30-26 | 25-21 | 20-16 | 15-11 | 10-6 | 5-1
#20: The Antlers - Burst Apart
Many lesser bands would have crumbled under the pressure to make a follow-up to an album as poignant as the 2009 LP Hospice. The Antlers created a freeing release in Burst Apart that removes the shackles and lets loose with passion and certitude. The simplicity on "Rolled Together", the sexual sirens of "Parentheses" and the urgent "I Don't Want Love" are a watershed and a solid step forward. Although the album wanes a bit in the second half, Burst Apart still reaches new ground while walking the line between emotion and spontaneity.
Download Track | Purchase Album
The Antlers - Parentheses
#19: EMA - Past Life Martyred Saints
Most of my favorite albums are something I can put on everyday at any time, while some are special moment albums when I am ready to enforce a certain feeling. Past Life Martyred Saints is neither of these. It is contentious and uncomfortable and a struggle to get through. This first effort from Erika M Andersen is a furious display, a scars-and-all confessional that confronts with no chagrin. For me, there has not been an album this caustic since PJ Harvey's Rid Of Me. After hearing her disappointing release this year, I think it is time to pass the torch to this new creative force. Let's hope she never finds a lack of subjects for her fury. If you have not yet heard "California", give it a listen and you will know what I mean.
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EMA - California
#18: The War On Drugs - Slave Ambient
If you are looking for the next indie breakthrough band you have never heard, The War On Drugs may be close to a sure thing. This album is rife with pleasing classic rock signposts that spare no passionate overture. The influences are also apparent and welcome, touching on Arcade Fire as well as Jackson Browne and moving from U2 to a Dylanesque nasal sneer. Slave Ambient is well-constructed as a cohesive unit with each anthem connected by loving instrumental interludes to give the listener an necessary breather before the next powerful moment. See, M83? It isn't so difficult.
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The War On Drugs - Come to the City
#17: Real Estate - Days
Maybe it is the cold weather that takes place at the end of the year, but those LPs that remind of sunny months and good feelings always sound so nostalgic. The warmth on Days is undeniable with the pleasant sounds like pictures in some discovered photo album of summer vacations long ago and fading from memory. The details Real Estate puts forth here seem effortless and deceivingly lazy, with each picked note and hazy lyric coming from last night's pleasant dream. From the opener "Easy", to the highlights "It's Real", "Wonder Years" and "Younger Than Yesterday" to the stretched out finish of "All The Same" each song is a worn page telling that story never to be lost again.
Download Track | Purchase Album
Real Estate - It's Real
#16: Disappears - Guider
Less of an album and more of a half hour steady hum, Guider is a quick, yet weighty exercise in minimal garage rock where each song, whether under two or over fifteen minutes, is a expression in sonics and reverb that has the listener digging past the noise to reach the pulsing core. Never stopping for a moment, these captured sounds show an urgent need to connect and create. If past indicators are true and the addition of Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley is permanent, then the next release will bring the masses as well as the critical acclaim.
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Disappears - Superstition
Showing posts with label Antlers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antlers. Show all posts
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Album Review: The Antlers - Burst Apart
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It is always good to see the little band without label support make good. NYC's The Antlers had been plugging away in relative obscurity before their 2009 LP Hospice. The moving opus concerning a dying cancer patient and their caregiver is rife with drama and pathos as the buried vocals scratch and claw from under the sudden blasts of beautiful noise. On their follow-up out now on Frenchkiss Records, Burst Apart sheds the melancholy that made Hospice such a success, in favor of a composition that is lithe and sensual rather than oppressive. Ably venturing forth with "I Don't Want Love", The Antlers lead with their more accessible track. Featuring Peter Silberman's acrobatic falsetto and a solemn organ, this ode to combative lovers benefits from the band's new clarity and confidence. They continue their assuredness on "Parentheses" referencing the paranoid klaxon wails of OK Computer-era Radiohead while Silberman's suggestive lyrics seduce. On "Rolled Together" The Antlers prove that they can keep it simple with a lush, trance-inducing groove and an afflicted chant that floats into space. They even pull off an up tempo number in "Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out" that still stays sultry while building into a rocking coda. The only criticism of Burst Apart is that it runs out of steam on the last songs, often abandoning the seductive groove they fostered and meandering off track instead of commanding attention. Still, The Antlers primary goal was to shed the weight of Hospice and prove they have more to offer than one dramatic concept album. In fact, Burst Apart not only exceeds these goals but resets any preconceived views of what The Antlers are.
