December 10, 2011
The D Man's Top Twenty Albums of 2011
1. Kaputt / Destroyer
2. Bon Iver
3. Hurry Up, We're Dreaming / M83
4. Helplessness Blues / Fleet Foxes
- Montezuma. When Pecknold sings and my mother and father in the beautiful, melodic opener.
- Bedouin Dress. Not sure what that instrument is, but it sounds like a snake-charmer.
- Sim Sala Bim. The opening stanza. He was so kind, such a gentleman . . . . Makes me feel like I'm sitting in some windswept parlor, something foreboding to come. Then it does.
- Battery Kinzie. I woke up one morning!
- The Plains / Bitter Dancer. The third act. Defying death incarnate. At arms length, I will hold you there. Enter bursting ooohs and aaahs.
- Helplessness Blues. Arguably the most thrilling mid-song shift of the year; the song's second half is a fleeting burst of imaginative clarity and harmony. If I had an orchard, I'd work 'til I'm sore.
- Lorelai. The lilting music, the lush harmonies, all of it, right now. I was old news to you then, oooold neeeews, oooold neeeews to you then.
- The Shrine / An Argument. Another exciting transition. Another brilliant, ancient-sounding song.
- Grown Ocean. The swervy guitar licks. The building sense of urgency. Leaves me in shambles of joy.
5. The King of Limbs / Radiohead
6. Smoke Ring for My Halo / Kurt Vile
7. Days / Real Estate
8. The Year of Hibernation / Youth Lagoon
9. Belong / The Pains of Being Pure at Heart
10. Zonoscope / Cut Copy
11. Slave Ambient / The War on Drugs
12. Hodgepodge
- Burst Apart by The Antlers. A gorgeous and spare slice of indie-rock, Peter Silberman wants to break your heart with his falsetto. Where Hospice created emotional wreckage with shards of spinning hope, the Brooklyn band's second album picks up the pieces in a most mesmerizing and keyboard-infused fashion.
- Strange Mercy by St. Vincent. Annie Clark is striking. So is her music. Once an Illinoisemaker for Sufjan Stevens, Clark is now the main event. A compelling dissonance arises from her imaginative arrangements, guitar arpeggios, and vocal gymastics. Indie chicks unite!
- Ashes & Fire by Ryan Adams. The D Man's long musical affair with Ryan Adams has been well chronicled. His latest record is a return to the basic acoustic premise of Heartbreaker and the numerous tracks that so many have fallen in love with. Musically, there is nothing earth-shattering in this collection of songs, except for the subtle genius of a gifted songwriter that is slowly revealed after repeated, worthwhile listens.
13. Watch the Throne / Jay-Z & Kanye West
14. Build a Rocket Boys! / Elbow
15. to 17. Chillwave Disintegrates
18. Circuital / My Morning Jacket
19. Yuck
20.* The Rip Tide / Beirut
December 5, 2011
Ten Best Musical Moments of 2011
- 10. Braving the Mojave with Marty Robbins in tow.
- 9. Screening Mark Kozelek: On Tour in Rip's basement.
- 8. Tilting windmills with Rizzo and some seemingly long-lost musical friends.
- 7. Listening to Kaputt on every atmospheric or late-night drive possible.
- 6. Air-guitaring with Dave Grohl on this closing number.
- 5. Enjoying Robin Pecknold's soaring voice on "Oliver James" at Red Butte Gardens.
- 4. Watching the spectacle of U2.
- 3. Pounding to the epic soul-march of "Wake Up" with Mrs. D Man.
- 2. Pulsing to "Race for the Prize" with Stark, Rip, and Rizzo. It's saturday night with the (expletive) Flaming Lips!
- 1. Attending The Kings of Convenience show with Rip at the Musix Box in Hollywood. Then hanging out with Erlend and Eirek after the show.
December 1, 2011
Song of the Week
November 22, 2011
Five Things
- M83 does it on Fallon. Yes, there will be sax.
- Enjoy the origami-stylings of Sean Pecknold, singer Robin's brother, who directed the video for "The Shrine / An Argument."
- "We All Go Back To Where We Belong." A lovely little swan song.
- Cool song from a band that I'm not really down with.
- Jamie xx reworks "Bloom."
November 7, 2011
Song of the Week
October 27, 2011
Kings of Convenience
- My Ship Isn't Pretty. A brief aside about demographics. While the duo's music certainly evokes passing beauty, like an unfolding natural scene, there is also a cosmopolitan cool that is untethered from American folk idioms. The sound of the Kings is ultimately rooted in a Scandinavian, nonchalant sophistication. Not surprisingly, this exotic air has resulted in faithful followings throughout Europe, Latin American, and, significantly, Korea and Japan. Approximately half the crowd at the Music Box was Asian or Asian-American, which, fortunately, resulted in a receptive and respectful audience.
- Cayman Islands. Crystalline guitar escapism.
- Love Is No Big Truth.
- I Don't Know What I Can Save You From. A super hooky guitar hook. The Kings are teeming with a seemingly unending supply of superb guitar licks. On several songs throughout the night, the Kings "jammed" with extended and intricate precision.
- Peacetime Resistance.
- Toxic Girl.
- Second to Numb.
- Mrs. Cold. You lost me, deaf in my ear! Nothing you can say is going to change the way I feel!
- Thirteen. They played a great cover of Big Star's heartbreaker.
- Know-How. A great track from their second album, Riot On An Empty Street. The entire audience sang Feist's lines. Sheer simplicity!
