Tag Archive: Caribou


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Rating: 8.0/10 (5 votes cast)

As we wind down the week that was, and rather put a fork in the continuing theme of getting back on track after our lengthy content-hiatus, it's probably best to cut our losses and steer into the new stuff.  This week has been a big week for seminal bands getting their albums leaked out to the net.  Band of Horses, The National, The Black Keys and a whole host of other bands have had to grapple with this issue.  Luckily, quite a bit of new stuff is hitting the streets, so to speak, legally.  Three tracks in particular this week have caught my ears.

Caribou's Swim came out earlier this week, but to most, the album seems like it's been here since January.  The marketing behind this record was superbly executed, and album leaks aside, the return of Caribou has been a refreshing wind into the music scene.  The album is top notch, and it's probably appropriate, or at least mildly respectful, for the remix train to continue rolling.  The Sprituals remix of "Sun" is seven minutes of sputtering intrigue.  Fragmentation, blips, and a smoothed groove develops early and situates itself somewhere between dubstep and smooth retro electronica (yes, folks, I refuse to use the genre name here).  It's good, and while it's dissonant and harsh at times, it doesn't fuly take away frome the ambient qualities.  The Caribou side of this lassos listeners back into the vibe.

Caribou – Sun (Spirituals Remix)

The B-side to Pure Ecstasy's previously released 7" entitled, Voices, rolls through like an ambient dreamscape with enough grainy edges to provide friction for the ears.  The sound is as if listeners are moving through a tunnel with distant voices shouting down from above.  Erratic percussion and a low feedback groans underneath throughout the track.  Perhaps it's way too personal of an endorsement, but for the last two days I've had this on repeat as I've graded a stack of horribly written essays.  I hear new things with each listen.  This Austin lineup is worth the foray.

Pure Ecstasy – Alexandria

Jonathan Clancy, AKA His Clancyness, has some new material hitting the ether and "Summer Majestic" is an immdiate winner.  It blends multiple genres into a more gutteral yet accesible hodgepodge of sound.  A rhythmic percussion drum roll incessantly gnaws at listeners throughout the song.  Vocal looping and overlapping rises and falls in intensity, as well.  While the epicenter of the track is largely pop-oriented, there's enough pulsing back and forth of sound to move this into stratospheric arenas.  As with the Pure Ecstacy track above, this one requires multiple listens to let it surround you.  The fourth listen allowed the track to blossom into a super inspiring and and emotional delivery.  There's peace amidst all of this sound, and even with very little effort, you may find yourself taking this one everywhere you go for awhile.

His Clancyness – Summer Majestic

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Rating: 9.5/10 (2 votes cast)

We’ve had lots of folks sending in emails asking when we’ll be arriving in Austin for SXSW, and that picture up above pretty much describes what our replies are.  If the incredible decline in content over the last couple of weeks hasn’t communicated it, perhaps the sad face will.  We’re pretty swamped over here, but certainly not dead.  However, the slavemasters at our 9 to 5′s are keeping us out of Austin this year.  The good thing is that our writer Justin will be in the Austin area, but probably doing more of the fan thing as opposed the writer thing.  We’re officially drowning our sorrows in vats of Great Lakes beer and eating lots of donuts.  Our calendars include SXSW next year, so hopefully we can stick it to the man or get promotions in the meantime.  The interesting thing, however, is what happens to the blogosphere during these couple of weeks.  Everyone sort of puts on blinders and focuses solely on the SXSW circus.  Being bloggers that are not attending gives us a unique perspective.  We’re still listening to tunes and evaluating.  This is a boon for you.  Because we’re pretty strapped for time, here’s a quick round up of the goodies that have been gaining speed this week.  Enjoy this week’s list and follow us on TWITTER and FACEBOOK.  We hope everyone has a safe trip down to Austin.  Call me for my credit card number, and I’ll buy everyone a round or two.

This Week’s List

ARMS – Heat & Hot Water – In the wake of the unfortunate collapse of Harlem Shakes, Todd Goldstein decided not to go to sleep.  We’ve posted a few sporadic MP3’s from his solo project turned full on band, ARMS, in recent months, and he’s apparently hitting a creative stride.  The trio has just released a free EP for fans, aptly titled, EP, and the first MP3 offered is “Heat & Hot Water.”  Harlem Shakes was certainly a pop act, but Goldstein’s guitar work shouldn’t be underscored.  When we saw them play live last year, I noticed that Goldstein was a musical braniac, sitting behind the band and allowing his intricate guitar work blend in.  On the ARMS project, Goldstein gets to move outside the restricting peramaters Harlem Shakes required.  This is a good thing, folks.  Snag the EP HERE and spread the word.

