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


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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Tav Falco. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Tav Falco. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2019. március 15., péntek

15-03-2019 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX

15-03-2019 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX [from the recent past] Electric Six, The Trouble with Templeton, Fat White Family, King Khan / The Gris Gris, Tav Falco, Le Butcherettes, Foals, Dido, Maya Jane Coles, Roz and the Rice Cakes, Dr. Dog, Ibeyi, Dungen / Woods, Lorelle Meets the Obsolete


M U S I C



pres_perf_mix # The player always plays the latest playlist tracks. / A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. 

LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM
http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971


Detroit rockers who became surprise British hitmakers with a blend of garage rock, post-punk, and disco. Mixing garage rock, disco, punk, new wave, and metal into cleverly dumb, in-your-face songs celebrating hedonism in multiple forms, Electric Six emerged from the same late-'90s/early-2000s Detroit garage-punk scene that produced the White Stripes and the Dirtbombs. 
Electric Six
Chicken Wine 2:25
Sex With Somebody 3:29
Dark Politics 3:59
from How Dare You 2017
Once upon a time -- back in the '60s and '70s, you know, the Bronze Age -- it was pretty much a given that a working rock band put out an album every year, toured behind it, and then rolled back into the studio to repeat the cycle. That time line has all but vanished in the 21st century, but the men of Electric Six have the sort of work ethic that harks back to those halcyon days. Since 2005, Electric Six have dropped at least one album every year, sometimes more, and 2017 has proven to be no exception, as How Dare You was delivered unto their fans in October of that year. Along with being industrious, the E6 are also reliable; while they haven't delivered a lunatic masterpiece like Switzerland or I Shall Exterminate Everything Around Me That Restricts Me from Being the Master in a while, they haven't been tossing off duds, either, and How Dare You is a testimony that this band's devotion to its own strange creation is not a sometime thing. Still dealing in hard rock bombast, dance-rock pomp, and a wisenheimer's worldview, How Dare You is Electric Six doing what they do best, with Dick Valentine's gloriously mannered vocals expounding on his myriad obsessions as the guitars, keys, and drums pop behind him like an exceptionally long string of firecrackers...


Introspective and occasionally epic indie pop from this Brisbane-based quintet led by singer/songwriter Thomas Calder. Australian indie rock quintet the Trouble with Templeton (named after an episode of The Twilight Zone) began in 2011 as the recording project of then 20-year-old Brisbane-based singer/songwriter Thomas Calder.
The Trouble with Templeton
Bad Mistake 3:05
Double Life 5:34
from Someday, Buddy 2016
Built around the talents of singer and songwriter Thomas Calder, the Trouble with Templeton self-released what was essentially a solo album before making their Bella Union debut as a five-piece with 2014's Rookie. The bricolage of indie folk, synthier pop, and more direct alt-rock led to touring opportunities with the likes of Of Monsters and Men and Father John Misty. Playing more to their strengths, however, the follow-up sees the group, which slimmed down to a trio, simplify their approach. The more focused Someday, Buddy re-places the emphasis on songwriting. It takes on an almost lo-fi character with '90s Pavement-type ambling guitars and intimate lyrics as the album oscillates between hushed rumination and lyric-driven outbursts...


Scuzzy rock & roll-inspired post punk with a socialist edge from south London recalling the likes of the Fall, Butthole Surfers, and the Birthday Party. 
Fat White Family 
Whitest Boy on the Beach 4:53
We Must Learn to Rise 7:10
from Songs For Our Mothers 2016
On their first album, Fat White Family sounded like they could be a group of bitter, homeless alcoholics who took to making music on battered gear found in a house where they were squatting. Three years later, the group made something of a creative shift; on 2016's Songs for Our Mothers, those winos have purchased a cheap but reliable rhythm machine and started dabbling in club music...


2019. február 8., péntek

08-02-2019 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX

Johnny Jewel

08-02-2019 alter:MiX # 33 alter tracks in PRSNT_PRFCT_MiX [from the recent past] Johnny Jewel, Heron Oblivion, Katie Dey, Airiel, Kate Nash, Israel Nash, Jacob Banks, Electric Six, Marilyn Manson, The Trouble with Templeton, Fat White Family, King Khan / The Gris Gris, Tav Falco, Le Butcherettes


M U S I C



pres_perf_mix # The player always plays the latest playlist tracks. / A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. 

LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM
http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971


Producer, label founder, and member of many projects whose eerie, nostalgic synth pop helped shape the sound of the early 21st century. 
Johnny Jewel
Digital Rain 5:19
The Runner 1:42
Seven Corners 2:02
from Digital Rain 2018
Appearing less than a year after the release of Johnny Jewel's solo debut Windswept, Digital Rain is an even more independent effort. Where Windswept included tracks Jewel recorded with bands like Symmetry as well as on his own, each track here is a solo composition -- and feels like it was recorded in solitude. After establishing himself in the arid city of Los Angeles, Jewel began to miss the rain and snow of places where he used to live, and challenged himself to create a wordless, beatless evocation of watery weather in its many forms...


Psych-folk group led by Meg Baird and featuring members of Comets on Fire and Six Organs of Admittance. 
Heron Oblivion
Beneath Fields 7:45
Sudden Lament 3:32
from The Chapel 2017
San Franciscan psych-folk group Heron Oblivion followed their excellent 2016 full-length debut with this live recording, captured in the band's home town in early 2017. Six of the album's seven songs are performed here, and while these takes aren't grand departures from the studio versions, they demonstrate the acute focus of the group's vision. Featuring drummer/vocalist Meg Baird, guitarists Noel von Harmonson and Charlie Saufley, and bassist Ethan Miller, the band alternate between fragile, dreamy folk and heavy psych-rock, often featuring delicate vocals and crushing dual guitar solos in the same song...

Experimental bedroom pop musician from Melbourne, Australia known for her unconventional arrangements and distorted vocals. 
Katie Dey
All 1:30
So You Pick Yourself Up 2:21
Only a Trip and Fall Down Again
from Flood Network 2016
Australian singer/songwriter Katie Dey's singular brand of fragmentary home-recorded pop is fragile, strange, and sometimes frightening. Taking full advantage of the recording and editing capabilities of her laptop, she vibrantly strums her scratchy-sounding guitar and programs nervous, glitchy beats. Nothing is ever straightforward with her music; it constantly feels like it's mutating and being pulled apart against its will. Most jarring of all is her voice, which she distorts into an unsettling digital croak. Similar to tUnE-yArDs, Dey's vocals are not for everyone, and may be a dealbreaker for many listeners. In the context of her music, however, they make total sense, and it's hard to imagine hearing pristine, angelic vocals over such broken, mutilated arrangements...

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