Posts Tagged marty friedman

二〇一七

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

No Comments

TWENTYーFIFTEEN

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away…lists.

And so:

A L B U M S

10. Motörhead | Bad Magic

Even before the…timely (overtimely) death of dearest Lemmy, I decided this would be on my list, but last. I like the sound of the record but there’s not really any standout tracks. And, this is weird to even mention for a Motörhead album, but I thought some of the lyrics were a little sketchy. The couple albums before this def got more spins, but the overall package came together better on this one so it was good to get on vinyl. Doesn’t sound like a final statement but at least looks the part.

9. Sleater-Kinney | No Cities to Love

I still love Janet Weiss and the guitars, but since Corin became a mom and Carrie became a comedian it doesn’t really speak like it used to. Hard to describe what this band used to mean to me; almost didn’t buy the record. But I don’t wanna be that guy…who’s like that…about things. And yet, I am. But I try. Only listened to it once. It’s good.

8. Matana Roberts | Coin Coin Chapter Three

I said this was pretty much set to make my list with each chapter and here it is. Close call tho, I have not been paying attention.

7. Sannhet | Revisionist

This might have gone higher if I listened to it more. Maybe I’m a little off-brand this year, what can ya do.

6. Blind Idiot God | Before Ever After

This caught me outta nowhere from an episode of the Diane Kamikaze show with the drummer who’s also in Khanate. I guess it wasn’t totally outta nowhere, I had read about them in the History of Progressive Metal book. Never really listened to them tho, but the record looked nice so I got it and really got into it. One of those things you can just leave on the turntable for general occasion, esp. the 1st side.

5. Capsule | Wave Runner

This was not a great year for J-pop and this was not really much of an exception, it’s pretty straight up EDM. I’m gonna…not ever be at that live show, but maybe it gives the illusion that I enjoy fun. Nakata is a composer, goddamnit.

4. Iron Maiden | Book of Souls

If you like Iron Maiden, here’s a whole lot of it. Hard to say if it’s up to “classic” status, but it’s at or near the top of the post-2000 releases which I haven’t spent that much time with but I don’t think it’s a bad compliment. There’s also a nice tribute to Chris Squire. (Maybe unintentional, who knows.)

3. Lim Kim | Simple Mind

Oh man, this was so good, sorry J-pop. Single of the year for me but I loved the rest of the record even tho I don’t know what she’s saying. Maybe a big part of the appeal of J-pop was not understanding how corny the lyrics are. Whatever, I love her voice and the production is cool. It’s not all retro-future Gothic Freestyle, it’s pretty varied. She can do it all.

2. Sigh | Graveward

Sigh does all the the Sigh things which happens to be my thing. If the Sigh thing was everything’s thing would it still be my thing? Not ever going to be an issue.

1. Screaming Females | Rose Mountain

Yes! It’s finally cool to rip Smashing Pumpkins riffs, I am not kidding. But you can also sing along w/o feeling like an idiot, impossible w/ a Pumpkins record. It does not really sound like SP most of the time, they got their own thing established, but when it does it’s pretty sweet if you ask my blog. If you listen to one track at a time from a record like this you are a supreeeeme chumppp.

M E N T I O N S [it turned into a whole 2nd top 10, whatever]

10. Merzbow/Gustafsson/Pandi/Moore | Cuts of Guilt, Cuts Deeper

Mostly reminds me that I haven’t read that Kim Gordon book yet. It’s a hard sell even at one disc if you’re not into this kind of thing, but if you were curious about improv free jazz-noise I would say it’s not a bad place to start. Big names, great artwork, it’s more than you usually get. Only gripe: you couldn’t come up with a group name guys? Even like, “Bag of Toenails” would be better, anything. How are you supposed to talk about this group? I just outed myself as a poseur, didn’t I. You’re not supposed to talk about them. Well, I’m almost sure I won’t, but, I would.

9. Daniel Menche/Mammifer

Ambient noise projects even harder to write about than free-jazz improv noise projects, of course, and currently I am not up to the challenge. Get it?

8. Dark Buddha Rising | Inversum

Thought this was a side project by the Neurosis dudes, but I guess it’s a totally different band from Finland that’s on their label. I thought it sounded pretty cool but if I don’t really listen to it much it’s like an .:Occult Objeckt:. which is what all records should aspire to be.

