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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Jenny Hval. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Jenny Hval. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2022. március 14., hétfő

007_10 RADiO lemonex: PLAYLIST of THE WEEK \ BEST TRACKS of 10th WEEK 2022 (18songs/ 1h 06m)

007_10 RADiO lemonex: PLAYLIST of THE WEEK \ BEST TRACKS of 10th WEEK 2022  (18songs/ 1h 06m)

Playlist of 2022/10th Week: 18 songs/ 1h 06m


Charlotte Adigéry / Bolis Pupul -
Esperanto from Topical Dancer 2022

Stromae
- L'enfer from Multitude 2022

Nia Archives
- Luv Like from Forbidden Feelingz 2022

Jenny Hval
- Year of Love from Classic Objects 2022
Trey Anastasio
- hey stranger from Mercy 2022

Widowspeak - Slow Dance from The Jacket 2022
Rex Orange County - Shoot Me Down from Who Cares? 2022
The Districts
- White Devil from Great American Painting 2022

Ditz - Clocks from The Great Regression 2022
Bodega - Thrown from Broken Equipment 2022
The Monochrome Set
 - Really in the Wrong Town from Allhallowtide 2022
Hoodoo Gurus - I Come from Your Future from Chariot of the Gods 2022
Young Guv - She Don't Cry for Anyone from GUV III 2022
Jeremy Ivey
- Black Mood from Invisible Pictures 2022

The Weather Station - Loving You from How Is It That I Should Look at the Stars 2022
Kit Downes / Petter Eldh / James Maddren - Castles Made of Sand (Jimi Hendrix) from Vermillion 2022
Greg Spero - Maxwell Street from The Chicago Experiment 2022
Kris Davis / Dave Holland / Walter Smith III / Matthew Stevens - In Common III 2022






















2019. augusztus 18., vasárnap

049 ALTER.NATION weekly favtraX 18-08-2019

ALTER.NATION #49
Sleater-Kinney, Big Thief, The Hold Steady, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Thee Oh Sees, Here Lies Man, Bobby Rush, Robbie Robertson, Ikebe Shakedown, Madison Cunningham, Field Mouse, Jenny Hval

weekly favtraX 
18 - 0 8 - 2 0 1 9

"The Center Won't Hold"




ALTER.NATION #49 on DEEZER


Arguably the most important punk band of the 1990s and 2000s, with feminist songwriting matched by taut melodicism and jaw-dropping sonic complexity. 
Sleater-Kinney - The Center Won't Hold from The Center Won't Hold
Weeks before the release of The Center Won't Hold, Janet Weiss left Sleater-Kinney -- a departure that clouded the record's reception, suggesting that the drummer perhaps wasn't happy with the trio's decision to collaborate with producer St. Vincent on the 2019 LP. Carrie Brownstein and Corin Tucker countered this perception by insisting it was Weiss' idea to work with St. Vincent, and the fact that the drummer is hardly buried in the mix suggests there may be no animosity among the various camps. Still, with Weiss' absence, the very title The Center Won't Hold seems prescient for the future of Sleater-Kinney, but it's also true the album is designed to suggest that the world is unmoored. In the age of Trump and Brexit, such a notion isn't far-fetched, and Brownstein and Tucker frequently allude to the roiling political tensions of the late 2010s, but they spend just as much of the record lamenting personal dissociation -- the alienation that arrives when too much time is spent time staring into tiny screens...

Brooklyn indie rock quartet steered by the vulnerable songwriting of singer/guitarist Adrianne Lenker. 
Big Thief - Not
Big Thief are really not fucking around. Instead of riding the wave of having released one of the most acclaimed albums of the year, they’re returning with another new collection just months later.... “Not” is a hell of a way to introduce that new album. After U.F.O.F.‘s intricate, meditative beauty enraptured critics and fans alike, “Not” is a roiling, fraying rock song, a totally different side of the band’s personality. Adrianne Lenker’s raw performance pushes her typically elusive vocals to their most ragged extremes; the band’s delivery is something like art school Crazyhorse; the whole thing is as desperate and cathartic as the bulk of U.F.O.F. was pristine and enigmatic. Big Thief have long been elemental. This time around, they’ve leaned deep into the fire.

