(Monday) Tuesday Time Machine: October 2010

Hello and welcome!

So, off the bat, my apologies– this didn’t get put up last week, so this week, you’ll get two Time Machine Playlists, neither of which will update on Tuesday, therefore being untrue to the name of the playlist!

Silliness aside, here we are for week 6, featuring my monthly playlist from October of 2010.

For those of you who are checking in for the first time, these monthly playlists which I’m re-visiting came about as a result of an idea I had back in January of 2010: an idea that would see me create one 80 minute playlist a month.

The reason for doing this was two-fold: I wanted to create and re-enforce very specific lived experiences and memories tied to music, and I wanted a rather consistent set of songs to propel me each month as I created my art.

In creating these playlists, I tried to make things flow— I wanted songs to segue very effortlessly (or abrasively) creating a sense of narrative.

Going forward, once a week, I’m going to update the Spotify playlist that you can find below. 

I’d recommend not shuffling the songs, as they were sequenced the way that they were for a reason. To get the full experience, listen to them in the way in which I’ve arranged things.

Included below is a short description of the tune I’ve included, and/or a description of the specifics memory associated with it. If you’re not trying to read all of that, just hit play up above!

October 2010

1. I’m Sorry- The Delfonics

I’m not sure what spurred it, but I went through a phase with the Delfonics at the tail end of college. 

This is a classic tune, and the vocal harmonies are pristine— a Sunday afternoon jam of the highest caliber. This is a strange pick for October as it’s most likely, best enjoyed somewhere sunny, during the summertime, but so it is.

2. This is not a Pipe- Franz Nicolay

I almost cringe reading the title of this song, because this is an indie tuned named after a meta-ish piece of art from the early 1900s by Rene Magritte.

At the same time, I was in the 3rd semester of my senior year of art school when I put this playlist together, so it makes sense?

There’s a lot to like here. Mr. Nicolay has a very classic voice, and both the banjo and the slide guitar are very aurally pleasing. There’s a feel of whimsy here, though it might be me recalling the specifics of this month in which I’d enter my Jordan year (23).

3. I Wish I Knew How it Would Feel to be Free- Nina Simone

I was made aware of this song as John Legend and the Roots did a cover that came out around this time. Their version is more forceful, and full-bodied, but the beauty in this version lies in how understated it is. 

It cooks a little harder towards the end, but it reminds me of the musical equivalent of The Little Engine That Could, and I think that’s wonderful.

4. Faithful- Common featuring Bilal and John Legend

Fully-produced by Kanye West, and released during the fall of my senior year of high school, Common’s “Be,” is a perfect album for my money. 

Arguably, this track is the album’s standout, and a great song for the fall. Any time it comes on, I can instantly recall the specifics of cruising in my friend Andy’s ’04 Ford Escape— empty Gatorade bottles and/or Burger King bags strewn about, heading to his house after school, where we’d spend the next several hours in the basement playing poker with our friends.

The best of times.

5. Changes- 2pac & Talent

Everyone knows this song, so I don’t feel like I need to wax poetic about it.

Outside of, “California Love,” this was the first 2pac song I heard on the radio, and there’s a reason that it became the crossover hit that it did.

It’s timeless, still relevant, and a particularly infectious ear worm.

6. Sleepwalk Capsules- At The Drive-In

I’ve probably spent more time in my life listening to The Mars Volta than At the Drive-In, but there are times where a blast of jagged, raggedy, post-punk from the latter outpaces even my favorite work by the former. 

 “Relationship of Command” is front to back, flawless, and this is one of my three favorite tracks on the album. It’s a great tune to run to as well.

7. Funky Dollar Bill- Funkadelic

Oh, Funkadelic.

I heard the song, “Maggot Brain,” for the first time when I was 18, but it would take me another 3 years to fully dive into the band’s albums that featured maestro Eddie Hazel playing lead guitar.

As an album, there may not be another album from the time period that is more drenched in reverb than, “Free Your Mind, and Your Ass Will Follow,” and this is my second favorite song from it. 

8. Morning Pray- Gustavo Santaolalla

Before he was doing the soundtracks for the Last of Us games on PS3 and PS4, Gustavo Santaolalla saw a couple of his tunes grace the soundtrack to the ensemble drama, “Babel.” 

This is a haunting, contemplative piece, featuring an especially sorrowful violin, and tremendous atmosphere: the perfect transition piece if you’re ever making a playlist.

9. Werewolf- Cat Power

I spent a great many night in 2009 and 2010 waiting by my green Samsung flip-phone for Cat Power to call me, so that she might profess her undying love, but it was all in vain.

This is a sad song, but it’s a beautiful sad song. Warren Ellis, (of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds fame), steps in to play violin here, and he adds a sufficiently spooky vibe to a tune about… well, a werewolf. 

Play this during your Halloween seance. I heard it’s good for that.

10. Kimdracula- Deftones

It’s only fitting to follow a song called, “Werewolf,” with a song that has the word, “dracula,” in it’s title, right?

As far as rock-radio ear-candy goes, this is amongst Deftones’ greatest accomplishments. Propulsive, crushing, and anchored by a swagged-out backbeat courtesy of Mr. Abe Cunningham, the band is locked in, and then away, before we even reach 3 and a quarter minutes.

