wordpress stats

Author Archive for Michael HansenPage 3 of 9

Oneohtrix Point Never at Boston’s Whitehaus this Saturday

opn

After a superprolific year in 2009 including the near perfect Rifts and Zones Without People, Oneohtrix Point Never is finally bringing his electro midnight meditations to Boston. Head down to the Whitehaus in Jamaica Plain this Saturday for an evening full of intimate strangeness you can’t afford to miss if you’re in the area. Playing with OPN will be Stellar OM Source, Daniel Higgs, Prince Rama, and the Whitehaus’ own Many Mansions, who are pretty fuckin rad. Gonna do my best to make it out there and get my chakra toasted. Here’s the Facebook event page to help you remember.

Oneohtrix Point Never, Stellar Om Source, Daniel Higgs, Prince Rama, and Many Mansions
Saturday, January 23rd
The Whitehaus
10 Seaverns Ave, Jamaica Plain, Boston
7 p.m./ all ages
$5 suggested donation to the artists

MP3 :::
Oneohtrix Point Never – Emil Cioran

Share/Save/Bookmark

When Can We See That Moon Tan of Yours?

archm

Londoner by way of San Francisco Arch M is a major tease. Ever since the 2007 release of his Cples EP, he’s supposedly been working on a debut full-length for ccaavveerrnn records called Moon-Tan. To keep us baited, he releases a free tape about a year ago called Mountain Tan Commercials, which is exactly what it sounds like; a series of previews. Working under a “nostalgia is everything” philosophy, this tape is a drowsy tour of 7 tracks in 9 minutes that infuse everything from psych, no wave, ambient loops, and electronic processing. Arch M sits somewhere between hypnagogic pop acts like Ducktails and modern ambient collage-workers like Black to Comm.

So where’s the entrée? All available info points to a mysterious upcoming 12″+dvd called Oakland Huxt, with no word on the once sure-thing Moon-Tan. Perhaps it was simply renamed or maybe it never existed in the first place, I don’t know. What I do know is that Arch M rules and you should all encourage him to make more music by downloading the two free releases he has out.

You can download the Cples EP here and the Mountain Tan Commercials tape here. Additionally, here is a video that may or may not enhance your listening experience.

MP3 :::
Arch M – Cple Outside Park With Me
Arch M – Cat Grave
Arch M – Bedrm Band at Caf NVA

Share/Save/Bookmark

Xiu Xiu – Dear God, I Hate Myself

xiu xiu

I know, they’re a curious case, but I implore you to forgive the theatrics, Hello Kitty aesthetics, and tendency to name their work things like Dear God, I Hate Myself, because underneath it all is one of the most underestimated bands going. Here, on their newest effort, Xiu Xiu follow suit with Animal Collective and The Dirty Projectors and take that inevitable, full-bodied swing at making a pop record. Although, Jamie and his cohorts harbor a definition of pop structure that’s so flexible it makes Bitte Orca sound like “Party in the USA”, if you listen close enough.

The groups talent for micro-sculpting and composing sounds is often overlooked because of the giddier elements that usually take the foreground. On it’s surface, Dear God is a toy chest pop anthem for the skittish and Zoloft-prescribed, but it’s punctured by the most fevered and inspired passages of atonal explosions, expressionist swells, and twitchy realism that Xiu Xiu have ever neatly blended into the scenery. “Hyunhye’s Theme” expertly weaves autumnal fingerpicking into a herd of deflating synths and ominous feedback, a vibe they tried out on Women As Lovers‘ “Gayle Lynn”. Other interesting recipes include “The Fabrizio Palumbo Retaliation” which pairs a catholic children choir with a Nintendo DS beat, and “Cumberland Gap”, which by contrast is the album’s real oddity, where a strange banjo-led folk song is given the Xiu treatment.

There’s a few great singles too, with choruses so catchy they’d be radio-friendly if they weren’t filled with lyrics about Richard Chase and bulimia. Jamie’s unique brand of ecstatic paranoia translates seamlessly into his new found accessibility. Powered by nervous energy, the album clocks in at barely over a half hour, and not a minute is wasted. There are no pretentious interludes like the ones that plagued earlier releases, just twelve tracks that could each serve equally well as the album’s ambassador.  Basically, it’s a Xiu Xiu record, and it’s either gonna warm up to you or not, but I say Dear God is the group in top form, even with the departure of former key member/cousin Caralee McElroy. With our culture’s increasing appetite for experimental approaches to pop music, it’s only a matter of time until this shit gets canonized. Best to just get on board now.

Dear God, I Hate Myself is available February 23rd on Kill Rock Stars.

