Sunday, August 14, 2011
Thursday, January 27, 2011
The Suburbs: Reviewsing Pt. 1: Structure Porn
This split in half thing, it's definitely a convenience, but as I'll note it adds a theatricality to the work; more consequentially, it frames the transition from a more optimistic first half to more pessimistic second half (or at least, more peppy to more somber). Pairing gives us two sides of one idea and illustrates all the muddy paradoxes living within these suburban paradoxes. Elsewhere, gapping accentuates how each song tries to get off the ground so earnestly, and seems to fade and need a restart (fadeout then tutti). "I can finally begin" at track 12? Despite all yearnings to hold on to something, we drive past it instead, and the spectacles get further apart. The shortest distance of all is between arguably the most contrasting tracks, Sprawls I and II, as if a last hurrah to save something totally broken.
Splitting. Take the album in two halves of 8 tracks: each takes a bit over a half hour (33:04 and 31:10); each begins with a "Suburb" song with the "in the suburbs I..." vocal lick; each is flanked by a Pt1/2 set of songs. In good Act 1 / Act 2 fashion, the first is longer, and the second has a coda/restatement to the ideas presented throughout. Separating the acts is an 18 second fadeout, the longest by far after Modern Man's 12 second fadeout and Half Light's 13 second fadeup. I do also think that the first half is more musically boisterous, while the second is more clearly depressed (as fuuuuck).
Doubling. For the most part, the songs fit very well into pairs or groups (themes mine):
- 1 and 2 (begin): by a 9 sec violin tone, and also by "first"/expository style. 9:27.
- 3 and 4 (modern): by the word "modern", starkly. 9:55.
- 5 and 6 (without): by a 9 sec string tone. 6:02.
- 7 and 8 (half-light): by name and 9 sec synth tone. 8:40
- 9: an interlude and underture, marking the transition between halves. 4:45.
- 10 and 11 (destiny): by 11 sec synth tone, and by "first they built the roads...". 7:10.
- 12 + 13 + 14 + 15 (shadow): linked all by themes of light and dark. 17:48. Also:
- 12 + 13: theme of technology and communication (weak, I think)
- 13 + 14: listen for the 12 sec rumbling sound effect between these two
- 14 + 15: title.
- 16: postlude and coda. 1:27.
- 1 to 2: transition; 9 sec
- 2 to 3: silence, then fadeup; ~5 sec
- 3 to 4: 12 sec fadeout, then tutti; 12 sec
- 4 to 5: tutti; ~0 sec
- 5 to 6: transition; 9 sec
- 6 to 7: dies away, then fades up; 20 sec
- 7 to 8: transition; 9 sec
- 8 to 9: fadeout, then tutti; 18 sec
- 9 to 10: dies away, then tutti; 15 sec
- 10 to 11: transition (within a fadeout); 11 sec (24 sec)
- 11 to 12: fadeout, then tutti; 15 sec
- 12 to 13: dies away, then tutti; 32 sec
- 13 to 14: faint transition (within a dying away); 12 sec (32 sec)
- 14 to 15: silence, then tutti; 3 sec.
- 15 to 16: fadeout into silence, then tutti; 35 sec
- 16 out: fadeout; 20 seconds
Friday, January 14, 2011
Heartland: How to Move
The violinist Owen Pallett released his third LP [1], Heartland, on January 12th 2010. Following the rushed yet elegiac Has a Good Home (2005), and the string-quartet song cycle He Poos Clouds (2006), Heartland is a firmly intentioned concept album, following the journey of the farmer Lewis through the world of Spectrum. However, this concept is not removed from incisive implications on life. Pallett’s second release used the format of a string quartet song cycle and the rough concept of the eight schools of magic of Dungeons and Dragons to explore how atheists approach death [2], and Heartland works similarly. His latest work folds in love (from the perspective of the loved), violence, masculinity, and the limits of creative expression, all within the journey of his protagonist.