Right on.

11. DJ Got Us Fallin’ in Love- Usher featuring Pitbull

This was the soundtrack to a Saturday morning that featured some not-so-great dancing on my part— dancing that took place between Facebook direct messages with a woman who was kinda-sorta dating someone in my friend group.

I had a terrible crush on her, and was hoping on everything that she’d switch up to be with me, but, that didn’t happen.

Looking back on it, I expect our conversation was probably a lot more meaningless than I thought at the time, and I think we spent most of it talking about milkshakes? 

She was bumping that Kelis as we chatted?

The world may never know.

12. Ready for Love- India.Arie

Michael Mann is a master of using pop music to great effect in his movies, and this song gets some screen time in Miami Vice, during a love scene between Rico and Trudi.

As an aside, Miami Vice is a wildly underrated entry in Mr. Mann’s filmography. I don’t think people really got it at the time, but I go back to watch it at least a couple times a year. It’s great.

13. The Face- Kings of Leon

Folks, do you remember when Kings of Leon RULED THE WORLD?!

My brother and I had a conversation about this awhile back, and I remember him saying they kill it on the festival circuit these days, but they’re not doing much outside of that.

Say what you will about their output as, “superstars,” but I think some of it is really wonderful. It’s great pop music that doesn’t require a lot of attention, and you can kind of just float on while it plays. 

14. Across 110th Street- Bobby Womack

I know there is a very specific instance that made me put this on the playlist all those years ago, but I can’t recall it.

Probably, because I re-watched, “American Gangster?”

In any case, this is an all-time classic for a reason. Across the board, everything here is flawless— Womack’s voice, the string arrangements, guitar, percussion, all of it.

15. The Visitors- Hamza El Din

This is probably my favorite guitar and voice recording ever.

I have absolutely no idea what he’s singing about, but the interplay between his voice and his instrument here is humbling.

One day, I’ll make my way into the desert just after the sun has set, sit, and meditate to this. 

It may well change my life.

16. Sweetness- Jimmy Eat World

Everybody loves this song, right?

Really, you HAVE to love this song.

On the eve before my 23rd birthday, my friend and his girlfriend at the time, had a get-together at their apartment complex, which had a pool.

I don’t think we went into the pool that night, but there was a particular strong sangria in the mix, as well as grilling, and good times. 

I rode my bike there, but arrived a little early, so I decided to hop back on the trail, and go a bit further. I stopped somewhere that allowed me sight of both the train tracks, and the setting sun, and I stopped to enjoy both. I thought to myself, “This is going to be a great night.”

Later on, when everyone arrived and the night got going, this was one of the first songs that came on, and I knew that I was correct in my thinking. 

17. Rabbit Heart (Raise it up)- Florence + The Machine

This was right around the time that Ms. Florence was blowing up, and like everyone else in the world, I was enthralled with her voice. 

Like a female Robert Plant with red hair, it seemed as though there were no notes that she couldn’t hit, and this song showed everyone that she came to take care of business.

18. They Won’t go When I go- Stevie Wonder

 As far as sorrowful Stevie Wonder songs go, I think this is his crowning achievement.

I’ve written at length about my appreciation of this in my review of Fulfillingness’ First Finale here, so head on over if you’re curious.

19. Resurrection- The Temper Trap

Before The Temper Trap were getting put in Coke (or Diet Coke?) commercials, I guess they has some pretty legit indie cred, or, at least enough for a girl I went out with once to remark about how, Coke wasn’t, “cool enough,” to use them in their ads.

I haven’t listened to this album in years, but I remember really digging it when it came out. It made me feel like there was a lot of possibility in the world— or, maybe more specifically, that it wasn’t so bad to be graduating with an ART degree, two years after the market tanked.

The specifics of that last bit can be argued, but this is still a great song. 

New Music Flavor – Juno Francis “Oyster Love”

Today, the world welcomes Oyster Love with open arms – the new EP baby from retro-esque duo Juno Francis (Angelica Ranåsen and Jacob Fagerstå). Self described as “the lovechild of a 60s gentleman and an 80s lady”, this Berlin based duo first caught my ears on Instagram with their track “Queen’s Anthem”, which yes, I do believe was written for me personally and remains one of my go-to songs.

The sonic journey of Oyster Love begins with “Follow the Stars”, a dreamy lil tune that makes me feel like I’m in a peaceful forest feeding deer and singing to squirrels. How delightful is that?

Next up is the title track, which is self described as “the darker side of a romantic world view and the sacrifices made to chase self-fulfillment”. As a former emo kid who has recently recently returned to bad habits, this track is a great representation of my anxiety and current state of mind. Upbeat, jivey keys that get you dancing and leaves a smile with some badass, darker lyrics that keep it real and leave you just a touch antsy.

FINALLY WE GET TO “FIGHT”, THE SONG THAT I CAN’T STOP HUMMING TO. It’s so magical and sensual, I can see this track closing out a Twin Peaks Season 3 episode. David Lynch, if you’re reading this, I have your next featured artist.

