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Favorite New Release of the Week - Feb. 28th, 2006

SecretmachinestsdThe Secret Machines - Ten Silver Drops

Imagine the worst thing you’ve ever said to a loved one. Now recall the instant you realize you can’t take it back. Your stomach drops; your mouth tastes metallic. What is done can’t be undone. A short time later you’re defiant—feeling that you don’t need anyone and will die alone. That naïve, insolent, singular moment is thoroughly explored and set to crystalline music on Ten Silver Drops, the new album from the propulsive trio Secret Machines.

It’s no surprise that the theme of isolation dominates the New York City-based Secret Machines’ second album. By the time they began working on the songs in January 2005, the band members—bassist/keyboardist/vocalist Brandon Curtis, his brother guitarist/vocalist Ben Curtis, and drummer Josh Garza—had been touring for more than 18 months straight in support of their 2004 debut album Now Here Is Nowhere with only a couple days off at a time. “We experienced a deconstruction of our personal lives,” says Brandon. “Coming home to a familiar setting and being alien to it created a sense of isolation from the people we’re close to. There were all these invisible barriers that were tough to reach through. So we ended up with songs like ‘Alone, Jealous, and Stoned’ and ‘Lighting Blue Eyes,’ about how our emotions propel us toward these conflicts and away from the people we love.”

The band crafted multiple layers of icy synths, alpine guitar, and Garza’s trademark hypnotic, crashing drums, giving the epic soundscapes a three-dimensionality that the band feels was missing on Now Here Is Nowhere. This musical confluence evokes that moment when you realize that things have changed and can never be the same, and is revisited several times on Ten Silver Drops.

“Last time we were interested in creating edges in places people don’t normally create edges, like in the low-end frequencies. It ended up making the songs kind of two-dimensional and flat,” he says. “This time we tried to preserve some of the depth and let other things, like melodies, float to the surface.”

Where Now Here Is Nowhere was tight, spiky, and well-defined, Ten Silver Drops is more spacious—its wide frequency spectrum giving it both frozen peaks and murky depths. “To stir up the feelings we were trying to express,” Brandon says, “we let things lurk in the shadows without trying to make everything so sharp.”

To retain control over the vision, Secret Machines produced the new album themselves, as they did Now Here Is Nowhere. The band booked itself into Allaire, a secluded recording studio on a mountaintop in scenic Shokan, New York, and worked, ate, and slept there for three weeks in May and two weeks in July. But they had a rocky start. “The first week it was like all the toxins we had gathered from the travel had leeched out and filled up the place with negative energy,” Brandon says. “It was the first time we had been that still for 18 months, in a quiet isolated place, and everything we had internalized came to the surface. We really struggled to wrangle all the energy and emotion ricocheting around the place.”

Over the second two weeks, the band ended up redoing everything they recorded the first week, but they learned some valuable lessons. “Producing ourselves, we came away with the essential nature of preserving the sanctity of the vibe of a recording studio,” Brandon says. “A producer can dictate the terms, set the schedule, and create a sensory feeling in the room by lighting it or making it smell a certain way. When you’re doing it yourself, you have to be responsible for dictating the feeling you want.”

The songs that emerged from the Allaire sessions feature more chords and melodic movement this time around. Longtime fans will embrace the familiar effects-laden, heavily processed guitars and primal, stomping drums on up-tempo tracks like “Lightning Blue Eyes,” “All At Once (It’s Not Important),” and “I Hate Pretending.” As with Nowhere, the music owes a certain debt to the band’s beloved German experimentalist pop groups Kraftwerk, Neu, and La Dusseldorf.

“There was no effort to abandon any aesthetic or embrace a new one this time around,” Brandon says. “But the songs are more ‘song-y,’ perhaps because they were honed out on the road. There’s something about the immediacy of performing in front of an audience, as opposed to a performance in your own head…what you do can be shaped by the reaction you get from the crowd.”

