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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Glen Hansard. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Glen Hansard. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2019. szeptember 15., vasárnap

053 ALTER.NATION weekly favtraX 15-09-2019

ALTER.NATION #53

Mike Patton, Jean-Claude Vannier, Robbie Robertson, Glen Hansard, Pixies, Corb Lund, Belle and Sebastian, Charles Rumback, Ryley Walker, (Sandy) Alex G, Gruff Rhys, Sequoyah Murray, Luke Temple, Perfume Genius, Kim Gordon

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"B r o w n i n g"




ALTER.NATION #53 on DEEZER


Mike Patton is not so much a singer as he is an innovator in manipulation of the human voice. One of the most versatile, innately talented, and idiosyncratic singers in rock music, Mike Patton is also one of the genre's most valuable players, since he has divided his time between a host of diverse projects including Faith No More, Mr. Bungle, Fantômas, Tomahawk, Peeping Tom, Nevermen, Dead Cross, and an experimental solo career.
The influence of Jean Claude Vannier on French popular and film music cannot be overstated. A composer, arranger, conductor, and producer, he is best known for work he's done for other artists, but his own recordings and scores have gained critical notice too.
Mike Patton / Jean-Claude Vannier - Browning from Corpse Flower
Though few would have conceived of it beforehand, a collaboration between French composer and arranger Jean-Claude Vannier and American singer, lyricist, songwriter, and producer Mike Patton finds them a perfectly matched pair of musical reprobates... Musically, this set crisscrosses many genres, it is ultimately rooted in exploration and adventure yet grounded in sleazy chanson, lounge tropes, blues, cinema music, and sound library tropes... "Browning" sounds like a mutant outtake from the Rolling Stones' Emotional Rescue if it were arranged by Vannier, Keith Richards, and Gainsbourg...  Corpse Flower is a dark jewel from two remarkable musical iconoclasts. It offers surprise, humor, revelation, tenderness, and excess, with flair and a certain tarnished elegance. It's a high-water mark for both men, albeit one born from the belly of hell itself.

The chief songwriter and lead guitarist of the Band, who later moved into film (acting, producing, scoring) and a solo career.
Robbie Robertson feat. Glen HansardDead End Kid
“They said you’ll never be nothing/ You’re just a dead end kid/ Probably end up in prison/ Or maybe down on the skids,” Robertson rasps over a smoky, sinuous groove, Hansard’s voice soaring above his in a ghostly echo. But then the song takes a defiant turn: “I’m gonna play my song/ Out across this lake/ From Scarborough Bluffs/ Over to New York State/ I want to show the world/ Something they ain’t never seen/ I want to take you somewhere/ You ain’t never been.”
Robertson wrote “Dead End Kid” while he was working on the second volume of his autobiography. “When I was growing up in Toronto, I was telling people, ‘One of these days I’m going to make some music and go all over the world,'” he explains in a statement. “Everyone was like, that’s never going to happen. You’re a dead end kid. Because my relatives were First Nation people and Jewish gangsters, it was assumed my dreams were going to explode. I found strength in overcoming that disbelief.”



Indie icons who influenced countless artists by welding classic pop influences and jagged, roaring guitars to Black Francis' fragmented songwriting.
Pixies - On Graveyard Hill from Beneath the Eyrie
On their third post-reunion album, Pixies do what they failed to on Indie Cindy and Head Carrier: suggest a way forward for their music. Too often on those albums, it felt like the band was trying to live up to someone else's expectations of what they should sound like. On Beneath the Eyrie, however, it sounds like they weren't trying to please anyone but themselves; paradoxically, the results are their most engaging set of songs since they reunited. Instead of caricaturing the best-known (and most copied) elements of their sound, they build on different, more versatile sides of their legacy. In particular, they take inspiration from some of the darker pages of Doolittle's and Bossanova's songbooks... "Graveyard Hill" is the latest incarnation of the dark feminine that's inhabited Pixies' world since "Is She Weird." While its tale of a witch who brews a deadly love potion might be almost too on the nose, it's got more bite and energy than many of their other previous attempts to re-create their magic...


