Our weekly, Kasey Kasem-inspired luddite DIY version of a podcast is a little late again, sorry, we’ll try to have next week’s for you on Tuesdays like we usually do. Every week, we try to mix it up, offer a little something for everyone: sad songs, funny songs, upbeat songs, quieter stuff, you name it. We’ve designed this as something you can do on your lunch break if you work at a computer (and you have headphones – your boss won’t approve of a lot of this stuff). If you don’t like one of these songs, you can always go on to the next one: every link here will take you to each individual song. As always, the #1 song here will appear on our Best Songs of 2010 list at the end of the year.
1. The Toneballs – Chelsea Clinton Knows
Characteristically incisive lyrical rock from Dan Sallitt’s jangly post Blow This Nightclub crew. They slayed with this a couple of weeks ago at the Parkside.
2. Annabouboula – Opium Bride
Psychedelic Greek rebetika surf/dance rock with sultry female vocals. They’ve got a long-awaited new album out and it’s great.
3. The Del Lords – When the Drugs Kick In
The legendary 80s Americana rockers’ first new song in 20 years, and it was worth the wait.
4. The Visitors – Living World
The New Race garage-punk classic recorded live 2008 via thebarmansrant.
5. Para – Roboti
Quirky, catchy Slovakian 80s flavored rock. They’re at Drom 11/17 at 9.
6. Copal – Shadows
One-chord jams don’t get any cooler than this hypnotic, trippy violin/cello Middle Eastern dance-rock vamp. From their excellent new album. They’re at Drom tonight at 10 if you’re in the mood to get out of the rain and dance.
7. Meg Reichardt – Frozen Toe Blues
The Roulette Sister and Chaud Lapin on a rare solo jaunt doing a typically irresistible oldtimey blues number.
8. Jeremy Messersmith – A Boy, a Girl and a Graveyard
This is the Tattooine guy, Elliott Smith style.
9. Cee-Lo Green – Fuck You
We couldn’t let the year go by without at least giving this one a mention. C’mon, you know you love it.
10. Buffalo Springfield – Burned
From the initial reunion show by the 60s psychedelic pop/Americana rock legends – this is with Neil on vocals, live via Leftsetz.
November 4, 2010
Posted by delarue |
blues music, lists, middle eastern music, Music, music, concert, rap music, rock music | 60s rock, americana, americana rock, anabouboula band, annabouboula opium bride, blow this nightclub, blues, blues music, buffalo springfield burned, buffalo springfield reunion, cee-lo green, cee-lo green fuck you, copal band, copal shadows, dance music, dance rock, del lords, del lords when the drugs kick in, downtempo music, garage punk, garage rock, greek rock, groove music, hip-hop, hip-hop music, jangle rock, janglerock, jeremy messersmith, jeremy messersmith a boy a girl and a graveyard, meg reichardt, meg reichardt frozen toe blues, middle eastern music, Music, neil young, new race band, oldtime music, oldtimey music, para band, para roboti, psychedelia, psychedelic music, radio birdman, rap music, rock music, roulette sisters, sixties rock, string band, surf music, surf rock, toneballs, toneballs chelsea clinton knows, top ten songs, top ten songs of the week, Visitors band, visitors living world, world music |
Leave a comment
This is just another way we try to spread the word about all the good music out there. As you’ll notice, every song that reaches the #1 spot on this list will also appear on our 100 Best Songs of 2010 list at the end of December. We try to mix it up, offer a little something for everyone: sad songs, funny songs, upbeat songs, quieter stuff, you name it. If you don’t like one of these, you can always go on to the next one. The only one here that doesn’t have a link to the track is #1 and that’s because it’s so new.
1. Erica Smith & the 99 Cent Dreams – River King
Apprehensive, hauntingly and richly lyrical Nashville gothic. Nobody does it better than she does. She’ll be playing the Dave Campbell memorial concert at the Parkside on the 22nd.
2. Adam H. Stevens – The Cities That You’ve Burned
Cynical retro-70s pop, a snide portrait of a dissolute trendoid. From his forthcoming cd We Live on Cliffs – free download.
3. Mighty Fine – Ride
Absolutely kick ass garage rock with a funk/soul edge and an original style if you can believe it. They’re at Public Assembly on August 19.
4. The Anabolics – You Can’t Let People Walk All Over You
More kick-ass garage rock. They’re at Bruar Falls on August 1.
