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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: J Fernandez. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: J Fernandez. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2021. május 18., kedd

18-05-2021 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX [2018-2021] (2h 23m)

18-05-2021 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX [2018-2021] Cursive, Galactic, The James Hunter Six, Sunwatchers, J Fernandez,Coma, Mike Dillon, Morcheeba, Yung, Holy Fuck, The Writhing Squares, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club


M U S I C (2h 23m)

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Challenging indie rock outfit with literate lyrics and an angular post-rock sound.
Black Hole Town (Cursive)
I Am Goddamn (Cursive)
Get Fixed (Cursive)
from Get Fixed 2020
It turns out that if you don't make an album for six years, you might end up with a lot of ideas for songs... But rather than send out a two-disc set, where they felt some of the material might get lost in the shuffle, they opted to split the bounty into two separate releases, and Get Fixed arrived 12 months after Vitriola.... Cursive are a bit less speedy than they once were, but the gravity and ferocity of their attack is as strong as ever on Get Fixed, and the angular shards of sound and precise volleys of guitar, keyboards, horns, strings, and drums are an ideal complement to the rage and confusion of these songs... Get Fixed is another bitter but meaningful State of the Union Address from Cursive, as well as evidence that when the band's creative process shifts into gear, they can deliver both quantity and quality.



Their down-home blend of New Orleans funk, R&B, and hip-hop has managed to appeal to traditionalists and new heads alike.
Already 8Ben Ellman / Robert Mercurio / Stanton Moore / Jeff Raines / Rich Vogel)
Goose Grease (Ben Ellman / Robert Mercurio / Stanton Moore / Jeff Raines / Rich Vogel)
Ready Already (Ben Ellman / Robert Mercurio / Stanton Moore / Jeff Raines / Rich Vogel)
New Orleans' Galactic is one of the most restless acts to emerge from the jam band scene of the 1990s. With every album they've expanded their musical palette to embrace other sounds and styles while keeping the musical gumbo of their hometown squarely at the center of everything they do... Galactic juxtapose modern dancefloor and funk rhythms alongside electronic instrumentation in putting across their ass-shaking funk pop & roll... Where Galactic's live sets are chock-full of improvisation and surprise, their studio recordings tend to focus on tight songwriting and arranging; this offering is no different -- there are few solos on this set and there is no jamming... Already Ready Already is bookended by two of three high-powered instrumentals, titled appropriately enough "Already" and "Ready Already." While the former is under two minutes, and the latter is under three, they offer twin impressions of intro and outro to the proceedings... The instrumental "Goose Grease" delivers Galactic's post-midnight brand of Meters-inspired jazz-funk inside a sound-effects tunnel riddled with synths, gunshot samples, and swelling B-3...


The gritty, passionate, longstanding backing band of British soulman, songwriter, and guitarist James Hunter.
I Don't Wanna Be Without You (James Hunter)
I Got Eyes (James Hunter)
Blisters (James Hunter)
James Hunter has stubbornly been making retro R&B records since the mid-'90s... Whatever It Takes is the James Hunter Six's second outing for Daptone. It was produced by label boss Bosco Mann (Gabriel Roth) and recorded live in the label's California studio, direct to eight-track analog tape and pressed to an acetate. The sound is flat, immediate, and just a tiny bit muddy -- it's all it should be... After signing to Daptone, Hunter met his future wife Jesse after a gig in New York. They were married in New Orleans and moved to England. She is the prime inspiration for many of the songs here, and it's more than likely their marriage may account for the unusual tenderness in Hunter's singing voice. His songwriting is more ambitious than at any other time in his career to date. While these songs unabashedly reflect the early days of soul -- from the late '50s through the mid-'60s -- they do so with a sense of rhythmic invention we haven't heard since the early days of New Orleans R&B and pre-Motown Northern soul...