With the final touch, “I Wanna Run Away” – about the only thing I have to say about this track is SAME! I can’t think of a sentiment I’ve repeated more over the last six months than expressing how much I want to run away to live in a cave on the beach, completely isolated. However, I’d make an exception for Juno Francis. They’re welcome in my hideout any day, as long as they bring the slinkin’ grooves.

Listen to the EP in full here! You’ll have it on repeat all weekend. I say that a lot, but you should know by now that I’m not writing about a song or an artist unless I truly believe you can jam the heck out to it.

Can’t get enough of Juno Francis? Tune into Indie Pong’s Instagram Live TOMORROW at 11am PST for an exclusive interview with Angelica and Jacob.

deryk – WOMb

deryk’s new EP got me like

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Also what an album cover, am I right? I could paraphrase this but you know how I feel about paraphrasing, so here’s it is from Madeline Bradley AKA deryk herself:

My two favorites are the hard-hitting ‘Call You Out’:

And the absolutely gorgeous goodtimes:

This is a good article on Deryk’s story if you want to read it in depth:

https://thespinoff.co.nz/music/10-07-2020/deryk-is-her-name-will-the-world-know-it-by-the-years-end/

But in a nutshell at 22 the New-Zealand based Londoner was about ready to quit music and then teamed up with Justin Pilbrow and made ‘Call You Out’, and now they’re blowing up.

Glad to hear it because I’m certainly looking forward to more deryk in the future. You can catch some deryk and more songs from the week tomorrow when I update the weekly playlist.

New Music Flavor – Magic Bronson “I Don’t Know Man”

Honestly man, I don’t know either….but this track is pretty dope.

Magic Bronson, an LA based indie duo, are unsurprisingly playful and quirky – staples that seem to be crucial to all acts under Handwritten Records. In their own words, they “spearhead music trends, tackling social issues and the anxiety of what’s going on in the world and coupling it with sensational and experimental melodies”. Sounds pretty relevant to me.

Side note, if anyone starts to “know man”, please let Magic Bronson and myself know.

First Impressions: Rolling Stone’s New 500 Best Albums of All Time List

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/best-albums-of-all-time-1062063/arcade-fire-%ef%bb%bffuneral-1062733/

So I know you’re probably thinking I’m going to rip this to shreds because of my reputation as the most absolute savage blogger on the internet who never shows any mercy or remorse, but I in fact have quite a lot of respect for the Rolling Stone lists. Do I think they’re perfect? No, definitely not. But as a big list guy I think they provide universal structure for young list-makers everywhere, such was the case with a young Mates, pestering my dad every car ride we went on asking him about music superlatives and to rank songs by different bands. The Rolling Stone top 500 songs of all time list helped shaped me as an impressionable youth (even though Like A Rolling Stone is absolutely not the best song of all time gtfoomf with that. But it is how I discovered some of my favorite songs of all time like Sam Cooke A Change Is Gonna Come, Tracks of My Tears, California Dreamin’, etc.

So let’s dive in. I am blogging this live as I am reading the list. Right off the bat we have Funeral at #500, so pretty strong start. Funeral absolutely belongs on this list, and I’m not going to say it’s too low before I see the rest of the list (yes I am, it’s too low, but let’s see what happens).

Update at #480: I’d be lying if I said I knew all of these albums. Also I noticed Harry Styles is in there and is above Arcade Fire Funeral…

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480 – Miranda Lambert ‘Weight of These Wings’. Love this album dearly. Big Miranda fan and I don’t care who knows.

463 – Laura Nyro ‘Eli & The 13th Confession’. Alright strap in. I am maybe the biggest Laura Nyro fan out there (at least for my age alright, relax, sorry I don’t have every single one of her albums on Vinyl) and I would like to take a moment to pay respects. The First Songs is my favorite, but it’s still Laura and we need we need to respect the soul and songwriting prowess that comes with her name. If you’re not familiar, she wrote Stone Soul Picnic, Stoney End, and a slew of other songs that would go on to find success performed by other artists. If you’re still not familiar, Kanye sampled her song ‘Save The Country’ on ‘Glory’. I named my keyboard after her that I’m sitting next to right now as I write this (Laura). Anyways, check this out and pay your respects as you stroll past:

440 – Loretta Lynn – ‘Coal Miner’s Daughter’. Classic.

I think they really shot themselves in the foot by making Funeral #500. Because now every indie guy like me is scrolling through and every single pick is thinking about how Funeral is better than most of these other albums and why. And I know you want the first item on your list to pop (see here) but I still think that created some instant controversy and frankly was a low blow to the indie community.

433 – LCD Soundsystem – ‘Sound of Silver’. Alright so now from this point on RS is saying that every album on the list is better than Sound of Silver. Keep that in mind.

It’s impossible to highlight every single great album (it literally is possible, Rolling Stone just did it) but here are some notable highlights I selected.