ARMS – Heat & Hot Water

Keepaway – 5 Rings – Brooklyn trio, Keepaway, will release their EP Baby Steps via Lefse records on May 18th.  There’s a lot going on in “5 Rings” and it warrants quite a few repeat plays.  Synths, riveting percussion, and off-kilter melodies swirl on this thing.  We’re not super hip on any back catalog, but there’s certainly promise with this track alone.  In what seems to be the ongoing theme, Brooklyn outfits are testing musical boundaries and winding up with all the credit they deserve.  Consider moving Keepaway into the discussion, as the EP should hit pretty heavily.

Keepaway – 5 Rings

Japandroids – Darkness at the Edge of Gastown – Polyvinyl is releasing No Singles at the tail end of April.  It’s a compilation of Japandroids’ first two EP’s that have long been out of print.  Post-Nothing created a lot of waves last year, and it’s nice to get a taste of how the band was working before this album started gaining momentum.  “Darkness at the Edge of Gastown” comes from the second EP, Lullaby Death Jams.  The slicy metallic guitars are front and center.  For folks aching for more Japandroids tracks to break shit to, look no further.  On a side note, the band is touring soon with Avi Buffalo.  We’ll be at that double-date with bells on.

Japandroids – Darkness on the Edge of Gastown

Mimicking Birds – New Doomsdays - I don’t know a whole lot about Mimicking Birds, besides the fact that “New Doomsdays” has been circulating heavily in my playlist over the past week.  Their self-titled LP just hit the shelves last week.  Stereogum referred to their connections to Modest Mouse, and I can definitely hear it.

Mimicking Birds – New Doomsdays

HEALTH – In Heat (Javelin Remix) – I’m not a huge HEALTH fan on record, but I’m super stoked about Javelin’s upcoming album.  The remix play here is worth a listen, as the Brooklyn duo is about to turn water into wine with the new LP.  Enjoy.

HEALTH – In Heat (Javelin Remix)

Oh No Ono – Eleanor Speaks (Caribou Remix) – Justin reviewed Oh No Ono’s LP a couple of months ago and referred to it’s varietal grandeur.  Caribou’s upcoming album, Swim, also promises.  The melting together of these two works well.

Oh No Ono – Eleanor Speaks (Caribou Remix)

Dr. Dog – Stranger- Is it possible that Dr. Dog is the best live show on the planet?  I’ve seen them three times, and I’d be willing to throw some money down on this debate.  The bluesy hook-rocking foursome has now released two tracks from their forthcoming album, Shame, Shame, and smooth and ass-shaking sounds promise to continue with very little change.  If you’re within a 200 mile radius of a Dr. Dog show, chalk it up as a huge missed opportunity if you don’t gas up the car and catch the show.

Dr. Dog – Stranger

MGMT – Flash Delirium - I read an interesting article this week regarding “Flash Delirium,” which seems like a left turn for MGMT.  The first released track from their upcoming album, the shifting and changes in the song no doubt polarize listeners.  The band alluded to the creation of the song, pointing out that much of it was laughable at first and it’s almost as if they extended a short apology to fans that were put off by the track.  To me, however, this is a change in MGMT that I can get behind.  I’m digging it.

MGMT – Flash Delirium

Wye Oak – I Hope You Die – I just missed the Wye Oak show in PA last night, and I’m kicking myself for not paying enough attention to my calendar.  The buzz has been pretty hot on this band and for good reason.  The hybrid mix of about ten different styles are done without sacrificing melody and artistry.  Nothing seems forced, and tracks lay out as smooth as silk, also with enough rock to keep the blood pumping.  The Pittsburgh stop was a long way from SXSW, but I’m going to venture the long traveling won’t tire them one bit.

Wye Oak – I Hope You Die

Neon Indian – Sleep Paralysist – The glo-fi music can’t be that difficult to create, but I’ll always make the argument that it may be difficult to make it extremely well.  Neon Indian is at the top of this game.  The Small Black and Washed Out sound isn’t as colorfully rendered, and the newest leaked track from Neon Indian shows this.  Like popping weeds in a summer yard, hooks and catchiness is abundant; the standards the Palomo employs are still front and center.  Dude’s just simply creating excellent music.