7. Locrian | Infinite Dissolution

Bleakness, keyboards, weird sound fx; Nine Inch Nails kinda makes me sick to my stomach anymore, so I’ll take this. (They do no sound anything like NIN.)

6. Enslaved | In Times

This is a band I need to listen to more, like dig through the whole catalog. Only really started with the last one.

5. Björk | Vulnicura

I don’t like sad Björk. Of course she’s still great and all but I can’t deal with it.

6. mus.hiba | hitoe

This should maybe go with the non-albums. I should have talked about them before this. They have a unique sound. Will talk more about them in the future.

3. Raekwon | Fly International Luxurious Art

Rough year for the Wu, Ghostface lost his shit on Action Bronson (uh, finally, really) and RZA became a conceptual artist or whatever. Thankfully there’s this. Maybe not one for the ages, but better than there’s been in a while I think.

2. f(x) | Four Walls

This was a big year for K-pop, esp. accessibility-wise w/ the whole YouTube fiasco, not like there’s a rivalry between the two countries or anything… (I should mention that Namie record made it all the way to satellite radio in the states, I heard it a couple times and I don’t even listen to it on purpose, but it was all in English so I didn’t care so much. Sorry.) Best tracks imo were Deja Vu & Rude Love. I really liked the Lim Kim better as album tho. Was it not a full album? Oops. NB: Ppl made a big deal out of Pitchfork reviewing this a full week after Billboard did for some reason.

1. The Go! Team | The Scene Between

This pseudo-group kinda fell off for me in the process of becoming a real group but they came back this year w/ some pretty good stuff and at least one with a terrible video. But it’s cool. Would have missed it if Watt didn’t play it on his show. He also made a record with that guy (One of those guys? Need to actually research this a little. It came out last year anyway.) that sounded good but I didn’t really check it out. Maybe if I ever review records on a regular basis I’ll talk more about it. But you know how that goes by this point. (If you don’t: it doesn’t.)

N O N – A L B U M

10. Especia | Primera (Selection)
I don’t even know if I like this tbh. The Japanese release is a full album I guess but it’s on iTunes a few songs short cause we can’t handle it. (And yet it leads with a non-essential 10-minute track, go figure.) They have one song I really like and it turns out to not be on this one, but last year’s GUSTO, which I bought on CD cause I’m old, leave me alone. Listening to it on the stereo gives me a weird feeling of embarrassment, which I suspect is intended.

9. V/A | Idol Bakari Pizzicato

This was…cute. Would have been more interesting say, 10 years ago when “Idol” did not mean perfectly plastic, autotuned, quantized earcandy. Non-perfection was the charm. Love the songs still, but it makes me appreciate the originals even more. Not to say Nomiya Maki is not perfect, but she is NOT an idol. She’s a chanteuse!

8. F.O.D./Dead Milkmen | Split 7″

This was a fairly transparent hoax of “lost” recordings being reissued which I don’t think anyone questioned for a second cause that’s where we are at with punk rock apparently. Maybe I’m out of touch. I’m not really out there anymore, everyday, in the pit. The conversation pit. It was pretty funny either way. Even tho I only bought this one, the dude from SRA sent me a link for all the mp3s (probably by mistake) of the other split 7″s they put out this year and I like this band Merda, who are from Brazil but sometimes sing in Japanese which is interesting. I don’t get into many new punk bands anymore.

7. V/A | Virgin Babylon Records 5th Anniversary

Too much to talk about on this one. I should really write more full reviews. Really.

6. Watchtower | [individual songs from unfinished new album]

What a concept! Releasing single tracks before eventually collecting them together with presumably a few more songs onto one larger release. But however they did it, bravo on this comeback cause some other clowns were calling themselves Watchtower which is not even a good name ffs, sounds like they’re Jehovah’s Witnesses. What a great band if you’re into the mathy prog-metal tho.

5. tricot | E

And speaking of mathy, we have some new tricot, still w/o a full-time drummer to record another proper full-length, but they are putting out some promising tracks still after a bit of a falter.

4. ZZZs | Invidia
Hey, I actually reviewed this one for real.

3. Scharpling & Wurster | Best Show Box Set

Objectively and subjectively spectacular. I used to mostly like the earliest stuff when the whole thing was just making fun of Glen Jones, then I checked out for a few years and when I came back to it I almost didn’t get it anymore. So it was a lot of fun filling in the missing pieces.

