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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Bob Mould. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Bob Mould. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2021. január 12., kedd

2020. szeptember 28., hétfő

"Goddess Of The Hunt" ALTER.NATION.MiX #102 - weekly favtraX 08-09-2020

ALTER.NATION #102
Artemis,The Heliocentrics, Public Enemy, Idles,Jehnny Beth,Bob Mould,Marilyn Manson,Deftones, Mastodon,The Flaming Lips, Blitzen Trapper, Frankie & the Witch Fingers, Ronnie Earl

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"Goddess Of The Hunt"




Named after the Greek goddess of hunting, Artemis is an all-female jazz collective known for their deeply sophisticated and adroit post-bop jazz. The group debuted in 2020 with their eponymous full-length.

Artemis - ArtemisGoddess Of The Hunt
The eponymous debut album from the all-star female jazz collective, 2020's Artemis showcases the group's immense compositional and improvisational depth. Named after the Greek goddess of hunting, Artemis is led by pianist Renee Rosnes and features the equally adept talents of tenor saxophonist Melissa Aldana, clarinetist Anat Cohen, trumpeter Ingrid Jensen, bassist Noriko Ueda, and drummer Allison Miller. Also on board is Grammy-winning vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant. Rosnes brought the group together in 2017 with an eye to building upon each of the member's combined skills. Consequently, while we get distinctive contributions from each player, while the album plays as a unified artistic vision. It opens with Miller's intensely kinetic "Goddess of the Hunt," her roiling groove and the song's tense melody offering a rich jumping-off point for each soloist. Jensen in particular leaps into the fray, offering frentic note clusters and wide octave leaps that further reinforce her status as one of the main heirs to Kenny Wheeler's legacy. 

Eclectic U.K.-based ensemble blending influences such as hip-hop, jazz, soundtracks, Ethiopian funk, outré electronics, and more.
The Heliocentrics - Telemetric Sounds / Telemetric Sounds
Long-running cosmic soul-jazz collective the Heliocentrics signed on with new label Madlib Invasion for their adventurous and dreamlike album Infinity of Now, released in February of 2020. Just about six months later, his fully realized follow-up Telemetric Sounds offers an ominous and decidedly more intense counterpart to the casual psychedelic drifting of its predecessor. The London-based group is known for their hallucinatory sounds and tendency to transform traditional jazz, funk, and soul elements into new alien forms. These deconstructions generally translate into friendly, curious explorations, but Telemetric Sounds is anxious, menacing, and a little bit depraved in comparison to the majority of the band's catalog. The album begins with the slow-burning title track, a tune that wanders in aimless frustration for over 13 minutes through passages of cranky synthesizer noise and tense rhythms. The players sound like they're working out uncomfortable feelings as they push through the lengthy performance, landing in a space somewhere between Sun Ra's most out there mid-'70s recordings and the fever-pitched peaks of more jam-oriented Krautrock bands like Cosmic Jokers, Guru Guru, or Agitation Free...


Influential and controversial New York rap act who gained massive cultural significance, led by the duo of Chuck D and Flavor Flav.
Let's face it: If any year needed a new album from Public Enemy, it was 2020. Faced with disease and unrest at every turn, PE returned to their original home, Def Jam, for What You Gonna Do When the Grid Goes Down?, a record that consciously reconnects with their past while addressing the present with a clear eye. At first, it's hard to avoid the chaos of the modern world, with Public Enemy pushing their "State of the Union (STFU)" and the existential digital quandary of the title track, but the record subtly shifts gears with "Public Enemy Number Won." Its title is a nod to "Public Enemy No. 1," a pivotal track from their 1987 debut, and it doesn't hide from the fact that neither Public Enemy nor their guests Mike D, Ad-Rock, and Run-DMC have been at this since the '90s. The vibe isn't necessarily nostalgic. Rather, it's an acknowledgment that the years have piled up, that PE and their peers are now not only the old guard, they're survivors. That's an undercurrent that runs through What You Gonna Do When the Grid Goes Down?: It finds room for additional cameos by Cypress Hill, Nas, Questlove, and Ice-T, fellow hip-hop veterans who have turned lifers...