5. Jeremy Messersmith – Organ Donor
Creepy chamber pop, sort of on the Elliott Smith tip. He’s at Joe’s Pub on August 17.
6. Pete Galub – 300 Days in July
Pensive psychedelic pop song given the Martin Bisi treatment which means raw and authentic. Grab a free download.
7. Ernie Vega – I’ll Follow You Home (Sweet Isabelle)
Like early Dylan but better – both the guitar and the vocals.
8. The JPT Scare Band – Slow Sick Shuttle
Just stumbled across this twisted stumbling seven-minute 1973 slice of acid-warped bluesmetal while trolling for a completely unrelated video. Isn’t the internet wonderful.
9. The Audiobodies – Free
Upbeat acoustic soul shuffle with Barrington Levy-esque vox.
10. Under Byen – Kapitel
Dark dreamy art-rock – a sensation in Denmark.
July 19, 2010
Posted by delarue |
blues music, lists, Music, music, concert, rock music | 300 days in july, adam h. stevens, anabolics band, art-rock, audiobodies, audiobodies free, best rock songs, best songs, best songs of the week, blues, blues music, cities that you've burned, country rock, erica smith, erica smith 99 cent dreams, erica smith river king, Erica Smith singer, ernie vega, garage band, garage music, garage rock, goth music, goth rock, gothic music, gothic rock, heavy metal, i'll follow you home, jangle rock, janglerock, jeremy messersmith, jeremy messersmith organ donor, jpt scare band, metal music, mighty fine band, mighty fine ride, nashville gothic, Pete Galub, power pop, powerpop, psychedelia, psychedelic music, psychedelic rock, roots music, roots rock, slow sick shuttle, soul music, top ten songs, top ten songs of the week, UNDER BYEN, under byen kapitel, you can't let people walk all over you |
Leave a comment
Jeremy Messersmith’s third album of smart indie pop continues in the same vein he mined on his first two. This one plays down the death fixation in favor of an upbeat, wistfully tuneful 60s psychedelic pop feel. But unlike the rest of the slavish Beach Boys and Ellliot Smith imitators, Messersmith has established a voice of his own: there’s a depth and a thoughtfulness to his lyrics and a subtly clever wit throughout the tunes and the arrangements, an indication of how successfully he’s immersed himself in intelligent oldschool pop sounds.
The first song here is something of a cross between late 60s English dancehall-style Kinks and Elliott Smith, with some absolutely gorgeous piano/guitar textures on the chorus. The second track, Dillinger Eyes is Badfinger-esque powerpop, followed by the album’s best song, Organ Donor. With a dark, reggae-inflected Watching the Detectives vibe enhanced by brooding strings, it’s a vividly metaphorical look at how we fall apart: “Took my brain to the seminary, never seen again…left my spine at the wedding chapel…” John the Determinist works off a bracing, tense string arrangement that underscores the narrator’s obliviously stubborn OCD vibe. Knots blends an old PiL guitar riff with a string section straight out of the Moody Blues circa 1967, a feel that returns with the mellotron-driven sympathy-for-the-devil ballad Repo Man, all sad and alone since nobody cares that he’s dead and gone. The funniest track here is the lushly jangly Rickenbacker guitar anthem Deathbed Salesman, its protagonist trying to upscale a potential casket buyer:
You’ve got a reservation
But you don’t have to wait if you don’t want to
You won’t feel a thing
All your friends are there already
This is how it has to end…
Fans of the original stuff as well as 60s revivalists like the Essex Green and Love Camp 7 will love this. Jeremy Messersmith plays Joe’s Pub on May 28 at 7 PM. Memo to Messersmith’s publicist; email this anonymously to pitchfork and tell them it’s the long lost Beach Boys album. They won’t be able to tell the difference.
May 13, 2010
Posted by delarue |
Music, music, concert, review, Reviews, rock music | 60s pop, beach boys, chamber pop, death songs, Elliott Smith, essex green, essex green band, indie pop, jangle rock, janglerock, jeremy messersmith, jeremy messersmith reluctant graveyard, kinks band, kinks ray davies, Love Camp 7, Love Camp 7 band, mcginty and white, moody blues, power pop, powerpop, psychedelic pop, reluctant graveyard, retro music, scott walker, sixties pop, songs about death, ward white |
Leave a comment