Acclaimed and respected Minneapolis-bred indie rockers who boast a melodic, contemporary take on mid-'70s classic rock. 
The Hold Steady - Star 18 from Thrashing thru the Passion
Reconvening for a full album for the first time in a half-decade, the Hold Steady do sound a bit older on Thrashing Thru the Passion -- an evolution they do not attempt to hide at all, which is to their benefit. It's not so much that the group no longer crank their amplifiers until they bleed and push the tempo to the point that Craig Finn has to rush to spit out his words, although those are developments that are hard to ignore. It's that the Hold Steady seem so comfortable in their skin on Thrashing Thru the Passion that they allow themselves to fiddle with details in the margins. They let the pace slow just enough to allow themselves to deepen the colors and textures of their arrangements...

Australian psychedelic collective with an intense work ethic and a wildly experimental outlook that reaches from synth prog to folk rock. 
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard - Perihelion from Infest the Rats Nest
King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard have dabbled in heavy metal before; their masterpiece Nonagon Infinity was metal adjacent, and other bits here and there across the group's expansive and ever-growing catalog have hinted at their love for pummeling rhythms, massed guitar riffing, and fantastical lyrical conceits. On 2019's Infest the Rat's Nest, the band go full metal. Often working in a small version of the band under the direction of vocalist/guitarist Stu Mackenzie, they've made a heavy-as-molten-lead song cycle about the death of Earth and the colonization of nearby planets by those who can afford it. It's fast, loud, and gnarly with traces of Metallica, Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, and a number of second-tier British and American bands from the late '70s and early '80s who fused the energy of punk with the dual-track guitar solos, dystopian words, and riffage of early metal... King Gizzard aren't sugarcoating anything, either musically or thematically, and that makes for their most timely and political album yet. It's also one of their most musically compelling and impressive, too, and that's saying a lot.

Influential California combo that mixes wild garage-punk noise and unhinged psychedelic exploration with occasional bouts of prog and metal. 
Thee Oh Sees - Scutum & Scorpius from Face Stabber
Oh Sees' 2017 album Smote Reverser seemed at the time of its release to be just about as far as the band could push their combination psychedelic-metal-prog-jazz-garage sound before it might split into a million pieces. It was hard to imagine that John Dwyer and company could twist, fold, or mangle things any more than they were or that they could add more elements without capsizing the rollicking ship entirely. Face Stabber puts a lie to those preconceptions -- not only does the band take another step further out into space, they tumble through the abyss with an energetic fury that most bands can never conjure, much less one on their 300th album... Any band looking to play psychedelic music should look to this album (and Smote Reverser) to fully understand the possibilities that exist within (and far outside of) the style, and just how far a band with limitless imagination can go if they don't settle for clichés and easy answers, and push hard to make something unique and beautiful like the Oh Sees do here (and almost always).

L.A.-based quartet founded by Chico Mann that melds West African rhythms and harmony to hard rock's riff-based foundations. 
Here Lies Man - Iron Rattles from No Ground to Walk Upon
A product of the feverish creative minds of Antibalas affiliates Marcos Garcia and Geoff Mann, Here Lies Man began in 2017 as a hybrid of West African rhythms and '70s stoner metal riffing... The introduction of "Iron Rattles" further expands the group's sonic palette, setting the pace with an electric kalimba rather than a blown-out guitar riff. The colorful compositions, analog production, and foreboding synth interludes make the mini-album some of Here Lies Man's most captivating material.

The king of the contemporary chitlin' circuit, known for his raucous and red-hot mix of soul, blues, and funk. 
Bobby Rush - Slow Motion from Sitting on Top of the Blues
Bobby Rush cut his first single in 1964, when he was already 31 years old, and 55 years later, the man is not only still making music, but he still sounds like a credibly raunchy love man at a time when most folks his age can hardly be bothered to get up off the couch. The swampy funk that was a major part of Rush's musical personality in his salad days is in short supply on 2019's Sitting on Top of the Blues, but his gift for grafting together deep soul and barroom-ready blues is as strong as ever, and the rough insistence of his vocals connects when he wraps his voice around his various tales of women trying to get the better of him (at least when he's not busy trying to get the better of them). The vibe of Sitting on Top of the Blues is laid-back but not lazy...

