Showing posts with label Avi Buffalo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Avi Buffalo. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Best Of 2010: 5-1




Honorable Mentions : 25-21 : 20-16 : 15-11 : 10-6

#5  Avi Buffalo - Avi Buffalo

Purchase Avi Buffalo here.

Read my original review here.

This album is another big surprise in its staying power for me.There is nothing that truly stands out upon first listen to this debut LP from a band of (mostly) teenagers. When it first came out, many dismissive critics connected the dots to sound-alike The Shins. The dirty little secret is that this is so much better. Getting past the sweet pop glaze of their indelible hooks, you get to the meat of the songs that center around the awkwardness of young love and sex and crackle with their puerile energy. The vocals snap with squeaking falsetto and are delivered with a slathering of dirty innuendo, but that only adds to the fun imagery. The secret weapon on Avi Buffalo is the soaring 70's anthemic guitar solos that are the quadruple bows on the these well-wrapped gifts. Oh, and did I mention that the entire band was under 21 when they made this album?

Avi Buffalo - Remember Last Time



#4  The National - High Violet

Purchase High Violet here.

Read the original review here.

I have been a flag carrier for this band since their critical breakthrough Alligator back in 2005. Yet, each new album keeps giving this deserving band even more fans and accolades. I have always felt The National were that band that has all of the tools to be huge in a mainstream sort of way. Of course, the thick baritone vocals that croon through sculpted ballads and bellows through upbeat rockers with unabated intensity must be given proper reverence. Couple this with a collection of talented and varied musicians led by one of the most underrated drummers in rock and you have, in my opinion, the best and most accomplished band in America at their creative peak. High Violet is their most thematic album to date. Where most albums chronicle the actions leading to heartbreak, The National are covering the fragile moments afterward. Memories causing fear, anger, pain and finally acceptance and the abdication of the past all take place over the tracks like chapters in a book. The best part of the story of The National is that there is no foreseeable end to their consistently awesome output in sight.

The National - England



#3  Gold Panda - Lucky Shiner

Purchase Lucky Shiner here.

Read the original review here.

I make no apologies for being an indie rock guy. Being a fan means that you get to be part of a culture of music that is interesting, smart, creative and constantly in a state of flux. Over the past 30 years or more of music that I consider, there has been a never-ending cycle of peaks of genres, bands, movements and sounds that you have to recognize for its greatness and ineradicable influence. The proliferation of electronic music has had its own storied lineage. Recently their has been a rise in musicians that explore the organic nature of electronica and take samples of acoustic instruments and the natural ambiance of the world around them and construct a new, singular and beautiful piece of art. Gold Panda has had many eras and ascendants that paved the way to making his debut Lucky Shiner. Like other great moments in art, this takes nothing away come the near perfection this album is. Who knows, Derwin Panda may make greater albums than this one or never make a full length again. Whatever the case, when music historians look back on music, specifically the genre of "indie", 2010 will cite this as a important moment because of Lucky Shiner. Go ahead, give the whole thing a listen below. And in 20 years or so, I will be saying "I told you so" to absolutely no one.



#2  The Morning Benders - Big Echo

Purchase Big Echo here.

I have to admit that I totally missed the boat on this one. Don't demonize me yet because I have a good reason. I started blogging in the middle of February and began utilizing Twitter later in the game. Big Echo was released somewhere in the middle of that, but I had too quickly written if off based on the hype of other, less worthy albums that had come out around that time. The sugary pop sensibility of the first two tracks in "Excuses" and "Promises" are inarguable. Heck, one was even use to sell Snickers candy bars. However, a couple of catchy numbers do not make it to #2 on my list. It is the strength of the rest of Big Echo that makes this album indisputably great. Check out the simple melody and firecrackers of percussion on "Wet Cement". Listen to them make a point quickly with a Latin groove on "Cold War" then get all epic with the noisy shoegazing exercise on "Stitches". Give notice to the should-have-been-the-single "All Day Day Light" that shamefully gets overshadowed by the hit tracks. They can even get tender without losing credibility in their balladry on "Pleasure Sighs". I could mention all of the 10 songs on Big Echo because they are all great. Every. Single. One.

The Morning Benders - All Day Day Light



#1  Deerhunter - Halcyon Digest

Purchase Halcyon Digest here.

Read the original review here.

Understandably, Halcyon Digest is going to gather lots of conflicting opinions and fiery debates among Deerhunter fans based on the fact that this sounds like the past efforts in only the vaguest of ways. Their is some clatter, distortion, muddled vocals and extended riffs, but this is miles away from Turn It Up, Faggot. However, we all need to mature sometime and Bradford Cox and co. have done exactly that. No longer is he merely an angry, undisclipined kid stricken with Marfan Syndrome. He is a settled, confident, full-fledged musician who has skills to burn and refuses to do any less than make the best album he and his band can. This is a moment-to-moment burning realization of this culmination of greatness from the deliberate opener "Earthquake", the quickie single "Revival" and the melancholy isolation of "Sailing" that leads into the best parts of Halcyon Digest. The drawn out, awe-inspiring finish of "Desire Lines" makes this my favorite track of the year. The fragile beauty of  "Helicopter" puts it among the top songs as well. At the end of Halcyon Digest is the yin-yang of "He Would Have Laughed" that not only acts as an ode to the early passing of Jay Reatard, but brings the entire history of Deerhunter full circle with an abrupt end, laying to rest the worries, mistakes and inferred drug use of the past. The future is bright and with this album there is only looking forward, now and forever.

