Looks like release season is slowing down a bit in anticipation of
upcoming sure-fire Xmas retail sellers, but this week still has some
juggernaut-sized new music for your ears to feast upon. I even found a
Christmas album that's not ear-splitting, and even manages to make
profanity enjoyable. Observe:
Jello Biafra
Cartel
The Christmas Jug Band - this is a real band. Huzzah!
Leonard Cohen - live at Isle of Wight 1970
The
Dan Band -
Ho! - A Dan Band Xmas - yes, the name says it all, but
rather than a no-brainer re-rendering of holiday classics with random
expletives thrown in, this is actually a deftly-composed set of 10
originals that aren't half bad, even if you won't be singing them
around the piano at the family party. "Have a very, merry,
mutha-f*ckin' Christmas" indeed
Joey DeFrancesco
Electric SixJay Farrar / Ben Gibbard -
One Fast Move or I'm Gone - a modestly
successful collab between two low-key indie rock greats, springing from
Farrar's appropriation of lyrics from the Jack Kerouac novel Big Sur.
Rather folky (obv.) but well-arranged and fleshed out with the right
instruments at the right moments. Gibbard is the saving grace, trading
lead vox with Farrar and lending compositional aid, even providing the
above-average title track to sum up the whole endeavor. The musical
framing is decent, and the words still possess their original jaded,
restless fire, dangerous only to those afraid of danger. Consider this
a companion to WIlco's Mermaid Avenue collabs with Billy Bragg over
Woody Guthrie's writings
FashawnFlight of the Conchords -
I Told
You I Was Freaky - second helping of New Zealand's fourth-most-popular
folk-parody duo feels a bit rushed, and admittedly so as they didn't
have years to hone these 13 tracks in front of audiences. Still
semi-solid, with forays into dance-club, R. Kelly freak'n'B, sad
bastard music, and the tongue-in-cheek come-on's they're best on. "You
Don't Have to Be a Prostitute" is the best song I've heard about not
having to be a prostitute since Roxanne by the Police!
Robert Francis
Aretha Franklin Christmas
Fu Manchu
Michael Jackson - remix suites
Juvenile
Kutless
Little Dragon
Lyle LovettMaps
-
Turning the Mind - gorgeous electronic compositions are James
Chapman's specialty. I honestly have no idea how he hears all the
different layers of blips and beats he manages to weave together. The
vocals and lyrics might be another story, but he covers everything with
deft layers of strings, reverb, and echo so it all sounds like a
distant lunar symphony or a chemical-induced haze. Chemicals are
indeed the subject of many of these songs, but not in abusive,
glamorous fashion, and therapy plays into the songcraft as well, making
this a rather superb overall work, cohesive in content both musically
and conceptually
Tim McGraw
Naam
Nouvelle VagueOld Canes -
Feral Harmonic - solo project from Chris Crisci out of superb
woodsy/atmo-rockers The Appleseed Cast, focusing more on his acoustic
side, for better or worse
OOIOO
Alec Ounsworth
Elvis Perkins
Pylon
Rakim
Rammstein
Otis Redding best of
Miles Benjamin Anthony Robinson
Royce da 5'9"
Timothy B. Schmit
Silver Starling
The SlitsSnow
Patrol -
LateNightTales - not an album of their music, but rather the
latest in the superb "LateNightTales" series, with Gary Lightbody and
co. choosing their favorite chillout tuneage, with an exclusive track
of their own for good measure
Spiral StairsSufjan Stevens -
the BQE - if
you're even remotely familiar with Sufjan Stevens, you know that
"ambitious" is far too small a descriptor for what he does. This album
is the recorded end-result of the music commissioned for symphonic
performance by the Brooklyn Academy of Music some two years ago.
Celebrating the ramshackle Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, Stevens and his
posse of course alsoundertook creation of an expansive film project, comic book, booklet, and Viewmaster (remember those?) reel for the whole project. I'd say more if I could actually find a place to listen to the damn thing...
Theory of a DeadmanKristina
Train -
Spilt Milk - smooth and subtle with just a hint of grit on the
soft end, huge and soulful on the loud end, Blue Note Records has found
another amazing voice with this artist. Penning songs with veteran
masters Jimmy Hogarth and Eg White, the singer owes a definite debt to
the resurgence of 70's soul, and reminds me of Aretha Franklin from a
Carole King shell. For fans of Duffy, Adele, Elizabeth & the
Catapult, and any music that moves you like a rainy day
Tina Turner - live CD/DVD
White Denim
It was uncommonly difficult, for some reason, to find samples of much
of this week's music, so I hope the links I've provided (which range
far beyond my usual MySpace linkage) will be of some help to you. Not
sure what's waiting next week, but that's when I'll see you...
Meow (a(a)
p.s. as if reading about them wasn't enough,
you can enjoy a playlist featuring most of these fine artists on my
MySpace Page. Have a ball.