Some background on Pallett and his work provides useful background for understanding Heartland, both because the album contains a character name Owen, and since his music is self-referential: “Even though while I was writing about [the character of] Lewis...when I’m writing about him, I’m still writing about me...I felt a little laid bare” [3]. One of the major threads through his career has been his love of geek culture [4]. Has a Good Home both idealizes and bemoans fantasy novels and games as escapes from reality, and He Poos Clouds uses Dungeons and Dragons as a proxy for religion. Although Heartland's concept is less apparently nerdy, it is important to recognize that Pallett is again playing with the boundary of fantasy themes; in the case of Heartland, the character Lewis will rebel against the limits of his reality. In the spirit of playful geekiness, Pallett will spice the lyrical and musical structures he creates with puns and references [5]. Pallett is also gay, which adds a subtext to the nearly homoerotic love between Lewis and the deity Owen, between creator and fantasy, and the place of the singer in this fourth-wall-shattering mess. In the end, Heartland is a progression of a man who follows his desires, but whether that man is the subject matter Lewis, the god Owen, the singer Pallett, or some combination of all three has to be decided.
[1] A list of relevant discography is available in the Addendum.
[2] http://www.youaintnopicasso.com/2006/04/18/qa-with-owen-pallett-of-final-fantasy/
[3] http://www.thelinknewspaper.ca/blogs/link_newspaper/2297
[4] Until very recently, Pallett recorded and performed under the name Final Fantasy, a reference to the video games series of the same name.
[5] As a perfect example: “Heartland” was a 1986 video game for the ZX Spectrum 48K. Owen would have been seven years old at release time. Tip from therethere on Dec 29 2009 from fanforums, also http://www.worldofspectrum.org/infoseekid.cgi?id=000226
Midnight Directives [7]: the march
[7] "I fully expected to recycle and change the order of the songs... the flow of the album is far more important to me than the cohesion of the narrative.” (Owen from Final Fantasy on Jan 3rd 2010 on Fanforums) Although the order was altered from its "original" state, some sequences have been left in order. See the Addendum for commentary on tracklist continuity and the lyrics of the B-Sides and Spectrum, 14th Century.
Keep the Dog Quiet / Mt. Alpentine: walking in circles
[8] In the original lyrical order, this sequence was followed by Tryst With Mephistopheles, although not too much lyrical continuity is lost if Lewis decides to, instead, Take Action.
Red Sun No. 5: heartbeat
Lewis Takes Action: strutting
The Great Elsewhere: sailing crashing
Oh Heartland, Up Yours!: plodding
Lewis Takes Off His Shirt: galloping
Flare Gun and E is for Estranged: interlude montage
Tryst With Mephistopheles: sprinting
What Do You think Will Happen Now?: standing.
Except by opening his eyes. Lewis dreamily wanders around the world of Spectrum for examples of dereliction. References to the Norse figures Loki and Surtr suggest the coming end of the world [8]. The sun of reality washes over Lewis, and manages to give him some motivation: “This morning I must get up to see the world around me, what I forgot in seeing ourselves as words upon a paper.” Acceptance fills him, reconciling the sun and the world, leaving behind his dark world, to be “yours.” Yours, meaning both the audience’s and Owen’s, in the darkness of that unresolved final chord. The trials of Heartland have lead to this piece of unmoving, tortured morning, of movement leading to stasis and darkness. Ultimately the creation cannot be divorced from the creator, and Lewis embodies Owen as much as he rejects him. Connection, with oneself and the surrounding environment, is the only hint of a savior.
[8] Interestingly, Midnight Directive's original title was "The End of the World."
Sources
White, Shelley. "Owen Pallett Wears His Heartland On His Sleeve." spinner 14 Jan 2010: n. pag. Web. 1 Apr 2010.
Hiedemann, Jason. "Fantasy World." Out and About: Chicago 16 Jul 2009: n. pag. Web. 1 Apr 2010.
Chafin, CL. "Blissfully Nerdy." Popmatters 4 Feb 2010: n. pag. Web. 1 Apr 2010.
Carew, Anthony. "Interview: Owen Pallett." About.com: Alternative Music n. pag. Web. 1 Apr 2010.
