Monday, December 22, 2008

Best of 2008 -- New Year's Show

I'm done writing this, so might as well post it up. Herein lies my top picks for 2008, along with what tracks I'll be playing on my extra-long "best of" show on Jan. 1, 8-10:30 PST. So, with no further ado...

Regency Fops: Top Albums 2008

Honourable mentions that needn't have been excluded from the bottom half of the list proper:
  • of Montreal - Skeletal Lamping (Polyvinyl)
  • Deerhoof - Offend Maggie (Kill Rock Stars)
  • Katie Stelmanis - Join Us (Blocks)
  • Tindersticks - The Hungry Saw (Constellation)
  • Final Fantasy - Spectrum, 14th Century [EP] (Blocks)
  • Tobacco - Fucked Up Friends (Anticon)
  • Adventure [Benny Boeldt] - s/t (Carpark)
  • Women - s/t (Flemish Eye)
Best reissued/archival releases:
  • Scott Walker - 'Til the Band Comes In (Water)
  • Paul Weller - At the BBC [box set] (Universal)
Best song not on any of the mentioned albums:
  • Goldfrapp - "Cologne Cerrone Houdini" off of Seventh Tree
The Top 10:

10. The Last Shadow Puppets - The Age of the Understatement (Domino)
In my Renegade Radio review I referred to it as "a clinic in bloated adolescent poetry," which I think sums things up quite nicely. It's 'in the vein' of artists like Scott Walker and David Axelrod whom made music that sound like stained glass, yet is in the end only decent mimicry; songs that only hint at the schizoid spirituality of their influences. It is as a visionary once wrote, "full of immature casuistry ... a delightful sample of word-spinning embroidered with ... naive declarations". It says a lot about both me and the album that I cannot recommend it these days without a "...but it's actually shit" postscript. Played: "Standing Next to Me" and "Calm Like You".


9. Sunset - The Glowing City (Autobus)
The next one is just a surprisingly long, very consistent psychedelic pop album by Bill Baird and his band Sunset out of Austin, Texas. Scouring the stacks of new music at the station you learn to judge an album by its cover (or at least to weed out the more obvious shit), and this badass Sonic Youth looking guy caught my eye. The Glowing City plays like a double album (18 tracks around five minutes each) -- it was surprising to learn they had put out another LP prior in the year to this, the prolific bunch. As things are, they did a Daytrotter session in July, so check that out if you can't find the album anywhere. Searches tend to bring up those Sunset Rubdown bastards, so be wary. Played: "Dreams of Sandy" and the wonderfully catchy "Theme from 'A Perfect Light Awaits Me'".


8. Dungen - 4 (Kemado)
You can tell this is a killer from the opening notes. Despite it being moderately heavy psychedelia, bandleader Gustav Ejtes sticks to piano on this one, giving it this paradoxically manic and lounge feel, that the distributors dubbed something on the lines of 'Yes meets Burt Bacharach in a Danish sex parlour.' It's Sigur Ros with balls, prog with a purpose. I dig. Played: "Sätt att se" and "Målerås Finest".


7. Destroyer - Trouble in Dreams (Merge)
I at first sneered at AMG labeling Bejar "unsure whether he was Dylan or Bowie" -- but it's no doubt what they're talking about on a song like "Rivers", with the neat theft of Dylan's Blood on the Tracks-era diction in the chorus which is followed by a big glam, Mick Ronson stylized crescendo in the instrumental break. But you can't reduce Trouble in Dreams to being impersonation, lyrically its pure, wide-eyed Bejar, ever autobiographical and obtuse. "Foam Hands" to "My Favourite Year" is an incredible one-two punch. Necessarily, I played those two.


6. Sébastien Tellier - Sexuality (Record Makers)
Sexuality is pretty straight up, 80s-style porno jams from France produced by Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo (one of the robots from Daft Punk). In a surreal move Tellier was France's Eurovision entry, which marks a first since probably France Gall that a decent act was sent to competition. Luckily he lost. Played: the single "Divine", followed by "Pomme", with the nonsensical perverted lyric nonpareil "You're a lover, in this jizz".


5. Parenthetical Girls - Entanglements (Tomlab)
Major step up into the top five. Zac Pennington and the rest of the (((GRRRLS))) manage something that's as pretty as it is sinister, with this strange, almost violent gay energy. Jherek Bischoff and Sam Mickens (two-thirds of the Dead Science -- we'll talk more about them later), along with Matt Carlson used their classical know-how to help complement Pennington's discordant melodies and poetry with the kind of arrangements Wally Stott, Bernard Herrmann and Van Dyke Parks used to craft. The Last Shadow Puppets throw around words and themes, Pennington does it better, and fucked. Sparks meets Bartok. Played: the propulsive, gorgeous single "A Song for Ellie Greenwich" followed by the equally baroque and electronic "Young Eucharists".