The chief songwriter and lead guitarist of the Band, who later moved into film (acting, producing, scoring) and a solo career. 
Robbie Robertson - Let Love Reign
...He’s shared “I Hear You Paint Houses” from it already, which was directly influenced by the story that The Irishman is based off of, and today he’s sharing “Let Love Reign,” a track that was inspired by the Beatles.
In a statement (via Rolling Stone), Robertson said: “Some people think John Lennon’s dream about love and togetherness went up in flames. I think that’s wrong. It’s everlasting. There was something a little naive about John Lennon going around singing about peace, but in that period young people celebrating love and peace helped end a war.”

Horn-driven seven-piece band from Brooklyn crafts instrumental funk in the Afro-beat and psychedelic soul tradition. 
Ikebe Shakedown - Not Another Drop from Kings Left Behind
New York septet Ikebe Shakedown play what they refer to as "cinematic instrumental soul," which amounts to a thick, steamy brew of retro funk, psychedelic rock, and soundtracks ranging from Spaghetti Westerns to blaxploitation flicks. The group's compositions almost always include galloping drums and hand percussion, hot horns, and simmering organ, along with additional touches such as surf guitar licks and string arrangements. Kings Left Behind is their fourth full-length, and the first taped at Hive Mind Recording, a Brooklyn-based studio built and operated by two of the band's members, bassist Vince Chiarito and saxophonist Michael Buckley. Compared to the group's past efforts, Kings Left Behind doesn't seem to utilize quite as much echo or other trippy effects, and it seems a bit classier and more sophisticated...

Los Angeles-based singer/songwriter with sophisticated jazz, folk, and country influences. 
Madison CunninghamPin It Down from Who Are You Now
In the two years between debuting her jazzy, nuanced folk-rock songs on the self-released Love, Lose, Remember EP and presenting her full-length Verve debut, Madison Cunningham was invited to tour with the Punch Brothers and Andrew Bird, perform on Chris Thile's public radio show, and guest on albums by the likes of Bird, Matt Redman, and J.S. Ondara. For the unacquainted, the allure of her textured voice and sophisticated guitar playing is evident on said debut, 2019's Who Are You Now. Also apparent are songwriting inspirations that range from Joni Mitchell and Jeff Buckley to Fiona Apple...

Rachel Browne-led indie rock outfit who sharpened early shoegaze influences into a catchy blend of fuzz and jangle. 
Field Mouse - Skygazing from Meaning
Over the course of their first half-dozen years together, Field Mouse shifted away from early shoegaze influences toward a more streamlined guitar pop that still echoed with some of the shadowy quality of dreams. Any momentum was interrupted, however, following the release of 2016's Episodic and, more importantly, the outcome of that year's presidential election. The band essentially went on an unofficial hiatus, partly to focus on their personal lives but largely due to bandleader Rachel Browne being too demoralized -- and self-conscious about the place of art in the circumstances -- to write. After two years away from music, Browne was inspired by looking through some of her old poems and reached out to band co-founder Andrew Futral. The resulting Meaning makes an effort to find perspective and support structures in uncertain times...

This Norwegian singer/songwriter crafts thoughtful, uncompromising music under her own name as well as Rockettothesky. 
Jenny Hval - High Alice
Jenny Hval songs tend to get stuck on a phrase. With a more conventional songwriter, you might call this a chorus, but she has always made these recurrences sound like incantatory thought loops. On “High Alice,” the second single from The Practice Of Love, that phrase is “must be drawn to something.” Hval switches between points of view, so that they, we, I are all tied together in their collective search for definition.
She frames this search through Alice In Wonderland fabulism; we follow Hval through the looking-glass as she is drawn to these familiar childhood peculiarities: the queen, the clock, the ocean. Hval says this High Alice is “sketching out her rabbit hole,” drawing in shades of her own being. “We all want something better,” she sings, her music floating deeper and deeper into the subconscious.


Sleater-Kinney, Big Thief, The Hold Steady, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Thee Oh Sees, Here Lies Man, Bobby Rush, Robbie Robertson, Ikebe Shakedown, Madison Cunningham, Field Mouse, Jenny Hval

2019. július 25., csütörtök

046 ALTER.NATION weekly favtrax 25-07-2019

ALTER.NATION #46
Ernie Hawks, The Soul Investigators, G&D, Jenny Hval, Wild Billy Childish & CTMF, Oceans of the Moon, The Quiet Templel, UV-TV, Twen, Bethlehem Steel, DIIV, The Hold Steady, Russian Circles

weekly favtraX 
25 - 0 7 - 2 0 1 9
"Scorpio Walk"




ALTER.NATION #46 on DEEZER


Ernie Hawks is straight up gangster! He somehow manages to transform the flute into as instrument with as much muscle as a baritone sax. Serious grooves here, like they were designed to be sampled, but really it's just funky dudes putting out funky tunes.
Ernie Hawks, The Soul Investigators - Scorpio Walk from Bad Education, Vol. 1: "Soul Hits" of Timmion Records
 Daptone Records takes its longstanding kinship with Finland's Timmion label to the next level with Bad Education, Vol. 1. Daptone distributes the label stateside and assists in extending its creative reach. In turn, the folks at Timmion provide advocacy and support for the New York label's artists when they tour Europe.

