Wednesday, September 30, 2009

SOTD 10/1: If you didn't know better, you'd swear it was 1964


when you listen to Mayer Hawthorne's retro Stax, Motown, soul driven songs. and when Michael Jackson died, let's face it, who didn't listen to ABC and 1,2,3 and think "damn. that's good."

you'll think the same thing after this, too:

Your Easy Lovin' Ain't Pleasin' Nothin' by Mayer Hawthorne

many thanks to I Am Fuel, You Are Friends for the find, it's an excellent blog, go visit it

Monday, September 28, 2009

SOTD 9/29: I try not to repeat too often, but the Avett Brothers have a new release


and by all accounts it's excellent. I love the Avett Brothers. This song isn't the most upbeat of their repertoire, but TODAY their new album, I and Love and You is released. Listen to this while you open a new browser window and buy it. Go on, I'll wait...


I and Love and You by the Avett Brothers

SOTD 9/28: Early States...can't quite put my finger on it


but there's something vaguely familiar about Early States - the indie music that has a more epic, almost Alarm-like epic sweep? the short choruses, repetitively drawn out? The ringing and chiming guitars vaguely reminiscent of four young lads from Dublin, maybe? I'm not sure what it is exactly, but there's just enough little pieces of things I recognize that, when put all together, I really dig it.

Smoke In My Eyes
by Early States

Thursday, September 24, 2009

SOTD 9/25: Is anything new by The Postal Service ever coming out? Cause I'll wait and dig this Jeff Caudill till it does...


Cause I liked them a lot. But today, I came across this cover of The District Sleeps done by Jeff Caudill. He was in Gameface way back when, and I have a random couple of Caudill solo songs that pop up on shuffle now and then, and there's something about his earnest singing that I really appreciate. Plus, I love the Postal Service version of this song, though it always felt like it should be sung in heartfelt manner by a guy with an acoustic guitar...

District Sleeps Tonight (Postal Service cover) by Jeff Caudill

Thanks to Can You See The Sunset for the find. It's an excellent site, check it out...

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

sorry ma, forgot to let out the cat – a replacements comp

sorry ma, forgot to let out the cat – a replacements comp

SOTD 9/23: Time keeps movin' on, and so does Yo La Tengo


you've loved yo la tengo for forever. we all have. their new album is flippin' awesome. they're gonna be at the Vic Theater on October 6th. you can see this song played live, then, I betya, and it does all the excellent things that every other yo la tengo song you ever loved does, so until then, check it out..

Periodically Double or Triple by Yo La Tengo

Monday, September 21, 2009

SOTD 9/22: I'm not even gonna pretend I've ever heard of the Parson Red Heads


Thanks to I Am Fuel, You Are Friends for today's find - the band The Parson Red Heads. They remind me a little of those early Blake Babies albums where Juliana Hatfield sang in that slightly off-kilter back up, but not totally, way - remember? now throw in a Farfisa organ, or maybe it's a Hammond B3, but still...

dig the handclaps. I do.

Punctual As Usual by The Parson Red Heads

SOTD 9/21: Julie Peel...return of the singer/songwriters who make Mondays bearable


Thanks to Music for Kids Who Don't Read Good for today's selection - Julie Peel. I'd have pegged her as a female Elliot Smith, someone who mines the sadder end of the pop/acoustic spectrum, but never would I have suspected her of being French - just like I didn't think Phoenix was, either. I love her voice, the quiet nature of her songs, and the easy pace...perfect for a Monday that reminds me why I think I should have been with enough resources to never have to work again...



Living in the Movies by Julie Peel

Alone by Julie Peel

Thursday, September 17, 2009

SOTD 9/18: Remember when rock music from Minneapolis meant something? The Evening Rig does...


And I do, too. The mighty Replacements. Husker Du. Hell, even Soul Asylum and Prince. Minneapolis was THE place for music to come from for...oh, a couple years. Maybe a little less. It's rockness seems to have died down, at least on a national scale, but today's pick, The Evening Rig, seems, in my book, poised to re-assert the case for Minneapolis being a rock and roll town. With raw and angry guitars, bash and smash drums, and, a personal fave, songs about drinkin', The Evening Rig is heir apparent to the classic Minneapolis rock tradition. I mean, check out the totally rippin' riff in The Steve McQueens - it's straight off an Aerosmith record. and not in a bad way...Love 'em, cause I do...

The Steve McQueens by The Evening Rig

Goddamn, I Could Use a Drink by The Evening Rig

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

SOTD 9/17: Thao and The Get Down Stay Down


I find myself, sometimes, drawn to beautiful noise, and Thao Nguyen brings them - reminiscent of Andrew Bird, (is that whistling? a theremin?), and embodying the current vogue in indie rock to have a rather shuffling drumming underlying thoughtful, plaintive lyrics, Thao and the GDSD craft excellent indie pop for the coming Autumn...


Know Better, Learn Faster by Thao and The Get Down Stay Down

Monday, September 14, 2009

SOTD 9/15: no more Mr. Maudlin Sentimental Argument for bands I irrationally love...Oh. Wait. Except for Mission of Burma...then that's it. Promise


Absolutely awesome noise rock, post punk magic from the guys who INVENTED this kinda music - Mission of Burma. Sounds like the Buzzcocks, and early Clash, and Material Issue all had a baby and named it Lil' Mission of Rockness. Great, great song...

