- FILTER Magazine
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- FILTER Magazine
We Love You...Digitally Hello and welcome to the interactive version of Filter Good Music Guide. We’re best viewed in full-screen mode, so if you can still see the top of the window, please click on the Window menu and select Full Screen View (or press Ctrl+L). There you go—that’s much better isn’t it? [Mini stretches, yawns, scratches something.] Right. If you know the drill, go ahead and left-click to go forward a page; if you forget, you can always right-click to go back one. And if all else fails, intrepid traveler, press the Esc key to exit full-screen and return to a life more humble. truth, justice and Interpol Coachella #17 • May-JuLY ’07 Travis Patton Oswalt Queens of the Stone Age Keep an eye on your cursor. While reading the Guide online, you will notice that there are links on every page that allow you to discover more about the artists we write about. Scroll over each page to find the hotlinks, click ’em, and find yourself at the websites of the artists we cover, the sponsors who help make this happen, and all of the fine places to go to purchase the records you read about here. Thank you for your support of this thing we call Filter. Good music, as they say, will prevail. — Chris Martins and Pat McGuire, Editors Letters, inquiries, randomness: guide@filter-mag.com Advertising and suchlike: advertising@filter-mag.com We get a lot of mail here at the Filter offices—some good, some bad, some…well, completely unclassifiable. Send us something strange and you might see it here. There are certain things in life that are better to accept outright than to question. Like hats made to look like Philly cheesesteaks. Instead of getting stuck in the specifics surrounding the arrival of this heady hatwich, we quickly donned it and made for the airport, assuming the felt strips of meat would double as the key to Liberty City. Sadly, we were rerouted to Wisconsin where we were doused with melted cheddar. Thanks Rasta Imposta! IN THE GUIDE You can download the Filter Good Music Guide at filtermag.com. While there, be sure to check out our backissues, the latest of which features the Arctic Monkeys, Lou Reed, the Fratellis, Aesop Rock, and Explosions in the Sky. With so many of our friends and good music fans heading to Indio for Coachella, we’ve given this issue a summer festival slant. If you find yourself in the California desert, keep an eye out for the Guide; we’ll be there with enough sunscreen for everyone. ON THE WEB Go to the freshly relaunched filter-mag.com for music news, mp3s, magazine features, extended interviews, contests, staff picks, album and concert reviews, and the worldfamous Filter Blog (insider information, offhand opinions, album previews, etc.). To stay abreast of news and events in your town, sign up for the Filter Newsletter, delivered weekly to your email inbox. Cities serviced: Los Angeles, New York, Seattle, Philadelphia, Dallas, Chicago, Miami, San Francisco, Denver, Boston, Portland, Austin, Washington D.C. and London. AT THE STANDS Out now: Filter Issue 25 – “Wilco Survives.” Things are falling into place for Jeff Tweedy. He’s spending time with the family, helping out around the house, and playing cherry music with his band. Here, in light of Wilco’s fantastic seventh LP, Tweedy sits down with Filter to discuss the prior storm and the clear skies ahead. Also: Leonard Cohen shares the wealth of his hard-earned wisdom; Canadian songstress Feist lets us in on the secret of laughter; and Beastie Boy MCA interrogates punk rock greats the Bad Brains. Furthermore: we pay respect to Pulp, go a round with the National, rediscover Blonde Redhead, and admire the unusual artwork of Bill Callahan (Smog). Plus: Charlotte Gainsbourg, Ira Glass, Philip Glass, The Harder They Come, Love of Diagrams, Great Northern, Klaxons, Fog, Kurt Cobain About a Son, and a special treat from FOUND Magazine’s Davy Rothbart. Contact us guide@filter-mag.com or 5908 Barton Ave., Los Angeles, CA, 90038 Publishers Alan Miller & Alan Sartirana Editors Chris Martins & Pat McGuire Art Director Eric Almendral Editorial Assistant Colin Stutz Editorial Intern Cameron Bird Scribes Cameron Bird, Andrea Bussell, Bryan Chenault, Phil Eastman, Benjy Eisen, Kevin Friedman, Esther Ginn, Liam Gowing, David Iskra, Patrick James, Cord Jefferson, Shane Ledford, Robbie Mackey, Nevin Martell, Jack McGrue, Jeremy Moehlmann, David C. Obenour, Patton Oswalt, Beau Powers, Anthony Rayborn, Lin Riserson, Bernardo Rondeau, Sam Roudman, Colin Stutz, Louis Vlack Marketing Samantha Barnes, Stephen Barr, Mike Bell, Samantha Feld, Penny Hewson, Eric “Vizion” Jones, Torr Leonard, Jose Vargas Thank You Heather Bleemers, John Brown, Rene Carranza, Eric Frederic, Mom and Dad, Martins and Vlacks, Marc McAlpin, the Oakland Bay Area, Baillie Parker, McGuire family, Bagavagabonds, Melissa Moore, Andrea LaBarge, Adrian Martinez, Wendy & Sebastian Sartirana, Momma Sartirana, the Ragsdales, SC/ PR Sartiranas, the Masons, Pete-O, Rey, the Paikos family, Chelsea & the Rifkins, Shaynee, Wig/Tamo and the SF crew, Shappsy, Phamster, Pipe, Dana Dynamite, Christian P, Lisa O’Hara, Madelyn Hammond, Philip Rivers, Robb Nansel, Daniela Barone, Pam Ribbeck, Asher Miller, Rachel Weissman, Brill Bundy, Julie Almendral Advertising Inquiries advertising@filter-mag.com West Coast Sales: 323.464.4775 East Coast Sales: 646.202.1683 Filter Good Music Guide is published by Filter Magazine LLC, 5908 Barton Ave., Los Angeles CA 90038. Vol. 1, No. 17, May-July 2007. Filter Good Music Guide is not responsible for anything, including the return or loss of submissions, or for any damage or other injury to unsolicited manuscripts or artwork. Any submission of a manuscript or artwork should include a self-addressed envelope or package of appropriate size, bearing adequate return postage. © 2007 by Filter Magazine LLC. all rights reserved filter is printed in the usa filter-mag.com cover photo: Sumner Dilworth THE FILTER MAILBAG hl`bj`cm\i%Zfd Your Guide to Innovations in Entertainment Deluxe Album Art Saves the CD Remember when albums were big ol’ cardboard squares of interactive art you could mess with while takin’ in the tunes? You could peel a Warhol banana slowly and see, or tug down Mick’s Sticky zipper like millions of groupies before. Plopping down some hard-earned cash for an hour’s worth of music felt good then. Now, with downloading hindering record sales, innovative musicians are turning to visual art to give the stingy market purchase incentives. Leading the pack are a trio of visionaries: Beck with The Information (stickers enable purchasers to conceive the cover), Bright Eyes with Cassadaga (hidden images abound), and Arcade Fire with Neon Bible (featuring flipbooks and a lenticular cover). Zack Nipper, the artist behind Cassadaga’s unique design—art related to the album’s theme is visible only through an included Focal Decoder—views album art as an important way for musicians to communicate their ideas. “This record has layers of meaning—some are apparent on the surface, others take time to come through. We wanted to use the artwork as an extension of the music.” Focally decode and see. SHANE LEDFORD Slacker’s Internet Radio On the Go Internet radio that conforms to the user’s inner playlist is no epiphany, but Slacker Radio has a master plan to beat all. Starting at Slacker.com, music fans can choose a genre or artist station, then modify as they go. Like Dinosaur Jr’s “Feel the Pain”? Punch that cute lil’ heart button while it’s playing and the song will go into regular rotation. Can’t stand Carrie Underwood? Hit the “ban” button and she’ll never return (the free service allows six bans per hour). Both majors and indies are well-represented, the quality is top, and songs come complete with cover art, artist profiles, reviews and photos. But true innovation comes when listeners leave home. Slacker’s soon-to-be-released