Author Archives: Tankboy

I can be the bigger man, see?

cyhsy_sld.jpgMy disdain for Clap Your Hands Say Yeah is nigh legendary. I didn’t believe their debut was the earth-shattering work of art everyone else did, and I thought it was crummy that they stole the spotlight when their pals The National tried to do them a favor and take them on tour opening for them, only to have the crowds skip out right after CYHSY’s set.

It annoyed me to no end that these guys were getting so much attention for what I felt was a sub par, at best, album. The only thing they had going for them, in my eyes, was that they showed the Majors that someone completely outside the system could still have a success sales-wise, and I thought that boded well for the future of D.I.Y.

In the world of music though, at least as far as i’m concerned, everyone gets another chance every time they release a new album. Even Kill Hannah gets a listen from me with every release, and the day they record something really good I’ll be more than happy to give them their due for doing so. It’s probably not going to happen, but there is always that possibility.

This brings us to CYHSY’s newest disc, the (again) self-released Some Loud Thunder. I put it in at work yesterday and gave it an honest listen. And I liked it. The über-distorto effect on the opening track, wherein all pushes are pushed blood red, seemed a little precious, as if the band was trying to play hard to get in that “we obscure our catchiest pop” sort of way but once I got past that I discovered that the band had indeed progressed. The album is by no means great, but it’s not the half-baked mess their debut was, so if Pitchfork were to award this a 6.8 I wouldn’t find myself arguing against it.

I still wish their lead singer would just let go of that David Byrne fetish, but at least this time it’s listenable.

Austinist Updates Big Ass List

Our friends at Austinist updated their list of bands playing at SXSW.

Interviews and Panel titles revealed…

The following interviews are confirmed:
Gilberto Gil
Emmylou Harris
David Byrne
Terry McBride, CEO/Co-Founder of Nettwerk
Ricki Lee Jones
Booker T. Booker (y’know, of Booker T and the MGs)
Joe Boyd

Panel titles are:
China’s Emerging Music Market
Idiots Unite! Reconstructing the Music Biz
Rock and Roll Is For Kids
Breaking AAA Careers in a Multi-Platform Environment

Me? I can’t wait to see Major Label bigwigs try to digest the advice given Idiots Unite! panel … sure to be amusing.

20 for 2006: Tankboy's Heavy Rotations

daltrey_tankboy.JPG2006 is the year that will go down in my personal history as being kind of “meh” in music. I think it’s actually kind of telling that I literally put off compiling my own “year-end” list until two days before the year actually ends. Sure, you had all sorts of new developments, scandals, and the continuing downward trend of the Major labels as their business models grew creakier by the hour to talk about if you wanted. Actually, industry-wise, there was all kinds of excitement, huh? But for me,while the year was marked by lots of solid albums, there just weren’t that many “sweet baby Jesus that’s AWESOME!” discs.

As a matter of fact, and this is probably a trend furthered by the whole downloading / mp3 blogger / consumer choice thing, 2006 was a stronger year for me as far as single songs were concerned.

Indie-dance continued to rise in stature, and while albums from pop titans like Justin and Xtina failed as complete works, they dished out some killer tracks nonetheless. So maybe bands are spending less time creating albums and more time crafting tracks as a result of the mp3 revolution. I mean, my listening habits have certainly changed since I started carrying 10,000 songs around with me every day instead of a couple CDs worth of music. Doesn’t it stand to reason that most artists are undergoing this same change in habit as well? I’m stating the obvious here, but I think it needs to be said.

So with that in mind, I present you with the discs that were played most often in my ears. They’re not ranked in any particular order, and I’m not even claiming they’re all artistic masterpieces, but they are the albums I found myself digging through the constantly crashing surf of new music to return to.

My top twenty, after the jump.
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An Unlikely Accomplishment

gwen_stefani_medium.JPGI hated Gwen Stefani‘s first disc, L.A.M.B.. I thought it was overly calculated, heartless pop. And i actually enjoy good pop music, so it’s not the genre I was holding against her, it was her execution. Of course, despite my screams into the wilderness, the disc ended up going gangbusters and launched Stefani from the role of charismatic front-woman into the guise of international pop diva.

Now I’m not saying there wasn’t a single decent song on L.A.M.B., but even my enjoyment of the bongo beats over a crowd screaming “B-A-N-A-N-A-S” was severely compromised when I envisioned the song being written by committee and test-marketed within an inch of his life.

The Sweet Escape is, in my estimation, a marked improvement. Don’t worry, Gwennie hasn’t exactly gotten experimental or gone punk, but she has managed to have her songs come across as human constructs instead of the previous batch of machine manufactured beats. There’s still barely an instrument in the mix that isn’t synthetic, but this time around her compositions beat with a blood red heart. For the most part.

