Sunday, January 8, 2023

2022: Top 5 New Albums

I'm now 10 years into doing this. Why stop now?

5. Pony Camp

 

self-released,10/28/2022

So, I believe the story goes something like this (although I could be wrong) -- Early in the pandemic, The Lowest Pair (aka Kendl Winter and Palmer Lee) went up into the mountains to camp and work on some songs with some friends-- a perfectly healthy, pandemic-friendly activity. Yet, because so many others had the same idea, the only place they could get to camp was a HORSE CAMP. And thus was their project named. As they were working on their HORSE CAMP songs, Kendl was also working on an electronic side-project with one of those friends, Adam Roszkewicz, and since it was a side project, it became PONY camp. At least that's what I think it is.

Anyway, it's fun to hear Kendl's songs outside of their normal banjo-tastic trappings. It's strange and fun to hear autotune on her vocals (Passwords), but I'd say this was one of those projects that works a little better on paper than it does in real life. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy this tape, but it's not as good as a Lowest Pair album.

 

4. Codeine - Dessau

   

The Numero Group, 09/02/2022

So, this should have been Codeine's 2nd album, "The White Birch". In fact, the artwork on the cover is named "The White Birch", which is the namesake and should have been the album cover for "The White Birch". Confusing enough?

Anyway, well through the sessions for this album, bassist Stephen Immerwahr kept hearing high-frequency noise (which may or may not actually be there) on the tracks, and scrapped the album for good.

Most of these songs ended up on "Barely Real" or "The White Birch". But this is the missing link. I love listening to the power of these songs.


3. The Lowest Pair and Small Town Therapy - Horse Camp

   

self-released 10/26/2022 


Like I said earlier, HORSE CAMP. Anyways, this is Palmer and Kendl with a full band -- generally guit/fiddle/mandolin/banjo that doesn't sound too far out from what Lowest Pair usually sounds like.

In fact, that's my best and worst thing I can say about this record. It's good. It doesn't sound too far from what a Lowest Pair record should sound like (which is amazing, don't get me wrong), but there's nothing too ambitious or different here. In fact, I would steer newcomers to the Lowest Pair to Perfect Plan or 36 cents. Nevertheless, this is a fine addition to the canon.


2. Afghan Whigs - How Do You Burn?

 

Royal Cream, 09/09/2022

Dulli's hair is going gray (so's mine!) and we're all getting older. Yet, this is a fun new Afghan Whigs album. There are lots of good and listenable songs on here. This is apparently Mark Lanegan's last recorded output, but he's unfortunately relegated to blink-and-you-miss-em background vocals, so no Gutter Twins II here. Also notable is "Domino and Jimmy", featuring Marcy Mays (lead singer of Scrawl, probably best known for her wicked vocals on Afghan Whigs' "My Curse" from 1993). This one's a fun duet. Check out some of the other bangers on this album like "Jyja" and "A Line of Shots".


1. Pohgoh - Du und Ich

 

Spartan Records 11/4/2022

Spartan Records has been on a roll the last few years. And Pohgoh? Breaking up in '97 only to release super amazing records 20 years later? Oh yes.

So this is Pohgoh's 3rd album. Solid rock and roll, great dynamics, perfect sound forever. And I love Susie's lyrics. She sings the things that are important to her-- not typical rock-and-roll, but a slice of her life and all the more important for it. A few of the songs are about her struggles with MS, but so many of the songs are about things we all go through--"Now I Know", quitting a job. "Heavy", struggles with self-image. She may say "Words are Harder", but somehow they sound effortless. Thanks, Pohgoh.

Tuesday, January 3, 2023

2022: Top 5 New Discoveries

(5 favorite albums from 2020 or prior that I discovered this year)

5. Cocteau Twins - Blue Bell Knoll

 

4AD Records, 09/1988

Ahh, a Cocteau Twins record. Early this year, I found myself planning a trip to the wilds of Southern Utah, and falling down a wikipedia rabbit hole, I discovered that the Cocteau Twins named an album after someplace I was visiting. So, with a very valid excuse, I tracked down this album and bought it as a soundtrack to a very fun road trip

I can't say enough good things about this classic Cocteau Twins album. Pretty melodies, alien words, silly song titles like "A Kissed-out Red Floatboat", and "For Phoebe Still a Baby". I need to pick up more classic Cocteau Twins, and this time I don't need a roadtrip as an excuse.

 

4. Codeine - Barely Real

   

Sub Pop Records, 11/1992

This is my year for Codeine. I was unaware this brilliant 6-song EP even existed. This has some powerful tunes. It may even be my favorite Codeine release. (don't hold me to that, I love them all)



3. Cat Power - Speaking for Trees

   

Matador Records

CD/DVD released 10/2004 


So, I remember when this came out. I remember reading reviews of it, and it sounded boring: One long (loooooooong) static shot of Chan Marshall playing outdoors. Nothing else.

I stumbled into this on Youtube, looking for something to listen to during my workday. I loved it. I realized that the visual isn't the point. This is great music. And the music is only half of it. The music is overwhelmed by the sound of high summer-- the insects and the wind. 

