June 15, 2008

Does it Offend You Yeah?

Filed under: Bloc Party,does it offend you yeah,Justice,MSTRKRFT,the rapture — AZLTRON @ 1:00 pm

Does it Offend You Yeah? is a UK band preying on the innocent with their electronic/dance influenced indie rock. Their debut “You Have No Idea What You’re Getting Yourself Into” teeters on the edge of crazed samples and angry distorted bass ala MSTRKFRT or Justice and emotional charged dance punk akin to The Rapture or Bloc Party. This schizophrenic nature gives the band a depth of sound beyond current musical trends and provides some interesting compositions and transitions.

The songs themselves are pretty bangin’ all around. As much as I love vocoder, I actually like it better when they don’t use the heavy electronics over their live rock sound. Don’t get me wrong, their use of vocoder and electronics is top notch, particularly on “Weird Science” but the standouts are the songs with unprocessed vocals like “Epic Last Song” and the most true return to form of Sebastien Grainger post DFA 1979 in “Let’s Make Out”. There’s even a a fantastic instrumental theme song to a movie that doesn’t exist, “Attack of the 60 ft. Lesbian Octopus”. In the end the album’s name serves as an accurate description of it’s sound, but as wildly as Does it Offend You Yeah? switches between electro and dance punk it’s all dance music of superior quality.

Does it Offend You Yeah? – Attack of The 60ft Lesbian Octopus

Does it Offend You Yeah? – Let’s Make Out

Does it Offend You Yeah? – Epic Last Song

May 20, 2008

HEALTH//DISCO

I’ve known about HEALTH for a while now and that their music is pretty raw and edgy, but outside of their remixes I’d not heard that much of them. Recently I listened to both their original album and their HEALTH//DISCO albums and I have to say that while the original album is certainly interesting and has a cool groove occasionally I much prefer the remix CD. It seems that with punk and electro trying to find new ways of merging organically, the Health songs are perfect for attaching those electro beats and synths to. Seeing as it doesn’t get much more raw or punky than Health.

Health – Triceratops (CFCF Remix)

Some nice goth grooves and 80′s video game solos sure to excite any nu-rave fan.

May 13, 2008

Wesley the Robot

Here it is, the final installment of Wesley the Robot for this season. It’s been a good run this season and he might pop up somewhere this summer, who knows! Again I apologize for not posting a whole lot, finals and papers routinely kick my ass. After this Thursday I promise to start posting regularly again, I have so many bands to review. This summer is going to be awesome. Like usual here are some songs that I’ve been enjoying.

Flight of the Conchords – Inner City Pressure

The Notwist – Gloomy Planets

Nine Inch Nails – Discipline

Sportsday Megaphone – Young Lust

Black Moth Super Rainbow – Rollerdisco

Jackson Jones – I Feel Good, Put Your Pants On


Mouse on Mars – Mine is In Yours

Bloc Party – Flux

Dub Pistols – Rapture (Blondie Cover)

A Faulty Chromosome – Bad Thing

Quitzow – Sponsor (It didn’t mean a thing)

April 11, 2008

Frankmusik Alphabeat & Leon Jean-Marie Get Some Digital Lovin’

I literally just checked my e-mail and I saw the words “Frankmusik” and “Alphabeat” in one of the subject headers, so thought, “This is the best thing I’ve been sent in days” before I even opened it. So long story short, tour mates Frankmusik, Alphabeat, and Leon Jean-Marie collaborated on a cover of Daft Punk’s “Digital Love”. The results are highly enjoyable.

Frankmusik, Alphabeat, and Leon Jean-Marie – Digital Love (Daft Punk Cover)

March 23, 2008

Hadouken Get Smashed!

Filed under: Bloc Party,Hadouken,Muse,Nine Inch Nails,prodigy,razorlight,the faint — AZLTRON @ 7:43 pm

Hadouken blipped onto my radar screen some months ago, with their hipster electro punk rapping style and outrageous lyrics. They are self aware to the point of parody and that’s what makes their high octane jaunts so enjoyable. Apparently they’ve got an album coming out entitled “Music for an accelerated culture”.

