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 Post subject: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 11:53 am 
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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 12:19 pm 
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The second album in his trio of "Estuando" albums (beginning with 1970's Estuando a Samba, and finishing with last year's Estuando a Bossa). At 70 years old, the guy is still making challenging music that brings a smile to my face. This is simply, one of the best albums of the '00s.
Fucking love it.
AllMusic Wrote:
Tom Zé has always had a knack for mixing rural, back-porch compositions with whatever technology was available to him -- giving his music a distinctive spice of the avant-garde. His tunes may be centered around the strumming of his battered acoustic guitar, but his production and mixing techniques often take his songs into a weirder world. A self-described "musical journalist," Zé isn't concerned with making you boogie as much as he is concerned with telling you what the deal is. "Socially conscious performance artist" might be a more accurate (if slightly demeaning) description of Zé's trajectory, but there's even more to it than that. He's whip smart and puckish, literate and reverent, wry and wily, tender and motherly, and utterly without boundaries -- either musical or artistic. Zé embraces the regimented hierarchy of classical mythology with the same gusto he affords the irreverent deconstructions of Marcel Duchamp -- placing himself somewhere between Wagner and Captain Beefheart, but showing an allegiance to neither. In keeping with that (seemingly) disparate artistic view, Zé's latest offering, Estudando o Pagode, juggles the stodgy constraints of the operatic form, the barroom machismo and lively improvisation of samba-pagode, a healthy dose of feminist empowerment, and a smattering of Greek, Catholic, and Shakespearian tragedy. The operetta unfolds in three acts and time travels, wildly, throughout history -- giving glimpses of men's desires, fears, and misconceptions regarding women through a series of leapfrogging scenes. As a Zé project goes, Estudando o Pagode isn't atypical. There are more personnel on board here than usual, but his singular vision remains undiluted. High moral ideals mix with low-tech instrumentation (his use of ficus leaves as primitive reeds, for example), and complex ideology mixes with economical arrangements to yield a work that is greater than the sum of its parts, without being the least bit overblown -- over the top at times, but never grandiose simply for the sake of ornamentation. To Zé's credit, the concept never overshadows the songs, which, at their heart, are pop songs. They exist, both within the context of the operetta and as their own entities. This is not the kind of heady, impenetrable concept schlock that plagued the heyday of progressive rock, with that genre's predilection for instrumental wankery and pomp at the expense of sincerity and clarity. No, Zé's always been too cool for that, and too keen on making sure the listener knows exactly where he's coming from -- and where he's going.

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 12:31 pm 
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Deerhoof - The Runners Four

Over time, I have decided that this is their crowning achievement. (Thus far.) It was the last album with their best line-up.







Last edited by Dick Meatwood on Wed Mar 16, 2011 12:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 12:31 pm 
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There's several albums from 05' that I thought deserved more praise. I'll put forth Love as Laughter - Laughter's Fifth, Deathray Davies - The Kick and the Snare, and Bluerunners - Honeyslides.

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I tried to find somebody of that sort that I could like that nobody else did - because everybody would adopt his group, and his group would be _it_; someone weird like Captain Beefheart. It's no different now - people trying to outdo ! each other in extremes. There are people who like X, and there are people who say X are wimps; they like Black Flag.


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 12:36 pm 
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Damian 'Jr. Gong' Marley: Welcome to Jamrock

OK, not obscure or anything, but just a chance to give a shout out to my favorite album by a Marley not named Bob. This thing is a monster and seamlessly blends more modern hip hop elements with roots reggae, ska and dancehall. A little something for everyone to like. He's Marley, but he doesn't sound like Bob and isn't at all just rehashing his dad's style. (Yes, that's a bit of a shot at Ziggy.) The title track is massive, and Pimpa's Paradise featuring Black Thought and Stephen Marley is a standout as well. Nas, Bounty Killer, Eek-A-Mouse and Bobby Brown all make appearances.


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 12:47 pm 
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Not quite up to the self titled/2 standard, but it was fun to see them on Sub Pop, and quite a few highlights including Eva Bruan, U-boat and Galena alongside Memoranda.

Arty, robotic rock, Scratch Acid, Cows.