Purchase Burst Apart: CD | Vinyl | mp3
Bonus: Check out the video from an in-studio performance of "I Don't Want Love" The Antlers did for Bowlegs Music.
I Don't Want Love
Parentheses (Download)
Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out (Download)
It is always good to see the little band without label support make good. NYC's The Antlers had been plugging away in relative obscurity before their 2009 LP Hospice. The moving opus concerning a dying cancer patient and their caregiver is rife with drama and pathos as the buried vocals scratch and claw from under the sudden blasts of beautiful noise. On their follow-up out now on Frenchkiss Records, Burst Apart sheds the melancholy that made Hospice such a success, in favor of a composition that is lithe and sensual rather than oppressive. Ably venturing forth with "I Don't Want Love", The Antlers lead with their more accessible track. Featuring Peter Silberman's acrobatic falsetto and a solemn organ, this ode to combative lovers benefits from the band's new clarity and confidence. They continue their assuredness on "Parentheses" referencing the paranoid klaxon wails of OK Computer-era Radiohead while Silberman's suggestive lyrics seduce. On "Rolled Together" The Antlers prove that they can keep it simple with a lush, trance-inducing groove and an afflicted chant that floats into space. They even pull off an up tempo number in "Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out" that still stays sultry while building into a rocking coda. The only criticism of Burst Apart is that it runs out of steam on the last songs, often abandoning the seductive groove they fostered and meandering off track instead of commanding attention. Still, The Antlers primary goal was to shed the weight of Hospice and prove they have more to offer than one dramatic concept album. In fact, Burst Apart not only exceeds these goals but resets any preconceived views of what The Antlers are.
Purchase Burst Apart: CD | Vinyl | mp3
Bonus: Check out the video from an in-studio performance of "I Don't Want Love" The Antlers did for Bowlegs Music.
I Don't Want Love
Parentheses (Download)
Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out (Download)
Monday, April 18, 2011
The Antlers Make Two Songs Available For Early Download, Album Out May 10
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Brooklyn based trio The Antlers drew a lot of notice in 2009 with their conceptual piece Hospice that addressed the relationship between a dying cancer patient and her caregiver. It is heartbreaking prose as well as contemplative music and spurned attention from all critical arenas as well as an extended worldwide tour. The follow-up album to such an emotional and inspired work is always difficult. On May 10 via Frenchkiss Records we will find out the complete results when Burst Apart hits the streets. Based on the two free tracks available below, The Antlers have found a successful formula that builds on and breaks away from the heavy nature of Hospice.
"Parentheses" crackles with an eerie falsetto and sways with pulsing keys and sensual bass that impresses more with each listen. Comparatively upbeat despite the title "Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out", the mandolin plucks accent the atmospheric swirl that cries out for attention. There are a lot of comparisons that can be heard on these new samples from the vocal work of Wild Beasts to the arena-sized bursts that Radiohead often delivers. If the rest of Burst Apart plays like these offerings, it is undeniable that The Antlers have effectively moved past their previous success and made another inspired and obsessively listenable album.
Preorder Burst Apart here.
Parentheses (Download)
Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out (Download)
Brooklyn based trio The Antlers drew a lot of notice in 2009 with their conceptual piece Hospice that addressed the relationship between a dying cancer patient and her caregiver. It is heartbreaking prose as well as contemplative music and spurned attention from all critical arenas as well as an extended worldwide tour. The follow-up album to such an emotional and inspired work is always difficult. On May 10 via Frenchkiss Records we will find out the complete results when Burst Apart hits the streets. Based on the two free tracks available below, The Antlers have found a successful formula that builds on and breaks away from the heavy nature of Hospice.
"Parentheses" crackles with an eerie falsetto and sways with pulsing keys and sensual bass that impresses more with each listen. Comparatively upbeat despite the title "Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out", the mandolin plucks accent the atmospheric swirl that cries out for attention. There are a lot of comparisons that can be heard on these new samples from the vocal work of Wild Beasts to the arena-sized bursts that Radiohead often delivers. If the rest of Burst Apart plays like these offerings, it is undeniable that The Antlers have effectively moved past their previous success and made another inspired and obsessively listenable album.
Preorder Burst Apart here.
Parentheses (Download)
Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out (Download)
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