vampire weekend spoon tim barry johnny cash brian
Transcription
vampire weekend spoon tim barry johnny cash brian
Spoon Transference Merge 2010 Vampire Weekend Contra XL 2010 Piddle away the normal and stick it in a pot where it can blossom into a beige-colored flower. Then you’ll have a foliage of routine, or proof of a set formula. Given a task, a challenge to overcome, perform the exact same operation and find yourself with the exact same result. Sometimes this outcome is sufficient for the assignment — sometimes it continually falls short, and eventually the collateral adds up to a bigger problem: disinterest. It has to be said short and fast — Vampire Weekend is a very good band. They have accolades and recognition, a community of privileged youth lifting them high above the banquet room floor. And Contra, their much-anticipated sophomore album, is fabulous. So I’m left in a bit of a catch — what should I think of a wonderful second release from fellows who were guaranteed to produce a wonderful second release? No surprise visits, no scandals, no overdoses or letdowns. What do I want from my bands? Destroy a suite or a motel room? Or keep surrounding yourselves with babes in pastel-colored polos, basking among them like a Persian warlord with his spoils of conquer? I’ve listened to Contra fourteen times now, and it is spot on. But it sounds exactly like Vampire Weekend’s self-titled debut. In my mind, Vampire Weekend is the representative of a childhood friend who has more money, better toys, tastier snacks, a bigger playroom, and a hotter mom. Ezra Koenig, Rostam Batmanglij, Chris Tomson, and Chris Baio have produced two wonderful albums so similar that I conducted an experiment, where I played both consecutively for two groups of people multiple times. Result? “This album is so good!” Never once were the two albums separated by my peers’ ears. So guys — pastel pop is something you can always come back to. Something you can always crush the college charts with. Trying something slightly different in the future, though, might allow you to build a mansion where you can house all the gorgeous women who love you. By Will Tunstall On their new album, Transference, Austin, TX, indie rockers Spoon get back to what they do best. Now, I wouldn’t go telling Dylan not to go electric, or The Beatles not to try acid and a string section, but some bands — great bands even — need to stick with what they know. Some bands get bored and go into the studio and fall ass over elbows into gimmicky production and apocryphal lyrics. For a couple albums there I thought that might be Spoon’s fate, but with Transference they’ve found a hunky-dory portion of studio to go with their raucous songwriting. In short, this is good, plain rock ‘n’ roll. Lead singer Britt Daniel’s voice is a sovereign and instantly recognizable entity. A moaning, mumbling, entirely comprehensible if not sensible lyric spews forth on Spoon’s sixth album. It’s at times annoying, yet there’s something about it. The band’s sound when done right is simple, with driving, punk-ish guitar and bass and some very danceable high-hats. The sound on Transference is something you’ve heard before, but roll your eyes if you will: the voice is something you haven’t. What the studio — often the fifth member of Spoon’s band — does on this album by stepping back is let the group’s simple catchiness capture the ear. On the past couple of albums, singular songs have jumped out and thrown the entire record out of whack. But that’s not the case here. Simplicity drives cohesion, as on the catchy, driving “Is Love Forever?”, where basic variations of the same chord make this song and the listener’s head bob. “Who Makes Your Money” showcases Spoon’s evolving maturity in production, and proves especially ironic as they produced the album themselves. The effect is layer upon layer upon layer, but the production manages to not supersede the structure. You know a rock album is good when you don’t have to skip a track. And that’s just what you get on Transference: a good, solid rock album, one best enjoyed really, really loud. By Taylor Angert Brian Jonestown Massacre Who Killed Sgt. Pepper? Tim Barry 28th & Stonewall Suburban Home 2010 Everything you need to know in life you can learn from a Tim Barry record. Yes, that’s Tim Barry of the legendary and now indefinitely on-hiatus melodic hardcore band, Avail. So after three full-lengths and a few seven-inches on Suburban Home, do the words “of Avail” still need to follow Tim’s name? The answer is yes and no. Yes, because all the independent-minded, raw emotional truth that surged from Avail’s records is still the backbone of Barry’s themes. And no, because he’s leading a new recession-era folk movement of former punk rock frontmen finding new work with acoustic guitars. 