4. Portishead - Third (Mercury)
The "particularly classic" one. Another reviewer likened this to an anarchic British novel or play. I'm pretty sure I understand that sentiment -- this leaves me as cold as A Local Stigmatic, offering no charmed sentiment that things might be okay, ever. Some bands get jaded or suck with age, on Third Portishead show they're still at the height of their powers, ever uncomfortable with the scheme of things. For an insightful review read Brad's (the fellow also unwittingly gave me the name for my show!). Played: "The Rip", "Plastic".


3. Simon Bookish - Everything/Everything (Tomlab)
All fans of one Leo Chadburn (portmanteau: Simon Bookish) are both impressed and slightly confounded as to how he has managed to make an electropop album using for the most part live instruments. Saxophones, motorik-style drums, and (my God) his voice, baritone talk-sing that it is, make this probably the most inventive thing on this list. Leo includes a explanatory phrase on each copy, dubbing this futurist Kraut-Seussical "a big band song-cycle about information and technology". Gets you a bit impressed with our more ingenious brethren. If I ever dart my eyes over in your direction and cry "Young man, you amaze me!" it's 'cos I got it from here. Played: "Dumb Terminal", "Portrait of the Artist as a Fountain", "Carbon", "Victorinox". Joyce and Swiss Army references galore!


2. Deerhunter - Microcastle (Kranky)
Ryan of Carload of Whatever is right to say this is one of those 'objective-favourite-records' that most of our type can enjoy. Spin (shitfest magazine that it is) described Microcastle as "erotic asphyxiation", which just nails it. And "Agoraphobia" is just perfect. Played: "Cover Me (Slowly)", "Agoraphobia", "Never Stops".


1. The Dead Science - Villainaire (Constellation)
The same year in helping Zac 'n' Girls make Entanglements (#5), Jherek Bischoff, Sam Mickens and Nick Tamburro of the Dead Science put out this little masterpiece. Like the Portishead album this defies genre-classification (trip hop! ...minus scratching! umm...) -- its shattered, almost strobe-like gothic rock by a bunch of pomaded, lesbian-looking men is easily my favourite of the year. With hip-hop references. And there is something very regal to it all.

I once daydreamed to this record of a man in velvet throwing cough syrup all over me. As you can tell, I can't talk sensibly about this; my friend Dana (of The Sound Travels, Fridays 3-4) described this simply as music by "a creepy man with a very creepy voice." Five-stars. My respects to Constellation Recs for taking a (I'm guessing momentary) break from the post-rock in releasing this and the Tindersticks record this year. Played: "Make Mine Marvel", "Wife You", "Holliston", "Black Lane".

Thursday, December 18, 2008

December 18 - Dandyism, Jandek, German Electro


Started with David Bowie's Christmas duet with Bing Crosby, "Peace on Earth / Little Drummer Boy" from the latter's 1977 Christmas special. Crosby apparantly had no idea who Bowie was, evidenced through their rigid, completely unfunny banter that starts off the track. The song is even more strange in light of music Bowie was doing at the time in Berlin -- so I was sure to follow it with "Blackout" from Heroes, with its Eno-Visconti-Fripp sound fuckery and lyrics of rotting wine and Japanese prostitution.

As mentioned, I read this essay "On Dandyism and George Brummell" by the 19th C. French writer Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly, translated and with commentary by George Walden (see Jarvis on the cover?!). Barbey argues such refined fops are hardly the superfluous men some writers and critics make them out to be, but that Dandies are in fact high society nihilists that through their vanity manage to hold social conventions in contempt, all the while miring themselves in the system itself. They are to be celebrated, 'futile heroes in a futile time.' Walden then goes to argue a socialist/anti-establishment stance is impossible for the pop star, that pop music is something inherently capitalist and ultimately deaf to social justice, that 'he or she is in never in any hurry to overturn the system that made them millions.' Great read! Anyways, there's a Kinks song on the topic.

Also, new Jandek (who's seeming quite straightforward and accessible to me these days), fantastic hip hop (Q-Tip!), archival Paul Weller, and a bit of the inordinately large German electro shipment we received at dear CFUV. Happy/Merry Christmas to all, see you on the first of the two-thousand-and-ninth year of our Lord for my top 10 for the two-thousand-and-eighth.

