Top 20 Albums of 2011

Dec 06 2011 Published by under Music, Personal, Top 10/Bottom 3

Ravedeath 1972

So many of the best works from the past year complemented one another that I felt it fitting to link those compatible works together.  Tim Hecker’s two albums are a no-brainer, as are the pairing of Pye Corner Audio’s second full-length with his Study Series collaboration with The Advisory Circle (actually, I could have made that a triple pairing with The Advisory Circle’s full-length, too, but I decided to pair that one with a thematic complement of its own).  The rest of the pair-ups are described below.  In all, you get 20 album recommendations from me this year, and since I think the only real benefit to lists like this is the chance for me to recommend good music to others, that’s an extra 10 albums (or, if you are being picky, 9 albums and one single) for your consideration.  As always, I’ve provided links to guide you on your shopping.  Happy listening!

Top 10 Albums

  1. Tim Hecker, Ravedeath, 1972 and Dropped Pianos: I’ve been a fan of Tim Hecker’s music since Radio Amor back in 2003.  His mix of guitar, field recording, and drone/dissonance has developed and morphed into an art form all his own, and this year we got to witness not only one of his finest works in Ravedeath, 1972 but also a bit of a “making-of” in the form of Dropped Pianos, a “rough sketch” album of recordings Hecker made at a church in Iceland before they were processed into Ravedeath.  Oddly enough, the music on Dropped Pianos is every bit as fascinating and haunting as the more “finished product,” which is a testament to Hecker’s skills as a musician–no matter what he does, it’s fascinating.  The piano and organ compositions on Dropped Pianos are both beautiful and unsettling, but they are only part of the story here.  There’s a use of reverb and delay throughout that stretches the notes out so they overlap with one another, creating an unnatural sense of space, as if Hecker were stuck in a canyon, a million miles from the nearest person, his only friend the echoes of his music bouncing from wall to wall.  And then he went a dozen steps further on Ravedeath, 1972, refining and enhancing the sound, transforming simple echoes into overpowering symphonies like “Hatred of Music I” that couple that basic piano and organ with a wall of sound that bends and sways from noise into churning, unbelievably lovely melodies and then back again into noise.  The music here is so powerful, so deep, so rich, and so beautiful that it took me the length of the year to process and appreciate (meaning that I didn’t really like it at first, but now I can’t stop listening).  This is essential music from a wonderful artist.  And I would be remiss not to mention the cover art for the albums, featuring guys pushing a piano off a building.  2011 will be remembered as a year of protest and uprising–first in the “Arab Spring,” later in the capitalist west.  Hecker released his album in the early part of 2011, long before most of this had taken place.  The cover image is more provocative than its MIT origin, but it is an image that has stayed in my mind all year long as I watched the transformation of so much of our world from passivity into action and beyond.
  2. Pye Corner Audio, Black Mill Tapes Vol. 2 and Study Series 07: Autumnal Activities (w/ The Advisory Circle): It’s no secret that I’m a huge fan of both Pye Corner Audio and Ghost Box, so I was thrilled when these two works came out.  Volume 2 of Black Mill Tapes picked up where Vol 1 left off: unbelievably good analog synth explorations that exist as alternate universe leftovers of 1980s action film soundtracks (assuming that the 1980s of that alternate universe was far, far cooler than the ones I remember).  So Vol 2 came out earlier in the year, and I’ve been waiting for Vol 3 (which is forthcoming, I’ve been promised), so it was nice to get a little PCA sliver in the form of the latest Ghost Box “Study Series” release.  I was fully prepared to love the PCA song on this single, but I was very surprised by the wonderful Advisory Circle song, which was even better than that The Advisory Circle’s full-length (and that was pretty fantastic to start with).  All in all, banner year for people who love squelchy analog synth music from the UK.
  3. Leyland Kirby, Eager to tear apart the stars and The Caretaker, An empty bliss beyond this World: Leyland Kirby is 2011′s MVP for his output alone.  Not only did he release these two wonderful creations but he issued three Intrigue & Stuff EPs, each as different as the last, and he tops 2011 off with the soundtrack to the film Patience (After Sebold), which might end up on next year’s best-of list.  Oh, and he redid his website and created a subscription service for his fans so they get all of his music as soon as it’s available.  Amazing energy, to be sure, but what matters is the music, and the music here is wonderful.  I don’t think Eager to tear apart the stars is the equal to 2009′s Sadly, the future is no longer what it was, but that’s like saying the fifth season of The Wire wasn’t quite as good as the other four seasons–it’s technically true, but who cares since it’s still better than almost everything else.  Both of these albums are wonderful, and while they share a similar tone (and shape), they are quite different in execution.  Caretaker albums center around the manipulation of samples (generally old songs from the 20s or something) as a way of exploring the experience of memories as they fade.  An empty bliss is very similar to the Caretaker works that preceded it, though there’s a sharpness and vivacity to this work that is an interesting contrast to some of the more difficult Caretaker albums like Theoretically Pure Anterograde Amnesia.  For example, a track like “Moments of sufficient lucidity” introduces a lilting piano melody that plays, stops, and repeats again and again amidst the crackles of an old LP until the melody abruptly stops.  The effect is a combination of melodious peace and uncanny apprehension.  It’s fantastic.  By contrast, Eager to tear apart the stars is a symphony of piano, distortion, synths, and despair.  There’s the same repetition of phrases as in the Caretaker work, but here there’s no hope, only an endless, slow, plodding, repetition until a final surrender.  It’s not a depressing album, but neither is it the kind of thing I usually listen to first thing in the morning.  Together, these are overpowering statements from one of the great artists working today.  What’s more, he’s also one of the most prolific artists, too, which means there is much more to come.
  4. The Advisory Circle, As the Crow Flies and Adrian Corker, Way of the Morris (Soundtrack)–It was, to be sure, a very good year for pagan-fused English music.  Of course, The Advisory Circle’s idea of paganism is to combine traditional English concepts of seasonal change and ritual with the omnipresence of totalitarian government–a combination that I find particularly fascinating, actually, since it lets me imagine a world where Christianity and all its baggage didn’t exist but the world was still just as screwed up and confused as it is now (that, by the way, is my personal vision of an alternate universe, in which the Roman Emperor Julian [the Apostate] didn’t die in the Persian desert and managed to squash Christianity as he had intended).  Really, though, As the Crow Flies is a wonderful collection of classic Ghost Box tinkering, and this is probably The Advisory Circle’s finest hour so far (though, as I said above, the Advisory Circle song “Cloud Control” on the Study Series single outdoes even this wonderful work).  Adrian Corker’s soundtrack to a movie about Morris dancing, on the other hand, is just plain pagan dreams, complete with old English creation myths about foxes dancing the world into being and music that makes me think that jumping up and down with handkerchiefs in my two hands is something I would like to try someday.  I haven’t seen the movie (though I intend to as soon as I can), but the music here is just weirdly wonderful and intricately varied.  At one minute, it is reminiscent of Valerie and Her Week of Wonders; at another, it becomes a Richard Thompson soundtrack; at yet another, it’s a remix of Chris Watson recording bird sounds.  Through it all, though, there is an eeriness that unsettles, confuses, and fascinates in the grand tradition of hauntological goodies like Ghost Box and Broadcast.
