Thursday, February 25, 2010

Sambassadeur - European

Album Review
Pitchfork
Feb. 23, 2010
Link













From freedom fries to tea parties, the American relationship with Europe over the past several years has been as complicated as continental philosophy. Or a sibling rivalry. Coming out of a global financial crisis, the Old World way-- with less conspicuous consumption and more built-in safety nets-- looks more than ever like the better way. Named after a Serge Gainsbourg song, winsome indie poppers Sambassadeur won't shake up any Sarah Palin fan's European stereotypes. But the Gothenburg, Sweden-based band's third album, European, again demonstrates the virtues of cosmpolitanism, craft, and restraint.

Of all the Swedish groups in recent years, Sambassadeur have perhaps the most in common with likely indie-kid preconceptions of Swedishness-- no blog-house attitude or hip posturing here. One part ABBA, one part C86, the fragile, idyllic pop of 2005's self-titled debut translated naturally to a studio and the lusher production of Dungen's Mattias Glavå on fine 2007 follow-up Migration. The new album doubles down on an aesthetic that should appeal to fans of Camera Obscura, the Clientele, or the Concretes, resulting in Sambassadeur's most consistent full-length to date, even if its peaks don't quite match earlier highlights like "Between the Lines", "Kate", or "Subtle Changes", marred in part by occasionally generic lyrics.

As with generations of Swedish popsters before them, Sambassadeur excel at picking up sounds from the U.S. and UK and refining them to their catchy essence. When European is at full gallop, making loneliness almost cheerful on first single "Days" or another album highlight, "Sandy Dunes", it's pretty tough to beat: Those horns! Those strings! That piano opening! Where Migrations quotes Pavement and includes a Dennis Wilson cover, Sambassadeur's latest sprinkles its lyrics with well-selected phrases from Nick Drake or James Bond movie titles (though you probably enjoy them more if you don't realize it). Plus there's a hushed, intimate rendition of Tobin Sprout's "Small Parade".

For all that, it's hard to pinpoint moments when European rises beyond "pleasant" or "comfortable" to something transcendent. While the slower songs may drag on early listens-- hint: try speakers instead of headphones-- "Albatross" eventually emerges as the closest thing. "I was happier alone/ Cut my hair just like a boy," sings frontwoman Anna Persson, her voice full and conversational over Astral Weeks-style upright bass. It's a moment that more than makes up for every "ivory skyline of your smile" or "pine trees like paintings." Put down your protest signs, people: There's still so much we could learn from each other.
 

Securities Lending Recovers, but Uncertainty Remains

News Article
BoardIQ
February 23, 2010
Link (subscription required)
  

New Pay Metric to Compare Boards' 'Degree of Difficulty'

News Article
BoardIQ
February 23, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Monday, February 22, 2010

This Is Not a Mixtape

Feature
Pitchfork
February 22, 2010
Link








Last December, Brooklyn's Oneida issued a limited-run cassette, Fine European Food and Wine, on Scotch Tapes. Sure, the tape contained years-old live improvisations the band deemed unfit for "mainstream" treatment. But Oneida aren't unheralded kids laboring in their bedrooms. Over the past decade, they've put out 10 albums on Jagjaguwar, including 2009 triple LP Rated O. "Why release a cassette?" their singing drummer, Kid Millions, muses. "Man, who knows, right?"

Oneida are only one of the most recent indie-inclined outfits embracing the tape format. London label the Tapeworm opened its virtual doors last summer, selling out a limited run of cassettes by enigmatic multimedia artist Philip Jeck. Upstart bands Jail and Harlem each put out tapes on Fullerton, Calif.-based Burger Records; Sub Pop went on to sign Jail, now Jaill, while Matador inked a multi-album deal with Harlem. Hometapes, the Portland-based label behind art-rockers like Bear in Heaven and Pattern Is Movement, capped the year by mailing out a label sampler to journalists-- on cassette.

Perhaps more surprisingly, a few of underground music's heavier hitters are also championing the medium. "I only listen to cassettes," Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore told CBC radio last summer. Dirty Projectors released last year's highly anticipated Bitte Orca on CD, vinyl, mp3-- and cassette. Deerhunter have made two EPs available on tape: 2008's super-limited On Platts Eyott and 2009's aptly titled Rainwater Cassette Exchange. Beck told Pitchfork last summer he was recording a cassette-only cover of Moore & co.'s classic EVOL album for an upcoming Sonic Youth box set (a spokesperson contacted for confirmation did not immediately respond to e-mail).

Tapes never fell completely out of favor among experimental and noise musicians, but their broader underground resurgence appears to reflect a confluence of cultural trends. Instant access to almost any recording has left some of us over-stimulated, endlessly consuming without really digesting what we hear. Many children of the 1980s first owned their music on cassette, so for them the format represents a nostalgia for simpler times; younger kids probably never owned cassettes in the first place, so for them tapes don't have any negative associations. The spread of Internet-enabled smart phones and 24/7 social networking has made work and pleasure increasingly intertwined in our digital existences. Like records, cassettes offer listeners a tangible experience at a time when our jobs, our social lives, and our popular culture are becoming more and more ephemeral.

Via Audio - Animalore

Album Review
Pitchfork
February 22, 2010
Link
4.8













Via Audio's band van has the word "SNOB" painted on its side in cartoonish block letters. The Brooklyn-based, Berklee-educated foursome surely aren't the only music lovers who self-identify that way these days-- even beyond their home borough. Based on the recent chart successes of Vampire Weekend, Grizzly Bear, and Animal Collective, a growing portion of U.S. record buyers now think a lot like critics. If widespread connoisseurship leads to more adventurousness inside and outside the mainstream, as Solange Knowles' Dirty Projectors cover or Antony Hegarty's Beyoncé cover appear to portend, then the stage could be set for some of the weirdest and most exciting pop in ages.

As Animalore shows, however, the new snobbishness isn't always for the best. That's a shame, because the mature, earnestly proficient folk-pop of Via Audio's first LP, 2007's Say Something, was mild-mannered to a fault. Again produced by Spoon's Jim Eno, Animalore keeps its predecessor's smooth gloss and evident chops, demonstrating why Death Cab for Cutie's Chris Walla was an early supporter, but adds touches of funk, R&B, and cloying humor. With songwriting that veers between snoozy and face-palming, it's the kind of sophomore album that makes you question whether the debut deserved so much love in the first place. To paraphrase Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure, true expertise is knowing there's a whole lot we don't know.

For instance, I don't know how much it matters that Animalore shares its name with a rare 1953 "animalanthology" featuring Lewis Carroll. If there's a concept here, it's subtle: "The Lizard Song" ably ventures into tropicalia; "Tigers" rides an indie pop groove but catches its tapping toe on Mother Goose-like rhymes. Animalore's charms are subtle, too, but easier to find. Spoon's Eno establishes a dubby sense of space beginning with the jazzy chords and thick bass of coolly seductive opener "Hello". Co-songwriter Jessica Martins' light, versatile voice should please fans of former tourmates Headlights, particularly on acoustic-to-technicolor finale "Happening"-- the album's best song. Martins also keeps the Fleetwood Mac-dreaming "Summer Stars" and castanets-kissed "Wanted" from collapsing underneath their complex arrangements. She can't save "Goldrush", which sounds like a 1970s-era "Sesame Street" ditty about the Olympics, but its hook should be sharp enough to catch some listeners.

When Via Audio engage with recent chart pop, though, they bring an ironic distance that can be... off-putting. It's hard to imagine anyone would actually "want to make babies" to first mp3 "Babies", which turns the sci-fi synths and slinky rhythms of a Timbaland production into wry parody. "Digital" adopts the deadpan electro of LCD Soundsystem to broach the shocking revelation that pop stars use Auto-Tune: "It doesn't even matter how good you are," co-songwriter Tom Deis sneers, aghast. It's sad and embarrassing hearing complaints about "something 12-year-olds will like" from a band that elsewhere sings, "Olga, the poetry of music rises like the ashes of a life before I knew you." As long as pop is going to encourage us would-be connoisseurs, here's hoping it doesn't forget about the 12-year-olds-- or the 17-year-olds, either.
 