Playlist:
  1. David Bowie & Bing Crosby - "Peace on Earth / Little Drummer Boy"

  2. Bowie - "Blackout" - Heroes

  3. Kieran Hebden & Steve Reid - "Between B & C" - NYC

  4. Q-Tip - "Won't Trade" - The Renaissance

  5. The Kinks - "Dandy" - Face to Face

  6. Orchestre Poly-Rhythmode Contonou - "Mi Ni Non Kpo" - The Vodoun Effect

  7. Paul Weller - "Fly on the Wall" - At The BBC [box set]

  8. Charlotte Gainsbourg - "AF607105" - 5:55

  9. Barbara Morgenstern - "Camouflage ft. Robert Wyatt" [yes, that Robert Wyatt] - BM

  10. Skeletons - "Unrelentingness" - Money

  11. Jandek - "Goodbye Today" - Glasgow Friday

  12. Gaiser - "Leave It" - Blank Fade

Thursday, December 11, 2008

December 11 - Kurt Weill, Levitts, Elizabethan Christmas Anthems



The Tudor composers this week are Thomas Tomkins (1572-1656) and Martin Peerson (1580-1650), with "Sing Unto God" and "Upon My Lap", respectively -- from the collection of Elizabethan Christmas Anthems by Red Byrd & The Rose Consort of Viols.


It irritates me how "Mack the Knife" has been imbued into everyone's consciousness since the '50s but so many of the plebe's out there know nothing of the German opera it comes from (let alone anything much about Brecht or Weill). So our hero aired that part of the Weill suite titled "Die Moritat von Mackie Messer", familiar tune that it is.


Plus the return of Pulp! I found a book on Dandyism with Jarvis on the cover, can't wait to read it. Some things were published just for our Geoffrey.


Playlist:

  • Red Byrd & The Rose Consort of Viols - "Sing Unto God" [Tomkins] & "Upon My Lap" [Peerson] - Elizabethan Christmas Anthems

  • Orchestra of St. Luke's - "Die Moritat von Mackie Messer (Mack the Knife)" - Suite from Threepenny Opera

  • Dungen - "Fredag" - 4

  • Shudder to Think - "Hot One" - Velvet Goldmine [OST]

  • The Who - "Odorono" - The Who Sell Out

  • Levitts - "The Saints of My City Are Children" - We Are the Levitts

  • Scott Walker - "The War Is Over (Sleepers)" - 'Til the Band Comes In

  • Pulp - "Pink Glove" - His 'n' Hers

  • Skeletons - "Stepper a.k.a. Work" - Money

  • Simon Bookish - "Interview" - Trainwreck/Raincheck

  • Justice - "Phantom Pt. 1" - A Cross the Universe / Live in San Francisco

  • Paul Weller - "Lullaby Fur Kinder" & "Where'er You Go" - 22 Dreams

  • Antony & the Johnsons - "Sing for Me" - Another World

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

December 4 - Interview: of Montreal's Davey Pierce

Whether you view of Montreal as neo-glam visionaries or pseudo-gay hacks does not change the fact I interviewed bassist Davey Pierce one Tuesday morning in December. We talked about working with Kevin Barnes (the group's frontman and sole contributor in the studio), bandmate Jamey Huggins' solo-work as James Husband, and about clearing out one's record collection. I'll air the entire interview on tomorrow's show after the church music, here's the transcript:

G: How’s the tour so far?

Davey Pierce: The tour has been totally awesome, actually. We’re on a nice little break, we leave tonight to go down to Florida.

G: You’re home right now?

DP: Yeah, I’m sitting right outside my house.

G: One question about your clothes: who designs it, the stuff you wear on stage?

DP: Kevin has a designer that he uses … I haven’t met her yet, some lady from Italy, which is kind of crazy. [laughs] Me? I just buy stuff from thrift stores and stuff like that. So I guess I would be the designer.

G: What do you think of the new record, and how well does it transfer to a live setting?

DP: Personally I love the new record, it’s awesome – Kevin never ceases to amaze me. As far as transferring to a live setting, that’s probably what’s been the hardest part about it. It’s disjointed, kind of all over the place that it was weird getting everything down because we learned it in parts, for the most part. He’d be like “Here’s these nine 30 second sections, so learn those and we’ll figure out where they go.” Like … “Wow, okay! I guess I’ll have to do that, then.” But yeah, I think it transfers pretty well. It’s been kind of a struggle to make it really work for us as a live band, but that’s half the fun of it.

G: When it comes to Kevin’s bass lines, are they easy to perform? Because you’re the driving force on some songs like “Gronlandic Edit.”

DP: Yeah, there are some that are pretty easy, and then some that are incredibly difficult and complicated. And me not really being a bassist for the most part it’s been …a learning experience.

G: If you’re not a bassist, what’s your ‘natural instrument,’ then?

DP: I’ve been a drummer since I was six, and I started playing guitar when I was about twelve. I picked up the bass about three days before I joined the band.

G: How did you get to first meet Kevin Barnes and join of Montreal?

DP: I moved up to Athens from Tallahassee, Florida, and lived about a block from him. We had a bunch of mutual friends and I’d go over to his house and we’d all play basketball, have barbecues and stuff like that. When it came to me later moving down to Orlando, I didn’t really want to, but I really had to, you know? And they offered me the job to do merch, roadie-ing and tech work so I jumped at the chance. It just snowballed from there.