  5. Zomby, Dedication and Nothing–I don’t dance, so I prefer the kind of electronic music that doesn’t require dancing.  But I can appreciate and enjoy dance music on its own.  Luckily, Zomby straddles that line between dance music and sitting on my ass music and he does it quite well.  Dedication is a wonderful work that I’ve been listening to since it came out.  It’s a feast for the ears, going in all sorts of directions, from the shotgun sample opening (reminding me of Portishead’s “Machine Gun”) to the dub-fused “Alothea” to the Emeralds-if-they-didn’t-use-guitars “Black Orchid” to the retro-Martin Dennis-funk fusion of “Salamander” to all sorts of other weird destinations.  And to just prove that he can do straight out dance music, he came out with Nothing at the end of the year, filled with unapologetic (but interesting and enticing) dance music that even makes me want to dance.  Great year for Zomby (and Zombies, too, thanks to The Walking Dead).
  6. PJ Harvey, Let England Shake and Tom Waits, Bad as Me–I am fully aware that these are the only two artists that most people would have heard of prior to reading this list.  PJ Harvey and Tom Waits are kindred spirits, though, wouldn’t you say?  Both just took a left turn at the rock musician door and wandered into their own spaces where they explore whatever the hell they feel like exploring.  PJ Harvey’s album is probably the finest work of her very impressive career, and it’s got more awesome pop songs than anything else released this year (my favorite, “This Glorious Land,” is featured on my top singles list).  Tom Waits album is another Tom Waits album, which is to say a wonderful thing (though I wouldn’t call it revolutionary).
  7. Jon Brooks, Music for Dieter Rams and Music for Thomas Carnacki–This is the year of the Advisory Circle, to be sure.  Jon Brooks is part of #2 and #4 above as his alter-ego, but under his own name he released two incredibly interesting albums on his side-label Cafe Kaput.  These are theme-based album of the highest order.  Music for Thomas Carnacki is Brooks’s “soundtrack” to an imaginary film of the enterprising “ghost hunter” Thomas Carnacki, the hero of William Hope Hodgson’s books.  Think of it as a kind of Hammer Horror tribute to the author and his creation.  Each song is an eerie fragment of electronic noodling, capturing the spirit and soul of a moment in Hodgson’s stories.  It’s a spooky album to be sure–great for Halloween.  By contrast, Music for Dieter Rams is an album-length homage to the famous industrial designer.  All sounds from the work were sampled from one of Dieter Rams’s creations, a small alarm clock.  Despite the limited sound palate, it’s amazing what Brooks is able to create here.  The songs are as rich and as varied as those on Thomas Carnacki (or any Advisory Circle release, in fact), from the slow synth moan of “Feldstarke” to the bubbling, bouncing joy of “Wanduhr Weltzeit.”  There’s very little that Jon Brooks can’t do, it seems.
  8. Byetone, SyMeta and Mika Vainio, Life (…It Eats You Up)–There are two sides to Pan Sonic’s music: short, sharp shocks and long, loud roars.  Byetone is an artist who seems to have latched on to both of these, and his creation here is like Pan Sonic’s music filtered through Raster-Noton’s trademark “glitch” beats.  ”Helix” is a perfect example: the thumping kicks, fuzzy noises, stabbing roars could come straight from any Pan Sonic album (like Kesto, for example), but in Byetone’s hands the rhythm and propulsion dominates in the same way that the dissonance and discord dominate in Pan Sonic’s hands.  As a huge Pan Sonic fan who was very sad to see the duo end their run, I’m happy that at least one artist is keeping their ideas alive.  Of course, someone else who is keeping their music alive is…the members of Pan Sonic themselves, like Mika Vainio who has released the incredible Life (It Eats You Up), where he focuses on the long, loud roars that Vainio’s solo work is so often partial to.  Even here, the dual layers of rhythm and noise come together and diverge in new ways.  There’s a sense of John Zorn-esque jazz floating around the edges of the noise and the grime in these tracks (thanks to the heavy use of guitars throughout), with beats existing not for rhythm but for accentuation (as in “And Give Us Our Daily Humiliation”).  There’s an incredible variety and ingenuity to these songs, proof (if any was needed) that Mika Vainio isn’t going away anytime soon.
  9. Thundercat, The Golden Age of Apocalypse and Kode9 & The SpaceapeBlack Sun–Dubstep has spread everywhere, to the point that the term really doesn’t mean anything at all anymore.  So forget the term.  Thundercat is an LA artist (part of the Brainfeeder group that includes Flying Lotus) and this is his first full-length, and boy is it good, featuring as it does the best song of the year in “Daylight” and a host of other groovy, time-warped tunes, as if he’s remixing Earth, Wind, and Fire with Ableton Live.  This is the happiest, most entertaining album I listened to this year.  Kode9 & The Spaceape’s Black Sun, by contrast, was one of the darkest (as the title suggests).  This is the second collaboration between Kode9 and The Spaceape.  While their first album felt like a stripped-down update of Linton Kwesi Johnson’s Dread Beat ‘an Blood, this album is quite different.  The music here is much more varied, grooves and melodies ranging from the head-on power beats of “Am I” to the more atmospheric, Burial-esque “Neon Red Sign” to “Otherman,” which builds from a Tim Hecker stream of noise into a crispy, static filled groove that rolls and blurs while Spaceape raps through a telephone (or so it sounds).  Amazing work.
  10. The Kramford Look, 1970 and Rangers, Pan Am Stories–Okay, I grew up in the 70s and 80s.  I remember the haircuts and the clothes; I lived them.  Trust me–the memory of that time is WAY better than the real thing.  I’m guessing that neither the Kramford Look nor the Rangers were around then, and that’s a good thing.  If they had, they would have never been so fascinated with the music of that time to the point that they would take the core elements of that music and reimagine it and reinvent it anew.  1970 could easily be the soundtrack to a Blacksploitation film or one of those Steve McQueen films about killing bad guys in San Francisco or a Spaghetti Western or an old Doctor Who episode.  Ah, but the trick is…it’s all of these things and more, a mix of funk and opera and bawdy and schmaltzy, all intertwined around one another.  Take “Shoebox at Sea,” which begins with a sound from Doctor Who and then builds into a smooth jazz beat from a cop drama that merges, somewhere along the line, into a funk line from some strange Harlem drug film.  I know nothing about the Kramford Look, but my guess is that they are too young to be burdened by the 70s.   This feels like music from people who grew up watching and thinking and dreaming about a time long past and seek to revive that past through music that knows no racial barriers, no political leanings, none of the baggage brought about by actually living through that tumultuous time (a time, most people forget, of deep musical segregation).  Rangers, on the other hand, have a different objective: to take all the crappy rock music from the 70s and 80s and distill it into swirling, lo-fi mini-epics.  This album is very reminiscent of last year’s Suburban Tours, but Pan Am Stories features more vocals and (dare I say) coherent songs than that former work, and it’s prettier, with intricate guitar work and some nice rhythm stuff.  Of course, it’s all presented in a lo-fi fog, as if it was recorded 25 years ago and left in the back of someone’s closet to be unearthed in 2011, but that quality is exactly what makes the music so interesting and so memorable: Rangers are, if anything, the 70s and 80s rock version of The Caretaker, examining the memory of rock before it fades into oblivion.


