mixtapes for weathers and moods / music for good days and bad days


For nonstop listening of players' tracks you must login to DEEZER music site! / A lejátszók számainak zavartalan hallgatásához be kell lépned a DEEZER zeneoldalra.

2019. szeptember 24., kedd

055 ALTER.NATION weekly favtraX 24-09-2019

ALTER.NATION #55
Reid Anderson, Dave King, Craig Taborn, Brittany Howard, Robbie Robertson, Liam Gallagher, David Kilgour and the Heavy Eights, Giant Sand, Chastity Belt, Vivian Girls, One True Pairing, Andrew Combs, Marco Benevento, The Juan MacLean


weekly favtraX 
2 4 - 0 9 - 2 0 1 9

"Sparklers and Snakes"




ALTER.NATION #55 on DEEZER


Composer, bassist, and electronicist Reid Anderson is a founding member of the globally acclaimed jazz trio the Bad Plus.
David King is an American drummer and composer from Minneapolis. He is known for being a founding member of the jazz groups The Bad Plus (with Reid Anderson and Ethan Iverson) and Happy Apple (with Michael Lewis and Erik Fratzke) although he is active in many other projects
Craig Taborn is an award-winning, in-demand pianist as a soloist, bandleader, and a sideman. His technical skills, combined with intellectual curiosity and stylistic versatility, have earned him numerous opportunities to collaborate with a range of recognized masters in diverse styles of contemporary jazz.
Reid Anderson, Dave King, Craig Taborn - Sparklers and Snakes from Golden Valley Is Now
...Their fixed focus was on song forms. The notion of "soloists" was thrown out the window. The music is tightly scripted and pays careful attention to texture, color, dynamic and, to a lesser extent, hooks. Taborn's place on synths and electric and acoustic pianos is central as the most recognizable center of melody, but his bandmates stick very close. Elements of indie electronica meld with lighthearted prog, easy flowing indie rock, and D.I.Y. electro-pop...  This date isn't about showing musical muscle; it's about composing, playing, and arranging songs -- simple instrumental ones -- with creativity and panache. This trio accomplish that with rawness, immediacy, collective good will, and a wacky kind of elegance.

Brittany Howard is an American musician, best known as lead vocalist and guitarist of American rock bands Alabama Shakes and Thunderbitch.
Brittany Howard - History Repeats from Jaime
Jaime is the name of Brittany Howard's sister, a sibling who died from a rare cancer when she was 13 years old. Howard began reckoning with the enduring ramifications of her loss when she started writing a memoir, an exercise that eventually led to her 2019 solo debut Jaime. Running a tight 35 minutes but containing a lifetime's worth of drama and insight, Jaime is bracing in its adventure and generosity. Trace elements of Americana can be heard -- there's nary a trace of the rockabilly roar of her ferocious Thunderbitch side project -- but Jaime could never be mistaken for an Alabama Shakes album...  It's slippery, elusive, and sober in its intent, even when its sound is decidedly woozy. Jaime plays the way memories do: specific facts get lost to a truth that gets larger as years pass, where the familiarity can be reassuring yet melancholy. Howard's embrace of all the mess of life gives Jaime its sustenance. Her audacity is apparent upon the first listen, but subsequent spins are profound and nourishing.


The chief songwriter and lead guitarist of the Band, who later moved into film (acting, producing, scoring) and a solo career.
Robbie Robertson - Beautiful Madness from Sinematic
...Throughout the album, Robertson relies on atmosphere, a vibe he builds with swathes of synthesizers, half-spoken, half-sung vocals, in the pocket rhythms, and plenty of tasty licks. Such studio precision has been a hallmark of Robertson's solo work, but Sinematic largely dispenses with darkness, at least sonically speaking... The clean funk and gleaming blues are performed with the expert panache of old pros who enjoy adding grace notes to shopworn chord changes, and that can be almost enough to compensate Robertson singing like he's an actor trying on roles...


Liam Gallagher achieved both fame and notoriety as the lead singer of British rock band Oasis, who hit their commercial peak in the '90s during the height of Brit-pop. Following the breakup of the band, he went on to form Beady Eye, and then began a career as a solo artist.
Liam Gallagher - Meadow from Why Me? Why Not.
Give Liam Gallagher considerable credit for a streak of wry self-awareness. The shrug lying within the title Why Me? Why Not. doesn't read as arrogance, it plays as a joke. Coming from a singer who once sneered at any emotion that came his way, this is a sign of maturity. The album -- his second as a solo artist -- sounds mature, too. Working once again with a bevy of producers headlined by Greg Kurstin and Andrew Wyatt, Gallagher essentially expands upon 2017's cleanly polished As You Were, relying on the same blend of comforting psychedelia and controlled six-string roar. Every song here could trace its musical roots back to Oasis -- there's a cheerful reliance on classically constructed pop tunes and heavy-booted stomps -- but Why Me? Why Not. consciously lacks the abandon that was present in even the band's last records... Granted, Gallagher isn't as potent a personality as he was a quarter-century earlier, but his middle-aged control has its charms, too. He sounds relaxed on Why Me? Why Not., maybe for the first time ever.


