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

December 20, 2007

Catching up with Damienkrauss

Filed under: Breakbeat,damienkrauss,dk,House,IDM,indie,Jungle,Nintendo,Trance — AZLTRON @ 12:31 pm

Damienkrauss is an artist hailing from California that I’ve been listening to throughout the years for his particular brand of IDM and electronica. He utilizes low bit rate instruments and jungle styled rhythms to create what would be the best video game soundtrack ever from 1990. In addition to the corrupted Nintendo melodies, some very thought provoking samples are thrown in. Not the obligatory “Oh the monster’s going to get me!” type 1950′s horror movie sample, but samples that are extremely relevant to today’s media engorged society. It’s like truth coming at you at 80mph.

Damienkrauss – Stick A Screwdriver in My Face

Damienkrauss – Pale Ale Nightmares

Damienkrauss – Lovelife Dischordia Papilloma Complex

Damienkrauss Myspace

Mature Audiences Only:

December 19, 2007

AZLTRON Top 40 Albums of 2007 Part 3 20-11

Well, here we are, at part 3 of my year end blow out. I’m coming into the home stretch here with the albums that I continually came back to over the course of the entire year. Without further ado I’ll escort you through yet another list of ten superb albums from 2007.

20. All Teeth and Knuckles – Club Hits to Hit The Clubs With

If there were ever a perfect ironic, post-hipster, club ready album released, All Teeth and Knuckles would already be two steps ahead of it. The beats border on indie, punk, rap, and electro while still retaining the feeling of those crazy guys who lived down the hall from you sophomore year, who’ve since moved out, but still invite you to their rocking parties off campus. What I’m trying to say is that the music is as much hilarious as it is badass. From the interludes of the squeaky voiced guy from the P-Funk, to a song literally titled “Fuck Your Jacket”, “Club Hits to Hit the Clubs With” is a Win.

All Teeth and Knuckles – The Real San Francisco

19. White Williams – Smoke

Another artist that has popped up in the category of almost dance, almost pop this year is White Williams. You can hear influences all throughout his music. Often times his rhythm section takes on a Bowie-like syncopation pattern, or his bass will chug not unlike an LCD Soundsystem bassline. Made from island rhythms, off note guitar melodies, aural soundscapes and an undeniable white boy funk, White Williams has crafted one of the most fascinating albums of the year. From the moment you hear the spacey sounds and driving bassline of New Violence you’ll be hooked, and when the sighs hit around 0:41 you’ll be as satisfied as Mr. Williams sounds.

White Williams – New Violence

18. Bright Eyes – Cassadaga

Several things happened as Bright Eyes progressed as an artist from my perspective. First off, he did the Digital Ash/Digital Urn album that drew me into his songwriting world and I figured out that while overtly emotional there was nothing annoying or whiny about most of his work, and that it was actually smart. Then, I got into Son Volt and Wilco and other Alt. Country bands. Lo’ and behold, Cassadaga is Bright Eyes’ best realization of alt country aspiration yet. The only thing I’d question is that “Reinvent the Wheel” was left off the LP. Songs like “Four Winds” and my personal favorite “If The Brakeman Turns My Way” buoy the album, but “Reinvent the Wheel” is undeniable.

Bright Eyes – If The Brakeman Turns My Way

17. Digitalism – Idealism

I have to admit it took some warming up to Digitalism for me, I think I wasn’t impressed with the singles off the bat and that impression stuck with me. It wasn’t until I heard the driving guitars of “I Want I Want”, that made me go “Woah, guitars? Who are these guys?” and I dove through the rest of their album finding other gems like, of course, “Idealistic”, “Anything New”, and the best song to listen to in a convertible while speeding, “Pogo”. Of course I’m going to like the songs with vocals better than the instrumental, sample based, and ambient works, but the fact that there is a wide variety gets more respect from me than if they just released 12 pop songs.

Digitalism – Pogo

16. People Noise – Ordinary Ghosts

People Noise is a welcome suprise, composed of Zeke Buck formerly of VHS or Beta and Matt Johnson formerly of Boom Bip, joined together they made one of the best rock albums of the year. Drenched in reverb and washes of keyboards every note is tangible and rewarding to listen to. It kind of cracks me up that when Zeke Buck left VHS or Beta all of the mystique and addictive riffs left too, leaving “Bring on the Comets” sounding like a clunky hybrid of the two Killers albums. That said, the lush soundscapes that were once hidden behind French house riffs are now in the forefront. From the absolutely thrashing rock riots to the beautiful ballads “Ordinary Ghosts” will make you wish Zeke had left VHS or Beta earlier.

