a song can get, and now after years of painstaking hand animation, it has a video.

The task was taken by Montana filmmaker Andy Smetanka, who specializes in construction paper stop motion animation. When I first saw this video, I was convinced that it had to have been done with After Effects, Motion, Toon Boom or one of the myriad other pieces of niche software that specialize in creating cool & off-kilter animation. Yeah, there were a few "hairs" on the film, and some of the exposures looked a bit uneven, but 18+ minutes of hand animation without a digital workflow? Please...

Not so apparently. Mr. Smetanka works entirely with Super-8, the medium that I was introduced to my first semester in film school, but long since lost interest in once that cameras and film got bigger and better in the semesters to follow. Now whats really amazing about this is the animation timing. This guy has to be equal parts meticulous and mathematical--in order to accomplish a single minute of this would take months of trial and error, even for someone trained in modern animation techniques--animation like this simply isn't done like this anymore. The level of frame complexity, synchronization with the soundtrack, speed of cutting and the sheer amount of all of it blow my mind.

Just a note on how all of this was physically constructed: construction paper cut-outs, complete with pinned together joints are laid down over a light box which is covered in a mixture of layers of opaque tissue paper & solid construction paper to form fixed backgrounds. Then, one frame at a time the characters are animated to perform desired action. Since this way shot on Super-8, it was potentially a little bit easier because most Super-8 cameras shoot at 18 frames per second--six frames less than the motion picture standard of 24fps. I'm not 100% sure about whether or not Mr. Smentanka uses a camera that shoot on 18fps or 24fps, but either way, directing animation on film that you have to develop is if anything, painstaiking. So here's the embedded video, and a link for the hi-res version. Enjoy!



Hi-Res available here
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Friday, September 12, 2008

2 More Bowie Records

So I stopped in at Goldmine today on my lunch break and found two more Bowie records! Apparently they've been there about a week, but Matt couldn't get a hold of me to tell me since I wasn't at work all week. Luckily I only missed out on one that I don't have, Hunky Dory.

And yes, I'm blogging from work But it's slow and I'm not even doing it from my work pc, instead this is via email from my iPhone. It's a feature that I really enjoy, especially for posting pictures. The only downside is that it limits you to one picture per email (stupid iphone) and there isn't a way to tag your posts. But regardless it's some pretty cool functionality!

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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Music Video Madness

Music videos are what all the kids are talking about these days...like 20 years ago something that was this cool would've gotten a chance to be played on the tv, rather than insipid crap thats popular with the < 18 crowd these days.

I hate sounding like a codger, but its really sad that MTV has now gone more years without even attempting to show block video programming than it did in its original format, which I can't even remember.

But not that we have teh internets, music videos are free to watch and enjoy from the privacy of anywhere that has wifi. Preferably sexually graphic videos, in a public place.

This is a video by one of my dearest, oldest friends, Mr. Shawn Kyle's band The Beauvilles. He tipped me off to it the other day, and I've been meaning to call him back.

Check it:


Links:
The Beauvilles myspace.
Pitchfork.tv has lots of rad, high quality videos
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Saturday, August 23, 2008

Bowie Records

So another phone call from Jon at Bart's CD Cellar on Friday yielded another addition to my collection of David Bowie records. 1977's Low (bottom left), the first album of the Berlin Trilogy recorded with Brian Eno.

The other albums pictured are (left to right, top to bottom) The Man Who Sold the World, Ziggy Stardust, Station to Station, Young Americans, and "Heroes".

Suffice it to say, I'm quite pleased at the little record collection I have going. I haven't done a count in a few months, but its got to be over a hundred by now. It's also great that Jon has been keeping an eye out for things I'm looking for, like Bowie albums from the 70s. It funny too because he doesn't have my phone number so he has to call me at work--which usually catches me off guard but its always a pleasant surprise.

So for the record (I'm punny!), I'm only looking for four more Bowie albums now: Diamond Dogs, Hunky Dory, Aladin Sane, and Pin Ups.

I can't stress enough how awesome it is listening to these albums in their original format on vintage equipment. Another good find this week was New Edition's eponymous 1984 album at Goldmine! Bobby Brown rules!
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