G: When it comes to live, you guys have done a lot of Bowie covers including a medley of “Breaking Glass” and “Be My Wife.” Do you remember doing that?

DP: They stopped the Bowie thing right after I joined because they had been doing it for like a year and a half and moved on. We did some Kinks, Prince covers, and all sorts of stuff like that.

G: So have you guys stayed away from covers lately?

DP: No, we’ve been doing a lot of covers! Actually… not too many this last tour, but we did “Take Me Out” by Franz Ferdinand and “Teen Spirit” which was always fun to play, kind of this noisy mish-mash of people on stage doing random things, a lot of breaking stuff. It’s good, cathartic to get to smash things. [laughs]

G: Since the albums are always very much Kevin’s babies, what studio work have you done in the last year?

DP: We [the band] recorded on one song with him [“An Eluardian Instance” from Skeletal Lamping], we also did an EP (I'm unsure if it will ever come out) as another band that’s all of us from of Montreal called Instant Witch. We played a couple of those songs live for a little while and then now that the new record’s out they’ve kind of fallen to the wayside. I actually have another band, we just recorded a record that hopefully will come out though probably won’t.

G: What’s the band called?

DP: It’s called Inkwell.

G: What’s it sound like?

DP: It’s more rocking than of Montreal, straight up rock ‘n’ roll kind of stuff. Y’know. Rock. Kind of hard to describe.

G: Have you heard any of Jamey [Huggins’] James Husband stuff? What do you think of it?

DP: Oh yeah, I play drums with James Husband. It’s awesome.

G: Isn’t James Husband putting out a split 45 with of Montreal in the next year? Do you know anything about that?

DP: I think that’s the “Happy Happy Birthday to Me” singles club. I’m not entirely sure. I hear only bits and pieces of that stuff. But I did hear about that, and am really excited about that one. James’ music is incredible, one of my favorite songwriters.

G: What’s your favorite album of the year in 2008, as we’re getting into December?

DP: Somebody asked me that earlier and I had such a problem answering that question, because I can’t remember what albums even came out in 2008.

G: What have you been listening to lately?

DP: Lately I’ve been really stuck on the latest Trail of the Dead record, So Divided, I’ve been listening to that like crazy. I still love Death Cab for Cutie, the last record that came out this year blew my mind. For the most part I’ve actually had this resurgence of stuff I used to love when I was twelve, so I’ve been going back and listening to Jawbreaker, Jawbox, Knapsack, Samiam, and all these bands I used to love when I was a little punk kid.

G: Do you have your old cassettes?

DP: I actually don’t have my old cassettes, I wish that I did. I go through a period every couple of years and get rid of everything that I own and start over again, you know? Unfortunately my cassettes went first, and then next time my whole record collection went.

G: Everything?

DP: The entire collection. I sold about a thousand LPs to Wax ‘n’ Facts in Atlanta. I think it’s a necessary thing to flush yourself of everything you have once in a while be it from force or your own decision. It’s good to start over every once in a while with a clean slate. You know?

G: Yeah… I see. I guess I couldn’t get rid of some of some of my good stuff. Everything, like everything?

DP: I got rid of literally every CD and LP that I owned.

G: That's crazy. Are you excited for Europe?

DP: I’m very excited for Europe, we’re doing a total bus tour this time. Normally the last couple of times we’ve been to Europe it’s been: play a show, wind up getting drunk, wake up two hours later, and go get on a plane and play a show. You sleep for a total of ten hours in the two weeks that you’re there. This time we actually have a little bus that will take us around and we can actually see Europe again instead of just flying overtop of it. We’re all really excited about that one.

***

Very nice guy.

The Tudor composer this week is Orlando Gibbons, favourite of Glenn Gould and contemporary of our friends Tallis and Byrd. Quite a few of his harpsichord pieces will be aired (performed by James Johnstone), followed by a few choral works by the Choir of King's College, Cambridge.

James Johnstone: Orlando Gibbons: Music for Harpsichords & Virginals
  • "The Italian Ground"
  • "Ground"
  • "Galliard: Lord Salisbury"
  • "Fantasia"
  • "Alman: The King's Jewel"
The Choir of King's College, Cambridge [Philip Ledger, director] - Orlando Gibbons: Tudor Church Music
  • "Fantasia for Double Organ"
  • "Magnificent (2nd Service)"
The rest:
  • of Montreal - "The Past Is a Grotesque Animal" - Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer?
  • Skeletons - "The Things" - Money
  • Pivot - "In the Blood" - O Soundtrack My Heart
  • Kieran Hebden & Steve Reid - "25th Street" - NYC