Performance #360: Bachelorette at Neumos
Nicest Man in Indie Rock
Another music review for Click & Dagger, but this time my review also got posted on KEXP’s blog!
Bands get tired of playing the same songs day in and day out. It’s a relief when a new album comes out, as it gives them a chance to play something new, to open a new door. But there’s a balance to achieve between playing those new songs that are enjoyable to them and playing those old songs that the audience wants to listen to. The crowd is fickle; they can turn on a band at any moment if they don’t hear what they came to hear. But clearly The Morning Benders don’t want to be tied to the past, and could care less about their past albums or what the audience may or may not be waiting for.
I arrived at the Crocodile with absolutely no expectations. My knowledge of The Morning Benders stemmed from exactly one fantastic video the band made in support of their new album. The video features the best song from the new album, but it’s not enough to base any overall opinions of the band on. Amazingly, the band played only songs from their newly released album, Big Echo, totally ignoring their critically acclaimed 2008 release, Talking Through Tin Cans. There were some great highs, some dour lows, and an amazing finale featuring the only song I knew. It was a short set, coming in just under an hour long. And there was no encore, nor were there any excuses as to why they didn’t play any older songs. I couldn’t have been happier; I got to experience the show like everyone else in the audience, collectively losing our Morning Benders virginity.
Christopher Chu, the bands’ principle songwriter, singer, and lead guitarist, does not give the initial impression of a commander. The band’s outward appearance leads you to believe they’re a bunch of geeky misfits who found each other at a Mathletes competition. Their set started out so quietly, half the audience thought the band was still tuning their instruments one full minute into the first song. But the tempo and volume picked up, reaching a climax where the band (both guitarists, the bass guitarist, and both drummers — yes, two) were animatedly slamming and strumming on their instruments, drawing the audience out of their conversations to stare at the spectacle on stage. Once you’re sucked in, you realize the appearance is intentionally misleading. They know how to rock, and they can prove it.
The band — all of them miked — adeptly played and sang backup to Chu’s lead. I feel compelled to say that Chris Chu’s voice reminded me of a voice I hadn’t heard in 15 years — that of Josh Clatyon-Felt from the early-90’s band School of Fish. I don’t expect you to have the same connection, as I’m pretty sure I was the only person to listen to them, and certainly the only person to actually remember them. But the connection was there, and unmistakeable. All of the instrumentation was fairly straightforward, excepting for the fact that the keyboardist also played a drum, effectively doubling the beats of the main drummer. He even occasionally played that drum with an Odwalla bottle.
Warming up to the audience, Chu coaxed the near-capacity crowd into dancing a bit longer after they played a particularly bouncy number. “I’m seeing some pretty good dance moves out there. You’re all looking very attractive and intelligent.” It would be easy to take such blatant flattery as being a little sarcastic, but coming from Chu you just couldn’t deny his sincerity.
After playing nine of the ten songs from their new album, Chu announced their next song would be their last. It felt like it was ending too soon, so we all assumed they’d go through the usual ego-stroking encore bullshit. Thankfully, no. The band said it was their last song, and indeed, it was. If only more bands would be so honest with their audiences. They finished their set, quickly left the stage and waded through the crowd over to the merch table to hock the new CD.
John Vanderslice (another favorite of mine, who is featured in the video linked above) better watch out — somebody is gunning for his “nicest man in indie rock” title. Inadvertently being the first one in line to pick up the new CD, I discovered I only had $11.50 when the new CD was being sold at $12. “I can give you a CD for that, no problem. I don’t even want the 50¢.” And with that, Chris Chu ever-politely patted me on the shoulder and said “Enjoy!” Smiling sheepishly, and feeling a bit embarrassed by my cheapness, I quickly carried the CD out the door and into the cold and wet night.
The Morning Benders will be back in town on May 25, opening for Broken Bells at Showbox at the Market. I’ll see you there.
(Originally posted at Click & Dagger and KEXP.)