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Random Thoughts

Mar 19 2011 Published by under Film/TV, Internet/Media, Music, Personal, Random, Sports, Technology

 

  • Finally got around to seeing The Social Network.  It’s an excellent film–well acted and directed and all that.  But what struck me most was how similar it was to The King’s Speech.  No, really.  Think about it: both are historical dramas featuring introverted main protagonists who struggle with communication in the technology age.  Yes, the historical eras of the two films are quite different (1930s vs. 2000s), and the communication mediums that focus on are different (radio vs. Internet).  Yes, King George is a nice guy who only becomes a jerk when his stutter gets the better of him, and Zukerberg is a jerk pretty much all the time. However, at their heart, both films are about technology and communication.  King George’s struggle is with technology–being able to deliver a speech on the radio without devolving into a stuttering wreck; Zuckerberg’s struggle is with actual human beings, and he overcomes this struggle through technology (creating a social tool that lets anyone communicate with anyone else).  These are different types of stories with different outcomes, but they are wrestling with the same basic themes.  As I see it, the real difference between the films is that, whereas King George actually learns to control his affliction and emerges triumphant in the end, Zuckerberg really doesn’t change at all from the beginning of the film to the end (that friend request to his ex-girlfriend doesn’t really count, I think–not enough of a change to warrant the audience’s admiration or respect).  That’s a big reason why The King’s Speech won the Oscar–happy ending vs jerk ending.
  • I’m using my iPad now more than I ever have.  It’s starting to fit better into my daily activities.  For the first 9 months that I owned it, I used it mostly when traveling and when in meetings at work.  Now, it’s the computer I keep with me when I’m watching TV or hanging out around town.  I watch Netflix on the iPad all the time.  The Google Readers on the iPad are excellent (I use River of News).  Twitter is easier to follow on the iPad.  I can read The Wire magazine on the iPad weeks before my print copy arrives.  And games, of course, are awesome on the iPad (I’ve been playing Plants vs Zombies lately, though I also like 10 Pin Shuffle).   The iPad is improving as a sports fan’s device of choice.  I love the MLB at Bat app, and that’s been on the device since it came out.  I’m going to cancel my DirecTV MLB subscription because I can watch all games on the iPad now.  But now there are other live sports apps for the NHL, the NFL, and MLS (along with the March Madness app).  Most of these require you to pay a little cash to watch the games, and I don’t pay for NFL or NHL, but I did get the MLS package ($40 for the whole season).  So, as a sports fan, the iPad is awesome.
  • The iPad’s not perfect, though.  I wish ESPN would open up ESPN3 to the iPad.  Also, Amazon should expand their Video on Demand to include the iPad as well.  And there are some crappy news apps like the BBC’s (though CNN’s is excellent).  And there are other problems, like the lack of cloud storage and document transfer integrated into the iPad (Dropbox is excellent, but you need to go through a few hoops to transfer files created on the iPad into Dropbox).  And there are other problems that others have discussed better than I.  Still, as a first-generation template for the future of computing (nope, I don’t have the iPad2 yet–and won’t get it for a while), the iPad is quite impressive, and it’ll only get more functional and flexible as the years go on.
  • UCLA lost their second-round March Madness game today against Florida.  UCLA was the #7 seed, and Florida was the #2 seed, so I can’t really be all that disappointed.  Still, they had plenty of chances to win, and their immaturity at the foul line and their inability to hit shots further than 2-feet from the basket pretty much doomed them.
  • SDSU barely won their 2nd game, but they won.  The majority of people where I work went to SDSU, so they’re all excited about their run.  I didn’t go to that school, so I don’t have any particular vested interest, but I always root for the west coast teams in tournaments, so I am happy they are moving on (and will play their next game in Anaheim, which should give them a nice home-state advantage).
  • I’m starting to understand Harry Partch, but I’m not completely there yet.  More on that later.
  • Recent music purchases: Sublevel’s Total Erosion, Trevor Duncan’s Final Frontiers, Indignant Senility’s Plays Wagner, and The Soulless Party’s Exploring Radio Space.  I’m in a hauntological/hypnagogical spiral.
  • Nearly done with my latest album.  I’ll be mastering it soon and distributing it via every online store I can find.  The working title is Riverrun, though that will most likely change.

