Category Archives: Review

Today is Officially M.I.A. Day

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I’m at a loss for words to describe Kala, the second album from London (by way of Sri Lanka) tastemaker M.I.A.

She’s certainly without borders; globe-trotting from Liberia to India to Jamaica to Brazil to Japan to Baltimore for a grab-bag of tribal, almost jarringly disjointed, array of sounds and beats. And regardless if her skills as an MC are up to snuff or her reliance on male producers (here Switch, DJ Blaqstarr, Timbaland, and Diplo lend a hand) is in question, songs like the Bollywood scorcher “Jimmy” and the frenetic voodoo of “Bird Flu” are examples of pop music its freshest and most dangerous precipice.

Polarizing as she may be, by cutting and pasting Clash samples (“Paper Planes”) or Oxfam philosophies (“World Town”) into giddy collages of melody and third-world representation, M.I.A. is taking a major stab at being both earth’s reigning diva (move over Bjork) and its 21st century conscious. It’s hard to try and convey the joy of such a dizzy album when one of your colleagues does it so much better.

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Buy Kala at Amazon

The Spanish Prisoners – Songs to Forget

songstoforget.jpg Might as well talk about the weather as there’s physically no other way for me to break the ice when introducing the Spanish Prisoners. We are in the midst of a heatwave in case you haven’t noticed, and the endless beads of sweat and feverish hallucinations such extremes create match well with the chilly atmosphere of Leonid Maymind’s earnest batch of ghostly folk. By naming his debut Songs to Forget he’s either set himself up for an inevitable punchline or (keeping my fingers crossed) turned a phrase that inherently describes his music. Like no other album released in the city this year, Songs to Forget is powerful in the sense that it has the ability to transport or at least make one “forget” they’re stuck in the middle of Ohio.

MP3: Some Among Them Are Killers

Where most Americana is steeped in regional celebration and local color, Maymind’s imagination tends to roam though a number of exotic climes. Being born in Latvia, raised in New Orleans, and finally spit-shined in Columbus, the guy’s obviously a xenophile without a comfortable home, perpetually fueled by his wanderlust. “Song for the Weary” has the slow-motioned crawl of the most tragic of love stories, only Maymind’s unsure of its shape, hovering between Appalachian spiritual, deep Southern blues, and even deeper swamp lore. I was reminded of the first time I heard the Palace Brothers, and whether there was a place in contemporary indie music for such stark authenticity. More Oldham than Oberst, the album’s sincerity towards traditional sounds is its most rewarding attribute.

Clearly though, the prize here lies in the Spanish Prisoner’s modest bent for experimentation. “Some Among Them are Killers” and stunning closer “Ballad of an Unfolding,” both weave the acoustic with the electronic, making for spooky rustic pop built with scattered beats and digital skree. The Postal Service or early Califone would be a convenient reference point, but Maymind’s fragile voice and imploding structures give off the feeling that it could all topple over with a strong wind. Even his ramshackle attempts at slacker salvos, found in the Pavement (prolly more Silver Jews) inspired “Periwinkle Blues” and “A Thousand Zimmermans,” are skinny and skeletal, and that’s all part of the charm.

Of course it’s too early to call Maymind a wunderkind — I’ve yet to see this unfold live (and have heard it’s not exactly the bee’s knees…yet) and Songs to Forget was aided by a long cast of local luminaries, including Sarah Asher, Eric Metronome, and the CDR crew (c’mon guys, sink some money into this record, this is something that could really expand the fam’), but that doesn’t mean that Maymind’s vision isn’t intriguing, unique, and completely from the heart. We should all be paying attention.

The Spanish Prisoners will celebrate the release of Songs to Forget tomorrow night at
The Basement. Recent Misra additions, Southeast Engine and (don’t get me started) The Slide Machine will round out an amazing little show at a crappy little club.