Neon Indian – Sleep Paralysist

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This has been a tough week as a literature teacher.  Brian alluded to the heartfelt loss we feel as a reading community at the loss of Howard Zinn and JD Salinger this week.  Zinn was a seminal author for Brian, and understandably so.  For me, however, Salinger’s writing marked a pivotal change for me.  My initial reading of Catcher in the Rye didn’t spark much interest, and in fact, probably pushed me away.  I could identify with Holden Caulfield immensely, but didn’t essentially tie all the language and aphorisms together into something meaningful until much later in life.  Each time I flip the pages of that novel, I realize how integral it was in the shaping of my interest in literature.  I’ve never felt the prose was anything spectacular, and have often discussed with my students that writing in first person is often the easy way out for a novelist.  What’s incredibly fashionable right now is to focus on Salinger’s pegging of youth angst and the fear of growing up in a fast paced, moving culture.  I’ve read countless facebook status updates with Salinger quotes and all sorts of Twitter activity about the deep hole the loss of this icon leaves in the hearts of many Americans.  For me, undoubtedly, it isn’t the actual literary merit of Salinger that I mourn here.  Instead, it feels as though a part of me leaves with this closing chapter.  The Catcher in the Rye, ultimately, is what steered me into becoming an English teacher and working with children.  In some sort of morphed way, I suppose I happen to enjoy my situated place in the fields of rye, keeping kids from falling over the cliff of adulthood too prematurely.  The novel is, indeed, timeless and as folks come out of the woodwork and remember Caulfield as a relatable anti-hero, it’s probably important to step back and realize what Salinger was saying in all of this.  The rye is representative of pain and fear of moving forward, or at least it always has been for me.  It makes it just a little bit harder to move forward knowing that Salinger, as a protector, isn’t literally in the fields anymore.  I mourn this, but also can appreciate what his writing did for me personally.  In the vein of moving forward (and in perhaps the worst transition in history), here’s what we’ve been spinning this week.  Some have been rolling around the interwebs for awhile, and others are straight from the birth canal.  Enjoy this week’s list and stay tuned for reviews throughout the week.

Oh, and, as always, follow us on Twitter and, now, Facebook.

This week’s list:

Lali Puna – Remember – I place this track on the list, not so much for my own personal taste, but more for our electro outfit fans.  “Remember” is the newest track from long dormant Lali Puna, the Munich-based electronic group responsible for pretty heavy-hitting Faking the Books, released in 2004 as the band’s third effort.  The overseas electronic output is healthy in the early part of 2010, and in a continuing trend of musicians that have taken their time in between releases, folks should be pleased to see Our Inventions hit the shelves sometime in April.

Lali Puna – Remember

Clipd Beaks – Home – Clipd Beaks’ newest release, To Realize just hit the shelves earlier this week, marking a progressive maturity in sound for the Oakland noise-rock trio.  Lovepump released the album fairly quietly, but inside the album’s liner notes is anything but softness.  This leaked track marches through a lot of territory.  It rises in intensity into cacophonous flurries.  Experimentation is the band’s forte and the two released tracks from the album paint a picture of progression.  Their 2007 debut, Hoarse Lords is similar, but this time around a more mature approach to arrangement provides a closer and noteworthy improvement.  We were not hip to Clipd Beaks before this week, but the dive into previously released material is well worth it.  Also check out their site, here.

Clipd Beaks – Home

Vivian Girls – He’s Gone (Chantels Cover) – Vivian Girls have been busy over the last couple of years, releasing their stellar debut and follow up all within a short time span.  Gorilla vs. Bear posted this cover of Chantels “He’s Gone” and with this new recorded material, it’s apparent that the female low-fi ensemble has no intention of stopping the output.  This excellent and popping track will be the b-side on their upcoming single for “My Love Will Follow Me” being released at the end of February.