People Noise – Harrison Bergeron

15. Simian Mobile Disco – Attack Decay Sustain Release

Taking their album name from the settings on an analogue synthesizer, SMD shows you what a good Moog can do. Several of the year’s most banging singles came off of this album as well as one of the most talked about music videos of the year (Hustler). Guest vocalists like Ninja from the Go! Team and Barry Dobbin from the the discontinued Clor make some of the albums highlights really shine. I’m sure half of the reason I listen to “Love” is because I want to hear some new Clor tracks and the other half is that great slap bass sound. The pinnacle though, is the hard hitting electro ballad “I Believe“. After listening to this record you will believe too, in Simian Mobile Disco.

Simian Mobile Disco – I Believe

14. Midnight Juggernauts – Dystopia

With all of the retrofitting of catchy synthesizers to fit funked up French fried beats, it seems impossible that anyone could pull off anything like that in a truly live performance. Australia’s Midnight Juggernauts prove that it is possible. With a sound that’s one part David Bowie, one part Justice, and one part Gary Numan’s Minimoog synthesizer from 79, the basslines and roaring synth will have you begging for more in 45 seconds flat. If anyone out there was going to make a remake of the Rocky series, except it was a musical on acid, they might want to consult the Midnight Juggernauts because they have a lock on the otherworldly dance sound that floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee.

Midnight Juggernauts – So Many Frequencies

13. Chromeo – Fancy Footwork

Everybody’s favorite Montreal based synthfunk band returned this year and proved to be in better form than ever. There literally was not a better album to have in your car in this summer. The majestic electro soul of the intro captures the greatness of the album yet to come. Once the hits start rolling the just don’t stop. The song structures from their last album have been juiced up and the choruses are so insanely catchy that they’ll be there until next year’s best of lists. From “Tenderoni”, to “Fancy Footwork”, “To Bonafied Lovin’” Chromeo will make you believe in a place where Jheri Curl never went out of fashion and everyone still wears asymmetrical sunglasses and neon jackets.

Chromeo – Opening Up (Ce Soir On Danse)

12. The Rakes – Ten New Messages

The thing that keeps bringing me back to The Rakes is that their music is so urgent. Vocalist Alan Donohoe perfectly ascribes the feeling of being intelligent and out of control at the same time. It’s the idea of the emotional versus the logical and the Rakes’ music is dripping with that give and take. The ballads highlight this unique approach to the love song, “Little Superstitions” and even more so “Leave the City and Come Home” lay out a relationship situation perfectly, and the protagonist knows what he should do, the logic, but his emotional side won’t let him. For as much as I’m talking about the cerebral, there are definitely brash rock outs on this album, some are even a little angry. The best of them is the unstoppable “Time to Stop Talking”, which is a shock to The Rakes’ cerebral system to end contemplation and begin fevered action.

The Rakes – Time to Stop Talking

11. The Octopus Project – Hello Avalanche

The smörgåsbord of sounds offered up on this album are more than enough to make it the instrumental album of the year, even though not all tracks are instrumentals. From tremolo vibes to fuzzed out electronic beats to perfect garage rock riffs, this album has something for everyone. There’s even a theremin all throughout! A theremin! When was the last time any band, any band, used a theremin? We’ve probably got to go back to the 60′s for that one. The genre bending tendencies of this album soar through ambient, easy listening, indie pop and IDM. If The Octopus Project ever scores a movie, I’ll be the first in line to see it. Until then they’ll have to remain the soundtrack of my life.

The Octopus Project – Ghost Moves

December 17, 2007

AZLTRON Top 40 Albums of 2007 Part 2 29-20

Filed under: 2007,best of,christmas,dance mix,Good Music,indie,Rock,year end list — AZLTRON @ 3:41 am

Again, it’s been a little while since my last post. Now that finals and papers are all done I can finally devote my attention to what has been garnering a great deal of attention all around the blog-o-sphere, year end best of lists.

29. New Young Pony Club – Fantastic Playroom

Sales of ice cream in the U.K. were in record numbers this summer due to the sweet dance/pop of New Young Pony Club. OK, so maybe I have no idea about the sales of ice cream products in the U.K. but if the people over there are aware of New Young Pony Club, they should immediately buy the album, and then get a hot fudge sundae, a sure fire way to bliss. Wait, it gets better, imagine the hot fudge sundae in one hand, CD in the other and now click here to watch the video for “Ice Cream”. Dance bands with attractive female keyboardists, singers and drummers can do no wrong in my book. Especially those keyboards, yowza.