Personal Radio device uses WiFi to connect with Slacker satellites and beam in pre-made playlists. Subscribers to the premium radio service, in addition to enjoying ad-free listening, will be able to cache their favorite songs into the device’s library. Better yet, a forthcoming car kit will take the entire production on the road. LOUIS VLACK filter good music guide Your Guide to Innovations in Entertainment VBS.TV: Spike Jonze & Toxic Zones Direct to Homes Generosity is not a virtue usually associated with mass media, but the folks at VBS.TV (Vice Broadcasting System) are doing their part to chip away at that stone-cold image. Taking cues from their own personal innovation (“Dos & Don’ts & Friends,” the “Toxic” series which focuses on poisoned locales around the country, “Shot by [Richard] Kern”) as well the pioneering work of Al Gore (Current TV, anyone?), VBS broadcasts free Web-based television with a constant refresh rate. Spike Jonze lends his talents as creative director, whittling down user submissions into a quality database of political, cultural and arts reporting. As the news cycle shrinks, VBS is holding out hope that the egos of cable-news pundits follow suit, paving a way for a broadened TV-on-the-Internet audience. CAMERON BIRD Make Your Own MP3 Player With MOTZ In a nutshell, the Koreans have done it again by inventing a digital media player that can fit inside of a nutshell. The MOTZ DIY Music Box is a spartan mp3 player designed for embedding in everyday objects. From your average household knickknack (like a match box) to just about any creatively modified outdoor paddy whack (…or, say, a walnut) the sky’s the limit for where you can stick this doodad. Hell, they even thought to include a cut-to-fit wooden box perfect for minimalists, the creatively handicapped or back-to-basics arts and crafters. The MOTZ is USB 2.0, comes with a Li-Polymer battery and 256 MB of memory, and sells for about $40 U.S. COLIN STUTZ filter good music guide Relive SXSW at Grouper.com Whether you missed South by Southwest altogether or are still reeling from the excitement weeks later, wouldn’t it be nice to (re)live all those scintillating performances you did or didn’t get a chance to see? Well, Grouper.com’s got your number. In case you didn’t get the memo, DirecTV hosted and broadcasted live three days’ worth of performances during SXSW, each artist featured—from the Annuals to Lee “Scratch” Perry to Peter Bjorn & John—playing an hour-long set while Matt Pinfield and Abby Gennet interviewed music personalities (including a Filter editor) between sets. Now, this content is all available free-ofcharge (natch) and for your viewing pleasure on Grouper. com (which essentially functions like YouTube). An equally compelling argument for both getting your ass out to the very next rock show to hit your town, and never having to leave the house again. Colin stutz good music guide filter Travis’ Guide to Glasgow, Scotland By Patrick James Expectation is tricky business. For instance, one might expect the members of Travis—a band who in recent years was beginning to seem as invisible as their 2001 album title (The Invisible Band) suggested—to be a rather solemn lot. But not in the least. Drummer Neil Primrose is as earnest as his timing is true, and singer Fran Healy is, well, quite the “head-first” personality (read on). Also a bit startling is the complete and utter finery of their new record, The Boy With No Name. Having recorded upwards of 40 songs that they whittled down to 11 essentials, Travis return warmer, bolder and better than on almost any album yet. The warmth, in all likelihood, comes directly from their hometown of Glasgow, Scotland, a city that, per Neil, is “less full of bullshit than any other place in the world.” He and Fran were kind enough to share their thoughts on the city that’s nurtured some musical greats: the Jesus and Mary Chain, Franz Ferdinand, Belle & Sebastian, and, of course, Travis. Glasgow’s Best… …place to find a kilt? could ever match that soul. Neil: Sauchiehall Street. There are about four kilt shops right in a row down near the art school area. Fran: That street is the center of my Glasgow. …hangover cure? …stop for a spot of Scotch? Neil: We’ve always gravitated toward the places which are a bit scummy. A great spot just down the street from the art school is the Variety Bar. It is pervaded by a clientele of bums and drunks. Fran: Ah, right. By that he means artists. …means of feeding artistic creativity? scarlet page Fran: The Glasgow School of Arts is a brilliant place. Three-fourths of the band went there. I saw Belle & Sebastian’s first ever show there. I was expecting it to be the shittiest thing ever—because I know Stuart, and I thought, “His band will be rubbish”—but I was so, so wrong. Neil: The best thing in Glasgow is the re-modernization of the Kelvingrove Art Museum, in the middle of a big park which bears the same name. A good way to spend a Sunday is to go to the park, go into the museum, drink coffee and look at all the dinosaurs. filter good music guide Neil: Scotch pie [filling: mutton] and a roll with brown sauce and a can of [Scottish soft drink] Irn-Bru, then a Mars Bar to finish it off. That generally cures most hangovers. It certainly stops ’em from getting worse anyway. Fran: If you’re American you’d probably be disgusted by that. I recommend steak pie supper from a chip shop. Though it actually makes you feel ill afterward, while eating it you feel like you’ve died and gone to heaven. Ten minutes later you feel like you’re coming down off the worst acid trip. …proprietor of haggis? Neil: A place called Peckhams. They do meat and vegetarian varieties. The best company that makes haggis, though, is McSweens. Fran: My God. There’s this place called The Ubiquitous Chip that’s been there for like 20 years. Haggis is much healthier than steak pie. Maybe have it for your next meal after the pie—it’d be a lot like a colon blow. I keep mentioning that “end” of things. Neil’s sensitive, but I like to dive in head-first. …venue? …reason to never leave? Neil: The ultimate gig in Scotland is the Glasgow Barrowlands, housed above an old weekend market. It’s an amazing place that’s got fights unlike anywhere else you’ve ever been and when people jump up and down the whole floor bounces. It’s kind of like the Fillmore but far more grungy. Loads of character. Fran: The first gig I saw there was the Cramps in 1989. Fucking amazing. I still have the ticket. I saw Rage Against the Machine there and I left the venue thinking “I don’t want to be in a band anymore.” I didn’t think I Neil: If you meet someone in Glasgow, I guarantee in 10 minutes you’ll be talking like long lost friends. It’s such a warm place. Fran: I remember thinking Glasgow was very small, like a village, but it’s the biggest city in Scotland with a few million people… Oh no [pausing to look up the number]…huh, it’s 655,000. Well, they killed a lot of people to bring the number down—bombed them. The population has been drastically reduced since the new mayor came to power. Fascist. F good music guide filter By Sam Roudman photo by sumner dilworth Interpol is not a rock band. It’s a band, certainly, but hardly in the whiskey-pounding, Harley-revving sense of the term. Rather, the members of Interpol more closely resemble a committee of well-attired Norwegian anthropologists than they do any brawling gang of guitar-wielding ruffians. And their music—as thoroughly kempt as its four conjurers themselves, with its mechanically intricate rhythms and vaguely morose pronouncements—could never succeed at arousing the dumb beer commercial triumphalism to which so many seem to aspire. Yet nonetheless, the four now find themselves almost a decade into a career in which they’ve received a host of accolades commensurate with that same big-time, highfive, power-chord rock success—that sense of “making it” to which they appear so uninterested, or perhaps so wary. Interpol has released two critically obsessed-over albums, played to fans adoring them in 55 languages, and are now signed to Capitol, one of the largest and most storied record labels in the world. This spring and summer, they’ll be playing the majority of the Big Time Rock Festivals; taking their mysterious and enamoring obliqueness from Coachella to Osaka; and releasing their as-yet-untitled and ravenously anticipated third album. So by most measures, Interpol have been fantastically successful. But for guitarist Daniel Kessler, all the exterior signifiers of his band’s ascendance are nonstarters. Discussing this with him, it’s clear that Interpol are neither rejecting nor agreeing to any interpretation of their work or place in terms of whatever else is occurring. They’re true to themselves, autonomy-conscious, and playing their hand close—just like any good band should. In speaking to the Guide, Daniel is façade-free almost to a fault. But his quiet judiciousness belies a vital truth about Interpol: they’re here to make great albums; all else is irrelevant. 