Tag Archives: CD Review

CD Review: The Satanic Satanists

Band: Portugal. The Man
Release: 2009

1. “People Say” – 8.3
2. “Work All Day” – 8.9
3. “Lovers In Love” – 8.6
4. “The Sun” – 8.8
5. “The Home” – 9.3
6. “The Woods” – 8.8
7. “Guns and Dogs” – 9.1
8. “Do You” – 9.3
9. “Everyone Is Golden” – 9.4
10. “Let You Down” – 8.6
11. “Mornings” – 9.6

Comments: What’s going on in this album is essentially marginalized pop music. It’s the kind of music that could easily become “big,” but as a whole is a bit too obscure for that level. I sense a variety of reggae and R&B influence. For its genre(s), it’s no doubt top-tier. The latter half of the album consists of some of the best pop-rock this year has seen.

Final Grade: 9.0 out of 10

CD Review: Eskimo Snow

Band: Why?
Label: Anticon.
Release: 2009

1. “These Hands” – 8.1
2. “January Twenty Something” – 8.7
3. “Against Me” – 9.2
4. “Even the Good Wood Gone” – 8.3
5. “Into the Shadows of My Embrace” – 8.5
6. “One Rose” – 8.3
7. “On Rose Walk, Insomniac” – 7.5
8. “Berkeley by Hearseback” – 7.7
9. “This Blackest Purse” – 8.8
10. “Eskimo Snow” – 8.1

Final Grade: 8.3

CD Review: Mirror Explodes

Band: The Warlocks
Label: Tee Pee
Release: 2009

1. “Red Camera” – 9.2
2. “The Midnight Sun” – 9.4
3. “Slowly Disappearing” – 9.1
4. “There is a Formula to Your Despair” – 9.7
5. “Standing Between the Lovers of Hell” – 9.6
6. “You Make Me Wait” – 8.8
7. “Frequency Meltdown” – 9.4
8.  “Static Eyes” – 9.5

Grade: 9.3

The Warlocks play at Great Scott on August 12 with The Morning After Girls.

CD Review: The Pains of Being Pure at Heart

Band: The Pains of Being Pure at Heart
Release: 2009

1. “Contender” – Grade: 9.4 – Twee!
2. “Come Saturday” – Grade: 9.5 – Noise pop!
3. “Young Adult Friction” – Grade: 9.8  – Post-punk revival!
4. “This Love Is Fucking Right” – Grade: 9.6
5. “The Tenure Itch” – Grade: 9.6
6. “Stay Alive” – Grade: 9.7
7. “Everything With You” – Grade: 9.6
8. “A Teenager In Love” – Grade: 9.4
9. “Hey Paul” – Grade: 9.7
10. “Gentle Sons” – Grade: 9.8

Comments: Twee as fuck! A cross between the Vaselines and Galaxie 500. This band is so ’90s, yet it totally is ’09.

Final Grade: 9.6 – One of the best albums of 2009.

CD Review: Post-Nothing

Band: Japandroids
Release: 2009

Comments: Sounding like a noisier, less polished Weirdo Rippers, Japandroids have put themselves alongside other noise rock greats with Post-Nothing. With just a guitarist and a drummer, the duo looks like and produces music very similar to the prolific L.A based No Age. Fast guitar riffs and hard drumming result in a noisy-power-pop combination that not only makes your ears bleed, but makes you want to dance. Continue reading CD Review: Post-Nothing

CD Review: Bitte Orca (DP)

Band: Dirty Projectors
Album Name: Bitte Orca
Release: 2009

Comments: I believe there’s a point when indie-pop bands try too hard to be both indie and pop at the same time. Swedish artists like Peter Bjorn and John and Jens Lekman haven’t had much difficulty in accomplishing both. The Dirty Projectors, an all-American band from New York, wrote an album in Bitte Orca that wants to be European, but isn’t at all. The light melody of “Temecula Sunrise” is refreshing. The scattastic artsy offering “The Bride” has annoying written all over it. The “I’m more indie than inner city black girls” of “Stillness is the Move” gets old quickly. On a positive note “Two Doves” is a perfect WERS song — sexy female voice in front of orchestral background music — and for that reason it happens to be the album’s effortless strong suit. The jangly electropop of “Useful Chamber” is Veckatimestastic. “No Intention” is kind of awesome. “Remade Horizon” seems like it would get a lot of college radio station airplay . There’s certainly some room for improvement, but it’s generally pretty good…if the constant “yay-I-wanna-blah-blah-remade-horizon” doesn’t piss you off, that is. “Fluorescent Half Dome” is a chill aged ending. The last one minute is flat out greatness. I think this album is going to take a few more listens for me to appreciate. It has potential, though probably not as much as Pitchfork [9.0 rating] makes it out to have.

Grade: 8.2

How Awesome Is Crack Box?

Band: Animal Collective
Release: 2009
Recorded: 2000-2003

Crack Box is very much like when you were a little kid taking a stroll to the graveyard/forest to record every ominous sound you could. You, still very much a youngster, decided that the recording simply was not enough. You needed to make little noises, surely unintelligible, on top of all the nonsense. You, through whatever means, spawned a drum kit and keyboard.