Merck Settles Vioxx Suits, Agrees to Governance Changes

News Analysis
Agenda
February 16, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Fluor Changes Bylaws to Permit CEO-Chairman Split

News Analysis
Agenda
February 16, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Voluntary ‘Say on Pay’ Adoptions Continue With JPMorgan, AmEx

News Analysis
Agenda
February 16, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Goldman Director: Scrutiny on Board Service Won’t Affect Day Job

News Analysis
Agenda
February 16, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

BofA-SEC Settlement Imminent, Judge Says

News Analysis
Agenda
February 16, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Genzyme Strengthens Lead Independent Director Role

News Analysis
Agenda
February 16, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Playboy Suit Says Hefner Harming Shareholders

News Analysis
Agenda
February 16, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Everybody Was in the French Resistance... Now! - Fixin' the Charts, Vol. 1

Album Review
Pitchfork
February 18, 2010
Link
3.8













"Answer records are not new," Time magazine wrote. That was in 1961. From "Yes, I'm Lonesome Tonight" to "No Pigeons", "Roll With Me, Henry" to "Wearing His Rolex", songs that respond to other songs have long been a lively pop tradition. In 1995, German reissue label Bear Family put out a three-volume compilation series, And the Answer Is: Great Pop Answer Discs From the '50s and '60s. It shows that as engrossing as the answer record trend can be, most of the records themselves are for obsessives only.

Eddie Argos is such an obsessive. The plucky raconteur for UK rockers Art Brut has always portrayed himself less as a pop star than as the ultimate fan, whether California dreaming about Axl Rose on 2004 debut Bang Bang Rock & Roll or belatedly discovering the Replacements on last year's Art Brut vs. Satan. And, as titles like "Pump Up the Volume", "Nag Nag Nag Nag", "Twist and Shout", and "The Passenger" may indicate, Art Brut were already making "answer songs" of a sort.

Everybody Was in the French Resistance... Now! is Argos' band with Dyan Valdés of L.A. group the Blood Arm. Produced by former Mighty Lemon Drops guitarist Dave Newton and recorded at Joshua Tree (take that, U2!!! ...I guess?), Fixin' the Charts, Vol. 1, an album-length excursion into answer songs, is only the latest example of Argos' fascination with participatory culture. Too often, though, its jokes are one-note, and so are its arrangements. It's irony. It's rock'n'roll. It's a listening experience not worth repeating a second time.

Wisely if foolhardily, Everybody Was in the French Resistance... Now! have chosen to respond to songs already rich in history. Wisely, because it's difficult not to take "The Scarborough Affaire" on its own terms when the Simon and Garfunkel original was already based on a Martin Carthy arrangement of a traditional song. Foolhardily, because this approach also highlights Fixin' the Charts' shortcomings: The limply parodic indie funk of "Billie's Genes" has nothing on earlier answer records like Lydia Murdock's Billie-Jean's-view "Superstar".

Argos is still witty, but here his punchlines tend to be predictable, due in part perhaps to the disc's overstretched answer-song conceit. I get that trying to reveal the emotional truth behind classic pop songs could theoretically be a way of giving Fixin' the Charts the sort of honesty about relationships that makes Bang Bang Rock & Roll or Art Brut vs. Satan stick with you for so long. But to "fix" the tacit anti-feminism of Avril Lavigne's "Girlfriend", "G.I.R.L.F.R.E.N. (You Know I've Got A)" would have to out-entertain her. Drunken indie-pop karaoke won't cause a generation of young women raised on Taylor Swift's "You Belong With Me" to stop fighting over boys and embrace girl power.

Then again, everybody was on the right side of history... now. When the Replacements sang about a musical hero of theirs, on Pleased to Meet Me/"Rock Band 2" fave "Alex Chilton", Paul Westerberg rasped, "I'm in love/ What's that song?/ I'm in love/ With that song." On "Hey! It's Jimmy Mack"-- in which, guess what, Jimmy tells Martha and the Vandellas he's never coming back-- Argos quips, "It certainly didn't deserve a song." What makes for a mildly amusing MySpace click can lead to a painfully obnoxious album. Particularly when, if you really think about it-- and I'm hardly the first person to have this idea-- every song is an answer song. Why else would you form a band?
 

Frank: SEC Should Require Disclosure of Top Employees’ Pay

News Analysis
Agenda
February 8, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Dodd: Bank Proposal Threatens Financial Overhaul

News Analysis
Agenda
February 8, 2010
Link (subscription required)
  

As Pressure Builds, Hewitt Spins Off Comp Consulting Biz

News Analysis
Agenda
February 8, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Board-Compliance Communication Could Lower White-Collar Fines

News Analysis
Agenda
February 8, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Will Companies Get to Opt Out of Proxy Access?

News Analysis
Agenda
February 8, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Recent Compensation Changes

News Analysis
Agenda
February 8, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Sunday, February 14, 2010

What Supreme Court’s Political Funding Ruling Means for Boards

News Analysis
Agenda
February 1, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

RiskMetrics on the Block?

News Analysis
Agenda
February 1, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Kraft-Cadbury Deal Reveals New Debt-Equity Balancing Act

News Analysis
Agenda
February 1, 2010
Link (subscription required)
   

Proxy-Access Comment Period Ends, to Uncertain Prospects

News Analysis
Agenda
February 1, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

House Panel Hears Tougher Proposals on Executive Pay

News Analysis
Agenda
February 1, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

How FBI Nabbed Execs in FCPA Probe

News Analysis
Agenda
February 1, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Google Co-Founders to Relinquish Majority Control

News Analysis
Agenda
February 1, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

AIG to Require Approval for All Corporate Jet Rides

News Analysis
Agenda
February 1, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Buffett: CEOs of Failed Companies Should Forfeit Their Assets

News Analysis
Agenda
February 1, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

IRS Proposal Would Require More Disclosure About Tax Risks

News Analysis
Agenda
February 1, 2010
Link (subscription required)
  

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Lightspeed Champion - Life Is Sweet! Nice to Meet You

Album Review
Pitchfork
February 1, 2010
Link
6.7













Devonté Hynes enjoyed critical acclaim at age 19 as a member of art-thrashers Test Icicles, and now, as Lightspeed Champion, he works with the resigned determination of someone who realizes hype is fleeting. Under a pair of pseudonyms (Blood Orange is the other), Hynes gives away impossible-to-digest amounts of free music online. Most recently, Hynes had his heart sawed to pieces by adorable animated bears in the Kanye West-endorsed (all caps: "THIS IS DOPE") video for Basement Jaxx's 2009 electro-pop stunner "My Turn", a song he co-wrote. As Hynes wonders aloud, "When will this all start?" it sounds like he knows it probably won't. If "My Turn" lays bare Hynes' fears, his Lightspeed project battles them-- eccentrically and at times too obscurely, but no less quixotically.

As Lightspeed, Hynes flees from the trends that briefly propelled his former band, while inevitably failing to escape them. His 2008 debut, Falling Under the Lavender Bridge, embraced the Americana twang of Saddle Creek in-house producer Mike Mogis, skewering ghetto-fetishizing peers with songs like "All My Friends Are Listening to Crunk". It was hard to tell who was being more ironic. Appropriately, then, Life Is Sweet! Nice to Meet You brings on a producer with a hip-hop background, Ben Allen, who also oversaw a little record called Merriweather Post Pavilion. For better and worse, Lightspeed's sophomore album plays like a product of Hynes' restlessness. Alternately inspired and frustrating, it addresses themes of lost love (and lost chicness) with Queen-size 70s-rock pomp, neoclassical interludes, and one ukulele-based chamber-pop song.

Hynes can shred, too, laying down a nasty guitar solo on the album's first single, "Marlene", a twitchy but slightly overlong funk barrage that could make "more triangle" the new "more cowbell." "Stop being cool," Hynes demands, a refrain that might be a mission statement for the whole Lightspeed project. The catchiest song, live favorite "Madame Van Damme", takes hipster self-loathing to its cheerful extreme, repeating, "Kill me, baby, won't ya kill me," over a light girl-group bounce. Heaven knows he's miserable now, but "Faculty of Fears" goes one Morrissey hiccup too far, tethering a badass bass groove to inscrutable lyrics about sarongs and Pythagorean theorems.

