Showing posts with label Girl Talk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Girl Talk. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Best Of 2010: Honorable Mentions - Part 2



Part 1 :: Part 3 :: Part 4 :: Top 25

Frightened Rabbit - The Winter of Mixed Drinks

Purchase The Winter of Mixed Drinks here.

Example 2 of "Artists in 2010 Who Will Never Match Their Best Effort, Despite Trying". I was truly excited for this album because of my strong affection for 2008's The Midnight Organ Fight.  I feel the songs on this year's effort have a strange narrative structure where they were lacking in a true beginning and end, instead containing long stretches of middle. Still, the boys from Scotland put on a great live set at Lollapalooza this year and the new tracks benefited from their live energy.



Frightened Rabbit - Swim Until You Can't See Land



Girl Talk - All Day

Download "All Day" for free here.

This album was dropped with barely a gesture and created a week long Twitter fury, mostly about people complaining that they couldn't successfully obtain A FREE ALBUM just by snapping their fingers. Nevertheless, this glorified mixtape is still a party starter and has a lot of the requisite moments where Greg Gillis finds that perfect interlocking of hip-hop and rock music to make something purely his own. To those who scoff at that notion, I like to bring up my Andy Warhol argument of how artist can draw from popular culture signposts and create (or in Warhol's case, pay others to create) something that is a commentary on the concept and direction of culture itself. Still this album was no Night Ripper and therefore is Example 3 of "Artists in 2010 Who Will Never Match Their Best Effort, Despite Trying".

Girl Talk - All Day (Full Album)



Holy Fuck - Latin

Purchase Latin here.

This is a really solid album of instrumental head twisters that never seems to get bogged down by any genre label of what they should sound like. Holy Fuck just is in a class by themselves. However, being so singular in their sound (as so many instrumental bands are) tends to box them into some sort of novelty act category, which is far from the case. It probably would have made it to my Top 25, but it was missing something...oh, yeah. Words.


Holy Fuck - Stay Lit



Hot Chip - One Life Stand

Purchase One Life Stand here.

This one was really close to being in my Top 25 as well. A shame, since this Hot Chip's best album to date. The songs on One Life Stand are much warmer and mature than anything else they have done. In fact, I probably could have made it my #25. Maybe it is the fact that I am not inspired to write much more about Hot Chip than I already have is the reason why it is here. Ah, cie la vie.



Hot Chip - Take It In

Monday, November 15, 2010

Girl Talk Gives Away New Album For Free (If You Are Patient)

The sample stealing/laptop DJ/mashup master Girl Talk has been dropping his musical melange since 2002. However, it was his game changer Night Ripper in 2006 that made cool kids of all shapes, sizes and colors take notice and dissect each ironic reference while shaking their collective skinny jeans-clad hips. His style is truly broad in scope and flavor with nothing too mainstream nor disparate to be poured into the mix and blended into something wholly different than the sum of its parts. Without much more than some hints, Girl Talk drops an entire album for free through the Illegal Art website. Entitled All Day, early listens and information states that this is less of an album of short tracks containing snippets of pop, metal and hip hop with more of an extended and continuous mixtape feel. Still, the classic songs from any and all genres that he chooses to interlock together can run between mind-bendingly moving to head-scratchingly peculiar. That is why I dig Girl Talk so much. He has no pretension nor boundaries about his choices and nothing but love for the music he utilizes. Realizing that makes me be a better music fan.

If you are patient and persistent (and quit whining), the download will kick in a couple of minutes. If you are savvy and a bit nefarious, you can find it via other means in the darker corners of the 'net. Also, there are some new album audio tracks for your listening pleasure via his MySpace page. Good hunting. In the meantime, enjoy this classic fan-made video from the Night Ripper LP.



Bonus: Check the still being compiled Wikipedia link for a list some of the samples from All Day. If you recognize any and they are not listed, be a good consumer and add your discovery. It is for the greater good.

Friday, February 26, 2010

RiP: A Remix Manifesto - A Movie About The Business of Music

As you well know, computers have quickly taking over as the main medium for music distribution. Whether you are paying for it or using legally questionable file-sharing methods, we all have obtained our music with just a couple clicks. Rather than complain about the loss of the other music formats and low quality bit rates (let that be for another post), let's chat about music ownership and, in turn, the shift in copyright law.

The documentary RiP: A Remix Manifesto spotlights these issues highlighting the career and legal battles of media manipulating, mash-up master, Girl Talk, aka Gregg Gillis. If you don't know, Girl Talk employs technology to take parts, beats and stems of different songs from across the spectrum of music and build a new, Andy Warhol-style, independent song. These newly created artistic statements make comments on the culture of rapid fire music acquisition and our ADHD-addled upbringings as well as putting your ass on the dance floor. It also lays out the history of copyright law as it has been over time formed by corporations rather than allowing for the intended freedoms, fair usage and eventual public domain that it provided at one time.

The legal issues taking place with music right now could not be more prevalent. Apple and other corporate attempts and failings at digital rights management (DRM), the ongoing (and stalling) campaign against file-sharing, major record companies attempts to impose fees on people who play music (e.g. radio stations, DJ's, Ellen Degeneres)...these things are at the forefront of rights of ownership, music distribution and internet freedoms.