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 1:26 pm 
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Blueprint - "1988"

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From AllMusic Guide
"Fresh for '88, you suckas." KRS-One said it on "My Philosophy," and MC/producer Blueprint repeats it 17 years later on "Anything Is Possible." Blueprint samples, quotes, or pays homage to Doug E. Fresh, Run-D.M.C., Stetasonic, and other old-school artists on this tribute to the golden age of hip-hop. He isn't really trying to break new ground on this relatively accessible collection of concise, melodic songs, but he is trying to add something to his influences instead of settling for a nostalgia trip. DJ Rare Groove's cuts and scratches fit the throwback vibe, while Blueprint's beats tweak old-school ideas, whether he's working with a Billy Joel piano fill on "Big Girls Need Love Too" or Doug E. Fresh-style beatboxing on "Fresh." The only guest MCs are Aesop Rock and CJ the Cynic, who appear on one song each. Blueprint provides some cunning rhymes and changes up his delivery to fit the album's diverse subject matter, whether it's the earnest social commentary of "Inner-City-Native-Son," the playfulness of the aforementioned "Big Girls Need Love Too," the obligatory braggadocio and complaints about wack MCs, or even the emotional vulnerability he displays on the second verse of "Liberated." His observations seem most trenchant when he's complaining about the current state of hip-hop on songs such as "Trouble On My Mind," which serves as a reminder that it ain't 1988 anymore.


Last edited by huskerpunk on Wed Mar 16, 2011 1:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 1:29 pm 
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The Oranges Band - "The World & Everything In It"

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From AllMusic Guide

With their second full-length, The World & Everything in It, the Oranges Band doesn't rewrite the indie rock handbook; more like they follow it in note-perfect style and form and in such a familiar way (Spoon, New Pornographers, Guided by Voices, Yo La Tengo, new wave influence, etc.) that your initial inclination might be to dismiss them as generic wannabes. Stick around though and you just might be won over. They may not be treading new ground, but they rehash the recent past in an energetic and exciting fashion. Roman Kuebler's reedy, sideways-glance vocals never oversell the songs, the group's performances are wiry and tense at times, sunny and expansive at others, and most importantly they reel off an impressive batch of whip-smart and catchy tunes. "I'll Never Be Alone," "Ride the Wild Wave," "Atmosphere," and "White Ride" are tough-as-spit rockers that would make any indie rock band proud with their shimmering hooks and knowing stance, likewise the moody and more atmospheric numbers like the Spoon-lite opener "Believe" or the charging "Open Air." When they take chances like on the title track with its dubby keyboards and mood shifts or "Evil's Where You Want It to Be," you get a sense of the artier and intenser direction the band could go in. They are also the weakest songs on the record and make you wonder, why take chances when what works for you works so well? And this album does work in a very pleasing, safe, warm, and nostalgic kind of way. Liking the Oranges Band might make you a badge-wearing indie dork, but it's a badge you can wear with the same kind of pride you take in being friends with the kid who all the cool kids disdain.


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 1:37 pm 
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my favorite year for music since the early-90s


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 1:43 pm 
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And of course...

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 1:56 pm 
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Pete Roach Wrote:
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Not quite up to the self titled/2 standard, but it was fun to see them on Sub Pop, and quite a few highlights including Eva Bruan, U-boat and Galena alongside Memoranda.

Arty, robotic rock, Scratch Acid, Cows.



I can't decide if I like these guys or not, based on the few songs I've heard. Some sorta interesting things going on, some sorta not. I've been meaning to spend some time with this band for a while - because they're often lumped in with a bunch of other bands I like - but I can never remember their name. Maybe now I will.

Do you know anything about the triple album they put out last year?


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 2:00 pm 
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Verve Remixed Vol. 1

I'm sure many will scoff, but this is a really well-done album that just sounds great. The source material and the remixers are all top notch. Highlights include Dinah Washington' Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby remixed by Rae & Christian, MJ Cole remixing Carmen McRae's How Long Has This Been Going On?, and a pair of Nina Simone remixes. Oddly enough I love Tricky and Billie Holiday, but his take on Strange Fruit is probably the worst thing on here. Anyway if you like this kinda thing, this is a great example of it being done well.


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 2:12 pm 
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Here are three off the beaten path . . . . .

Devin Davis - Lonely People of The World Unite
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RIYL : Big hooks, guitars, clever lyrics, songs. Still waiting for record #2.


Peter Bruntnell - Ghost In a Spitfire
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While not as "immediate" as Normal For Bridgwater, Ends of The Earth or his last Murder of Crows, this dark & rocking record has grown on me in a big way the last few years. Rolling Stone called Peter one of England's best kept musical secrets. A great voice to boot.


Julien Neto - Fumeur De Ciel
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Instrumental nightime lullabies for insomnia. Cross pollination of acoustic & digital. This is some haunting shee. Not for everyone, RIYL - Helios & Max Richter.

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 2:12 pm 
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Not exactly little-known. But, Damon Albarn is a fucking genius and if everything he does isn't pure gold, it's at the very least worth a listen. This album happens to be closer to the former than the latter. Features a couple of the best singles of the last 10 years -- "Feel Good, Inc." and "Dirty Harry". But then the album tracks are pretty great too -- "Last Living Souls", "Kids With Guns" being the two that come immediately to mind. So much more than just a clever concept and marketing strategy. This is an excellent album from an excellent band.