8 12 filter good music guide There is no mystique. There is only truth, justice, and Interpol good music guide filter 13 Interpol You have quite a few festival dates coming up. Does playing to a huge audience alter your live show? Not really. Truth be told we haven’t played in so long that I can’t really say. It’s a whole new era when you take a break from a tour and you take a break overall; you start writing and you record and so forth, and your creative side takes over your existence in a lot of ways. We haven’t played a show since October 2005, let alone a festival, so I can’t really tell how it’s going to be. We’re not gonna be playing the bulk of the new material because it won’t be out for awhile, but we’ll play some. Has the live show changed over the time you’ve been together? I think so. You get a lot more comfortable. We spent our first four years or so in New York City just playing shows at all the clubs. That was a really good thing for us, as we weren’t paid too much attention and didn’t really have much of a fan base. How was the recording of this record different from the first two? This is the first record we did in New York City, so that’s a big change. Turn on the Bright Lights and Antics were recorded and mixed in a house studio in Connecticut—we lived there, and that was a great experience. But after the lengthy touring we’d done, we really felt like this record should be made in New York City and wanted to be there. Did being in New York color the album? I don’t think so, really. Our approach was still very similar. We enter the studio with the songs pretty much written and arranged as they end up on the record. Paul’s always writing vocals, moving things around. We had the keyboards playing as we wrote. I think another pretty big difference from the first two records was [producer Rich] Cosey, who is great at what he does. We came into the studio with the same mindset we always come into the studio with, but if we wanted to capture a certain sound, he was really great at capturing that. He has different ways of getting it. What about your switch from Matador to Capitol? We had to make a decision, essentially. And Matador is probably my favorite record label and they’re all great, great friends of ours, but we had to make a decision. Would you agree that Interpol has a mystique? I don’t know. I think developing a mystique isn’t some- thing you can try to do. Maybe there is one, but I don’t really think about it…I don’t know, truthfully. We kind of just do what we do, and we get together and we write as a band. We don’t think about the parameters of a rock band, or about what the media is saying. Once you start worrying about what people are thinking, your focus gets lost. We just keep it simple. Even in interviews, I try to answer all the questions but I can’t go to situations that are uncomfortable and that don’t feel like me. In a way I think we’re actually extremely honest—we don’t say things for the sake of saying things, we don’t answer things for the sake of answering them. We just have to be true to ourselves. Once you say things that aren’t true to yourself, it’s kind of a bad feeling. You feel cheap. A lot of these potentially compromising situations—with press or web chatter—are a product of your success. How do you manage to insulate yourself from such situations? I think it’s pretty natural. When you’re inundated with this kind of stuff, you have to turn it off. For me, not reading is a good thing to do. But I don’t mind doing interviews. All I can say is that I’ll be honest in that moment, but after that it’s out of my hands—what more can I do? It’s pretty simple, overall: We don’t need too many people in our ears. But regardless, you’re still a large band, even to the point where other bands are taking elements of your style and becoming successful with them. I saw a bumper sticker recently that said “Interpol Wants Revenge.” Is it really important that people say things like that? It’s fine that that bumper sticker exists. I think it’s funny, and then I don’t think about it any further. We didn’t join the major leagues of the rock and roll world to have to pay attention to what’s going on out there. No, we’re artists and musicians—a collective. We make our own decisions, take our own path. Everything else just flows in and out. It’s not really my business. Given this natural progression, is there a specific something for Interpol to accomplish or is it more about putting out quality work? I think it’s quality work, in a way that pleases us. Getting deeper and deeper into our creative process. It’s really not a master plan, but you kind of hope that you can keep progressing. You can’t really say where you want to be until you get there. F “We’re artists and we take our own path. Everything else just flows in and out.” 14 filter good music guide good music guide filter 15 Coachella Casserole A letter from Patton Oswalt Hey Filter. I was so flattered you asked me to write something for the Guide about Coachella. But I’ve been so busy with my new CD Werewolves & Lollipops coming out on Sub Pop in July, plus a can of peas I’m planning on cooking, that I asked my Aunt Ori, who does our annual family Christmas card, to write this for me. Take it away, Ori… ach the 2007 one. And, as we appro ery ev r fo ar ye n fu estation is nearly It’s been a 90 percent Festival, and Grandma Feeny’s bot fly inf ts Ar Coachella Music and 100 percent fun! be bringing shaking hands with be on so ’ll we ry Chain are going to ’s festival. , Ma red d cu an s su Je the n, nt fu s year Speaking of 100 perce summertime good-fun surfing vibes to thi Aunt Ori said, ’em cy ll un Te bo re! y, nn Ma su rel their usua ig J” and Ma “B th wi ri fa sa on Catch a wave and go from all the tow, and need a break ones to see in “Hang ten!” ren ild ch th wi al le festiv Comedy, take the litt If you’re at tending the saw at our of the Comedians of we o s!