A self-proclaimed "angry band" from Bristol in Southwest England, Idles take the fury of punk rock and wed it to a muscular but moody instrumental attack that matches the literate, purposeful menace of their lyrics. Idles were formed in 2010 by vocalist Joe Talbot, lead guitarist Mark Bowen, rhythm guitarist Andy S, bassist Adam Devonshire, and drummer Jon Beavis.
Idles feat.  Jehnny Beth - Ultra Mono / Ne Touche Pas Moi
On their third record in almost as many years, Idles are at their most anarchic, dialing up their comedic edge -- often including cringe-inducing, Police Academy-style sound effects -- and their manic energy. To call Ultra Mono terrible would be disingenuous, as it is still some of the most vital music being made; however, it does include the first notable misfires from a group who could seemingly do no wrong. Lyrical content aside, the band themselves are either over-committed, as with bassist Adam Devonshire's increasingly unhinged backing snarls, or underwhelming. Guitarists Mark Bowen and Lee Kiernan have few standout moments between them, demoted to creating dissonance or raising the volume, which they admittedly pull off admirably... It is hard to fault drummer Jon Beavis, whose consistent thumping has managed to stay fresh over three records. Taken at face value, the elements that make Idles great are present, including the social commentary, the sense of humor, and the cathartic justified rage... 


Acclaimed lead singer and guitarist of Hüsker Dü and later Sugar, he has also dabbled in singer/songwriter styles and electronic music.
Bob Mould - Blue HeartsLeather Dreams
A lot can happen in a year and a half. In February 2019, Bob Mould released Sunshine Rock, which in addition to reminding us that in the 2010s he was in the midst of an unexpected renaissance and making some of the strongest rock music of his life, saw him embracing a cautious optimism, celebrating the joys of life and focusing on the hard work of being a better man. September 2020 has brought another album from Mould, Blue Hearts, and his mood has taken a sharp turn into rage and frustration. Between life in a divided nation, the ongoing threat of climate change, and a global health crisis that is being ignored by the powers that be, Mould has stopped ignoring the multiple elephants in our rooms, and Blue Hearts is a fast, furious, passionate broadside, messages written as the world burns around him (in some cases literally)...


Controversial metal act that gained notoriety in the late '90s and early 2000s with shock antics and goth-glam flair.
Marilyn Manson - WE ARE CHAOS / INFINITE DARKNESS
Extending a late-era artistic renaissance with his 11th album We Are Chaos, Marilyn Manson goes three-for-three with his Loma Vista output, delivering yet another taut set of catchy earworms that retains enough of his peak-era trademarks while continuing his unexpected late-stage evolution. This time around, the elder goth statesman parts ways with creative partner Tyler Bates -- the man who assisted Manson's late-2010s comeback efforts The Pale Emperor and Heaven Upside Down -- and connects with outlaw country musician Shooter Jennings. For those expecting this to be a boots-and-beer makeover, rest assured that Jennings doesn't change the formula too much, sprinkling just the right amount of Nashville dust into the mix to color Manson's usual corrosive, ghoulish sound... That track, "Red Black and Blue," hits a raging sweet spot, joining "Perfume" and "Infinite Darkness" as the album's most classic-sounding moments...


Alternative metal quintet who evolved beyond the nu-metal era with a dynamic blend of beauty and brutality.
Deftones - OhmsPompeji
At the dawn of their fourth decade together as a band, alt-metal stalwarts Deftones crafted one of the best albums in their catalog, Ohms. Reuniting with producer Terry Date, the man behind their first four efforts (five, counting the unreleased Eros), the band attacks with full power, reinvigorated, hungry, and at a creative apex. Their most accessible work since 2000's White Pony, Ohms offers listeners plenty of substance to grab on to: for the first time in a while, tightly executed songs take precedence over heady ideas, resulting in a deeply effective and satisfying experience that balances their eras. Playing upon the concepts of resistance and polarity implied by the album's title, Deftones take their signature beauty-meets-brutality assault, searching for balance across a tightly focused ten tracks. As a unit, they haven't sounded this refreshed in years. Chino Moreno's vocals stun, careening from fevered hush to unhinged shriek without notice, while Stephen Carpenter returns to center stage armed with a bounty of riffs and a nine-string guitar. Bassist Sergio Vega and drummer Abe Cunningham bounce and bash, marking a return to groove that is rarely heard in their late-era output...



One of the most acclaimed metal bands of the new millennium, with an innovative, lyrically astute blend of progressive metal, grindcore, and hardcore.
Mastodon - Medium RaritiesAsleep in the Deep
For two decades, Atlanta's Mastodon have stubbornly followed their own path, whether it led to chart success or derision by closed-minded purists spewing across social media. Over seven studio albums, a handful of singles, splits, and EPs, this quartet hasn't released a "proper" compilation until now. Medium Rarities assembles instrumentals, live tracks, soundtrack cuts, and covers, without separating them categorically.... 



