Pages

Showing posts with label rants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rants. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 August 2013

I may have set the bar a bit high....

Welcome to my 20th post! Well, number 20 that I keep up, anyway. I did remove a few of the more boring posts. As well as some that were far too related to things that were life based.

I made mention around a week ago that I was going to do a top albums list. This is still the plan, but it will be postponed for quite some time. I realized that in order for me to do this properly, I would first need to go through ever album I own and figure out what ones mattered. This is not as daunting as I was initially thinking it would be (took me only a few hours to do about a quarter), but it has been far too busy to get finished. I'm also breaking everything into categories so I'm not keeping important albums off a list because I listen to them less. For instance, I listen to Animals as Leaders far more than Godspeed You, Black Emperor! but I would easily put F# A# Infinity on my top lists.

The next big question is what lists and guidelines should I use when selecting the music? Should I make "Top EP's" a thing and keep EP's off the rest of the charts? Should I be putting a brief explanation why I love every album, or just the number ones? Should I be linking videos or tracks when available? Should I be doing a list a week at the end of other updates, or just spam out something huge when completed? So many questions for such a huge project!

While these questions remain in speculation, here are a few things that I either picked up or rediscovered over the last couple of weeks.

Tears for Fears - The Hurting.


Classic album! Anyone who knows me, knows that I harbour much love for this British duo. Songs From the Big Chair is still one of my favourite albums of all time and Sewing the Seeds of Love is one of the earliest memories I have. I blame this band for my love of industrial music and for keeping my mind open to so many different ideas of where music can go. Are they cheesy? Hell yes! They get away with it through being so genuine in everything that they did for most of their career. I still hold that the original version of Mad World puts Gary Jules to shame, though I will admit he understood the underlaying tones of what that song was trying to say. For a debut album, it screams potential and great imagination. If you have a soft spot for eighties music and works of art, I would put this on your "must find" list. I picked it up a while ago on vinyl from a shop in Waterloo and haven't stopped playing it when I'm in my room since.

Animals as Leaders - Weightless


This is one of those albums where I listen to it, then don't touch my drums for a week because I am not worthy. Though still very metal, this album closer resembles a jazz composition. No bass, just two eight string guitars and a drummer who doesn't let up. I tend to not remember any one part of this album because I get so lost in the many layers and rhythms. Very few albums leave me feeling absorbed and yet still a spectator. Still one of my favourite albums to drive late at night to; the groove is a great soundtrack to a night sky. When I say the term groove, I do not use it lightly. Every song, no matter how complicated, falls on a groove that anyone can find. It is what keeps this band different from most of the other progressive instrumental metal that has come out before it. The only thing that keeps this from being my favourite of the AaL albums is the lack of a 10 minute long song. I do loves me some unnecessarily long tunes!

Attack In Black - Years (By One Thousand Fingertips)


This is more of a rediscovery than a new procurement. This week, we had a copy of Marriage come through my fascinating. It is one of my favourite Canadian albums, but this tops it in every way, minus the punk way. I still find it fascinating that a band that has such a punk/hard core root can grow up to be such a great folk outfit. I have my suspicions that this band will never reconvene; they have all had great success doing other things. This album is their swan song. Such beautiful ideas, songs, and lyrics. There is very little to talk about because it all seems so simple in my eyes. I'm sure there are a million nuances that my little brain can not figure out, but I honestly do not wish to. It will remain a great pop/folk album in my mind and I am really okay with that.

Here is the single off of the album. It's less folk and more pop rock, but still awesome.


Well, that is all I have for now. I hope the upcoming week is awesome and I hope that you are all doing well.
If you have some recommendations on how I could go about my list, please don't hesitate to comment below or shoot my an e-mail in some capacity.

-J

Sunday, 28 April 2013

10) Ten, really?

Oh time off: how I have missed you. It was March that I last had more than one day off in a week. Thursday I napped for an entire hour because why the fuck not! It was glorious.

I digress. I should probably mention that my store loves me right now. In the last week, I have picked up the following albums:

At The Drive-In - Acrobatic Tenement
The good ol' reissue of At The Drive-In's first full length album on bright red vinyl. Dine Alone Records has done a great job with these reissues. The liner notes and artwork is all faithfully restored and the presses are great. I would say that this is an essential grab for anyone who loves fast sudo-punk and recordings that can sound like shit and sound amazing at the same time. One thing that threw me off was that this particular press does not come sealed. Paper Bag Records has been notorious for this with all the limited edition releases they have been doing as of late. I don't think it changes much and the environmentalist inside me is quite happy. There will always be that worry that someone is going to score just the wax and leave the sleeve behind, but that is just years of working in customer service talking.

I had a friend who died for something he really loved I had a friend who stood for none of the above I had a friend whose experience was riddled with scars who got drunk one night in the trunk of Louie P.'s car I had a friend who would love to scare you as was his affection and tremble you did, cuz you weren't worthy of his friendship I had a friend, but now he's stranded on the Mesa St. exit and sometimes I'm jealous cuz I'm still at the intersection I had a friend whose heart was too heavy to hold...

At The Drive-In - Relationship of Command
AHAHAHAHAHAHA I GOT IT! I was kind of worried it wouldn't happen. I also just got notice from a buddy of mine that he picked up the Cure LP I wanted, but more on that next week. Limited reissue on the biggest album of ATDI's career? I think it will come back, but maybe on black vinyl instead of yellow. In the mean time, I'm going to play the paranoid record store guy and assume that I will never see it again as long as I live. It sounds great and feels great and my god One Arm Scissor is such a wicked tune.

At The Drive-In - Vaya
What? I talked about the other two I have and I'm missing In Casino/Out, so Yes: I am going to type about my favorite album that they ever released. White ten inch. I hate white. I think ten inch records are pretty, but impractical. Other than that, great fucking album. Ok, on to that other one I picked up durring the week.

Emily Haines and The Soft Skeleton - Knives Don't Have Your Back
One of the most beautiful albums to be released in Canada, not to mention one of the most beautiful solo attempts I have ever heard. Emily Haines of Metric really shows how diverse her vocal ranges can be and just how great of a song writer she is. Yes, it is apparent that she ripped most of the subject matter from the pages of Margret Attwood's Handmaid's Tale (which is a terrible book, by the way), but she used it in a very modern and good way. Did I mention that the album is incredibly pretty?