— gh wh , lau nts d Pa an h ac s— Pe in pta Ca cuss word e lik g if she’s anythin t there’s sure to be Peaches! I don’t know Blast, but with an adorable name like tha , celebrate Haln ! Or church’s Arbor Day Fu Ask if you can have a taste of peach pie . fts cra d sing-alongs an bought at IKEA (you ostface Killah! loween early with Gh herself after this adorable notions shelf I s that makes you Björk, besides naming uple to shop there, believe me!), sings song t y co re belt. And she’s jus don’t have to be a ga seashell on a magic groundhog’s adventu ly Bil er, ov e t. Move think she lives in a we ladies twanging away at this year’s fes ted u can bet there’s en Yo ! tal en ny All ma one of the Youth, and Lily nic So e, us ho ine W th all these self-acy Joel—here comes Am ious covered dishes prepared backstage wi delic going to be a lot of Arctic Monkeys bill! the on n g, tells me to mention rin tualized wome nose a s ha d ien lfr My nephew, whose gir y belated birthday, Nelson! od time, pp Ha . sts eri mb ce fans except have a go t get De sic mu u and the yo to y sa you migh at else to Gosh, I don’t know wh d stay upwind of Willie Nelson’s show or thing or two a an , s ck ow blo kn n i wear lots of su na high. Aunt Or is slang for a marijua a “pot” high, which and Jesus in his about a thing or two. Oswalt, tell him to lay off the President le. And if n tto an ut being me to peop says “SuFi tho And if you see Pa wi es jok y nn fu t plenty of shirt that comedy skits. He’s go cool, very hip (despite his eyes rolling) Ta ing . ar him we r buy that fo you see him s nice of Aunt Ori to Forever,” tell him it wa e! Aunt Or—err, Patton Oswalt is a writer, actor and card-carHave a fest-tastic tim rying member of the Comedians of Comedy, who are appearing Aunt Ori at this year’s Coachella festival. He can currently be seen playing Spencer Olchin in King of Queens, and will soon be heard as the voice of the animated rodent lead of Pixar’s Ratatouille. 16 filter good music guide Slacker is the easiest way to listen to your favorite artists and discover new Slacker the easiest way to listen toplayers your favorite and discover new music.is Look for Slacker portable to take artists your music on the go. music. Look for Slacker portable players to take your music on the go. Start listening for free today at Slacker.com Start listening for free today at Slacker.com Slacker is a trademark of Slacker, Inc. Actual online experience may differ from photo. Slacker is a trademark of Slacker, Inc. Actual online experience may differ from photo. The Chairmen of the Bored Opposite: Nick Frost, Simon Pegg. Above: Pegg. Hot Talk with the Men of Hot Fuzz Americans never seem to tire of lowbrow entertainment, as is demonstrated by the neverending barrage of straight-to-video Chuck Norris and Van Damme testosterone fests. As a transatlantic response, Edgar Wright, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost create intriguingly kinetic comedies that borrow from the brainlessness that rattles around in our dollar bins. In 2004, the trio’s Shaun of the Dead simultaneously satirized and paid homage to the zombie B movies of yesteryear. With Hot Fuzz, they take on the canon of contemporary Hollywood, parroting the dizzying panoramas of Bad Boys II and the camp of Point Break. The film centers around a London police Sergeant (Pegg) who gets transferred 18 filter good music guide By Cameron Bird to the outlying village of Sandford, where he teams up with a Popsicle-loving police constable (Frost) to straighten out the town’s weirdos and miscreants. Today, in the wooded courtyard of the uppercrusty Chateau Marmont hotel on Sunset Boulevard, Frost sips orange juice from a glass without ice cubes, while Wright and Pegg exchange quips about cell phone ringtones. The group is just about done with a vertigo-inducing U.S. promotional tour and they’re understandably uninterested in any standard sort of discussion. Naturally, we oblige. What transpires is a fine collection of nonsense that offers a rare but true glimpse into the restless minds that have given us so much irreverent brilliance. So, speaking of ringtones…what’s your poison? Have you ever picked up? Simon: I use Bluetooth to transfer songs from my computer to my phone. Edgar: And you have different music for different people, don’t you? Simon: Well, my current ringtone for everybody is the CTU [Counter Terrorist Unit] noise from 24. Edgar: Would that be what I’ve got? Simon: Yeah, that’s what you have. When Nick calls me it’s a Devo track. Edgar: Why don’t I get any special music? Simon: You get CTU just like everybody else. Nick: When Edgar calls me, my phone says, “Don’t pick up!” Nick: I have never picked up my phone. [To Edgar] What do you have on yours? R2D2? Edgar: I have one of those 30-second instrumental bridges from James Brown’s Live at the Apollo... The one where he’s walking out on stage with a gown. Simon: If you go through your iTunes and put the songs in order of length, you’ll have the shortest songs at the top. They make terribly good ringtones. Edgar: It’s always a good geeky thing to do. Switching gears here, what are some of your favorite bad action movies? Edgar: Well, the DVD cover for Silent Rage adver- good music guide filter 19 Left: Edgar Wright. Right: Frost and Wright savor the Guide. tises the film as Chuck Norris versus a super-human killing machine, so… Simon: The weird thing about that film is that it’s almost good, but it ends up just being bad. It flirts with being good. Edgar: The only cinematic crime you can commit in my mind is being boring. If a film is entertaining in any regard—whether it’s shit or not—it’s worth watching. Tarantino’s really good at taking out the great bits in bad films. He makes it worth watching a 90-minute film for one really cool bit in the middle. And in a film like Silent Rage, which is really terrible, there’s one scene that makes you sit back and say, “Wow, that Steadycam shot is pretty amazing.” There is no tradition of B movies anymore, but there still are B movies like Out for Justice, which was a top-grossing film when it came out in 1991. It’s like 80 minutes long and perfunctory in the way it’s put together. It’s basically about brains being smashed. Nick: Have you ever walked out of a theater? Edgar: Only once. We were editing Hot Fuzz and the power got cut and none of us knew when it was going to come back on, so the editing staff went to see Operation: Stormbreaker. Even though I didn’t need to go back in the middle, I thought, “I’m not too sure about this” and I walked out. It was just lame. But I’m also a sucker. I don’t know why, but I don’t like watching good films on planes. Like on Virgin, they give you a really big selection, but if it’s good, I don’t want to watch it like that. So I end up watching Employee of the Month or Epic Movie. What’s an uncontested great action flick? Simon: Well, Bad Boys II is almost so good it’s bad. It’s so proficient at what it does. Nick: But when we say “bad,” we mean baaaaad, like phat. Edgar: It’s like the naughty version of Freebie and the Bean. Many people would consider it to be absolutely obnoxious and yet it’s almost because it went out of its way for critics to hate it by being irresponsible and wasteful with money that it ends up being kind of brilliant. Nick: Like a double comedy ball-busting. 20 filter good music guide What about the original Bad Boys? Simon: I always get that film and Men in Black II mixed up because in the end it becomes the same. At the end of both films, he puts the lady in the room with all those fuckin’ worms. It’s the same scene! Edgar: Did you know that in Spain, I, Robot was called Yo, Robot? The billboard really made me laugh. In Germany, Vin Diesel’s The Pacifier was renamed Der Babynator. Edgar: The babynator! Nick: Babynate this! [Simon is whisked away by his publicist] Edgar: Simon’s like Wesley Snipes. He only turns up for three hours a day and gets his stunt double to do the rest. On that note, one last serious inquiry: What are your favorite potential human-animal hybrids and why? Nick: Ah, the famous man-animal question. Edgar: You got anything? Nick: I dunno...a man-hen? I’d like to see a chimp-human too, a hu-man-zee, but that’s actually already happened. Edgar: Really? Nick: Yeah, it walked on two feet and smoked. It was weird as fuck. Edgar: I’d like to see a man with two mice for his ears, and he could also have little exercise wheels. Nick: Well you know, that what’s Princess Leia was hiding...head mice. This could’ve been the one question that stumped Sinatra. Edgar: Frank, if you’re listening, if you can hear us, what would be your favorite human-animal hybrid? [Pauses] He would have a combination of a Jack on the rocks and a lady, a sort of woman’s body with a drink for a head. Nick: He’ll have a tits and Coke. F Queens of the Stone Age Usher in a New Era By Liam Gowing From