Ever-evolving band led by Wayne Coyne who became critical darlings for their lush, emotionally resonant psychedelic rock.
The Flaming Lips - American HeadFlowers Of Neptune 6
On American Head, the Flaming Lips use their storytelling skills to their fullest, combining some of their purest moods and most beautiful melodies with some of their most overtly autobiographical songwriting. Drawn from Wayne Coyne's memories of growing up in early '70s Oklahoma with his freewheeling brothers and their biker friends -- as well as his imagined version of Mudcrutch, the precursor to Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers that honed their chops in Tulsa around that time -- the album's concept is one of the band's richest in some time. At the time of American Head's release, the band compared it to Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots and The Soft Bulletin, and it's true that the album's scope and depth of feeling put it on that level. However, American Head still bears the scars of albums like The Terror, which brought a weight to the Flaming Lips' music that works especially well on these meditations on the loss of innocence...  "Flowers of Neptune 6" sets a moment of pure epiphany to a lush swath of trumpets, tympani, strings, and the sugared twang of Kacey Musgraves' backing vocals (one of several appearances the country star makes on the album) that calls to mind early '70s AM pop...



Oregon indie rockers with an eclectic style that combines elements of country, folk, indie rock, and progressive Americana.
...Inspired by George Saunders’ 2017 experimental tome, Lincoln in the Bardo and the Tibetan Book of the Dead, Earley’s lyrics take the listener on a wild and dramatic journey through rivers of waist-high water in the aftermath of a tragic car wreck and the hazy morning before a murderous moment, and from getting blitzed to the point of extinction inside a masonic temple to a stop for chips and dip before the apocalypse. Along the way, there’s also an occasion to smoke dope with Abe Lincoln and play bones with Brian Jones, slide through the ether in a dream, and confront the Intermediate States while bathed in the glow of the bardo’s light - that transitional state between death and rebirth.




Los Angeles-by-way-of-Indiana foursome whose music takes tough garage punk and runs it through a heavy psychedelic filter.
"Frankie and the Witch Fingers are a swift kick in the ass for garage psych. Their hooks are sharper, the production isn’t vintage for the sake of vintage, and the recorded material captures the energy of the band’s eccentric live performances perfectly. That’s exactly what they do once again on their new album, Heavy Roller..." - Consequence of Sound


Long-standing blues guitarist, successful both as a solo artist and as a member of Roomful of Blues. One of the finest blues guitarists to emerge during the '80s, the award-winning Ronnie Earl often straddled the line between blues and jazz, throwing in touches of soul and rock as well.
Ronnie Earl - Rise Up / Blues For J
Rise Up is Ronnie Earle's 27th album and his 13th for Canada's venerable Stony Plain label. The blues master's playing style has long been celebrated for its iconic tone and deep well of emotion. None of that changes here, but this set is topically contemporary, a reaction to the history-making year 2020. Earl offers tributes to the recently lost, and solace for those continuing to struggle on the front lines for racial and economic justice... a swinging version of Jimmy Smith's "Blues for J,"...

Artemis,The Heliocentrics, Public Enemy, Idles,Jehnny Beth,Bob Mould,Marilyn Manson,Deftones, Mastodon,The Flaming Lips, Blitzen Trapper, Frankie & the Witch Fingers, Ronnie Earl

2016. december 31., szombat

20 trax / Rolling Stone: best songs of 2016 PnM.MiX

Selection from Rolling Stone's 50 Best Songs of 2016

All corners of the music world kept booming in 2016 – even when everything else about our world looked like it was on the verge of blowing apart... Some became worldwide hits; others were lurking in the shadows. But these were the songs that hit hardest and rang truest all year long. (Rolling Stone)



Van Morrison - Going Down to Bangor 5:18
The Celtic blues king wanders down some ancient roads – the corner of Wales where the Fab Four first went on retreat with the Maharishi – to hear harmonicas in the wind and meditate on the power of Caledonia soul.

Sturgill Simpson - Keep It Between the Lines 4:01
Having won his crown as the king of outlaw country, Simpson leaves that pigeonhole behind. He lays out advice for his newborn son ("Don't turn mailboxes into baseballs/Don't get busted selling at 17") with the R&B horns of Sharon Jones' band the Dap-Kings.

Free Cake for Every Creature - All You Gotta Be When You're 23 Is Yourself 2:26
Drifting to a new town, turning 23 without a birthday cake to show for it, calling yourself an artist while working part-time at Whole Foods – indie newcomer Katie Bennett brings an uncommonly funny approach to the slack-ass lifestyle, with a guitar to match.

Bob Mould - Voices in My Head 3:54
What a roll this guy is on. This masterful highlight from Patch the Sky has the firestorm guitar attack he defined with Hüsker Dü and Sugar, yet it's anything but kid stuff. Mould snarls about reoccurring dreams that dog him all the way through adult life, facing the real-world future with zero fear.