The best and the worst of Life Is Sweet! Nice to Meet You meet on "The Big Guns of Highsmith". First it's a clever kiss-off to London: "Chelsea teas and Socrates still haunt me/ A life I strived and chased and had and lost." Then it's clever self-recrimination: "Hurts be to be the one who's always feeling sad," Hynes whines, before a Greek chorus retorts, "Oh, just stop complaining!" This dry self-awareness puts the album's remaining highlights-- baroque keyboard plaint "Middle of the Dark", spaghetti-Western epic "Sweetheart", jazz-splashed rumination "Smooth Day (At the Library)"-- in proper context. It's also bloodlessly cerebral. We are not the champions, my friends. Hynes has been, and still could be again, but for now he's keeping that English stiff upper lip about it.
 

Goldman Seeks to Block Pay Proposal, Citing Errors

News Analysis
Agenda
January 25, 2010
Link (subscription required)
  

Edison International Adopts Advisory Pay Vote

News Analysis
Agenda
January 25, 2010
Link (subscription required)
  

Overstock.com Plans to Return to Nasdaq Compliance by May

News Analysis
Agenda
January 25, 2010
Link (subscription required)
  

IRS Lets Companies Fix Deferred Comp Mistakes

News Analysis
Agenda
January 25, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Companies Look to Raise Special-Meeting Ownership Thresholds

News Analysis
Agenda
January 25, 2010
Link (subscription required)
  

What Now for Financial Regulatory Overhaul?

News Analysis
Agenda
January 25, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Arbitron CEO’s ‘Misstatement’ to Congress Raises Question

News Analysis
Agenda
January 25, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Friday, January 29, 2010

Good Shoes - No Hope, No Future

Album Review
Pitchfork
January 29, 2010
Link
5.8













In late 2006, Good Shoes cracked the UK singles charts with "All in My Head", a quintessentially British-indie slab of neurotic, spiky punk-pop. Further singles and chart appearances culminated in 2007's Think Before You Speak, a charmingly heartfelt album somewhere between a less insular Arctic Monkeys and a less caffeinated Futureheads-- romantic insecurities you could dance to in your trainers. When sharply accented singer/guitarist Rhys Jones sang, "Things were better when we were young," the future still sounded bright.

Now-- No Hope, No Future. The world has changed a whole lot since the mid-2000s, musically and geopolitically, and Good Shoes are probably being at least half-serious about their sophomore album's title. The London four-piece are confronting the same boring bummer as so many others in this "new 'normal'" economy. Success isn't as successful it used to be, you start growing old before you stop growing up, papa don't preach. What results is an album that sounds like the 00s even as its themes are solidly turn-of-2010. A darker album, a slightly clumsier album, but an album with strong unifying themes and a few songs worth stepping away from the bar for.

"Time may change me," sang Bowie, "but I can't trace time." Guess who was taking notes. Good Shoes are obsessed with permanence and flux, what's innate in a person and what might eventually turn sour: relationships, careers. No Hope, No Future's first single, "That's the Way My Heart Beats", bouncily blames the narrator's ongoing girl problems on something in his nature. By contrast, evocative finale "City by the Sea"-- as close as UK indie gets to power ballads-- is right there with Death Cab for Cutie's "Meet Me on the Equinox": "All I want's a little more time/ To feel your heart beat next to mine." Everything-- everything-- ends.

After a debut record wrapped up in girls and going to shows, Good Shoes deserve credit for continuing to sing about what they know even as that gets darker. "Times Change", an assault on cranky oldsters, has guitars neatly uptight enough for Field Music, and it's refreshingly difficult to figure out where to put the air quotes on tense relationship-ender "Then She Walks Away": "I know I should be the one to say those words/ Like, 'Times change, but I want you to stay.'" But gloomy quarter-life crisis songs leave less room for error, and even on the latter track, Jones sings contrived-sounding words about how his words sound "contrived."

When No Hope, No Future isn't staring glumly into the void, Good Shoes could be a whole other band-- the band of their debut, only more seasoned. There's the Chic-chic disco-funk of "Under Control", which would resemble Art Brut if Eddie Argos sang about sex addiction rather than impotence. There's also the sprinting release of "Thousand Miles an Hour", which functions almost like a surf-rock instrumental. On "I Know", Jones attacks zealots of all stripes with a sanctimonious certitude that would make Billy Bragg sound like Ghostface Killah if not for the half-winking title. It's been said the only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing. Yeah, but it's also been said, "Know thyself."
 

Monday, January 25, 2010

The Delta Mirror - He Was Worse Than the Needle He Gave You

Track Review
Pitchfork
January 25, 2010
Link
8













A certain strain of recent indie rock seems to be taking an unusual interest in illness and death. You could blame Arcade Fire, the sad loss of whose family members only happened to lead to one of the most universally acclaimed independent releases of the past decade. Last year, the Antlers' Hospice focused an entire album on the subject of a man with terminal bone cancer. Now L.A. trio the Delta Mirror's upcoming Lefse debut, Machines That Listen, sets each of its nine songs in a different room of the hospital.

This slow, layered ballad "He Was Worse Than the Needle He Gave You" stands out not for its pathos-ridden subject matter-- I'm still not sure I know exactly what it's about-- but rather its restrained emotional gutpunch, which it achieves with a simple but catchy tune and dramatically expansive production. Imagine the Big Pink's electro-shoegaze explosions sounding vulnerable. "I've got too much time on my hands," goes a gothy male vocal, and before long we find out the reason why-- and the guy responsible won't fucking be held responsible. The next time the Delta Mirror sing those words, at the end of the song, their meaning has changed. Damage done.
 

CFOs Identify Top Risks for 2010

News Analysis
Agenda
January 19, 2010
Link (subscription required)

Citi Director Deutch Quits, Calls for Others to Join Him

News Analysis
Agenda
January 19, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Columnists: SEC Should Look Beyond BofA

News Analysis
Agenda
January 19, 2010
Link (subscription required)

SEC Issues New Guidance on Proxy Disclosure Timeline

News Analysis
Agenda
January 19, 2010
Link (subscription required)

Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Recalls Depression-Era Panel

News Analysis
Agenda
January 19, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

What Dodd’s Exit Might Mean for Financial, Governance Bill

News Analysis
Agenda
January 19, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Big Pay Consultants Losing Business to Independent Boutiques

News Analysis
Agenda
January 19, 2010
Link (subscription required)

Post-Crisis Issues Top Audit Committee Priorities for 2010: KPMG

News Analysis
Agenda
January 19, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Friday, January 22, 2010

Various Artists: Diplo Presents: Free Gucci (Best of the Cold War Mixtapes)

Album Review
Pitchfork
January 22, 2010
Link
5.9













"Who need be afraid of the merge?" When Walt "Leaves of Grass" Whitman wrote that, in the 1855 debut edition of the poem that would become "Song of Myself", his subject certainly wasn't Wesley Pentz. But the Philadelphia DJ/producer known as Diplo-- alongside such fellow global travelers as DJ /rupture-- has been among the 21st century's most dauntless joiners of disparate musical cultures. Whether Baltimore club (parties starting in 2003 at Philly's Ukrainian Club), baile funk (2004/2005 Favela mixtapes), Alabama hip-hop (2008's Paper Route Gangstaz mixtape), or Jamaican dancehall (last year's Major Lazer album), Diplo has a musically unimpeachable track record of taking the world's streets' worthiest sounds out of the neighborhoods and into your earbuds.