2018. december 2., vasárnap

009 ALTER.NATiON: weekly favtraX / 02-12-2018

ALTER.NATiON
Tav Falco, Monteagle, Marker Starling, Daniel Romano, GospelbeacH, Foxwarren, The Fernweh, Jeff Tweedy, Bryan Ferry, Reverend Horton Heat, Robben Ford, J Fernandez
Tav Falco


weekly favtraX
02-12-2018




Tav Falco - Sleep Walk (Santo & Johnny cover)  from Cabaret of Daggers
The master of a raw and shambolic fusion of rockabilly, blues, and fractured noise, Tav Falco was, along with the Cramps, one of the earliest purveyors of what would come to be known as psychobilly (though his version of the sound lacked the campy horror movie ambience others brought to it), and he anticipated the fractured but hard-hitting blues wailing of the Gories and the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion by close to a decade...

Monteagle - Midnight Noon (Justin Wilcox) from Midnight Noon
Monteagle is the solo project of Tennessee-born, New York-based singer/songwriter Justin Giles Wilcox, whose textural Americana first gained traction during his tenure as head writer for the similarly minded duo Nassau. Named after a mountain in Southern Tennessee, Monteagle's hazy epistles follow in the footsteps of roots-loving sonic explorers like M. Ward and Lord Huron, pairing a well-worn rustic drifter aesthetic with washes of experimental ambience. His solo debut, Midnight Noon, comes courtesy of Brooklyn indie Fire Talk Records, and more or less picks up the thread left by Nassau on their 2017 LP Heron...

Marker Starling - Hold No Desire/ Leavetaking/Mass Market Paperback (Chris A. Cummings) from Trust an Amateur
The fourth Marker Starling album, 2018's Trust an Amateur is actually the second one Chris Cummings worked on when he began the project. After starting to write the songs, he took a break to record a 2016 album of covers, I'm Willing, and 2017's Anchors and Ampersands; he then doubled back to finish them and headed to Berlin to record with producer Guy Sternberg. It's a lovely collection of tracks sung by Cummings in his best sleepy croon, as he tells stories of everyday life and love backed by electric piano and a drum machine. It's standard Marker Starling, and that's a good thing...

Daniel Romano - The Long Mirror of Time (Daniel Romano) from Finally Free
The song celebrates  “the unconformities of the natural and supernatural worlds,” says Romano. “The tangible world can often suppress our inherent instincts to shift our shape and transcend our surroundings. The long mirror of time is in-fact not a mirror but a passage of prisms. This song is for those who do not see themselves in these monotonous rays of light and instead remain unseen or further yet, push on into a realm imperceptible to those trapped in the mirror. The long mirror of time, reveals the prism faces, but not mine. Always dedicated to the freaks.

GospelbeacH - Runnin' Blind [Winter Version] (Trevor Beld-Jimenez / Brent Rademaker) from Another Winter Alive
GospelbeacH's second album Another Summer of Love was a laid-back and organic take on early-'80s Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers that had an extra layer of energy and songcraft that was missing from their Grateful Dead-obsessed debut record. Under the guidance of Beachwood Sparks' Brent Rademaker and a crew of like-minded folks, the album was concise and focused guitar pop with all the harmonies and jangle of Petty at his best. It was good enough and true enough to that warm West Coast-meets-Heartland sound that it seemed a shame to have only been 11 songs long...

Foxwarren - Fall into a Dream from Foxwarren
OUR TAKE: FOXWARREN’S SELF-TITLED ALBUM CEMENTS THEM AS KINGS IN THE INDIE ROCK SCENE / Canada-based singer/songwriter Andy Shauf joins childhood friends Dallas Bryson and brothers Avery and Darryl Kissick to create Foxwarren, an experimentation of the classic rock formula with inclusions of synths, modern flourishes, and some of the most poetic lyrics in the scene. Their self-titled album Foxwarren started a decade in the past and has now fully emerged into a piece of craftsmanship and art that excels at delivering a unique and fulfilling sound. The result is a spell bounding journey that is filled with gorgeous rhythms and an immense amount of heart...