the foundational “robot rock” of their self-titled debut, to the drug-fueled and wildly eclectic Rated R, to the sprawling, drum-heavy rawk of Songs for the Deaf to the tight, textured Lullabies to Paralyze, Queens of the Stone Age have always been about constant change. Forthcoming fifth album, Era Vulgaris—recorded by the sole constant of singer-songwriter/guitarist Josh Homme, drummer Joey Castillo and multi-instrumentalists Troy Van Leeuwen, Chris Goss and Alain Johannes, with a little help from Mark Lanegan—is no exception to the rule. Sounding at once like everything Queens has ever done and a near-total departure, it’s a strange sonic journey through headily dissonant riff-rock and gypsy-metal psychedelia full of groggy moans and curdling falsetto whispers. On the verge of a new tour, Homme briefed the Guide on his smorgasbord recording style, his fait accompli approach to the release, and the significance of Era Vulgaris. I initially had a three-record idea. It wasn’t cast in stone—more like stained glass. The fourth record was kind of an amalgam of all of them. And it was very dark because the time frame was very dark. I think it ended a phase of something, you know? It kind of cut the lead jacket off of us. And I think this new record is like… A new Era for Queens? were like, “Surprise! Our record’s almost done.” the jerk-off thing.” You didn’t want any label involvement? You’re referring to “I’m Designer.” Seminal track. What’s that about exactly? Well, they do their thing and we do ours. And they should do their thing, and we should do ours, you know? I mean, if they knew how to make records, they’d be in bands. Yeah. It’s very modern for us. This is what we sound like when we’re thinking we’re modern. The goal was to get to a spot where you can play anything you want, and you’ve brought the audience with you. You have to move slowly—some bands move too fast and people are like, “What the fuck?” This is the first record of, “We’ve made it there.” We’re at the musical Hometown Buffet. You know that restaurant? It’s gross. But there are all these options. So what was the reaction when you played the album for them? Totally. About a year ago. We spread it out. We’d do a month on and then take a month off. Your tour manager mentioned that the album was more than halfway finished before you even told the record company about it. Was that part of your strategy? Each of the last albums had a really strong, unique vibe. What’s this one all about? Yeah. Everyone’s so serious with the record company. No one ever jokes around with them. So we wanted to do a surprise party for the people that work there. We So when did you start work on the record? 22 filter good music guide [Laughs] They were stoked on the songs and a little scared of how it sounded. Because it’s very dirty. Everything’s like, “arrrgh-grrrrr.” Everything sounds like it just woke up, like, “Uhhhh [groaning], what’s up?” It’s a metaphorical flinging. It’s our version of “My Generation” in a way, without the Who being there. ’Cause I think our generation is unsure of a Five Best Rejected lot of stuff. And they don’t want to have jobs in a coal mine. They want QOTSA song titles to have more rewarding and artistic “No Fried Zucchini” jobs, which I totally understand. They have this feeling like, “Money’s “Put a Flag the root of all evil… but I actually Wherever I Point” need some, if you have some.” It’s “To Silence the Sucking” like gluttony-bad, or gluttony-rad, I dunno. And I think it’s alright to be “The Horse You undecided. I certainly am. Rode in On” 5 “White Powder So our generation—Gen-X, to the People” And also, I figured out how to not Gen-Y or whatever—is living in get censored. I asked on the last rean era of indecision? cord, ’cause I hate getting that parental advisory stick- It’s Generation Vulgaris. It’s our era, what we have in er. I figured out that you can say stuff like, “I’m going common—being kind of stuck in prolonging your adoto go home and jerk off,” and they can’t do anything lescence and your thought processes, and questioning about it. So there’s a lot of stuff there that the record everything. And I think while you’re deciding, you have execs were like, “Well, that could be a single except for to sample everything. We’re playing that party. F good music guide filter 23 One-Liners: a miniature take on selected Filter Magazine reviews ........................................................................................................................... (Go to Filter-Mag.com or pick up Filter Magazine’s Spring Issue for full reviews of the albums covered here) Elliott Smith New Moon94% Kill Rock Stars Two discs spanning ’94-’97 offer insight on the humble and heartworn Smith we loved best. Thee More Shallows Book of Bad Breaks87% Anticon A drunken stage-dive into the orchestra pit of the L.A. Philharmonic. Ryan Adams Easy Tiger86% Lost Highway A cathartic dedication to all American kids who went to bed, then woke up in their early 30s. Rufus Wainwright Release the Stars93% Geffen Enough Broadway bombast to leave you teary-eyed, utterly inspired and applauding like a beautiful idiot. Stars Do You Trust Your Friends?85% Arts & Crafts A “friendly experiment” in remixing Stars proves that trusting loved ones has its benefits. Dntel Dumb Luck91% Sub Pop Postal Service pedal-pusher calls up super-friends and gets super freaky with ambience, IDM and techno-pop. BrYan Ferry Dylanesque84% EMI/Virgin Roxy Music frontman forces Dylan songs to do his emotional bidding; most succumb gracefully. Björk Volta90% One Little Indian Björk shows her inherent pagan with the support of dizzying African rhythm and Inuit undertones. The Cribs Men’s Needs, Women’s…82% Warner As with new Chuck Taylors, squeaky clean sheen is no replacement for scuffed and rough. Cornelius Sensuous90% Everloving Cornelius’ Space Mountain Mindfucker! Pregnant women and short dudes ride for free. he Horrors T Strange House77% Stolen Transmission Sketched by Edward Gorey, dressed by Mary Quant... If only we could judge this band by appearances alone. The Clientele God Save the Clientele89% Merge Joy and disarming sweetness prevail; Clientele gains a percentage point. brakesbrakesbrakes The Beatific Visions67% rough trade Forced-sounding follow-up fails to evolve; same schtick, different day. Dinosaur Jr Beyond87% Fat Possum D.J return with a triumphant mix of face-melting fretwork and merry-butmessy melody. 24 filter good music guide FILTER ALBUM RATINGS Dungen Tio Bitar92% Kemado Perfect acid rock dug out of the damaged but brilliant brain of Timothy Leary. 91-100% 81-90% 71-80% 61-70% below 60% 8 8 8 8 8 a great album above par, below genius respectable, but flawed not in my CD player please God, tell us why Music, etc. ........................................................................................................................... Bright Eyes Cassadaga91% Saddle Creek A lesser-known American religious movement, Spiritualism, centers on the belief that it’s possible to communicate with the departed (and, likewise, that death itself is not an end). The most prominent Spiritualist community today is in the Floridian town of Cassadaga, and while the movement’s principles have given Conor Oberst something to sing about (“Clairaudients,” “Four Winds”), the title of Bright Eyes’ latest release references a perfect metaphor for the album as a whole. The old Oberst is dead (get over it, girls), replaced by a more highly evolved artist (with filtered piss and refined vinegar) who can channel music from other times and places. On Cassadaga, classic sounds are resurrected in a satisfying swirl of country, gospel, cinematic pop, and of course, electro-folk. BENJY EISEN The Nightwatchman One Man Revolution76% Epic Tom Morello is pissed. Resurrected from the rubble of Audioslave’s breakup, rock’s resident wah-wah enthusiast has decided it’s due time he recorded his never-ending political