Posts tagged This Will Destroy You

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.

25 Albums that Changed My Life

Oh no! A meme on my blog? It’s all downhill from here. But really, did you expect me to pass up a music-themed post, especially when I’m not feeling my best and have a hard time finding inspiration?

Think of 25 albums that had such a profound effect on you they changed your life or the way you looked at it. They sucked you in and took you over for days, weeks, months, years. These are the albums that you can use to identify time, places, people, emotions. These are the albums that no matter what they were thought of musically shaped your world.

I couldn’t even begin to put these in order of preference. They’ve all been number one in my heart at some point or another. So, in true Rob Gordon fashion, I put them in autobiographical order, all the way from high school up to now.

I won’t even begin to try and explain each album or even the general progression of my music habits. If you are curious, that’s kind of what comments are for.

  1. Jimi Hendrix – Woodstock
  2. Project 86 – Drawing Black Lines
  3. Incubus – Make Yourself
  4. Radiohead – OK Computer
  5. Tool – Aenema
  6. A Perfect Circle – Thirteenth Step
  7. Sigur Rós – Ágætis byrjun
  8. Extol – Undeceived
  9. Sufjan Stevens – Michigan
  10. The Dillinger Escape Plan – Miss Machine
  11. The Mars Volta – De-loused in the Comatorium
  12. Godspeed You! Black Emperor – Lift Yr Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven
  13. Radiohead – Amnesiac
  14. He Is Legend – I Am Hollywood
  15. Killswitch Engage – The End of Heartache
  16. The Dillinger Escape Plan – Irony is a Dead Scene
  17. Explosions in the Sky – The Earth is Not a Cold, Dead Place
  18. mewithoutYou – Catch for Us the Foxes
  19. The Appleseed Cast – Low Level Owl: Volume 1
  20. mewithoutYou – Brother, Sister
  21. This Will Destroy You – Young Mountain
  22. Neko Case – Fox Confessor Brings the Flood
  23. Sigur Rós – Takk
  24. Ryan Adams – Heartbreaker
  25. This Will Destroy You – This Will Destroy You

Ambient music

I like ambient music.

Correction: I love ambient music. I can’t get enough. It’s good to fall asleep to, it’s great to wake up to and it’s perfect, undistracting background noise when I’m working during the day. In fact, it’s 12:10 am right now and I’m listening to Eluvium’s Talk Amongst the Trees as I write this.

Ambient is “a musical genre in which sound is more important than notes. It is generally identifiable as being broadly atmospheric and environmental in nature.” (Thanks, Wikipedia.)

Some say ambient music began with Erik Satie’s experimental piano compositions in the early 20th century. Satie’s best-known work is simple piano parts that could loop for several hours. He coined the term “furniture music,” meaning that it was part of a room’s decor or ambiance (pun intended) rather than a focal point.

Others point to Brian Eno’s work in the 70s as when the genre began. Eno is best known as the producer of U2′s The Joshua Tree and other albums, as well as his part in the band Roxy Music. His groundbreaking album Ambient 1: Music for Airports is widely considered to be the first ambient album, and it is still looked to as a prime example of the genre today. There Eno took simple, looping pianos and single note tones and covered them in a wash of subtle noise. Loops would overlap on themselves, creating new tones and sounds as a result. The songs clock in between six and sixteen minutes.

Aside from enjoying ambient for its utilitarian aspects, I have a great respect for ambient artists for their skill. When dealing with quiet, repeating sounds that are hardly melodies, they walk a fine line between mundane and genius. The focus required to make the music effective rather than annoying or boring takes great finesse and an attention to details that would be unimportant in other forms of pop music.

Ambient music can be effective and enjoyable for everyone. It may take time to find the music you particularly enjoy but once you find that album or two, I’d bet it would be hard to ever give them up.

Here are a few ambient (or almost-ambient) albums that have done the trick for me:

  • Brian Eno – Music for Airports
  • Stars of the Lid – And Their Refinement of the Decline
  • Hammock – Maybe They Will Sing For Us Tomorrow
  • Eluvium – Talk Amongst the Trees
  • William Basinski – Disintegration Loops I-IV
  • This Will Destroy You – This Will Destroy You

Monthly Playlist: August 2008

You know autumn is on its way when reverb and ambient textures start to float back into the soundscape, especially in the form of Neko Case, Fleet Foxes and This Will Destroy You. This year they’re accentuated with some of those warm, 80s-esque synths that M83 and MGMT bring to the table.