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Top 10 Albums of 2010

Dec 20 2010 Published by under Feature, Music, Personal

Emeralds cover To me, 2010 will stand out as the year musicians returned to the 70s and early 80s, stole the synths, and came back to play them for us.  The Wire magazine coined the phrase “hypnagogic” to refer to the music of Rangers, Emeralds, Arial Pink’s Haunted Graffiti, and the like, music suffused with warped nostalgia.  But Boards of Canada did the same thing 15 years ago, and Ghost Box has been doing the same thing for years, and they’ve been calling THAT “hauntology” for quite a while, so I don’t know why they needed a new term.  Oh wait, these groups are mostly American, so we have to separate them from the proper British groups.  Well, that’s just stupid. And it doesn’t matter.  What matters is the quality of the music, and the quality of the music this year was as good as it has been in quite a while.  Emeralds’ album is ethereal, lush, and overwhelming.  It took me a while to get it, but once I got it, I couldn’t let go.  But the same can be said for the other works on this list–works that I have examined and celebrated both here and in my car (and between my ears) for the bulk of the year.

I love end-of-year lists not for the competition of seeing who is on top; rather, these lists always give me ideas for music to buy, since there’s no way to hear everything in a given year (unless you are paid to do this, which I’m not).  So hopefully this list will have one or two suggestions for you as you go shopping for new music in the new year.  I’ve provided links to each work to help facilitate that end. Happy holidays, and have a great 2011.

  1. Emeralds, Does It Look Like I’m Here — Unbelievably beautiful, captivating synth music from a band I’d not even heard of when the year began.  If the 80s had sounded like THIS, perhaps we wouldn’t have needed so much hair gel.
  2. Joanna Newsom, Have One on Me — I waited a long time for this album to come out, but it did not disappoint.  It’s very long, and it is hard to get through it all in one sitting (I don’t bother), but there’s enough here to study and dissect for a lifetime, and Joanna is just getting started!
  3. Pye Corner Audio Transcription Services, Black Mill Tapes Vol. 1: Avant Shards — This is just wonderfully muddy, trippy, eerie music that captivated me from the moment I first heard it.  Wire magazine called it “evil,” which made no sense unless “evil” is British for “awesome.”
  4. North, Darkside — This has been a fixture in my car for a few months now.  It’s the best thing Hyperdub has released since the last Burial CD, and that’s saying something.  Wonderful, weird, twisted synthpop.
  5. Rangers, Suburban Tours — Each song on this guitar-swirl album sounds like the engineer pushed “record” halfway through.  If there is such a thing as “hypnagogic,” then you’ll find it here–AOR radio from the 80s squished into knots and reimagined by punks.  Awesome.
  6. Pan Sonic, Gravitoni — Pan Sonic’s last, great work was too much like their earlier music to place any higher on my list, but this is a band who redefined electronic music and whose output will be respected and revered long after the concept of “electronic music” has been shelved.  A final, great summary of a truly great band.
  7. Ghost Box Study Series (Vol 1-4) — This was the Ghost Box filler year, when they released a bunch of singles that, together, make one of the best albums of the year.  The Broadcast & the Focus Group single is of particular note–a continuation of their 2009 collaboration that is every bit as wonderful.  I can’t wait for 2011 and a new Broadcast album (perhaps?  perhaps?).
  8. Philip Jeck, An Ark for the Listener — As always, Touch records stands at the top of the mountain in electronic and experimental music.  This was a wonderful, inspiring work from one of the label’s stalwarts–an artist who manages to create symphonies using only turntables.
  9. Frank Bretschneider, EXP — I’ve always loved Bretschneider’s music for its grooviness, but this year’s effort was wonderful because it pared down the grooves into their component elements and turned dance music into an abstraction (which is what it always has been anyways).  Yes, clicks & cuts live!
  10. Arcade Fire, The SuburbsI know that this is the only album on this list that anyone has actually heard of, but don’t let that fact diminish the quality and inventiveness of this Canadian group’s third effort.  If the world is lucky, they are the band of the future, and this was only the beginning.