With Free Gucci (Best of the Cold War Mixtapes), a freely downloadable mixtape of remixes for Atlanta gangsta rapper Gucci Mane, all that jet lag may have finally caught up with him. Never mind the usual point-missing accusations of cultural tourism-- "Having white kids talk about race on the internet is the dumbest thing in the world," Diplo told Pitchfork's own Tom Breihan in a 2007 Village Voice interview. When it comes to the MC born Radric Davis, "the merge" already happened. After a prolific series of high-profile guest appearances (Mariah Carey, Black Eyed Peas, Big Boi) and mixtapes (his Cold War trilogy flooded the blogs one day last November) all but guaranteed Lil Wayne comparisons, Gucci Mane's Warner-sponsored The State vs. Radric Davis debuted in December at #10 on the Billboard albums chart. The New York Times hailed the rapper as "one of the most vigorous and exciting in recent memory". I mean, sure-- B'more club, baile funk, Alabama rap, and Jamaican dancehall each existed for years before Diplo got them in his crates. But he introduced them to listeners who probably wouldn't have been exposed to them otherwise. Gucci Mane needs no introduction.

Compared with Diplo's past projects, then, Free Gucci has little reason to exist. In fact, despite the title, most of the tracks here weren't on the Cold War mixtapes at all-- the bulk come from last year's superior The Burrprint: The Movie 3-D. Anyway, all that stuff would be just as academic as arguments about cultural appropriation if the music itself banged. And that's the problem. Yeah, Gucci's slurry, word-drunk absurdism is a huge part of his appeal. And Diplo's remixers have picked some of the rapper's signature tracks. But Atlanta producers such as Drumma Boy and Zaytoven, with their pin-prick synths and sweaty lurch, are also crucial to Gucci's sound, as even Warner must've recognized by sticking to them and other Southern producers on the new studio album. The indie-friendly mergers Diplo brokers in their place have their moments, but by and large they're no more accessible-- and definitely less complementary-- than their originals.

The most significant connection Diplo makes here isn't between Gucci and casual hip-hop fans. It's between today's various underground styles of woozy, stoner-friendly electronic music. There's glo-fi/chillwave/whatever: Memory Tapes gives Burrprint's gloriously shameless jewelry boast "Excuse Me" some icy, extraterrestrial counterpoint (space abhors a bare neck). There's post-dubstep blippiness from Zomby, who adds a different kind of trunk-shuddering low-end to Guccimerica threat "Boi". There's also Warp-signed hip-hop instrumentalist Flying Lotus, fogging up 2008's "Photo Shoot" with siren wobble and extra mush-mouth. Unfortunately, gloomy lo-fi duo Salem have done much better Gucci remixes than this rotely ominous rework of another Burrprint highlight, "My Shadow". Overall, though, Free Diplo shows that some of the most notable home electronic producers right now have more in common than their fan factions might like to admit.

The link between Gucci's intoxicated flow and Diplo's chosen remixers should be obvious, but bringing them together isn't always so seamless. French producer Douster puts post-"A Milli" bass mumbles beneath Burrprint's (relatively) introspective "Frowney Face". OK-- but why did Philly's Emynd think his uptempo version of the same track needed irritating percolator bubbles? DJ Teenwolf, of Brooklyn's Ninjasonik, bur(r)ies Great BRRitain's "I'm Expecting" ("What you expect? I expect another check, man") in constantly hammering kick drums and skidding sound effects. The same mixtape's "I Be Everywhere" gets an Asian motif and pitch-shifting from English producer Mumdance on one fairly solid remix, then burbling dubstep clichés from San Francisco's DZ on another. Austin's Bird Peterson replaces the mock-gothic sweep of one more Burrprint cut, "Dope Boys", with expansively conceived bass-synth grandeur that should please fans of Memory Tapes; still, it's an odd fit for such a playful song ("I'm paraplegic/ Where's my paralegal?"). Anyone reading this review can get a better sense of Gucci's weird charms by going straight to the source. Which you can download almost as easily.

As for Diplo himself, the Mad Decent boss can take credit for a few of the mixtape's better tracks-- especially a stomping, synth-slithering "Excuse Me" ("He do all that lame stuff/ I just keep it gangsta") that wouldn't be too far out of place on one of Gucci's own albums. Snares bustle and synths bend on Diplo's "Break Yourself", a much fuller production than the Burr Russia original. His Mariah Carey-sampling remix of Guccimerica's outlaw manifesto "Dangers Not a Stranger", with its satin-y keys, might be too precious for some, but it-- like DJ Benzi and Willy Joy's Daniel Bedingfield-sampling trance-rap take on 2008's "I'm the Shit"-- uncovers enjoyably unexpected similarities between otherwise vastly different tracks.

So Free Gucci isn't great. But even a mixtape without any duds would arrive at a time when Diplo's target audience no longer needs someone like Diplo to help them meet rap halfway. Washed Out, whose gauzy synth-pop isn't included here but shares the same spirit, came to his current sound after working on instrumental hip-hop tracks. Salem have been informed by chopped'n'screwed music since the beginning, and their remix of Jeezy diss "Round One" beats anything here, easy. Newest Warp signee Babe Rainbow, aka Vancouver-based producer Cameron Reed, calls his style "surf-step": lo-fi beach-punk goes dubstep? Reed is also a huge hip-hop fan. Diplo need not be afraid of the merge, but Free Gucci is too little, too late.
 

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

jj - let go

Track Review
Pitchfork
January 20, 2010
Link
4














"Summery," we said? Ha! The cold Swedish winter is right outside! As if to make good on Sincerely Yours' past promise of "no fantasy, no stupid escape," jj's latest leaves behind Balearic beaches for a desert of the real. The Swedish duo's still quasi-anonymous (What? Free health care and no TMZ?!) female singer mentions the change of season in her earnestly intoned lyrics to "Let Go", the first mp3 from the forthcoming follow-up to my favorite album of 2009, but she wouldn't have to. Suspiciously Nebraska-esque harmonica gets her point across immediately. Fragile guitars, icy keys, and Knife-like blots of percussion all second.

jj n° 2 stood on a lofty precipice between naïveté and cyncism, sensitivity and machismo, Saint Etienne and Flo Rida. "Let Go" breaks on through to the other side. A little bit more New Age now: As my colleague Eric Harvey alerted me, the melody to the synth-glistening chorus bears a more than incidental resemblance to Sting's "Fields of Gold", which maybe shouldn't be surprising-- have you ever tried listening to "Fields of Gold" in jj's usual state of mind when it's perpetually dark and freezing outside? "All I have is my soul," the new song begins; a drug reference, a Boss reference, and a reference to label bosses the Tough Alliance later, we're told to free ourselves, let the jealous sun burn our skin anyway. Huh. I was ready for other people to be puzzled by jj. I just wasn't ready for it to happen to me.
 

Yes, I 'Actually' Like It

Feature
Village Voice
Pazz and Jop
January 19, 2010
Link













"There should never be guilt in pleasure," John Mayer wrote this year to his nearly 2.8 million Twitter followers, in reference to a Miley Cyrus song. The 32-year-old singer, songwriter, and bluesy guitarist has also taken aim at jaded souls who acknowledge liking a popular song by saying they "actually" like it—the implication being, I guess, that you wouldn't have expected such a tasteful person to like that song, and thus that it's still, on some level, a guilty pleasure. To me, "Who Says"—the first single from Mayer's fourth major-label studio album, Battle Studies, which entered the charts at #1 to mixed reviews (or, among the circle of critics I'm friends with, no reviews at all)—isn't "just" a song about getting high. It's the anti-guilty pleasure. And yes, I "actually" like it.