In September, the band traveled to London to mix the album with legendary engineer/producer Alan Moulder, who is known for his work with Nine Inch Nails, My Bloody Valentine and Smashing Pumpkins. Brandon says. “He was present for the engineering of records like Loveless by My Bloody Valentine and Nowhere by Ride—it was comforting as well as intimidating because he’s been in the room when great things have happened. On some level that makes me feel like, ‘Here’s an opportunity for great things to happen in this room, too,’ but it also makes you wonder how your music is going to stand up to it.”

Secret Machines have been preparing for that moment to rise to the occasion since forming in Dallas in July 2000. The Curtis brothers and Garza served their musical apprenticeships in lesser-known experimental rock bands such as UFOFU, Captain Audio, Comet and Tripping Daisy, but knew they were destined for greater things. The trio decided to seek their fortune in New York, first making a stop in Chicago to record an EP, September 000, which was eventually released in March 2002 on Ace Fu records.

They moved into Brooklyn’s Bushwick neighborhood in November of 2000, living in a one-room loft apartment with no hot water that doubled as their rehearsal space. Word began to spread about the band’s fiery live performances and the buzz led to a record deal with Reprise, which released Now Here Is Nowhere in 2004. Last June Secret Machines put out The Road Leads Where It’s Led, a six-track EP of two originals and four covers, including Van Morrison’s “Astral Weeks” and a moody nine-minute version of Bob Dylan’s “Girl From The North Country.”

There’s an unspoken rule in pop songwriting that if you can’t say it in three minutes, something’s wrong. Nowhere opened with the nine-minute “First Wave Intact” and most of the tracks on Ten Silver Drops clock in around five minutes (though “Daddy’s In The Doldrums” spirals out to just over eight minutes). Brandon says he understands why some songwriters feel it’s important to get to the point, but insists there is room in this world for variety in song lengths. “Some things are worth soaking in,” he says. “If you think of music as a picture or a story, sometimes you want to be immersed in that world for a while. If we get something going, we enjoy the feeling that it gives us and want to let it spin. Just because it can’t be said fast, doesn’t mean it’s not valid. “

Apple's New iPod Hi-Fi Speaker System

Ipodhifi

Apple presented their new iPod Hi-Fi speaker system today and once again I find myself fighting the urge to add to my ever-growing collection of iPod accessories. 

As Playlist Magazine reports, the new speaker system has an integrated Universal iPod dock that can support any dockable iPod and you control the device via the Apple remote.  The system sports two custom designed wide-range speakers and a tuned, ported bass system.  Additional features include Tone Control, Large Album Art mode and volume mirroring.  The outer casing has handles for easy transportation, a removable front grille with precision-mounting clips, and touch-sensitive volume control buttons.  It also features an auxiliary input that will accept both analog and digital signals to support a wide range of audio sources, including the iPod shuffle.  Users will have the option to power the Hi-Fi by either AC power or six D-cell batteries.

While discussing the new speaker system Steve Jobs said he might be ready to get rid of his "expensive" stereo equipment for the new Hi-Fi.  "I'm an audiophile," Jobs said. "I've had stereos costing, well I won't say because you'll think I'm crazy. But, costing a lot more. And, I'm thinking of getting rid of mine for this."

Monthly Mixtape - February '06

I'm proud to announce the addition of the Monthly Mixtape series to the website.  The Monthly Mixtape will be a compilation of all the daily song suggestions I've made during the month.  The Monthly Mixtape will be a one-stop shop that covers what I've been listening to on a day-to-day basis.  I'll do my best to have it up on the last day of each month.

Check out February's Monthly Mixtape now...  If you feel like it of course!

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 28th, 2006

Animalcollective_2 Animal Collective - "The Purple Bottle" from Feels

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 27th, 2006

Applesinstereo The Apples in Stereo - "Stream Running Over" from The Discovery of a World Inside the Moone

Of Montreal - Live at the Southgate House

I made it to the Of Montreal show last night at the Southgate House and it definitely blew my mind.  I usually refrain from writing reviews of shows I go to but the bands performance got my creative juices flowing.  I'm not going to write a review, so to speak, but instead try to describe to you what seeing an Of Montreal show is like, at least in my mind.