432 – Usher – ‘Confessions’
398 – The Raincoats – ‘The Raincoats’
397 – Billie Eilish – ‘When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?’
395 – ‘D’Angelo – ‘D’Angelo and the Vanguard’
389 – Mariah Carey – ‘The Emancipation of Mimi’.
387 – Radiohead – ‘In Rainbows’
382 – Tame Impala – ‘Currents’
377 – Yeah Yeah Yeahs – ‘Fever To Tell’
376 – Neutral Milk Hotel – ‘In the Aeroplane Over the Sea’
370 – Lil Wayne – ‘Tha Carter II’
365 – Madvillain – ‘Madvillainy’
347 – GZA – Liquid Swords’
341 – The Smashing Pumpkins – ‘Siamese Dream’
340 – Snoop Doggy Dogg – ‘Doggystyle’
328 – Vampire Weekend – ‘Modern Vampires Of The City’
321 – Lana Del Rey – ‘Norman Fucking Rockwell!’
315 – Rosalia – ‘El Mal Querer’
312 – Solange – ‘A Seat At The Table’
295 – Daft Punk – ‘Random Access Memories’
294 – Weezer – ‘Weezer (The Blue Album)’
289 – Bjork – ‘Post’
280 – 50 Cent – ‘Get Rich Or Die Tryin”
276 – Radiohead – ‘The Bends’
270 – Kacey Musgraves – ‘Golden Hour’
269 – Kanye West – ‘Yeezus’
260 – The Slits – ‘Cut’. I looked into this one because it looked ahead of it’s time for 1979 and it sure damn was. Cool album.

500 albums the slits cut

244 – Kanye West – ‘808s & Heartbreak’
236 – Daft Punk – ‘Discovery’
230 – Rihanna – ‘Anti’
225 – Wilco – ‘Yankee Hotel Foxtrot’
213 – Fiona Apple – ‘The Idler Wheel…’
208 – Lil Wayne – ‘Tha Carter III’
204 – Kanye West – ‘Graduation’
202 – Bjork – ‘Homogenic’

Okay so we’re through the first 300 albums. I’m not feeling especially hyped yet personally, especially from the indie point of view, but let’s see how it unfolds since Body Talk is coming up. Also for what it’s worth, not mad about this order so far for Kanye albums…

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196 – Robyn – ‘Body Talk’
175 – Kendrick Lamar – ‘Damn’
155 – Jay-Z – ‘The Black Album’
149 – John Prine – ‘John Prine’
148 – Frank Ocean – ‘Channel Orange’
136 – Funkadelic – Maggot Brain

Best guitar solo of all time? Yes or yes?


134 – Fugees – The Score
117 – Kanye West – ‘Late Registration’. So this is imo the best Kanye album. It’s neck and neck with College Dropout and MBDTF is obviously also in the conversation, but to me this is first. Just for the record.

115 – Kendrick Lamar –  ‘good kid, m.A.A.d city’
114 – The Strokes – ‘Is This It’
108 – Fiona Apple – ‘When The Pawn…’ – I feel like I can be a little direct here since I’m paying high regards to another of her albums. This is a great album, but higher than Idler Wheel? GTFOH. This album is mozzarella sticks before the half pound burger with all the fixins that is Idler Wheel.

Top 100 coming up. But first I have a public statement I’d like to make:

Sometimes I’m blogging and a clip from a show pops in my head and I use it as a gif, and nothing has been more persistent than the line in Kroll Show-Wheels Ontario where we slow pan in on Canadian Nick Kroll and he goes “Here we gooooo”, and I can’t find a gif of it anywhere. I am pledging to the Indie Pong fan base that I am going to make that gif as a gift to the internet. That is my pledge.

Here it is timestamped (0:32) but nobody do it before me, I want to do it first:


99 – Taylor Swift – ‘Red’ (yeah okay)
95 – Drake – Take Care
81 – Beyoncé – ‘Beyoncé’
79 – Frank Ocean – ‘Blonde’ (woohoo)
74 – Kanye West – ‘The College Dropout’. Damn okay so they really went and put MBDTF ahead of LR and CD… I mean… I guess there are more egregious crimes in the world but still, hmph.
73 – My Bloody Valentine – ‘Loveless’
69 – Alanis Morissette – ‘Jagged Little Pill’ – …nice
68 – Kate Bush – ‘Hounds Of Love’
67 – Jay-Z – ‘Reasonable Doubt’
64 – Outkast – ‘Stankonia’
56 – Liz Phair – ‘Exile In Guyville’
50 – Jay-Z – ‘The Blueprint’
49 – Outkast – Aquenimi
44 – Nas – ‘Illmatic’
43 – A Tribe Called Quest – ‘The Low End Theory’
42 – Radiohead – ‘OK Computer’
37 – Dr. Dre – ‘The Chronic’
33 – Amy Winehouse – ‘Back To Black’
32 – Beyoncé – ‘Lemonade’
27 – Wu-Tang Clan – ‘Enter the Wu-Tang(36 Chambers)’
26 – Patti Smith – ‘Horses’
25 – Carole King – ‘Wrap Around Joy’… just kidding it’s ‘Tapestry’ but we all know about my smoking hot correct take that Wrap Around Joy is better than Tapestry so…
20 – Radiohead – ‘Kid A’
19 – Kendrick Lamar – ‘To Pimp A Butterfly’. Woooowwwwww above GKMC… I don’t agree with this at all, but I know there are TPAB stans out there that absolutely do. But I don’t (love the album though obviously).
17 – Kanye West – ‘My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy’
10 – Ms. Lauryn Hill – ‘The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill’. Hell yeah.
7 – Fleetwood Mac – ‘Rumours’
6 – Nirvana – ‘Nevermind’

And then the top 5 really surprised me…

5 – The Beatles – ‘Abbey Road’
4 – Stevie Wonder – ‘Songs in the Key of Life’
3 – Playboi Carti – ‘Die Lit’
2 – Death Grips – ‘Ex-Military’
1 – Mac DeMarco – ‘2’

So there you have it, Rolling Stone’s official top 500 albums of all time. Overall I would call this not a smashing success, but educational and fun as per usual.