Culloty, Shane. "Interview: Owen Pallett." slate 18 Mar 2010: n. pag. Web. 1 Apr 2010.
Pallett, Owen. Owen Pallett - Heartland. Recording andPrint
Addendum
Pallett focused more heavily on musical flow and symbolic meaning, rather than a distinct narrative; not surprisingly, the order of songs was changed multiple times, lyrics rewritten and recycled, and tracks swapped in and out. Here is the original tracklisting, and the US released version. From Owen from Final Fantasy, Jan 3rd 2010 on fanforums.
4 | Red Sun No.5 | Midnight Directives | 1 |
X | Wella-Balsam Reverie (aka The Man With No Ankles) | Keep the Dog Quiet | 2 |
X | Scandal at the Parkade | Mt. Alpentine | 3 |
5 | Lewis Takes Action | Red Sun No. 5 | 4 |
6 | The Great Elsewhere | Lewis Takes Action | 5 |
7 | Oh Heartland, Up Yours! | The Great Elsewhere | 6 |
8 | Lewis Takes Off His Shirt | Oh Heartland, Up Yours! | 7 |
2 | Keep the Dog Quiet | Lewis Takes Off His Shirt | 8 |
3 | Mt. Alpentine | Flare Gun | 9 |
10 | Tryst With Mephistopheles | E is for Estranged | 10 |
1 | The End of Time (aka Midnight Directives) | Tryst With Mephistopheles | 11 |
12 | What Do You Think Will Happen Now? | What Do You Think Will Happen now? | 12 |
HEARTLAND TRACKLISTING AND LYRICS
Midnight Directives
Cross her off the shortlist.
My blood is a red-winged bird.
The way will be lit by the bridges we burn, oh.
And come, tornado!1
Carry me away from the croft.
Ruffle my hair, bear my body aloft, oh.
As the cutlass came down on a Saturday night,
Left an un-planted field, left my daughter and wife.
Called away into service, for a clerical life.
Left an un-planted field, left my daughter and wife.
Thought I was a sad-boy.
Now I know, I know, I know I was wrong.
Since you came along, I can see how content I had been.
It'll drive a man crazy to age from the outside in.
But I have a plan, it's a trick with a prick of a pin.
And as the cutlass came down on a Saturday night,
Left an un-planted field, left my daughter and wife.
Called away into service, for a clerical life.
Left an un-planted field, left my daughter and wife.
For a man can be bought, and a man can be sold,
And the price of a hundred thousand unwatered souls
Is a bit of meat and a bit of coal.
It's a bit of meat and a bit of coal.
It's a little bit of meat and coal.
Keep the Dog Quiet
My body is a cage2.
This union is cage about a cage about a cage.
And this, and this town too.
I'll see you once in a while but I can't be seen with you.
This place is a narrative mess.
The floor a tangle of bedsheets and battered sundress.
The ink has dried in the well.
The journey once was consequential,
Now: sequential, sequential, sequential, sequential.
When will you silence your hounds?
The eldest sons to the altar of the Eternal Sound.
Their blood is spilled at the dawn.
A nation bound to your will, still, the violin plays on.
Plays its devotional song.
Once it was, once it was so essential,
Now: sequential, sequential, sequential, sequential.
Mt. Alpentine
Lead on, oh horse of mine, we will climb the side of Alpentine.
Lead on, oh horse of mine, we will voice our satisfactions.
Karma is the concatenation of your actions.
Red Sun No. 53
I'd been living through days
Carrying no burden
But the shit of cattle
And my resignation
Until the sun rose crimson
Crept across my limbs and
I saw that they were earthen
That they decay and worsen
And from my ginger chest, there
Came the sound of thunder
I am not a father
I am not a farmer
I tremble to speak of it.
Held her in my arms and
Pressed her to my heart and
Pressed my hand o'er her lips
I murmured words of his love
I will be his baron
With him I have an ending
With him I have completion
And the cover of night
Lewis Takes Action4
I got a message for the acolytes.
I am your man for a wifey fight.
I got a thirst for liquid gold.
I'll bludgeon 'til the body's cold.