Let's pretend that we're actually living in the '20s, the ROARING '20s to be exact.  Prohibition is in full effect but luckily the Southgate House is serving up all the prohibited goodness you could want.  On a side-note, if you've never been to the Southgate House, I've always appreciated the link to the past you feel when you're there.  For an example of what I mean, consider the fact that the mother of the guy who invented the "Tommy Gun" used to own the house!

So anyway, back to my story, we've all gathered in this dark, smokey speakeasy to celebrate New Year's Eve. The only people in attendance are those who received a mysterious invitation, to this mysterious party, that contained a mysterious message from the future.  Yes, it's all very mysterious!  All we know is that this is the place to be and that we're about to be let in on a little secret.  The only thing we're really worried about is getting the message before the party gets busted.

Who sent this message you ask?  Scientists who successfully created a Frankenstein-like genetic mutant called Of Montreal.  The creature is a five headed monster made up of equal parts David Bowie, Cher (for the costume changes), The Human League, Andy Warhol, etc...  The band survives on a strict diet of glitter, LOTS of glitter. 

Now, why are they here?  They've been sent from the future to save the planet from certain destruction of course.  If they don't spread their message of neo-psychedelic indie glam, the world will explode right after Dick Clark drops the ball in Times Square.  Yes... he was doing that bit in the '20s, the guy is like 400 years old.

We're they successful?  Of course they were, you're sitting here reading this aren't you?  It's just like when Marty McFly successfully hooks his parents up at the "Enchantment Under the Sea" dance.  The mission was a success, the grandfather paradox was averted, and the future was saved.

So what am I really trying to say?  I'm not exactly sure but if the above story actually happened, it would have  definitely went down at the Of Montreal show I witnessed last night.

Hopefully, you get a feel for what I'm trying to say.  If not, check out the band while they're on tour and see for yourself.  I think it will all make sense once you do that.  In the meantime, check out the bands video for "Wraith Pinned to the Mist and Other Games" below.

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 24th, 2006

Talkingheadssit Talking Heads - "Burning Down the House" from Speaking in Tongues

SOUND team - "Fastest Man Alive" Short Film

In case you haven't noticed, I've been on a serious SOUND team kick lately.  Let's keep it going with a post showcasing the band's "Fastest Man Alive" short film.

P.S.  Thanks to Sarah for pointing me to the original release of this which was made available as a downloadable iPod Video-ready version.  It made its exclusive debut on gorilla vs. bear here.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Gold Lion

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 23rd, 2006

Soundteam Sound Team - "In the Dark No One Can Hear You Sweat" from Work - EP

Voxtrot on woxy.com

Thanks to gorilla vs. bear for the mp3's of Voxtrot's Lounge Acts performance, split up into Part 1 and Part 2, on woxy.com.  I caught the band at the Southgate House on Tuesday night and they were excellent!  The band put on a great show and were extremely pleasant to talk to afterwards.

Be sure to check out the bands tour dates for your chance to catch them live!

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 22nd, 2006

Thecloudroom The Cloud Room - "The Hunger" from The Cloud Room

Bill Graham Presents...

One of the most amazing collections of rock memorabilia ever.

In case any of you are having trouble deciding what to buy me, I really like this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, and this.  Let me know when you've made a decision and I'll make sure to get you my shipping address!

In all seriousness, you have to check out Vault Radio too!  As the website states:

Graham taped thousands of live performances and stored the tapes in the basement of the BGP headquarters. These tapes and the concerts they captured lay dormant until the Bill Graham archive was acquired by Wolfgang's Vault (Bill Graham's given first name was Wolfgang) in 2003.

Vault Radio is now playing selected tracks from these concerts in an FM-quality, 128K digital radio stream. Songs will be added to and removed from the radio show on a regular basis. We will be broadcasting unaltered live performance music from many of the greatest bands of the last 40 years. The music you hear on Vault Radio has not been sweetened or polished. You'll be listening to what the band played that night - nothing more, nothing less.