2. Melt-Banana | Return of 13 Hedgehogs

Old material that was tough to find, this nicely replaces a folder of low bitrate rips I got off Soulseek in 2006 and then some. Wacky covers: Devo! The Specials! Some old Europop! I don’t know!

1. Suiyoubi no Campenella | Diablo

Only 3 songs that I listened to a whole lot back-to-back with the previous album I should have already had. But I just didn’t want to listen to rap for a while I guess. Def a new obsession on par w/ Halcali, maybe.

S H O W S

10. Horror-thon @ The I-House

Not exactly a show, but just illustrates how much more I go to the movies than shows now and I didn’t even see that many movies either. It’s mostly been studying and getting paying work again.

9. Sakura Sunday (Bonten, J-Music Ensemble) @ Fairmount Park

I also volunteered a bit. You’d think I’d been to this thing before but it was a first. I had not even seen the Japanese House. It just wasn’t a priority so I never got around to it before. They had some traditional Taiko and dancing which I like, but this group Bonten does something more like soundtrack music, adding some modern synths and performing like a regular band. The J-Music Ensemble is a Jazz band with a full horn section that covers J-pop songs and they have pretty good taste in song choice like Perfume and Utada. Hope they go further w/ the idea.

8. Fucked Up @ The I-House

Spent a lot of time at the I-House this year, esp. when they moved the Japan Philly Society Conversation Club there. How is it for punk shows? About as weird as you’d think. They performed kinda like RHPS, on the small stage in front of the movie screen, which played a random light show. I never posted pics due to a technical issue, altho I did dump them all onto flickr set to private. I should really fix my flickr page. Never saw them before and I’m not a huge fan so I missed their transition into like, krautrock w/ screaming. It’s pretty cool.

7. Philm @ St. Vitus & JB McGuiness (New Castle)

Had to see ’em twice cause I left Vitus early to catch my train home so I would not be stuck in NYC on the coldest night I have ever experienced. They’re good and all but Dave Lombardo was RIGHT THERE, MAN. Non-that aspect of it: it was interesting to see the same headliner back-to-back in two very different “metal venues”. There’s a lot of snark that could go both ways but I will leave it to your imagination.

6. Helmet @ World Cafe Live

Page Hamilton doesn’t have a lot of interest in recreating the screaming parts but the music was so tight it didn’t matter that much. There actually was a pit so it was not like a loud Jazz gig or something. (It’s a somewhat “Adult Contempo” venue.) Helmet does not get the respect they should from the Metal scene as like, almost-cover bands, shoegaze or Korn…I guess cause there’s not enough contrarian juice in defending the music and they never did the Civil War reenactment-type fashion thing. It’s not exactly top-notch songwise post-Meantime in my book, but it’s all monster riffs and killer solos. Altho, there was not even an opening band which is maybe why they booked this place. I guess they went out of their way to snub “the scene”, but metalheads defend bands that don’t even play live based on the first couple records that are the only good ones, get real guys.

5. ZZZs @ Boot & Saddle

Finally made it into the place I actually drive past all the time that my older cousins used to line dance at or whatever. I have mixed feelings about the sign renovation, but nice place. Anyway, this was a real cool show, I talked about it in the post I already linked to.

4. Marty Friedman/Exmortus @ The North Star

Hell of a show to say goodbye to this place with. Sad it’s ending shows but it was always an out-of-the-way venue. I kinda just like Marty as a dude and a player, not that I don’t like his records, but I wasn’t really expecting it to “translate” live. I think the show was on a weeknight and I was actually planning to duck early, I just wanted to feel like I had really crossed Megadeth off my seen list, but wow. That is a real band. Exmortus was cool too, did some straight-up Classical stuff, got their album that came out last year that I’ll…y’know.

3. Scharpling & Wurster w/ Kurt Vile & The Dead Milkmen

Speaks for itself. Good job getting these two Philly camps to break hoagie, btw.

2. Either/OR playing Morton Feldman’s “For Philip Guston” @ The Rotunda

Compared to other types of music, this piece is sort of like a five-hour intro to a song that never kicks in. I really stayed for the whole thing w/o even a bathroom break and I left my phone in the car. (Incidentally, I received a $76 parking ticket for this otherwise free concert. Worth it.) For the first hour or two, I was writing twitter jokes in my head, but I forgot what they were by the end. (I nodded off a little a few times.) But it was really an amazing musical experience in it’s own universe.