Autumn has finally become a season that I can appreciate. Now that I’m beyond school and life is fairly constant aside from the natural seasons, I’m able to enjoy what each season brings, in both the emotional and natural senses. I look forward to the sense of calm darkness and satisfied sadness that reminds me to take comfort as I sit back and watch a year come to a close.

  1. Stars of the Lid – “Apreludes (in C sharp major)” (and Their Refinement of the Decline)
  2. Spain – “Our Love is Going to Live Forever” (She Haunts My Dreams)
  3. Norma Jean – “Death of the Anti Mother” (The Anti Mother)
  4. Ponytail – “Celebrate the Body Electric (It Came From an Angel)” (Ice Cream Spiritual)
  5. Santogold – “Creator” (Santogold)
  6. The Faint – “The Geeks Were Right” (Fasciinatiion)
  7. edIT – “Laundry” (Crying Over Pros For No Reason)
  8. The Cool Kids – “A Little Bit Cooler” (The Bake Sale)
  9. M83 – “Midnight Souls Still Remain” (Saturdays = Youth)
  10. Anathallo – “Dokkoise House (With Face Covered)” (Floating World)
  11. MGMT – “Time to Pretend” (Oracular Spectacular)
  12. This Will Destroy You – “A Three-Legged Workhorse” (This Will Destroy You)
  13. Fleet Foxes – “White Winter Hymnal” (Fleet Foxes)
  14. Neko Case – “Maybe Sparrow” (Fox Confessor Brings the Flood)
  15. Delta Spirit – “People, Turn Around” (Ode to Sunshine)
  16. Lil Wayne – “Got Money” (Tha Carter III)

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 – December 2007

I’m only a few days late. This was a month of making the best Christmas mix CD ever (exclusively in the hands of my closest friends), listening to countless best-of-2007 lists (hence the recurrence of M.I.A. and The Snake The Cross The Crown), a new This Will Destroy You record (not as good as Young Mountain, but still not a waste of money if you make it to the last few songs), discovering only a few years too late how great I’m Wide Awake It’s Morning is and realizing that Sam Beam has probably been listening to dub music.

Coming up: my personal goals for 2008, which explains how this here blog will finally be put to greater use than monthly playlists and the occasional rant.

  1. The Knife – “We Share Our Mothers’ Health” (Silent Shout)
  2. Daft Punk – “Robot Rock / Oh Yeah” (Alive 2007)
  3. Holy Fuck – “Echo Sam” (LP)
  4. Thom Yorke – “Harrowdown Hill” (The Eraser)
  5. Sufjan Stevens – “O Come O Come Emmanuel” (Songs For Christmas)
  6. Vince Guaraldi – “Christmastime Is Here (Vocal)” (A Charlie Brown Christmas)
  7. Rihanna – “Umbrella” (Good Girl Gone Bad)
  8. A Fine Frenzy – “Fever” (Dan In Real Life Soundtrack)
  9. Bright Eyes – “Poison Oak” (I’m Wide Awake It’s Morning)
  10. Bright Eyes – “Road To Joy” (I’m Wide Awake It’s Morning)
  11. This Will Destroy You – “The Mighty Rio Grande” (This Will Destroy You)
  12. Mindy Smith – “Santa Will Find You” (My Holiday)
  13. The Snake The Cross The Crown – “Cakewalk” (Cotton Teeth)
  14. M.I.A. – “Mango Pickle Down River” (Kala)
  15. The Snake The Cross The Crown – “Electronic Dream Plant” (Cotton Teeth)
  16. M.I.A. – “Paper Planes” (Kala)
  17. Iron & Wine – “Wolves (Song of the Shepherd’s Dog)” (The Shepherd’s Dog)
  18. This Will Destroy You – “They Move On Tracks Of Never-Ending Light” (This Will Destroy You)

20 Best Albums Of 2006

The final part of my four-part series. The list to end all lists. I present to you the best new albums in 2006.