frustrations…acoustic style. But with an annoyingly selfcongratulating pseudonym and a sound reminiscent of that hippie musician who lived across your dorm and only ever listened to Bob Marley’s “Redemption Song,” the Nightwatchman’s socially conscious songs are muddled by liberal clichés, redundant guitar work, and downright mediocrity. PHIL EASTMAN The Boggs Forts90% Gigantic Brooklyn’s Boggs (Jason Friedman plus friends) make a generous offering of their debut, Forts. It’s a curious album colored with strained dialogue and urgent poetry, the words in total giving the feeling that something nearby is in danger of breaking very soon. The music follows this striking haphazard path, crashing, jangling, pumping and bumping on its way to something bright and great. Occasional pit-stops are made for quiet moments, but always as the platform for the next flailing foray. Make no mistake: as the Boggs perfect their brand of eerie bliss, we’ll be listening. LIN RISERON 26 filter good music guide The Rakes Ten New Messages81% V2 [U.K.] The skittering and jittering melodies of Capture/Release are gone, and in their stead: smoother, sleeker licks and a greater sense of jaded cynicism. Though Ten New Messages lacks the frenetic energy of the Rakes’ debut, the hip and sceney will still be inspired to rush the dancefloor in order to mope along to these moody, metropolitan sonic missives. Cheer up guys, the world’s not ending just yet. Plus, how can you not smile when you’re writing a song called “When Tom Cruise Cries”? NEVIN MARTELL Blonde Redhead 2389% 4AD With the arrival of 23, time, maturity and exploration wash over the jagged guitars of Blonde Redhead’s initial artrock outcropping, shaping inaccessible wails into delicate aural platforms that are simultaneously light and moody. Through the tinkling guitars and exacting drums of the brothers Pace, our ghostly heroine Kazu Makino threads airy moans that hint at a desire to shed some of the melancholic cloak donned for Misery is a Butterfly. The end result is a kind of low-flying elation that only these experienced noirists could deliver. CORD JEFFERSON Handsome Furs Plague Park84% Sub Pop While a self-spun press release cites Scandinavian black metal as an influence on this meager Wolf Parade offshoot, the statement is falsified after multiple listens. Plague Park’s sandpaper drum machines and dehydrated vocal melodies combine to form an often underwhelming shoegazer drone. Nevertheless, once in a while, visceral hooks climb over the Wall of Sound. On “Snakes on a Ladder” and “Sing! Captain,” Beck-ish vocals kick through the façade of slow and steady rhythmic pacing to reveal an emotional potency hiding behind the often formulaic hum of Handsome Furs. CAMERON BIRD Wooden Wand James & the Quiet73% Ecstatic Peace With each consecutive release Wooden Wand, a.k.a. James Toth (and his many backing incarnations: Vanishing Voice, Sky High Band, and now the aptly titled Quiet) has stripped his sound further and further down (even with production from Sonic Youth’s Lee Ranaldo). Straying from otherworldly acid jazz odysseys in favor of the well-worn folk songwriter path, Toth’s fanciful lyrics wander aimlessly looking for the home that they used to find in an equally displaced musical accompaniment. It all goes to show that sometimes more is…well, more. DAVID C. OBENOUR book Check the Technique: 88% Liner Notes for Hip-Hop Junkies Brian Coleman Villard/Random House It’s a lot easier to be a rock and roll geek than a hip-hop geek. Beside the fact that the local library’s rock-to-rap ratio is about as imbalanced as Chuck D’s political rants-to-love ballads quotient, Elvis Costello looks a lot better in specs than Fat Joe. Thankfully we have Brian Coleman’s Check the Technique, which expands upon his previously published Rakim Told Me to geek us out with even more insightful, hilarious and poignant “making of” conversations with the artists behind 36 rap masterpieces. LenzKrafterz, anyone? SHANE LEDFORD Datarock Datarock Datarock 83% Nettwerk If the first chorus of your record consists of screaming the line, “BMX is better than sex,” then there’s a pretty good chance you’re in the band Datarock. And, if that’s the case, you owe the world an explanation: How in God’s name did you manage to make shit like this sound any good? On this double eponymous debut, what should be insipid and vacuous becomes a beacon of electro-rocking new wave glee. It’s a tongue-in-cheek rendering of a what-the-hell-happened-last-night dance party, and it’s halfway decent. PATRICK JAMES John Doe A Year in the Wilderness89% Yep Roc At a trim 35 minutes, there’s no fat to be found on this album. There is a grace throughout that highlights the maturing troubadour’s craft with country shuffles, waltzes and narrative gems. And Doe still rocks, as evidenced by the opening track “Hotel Ghost,” a speaker burner that hearkens back to the late ’70s at the Whiskey. In a just world, this album would be the “new country” instead of the lycra-spandex version that has infected Nashville. KEVIN FRIEDMAN The Mother Hips Kiss the Crystal Flake79% Camera It may, initially, seem a good idea to combine one part Matthew Sweet with a dash of Pavement and a pinch of CSNY. Unfortunately the result on Kiss the Crystal Flake is more akin to CSINY, the bastard cousin of everyone’s favorite procedural drama. Vegas has showgirls, Miami has David Caruso, but New York has…the chick from Providence? Original ideas are groundbreaking, and some spin-offs find their own voice, but most imitations, like the Mother Hips, are just palatable but dull reconstructions of someone else’s success. JEREMY MOEHLMANN Pelican City Of Echoes82% Hydrahead If you wanna get all ornithological, then you’d have to say that Pelican is the bird that shits metal pellets—the bird that doesn’t sing, but certainly shreds. Like the last few eggs plopped, this hatchling’s almost-live production spreads a chunky foie gras over a main course of guitar sometimes raw, sometimes simmering, sometimes seared. Pelican’s instrumetal might not fly as high as fellow travelers Isis (whose namesake was a damn fine bird), but there’s wingspan aplenty here to ride out the storm. SAM ROUDMAN book Dear Diary84% Leslie Arfin Vice Like, so, this book is totally like a bunch of real diary entries by this girl who’s gone through all these totally sucky phases in her life like heroin addiction and liking all these boys who totally don’t like her back and it’s like totally entertaining on one hand but then when you really like think about it you get super bummed, like who would want to reveal all their deepest darkest secrets, but then on the other hand maybe that’s what makes it pretty rad. Whatevs. Oh yeah, she totally interviews all these people who she wrote about in her diary too. ESTHER GINN Alias Collected Remixes87% Anticon The kick drum booms like the footsteps of a giant rumbling through the cacophony of a foggy forest. The pacing and energy feel like a steady march toward destiny. Add Alias’ trademark layers of synth, guitar and ambient noise until each original (by folk as diverse as John Vanderslice, Sixtoo, Arab Strap’s Aiden Moffat, the One AM Radio, 28 filter good music guide Lunz, and Lali Puna) becomes so massive that it rolls into oblivion. Alias’ touch may leave your ears ringing and your balance off, but Remixes is well worth the experience. JEREMY MOEHLMANN Polyphonic Spree The Fragile Army84% TVT Besides a few unorthodox gems, The Fragile Army succeeds mostly at retreading the sunshine-beaten path of the Spree’s previous two outings. On songs like “Get Up and Go” and “Running Away,” the 23-peopled collective projects fleeting melodies that sound like a bunch of pop psychologists with a mean case of confirmation bias. The baroque lyrics on “Light to Follow” prove to be one of the album’s defiantly interesting moments, but these are too scattered to offer much new to the casual listener. Spree fans, however, shall