Review: Spoon – Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga

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MP3: The Underdog

For many Spoon turned a corner (or jumped a shark) with Gimme Fiction, one that favored big studio flourishes and a hankering to wallow in their rags-to-riches-to-rags-to-riches existence instead of the stalwart songwriting and idiosyncratic quirks that made Kill the Moonlight such a triumph. Save “I Turn My Camera On,” the album was a creamy, vanilla bore. The dour second half, enough to write off the band as comfortably set in their ways, with little regard to re-charting a path towards indie-rock salvation. Britt Daniel sounded awfully tired. Sitting with Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga months before its release (really, the leaks gotta’ stop), seeing them half-heartedly play live to an over-inebriated, thankless crowd, I started to get the feeling that Spoon was done for; another one of my collegiate idols reduced to a few awkward radio hits and soundtracking. Thing is, I’m wrong.

The horribly titled record, probably reference to the monotony and mediocrity Spoon was becoming, still relies on minimalism and a modicum of tattered edges to structure its songs, only difference being, Spoon have finally mastered being themselves. “You Got Yr. Cherry Bomb” and “The Underdog” in particular though, jump out of the two-toned, acoustic mood that defines the band’s sound, giving way to buoyant pop, gauzed in Spector-ish sonic frills and brass nicked from blue-eyed soul. Both are bright and punchy, but they were also undeniable birthed a Daniel/Eno creation as there’s little mistaking the former’s nicotine-dusted, near-scat vocal treatments, and the latter’s economical percussive puzzles.

Going beyond the obvious hits, the albums uses few tools to make a sizable, affecting racket and is prone to throwing in addendums of kora and Spanish guitar (both appear at the end of “My Little Japanese Cigarette Case”) as window dressing rather than basing songs around such excess. It’s the tiny mistakes, false choruses, and playful knob twists that characterize “Finer Feelings” and “Eddie’s Ragga;” simple as origami until it’s unfolded to reveal shortcuts and do-overs. Many of Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga’s ten tracks operate within that mundane repetition, Spoon’s entire m.o. post-Girls Can Tell has loitered around a slacker’s thrift, here though Daniel proves he has a skilled hand to dissect it, deconstruct it, and stretch equal parts glum demeanor and understated optimism just far enough not to flaunt his gift of melody. Whether it’s the career-encompassing record that will be their legacy remains to be seen, for now, after some deep listens, it’s certainly the finest version of Spoon being Spoon they’ve put to tape yet.

BUY: Amazon.com

An Exit Stencil Threesome

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Remember the SAT? Well if you do, then CDR is to Columbus as Exit Stencil is to Cleveland. Yes, despite my bias against the armpit of Ohio, the Indians, the Browns, the RNR Hall of Fame, and the eternal stench, Exit Stencil have proven that the city is much more than simply Pere Ubu, Electric Eels, and Bone Thugz. There’s actually a diverse and thriving music scene going on there. Go figure. Though a dear friend (and Cleveland native) recently quipped that all my stereotypes regarding his city were completely justified, I’m tempted to say, with this recent slew of Exit Stencil releases, there’s finally a suitable rivalry to deal with. This is not a condescending statement, merely fact. There has always been a Cleveland “sound” that has never sat well with my stomach, that is, until now.
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DMX at Skybar in Columbus

World famous rapstar DMX (who isn’t as successful as he used to be) performed at a night club that typically caters towards Jocks.

After the break, I summarize the evening with the dog.
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It’s Your Boyfriend: R Kelly Review

Ok. The new Kells is so amazing to me that I was surprised it hasn’t been universally heralded as a classic by the critics of the world. But I guess it isn’t, according to metacritic.

In my mind, Justin Timberlake is Radiohead. You know. Anyone with taste would see that its great music.

And if Timberlake is Radiohead, then Kells is Bjork. You know—>acclaimed music by a quirky weirdo pervert. (watch a Matthew Barney movie. I dare you. Thats Bjork’s boo. His films are borderline as bad as Kells’ urinating video)

After the break.
It’s Your Boyfriend!!
Kells.
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Rosehips Celebrate a First Release

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Almost exactly a year after their debut, Rosehips have finally made their work indelible with this weekend’s release of a 7-inch teaser on Manup. This pair of songs shows off the Rosehips prowess at capturing the indie rock vibe of distorted guitars blanketing more delicate vocals. That combination brings to mind some mid-90’s female fronted bands like Madder Rose or Rainer Maria (if you haven’t heard, yeah, they’re all women, and no, it’s no shtick). Quick changes in tempo and tone suggest this stuff has as much pop pedigree as guitar drone. The more garage-y aesthetic in the songs suits the media format, as a lo-fi texture is evident. The record is a really nice cap to a year of progression from this band, and if nothing else makes me anxious for a full-blown set of recordings.