  1. mewithoutYou – Brother, Sister
  2. This Will Destroy You – Young Mountain
  3. Mew – And The Glass Handed Kites
  4. Jeremy Enigk – World Waits
  5. Joshua Radin – We Were Here
  6. Malajube – Trompe-L’Oeil (US Release)
  7. Band Of Horses – Everything All The Time
  8. John Mayer – Continuum
  9. P.O.S. – Audition
  10. Norma Jean – Redeemer
  11. Thom Yorke – The Eraser
  12. Neko Case – Fox Confessor Brings The Flood
  13. Sufjan Stevens – The Avalanche
  14. The Decemberists – The Crane Wife
  15. The Appleseed Cast – Peregrine
  16. Damien Rice – 9
  17. The Knife – Silent Shout
  18. Underoath – Define The Great Line
  19. Angels & Airwaves – We Don’t Need To Whisper
  20. Muse – Black Holes And Revelations

Well, that’s all folks. I had fun making these lists and you probably hated reading them. Or maybe you found something new to love. If that’s the case, my goal has been met.

Have a merry Christmas and a happy new year. Keep on discovering.

27 Best Songs Of 2006

Part three of four. Of all the music I listened to that was released this year, these are the ones that mattered most.

  1. This Will Destroy You – Quiet
  2. Jeremy Enigk – Been Here Before
  3. mewithoutYou – O, Porcupine
  4. This Will Destroy You – The World Is Our ____
  5. Mew – An Envoy To The Open Fields
  6. mewithoutYou – In A Sweater Poorly Knit
  7. Joshua Radin – Sundrenched World
  8. mewithoutYou – C-Minor
  9. Band Of Horses – The Funeral
  10. Sufjan Stevens – Chicago (Acoustic Version)
  11. Mew – The Zookeeper’s Boy
  12. Thom Yorke – Harrowdown Hill
  13. P.O.S. – Half-Cocked Concepts
  14. Norma Jean – The End Of All Things Will Be Televised
  15. Malajube – Montréal-40ºC
  16. Mew – Special
  17. The Mars Volta – Viscera Eyes
  18. Malajube – Casse-cou
  19. P.O.S. – P.O.S. Is Ruining My Life
  20. Angels and Airwaves – The Adventure
  21. Sufjan Stevens – The Avalanche
  22. The Knife – Silent Shout
  23. Jay-Z – Show Me What You Got
  24. Angels and Airwaves – Valkyrie Missile
  25. John Mayer – Bold As Love
  26. Underoath – A Moment Suspended In Time
  27. Joshua Radin – Star Mile

And, if by some random chance you happen to have Rhapsody, you can listen to this playlist there.

33 Most-Played Artists of 2006

Part two of four of my evil list-making scheme.

  1. Sufjan Stevens
  2. Explosions in the Sky
  3. mewithoutYou
  4. Radiohead
  5. The Appleseed Cast
  6. Nickel Creek
  7. The Dillinger Escape Plan
  8. Godspeed You! Black Emperor
  9. The Mars Volta
  10. A Perfect Circle
  11. Andrew Bird
  12. MxPx
  13. AFI
  14. Alison Krauss
  15. Project 86
  16. Tom Waits
  17. Sigur Rós
  18. The Faint
  19. Chris Thile
  20. This Will Destroy You
  21. Mew
  22. Iron & Wine
  23. Coldplay
  24. Cloud Cult
  25. John Mayer
  26. Opeth
  27. Joshua Radin
  28. Killswitch Engage
  29. Incubus
  30. Ryan Adams
  31. Norma Jean
  32. Robert Johnson
  33. The Black Keys

Once again, thanks to Last.fm for making this list possible.

15 Most-Played Albums Of The Year

Part one of four in my 2006-list-making extravaganza.

  1. This Will Destroy You – Young Mountain
  2. Cloud Cult – Advice from the Happy Hippopotamus
  3. Mew – And The Glass Handed Kites
  4. Joshua Radin – We Were Here
  5. mewithoutYou – Catch for Us the Foxes
  6. Ryan Adams – Love Is Hell
  7. Explosions in the Sky – The Earth Is Not a Cold Dead Place
  8. The Three Sounds – Live at the Lighthouse
  9. Explosions in the Sky – Those Who Tell the Truth Shall Die, Those Who Tell the Truth Shall Live
  10. Jay-Z – The Black Album
  11. Band of Horses – Everything All the Time
  12. Nickel Creek – Nickel Creek
  13. Chasing Victory – I Call This Abandonment
  14. Nickel Creek – Why Should the Fire Die?
  15. Thom Yorke – The Eraser

Thanks to Last.fm for making this list possible.

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