Love that Beck. In case you haven’t heard, he’s doing a series called “Record Club” where he and friends go into the studio and cover a full album in one day. Their rendition of The Velvet Underground and Nico made my top 31 albums of 2009. I’m sure this new one, INXS’s Kick, will make it onto the 2010 list. That’s St. Vincent, among others, playing with Beck on this one.
Performance #358: Miniature Tigers at The Crocodile
“Here Lies Love, a collaboration between David Byrne and Fatboy Slim, tells the story of Philippine First Lady Imelda Marcos and her rise to prominence.”
Mia Doi Todd’s “Open Your Heart”, directed by Michel Gondry. Gondry continues to pump out the great music videos, this time using some people dressed and dancing in amazing technicolor dream-tees. /via We Love You So
Today’s hot boy band, Hot Chip, perform a masterpiece in this great video for their song “I Feel Better”. It’s been open in my browser for so long I’ve forgotten how I found it. Most likely via MBV Music
Lonely Jetpacks
As soon as the band started testing their mics and tuning their guitars I began to regret having forgotten my earplugs. “Whoa. That’s loud,” said the person next to me to no one in particular. And when The Lonely Forest started into their set in earnest, I was forced to retreat from my position directly under a bank of speakers to the far reaches of the club to try and find some ear protection. Neumos — thankfully — is happy to oblige anyone who wants to protect their ears from the insane decibel levels being pumped out overhead.
Returning to the floor with my ears plugged, I settled in for the remainder of the Anacortes, Washington band’s set. I’d heard the name Lonely Forest before, most likely thanks to KEXP, but I would have been hard pressed to come up with the name of a song or an album. It turns out that wouldn’t matter, as the band proceeded to play almost an entire set of brand new songs. The capacity crowd was decidedly uninterested as the band got underway, but it didn’t take long before we all came around, attention rapt. Halfway through their second song, “Tunnels” from the band’s forthcoming new album, drummer Braydn Krueger was allowed to perform a minor miracle on his kit. His solo was a beautiful thing. Based on that performance alone I would have called the band’s opening set a rousing success.
With lead singer John Van Deusen’s vocals mixed to a level well above those of the other instruments, I was reminded of a few bands where the vocals play an unusually loud part of the mix. A friend of mine said there was more than a little Death Cab in there, but to me it was more refined than that — a sort of Harvey Danger meets the Dismemberment Plan. While his voice wasn’t as melodic as Sean Nelson’s (nor his prose as unique), it was definitely equal to if not better than Travis Morrison’s (at least during the Plan’s heyday. He’s taken a different vocal path with his solo career). And while the clear-as-day lyrics were a bit clichéd at times, Lonely Forest is young enough that with time I’m confident they’ll come around to deeper, more original lyrical fare. As the middle act for this leg of the tour, they set the bar quite high for the headliner. I’m confident they have a long and fruitful career ahead of them.
After months upon months of touring around the globe, Adam Thompson of We Were Promised Jetpacks is a man of very few words. It’s not often you see a band headline their own sold-out tour less than six months after their stateside debut as opener for an established act. But here they were, four men from Glasgow, a bit mystified at their own success. “All of you guys are here, and we’re just a little band from Scotland — we’re not quite sure how this has happened.” Considering the band’s set was less than an hour long, I was thankful he didn’t say much more than that.
It took the band a couple songs to get warmed up. Starting off with the extreme build-up of “Keeping Warm,” it appeared as if they were just going through the motions. You can’t blame them for looking and playing with limited exuberance, given their never-ending tour schedule and the high level of energy that each of their anthemic songs demands, but I had come to see the band I saw open the show in October, damn it. A song and a half into their set, and it was quickly turning out to be more like a handful of overworked, exhausted young men.
Thankfully, after the crowd’s massive cheer following their biggest hit, “Quiet Little Voices,” the band visibly loosened up and settled in to perform most of the remaining songs from their amazing debut, These Four Walls, along with a couple songs from their newly-released tour EP, The Last Place You’ll Look.
