Saturday, March 31, 2012
SoKo - I Thought I Was An Alien (2012)
SoKo, real name Stéphanie Sokolinski, is a French singer with a cute-ass voice. Really catchy, harmonic folksy/popsy guitarriffs with SoKo either singing, or just talking in her adorable voice and French accent about touching stuff. Props to Jake for introducing me to this!
Sample: "First Love Never Die"
- Alessandro
Uve Schikora Gruppe - Das Gewitter (1972)
So, up until this album, I didn't know too much at all about Cold War-era Eastern German music, let alone that they even had music. Starting from hearing the funkalicious "Oh Angela" (dedicated to black power and Communist activist Angela Davis) late one night and several translated Wikipedia tabs later, I came upon the state-owned Amiga record label, responsible for a majority of releases at the time. One such being Das Gewitter (The Storm), the first and only LP by Uve Schikora and his backing group. Ranging from poppy to pyschedelic to jazzy, the album constantly contorts with a graceful chaos through songs, revealing new facets with each motion. Undeservingly forgotten, Das Gewitter is a gem and satisfactory listen that warrants repeated visits for anyone either a fan of progressive rock or a newcomer to it (such as myself).
-Jake
Estradasphere - Buck Fever (2001)
Hey, you! Did you ever want to have an album that is a big experimental rock epidemic played with at least 10 different instruments that sounds heavy as fuck but yet melodic, mixed with some instrumental versions of video game soundtracks including Mario through it? Well, you've just found the thing!
"Buck Fever" is an incredible album by Estradasphere, which is a band with 6 multi-instrumentalists that all are specialized in a completely different genre, including classical music; jazz and heavy metal. And somehow, they find a way to blend it in together perfectly! Best way to describe this would be frantic and loungy jazzpsychobungle metal. And I mean, look at the cover! LOOK AT IT.
There's really no way to describe it. Just check the sample out and find out.
Sample: "Feed Yo Mama's Meter (Remix 2001)"
- Alessandro
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Potatohead - Hd.mr (2012)
So I found this somewhere and other than another project by this artist and some Japanese shit I have no information on Potatohead. Last.fm only knows an indie pop group that goes by the same name but it's not the same person. In other words: OH MAN THIS IS SOME SERIOUS HIPSTERCRED Y'ALL.
Hd.mr consists of four amazing electronic tunes with glitch-elements to dream away to, really full of sounds and extremely relaxing and relieving to listen to. I enjoyed it loads. It's not even 20 minutes long so it's really worth taking your time out to listen to this, and I guarantee you that you'll listen to it more than once.
Sample: "akneat Industrial"
Download
- Alessandro
Labels:
2010's,
electronic,
glitch,
idm,
Japanese
Monday, March 26, 2012
Animate Objects - Riding in Fast Cars with Your Momma (2007)
Conscious hip-hop stuff! Classy, jazzy beats and slick flows characterize this acclaimed, but fairly forgotten, gem filled with a variety funky stuff to bounce to and slow-paced stuff to grind to.
- Jake
Clare & the Reasons - The Movie (2007)
So already, this album cover should be a fairly clear indicator of what to expect: at least something along the lines of "cinematic," right? Quite so. In this case, of the baroque pop variety. Featuring contributions from Van Dyke Parks and Sufjan Stevens, The Movie is chock-full of lush string arrangements, day-dreamy compositions, sharp songwriting, breezy guitar work, and delightful feminine coos with an old-fashioned sound to it. If you like Lana Del Rey, you can appreciate their same sort of retro-Golden Age Hollywood aesthetic. If you hate Lana Del Rey, you can appreciate they're a better version of her.
- Jake
(major props to Alessandro for making me aware of them, in the first place)
Sunday, March 25, 2012
The Wild - Set Ourselves Free (2010)
I love bands where everyone sounds like they're having the absolute time of their life during the recording process. I like especially how a lot of these bands come from the anti-folk/folk-punk movement. Be the lyrics miserable or life-affirming, you just get the sense that everything will be all right, everything will go to shit, and will happen all at the same time. The Wild certainly live up to their name, sounding unbridled and free, with bratty adult vocals, and pumping out jangly shout-along melodies to leave you bopping to your grave.
- Jake
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