Showing posts with label tv on the radio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tv on the radio. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

The 10 Best Albums of 2008 - #'s 5 - 1


5. Q-Tip - The Renaissance: While people waited 17 years to be disappointed by Chinese Democracy, fans of Q-Tip waited over nine years for the oft-delayed follow-up to his solo debut Amplified. Luckily the similarities between the two albums end there, since The Renaissance is a tightly-focused collection of Funk/Jazz/Soul/Hip Hop that is instantly likable, while Chinese Democracy is a convoluted cacophonous mess.

After being jerked around over the years by five different record labels, Q-Tip was finally able to release the album he had been hoping to give fans since 2002. With help from a slew of special guests (including the late J Dilla), Q-Tip was able to produce perhaps the most enjoyable record of the year. The first six tracks alone are enough to sell anybody on how great this album is. There's plenty of homages to old school 70's boogie and 80's Soul, and almost every track is single-worthy. If I had to pick my favorite song my answer would change each time you asked me, so why even limit myself and just listen to the entire thing from start to finish?

4. Cut Copy - In Ghost Colours: This was THE album of the Summer for anyone who reads Pitchfork, owns a MacBook, and wears skinny jeans with a zip-up hoodie. While I don't quite fit that caricature (skinny jeans look pretty ridiculous on me), I can understand what the fuss was all about. Cut Copy just flat out know how to party.

As if there was any doubt such an infectious dance album would be produced by anyone else, DFA legend Tim Goldsworthy help craft the band's sound into something that is both at home in a warehouse party and on the radio. Yes, there are obvious nods to early Depeche Mode, New Order, and Disco, but Cut Copy manages to avoid bastardizing any of those influences. Instead, they meld those influences with 80's New Wave, Madchester, Psychedelic rock, and Pop to create a sound that is meant to take over any space it is played. As a result, we are treated to a few bonafide Dance anthems like "Lights and Music", "Far Away" and "Hearts on Fire," while ensuring that I have yet to grow tired of this record.

3. Deerhunter - Microcastle/Weird Era Cont.: OK, OK, I know what you're thinking, "another post about how great Deerhunter is." I'm not trying to shove these guys down anyone's throat, but it's hard to deny they make (if nothing else) interesting music. Bradford Cox manages to keep things interesting based on his preoccupation with corpses, endless stream of new music, and his general eccentricities, but the man knows how to keep moving forward, which is something I always respect.

Microcastle is definitely the most accessible thing Deerhunter has ever done. It's less deliberate than Cryptograms in its attempts to sound profound, using the sprawling sound of that album and channeling it to more structured compositions ("Nothing Ever Happened", "Little Kids"). Lyrically, Cox spends most of his time recalling his days as a childhood outcast instead of talking about exclusively about death.

Weird Era Cont. is a nice bonus album that stays truer to Deerhunter's noisy, experimental roots. It sounds much less like an album than Microcastle, but what it lacks in continuity is more than compensated by the plentiful moments of avant-punk and psychadelia that shine through ("VHS Dream", "Dot Gain," "Cavalry Scars II/Aux. Out"). With or without the inclusion of Weird Era, Deerhunter would've still made this list, but why give the fans one great album when you have enough material for two?

2. Portishead - Third: For anyone who loves to sit in a dimly lit room, strap on a pair of headphones, and revel in their own saddness, Third was your Chinese Democracy. The album you thought would never come finally materialized and (unlike Axl Rose's narcissistic exercise in prog-rock masturbation) it was a triumphant success.

How did they do it? For one, they didn't try to recreate Dummy or their self-titled second album. Nor did they try to reinvent the wheel and attempt to bite off more than they could chew. Instead, they took the core components of their sound (haunting vocal delivery, masterful drum and synth programming, and guitar noise) and used different musical influences to amplify them. Having such a strong distaste in being characterized as "Trip Hop" will cause a band to do that sort of thing...as well as allow them to take 11 years to complete it.

In order to completely divorce themselves with their 90's era aesthetic, Portishead relied exclusively on analog instruments and recording devices. Songs like "We Carry On" and "The Rip" artfully pay homage to Silver Apples and Krautrock studio nerds like Harmonia and Cluster, yet they are so much more complex than that simple description indicates. That's because there's an overarching theme of uneasyness that keeps the listener off balance by interchanging the mood from bleak melancholy ("Hunter", "Silence", "Threads") to chaotic self-doubt ("Machine Gun", "We Carry On", "Magic Doors").

Of course, Beth Gibbons is the perfect muse for this brand of painful narration as both her voice and lyrics conjure up nothing but images of loss and isolation. This is perfectly OK because the musical accompaniment offers such depth and organic feeling that she never manages to sound whiny or repetitive. It also doesn't hurt that her voice is among the most unique I've ever heard . In fact, this entire album proves that even after an 11 year hiatus Portishead is still a wholly original band.

1. TV on the Radio - Dear Science: It's hard to imagine that anything this year was better than Third, unless you are already familiar with TV on the Radio. In which case it shouldn't surprise you these guys were able to pull off such a tall order. Dear Science is simply the poster child for all the music that mattered in 2008. As if the band had listened to every acclaimed band/record of this year and decided to take ingredients from all of them, stick them in a blender and then poured it on top of their own signature sound.