New Young Pony Club – Ice Cream

28. Nine Inch Nails – Year Zero

One of the best surprises of the year, Trent Reznor is finally comfortable with all of his influences and is pushing the boundaries of his own music. No more do we get empty angst and mindless E-string riffs, we get a fully thought out and programmed concept album. The arsenal of sounds that Reznor uses are hit and miss, but when they hit, you better be in a military bunker a mile underground.

Nine Inch Nails – God Given

27. Au Revoir Simone – The Bird of Music

This is the perfect album for a Sunday morning or sitting by the fireplace watching the snow come down. The three part harmonies, keyboard melodies and heartfelt lyrics combine for a rapturous effect that will lower your heart rate, in a good way. Like I said earlier, if a band has one female keyboardist, they can’t go wrong, if they have three, can world domination be far behind?

Au Revoir Simone – Night Majestic

26. !!! (Chk Chk Chk) – Myth Takes

This is a monster of a dance album, a little darker than their previous work, !!! offer up their hypnotic rhythms in a variety of songs. All the quirky dance songs are still here, but what shoots them into the stratosphere are song like “Must Be The Moon”, where they take all they learned from grooves, raps, and builds and put it together into one monster track. If people have hips that are able to move side to side and they have functioning eardrums the must dance when they hear this song.

!!! (Chk Chk Chk) – Must Be The Moon

25. Calvin Harris – I Created Disco

If “Myth Takes” is about dancing till you completely lose it, then Calvin Harris is about being the coy wallflower that the girls can’t get enough of. Calvin Harris exudes a seemingly effortless cool that echoes his surprisingly simple song structures that despite being repetitive, are always entertaining. Whether it’s reminiscing about an era that you barely remember or going to Vegas, listening to this album is almost as good as actually getting all the girls. Almost.

Calvin Harris – The Girls

24. The Broken West – I Can’t Go On I’ll Go On

The title of the album is misleading, there’s never a doubt from the opening salvo of “On The Bubble” that the album will ever beak down or be subject to paralyzing melancholy. It shoots forth, full blast full of pure of indie rock songs that are as catchy as they are poignant. They’ll get you on the third and fourth listens. Especially the heartbreaking “You Can Build an Island”. My favorite track is “Big City” for it’s piano groove, the lines “We Think We’re going somewhere but we’re really spinning out of control”, and of course what I like to call the “Car Commercial” part around 2:31. Seriously, why hasn’t this been licensed yet?

The Broken West – Big City

23. Billy Harvey – Bearsick

I usually dislike acoustic rock by sensitive singer songwriter types just because their accessibility and vague lyrics results in a lot of bro doofs and stephanies mindlessly blaring Jack Johnson at a frat barbecue. Billy Harvey is not such frat fodder, his clever word play, unconventional production and honest voice make him stand above the rest. There’s such an earnest quality to his songs, even when you can tell what the next verse is going to be, it’s still endearing.

Billy Harvey – When I Say Go
22. The Minor Canon – No Good Deed Goes Unpunished

If there is a grower on my year end list it’s Minor Canon’s No Good Deed Goes Unpunished. I had the chance to get acquainted with this album on a few long drives at night over the summer. The rich instrumentation creates a soothing world somewhere between easy listening and damn good songwriting. Quiet enough so that it makes good background noise to keep you awake, but as you go on listening you find yourself enthralled with the masterfully constructed lyrics. I dare you to listen to the album and not come away feeling validated and a little inspired.

The Minor Canon – The Rockets

21. Greg Summerlin – All Done in Good Time

Greg Summerlin’s latest album has some shockingly bouncy and upbeat singles about being unfortunate in relationships. Now wait a minute, upbeat? Bouncy? Relationships gone bad? That’s a recipe for not only musical genius, but also for AZLTRON to absolutely love it! You get the sense that even if Greg Summerlin was trapped in one of those constricting rooms with spikes on the walls he would find some way to escape through pure optimism. I think his happy thoughts would melt down the gears and reshape the room into neon colored ballroom where you and your friends could have the ultimate dance party.

Greg Summerlin – Unlucky In Love

20. Maximo Park – Our Earthly Pleasures

Maximo Park’s second album shines with all of the class, intelligence and raw energy of their debut while still exploring a few new musical avenues. like the synth loop driven “Our Velocity”, but don’t worry there’s the same introspective anthems present that we’ve come to expect of Paul Smith and company. A shining example is the Marr influenced “Books From Boxes” that is at once hypnotizing and heartbreakingly beautiful. The song is truly cinematic. When Smith sings “The rain explodes at the moment the cab door closed” not only can you imagine it brilliantly but you feel the chill of that rainy day run down your spine.

Maximo Park – Books From Boxes

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