The stony hiss of cockatrice has cast us into serfdom.
I close my eyes, and spur Imelda down the mountainside
For a liberated Spectrum.
I took No-Face by his beak and broke his jaw, he'll never speak again.
I took No-Face by his beak and broke his jaw, he'll never speak again.
My every move is guided by the bidding of the singer.
The night is split by the whistle of my amber whip
And the fire from my fingers.
The Great Elsewhere
Talking, what's it good for?
Absolutely nothing.
Wrestle, let's wrestle.
You can pin me to anything.
Thought I saw you in my tea leaves.
Thought I saw you in a forest flame.
I'll fill up the silence with the sound of your holy name.
Knowledge of the sea-ways, knowledge of how the water flows.
Whoever coined the phrase has never had to brave the snow.
I climbed the shroud to the top-sail and I peeked through the glass.
The curvature bisected by a wintry mizzen mast.
The scar upon my stomach, I call it my Flying V5.
And every time I show it, I can feel your eyes on me.
How many islands will surrender to the blunderbuss?
And how long must we sail before you show your face to us?
Followed him out to the end of the pier.
"Don't come any closer," he cried, "I am afraid
Of the man I'll become if I lay my
Life down for a people who I don't even care for."
Face to his face, I put my
Hand into his and I tried to tell him, "No,
I've seen his work upon the panes of cathedrals,
In the sweat of the workers and the flight of the seagulls."
My words were drowned out by the sound
Of the motors and rowers, the ship as it ran aground
And from the trees came a thousand soldiers.
I went down on my knees with a spear in my shoulder.
About face, about face, I swam back
To the Victoria6. I shiver with the
Memory, memory of the island dwellers
And the indifferences of the Storyteller.
Oh Heartland, Up Yours!7
The stars collected.
Each world accounted for8.
Freed all the children.
Seems there's nothing more.
If I only had a rowboat, I would row it up to heaven9.
And if heaven will not have me, I will take the other option.
I will seek out my own satisfaction.
From the wight lying in the barrow10,
To the priest with his broken arrows.
There's a method to the madness11.
They will feign an expression of sadness.
A concatenation of locusts,
And the farmers are losing their focus.
On the pitch of the Avenroe grasses
I will sing, sing, sing to the masses
Oh Heartland, up yours!
The hollow voice of our 14th century.
Too much assumption to be taken seriously.
Oh, you wrote me like a Disney kid, in cut-offs and a beater
With a feathered fringe, it doesn't suit a simoniac breeder12.
Doesn't work, doesn't fly, doesn't handle.
From the wight lying in the barrow,
To the priest with his broken arrows.
There's a method to the madness.
They will feign an expression of sadness.
A concatenation of locusts,
And the farmers are losing their focus.
On the pitch of the Avenroe grasses
I will sing, sing, sing to the masses
Oh Heartland, up yours!
My homeland.
I will not sing your praises here.
Lewis Takes Off His Shirt
As soon as I got on the horse, I forgot about the math.
Forgot about the odds against an adolescent standing up to all of Owen's wrath.
The heat of prairie summer, impossible to take.
I grab the hem and lift the fabric over my sweet head.
I know what you're looking for, and I'm never gonna give it to you.
I'm never gonna give it to you.
I'm never gonna give it to you.
Government rule established by a dazzling light show.
A hegemony armoured with a thousand-watt head and seven inches of echo.
I keep up my velocity, my spurs are in her sides.
I don't know what I'm doing, and it is the only way.
Toward the range I'll ride, singing, I'm never gonna give it to you.
I'm never gonna give it to you.
I'm never gonna give it to you.
"I am overrated," said the sculptress to the sea.
"I've been praised for all the ways the marble leaves the man,
And I was wrong to try and free him."
And as for me, I am a vector, I am muscle, I am bone.
The sun upon my shoulders and the horse between my legs,
This is all I know.
My senses are bedazzled by the parallax of the road.
I concentrate to keep contained the overflow.
My knuckles grip so tightly, my fingers start to bleed.
If what I have is what you need,
I'm never gonna give it to you.
