Archive for the ‘Music Reviews’ Category

Awesome Albums Out This Week (9-16-08)

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

Orange Tulip Conspiracy, the solo debut from Estradasphere guitarist Jason Schimmel, tops our list of awesome albums for the week. Click onward to read about the album and our picks of Burst, John Zorn, and…Soundgarden? (more…)

Patrick Bower: Beach Closed

Monday, September 15th, 2008

Mention Patrick Bower and chances are few will know the name. After all, his recent self-released album Beach Closed is his first solo outing. His story, though, begins ten years ago while still living in Bloomington, IN and later, Indianapolis, fronting the shamefully overlooked Even Homer Nods (later shortened to The Nods). After a botched East Coast tour due to the tour van nearly exploding, he relocated to Brooklyn and shortly thereafter began his current project, The World Without Magic. (more…)

Ra Ra Riot: The Rhumb Line

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

Ra Ra Riot have come a long way in just two years. After making a name for themselves as one of the most energetic live bands in Syracuse, New York, releasing a self-titled EP, and raising some eyebrows at CMJ festival, the quintet seemed destined for stardom. Sadly, though, along the way, they lost drummer, co-songwriter, co-vocalist and founder John Ryan Pike when he tragically drowned in 2007. But where many bands might folded under the new-found malaise, Ra Ra Riot instead persevered, making do with what they had, and created The Rhumb Line (Barsuk) one of this year’s best indie-pop debut albums. (more…)

Karate: 595

Monday, August 25th, 2008

The now-defunct New England jazz-rock outfit headed by Geoff Farina and known as Karate had led an expansive career that has left many fans in their wake. Though known for its live shows, 595 is their first official live record. As Farina states, “We’ve heard countless live recordings of the 694 shows we played between 1993-2005, but this recording of #595 is surely our favorite.” (more…)

The Asteroid #4: These Flowers Of Ours - A Treasury Of Witchcraft And Devilry

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

Over a decade ago, Philadelphia-based The Asteroid # 4 came onto the music scene, playing the kind of drug-hazed psychedelia that was a dime-a-dozen back in the 1960s. After gaining some recognition after appearing on a Spaceman 3 tribute album, they quickly released their debut, Introducing… . However, the six-piece went more or less under the radar for many years, releasing five albums without managing to pinpoint a distinct sound. Instead they floated aimlessly between music scenes, never really finding a niche.

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Talkdemonic: Eyes at Half Mast

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

The folkronic hop moniker that Talkdemonic once proclaimed as an accurate description of their music seems altogether forgotten on their third and latest album, Eyes at Half Mast (Arena Rock). The album, brimming with everything from analog synths, banjos, fuzz violas, and rhodes is more indicative of atmospheric, instrumental chamber pop than the quieter and more subdued moments on the band’s previous two albums, 2004’s Mutinysunshine (Lucky Sunshine) and 2006’s Beat Romantic (Arena Rock). Indeed, whereas Mutinysunshine was a rougher representation of the band’s experimentation with folk instruments, electronic beats, and a hip hop ethos and Beat Romantic was a sweeping, yet softer take on the duo’s original sound, Eyes at Half Mast is fueled by a range of different sounds and instruments to create something fresh. (more…)

The War On Drugs: Wagonwheel Blues

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

The major label debut from The War On Drugs is a full bodied and healthy dose of nostalgia and longing that is usually reserved for country singers. The Philadelphia quintet, led by guitarist/vocalist Adam Granduciel, sounds more at home playing in a small bar surrounded by pasture and rolling hills than the city that Rocky built. Yet, like Rocky, the music speaks to a decidedly American idea. (more…)

Takka Takka: Migration

Friday, July 25th, 2008

Takka Takka are a band with a myriad of influences. While listening to Migration, the band’s sophomore effort, it becomes apparent that although indie rock is at the core of the band’s aesthetic, the group is not afraid to experiment in terms of texture and song structure to create a warm, melodic, and rich record of folk rock more befitting of the fall than its summer release. That’s not to say that everything works. In fact, the music often blends so seemingly from one song to the next that you find the need to skip over one track and go to the next in the hopes of finding something better, only to be disappointed.

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Moss: Sub Templum

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Since forming in 2000, Southhampton, UK trio Moss has become known for their penchant for writing music darker and less friendly than a medieval torture chamber. Inspired by the likes of H.P. Lovecraft and Aleister Cowley, Moss released an impressive array of demos and split albums with groups like Nadja and Unearthly Trance before unleashing their first full-length, Cthonic Rites (Aurora Borealis) in 2005. Sub Templum (Rise Above), their second album, is a four-song, hour and fifteen minute venture that is so monstrously heavy, it could quite possibly make healthy plants turn brown, shrivel up and die upon exposure. (more…)

Bodies Of Water: A Certain Feeling

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

Los Angeles-based Bodies Of Water have been under the radar for most of their short-lived career. But they shouldn’t have a problem with that anymore. A Certain Feeling (Secretly Canadian), the band’s second full-length in just two years, finds the quartet where 2007’s Ears Will Pop & Eyes Will Blink left off experimenting with song structure, utilizing a variety of instruments and becoming more and more sophisticated musically-speaking than many of their peers.

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