Showing posts with label My Bloody Valentine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label My Bloody Valentine. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Top 30 Albums of 2013

Deer Tick - Negativity
30. Deer Tick - Negativity

Majical Cloudz - Impersonator
29. Majical Cloudz - Impersonator

Mount Moriah - Miracle Temple
28. Mount Moriah - Miracle Temple

Sarah Jarosz - Build Me Up from Bones
27. Sarah Jarosz - Build Me Up from Bones

Deerhunter - Monomania
26. Deerhunter - Monomania

Alela Diane - About Farewell
25. Alela Diane - About Farewell

Boards of Canada - Tomorrow's Harvest
24. Boards of Canada - Tomorrow's Harvest

Iceage - You're Nothing
23. Iceage - You're Nothing

22. Iron & Wine - Ghost on Ghost

Haim - Days Are Gone
21. Haim - Days Are Gone

20. Chvrches - The Bones of What You Believe

Tomahawk - Oddfellows
19. Tomahawk - Oddfellows

Queens of the Stone Age - ...Like Clockwork
18. Queens of the Stone Age - ...Like Clockwork

Richard Thompson - Electric
17. Richard Thompson - Electric

Janelle Monáe - The Electric Lady
16. Janelle Monáe - The Electric Lady

Wire - Change Becomes Us
15. Wire - Change Becomes Us

Fuck Buttons - Slow Focus
14. Fuck Buttons - Slow Focus

Bill Callahan - Dream River
13. Bill Callahan - Dream River

Julia Holter - Loud City Song
12. Julia Holter - Loud City Song

Merchandise - Totale Nite
11. Merchandise - Totale Nite

My Bloody Valenine - m b v
10. My Bloody Valenine - m b v

Run the Jewels - Run the Jewels
9. Run the Jewels - Run the Jewels

Lady Lamb the Beekeeper - Ripely Pine
8. Lady Lamb the Beekeeper - Ripely Pine

Torres - Torres
7. Torres - Torres

Braids - Flourish/Perish
6. Braids - Flourish/Perish

Throwing Muses - Purgatory/Paradise
5. Throwing Muses - Purgatory/Paradise

No Joy - Wait to Pleasure
4. No Joy - Wait to Pleasure

Deathfix - Deathfix
3. Deathfix - Deathfix

Polvo - Siberia
2. Polvo - Siberia

Arcade Fire - Reflektor
1. Arcade Fire - Reflektor


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Saturday, November 30, 2013

Throwing Muses - Purgatory/Paradise

Throwing Muses - Purgatory/Paradise


Looking at the running times of each track on Purgatory/Paradise, a third of which hover around the one minute mark, it could be a film score. In a very real way, it's is the soundtrack to the last ten years in the lives of Kristin Hersh, Bernard Georges and Dave Narcizo, the book that comes with it being a treatment for the script.

Throwing Muses have always been an example to other bands; they had a whole scene built around them in the mid 80s, and when they settled into the mid 90s alt-rock scene, a scene they had a big hand in creating, they settled near the top. Another decade after that, Kristin Hersh became a pioneer of crowdfunding for music. The better part of another decade later, Purgatory/Paradise sets an example that not many are likely to follow, albeit the same one being set this year by a number of veterans, including My Bloody Valentine, Richard Thompson and Wire: how to make a great rock album in the early 10s.

 If the film to which Purgatory/Paradise could be a soundtrack existed, it would be a disjointed, meandering narrative, telling the story out of order. Before the 32 song, 67 minute long album can take hold, what does make an impression is the sound. It's not lo-fi, but it's far from slick. It's very real, very human; the drums sound like drums rather than someone bouncing a basketball in an empty church. The album was mastered with an uncommonly light touch, and given the number of soft-loud transitions, it was the only way to do it. If the sound is human, then accordingly the music is direct. Whether it's a quiet, contemplative number or a strident rocker, you can imagine three people in the studio playing those instruments, and if there's any singer who sounds as if she might crawl through the speakers Ring style at any given moment, it's Kristin Hersh. Each of the songs carves out its own space while functioning as part of the album as a whole. Paradoxically for an album with so many songs, Purgatory/Paradise should be able to remind any willing listener of a time before they had thousands of albums and when their relationship with a song was deeper because of it. In 2013, releasing 32 songs that are worth listening to would have been enough, but it wasn't enough for Throwing Muses; these songs demand to be listened to.

