Saturday 18 February 2012

Top Albums 00s (various Sources)

Top Albums 00s (various Sources)


Top Albums 00s (various Sources)

Posted: 18 Feb 2012 12:56 AM PST

Thursday 9 February 2012

Listen to Live Balmorhea Album Free: Live at Sint-Elisabethkerk

Listen to Live Balmorhea Album Free: Live at Sint-Elisabethkerk


Listen to Live Balmorhea Album Free: Live at Sint-Elisabethkerk

Posted: 04 Feb 2012 03:37 PM PST

Their album 'Settler' was one of my favourite albums for some time. In the vein of explosions in the sky and those more melodic postrock outfits, although more chamber music and folk influences. If you know Rachel's then you'll have an idea.

Interview with m83 from eMusic

Posted: 30 Jan 2012 09:48 AM PST

eMusic Q&A: M83

On his fifth album (sixth, if you count ambient dalliance Digital Shades, Vol. 1), Anthony Gonzalez — the prime mover behind widescreen synthpop act M83 — goes all-in, crafting a sprawling double-album built on the kind of surrealist fairy tale plotline that typically powers Michel Gondry films. Taking place inside the parallel dreams of a brother and a sister, Hurry Up We're Dreaming often feels like a road movie set on Mars. The album boasts Gonzalez's most expansive, fully-realized music to date; there are swooping saxophone solos, rich, rococo orchestral passages and ink-blue bands of synth lines that pool outward endlessly. Call it Hansel & Gretel for the digital age. "We didn't need a real world," whispers the sister in the album's opening moments. "We just had to keep walking and we became the stories."
eMusic's Amelia Raitt caught up with Gonzalez to talk about five albums he turned to for inspiration as he was crafting his own grand opus.