1. Melt-Banana/Hirs @ Johnny Brenda’s

Was I really gonna put Morton Feldman at #1? I might have. Am I that guy now? I’m not that guy. I used to listen to the late-night avant-garde show on PRB, I took it all the way, as far as I can go. I’m not a genius. And I’m not commercial. But sometimes I need some new electro-pop music to feel like I’m living in the 21st century, so seeing Perfume last year was great. But this was something else. This really put it all together. I mean it’s just some people playing to a pre-recorded track, but it was so punk rock. This was really how you do that. I didn’t want to admit this, but when I saw Motörhead at MSG a couple years back, they put on a great performance and all, but I was so far away (best tix I could afford) it almost didn’t matter if they were really playing or if I was watching on a screen, and I had this sense of urgency leading up to seeing them like, “this is gonna end! it’s gonna be over!” And now it is, but during the show itself I thought, “it’s ok if this ends”. Rock music does not end because it’s not on that scale and purity at any kind of non-acoustic show is an illusion anyway. “Goodbye, fuck it.”

So anyway, I’m pretty psyched about seeing Maiden in March. Hopefully everyone survives till then.

%

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

4 Comments

2014 Did Not Exist

Posted in: x
Posted in: RECORDS.
Posted in: list10

Saluton,

久しぶりね? Last year I promised (to myself, no one else really cares) a post every Wednesday. This is a full-on, objective failure that I feel I have to mention up front. I make no such promises this year (to an imagined audience); in fact, I’m going to tell you I’m giving up forever and then come back anyway. People love that.

I’ve never been and am unlikely to be, important as a music writer. However, I used to be the guy paying attention to music no one else was paying attention to. That’s no longer the case. Besides from other bloggers who have a legit professional craft that now regularly talk about Asian pop music with a straight face, it went pretty mainstream this year. Once people got used to stuff like PSY and Kyary Pamyu Pamyu, which, while good, is pretty much the exact sterotype of hyper goofiness the average person might expect, things seem to have settled down and it’s generally accepted that it’s not all like that. Earlier I even thought I found a band no one had written about, the unwieldily named ゲスの極み乙女。(Guess no Kiwami Otome), when I found a write up not in a blog but Time Out Chicago. Skipping right over the blogs now. Even Rolling Stone put K-pop’s Hyuna on their best videos list.

Well shit.

But forget about that. The big event for me as a person who writes things on the internet was the demise of the Robot Lounge, long running message board of Giant Robot Magazine. Giant Robot is kinda just a brand now that has some stores and art galleries and they finally redid their website to reflect this. The art and the toys and stuff used to just be a small part of Giant Robot, I think of it as just one of the eject-able lionhead/hands that just kinda floats in space now. Still cool, but it’s only a piece. GR encapsulated most of the things I was interested in from the late-90s on, and the board starting in late 2000 even more so. As cool as the magazine was, the board was more intellectual, funnier, and more filthy. Lacanian deconstruction (of J-pop videos), who Sammo Hung could beat in a real fight, and the joys of sex during menstruation could all be active threads on any given day.

I only write online because of the Robot Lounge. I would still be making my experimental art-music or whatever the hell it is I really do and posting it online, but I would be one of these yahoos with no ability to communicate socially, auto-sending direct messages on twitter: “Hi, I’m from [thing you’ve never heard of], I realize we live now in a world of unlimited free entertainment, but here’s more with no context.” What a great way of telling people you only followed them for the followback—awesome job guys, girls, most anyone trying to get attention for anything. Don’t give that potential audience even the chance of an illusion that they themselves are interesting, cool plan.

Anyway, I kinda lost interest in following most sites very closely, and haven’t even looked at most of the major lists. So there’s none of that recapping the entire internet nonsense I used to do. And I haven’t lost interest in buying large amounts of new music, but I have lost a lot of time and money this year doing other things. Like studying Japanese more seriously. That’s a big one. And once you step off the internet content train for a bit you start remembering things you used to enjoy like books, and movies. Really just one of those things at a time, for a couple hours at a time. That’s cool. And shows. And playing music. That’s maybe even better. For part of this I actually had some extra money because my health insurance dropped me and then I got on Obamacare, so I enrolled in a real Japanese class, bought some tickets to shows I would not have seen otherwise, and a cheap 7-string. Then I lost one of my jobs and now I’m broke again until I figure out something new. But that got me out of a hell of a rut. I got myself into a whole new rut of watching old anime and horror movies, but who are you to judge?

