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Tag Archive for 'dream pop'Page 2 of 3

The Legends – Over and Over

the-legends The Legends - Over and Over

Back in 2004, The Legends released Up Against the Legends, a rather unfortunate band and album name for a body of work that was quite good. But the Legends have always had a sense of humor. When the record was first released, many were under the pretense that this group of C86 nostalgic bros were a nine-piece noise pop orchestra. That wasn’t exactly true, as The Legends are/is really a one-studio wizard deal a la Dungen by the name of Johan Angergård. While it’s easy to ignore The Legends since they’re Scandinavian and might be mistaken for some Stereogum overhyped garbage, you should not do this. Though not terribly groundbreaking, The Legends are awesomely interpreted sublime dream/shoegaze pop perfect for these warmer months.

The recently released Over and Over is a decidedly more polished effort than their ’60s garage fuzz pop centric Up Against the Legends, and leaps and bounds better than their dreadful Public Radio. The most intriguing aspect to Over and Over is Angergård’s ability to write gorgeous, sunshiney major-key vocal melodies while created a darker album. Over and Over is more spacious and moodier in its softer moment, while the noise and distortion is more grating in its wall of sound moments. This notion is best demonstrated with the title track and “Turn Away,” included below for your consideration. Over and Over, while not a mindblowingly original record, is a well crafted and fun-loving document of what was good about C86 and the poppier side of shoegaze.

Over and Over is available now through Labrador.

For fans of:  Shop Assistants, The Jesus and Mary Chain, Vivian Girls

Fagen-Becker Quality Rating
steelydan2 The Legends - Over and Over

MP3 :::
The Legends – Over and Over
The Legends – Turn Away

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Rain Parade, Where Have You Been All My Life?

rainparade Rain Parade, Where Have You Been All My Life?

I recently started exploring the realms of what was known as the Paisley Underground, a movement mostly around Los Angeles in the early to mid ’80s that acted as a reaction to the machismo of the hardcore scene percolating at that time. The groups involved in the Paisley Underground (a moniker that, like punk, was meant as a joke) wanted to spread peace and love again through candy-ass rock and roll. Some very incredible albums came from this movement, and not all were specific to LA (Soft Boys and Big Star come to mind). While The Dream Syndicate and The Three O’Clock probably championed the scene the most, The Rain Parade’s austere yet lavish 1983 album Emergency Third Rail Power Trip is my pick of the litter. This album rips.

If “I Look Around” sounds familiar, The Asteroid #4 covered it last fall on These Flowers Of Ours. Jangly, lush, gorgeous – Emergency Third Rail Power Trip is unrelentingly powerfully, probably because it’s the perfect balance between two significant movements in rock – ’60s psych, and C86 dream pop. “This Can’t Be Today” is the type of unequivocally perfect, slightly askew pop song that makes everything else sound shitty. Everything. I mean, really, after hearing a song so flawless, it makes me want to go find the members of poppycock groups like Passion Pit, roundhouse kick ‘em in the domes, steal their money, and donate it to the formers members of the band. While The Rain Parade never saw much commercial success before their split in 1986, vocalist David Roback went on to form two other excellent bands – Opal, and the mighty motherfuckin’ Mazzy Star. So Roback still got real paid in the end, I suppose.

Though Rain Parade’s original label, Restless, is no longer around, Ryko still distributes Emergency Third Rail Power Trip, but not widely. Hence, if you don’t live near a rather large record store, your best bet is to grip it through Amazon. Which you should. Amazing that there was a time when indie rock didn’t suck, yes?

MP3 :::
The Rain Parade – This Can’t Be Today
The Rain Parade – 1 Hour and 1/2 Ago
The Rain Parade – I Look Around

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The Best of Swirlies

61adnfeydgL._SS500_ The Best of Swirlies

Continuing the Contraband series, showcasing various finds and older, often out of print, records that deserve some ink in the blogololosphere, today we discuss Swirlies and three albums – Blonder Tongue Audio Baton, What to Do About Them, and They Spent Their Wild Youthful Days in the Glittering World of the Salons – all of which are very worthy of your attention.

Swirlies served as a Yankee response to the Thames Valley-centric shoegazing movement, though it could still be argued that Swirlies didn’t necessarily fit nicely in that box either. The group masterfully amalgamated both dream and noise pop aesthetics like champs, while also pioneering what was known as “chimp rock,” or music with a deliberately childlike, uncouth approach to songwriting.  Though they’ve not done a whole lot in more recent times, it’s worth noting that Swirlies never officially disbanded. As a matter of fact, they recently resurfaced to play three east coast shows in February.