Deerhunter - Helicopter

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Album Review, Best Of 2010 (So Far): Avi Buffalo - Avi Buffalo

The best way to come across a never-heard-before band is incidentally, giving the moment a "stars are in perfect alignment" feeling that puts this gift of newly found music in your listening rotation that is reserved only for the all-time favorites. You can have that feeling with Avi Buffalo as well. Since this is not only their first album, but that all of the band members are at or under legal drinking age, you can definitely get in on the fandom at the ground floor. The only fans who will have you beat will be their high school friends.

If you have been reading up on Avi Buffalo recently, you have quite possibly heard their sound connected to the Zach Braff-endorsed band The Shins. There is a definite connection to their sweet, hummable tunes paired with a inviting falsetto. However, Avi Buffalo's lyrics manage to dig deeper and employ the edgier, adventurous side of being young. Their songs are about the unsettling nature of relationships not unlike, well, everyone else, but have the youthful exuberance of teenagers who can't restrain themselves. Look no further than the tellingly titled tracks "Summer Cum", "Five Little Sluts" and "Where's Your Dirty Mind".

Yet  there is much more going on here than teenage energy. There is interesting vocal inflections, beautiful boy-girl harmonies and some intricately simple guitar work revealing a confidence most bands search for their entire careers. If anyone is finding their sound too twee, give the guitar solos on "Remember Last Time" and "Jessica" a listen. It is almost an inside joke that such 70's inspired sounds come from band members mostly born in the 90's. All in all, Avi Buffalo's self titled release is definitely the best debut this year. Get on the bandwagon now while there is plenty of room. Three favorite tracks from the album are given below.

Purchase the new Avi Buffalo album here.

Avi Buffalo - Remember Last Time


Avi Buffalo - Summer Cum


Avi Buffalo - Truth Sets In

Saturday, June 26, 2010

My Top Albums Of 2010 (So Far)

After a groundbreaking decade for music in sound, production, distribution, listening devices and expanding community, such as the 2000's were, the 2010's have a hard act to follow. The stage is set for endless possibility, with new avenues to be explored, old roads to be rediscovered and endless combinations to be unlocked. Also, many questions are posed; what will be the new direction of Indie? Of Pop? Of Hip Hop? Of Electronica? How will these genres diverge and intertwine? Will the dinosaurs of music's past (major labels, open air radio stations, physical distribution of music) finally become extinct or reinvent into a more adept species? Will the savvy younger generation embrace the future of music or get suckered by new marketing techniques pushing the same old rubbish?

For the first six months of this year and decade, I feel the indie influence has regressed rather than progressed.That statement sounds wholly negative, but it is meant to express the sound of now as influenced by the past, with all of its steps forward and back. One example of what is getting pushed in indie circles is a garage revival, a stripped down antithesis to the qualities of the digital age. Although four track recordings of distorted, tin can vocals and unfiltered guitar riffs has its definite charms, the most important and universally agreed aspect is the quality of the songs. Bands like Male Bonding, Dum Dum Girls and The Smith Westerns have bright spots and some solid tracks, yet don't make me forget (or even reflect upon) the great heights of such bands as Sebadoh, Guided By Voices and early Dinosaur Jr.. Lately, there is lots of love for the sounds of the past. Beach Boys chamber-pop, neo-80's synthesized pop and the heavy percussive influence of world music has cross-pollinated with the indie aesthetic to make new subgenres. These upstarts still have not stamped their movements with the head-turning album that defines it all in one front-to-back listen. There are torch bearers that stand out (Japandroids comes to mind) but this new decade needs more groundbreakers.

So, my top albums of 2010 includes (save Avi Buffalo) artists established in the last decade (and two beginning in the 1990's) building on their well rooted foundation and branching into new directions. Some of my personal favorites (The National, Spoon, LCD Soundsystem, Broken Social Scene) were consistent or even emboldened, while artists Beach House, Tokyo Police Club and The Besnard Lakes released efforts that show the beginning of an intriguing future. Even though my heart lies in rock, three of my favorites albums so far this year are electronica, hopefully representing my unwillingness to be turned by the influences of indie tastemaking as well as the quality of their efforts. Hey, it is one guy's opinion. Enjoy it for what it's worth and debate away.

The list in alphabetical order is given below. I tried to eliminate make it a list-friendly ten albums, but could not break the ties. Again, my blog, my rules. All artists are available below for listening and download. Hopefully I will find the time to write more about these deserved albums.

Avi Buffalo - Avi Buffalo
Beach House - Teen Dream
The Besnard Lakes - Are The Roaring Night
Broken Social Scene - Forgiveness Rock Record
Caribou - Swim
Chemical Brothers - Further
Four Tet - There Is Love In You
LCD Soundsystem - This Is Happening
The National - High Violet
Sleigh Bells - Treats
Spoon - Transference
Teenage Fanclub - Shadows
Tokyo Police Club - Champ

Avi Buffalo - What's It in For


Beach House - Norway


The Besnard Lakes - Albatross


Broken Social Scene - World Sick


Caribou - Sun


Chemical Brothers - Full Album


Four Tet - Love Cry


LCD Soundsystem - I Can Change


The National - Sorrow


Sleigh Bells - Rill Rill


Spoon -Written In Reverse


Teenage Fanclub - Sometimes I Don't Need To Believe In Anything


Tokyo Police Club - Wait Up (Boots Of Danger)