Also...
Sam Prekop - Who's Your New Professor
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Another artist where everything that he does is worth taking note of and worth listening to. The current Sean & Cake and former Shrimp Boat frontman (yeah, I got both Tom Zé and Shrimp Boat mentions into the same thread!) mumbles his way through another set of thoroughly inventive post-pop songs. Charming as hell and sneakily melodic.

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Paul Caporino of M.O.T.O. Wrote:
I've recently noticed that all the unfortunate events in the lives of blues singers all seem to rhyme... I think all these tragedies could be avoided with a good rhyming dictionary.


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 2:12 pm 
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Drinky Wrote:

Do you know anything about the triple album they put out last year?


Yeah, Its a compilation of the 7's and a load of demo/outtakes. Very good, but perhaps more for the fan boy.

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 3:06 pm 
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........three more off the beaten path.

Babyshambles - Down in Albion
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Bad publicity and drugs aside, a great rocking record. I've heard it called Pete's 'London Calling'.



Chris Mills - The Wall to Wall Sessions
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Recorded and mixed live to 2-track, Mills continues his streak as a consistent songwriter and performer. I'd like to add, the first track, Chris Mills is Living The Dream opens with one of the best first lines ever. One to inspire an image of both hilarity and horror every time I hear it. It's a reference to Richard Pryor



M. Ward - Transistor Radio
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Good songs, great playing and a voice like Louis Armstrong.
RIYL - folk, bluegrass, 50s AM radio, and the saloon cabaret of studio-era Hollywood

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 4:03 pm 
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god damn it. why won't it take my post.


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 4:06 pm 
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Transistor Radio is definitely my favorite M. Ward.

He just moved in next door to my girlfriend's mom and his wife is her TA at Portland St. He scoured their basement because my girlfriend's dad has a huge record collection

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 4:07 pm 
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I keep trying to post a list with images and a video and short descriptions but keep getting a message "Too few characters" so I'll try something shorter.

Two favorites from back then:

Joe Bataan - Call My Name
Archer Prewitt - Wilderness

The ones I missed back then but really like now:

Deadstring Brothers - Starving Winter Report
Rich Hope & His Evil Doers - S/T
Mike Stinson - Last Fool at the Bar
Sexsmith & Kerr - Destination Unknown


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 4:08 pm 
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My second favorite album from 2005:

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(Smog) - A River Ain't Too Much to Love

One of my favorite Bill Callahan albums. Maybe my favorite. He achieved pretty much the perfect sound to go along with some great songs here.





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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 4:19 pm 
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Early last year I made a top 10 list for every 00 year, and looking at my 2005 top 10 - I did think its probably the worst of the 00s, but I also am just laughing at the top 10. Idk

1. Eluvium - Talk Amongst The Trees
2. Richard Hawley - Cole's Corner
3. BSS - BSS
4. Common - Be
5. M. Ward - Transistor Radio
6. Mountains - S/T
7. Robyn - S/T
8. Edan - Beauty & The Beat
9. Sam Prekop - Who's Your New Professor
10. Lil' Wayne - Tha Carter II

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 4:32 pm 
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Bedroom BritPop with shades of Kinks, Bowie, XTC, Oasis and the like. Nothing groundbreaking, but really good, solid songs with good melodies and good hooks, performed and sung very well.

"If I Met You Again"

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Paul Caporino of M.O.T.O. Wrote:
I've recently noticed that all the unfortunate events in the lives of blues singers all seem to rhyme... I think all these tragedies could be avoided with a good rhyming dictionary.


Last edited by PopTodd on Wed Mar 16, 2011 4:40 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 4:37 pm 
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mcaputo Wrote:
Devin Davis - Lonely People of The World Unite
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RIYL : Big hooks, guitars, clever lyrics, songs. Still waiting for record #2.


I'm starting to fear we'll never see record #2, which makes me beyond sad.

Top 5 album of the decade.

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 4:59 pm 
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billy g Wrote:
Deadstring Brothers - Starving Winter Report

I'm pretty sure this one is from 2006. Great record, nonetheless.

billy g Wrote:
Mike Stinson - Last Fool at the Bar
I've tried, unsuccessfully, to track this one down.


FT Wrote:
mcaputo Wrote:
Devin Davis - Lonely People of The World Unite
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RIYL : Big hooks, guitars, clever lyrics, songs. Still waiting for record #2.

I'm starting to fear we'll never see record #2, which makes me beyond sad.
Top 5 album of the decade.

I'm holding on to hope.

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 2005
PostPosted: Wed Mar 16, 2011 5:17 pm 
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contra already mentioned it but i think this was probably in my top 10 of the year.

other favorites of that year.


though i haven't listened to it in awhile and i'm not sure it holds up now.




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