The Crack Box is comprised of six sections…three tracks  in each, except for the last. That one has five. Anyway, the disc manages to be awesome even if the entire musical composition is just Avey Tare whispering, a soft acoustic guitar playing, and two notes on the keyboard being tapped. A strong spot is the soft twee of “Hey Friend,” track C2 for all you following along. In “De Soto De Son,” I’m sensing some plagiarism on the part of the band Grizzly Bear. Call this claim far-fetched because, well, it is. Listen to “All We Ask” by Grizzly. Sure it’s faster and more reminiscent of “pop,” you got to admit something is there. Actually I’d reckon Crack Box is a fucked up Veckatimest. The base structure of the songs is totally there, but it’s far from complete. Far from musically bearable (that is to the average listener), these songs need just a push. So what the group did was say F U to most of the songs on Crack Box and add a little bit something extra to their new songs. The change to having a fully integrated album didn’t occur until 2008 when the group started playing songs that later were released as Merriweather Post Pavillion. “Do The Nurse” is hilariously screwed up if the title doesn’t already give that away. “I wish he would just get a boner. Do the nurse.” Seriously, Avey? They were young. “Ice Cream Factory” tells us that when you “black out you feel much better.” Heed those words. Or don’t. “Hey Light” you know from Here Comes the Indian. Crack Box version is quite lo-fi and only 2 minutes 35 seconds, a sign of the times. Listen real closely to “Don’t Believe the Pilot” and you can hear birdies chirping. Also this original version of “Who Could Win a Rabbit” pretty damn sweet. For obvious reasons it doesn’t have any polish. But sometimes things are left best unpolished. And finally, any better way to end the disc than with “We Tigers?” Probably. The original has awful sound quality.

Overall, I don’t think that I will ever again be able to manage listening to this from start to finish. There are some real gems, but most of the stuff is just too archaic and weird for me. Makes for some good relaxation music, possibly.

Grade: 8.0

CD Review: Alone

Band: The Morning After Girls
Release: 2009

Comments: A shoe-gazey effort that literally does not make you want to stop looking at your shoes. That’s because upon listening your head will consistently (but very very slowly) be moving down and side to side. I wouldn’t say The Morning After Girls are purely psychedelic, but they are quite a spacey group. The first track “The Best Explanation” is a decent defense for my just mentioned claim. Picking things up to a more “alternative” level is “The General Public.” Present is a certain quality of mainstream rock instrumentation (like Dandy Warhols). Continue reading CD Review: Alone

CD Review: What’s For Dinner?


Band: King Khan & BBQ Show
Album: What’s For Dinner?
Year: 2006
Label: In The Red
Credits: King Khan- Vocals, guitar. Mark “BBQ” Sultan- Vocals, guitar, drums. Mastered by David Cheppa. Recorded at Moon Studios, Berlin in 2006 (which I believe is King’s studio, where the Black Lips’ 2005 record, Let It Bloom was recorded, at least half of it!)

1) Treat Me Like A Dog- 8.5
2) I’ll Never Belong- 9.8: Excellent example of the group’s Doo Wop
3) Zombies- 9.5: Excellent example of the duo’s Punk Rock
4) Dock It #8- 9.2: A rocker to drive around and pick up chicks to!
5) Why Don’t You Lie?- 10- Top Ten Greatest Doo Wop songs/ Highly romantic, not depressing as some listener commented.
6) Captain Captain- 7.5
7) Too Much In Love- 10: BEST KING KHAN SONG! AND ONE OF THE GREATEST LOVE SONGS EVER!!!
8) Learn My Language- 7.8
9) Blow My Top- 7.5
10) Into the Snow- 9.8: Yet another amazing lovin’ Doo Wop number!!!
11) Operation- 8.5
12) The Ballad Of… – 8.0
13) What’s For Dinner?- 9.0: Makes you hungry…..
14) Suck It and Smell- 8.7

Final Grade – A: Despite the fact that mathematically it only comes out to an 88 (B+). Clearly some of the songs are better than the others, but all of them are at least good. This is the way I see it mathematically: Insane Punk Rock + Soulful Doo Wop = Kickass Rock N Roll! Brings you right back to the 60s!!!

Chris DeCarlo

CD Review: Farm (Dinosaur Jr)

Band: Dinosaur Jr.
Album: Farm
Release: June 23, 2009

1. “Pieces” – [8.8]
2. “I Want You to Know” – [9.3]
3. “Ocean in the Way” – [8.9]
4. “Plans” – [9.2]
5. “Your Weather” – [7.7]
6. “Over It” – [8.5]
7. “Friends” – [8.4]
8. “Said the People” – [7.9]
9. “There’s No Here” – [8.6]
10. “See You” – [9.0]
11. “I Don’t Wanna Go There” – [8.5]
12. “Imagination Blind” – [8.2]

Final Grade: 8.6