Proudly Alberta-based vocalist and guitarist whose band is fluent in roots music from blues to cowboy to rockabilly to Western swing. Corb Lund is a Canadian roots-country singer/songwriter whose third album, Five Dollar Bill (2002), established him as a favorite among critics and Americana music enthusiasts in his home country, the U.S., and in Europe.
Corb Lund - These Boots Are Made for Walkin’ from Cover Your Tracks
Since releasing 2015's Dave Cobb-produced Things That Can’t Be Undone, Alberta's Corb Lund has been touring relentlessly and doing charity work. Preparing to write and record a new set of originals, the singer/songwriter, with his Hurtin' Albertans in tow, issued the eight-track Cover Your Tracks EP, co-produced with John Evans. It's a divergence for Lund, whose Americana recordings have made him one of North America's most acclaimed roots artists. He chose these tunes from his band's live set and/or their honored places in his life. While most are readily recognizable by their original artists, Lund infuses most of them with fresh energy; he also enlists of a couple of guests to assist... Lee Hazelwood's Nancy Sinatra vehicle "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'" has been covered far too often. It may be important to Lund, but it doesn't add much here...


Anchored by Stuart Murdoch, this Scottish collective specializes in immaculately crafted, clever, and poetic indie pop.
Belle and Sebastian - The Colour's Gonna Run from Days of the Bagnold Summer
Days Of The Bagold Summer is Belle & Sebastian's soundtrack for Simon Bird's 2019 cinematic adaptation of Joff Winterhart's 2012 graphic novel. The band was hired by the director during a period where leader Stuart Murdoch was revisiting some of his older songs, so these tunes anchor the soundtrack album... "The Colour's Gonna Run" is a shimmering piece of folk-pop. The individual parts fit together elegantly, even if it flirts with the ephemeral; the music deliberately floats by, leaving trace elements of melodies and vibe behind...


Ryley Walker is an accomplished fingerstyle guitarist, singer, and songwriter from Chicago whose music and evolution as an artist have proven mercurial.
Charles Rumback, Ryley Walker - Half Joking
Ryley Walker is reuniting with drummer Charles Rumback for a new album called Little Common Twist, their second release together as a duo after 2016’s Cannots. Little Common Twist compiles eight instrumental pieces recorded with producer John Hughes over several improvised sessions throughout 2017 and 2018.




Intimate lo-fi pop from a Pennsylvania songwriter/guitarist who takes influence from Elliott Smith and Built to Spill.
(Sandy) Alex G - Crime from House of Sugar
For his third Domino Records release and ninth album in total, lo-fi pop experimenter (Sandy) Alex G (Alex Giannascoli) presents House of Sugar. The multifaceted title is, for one, a reference to the SugarHouse Casino in Philadelphia... While 2017's Rocket saw the songwriter/GarageBand recordist working with an expanded guest list including touring bandmembers for the first time, House of Sugar involved recording collaborations on some songs with his mixer, Jacob Portrait, at Portrait's Brooklyn studio -- Giannascoli's first excursion to an outside studio. In addition to splurging on a new microphone and recording-software upgrade at home, Giannascoli has said that he worked more deliberately on this album, spending more time on fewer songs than ever before...


De facto leader of Welsh psych-pop outfit Super Furry Animals, who went on to record solo projects and form collaborative outfits like Neon Neon.
Gruff Rhys - Pang! from Pang!
Consider Pang! the aperitif to the luxurious meal that was Babelsberg, the 2018 concept album recorded with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales. Gliding by on elegant electronic rhythms, sung in Welsh and buoyed by breezy chord changes reminiscent of bossa nova and finger-picked folk, Pang! finds Rhys collaborating with Muzi, an electronic artist from South Africa. It's not the only 2019 album to find Rhys delving into modern African music. Earlier this year, he contributed to EGOLI, the 2019 album by Damon Albarn's Africa Express, but where that record proudly rooted itself in rhythm, Pang! is so light, it almost seems weightless...


Innovative and eclectic Atlanta-based artist blends elements of Afro-pop, gospel, Tropicália, dream pop, and soul.
Sequoyah Murray - Blue Jays from Before You Begin
Straight from its Satie-lilting introductory track, Sequoyah Murray's first full-length instantly sounds fresh and unique. The Atlanta native, all of 22 years old at the time of the album's release, takes an adventurous approach to songwriting, stitching together dreamy yet cohesive pop songs out of exploratory brainstorming sessions, and blurring genres with ease. At the center is Murray's rich, versatile baritone, which is both sensuous and commanding, and ethereal enough to make you wonder if he permanently resides in an echo chamber... Murray experiments with more complex rhythms on the cyber-Afropop of "Blue Jays"...  An eye-opening debut from a boundlessly creative talent.


