Showing posts with label Songs of the Day. Show all posts
    Showing posts with label Songs of the Day. Show all posts

    Saturday, April 11, 2009





    For whatever reason, I've never gotten into Belle and Sebastian.  Like books and movies, oh-so-long is the list of music I can't seem to get around to.  Stuart Murdoch (of B&S) has put together an amazing project due out in early June on Matador.  While running he had a tune in his head he knew wasn't right for his band; it was a vivid wall of doop-woppy girl-group vocals and a 45-piece orchestra.  Culling together nine amazing vocalists (most notably, Catherine Ireton who worked with Belle and Sebastian in 2006) he recorded the album that had been ringing in his head for the better part of 5 years.  He calls it God Help the Girl and this YouTube clip tells you all about it.

    The first single, "Come Monday Night" starts out sounding like something Snow White might trill amongst the wild flowers.  It then kicks into classic old school pop, riffing on the throwback-stylings of M. Ward and Zooey Deschanel's Volume I, though moodier and less California.  If the debut has all the perfect pop of the single with just a bit more melancholic Scottishness, I suspect we'll be hearing a lot about God Help the Girl.  


    (While you're at it, check out Ireton's band, The Go Away Birds for a free download.  While it doesn't excite me half as much as GHTG, I do enjoy Ireton's voice.)


    Wednesday, April 8, 2009





    No Doubt
    is back with the first new song from their much-anticipated follow-up to 2001's Rock Steady. It's a cover, but that's okay. Adam and the Ants' "Stand and Deliver" gets the No Doubt treatment, and it makes me feel so old to think that, while singing a song from the 80s, Gwen and Co. sound so retro in their own right. I can remember being in grade nine listening to Tragic Kingdom, front to back, for months on end, single after spaghetti-covered single. And now I imagine sitting in the car, "Sunday Morning" blasting on the radio, whooping it up with Jeff, while our kids roll their eyes collectively.

    Download: "Stand and Deliver"

    Friday, April 3, 2009





    Metric's new album is pretty good -These acoustic versions of two of its tracks are, perhaps, even better.  If you haven't looked into Emily Haines' solo material, you should.  She's great. These stripped back tunes definitely come from that part of her brain.

    Metric - "Gimme Sympathy"
    Metric - "Help I'm Alive"

    Tuesday, March 31, 2009





    So, I'm going through a bit of an Antony phase. After downloading his fantastic concert podcast, I've been listening non-stop to his entire catalogue. Newly released, the Epilepsy is Dancing single includes a b-side from their Crying Light sessions called "Where is my Power". A great track, percussive and plucky, it's a bit of a sonic departure, though I would have loved to see it on the album proper. The album art is also quite lovely, very Bjork-esque.

    Download: "Where is My Power"

    Sunday, March 29, 2009





    I wrote about the English bluegrass band Mumford and Sons recently and have been listening like crazy since discovering them.  Their driving, stomping, thumping style is often countered by intensely gentle lyrics. Growling vocals soften into deeply romantic proclamations.

    On "Hold Onto What You Believe" Marcus Mumford sings "This land means less and less to me without you breathing through its trees," which instantly conjures an image of my grandparents' farm, modest acreage in the heart of South Western Ontario, a cluster of trees in the distance.  I love this song.



    Friday, March 27, 2009





    Forgive me for repeating myself, but I wanted to get this into your hands. If you don't want to download the whole album, just grab this one. One of the most gorgeous songs ever. Particularly at 1:38-in. Gentle, lovely, perfect. The Middle East's "The Darkest Side". Download now!

    Tuesday, March 10, 2009





    If you haven't climbed on-board, come on! Allow me to satiate/convince you with one more track from Neko Case's incredible Middle Cyclone.

    Download: "The Pharaohs" and head to iTunes for the rest. Seriously. You can't miss this album. Come December it'll be on all the lists and you'll feel like a fool for missing ten amazing months in its company.

    Read the review I posted on These Roving Eyes for more info.




    My friends and loved ones really like to rip on me about my taste in music. Jeff (whose favourite bands include Coldplay) likes to joke that I have the taste of your average Art House Lesbian. After all these years his prodding still gets me. I get my back up, reeling off the reasons why Rachael Yamagata is fantastic, or why Annie Lennox is a legend or why Neko Case is one in the making. My friend Nick got in a real good one just the other day. While listening to music, my iPod inevitably shuffles to any number of "girly" artists. In his hilarious accidentally-funny way he proclaimed: "Your iPod would make anyone get their period three days sooner." Now, while I resent the sentiment, I appreciate a zinger like nobody's business.

    Neko Case releases her much-anticipated follow-up to the bananas-amazing Fox Confessor Brings the Flood on Tuesday and all I can say is: Jesus Christ. A perfect next-step, this album has a similar feel to Confessor, though stands on its own entirely. Case is an exacting musician, her phrasing and diction clean and organized, her tone effortlessly pitch-perfect. Listening on headphones (you must!) you hear every breath and each pause, utter control over every aspect of the record. That said, there's nothing robotic about her. It's simply pure talent and musicianship. And she surrounds herself with the same; guests on the record include M. Ward, Garth Hudson, Sarah Harmer, members of The New Pornographers, Los Lobos, and Calexico.

    "This Tornado Loves You" gets the album started in a frantic and mildly-manic state, a runaway song convincing a man she loves him. "I miss the way you sigh yourself to sleep." With a jittering guitar under the whole thing, it races along and gets your feet stomping.

    "The Next Time You Say Forever" is just shy of two minutes long. She has a way of writing chorus-less songs that just drive, leaving you wanting so much more. When each set of sounds happens just once, you pine for more. We're so used to a great harmony coming around two and three times, but Neko insists you just listen to the album on repeat if you want that. "I've been away for so long, I've lost my taste for home. And that's a dirty fallow feeling to be the dangling ceiling from when the roof came crashing down." And a wordplay mastermind to boot. Throughout her entire catalogue she dangles great runs or melodies, but sparingly. 1:16 into "Vengeance is Sleeping", a swell of harmonies never heard again makes you want it all the more.

    "Polar Nettles" is a great example of something else Neko is skilled at. Sometimes the character she sings about doesn't particularly interest, the story, the setting, something doesn't grab you, but then a little detail in the music does: 1:23-in, a rattling snare drum makes this song. The first time I heard it, it caught me off-guard and I could feel my eyes widen, my smile too. My stomach dropped a little and I scanned back to hear that again. Fantastic. Those dangling moments, so unexpected.

    "Did someone make a fool of me, for I can show 'em how it's done." At her best on tracks like this one ("Middle Cyclone") she sings three verses about something other than an old-timey murder, in this case, it seems, her own inability to get close to others, singing "I can't give up acting tough, it's all that I'm made of. Can't scrape together quite enough to ride the bus to the outskirts of the fact that I need love." All to a quiet guitar and the twinkling of a little girl's ballerina musicbox. Economical songwriting like this is so rare, so perfectly restrained.

    Download: "Vengeance is Sleeping"

    Rating:

    Saturday, March 7, 2009





    Julie Doiron - Heart and Crime (2002)
    Sending the Photographs









    Emily Haines - Knives Don't Have Your Back (2007)
    Reading in Bed









    Jenny Lewis - Acid Tongue (2008)
    Trying My Best To Love You
    (2008)








    Robert Plant and Alison Krauss - Raising Sand (2007)
    Rich Woman









    Tegan and Sara - The Con (2007)
    The Con