Marc Hogan
Des Moines, IA

  

Monday, January 18, 2010

Perot Systems Affiliate Ex-Employee in $8.6M SEC Settlement

News Analysis
Agenda
January 11, 2010
Link (subscription only)

Wells Fargo Top Execs Get Stock, Not Cash, Incentives

News Analysis
Agenda
January 11, 2010
Link (subscription required)

Impact of New Comp-Risk Disclosures to Vary by Industry

News Analysis
Agenda
January 11, 2010
Link (subscription only)

Judge Finds Ex-Deloitte Executive Liable in Trading Case

News Analysis
Agenda
January 11, 2010
Link (subscription required)

Hospitals Hit Execs With Outside Board Pay Cap

News Analysis
Agenda
January 11, 2010
Link (subscription required)

Sen. Dodd’s Exit Threatens Financial Legislation

News Analysis
Agenda
January 11, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

BofA Judge Blocks News Reports as Testimony in SEC Case

News Analysis
Agenda
January 11, 2010
Link (subscription required)

Continental’s New CEO Waives Salary, Bonus

News Analysis
Agenda
January 11, 2010
Link (subscription required)

2009: The Year of Risk Management

News Analysis
Agenda

January 11, 2010
Link (subscription required)

AIG to Award Executives Stock Units, Not Common Stock

News Analysis
Agenda
January 11, 2010
Link (subscription required)

Judge Approves Schering-Plough’s $165M Investor Settlement

News Analysis
Agenda
January 11, 2010
Link (subscription required)

Friday, January 15, 2010

Ceremony - Someday

Track Review
Pitchfork
January 15, 2010
Link
7













Before Stephin Merritt decided orchestral folk-pop songs for Eric Cartman's next tea party constituted Realism, he cranked up his copy of Darklands and titled the Magnetic Fields' 2008 album Distortion. For these former members of Virginia-based Skywave, a band that also spawned A Place to Bury Strangers, that album title could've summed up an entire career. Instead, Paul Baker and John Fedowitz chose to call their post-Skywave duo Ceremony, a moniker that hearkens back to a certain New Order song title (also, probably less relevantly, a short-lived band fronted by Chastity Bono). Aside from vocals recalling Merritt's tired monotone, "Someday" doesn't sound like anything you might not be able to imagine from those reference points-- thunderously romantic Factory Records guitar/bass interplay, lo-fi drum machines-- but as far as what it sets out to do, it succeeds. And did I mention that it's really fucking loud?
 

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Rogue Wave - Good Morning (The Future)

Track Review
Pitchfork
January 14, 2010
Link
3














If Rogue Wave sound underwhelmed by the way the Great Recession has downgraded our collective prospects, consider the couple of years these Bay Area rockers have had. Two days before Christmas 2007, then-bassist Evan Farrell died in an apartment fire. Guitarist Gram LeBron lost his father. Drummer Pat Spurgeon survived a years-long quest for a new kidney, as documented in a recent PBS documentary, D Tour. And frontman Zach Rogue spent much of last year bed-ridden and partially paralyzed. Rogue Wave would've been forgiven for throwing in the towel.

Instead, they're bringing happy back. "Good Morning (The Future)", the first mp3 from the quartet's fourth album (second for Brushfire), marks a dramatic shift from the melodically tricky folk-pop that once made these guys such natural Shins labelmates. "The future isn't what it used to be/ I'm not surprised," their new song blithely begins, but its "future" unfortunately sounds like a more irritating version of the recent past. It's got the sensitive-guy choruses and peppy synth programming the Postal Service delivered to Owl City and lockstep post-punk guitars the Killers might've used to crash a Bloc Party. And, on the bridge, the sort of warped alien voices that haunted the Flaming Lips' Yoshimi. Bland political pronouncements ("Do you think that we like to take our orders from fools?") don't make this awkward electro-pop embrace any less clumsy. "Love machine"? Really?
 

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Fiveng - Jonah

Track Review
Pitchfork
January 12, 2010
Link
8













Less Jonah and the whale, more David and Goliath. Nicholas Ng has the kind of story that became increasingly common in 2009, when the most intriguing new psychedelic bands often weren't bands at all. A couple of months ago, Ng started sending out mp3s of his Fiveng bedroom pop project, in hopes that maybe somebody out there would hear something they liked and post them. A few local Bay Area blogs did. From there, Ng's aquatic lo-fi productions somehow found their way to Switzerland-based blog Delicious Scopitone, and then to Dallas-based Weekly Tape Deck. Now you're reading these words. And deservedly so.

Amid so many lame attempts to jump the recent "chillwave"/"glo-fi" phenomenon with summer-themed songs and "mysterious" secret identities, it's thrilling to know there are still undiscovered talents like Ng out there, tapping that zeitgeist of wooziness in their own refreshing ways. The fact that "Jonah" uses nature samples, exotica percussion, heavily reverbed guitars, streaky synths, and Panda Bear-style harmonies shouldn't come as much of a shock. That the arrangement is so accomplished, though-- the song so melodic and well-constructed-- makes Fiveng one of those rare pleasant surprises. "Jonah was a boy who didn't give a damn," Ng sings, over strummy chords that cry out for a mashup with the Exploding Hearts' "Throwaway Style"; "All he ever wanted was a bowl in his hand." As much Here We Go Magic as Washed Out, Ng just wants to see you underwater.
 

Monday, January 11, 2010

SEC Charges Ernst & Young Auditors in Fraud Case

News Analysis
Agenda
January 4, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

U.S., European Antitrust Regulators Get Back in Sync

News Analysis
Agenda
January 4, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Dodd Reaches Out to GOP in Financial, Governance Overhaul

News Analysis
Agenda
January 4, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Companies Hold Off on Proxy-Access Bylaws

News Analysis
Agenda
January 4, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

'Say on Pay' Advocates Predict More Voluntary Adoptions

News Analysis
Agenda
January 4, 2010
Link (subscription required)
 

Activists Take Aim at CEO Succession After Rule Change

News Analysis
Agenda
January 4, 2010
Link (subscription required)
  



Thursday, January 7, 2010

Elliott Smith - Cecilia/Amanda

Track Review
Pitchfork
January 7, 2010
Link
7













After three discs of posthumous songs, most musicians don't have a whole lot of gold left in the vault. Elliott Smith's spiritual brother in intimate, depressive folk-pop, Nick Drake, made it to one rarities collection before lapsing into mediocrity. John Lennon got one half of a studio album and a couple of barrel-scratching Anthology tracks. Jimi Hendrix, for whatever it's worth, was releasing unreleased songs to some critical acclaim well into the second decade after his death (though I gotta admit I haven't heard many of them). So there's no reason Smith-- who recorded songs constantly, and, judging by some of his latter-career creative choices, wasn't necessarily the best judge of his own talent, anyway-- might not still have a couple of worthwhile recordings that haven't yet found a home.

"Cecilia/Amanda" is one, though it's not exactly greatest-hits material. With bleak but rich imagery that evokes the deadly "party dress" of Elvis Costello's "Alison" almost the way XO's "Baby Britain" turned over Revolver, Smith sings of a damaged female duo and "a place where lonely men pay to make their opposites match." It's still unclear who exactly belongs to whom, but a baby is definitely involved. Remastering by Tape Op editor Larry Crane nicely cleans up the keyboards and acoustic strums from the muddled version that has been floating around for a few years. Given that the tune dates back to Smith's high school band-- he recorded this take with Crane in 1997-- it's a good bet Smith didn't consider it one of his best. You won't need him to tell you that, but you'll be happy to hear another reliably well-constructed folk-pop song from the late singer/songwriter just the same. Even if part of his romantic charm was that he always strived for something more.
 

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Kurt Vile - I Wanted Everything

Track Review
Pitchfork
January 6, 2010
Link
8













This Philly home-taping head got his biggest break with the 1970s FM-rock dreams of Matador debut Childish Prodigy last fall. But delve deeper into Kurt Vile's work, and you hear a folk troubadour off in his own Another Green World. "I Wanted Everything", from a 7" titled Meet the Philly Elite (tongue, no doubt, halfway in cheek), is Vile in downcast acoustic-totin' slacker mode. The outer-space production flourishes of his best album so far, God Is Saying This to You, must've gone back to their home planet, but Vile's earthy moan and rusty guitar arpeggios pass through lo-fi reverb that should please devotees of Atlas Sound, Ariel Pink, and, hell, early My Morning Jacket. One minute, Vile is dusting off American clichés to promise eternal love. The next, he's bumping up against deeply contemporary quandaries involving work-life balance-- and impending mortality. You can't always get what you want.
 