ENJOY!

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 21st, 2006

Robertpollard Robert Pollard - "Dancing Girls and Dancing Men" from From a Compound Eye

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 20th, 2006

Explosions Explosions In the Sky - "Have You Passed Through This Night?" from Those Who Tell The Truth Shall Die, Those Who Tell The Truth Shall Live Forever

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 17th, 2006

Havergal_lftr Havergal - "Letters '98" from Lungs for the Race

indietits

I laughed at this.

The Strokes - Heart In a Cage

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 16th, 2006

Kingbiscuittime King Biscuit Time - "I Walk the Earth" from No Style

Of Montreal on KCRW

Head over to So Much Silence for mp3's  from Of Montreal's performance on KCRW's Morning Becomes Eclectic from Feb. 13th, 2006.

Let It Beast

Letitbeastcolor Thanks to MOKB for the link to dj BC's second installment of The Beatles/Beastie Boys mash-ups Let It Beast.

Love Will Tear Us Apart Covers

Awesome Until Proven Guilty has a nice post showcasing several "Love Will Tear Us Apart" covers.

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 15th, 2006

Catfishhaven Catfish Haven - "Please Come Back" from Please Come Back

Trailer Park

I've been meaning to post about The Devil and Daniel Johnston ever since I watched the trailer a couple days ago.

WFMU's Beware of the Blog has a post about it and another film I was unaware of called Danielson: a Family Movie.  I'm definitely looking forward to seeing them both.

  • The Devil and Daniel Johnston - Trailer
  • Danielson: a Family Movie - Trailer

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 14th, 2006

Mybloodyvalentine My Bloody Valentine - "When You Sleep" from Loveless

Favorite New Release of the Week - Feb. 14th, 2006

Eelsws Eels - With Strings - Live at Town Hall

You never know what you'll get when you attend an EELS concert. One year it's vocoders and synthesizers, the next it's gritty garage rock. None of this is designed for the sake of versatility so much as it is for answering the deep-rooted creative needs of EELS leader Mark Oliver Everett, aka E.

"I'm not going to make a polka album just because I can. It's not in me, not this year, anyway, and I'm not doing different things to try to dazzle the audience with my wide horizons. There's just some stuff in me that needs to come out," says the man The New Yorker describes as "a hypertalented misfit."

Cut to April, 2005: Everett releases the highly acclaimed EELS Blinking Lights and Other Revelations double album and assembles his most ambitious version of the EELS yet: a seven piece band consisting of Everett backed by a string quartet and two multi-instrumentalists juggling lap steel, guitar, upright bass, mandolin, musical saw, melodica, celeste, pump organ, piano, and a trash can and suitcase percussion set.

"After the last tour (2003's two-time globe-circling Tour of Duty) I was exhausted and didn't feel like touring anymore," Everett says. "Sometime after finally finishing the Blinking Lights album, I was smoking a cigar out in my backyard one night, just sitting there with my dog, Bobby, Jr., and looking up at the smoke I was puffing up into the air. I started to imagine an EELS concert that was unlike anything I'd done before, one where I could smoke a cigar during the show. Where there wasn't even a drum set, and the nucleus of the band was a string quartet. I saw lots of old, antique keyboards: a celeste, pump organ, upright piano, melodica... and a musical saw. Chet played some beautiful saw parts on some of the Blinking Lights tracks. Once I thought of the saw being on stage, I started to get excited about the idea and couldn't stop myself from making it happen."

Everett says the preparations and rehearsals were by far the most difficult in EELS history. "It was much harder than I had anticipated. We have never been in a situation where band members were reading written music. I can't even read music! This wasn't a 'pick up your guitar, plug in and see what happens' situation. There is very little margin for error with this kind of setup. There's no feedback, no cymbal wash to hide behind when something goes wrong. You're very naked and everyone can hear every little thing very clearly."