Point is, there’s not much to go through here. There’s my favorite 10 records this year, and then 10 more records and change, and we’re done here. For now.

Oh, I almost forgot, I’ve been saving this:

There’s also a downside. But I forget what that is, because I forgot to leave a note with this draft. (Always leave a note.) Wait, it’s forgetting stuff you liked. Not a problem this time. Not really a problem for me at all, because in “the game” (…) of music writing, I’m nobody, and I’m fine with that. I’m just a long-winded message boarder.

The List

  1. Cibo Matto | Hotel Valentine

    Didn’t expect this to be this good. Heaviest rotation. Some people seem hung up on the fact that they are like 50. Lotta bands from the 90s are 50 now. But wait, that means they were like 35 then. I don’t remember anyone listening to Fugazi and saying, “fuck these old dudes”. People said different things, but nobody said that. GOOD RECORD.

  2. Shellac | Dude Incredible

    New Shellac album is always going on the list. They are the Motorhead of indie rock. More consistent, even. And younger. Yes, 2 90s bands at the top. I am from the 90s. Gotta be from somewhere.

  3. Tombs | Savage Gold

    Got into this more than the last one, which was great, but the songs clicked for me here better and great production by Eric Rutan. I love how it opens with that delay/pitch shifted riff. Good opening riff makes you put the album on again and again.

  4. Agalloch | The Serpent and the Sphere

    I was not into this band much previously, but I went to see them for the hell of it and dug it. So I got this album on cassette and drove around all summer in a car with only a cassette player and no air and roll-up windows. (The car had air, but I refused to turn it on. I was trying to remember how much the 80s sucked. The only other cassette I had in the car was Black Flag’s In My Head. Try it. You will not be pleasantly surprised. I did this for months until I broke out my Pizzicato Five dubs.) On repeat, the album puts you in kind of a trance. Of the albums floating around that mix Black Metal with dreamy post-rock/shoegaze vibe, I like this one best.

  5. Mastodon | Once More ‘Round the Sun

    I still love Mastodon even if they don’t always make an album of the year. What else can you say. I’m not that good at reviewing records? You could say that.

  6. Emerald Four | Nothing Can Hurt Me

    Japanese witchhouse or whatever thankfully going strong because Purity Ring is normcore now or whatever, I have no idea what’s going on, this is a chill record.

  7. Boris | Noise

    This was supposed to be the ultimate Boris record whatever that means and I don’t think it is, but it’s pretty cool. I got the deluxe version on iTunes that has some live bonus tracks. In some cases, for some reasons, I think Boris is better live than on record. These are not those cases. Do not buy the deluxe version. There’s youtube vids you could rip with better quality. They need to get a good live recording that gets all the bass in somehow, that would be the ultimate Boris record.

  8. Marty Friedman | Inferno

    I like Marty Friedman, he’s really good at playing guitar. I could do without the vocal tracks on his albums, but these ones are not completely terrible. So maybe this is really the best Marty Friedman record ever, if you don’t count Tokyo Jukebox. I do.

  9. Triptykon | Melana Chasmata

    Oh man, this should be higher right? Just listening again. Got the CD for the art but only heard it so many times. Is this album cover the last thing H.R. Giger did? End of an era right here.
    (Does this band’s name come from the Transformer, because I forgot all about that and just noticed it.)

  10. Behemoth | The Satanist

    Technically and musically you’d have to say this is the best Behemoth album, where they finally brought the very mechanical blackened death metal into back the more organic realm of their earliest material. But I actually like the previous few that border on an industrial death metal sound, those are always gonna be my favorite. And I don’t care about the whole taking Satanism thing seriously, I prefer the vaguely sinister stuff of previous years. There’s been a lot of talk with these bands along the lines of, “I don’t agree with it, but you have to respect their religious beliefs.” Nah you don’t. It’s metal. The whole appeal was not respecting religious beliefs I thought. When you keep it on that level, I’m into it. When it’s on that Tom G. Warrior level when it’s really about depression and death, and no one knowing anything, I’m into it. Thankfully when interviewed, the members of the band seem very politically naive so they aren’t really promoting some fascist agenda, but you see where I’m going where I’m fully not into it. You gotta see there’s like a potential overlap there. I think right in that edge space is a lot of potential for great art, but sincerity can be a problem in that area. Great artists are not necessarily great thinkers.