If you’re into night vision underage house parties, they’ve also got a video that’ll be right up your alley.

Hadouken – Get Smashed Gate Crash

Hadouken Myspace

December 23, 2007

AZLTRON Top 40 Albums of 2007 Part 4 11-1

Well, this is it, the final culmination of the year into a nice condensed, almost soup like formula, read for your speedy and enjoyable consumption. Whether you’ve been reading along with me for most of the year or just found my blog today, I’d like to thank you and wish you a great new year. Oh, and a bit of advice, take the songs you find here and put them into a play list on your ipod/zune/zen/whatevs, then get some good running shoes. One plus one equals doing a body good. It’s what I’m doing, so I thought I’d send out an invite you you fine folks as well. Alright, without further babbling, onto the top 11.

11. Klaxons – Myths of the Near Future

With the amount of hype leveled at them by NME, the Klaxons could have suffered a massive backlash, but they didn’t. This is because their music is different, it might not be the rallying cry, flagship of a whole new genre (Nu Rave) that NME wants it to be, but it is definitely distinct and worthwhile. There are similarities between some Klaxons songs and typical rave music, but they are only in the spare sound effects laid upon the throbbing bass and breakneck beats. While the jagged guitars and angular synth hold down the dance rock, the vocals in particular deserve some attention. From soaring cryptic choruses to the kind of vocals you’d expect possessed monks to be chanting as they stumble towards you in the woods at night, the voices complete the strange world that the Klaxons are trying to evoke. NME may have actually been right about something, we should really get someone to check the temperature of hell.

Klaxons – Golden Skans

10. Mason Proper – There is a Moth in Your Chest

Mason Proper was another pleasant surprise that popped up this year. This group from Michigan has incredible depth, as they can pull off everything from meaningful experimental ballads to the perfect synthesis of keyboards and guitars for a full force thrash down dance party. Their guitar riffs explode seemingly effortlessly moving in and out of hard rocking and ethereal synth supported vocals seamlessly. The range of sounds offered up on There is a Moth in Your Chest, is huge, and is always full and satisfying. Mason Proper’s immediacy and readily apparent songwriting genius has garnered them comparisons to The Pixies, rightly so, but to paint a better sonic picture add in a bit of The Faint, some Devo, and a pinch of the Shins, and you have a cocktail for one of the year’s best new bands. The energy in their songs is constantly throbbing, like that kid in class that can never sit still, and the feeling is contagious.

Mason Proper – Light’s Off

9. Plastic Operator – Different Places

If you can’t tell by now, I like surprises. Plastic Operator came to my attention after surfing some music blogs and I got turned onto their myspace because they were compared to Styrofoam and the Postal Service, and me be the connoisseur of contemporary synth pop that I am, I couldn’t resist. I have to say the reviews that say that the London two pieces’ album Different Places is the most complete synthpop experience since the Postal Service’s Give Up are absolutely correct. From the opening 8-bit Melody of “The Pleasure is Mine” to closer “The Long Run”, every song hits the spot. Plastic Operator is definitely a band you’re going to want to put into your new music folder.

Plastic Operator – Folder

8. Justice – Cross

Justice provided the most anticipated dance album of the year and under a mountain of hype actually delivered. Their unique Daft meets trashed production style has been a hallmark of the electronic music of the year. Producing one of the year’s longest lasting and most remixed singles of the year “D.A.N.C.E.” as well as other dance floor scorchers like “New Jack”, “Phantom” parts one and two, and the undeniable, unforgiving fury that is “DVNO”. I don’t think I’ve ever been hit so hard with slap bass or string samples before in my life, and one thing is for sure, I’ve never enjoyed them more.

