man man month - Days On File
Transcription
man man month - Days On File
MAN MAN SHARKS DEL THE FUNKY HOMOSAPIEN The Joys Of Living 2008-2010 Velvet Scene/Rise 2011 Golden Era The Council 2011 Sharks? Who the hell calls themselves Sharks? Apparently, this Warwickshire, UK, four-piece does. Oakland, CA, seems like a rough town — the sort of place where gangsta rap blasts from open windows most hours of the day. Despite that rough rep, well projected by the city’s NFL team, the Raiders, Oakland is also home to Del The Funky Homosapien, one of the primary detractors from the pure gangsta rap sound. Don’t get me wrong — Golden Era, Del’s latest album, bears a distinct gangsta flavor, but one tempered by shots of comic relief and pure funky creativity. Del originally entered the rap game as Ice Cube’s younger cousin. He supported the future Are We There Yet? star as a member of his crew, but after Cube helped Del launch his own record, I Wish My Brother George Was Here, the two split ways. The Joys Of Living 2008-2010 is a collection of material that came out on a pair of EPs, 2008’s Shallow Waters and 2010’s Show Of Hands, released on London indie label Best Before Records. That said, let’s assume that most haven’t heard these Brit brats and their big British sound. And it is big. The record starts with “Sweet Harness,” a pretty and melodic ditty that’s easy on the ears and rocks into a more urgent and upbeat indie rock title track. But just three songs into the record, lead vocalist James Mattock does an unaccompanied intro with a sweet Joe Strummer rasp — a bold journey for any musician, English or not. Later, on “Bury Your Youth,” Sharks even fall into a roots-reggae rhythm. But while they show some early The Clash tendencies, Sharks don’t solely lean on the legendary Londoners and their patented sound. In fact, Sharks don’t lean on anyone. Sure, fans of Joy Division’s guitar work, crosspond contemporaries Titus Andronicus’ tempos, and (dare I say it) Weston’s “cutesiness” may be drawn to Sharks’ catchy refrains. Borrowed influences range from both continents and four decades. The band actually teamed up with Rise Records to create their own imprint, called Velvet Scene, and now folks are tapping their feet everywhere. “Fallen On Deaf Ears” features some uplifting horns, and “Yours To Fear” is a different kind of sing-along to piano. There’s nothing particularly dark or heavy here, just a lot of well-constructed rock sounds with punk undertones, skillful harmonizing, and great production. Lyrically, Mattock is intelligent without overstating it. “Have you ever stepped inside yourself, to see the truth is a dream aloud?” You may have to scratch below the surface to find meaning, but you don’t need a pickax. And you’re not just shoveling shit. Sharks are original, but you wouldn’t say this is a particularly acquired taste. I can see anyone popping this in and feeling pretty good, which leads to the conclusion that this young band can pretty much call themselves whatever they want. By Jon Coen While Ice went on to further cement the role of gangsta rap in American race relations and mainstream culture, Del took a step back from the same old beats and rhymes. Two decades later, Del has shouldered the weight of a tumultuous career that has earned him hushed praise and a loyal underground following. He is best known for his flows on “Clint Eastwood” by Gorillaz and for his host of songs in a list of skateboarding, snowboarding, and BMX video games and movies. In that sense, it’s unlikely that Golden Era will see Del escaping his typecast. But that’s okay. Releasing an album so jam-packed with fun beats and transcendent rhymes, Del stays with what he knows and wins because of it. “Calculate” finds Del The Funky Homosapien firing on all cylinders. An N.W.A.-like beat carries the song musically, allowing Del’s monster rhymes to bedazzle, unabridged by over-utilized hooks like most popular hip-hop today. The flow slows on the chorus, allowing listeners a chance to keep up with our master maestro as he blasts his competition: “But it don’t add up/ You ignorant, got no clue/ I know you must be so confused/ They got the nerve to talk so reckless.” However, other songs, like the boringly repetitive “Upside Down,” fail to add up to much more than beats and words. Del will never have the fame of his cuz, but overall solid performances like Golden Era ensure that the Oakland MC will stay top dog in the house he built. By Alex Lemonde-Gray Life Fantastic Anti- 2011 At this point, it’s futile to even try and pinpoint Man Man’s chaotic genre exercises. Carnival rock, Gypsy jazz, freak folk, kindergarten punk, old-fashioned sea