You had expressed some dissatisfaction with your last album, Saturdays=Youth, which I found a bit surprising. I loved that record. Why were you unhappy with it?
Oh, I don't know. Sometimes when you listen to the finished product, you feel like you could have done better, and that's exactly what happened with Saturdays. It was tough, because it was a hard period of my life. I was kind of depressed, I wasn't feeling well, I was living in the South of France and feeling like I needed another experience, which is why I moved to LA. I need to be in a place where I feel confident in order to compose music. So, I changed my environment; I moved to L.A. and started from scratch. I didn't use any of the compositions I'd made before the move. I really wanted to make sure that I composed everything in this new environment.
Once you got to L.A., though, you didn't just stay at your own place. You were taking trips to the mountains and the desert…
I was doing that in the south of France as well — just driving to the mountains or driving on the coast. It was a good way for me to clear my head and to get away from the craziness of the city. I just love the fact that I can be in a place that I don't know, and I'm just alone with my instruments there. It's such a good feeling, and it gives me the strength to compose music. I feel like I can compose a whole album in that kind of environment. And that's something else I love about L.A. — I like the fact that I can go to museums and movie theaters and live shows, and then get in my car and still be able to find some places where nobody is.
You mention movie theaters. I know you're a big Terence Malick fan. I was wondering what you thought of Tree of Life.
Obviously, it's beautiful. The photography is amazing, the acting is classic. For the first hour, it's stunning. But I got bored of it. But then again, this is one of those movies where walk out thinking, "I'm not sure," but the more you think about it, the more you love it.
The reason I brought that movie up is that there seems to be some overlap between Tree of Life and Hurry Up, We're Dreaming. Both of them have this kind of dreamlike quality to them, and both of them center around the innocence of childhood, a theme you return to often in your work.
It was such a happy moment in my life, and I don't want to lose that. Music is the only way I found to remember my childhood, and to go back to that moment in my life. I had the perfect childhood, and I'm scared of not being able to remember it.
I've also been fascinated between the relationship between siblings. I grew up with an older brother. What fascinates me is the fact that you're kind of the same person, but you're thinking differently. It's really weird, but so beautiful in a way. I feel like you don't have to talk much to be able to communicate, and that's exactly what's happening on this album. Disc 1 is the state of mind of the brother, and the other side is the dream of the little sister, and somehow the two records are connected.
Let's talk a little bit about the records you mentioned as inspirations for Hurry Up We're Dreaming. The first is Smashing Pumpkin's Mellon Collie & the Infinite Sadness.
I was like 14 when I got this record. I totally remember, because I was in high school, and I didn't go to school the day it came out. I went to the record store with my friends, and we bought it and went to one of my friends' place, because his mom was working, and we listened to the album the whole day. It was awesome. We were waiting for this album for so long. And when you finally have the object in your hand and can dig into the lyrics — there's something very rewarding and satisfying about that.
For me, my new album, it's a bit about the object as well. Mellon Collie is not a musical influence, but it's more about that idea of the object, and the way we used to listen to music in the '90s. It's also an album with a lot of different musical styles, which is what I like about it. There's a lot of slow, orchestrated songs, as well as a lot of very rock — and almost metal — songs. The instrumentation, the amount of different instruments they're using on this album are all amazing.
Next on your list is My Bloody Valentine's Loveless. This was a band you discovered relatively recently, right?
Yes, so, when my first album came out, I didn't really know about My Bloody Valentine. I'd heard the name, but I'd never heard their music. The journalists who were doing interviews would always ask about My Bloody Valentine over and over. It was a shock really, when I heard them, because it's true that we have a lot of things in common. It was a mixed feeling — I was super happy to discover an awesome new band, but I was kind of sad, too. I thought that I'd created something new, and actually, I hadn't [laughs]. So it was a mixed feeling.
Loveless's notoriously agonizing gestation period kind of introduced — or, at the very least, furthered — this notion that great art can't be produced without great struggle. To what degree have you found that to be true?
That's actually why I consider myself super lucky. I'm working with a label who gives me time. I've never felt rushed by anyone at the label, or that I had to make something I didn't want to. I make the music I want to, and I take my time. For example, I was about to finish this album, it was five days before the end of the mix, and I talked to [a representative] from Mute and I said, "It's going to be a double album," and it was like they almost didn't have a choice! [Laughs] They were like, "Oh [long pause] really? That's a little bit crazy, Anthony. But we trust you. Hopefully, it's a good one."
Next on your list is Steve Reich's Music for 18 Musicians. That one's a bit surprising to me. It's a minimalist work, and I've always thought of your records as distinctively maximalist.
Well, it's true that it's very minimalist, but it's also the perfect music for when you're travelling. I could listen to this album every day almost, and I wouldn't get bored, because there's always something to discover — a small sound or a small part. There's something so cyclic, so repetitive. It's like a trance, almost. In that respect, I actually think it's very close to my music. It's very repetitive. I like how it builds up, all these melodies and these little parts. I just love this album.
How about Popol Vuh's soundtrack to Aguirre, a film by one of your favorite directors, Werner Herzog?
Well, I love the movie, first of all. It's fantastic. But the strength of the movie is the music. The music is so important for a movie — you can have the best photography ever, the best acting ever, but if the music doesn't fit, it's not gonna work. And that's what I like about this movie — everything is perfect. This is a big journey, this movie, and the soundtrack is not too huge, but there's the perfect amount of strangeness. Something weird and enigmatic and ghostly, almost. Almost scary. It really helps you to travel with the crew and the actors and the movie.
And let's close with a really beautiful piece on your list, Gorecki's Symphony No. 3.
It was like five or six years ago when I discovered this piece. The first time I listened to Symphony No. 3, I was really blown away. There was something so sad about this music, but also something uplifting. I felt like I could move mountains with it. It gives me power. I don't know how else to describe it.
It's probably not a coincidence that all of the movements in this symphony are centered around the idea of lost youth.
Oh yeah, yeah. A lot of people are really scared about losing memories. For me, it's this feeling of being scared of death and scared of forgetting the past — that gives me power to write my music. That idea is the biggest influence on my music — it's my inspiration. Being a musician is a way for me to not be forgotten, because my albums will live on even after I die. It makes me feel better about myself.


Read more: http://www.emusic.com/music-news/interview/emusic-qa-m83-2/#ixzz1kxsefGd9

NPR Listener's Pick their Top Albums 2011 (All Songs Considered Podcast)

Posted: 15 Jan 2012 12:23 PM PST

Listeners Pick Their Favorite Albums Of 2011

Language Advisory: This program contains song lyrics that some listeners may find offensive.
All Songs Considered listeners picked their favorite albums of 2011.
EnlargeMito Habe-Evans/NPR
text size A A A
December 14, 2011
This summer, when All Songs Considered asked listeners to vote for their favorite albums of the year so far, there were a handful of shoo-ins. Instantly beloved releases by Bon IverAdeleFleet FoxesThe Decemberists and others all made a predictably strong showing.
Six months later, many of those albums have held their ground — but our poll of listeners' 100 favorite records from all of 2011 still had its surprises. The Black Keys swooped into the No. 6 slot with El Camino, an album just a few days older than the poll itself. Ceremonials, the follow-up to Florence + The Machine's sleeper hit Lungs, followed close behind. And it wasn't just the dark horses that stunned us — two of our personal favorites, the strong spring releases from Wye Oak and The Antlers, each dropped a dozen spots.
This week's episode includes songs from the Top 25 listener picks. Once you've listened to the show, head to the All Songs blog for the full list of your 100 favorite albums of 2011.