28th & Stonewall doesn’t offer much stylistic departure from Rivanna Junction and Manchester — Barry’s wasted no time in releasing three full-lengths in three years — with similar songs of jumping trains and denouncing stagnation. Except of course for “Will Travel,” his first foray into ragtime. What? Yet the ballads on 28th & Stonewall are more melancholy, the attacks on wealth and greed more scathing, and his collar a deeper shade of blue. This effort climbs metaphoric hills with the upbeat and bluesy “Thing Of The Past,” before descending into pedal-steel valleys on “Bozeman” and launching into the tale of Gabriel Prossor, a heroic rebel slave from Barry’s hometown of Richmond, VA. Tim Barry is quite possibly the only white Southerner with a sweat-stained cap, bad tattoos, and sleeveless T-shirt who could deliver such a long-lost history lesson. And if songs like “Wait At Milano” tugged at your heartstrings, “Moving Blue” will break that heart when Barry smashes you in the back of the head with truth while letting his sister Caitlin Hunt comfort you with violin: “Some may have a mask or two/And base their lives on making more than you/Man that life must be lonely as fuck.” Just listen to Tim Barry and you’ll be all right. By Jon Coen A. Records 2010 Who Killed Sgt. Pepper?, the latest incarnation from psychedelic outfit Brian Jonestown Massacre, is not only a departure from the band’s previous releases but also serves as an exploration into the psychosis of frontman Anton Newcombe. Since the inception of Brian Jonestown Massacre in 1990, Newcombe has been regarded as a musical genius and also dismissed as a drug-addicted mental case. In fact, Dig!, a 2004 documentary, chronicled Anton and his escapades with then-rival band The Dandy Warhols, along with his enigmatic and disturbing yet prolific nuances. Who Killed Sgt. Pepper?, a schizophrenic mélange of music, explores a wide array of genres and instrumentation, from ambient electro trip-hop to Eastern European gypsy music to scathing industrial and acid rock, all while maintaining a lo-fi shoegaze vibe that somehow manages to end up serving as the perfect example of neo-psychedelia. Featuring vocalists from Russia and Iceland singing in their native tongue while Eastern chants chug along, a post-apocalyptic industrial sound emanates throughout, creating a stark contrast to BJM’s earlier ‘60s-influenced mellow garage rock. Yet this strange mix of genres and languages actually has a cohesive, danceable world-beat groove to it. One can only imagine the amount of acid that would need to be taken to produce a record such as this, and as Anton continues to amass his collective of global musicians and followers, his unhealthy interest in Charles Manson becomes downright scary. While influences can be drawn from later The Beatles albums, Velvet Underground, The Jesus And Mary Chain, or even ‘90s trip-hoppers Morcheeba, Brian Jonestown Massacre maintains an incomparable dichotic sound. Who Killed Sgt. Pepper? could prove to be a breakthrough record for the group, and for each of the album’s flaws, there is an equalizing redemptive quality. It’s a contradiction of sorts; dark undertones and menacing lyrics contrasted with the danceable grooves, it becomes apparent that it could be easily interpreted as either brilliant or manically insane. Not too dissimilar to Anton himself. By Pete Viele Strong Arm Steady & Madlib In Search Of Stoney Jackson Johnny Cash American VI: Ain’t No Grave Stones Throw 2010 If American VI: Ain’t No Grave is the last recorded testament from legendary American icon Johnny Cash, fans of The Man In Black can die happy. The sixth in a series of collaborations Cash undertook late in life with esteemed producer Rick Rubin, Ain’t No Grave is stark, succinct, and sparse, the sound of Cash