Archive for the ‘Tunes’ Category

Hints, allegations, and things left unsaid

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Kaiser Chiefs – Oh My God

You spend the fall of 2005 and the winter of 2006 happily confused. You didn’t know what to expect when you moved to New York City, and it’s better that way; Even if you had, you would have been wrong. Everything is harder than it should be. This is why so many would-be residents depart soon after arriving; they either burn out and move on or quietly fade into the larger canvas of New York. You won’t figure it all out, but you resolve to haltingly inch closer.

October 7, 2005, the day you add the Kaiser Chiefs “Oh My God” to your iTunes library, marks roughly your quarter-year anniversary in Brooklyn. No one celebrates. In that amount of time, you learn the basic ebbs and flows of New York, which you unironically begin calling “The City” as if it adds gravitas to your largely anonymous presence. New York is; therefore you are.

You find a job at a restaurant in midtown that requires you to clear martini glasses until 2 a.m., 3 a.m., sometimes 4:30 a.m. The bar sits far enough off Broadway that the patrons are actors, not tourists. They tip well. The successful ones come for a drink after their seventh performance of the week as Sir Robin in Spamalot, and then depart. The “actors” drink Jack Daniels and Amstel Light until your manager, fueled by cigarettes, anger, and the eternal frustration of being a New York Mets fan, finally tells them to leave.

Because the myth of being poor drives your decision-making more than reality – you will take a 50 percent pay cut when you get a full-time editing job – you eschew cabs to take the subway home to Brooklyn, behavior that’s partially fueled, you suspect, by the implied romance of the venture. Isn’t the promise of a 4 a.m. trip on public transportation why you’re here?

Invariably, somewhere between 14th street and the Broadway-Nassau station, a debate ensues in your buzzed brain: take the C to Clinton/Washington or the G to Classon? The latter stop almost certainly requires a long wait on the platform but leaves you a block and a half from the duplex apartment you share with two friends from college and a high school buddy who won’t get along in six months; the former doesn’t necessitate a transfer but drops you more than half a mile away.

Inevitably, you stay on the C, emerging above ground on a leafy street in Brownstone Brooklyn that’s ominous when it’s dark and you’re new to the city. You wear stained black clothes that signify you work in the service industry. You’re obviously carrying cash. “Oh my god I can’t believe it / I’ve never been this far away from home,” Ricky Wilson screams out of your white iPod earbuds, the only thing separating you from the blackness. It strikes you that you are rather far from home. And that it’s probably your own fault if you get mugged.

Just as quickly, you and Wilson begin to disagree: “Cos all I wanted to be / was a million miles from here.

Sure, you may walk a little faster, but you’re happy where you are. [Buy.]

I want to know:

Written by

Were my feet always this dirty? Is my hair going grey? Why am I this weary? Are you going to stay? Who gave you this number? Are you alone? When did the children disappear?

*Lonely Planet, by Suddenly Sunshine

And the bells they will ring

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Sleigh Bells – Tell ‘Em

I haven’t listened to music for days now – smack-dab in the middle of the lull, and so am in need of awakened senses; for the smell to return, for the vibrancy of colour synaesthesia to blind me. Tell ‘Em is the crack of finger snap, the dispersing wave of guitar response, the frantic rev of sound that falls somewhere between a video game shooter and an engine on start up. Krauss’ vocal styling reaches keyboard imitation as it occasionally rises to the collapse of a final syllable. Its frantic nature fails to diminish as it carries you aboard a provoked drum machine and surging pelts and belts of tumultuous guitar notation.

[Audio by Sleigh Bells.]
[Visuals by Christopher Anderson.]

Put it to the back of your mind

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Phil Selway – By Some Miracle

Phil Selway, Radiohead’s drummer, is whispering, hushed and lush, about secrets. Here are some of mine:

– I last shit my pants aged 23.
– I once handed the majority of my savings in the form of a wad of cash to a teenage boy in Myanmar.
– I’m not sure love is a necessary ingredient of a successful marriage.
– I once went four months without masturbating.
– I think I believe in a god.
– I would like to spend a weekend or two high on vicodin.

[Buy Familial.]

idea for a short story

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Bloc Party – Your Visits Are Getting Shorter

This song makes me want to wear sunglasses indoors and generally wander around aimlessly reveling in my own awesomeness. [Buy.]

He works so hard

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Sheena Easton – Morning Train (Nine To Five)

Why does our present look so unlike the future once envisaged? The time we now live in, described by the minds of those long gone. They’d be so upset with the bland and the unison – the monotony. The immaculate misconception. Is it wrong to sometimes desire the nine to five? [Best.]

Careful, watch your step, in you go

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Destroyer – Archer on the Beach

I saw Dan Bejar live once. I bummed cigs from a couple from Sweden, and the Asian kid sitting on the plastic stackable chair next to me played some racing game on his phone between sets.

