Wednesday, May 30th 2007


_wednesday weview - Maximo Park
posted @ 1:44 pm in [ _indie rock - _mp3 - _vids - _wednesday weview ]

 

Maximo Park  - Our Earthly Pleasures

Maximo Park gave us ‘Our Earthly Pleasures’ on April 2 to such hype in the UK. But then again, everything is hyped in the UK. Franz Ferdinand’s second album, anyone? Ba-bow. Bloc party. Meh. Our Earthly Pleasures reached these shores with barely a whimper. Maybe Silverchair and Powderfinger had a little to do with that and that’s okay. Oi oi oi, as it were.

So without hype I spend a weekend with Maximo. I hadn’t planned on playing the album as much as I did, but that’s the charm of this album. It opens with two great upbeat tracks dripping in Geordie Charm and intrigue. Accents and riffs vie for your attention, with lines like ‘you’ve lived your life with your mouth wide open’ finally taking hold.

Our Velocity could be ferocious. Every live performance I’ve seen of this track blows away the album version, which is a shame. I can’t help thinking that Gil Norton’s production has polished a little too much of the ferocity away. ‘Books from boxes’ , below, is at this moment in time my album jjjem.  But I know that by the end of next week it will be ‘Nosebleed’.

Paul Smith’s vocals are so distinct that even Mark Ronson used Smith on a reworking  of ‘Apply some pressure’, a maximo song, taken from the 2005 album ‘A certain Trigger’. Maybe it’s my penchant for Northern post-wave with intelligent lyrics (Yeah, like you don’t) but I think that Maximo have provided all you Northern Hemisphere folks a perfect soundtrack for your summer.

THINK: A Geordie Snowpatrol before they wrote for m.o.t.r.
READ: Maximo Park’s Homepage or myspace
WATCH:
Books from Boxes clip
BUY:
Our Earthly Pleasures from AllofMP3

 
 Maximo Park - Books From Boxes: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
 Mark Ronson - Apply Some Pressure (feat. Paul Smith): Play Now | Play in Popup | Download



Wednesday, May 23rd 2007


_wednesday weview - Modest Mouse
posted @ 4:27 pm in [ _indie rock - _mp3 - _vids - _wednesday weview ]

Weweredeadbeforetheshipevensank.jpg

Modest Mouse - We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank

We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank is Modest Mouses 5th long player. It was released after a frenzied build up caused by the single ‘Dashboard’, featured in the May edition of Borrowed Beats. Dashboard is symptomatic of the entire album ’ It sounds like novelty-rock’ on first listen. Catchy, off-kilter, finely crafted self indulgent novelty rock, but novelty rock none the less.

What I’ve enjoyed most about this album is the unexpected surprise that it is actually a work of substance. Much like Arcade Fire’s Neon Bible, We Were Dead gently reveals its layers and continues to refine Brock’s aesthetic. The development is clear in the way “Parting of the Sensory” smoothly evolves from foul-mouthed acoustic lament to the best hoedown this side of Springfield.

Johnny Marr joined Modest Mouse for this album, and despite his sophisticated influences, it’s still undeniably Brock’s band. His charisma and confidence of delivery of his impressive inventory of vocal characters keeps you coming back for more. To the fore is shouty Brock, followed closely by Tom Waits-like growling Brock, and Emo-tastic Brock. I chose ‘Parting’ to showcase the singer playing call-and-response with himself, and how effective this inventiveness can be.

We Were Dead runs a little over 60 minutes, and reading all the reviews would run many times this length. Every aspect from the existential lyrics (”someday you will die somehow and something’s gonna steal your carbon) to the indie radio friendly cross over to Marrs influence have all been discected at length.
All that is left for me to say is that I rate We Were Dead. I rate it 4 crows.

THINK: Indie-rock sea-shanties with more substance than initially meets the ears chanelled through Tom waits

READ:Modest Mouse homepage and  myspace

WATCH:The brilliant Dashboard Video

BUY: We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank at Insound

 
 Modest Mouse - Parting Of The Sensory: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download



Monday, May 21st 2007


Ratatat
posted @ 1:14 pm in [ _instrumental rock - _mp3 - _vids ]

And with Ratatat I end my mini obsession with instrumental rock. It isn’t the genre I would have picked to start this blog with – but dems de breaks, as it were. And while this album was released in 2006, I have just come across these guys. And here on Triplejaysus, if it’s new to me then that’s news.

Classics is the second outing by Brooklyn duo Ratatat. Unlike the other instru’rock artists offered up, Ratatat aren’t at all overly cerebral. They write immediately arresting hooks, use samples that are on the kitsch cusp, and like to rock out Yngwie Malmsteen style.  They try to transcend rock and beats, using angular breaks, acoustic and slide guitar and the odd sleigh bell.

‘Wildcat’, below, features the only vocals on the album, and was the obvious inspiration for the album cover image. It reminds me of the pared back guitar harmonies of Brian May & Eddie Van Halens Star Fleet Project. For that reason alone it gets 4.5 crows!

THINK: Joe Satriani with out the perm, Briam May meets the Neptunes

READ: Ratatat’s homepage or myspace

WATCH: Ratatat perform “Gettysberg” at Guggenheim Museum (NYC)

BUY: Classics at allofmp3.com

 
 Ratatat - Wildcat [4:18m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
 Ratatat - Gettysberg [5:28m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download



Thursday, May 17th 2007


Pelican
posted @ 12:42 pm in [ _heads up - _instrumental rock - _mp3 ]

Pelican - City of Echoes

These things always seem to come along in threes. I’ve been getting quite excited about the Battles album – I needed a post-mogwai rock instrumental hit – and then along comes another.
Pelican, a four-piece band from Chicago, will be releasing their third long player, City of Echoes, in June. Previous releases have been organic in theme and packaging – images of clouds and song titles like ‘Autumn into Winter” set the tone.

City of Echoes is a little different however, concentrating more in the built environment. ‘Bliss in Concrete’ and “Dead between the walls” are both grimy tracks, that struggle to keep a NIN-esque informed pessimism at bay.

Far from Fields, the leaked track below, is different though. This track is seven minutes of optimism that could almost be the closing theme to any happy road trip. It’s the sound track to an excited arrival.

Metal is going through an exciting renaissance at the moment. The boundaries of what is metal are being pushed harder than ever right now, and mostly by some old hands.
Isis, Mastodon, and Tool are all blending indie introspection with mathy virtuosity which I just love.

THINK: Isis sans vocals, Mogwai at 11

READ: Pelican’s swish homepage or myspace

BUY: City of Echoes at Insound.com

 
 Pelican - Far from fields: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download



Monday, May 14th 2007


Battles
posted @ 2:58 pm in [ _heads up - _instrumental rock - _mp3 - _vids ]

 

Battles release their first full lenght album Mirrored tomorrow. This US math rock band has a collective history in bands like Don Caballero, Lynx and Helmet, and certainly know a thing ot two about musical experimentation.

 ’Atlas’, the first single is set to be a classic. The video is is directed by Timothy Saccenti and is bound to get stacks of airplay. Where bands like Mogwai and Sigur Ros draw the line creatively, Battles plough on fearlessly. This creative freedom can sometimes give way to chaos. Leaked track ‘tonto’ is not one of these times. It’s a brilliant instrumental rock classic, powered by ex_Helmet drummer, John Stainer.

THINK: Mogwai’s older, angrier brother

READ: Battles homepage

WATCH: ‘Atlas’ video here

BUY: Although Mirrored is out tomorrow, you can buy the older stuff at bleep.com

 

 
 Battles - Tonto: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download



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