Singer/songwriter and visual artist who spans indie folk and experimental pop with his solo output, with Here We Go Magic, and as Art Feynman.
Luke Temple - 200,000 Years of Fucking from Both-And
By the arrival of Both-And, his debut for Native Cat Recordings, Luke Temple had released music varying from pastoral folk to experimental pop to cosmic jams and spaces in between under his own name, under the alias Art Feynman, and with Here We Go Magic. Always unpredictable from album to album, particularly in terms of palette and adherence to song structures, any attempt to lay out a coherent sound trajectory for Temple's catalog should probably be tossed out the window. Having said that, Both-And feels a bit like a consummation of prior works, at least in that it offers varied electronic-acoustic textures and examples of improvisational atmospheres, free-form song, and stricter verse-and-chorus tunes.


Alternative singer/songwriter project for Mike Hadreas' fragile yet brutally honest songs.
Perfume Genius - Eye In The Wall
...“Eye In The Wall” was clearly written with dance in mind, and it’s easy to close your eyes and picture bodies moving to it. The song is a rich, atmospheric head-trip that owes a clear debt to Amnesiac-era Radiohead. But it’s also built around swirling Afro-Latin percussion, something that goes shockingly well with the sound. Here’s the song:



Iconic indie rock musician and feminist, best known for her work with Sonic Youth and several solo projects.
Kim Gordon - Air BnB
...“Air BnB” is a great song, a scratchy and anthemic rocker that calls back to Sonic Youth’s early-’90s noise-pop period while still sounding fully of-the-moment. The track is full of discordant guitar sounds, but those sounds work in service of the song, which has a grimy punk intensity and a huge chorus. “Air BnB / It’ll set me free,” Gordon yells, effectively satirizing the kind of consumerism that could really stand to be satirized nowadays...


Mike Patton, Jean-Claude Vannier, Robbie Robertson, Glen Hansard, Pixies, Corb Lund, Belle and Sebastian, Charles Rumback, Ryley Walker, (Sandy) Alex G, Gruff Rhys, Sequoyah Murray, Luke Temple, Perfume Genius, Kim Gordon

2019. április 13., szombat

030 ALTER.NATiON: weekly favtraX 13-04-2019

ALTER.NATION #30
Norah Jones, Bruce Hornsby, PJ Harvey, Gillian Anderson, Lily James, Chris Forsyth, Shovels & Rope, T-Bone Burnett / Jay Bellerose / Keefus Ciancia, The Budos Band, Glen Hansard, The Leisure Society, Patio, Men I Trust

weekly favtraX
13-04-2019



Pianist who sold millions with her beguiling vocals and a musical blend featuring jazz, traditional vocal pop, bluesy country, and contemporary folk. 
Norah Jones - Begin Again from Begin Again
During 2018, Norah Jones concentrated her creative endeavors on a series of digital singles that found the singer/songwriter stretching herself stylistically. Usually, she pushed herself by teaming with new, unexpected collaborators, including Wilco's Jeff Tweedy -- a tactic that guaranteed a variety of sounds and songs, a practice put into sharp relief by the 2019 release of Begin Again. This brief LP collects the seven songs recorded for this project -- all but one released beforehand -- and while they're a disparate batch, they nevertheless cohere thanks to their elegant, elastic experimentation.


Singer/songwriter and pianist whose breezy, nonchalant style made his numerous hits of the 1980s instantly recognizable. 
Bruce Hornsby - Fractals from Absolute Zero
The Noisemakers, Bruce Hornsby's regular backing band since 2002, aren't credited on 2019's Absolute Zero, which should be an indication that the album is a bit of a departure from the other records he's made during the 21st century. While the Noisemakers haven't avoided adventure, Absolute Zero feels as if it was made without any regard to boundaries, either in terms of style or approach. Such fearlessness is evident from the outset, when the record kicks off with a dexterous rhythm suitable for a vintage post-bop session, but it's too reductive to call Absolute Zero an odyssey into straight jazz.