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

The Tough Alliance - Prison Break EP

Album Review
Pitchfork
January 5, 2010 
Link 
7.6














"We have a world of pleasure to win, and nothing to lose but boredom." That manifesto shows up a few times on the Tough Alliance-run Sincerely Yours label's website. As is the Gothenburg, Sweden-based electronic pop duo's habit, the words are borrowed, in this case from Belgian author and Situationist International member Raoul Vaneigem. You could think of TTA's music as sort of a living shrine to pleasure: unabashedly catchy, defiantly emotional, with gaudy synthetic beats and fuck-you bravado. But nobody can stave off boredom forever.

In fact, TTA have been conspicuously quiet lately. Since releasing A New Chance, their second full-fledged album, in 2007, co-conspirators Eric Berglund and Henning Fürst have put out precious little new material under the TTA name: a pair of covers, a remix of Victoria Bergsman's Taken by Trees, and various remixes by other people of their own songs. The six TTA remixes collected on the mp3-only Prison Break EP are uniformly solid and occasionally revelatory dancefloor fare, well worth any Swede-head's $5.35. But Prison Break is an exceptionally weird release. As good as it is, this EP should have the duo's fans growing only more and more impatient for the next album or single-- unknown pleasures, still.

In early November, Sincerely Yours mailing list subscribers received a typically enigmatic message, with one link to a new track by jj, and another to information about this EP. "Better late than never," the linked page says; digital music seller Klicktrack lists Prison Break's release date as Oct. 31, 2008. The fuck? What's more, these remixes don't change the title of the original track, a naming convention that's usually standard for the Sincerely Yours crew ("Now That's What I Call Indulgence", not "Indulgence (The Tough Alliance Remix)"; "The Sweetness of Air France", not "Sweetness (Air France Remix)"). One possible clue: Two of these remixes, a ravey "Neo Violence" by Dutch DJ/producer Laidback Luke (grab his remix of Robin S.'s "Show Me Love" with Sweden's Steve Angello) and a dubby space-disco "Neo Violence" by L.A.-based DFA/Rong signee Woolfy, came out in 2008 on Modular-- not Sincerely Yours. Regardless, rounding out a trio of "Neo Violence" takes here is a fine Daft Punk-style electro-house reworking by Perth-based Shazam.

Whatever Prison Break's origins, the people you expect to be the heavy-hitters pretty much are. Barcelona's El Guincho is a TTA kindred spirit, sharing their yen for sunny globe-trotting, but his chiming, euphoric "First Class Riot" gets overshadowed a bit by jj's absolutely radiant "touch of jules & jim" version. Taking a name from 1962 French film Jules & Jim, jj's remix puts a hushed female voice alongside TTA's, which jj chop up and toy with like marionettes (or like that Grateful Dead sample on "What Would I Want? Sky"), making TTA shout out "touch of you" and then a sublimely dumb "da da" melody atop girlish giggles and John Williams-grandiose orchestration. The Juan MacLean's "A New Chance", meanwhile, remains near perfection, ensconcing the original in the finest techno-house marble for future generations to marvel upon.

"It's not a question of understanding it, man. If you feel it, you feel it, stupid." That quote, from a John Cassavetes film, shows up more than once on this EP, and it's still the best encapsulation of the Sincerely Yours spirit. We could quibble about the absence of Brooklyn duo Tanlines' highlife-meets-Whigfield "A New Chance" remix, or California krautrock-disco duo Windsurf's "Neo Violence (Windsurf's Neon Violet Dub)", or other DJ-ready TTA remixes by Alvy Singer and Stevie Tech Nicks. But those are all pretty easily downloadable at this point. More urgent: The Sincerely Yours catalog description for Prison Break mentions that TTA are "on short term leave." We have no new(-ish) TTA to listen to but this. Until the next random-ass listserv email.

Surfer Blood - Astro Coast

Album Review
SPIN
January/February 2010
Link
8/10


 





Scruffy indie rock with cheap-seats aspirations

"Take it easy on me," frontman John Paul Pitts sings on two different songs from these South Florida blog favorites' wonderfully fuzzy debut. But Astro Coast can stand up to online scrutiny -- it's girls that keep Surfer Blood's reverbed indie rock jumping out of its skin. Not that you need notice the angst for all the crunchy riffs, sunny harmonies, inscrutable humor, occasional strings, and Afropop touches. Adolescent anthems like "Swim (to Reach the End)" and "Catholic Pagans" show latter-day Rivers Cuomo who's daddy.

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Top 50 Albums of 2009

Feature
Pitchfork
December 18, 2009
Link














46. Dan Deacon
Bromst
[Carpark]

From the Magnetic Fields on i to Elliott Smith on Figure 8, plenty of beloved artists have upgraded their equipment at the expense of some of their most appealing qualities. Dan Deacon's schmancy new toy is a computer-operated player piano that can generate notes faster than any pair of human hands; thankfully, his most appealing quality remains manic glee. So when Baltimore's most notorious electro-spazz made the leap from the basements of 2007's comparably lo-fi Spiderman of the Rings to, well, wherever the hell you'd expect to hear something like Bromst, he sticks the landing. Highlights "Snookered" and "Surprise Stefani" expand the sonic and emotional palette of Deacon's densely layered drifts, staying between Philip Glass and Chicago house, while unexpected touches like the female vocals on "Wet Wings" show new sides of the old goofball. Don't worry, he still sings like Woody Woodpecker. --Marc Hogan














15. Japandroids
Post-Nothing
[Unfamiliar/Polyvinyl]

Japandroids have a freaking wind machine, which they use to great effect on stage. It's a perfect nod to what this Vancouver band delivered on its debut album: eight deliriously enthusiastic garage-rock songs about girls, growing up, and going away from home. Rather than mask their emotions in reverb or tape hiss, Japandroids shout slogans, often in unison, over thrumming guitar chords and chaotic drumming. From the rambunctious ambivalence of "The Boys Are Leaving Town" to the slo-mo emo of "I Quit Girls", the energy level rarely wavers. Raging against the certain knowledge that we won't know what we've got 'til it's gone, "Young Hearts Spark Fire" sums up Post-Nothing's sound in four words. While Neon Indian, Washed Out, and their homemade psychedelic electro-pop peers were getting accused of wallowing in childhood, Japandroids captured the recklessness of youth-- and the abject terror of not knowing what comes after it. --Marc Hogan

Top 100 Tracks of 2009

Feature
Pitchfork
December 14, 2009
Link













93. Morrissey
"Something is Squeezing My Skull"
[Polydor]

After Morrissey's onstage collapse and subsequent pegging by a drink-hurling fan, Years of Refusal's muscular, defiant opener, with its worries about the star's health, feels like its most striking accomplishment. For such an aggressively upbeat glam-rock tune, the theme is melodramatically bleak-- and, to British pop fans, probably doubly familiar: Modern life is loveless. Worth it just to hear Moz list meds and then breathlessly repeat, "Don't give me anymore," at the song's conclusion. Oh, Mother, he can feel the soil falling over his head. --Marc Hogan














42. The Big Pink
"Velvet"
[4AD]

What's more cocksure than naming your band after the house where the Band wrote Music From Big Pink and recorded The Basement Tapes with Dylan? Calling bullshit on Otis Redding. "These arms of mine/ Don't mind who they hold," Robbie Furze announces on "Velvet", the second single by London duo the Big Pink. Men are scum-- check the headlines. So an album called A Brief History of Love would be pointlessly abridged without a song exploring the conflicting, self-destructive emotions of the (post?) adolescent male: heartbroken and heartless, loving and horny, quixotic and cold. If you don't hear any of that, Furze and bandmate Milo Cordell-- plus vocalist Lauren Jones and drummer Akiko Matsuura, with mixing by Alan Moulder-- conjure a feedback-roiled electro-shoegaze maelstrom that sounds as huge as first love feels. Does it make sense, or are we all eventually doomed to end up with facial lacerations and a five-iron through our Escalades? --Marc Hogan  