The highlights of the show were the couple of songs that got the crowd really worked up. So much so that the floor started bouncing, similar to something I’ve only experienced at the Crystal Ballroom in Portland. “It’s Thunder and It’s Lightning” and “Short Bursts” both forced the crowd into this fever pitch, bringing along that unsettling feeling that the floor is going to give out because everyone is rising and falling in unison to the thump of the bass drum and the drone of the guitars.
But we survived, and the band finished up their short set, opting to stay on stage for their final song rather than pretending to have a “final” song and then come back for an encore. I’m a big proponent of this move — the Long Winters used to do it, too. It’s probably a gimmick for those bands with fewer playable songs than are necessary to carry a full headlining set. Why bother stretching it out when you know your fans can name exactly which song you’ll come out and play next because they’ve heard all your other songs already?
I’m dying to hear more from We Were Promised Jetpacks. Their debut and the follow-up EP just aren’t enough. I’m a bit concerned that they can’t carry this momentum forward into new territory. I really, really, hope they prove me wrong.
(Originally posted at Click & Dagger.)
If this first installment of the Onion A.V.Club’s “Undercover” is any indication, this series is going to be amazing. Check out the list of future songs on the site: Ted Leo And The Pharmacists cover Tears For Fears “Everybody Wants to Rule The World”.
Performance #356: Grand Hallway with the Seattle Rock Orchestra and the Perkins School Children’s Choir at The Triple Door
Performance #355: Mighty Tiger at The Triple Door
Performance #354: We Were Promised Jetpacks
Performance #353: Lonely Forest
Start making sense →
Hillman Curtis, one of my favorite designers and short-film directors, has directed a full-length feature film centered around David Byrne’s most recent tour, of which I’m happy to say I got to attend a few months ago. The movie is called Ride, Rise, Roar and looks utterly fantastic. Watch the trailer! /via @kingblind
I’ve only watched this once, but I think I could watch/listen to it over and over again for the rest eternity. I know nothing about the Morning Benders, but aim to know everything about them by the end of the week. I know they’re coming to the Croc in April, and I hope to be in attendance. Video also features one of my faves, John Vanderslice, on one of the many guitars. /via MBV
Brilliant. OK Go, masters of the viral music video, have done it again. /via Kung Fu Grippe
P.S. I know it’s been a while since I posted here. I will come back, I promise.
#1 on the 2009 Musical Advent Calendar
Manners by Passion Pit
No band better defines 2009 than Passion Pit. After first hearing their song “Sleepyhead,” from their 2008 EP Chunk of Change, this Boston-area band has been at the top of my go-to list when people ask me, “What are you listening to these days?” I’ve pushed the band onto friends and family from all sorts of disparate circles, and they’ve been fairly well-received across the board. I even succeeded in dragging my wife to see them while on a family visit to Boston back in June and consquently converted her; she’s one of my toughest critics, and I consider this one of my shining moments as a music-pusher this year.
I’ve listened to Manners, the band’s full-length debut, at least once a week since it came out in the Spring. I even declared that “Sleepyhead” would become the Song of the Year, thinking it would rise to heights similar to Gnarl‘s Barkley’s “Crazy” or Outkast’s “Hey Ya!” While it hasn’t yet reached those heights, another song — “The Reeling,” featured in the video shown above — did reach #29 on Billboard’s Hot Alternative Songs list earlier this year. (I didn’t even know the “Alternative Songs” category still existed on Billboard. How quaint.)
But as I’ve covered earlier in the countdown, this is my list, and I don’t have to validate my selections by what other countdowns have arbitrarily determined to be the top albums of the year. But just because I only have myself to worry about when determining the order of the list, that doesn’t mean it’s been easy. Reviewing all the albums I’ve heard over the past year, assigning a level of importance to them across any number of criteria, and then trying to stick to that order while counting them down has been extremely difficult. (Full disclosure: I did reorder the top 2-15 a couple times while counting down the top half of the list.)