Best Single/EP

  • Namie Amuro | Tsuki

    This is technically a single for a completely forgettable ballad. It’s the b-sides that made this an esstianal purchase for me. (Which I bought the last album for without checking the playlist, haha.) In the twisted alternate reality my own brain, putting nonsense lyrics on top of already successful EDM tracks equal the biggest pop songs of the year. In the real world they exist in an aesthetic no man’s land; not pop enough to be truly Pop, not original enough to be critically praised. I feel like this is simply every ele’s loss. There’s some cool sounds coming out of EDM, but it’s not enough to hold my attention since I don’t go to clubs and I’ve never done Ecstasy. Maybe this is my loss, but I’m not about to start. What, I’m a walking question mark that can go in any direction at any time? No. There’s gotta be a topline to actually listen to.

Videos

Not doing a best of videos this year. Got over a hundred in my Watch Later queue, and prefer to dole them out in a non-linear fashion on tumblr anyway. I do have a public playlist of J-pop/rock vids that I’ve been adding to for a while, but I haven’t kept track of what came out this year.

The Other List

  • Alto! | S/t

    Just a cool instrumental post-rock album I heard on Jon Solomon’s show and it came out on his label. Might’ve forgot about it otherwise. It’s kinda like King Crimson x krautrock. Not gonna change your life but if you are ordering other stuff from there which you should of course it’s a great add-on. Oh, you can d/l it free on bandcamp, sure you can do that too. I’m not telling you how to live.

  • Anaal Nathrakh | Desideratum

    This band started out as one of the the most extreme bands ever and just when you think they can’t get any more extreme…they don’t actually. Kinda plateaus. I happen to like this kind of plateau but it is what it is. Actually I think they peaked on 2004’s Domine Non Es Dignus, when they were going back-and-forth with some clean Power Viking Chorus Metal vocals. Now that was crazy. There was some kind of contrast.
    And yo, I did not hear this other album that came out this year also call Desideratum, but I gotta mention it, cause even the covers are similar in the same half-assed way. Really guys? Metal community? Gotta do better than this.

  • The Austerity Program | Beyond Calculation

    I like this band but the thing with the no song names is too much for me, or rather, not enough. Also, if you put this on your list the same year a Shellac album came out but didn’t include the Shellac kiiiinda fuck yourself?

  • Nader Sadek | The Malefic: Chapter III

    So this art project is a really real death metal band now, with some awesome players, and I got it for free with my Decibel sub. Not much to complain about, sounds great, hits the perfect sweet spot of how this music should sound, even Flo Mounier on drums! Can’t really stand post-Lord Word Cryptopsy, so that is great to hear. The songs just didn’t stick for me so not many spins. Hold on, is there another way for people to get this thing? I’m just going to link to the guy’s website and it has to turn up there eventually.

  • The Roots | …And Then You Shoot Your Cousin

    I had this theory that my life started going off track when I stopped buying Roots albums as they came out. This album doesn’t help and I’m pretty sure now it’s a coincidence. But if you have any interest in making music with some kind of integrity and also be a success and you don’t pay attention to the Roots you’re dumb. I literally feel stupid because this album is so high-minded I don’t even get it as a long term fan. All you have to do is play live five nights a week on national TV and you can make whatever album you want.

  • Run the Jewels | RTJ2

    I was late really getting into the first one, which I listened to a lot this year until this one came out; it didn’t really hit me the same way. People thought it was better or more extreme…there was more jokes if anything. I’m not putting it down cause this is a great group, it just didn’t top one for me.

  • Charisma.com | DIStopping

    This group came out kinda like they were the anti-Halcali: they write and produce their own tunes and actually know something about music. I love Halcali but they went off the rails when they lost their producers. Anyway, on this album they do a ballad. Halcali ballads are sweet. Those girls are sweet. These girls are not sweet, it’s kinda the whole concept. So it’s obviously forced. There’s some good tunes, but that threw the record for me. Like they really are not in control of the thing which is a shame.