JK 321 are Joni Mitchell Blue, Pet Sounds, and Marvin Gaye What’s Goin’ On respectively.

Also are we just going to sit on the can and read Rolling Stone magazines and ignore the fact that they completely omitted THE SUBURBS?! You know the arguable greatest indie album of all time that won all of the Grammys? Also, no Gorillaz? We have room here for 4 Radiohead albums and not 1 Gorillaz album?

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Heads Up! This is a tear-jerker: Vergangenheitsbewältigung (Crater Speak) by Slauson Malone EP Review

Hello everybody! My name is Memo and I am the newest member of the Indie Pong gang. Here’s a little bit about me. I have a music youtube channel with over 2,000 subscribers called FancyMemo. I do reactions, reviews, discussions, vinyl record videos, and other music-related content. I am a huge hip hop and rap fan. Although that is my go to genre I do like exploring other genres. I like to give everything a chance, so being a part of the Indie Pong family seems to be a perfect fit. I also work part time at an elementary school and I am a full-time student at Cal State Fullerton. Although I am a busy guy, I do love talking about music, so I am very happy about being able to share my thoughts about music here on Indie Pong. With all that said, lets get into this Slauson Malone reiew.

Slauson Malone is a rapper, singer, songwriter, and producer from New York. Although he has been making music with the group Standing on the Corner, I first discovered him when he released his debut album A Quiet Farwell, 2016–2018. Although I didn’t understand the appeal at first, A Quiet Farwell quickly grew on me and it ended up becoming my third favorite album released last year. I like describing this album as audible depression because of how dark and heartbreaking the album is. Malone’s newest EP is no different. With only nine tracks, vergangenheitsbewältigung, or “coping with the past” in english, packs a huge emotional punch in its short twenty-four minute run time.

The instrumentals off this EP are strangely beautiful. It can be so off-kilter yet comforting at the same time. For instance, the song “My feet’s tired (see page 108)” starts with this annoying high pitched feedback noise, but it seamlessly transitions into this very warm piano. Both the piano and guitar are utilized a lot throughout this EP. These instruments give off a very soothing feeling to each track. The song “THE MESSAGE 3: Blood (see page 39, 179, and Bye)” has this very peaceful guitar playing throughout the entire track. It matches very well with Malone’s emotional performance. Although these instrumentals are mostly soothing and relaxing, Malone does sprinkle in different sounds once in a while to spice things up. At random moments you can hear a glitchy voice or even a scream pop up. It helps add to the depressing tone of the EP.

Speaking of depressing, the subject matter is……a lot. This man is in pain and I hope he is getting some help. For the most part, Malone talks about his usual subject matter, but he always does it in a new and complicated way. The lyrics are so dense and it takes a lot of time to decipher. What I was able to get out of his lyrics is that this man has been in a very dark place. He wants to live a normal life, but he can’t escape the horrors that are plaguing him. No matter how hard he screams for help, he continues to feel trapped. Malones lyrics are matched with some painful performances.

One of Malones biggest improvements, from his debut album, is his ability to give an impactful performance. Since A Quiet Farwell is mostly instrumental, and the features were on the mic more than Malone, I didn’t really know what Malone was capable of vocally. Turns out, he is pretty moving. Malone tends to have this moany singing voice, which I don’t mind at all, but in this EP he seemed like he was breaking out of his shell. He is a lot more expressive. You can tell how broken he is by listening to him sing. “The Wake Pt. 3 & 2 (see page 87, 58, and 48)” and “THE MESSAGE 3: Blood (see page 39, 179, and Bye)” showcases these emotions on full display. These two tracks give me goosebumps. This is a huge improvement from what he was doing on his last project.

Overall, I think Vergangenheitsbewältigung (Crater Speak) is a great companion piece to it’s older brother. This EP is practically A Quiet Farwell, but bite-size. If you are curious about Malone’s work I highly recommend this EP. I feel like this is a great gateway project to his material. I don’t think this EP is for everybody. It is a lot to take in, but I highly recommend it. It deserves a listen and who knows? Maybe it will resonate with you as it did for me.

Exhalants – Atonement

Shoutout to JPGChief for this one. This album is dope, an instant favorite of the year. It’s very angry and loud while also being smart and thoughtful. One of those albums where the raw emotion bores through your exterior and defines the listening experience on a more personal level.