The Fernweh - Dressing Up Box from The Fernweh
The Fernweh’s debut album is a wonderful and very modern concoction of folk-rock with a psych chaser. Now, for the old guard who were there during (what my friend, Kilda Defnut, calls) The First Vinyl Age, I will simply quote Peter Gabriel as he sang, “It’s one o’ clock and time for lunch, bum de dum de dum.” Of course, that’s the opening monologue for “I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe),” a tune that captures the quirky and highly eccentric British take on rock music. But don’t worry, this is not big epic prog stuff. However, the music, indeed, touches the autumnal folky moods of Genesis songs such as “Dusk,” “Seven Stones,” “Happy the Man,” and “Harlequin.”  And “Dressing Up the Box” gets (sort of) jazzy with a sax solo which is shadowed by a grungy guitar bit.

Jeff Tweedy - Having Been Is No Way to Be (Jeff Tweedy) from Warm
...After hearing Tweedy trade riffs and sprawl out with full bands for so long, WARM’s solo setting feels fresh. This is his most threadbare collection of music. Songs drone on as long as he wants or stop abruptly once he runs out of words. This spontaneity allows Tweedy’s wisdom to feel both casual and all-encompassing: worn-in proverbs that just occurred to him, as he elaborates and pokes holes in his own fatalist tendencies. Textured with acoustic guitar, pedal steel, and brush-stroked drums from his son Spencer and Wilco percussionist Glenn Kotche, WARM follows a legacy of reflective, autumnal works like Neil Young’s Harvest Moon...

Bryan Ferry And His Orchestra - New Town (Bryan Ferry) from Bitter-Sweet
The Roxy Music frontman journeys through the past, inventively, in an album that offers a lush “remake/remodel” of familiar material.
It should be no surprise that elegant British crooner-composer Bryan Ferry has been influenced by Weimar Republic cabaret, Scott Joplin rags and Duke Ellington’s snazzy jazz throughout his 48-year-old career, both as Roxy Music’s frontman and as a solo artist. There have forever been hints of Brecht/Weill, Ellington and such in Ferry’s music and lyrics... A recent teaming with Netflix on the Weimar period drama “Babylon Berlin” guided Ferry’s hand in creating (in the words of one of his songs) a “remake/remodel” of music from his past with “Bitter-Sweet,” an album that builds on the premise of “The Jazz Age” while reintroducing his voice into the mix...

Reverend Horton Heat Don't Let Go of Me (James C. Heath) from Whole New Life
He’s been on fire for a long time and Jim Heath is showing absolutely no signs of stopping! To keep that fire stoked and burning... For “Don’t Let Go of Me,” they slow the pace down and dip into deeper tones for a reverb-heavy jam session. Here, a meandering plea in the name of love highlights the band’s musical talents. Similarly, the instrumental journey that is “Ride Before the Fall,” much like its predecessor, displays the band’s exceptional talents beautifully. Together, the band tell a story without words, painting a stellar, cinematic landscape.

Robben Ford - Willing to Wait from Purple House
There’s a lot to be said for a blues oriented guitarist willing to explore new directions deep into a lengthy career that has straddled rock-blues, jazz and fusion. Robben Ford makes much of the fact that he never records similar albums... ‘Purple House’ isn’t so much concerned with the amount of time it took to record, as the way it has embraces a bigger production, giving him additional electronic touches and an overall bigger sonic impact. It’s also an album on which he has paid more attention to his songcraft and particularly the lyrics. His eclectic imagery engages the listener in an exercise of joining the dots between his musical feel and his words... This is also the case on the all too sudden fade of the closing ‘Willing To Wait’, which is a soulful, spacey piece (think Bowie’s upflifting ‘Space Oditty’) with a lovely ascending guitar solo by Drew Smithers over an acoustic wash. The full production kicks in on an impressive wall of sound, with harmony vocals before the fade...