I'm never gonna give it to you.
I'm never gonna give it to you.
Flare Gun13
The wella woods of Belvedere.
The peat and moss of Avenroe.
St. Germain's canaries.
The fortress of Alpentine.
Oh my soul, my loyalty is to the East
And Spectral man, and bird, and beast.
Red soil for the taking.
Ruddy women for your brides14.
All good men of valourous heart,
Consider a new start and sail today for the Heartland.
E Is For Estranged
Boys run like water from the barrel to the trough.
They'll never stop their running.
Gunning for their brothers.
This house is a hostel.
It is peaceful, but it's always emptying.
Boys all want to be someone.
Haven't you heard? I am a flightless bird.
I am a liar, feeding facts to a false fire.
If pathos is borne, borne out of bullshit--in formal attire,
I'll score you a string ensemble15.
I saw my son at seventeen,
The shutters made projections on his naked frame.
Now at twenty-five,
He simply cannot stay away from the ketamine.
With makeup on his sores,
He spends an hour a day composing little eulogies.
Sometimes he sends me letters,
But it's mostly garbled phrases and apologies.
But haven't you heard? I am a flightless bird.
I am a liar, feeding facts to a false fire.
If pathos is borne, borne out of bullshit--in formal attire,
Cue the Bulgarian men's choir.
Tryst With Mephistopheles
I stumbled on the summit's path.
Clumsy, clumsy.
No paragon am I.
I can't even keep my shoes tied.
I've been in love with Owen ever since
I heard the strains of Psalm 2116.
Standing between the choirs,
As they sang, "Laudate Dominum, Laudate Dominum".
Damn, I wrote it down, but I left it in the pocket of my other jeans.
Scrawled across the foolscap: "I don't know what your devotion means,
I don't know what your devotion means."
And up, upon the summit I can see
The one I worshipped as a boy.
The Creator, The Great White Noise.
The Great White Noise.
Charged and charging up the ridge.
The chests are empty, the coffers too.
They float in the flood, and so will you, I swear, so will you.
"Your light is spent! Your light is spent!" I cried,
As I drove the iron spike into Owen's eyes.
The sun sped cross the plains like that cinematic moment where
Humanity and nature collide.
When you think, "Everything's gonna be all right,"
Just before the hero gets a bullet in his side.
Whizzing off the clifftop,
Listening for the spatter, thirty floors below.
Down come the vultures.
I will not be your fuel anymore.
Now the author has been silenced, how will they ever decipher me?
I hope they hear these words and are convinced
You never even knew me.
I draw a bruise on your brawny shoulder,
Scratch my fingers over your tattoos.
The author has been removed.
What Do You Think Will Happen Now?
The difficulties of my story:
Despite discomforts, despite myself, I
I reaffirm my endless devotion
To the belief that we're all of value,
We're all of virtue, and so inclined we
Fill up our cups and toast to each other,
And though I listen to the arguments
That most divergent systems employ to
Debilitate us, delineate us,
Repackage our words, demystify us,
I unceasingly affirm my love can
Cannot be measured, cannot be altered.
I know, I know it, I do affirm it
With overzealous obscurantism.
With every word and with every gesture,
I must express it. I can't define it,
But all the same I know I can describe it:
I walk o'er bridges and see the river.
A marble statue the sun has weather'd.
The stubbornness of the overgrowth and
The old memorials covered in snow. We've
Written the way the universe will go.
A righteous white horse17, a man with a bow18.
A sharpened bit of the mistletoe19.
Scissors of fate20 or the fire of Surtur21.
Though we're divided, the force of nature
Will put us all in the ground together
This morning I must get up
To see the world around me.
Right away, what I forgot
In seeing ourselves as words upon a paper.
The sun is up.
My arms are wide.
I am a good man, I am yours.