Name a genre and TV on the Radio seemingly incorporated it in some way on this album. Thanks to their in-house producer/guitarist/keyboardist Dave Sitek, TVOR is well-versed in melding seemingly disparate musical influences into a cohesive composition. This produced some of the most memorable songs of 2008, like the Prince-aping "Golden Age" (so good that Prince probably sent his lawyers after TVOR before he realized he didn't in fact write the song) and hyper-paced "Dancing Choose", both of which brought together Funk, Afrobeat, Hip Hop, Soul, Art Punk, Dance, and noise to a convergence point that you couldn't help but listen to over and over again.

Lyrically the co-lead duo of Kyp Malone and Tunde Adebimpe write songs that try to make sense of a world that is chaotic ("DLZ"), sad ("Crying"), and hopeful ("Family Tree") all at once. Considering the music and production quality echo those same sentiments, everything manages to sound coherent as a whole. This is no small feat and it is undeniable proof that TVOR's brand of creative is something that is all their own.
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Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Video of the Week - TV on the Radio: "Dancing Choose"

Some of you may have noticed my effusive praise for the new TV on the Radio album didn't include any songs for you to enjoy. That choice was a conscious one, as I wanted to force you to seek out the songs yourself based on my glowing praise.

There's always the idea in the back of my mind that when I post full songs many readers will just scroll straight to the bottom to listen and might never even bother with reading the words. Since my review of Dear Science was so glowing, I felt my words would be persuasive enough to provoke you guys into visiting TVOR's MySpace page, where you can stream the entire album. But since I am a man of the people I figured I should throw you a bone and post their latest video for your mindless consumption.

BTW, I apologize for the 20 second MTV promo at the beginning of the clip, but their version of the video is much better quality than the YouTube clip.

>>>Continue reading "Video of the Week - TV on the Radio: "Dancing Choose""

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

It's Official, TV On The Radio Are One Of The Best Bands In The World

If I were to make a list of my most anticipated albums of the year, perhaps only Portishead's Third would have placed higher on that list than TV on the Radio's Dear Science. After the triumph that was Return to Cookie Mountain, two major questions trailed the band on the follow-up; could they top it and are they capable of appealing to a wider audience in the process? After listening to Dear Science several times in the last few days I think the answer to both questions is a resounding yes.

Thematically the songwriting of Kyp Malone and Tunde Adebimpe explores the difficulties of navigating and interpreting a world wrought with despair and uncertainty. In some instances these ideas are realized in the form of confrontation ("Red Dress", "DLZ"), while at others the emotions flow from bleakness ("Crying") to hope ("Shout Me Out") to full-on exuberance ("Golden Age"). TV on the Radio are definitely maladjusted to the current political and social realities of the times, and the gamut of emotions exhibited on this album lend themselves to various forms of creative expression.

Musically Dear Science isn't nearly as much of a whirlwind of noise and layers upon layers of production as Return to Cookie Mountain. Producer/guitarist Dave Sitek manages to compartmentalize the band's art rock tendencies (of which there are many) into more accessible bursts of experimentation. If Return to Cookie Mountain was a series of cluster bombs to the senses, then Dear Science is a sonic cruise missile (forgive me for the war metaphor). As a result, many of the rhythms and melodies on this album are the most accessible the band has made to date, with some producing (dare I say it?) brief flirtations with pop music.

Opening track "Halfway Home" is perhaps one of the three best songs the band has ever done. Sitek's buzzing guitar drone swims along a wave of syncopated hand claps and drums while Adebimpe sings the infectiously catchy and simple lyric "ba ba ba ba ba bum, ba ba ba ba bum" before the fireworks finally go off in the last third of the song.

After the smoke clears we are treated to the wonderfully melancholy "Crying", which is the closest thing to pop as you're ever going to get with this band. Sitek effectively blends funk guitar, avant jazz horns (courtesy of Antibalas Afrobeat Orchestra channeling their inner John Zorn), and 8-bit synths into a seamless pop groove that only a handful of artists could pull off.

"Golden Age" finds TVOR giving a not-so-subtle nod of recognition to Prince with its funk-pop backdrop and falsetto verses, yet mixes it with strings, horns and electronic noise to create a hodgepodge of sounds that doesn't sound nearly as convoluted as my description may indicate. While on "Family Tree" the bands strips everything down and manages to pull off the delicate balancing act of the rock ballad. Unsurprisingly they nail their first foray into this territory, whereas a band like Block Party still fails to get it right after numerous attempts.

Perhaps the heaviest groove on the entire album is the mashup of bass, bongos and cymbal rush found on "DLZ." The tension manages to build throughout as sampled electronic gizmos, guitar noise and vocals are layered on top of each other until the song reaches a boiling point and then suddenly sheds it weight at the end.

Two years ago I wondered if TV on the Radio could possibly top Return to Cookie Mountain. Now, I'm wondering if the ceiling for this band is even viewable from my vantage point. The way they mix together artistic indulgences and pop hooks on Dear Science is perhaps the most difficult thing to pull off in rock music, yet it never manages to sound labored. The future is bright for this band and I couldn't be more excited to stick around to see how it all unfolds.
>>>Continue reading "It's Official, TV On The Radio Are One Of The Best Bands In The World"