The only part that was easy about the list was picking Manners as #1. I always knew this would top the list. In the years to come, when I reflect back on 2009, I will think of Passion Pit as the soundtrack for the year. It’s been a difficult year for most everybody out there, and this collection of bouncy, dancey, high-energy pop songs has kept me afloat. Michael Angelakos’ extreme falsetto, singing over the top of the keyboard and synth sounds, just keeps my head bobbing as I go about my day. It’s a wonderful thing. You, too, can have them keep you bouncing in your seat: listen to the full album, as well as a few remixes, for free at the band’s website.
I saw Passion Pit perform twice this year, once in Boston at The Paradise and again at The Moore Theater here in Seattle. I wrote about their performance at The Moore for Click & Dagger — I recommend reading my review to get a sense of what it’s like to hear the band live. (Hint: they’re even better in person.) And then run out and buy the CD.
So there you have it, my top 31 albums of the year. This has been quite an experience, coming up with and writing about these great albums, and ultimately sharing it with the world. I don’t think I can or even should maintain a pace of writing something about music every day in 2010, but I’ll certainly be looking for opportunities to write about new albums as I discover them over the year. I’ve talked with a few of you about the list and how it’s being received, but I’d love to hear from even more of you. Leave a comment below by clicking on “Add a comment” or “Join the Discussion.” And do please continue to come back often to Bacon Review, or better yet, subscribe to the RSS feed to have the content come directly to you. I’ll still be posting non-music related findings to my Bacon Tumblr, as well as keeping up with the daily thoughts at my Twitter account. Lots of places to find me!
Given how 2009 has gone, it can only get better from here. See you in 2010!
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2. The Hazards of Love by The Decemberists
3. Merriweather Post Pavilion by Animal Collective
4. The First Days of Spring by Noah and the Whale
5. These Four Walls by We Were Promised Jetpacks
6. Hometowns by the Rural Alberta Advantage
7. Velvet Underground & Nico: “Record Club” by Beck
8. March of the Zapotec/Holland by Beirut
9. There is no Enemy by Built to Spill
10. Dark Was The Night, a Red Hot Compilation
11. The Mountain by the Heartless Bastards
12. Creaturesque by Throw Me The Statue
13. Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band by Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band
14. Horehound by The Dead Weather
15. Promenade by Grand Hallway
16. Grand by Matt & Kim
17. Blood Bank EP by Bon Iver
18. Fever Ray by Fever Ray
19. Tell ’Em What Your Name Is by Black Joe Lewis and the Honeybears
20. Mo Beauty by Alec Ounsworth
21. Here Comes Science by They Might Be Giants
22. Noble Beast by Andrew Bird
23. Hungry Bird by Clem Snide
24. Actor by St. Vincent
25. Elvis Perkins in Dearland by Elvis Perkins in Dearland
26. XX by the XX
27. Grrr… by Bishop Allen
28. Keep It Hid by Dan Auerbach
29. It’s Blitz! by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs
30. Beware by Bonnie “Prince” Billie
31. Veckatimest by Grizzly Bear
#2 on the 2009 Musical Advent Calendar
The Hazards of Love by The Decemberists
In the music world, there are few things more strange than the Rock Opera. It’s had its shining moments (see: The Who’s Tommy, Pink Floyd’s The Wall or even The Alpha Series by the Mountain Goats, which encompasses songs about one specific couple across many different albums), but more often than not it’s a poorly conceived thought in the mind of a songwriter wearing Bad Idea Jeans™. Genesis, Queensrÿche, My Chemical Romance, and even R. Kelly all have attempted and failed, massively (although Kelly’s attempt would be better defined as a Rap Opera, they all stem from the same base). And that just scratches the surface.
If ever there were a band cut out to create a Rock Opera, The Decemberists are that band. After many albums of long-form sea shanties about corsets, whales, and chimney sweeps, the band decided to tackle a full hour-long album about one subject, The Hazards of Love. With multiple reprises of the same themes throughout, and even four songs titled with the same name (“The Hazards of Love 1-4”), this album was a departure for the band, but yet remained totally in their wheelhouse.