shanties, doo-wop, R&B… it’s all there on this Philadelphia fivepiece’s last three albums. But on their fourth full-length, Life Fantastic, the stakes are considerably raised, mostly because this is by far the slickest set in Man Man’s history. Surprisingly, though, it works: the production of Saddle Creek mastermind Mike Mogis and the lush string arrangements of Bright Eyes member Nate Walcott keep the band’s patented pandemonium under control. PICK MO OF THE NTH But Life Fantastic didn’t emerge from some easygoing period of Man Man’s newly successful life. Instead, frontman Ryan Kattner sat down to write torn up over the deaths of several friends. “In the past, I was able to take bad situations and turn them into something creative,” Kattner explains in press for the album. “This time I felt nothing, which was worse than feeling miserable or depressed.” Album opener “Knuckle Down” maintains the same lurching Man Man energy thanks to excellent drumming from Chris Powell, but Kattner’s schizophrenic keys are more subdued, Billy Dufala’s horns more tasteful, and Russell Higbee’s guitar lines more nuanced. “Piranhas Club” smiles through its drug-addled surf-pop haze, but “Steak Knives” resides at the other end of that spectrum — bare bones, but with a touch of reverb added to Kattner’s haunting voice and extra aching beauty layered on thanks to those aforementioned strings. “Dark Arts” is similarly downbeat, but far more propulsive and batshit-crazy, hearkening back to Man Man’s anarchic early work much as the seven-minute organ-driven jam “Shameless” does. Life Fantastic journeys to mythical Eastern European lands on the shimmying “Haute Tropique,” but as always, Man Man saves the best songs for last. The queasy gang-chorus splendor of “Bangkok Necktie,” the strutting magnificence of the title track, and the cinematic lounge-jazz balladry of “Oh, La Brea” all feature plenty of breakneck experimentalism, along with heaps of splendiferous production from Mogis. Even with a markedly cleaned-up face, the brutal Man Man personality has not changed. Kattner’s songwriting is still jaw-droppingly evocative. The entire band is still ridiculously tight. In fact, 2011 might stand as the band’s most prolific period to date. My advice? Buy Life Fantastic, catch Man Man live this summer, and enjoy the life-changing moments. By Nick McGregor THEE OH SEES FLEET FOXES BILL CALLAHAN Castlemania In The Red 2011 Helplessness Blues Sub Pop 2011 Apocalypse Drag City 2011 Thee Oh Sees are funny cats, full of vintage garage-rock cheekiness, folksy psychedelia, and completely maniacal on-stage antics, throwing themselves headfirst into their live performances and authentically purveying what it means to be an independent rock act. Headed by John Dwyer, who’s originally from Providence, RI, and whose laundry list of acts founded in the exploding San Francisco indie scene include Pink & Brown, The Coachwhips, OCS, and more, Thee Oh Sees accomplish what a lot of the burgeoning revivalist garage acts as of late do not: originality. Over the last two weeks, I’ve spent a lot of time trying to figure out who likes the sound of a lute. When I first heard Sting sing Songs From The Labyrinth, on which he used circular breathing to force his listeners to sleep as he droned on for 14 hours over Edin Karamazov’s string play, I got a headache. The same thing happened with Fleet Foxes during the first 14 seconds of their new album, Helplessness Blues, so they clock in at 5000% better then the shrink-wrapped migraine I purchased the last time I explored European roots music. Based on statistics and probability, the 1,888 seconds of greatness on Helplessness Blues divided into the 14 seconds of shit equals Fleet Foxes having a 741% chance of success. What keeps an immensely talented singersongwriter from achieving mainstream success? In some instances, it’s his or her vocal pitch. In other cases, it’s the classic troubadour case of obscure impenetrability, using weird song structures, offbeat lyrics, and puzzling imagery to purposefully stand out. But for Bill Callahan, who already boasts a devoted cult following, his only crime may be his casualness. Too easygoing. Too laid-back. Too carefree. But make no mistake — when NPR did their “50 Great Voices” feature in 2010, they made a huge mistake by excluding Callahan’s husky, heartwarming baritone. Castlemania, the group’s seventh offering, comes in at a total of 16 tracks that are chock full of their familiar blend of rock, only with a little less of the punk tinge found on their last two very well-received albums, Help and Warm Slime. At times, Thee Oh Sees are raucously playful, while at others, they’re completely