J Fernandez - Expressive Machine from Occasional Din
Sophomore album Occasional Din takes a surprising shift toward more adventurous and acid-bathed sounds. This shift is communicated in the first moments of the album, as field recordings, swirling keyboard lines, and ambient clouds melt into tempered fuzz guitar, falsetto vocal harmonies, and live drums washed in healthy doses of flanger... At just over a half-hour running time, Occasional Din is best absorbed on repeat, where the refined details of the songs can reveal themselves fully and listeners can get cozy in Fernandez's brightly drawn internal world.


Tav Falco, Monteagle, Marker Starling, Daniel Romano, GospelbeacH, Foxwarren, The Fernweh, Jeff Tweedy, Bryan Ferry, Reverend Horton Heat, Robben Ford, J Fernandez

2018. november 11., vasárnap

006 ALTER.NATiON: weekly favtraX / 11-11-2018

ALTER.NATiON
D. Patucchi, SAVAK, boygenius, Jon Spencer, Beach House, Girlpool, Gouge Away, Rays, Ellis, J Fernandez, Thom Yorke, Gary Pacific Orchestra


weekly favtraX
11-11-2018



D. Patucchi - Dimonstrazione 2:21
In the heyday of low-budget television and scrappy genre filmmaking, producers who needed a soundtrack for their commercial entertainments could reach for a selection of library music: LPs of stock recordings whose contents fit any mood required.
Unusual Sounds is a deep dive into a musical universe that has, until now, been accessible only to producers and record collectors; a celebration of this strange industry and an examination of its unique place at the nexus of art and commerce.

SAVAK - Agronomy Domine 4:05
Only a year separated SAVAK's second album, 2017's Cut-Ups, and their third, 2018's Beg Your Pardon, which is an impressively fast turnaround for an indie band in the 2010s. Stylistically, the band didn't advance all that much in the space of 12 months, but Beg Your Pardon does sound noticeably different than its older sibling... Guitarist Sohrab Habibion and Michael Jaworski have sharpened their attack both individually and as a combination, and bassist James Canty and drummer Matt Schulz hit harder and with a better sense of groove on these sessions, driving the music forward while adding to their melodic power.

boygenius - Salt in the Wound 4:11
In a delightful twist on this binary categorizing, Dacus, Baker, and folk-rock songwriter Phoebe Bridgers announced in August that they’d made an EP under the name boygenius, a nod to the way we can carelessly lean on gender to telegraph meaning. A boy can be an individual genius, while women in indie rock are all the same. In advance of a tour they had coming up together, the trio of indie titans decided to record a 7" as a supergroup, and the result briefly winks at, then pulverizes the reductive labels we heap onto women musicians.






Scuzz-rocking guitarist who fused ernest traditionalism and destructive tendencies fronting Pussy Galore, the Blues Explosion, and Heavy Trash.
Jon Spencer - Wilderness 2:27
...The only thing curious about that would be that this marks the first time Spencer has released a solo project. Spencer has always displayed a strong personal style, whether in the noise rock assault of Pussy Galore, the hard wailing of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, the lascivious R&B stomp of Boss Hog, or the roots-conscious swagger of Heavy Trash. But if you were expecting that something new would be revealed with Spencer as the uncontested leader, free to bend his talents into any direction he chose, well, that's really not what you get here. More than anything, Spencer Sings the Hits suggests the Blues Explosion without the same degree of fire and gravity, and with a little bit of noisy clatter and keyboard blurt added for seasoning...

Beach House - Alien 4:03
...“Alien,” which magically appeared on YouTube over the weekend, apparently comes from the 7 sessions; the YouTube caption only calls it an “unreleased B-side” from the album. But the song achieves the same sort of liftoff as the single “Dive.” It’s a grand, world-swallowing song, the type of thing that demands to be heard pumping from speakers at Red Rocks or at the Hollywood Bowl, while dry ice fills up the stage and makes the people up there hard to see...