No longer singing about pirates and Victorian-era maidens, the band got a bit more modern, or at least timeless, for the album’s setting:
a love story starring a woman named Margaret (voiced by Becky Stark from Lavender Diamond) who falls in love with a shape-shifting boreal forest dweller named William (voiced by Colin Meloy, the Decemberists’ chief songwriter/lyricist and lead singer). A jealous forest queen and William’s mother (voiced by Shara Worden of My Brightest Diamond), the villainous Rake (also voiced by Meloy) and an ensemble of recurring characters bring conflict to the album’s story arc. Robyn Hitchcock as well as Jim James from My Morning Jacket also make an appearance. via Wikipedia
Freeing original band members Chris Funk and Jenny Conlee, who are also, along with Meloy, the band’s primary music-writing team, to embrace their ELO fantasies, this album is a full-on prog rock extravaganza. We saw hints of some progressive thinking from the band on their previous album, The Crane Wife, but those moments were fleeting.
The video above, for “The Rake’s Song” from The Hazards of Love, comes along in the middle of the album, at the start of what might be called Act 2. The highlight of the album for me are the multiple iterations of “The Wanting Comes in Waves,” a building chorus that in its final iteration climaxes with a full string chorus and piano driving Meloy to shout “and I want this night!”
The band put all its might behind the launch of this album, embarking on a full tour where they played the full album in order. Consequently, they put off a lot of their less-devoted fans, who were expecting them to play the hits from previous albums. Sadly I had to miss them on this tour, as I would have loved to see them play this album in all its glory. They will eventually become my second two-digit band, but that will have to come in 2010 or beyond.
The Decemberists have quite the back log, and if you like what you’re hearing above but are not familiar with the band, you can pick up any one of their previous albums and be satisfied. I would be hard pressed to pick a favorite, but The Hazards of Love would certainly be in the running.
Tomorrow: Numero Uno!
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3. Merriweather Post Pavilion by Animal Collective
4. The First Days of Spring by Noah and the Whale
5. These Four Walls by We Were Promised Jetpacks
6. Hometowns by the Rural Alberta Advantage
7. Velvet Underground & Nico: “Record Club” by Beck
8. March of the Zapotec/Holland by Beirut
9. There is no Enemy by Built to Spill
10. Dark Was The Night, a Red Hot Compilation
11. The Mountain by the Heartless Bastards
12. Creaturesque by Throw Me The Statue
13. Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band by Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band
14. Horehound by The Dead Weather
15. Promenade by Grand Hallway
16. Grand by Matt & Kim
17. Blood Bank EP by Bon Iver
18. Fever Ray by Fever Ray
19. Tell ’Em What Your Name Is by Black Joe Lewis and the Honeybears
20. Mo Beauty by Alec Ounsworth
21. Here Comes Science by They Might Be Giants
22. Noble Beast by Andrew Bird
23. Hungry Bird by Clem Snide
24. Actor by St. Vincent
25. Elvis Perkins in Dearland by Elvis Perkins in Dearland
26. XX by the XX
27. Grrr… by Bishop Allen
28. Keep It Hid by Dan Auerbach
29. It’s Blitz! by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs
30. Beware by Bonnie “Prince” Billie
31. Veckatimest by Grizzly Bear
Falling in love with The Rural Alberta Advantage
I wish I had had the Vera Project when I was in high school, growing up in Oklahoma. I surely would have developed good musical taste and consequently used it to my advantage to rise above the “perfectly average” persona I had diligently built for myself. Actually, it probably wouldn’t have done any good. I just wasn’t ready to form my own opinions about anything back then. And now — well, just go ahead and try to shut me up.
What a great thing kids in Seattle have. Too bad only a handful of them even know about it. The Vera is a safe haven, where mom and dad can drop you off without fear of you damaging anything but your hearing. And you get to see some great touring acts play in a venue that doesn’t cordon you off in a corner (or keep you out completely). So cool.
And so, during the opening bands, this is where I found myself: distinctly “that guy,” the one I used to see at shows and say to myself, “who’s dad is that?”; in a venue where clearly the only people older than me are indeed somebody’s dad (or even granddad), enjoying their son’s band; standing in a large group of kids who are literally less than half my age; thoroughly enjoying the opening bands I’d never heard before; generally having a blast.