22. Delorean
"Seasun"
[Fool House]

Barcelona four-piece Delorean could hardly have given the standout from their Ayrton Senna EP a more zeitgeisty title. But what "Seasun" represents would be just as relevant in 2002, 1982, or-- warning: weak Marty McFly joke to come-- 2022. It's the sound of a rock group who learned songwriting by making killer remixes of other people's songs. Forget verse-chorus-verse: Singer/bassist/scholar Ekhi Lopetegi doesn't sing anything you could properly call "words" until almost the three-minute mark, but that doesn't make "Seasun" any less catchy. Instead, we get a shimmering, arena- or disco-ready object lesson on letting the beat build. Whirring synths-- and, on John Talabot's excellent "Seasun" remix, electronic thuds that could fill the Camp Nou-- here give way to dramatic piano, high-pitched coos and hearty cheers, handclaps that sneak up on you, rock-style drums that gain momentum, maracas, and gorgeously Balearic guitars. Something something, "never be the same again." --Marc Hogan  














10. Washed Out
"Feel It All Around"
[Mexican Summer]

A year ago, Ernest Greene wasn't singing, really. Nine months ago, he wasn't making glimmering lo-fi electronic pop as Washed Out. Until October, you couldn't buy any of his stuff in physical form. Not long before you finally could, he would've had no reason to ask upstart labels Mexican Summer or Mirror Universe to press more than tiny numbers of his Life of Leisure 12" EP or High Times cassette. Who would be interested in them? A lot of people, it turns out, and "Feel It All Around" is the biggest reason why.

Washed Out's first single doesn't tell you what, exactly, you're supposed to be "feel"ing, but that's the idea. Twinkling synths, amniotic vocal drone, undulating bass, and chockablock percussion all imagine a hazy innocence that's just out of reach. Greene's wispily multi-tracked ache is no more clearly articulated. Anybody truly scandalized about this track's sampling of Gary Low's Italo-disco jam "I Want You" would've been just as pissed at the 1983 original for having synths. The past isn't as sublime as you remember it. The present always ends too soon. --Marc Hogan

 

B of A Likely to Sell Columbia to BlackRock, Ameriprise: Sources

News Analysis

Ignites
Republished December 31, 2009, as 8th most-read Ignites article of the year
Originally published July 17, 2009
Link (subscription required)



2009 Worst Year for Fund Launches Since 1990

News Article
Ignites
December 29, 2009

Link (subscription required)
 

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Class Actress - Journal of Ardency

Track Review
Pitchfork
December 8, 2009
Link
8













Before Elizabeth Harper was frontwoman for slinky Brooklyn electro-pop trio Class Actress, she was another eponymous singer-songwriter. And yeah, before she gained some local media renown as a singer-songwriter, Harper was a college drama major. Those acting classes would appear to have paid off handsomely on the title track from Class Actress' debut EP, Journal of Ardency. For me, a big part of this coolly seductive song's spell lies in the way it gracefully finesses the gulf between someone's glamorous image of big-city nightlife and the narrator's lonely, wounded reality.

"You think I'm livin' it, livin' it, livin' it, livin' it up," Harper repeats behind frosty snare thwacks, adding, "It's a lie, lie." The galloping Italo-disco bass line and luxurious rubber-band synths evoke a night of cosmopolitan-clutching revelry at pricey Manhattan clubs, but the ponderously Depeche Mode-ish song title, unshowy melody, and earnest, expressive vocals tacitly acknowledge our narrator will no doubt be going home as she probably went out: alone. So while the track's moodily retro aesthetic suggests the nocturnal shadows of Glass Candy or Chromatics, its warm heart and bright hooks bring it closer to the communicative synth-pop of Annie, Little Boots, or stated influence Madonna. Confessions on a dance floor, for real.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Pink Skull - Endless Bummer

Album Review
Pitchfork
December 7, 2009
Link
7.3

 











New York's RVNG boutique has long distinguished itself for not only its expertly curated mixes, but also its imaginative packaging. When Philly mainstays Julian Grefe and Justin Geller, core duo behind disco freaks Pink Skull, put together the first Rvng Prsnts mix back in 2002, they recorded it straight to CD-R and did the printing at Kinko's. Each copy of Endless Bummer, Pink Skull's second album (first for RVNG), comes hand-typeset with a different "bummer"-- real depressing shit like "BUTT ACNE" or "NUCLEAR WARFARE." I got "JOHNHUGHESDIED."

In a year of summery new-music releases and celebrity deaths, Endless Bummer is neither glo-fi/chillwave trendfuck nor downer. Pink Skull's last album, 2008's Zeppelin 3, was a sprawling journey through psych, krautrock, Chicago house, rave, and other styles you might hope for on a killer RVNG mix. Jumping between live disco and acid house, with plenty of unexpected turns along the way, Endless Bummer is just as varied and transportative. It's also (relatively) focused. Recorded by Mazarin's Quentin Stoltzfus at the studio of Clap Your Hands Say Yeah's Alec Ounsworth, the release is available on mp3 and vinyl, with digital-only bonus tracks.

Multiple online reports have suggested that Pink Skull got a full band together only prior to this album, but that's not the case. Grefe, Geller, and their abettors had actually expanded into a working live unit by 2007, and Zeppelin 3's dusty, freeform grooves-- the type of percussive dance-punk explorations that make you feel !!! drummer Jerry Fuchs' death all the more acutely-- get a wild and woolly reprise here. On the near-instrumental title track, for example, a variety of multi-layered, South American-flavored percussion parts support skronky sax and synths that alternately screech and lull.

A bigger change since Pink Skull's last outing-- that rare album to feature vocals from both Mirah and Ghostface Killah-- is the new prevalence of Grefe's own singing, with guests' higher-pitched harmonies balancing out his gruff man-voice. Those vocals are nevertheless the weakest part about opener "Peter Cushing", a limber disco-funk swooner that trades Zeppelin 3's music references for film references, but it's an elaborately realized production that would sit nicely beside something from DFA or Modular. Ostinato bass drives the sweeping, majestic "Oh, Monorail", as Grefe wryly asserts, "You know I hate songs about nightlife."

True to the idea of an album that is more than a collection of dance singles, the contemplative moments on Endless Bummer make return trips more rewarding. Each side of the album closes with elegant ambient synth pieces, while "Circling Bwi" toys with disembodied harmonies. The flute-trilling "Fast Forward to Bolivia, 2000 Years Later, Our Hero Finds Himself..." could score a futuristic update of that old Disney cartoon The Three Caballeros. A track with an even longer title floats a melodic synth line recalling Aphex Twin over complex drum programming. Endless Bummer won't bring John Hughes back, but it would make a hell of a DJ mix. Maybe even cure butt acne.


Friday, December 4, 2009

Shout Out Louds - Walls

Track Review
Pitchfork
December 4, 2009
Link 
7













Mr. Ek, nice job putting up this wall. Construction is a sturdy enough metaphor for "Walls", the lead mp3 from Shout Out Louds' second Merge album (third overall), appropriately titled Work. When we last heard this Swedish five-piece, on 2007's Our Ill Wills, Peter Bjorn and John's Björn Yttling was producing; he gave the band's melodic, emotive rockers that innocent "Young Folks" splendor. As great as singles "Tonight I Have to Leave It" and "Impossible" were, the risk for Shout Out Louds is to get too heart-tugging-- you may have noticed "Very Loud", from their 2003 debut, Howl Howl Gaff Gaff, in the trailer for Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist last year-- so it's good to have producer Phil Ek (the Shins, Modest Mouse, Band of Horses, Fleet Foxes) as foreman this time around. "Walls" pounds out a rigid foundation, then lets chunky guitars and hummable piano rise above like spires. Horns are there for hue, not for hooks; those are provided courtesy of throwaway phrases like "ahhh ahhh" and "run, run, run", so you'd almost never notice the fraught lyrical content. "I took too many pills and wrote my will just to get to ya," Adam Olenius sings, sounding tense but restrained. From Sweden's emo Strokes to Sweden's emo Spoon: Look what Shout Out Louds have wrought.
 

