Posts tagged Burial

Monthly Playlist – June 2010

Happy July! I don’t even know what to say about my musical selections for June. I reviewed some albums for Ghettoblaster (Sarah Jaffe), continued to get stoked on the new Hold Steady album, saw David Bazan and mewithoutYou live and crept into a major electronic music phase, which I am currently entrenched in. My monthly playlist for July will be packed with it, don’t you worry.

  1. Mumford & Sons – “Winter Winds” (Sigh No More)
  2. Wye Oak – “That I Do (Mickey Free remix)” (My Neighbor / My Creator EP)
  3. The Polyphonic Spree – “Section 2 (It’s the Sun)” (The Beginning Stages of…)
  4. N.A.S.A. – Spacious Thoughts (feat. Tom Waits & Kool Keith)” (The Spirit of Apollo)
  5. Iron & Wine – “Peace Beneath the City” (The Shepherd’s Dog)
  6. This Will Destroy You – “Brutalism & the Worship of the Machine” (Field Studies)
  7. The Hold Steady – “Rock Problems” (Heaven Is Whenever)
  8. Sarah Jaffe – “Clementine” (Suburban Nature)
  9. mewithoutYou – “Timothy Hay” (it’s all crazy! it’s all false! it’s all a dream! it’s alright)
  10. Zomby – “Spliff Dub (Rustie remix)” (Mu5h / Spliff Dub single)
  11. Burial – “Shutta” (Ghost Hardware EP)
  12. Sleigh Bells – “Tell ‘Em” (Treats)
  13. Wye Oak – “For Prayer” (The Knot)

And, of course, here’s your free, streaming playlist of all the songs above.

Monthly Playlist: November 2009

This was a funky month for music. I saw The Antlers and Minus the Bear and Vampire Weekend live, so those were obvious adds. Jay-Z and Oceana put out great videos for “Empire State of Mind” and “The Family Disease,” respectively. And a box set of the entire works of Buddy Holly, flaws and all, came out last week. Not bad, not bad.

  1. The Antlers – “Thirteen” (Hospice)
  2. Minus the Bear – “Knights” (Planet of Ice)
  3. Julian Casablancas – “Out of the Blue” (Phrazes for the Young)
  4. The Drive-By Truckers – “The Three Great Alabama Icons” (Southern Rock Opera)
  5. Floating Action – “50 Lashes” (Floating Action)
  6. Burial – “Fostercare” (5: Five Years of Hyperdub)
  7. Oceana – “The Family Disease” (Birth.Eater)
  8. Bellwether – “Miss You Twice” (7&6)
  9. The Mountain Goats – “Against Pollution” (We Shall All Be Healed)
  10. Vampire Weekend – “Horchata”
  11. Jay-Z – “Empire State of Mind” (The Blueprint 3)
  12. The High Strung – “Standing at the Door of Self Discovery” (Ode to the Inverse of the Dude)
  13. The Hold Steady – “Slapped Actress” (Stay Positive)
  14. Buddy Holly – “Midnight Shift (false start/alternate)” (Not Fade Away: The Complete Studio Recordings and More)

Resetting the Synapses

Much to the dismay of many an anti-hipster, I am thoroughly enjoying Animal Collective’s new album Merriweather Post Pavilion. The song “My Girls” especially is ridiculously catchy and ingenious.

This morning I watched the music video for “My Girls” and a sense of inspiration hit. All of a sudden there was an itch to be creating music. Something about the song touched the creative nerve in my brain (however dormant the action of creation may be). It reminded me of something Bob Boilen of NPR’s All Songs Considered said about a Radiohead show (that I was at!):

These guys write great songs, and sometimes you can even sing along to them, but what they do better than any band is create a sonic adventure — a soundscape which, at its best, stretches time and allows the mind to wander and rejuvenate. I think of it as resetting the synapses. Creativity breeds creativity. When the music was over, I felt unboxed and changed and pretty darn happy. Drugs are overrated; music is underrated.

Resetting the synapses. I like that. Everyone should make a list of songs (or any kind of art, for that matter) that resets their synapses, where its creativity inspires your creativity. Here are eight songs that inspire me to create:

  1. Radiohead – “15 Step” (In Rainbows)
  2. Black Moth Super Rainbow – “Forever Heavy” (Dandelion Gum)
  3. Animal Collective – “My Girls” (Merriweather Post Pavilion)
  4. Eightball – “Drama In My Life (feat. Psycho Drama)” (Lost – Chopped and Screwed)
  5. Burial – “Archangel” (Untrue)
  6. Radiohead – “House of Cards” (In Rainbows)
  7. Ryan Adams – “The Shadowlands” (Love Is Hell)
  8. M83 – “Lower Your Eyelids to Die With the Sun” (Before the Dawn Heals Us)

And an iLike playlist if you want to listen to the songs:

Read the rest of this entry »

Monthly Playlist – January 2008

This one is late for good reason. I’ve been sick all week and am just now beginning to see the end. Not only have I been busy resting, watching the entire Freaks & Geeks series, as well as several episodes of Six Feet Under, but the doc I went to looked at my ear, which is highly prone to infection after colds, and said I had a major tear halfway across my ear drum. Closer inspection indicated that wasn’t the case (whew) but neither of the doctors could figure out what was going on. “Cool ear,” one of them told me on his way out. Uhh… thanks?