Justice – DVNO

7. Air – Pocket Symphony

When I picked up Air’s Talkie Walkie I really wanted it to be, like one of my favorite albums ever, but as much as I liked the mathematical piano, and the amazing atmosphere, it all seemed like a lot of well made, well prepared, well seasoned tofu. This time around with “Pocket Symphony”, each song is rich with its own wonderful ‘flavor’. The wonderful instrumentals and minimalist vocals are back in all their glory, but this time there are shades of everything from hope, wonder, awe and melancholy. There are even excellent guest vocalists on the album, like the inimitable Jarvis Cocker, who delivers some of that aforementioned melancholy. One thing’s for sure, after this album’s over you’re going to realize two things, that Air has the best instrumentals ever, and that you want to listen to the album again.

Air – Left Bank

6. (We Are) Performance – (We Are) Performance

I’ve been looking for work from these artists since news of them came to me through NME. They debuted their song “Love Life” along with Editor’s “Bullets” back in 2005. Since then I’ve heard little from them, one single called “It’s Bad and It’s Just Begun” came to my attention last semester, but it was this semester that I saw the name “Performance” on his computer and I demanded that he send the album to me. Apparently they had had issues with the label but did put out their debut this summer. Everything from the two songs that I had heard had been polished and perfected to form a series of the most bombastic, catchy, dramatic and dancy songs imaginable. Their sound is a sublime mixture of the Human League style backing vocals and Cure-ish intellectual yelping. Joe Stretch provides some of the most innovative vocal hooks I’ve heard since, who knows when. To add another layer of awesomeness to (We Are) Perfomances’ repertoire, is that they’re actually from Manchester and are continuing the tradition of producing excellent and addictive music. I couldn’t think of anyone better to carry the Mancunian musical torch.

(We Are) Performance – Live a Little

5. Interpol – Our Love to Admire

Interpol’s latest effort starts off the quietest of any of their releases and gently expands like a stream moving into a river. The well dressed quartet keep you rowing into the unknown until the river takes a fast turn over a waterfall, after which you’re left alone in an unknown land. From there, the sound only gets deeper, more expansive, and more isolating in the way that only Interpol could provide. The production on this album is fantastic, each instrument is almost lyrical in creating song after song, and Paul Banks’ vocals have never sounded better. Interpol may not have an abundance of up tempo rockers this time around, but they make up for it in the sheer might of their more refined sound. The single “The Heinrich Maneuver”, as good as it is on it’s own is so much better in the full context of the album. Interpol have made their best cohesive album to date. Each song draws you in not only for repeated listens of that song but of the whole album as well.

Interpol – Pace is the Trick

4. Arcade Fire – Neon Bible

Neon Bible is a peculiar album, you see, because when I first listened to it, I loved the songs that everyone else loved on the album and found the slower songs kind of monotonous and boring. Although, something happened in the time from when it was released to now. Now all of those slower songs have revealed their full meaning to me, and now all the incredible power of the lyrics and the simplicity is apparent to me. So now when I listen through the album, I hear catchy enjoyable songs framed by these towering epic songs, that are all veering in the same direction. They evoke all the terror and hope that everyone experiences today. It feels like each song is a reaction to Armageddon, do you rejoice? Do you do all the things that you were afraid of doing? Do you repent? Do you take cover? The album ends with one of the most emotionally powerful songs of the year, “My Body is a Cage”, which sounds like the story of a man conflicted, who has a hard road to travel. If Funeral was filled with wide eyed wonder, Neon Bible is filled with the discovery and disillusionment of adolescence, and it makes for a compelling listen.