Joining the stage in celebration on Friday will be fellow Manup band The Lindsay, Athens, OH based The Snails, and Beard of Stars. The show will be at Camp Manup, aka Carabar, and as always, is free.

MP3: The Remainder

Review: Bjork, “Volta”

volta.jpgWhile not exactly timely, my late review for Volta had to be informed by intense listens; deep dives into the album’s mystic haze and playfully violent fits of claustrophobic noise. I had to ingest a reasonable cross-section of reviews in order to gauge where the populous stands. I’m eternally biased, an unhealthily obsessed fanboy. Throughout her career, Bjork’s body of work has become a monolith of polarization and the frustrating highs and lows of Volta are no exception.

She has always been more high-art, high-concept, than composer of “songs” or one who even remotely flirts with accessibility. It is better not to give her borders, expectations, and timelines. Anyone hoping for Top 40 dare not tread here, just be content that she has given you something tangible.
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Review: Animal Collective at Wexner Center 5.14.2007




I still wouldn’t be able to spot the three core members of Animal Collective if they were walking down High St. and I suppose it’s that anonymity, that shroud of mystery, which keeps me intrigued with their career trajectory, even as it rises to puzzling new heights.

Last year’s Feels was an awkward step backwards into the abject jamming of ol’, almost completely disregarding the near pop-acoustic masterpiece that was Sung Tongs, so it was pleasantly surprising that Monday’s show at the Wexner Center was filled to capacity with an odd contingent of barely legal followers, a new generation of hippies, giving the place a vibe that we were privy to an intimate performance with Phish. There was dope smoked (a first at Wex methinks), gutter punks begging to pay $30 and upwards for a ticket, out-of-place scalper harassment, and a long line of devotees waiting for autographs pre-show.
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Review: The Clientele, “God Save the Clientele”

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London’s Clientele has been kicking around for ten years now, in that time they’ve become Britain’s foremost “blues” band. Not blues as in Black Keys, but in the specific hues their albums evoke. Suburban Light, the initial collection of singles, is the shade of royal, The Violet Hour, more aquamarine, Strange Geometry, eerie midnight blue, and now, with God Save the Clientele, it’s purely cerulean, even flashes of periwinkle add to the group’s most charming album. Throughout that catalog, they’ve always been fascinated with seasonal change, earthly environments, the natural world, and the tragic relationships that are affected by such things; in that case, God Save is a cloudless sky lazily slouching above a dramatic summer fling.

By releasing their “inner Monkees,” the carefree, but ghostly ominous lead, “Here Comes the Phantom,” resembles a more baroque “Daydream Believer.” Despite having grown musically over the past decade, telling in the complex arrangements that serve more as soft-rock backdrop than focal point, the Clientele trumps the stiff, learned, pomposity of their playing with bright, breathless, a.m. melodies. “Bookshop Cassanova,” has the feel of a Left Banke single never buried in mothballs, instead dusted off and delicately primped every year, without sacrificing its halcyon glisten.

New tricks are experimented with here as well, “The Queen of Seville” adds a bit of twang via steel guitar, “The Dance of the Hours” is a sprightly instrumental channeling Vince Guaraldi or Mike Oldfield’s playful soundtracks, and like most of God Save, “I Hope I Know You’s” contemplative and smiling melancholy, has the feeling you’re staring off into a landscape caught in infinite dusk.

Unfortunately, The Clientele’s allegiance to the late 60’s orchestral chamber pop (i.e. the Zombies, the Hollies, the Turtles) will always leave them pigeonholed as a band that is ephemeral and forgettable, a group more concerned with re-creating the past than moving forward. Paying closer attention to their evolution however, will reveal that they are making bold strokes towards a psychedelic-lite that comfortably fits in modern times.

MP3: “Bookshop Cassanova”
BUY: Amazon.com