What to Do About Them, released in 1992, is rather cohesive for a debut EP. Under the soundboard-clipping washes of noise is a touch of bubblegum pop that carved a niche for Swirlies as America’s The Vaselines. Dig the sweet and sour “Chris R” and anthemic “Upstairs.”

24c5c060ada055dd040d0210.L The Best of Swirlies

Blonder Tongue Audio Baton, released in 1993, maintains the typical cadence and aesthetic of the time as a freewheeling, sloppy recording. One important distinction, however, is Swirlies’ mastery of the quiet/loud dynamic. Songs like “Bell” have a real Ride quality in terms of soaring melodies and silky guitars – minus any sort of production, of course.

61fvRZOYY1L._SS500_ The Best of Swirlies

While Swirlies’ 1995 album They Spent Their Wild Youthful Days in the Glittering World of the Salons is still in print, it isn’t widely released, discussed, or revered, and that’s an abject bummer. Compared to their noisier, more disjointed previous releases, …Salons features cleaner production and more sophisticated, concise songwriting, ostentatiously because it is, indeed, a latter album and the members are older, etc. However, the band proves they still don’t give a shit by way of their classic muddy, brutal distortion. The liner notes state that no synthesizers have ever been used in Swirlies, making some of the sounds scattered on “Sound of Sebring” over the ’90s-centric, tinty, active rhythm quite curious indeed.

MP3 :::
Swirlies – Upstairs
Swirlies – Chris R
Swirlies – Pancake
Swirlies – Park the Car By the Side of the Road
Swirlies – In Harmony New Found Freedom
Swirlies – Sound of Sebring
Swirlies – Sunn

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Viva Voce – Rose City

3385606891_c3cd38db74 Viva Voce - Rose City

There are very few poppy indie rock groups I like. Very few. Viva Voce is one of them. Viva Voce toggles between genres like you eat lunch – psychedelic, dream pop, electric folk, classic rock, and general early ’90s slacker pop. Sure, this blog tends to champion artists who do fuckin’ weird shit. But sometimes you want a good no frills rock and roll record. Viva Voce’s forthcoming Rose City is just that.

Latin for “by live voice,” Viva Voce is the type of compositionally tight group that feels organic and feels like a group that must be seen live to appreciate fully. Other than a heightened production level, there’s not much separating Rose City from 2004’s The Heat Can Melt Your Brain and 2006’s Get Yr. Blood Sucked Out. Fine with me, Viva Voce is the type of band that makes the familiar sound fresh, and the type of band that created a forumla that works and shouldn’t be fucked with.

Opener “Devotion” evokes Darklands-era Jesus and Mary Chain and mid-career Primal Scream, with rapid-fire percussion, swelling synths, and reverb-drenched vocals. “Good as Gold” is classic Breeders – simple, sloppy, and catchy. “Red Letter Day” is the classic Morricone-informed, absinthe-influenced, highly hummable, drive your truck into the sunset dirge that made Tara Jane O’Neil’s new record so engaging. However, it’s the sound the group cultivates on songs like the western-tinged, ornate, classic 4AD vibin’ “Flora” that separates Viva Voce from the general NPR-friendly hipster garbage – placing them along the best in contemporary jangle and dream pop, or as I call it, C86 v2.0. Trippy and accessible, Rose City gets a 9 on form, 8 on mind-meltingness, and is 100% worthy of your attention.

Viva Voce’s Rose City drops on May 26th. Grip it here.

Fagen-Becker Quality Rating
steelydan2 Viva Voce - Rose City

MP3 :::
Viva Voce – Flora
Viva Voce – Red Letter Day

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The Nightblooms and their Summertime Shoegaze

51dYpyGnxML._SS500_ The Nightblooms and their Summertime Shoegaze

Recently, I discovered I had quite a volume of unmarked CD-Rs lying about my personal caverns (closets, that is, not some strange sexual euphemism). Last night, I gripped L-Train’s industrial-strength Sony Walkman (remember those?) and went through 30 or so unnamed CDs. I found some amazing stuff – much of which I will share with you over the next few weeks. A lot of tracks I found were certainly of the older, rare, and/or out of print variety, as I pirated a lot of music from my former college radio station WRFL, where I dwelled for most of my college career. The station pretty much had a “don’t throw anything away” policy since its inception in 1988, so it’s a veritable museum (though certain titles were stolen at some point in the past obviously). This is why you see a new category called “Contraband.” Since the concepts are somewhat similar, entries from Cut-Out Bin Classics and Vinyl Finds have been consolidated into one easy, low-APR category. The MP3 categories, as always, refers to hawt new traxxx (or easier to find music).