"We simply didn't have enough time to prepare and when we found ourselves at the first warm-up show, I had to level with the audience and tell them that we just weren't ready. That seemed to relax everyone and, by some miracle, we ended up having a great first night and it turned into one of the funnest tours I've ever been on, albeit a very demanding one. The sound checks were relentless. There's seven of us up there juggling about 20 instruments. Chet's sound check alone was longer than any full band's sound check should be. But he was playing enough instruments to cover two bands of lesser men."

Seven members is an EELS band member record. The ever evolving band's previous two tours were four piece lineups. Multi-instrumentalist Chet proved to be such a spotlight stealer in his role as the star multitasking sideman during the early EELS with strings shows, that he morphed into The Chet, the name he is contractually obliged to be referred to as from now on. Upright bass player Big Al, no slouch himself, also played celeste, pump organ, melodica, piano, and the autoharp -- an instrument he didn't even know he could play until E insisted he play it.

"Anyone that has ever been in the EELS can tell you that I had to push them into areas they weren't used to or didn't know they could handle: John Parish playing concert cymbals... Lisa Germano playing timpani... Now we've got The Chet playing melodica and Big Al playing piano and autoharp, even though they came to me as guitar and bass player, respectively. We don't like to use the word "impossible" around here, so I just have to push the musicians past what they perceive as their limits until they become the monsters I need."

The string quartet, first violinist Paloma, second violinist Julie, violist Heather and cellist Ana had never played together as a quartet before EELS with strings. All seven band members sang and played percussion at times during the shows.

"One of the nice things about playing a show is being able to go back to an old song and try to get it right this time, in my mind, knowing what I know now," says Everett. "It's painful to listen to an old track. I hear all the things I'd like to change. The beauty of a live performance is that you CAN change it. And some of these get changed to a pretty extreme degree. Listen to "Bus Stop Boxer" from the Souljacker album and then listen to the Town Hall version, or "Dirty Girl" from the Shootenanny! album compared to its Town Hall version. I treat the concerts like they are a musical entity unto themselves. It's never about trying to recreate the latest studio album on stage. The concerts, to me, are new albums in themselves, so it's nice to document one, especially a special one like this."

The EELS with strings tour began in May of 2005 with three warm up shows in the U.S. and then went on extensive treks of Europe, the U.S., back through Europe again, Australia, and concluded in October with a final performance at the Saint James Theater in Auckland, New Zealand. In London alone EELS with strings played concerts at Royal Festival Hall, Queen Elizabeth Hall, and Royal Albert Hall. The New York Town Hall performance was filmed and recorded at the end of the U.S. leg of the tour.

Recorded the evening of June 30th, 2005, after a hectic day that found the EELS loading into Town Hall at 6 a.m., having just played Boston's Sommerville Theater the night before, and then performing on The Late Show with David Letterman the very afternoon of the Town Hall show, EELS with strings Live at Town Hall is the first properly released EELS live album (two earlier limited edition live CDs were released through the EELS website and are now sought-after collectors items). Besides nineteen unique takes on songs spanning the entire EELS catalogue, Live at Town Hall also features EELS with strings taking on Bob Dylan's "Girl From The North Country," Johnny Rivers' "Poor Side Of Town," and The Left Banke's "Pretty Ballerina."

The EELS with strings Live at Town Hall concert film, being released on DVD simultaneously with the CD, includes eight songs that are not included on the CD, while the CD version of Live at Town Hall includes four songs from the evening's performance that are not in the concert film.

Everett, who was born and raised in Virginia and now lives in Los Angeles likens the experience to one of the "Blinking Lights" he sings about that make life worth living: "It was a tough day, physically. We had a lot of pressure on us to do what a lot of people were telling us was either impossible, or would end in tears somehow, but we did it. We drove straight from our show in Boston the night before, loaded into Town Hall ridiculously early, did our lengthy sound check, got the cameras and recorders set up for the show, went across town and played on the David Letterman show, and got back just in time to play our concert for the people, the cameras and the tape."