rejoice. CAMERON BIRD dvd You’re Gonna Miss92% Me: A Film About Roky Erickson Directed by Kevin McAlester Palm Pictures The Roky Erickson story could easily succumb to the hackneyed trappings of stock music bios: Rock genius goes off the rails and disappears into the haze of drugs and mental illness. But freshman documentarian McAlester deftly circumvents clichés in telling the tale of the ’60s psych-rock innovator and former 13th Floor Elevators frontman. The narrative doesn’t suffer under the weight of reverence for its subject, providing honesty and warmth that’s uncommon in the age of sensationalism. ANTHONY RAYBORN Socalled Ghettoblaster88% JDUB The answer is yes. “Yes, an accordionwielding magician can assemble a cast of Yiddish music authorities, Canadian Klezmer superstars, up-and-coming soul singers and underground NYC rappers to make an album that masterfully weaves traditional Hebrew sounds into the re-stitched fabric of hip-hop.” On Ghettoblaster, Québécois quadruple threat (squeezebox, beats, raps, magic hats) Socalled proves his chops, emerging with his version of Wyclef’s The Carnival (replace the voodoo with Jewdoo) and one of 2007’s sleeper singles, “You Are Never Alone” featuring C Rayz Walz, two soul sisters and a perky Western-tinged bounce. Yiddyup! JACK McGRUE Wheat Everyday I Said a Prayer82% for Kathy and Made a One Inch Square Empyrean More than 10 years into their career and Wheat’s latest album-with-an-excessively-long-title sounds, well, uninspired. Departing from the driving emotional urgency of 2005’s Per Second, Per Second, Per Second . . . Every Second, the Massachusetts trio’s newfound love of meandering atmospherics plays like a Broken Social Scene doppelganger dozing off in its own sonic wanderings. It seems that Wheat no longer raises a fist at life’s daily struggles. Their weapon of choice may be a limp wrist. PHIL EASTMAN dvd South Park:84% The Complete Ninth Season Comedy Central/ Paramount Tranny teachers, Jew jokes, handicapped kids with boners…no, it’s not the Democratic National Convention; it’s season nine of South Park. While this set does lay claim to classic episodes “Trapped in the Closet” (brilliantly blasting R. Kelly and Scientology in the same breath) and the Emmywinning “Best Friends Forever” (Kenny’s video game prowess must save Heaven from Hell), the majority of the three discs is just the standard, better-than-everything-else fare we’ve come to expect from S.P. It’s not spectacular, but what else are you gonna watch? SHANE LEDFORD Wilco Sky Blue Sky91% Nonesuch On Wilco’s seventh LP, Jeff Tweedy and his compatriots emerge with a surprising departure from the experimentalism that contorted the tracks on Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and A Ghost is Born. Going it without producer Jim O’Rourke, Wilco has constructed their most straightforward release in recent memory, which relies heavily on the inspired intricacies of a full-hearted band. With a decent dose of Lennonlike inspiration, Tweedy’s songwriting is as sharp as ever, removing Wilco’s cloud cover to reveal something simply beautiful. COLIN STUTZ Nine Inch Nails Year: Zero85% Interscope At its core, Nine Inch Nails’ Year: Zero is a paranoia-racked concept record about totalitarian government. But as pointed and insistent as Trent Reznor’s lyrics might be, the muscle-bound misanthrope’s doggedness and anxiety aren’t what actually sells the album’s dystopic future. Instead, it’s the post-apocalyptic sonics, the industrial-strength bombast and buzzing bondage-core that mightily sustains its frightening 16-track, onehour run-time. ROBBIE MACKEY Pissed Jeans Hope For Men92% Sub Pop Unholy fuck. This is the sound of brains oozing out of ears, and a million razor blades cutting a billion teeth. Pissed Jeans are riding the booze caboose to Loserville, following the clangy coaches of the Jesus Lizard, Nick Cave, Tom Waits, Darby Crash and Bukowski. Their spit-talk game is decidedly upped on this album, where songs range in rant and rage like chunks of meat in a puke puddle. Take a whiff; it’s a gutter-chugging disasterpiece. SAM ROUDMAN Jeff Buckley So Real: Songs from80% Jeff Buckley Columbia/Legacy If you’re among the many who raise an eyebrow every time a new Jeff Buckley release appears, chances are So Real isn’t going to put your doubt to rest. Songs from Jeff Buckley commemorates the decade anniversary of his death with a lackluster unveiling of two “rare” songs: a Smiths cover and an acoustic take of “So Real.” Since we’ve heard just about every incarnation of the other 12 songs by now (obvious Grace, Sketches and Sin-é selections) this collection is anticlimactic no matter how brilliant Buckley’s songs remain. ANDREA BUSSELL Bill Callahan Woke on a Whale Heart88% Drag City Considering that he’s one of lo-fi rock’s most brutally self-exposing troubadours, it’s odd that the man behind Smog chose Woke on a Whale Heart as the first album to carry the name on his state ID. Employing a crisp album production to match his newfound focus on melody, Bill offers a departure from the norm but nothing as introspective as the name-swap might suggest. Immediately accessible and growingly catching, this remarkable mix of Americana promises whistles and toe-taps all around. DAVID C. OBENOUR Great Northern Trading Twilight86% for Daylight Eenie Meenie It’s all about achieving balance for Great Northern: male and female vocals; sincere intimacy that’s epic in nature; confused sentiments pitted against soothing guidance. On their full-length debut, the Los Angeles quartet takes some very universal themes (hopelessness, addiction, escapism), stylizes them into songs that tend toward the visceral and cinematic, and sets about telling us that it’s all part of this crazy ride we call life. Sure it’s coddling, but sometimes it’s nice to have someone sing you that perfect lullaby. COLIN STUTZ Nick Lowe At My Age68% Yep Roc Nick Lowe once said, “Anybody my age who worries about appealing to kids is not only out of their mind, but in for a brutal disappointment,” and he’s right. He shouldn’t concern himself with impressing us, but it never hurts (sales) to earn some of that ol’ twilight year cred. Unfortunately At My Age doesn’t have the ironic swagger of Leonard Cohen, and Lowe’s work with Elvis Costello just ain’t enough. The lyrical chops are intact but the production is far too dated. Great for flashbacks of shopping at Sears with your mom, though. DAVID ISKRA dvd A Purge of Dissidents75% Dalek & Haze XXL Ipecac That the once groundbreaking graffiti artist known as Dalek has become something of a one-trick space monkey isn’t helped by this collection of animated shorts. True, the simple 2-D cartoons and monochrome color fills are in keeping with Dalek’s style, but that style plays out here as a sluggish, unironic take on Itchy & Scratchy. The imagery is limited to a finite set: green rodent-like aliens getting chopped and screwed in various situations involving knives, eyeballs, fart gas and spewed body fluid. Haze XXL’s semi-grating soundtrack only numbs down the production, dropping the viewer into a slow mire of repetition and mild discomfort. LOUIS VLACK The National Boxer 90% Beggars Much of Matt Berninger’s charm lies in his singing like he’s just woken up, scratching his head while reciting wine-soaked ramblings from the previous night. That kind of wooziness pervades from the opening moments and throughout the Brooklyn-via-Cincinnati band’s fourth full-length, trading some of Alligator’s bite for a more consistent batch of gentle guitars and beautifully Sad Songs. While Boxer lacks a knockout punch like last album’s 13th round uppercut “Mr. November,” all scorecards still have the National besting David Berman to remain indie rock’s “Great White Mope.” BRYAN CHENAULT Omar A. Rodriguez-Lopez Se Dice Bisonte, No Bufalo82% GSL Being the lead guitarist and primary composer of one of rock’s most polar- izing acts means receiving