warped and creepy. While the majority of the album plays with vintage sounds and features some soft harmonies intermixed from Brigid Dawson, there’s some twisted vocal work by Dwyer that just sounds downright evil propped up against the ‘60s summery pop vibe. I actually get the feeling that was the kind of sound serial killer Charlie Manson was looking for in his own heyday of recording. “I Need Seed,” the lead track off Castlemania, is about as catchy as garage rock can get. Meanwhile, “Corprophagist (A Bath Perhaps)” is a goofy track featuring jazz flute that chugs along, “Corrupted Coffin” is the most crunchy and punk-inspired of the album, and “AA Warm Breeze” plays with honky-tonk and features perfectly placed harmonica work. Clocking in at a mere 59 seconds, “Spider Cider” is probably the most indicative of Thee Oh Sees’ mischievous style, with a cartoonish Adam West version of the Batman theme song acting as a melody. If you wish The Rolling Stones, The Mamas & The Papas, The Castaways, and The Troggs sounded a little dirty and edgier — or you simply liked to get down to the Monster Mash Halloween record when you were a kid — then try to pick up Castlemania (particularly on vinyl) and enjoy the creepy tunes and super-cool cover art from Thee Oh Sees. By Peter Viele 40 EasternSurf.com This Seattle band walks the line between beautiful, progressive, popinfluenced balladry and experimental failures. And I find this endearing. It shows that they’re willing to work toward a new sound with new members in new places and not let their freedom carry them into a corky spiral of 18th-century instrumental abuse. I address this because one of the main elements on Helplessness Blues is the use of Fettered Belly Lutes and an in-depth study of Baroque-period European stringed ensembles on instrumental “The Cascades,” deriving a “Sir Gawain & The Green Knight” sonnet and eloquently splicing it into an otherwise awesome song. Aside from that, I can’t find many complaints. Frontman Robin Pecknold is a worthy architect of lyrics, and he shoots straightforward press from his own pen, a respectable move in an industry that’s often built more on public relations tactics than talent itself. Fleet Foxes haven’t held many firm rules over the years, willingly accepting members as they come and go and skirting the immense pressure to release this album in favor of maintaining a happy and healthy band. I keep coming back to one image: Fleet Foxes as a type of small community living diligent lives in a small tree (think Keebler Elves), where they record under strict barometric pressure and lighting for astounding high-end results (see pristine songs like “Sim Sala Bim” and “Lorelai”). This is partially due to their name and the nature of the fox in my own mind, but mainly it’s based on their quick shifts among numerous talents. By Will Tunstall Callahan’s early output under the Smog pseudonym was spotty. Sparse. Lo-fi to the point of ambiguity. His first proper solo album, Woke On A Whaleheart, took an impressive step in a clearer, more upbeat direction. His second effort, Sometimes I Wish We Were An Eagle, trended moodier. Darker. Even a little angry. And now Apocalypse arrives wrapped in a magical, mysterious shroud. It only clocks in at seven songs and 40 minutes — but Bill Callahan could sing for hours surrounded by nothing but air, and his voice would still carry a megaton weight. “Drover” is the clear standout of the album, boasting an ominous, high-steppin’ acoustic backbone, a spooky drum line, and a jagged fiddle riff as Callahan talks antiquated topics like cattle and crops. The song also highlights why Bill Callahan may never be the mainstream cat’s meow — his vocals ramble, repeating seemingly insignificant words with no rhyme or reason. “Baby’s Breath” similarly starts and stops in fits, with paranoid electric guitar fills overtaking Callahan’s soft country strum. And “America!” is a militaristic abstract prose poem that’s witty and intellectual but tough to enjoy in its quirkiness. Likewise with the meandering “Universal Applicant” and the notquite-fleshed-out “Free’s.” But “Riding For The Feeling” furthers “Drover’s” Old West aesthetic, a stark atmosphere that Callahan does superbly well. And “One Fine Morning” finds the Texas songwriter at his best, plinking out warm piano chords, twisting his way through nine-and-a-half minutes of indirect metaphors involving mountains and valleys and “no more drovering,” bringing the album full circle. Apocalypse is aloof yet personal. Hesitant yet sure-footed. Will it be a mainstream hit? Definitely not. Will it one day be hailed as an artistic masterpiece? Definitely. By Nick McGregor