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Premiere: Human Highway (Nick Thorburn of Islands and Jim Guthrie): "The Sound" [Stream]

When he's fronting Islands, Nick Thorburn is free to explore his experimental side, folding genres including orchestral pop, calypso, and hip-hop into his peculiar musical stew. Working with fellow Canadian singer-songwriter Jim Guthrie as Human Highway, he appears to be getting back to basics, at least judging from this advance track from their forthcoming full-length debut Moody Motorcycle. On "The Sound", Thorburn and Guthrie's reverence for the close harmonies of the Everly Brothers brings to mind kindred spirits from the laid-back 1970s West Coast folk-rock set. The vibrations are good, the song-song tune sticks in your head, and the acoustic guitar bit is as simple as it gets. Stop, hey, what's that sound? Oh, "The Sound", OK.
 
 
[from Moody Motorcycle; due 08/19/08 on Suicide Squeeze in the U.S. and Secret City in Canada]
 

Posted by Mark Richardson on Thu: 05-08-08: 01:30 PM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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On Repeat: Philip Jeck: "Fanfares" [MP3/Stream]

The title and sonic inspiration for this track, which serves as a centerpiece for Philip Jeck's upcoming album Sand, is Aaron Copland's ubiquitous "Fanfare for the Common Man". Copland wrote the brassy piece during World War II and it was obviously composed to inspire; Emerson, Lake & Palmer, who intuitively understood the tug of the piece's naked pomp, famously covered it in the 1970s. Jeck, whose working method involves mixing and processing old records via multiple turntables, usually live, takes fragments of the "Fanfare" and turns them inside out. The result retains the original's sense of nostalgia, but instead of triumph and progress it coats those feelings in decay and loss. You can almost see civilizations crumbling as the piece progresses, as the notes are caught in ever tighter and more confined loops and the droney throb of noise rises up to bury the melody. Jeck's genius here is to create a piece that evokes three or four distinct feelings simultaneously, a dazzling emotional patchwork that is both disorienting and completely addictive.
 
 
[from Sand; due 05/18/08 on Touch]
 

Posted by Mark Richardson on Thu: 05-08-08: 12:00 PM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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Video: The Mountain Goats [ft. Aesop Rock]: "Lovecraft in Brooklyn" (Aesop Rock Remix)

As John Darnielle writes on the official website for the Mountain Goats, "You may have heard tell about how a couple months back I gave Aesop Rock all the constituent parts of the song 'Lovecraft in Brooklyn' and told him 'go nuts, why don't you?' It is with great pleasure that I present to you Aesop's completely great from-the-ground-up remix and an accompanying video from the truly awesome Sketch Theatre." Darnielle and Aesop Rock have collaborated before, of course, so we know they're simpatico. Here, the latter adds a lumbering beat to the sturdy rock tune from Heretic Pride, which is filled with great lyrical detail ("Some kid in a Marcus Allen jersey asks me for a cigarette"), and then adds a few verses of his own toward the end. Interesting scene being drawn in the video as well.
 
[original track from Heretic Pride; out now on 4AD]
 

Posted by Mark Richardson on Thu: 05-08-08: 10:10 AM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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New Music: First Floor Power: "The Jacket (Karin Dreijer From the Knife Remix)" [Stream]

Underrated Swedish rockers First Floor Power don't seem to mind getting the Silent treatment. Lead singer Sara Wilson let her synth-pop side lead her forward on 2006's Love & Youth for the Knife's Rabid label, but her long-running main band gets back to the guitar-driven stuff (with a few synths still) on "The Jacket", the first single from their forthcoming Don't Back Down!. In this remix, Knife half Karin Dreijer Andersson takes the song back to the electronic sphere, which sounds like some kind of mythological underworld, or else maybe a planet-destroying space station. Atop a basic New Order-esque house beat and some other crackles of percussion, some synths plink rapidly, ominously, while others coo gently. The Knife's familiar (strange) vocal effects give Wilson's vocal an edge of menace: "If your jacket is getting too heavy for you/ Please, let me take it off." From there, Dreijer constructs a house of unusual sounds-- Wilson's frosty breathing, her wordless ululations-- and proceeds to haunt the shit out of it. Not all power currupts: Don't Back Down! is now streaming in its entirety on First Floor Power's MySpace page.