The disc’s highlight is also it’s most frustrating track, since it betrays just how good the whole album could have been if Stefani had let herself take a few more chances. “Yummy” follows the storyline of brand new mom trying to reclaim some of her own personal womanhood. It’s a sweet tune with lyrics that actually seem to be written from Stefani’s own book of poems. the beats are provided by The Neptunes and the first 3/4 of the track is serviceable and bows down to Stefani’s presence. The last minute and a half, though, features a sonic build-up that is probably the best thing The Neptunes have produced in th last two years. It’s a shame this sort of craziness was left as a code. If it had been allowed the seep throughout the disc we might have ended up with on of the most daring pop albums of the year.

Other stand-outs are the yodeling “Wind It Up”, the Beyoncé-biting “now That You Got It”, and the melting ice flow and quirky girl-group bop of”Early Winter”. In a year where I feel pop played it safe for the most part, causing me to feel cheated for getting my hopes up by Xtina and Trousersnake, it’s odd that Stefani ended up being the girl ready to take the most chances to win my heart.

MP3: Download at Hype Machine

New Bloc Party track.

bloc_party.jpgUsually I hate pointing folks toward streaming tracks, but this Bloc Party song, off their forthcoming sophomore effort A Weekend In The City, is just too good to pass up.

Listen to “The Prayer” by making with the clicky here.

Not bad, huh?

My one complaint? We have to wait until February for the album’s release?

Crap!

But will they have Sparks?

If you’re in Chicago, The Prairie Cartel is DJing upstairs at Schuba’s tonight, and one of their crew (Scott Lucas, who is also in a little band named Local H) is pulling double-duty as a guest bartender for the evening. For a bunch of rockers, they actually turn out some pretty fun electro-lite. It should be a hell of a blast — I actually pulled the flyer from Cynthia Plaster Caster’s archives so who knows just what the hell is going on — so I urge you to attend. Deets are below.

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Heavy pop.

stephen_brodsky.jpgWhat happens when a man more closely aligned with metal goes the power-pop route? Stephen Brodsky’s Octave Museum answers that question and the result is more than satisfactory. Brodsky’s day job is as the leader of Cave In, but on this solo outing he’s joined by members of Scissorfight and Thee Electric Bastards. With a pedigree like that, you’d expect the album to thump, crash, and crush, right? Instead Brodsky’s combo bops around Duke of Stratosphear style psych-lite and bouncy rock tunes. The only hint Brodsky’s heavier edge bleeds through in the tone of some of the guitar lines, but for the most part this is a straight-ahead pop album.

Personally I dig the one-two punch of the opening tracks. They serve to set the scene for the remainder off the album succinctly as the hypnotic drone of “Voice Electric” gives way to the sunny shimmer of “Sentimental Case.” There are a few points of the album, particularly when Brodsky attempts acoustic balladry that things slow down. Even these speed bumps can’t dim the overall enjoyment of the disc though. Lots of dudes say that their influences range far and wide, but few can back it up with the stylistic diversity that Brodsky employs.

MP3: Stephen Brodsky “Sentimental Case”

24 Hours with The Kleptones

kleptones.jpgIt had been a while since I had thought about The Kleptones, and until I was reading a friend’s blog I had sort of forgotten they existed. Sure, their mash-ups of Queen’s A Night At The Opera and The Flaming Lips’ Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots were entertaining, but they were more amusing than revealing. Personally I dig a mash-up that does more than just stick two-songs together. I’m looking for something new to arise out of that marriage in order for it to capture my attention beyond a listen or two. A great example of a successful mash-up, in my opinion, is Aggro1’s “Since U Been Hard 2 Find” since it turns Kelly Clarkson’s triumphant original into a haunting meditation backed by American Analog Set.

Anyway, The Kleptones.

So I revisited their site recently and was met with two pleasant surprises. The first is that they’ve reposted their entire discography in files that are of a uniformly quality bitrate. The second, and biggest pleasure, was the discovery of their latest album of mixes, a two-disc concept album covering a day in the life of an average joe. The mash-ups throughout the disc are strong, inventive, and playful while still managing to convey the feeling of a cohesive storyline.

Download the whole thing here. And, as a sample, here is one of my favorite tunes on the album:

MP3: The Kleptones “1800 – War Of Confusion”

Twilight Singers in Chicago Last Night

We are DIGGING the Dulli / Lanegan collabo thing.

twilight_singers_dulli_lanegan_11012006_02.JPG

More shots after the jump.
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