The most challenging singer/songwriter to emerge in the '90s, her brutally honest lyrics match well to a progression of raw musical styles. 
PJ Harvey feat. Gillian Anderson  - The Sandman from All About Eve
PJ Harvey feat. Lily James  - The Moth from All About Eve
PJ Harvey wrote the score for a stage adaptation of All About Eve, the classic 1950 film about an aging Broadway star and a young fan who finagles her way into becoming the next big thing. The adaptation, which stars Gillian Anderson and Lily James, debuted in London earlier this year. The score that Harvey wrote for it is mostly instrumental, though there are two songs that feature Anderson and James.
Here’s what Harvey had to say about the score in a statement (via Pitchfork): I have always loved stories, and so to compose music to support and enhance a story being told is a challenge I enjoy. I also love the freedom that working instrumentally can give me without the constraints of song form.

Guitarist/songwriter Chris Forsyth got his start in Brooklyn's experimental circles in the early 2000s and slowly grew into a masterful technical player. As the bandleader of Chris Forsyth & the Solar Motel Band, he composed mostly instrumental pieces that channeled both the psychedelic jamming of the Grateful Dead and the precision of art-punk guitar acts like Television.
Chris Forsyth - Tomorrow Might as Well Be Today from All Time Present
...The sprawling double album All Time Present is a sampler pack of Forsyth's strongest impulses, offering up just eight mostly instrumental pieces but stretching out in different directions over the course of its hour-plus playing time. Though All Time Present is the first work billed as a solo album since 2013's Solar Motel, Forsyth is bolstered by various players on every track. Most notably, bassist Peter Kerlin (also of Sunwatchers) and drummer Ryan Jewell add weight to tracks like album opener "Tomorrow Might As Well Be Today"...

South Carolina duo channeled country, bluegrass, and blues through a nervy indie rock prism. 
Shovels & Rope - I'm Comin' Out from By Blood
Shovels & Rope open By Blood, their fifth album of original material, with "I'm Comin' Out," a stomping, fuzz-drenched rocker that serves as a statement of purpose: the duo is indeed moving from the shadows into the light. "I'm Comin' Out" pulsates with vivid primary colors, a distinct switch from a band who previously specialized in shades of grey. As such, it's a fitting keynote for By Blood, which is by many measures the boldest record Shovels & Rope have made. Michael Trent and Cary Ann Hearst accentuate By Blood with an impressionistic flair that is far beyond drums and guitar...

Despite critical acclaim as a performer, the rootsy singer/songwriter T-Bone Burnett earned his greatest accolades as a multi-Grammy-winning record producer and Oscar winner. 
T-Bone Burnett / Jay Bellerose / Keefus Ciancia - Anti Cyclone from The Invisible Light: Acoustic Space
The Invisible Light is Burnett's first album in 11 years. It's a futurist, avant-industrial companion to a 5,000-line poem he's been writing for years now. Its companion volumes will be released at six-month intervals. Burnett's themes illuminate his notion that for 100 years, electronic programming (and in turn, technology) has caused humans to lose capacity for distinguishing truth from fiction, and has gone a long way to transforming us into hybrid beings. (Google claims the transition will be complete within 20 years.) He is joined by drummer Jay Bellerose and sound sculptor, composer, and keyboardist Keefus Ciancia. There are few acoustic instruments here. The songs follow even fewer conventional traits: Burnett talks more than he sings and he pays attention to interplay, texture, and dynamic, not songwriting norms. In his liner essay he calls this "electronic music" and "trance music," but it doesn't resemble EDM. He juxtaposes ecumenical spiritual themes and propaganda, philosophy and emotion, and the pursuit of truth and the current cultural celebration of mendacity from the mouths of the powerful... "Anti-Cyclone" begins as a sung tango before morphing into a tarantella with spaghetti western overtones mashing together a lovelorn ballad with insidious Machiavellian political psychology: "If you tell people the things they already believe/They will believe you/It doesn’t matter what you say…."