You can actually download the entire movie and pay what you would like (or not) through the RiP website. In the meantime, enjoy the first of nine parts of the movie here, all posted on YouTube for free:

Saturday, February 20, 2010

My favorite albums of the decade.

The “00’s” and the advent of the computer and Internet as our primary source for information made music easier to hear about, make, produce, sell, share and remix. It is more than downloading a song or torrent; this new era has been a cultural and artistic revolution. The albums listed below, and many others, are so good that it reaffirms my belief that the best music will still never be on traditional radio (another dying institution), so why bother with the expectation. Be happy you were here for it.

1. Broken Social SceneYou Forgot It In People (2003)

Broken Social Scene is a collective of musicians who each bring something special to You Forgot It In People. Instead of getting a structured rock album, we are given a statement of each musician’s expression like a declaration of love of his or her music and, in fact, life itself. What comes from this community is raw rock music that is emotional and passionate. It feels grandiose and orchestral like an opera, even when it is just a meager handful of voices and instruments. The whole album (as many of these albums do) play out best beginning to end, like a movie or a great TV series where you can’t start watching in the middle of second season. No surprise that many of these songs were used in one of the best movies of the decade, Half Nelson. The songs hit a wide range of emotions. Sometimes the songs are sweet and tender like a kiss on your neck and a whisper in your ear. Other moments they are breaking bottles and tear soaked cuss words after a passion-fueled fight. This album has half dozen virtual instrumentals as well that say more with the distant hums and wails, percussive piano and insistent drums than most lyrics can. It moves me every time I listen.

Standouts: Stars and Sons, Anthem for a Seventeen Year Old Girl, Almost Crimes (Radio Kills Remix)

Purchase the album here.


2. LCD SoundsystemSounds of Silver (2007)

I am reminded of that classic Dave Chappelle (please come back!) skit where he tackles why white people can’t dance. It isn’t that we can’t dance; we just need the right kind of music. Of course, he ventures of into silly rock stereotypes, but the sentiment rings true. White people can dance and here is Exhibit A. Sometimes disco, sometimes techno, sometimes dub, sometimes punk, James Murphy brings it all together in a package of flashing lights and cowbell. All of the songs are great, but the standouts are epic lengths of 6 to 8 minutes, which is how long you wish all of your favorites songs were. The topics of the songs, however, are often far from dance anthem material. Getting older, being proudly ashamed to be American or aching to be with another (ok, that is pretty common) is where he takes us, but quickly puts us right back on the dance floor where we belong. I can’t even remember why I ever stopped dancing, but looking at 40 coming like a freight train, I want to make sure I can dance as long as I am able. Children of all nations, please join me there.

Standouts: All My Friends, Get Innocuous, Us Vs. Them

Purchase the album here.


3. InterpolTurn on the Bright Lights (2002)

Blah, blah. Joy Division was better. The truth is that they came along suddenly and ended too soon, so why not try and pick up where they left off? There has been a wave of Joy Division inspired music recently and not unlike the grunge explosion of the 90’s, not a lot of it is worthy of comparison. Interpol’s first full length takes that obvious influence and dresses it up in a $1000 suit. The post-punk jabs and stabs are undeniable, the bass and drums relent for our attention, the vocals are deep, brooding and abstract and the keyboard washes over it all like midnight surf and smoke. Turn on the Bright Lights is dim, hazy and steely cool yet comfortable like your empty bed after a late night. This album proves that imitation and influence, when done right, makes greatness.

Standouts: Untitled, Obstacle 1, The New

Purchase the album and preview a song here.


4. The Arcade FireFuneral (2004)

I am going to say it; this is the album U2 wishes they could still make. Ever since Bono got people to sing along about “a mole digging in a hole”, I could see the bottoming out of popular radio rock rapidly approach. Thus we are given The Arcade Fire’s Funeral, an album that is passionate and earnest without a moment of embarrassment for doing so. They have gotten a lot of backlash and bad press recently, but if I stopped listening to a band because they were found to be pretentious, my life would be a quiet one. This band loves their music and wears it on its rolled up, sweaty collective sleeve. You can almost picture them crying as they play and sing their hearts out. Man, if I could do what they do, I would weep as well from the sheer joy. You all can shell out the $100+ for the light and stage show covering up the aging rock star; I will be at the Arcade Fire concert saving my money and time for something better.

Standouts: Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels), Wake Up, Rebellion (Lies)

Purchase the album and preview a song here.


5. The NationalAlligator (2005)

A fine example of how Pitchfork can often be dead wrong. Luckily they admitted it in their later posts that they missed the mark by calling this a “grower”. To me, that description still discounts the watershed moment for a truly great band. This is the most tuneful and musically straightforward album in my Top 10 and could easily play next to anything in someone’s classic rock catalog. However, there is a lot going on here beyond the traditional. These songs are aching, upset love songs soaked in booze and turmoil. The music is uncomfortable and tense and sweeps you away from your comfortable home to the nearest forlorn bar. However, the true gem is the vocals: deep, masculine with the confidence of a man who has been hurt many times. If you like your lyrics poetic and picturesque, strap on your headphones and shut your eyes.

