Archive for August 2011

Joel’s Hit Show, Episode 119, 10 August 2011 Playlist

August 10, 2011

The Woodenbirds, Folly Cub
Count Fleet, Stay Here
Blondie, D-Day
Fereshta, Wonderlust
Moonbell, Figurine
Mia Doi Todd, Summer Lover
Julianoguitar, Spectreman (theme)
Team Me, Come Down
Esben and the Witch, Eumenides
The Luyas, Canary
When Saints Go Machine, Kelly
The Coathangers, My Baby
The Bewitched Hands, Hard to Cry
Marissa Nadler, Baby I Will Leave You in the Morning
Imperial Mammoth, Christmastime in London
OK Go, Here It Goes Again
Cranes, Breeze
Crazy Mary, Way Too Freaky
Cub, My Flaming Red Bobsled
Stooges, Search and Destroy
The Curious Mystery, Night Ride Reeling
Kimya Dawson, Wiggle My Tooth
Dance Hall Crashers, He Wants Me Back
Damone, Frustrated Unnoticed
Dealership, All the Kids
Dead Can Dance, Ariadne
The Dears, Galactic Tides
Dead Man’s Bones, Flowers Grow Out of My Grave
Dear Nora, Rollercoaster
Deerhoof, Come See the Duck
Deluka, OMFG
The Delgados, Accused of Stealing
Rad Cloud – Calif. Totally Rad
Death Set – The Wrong Way
Buzzcocks – Get On Our Own
Los Vigilantes – Me Imagino
Alkaline Trio – Clavicle
Aloha Screwdriver – Death Grip
NoFX – Kill All the White Man
Decrepit Youth – Escape the Light
Sporadic Spontaneous – Nursing/Low
TSOL – Being in Love
Touch My Rash – Sexless Existence
Cerebral Ballzy – On the Run
Iron Lamb – Dubious Preacher
Fucked Up – Slanted Tone
Broken Bottles – Generation USA
Eddie Haskells – Radio Video
Rivals – Brick By Brick
Riverboat Gamblers – Entertainment
Jonny Manak and the Depressives – Sacrifice
Executioner – Kraft
Megadeth – Peace Sells

Bowling for Soup Dollyrots Sunderland San Francisco show review

August 8, 2011

Spinning Platters, bitch!

Ursa Minor “Showface”

August 7, 2011

Unimaginative but passable female modern rock. When your boyfriend says “no more Pretenders” you can double-cross him by playing Ursa Minor instead. “Lead & I Will Follow” won’t become the new introduction to The Rush Limbaugh Show, but it still provides an excuse to drink iced tea you made on your balcony on a cool summer afternoon. Global warming, my ass.
“Guerilla” is better in the singing quality department. I’m placing the fault on the musicians as to why this record isn’t better. Michelle Casillas sings just fine on these tracks.
I can always listen to “Always Someone.” The guitar picks up a bit on this one. It can stand on its own. “No Other” is like no other. It’s OK. The guitar is best on this one. The lyrics depend too much on a chorus that runs a bit flat.
It would be so awesome if “Come to Me” were like “Come to Butt-head,” but it isn’t. More of an Alannah Myles feeling here.
The Chrissie Hynde comparisons peak with “What Good Is a Song.” This one gets it right, in that it focuses on the vocals. Not bad at all.