Eastern Washington’s Yarnowl got things started off in the right direction, with a set of original music that hinted at a love of the headliner, as well as other similar acts like Page France and Noah and the Whale.
Blunt Mechanic were the middle act, and while they are clearly influenced by a lot of Northwest indie rockers, the band is doing a good job of creating a space all their own. Led by Ben Barnett, the Music Director of the Paul Green School of Rock, and mastermind behind the now defunct Kind of Like Spitting, Blunt Mechanic has a lot going for it but also has a lot to prove. This was their first show together, and while it was a little rough around the edges, they really did rise to the occasion. The highlight of their set was when a student of Barnett’s named Dylan, clearly still in or just out of high school, came on stage to play rhythm guitar and keys. He looked like a natural, flicking the long, scraggly hair out of his eyes while playing like a seasoned pro.
As Blunt Mechanic and the gaggle of younger kids filed out of the space at the end of their set, the Vera started to fill up with the usual Seattle show crowd, and I started to feel a lot less “old.” I did have tinges of oldness, though, when noting things to myself like: they don’t serve alcohol here, and this crowd is more mellow and jovial than a crowd that had been drinking since dinner time would be. This is a good thing. (OLD!) This space isn’t packed with people, and I have room to stand and watch without being bothered by anyone. (OLD!) The headlining act is going on stage at 10:40pm — on a Saturday night — and I’ll be home by midnight. (OLD!) But all those thoughts melted away when the Rural Alberta Advantage came on stage.
It’s been a long time since I’ve felt this compelled to shout from the heavens “YOU MUST HEAR THIS BAND!” Noting near the beginning of the set that this was their final show of the year (nigh, decade) and they were going to be off for 3 weeks, Nils Edelmann, the lead singer, guitarist, and seemingly all-around nice guy, declared that he was going to go all out at this show. His singing style has got to be hard on his vocal chords, and after playing 100 shows this year he felt he was sounding a little hoarse (but I can’t say I heard it myself). But “all out” is exactly where he took the band, pushing his voice to the limit at more than one point during the hour-long set, evoking emotional highs similar to that of Neutral Milk Hotel’s Jeff Mangum.
Playing all but one song from their debut, Hometowns, a handful of new songs and a cover (of the theme song from the 70s/80s Canadian TV show “The Littlest Hobo”), it’s difficult for me to pick one highlight from the show. A pleasant surprise throughout was the insanely extreme drumming. It was truly one of the most inspired, original and exciting drumming performances I’ve ever witnessed. Seriously. Benjamin Weikel from Helio Sequence, John Stanier from Helmet and Battles, and now Paul Banwatt from the Rural Alberta Advantage. You’ve got to see it to believe it — listening to Hometowns, you get a small sense of it on “Don’t Haunt This Place,” but what I didn’t catch until seeing the live show is that that same intelligent, fast-paced drumming is prevalent across the entire album. Pay attention to the drums the next time you listen to the album all the way through (you can hear the album in its entirety on this CBC Radio site).
Not to be overlooked, Amy Cole, the band’s xylophone, tambourine, maracas, keyboards and percussion expert, created beautiful harmonies to match Edelmann’s strained leads, and played fantastic beats to complement what Banwatt was doing on the drumkit. She rounded out the melodies with her myriad of talents, filling in with keyboards what was originally recorded as a cello in the studio. If I had to pick a single, solitary disappointment, it would be that there was no cellist touring with the band. The strings on the album are well-placed and surprising, and would be a welcome addition to the live performance.
After playing their full set and coming back on stage to finish with one new song and two favorites, the band did something surprisingly fresh. As they were finishing their “final song,” Hometown’s “The Dethbridge in Lethbridge,” the band picked up their instruments and walked off the front of the stage and into the center of the audience. They announced that they had one more song, and it’s a special treat for them that they try to perform from time to time. They decided to share the song with us because we’d “been so attentive and into the music” — to which someone shouted “Because this place doesn’t serve alcohol!” And indeed, they weren’t able to play this song the night before in Portland because the audience was so rowdy. So they performed their “goodnight song,” completely unmiked and in the round in the middle of the venue floor. It was the perfectly intimate end to a perfect set. It made the small audience at the Vera feel special.