Yohuna - The Moon Hangs in the Sky Like Nothing Hangs in the Sky 4:06
An enigmatic yet irresistible ballad from synth dream-weaver Johanne Swanson's stellar debut Patientness. She sings in a breathy murmur that hints at intimate heartache, yet refuses to give any of her secrets away.

Tacocat - Night Swimming  2:26
The Seattle grrrl-punk band offers a maddeningly catchy escape from city malaise – cruising to the lake for a late-night skinny dip. Bring your boombox, but there's only one rule: You can't play R.E.M.

Drive-By Truckers - Ever South 5:44
Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley wrote an album of political post-Skynyrd rockers for American Band, but Hood really drives it home here, tracing his family roots from Ellis Island to Appalachia, only to end up "a blue-eyed Southern devil" who doesn't feel at home anywhere.

Japanese Breakfast - Everybody Wants to Love You 2:12
Michelle Zauner vents about grief, sex and food ("Will you lend me your toothbrush?/Will you make me breakfast in bed?") with Cure-worthy guitars and a vocal assist from a kindred spirit, Radiator Hospital's Sam Cook-Parrott. Psychopomp isn't just her album title – it's her way of life.

Miranda Lambert - Vice 4:00
Miranda doesn't make nice in her first hit since her high-profile split with Blake Shelton. She's in fighting spirits, an unrepentant Nashville bad girl ready to steal your man then hit the next town to do it all over again tomorrow night.

Leonard Cohen - Treaty 4:02
The ultimate Zen sage was still writing songs on his deathbed, offering this poetic goodbye to the battlefield and the bedroom. Farewell, old friend.

The Monkees - Me & Magdalena 3:33
Who could have expected a comeback this great? Mike Nesmith gets to show off all the mileage on his country-fried pipes in this superb road-weary ballad, written to order by a lifelong Monkees fan, Death Cab for Cutie's Ben Gibbard.

Danny Brown feat. Kendrick Lamar, Ab-Soul, Earl Sweatshirt - Really Doe 5:19
His hard-stomping posse cut with Detroit producer Black Milk, passing the mic to Kendrick Lamar, Ab-Soul and Earl Sweatshirt in a virtuoso battle rhyme. Earl has the funniest line: "I'm at your house like, 'Why you got your couch on my Chucks?'"

Lucy Dacus - I Don't Wanna Be Funny Anymore 2:35
Barely into her twenties but already a major talent, the Virginia songwriter gets lost in mixed-up identity confusion with some Johnny Ramone in her guitar and a voice that leaps straight to your heart.

Kendrick Lamar - Untitled 05 | 09.21.2014.
K-Dot debuted this as part of his epochal Grammys performance in March, tapping into spiritual doubts – "I'm living with anxiety/Ducking the sobriety /Fucking up the system, I ain't fucking with society" – with a sax sample from jazz legend Eric Dolphy and a heavenly R&B hook sung by Anna Wise.

Mannequin Pussy - Romantic 2:39
The gloriously snotty Philly punks celebrate modern romance as a hellhole, blasting out their shoegaze guitar fuzz. "You would sleep with me if you could do it comfortably" is one very special valentine.

Wilco - If I Ever Was a Child 2:55
Jeff Tweedy at his most low-key and likeable, a three-minute acoustic memory of growing up miserable in the Midwestern suburbs, with a taste of Nels Cline twang to make the pain go down smooth.

Red Hot Chili Peppers - Dark Necessities 5:02
Their big comeback hit collabo with Danger Mouse, with Anthony Kiedis getting personal about his darkest, druggiest memories over a Flea bassline full of blood, sugar, sex and magic.

Lvl Up - Pain 5:35
The year's most heart-shredding air-guitar jam. The Brooklyn indie upstarts deliver a hate song that feels so real because it's also a love song, rocking out with a touch of Elliott Smith in the vocals and a climactic guitar outburst that reaches back to Dinosaur Jr. and Neil Young.

Solange - Cranes in the Sky 4:10
Solange drops a song that can always stop you dead in your tracks, no matter where or when you hear it – describing the kind of sadness she can't escape by crying, drinking, sexing or shopping it away. The music builds from quiet meditation – that Raphael Saadiq bass – into towering soul.

Pwr Bttm - Projection 2:45
The glitter-punk bravados sing about growing up queer and scared and lonesome, staring out the window at the other kids, lamenting, "My skin isn't made for the weather." It gets to the heart of how this whole year felt.