Archive for October, 2010

3 More Weeks of Record of the Week: Benoît Pioulard – Lasted (Kranky) / Desertshore – Drifting Your Majesty (Caldo Verde) / Purling Hiss – Public Service Announcement (Woodsist)

Tuesday, October 26th, 2010

Catching up on 3 weeks of Record of the Week again after some incredibly hectic weeks. The hangover from our Kurt Vile and Soft Pack in-store is in full force but I’m confident we can pass on our excitement about these three records just the same!

It’s the month of October and an even number year which means, a new album from Benoît Pioulard! An absolute store favorite here for years, we’ve played his two previous full lengths, Précis and Temper, a whole lot in the store. This former Ann Arbor native, who’s actual name is Thomas Meluch, has been crafting his unique style of blissful, bedroom dream pop for years and presumably releasing them strategically in the Fall as his records have become the absolute sign of the season around here. You’d could almost consider him our dream pop version of Punxsutawney Phil.

Lasted is his newest full length and it’s an absolutely beautiful record, certainly worthy of October 12th’s Record of the Week. His field recordings sound as lively as they ever have as a backing track. Sounds of trains and various other things, they help speckle the album with the sound of Fall. He has also honed his skills on pop hooks and incredible song writing even more and some of his best tracks are here to show for it.

All in all, another incredible effort from Benoît Pioulard. An album that truly sounds like it’s album cover. A washed out Polaroid photo that has been bleached out by the sun, yet retains, or maybe even gains a new sense of life.

Listen to “A Coin On the Tongue” from Benoît Pioulard’s Lasted

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October 19th’s Record of the Week, Desertshore’s Drifting Your Majesty was something of an enigma. Without any information at all, just knowing I really liked the album cover, I put it on and was quite taken aback.

The first thing I noticed was a striking similarity to the backing music of the first two Sun Kil Moon albums, or Red House Painters material. While Desertshore is entirely instrumental, there was some definite similarities. Come to find out, Phil Carney of both bands is the guitarist of Desertshore!

Most of the songs are somewhat short, generally falling under four minutes. Some songs come across more as ideas rather than full fleshed out songs but are rather good nonetheless. Right in the middle of the album is the title track that clocks in at close to eleven minutes and is the absolute pinnacle of the album.

If you are a fan of the music that has backed Mark Kozelek for years as Sun Kil Moon or Red House Painters, I’d definitely recommend checking out this album.

Listen to “The Town Alight” from Desertshore’s Drifting Your Majesty

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October 26th’s Record of the Week comes from Philadelphia’s Purling Hiss. Their new album, Public Service Announcement comes from us from Woodsist Records and is absolutely out there.

The only way to describe it would be if Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti smoked some of the dirtiest weed they could find and laid down some tracks on a busted four track recorder. The opening track, “Run From the City”, is headlined by an absolutely killer guitar hook and has a production that almost sounds like standing outside and hearing some guy driving down the street blaring classic rock in his ’78 El Camino with blown out speakers and the windows down.

The production of the album is used as an instrument just as much as the instruments themselves. There are parts of the album that sounds like it just skips a frame or two. Other parts where it sounds like the turntable belt is going bad and the record can’t quite sit around 33 1/3 RPMs. It’s incredibly lo-fi which could turn a lot of people off but just adds to the mystique if you ask us!

All in all, an absolutely great record from these Philly weirdos. We also are stocking their two other full lengths, this year’s Hissteria, and their earlier self-titled effort. Absolutely worth a pick up!

Listen to “Run From the City” from Purling Hiss’ Public Service Announcement

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Kurt Vile & the Soft Pack In-Store this Monday!

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

We are completely ecstatic to announce that two of our favorite bands, Kurt Vile and Soft Pack, will be playing in-stores here this coming Monday, October 25th, before their show at Mickey Finns that night.