- 24-25. This is just about as lovely as a pair of voices and guitars can be. The duo's deft lyrics of interpersonal relationships are always thoughtful, poignant, and honest.
- Boat Behind. The audience, of course, hit the chorus with little help. Wo, whoah-wo, whoah-wo! I can never belong to you!
- Misread. Perhaps the penultimate song from the "quiet is the new loud" movement. The duo's relatively quiet, minimal approach to songcraft results in an accentuated dynamism whenever there is the subtlest shift in volume, tempo, and rhythm. Each pick of a guitar string is an event met with anticipation. The practical affects of this phenomenon? When Erlend took off his cardigan in a fit of mid-song joy, the audience went wild.
- Rule My World.
- I'd Rather Dance With You. Nothing else like this. If this clever song doesn't make you feel good, your pulse has stopped. The opening band, Seth Pettersen & the Undertow, came out to back up this number so that Erlend could let loose and do his thing.
- Me in You.
- Little Kids.
- Homesick. The D Man has already waxed at length about the personal meaning of this song. The perfect closer.
October 17, 2011
Song of the Week
October 13, 2011
Song of the Week
October 7, 2011
Stark the Vinyl Shark: Time To Pay Attention to the Dum Dum Girls (Vol. II)
In March, the Dum Dum Girls released the He Gets Me High EP (Sub Pop), showcasing three original tracks and one exceptional cover of “There is a Light That Never Goes Out” by The Smiths. Is it as good as the original? No. Would Morrissey and Johnny Marr approve? I think so. If nothing else, it will inspire you to dig out your Smiths vinyl or CD collection to revisit the unique musical stylings of your old friends from Manchester.
In September, the Dum Dum Girls released their second full-length from Sub Pop called Only in Dreams. It’s an improvement over their debut in almost every way, thanks to a sleek production and improved instrumentation. It’s a more mature sound, not to say they don’t have any fun (see “Just a Creep”), and shows that even though they play to their influences, they have managed to break away from the lo-fi sound that brought them so much success last year. Stand out tracks include “Coming Down,” which sounds like the perfect marriage of Mazzy Star and The Pretenders, “Bedroom Eyes,” which showcases Dee Dee’s excellent vocals, and “In My Head,” which is pure bedroom pop bliss, with a dash of The Beach Boy’s classic West Coast pop sensibilities.
Dee Dee’s smoky, seductive vocals are brought way up in the mix this time, with excellent results. Listen to “Caught in One” with your eyes closed and you’ll swear it's Neko Case, yet on “Just a Creep,” it’s Chrissie Hynde. I’ll take it either way, especially when backed by a rhythm section that knows what they are doing, and a guitar player in Jules who refuses to blend into the background.
I was able to snag a limited edition first pressing of Only in Dreams called the “Sub Pop Loser Edition” which is pressed on pink vinyl and came with a bonus 7’’ 45rpm single. The mix is great, the low end is warm, and Dee Dee’s vocals really sound great on pink wax. It feels great to turn this album up, to enjoy the dynamic range, and to appreciate the great Rock & Roll these women have to offer.
October 3, 2011
Song of the Week
September 28, 2011
Song of the Week
September 21, 2011
R.E.M.
- Radio Free Europe (Murmur, 1983).
- Harborcoat (Reckoning, 1984).
- Finest Worksong (Document, 1987).
- Orange Crush (Green, 1988).
- Near Wild Heaven (Out of Time, 1991).
- The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonight (Automatic for the People, 1992).
- Nightswimming (Automatic for the People, 1992).
- Electrolite (New Adventures in Hi-Fi, 1996).
- Imitation of Life (Reveal, 2001).
- Walk it Back (Collapse Into Now, 2011).
September 18, 2011
The Flaming Lips
- Worm Mountain. Wayne crawled across the crowd in his cosmic bubble. He came to rest right above us. He stood up inside the sphere as we held him aloft. We were a collective Atlas, carrying the fate of the entire planet on our shoulders. I should add that many Lip fans have died without ever holding the bubble. We felt so honored.
- She Don't Use Jelly. Totally ridiculous song. Totally works everytime. One of the most entertaining songs that you could ever hope to hear live, it is a bizarre treasure from the Lips always-interesting catalog. The alterna-hit thrust the Lips into the national consciousness, or at least the consciousness of weirdos everywhere.
- The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song. My kids love this song. What's not to like? So easy to sing.
- Vein of Stars. A pensive strummer, contemplating space and time itself. Stephen Drozd's guitar wailed with existential sadness.
- See the Leaves. A scary track from Embryonic. There were lots of cymbals crashing and drum fills banging.
- Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots Pt. 1. Wayne turned this favorite into an intimate sing-along. There was no doubt that she could save us all. She's a black-belt in karate!
- Death Rays of the Sun.
- Pompeii Am Gotterdammerung.
- What is the Light? / The Observer. A cool track from The Soft Bulletin. The spacey bass-line kept it groovy.
- Race for the Prize. One of the most euphoric moments of The D Man's concert-going history. Don't believe me? Even the Japanese (see the video) understand the splendor of the woozy, off-kilter guitars and keyboards, the penultimate race for the cure. Rip and The D Man jumped in jubilation as the swell hit one of my favorite lyrical hooks in all of pop music: They're just humans, with wives and children!
- Do You Realize???. A massive celebratory send-off. Wayne talked about how some individuals in the audience were likely burdened by sadness, and how he was happy that they could come to the show and escape for a little while. It was touching and sincere. It was a call to reach out, to lift, to realize: The sun doesn't go down. It's just an illusion caused by the world spinning round.