EXTRAS AND B-SIDES TO HEARTLAND
Wella-Balsam Reverie (aka The Man With No Ankles)
Somewhere between a window and my doorstep
I remembered what it was to play, to play, to play
Don't tell me you can't remember
A time before carnal needs
Turned us all into employers and employees
The future is a constant in the world everywhere
But if humans aren't predestined, the future is variable
Well I don't even I don't know what it means, don't know what it means
But a fine figured wife isn't how I'm gonna end my teens
I'll do, upon, upon, your beauty
I'll do, d-do, d-do, my duty
I'll do, I'll do, I'll do my duty
I'll do, d-do, d-do, my duty
I stopped by the river to fish out a fiver
I couldn't stand to see my countenance there
Oh, as the water hit my calves and my ankles
To the back of my legs, to my neck, to my head
Woo. hoo.. ahh....!
I'll do, I'll do, I'll do, my duty
I'll do, d-do, d-do, my duty
I'll do, I'll do, I'll do, my duty
I'll do, d-do, d-do, my duty
Lewis' Dream
Benito was fifteen when he went off to college
I stayed home and tried to go with his best friend
He told me he was gonna cut my neck right across
Then he read Rousseau
Where did he go?
Master comes to me while I'm sleeping
Gives me hell for my overeating
Tells me how I should cut my hair
You think I am only dreaming
But I've arms of bronze and bone
I was born into a loving home
And of all the promises that I have made
There's one I'll never break
Write his name on your chest in a fever
Sing his song to the boats on the river
Heaven's number is seventy-one
Our work has only just begun
With our arms of bronze and bone
We will set our shoulders to the stone
We will lift it, we will bear it 'til our bodies
Our bodies break
A Watery Day
The day I lost my virginity
I made a pot of chicken noodle soup.
Cracked the eggs into a swirling mess.
I ate half and I chucked the rest.
The day the doctor gave me pills
I smirked like a kid with chewing gum
As if the plague was a college acceptance
Or the memory of a brilliant threesome
A letter came in from St. Germain
My mother washed away by two weeks of rain.
The Singer took away my family
But all I felt were his glowin' arms around me
During Easter dinner, the dog died
And I failed, I failed, I failed
And I couldn't even lift the spade
1 Possible reference to the video games Super Mario Bros. 3 or the Legend of Zelda Series. Suggested by scarychips on Dec 25 2009 on Fanforums
2 Pallett arranged strings for Arcade Fire’s second LP, Neon Bible, the last track of which is called My Body is a Cage.
3 “Called ‘No. 5’ because, like Chanle No. 5, it was the fifth version that made the cut.” http://drownedinsound.com/in_depth/4138861-owen-palletts-track-by-track-guide-to-heartland?relevant-artist
4 This song contains reference to almost every track on the Spectrum, 14th Century EP. “Cockatrice,” “Imelda,” and “No-Face” are both titles/characters, “Spectrum” is used to name the setting, and “The Singer” is used to reference Owen (as in The Butcher). Suggested on the fanforums.
5 A Flying V is a model of electric violin. Suggested by Peter Heke and joebonte on Feb 15th 2010 on Fanforums.
6 The Victoria is the name of Ferdinan Magellan’s ship. He was killed on an expedition much like Lewis’. Suggested by ben on Feb 15 2010 on Fanforums. See also: “As a kid I was really into Magellan and this song re-imagines that bit when he was killed by a Filipino chieftain” http://drownedinsound.com/in_depth/4138861-owen-palletts-track-by-track-guide-to-heartland?relevant-artist
7 In October 1977, the English punk group Xray Spex released their game-changing single “Oh Bondage, Up Yours!”
8 Collecting stars and traveling between worlds is a constant game mechanic in the Super Mario series. Suggested by Peter Heke on Feb 15 2010 on Fanforums.
9 On Radiohead’s June 2001 album Amnesiac, Track two, Pyramid Song, contains the lyric: “We all went to heaven in a little rowboat.” Suggested by Alyssa on Feb 15 2010 on Fanforums.
10 Very direct reference to a sequence in JRR Tolkein’s The Lord of the Rings.
11 Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Act 2 Scene 2.
12 Slang in some queer communities for heterosexuals. Suggested by emlyi on Feb 17 2010 on Fanforums.
13 Each of these song titles is in some way derivative of some other fantasy-related or fantastical concept.
Belvedere is “beautiful view” in Italian, and is often used as an architecture term, and for various brands.