We’ve long been fans of both bands. We discovered Kurt Vile when we found out one of the dudes from another store favorite, War on Drugs, had put out a solo record called Constant Hitmaker. From the moment we heard it, we were completely in love. Since then, we’ve been pushing all of his records on to you, from the super limited God Is Saying This To You to easily one of the best albums of 2009 in his Matador Records debut, Childish Prodigy. He’ll be peforming at 5:30 and will be doing an all acoustic set. We urge you to come check this out.

Before he plays though, we’ve got the Soft Pack! Having dug their 45s they released as The Muslims, it took us all of 10 seconds to know that their debut album as the Soft Pack, released this year, was one of the best things we’ve heard in a long time. Their music brings a lot of great bands to mind: the Feelies, the Monks, the Replacements, Hot Snakes. Not bad company. They’ll be playing a couple songs before Kurt Vile starting at 5:00!

Kurt Vile w/ the Soft Pack
Monday, Oct. 25, 5PM!

3 Weeks of Record of the Week: Swans – My Father Will Guide Me Up a Rope to the Sky (Young God) / Deerhunter – Halcyon Digest (4AD) / Tamaryn – The Waves (Mexican Summer)

Monday, October 11th, 2010

Catching up on three weeks of Record of the Week. That’s a daunting task. It was made a whole lot less daunting though when you think about the quality of releases we’re talking about here. These things practically write themselves!

First and foremost is our Record of the Week for September 21st! Back after a nearly 15 year hiatus from releasing their last full length, Soundtracks For the Blind, the legendary Swans are back with their twelfth album, My Father Will Guide Me Up a Rope To the Sky.

A band reuniting after a 15 year hiatus, who had been around since 1982, could lose a step here or there. Not be nearly as involved. Not be nearly as captivating. This couldn’t be further from the case with Swans. Founder, Michael Gira, is just as intense as he’s always been, his croon sending shivers up your spine as sings of lost friends, throwing liars on the fire to keep warm, and other equally depressing topics.

Gira has adopted a lot since his last days as Swans, bringing a little bit of his Angels of Light moniker into the music. There is a gospel and western tinge to these tracks that weren’t immediately obvious on previous Swans releases. It all lends to this being one of the best albums of the year and one of the most crushingly depressing things you are bound to hear in a long while.

Listen to “Jim” from Swans’ My Father Will Guide Me Up a Rope to the Sky

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As a stark contrast to September 21st’s Record of the Week, September 28th’s Record of the Week is of the dreamy, ethereal sort with a brand new album by store favorites, Deerhunter.

We’ve long been a fan of just about anything Deerhunter frontman, Bradford Cox, has touched. His albums as Deerhunter have always gotten lots of love from us and his solo albums as the Atlas Sound haven’t been short of praise from our end either. You certainly aren’t going to see this love affair end anytime soon either as Deerhunter’s new album, Halcyon Digest, might just be one of their best.

With each album they step a little further out of the shadows that are reverb and delay and refine their songwriting more and more. They’ve stripped down to some very basic elements at times and even dip into more natural and acoustic sounds like the saxophone that comes in out of left field.

If you were a fan of Deerhunter’s previous albums, there is absolutely no excuse why you shouldn’t pick this up. If you haven’t familiarized yourself with Deerhunter yet, this is a great album to start with as it’s one of their finest efforts yet.

Listen to “He Would Have Laughed” from Deerhunter’s Halcyon Digest

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Our third Record of the Week comes from the very hazy 80′s throwback styling’s of Tamaryn. Bringing to mind Siouxsie Sioux or Elizabeth Fraser from Cocteau Twins, Tamaryn’s vocals are hushed and never confrontational, usually finding themselves melting into the mix along with the music.

They seem to be getting tagged under the genre shoegaze quite a bit but they seem to have more in common with bands like Cocteau Twins, leaning more towards the gothic dream pop vein than shoegaze. There might be a tinge of Slowdive here and there, but not enough to label them shoegaze completely.

The Waves is an album that flows together incredibly well, not just showcasing a couple killer tracks with a bunch of filler. That also means there isn’t that one “definitive” single on the album, which I have had no problem with. It’s an album you put on and just get absolutely lost in.

Listen to “Sandstone” from Tamaryn’s The Waves

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