Girlpool - Where You Sink 3:22
You can never fully understand another person and nobody will ever fully understand you. We try to fill the gaps with communication and analysis, but our perceptions of people are just that. On “Where You Sink,” Girlpool carry this burden, consumed by the Sisyphean task of trying to know someone who doesn’t want to know themselves. It feels like quicksand. Grainy reverb and rumination drone toward a pit. Chugging guitars struggle to fight the earth’s pull as Harmony Tividad grasps at the frayed edges. There are moments where it’s hard to tell whether she’s drowning or digging.

Gouge Away - Ghost 3:33
Florida hardcore band Gouge Away are named after the final track on Pixies’ 1989 album Doolittle. And their new song, “Ghost,” finds the band moving closer to their namesake. Like “Gouge Away,” and Doolittle as a whole, “Ghost” doesn’t sacrifice melody for noise. The rhythm nearly inverts that of “Gouge Away.” “Ghost” sounds like its offspring, similar structure — simple, captivating bassline and gruff vocals — with modern flourishes.

Rays - Fallen Stars 3:04
Rays' second album marks a major shift for the band, one that makes a world of difference. After releasing a debut that was woolly around the edges as it mixed scrappy Flying Nun-inspired guitar pop and jagged, lo-fi post-punk, You Can Get There from Here is a slight step in a different direction. They've ditched some of the punk in favor of a mid-'80s indie pop sound that would have sounded good wedged between classic Pastels and Dolly Mixture singles... Now it's clear just how much Martinez is inspired by the vocals of Stephen Pastel, especially on the slow-rolling "To the Fire" and the sweet-as-punch "Fallen Stars," which leads the album off on the right foot.

Ellis - All This Time 4:25
“All This Time” finds Ellis in the thick of the storm. Sludgy guitars thunder, dissipating on the fringes of her words: “Do I scare you?” There’s a moment where she clears the sonic fog, her voice outlined in synth: “All this time I thought that you were trying to change me / You were trying to strip away the parts you knew were never me at all.” The clouds come back in as she repeats these lines, layered with fuzz, growing stronger with each utterance before losing shape and fading into the void.

J Fernandez - Unwind 2:30
The encapsulation of '60s & '70s pop is front and center in "Unwind." The prominent keys and electric guitar don't shy away from making bold statements instrumentally. The vocals compliment the composition perfectly by offering a relaxed and simmered sound. The genre melding that takes place here combines experimental pop and psychedelic fixings to create a short but sweetly pleasant prize. What did we do to deserve J Fernandez?

Thom Yorke - Unmade 4:27
For Luca Guadagnino's 2018 remake of Dario Argento's 1977 horror classic, Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke took the reins to produce an updated soundtrack, adding familiar touches to an appropriately unsettling and tense experience. Yorke's Suspiria feels nostalgic yet strangely futuristic... "Unmade" is another standout, swirling together icy piano, Yorke's soothing vocals, and a sweeping choir in one of the soundtrack's only purely lovely moments. Altogether, Suspiria is an appropriate accompaniment to the film, generating fear and discomfort as much by what's presented by Yorke as what's left to the imagination.






Gary Pacific Orchestra - Soft Wind 2:05

...The perfect companion to the David Hollander curated book Unusual Sounds: The Hidden History of Library Music (out now on Anthology Editions), these 20 tracks, encapsulate the niche and fascinating subculture of library music. Genres were spliced, conventions dispensed with, and oftentimes hybrid music of astonishing complexity was produced. Elements of rock, jazz, soul, even twentieth-century avant-garde composition were all utilized, and no stone was left unturned. As a result, some of the best library music defies all categorization, reflecting the individualistic quirks and artistry of the various musicians who made it.



D. Patucchi, SAVAK, boygenius, Jon Spencer, Beach House, Girlpool, Gouge Away, Rays, Ellis, J Fernandez, Thom Yorke, Gary Pacific Orchestra