New Zealand singer and songwriter who proved highly influential to indie pop for his work in the Clean and as a solo act. From his earliest days as a member of legendary guitar pop trio the Clean through a long-running career as a solo artist, singer/songwriter David Kilgour stands among the most important figures on the New Zealand pop landscape.
David Kilgour and the Heavy Eights - Ngapara from Bobbie's a girl
Both on his own and with his band the Heavy Eights, David Kilgour built up a strong CV of chiming, noisy, and sometimes thickly psychedelic indie rock since the Clean stopped recording (for a while) in the early '90s. On records like 1994's Sugar Mouth or 2004's Frozen Orange, right up to 2014's End Times Undone, he's made thoughtful, tuneful albums that chime warmly as his understated vocals deliver a big, soft punch. It's a formula that has served him well for a long time, but on 2019's Bobbie's a Girl, Kilgour and his band change things up. For one thing, it's mostly an instrumental album, with Tony De Raad and Kilgour's acoustic and electric guitars carrying the main melodic weight, Thomas Bell's bass and Taane Tokona's drums subtly shading the background, and an array of carefully placed keyboards coloring in spaces here and there...


Influential alt country band whose sound evolved into a crisp mix of swing, country, rock and beatnik lyricism.Giant Sand was the primary outlet for the stylistic curveballs and sun-damaged songcraft of Howe Gelb, a Pennsylvania-born singer/guitarist who found his muse in Tucson, Arizona in the '80s. Beginning as a scrappy rock band with a psychedelic bent, Gelb and his rotating band of collaborators matured into a group that combined hard rock guitars and lonesome country twang with a dry, dusty sound that was an ideal match for Gelb's playful lyrical eccentricities.
Giant Sand - Recounting The Ballads Of Thin Line Men from Recounting The Ballads Of Thin Line Men
...A bit less than a year later, Gelb and Giant Sand issued another studio set, Recounting the Ballads of Thin Line Men, and this time they re-cut most of the tunes from the second Giant Sand LP, 1986's Ballad of a Thin Line Man. Even by Gelb's inscrutable standards, re-recording two albums in a row seems like a truly strange move, but Recounting the Ballads of Thin Line Men at least does a better job with this concept than Returns to Valley of Rain. This lineup of Giant Sand -- Gelb on guitar, keys, and vocals, Annie Dolan and Gabriel Sullivan on guitars, Scott Garber and Thøger T. Lund on bass, and Winston Watson on drums -- sounds more broken in and the members more in tune with one another on their second trip to the recording studio...


Seattle area band takes cues from the riot grrrl scene as well as angular early-'90s guitar-based indie rock.Taking cues from both the politics of the riot grrrl scene and the intricate, moody guitar-based sound of early-'90s Pacific Northwestern indie bands like Sleater-Kinney and Autoclave, Chastity Belt balanced smart, edgy music against lyrics that were often filled with goofball wit and feminist satire on their 2013 debut, No Regerts. Principal songwriter Julia Shapiro moved into deeper and more personal themes...
Chastity Belt - Split from Chastity Belt
Chastity Belt haven't really changed that much since they released their first album, No Regerts, in 2013, but the changes they have made mean a great deal. Where they previously sounded at once rough and languid, they've grown into a band whose instrumental interplay is artful without seeming pretentious, and the dry snarky wit that was a large part of their early work has faded into the middle distance as their lyrics explore more personal and introspective themes. 2019's Chastity Belt, the group's self-titled fourth album, is still clearly the work of the same band, but this music doesn't shout, it insinuates, and the tone of the conversation is intelligent and unguarded... Chastity Belt's musical evolution has been a fascinating and rewarding thing to witness, and this may be their smartest and most compelling music to date.


Trio of distortion-loving women become overnight sensations in Brooklyn punk scene. Deriving their name from the ill-fated characters featured in the work of writer/illustrator Henry Darger, the Vivian Girls (not to be confused with the "craft pop" duo of the same name) are a Brooklyn-based trio whose gritty, lo-fi tunes nod to seminal indie pop acts like Black Tambourine, Talulah Gosh, and Tiger Trap.
Vivian Girls - All Your Promises from Memory
The return of the Vivian Girls in 2019 seemingly came out of nowhere. Since they broke up, each member of the group had struck out on her own and forged a path free and clear of the band and their reputation. Their friendship brought them back together to record Memory, and fans of the band and their brand of spooky, hooky noise pop should be glad. The three bandmembers apply the musical growth they experienced in other projects -- Cassie Ramone in the Babies, Katy Goodman in La Sera, and Ali Koehler in Upset -- to this record, and working with producer Rob Barbato, they deliver plenty of songs that add the noise of punk to the sweetness of pop, sounding tough and more focused than ever...