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Top 10 Albums of the 1990s

Nov 17 2010 Published by under Feature, Internet/Media, Music, Personal

In the Aeroplane over the Sea album cover

It’s been over ten years, so I think enough time has lapsed to look at the music of the 90s objectively.  But that’s not really what this list is about.  I culled this list from my own listening habits over the past decade-plus.  The criteria is simple: to make the list, the work had to have been released in the 9os (duh), has to be in my iTunes directory today (before I conceived of this list), and it has to be something I continue to listen to on a regular basis.  So that’s why there’s no Nirvana or Nine Inch Nails here.  Sorry, dudes, your music is great, but it’s not in my catalog right now.  Oh, and I wanted to include The Conet Project’s Recordings of Shortwave Numbers Stations, and while it is on my computer, I honestly don’t listen to it on a regular basis (though its importance is even more obvious now).

So it’s a biased and a (somewhat) arbitrary list of great music from the 90s.  But isn’t every list biased and arbitrary?  At least I own up to it.

One final thought: most of the music here was released in 1997 and 1998, two of the best years for music in decades.  No one talks about this fact, but those years are right up there with 1968, 1977, and 1984 for sheer volume of amazing music.

  1. Neutral Milk Hotel, In the Aeroplane Over the Sea
  2. Boards of Canada, Music Has the Right to Children
  3. Tricky, Maxinquaye
  4. Massive Attack, Mezzanine
  5. Pan Sonic, A
  6. Radiohead, Ok Computer
  7. Belle & Sebastian, If You’re Feeling Sinister
  8. Portishead, Portishead
  9. Chris Watson, Outside the Circle of Fire
  10. The Caretaker, Selected Memories from the Haunted Ballroom

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Best so far of 2010 is…

Jul 26 2010 Published by under Music

Sadly, The future is no longer what it was

It’s past the midpoint of 2010 by about a month.  A lot of great music has been released in the past 7 months: Joanna Newsom’s Have One on Me, Pan Sonic’s Gravitoni, Flying Lotus’s Cosmogramma, Frank Bretschneider’s EXP, Emeralds’ Does It Look Like I’m Here? Dolphins into the Future’s The Music of Belief, and Autechre’s Oversteps, to name just the stuff I’ve been listening to.

But one work stands above all these, has invaded my listening space like on other…and it came out in 2009.  It’s Leyland Kirby’s Sadly, The Future Is No Longer What It Was.  I’ve reviewed it already, but I thought I’d reassert the magnitude of this work again.  It’s easily the best album of the current decade, even if it was released in the tail end of the last.  It’s a long, difficult album, but it overwhelms me at every turn.

Absolutely essential listening.

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R.E.M.’s Fables (and my own)

Jul 16 2010 Published by under Music, Personal

REM's "Fables of the Reconstruction" cover

At the end of the day, when there are no friends, when there are no lovers, who are you going to call for?  What do you have to change?

–R.E.M., “Good Advices”

R.E.M.’s Fables of the Reconstruction was given the deluxe edition treatment this week–a remastered original CD and an extra CD featuring demos the band did in Athens just before flying to London to record the work with Joe Boyd.  As deluxe editions go, this one is excellent simply because the second disk is not only a great listen but previously unreleased (for the most part), therefore making the whole thing worth purchasing even if you already own the album.  And, yes, I bought my copy.  When the first notes of “Feeling Gravity’s Pull” started up, I was suddenly taken back in time to 1985, to a point in my own musical history that has few parallels. Continue Reading »

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In Praise of Pan Sonic

Jun 17 2010 Published by under Music, Personal

I’m no musician; I’m more of a dabbler, really.  But I create stuff and share it with others.  One of the most common complaints I’ve received about my music is that it is too sparse–that there aren’t enough things going on.  “It needs something….else,” a friend once told me.  When pressed, he couldn’t identify exactly what was missing–just that there wasn’t enough sound there (or there there, perhaps).  And he was probably right, but the problem with creating music is that each element added to a mix needs to blend with all the other elements.  Add something, and suddenly everything else sounds different.  More often than not, those added sounds just create a muddled mess.

It is so easy to create complex music today.  There are endless tracks available in even the cheapest audio workstations; there are endless plug-ins that can be used to make every individual track different; and there are seemingly endless combinations within each plug-in to customize sounds even further.  For many musicians (especially novices like myself), it seems almost like cheating if we don’t stretch the software to its breaking point, adding tweaks and overdubs and all sorts of variations to every single song, every single track, every single plug-in–whether they need it or not.

Most of the time, songs don’t need that level of complexity.  A song is usually a pretty simple thing: a melody, a beat, a hook.  But once those elements are figured out, the creative process kicks in, and it’s hard to stop tweaking, enhancing, expanding.  Back when it cost real money to record music (studio time and all), there were good reasons to stop tweaking.  Now?  Money is no object; time is no object.  But the end result often suffers.

Because I’m keenly aware of the pitfalls of overproduction, I find myself drawn to music that resists such complexity.  I love artists that craft interesting music out of the most elemental sounds, artists who recognize that less is way more interesting (and more challenging) than more.  I’m not talking about classical music or folk music that is designed for a quartet or a piano or acoustic guitar; that stuff is fine, but it’s designed for simplicity.  There’s no challenge there.  Rather, I’m talking about music that has been deliberately pared down to its basic elements.  I’m talking about artists who create unique and memorable sounds and then have the guts to leave those sounds alone. I’m talking about artists like Young Marble Giants, whose entire output consists of simple beats, two-finger synth melodies, and simple guitar licks–crafted in utterly beautiful, brilliant ways.  I’m talking about The White Stripes, who create epics out of a guitar, a drum set, and a voice.  I’m talking about Tom Waits songs featuring an organ, a trash can, and his nearly-dead voice.  I’m talking about Chris Watson’s wonderful recording of a cheetah’s growl.  I’m talking about the minimalist orchestra music of Amiina.  I’m talking about The Caretaker’s and William Basinski’s slowly-dying recordings of the past.