Avenroe shows up in this poem about truth and action: “But such deep secrets willingly I leave / To grand philosophers. I'll forward go / In my proposed way. If they conceive / There's but one soul (though many seem in show) / Where in these living bodies here below / Doth operate (some such opinion / That Learned Arab held hight Aven-Roe) / How comes't to pass that she's so seldome known / In her own self? In few she thinks her self but one.” A Platonicall Song of the Soul, translated by Henry More.
St. Germain is a chateau in France.
Alpentine takes the adjective alpine, meaning mountainous.
14 See Blue Imelda for Owen’s thoughts on the relationship between farming and women.
15 Pallett is one of the foremost arrangers on the classical/indie circuit.
16 The psalm contains these words: “Though they plan evil against you, / though they devise mischief, they will not succeed. / For you will put them to flight; / you will aim at their faces with your bows.” Notice the double meaning of bows, and Owen’s face wound later in the song. Suggested by joebonte on Feb 15th 2010 on Fanforums.
17 Horses show up in Lewis Takes Off His Shirt and Lewis Takes Action (through Blue Imelda), possibly alluding to his sexuality (“the horse between my legs / this is all I know”)
18 Violin bow?
19 Loki used mistletoe to kill Baldur. Suggested by ren on 16 Feb 2010 on Fanforums
20 The weavers of fate, Atropos. Suggested by ren on 16 Feb 2010 on Fanforums.
21 Surtr commanded fire in Norse mythology. Suggested by ben on 16 Feb 2010 on Fanforums
APHM 3: (1/14) Twee Bullshit
"Katie's Conscious" is a perfect statement: it feels exactly like the rush you hear when a friend has woken up, it's like a door opening over you as you're lying on the floor journaling about a sadness like the grains in the wood. It's punk, but with the distortion down and a few more melodies on top, maybe pandering to indie acessibility, or maybe moving punk's sonic roughness into some acoustic noodling in favor of a purer tone. It's still optimistic, kindly-old-badass-grandfather-vegan, and tight as hell.
Rory McIntyre - "Au Revoir Les Elefants"
Thematically, it tries to summon all of the pictures it can of childhood that it can and sidestep it slightly and humorously: enfants to elefants, cheerios and cheerio, snow soup and stone soup, puppet show to muppet show. How do we say goodbye, how do we reminisce? An experimental rock/ambient record seems to be a not-too-bad place to do it, but I'm never totally satisfied after finishing a listen. Individual tunes are nice, "Elefants" and "Clec" especially. Fucking daliks yo.
Skygreen Leopards - "Gorgeous Johnny"
Inviting, in the sense that it's fun to sit down at a piano and jam along too. Fun like an inside joke. The whole Johnny thing feels like a red herring, though, never actually gets you anywhere as a concept. "Dixie Cups" is nice, but the storytelling isn't that great. Good party music.
Ascended Essence - "The Grand Unification"
Benefit of the doubt can only take you so far with a rap record about epistimelogical metaphysical models joining relativistic physics with stock Eastern philosophy: it sounds like an idea that broke your consciousness while stoned. I was very, very turned off on my first listen, but the album isn't just one man's blown-up zeitgeist. There's too much trade-off between rappers, too many catchy lyrics, too many welcome and different facets to their argument. Maybe they dumb their rhymes down to reach the public, maybe the cartoonishness of the culture they're countering bleeds into them, maybe I'm too unfamiliar in the territory of pop rap to really "get it." But the beats are really nice, and the rhymes range from subpar to pretty sweet; that's not so bad, right?
Deerhoof - "Green Cosmos"
Twee bullshit is more accessible for me in indie rock records, I guess. But there's so much brilliant contrast! Slight touches of broken tempo, chord changes that don't feel quite right, really gross bass and that gorgeous voice. It works because the band can pick up anywhere and go with it, and with that skill and versatility decides to push the limits of any conventionality they were trained in. See above. Byun byun byun.