Related:

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Flux Capacitor: Throwing Muses - Untitled
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

Monday, October 14, 2013

Polvo - Siberia


"No bell will chime to celebrate an aspiration past its prime" - so wrote Ash Bowie in Polvo's "Time Isn't On My Side" in 1993. Siberia calls bullshit on that. Ash Bowie is in his mid 40s, which admittedly seems like nothing when I see that my top whatever for this year will include My Bloody Valentine, Deathfix (ft. Brendan Canty) and Richard Thompson and makes it read more like a list from 1991. In any case, Siberia sounds like the work of musicians who mentally travelled back to their 20s and got to make an album that captures their youthful exuberance while benefiting from everything they've learnt in the two decades hence. 2009's In Prism was a worthwhile comeback album after 12 years broken up, and it, too, built on Polvo's past without lazily rehashing it. Siberia, however, is more fully realised. The songs are sturdily structured, but manage to find a place for Ash Bowie's circuitous guitar playing, whether he's going off on Neil Young-esque tangents or taking his time and anchoring the song with an arresting arpeggio. His voice, too, has matured and come to embody the wisdom he's accrued over the years. Siberia is one of the strongest cases for bands reuniting; if you can be this good after more than 20 years on and off, why wouldn't you?

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

My Bloody Valentine - m b v

My Bloody Valentine - mbv

Maybe I'm showing my age, but when I ordered the CD of m b v and downloaded the accompanying digital copy in less time than it takes to listen to it, it still didn't feel as if I was really looking at a new My Bloody Valentine album. I mean here it is on a medium that didn't exist when Loveless came out, obtained by means that didn't exist as we know it. When Loveless was new, CDs had just snatched the market share from cassettes. To put it in terms of the musical landscape, it was a time when Kurt Cobain was alive and Justin Bieber wasn't.

The band's fans have a couple of legitimate fears regarding m b v - fears which, if they share my opinion, they can put to rest. Firstly, m b v isn't a retread of Loveless (or Isn't Anything or any other My Bloody Valentine release for that matter). It's a product of the same band mining the same ground, but it's not the same album. To call it so just because it trades in sheets of fuzz and buried vocals would be like saying Rain Dogs is the same as Swordfishtrombones because they both have growling and marimba. One fortunate similarity is the preservation of dynamics in the mastering.  Secondly, well, I'll just come out and say it: the album is damn good. No, probably not Loveless good, but damn good. Welcome back, it's been too long. There's beer in the fridge, help yourself.

m b v eases listeners into the idea of a new My Bloody Valentine album over the course of its first third. On the opener "She Found Now", the waves of distortion and a clean, tonally unambiguous guitar are both at the forefront as the drums, though barely audible, punctuate the tidal effect of the distortion. "Only Tomorrow", a likely single, reminds us that the wait has been even longer for an album featuring Colm Ó Cíosóig as a full time participant. Ó Cíosóig's drums are mixed to various levels throughout the album; they're pretty quiet on this one, yet they drive the song, which in this case is an upbeat number that reminds you that My Bloody Valentine can engage you physically as well as mentally. It also ups the stakes sonically, as a distorted lead guitar emulates brass. "Who Sees You" guides the listener further out into m b v 's strange world while sounding familiar thanks to Kevin Shields' whammy bar shenanigans.

While Shields is necessarily all over this album, it's far more of a band effort than Loveless, and the next three tracks serve as a welcome back to Bilinda Butcher, who sings on all three. It's a pretty gentle trio of tracks; all three emphasise Butcher's vocals and some interesting modulation effects over distortion and feedback, and the last one is built on tremolo'd guitar, a danceable beat and some of Debbie Googe's most audible bass work.

The last three tracks cease the hand-holding completely. Vocals are almost entirely absent ("Nothing Is" is completely instrumental) and all three tracks are rambunctious numbers driven by whims and, like most of the album's best material, the drums. The album ends with a "jet plane" flange sound, and if that signifies the end of a journey, it's one that gets less familiar as it goes while at the same time making it increasingly clear why the band still thought it was worth taking us after all this time.

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