Most of all, however, I’m talking about Pan Sonic, the anchorite monks of electronic noise whose last album, Gravitoni, is released this month.  If anyone embodies this aesthetic, it’s them.

My introduction to Pan Sonic came in 1999 with their third album, A.  I was familiar with a lot of electronic music at that time–the typical stuff like Orbital, Autechre, Boards of Canada, Prodigy, Chemical Brothers, etc–but when the first hums and snaps of “Maa” (first track on A) came out of my speakers, something clicked.  This is it, I thought at the time.  This is what I’d been searching for (even if I hadn’t been aware of the search until that moment).  I was amazed by the simplicity–low, resonating, overpowering tones; intense buzzing and wheezing noise; and especially the clean, crisp, snapping click beats.  This is electronic music, music crafted from the very elements of electricity.   I was enthralled.  I went back and got their first two works, Vakio and Kulma.  I picked up their live recordings.  I picked up the solo work by Mika Vainio and Ilpo Väisänen.  As each new album came out, I would spend weeks dissecting every second.  I’d post reviews on my web site.  I’d spread the word to whomever would listen.  Before their four-CD set Kesto came out, I scoured the web looking for information on the work and then forwarded that information on to Phinnweb, the guys who ran the only Pan Sonic web site on the web.  In fact, I scoured the Phinnweb Pan Sonic discography page and bought everything I could that had anything to do with the band, including a DVD that featured Pan Sonic performing on an instrument created by legendary Finnish electronic composer Erkki Kurrenniemi.  The DVD was PAL-encoded, so I went out and bought a DVD player that played PAL disks (great investment–that thing let me buy the complete Blake’s 7 series that is only available on PAL).

Pan Sonic uses custom made instruments (made by Jari Lehtinen, a friend and unofficial “third member” of the group).  I don’t know much about these, but I’m guessing they follow the rules for most synthesizers and drum machines–they use oscillators, filters, and envelopes; they feature sine and square waves and different types of noise.  These various elements, configured in different ways, produce beats, tones, noises, and chords–the bread and butter of electronic music.  But in Pan Sonic’s hands, these instruments manage to create beats, tones, noises, and chords that are richer, sharper, more interesting, and more “pure” than anyone else’s.  Take the snare sound in “Vaihtovirta” off Aaltopiiri, for example.  On the surface, it’s just a snap, like a thousand other snap sounds you’ll hear if you listen to enough electronic music.  But listen again–there’s a warmth to that snap (created, most likely, by a built-in reverb in the instrument).  At full volume (Pan Sonic’s preference), the snap sounds like a microscopic bullet shot into a thin sheet of ice.

What makes this sound even more impressive is way in which Pan Sonic presents it–sparsely.  Their music is incredibly simple: some beats, some tones, and some noise.  There are usually only about four or five different sounds at work in a Pan Sonic song; some of the sounds are in the high frequencies, some in the mid, and some in the low.  Rarely do sounds overwhelm one another; each one is given space to build and to inhabit its frequency range.  As a result, that snare snap in “Vaihtovirta” is wonderful because we can focus on it so easily.  I find interesting sounds far more exciting than interesting songs, so this focus on sound alone is infectious.  That’s not to say that Pan Sonic’s music merely fills space, however; the songs and the song structures are equally compelling, often moving from silence to noise and back again within a simple three-or-four minute opus.  This was made possible, in part, because Pan Sonic usually recorded their music live in studio–unlike almost every other electronic artist (or just artist, for that matter, since the advent of computer recording equipment).  That live feel in their music allowed for spontaneity, to be sure, but it also brought a freshness to the feel of the music–the sense that only music created in a moment can provide (mistakes and all).

Above all, however, I am amazed by Pan Sonic’s consistency.  Everything they have every created is memorable.  Yes, their music shares some common elements across every one of their albums, and some might call that repetitive.  However, I don’t.  To me, they are craftsmen who use the same tools and the same elements to create as many different, unique, and ingenious works that they can.  Their biggest album, the four-CD Kesto, was founded upon the triptych works of Francis Bacon, who routinely created three different paintings on the same subject as a way to explore the many faceted nature of those subjects.  To me, Pan Sonic’s music (not only Kesto but all of their works) took up a similar exercise–to explore how many different ways they could use the same basic tools to create music.  If you listen to all of their music, from 1995′s Vakio to 2010′s Gravitoni, you’ll hear an incredible range of sounds and musical styles, from minimalist techno to maximalist noise.

And now we have an answer to the question: how many years can Pan Sonic use the same elements to create new musical ideas? The answer is: 15.  Yes, Gravitoni is (apparently) their last album as a group.  The two have been solo artists for some time now, and they both plan to go their separate ways to pursue their individual interests.  But before they went away entirely, they gave us an amazing album that functions like a concluding chapter in the Pan Sonic story.  Like all good conclusions, this one summarizes everything that came before and offers a final parting thought by which to remember their legacy.  So spread across this album’s eleven songs and 52 minutes, there are beautiful and ugly and terrifying beats; overpowering caverns of noise; deep, gurgling bass lines; waves of sonic steam; and sine waves and square waves and flashing waves and distressed waves and on and on.  Some of the highlights include “Corona,” which must be the audio equivalent to a voyage into the sun; “Radio Qurghonteppa,” which features a killer bass line (grinding gears churning through dead bodies, I think); and “Kaksoisvinokas/Twinaskew,” an eerie song that includes actual vocal samples (very rare in the Pan Sonic world).

And then there’s the last track, “Pan Finale” (see above), which really does sound like a finale, encompassing every single one of these sounds in an almost montage-like way to end the album and their career, starting with propulsive beats, adding in techno noodles and waves of spooky tones, then pushing these tones further and further towards a wall of noise and distortion, grinding and churning around the beat, washing us in a bath of white death.  This is followed by a pause, where the beats and noodles reemerge; followed again by a powerful buzzsaw noise of pain, which dies into a long, slow tone that moves from left to right and back again as it dies.  And, in the very end, at the very last second, there’s a snap, a crunch, a burst of noise–and then silence.