"And the weird part is -- it all worked. Usually when you record a show, it's always the wrong one, it's always on a bad night. But when we were done, we all agreed that it was a great night and that we were glad we had captured it."

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 13th, 2006

Dbcc Devendra Banhart - "Chinese Children" from Cripple Crow

Devendra Banhart on KCRW

Head over to Muzzle of Bees for mp3's  of Devendra Banhart on KCRW's Morning Becomes Eclectic from May 5th, 2004.

Yacht Rock

Stereogum has mentioned Yacht Rock, from Channel 101, a few times in the past but for some reason I had never checked it out.  Well, now I see what I've been missing.  It's hilarious and I highly recommend checking out all the episodes. 

My favorites episodes would have to be 1 and 5.  My favorite characters???  Hall & Oates of course!!!

Check out Channel 101's Yacht Rock here.

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 10th, 2006

Nadasurf Nada Surf - "Concrete Bed" from The Weight Is a Gift

Helter Skelter

In celebration of my birthday, and Feb. 9th also being the same day that The Beatles made their first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964, why not post something about The Beatles.  What you ask???  Well, how about a video of Paul McCartney absolutely killing it last night at the Grammy Awards!?!

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 9th, 2006

Spsd_1 The Smashing Pumpkins - "Today" from Siamese Dream

Thanks Brian

Bhunt_1 I just wanted to say thanks to Brian over at BrianHunt.NET for his VERY special birthday message to me.  Thanks buddy, I owe you one!!!

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 8th, 2006

Yyys_1 Yeah Yeah Yeahs - "Gold Lion" from Gold Lion - Single

iTunes Billion Song Countdown

Apple is giving away an iPod, for every 100,000 songs downloaded, in anticipation of download #1,000,000,000.  Check out the details here and then go download something. 

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 7th, 2006

Jgremain José González - "Love Will Tear Us Apart" from the Remain EP

Favorite New Release of the Week - Feb. 7th, 2006

Sm_2 Swearting at Motorists - Last Night Becomes This Morning

With their first album since 2002's critically acclaimed This Flag Signals Goodbye, Swearing at Motorists return with a career-defining album. Last Night Becomes This Morning is frontman Dave Doughman's indie version of "Running On Empty". It was recorded on the road, between and while on tour in various locations - at soundchecks, in hotel rooms, rehearsal halls and on the bus (listen closely for the engine whine and the gears change). It is an album about two artists in love and how their craft keeps them apart.

Last Night Becomes This Morning is a record of transition - and the confusion, discovery and understanding with which it comes. It is about a self-perpetuating myth. Where "Running On Empty" told of the battle to cope with fame & fortune, Last Night... chronicles the struggle to live life on the road in spite of lack of fame or fortune. In place of the sold out arenas, its live sound comes in busking in an empty Berlin subway station - exile on Gipstrasse.

Dubbed the Two-Man Who by many a rock critic, Swearing at Motorists is an everyman record for the inner superman in all of us. File next to Thin Lizzy, The Replacements and Spoon. This needle-drop instant classic is the perfect Valentine's Day gift.

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 6th, 2006

Mintroyale Mint Royale - "My Heart Is Beating Fast" from See You In the Morning

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 3rd, 2006

Bss Broken Social Scene - "Cause = Time" from You Forgot It in People

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 2nd, 2006

Ordtrogd Okkervil River - "Song About a Star" from Down the River of Golden Dreams

Around the Blogosphere

In anticipation of the new Secret Machines record Ten Silver Drops, due April 18th, be sure to check out the following track:

Speaking of anticipation, Voxtrot has a new EP coming out on April 4th so be sure to check out the title track:

Finally, check out another Tom Vek radio performance, this time on KEXP.  (via So Much Silence)

iTunes Song Suggestion of the Day - Feb. 1st, 2006

Adamgreengarfield Adam Green - "Dance With Me" from Garfield

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