MP3 :::
Xiu Xiu – Chocolate Makes You Happy
Xiu Xiu – House Sparrow

Share/Save/Bookmark

New Grouper/Roy Montgomery Split 12″

grouper-roy-montgomery New Grouper/Roy Montgomery Split 12

Despite a few great singles and splits in 09, it feels like forever since we’ve had a real thick slice of Grouper to bite into. On this new split 12″, Liz Harris teams up with New Zealand’s Roy Montgomery for a satisfying glimpse at what the Portland chanteuse is up to. Montgomery spills across Side A with a phased out variation of Sandy Bull’s ‘Fantasia on A Theme’, hacking out 18 minutes of icy solo guitar musings.

Grouper takes the B-Side with 4 tracks of her most concise songwriting yet. “Vessel” is steered by a slow, processional Wurlitzer that seems to absorb all the reverb from Harris’ vocals, which remain as doomed and affecting as ever even in this more austere recording. Her side is healthily supplemented with the creepy backyard, wind-pushing-swingset, dog barking, Boo Radley tape atmospherics you’d expect.

You can snag the new 12″ here.

MP3 :::
Grouper – Vessel

Share/Save/Bookmark

The Art Museums are Woodsist’ Newest Weapon

art museums

The Art Museums are the duo of San Francisco players Josh Alper & Glenn Donaldson (of Skygreen Leopards) who describe themselves as “Anglophile jams on a Tascam 388″. What this basically translates to is a lo-fi pop rendering of Belle and Sebastian’s through-a-keyhole high culture digest. They summon the extroverted geek musings of the Magnetic Fields minus the baritone, matching drum-machine beats and hand claps with flatly recorded guitar riffs that jangle in their Mod glory.

What I have heard so far is fay, catchy as hell, and full of possibly ironic nods to the Style Council, Wham!, and other Members Only patrons.  Perhaps our point of drilling for 80’s influences is shifting from the once fertile land of warm electro workouts to the pastel bistros of new wave hedonism. Compared to their peers, Art Museums have their reverb settings at half-mask, preferring a sharper, drier aesthetic that closely mirrors the tone of the artwork.

Recently signed with the steamrolling Woodsist, the duo are set to release their debut mini-LP Rough Frame some time this February. You can also listen to a bunch of their songs on their myspace. It’s too early to really dissect these guys, having only one single at my disposal, but feelings aside, you can expect this album to have one of the first ripple effects in the new year.

For Fans Of: The Magnetic Fields, Television Personalities, Surfer Blood

MP3 :::
Art Museums – Sculpture Garden

Share/Save/Bookmark

UK Girls Unleash Shaggy Dog Attack

wetdog

Boasting pulsating rimshots, d-punk bass lines, and female vocals that sound like a German nanny fronting a riot-girl band, Wetdog initially come off as kind of a dirty boots version of Deerhoof’s ADD garage-skronk aesthetic, but achtung!–first impressions are deceiving here, so put your “Mediocre!” buttons back in the drawer. The girls’ new album Frauhaus! has one foot in the shit-gaze movement and another recalling the gleaming-amateur looseness of the Shaggs, complimented by unexpected touches of found sounds and flea-market synths. The lyrics are pleasantly absurd, and every time you expect them to get lazy and ease into some post-Slumberland girl group chorus, they opt out to explore their fondness for bad taste, cramming in some other disparate element that barely hangs on the beat. Sounding like one of Frank Zappa’s neglected childhood toys brought to life, this strange time capsule of new wave, slapstick, garage-punk, angular distortion, and musique concréte is a gutsy offering that is both behind and slightly ahead of it’s time.

You can snag Frauhaus! at the Piccadilly Records shop.

For Fans Of: The Shaggs, Deerhoof, The Raincoats

MP3 :::
Wetdog – Round Vox
Wetdog – Long Long Time to Go

Share/Save/Bookmark

Topaz Rags Release Sinister Debut Full-Length

topaz rS

Topaz Rags have finally dropped their debut full length for Not Not Fun Records. Full of the old ghostly comforts of Pocahaunted and book-ended with sharp insomniac riffs, Capricorn Born Again is one of the most seductively pessimistic albums of the year, with limping off-kilter jazz tempos dragging purgatory lounge ballads through the afterhours With label veterans Britt & Amanda behind the wheel, they create a natural assimilation from their previous band experiences. Take Robedoor’s misanthropic sludge and dump it all over Best Coast’s swooning melodies, keep the warm tape crackle, but add a touch of morose blues, skeletal piano noodling, and a druggy pulse, that’s what your in for. Eight tracks compiled “via a complex 4-track/boombox assemblage method,” for your degenerate pleasure, into what is one of the most articulate, and stylistically concise outings from this Golden State experimental community ever. Prediction: In 2010 Not Not Fun will consolidate itself into one massive supergroup and create a psychedelic magnum opus, here is a taste of it.

Capricorn Born Again is available now through Not Not Fun.