OK Go “180/365”

August 7, 2011

It’s a collection of live recordings from their tour last fall. Pick the songs you like the best and expect that they will sound good here as well. It seems that the band is fading from recognition so you might even be able to pull off playing “Here It Goes Again” if you’re so inclined. The ones that stand out to me are:

  • “Do What You Want,” from St. Olaf’s College in Northfield, Minnesota
    “I Want You So Bad I Can’t Breathe,” from Terminal 5 in New York City
    “This Too Shall Pass,” from Northern Lights in Clifton Park, New York
    “Needing/Getting” and “In the Glass,” from Club Nokia in Los Angeles
    “Here It Goes Again,” from The Orange Peel in Asheville, North Carolina
    “Skyscrapers,” from Tipitina’s Uptown Club in New Orleans
    “Get Over It,” from The Fox Theatre in Boulder, Colorado
  • Elliott Smith “An Introduction to…”

    August 7, 2011

    No one picked this one up, which of course is just the sign of the times. Today’s college students have no reason to know who Elliott Smith is. He is from Portland, so I figured I might as well save the record from whatever we call the reject pile these days. I don’t give a shit about Jethro Tull, so I imagine it’s the same thing. Three cheers to Kill Rock Stars for putting this out.
    At any rate, Smith died when he was 34, right around when we began to invade Iraq. Like a lot of Portland residents, he was depressed and drank a lot. And like a lot of Portland residents, he made music. This record should explain the rest.
    “Waltz #2 (XO)” is a waltz. It sounds like any other mid-’90s “alternative rock” song with 25% of the beats missing. “Alameda” is not about the city in California, or is it? This one has haunting background vocals that you’re sure to enjoy.
    Also good is “Last Call,” which is even more depressing than most of his other efforts. If you can handle it, it’s great stuff. Put the knife down. Don’t even be in the same room as it.
    The vocals are mixed a little higher on “Twilight,” which has nothing to do with the movie or the KSCU DJ. These louder vocals give you louder backing vocals as well, and all told it makes for a better song.
    The last track is the single version of “Happiness.” This might be the one to help you identify with Smith the most. It takes a lot of the melancholy characteristics of his music and puts them all in the same song.

    Fereshta “Global Citizen”

    August 7, 2011

    Straightforward female-fronted rock ‘n’ roll here, right down to the guitar. Maybe two rungs below heavy metal on the ladder, but make no mistake: There’s no pop here.
    “Motherland” has a melody I’ve heard before and guitar that screams U2. Put it together, and it could be like The Lightfighters or Picnic. The familiarity continues on “Wonderlust,” which has the same bass line as “Stray Cat Strut” by the Stray Cats. When Juliana Hatfield did the double album, a lot of stuff from Juliana’s Pony sounded like this stuff, although Juliana couldn’t sing at a level this mediocre if she tried. No, Fereshta’s strength is in the mix and consistency. It’s not necessary to sing the way Hatfield does to make this style successful.
    Maybe the attempt is to be goth with “Untie My Hands,” but it’s not synthy enough for that. At any rate, this track is darker than you’d expect, so maybe you can sneak off and have one clove. They’re called carcinogens for a reason, though.
    “Tombstones” sounds like “Harden My Heart” by Quarterflash. “Body Heat” stands out in that it’s a rock song that sounds like a rock song but not any one in particular.
    Predictably, the last track is a ballad, in this case “Warm Gentle Breeze.” Every rose may have its thorn, but such gimmickry is not needed on an otherwise satisfactory rock album.

    Bell “Diamonite”

    August 7, 2011

    Straightforward mid-90s post-industrial sounding stuff. Little bits of M.I.A. and Republica can be found if you look deep enough into tracks such as “Bulgari.” You can also hear Information Society in “Meaninglessness.” This one stands out on its own merit as well. Frenetic yet controlled, it’s like Bis without the shrieking.
    “River” musically is like a Super Nintendo take on “The Dominatrix Sleeps Tonight.” And why shouldn’t we have a 16-bit craze now that the 8-bit craze has run its course?
    More whimsical music can be found on “Junior.” It’s as happy as a Mormon boy singing along to the Oak Ridge Boys’ “Elvira.” The last track is “Eat Seeds,” and I like to pretend that this is about ensuring you eat enough fiber. It’s actually a metaphor-filled concoction that completes what Bjork wishes she could do.