  • Judas Priest | Redeemer of Souls

    Maybe this could’ve bumped Marty Friedman off the top 10 if I got to it before this week. Nah, what am I thinking…Marty? I think it might be better than the Marty record in fact. But I’ve never been a proper Priest fan. I know all those old records are good, but I haven’t got most of ’em. I watched the Anvil movie from Netflix this year finally and it was cool, I respect those guys on some level, but they overhyped them being influential, I thought. People who were never really in bands seem to be inspired by it because they could see themselves being one of those dudes, I was a little scared cause I could see myself being one of those dudes. I love playing music, but I would rather listen to Priest and have some other decent job than play in a band that is almost not quite nearly as good as Priest and work endless shit jobs. I mean for 30 years? Do people not in bands realize how many times you have to hear your own songs as you play them? Lotta ear time.

  • Merkebah | Moloch

    I instantly thought of this as a top 10er upon first listen, forgetting at least that many good records had come out already. I do not remember how I heard of this, maybe just the name of the album caught me because I used to be obsessed with Ginsberg’s Howl. There’s also (probably several) bands named Moloch, but that seemed to be pushing it too far. An album about Moloch on the other hand is something I can get behind. Even better, it’s instrumental metal with a sax. Maybe my favorite example yet as far as the playing of the instrument. There’s no sense of novelty about it, there’s serious playing here. And there’s actually a sense of swing to the music.

  • Jute Gyte | Vast Chains

    Oh man, this is some creepy shit. So many metal albums come out in a year, and this did not even make my listening list because I only listened to it once on my laptop way in the beginning of the year, but once was enough to remember it and that alone should say something. This is some Grade A Bad Mood Sonic Youth atonal dissonance with a Satanic twist to it; it’s really unfortunate they don’t have a name people can remember, that’s the only tough part. Most bands this far off normal notes and scales either don’t really know what they are doing, are joking, or doing some kind of chaotic jamming thing. And it’s usually a lo-fi affair. I’m not sure what “it” is for these guys and I don’t wanna know, but these guys mean it and every part is clearly composed and recorded. Now I feel like a wimp for not putting in the top 10, right? But I’m really only listening to it for a second time right now. That’s really gotta be taken into effect for a personal list.

    Also there was the Shonen Knife album I already wrote about.

    And I have to mention the Relapse Sampler so I can cross it off my to-do list. Had to give this a close listen just to make sure I wasn’t stupidly missing something great (at least that was on Relapse), but I really think Tombs is the best thing they put out this year.

Old Records

  • Black Sabbath | Complete Albums Box (1970-1978)

    Holy shit, I listened the hell of of this. Never paid much attention past the first four, which I did not have full copies of.

  • Bottomless Pit | [all of them]

    I don’t feel like I’m qualified to write about this band. This should be every smart person’s favorite band. I mean smarter than me. If they were really smart I guess they would already be listening to them, so those are the smartest people but I mean, there’s gotta be a lot of people in the smarter than me, not as smart as those people range. And it’s not like a requirement. It’s not exactly Stockhausen. It’s not difficult music, it’s a rock band.

  • OOIOO | Gamel

    I guess the American release came out this year so it’s on some lists now, but it’s over a year old in Japan. Really need to talk about this one in depth because of the tuning implications. Before the world melts or explodes or we all kill each other.

Japan-related Disappointments (Non-political)

  • New FLiP but it’s boring
  • Kyary & Perfume Singing in English doesn’t quite work (yet?)
  • New Perfume Singles were kinda weak
  • tricot lost their drummer and is corny now
  • Sugar’s Campaign full album is…I dunno yet.
  • Still really expensive to get there; far away

I think things will work out. Before, you know. Ultimately.

That was kinda of a downer to end with how about Best Live Shows

  1. Pig Destroyer/Tombs/Fight Amp@First Unitarian
  2. Perfume@the Hammerstein
  3. Cibo Matto/Deerhoof@Union Transfer
  4. Agalloch/Vektor/Jex Thoth@Underground Arts
  5. Sleep@Union Transfer
  6. OOIOO@Johnny Brenda’s
  7. Morning Musume@Best Buy

Shit that’s everything.

Obliquior!

%

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

1 Comment