From their Bandcamp:

Exhalants began in 2017 sprouting from their local DIY and club scenes with one goal in mind; be loud as fuck.The three-piece quickly cut a demo, played some shows around town, and then set out to record their first full length not long after that. That first LP yielded a strong collection of songs that balanced the moody experimentation of indie heroes like Unwound and the harsh distortion and feedback-drenched noise rock of Unsane, coupled with raw emotion on display. The record received a good amount of acclaim, which helped Exhalants get their name out more and tour throughout the U.S. During this time they also recorded a split 7” with fellow Texas trio Pinko (Hex Records) to have while both bands were out on tour together.
Immediately following the release of their first record, Exhalants started working on new material. They spent most of 2019 writing and touring, fleshing out newer material on the road while still promoting their 2018 self-titled debut.


Exhalants hail from Austin, Texas. The members all have roots with playing in multiple bands around the area and have been employed by various venues in town, so they are no strangers to the community aspect and DIY nature of playing the sort of decidedly non-mainstream music they do. With a mountain of amps, precision pounding drums, eardrum-rattling feedback, and a healthy dose of experimentation Exhalants are easily one of the more exciting newer bands to gain attention within the punk/noise rock arena in recent memory. “Atonement” aims to push that sound further for anyone willing to listen. 

Favorite track (as per usual the slower reprieve of the album): Definitions

Their phone number is one their Facebook page so you can text them if you want to congratulate them on the album:

Best Tracks of the Week 9/3/20

Hellllloooooo here we go again. Best new songs, from the last two playlist updates since I was lazy/busy and didn’t do last week’s. Here’s the playlist, follow for weekly updates and follow along as you read if you’d like!

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I’m just gonna come smouldering hot out of the gates and talk about this new Mariah Carey/Ms. Lauryn Hill song. Like whaaaaaaat? Iconic artists release new music all the time but what business do these all timers have releasing a song in 2020 that goes THIS hard?

‘Save The Day’ – Mariah Carey, Ms. Lauryn Hill

Unbelievable. While we ride out the entirety of this song, I know this is off brand but did anyone watch the Rockets OKC game 7 tonight? What a trash game. Underwhelming. Should have just Indie Pong’d instead.

‘BRITNEY BITCH’ – BLACKSTARKIDS

Our faves BLACKSTARKIDS are at it again with a very on brand ‘BRITNEY BITCH’. You can check them out in our best songs of the first half of the year post I did or in this interview we did with them earlier this year. Another banger, not surprised. BSK is on a rocketship on their way to the moon.

‘Renegade Breakdown’ – Marie Davidson, L’Œil Nu

This song is insane. I absolutely love it. I’m a big Marie Davidson fan and was bummed when she decided to retire (but understood as it was pretty much the most relatable reasoning I’d ever heard) and then un-bummed when she unretired shortly thereafter with new projects such as an Essaie Pas release. If you dig this check out this banger from our Best of the Decade List and the rest of the Marie Davidson catalog as well.

‘Grasshopper’ – Tkay Maidza

Has anyone come into a song hotter than this? This Tkay Maidza EP is just something special. Zimbabwean-born Australian Tkay goes both unbelievably hard and unbelievably smooth on this album. As a matter of fact I have literally three of her songs (!) on the playlist this last week, which I think is a new record? Check out ‘My Flowers‘ and ‘24k‘ on the playlist as well (and Shook from a few weeks more than a few weeks back).

‘Mijo Pt. 1’ – Josh Dominguez

This album is going to fiiiiirrrreeee. What I’ve heard is that the first two singles off of the album are not even the showstoppers on the record, those are coming soon. Which is nuts because this track is DOPE. Josh has grown so much as an artist and you can really tell, production aside, from his newfound mastery of rhythm and cadence.

‘Live In Life – Alice Ivy Remix’ – The Rubens

This song is hot af.

Obviously we love Alice Ivy dating way back, seeing as it’s practically all I talk about. By the way did y’all catch this #content we put together courtesy of Mubi?

#content

‘Escape The Night’ – Jun Kamoda

This is some straight up house heat, and not only that, it’s also by a fellow J man and features some Japanese so obviously I am IN.

‘Live 4ever’ – Magdalena Bay

You know how I know you’re special? Magdalena Bay? Because you’re basically the only pop act that #UnderCoverSadGirl listens to. Jen and I brought UnderCoverSadGirl to a Sigrid show and she absolutely hated it. Just kidding that’s an exaggeration but let’s just say she did not buy any merch. But she loves some Magdalena Bay as do I and they just keep continuing to impress.

‘Screwface’ – They Hate Change

Yeah, this is absolutely the next big thing. These dudes are dope af and their whole EP is awesome. This is the kind of sound we’re always looking for, an innovative take on a familiar genre that leaves you wanting more. Kind of reminds me of one of my favorite sleeper rap tracks of the past decade. Watch out for these guys, they’re on their way up.

‘Fuck Dallas BBQ’ – The New Restaurants

This song is awesome. Vibes. They have an album coming out in a few days, am stoked.

‘Modern Hart’ – Billy Nomates

I really just love this one. You know me, I don’t like to overexplain music. This just has it, ya know?

‘Gateway’ – MUEX

Chicago based (ayooo) Muex is the move.

‘Wild Faith’ – Jerome Blazé

This album is gorgeous y’all!