Doing their part to ensure the “all Canadians are really nice people” stereotype, the band came out into the lobby after completing their set to talk with the fans, shake hands and accept the gratitude heaped upon them. And I was right there with everyone else, saying “nice set!” and “great show!” like a dumbfounded idiot. But I didn’t care. The band had taken me to a place I’d forgotten existed. And now I find myself counting the days until their next visit so I can get back there again.
(Confidential to the band: please come back to Seattle after your date in Vancouver in February 2010!)
(Originally posted at Click & Dagger.)
#3 on the 2009 Musical Advent Calendar
Merriweather Post Pavilion by Animal Collective
It’s amazing what you can do when you get a full zoo of animals together. Animal Collective is the proof for the infinite monkey theorem — get a room full of monkeys together randomly typing away on typewriters and eventually you’ll end up with War & Peace. Led by a Panda Bear, a couple of animals I’ve not heard of before (an Avey Tare and a Deakin), and all combined with, strangely, a Geologist, the “band” has been able to produce a wide array of music since forming in 1999.
This band does nothing but cause confusion and begs me to ask any number of questions. It’s still unclear to me how they are able to get a panda to sit down and play keyboards for any length of time. And how does it twist knobs with those giant paws? That Geologist must be one hell of a trainer.
What does an Avey Tare look like, and what is its natural habitat? Must be a close cousin of home sapiens, because it sure sounds like the thing is singing in English. Perhaps it’s a kind of parrot.
What the hell is a Deakin? Sheesh. I knew they were finding thousands of new species of animals deep in the Amazon Rainforest, but animals that play instruments and can sing like a human being? That’s just too much.
It is such a show of human ingenuity that someone — a Geologist! — was able to get these disparate animals together and keep them producing music for 10+ years. The “band” has produced 8 full-length albums in that time! They even go on world tours, although they must have their own plane or train, because I think it’s still illegal to put a panda in your carry-on across international lines.
I first heard Animal Collective on their 2005 release Feels. After stumbling a tad by following that amazing album up with Strawberry Jam, the “band” came back full force with Merriweather Post Pavilion. I’m totally confounded by this band. Not really sure how the “band” does it all, but I don’t care, either. As long as they keep producing music like Merriweather Post Pavilion, from which the above video for “In The Flowers” is shown above, then I’ll be a happy boy.
Tomorrow: Back to reality. Through the process of elimination, are there any guesses as to who #2 and #1 are?
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4. The First Days of Spring by Noah and the Whale
5. These Four Walls by We Were Promised Jetpacks
6. Hometowns by the Rural Alberta Advantage
7. Velvet Underground & Nico: “Record Club” by Beck
8. March of the Zapotec/Holland by Beirut
9. There is no Enemy by Built to Spill
10. Dark Was The Night, a Red Hot Compilation
11. The Mountain by the Heartless Bastards
12. Creaturesque by Throw Me The Statue
13. Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band by Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band
14. Horehound by The Dead Weather
15. Promenade by Grand Hallway
16. Grand by Matt & Kim
17. Blood Bank EP by Bon Iver
18. Fever Ray by Fever Ray
19. Tell ’Em What Your Name Is by Black Joe Lewis and the Honeybears
20. Mo Beauty by Alec Ounsworth
21. Here Comes Science by They Might Be Giants
22. Noble Beast by Andrew Bird
23. Hungry Bird by Clem Snide
24. Actor by St. Vincent
25. Elvis Perkins in Dearland by Elvis Perkins in Dearland
26. XX by the XX
27. Grrr… by Bishop Allen
28. Keep It Hid by Dan Auerbach
29. It’s Blitz! by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs
30. Beware by Bonnie “Prince” Billie
31. Veckatimest by Grizzly Bear