It was awful. Bejar kept pushing his fro out of his eyes and his sentences trailed off, like he was thinking aloud to himself on the stage. I could have chalked that up to his endearing standoffishness were the songs – performed solo acoustic – not so lifeless, so carelessly tossed out of his mouth and guitar as if he were practicing alone on his back porch.

Like his demeanor in that show, the two 12″ singles Destroyer has released since have had a cold complexion. Electronic synths and midi orchestrate lengthier, repetitive tunes. But the warmth of the recordings coddles me. On the b-side, Grief Point, you can hear the flint of a lighter and clink of ice cubes in a glass behind the most earthy recording of Bejar’s voice we have yet.

In this song, Archer seems paralyzed on the beach, his arrows just out of reach – it’s chilly and melancholy. Except that we can hear the pitter-patter of every rain drop in the sand beside him.

[Hurry and get one of the 1,000 copies of Archer on the Beach b/w Grief Point.]

Dress me down and liquor me up

Written by

The National – Available

Webster Hall, February 2, 2006, New York, NY – The National are angry.

The band – touring in support of a wonderful Alligator album that hasn’t made them rich as they think it should – are headlining the Plug Music Awards, a made-up ceremony in which the “awards” are handed out during set changes. They play last, surrounded by devil heads on the walls and indie kids on the floor.

They are the same band that will write Boxer and High Violet, be subject of a fawning New York Times Magazine story, and play a high-minded show at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. They are the same band that will eventually become successful enough that others accuse them of being boring, a claim that’s both driven by equal parts jealousy and fact. They are the same band that will get paid, find love, have children.

They are a band on the way, but right now, in this moment, they are pissed.

This show, it’s clear almost immediately, means everything to the group of five. They destroy their bodies on stage. They are desperate. Hungry. Vital. Overpowering. At one point, Matt Berninger sings so violently that he shakes the microphone cord out its slot.

A year from now, the lead singer will offer, “I think everything counts a little more than we think,” on Boxer’s “Ada.” Tonight, however, he has a different mind set: Nothing matters, except killing this show, even if it kills them.

Amtrak, October 26, 2010, Somewhere between Providence, RI and New York, NY – I have no idea if The National played “Available” on that February night four years ago. They might have – they didn’t have a huge catalog back then – but it’s not a great song. At this point, it wouldn’t make a two-disc “Best Of… The National” album. For 200 seconds, Berninger finds himself battling an alt-rock wall of noise in an effort to locate the slow, dark, melodic songs that the world associates with his band. He’ll get there – Sad Songs For Dirty Lovers cut “90-Mile Water Wall” provided the roadmap, and he inched closer on Alligator before perfecting the form on Boxer – but “Available” is a messy mix of ideas. I don’t know why they would have played the song.

But if you could compress the hopeless feeling overwhelming the room at Webster Hall – the frustration of knowing you’re good enough to succeed and but knowing that you aren’t – into 25 seconds, it would sound exactly like the stretch from 2:20 through 2:45.

Today, the National are a far superior band. They doused the fire present onstage at Webster and created magic from the smoke and the embers. But I’m allowed to miss the inferno. [Sad Songs for Dirty Lovers.]

On the phone, there was all the laughing

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Scarlett Johansson – Anywhere I Lay My Head

Pitchfork claim ‘Anywhere I Lay My Head’ as “dearth of vocal personality,” and the suggestive Entertainment Weekly see the record’s soundscapes as playing “second fiddle to disguising her [Scarlett’s] expressionless voice.” Oh, to be grotesquely wrong. But the Guardian got it right. When writing their letter to Music – following an acknowledgement of a record with “surprising allure” – they quizzed the master, “What would Johansson have made of ‘Christmas Card From A Hooker In Minneapolis’?” This is one of the most splendid of records to have cushioned my ears. The tickle and charm of whimsy. [Cheaper elsewhere, but here’s the manufacturer.]

Give me a village the size of a teacup

Written by

James Yorkston – Woozy With Cider

If you are reading this later, you might notice these words are different. Initially I tried writing from the point of view of the girl in this song. But that’s wrong. Her song is different, it doesn’t sound anything like this one. It didn’t fit.

I’m not sure what her song is. Maybe I wouldn’t like it. But I know what this song is.

This song is an old picture of that road trip you took after freshman year. Forget the all-nighters you pulled, erase the gnawing stress of finals week, let’s not even bring up the shame on the night you lost your virginity – for that one week all was right in the world. The sunlight hit your hair from behind, giving your face a warm glow.

This song is a steaming cup of hot cocoa with Bailey’s in it. You sip it tenderly as the frost opaques the windows and a soft blanket of snow drapes over the car. You don’t have anywhere to be all day.

This song is an old home video of your two kids fighting, viewed long after they’ve moved out. It’s the dry kiss you place on your lover’s brow as she tears up watching it. It’s the way she rotates the ring on your finger.

[Buy The Year Of The Leopard.]