I thank my former coworker Glen for loaning me The Coast Is Always Clear. Beulah are talented musicians who play friendly and poppy modern songs you’ll be singing for days. I also love the cover art.
ballboy – Club Anthems
6 06 2010ballboy is a another band I don’t remember how I discovered, but I’m glad I did, as they are a band I have listened to for years and still love. I’m sure it was another “minor Scottish band I have heard I should check out” situation. Club Anthems is a collection of their initial EPs and the title is a total put-on – their music in no way resembles club anthems in the slightest.
I would describe ballboy as similar in lyrical tone to the most witty and sarcastic Belle and Sebastian songs, and at times the degree of hilarious self-loathing can resemble Morrissey. Let me see if I can illustrate:
I Hate Scotland lists the many faults of Scotland.
Sex is Boring: “Take me back to your room, tie me up and strip me naked and lie me on your floor. Then you’ll see that sex is boring with me, it’s not what I came here for.”
Donald in the Bushes with a Bag of Glue: “The last time I saw you you were lying in a bush with a bag of glue. Now you’re making cakes for middle-aged ladies and you’re married too.”
But I shouldn’t give the impression that all their songs are just jokes. The music is always well-crafted and beautiful, even during the funny songs, and ballboy have just gotten better and better over the years at both the humor and the music.
Comments : Leave a Comment »
Categories : regular
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
6 06 2010Besides Blonde on Blonde, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah’s debut album has one of the more annoying opening tracks ever. It seems purposely designed to scare people off so the band would be artificially limited in fan base and therefore keep their indie cred. The rest of the songs are pretty catchy and good, though the singer’s voice takes some getting used to as it’s not really what you might call “singing” much of the time – more like yelping. I would call them a modern Talking Heads stylistically.
Definitely this band is very painfully cool though – they take themselves a little too seriously for me to become much of a fan.
Comments : 1 Comment »
Categories : regular
Fran Healy & Andy Dunlop – A Chronological Acoustical Journey Through The Travis Back Catalogue Live
6 06 2010Fran and Andy are two guys from Travis, one of my favorite bands. Chronological Acoustical Journey is acoustic versions of their greatest hits, with assorted anecdotes told extremely endearingly by Fran. These include the horrors of a small Scottish man trying to rap, poor naming conventions of Scottish small towns, heterosexual man-crushes on Jake Gyllenhaal – the list goes on – all told with a very cute Scottish accent.
Through a scheduling cock-up (as a Scot might say) I missed the live tour when they came to town, so I’m glad they released this album, though the hilarity of it makes me even more sad I missed it!
Comments : Leave a Comment »
Categories : regular
Nico – Chelsea Girl
4 06 2010Nico is an acquired taste. Someone I was sharing The Velvet Underground and Nico with said he was bothered by her voice too much to appreciate the album – he said it reminded him of a drag queen singing(!!). I was bummed out that someone didn’t like an album I happen to love, but I had to laugh.
Chelsea Girl is her first release, which heavily involved members of the Velvet Underground both lyrically and musically. Jackson Browne also wrote several songs on this album and participated musically as well. I love her version of Bob Dylan’s I’ll Keep It With Mine – a song he gave to her and never officially released himself.
It’s kind of a bizarro-world folk album. Which works with the Velvet Underground connection, since they were the bizarro-world rock band of their time.
Comments : Leave a Comment »
Categories : regular
Ravi Shankar – Chants of India
4 06 2010I have no idea why I decided to include Chants of India in the project – it is a beautiful album, but it’s the antithesis of work music. My mind and body wanted to be doing yoga instead of working.
Comments : Leave a Comment »
Categories : regular
Bob Marley – Catch a Fire
4 06 2010Until I bought Catch A Fire, similar to Pink Floyd, I dismissed Bob Marley as music for stoners. Which, like Pink Floyd, is not entirely inaccurate. All the songs they used to play on Live 105 when I was in high school were the feel-good stoner party anthems you find on the “best of”.
This album totally turned me around. I bought it used, quite cheaply, because I remembered hearing tape of vintage Paul and Linda McCartney saying that they loved it, and though I assume they were probably also stoned at the time, I respect their musical taste. The deluxe version includes 2 versions of the album – the longer, less produced, unreleased Jamaican version and the commercially released version. Both have their merits.
Critically, it showed me the best Marley songs are the challenging unpleasant songs about struggle and the travesties of history. Concrete Jungle is my favorite Marley song – a gripping picture of someone living in gritty circumstances but striving and knowing there is something better out there for him. The driving bass and guitar work only increases the appeal. Oh, the love and party songs are here – Baby We’ve Got a Date, Stir it Up, Kinky Reggae – which are catchy and fun, but then I’ll get pulled into the absolute spookiness of a song like Midnight Ravers (“I see 10,000 chariots, and they’re coming without horses. The riders they cover their face, so you could not make them out in smokey place”). Is this fantasy? History? The present? I don’t know, but it conjures up a great image.
I’ve gone on to collect other Bob albums as they’ve been remastered in deluxe versions, and they’ve only deepened my opinion that the stoner fetishism image really doesn’t give Bob the credit he’s due musically and especially lyrically.
Comments : 3 Comments »
Categories : regular
Cat Stevens – Cat Stevens
4 06 2010OK, this is where I start cheating. I don’t actually have a real Cat Stevens best-of album. I’ve made my own out of songs I downloaded over the years. It includes: The Wind, Trouble, If You Want To Sing Out, Don’t Be Shy, Peace Train, Another Saturday Night, I Think I See The Light, I Wish, The First Cut Is The Deepest, Here Comes My Baby, Where Do The Children Play, Wild World, Miles From Nowhere, Tea For The Tillerman, and Morning Has Broken.
My love affair with Cat Stevens’ music began in high school when we watched Harold and Maude in AS English class. There are 7 or 8 of his songs in that movie and it just wouldn’t be the same without them (though it’s also a great movie on its own merits). The songs are so important, Cat is almost a character in the movie.
I think he’s one of the most underrated pop songwriters ever. No one realizes he’s the one who wrote First Cut or Wild World! I haven’t heard any of his new music since he’s come back to releasing albums again, as Yusuf Islam. I should check them out and see if he’s still got it.
Comments : 1 Comment »
Categories : regular
Carbon/Silicon – The Carbon Bubble
4 06 2010The Carbon Bubble was a free download. If you aren’t familiar, Carbon/Silicon is Mick Jones and Tony James, two grizzled, seasoned punk rockers. The music is old school punk in tone. The lyrics are extremely liberal and political, which can sometimes be amusing (Don’t Taser Me Bro), but I think in 10 years people won’t get many of the references.
Comments : Leave a Comment »
Categories : regular
Idlewild – Captain
3 06 2010Idlewild is one of my favorite bands – I’ve listened to them for years and still enjoy listening to them. Captain is their first album (really a mini-album), which I didn’t hear for a long time after becoming a fan, since it’s hard to find outside of the UK and it took some time to track down. I probably got it in college at Mod Lang or on eBay; I don’t remember at this point. It was one of those items I had to get my hands on for cred (same idea with most of the Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci catalog I own) – since it was so hard to get, having it meant you worked for it because you cared THAT much about being a completist! Does anyone in the music world even do that anymore?
This being said, I haven’t listened to it much – it’s really hard-sounding and messy compared to their later work, and Roddy Woomble (one of the most un-rock names ever) hasn’t found his voice yet. I can hear the beginnings of their later style that I love so much, but it’s hard to hear over the shredding guitars. It was nice to go back and revisit my shock upon hearing it for the first time!
Comments : 1 Comment »
Categories : regular