Standouts: Secret Meeting, Karen, All The Wine

Purchase the album here.


6. RadioheadKid A (2000)

If everyone says it is great, then it must be great. I try not fall into the trappings of rock critics and taste-making bloggers who have already listed their faves and sung the praises time and time again of Radiohead. Here is my take. Radiohead is quite simply the best band over the past 15 years with no one else coming close. Most groups ebb and flow between solid and suspect or have one remarkable album to then succumb to the expectation. Yet Radiohead rolls out a new album every few years while never failing to reach that level of greatness. And Kid A is their best album. Some will argue for the prog-rock, standard setting OK Computer, some even speak of The Bends or In Rainbows are their crowning achievement. But where OK Computer reinvented the rock concept album, Radiohead went ahead and reinvented it again. That is the stuff of the Beatles. If they manage to not get too serious or pressured by this whole greatness thing (and there is no sign of that), they might just do this for a long, long time.

Standouts: Everything In It’s Right Place, Optimistic, Morning Bell

Purchase the album here.


7. Girl TalkNight Ripper (2006)

A lot of people hate Andy Warhol. His exploitation and blatant stealing of mundane items and events for his own personal statements on culture makes many question whether it is viable art. I argue that the purpose of art is to invoke those polarizing discussions and that in itself makes it the most important kind of art. Enter Greg Gillis, a guy who loves all music; rock, hip hop, new, old, beautiful, profane; so much that he wants it all together in one song and, damnit, he wants everyone who feels the same way right next to him. Like many great artists, he takes a pseudonym, in this case the disarming title of Girl Talk. He then takes pieces of his favorite songs and lays them over a drum machine beat and makes a joyfully blurred barrage of music without the borders of culture or genre. It is equal parts social commentary, methodical trashing of fair use laws and boundless dance party. Sure, there are arguments and lawsuits over Girl Talk, but that is just one more instance on the growing list of how the dinosaurs of music distribution and ownership will never get it, even as they are sinking in the tar pits of their own making. When the big record companies eventually crumble, we can play Girl Talk at the funeral so it won’t be so sad.

Standouts: Smash Your Head, Bounce That, Overtime

Purchase the album here.


8. TV on the Radio - Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes (2004)

Have you ever watched a sci-fi movie or a film takes place in the future and they try to define the ultramodern setting with REALLY BAD INDUSTRIAL/HARD ROCK MUSIC? Think of the final Matrix film or Strange Days. I know, ugh. Your heart need not yearn any longer, for TV on the Radio is that futuristic music and it is happening right now. They have been picking up fans and critical accolades over the more recent albums, but this is the one that has captured the most spirit, energy and intensity. Their sound is the bastard mix of space age trance and doo-wop harmonies that causes each new listener to sit back upon first listen. They are taken aback when they hear shards of each song’s surrounding ambience: bleating horns, machinery hums, bass and guitars interweaving like car crashes. Just when it is almost too intense, those reassuring, soulful vocals rise above the thump and grind. And it is beautiful.

Standouts: The Wrong Way, Dreams, Ambulance

Purchase the album here
.


9. Yeah Yeah YeahsFever To Tell (2003)

Sometimes music just has to be nasty. It could be John Lee Hooker growling “boomboomboomboom” or John Lydon spitting on you with utter disdain. Whether the crotch grabbing, bedroom groaning vocalist is Peaches or David Lee Roth, you sometimes need a little raunch in your rock. That is what this album is, strutting, seedy and sexy music to sink your teeth into. The songs are short and straight ahead, a stripped down drum and guitar combo fronted by Karen O, exotic and glamorous as she coos and howls like an overheated sports car. There is no time wasted as the lyrics and music dually plunge into each track to bring up taboo topics such as rough sex, incest and ambiguous gender roles sung about without a hint of shame over a pummeling beat. Even the calm tracks still glisten with the sweat of long, hot evening that went so right, even when it went a little wrong.

Standouts: Black Tongue, Maps, Y Control

Purchase the album here.


10. Sleater-KinneyThe Woods (2005)

The final choice on a list is always the most difficult. All considered albums have such strong qualities, but none had the sledgehammer of emotions of this swan song from the best all female rock band ever. By the time The Woods came out, Sleater-Kinney was well respected and had grimy handfuls of indie cred. Like all great bands they wanted to push their boundaries to play and sing in a whole new way. With the help from some seriously overdriven production, they bore this album of edgy stress and dark fury. The best example is on the first track, where the lyrics are as simple as a child’s nursery rhyme but are delivered with an overt display of unrestrained anger as the instruments pummel in their best attempt to cause you pain. There is such blatant anger here that I am literally scared to consider what personal demons were summoned for this album. Maybe they were close to breaking up when they recorded this album or maybe this album literally drove them apart, but I am hard pressed to find a better way for a seminal band such as Sleater-Kinney to leave the stage.

Standouts: The Fox, Rollercoaster, Steep Air

Purchase the album here.