a simultaneous bombast of praise and condemnation—most recently in the very literal form of piss-filled condoms hurled onstage during a festival performance. Regardless, the Mars Volta’s ever dexterous Omar Rodriguez-Lopez is back, unrelenting as ever, blasting angular freeform solos over Latin-melodied jazz fusion chaos. If you dig the most meandering moments Mars has to offer, grab some headphones and get weird. PATRICK JAMES Black Moth Super Rainbow Dandelion Gum85% Graveface/Southern Zombie robotnik dream-hop, anyone? Boasting a sound as collage-y as their randomly generated name, Black Moth Super Rainbow hail from Pennsylvannia, though their woozy mixscape is several light years beyond the Keystone State. This musty montage of Telstar frequencies, vocoder languor, electronic blear and various hissing plundered instruments—a wispy pan pipe here, a crackling drum kit there—is basementgrade sampledelica that could easily score the scratch and pop of vintage sci-fi prints. BERNARDO RONDEAU Bad Brains Build a Nation89% Megaforce After the resurgence of Bad Brains reverence with last year’s documentary American Hardcore, and considering the state of music/politics/society, it only makes sense for the OGs to stage a triumphant return to save punk rock…again. Produced by Beastie Boy and longtime Brains disciple Adam Yauch, this isn’t your typical band-resurfacesfor-cash-and-makes-sub-par-record record. No, this is the real shit—classic lightning riffage, hearkening dub rhythms, and a perfectly insane H.R. and Co. following the great spirit to hardcore heaven. Listen to this motherfucker loud, and listen to it often. BEAU POWERS book FOUND Polaroids88% Jason Bitner Quack!Media With so much sampling in art these days, it’s a wonder it took so long for someone to discover the easiest way to start a media empire: by using other people’s shit. Found Magazine is anthropology for our generation and Polaroids is an homage to that 20th Century fossil, a titillating readersubmitted collection of those white-bordered rectangles rendered nearly extinct by digicams. Look upon grainy pics of strangers’ Christmases past, familiar vacant lots and furniture discarded just like the ’roid depicting it. Let your inner voyeur shine and your imagination do the work. PAT McGUIRE ELVISO cOSTELL “THE MOST ORIGINAL VOICE OF THE PUNK ERA .” “HIS DISCOGRAPHY IS A STAGGERING LIBRARY OF CONFIDENCE AND DARING: HIS ’78-84 RUSH OF CLASSICS WITH HIS GREAT BAND THE ATTRACTIONS.” - ROLLING STONE THE BEST OF ELVIS COSTELLO THE FIRST 10 YEARS + THE ENTIRE CATALOG FROM ’77-’86 L MUSIC and a new compilation ROCK AND ROL COMING 5.1.07 z WWW.ELVISCOSTELLO.COM H / c 2007 Universal Music Enterprises, a Division of UMG Recordings, Inc. Available At U.K. Imports: presented by ........................................................................................................................... Arctic Monkeys Favourite Worst Nightmare Domino Well, this is different. By the time the last Arctic Monkeys album came out half the U.K. already knew all their songs backwards. This time ’round, it’s all been under wraps, and now first impressions suggest Favourite Worst Nightmare lacks hooks to reckon with anything on the debut. But it’s encouraging to see Arctic Monkeys are no one-trick pony, and quite to the contrary, they’re full of surprises. Here they mix indie soul (“Fluorescent Adolescent”) and even Sinatra-isms (“Only Ones Who Know”) with White Stripes-like low frequency (“D is for Dangerous”). If the strength of the first album was in its detail, FWN relies more on the listener’s imagination and emotions, resulting in a topsy-turvy roller coaster ride guaranteed to give perception the spins. JOHNNY K Polytechnic Down Til Dawn Shatterproof Manchester’s Polytechnic don’t possess the blackened threads of rock and roll DNA that they should. They don’t war-paint their faces like Pop Levi doing Darth Maul, and the nearest to “new rave” they get is probably the local Laser Quest. Kicking off their debut, then, with a track called “Bible Stories” certainly isn’t the most unholy of rock commandments. But with frontman Dylan’s awkward whining vocals somehow complementing jangling guitars and perky melodies (“Won’t You Come Around”) that mutate into the powerfully melancholic (“Man Overboard”), Down Til Dawn is one of the unlikeliest contenders for stand-out album of the year. LISA DURRANT Maxïmo Park Our Earthly Pleasures Warp Our Earthly Pleasures is a lesson in how to make a spot-on second release. It boasts all that made us first fall for Maxïmo Park—exploding choruses, punchy guitars, quirky subject matter—while exploring the Newcastle quintet’s emotionally heavier side and capturing their famously frenetic live energy. There’s not one dud here, from the lusty riffs of “Girls Who Play Guitars” to the tinkling, piano-tinged “Your Urge,” the stirring strings of “Sandblasted and Set Free,” and the pouncing attack of “Our Velocity.” Pleasures is a glorious listen that affirm MP’s place as a true force in modern music. CAMILLA PIA Alberta Cross The Thief and the Heartbreaker Fiction From the soulful heartlands of Sweden and London comes Alberta Cross. Not—as you might think—an old blues woman who spent her days working in the field and her nights rocking on her porch, but a couple of guys who met over a love for roots music and put a band together. Theirs is a deliciously warm, semi-acoustic sound, which soundtracks miserable stories sung cheerily. The Thief is their debut, and it’s short and sweet, just the way we like it. MARTIN KAHL Fields Everything Last Winter Black Lab “Song for the Fields” opens with a Wicker Man-esque alt.folk—all shy and coy and faux-whimsical— but then a switch is flicked and Fields unleash all hell in a style more My Bloody Valentine than Bonnie “Prince” Billy. It’s a motif carried throughout the album, the band grasping that there’s no shame in tempering musicianship with solid hooks. No reason to question the merit of future stadium-fillers like “Charming the Flames”; it’s—whisper it, now—pop music for people who don’t listen to pop music. JON-PAUL WADDINGTON YOURCODENAMEIS:MILO They Came From the Sun V2 [U.K.] Themission:abrandnewbeginning. This record is armed with such shit-your-pants apocalyptic digi-rock it’d be enough to blast any other Geordie guitar band into outer-space oblivion. There’s danger in being too clever though, and with YCNI:M’s first album overshooting the heads of musical mortals, They Came From the Sun is a (slight) change of tactic. From the stadium-sized opening riff of “Pacific Theatre,” there’s no mercy. “About Leaving” is an electro parade of sonic blips, whilst the guttural strumming of “Translates” sends every track that follows thundering along with the intent to outdo. New pants needed. Mission accomplished. LISA DURRANT The Fly is the U.K.’s second largest circulated music magazine. Focusing on emerging talent, it’s the essential guide to new music in the U.K. Subscriptions are available, priced at £40 for 12 months (11 issues), by contacting subs@channelfly.com, or online at www.the-fly.co.uk. 34 filter good music guide Afro Samurai Deluxe Edition DVD, $39.98 afrosamurai.com funimation.com MLB 2K7 Virgin V.I.P. Card Get discounts, prizes and member only rewards! available at U.S. Virgin Megastore locations Brixton Fluevog Unisex vegan, non-animal uppers, water-based glues, natural crepe rubber soles. $129-145. fluevog.com Tan Castor Straw Fedora, $35.00 brixtonltd.com '%%,KIZX]8dbbjc^XVi^dch!>cX#6aaG^\]ihGZhZgkZY# Available for X-Box, X-Box 360, PS2 and PS3. 2ksports.com 9Zh^\cZYid[^indjg]dbZ#6cYndjga^[Z# 9:8I+#%iZX]cdad\n^hhdedlZg[ja!ndjXVcVXijVaanhZZ^ih ^beVXi^ci]Zha^b!Xjii^c\"ZY\ZYZh^\cd[KIZX]ÉhcZl9:8I a^cZd[XdgYaZhhe]dcZhÅVaal^i]]^\]"ZcY[ZVijgZhVcYVhjeZg^dg aZkZad[^ciZg[ZgZcXZ"[gZZXaVg^in!fjVa^in!hZXjg^inVcYgVc\Z# 36 filter good music guide . +%*' ;^cYdjibdgZVikiZX]e]dcZh#Xdb
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