Arcade Fire – The Well and The Lighthouse

3. LCD Soundsystem – Sound of Silver

On the opening track “Get Innocuous”, James Murphy and company choose to, instead of punch you in the face “Daft Punk is Playing at My House” style, begin to remove all the furnishings of your home until you are pulled into a hypnotic groove vacuum. I’ll put it this way, if any song could work with just a seven minute long repeating clip from inside the millennium falcon moving at light speed, it would be the Sound of Silver opener. At the end of that song, you’re transported fully inside the disco ball and treated with track after track of the wry wit of Mr. Murphy and the funk he replaced your furniture with. There’s not a misstep to be found on the album, “North American Scum” proves that LCD Soundsystem still has the mastery over the build build build build release dance song structure; it also proved that Nancy Wang has great back up vocals. The song “Someone Great”, shows that even if a song has a syncopated rhythm and bells augmenting the vocals, it can still be heartbreakingly lovely. LCD even sharpen up their out of left field piano pop numbers with the unforgettable “New York I Love You But…”. The highest achievement has to be the perfect combination of dance rock bliss and pure pop perfection that is “All My Friends”, which is undeniably the best single of the year. If you haven’t climbed into that disco ball yet, you better get to it.

LCD Soundsystem – All My Friends

2. Jens Lekman – Night Falls Over Kortedala

There has always been something extremely enjoyable about Jens Lekman’s music, whether it’s his charming unconventionality or his time warp production techniques. When I first heard his song “You are the Light” on MTV U while I was running on a treadmill at Alfred, I was hooked by the faux vegas singer vibe and floored by the sarcastic handclaps made by the singer who was in full medieval armor. His last album, “When I Said I Wanted to be Your Dog” was certifiably unique and enjoyable but there was an edge in his sound that needed to be developed, it needed more of that lyrical wink, the earnest guy in a ridiculous situation and the retro musical styling. That is precisely what Mr. Lekman delivered this year with Night Falls over Kortedalla. The lyrics are tighter, the music is more powerful, and the songs have never been more signature of Jens. From the over the top Vegas strings, to 50′s back beat doo wap samples, to actual beats, Lekman delivers.

Jens Lekman – A Postcard to Nina

1. Spoon – Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga

Where to start… Spoon one of my all time favorite bands, it seems that anything they release is going to get a mention from me. The thing is though, if they weren’t so consistently awesome, my fascination with them would die down. Even their b-sides are better than the majority of other songs out there today. On Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga, Brit Daniel and company don’t miss a beat, coming right out of the gate with a song with probably the most identifiably hooks ever, “Don’t Make Me a Target”, and when the riotous piano breaks out, forget about it, you already know this album’s going to be a winner. Even the red herring, “The Ghost of You Lingers” is an enjoyable piano ballad dripping in reverb and would be perfect in a boxing movie or on a jogging mix tape, don’t forget to jump with your arms outstretched in a victory pose when you get to the top of the library steps. All of the familiar guitar rock is still present and leaps out at you in a relentless fervor ala “You Got Yr Cherry Bomb”. For fans of the hyper rhythmic “I Turn My Camera On”, there is “Don’t You Evah” which once again satisfies that need for a delicious groove. The singles material is what’s got Spoon the initial attention on this album, but it’s the core songs, the ones that aren’t going to get all the attention, that are the ones that make Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga album of the year. “Rhythm and Soul”, “Eddies Ragga”, “Finer Feelings”, are all incredible growers, the lyrics will jump out at you and demand that you sing along on the second listen. The album also has the best closing song of the year, with “Black Like Me”, can anyone else see the sun set when the viola plays? Long story short, it feels good when the underdog wins.

Spoon – Finer Feelings

November 5, 2007

Kimono Kops Remix Bloc Party

Filed under: Bloc Party,Kimono Kops — AZLTRON @ 11:26 am

Kimono Kops once again drop a killer remix of an indie song. This time it’s Bloc Party’s “I still Remember” the U2 sustained notes are replaced with vintage synth in this incarnation and they create a delirious spinning dance number.

MP3 – I Still Remember (Kimono Kops Remix) – Bloc Party

August 12, 2007

Go, Go Motion!

I am a sucker for electro/post-punk music when it’s done well. Others may get tired of the trend and the new bands churning out every couple months, but as long as they remain as quality as White Rose Movement, Editors, and the Cinematics I say bring ‘em on. One such band that I have been anxious to write about and have been listening to all day is Go! Motion. They may sound like they’re from Manchester England but the jittery post-punk quartet are from Omaha Nebraska. So if a band is quality post-punk and is from the same home town as one of my favorite bands (The Faint) it seems like fate has decreed “Thou shalt like this band”, and you know what? I do.