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Princeton - Cocoon of Love

Album Review
Pitchfork
December 3, 2009
Link
5.9













Sometime around 2004, cultural critics started typing up twee's obituary. The latest Wes Anderson film, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, had flopped. Mild-mannered bands like the Boy Least Likely To and Belle and Sebastian were about to cross over to the Guster/Ben Folds set. And hey, you hear this guy Kanye West? Precious, indie-label pop has regained some critical currency over the past couple of years, but the most contentious stuff is different now. It has swagger.

At least, Vampire Weekend do. Sweden's the Tough Alliance and the acts on their Sincerely Yours label do, too, though they've obviously spent serious hours pining over old C86 and Sarah Records bands. L.A. baroque-pop quartet Princeton are similarly unapologetic about their self-presentation: boat shoes, a breakout 2008 EP inspired by London's Bloomsbury intellectual scene, and, on debut full-length Cocoon of Love, worldly references to everything from luxury cars and Kafka stories to hip-hop slang. But Princeton have been putting out records since before anyone heard "Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa", and the group's singers-- twins Jesse and Matt Kivel-- actually grew up on Princeton Street in Santa Monica.

A little too clever? You're starting to understand the problem with Cocoon of Love. Joined by longtime pal Ben Usen on keyboards and newer addition David Kitz on drums, the Kivels tend toward Jens Lekman's dashing orchestration, unexpected samples, doo-wop finger-snaps, and Eeyore vocals. When they toss in Afro-Caribbean flavors, the effect has more to do with the recent sounds of Gothenburg, Sweden, than with certain young Columbia grads. Nevertheless, for all the names ("Sadie and Andy", Saul and "Silvie") and far-flung locales (Germany, Wall Street, San Diego) in these melodic vignettes about dysfunctional couples, there's little of Lekman's unforced charm. It's as if the songs are still growing into an older relative's finest suit.

Princeton do better here when they outfit their jaunty tunes in more atmospheric styles: the frayed synth-pop of "Martina and Clive Krantz" and "Worried Head", the shoegaze whorls on "I Left My Love in Nagasaki", or the chiming tropical reverie of "Calypso Gold". Waltzing acoustic finale "The Wild", however, with its clumsy poetry, is an even bigger let down than Camera Obscura's own Leonard Cohen pastiche, "Your Picture", itself the worst song on the Glasgow band's still-great Underachievers Please Try Harder. Sure, Lekman remembers Warren G, Vampire Weekend appreciate Lil Jon's lack of modesty, and TTA have covered 50 Cent, but Princeton's "Stunner Shades in Heaven", featuring the kind of squeaks Serge Gainsbourg used to elicit from Brigitte Bardot (and an Arthur Russell quote you'll see coming a line away), is once again a bit too-- har har-- on the nose.

If Cocoon of Love wants to be something bigger than it is, well, there are worse sins. Like Vancouver's equally mannered No Kids, Princeton are stretching beyond the staid chamber-pop of former tourmates Ra Ra Riot-- let alone Noah and the Whale or the disappointing new Boy Least Likely To single-- and that's to be applauded. They've even performed with a dance troupe at Lincoln Center as part of a Virginia Woolf event. And Jesse Kivel has made fine, Air France-style beach fantasy-pop under the name Kisses. None of this makes it any easier to stomach when, on Cocoon of Love's "Korean War Memorial", you hear a weirdly accented voice crooning, like nothing so much as a karaoker's Lekman, "You said to me that you liked indie rock." Here's the thing about swagger: You gotta own it.


Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Citay - Careful With That Hat

Track Review
Pitchfork
December 1, 2009
Link
7













2010 could turn out to be the year the indie kids stopped worrying and learned to love 1970s classic rock. As a devoted hand-wringer, I'm of more than a few minds about this potential development. It's not as if bands from the Hold Steady to Belle and Sebastian haven't already spread the gospel of Thin Lizzy. And yeah, My Morning Jacket and Band of Horses have almost definitely spent time bro-ing down in the wide open country-fried spaces of classic Neil Young LPs. Do I have to tell anybody at this point about Animal Collective's jones for Grateful Dead? But with Free Energy's barbecue-friendly power-pop choogling and Surfer Blood's more than Boston-sized feelings already among next year's most promising releases, I'm already starting to wax nostalgic for, like, post-punk. Or post-anything.

From the sound of it, Citay were never worried at all. Except possibly about their headwear. Led by Ezra Feinberg-- previously of Piano Magic-- Citay shredded happily, hippily, all over 2007's Little Kingdom, the San Francisco band's first album picked up by Dead Oceans (following a stint on Important). "Careful With That Hat", the rambling opening track from upcoming follow-up Dream Get Together, is no more apologetic about Allman Brothers-style dueling guitar heroics, sprightly acoustic strums, and summer-festival organ-- these guys could share a stage with similarly 70s-minded Swedish folk-rockers the Amazing. "It's an homage, not a mockery, I swear," asserts a boy-girl-girl vocal, the only thing tentative here. As synths and all kinds of percussion pile up on the closing jam, it's clear Citay are of more than a few minds, too-- I count seven band members in the press release-- but also, instruments. Which they can play, too, almost as good as Dickey Betts, whose musical rep should need no rehabilitating. Peach.

Monday, November 30, 2009

The Bravery - Stir the Blood

Album Review
Pitchfork
November 30, 2009
Link
2.3













Nobody remembers Louis XIV, right? So the Bravery are just about the last quasi-big rock band anyone might expect to come within downtown sneering distance of a noteworthy hit by a bona fide pop starlet. But here we are: Sam Endicott, frontman for these oft-abused New York electro-rockers, co-wrote Shakira's Italo-crazed "She Wolf". He didn't, however, write the lyrics.

New Order-style bass lines like the one on "She Wolf" could practically be the story of this guy's career. They anchored the Killers-lite dance-rock of the Bravery's self-titled 2005 debut-- particularly its best song, "Honest Mistake"-- and turned scarce when the band dialed back the synths for rootsier wannabe-Brit mope on disastrous 2007 follow-up, The Sun and the Moon. While that synth-pop bounce is back on Stir the Blood, so are the group's shortcomings. Some are familiar, and some are worse than even the most hardened mid-2000s NME skeptics could've anticipated.

Endicott's voice still alternates between operatic Ian Curtis croon (remember Elefant?) and adenoidal Robert Smith whine (remember Stellastarr*?). He still sings songs that manage to evoke greats from bygone eras without any of the greatness: "Baby, we were born to be adored," repeats glumly hooky synth-rock opener "Adored", neatly desecrating the most famous choruses from Bruce Springsteen and the Stone Roses in a single refrain. "Born again" stomper "Song for Jacob" contains a sideways allusion to the Smiths' Louder Than Bombs, and make-out anthem of sorts "She's So Bendable" has that "How Soon Is Now" guitar wobble. Soma-dropping dystopia "I Have Seen the Future"-- in which the band accurately concedes, "I am a nerve ending without a brain"-- might as well be called "I have become aware of the title and primary neologism from Brave New World." Druggy (I guess?) finale "Sugar Pill" avers, "I am blissed out/ I have kaleidoscope eyes." Shakira this isn't.

"She Wolf" collaborator John Hill, who co-produced Santigold's excellent debut album, doesn't seem to have been much help sonically, either. Someone clinically extracts whatever trace of messy humanity made it through the first time the Bravery worked the nu-wave shtick, on their debut; Stir the Blood is a parodoxically bloodless listen. In another evolution of the band's sound, lead guitarist Michael "Moose" Zakarin now tops the cookie-cutter chord progressions with needlessly frilly prog-metal solos. See "Hatefuck", which gives the band's previous woman-unfriendly tendencies a shrill, witless apotheosis ("No one can hear you here"-- hey, wasn't that part of a David Spade dirtball-comedy routine?). As if that weren't enough to get us all excited, there's utterly unremarkable first single "Slow Poison": "Burn, burn, house on fire/ I'm so sick and tired." It goes on like this.


Search This Blog

Press Mentions

"Goes over the top and stays there to very nice effect."
-- David Carr, The New York Times

"I wasn't fully convinced. But I was interested."
-- Rob Walker, The New York Times

"...as Marc Hogan wrote in Spin..."
-- Maureen Dowd, The New York Times