[from Don't Back Down!; due 05/05/08 in Sweden and 05/23/08 in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland on Crunchy Frog]

Posted by Marc Hogan on Thu: 05-08-08: 09:00 AM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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New Music: Pepi Ginsberg: "The Waterline" [MP3/Stream]

Dr. Dog's Scott McMicken was so taken with Pepi Ginsberg that he not only collaborated with the New York singer/songwriter on her third album, Red, but he also got her signed to Philly label Park the Van. It's easy to see the musical attraction. On "The Waterline" Ginsberg sounds thoroughly self-possessed both lyrically and vocally, fitting a breezy, folky arrangement to dark lyrics about trying to keep your head above water. Although it is specifically city-set, the song doesn't sound necessarily urban, but neither does it sound like the freaky folk music emanating from Philadelphia lately. There are jazzier elements pushing the song along: In the high range, a choir of Pepis sing a wordless warble-- the song's most distinctive feature. In the low range, a piano plays the left-hand part of an old boogie rhythm, filling in for a bass guitar and giving the song its ambling lope. In the middle is Pepi herself, singing about how "life is poetry you can't read twice." 

 
MP3:> Pepi Ginsberg: "The Waterline"
[from Red; out now on Park the Van]
 
Bonus! The song now has a video:
 

Posted by Stephen M. Deusner on Thu: 05-08-08: 08:00 AM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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Pitchfork.tv: May 7: In the Studio With Lee "Scratch" Perry and Andrew W.K. / Hot Chip / Clinic / Parts & Labor

You know how the first time you heard that Andrew W.K. was going to be co-producing Lee "Scratch" Perry's next album you thought to yourself, my god, I would love to be a fly on the wall in that studio? Well, dream come true, basically. Watch as these two eccentrics, seemingly from separate musical universes, form a mutual admiration society and come together to make some auditory magic.

We also added to the archive sweet recent videos from Hot Chip, Clinic, and Parts & Labor.

Hot Chip: "One Pure Thought"

Clinic: "The Witch (Made to Measure)"

Parts & Labor: "The Gold We're Digging"

Posted by Pitchfork on Wed: 05-07-08: 04:30 PM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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Video: Robyn: "Handle Me"

Another day, another video for Robyn's "Handle Me". This makes three for the single, count 'em, and the budgets seem to be slipping with each. Here she dances and sings in front of a mildly trippy video backdrop.

[from Robyn; out now on Konichiwa/Cherrytree/Interscope]
 

Posted by Mark Richardson on Wed: 05-07-08: 04:04 PM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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New Music: Lithops: "Rosa in a Light Speed Vessel" [MP3/Stream]

Jan St. Werner has been in the public eye in the last year or so for Von Südenfed, the collaboration he and his Mouse on Mars partner Andi Toma have with the Fall's Mark E. Smith. But St. Werner keeps busy and often has several projects going on simultaneously. Musically, the man never stays still; even when he's issuing a sequel, it still feels like the first time. Case in point is his new solo album under his Lithops guise. Though it shares the title Mound Magnet with its predecessor, (this is Part 2, subtitled Elevations Above Sea Level), the feel on the tracks I've heard is looser, sillier, comparatively melodic, and more focused on the driving 4/4. The epic "Rosa in a Light Speed Vessel" has a propulsive beat at its core and everything but the kitchen sink is swirling around it in a cyclone of sound-- stomping guitar chords, sea-sick synth moans, what might be a gradually pitch-shifted sample of a bi-plane's engine. It's a track that makes you feel like you're one step behind it for its entire duration, not quite able to figure out what's going on one moment as it has already moved on to the next.   