LISTENERS PICK THEIR FAVORITE ALBUMS OF 2011

Cover for Bon Iver

1. Bon Iver

  • Album: Bon Iver
  • Song: Calgary
YouTube
 
Cover for Helplessness Blues

2. Fleet Foxes

  • Album: Helplessness Blues
  • Song: Grown Ocean
YouTube
 
Cover for 21

3. Adele

  • Album: 21
  • Song: Rolling In The Deep
YouTube
 
Cover for The King Is Dead

4. The Decemberists

  • Album: The King Is Dead
  • Song: June Hymn
YouTube
 
Cover for The King Of Limbs

5. Radiohead

  • Album: The King Of Limbs
  • Song: Lotus Flower
YouTube
 
Cover for El Camino

6. The Black Keys

  • Album: El Camino
  • Song: Lonely Boy
YouTube
 
Cover for Whole Love

7. Wilco

  • Album: Whole Love
  • Song: Born Alone
YouTube
 
Cover for Ceremonials

8. Florence + The Machine

  • Album: Ceremonials
  • Song: Shake It Out
YouTube
 
Cover for The Rip Tide

9. Beirut

  • Album: The Rip Tide
  • Song: Santa Fe
YouTube
 
Cover for Torches

10. Foster The People

  • Album: Torches
  • Song: Don't Stop (Color on the Walls)
YouTube
 
Cover for Hurry Up, We're Dreaming

11. M83

  • Album: Hurry Up, We're Dreaming
  • Song: Midnight City
YouTube
 
Cover for Metals

12. Feist

  • Album: Metals
  • Song: How Come You Never Go There
YouTube
 
Cover for Kiss Each Other Clean

13. Iron & Wine

  • Album: Kiss Each Other Clean
  • Song: Tree by the River
 
Cover for w h o k i l l

14. tUnE-yArDs

  • Album: w h o k i l l
  • Song: Bizness
YouTube
 
Cover for Strange Mercy

15. St. Vincent

  • Album: Strange Mercy
  • Song: Cruel
YouTube
 
Cover for Barton Hollow

16. The Civil Wars

  • Album: Barton Hollow
  • Song: Barton Hollow
YouTube
 
Cover for Codes And Keys

17. Death Cab For Cutie

  • Album: Codes And Keys
  • Song: You Are A Tourist
YouTube
 
Cover for Bad As Me

18. Tom Waits

  • Album: Bad As Me
  • Song: Bad As Me
YouTube
 
Cover for Circuital

19. My Morning Jacket

  • Album: Circuital
  • Song: Circuital
YouTube
 
Cover for The People's Key

20. Bright Eyes

  • Album: The People's Key
  • Song: Shell Games
YouTube
 
Cover for Watch the Throne

21. Jay-Z/Kanye West

  • Album: Watch the Throne
  • Song: Otis

Warning: This song contains language some listeners may find offensive.

YouTube
 
Cover for Mylo Xyloto

22. Coldplay

  • Album: Mylo Xyloto
  • Song: Every Teardrop Is a Waterfall
YouTube
 
Cover for Let England Shake

23. PJ Harvey

  • Album: Let England Shake
  • Song: Let England Shake
YouTube
 
Cover for Cults

24. Cults

  • Album: Cults
  • Song: Go Outside
YouTube
 
Cover for James Blake

25. James Blake

  • Album: James Blake
  • Song: The Wilhelm Scream
YouTube
 
 

Listen to a song by Brooke Waggoner and Hammock

Posted: 15 Jan 2012 04:58 AM PST

Hammock make beautiful mostly instrumental music. Tracks layering up guitar and synth creating ambient tapestries. Something like stars of the lid. You can actually try out their complete albums for free at bandcamp and I'd recommend them. Try albums 'maybe they will sing for us tomorrow' for their more ambient dream-like album or 'kenotic' for their shoegaze with more drums and some lyrics.

Sound Opinions Podcast Best Albums 2011

Posted: 07 Jan 2012 01:09 AM PST

Sound Opinions, a very popular music podcast from the US have released their podcast for the best albums of 2011.