 This is from the same era of the one and only time I saw Cat Power live. She cycles through some of her songs, some covers, and mashes some covers and some of her songs together. She plays the same series of songs over as many as 3 or 4 times.

There's also a second audio CD with an 18 minute version of Willie, which got cut down to song-length for her next album The Greatest.

This is a fun listen, and this is peak Cat Power.


2. Verse en Coma - Rialto

 

Robotic Empire, 2008

It took me one listen through one song to order this EP. (It's available on 10"/CD on Bandcamp for a reasonable price). This is driving, intense, lyrical music. Many of the songs reference the Olympic Peninsula in the lyrics (which is my favorite place in the world). Soaring choruses, driving guitars. I love this so very much.

So these guys were apparently also in City of Caterpillar. I checked out their stuff this year and also liked it, but maybe not quite as much as I love this Verse en Coma record.


  1. Soul Coughing - Ruby Vroom

 

Slash/Warner Bros Records, 09/1994

It strikes me as odd that I've gone so long without hearing this album. I own "Irresistible Bliss", their 1996 follow up. I was just under the mistaken impression that I only needed one Soul Coughing album in my life. This album is the epitome of cool. Most of the time I don't even know what's going on with all the samples/upright bass/jazz drumming/nonsense words, but I know it's cooler than I'll ever be. My good friend David has been a Soul Coughing freak for years, yet somehow I let this one slip until now. That has been corrected.

Monday, January 2, 2023

2022: Top 5 Miscellaneous Songs

(The best five songs not on the other two lists. Either new in 2022, or new to me.)

5. Sparta - Until the Kingdom Comes

 

from Sparta's self-titled fifth album

Dine Alone, 10/2022

A dearly-missed friend turned me on to Sparta a few years ago. Jim Ward is a former member of At the Drive In, and he makes melodic, driving post-hardcore music. Jim recently (like 2019?) took back up the Sparta mantle, and this is the result.

I would no longer classify this as post-hardcore (not that labels really matter anyway), but this is BIG music. This occupies the same strata as big rock albums. It's a Weezer Blue. It's an Achtung Baby. This is Music for the Masses in the best way possible. Have a listen and see for yourself.

 

4. Typhoon - No One Will Dance

   

From the "Underground Complex No.1" EP
Roll Call Records, 04/2022 

It must be hard to be a member of Typhoon. Even middling indie success probably won't pay the bills when split 13 ways. I've been following Typhoon for at least 15 years, and they peaked at 13 members once or twice. Now I think they're down to 6 or 7 and that's sort of sad. Less is sometimes more, but not at a Typhoon concert.  Typhoon's power has always been derived from the number of kids on stage pouring their hearts into the music.

In more recent years, as their numbers have dwindled, the bright sparks on Typhoon's records have come fewer and farther between. Nevertheless, there are some great songs on this EP, and this song is one of them. Also, I got to see them in Monmouth, Oregon for a one-off show this December, and several former bandmembers guested. The player count was temporarily up to 8, and the show was quite good. 

They didn't play this song at the show, which was a shame. I love the moment in this song where Kyle sings the line "a song that no one will dance to...", and the rhythm immediately switches to an amorphous waltz time that is... impossible to dance to. Perfect.



3. The Decemberists - Better Not Wake the Baby

   

From the album "What a Terrible World, What a Wonderful World"
Capitol Records, 01/2015

2022 was Year of the Decemberists in our house. Our 13-year-old decided that The Decemberists were his favorite band. As a result, we added several Decemberists albums to the collection, and saw them in concert.

This song is 1:44 of classic Decemberists. Folky instrumentation, catchy tune, slightly old-fashioned and wordy sounding, with some borderline-ridiculous lyrics. Light, fun, and silly. Yeah, sounds a bit like The Wellerman, but who's counting?



2. The Arcade Fire - The Lightning I/II

 

From the album "We"
Columbia Records, 05/2022

I'm a sucker for two-parter songs. This is a fun one. A great performance on SNL this year, too. I'm not a big Arcade Fire guy, but this song is a banger.

To mention the current unsavory allegations against Win Butler-- we're certainly in an age where we can separate art from the artist. That being said, I think this sort of allegation would be better proven or disproven in a court of law. As it stands, I tend to disbelieve anything Pitchfork publishes, especially about bands that Pitchfork singlehandedly put on a pedestal.


  1. Tom Jones and The Cardigans - Burning Down the House

 

From Sir Tom Jones' "Reload" album
Gut/V2 Records, 09/1999

Wh..what just happened? Was that The Cardigans, fresh off their international superhit Lovefool, doing a classic Talking Heads cover with Sir Tom Jones (AKA "Theme Song Guy!")?

This would've been a fun, interesting cover with the Cardigans OR Tom Jones. Getting both at the same time feels like.. cheating. It's like somebody pushed up up down down left right left right BA start, and reality gave us Tom Jones, the Cardigans, and Talking Heads.