As for the actual sound of the band, you can hear clear influences from Bloc Party, The Smiths, The Cure, U2, and even a little Bauhaus. All chopped, minced and brought to a boil in songs that are urgent and contemporary as well as carrying an echo of the past. The beats are frantic, the guitars chime and churn and explode into contagious choruses. “Different in Time” utilizes enigmatic synths to build up a mountain of sound before shifting gears and jumping off, without a parachute. “Somewhere Nowhere” is a song reminiscent of U2′s epic ballads mixed with the current dance-punk revival that creates a song that I would dance to at a wedding. Although I doubt anyone exists who would be hip enough to play this at their wedding. Perhaps the biggest standout would be the Cure-esque “Charm is Harmless” where Albert does his best to channel a snotty Robert Smith vocal to compliment the melodic plucks and swirling keyboards. Go! Motion doesn’t revolutionize the post-punk genre, but they do have a solid album that hits the sweet spot for a devoted post-punker like myself.

MP3 – Somwhere Nowhere – GO! Motion

MP3 – Different in Time – GO! Motion

Buy Kill the Love

Kill the Love Live:

July 28, 2007

Ready, Set, Go! Motion

The Omaha Nebraskan quartet Go! Motion, hearkens back to the early propulsive wailing of the Cure combined with the stop and go mayhem of Bloc Party’s dance rock aesthetic. Fans of White Rose Movement, Editors, and Interpol will find something to like here. Their take on the whole atmospheric urgent dance music is more linear and they’re not afraid to bust out homages to both The Smiths and The Cure in the same song, “Charm is Harmless”, which sounds surprisingly fresh for all of it’s Marr guitar and Cure plucks. The sustained notes of “Somewhere Nowhere” show that they didn’t need to find inspiration from U2 on their second album, like Bloc Party, they were ready out of the gates to emulate the edge while still retaining their own sound. The influences are easily deciphered on each track of Go! Motions’ debut “Kill the Love” but don’t let that distract you from the raw energy and the passion of the music.

Buy “Kill the Love”

MP3 – Charm is Harmless – Go! Motion

MP3 – Kill the Love – Go! Motion

February 25, 2007

Bloc Party and Working Backwards

Filed under: Bloc Party — AZLTRON @ 6:46 pm

I really should be working on a project right now, but instead, I am on here writing again. 3 posts for 3 days. This is either healthy expression combined with professional enthusiasm or an addiction. I’m not ready to say what I think it is yet.

So the new Bloc Party album came out a little while ago. Honestly, I never liked Bloc Party that much, I remember arguing with people that their sound was a little all over the place (skittery, jumbled, mismatched) and that other bands that had been released around the same time (The Bravery) were a more focused and in and of themselves a complete package. That’s right, I like the Bravery more than Bloc Party. Mostly because of their sweet sweet keyboards, and that their front man really can’t sing and is always drunk. Anyway, back to Bloc Party, I do like “Banquet”, and I think one or two songs on the new disc might be enjoyable too.

Artist: Bloc Party

Title: A Weekend in the City


Kele Oleorke’s vocals sound like a timid king riding atop a crashing wave of instrumentation. That being said, the instrumentation is more lush and rich when compared to their first album but the quiet moderate tempo to brash jittery middle and crashing end formula is rarely abandoned at all throughout the entire CD. The outstanding singles are “The Prayer” (4) and “I Still Remember” (9), the former being a more tribal track that reminds me of TV on the Radio a little, and the latter, while being the best track on the album, has a few of the same notes from Wham’s “Last Christmas”, it jars me out of the song, but overall it’s a lighter more agile song that is a pleasant listen.

Video for “I Still Remember”

Buy “A Weekend in the City” by Bloc Party

« Newer Posts

Powered by WordPress