Progenitors of "Staten-Island Afro-Soul," the band channel funky African jazz rhythms, hardline vintage-style horn-driven R&B, and psychedelia. 
The Budos Band - Old Engine Oil from Budos Band V
In 2015, Staten Island's Budos Band surprised fans with Burnt Offering; their first non-numbered title, it delivered a shift in musical direction. In addition to their trademarked fusion of Mulatu Astatke-inspired Ethio-jazz, Afrofunk, and hard-swinging R&B, they indulged a collective love for darker, '70s-era hard rock and psychedelia. With V they have fully integrated the latter aesthetic with the former. The hard rock dimension of their musical persona now exists in an unholy balance with the groove elements of their first three recordings. The set also reflects a new Budos reality: Guitarist Thomas Brenneck and baritone saxophonist Jared Tankel relocated to California, and other members became parents. Budos became a bi-coastal outfit whose Thursday night rehearsals and writing sessions were jettisoned in favor of periodic get-togethers when members could travel East. They wrote and tracked V at the same time in their new Diamond Mine recording studio, all within 72 hours. Brenneck took the tapes back with him to L.A. where he and Daptone's Gabriel Roth mixed the 34-minute set.
This fifth outing showcases a more aggressive and inventive Budos Band than the one heard on Burnt Offering. Opener and single "Old Engine Oil" commences with a "Whole Lotta Love"-inspired guitar vamp before cracking snares and kick drums enter alongside horns. The sound is ragged and immediate, charged with energy, fury, and soul. The horn lines marry Muscle Shoals-styled charts to driving hard rock via electric guitars, wah-wah, breakbeat drumming, and a wrangling bassline

With a host of real-life songs and lilting vocals that reflect a passion for his influences (particularly Van Morrison, Leonard Cohen, and Bob Dylan), Glen Hansard is best known for his work with the Frames and the Swell Season.
Glen Hansard - I'll Be You, Be Me from This Wild Willing
The opening track on 2019's This Wild Willing, "I'll Be You, Be Me," begins with a fuzzy rhythm track and a bass patiently thumping over a clanky rhythm machine as Glen Hansard delivers his lyrics in an ominous murmur. Four minutes later it snowballs into a massive tower of cacophony with guitars, keyboards, and strings united in a howling frenzy of sonic force. It's a powerful way to start an album, and while it's easily the set's boldest departure from the introspective but passionate indie folk that has been Hansard's trademark, it sets the stage for a set that finds Hansard pushing his stylistic boundaries. This Wild Willing was primarily written during a four-week working holiday in Paris, and Hansard received input and inspiration from a wide variety of fellow artists, running the gamut from Irish traditional folk instrumentalists to experimental electronic musicians...

Folk-inflected British indie pop outfit led by singer/songwriter Nick Hemming. 
The Leisure Society - There Are No Rules Around Here from Arrivals & Departures
A decade into their recording career, England's amiable chamber pop specialists, the Leisure Society, return with their first double album, a deeply personal self-exploration from frontman Nick Hemming, whose breakup with bandmate Helen Whitaker lies at its thematic core. There has always been an earnest sensitivity to Hemming's songwriting which the group then trims in garlands of wistful strings, horns, and woodwinds so that even at their most melancholic, there remains a feeling that hope does indeed spring eternal. Such is the case on Arrivals & Departures, where over two discs, the band serves up themes of regret and dramatic life changes atop puffed clouds of bittersweet melody and orchestral grandeur with occasional stabs of angry lightning...


Patio - Endggame from Essentials
In 2014, Patio was the fictitious brainchild of Loren DiBlasi, then a music journalist who fancied bass guitar but had yet to pick one up. Linking with guitarist friend Lindsey-Paige McCloy, DiBlasi learned bass by replicating Pavement and Blink-182 licks. College friend Alice Suh, who’d just taken up drum lessons, completed the trio. Mitski accepted an invitation to their first show, and nearly five years later, Patio are a frequent opening act on the Brooklyn DIY scene... The sprightly post-punk of Essentials commands attention, not because it’s overzealous or hyperbolic, but because of the vigor Patio bring to their songs. Their attitude recalls predecessors like Dig Me Out-era Sleater-Kinney, but Patio inject the final product with enough modern indie-pop influence to clear them of imitator status....

Montreal self-recordists mix dreamy atmospheres, wistful extended chords, and funky, low-key dance grooves. 
Men I Trust - Numb
Men I Trust have a new album ready in the wings, Oncle Jazz — it was originally supposed to come out in February, but it’s been delayed... The dreamy Montreal trio have just released a new song called “Numb,” with a hazy synth and bass groove. “Numb, is how I feel deep inside my soul,” lead singer Emma Proulx sings softly. “Need to feel that I am on the line / I’m sorry that I dragged you down my way.”


Norah Jones, Bruce Hornsby, PJ Harvey, Gillian Anderson, Lily James, Chris Forsyth, Shovels & Rope, T-Bone Burnett / Jay Bellerose / Keefus Ciancia, The Budos Band, Glen Hansard, The Leisure Society, Patio, Men I Trust