Haha sorry as you can see by this point in the blog we’re cutting right to the point. Who likes to read, anyway?

‘Surfer Guy’ – Lullabies

Time to mellow out after all of these piping hot tracks.

And I’ll leave you with one final one. Check us out on Instagram, Twitter, and FB if you LOVED this blog, check out our video podcast on our Instagram where Jen, Cassie, and I discuss new songs and I get absolutely drenched in body paint, and tune in for new tracks next week by following our Spotify playlist!

Anyways, one more for the road:

‘You’re Not Real You’re Just a Ghost’ – Sophia Bel

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Sunday with George: Between the Buried and Me- The Great Misdirect

Back in 2009ish, (before they were our monolithic corporate overlord), Amazon used to do something kind of cool on their website.

Once a week, on their digital music page, they’d have a, “deal,” that saw them offer a digital download of a new or classic album, at a bargain price— somewhere between $1.99 and $4.99.

I would check in on this page RELIGIOUSLY.

I picked up some great albums as a result of it too, chief amongst them, Ornette Coleman’s, “The Shape of Jazz to Come,” Lady Gaga’s “Born This way,” and maybe, “Let it Bleed,” by the Rolling Stones?

I know there were many others as well, but the greatest amongst them was Between the Buried and Me’s, “The Great Misdirect.”

Now, before stumbling across BtBaM (as they’ll be referred to henceforth) on this page, I’d never heard of them.

In retrospect, I’m somewhat surprised I bought the album, because save for Mastodon, (who a few months earlier had released their crossover hit album, “Crack the Skye”) metal was not really a part of my life back then.

For the most part, my musical philosophy at this point revolved around asking 2 or 3 questions before listening to something—

1. “Did this person play with Miles Davis at any point in the late 60s or early-mid 70s?

2. “Is Robert Fripp involved?”

3. “Is this some, “scene,” shit? Some Prior Lake or Zumiez shit? Some, “skinny jeans and can’t play a guitar solo,” shit?”

If the answer was, “no,” to the first two questions, or, “yes” to any of the last three, I wasn’t going for it.

Naive, and outrageous, I know, but when you’re 22 years old at art school, naive and outrageous are your bread in butter.

In any case, BtBaM’s album was going for a steal at 5 bucks, so I grabbed it.

I’ve been listening to the album for just over ten years now, and it’s become one of my all-time favorites.

Most likely, it’s the only metal album that sits in my top 10.

As an aside, metal is a weird thing for me.

I love it, but I don’t.

Iron Maiden, Black Sabbath, Slayer, Mastodon, Deftones, and Megadeth, are all near and dear, but outside of that, things can get spotty, and go on a song-by-song basis. It’s hard to me to stay consistently engaged with with the genre, due to things that a band like BtBaM both does and does not do.

As someone whose gateway drugs into the genre were Led Zeppelin, and Metallica, it took a long time for my ears to adjust to (and appreciate) harsh or screamed vocals. Sometimes, I kinda love them now, but the “cookie monster voice” that a number of bands (including this one) choose to employ can be a bit much.

Coming back around though, BtBaM are particularly unique amongst their peers as their brand of metal pulls from a LOT of different genres.

Over the course of the six songs found on this album, the band manages to run through polka, contemporary (smooth?) jazz, country, bluegrass, prog, and something that approaches Indian raga Rock?

That sounds absurd, I know, but they pull it off, and they manage to not sound silly in the process of doing so.

The album opens with, “Mirrors,” a tune that perhaps, serves more as a device than a song— a ruse to lull the listener into a false sense of safety.

It’s a serene tune: one that features no screamed vocals or distorted guitars. Tommy Giles Rogers, the band’s lead vocalist throughout, (save for one song) sings beautifully. He could probably do the white boy R&B thing if he wanted to, but thankfully he doesn’t.

In any case, his short vocal intro gives way to a jam the features some magnificent polyrhythmic jolts, a funny time signature, especially nimble bass work from Dan Briggs, and wonderfully uncommon resolutions from guitarists Paul Waggoner, and Dustie Waring.

Things turn foreboding in the last 40 seconds, and segue directly into, “Obfuscation.”

Obfuscation sees the band kick into high gear with spiraling guitar lines, time signature changes, and some particular rough vocal work from Tommy Giles Rogers.

The song is frequently a dizzying spasm of guitar that alternates between sounding spastic and groovy.

Throughout the album, there are a number of motifs that would not sound out of place, coming from Robert Fripp’s guitar amplifier. Figures ascend and descend, not unlike the gamelan-inspired parts that he played alongside Adrian Belew in the early 80s. Needless to say, I love this, and I think a great part of my appreciation from the album stems from the fact that many parts of this music call so clearly to 80s Crimson, albeit from the realm of metal, as opposed to Talking Heads-influenced New Wave.

In any instance, halfway through the song we get a wonderfully out-of-box guitar solo from Paul Waggoner, whose note choices are not predictable in a single instance, and are frequently, delightful.

Metal guitar players like to lean on funny scales, and sometimes, things just sound too dissonant or clever for their own good, but that’s never the case here.