The first awesome find in last night’s excursion is the 1992 self-titled album by The Nightblooms. The Nightblooms were, as often is the case, an underappreciated collective from The Netherlands who only released two albums. Shoegazing is certainly the easiest reference point, as the group concealed melodic vocals under massive Big Muff guitar sounds. However, the Nightblooms were not nearly as ethereal as, say, Lush – the group packed a crunchy punch… almost reminiscent of a sped-up stoner metal band. You also hear an amalgamation of fuzz, punk, noise, and twee a la The Vaselines. There’s very little information on the group and I have yet to find any interviews on the intarwebz. If you find something, please send it my way! Otherwise, enjoys these rare gems perfect for warming weather.

For fans of: Lush, The Vaselines, Velocity Girl, Aislers Set

MP3 :::
The Nightblooms – Panicle
The Nightblooms – 59#1
The Nightblooms – Slowly Rising

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Massive Spring Mix Part One

ssm4 Massive Spring Mix Part One

There’s no real need for an introduction. Spring is here finally, and it rules. West coasters may not be privy to this, but on the east coast, we have this thing called February which really sucks the life out of you. With these new mild conditions and sunshine, I had the energy to pull together a rather massive springtime collection of music – sunny folk and psychedelia (with annotations!) that evokes the oft conjured imagery of the season that I won’t waste time reiterating here. This gangsta-ass mix is so massive, as a matter of fact, that it will be be broken up into two parts. I wish someone made me a mix this monumentally ballin’, but unfortunately I’m probably the only one dope enough to bring this to you.

As always, please support the artists if’n you take a likin’ to any of these torch ballads. Salad rules, as well.

bb_spmf Massive Spring Mix Part One

MP3 :::
Margo Guryan – Come to Me Slowly
You can find this gem on the collection 25 Demos

The Free Design – Bubbles
Everything is small potatahs up against the mighty FD, trick

Mia Dio Todd – My Room is White
Remixed by Dungen for her collaboration compilation La Ninja (ZOMG NINJAZ!!1!)

The Left Banke – Ivy Ivy
Technically, this is a Montage song, but since both groups have Michael Brown at the helm, it matters not. Good gravy either way.

Fairport Convention – The Deserter
Okay, so the subject matter of this one, as with many Fairport numbers, is not as pleasant as spring tends to be (a narrative of being ratted out on and meeting your executioner), but Sandy Denny makes everything gorgeous.

The Incredible String Band – There is a Green Crown
Eight big minutes of sitars and freak-folk before anyone knew what freak-folk was. You can find this one on The Hangman’s Beautiful Daughter.

Broadcast – Look Outside
Considering their respectable following, why… in the fuck… is The Noise Made By People not available in the United States? Warp… dudes, what gives?

Black Moth Super Rainbow – Smile Heavy
Yeah… why does the sun go down? Rotation – fuck that shit. Find this on their 2004 effort Start a People.

Pia Fraus – Springsister
With the word “spring” in the title, this was an obvious choice. What I lack in subtlety, I make up for in honesty.

Mahogany – Chance
Excellent neo-gaze band from the early ’00s

Koushik – Be With
You would think this might be on Sundazed. But it’s not – it’s on Stones Throw.

Tower Recordings – Other Kinds Run
Matt Valentine, PG Six, and other rad dudes on acid freak the fuck out for three minutes.

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The Mythical C86 Tape

NMEC86 The Mythical C86 Tape

Holy shit! Like unicorns, I wasn’t sure if this thing actually existed, but the C86 tape has finally surfaced.

Despite sounding like a printer model, C86 is actually a genre of music, and the term refers to a cassette released by the (ugh) NME in 1986.  C86 is a sample platter of all the jangle pop, fuzz pop, dream pop, shoegaze, and various off-center melodic rock happening in the south of England in the ’80s.  Many of these bands, of course, are notorious for building the mighty Creation Records with crazy ol’ Alan McGee. Read my annotated history of Creation Records (and enjoy some choice jams as well) here: Creation Records, For the Win.