 
  
Like every scholarly work, Sound Opinions has provided footnotes to help you navigate through the show.

Because let's face it--sometimes even we have no idea what Jim and Greg are saying.
Songs featured in this episode
Join the Mailing List
Contact Us

 


12-09-11 Footnotes
Show 315: The Best Albums of 2011
Listen to the MP3 Stream of this show: (link)
Download the Podcast: (Download the MP3)

It's the moment all music fans wait for…the end! Without further ado: The Best Albums of 2011.

Greg Kot's Top Ten of 2011

1. Wild Flag, Wild Flag
Listen to Jim and Greg's review
Listen to Wild Flag on Sound Opinions

2. The Roots, Undun

3. tUnE-yArDs, WHOKILL
Listen to tUnE-yArDs on Sound Opinions

4. Van Hunt, What Were You Hoping For?
Listen to Jim and Greg's review

5. F*cked Up, David Comes to Life

6. The Feelies, Here Before
Listen to Jim and Greg's review
Listen to The Feelies on Sound Opinions

7. Raphael Saadiq, Stone Rollin
Listen to Jim and Greg's review

8. Bewitched Hands, Birds and Drums

9. Das Racist, Relax
Listen to Jim and Greg's review

10. Fleet Foxes, Helplessness Blues
Listen to Jim and Greg's review

View Greg's complete list

Jim DeRogatis' Top Ten of 2011
1. Le Butcherettes, Sin Sin Sin

2. Wild Flag, Wild Flag
Listen to Jim and Greg's review
Listen to Wild Flag on Sound Opinions

3. Das Racist, Relax
Listen to Jim and Greg's review

4. The Feelies, Here Before
Listen to Jim and Greg's review
Listen to The Feelies on Sound Opinions

5. Danger Mouse and Daniele Luppi, Rome
Listen to Jim and Greg's review

6. F*cked Up, David Comes to Life

7. Bewitched Hands, Birds and Drums

8. tUnE-yArDs, WHOKILL
Listen to tUnE-yArDs on Sound Opinions

9. The Decemberists, The King is Dead
Listen to Jim and Greg's review
Listen to The Decemberists on Sound Opinions

10. The Go! Team, Rolling Blackouts

View Jim's complete list

And some more #1s from the listeners!

Jeremy, from New York NY
Fleet Foxes, Helplessness Blues

Rose from Naperville, IL
Mute Math, Odd Soul

Derk from Chicago, IL
SBTRKT, SBTRKT



Songs Featured in Show #315
The Bewitched Hands, "Hard to Cry," Birds & Drums, Jive, 2011
Fucked Up, "Queen of Hearts," David Comes to Life, Matador, 2011
Danger Mouse and Daniele Luppi, "The Gambling Priest," Rome, Capitol, 2011
Van Hunt, "A Time Machine is My New Girlfriend," What Were You Hoping For, Godless Hotspot, 2011
Raphael Saadiq, "Stone Rollin'," (0:40) Stone Rollin', Columbia, 2011
Fleet Foxes, "Lorelai," Helplessness Blues, Sub Pop, 2011
Mutemath, "Prytania," Odd Soul, Teleprompt, 2011
SBTRKT, "Something Goes Right," SBTRKT, Young Turks, 2011
The Feelies, "When You Know," Here Before, Bar/None, 2011
tUnE-yArDs, "Gangsta," w h o k i l l, 4AD, 2011
Das Racist, "Relax," Relax, Greedhead, 2011
The Decemberists, "Don't Carry It All," The King is Dead, Capitol, 2011
The Roots, "The Other Side," Undun, Def Jam, 2011
Le Butcherettes, "Tonight," Sin, Sin, Sin, Rodriguez Lopez Productions, 2011
Wild Flag, "Romance," Wild Flag, Merge, 2011
Astrud Gilberto and Stan Getz, "The Telephone Song," Stan Getz meets João & Astrud Gilberto: New York 1964, Giants of Jazz, 1990
Trombone Shorty, "Dumaine St.," For True, Verve, 2011
Lou Reed and Metallica, "Pumping Blood," Lulu, Warner Bros., 2011
The Velvet Underground, "The Black Angel's Death Song," The Velvet Underground & Nico, Verve, 1967
Super Furry Animals, "Night Vision," Guerrilla, Creation, 1999
Jonathan Mann, "Hey Paul Krugman," self-released, 2009