Disease, Injury, Madness, follows. While it begins as a rather blunt exercise in brutality, it shortly gives way to a floating section that features lots of guitar swells, fairy dust, and some drumming that wouldn’t sound out of place coming from Dennis Chambers’ kit, during his tenures with Santana.

There are perhaps shades of Tool here too, but the vocal harmonies, are a bit prettier, and the basslines are rooted more in Jaco-Pastorius-era Weather Report.

Particularly lovely flamenco-indebted guitar gives way to a return to the bludgeoning business, and it’s glorious. Shortly thereafter, a horse’s neigh is used as a transitionary device to a section that might be best described as a West Arkansas, “still chopping, still cooking,” hoe-down: one that needs only a cowbell to send things fully overboard.

The last bit of the song leans hard into a kookie carnival thing that features some swirling organ, and demented choir vocals that wouldn’t be out of place in Danny Elfman’s score for, “The Nightmare Before Christmas.”

“Fossil Genera- A Feed From Cloud Mountain” is another exercise if genre-hopping that goes all the way from ragtime or Polka-esque piano to jazz-country?

The metal bits pop up in there too, of course, but the songs closes with a section in which we’re treated to fully soaring vocals from Tommy Giles Rogers, and a string accompaniment delivered via synthesizer or the real deal.

It’s a magnificent closing blow-out, one that transitions effortlessly into the album’s most unique piece of music, that’s also the first song from the album that I fell in love with.

“Desert of Song” is the lone track from the album to feature vocals from lead guitarist Paul Waggoner. His voice is truly magnificent, one that’s in the mold of the down-home country singer.

I see it as the aural equivalent of watching a lone tumbleweed roll through a desert landscape: one replete with off-brand orange earth tones, and sparse greenery, completed by a sky that grades very cleanly from a dark brown in the sky, to orange, to yellow at the horizon.

That’s a surreal sight to be sure, but this is also a very particular respite from an album that’s tended more towards brutality than beauty at this point.

It’s a necessary, kind moment, that also happens to feature a guitar solo from Waggoner that’s rooted in good old-fashioned box blues, but with more informed note choices.

The song ends with the same set of notes that it began with, and leading the listener towards their final trek, the album’s sprawling finale “Swim to the Moon.”

“Swim to the Moon” runs 6 seconds shy of 18 minutes, and to go through the song as a whole would be a daunting task.

As a general rule of thumb, I don’t like to use the word, “epic,” as it’s overused: fully at risk of parody at this point in time.

Here though, it’s the best word for the job.

The song has more twists, turns, and segues than you can shake a stick it. It’s almost disorienting, and hard to keep up with. It’s also wildly hypnotic, so you’re kind of locked in your seat as the music marches forward.

A masterful closer, and a fairly effective summation of everything that’s come before, it’s one of the greatest closings I’ve heard on an album. Mastodon did a similar thing in the same year, in closing their album, “Crack The Skye,” with, “The Last Baron,” but “Swim to the Moon” is more impressive for my money, ascending to the heavens, and disappearing into the ether.

In closing, “The Great Misdirect” is not an album that will be met with an initial warm embrace by all ears.

It can be a rough and tumble experience in certain places, and listeners who are turned off by the harsh nature of the vocals in certain instances are well within their right to not dig the screams and growls.

If you give it a chance, and try to absorb the album as a whole though, it’s a really magnificent thing.

I can’t recommend the investment highly enough, and hope new listeners find as much to love in the album as I have, these last 10+ years.

Shoes by Jonah Yano and how my friends don’t respect me

So this song is absolutely gorgeous. At least I think, it’s half in Japanese (kind of like me) and I only speak a little Japanese but it sounds pretty gorg to me.

You’ll get the whole story from watching the video, but the summary is that Jonah Yano went to Japan to see his father for the first time in 15 years, and upon doing so recovered and revived a song that his dad’s band made in the 80s and made it into this song. A beautiful story and a beautiful video.

One of my core philosophies behind the blog is that music is meant to be shared, so when I saw this video I thought it was so beautiful that I decided I would share it with some of my film school friends in a group chat. My friend Austin saw it as an opportunity to one up me and immediately responded with a link to the marginally more danceable ‘Time To Dance’ by The Shoes, get it, because they both have ‘shoes’ in them. It proceeded to get more likes in the group.

Whatever.

Who cares right? Just some friends messing around. Most music nerds get a little bit of socially unacceptable DJ envy when a good song is thrown into the mix. So who cares? Well this morning Austin lights me up bright an early with a link to ‘Shoes’ by Jonah Yano with his summary of the video which went as follows:

So basically Austin lit a bag of dogshit on fire and threw it right in my face. This is insult to injury like I’ve never seen before except for maybe a few times. He might as well have facetime’d me from a party I wasn’t invited to with my entire immediate family and Jonah himself and told me to go kick rocks.

Also right after Austin tried to out-song me he almost immediately proceeded to shift the conversation onto his new puppy, which I obviously can’t compete with.

Anyways the moral of this story is you can’t trust anyone and probably no one listens to those links you sent.

What do you think- reasonable or rude af? Catch Shoes and other new tracks on our Spotify Playlist that updates weekly (ish) and on our socials.