G&D (Georgia Anne Muldrow/Dudley Perkins)  - Where I’m From
...The duo’s debut album Black Love & War is about the unity of the black family as is largely produced by Muldrow. Its lead single “Where I’m From” is definitely worth checking out. This one’s a bit more acoustic compared to “Overload,” and has a smoldering, earthy feel. While giving Muldrow’s full-bodied vocals a place to shine, it still features some of those digital top-line trills that serve as a reminder of the track’s modernity. Along with Perkins’ relaxed yet rhythmic verses, a transportive atmospheric synth pad swirls horizontally. A simple drum beat maintains throughout as Muldrow’s gospel ad libs soar.

This Norwegian singer/songwriter crafts thoughtful, uncompromising music under her own name as well as Rockettothesky. 
Jenny Hval - Ashes to Ashes
...On her best songs, Hval gently coos gnomic reflections on the human body, creativity, and sexuality, set to shape-shifting, adventurous music that hints at how weird and grotesque all this “being a physical person who can reproduce and will die” stuff is. With “Ashes to Ashes,” Hval once again does all that in a new way. Catchy hooks, uptempo thumps, and strobe-like shimmers turn out to be a Trojan Horse for a series of reminiscences about dreams—about the acts of burial, songwriting, and fucking, in that order—delivered with the off-kilter elegance you’d expect from a keen student of Kate Bush and Björk...


Few performers in rock history have been as ferociously prolific as Billy Childish. In fact, a complete discography of his work as a solo performer and with his various bands would take up quite a lot of space...
Medway's most prolific craftsman, Billy Childish has been in more bands than most people could count on their fingers and toes since he started bashing out three chords in the late '70s. CTMF was his main band in the 2010s; the power trio combines the furious energy of punk, the sprightly swagger of garage rock, and the occasional ragged strand of Merseybeat or psychedelia, wrapping it up in Childish's trademark hollered vocals and raw lyrical perspective.
Wild Billy ChildishCTMF - You Can't Capture Time from Last Punk Standing…
When the name Billy Childish shows up on the sleeve of an album, it's a guarantee that the contents will be raw rock & roll played with feverish purity and sung with the passion of a madman. He's had numerous bands over the years, and CTMF is on par with the best of them. Over the course of a handful of albums they've established themselves as keepers of the punk rock flame, undimmed by commercial concerns and undeterred by the lure of flashy stylistic diversions. Last Punk Standing... is another fine addition to their CV; the trio whip up some thrilling noise as they power through raging rockers, pounding punk polemics, a surf instrumental, and the occasional love song.

Minimalist grooves and indie rock aggression meet vintage electronics in this project from Rick Pelletier of Six Finger Satellite. 
Oceans of the Moon - Borderline from Oceans of the Moon
In the late '60s and early '70s, the synthesizer was something novel, and often used in pop music to conjure up the sound of a sleek and gleaming technological future. All these years later, electronics have been around enough to sound clanky and fractured if need be, and the self-titled debut album from Oceans of the Moon is an inspired example of music from an alternate universe where a gang of aging sound-generating circuits have made their last stand in some forbidden silicon graveyard. Featuring Rick Pelletier (of Six Finger Satellite and La Machine) on guitar, keyboards, and vocals, Jon Loper on drums, and Dare Matheson on a synthesizer rig he could have rescued from a garage sale at Allen Ravenstine's house, Oceans of the Moon know how to make a groove when they feel like it (the R&B influences are faint but audible in Loper's drumming)