In all, Gravitoni is an amazing end to an amazing career.  I’ve been listening to it for over a week and find myself wanting to go back and re-listen everything that this band has created.  To me, as a wanna-be musician, their music is both inspiring and intimidating.  I hope someday to create beats that are half as good as theirs–and when I do, I hope I have the guts to then leave those beats alone to grow and build and to live within my songs.  Mostly, however, I’m humbled by their ability to follow a musical path for such a long time and with such amazing success.

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It’s Here!

Feb 22 2010 Published by under Music

It’s here!  It’s Joanna Newsom’s brand new 3-CD, 2 hour opus, Have One on Me.  Her last album, Ys, was one of the finest works of the last decade, and I’ve been waiting and waiting for new music from her to come out ever since I first heard “Emily.”  And now my wait is over, and now the listening begins.  Hopefully, I’ll have something to say about the work in a few days.

Go buy this nowNow now now now now now now now now now!

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Top 25/Bottom 10: January 2000-December 2009

Angels win 2002 World Series

Top 25

  1. Angels win 2002 World Series–At my father’s funeral in 2005, I talked about our shared love of sports, and the point I made to illustrate this love was him calling me after the Angels won the Series for the first time.  That’s how much this meant to me (and to him).
  2. The Wire: When a postmortem is written about the American experiment, this show will be singled out as a perfect illustration of how the country fell.  The detailed way in which the show demonstrated corruption, complacency, and stagnation at all levels of bureaucracy and business, mixed with the systematic defeat of anyone and everyone trying to make things better, says more about the last decade than a million hours of campaign commercials and governmental panels ever could.  It’s the most essential work of art of this century, and it will be one of the lasting gifts of our generation to generations to come.
  3. William Basinski‘s The Disintegration Loops and The River–I helped to generate interest in William Basinski’s work when I worked at the now-defunct Stylus Magazine.  All of his work is wonderful, but these two works shine above all other music from the last decade (even though they both are really over 30 years old now).
  4. Children of Men: The best film of the decade is also the most amazing science fiction films ever conceived.  Clive Owen’s acting, Alfonso Cuarón’s directing, and Emmanuel Lubezki’s cinematography are the three pillars in this film, which takes us on a journey through a world without children and all the chaos and confusion that this fact produces.  It’s a spellbinding, amazing work of art.
  5. Barak Obama–2nd best night of the decade (behind the night the Angels won the series) was the night that Obama won the Presidency.  And while he’s been attacked left and right for the past year, he’s still standing and he’s moving slowly but surely toward change.  I still believe.
  6. Apple’s iPod and iPhone–When I used to carry around a portable CD player and 50 CDs, I would dream of a device that could store my music in my pocket.  And then I got an iPod.  And then I got another iPod.  And then I got an iPhone.  And then I gave my first iPhone to my friend and got a new one and we both started using ours together.  And it was good.
  7. Tivo–Oh hell yes.
  8. Idiocracy–Funniest movie of the decade, and the most accurate.  We don’t have to wait 500 years for this world to come into existence; I see this kind of stupid every single day.
  9. Sigur Rós‘s Agaetis Byrjun, ( ), Takk…, and Hvarf – Heim–Band of the decade?  I think so.  Their music has defined much of the genre that is usually known as “post rock,” even as their emerging popularity has alienated the band from the critics, most of whom see the band as sell-outs because they are successful.  And yes their last album wasn’t as good as their previous work; but it’s still way better than 99.99% of all music ever, so I’ll give them some slack.  Oh, and Amiina is awesome too!
  10. Joanna Newsom’s Ys–I put this CD in my car shortly after I bought it in 2007 and it’s still in there.  It’s one of the only examples of high-quality poetry brought to life through music.
  11. The Venture Brothers–Poetry of an entirely different stripe, this series is the vanguard of Adult Swim, itself the vanguard of popular entertainment for quite some time.  It’s part Hardy Boys, part Superfriends, part Six Million Dollar Man, part dada, part I Saved Hitler’s Brain, and part…well, part everything else I can come up with.  Oh my flipping zombie Jesus is this show good.
  12. Tod Dockstander’s Aerial–Decades in the making, this is a magnum-opus from an electronic music pioneer who never really had much of a chance to practice his art back in the 60s because he lacked the credentials to use the very rare and very expensive technologies found in some high-level universities and few other places.  This is an exceptional trilogy of albums that puts Dockstander front and center in the modern world of experimental music.
  13. NetflixIt took me a while to get into this (their initial catalogue was rather minimal), but now it’s practically a religion, even for people like my mom who know next to nothing about computers.  She checks her email and her Netflix queue.  Oh, and they forced Americans to use the word “queue,” too.  That’s awesome.
  14. The Caretaker: The Complete Digital CollectionUnbelievably important music from the guy who was originally known as V/VM.  The entire catalogue is worth owning; more than that, it’s affordable.  This guy pioneered the online distribution of music.  Most of his catalogue was originally available for free download.  But I felt that I owed it to him to buy the collection and support this wonderful artist’s work into another decade (which has begun in earnest with Leyland Kirby’s latest release).
  15. World of Warcraft–This is #1 on my wife’s “Bottom 10″ list for the decade.  I play it too much–and have for several years.  I got hooked when I saw that I could create a druid alchemist.  How cool is that?  Not that alchemy or druidism in WoW have anything to do with actual druids or alchemy, but it’s still fun to imagine living within a mythological world.
  16. Boards of Canada‘s Geogaddi and The Campfire Headphase–Boards of Canada’s contribution to the music world in the last decade consists of two fascinating albums and some EPs.  These are exceptional works, and they extend the ideas from Music Has the Right to Children in interesting ways.  I still check BoC’s website every day to see if there’s news of their latest release.  I bet I’m not the only one.
  17. Amazon Prime–I grew up in Riverside, about 60 miles from Los Angeles at a time when I had to go into LA to find any decent music or bookstores.  I dreamed of a day when I would live in a decent town where I could buy any of the weird stuff that I read about in magazines.  And then the Internet showed up and with it came Amazon, the first and still best stop for online shopping.  I now live in a town that is over 100 miles from the nearest pocket of civilization, and the only reason a place like this is even partially tolerable is Amazon Prime, which allows me to buy whatever I want and not pay for shipping (well, I pay $75 a year, but you have no idea how much stuff my wife and I get on Amazon).
  18. Neal Stephenson’s Anathem–Read it recently and loved it.  I’ve loved all of his novels (though the Baroque Cycle is a tough haul).  I love the fact that the kernel of this novel’s story is taken from the Long Now project.
  19. Tim Hecker‘s Radio Amor, Harmony in Ultraviolet, and An Imaginary Country–I first got into Hecker because Amour was based around shortwave radio signals he recorded in Central America (shortwave being one of my fascinations).  But everything this artist has created in the past few years is truly beautiful and challenging (a difficult combination, indeed).  Highly recommended.
  20. Stow, Scotland–My wife and I took our parents to the UK in 2006.  We spent a week at a small farmhouse in this town.  It was wonderful.
  21. Ableton Live–This is the past, present, and future of electronic music composition.  This German company will dominate the next decade because of their wise decision to merge their software with Cycling ’74′s epochal Max/MSP.  Max for Live debuted in November 2009 and will be the basis for more music in the coming decade than the vocoder was in the Noughts.
  22. Top Gear–I care very little about cars, but I love this show.  It proves that adult men can make fun of each other intelligently and with style.  Plus it’s one of the few things my wife and I enjoy watching together.
  23. Lord of the RingsThe movies were fantastic, but what I love even more is the fact that these films spearheaded the interest in fantasy and mythology.  It’s partly because of this film that I’m able to teach a class on mythology at my college.
  24. Patton Oswalt–I’ve been a fan since his 1996 HBO special (which I taped and watched over and over).  He’s more popular than ever now, and his comedy just keeps getting stronger.
  25. Longplayer–A wonderful idea.  Here’s hoping it lasts!