For Fans Of: Pigeons, Pocahaunted, Wet Hair

MP3 :::
Topaz Rags – Darker Sooner
Topaz Rags – Slow Gin Fizz

Share/Save/Bookmark

Gkfoes Vjgoaf Makes a Mighty Fine Slow Burner

gkfoes

God forbid I ever have to talk about this band outside of the internet, but I can’t stop spinning the new album from the impossible for me to pronounce, Gkfoes Vjgoaf. I came across this tape looking for some Nordic death metal but it turned out to just be great freak folk from some long haired Berkeley dude named Sean. Oh well, I’ll take it.

His newest album Magic Days has that Lucky Dragons sorta deformed utopian, every-idea-is-as-good-as-any-other approach to song-writing. Jumping from thick lo-fi pastoral scuzz to breezy recordings of xylophones, wind chimes, and acid-guided acoustic picking within the same 5 minutes. Sean’s tact vocal harmonies rope together the album’s diverse influences, flirting with eastern mysticism and spaced out melodies alike. As them Buddhists say, “Comparisons are odious,” but if you enjoy a nice porch-side jam as much as subjecting your friends to abstract sample tinkering, this is right up your alley.

You can grab physical copies of his releases through Ace of Tapes, and Sean has been gracious to rip his albums online which are available on his myspace.

For Fans of:  Lucky Dragons, Sore Eros, Amen Dunes

MP3 :::
Gkfoes Vjgoaf – Hellocean
Gkfoes Vjgoaf – Longevity Ritual
Gkfoes Vjgoaf – Slow Burner

Share/Save/Bookmark

Emerald’s Mark McGuire is Secretly Having the Best Year Ever

mark
How do I even begin to measure how much ass Emerald’s Mark McGuire kicked this year? Working under several different project names including Sun Watcher, Skyramps, and Peoples Parties, Mark quietly conquered the ambient underground in 2009. To combat sleeplessness, tour schedules, and boredom, he filled his four-track with buoyant, rhythmic meditations for guitar and tape with a deeply submerged pop sensibility.

While varied stylistically, the handful of releases he put out this year are all anchored around his fluid and intuitive sense of song structure. If I had to pick one release that most accurately describes his “sound”, it would probably be Loosing Sleep, where nostalgic phased guitar tones hover and multiply into lush airspace. Recorded at his home between 3 and 6 am, this album captures an adolescent wonder for the looming potential of the after hours. The epic “Marfa Lights 2″, hones darting notes of Tangerine Dream-soundtrack ambiance, culminating into an absurd metropolis of coexisting guitar loops stacked a mile high (all of which he bangs out live).

It’s worth noting that his collaborative efforts from this year have yielded equally compelling results as well. One highlight was Skyramp’s Days of Thunder. With the help of Oneohtrix Point Never’s Daniel Lopatin, they create five sprawling tracks built on Fripp & Eno sine waves of metallic fuzz jockeying over Kraftwerk electronics. Whatever his working title may be, Mark has become sort of like the ambient Robert Pollard, only more prolific and on target twice as often.

You can view Mark’s complete discography, as well as links to purchase the albums here.

For Fans Of: Fripp & Eno, Mountains, Oneohtrix Point Never

MP3 :::
Mark Mcguire – No Eye Noon Doe
Skyramps – Skyramping
Sunwatcher – Teaming Up

Share/Save/Bookmark

Xiu Xiu Drops Details About New Album

dear god
It’s been almost two years since we’ve heard a proper yelp from Jamie Stewart and his band of avant-humanists. Which isn’t to say he hasn’t been busy, making a record with Former Ghosts, writing personal haiku’s for me and a billion other kids, and even covering Morrissey. And now that we’ve all been tended to, Xiu Xiu will return to form this February with the release of their new full-length called (ready?), Dear God, I Hate Myself.

After the somewhat recent departure of Caralee McElroy, they’ve enlisted the full-time help of previously part-time collaborator Angela Seo on piano, synth, and programming. Production was co-headed by Stewart and Deerhoof’s Greg Saunier, who plays on most of the album as well. On “This To Shall Pass Away (for Freddy)”, a possible ode to the late Queen front man, the group will joined by the Immaculata Catholic School Orchestra. Word is that this new release will be heavy on the goth pop side of things (comin’ for you, Cold Cave), with four songs composed heavily on a Nintendo DS. But however they reincarnate themselves, you can be sure to expect the usual ingredients of superb art-damaged pop, scattershot rhythms, atonal explosions, and embarrassing details. Xiu to the muthafuckin Xiu, 2k10.

Dear God, I Hate Myself will be available February 23rd on Kill Rock Stars.

Track list:
1. Gray Death
2. Chocolate Makes You Happy
3. Apple for a Brain
4. House Sparrow
5. Hyunhye’s Theme
6. Dear God, I Hate Myself
7. Secret Motel
8. Falkland Rd.
9. The Fabrizio Palumbo Retaliation
10. Cumberland Gap
11. This Too Shall Pass Away (for Freddy)
12. Impossible Feeling

MP3:::
Xiu Xiu – I am Hated for Loving (Moz cover)

Share/Save/Bookmark