The politically and personally charged synth rock project of former Wild Beasts bassist Tom Fleming. As One True Pairing, former Wild Beasts bassist/vocalist Tom Fleming continues to explore the complexity of masculinity as well as larger issues like class and Brexit's impact on the U.K. On 2019's One True Pairing, Fleming expressed this intersection of the personal and the political with a rough-edged set of songs that combined his rich baritone, anthemic '80s heartland rock and gritty synth pop.
One True Pairing - Blank Walls from One True Pairing
More than many artists, One True Pairing's Tom Fleming is well prepared to explore the complexities of the late 2010s. After all, he already tackled many of these subjects with Wild Beasts, a band who, over the course of five albums, eloquently explored the intersection of the personal and the political. Fleming continues to examine that fraught, inescapable relationship as One True Pairing, and though the name of his solo project comes from Internet fan fiction, his self-titled debut album couldn't be more genuine. In Wild Beasts, Fleming's resounding baritone was the perfect complement to Hayden Thorpe's falsetto as they played with different aspects of sexuality and masculinity. On his own, he sounds rougher, wearier, and more direct as he digs into the ways class and gender shaped the political climate that created Brexit, as well as more timeless conflicts. To express them, he looks back, but not fondly: One True Pairing's anti-nostalgic combination of Reagan and Thatcher-era sounds -- Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, Depeche Mode -- helps him tie together nearly four decades' worth of struggle...

Nashville singer/songwriter with a knack for pairing golden-hued, vintage country-pop with contemporary indie Americana.
Andrew Combs - Stars of Longing from Ideal Man
2017's Canyons of the Mind saw Andrew Combs hewing closely to the sepia-toned '70s singer/songwriter architecture of his previous works. Part outlaw and part coffeehouse crooner, Combs' efficacy as a modern countrypolitan torchbearer is on full display with the arrival of Ideal Man, a compelling 11-track set that looks to the cosmic country stylings of Lee Hazlewood for inspiration. Recorded live in the studio in Brooklyn with producer Sam Cohen (Kevin Morby, Benjamin Booker), Ideal Man commences with the fuzzed-out "Stars of Longing," which sees longtime collaborators Dom Billet (drums) and Jerry Bernhardt (guitarist/keyboardist/bassist) laying down a propulsive net of sound that helps elevate Combs' Walt Whitman-esque declaration of self into the upper reaches of the atmosphere...


A New York City-based keyboardist and vocalist whose sound crosses between experimental jazz, psych-pop, and catchy indie rock. An inventive keyboardist and singer, the New York-based Marco Benevento is a broadly inspired performer known for his expansive, psychedelic sound. A graduate of Berklee School of Music, Benevento's musical palette is both deep and wide with roots in modern creative jazz, indie rock, jam band, and post-rock/experimental styles.
Marco Benevento - Nature's Change from Let It Slide
Coming off his 2016 concept album The Story of Fred Short, Marco Benevento offers a slightly more straightforward if no less inventive pop effort, Let It Slide. Produced with Leon Fields & the Expressions' bandmember Leon Michels (who has also worked on such disparate recording projects as Norah Jones, Lady Wray, and his own El Michels Affair), Let It Slide finds Benevento offering songs that straddle the lines between arty indie pop, '70s soft rock, and psychedelic soul. A Berklee College of Music grad with a jazz and creative music background, Benevento has a knack for balancing memorable chorus hooks with a tactile, deeply textured, and analog-brand of instrumentation...


Centered around John MacLean and Nancy Whang, the Juan MacLean were one of the first signees to Brooklyn indie dance behemoth DFA, and they remained one of the label's most consistently first-rate acts without sticking to a predictable formula.
The Juan MacLean -  The Brighter the Light from The Brighter the Light
...The Brighter the Light collects the majority of these tracks (barring a pair of non-DFA releases), and it easily stands up to the act's three strong full-lengths. As expected from a collection of singles by a dance group, this focuses squarely on club burners -- no synth pop ballads or interstitial experiments here... The collection concludes with its title track, a dreamy blend of starry arpeggios and reflective yet buoyant pianos. A magnificent release from an act who have remained DFA's most reliable signing without ever sticking to a tried-and-true formula.
Reid Anderson, Dave King, Craig Taborn, Brittany Howard, Robbie Robertson, Liam Gallagher, David Kilgour and the Heavy Eights, Giant Sand, Chastity Belt, Vivian Girls, One True Pairing, Andrew Combs, Marco Benevento, The Juan MacLean

Nincsenek megjegyzések:

Megjegyzés küldése