 
[from Mound Magnet Pt. 2: Elevations Above Sea Level; out now on Sonig/Killer Pimp]

Posted by Mark Richardson on Wed: 05-07-08: 03:10 PM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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New Music: Bridges and Powerlines: "Uncalibrated" [MP3/Stream]

Bridges. Powerlines. Calibration. Sounds like this band from Brooklyn may consist of engineering nerds, but the words on this track from their debut album Ghost Types sound like they might be into something more along the line of metaphysics: "I could make it cold inside just by being here," goes one line. Now that's power. The press kit mentions that Bridges and Powerlines are into Elephant 6 but I can't help thinking Elephant Shell, as the chord textures are all steel-wool shimmering and fuzzy, not unlike those favored by Tokyo Police Club. Chris Zane, who helped produce Les Savy Fav's Let's Stay Friends, was behind the boards for this, so we have him to thank for the bright sound.
 

[from Ghost Types; out now on Citybird]
 

Posted by Mark Richardson on Wed: 05-07-08: 01:40 PM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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New Music: Hot Chip: "Wearing My Rolex" (Wiley cover; live on BBC Radio 1's "Live Lounge") [MP3/Stream]

Hot Chip dropped by Radio 1's "Live Lounge" to chat about the ATP line-up (have fun and be safe, everybody) and they played "One Pure Thought" from the new one as well as a weird but relatively faithful cover of Wiley's rather awesome single "Wearing My Rolex". The BBC stream is super lo-fi, but what are you gonna do? (via I Am Fuel, You Are Friends, who have the mp3s).

Stream:> Hot Chip: Live on BBC Radio 1's "Live Lounge"

Posted by Mark Richardson on Wed: 05-07-08: 12:00 PM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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New Music: Frauke: "Parasite Fungus" [Stream]

Some bands might wield a song title like "Parasite Fungus" as if combining two words with often negative connotations somehow makes a work avant-garde. Frauke rock "Parasite Fungus" as if it's funny (hey, it kind of is) and as if they hate you (they probably don't, but that's their URL if not their M.O.). Either way, the Brooklyn-based punk trio of Tammy Duncan, husband Andrew Duncan, and Goes Cube's David Obuchowski dig this track-- from full-length debut Dirtier Than Horses-- a shallow grave of trebly hammer-on guitar riffs and attention-deficit drumming, then cover it up with some distorted banshee wails. As the drums and cymbal crashes build up intensity, after a verse or so the guitars start to sound less "American Girl" and more "Last Nite"-- albeit quite a bit messier than both. Perhaps it's because they're decomposing: "I'm already dead," Tammy bellows, and almost as soon as the track has begun, sure enough, it goes dead. But that shouldn't stop the parasite fungus. Not yet. (There's also an unofficial video for the track, posted below the link.)

Stream:> Frauke: "Parasite Fungus"

[from Dirtier Than Horses; out now and self-released]

Posted by Marc Hogan on Wed: 05-07-08: 11:10 AM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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New Music: Nico Muhly: "Mothertongue" (Excerpt) [MP3/Stream]

The four-movement title sequence from Chinatown-based composer Nico Muhly's forthcoming LP, Mothertongue, exhumes the detritus of memory. Muhly plumbed his mind for old, useless phone numbers, serial numbers, street numbers-- all the context-dependent codes we accumulate over a lifetime-- and turned them into a secret, subliminal, and ultimately unsolvable cipher. This condensed excerpt from "Mothertongue" begins with the insectile buzz of a mind digesting itself, as mezzo-soprano Abigail Fischer unravels sonorous strands of digits with religious fervor. Its palette includes rose-scented Romantic-era strings and mighty modernist synthesizers, and it has the same celestial, ululating quality of Music in 12 Parts by Philip Glass (with whom Muhly has worked in various capacities). Many classical composers seem like the Wizard of Oz; the glowing godhead of the music distracts us from the man behind the curtain. But Muhly always wants to be perceived, and here, we witness the junkyard of his memory being spun into something at once utterly ordinary and utterly strange.

MP3:> Nico Muhly: "Mothertongue" (Excerpt)
[from Mothertongue; due 07/22/08 on Brassland]

Posted by Brian Howe on Wed: 05-07-08: 09:30 AM CDT | Digg this article | Add to del.icio.us | Permalink
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