...The band's name comes directly from a tune composed by pianist Mal Waldron, recorded by Donald Byrd and Booker Little for the 1960 album The Soul of Jazz Percussion (reissued as The Third World)...
The Quiet Temple - X Rated from The Quiet Temple
Founded by guitarist Duke Garwood and Soulsavers' Rich Machin, Quiet Temple is a loose-knit, slipstream instrumental collective named for a Mal Waldron composition immortalized by Donald Byrd and Booker Little. The rolling cast includes players who have worked with various bands over the past two decades and sometimes together. The roster includes saxophonist Ray Dickaty (Stereolab, Spiritualized); keyboardist Tim Lewis (aka Thighpaulsandra -- Spiritualized and Julian Cope), drummer Paul May, bassist Peter Marsh (both Woven Entity), and guitarist Tony "Doggen" Foster (Julian Cope, Spiritualized, Brain Donor). Their music crisscrosses genres from psych and post-punk to left-field jazz, steamy dub, kosmiche, and even Krautrock...  Ultimately, there are too few records like The Quiet Temple. While its musical referents are obvious, its assemblage, execution, and inspiration are not.
The Quiet Temple founded by Duke Garwood and Soulsavers' Rich Machin

Central Florida noise pop trio UV-TV make catchy, candid pop melancholia with jagged edges
UV-TV - World
“World” is one of their longest tracks, an extended humid nightmare whose sunny tones cut through the compression. “I’m running, always trying, it’s always worth the fighting,” Rose Vastola sings through the density. “There’s no choice of denying.”



Twen - Waste
...We’ll learn more about their full-length debut later this year, but for now we’ve got “Waste,” a song about self-doubt and silencing a negative mental feedback loop. Lead vocalist Jane Fitzsimmons shouts over an extremely catchy but hard-hitting melody, “I make you wanna be someone. I make you want to waste it, I make you wanna waste some time.” The harmonies kind of remind me of early Tegan And Sara with a fuzzy edge...



Bethlehem Steel - Bad Girl
...At the project’s center is still Becca Rsykalczyk, though, whose smoky voice grounds Bethlehem Steel’s lead single “Bad Girl”: “Woke up early to hate myself/ Am I a bad girl?” she wonders on it, her swirl of anxieties giving way to a terse, knotted breakdown.“‘Bad Girl’ is about all the nights that my brain keeps me awake. Irrationally telling me I’m a terrible person. Going over and over and over all of the things I might have done to upset or inconvenience another human,” Ryskalczyk said in a statement. “Singing the line ‘am I a bad girl?’ to my bandmates or even just out loud to myself was definitely embarrassing. I wasn’t sure if I should even keep it as a lyric until I decided to just lean into it. I send my mom everything I’m working on and when I sent her the demos with place holder titles she was like ‘Bad Girl? Now THATS how you name a song!’ so naturally it had to stay.”...


DIIV - Skin Game
We’re also getting the lead single, “Skin Game,” a track that starts breezy and shoegaze-y and eventually trails off into electrifying guitar distortion. Zachary Cole Smith talks about “Skin Game,” describing it as a song about addiction and recovery, in a statement:
"It’s an imaginary dialogue between two characters, which could either be myself or people I know. I spent six months in several different rehab facilities at the beginning of 2017. I was living with other addicts. Being a recovering addict myself, there are a lot of questions like, “Who are we? What is this disease?” Our last record was about recovery in general, but I truthfully didn’t buy in. I decided to live in my disease instead. “Skin Game” looks at where the pain comes from. I’m looking at the personal, physical, emotional, and broader political experiences feeding into the cycle of addiction for millions of us."

The Hold Steady - You Did Good Kid
The song thrives on contradiction. Rumination on daily drudgery and existential anxiety (“When your low serotonin’s got you brittle and glitchy”) is sandwiched between half-hearted affirmations (“You did good kid.”) Spiraling riffs lead to a buoyant brass section. It sounds like a harmonious panic attack...
"‘You Did Good Kid’ is the first song we worked on for this session, and remains a favorite,” Finn says in a statement. “It went though a few iterations before we came to this arrangement, and I’m really psyched on it. It feels great to play live.”

Russian Circles - Kohokia
In a couple of weeks, Chicago instrumental trio Russian Circles are set to release a new album, Blood Year... a simmering 7-minute epic that feels like a perfect confluence of their sound: glowering dread and tension mixed with soaring highs that approach transcendence...

Ernie Hawks, The Soul Investigators, G&D, Jenny Hval, Wild Billy Childish & CTMF, Oceans of the Moon, The Quiet Templel, UV-TV, Twen, Bethlehem Steel, DIIV, The Hold Steady, Russian Circles