embracing for one last time the mighty baritone and ominous acoustic guitar that first made him famous nearly 60 years ago. The 52nd Annual Grammy Awards heaped hip-hop praise on Black Eyed Peas, Jay-Z, and Eminem in late January, only days after Los Angeles trio Strong Arm Steady released their excellent collaboration with Madlib, In Search Of Stoney Jackson. It’s an interesting paradox to consider — SAS formed in the shadows of Southern California’s once-prominent Death Row umbrella, but eschewed that label’s gangsta profile for the underground mixtape scene. Meanwhile, the aforementioned mainstream artists, who all started from scratch, have built mighty empires on the backs of platinum albums and high-profile paparazzi exposure. At 32 minutes total, Ain’t No Grave is barely an album by critical standards, yet its impact is immediate and throbbing. The booming title track opens the set, Cash’s frail vocals straining and stretching over a gloomy drumbeat while The Avett Brothers provide subtle piano and banjo flourishes. That song and a moving rendition of Sheryl Crow’s “Redemption Day” represent Cash’s spiritual dichotomy: devastated by the loss of his wife June mere months before recording these songs in 2003, yet fully aware of the fact that death awaited him also. Cash taps the fertile songwriting vein of longtime friend Kris Kristofferson on the tender “For The Good Times,” lightening Ain’t No Grave’s mood in two minutes flat. The straight-ahead gospel number “I Corinthians 15:55” is the only Cash original on the album, but Tom Paxton’s “Can’t Help But Wonder Where I’m Bound” feels like a better fit, its affable nature allowing The Man In Black to stretch out. Strong Arm Steady’s three MCs — Krondon, Phil Da Agony, and Mitchy Slick — prove deft at alternating between complex and languid rhyme schemes. In Search Of Stoney Jackson opens with the effervescent “Best Of Times,” a soulful number that cross-references “Cosby sweaters/And pimp hats with feathers” and regularguy raps like “I’m black, I was born of financial crisis/So no eulogies/I’ll survive because being broke ain’t new to me.” And Madlib’s Midas touch production is perfectly embodied on the spooky “Questions,” which features a crackly batch of endearing samples that sound dredged up from a crate digger’s dusty record-store heaven. The choppy, record-skipping confusion of “New Love” features an intense and even threatening guest spot from Chace Infinite, but that deep moment is followed by the lackadaisical street report “Get Started,” a breezy leftfield slow-burner featuring worldwide star Talib Kweli. Yet “Satisfied Mind” hearkens back to Cash’s early days, a lone guitar and his beautifully creaky voice sounding like they were recorded on shellac in the early 1950s. And “Last Night I Had The Strangest Dream” is perhaps Johnny’s last great anti-war statement, recorded in the summer of 2003 shortly after the Iraq War started. But the final track on Ain’t No Grave? The final entry in the overflowing Johnny Cash canon? “Aloha Oe,” a traditional farewell ballad written by Queen Liliuokalani, the last sovereign monarch of Hawaii. Ironic yet fitting coming from an Arkansas native who grew up on a farm, revolutionized the relationship between country and rock ‘n’ roll, and became perhaps the greatest musical icon of the 20th Century. Apparently even Johnny Cash had saltwater in his blood. By Nick McGregor But In Search Of Stoney Jackson’s disorientation returns on “Pressure,” three startlingly different beats morphing into a singular stutter-step. Further mind-blowing brilliance ensues: dubbed-out snare drums on “True Champs,” haunted-house laugh tracks on the madcap “Needle In A Haystack,” and guttural Wu-Tang ghetto tales on “Ambassadors.” The album ends with the resounding survival story “Two Pistols,” all puffed-up gunplay talk sobered to stone by weeping gospel samples. It’s hard to tell where SAS stands after the ironic combination; are they reformed Death Row gangstas atoning for their past sins, or adept rappers flexing their satirical muscle? Either way, the match-up of Strong Arm Steady and Madlib has produced one of the most intriguing and underrated hip-hop albums of 2010. Maybe it’ll even earn a Grammy nod or two next year. By Nick McGregor American Recordings/Lost Highway 2010