1, 2, 3, Party! by Mission of Burma

I know, I'm a zealot, but...

U2 is a fantastic live band. There's no two way about it. Protest all you want about the crass commercialism, the self-aggrandizement, the whatever....the simple fact remains: U2 is four guys with two guitars, a 4 piece drum kit (granted, with a bunch of cymbals, but it's snare, bass, tom, floor tom - that's it) and the same old Vox amps they've always used, and they raise a fantastic racket.

And that it comes in a wrapper that looks like this:







can be disconcerting to some, but it contains every contradiction of U2 - the sacred and the profane, the money and the soul, the sound and visual. I think what I like about U2, and pardon this sideways trip into weakass philosophizing, is that they ARE the duality of what each person is - our best and worst selves, our hopes and our weaknesses. I know, I know, I swear I've not been getting high, either. It just seemed to me, sitting there looking at this GIGANTIC stage and the Lilliputian size of the band and listening as they turned a 70,000 seat football stadium into an intimate venue, that there has to be an acknowledgement of how hard that is to do and what an artistic triumph it is to do it well. But the contradictions were rife, literally seconds after thanking the charitable donations of Americans for sending 35 million African kids to school, he thanked LiveNation (the concert monopoly) and Blackberry for helping sponsor the tour (and, ostensibly, filling his pockets with enough cash for him to bring the message to the people.)

It was an experience - that's for sure.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

SOTD 9/10: It's kinda old, but Secret Machines..


have a direct connection to my boys from Dublin - The Edge has been quoted as calling Benjamin Curtis, former guitarist for Secret Machines and currently in School of Seven Bells, "brilliant" and on the Vertigo album, Edge used a bunch of effects pedals that Curtis built. Or at least I'm pretty sure I read that some where. A few minutes on Google could remedy that, I suppose, but I'm feeling a tad lazy today...

So anyway, without further ado, I think there's a direct line to draw from my boys in U2 to this wonderful song by the now apparently on hiatus Secret Machines...

Lightning Blue Eyes by Secret Machines

SOTD 9/9/09 - It's a big day, and no, not because Beatles Rock Band is being released...

I simply don't share as much Beatles love as I should. I understand their place in the rock pantheon and all, but I haven't voluntarily put on a Beatles song in years. Not as some kiss-off to rock greats or anything, but there's nothing new there, I've heard every Beatles song literally a million times.

So, no. that's not it. I'm in full-on countdown mode for my own peculiar rock obsession: my adoration of U2. But rather than play some New Year's Day bootleg (talk about a song you've heard a million times...and I STILL LOVE IT) I'm gonna spend the rest of the week playing songs by bands that were influenced by U2. Or at least influenced by bands who were influenced by U2, if that makes sense. Which brings us to this band out of Austin, Texas - The Rocketboys. I know, I know, not the best name, but listen and you'll hear the influence of Coldplay (hipsters, quick, recoil in horror!!) and my boys from Dublin.

I know it's not hip, cutting edge, or cool, or whatever to have U2 love. I know they represent a music monolith whose output, by many, is viewed as an artistically uneven enterprise geared strictly for profit. But you know what? I don't care. So dig The Rocketboys, cause they're really good. Simple as that...

We Are A Lighthouse by The Rocketboys

Like Ice In Water by the Rocketboys

Monday, September 7, 2009

SOTD 9/7: A brief stroll down memory lane. Sort of.

I remember growing up, there used to be big rock festivals, not the Lollapaloozas and whatchamahoozas that all you kids get nowadays. It was things like "The Rockford Speedway Jam" or "The Mississippi River Jam" and you've have a band like the Cars on the bill with Judas Priest and REO Speedwagon. Those were the days. and one of the bands that always played at those shows? Heart. Rockin' chicks. Awesome guitar parts. Good tuneful music. I'd never go out of my way to go to a Heart show, just as I never owned a Heart album, but they DID have some really spectacular songs. I don't want to be one of those "music was so much better when I was a kid" old guys, but I think the current tide in music has drifted much further away from good songs and mutated into hooks and beats. Which is fine, music changes, but there's something right and good about honoring great songs today. Which is why I love this video so much - The Decemberists, who still honor great songwriting are covering "Crazy On You" by Heart...perfect.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

SOTD 9/4: I used to miss power pop. But now I don't cause The Balconies rule


I dare you to try to ignore the jangly not quite distorted guitars, the absolutely perfect background "ba-ba-ba-ba-ah-a" background vocals - you won't be able to, I guarantee it.

According to Quick Before It Melts, The Balconies are from Ottawa - further cementing my belief, as it if NEEDED it, that Canada turns out way more music I love than nearly anywhere else.

So listen up and enjoy...

Smells Like Secrets by The Balconies

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

SOTD 9/2: The Beatings...if superchunk and husker du had a baby..



they'd name it The Beatings.

Apparently around for a while, I just today heard of The Beatings and their 2006 release Hold On To Hand Grenades. Their new album Late Season Kids is due out shortly. I hear traces of all my fave rawk heroes here...love it like I do.

Feel Good Endings by The Beatings

Bury You by The Beatings