Monday Music Roundup
You may have read about the ooooh-ahhhh coolness of the new iConcertCal plugin you can download for iTunes which will automatically cull all the upcoming concert dates for whatever city you type in, based on who is in your iTunes library. What I didn't know until yesterday is that it is now available for Windows users as well as Mac.
I did actually find myself ooohing and ahhhing when I loaded it -- very cool & helpful and now all of us Windows Luddites can join in on the fun. Plus, it's good for travelling (as I am doing to San Diego next month for my brother's graduation -- I gotta take that kid out and now I have some ideas of where to whisk him).
Here are some new tunes to feed your ears this week.
Look At You Now
Golden Smog
When does a side project become a "real" band? I love side projects for the freewheeling ways that they let the collaborating musicians explore common ground with no long-term commitment -- they're doing it because they want to. Blood On The Slacks (har har) is the second release in less than a year from Golden Smog (a supergroup comprised at times with members of The Jayhawks, Soul Asylum, Run Westy Run and Wilco -- although this release is Tweedy-less), and it's out April 24 on Lost Highway. There are several great tracks among the 8, including the blush-inducing falsetto ballad "Scotch On Ice" about a bendy and compliant sex partner, and the fuzzy & bright "Can't Even Tie Your Own Shoes." This particular cut is more '60s harmonies and pop-influenced than some of the other more alt-country/rock pieces on the EP -- a great summer song.
Os Novos Yorkinos
Bebel Gilberto
Daughter of legendary bossa nova musician João Gilberto and Brazilian jazz singer Miúcha, Bebel Gilberto has a solid gold pedigree in making music. Momento is her third solo album, a deliciously global and seductive collection of earthy rhythms influenced by her native Brazil and recorded in London, Rio de Janiero, and New York. This track jumped out at me for the acoustic guitar and handclaps+congas foundation mixed with her slyly knowing voice. This song (and the whole album, really) deserves to be liberally splashed throughout all of your summer mixtapes this year - delightful and warm.
Are You Prepared
The Concretes
A charmingly retro-sounding closer to the new Hey Trouble album from Sweden's The Concretes, illustrating the unvarnished '60s girl-group undertones layered with synthy-Scandinavian pop and tambourines. The aforementioned "trouble" refers to the tumultuous year they've had with the loss of lead singer Victoria Bergsman (who is busy whistling and singing about not caring about the young folks lately) and their decision to carry on as a band without her. Her voice is certainly missed on this album, but it's a new era for The Concretes with a new sound that's growing on me. Hey Trouble is out now physically in Scandinavia and digitally elsewhere.
White Headphones
The Mother Hips
I posted a bit from Jackie Greene last week where he mentioned the new Mother Hips album. It sparked something in my memory and I delved into the immense & growing pile of promo CDs sitting on my stereo cabinet, and eureka! there it was. Kiss the Crystal Flake has an odd egg/ocean-themed cover and a psychedelic title, but it's got some good stuff within. I've never seen the Mother Hips live, as everyone says I must, but I very much liked the '70s-Stones swagger of this track, which also features Mr. Greene on piano. It also definitely recalls the opening of the Beck track "Strange Apparition" for me, which in turn also reminds me of the Stones too. All that to say - it's good. Check it out.
Don't Give Up
The Noisettes
Pardon me while I sexually harrass another female. This album from The Noisettes is one, if you get it, that you should buy the actual album. The front cover is the trio busting out of some sort of carnival-mouth thingie. The back cover is a rear view of their exodus, and the central focus is pretty much lead singer Shingai Shoniwa's exceedingly lovely bottom in magenta spandex. I mean come on, you can't help but check that thing out. The Zimbabwean/Londoner yowls on this track with a take-no-prisoners snarl that belongs in the halls of the baddest female punk rockers. I feel fierce just listening to her verbal assault in front of a wall of thick guitar that Brian Setzer would approve of, and unrelenting punk drums. This is fun stuff (even if I think noisette is French for . . . hazelnut?). What's The Time Mr. Wolf (??) is out tomorrow in the US on Universal/Motown.
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Labels: bebel gilberto, golden smog, jackie greene, monday music roundup, the concretes, the mother hips, the noisettes
6 Comments:
If you like iConcertCal, you should know about Eventful.com, which among other things lets you track all of your favorite iTunes or Last.fm performers by importing them into Eventful. Then, Eventful alerts you when any of those performers are coming to town. You can subscribe to RSS feeds and iCal feeds as well as get email notifications.
Eventful tracks neary 4 million events worldwide, with more added every day. Not just music, but all kinds of events.
Hey, I write a blog for San Diego at www.sddialedin.com where I do event listings. Maybe you will find it useful when you visit SD.
This is Golden Smog's first EP of the year. Their other release was a full-length album.
I use iConcertCal all the time - and consult it often, as it will sometimes show dates scheduled that haven't been advertised yet.
Thanks also for the heads up on Golden Smog. Love "Another Fine Day" and will definitely be checking out their new stuff.
The Mother Hips singer sounds like Tom Petty to me, which is not a bad thing. It's not bad to be compared to so many bands that you become like a super group. Of course, it's nice, like Golden Smog, to be one. Less pressure.
Yeah. iConcertCal is really a nice and wonderful thing for Windows and Mac users nowadays. It adds spice to all music enthusiasts as well!
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