Archive for the ‘9 Points’ Category

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My Bloody Valentine- On Becoming a Decibel

September 25, 2008

My Bloody Valentine
September 23rd 2008
Roseland Ballroom

There is a reason why people listen to My Bloody Valentine religiously, and we all heard it yesterday. Last night’s show was the last of their reunion trilogy in New York, which in their grander USA tour continues westward to end in Los Angeles on October 2nd. No one thought these shows would ever happen again since the band’s break up in 1991, which makes yesterday’s experience (and future shows) all the more surreal. Phenomenal would be an understatement to describe last night, though I don’t know if one word could describe what I felt as I watched in awe. It was a show that tested the human body and mind in the face of life-altering decibel levels. Boxes of earplugs were scattered around the venue as if one pair alone would not suffice. Some brave souls tempted to endure the show without these little saviors. Wikipedia’s entry for the band picks up on this observation of the sound magnitude of MBV’s past reunion shows in the UK:

“One visitor comments he saw a 130 dB volume on the mixing desk, another visitor comments he saw 132 dB at one moment, both louder than the Loudest Band in the World record before the Guinness Book of World Records discontinued the category.”

That makes me feel awesome.

The music was truly hypnotizing (I saw so many faces of honest devotion with eyes shut) and possessed the audience into some involuntary bodily movements that were aesthetically fascinating. But the hypnotic quality shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone who listens to MBV. Neither should the fact that it was nearly impossible to discern any of the vocals. What impressed me the most was the sheer power from the drummer and bassist. The sound they produced together was the backbone of last night’s beastly performance. They even had a mirror installed next to the drum set for easy communication. All in all, I was more than satisfied with the show. I nearly cried when they played Cigarette In Your Bed.

Though there was also an opening band called The Lily’s, they were just that—a band you mention before you forget.

Some people brought up that the nostalgia effect as a factor that made this show more amazing than it really was. But for the younger generation like me, last night was not nostalgia, it was now. And hands down, it was my best show yet.

8/9 (9/9 for MBV)

-Cindiot

http://www.mybloodyvalentine.co.uk
http://www.myspace.com/mybloodyvalentine

Tour
Sep 25 2008 Kool Haus, Toronto Ontario
Sep 27 2008 Aragon Ballroom, Chicago Illinois
Sep 30 2008 The Concourse Exhibition Center, San Francisco California
Oct 1 2008 Santa Monica Civic, Santa Monica California
Oct 2 2008 Santa Monica Civic, Santa Monica California

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Iron & Wine- The Shepherd’s Dog

November 26, 2007

The Shepherd’s Dog

Iron & Wine
The Shepherd’s Dog
September 25th 2007
Sub Pop Records

I would love to have witnessed the birth of Iron & Wine. Could it have been the moment when Sam Beam, as a teenager learning guitar, first listened to Guinevere off Crosby Stills and Nash’s self-titled debut record? I like to imagine it that way, the education of Mr. Beam’s delicate voice, flowing and illiterating while rhythmic acoustic melodies were built into a chant-like invocation. I’ve been inspired by this record in ways that I am not sure I’ve been inspired in the better part of a decade. While it might be said that The Shepard’s Dog has much in common with Crosby Stills and Nash, make no mistake, Iron & Wine has succeeded in crafting a release of equal measure. It is not passé or derivative. It reminds us of Déjà Vu but manifests itself as a unique and provocative work. It has the mystical and folkish cohesiveness of Led Zeppelin III and the fundamental lyrical beauty of anything W. B. Yeats.

Iron & Wine has produced a record that is both ambitious and progressive. Beam has resisted the temptation to dish out more of the same, yet he has sought to maintain and further define his signature style. The Shepherd’s Dog does not retreat from the ground covered thus far, rather it presses further beyond expectation, illuminating prior work while escaping the bonds of monotony. It elevates Sam Beam, underscoring his place as one of the most sentient and talented singer/song writers of our generation. Iron & Wine avoids contrived floral fakery when constructing his poetics by keeping the lyrics rustic, earthen, and elemental. Without question, The Shepherd’s Dog is an alluring and rare beauty.

American-gothic themes lace throughout the record. Influenced by his South Carolina roots and Austin Texas home, Iron & Wine has created what in literary circles might be termed Southern Magical Realism. The Shepherd’s Dog is something slightly dark yet derived from the hearth and home. Like Van Morrison’s Moondance, there are moments of occultish mysticism and pagan imagery. Mr. Beam develops narratives incorporating kings, queens, witches, and magic and then embeds them within a modern and familiar context. Even with all of its fantastical parts, or perhaps because of them, The Shepherd’s Dog has all the strength and splendor needed to make a genuine classic. It is autumn embodied. It is hard cider and country bales stacked at the pumpkin patch. It is Iron & Wine‘s greatest feat, and one of, if not the best album of the year.