Bottom 10

  1. George W. Bush
  2. Dick Cheney
  3. Donald Rumsfeld (really, it’s a three-way tie for first)
  4. Rush Limbaugh/Glenn Beck/Fox News
  5. People who don’t understand the difference between “were” and “where”
  6. Terrorists of all stripes (from the 9/11 attackers to the Wall Street thugs to Republican fearmongers)
  7. Boston
  8. Reality television
  9. 99.99% of all entertainment
  10. Summers in El Centro, CA

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Best Albums 2000-2009

Dec 29 2009 Published by under Music

Cover of Basinski's Disintegration Loops

Rather than pick and choose between different albums, I’m focusing on artists here.  Sigur Ros released a lot of music in the past decade, and it’s all (or nearly all) worthy, so I just lump it all together here in the #2 spot.  The same goes for Basinski, The Caretaker, Boards of Canada, and so on.  Mind you, I don’t add everything by these artists–only the cream of their crop (so to speak).   My attitude is: why focus on one work when so many great artists created multiple works of incredibly high quality?

As a result, I think you’ll find that the top albums list comes out to about 29 individual works (and more, if you count The Caretaker’s work individually).  That doesn’t include the multiple-CD releases here like The River and Kesto.  What does this mean?  Despite the near-death of the music industry, there’s still a hell of a lot of great music out there.

  1. William Basinski’s The Disintegration Loops I-IV and The River
  2. Sigur Rós’s Agaetis Byrjun, ( ), Takk…, and Hvarf – Heim
  3. Joanna Newsom’s Ys
  4. Tod Dockstander’s Aerial #1, #2, and #3
  5. The Caretaker: The Complete Digital Collection
  6. Boards of Canada’s Geogaddi and The Campfire Headphase
  7. Tim Hecker’s Radio Amor, Harmony in Ultraviolet, and An Imaginary Country
  8. Pan Sonic’s Aaltopiiri and Kesto
  9. The White Stripes’s De Stijl, White Blood Cells, Elephant, and Get Behind Me Satan
  10. Radiohead’s Kid A, Amnesiac, Hail to the Thief, and In Rainbows

Honorable Mentions (in alphabetical order)

  • The Advisory Circle’s Other Channels
  • Amiina’s Kurr
  • Antony & The Johnsons’ I Am a Bird Now and The Crying Light
  • Gevorg Dabaghyan’s Miniatures: Masterworks for Armenian Duduk
  • Fennesz’s Endless Summer, Venice, and Black Sea
  • Flying Lotus’s Los Angeles
  • Hildur Guðnadóttir’s Without Sinking
  • Jacob Kirkegaard’s 4 Rooms, Eldfjall, and Labyrinthitis
  • Kode9 & The Spaceape’s Memories of the Future
  • Leyland Kirby’s Sadly, The Future Is No Longer What It Was
  • Nick Cave & The Bad Seed’s Abattoir Blues/The Lyre of Orpheus
  • Random Inc.’s Jerusalem: Tales Outside the Framework of Orthodoxy
  • Rechenzentrum’s Director’s Cut and Silence
  • Stars of the Lid’s The Tired Sounds of Stars of the Lid and And Their Refinement of the Decline
  • The Silk Road: A Musical Caravan
  • Tom Waits’s Alice, Blood Money, and Real Gone

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