Anyway, on to the music (which will be slightly garbled to me until I finish this course of double-strength antibiotics). Last month I finally started catching on to This Will Destroy You’s new one, I continued to fall in love with The Snake The Cross The Crown, I saw Ryan Adams live for the first time (yay, bootlegs!) and discovered Modeselektor thanks to Radiohead guest-DJing some BBC radio show I’d never heard of. Enjoy some tunes.

  1. This Will Destroy You – “They Move On Tracks of Never-Ending Light” (This Will Destroy You)
  2. The Snake The Cross The Crown – “Gypsy Melodies” (Cotton Teeth)
  3. M.I.A. – “Hussel” (Kala)
  4. The Snake The Cross The Crown – “Maps” (Cotton Teeth)
  5. Michael Cera & Ellen Page – “Anyone Else But You” (Juno soundtrack)
  6. Sigur Rós – “Hafsól” (Hvarf/Heim)
  7. The Magnetic Fields – “California Girls” (Distortion)
  8. M.I.A. – “20 Dollar” (Kala)
  9. Circa Survive – “In The Morning And Amazing…” (On Letting Go)
  10. Ryan Adams – “Shakedown On 9th Street” (Heartbreaker)
  11. Collections Of Colonies Of Bees – “Flocks III” (Collections Of Colonies Of Bees)
  12. Modeselektor – “The Dark Side Of The Sun (feat. Puppetmastaz)” (Happy Birthday!)
  13. Modeselektor – “The White Flash (feat. Thom Yorke)” (Happy Birthday!)
  14. Burial – “Prayer” (Burial)
  15. Vampire Weekend – “Walcott” (Vampire Weekend)
  16. Vampire Weekend – “Oxford Comma” (Vampire Weekend)

Monthly Playlist – November 2007

Here’s the breakdown of what I listened to last month that made me happy. Songza made linking ridiculously easy.

Also, December is going to be a dead month for new music. Guess what that means? More meaningless end-of-year lists! Hooray! Expect several of these from me, just like last year.

  1. Sigur Rós – “Í Gær” (Hvarf/Heim)
  2. Ray Charles – “What’d I Say” (20 Golden Classics)
  3. Bright Eyes – “If The Brakeman Turns My Way” (Cassadaga)
  4. Neko Case – “Hold On, Hold On” (Fox Confessor Brings The Flood)
  5. Alison Krauss & Union Station – “New Favorite” (New Favorite)
  6. Jóhann Jóhannsson – “Part 1 – IBM 1401 Processing Unit” (IBM 1401, a User’s Manual)
  7. Damien Rice – “Eskimo” (O)
  8. Stars – “Your Ex-Lover Is Dead” (Set Yourself On Fire)
  9. Stars – “Set Yourself On Fire” (Set Yourself On Fire)
  10. The Dillinger Escape Plan – “Nong Eye Gong” (Ire Works)
  11. Opeth – “Ghost Of Perdition” (Ghost Reveries)
  12. Jakob – “Pneumonic” (Solace)
  13. Daft Punk – “Around The World / Harder Better Faster Stronger” (Alive 2007)
  14. Feist – “My Moon My Man” (The Reminder)
  15. Burial – “Archangel” (Untrue)
  16. Bright Eyes – “Lua” (I’m Wide Awake, It’s Morning)
  17. Regina Spektor – “Music Box” (Begin To Hope)
  18. Ryan Adams – “Pearls On A String” (Easy Tiger)

What Is My Duty?

Albums that are sticking like glue:

  • The Dillinger Escape Plan – Ire Works: It’s everything I hoped it would be, and then some.
  • Burial – Untrue: I’m not ashamed to admit that Pitchfork tipped me off on this one. I can’t put my finger on why I like it so much yet.
  • Daft Punk – Alive 2007: Best live album I’ve heard in years.
  • Jakob – Solace: Great sleeping music.

A few weeks ago, I read Rob Sheridan’s lengthy diatribe about the state of the music industry and his proposed solution to its many problems. The general idea is that the RIAA is killing its own business by using scare tactics, treating its customers like thieves and using its position of power to alter and protect copyright law for its own selfish purposes.

The solution (according to Sheridan): Stop buying music from labels that support the RIAA. Download it for free instead, and then use your money to support the artist directly through merchandise and ticket sales.

That wasn’t a perfect summary, so go read his rant if you have the time. It was both enlightening and concerning.

In the end, I was left with several questions, which I’ll leave with you to ponder as well. If you any answers I would very much appreciate them.

  • I subscribe to Rhapsody in order to legally access as much music as possible for a low price. Certainly some of the money I give them goes to the RIAA’s efforts. Is my subscription to their service helping or hurting the situation? Would I be better off using illegal means to sample music?
  • As a follower of Christ, is it my duty to follow the law put before me, or is it to recognize the corruption of the law and do what I can to help correct the situation even if my actions would be considered illegal? (I know that this would be easier to answer if we were talking about something more universally significant than music or art, such as human rights or public health.)
  • Does “trying before buying” help to improve the problem of there being so much terrible music that still manages to sell well? (In other words, if I only spend money after I’ve concluded that an artist is valuable, does it mean I’m “voting” for the very best and therefore helping only the best artists to succeed?)

These are just a few of the questions that have been spinning in my head for the last few weeks. Right now it’s only a dialog (mostly internal); I don’t want to take any action that I can’t fully justify and support with a reasonable argument. The only “action” I’ve taken so far is to see if what I’m buying supports the RIAA, so I at least have some idea as to where my money is going. In my selfish nature, I know I would love for music to be free and easily accessible, but I refuse to let my own desires get in the way of making a wise decision.

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