9/9

http://www.ironandwine.com
http://www.myspace.com/ironandwine

Other Music
The Creek Drank the Cradle- 2002
Iron & Wine Tour EP- 2002
The Sea & The Rhythm EP- 2003
Our Endless Numbered Days- 2004
Woman King EP- 2005
In the Reins (Calexico)- 2005

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Radiohead- In Rainbows

October 16, 2007

In Rainbows

Radiohead
In Rainbows
October 10th 2007
Unsigned

And so begins my obligatory review of Radiohead’s self-released seventh studio album In Rainbows. In a marketing move unparalleled in recent memory, Radiohead surprised the music world with their short notice release. First came the THE MOST GIGANTIC LYING HOAX OF ALL TIME (in reference to the title of their 2004 DVD The Most Gigantic Lying Mouth of All Time), then came the light hearted apology from someone in the Radiohead camp (see comment below LP7 article), and then came the digital release of In Rainbows for a price to be determined by the purchaser, buyers throwing as much or as little money at the record as they please. The series of events unfolds daily.

I of course bought the disc-box to be released on or around December 3rd for $81.50 because I am a gimmick sucker who needs the liner notes, artwork, and vinyl records. Damn the greenback’s worthlessness! All of a sudden Radiohead was on every music blog known to man, woman, and child. Even the ultra hip blogs, too cool to blog on Radiohead, blogged about how they weren’t blogging about Radiohead. I on the other hand am compelled to add to the chorus of accolades you have no doubt already read. I will say it from the git’go, In Rainbows is an incredible album.

15 Step makes the perfect transition from Hail to the Thief, incorporating a hyper dense drum intro and Yorke’s gospelesque croon. One might assume that this bridge would continue into some extension of their sixth album, but In Rainbows is not contained within such a linear trajectory. Bodysnatchers reminds us that Radiohead hasn’t lost their pre-post-postmodern charm as recorded on Pablo Honey and The Bends and then perfected on OK Computer. As a delicate and contemplative Rhythm and Blues track, Nude delivers as good as any Radiohead song has ever delivered. The song is so sensitive you can hear the guitar pick click down the chord like a washboard. This song is easily among Radiohead’s best. All I Need is a heavy, erotic, almost oppressively desirous expression. Lines like, “I’m an animal, trapped in your hot car,” spoken with resigned conviction, induce the sense of weighty heat. In some ways In Rainbows is Radiohead’s most sexual album, if not because of the lyrics then because of the soft tension and resignation emphasizing vulnerability.

How do we even begin to deconstruct Faust Arp? Faust sold his soul and Arp co-founded the Dada art movement in Europe after the First World War. Dada was a self proclaimed anti-art movement. With Radiohead’s distaste for the music industry’s standard operating procedures, perhaps the title has to do with contractual relationships with commercial entities. It was only after Radiohead came out the other end of that meat grinder that they had the clout, the authority, and cultural standing to depart from the commercial structure and operate as its antithesis with 1.2 million records sold on their own on the album’s first day. While pinning meaning to a Radiohead song is rarely productive, this song is themed with voyeurism, with being watched, with performance, with expectation, and the relationship between the audience and the artist. Faust Arp is a short and gorgeous tune laced with a poetic string arrangement and provocative lyrics.

Reckoner is the crescendo of In Rainbows. Thom Yorke’s vocal melody and solemn vibrato tear away at the heart. The urban-trap beat contrasts with the violins and the phantom vocals layered throughout this perfectly crafted song. If you listen closely at the end of the track you can even hear the song transform into an up-tempo jingle. Reckoner reminds us why Radiohead is so good. They are prolific in both their creativity and their ability to construct new spaces in which to explore the human condition and the range of our collective experience. Yes, they are that good.

And on and on and on again. So much can be said for this record. In Rainbows balances the complex and the simple challenging the listener as it awes them. The closing track Videotape is a rather straightforward dirge lamenting loss and recognizing regret, wanting moments of our past back. Not to correct them or improve them, but to live them again, keeping everything exactly the same. As the song concludes, drums build into a slow polyrhythmic snare roll, as if to count down the seconds remaining in our lives. In Rainbows is not a retreat from their more eccentric work, rather it is a reaffirmation of their exemption from a linear trajectory. I cannot wait until the disc-box gives me 8 more.

9/9

http://www.inrainbows.com
http://www.radiohead.com/deadairspace

Other Albums
Pablo Honey- 1993
The Bends- 1995
Ok Computer- 1997
Kid A- 2000
Amnesiac- 2001
Hail to the Thief- 2003

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