Monday, April 25, 2011

Autechre - Quaristice (2008)


Hervé This is a French chemist who makes no music, as far as I know, and works mainly with food within the field of "Molecular Gastronomy" where he does things like unboil eggs. Among other things, he has gained attention through cooking only with elements (sodium, lithium, and stuff), creating edible compounds that the internet tells me are delicious. The point is, these dishes are so unlike traditional food, that even culinary experts have great difficulty describing the experience of eating them. By breaking down food into its most basic components and reassembling, This has created a whole new paradigm. It is this sort of thinking that is most helpful when approaching Autechre. This duo started in techno more than 20 years ago, developing a sound that has disintegrated into something much more unfamiliar. To call their music experimental is unfair, because clearly there is meticulous design behind every composition; experimental listening is more like it. There just isn't ever a guaranteed result when approaching these pieces of sound, even when each fragment could exist within the realm of popular dance music. But sometimes the music's relationship to the conventional is too baffling (these guys write their own software for making this stuff) and the overarching design too obscured for much reference. This also is by design. When Autechre performs, they play in pitch darkness and they play loud. Autechre is about sound itself. This applies to most stuff post-2000, but you never know. They are putting music out all the time recently and just sort of do what they want. For my money 2008's Quaristice has just about everything they do in it, from the ambient to the banger to the brainmelt. Music to scare your cat. "90101-5I-I", "Tankakern" and "Fol3" float my boat, but the whole thing's great.
Autechre's importance lies in the fact that they may be the first electronic act to eliminate the space between artist and expression. Electronic music has always been characterized by the limitations inherent in its technology. Your 303 drum machine can only DO so many things, therefore establishing an aesthetic upon technological boundaries. Autechre are the first artists, in my mind, to reach a level of fluency within their craft that these limitations are virtually nonexistent. Where before dance music has made its creators more robotic, Autechre has made the electronic more human.
G et i t he re

-Andrew Black

Funkadelic - Maggot Brain (1971)

Though the phrase "If you suck my soul, I will lick your funky emotions" was not uttered on this record, never has it been more applicable. If P-Funk records are about a 1 for 1 transfer of altered and elevated consciousness from George Clinton to me, this one works best. It is also the grimiest, heaviest, trippiest, ecstatic, unrestrained album Clinton's minions ever released. They cover an incredible amount of ground in 7 tracks. "Can You Get to That" is a perfect pop song (way better than the song Sleigh Bells sampled it for). "Super Stupid" is crushing. The title track is the only 10 minute guitar solo I care to listen to. I want the album cover on the ceiling above my bed, like 8x8 feet.
 Lowndoad it, white boy!

-Andrew Black

Shitbirds/Simon & the Bar Sinisters Split 7" (1994)


The Shitbirds. Yeah, that name doesn't give off the best connotation. Seriously, why do bands think its a good idea to name their bands after variety of words that mean shit? I mean, if they really suck, it's WAY too easy to make fun of them. I mean seriously, if you name your band after shit in anyway, you better have the fucking tunes to back it up or your band is fucked. Luckily, the Shitbirds have enough in them to make them not live up to their name. Absent of any vocals, the short songs pack a few punches. "Kickback 1812" had me skeptical at the beginning, but those guitar licks during the chorus and the drums won me over. "Canadian Carwash" is up next. Seriously, how high were these guys when they picked out that title? Good new is the track is pretty cool and has good riffs. These dudes made a good choice by not putting vocals over this stuff. Judging by the titles and the band name, these guys probably aren't that great with words, so they just stuck to what they know. Good call dudes, good call.

Simon & the Bar Sinisters made a good call too. Vocal-less, it's easier to get lost in their surf/blues/psychedelic riffs. Their songs let you make up your own lyrics, which is why I think this band is better. While I think the Shitbirds are cool, this band just sounds cooler. They both have borderline dumb song titles, but Simon & the Bar Sinisters have the tunes and the better band name. These tracks should be on the A-side, because they have more to them.

For under ten minutes, this split is pretty cool and worth a listen. Obscure bands are always a mixed bag, but these bands pull it off for the most part. Check it out.

Lowndoad it!

- Jordan Canio

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Built To Spill - Joy Ride 7" (1994)





This 7" single is part of Calvin Johnson's (K Records, Beat Happening, Halo Benders) "Dub Narcotic Disco Plate" series of 45"s. The title track "Joyride" reminds me of a Plan-It-X band that might not smell like shit in person. "Sick and Wrong" is more like your classic Built To Spill super-jam. I loves this record, y'all.
Clikk 2 Klownload

Mikey

DS-13 - Aborted Teen Generation 7" (1998)


"Aborted Teen Generation" was one of my first pieces of vinyl, almost certainly my first 7". I know for sure, though, it was the first time i heard fast nasty hardcore the old fashioned way...on a borrowed, worn out record. This EP (13 songs in 10 minutes) from Umea, Sweden's DS-13 oozes old school hardcore nostalgia like Minor Threat and their DC contemporaries - a far cry from the Umea hardcore sound made famous by bands like Refused. This is really a record that can bring an old punk out of skateboarding retirement.

Mikey

The Pretty Things - The Pretty Things (1965 US version)

1965 gave us The Beatles "Rubbersoul", Bob Dylan's "Bringing it All BackHome", The Who's "My Generation", The Sonics "Here Are The Sonics", and The Rolling Stones "Out of Our Heads". The Pretty Things were ahead of the curve in just about everything they recorded between 1965 and 1970. This is their debut LP that many critics have described as sounding like a more hard-edged Rolling Stones - a fair comparison as they share founding member, Dick Taylor. Most of the tracks are covers of R&B and blues songs, much like The Zombies debut record "Begin Here" (also 1965...what a year). The difference between "The Pretty Things" and all the other British invasion bands at this time is a very keen ability to play the American blues songs they loved so much while keeping the sound distinctly authentic. The track "Unknown Blues" is a good example of this. Is that a drummer tapping on a guitar case? This is Jack White's wet dream...this is the album every hip new garage rock band dreams of making. Enjoy.


Mikey

Do a lil music

ok then