Wednesday, September 24th 2008


_triplejaysus_exclusive! - Random Impulse
posted @ 12:59 pm in [ _electronica - _heads up - _hip hop - _interview - _mp3 - _rap - _sonic_fiction ]

FullMetalCover.jpg

Random Impulse - Full Metal Alchemist

UK Grime artist Random Impulse released his second album on Black Unicorn records recently. Apart from the fact that Black Unicorn is a US based label, what sets this release apart is not just it’s length - it runs 17 tracks long - but the production quality of this genre hopping release.

Grime hasn’t made much of an impact in Australia yet, while other more US-centric variants of Hip Hop have managed to get a foothold. Dirty South and Crunk regularly get air play on JJJ - maybe it’s just another indication of how Australia looks to the US for cultural stimulation - surely an oxymoron.

Full Metal Alchemist’ samples rock, soul, funk and Sci-Fi, with Jovel’s rapid fire delivery sitting nicely over all of these genre. He plays guitar on most of the tracks, and maybe that’s what elevates this release from other ‘electronic hip hop‘ like Akala. The narrative is strong and not in the least pretentious. There’s not a single ’shory wants to freak me’ track on here. No ’slangin’ crack’ tracks. And that’s another reason why you should check out this album. A breath of fresh air from ‘ghetto-booty-tech’ soaked air waves. ’Full Metal Alchemist’ is one of the most original albums I’ve heard this year.

Jovel Walker ( Random Impulse) answers our questions after the jump - 

(more…)

 
 Random Impulse - The Heroine [2:55m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
 Random Impulse -Time Travel: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download



Wednesday, July 23rd 2008


_heads_up - Bon Iver Live!
posted @ 5:29 pm in [ _FREE! - _folk - _heads up - _links - _mp3 ]

Bon Iver
_heads_up - Bon Iver Live!

Those crazy kids over at daytrotter have done it again - they’ve managed to jag another beautiful recording from an artiste du jour (certaintly round these parts).

Bon Iver deliver 4 tracks from the haunting For Emma, Forever Ago, with some extra percussion and additional guitar work fleshing out the tracks nicely.

You can get them ( and heaps of other cool stuff ) here.
G

 
 Bon Iver _DaytrotterSession _ Lump Sum: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
 Bon Iver_DaytrotterSession _ Flume: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download



Wednesday, July 2nd 2008


_wednesday_weview - Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy
posted @ 12:55 pm in [ _folk - _mp3 - _wednesday weview ]

lie-down
_wednesday_weview - Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy - Lie down in the light

Every now and again one of us falls behind.
I think that you may have gathered by now that I love music. I spend a (scarily) large amount of my life with a soundtrack. Each of my moods or periods of my life have had an appropriate backing track. ’Lie down in the light’ is almost the diametric opposition to the previous post, it’s more like ‘hands in your hair’. (Sorry.)

Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy’s (aka Will Oldham) 9th album ( under this name) is the warm embrace and consoling words of a friend. Warm and honest songs delivered in ‘a fragile sort-of warble frittering around haunted melodies in the American folk or country tradition’. But don’t let that put you off. Produced by Steve Albini (producer to Pixies and Nirvana), Bonnie is said to bring punk’s honesty to American folk. I wouldn’t say that, but you know….someone somewhere did.

I know my way around the world, it’s a circle - it starts and it ends.
If you need a some music that doesn’t demand you dance, or wave your hands like you just don’t care, then chances are you’ll enjoy ‘Lie down in the light’. It’s an album that won’t challenge you immediately. You’ll listen and think ‘I know where this is going’ but next time you look up you’ll be somewhere other than you expected.

For Every Field, There’s a Mole.
Clarinet swirls behind bare folk bones. Jews harp twangs act as exclamation points. There is reward for the attentive listeners that will make this album a consoling friend to all.

THINK: The Punk John Denver
READ: An interview with Bonnie PB
WATCH: Cursed Sleep clip
BUY: ‘Lie down’ at Spunk!

 

 
 Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - For Every Field There's A Mole: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
 Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - So Everyone: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download



Wednesday, June 4th 2008


_wednesday_weview - Fleet Foxes
posted @ 12:01 pm in [ _1960 revival - _folk - _mp3 ]

Fleet_foxes.jpg
_wednesday_weview - Fleet Foxes

Fleet Foxes released their self titled debut yesterday, to much anticipation. ‘Fleet Foxes are not hippies - Don’t Let the Floppy Hats, Jesus Beards and Five-Part Vocal Harmonies About Rivers, Trees and Sunshine Throw You.’announced a Seatte Arts paper recently.

They describe themselves as Baroque pop, and that’s a pretty good pigeon hole they’ve carved out for themselves. Not many contenders for iTunes Baroque Pop album of the year. Crosby, Stills and Nash style harmonies over american west coast folk tunes.

With dreamy choral passages akin to Sigur Ros, but with a little more structure and intelligibility and lyrics taken from ye-olde-folk-lyric-book, this release has instant folk classic written all over it.

‘White Winter Hymnal’ is impossibly catchy, but you’re not sure why and it is difficult not to turn to your partner and curtsy mid way through ‘He Doesn’t know why’.

Following Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes is proof that folk is alive and well, but is being taken in unexpected and wonderful directions by the next generation of protagonists.

THINK: Crosby, Stills & Nash meet Sigur Ros in 1886
READ:
An interview with the band
WATCH: White Winter Hymnal
BUY: Fleet Foxes at SubPop

4.5 crows

 
 Fleet Foxes - white winter hymnal [2:27m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
 Fleet Foxes - He doesn't know why: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download



Wednesday, May 28th 2008


_wednesday_weview - Bon Iver
posted @ 12:44 pm in [ _folk - _mp3 - _wednesday weview ]

Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago
Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever ago

Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever ago is featured in the ‘what I’m listening to now’ sidebar of triplejaysus. The idea was that I would feature albums that i wasn’t going to review. And already that plan has fallen over. After almost three weeks of constant rotation I’ve realised that a _mood_indicator and a sidebar link is doing Bon Iver a disservice.

For those who haven’t heard the back story, this guy hides away in a cabin in wisconsin following a breakup, and spends three months writing an album about it. I can understand that you wouldn’t rush out and buy the album based on that sentence. And while I love meloncholic music, this is so much more.

While only 9 songs long (unless you preordered in iTunes), ‘For Emma’ is a beautiful and haunting contemporary folk album. Vocals are laid layer upon layer until every corner is filled with a choir, but the restraint shown using this choir is simply beautiful. ‘Lump Song’ opens with such a passage, but you know immediately that Enya is no where to be seen. And, without putting too fine a point on it, thanks be to christ above and his legions of saints that she’s miles away.

‘For Emma’ is a beautiful album, remarkably accomplished for a self produced, self released debut. Detractors will point to jangly guitars, falsetto and hymn-like passages, and they’re right. All of the above are present, but used with such confidence that they cease to be negaitve discriptions. I highly recommend you seek this album out, if only to remind yourself that music can be an emotional discourse. 

THINK: In beauty lies hope.
READ:
An indepth interview with Justin Vernon
WATCH: ‘Flume’ performance
BUY: ‘For Emma…’ here

 
 Bon Iver - Lump Song [3:21m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
 Bon Iver - The Wolves (Act I and II): Play Now | Play in Popup | Download



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