    Imperial Mammoth “Imperial Mammoth”

    August 7, 2011

    Just another indie rock band, but they get it. The piano accentuates the rest of the act, rather than defining it. Calming music doesn’t have to be calm — it can sound like this instead.
    “No Time” has similar guitar as Adam Ant’s “Wonderful” and a Paula Kelley song I can’t place. The backing vocalist doesn’t sound like Kelley, don’t get me wrong. Actually he doesn’t sound like Adam Ant, either. Just the guitar. Very good composition at any rate.
    The Auto-Tune gets a workout on “Real People (Parts 1&2),” but it seems to be part of the artistic statement, rather than a coverup for lousy-ass vocals. Like any two-part song, it’s a bit long, but the pace gets you through it painlessly.
    If you’re looking for whistling and hand claps, “Ultra Violet” is the track for you. The woman does the lead vocals on this one, and it sounds pretty good. She also leads on “Christmastime in London.” Amazing that two of the most depressing things on earth — Christmas and England — can combine to make such a happy-sounding song. The chorus really brings this one home, as we finally get to hear the singer’s vocal range. It puts Jolie Lindholm to shame.

    Sci-Fi Lovestory “Electrocutie (Single)”

    August 7, 2011

    The album version is awesome because the song is awesome. Male singer with female la-la-la-ing in the background. Very basic indiepop done right. I would like to hear more. The B-side is “Get Away.” It is slower but still fun. These guys should be able to get on some romantic comedy soundtracks with this stuff.
    The dance radio edit is just that. I like it better. These guys were born to rock this way anyway, so you might as well get the full effect, even without Reggie. Kramer’s mix is OK, but it sounds too much like a sitcom theme. Stick with movie soundtracks, not TV, guys.
    The last track is the 12″ extended dance mix. Usually these versions have some sort of unique component, which is why I love Book of Love so much. In this case, the song is just longer. But hey, that’s why Burger King has more than one size of onion rings, right?

    Joel’s Hit Show, Episode 118, 3 August 2011 Playlist

    August 3, 2011

    Oh Mercy, Broken Ears
    The Bewitched Hands, Hard to Cry
    Fungi Girls, Some Easy Music
    The Lost Years, Waiting Lines
    Chop Chop, Slavery
    The Coathangers, Trailer Park Boneyard
    Metal Mother, In the Bones
    Victoria George, Forever
    Scumbag Philosopher, Tickbox Exercise
    Black Ryder, To Never Know You
    Yacht, Dystopia
    Agnes Obel, On Powdered Ground
    Sarah Lee Guthrie & Johnny Irion, Seven Sisters
    Rad Cloud, California Totally Rad
    The Rich Collective, Living Out Our Dreams
    The Concretes, Say Something New
    Controller.Controller, Straight in the Head
    Concrete Blonde, I Call It Love
    Cotton Jones, Dream on Columbia Street
    Corpus Callosum, Riding Home
    The Corner Laughers, Dark Horse
    Christina Courtin, Green Jay
    Cowboy Junkies, Renmin Park
    The Cribs, We Were Aborted
    Saskia Crescentia, Sensual Life
    Sons & Daughters – The Model
    Black Lips – Time
    Death Set – I Miss You
    Greenhorns – Saying Goodbye
    Sci-Fi – Influenza Z
    Fung Wah Freakout – Auf Weidersehen
    Touch My Rash – Give Me Everything
    Superchunk – My Gap Feels Weird
    NoFX – Stranded
    Kitten Forever – Nightworm
    Supergrass – Caught by the Fuzz
    Police Teeth – Christian Rudolph
    Hoter Water Music – End of the Line
    Real McKenzies – Lest We Forget
    She Mob – I took the cash
    Oops – Drive Carefully
    400 Blows – Let the Lightning Strike
    Alkaline Trio – Crawl
    Kills – Heart is a Beating Drum
    Deep Eynde – Devilchild
    The Loved Ones – Jane
    Hot Snakes – XOX