Without coming off as too nerdy, the C86 tape is pretty legendary. This small-run cassette tape was, for many throughout the UK and the western world, a rather seismic introduction to groups like Primal Scream, The Pastels, The Wedding Present, and more.  I mentioned in my review of the new Wavves album a couple of days ago that this new wave of “shitgaze” bands that are popular with indie dorks these days owe a polite handshake to Marmoset, who owe a tasty bundt cake to Meat Whiplash, who all owe their mortgage to the C86 movement.

Now, maybe I’m not good at Intarwebz, but I’ve been looking for a digital version of C86 for a straight minute.  Chocolate Bobka, a blog I just discovered and like quite well, somehow gripped a full, high quality digital recording of the original C86 release.  And they were nice enough to share.

Below are some highlights for me.  Enjoy! Oh, and I was just informed that unicorns do exist. Well… shiver me timbers. Scratch the introductory sentence, then:

captb374481c5e3543cfa80c045b09fc6414italy_unicorn_pto101 The Mythical C86 Tape

MP3 :::
Primal Scream – Velocity Girl
Shop Assistants – It’s Up to You
The Pastels – Breaking Lines
The Servants – Transparent
The Wedding Present – This Boy Can Wait

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Lush’s Gala Will Destroy You

lush Lushs Gala Will Destroy You

I had to go through a labyrinth of amazing old school Geocities websites to find a decent photo of Lush. The mid-’90s was such a golden age for web design, ya’ll. Why don’t designers use wicked animated GIFs anymore? Man… fuckin’ Geocities… oooh weee. I had a Geocities website and it ruled so hard.

Anyway, conventional shoegazing history operates, for all intents and purposes, as follows.  When the “Scene That Celebrated Itself“ collapsed on itself around the same time as grunge (roughly Q3 of 1994) your band did two things: either dismantled or went a very different direction. Lush chose the latter, and released some kinda shitty music toward the end of their career. However, Lush’s Gala compilation, which comprised of the group’s first three EPs collected on one priced-to-own record long before the Beta Band thought of doing it, is not just some of the best dream pop ever recorded – it’s just some of the best rock and roll recorded. Lush, along with Cocteau Twins, established what the 4AD sound was all about. Continue reading ‘Lush’s Gala Will Destroy You’

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A Rare One From Chapterhouse

chapterhouse A Rare One From Chapterhouse

Since setting short or long term goals for yourself tends to keep you focused and away from the dangers of drugs, so as such, it is my short term goal to write a few entries this week digging through my archives. My archives are kept in a fortress outside the city proper and mote-protected.  However, I will share certain gems from these archives on my blog, because sharing is caring. Here’s one from classic UK dream pop outfit Chapterhouse.

So, Chapterhouse’s 1991 release Whirlpool never made a huge, umm, splash in the shoegazing scene, but it was very good. Had they developed these sounds more, expanding on their sonic landscape instead of following-up with a corny, overtly poppy, overly slick, incredibly dated sounding album (1993’s Blood Music), Chapterhouse might have been as recognizable of a name as Ride.

Though Chapterhouse tended to be more poppy than many of their contemporaries, they made quite a statement when they weren’t going for verse-chorus-verse structures and soft guitar sounds.

This… this is a total brain melter. And it’s a rare treat. Continue reading ‘A Rare One From Chapterhouse’

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The Great Northwest – “Chief John” and Engineers – “Forgiveness”

great_northwest The Great Northwest - Chief John and Engineers - Forgiveness

I want to talk about my email for a sec [kb (at) thedecibeltolls.com]. Chuck Klosterman once said that music critique is basically being paid to read your mail. That’s pretty accurate, and in many ways, that was the largest chunk of my job as a talent buyer at the music venue. I miss doing such work, despite the funky hours, so I enjoy getting mail from publicists and label reps. These letters provide two outcomes, depending on if the publicist is good at his/her job: 1) point you in the direction of artists that will pique your interest, or 2) provide some serious lol time, such as “Rilo Kiley fans – take delight.” Have you read this blog? I rag on that shit daily. I understand this, of course, as music promotion is often throwing spaghetti against a wall – just launch your name everywhere, and see what sticks. However, sometimes these corrospondences point me in the direction of some bands I dig, and if you’re reading the blog, you’ll dig as well. Case in point…

Today, I’m happy to present The Great Northwest. And following the storied tradition of Boston, Chicago, and Kansas, they are indeed from the great northwest (Portland, specifically). The Great Northwest in a few words: absolutely gorgeous, expansive space rock. I plan on reviewing their recently released debut The Widespread Reign of… soon. This is good. Continue reading ‘The Great Northwest – “Chief John” and Engineers – “Forgiveness”’

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