Vivian Girls – He’s Gone (Chantels Cover)

Beach Fossils – Desert Sand – We keep snagging our Beach Fossil tracks from Connor and crew at I Guess I’m Floating.  They’re spot on in their assessment and excitement over the upcoming album from this band.  Big ups to the folks over there for continually bringing us new material from the Brooklyn one-man-act of Dustin Payseur.  The album Daydream is due out on Woodsist records, and as I’ve mentioned before, this is lo-fi I can work with, as opposed to so much of the lackluster gritty DIY stuff coming out.  We’re totally piggybacking on IGIF’s hype, and hope the buzz spreads outward.  “Desert Sand” is a touch different than the other two tracks we’ve posted, as there is something enlarging here, quite purging and catchy in a lose the cobwebs and push onward kind of way.  In any event, stay tuned for this release.  We’re entirely on board.

Beach Fossils – Desert Sand

Caribou – Odessa – I loved The Milk of Human Kindness and am pretty amped about the upcoming Caribou release.  “Odessa” marks the reentrance of Daniel Snaith, who has been producing tunes for the better part of the last decade as Manitoba and, at least since 2005, Caribou.  “Odessa” is a fine teaser in what projects to be one of the more lofty and buzzed electro-situated releases of the first quarter of 2010.  Merge is releasing the full length on April 20th, and the fanfare will only continue to increase moving forward.

Caribou – Odessa

jj – And Now - The much hyped upcoming release, jj n°3 is getting the pop and rhythm and blues community aflutter.  “And Now,” which has just recently been leaked, is the first track I can consistently get behind full throttle.  I’ve allowed myself to fall into the hype buzzsaw surrounding jj and I’m happily committed at this point.  If this track is indicative of what the rest of the album entails, I’ll stamp it with approval right now.  It’s catchy and brilliantly smooth in all the right spots.  As this one picks up steam, it’ll be interesting to see where this goes as far as mainstream accessibility.

jj – And Now

Four Tet – Angel Echoes – Fluxblog kicked this one out earlier in the week, and obviously it’s been floating around the internet for awhile.  Four Tet’s newest release, There is Love in You is probably the hottest thing around lately.  While the five of us haven’t fully hopped on the hype train, this track is the best of the loot, as far as we can tell.  Even without a solid score approval from me album-wise, I can appreciate the intricate, minimalist nature of this electronically situated song.  There’s plenty at play here stylistically, and a soulful inspiration manages to attach itself to my ears each time I spin this.  If you’re not familiar with the release, consider this a taste of what the entire album blooms.   It’s getting high critical nods everywhere, and perhaps we’re remiss in only getting this out to you now.

Four Tet – Angel Echoes

Serena-Maneesh – I Just Want to See Your Face – 4AD is beginning to furnish peeks into the upcoming sophomore effort of Serena-Maneesh, and this initial leaked track proposes a unique dose of shoegaze and fuzzy overdrive.  The album, S-M2: Abyss in B Minor is hitting US shelves on March 23rd, a welcome reprieve for fans that have been waiting patiently since their 2005 self-titled debut.  This track is sprawling guitar on glittering canvas.  We’re stoked for the album’s release.

Serena-Maneesh – I Just Want to See Your Face

Mumford and Sons – Sigh No More – We’ve been on the Mumford and Sons train since October when Rob broke out “Little Lion Man” to a relatively unknowledgeable US webspace.  Since then, we’ve been pleased to see the steam pick up a little.  Last week, we reposted “Little Lion Man” to excellent reception.  This week, I’m posting “Sigh No More” to offer another taste of the album.  I’ll be posting a full length review of their 2/16 release, Sigh No More later this week, as well.  This is an opulent album of varying styles, ranging from chamber folk country auras to cinematic orchestral intensity.  Think Avett Brothers meet La Boheme in some sort of brilliantly accessible and goosebump raising cauldron of sound.  It’s a collection of tracks that’s been slowly stirring beneath the surface for the greater part of the last two years.  It’s good to see them finally peeking out with more gusto.  Folks should hop on board before the train is full.

Mumford and Sons – Sigh No More

Phoenix – Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands (Bob Dylan) – When I received the email earlier this week that Phoenix had leaked out a Bob Dylan cover, I couldn’t figure out if I was horrified or completely interested.  The cover of the lengthy and meandering last track of Blonde on Blonde adds to a small heap of acoustic material Phoenix has released recently into the ether.  I went back and played the original after listening to the Phoenix version, and with great fear of being struck by lightning, I add that this cover is a pretty good reworking.  It’s not as long, but does a pretty good job of toeing the line.

Phoenix – Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands (Bob Dylan)

These New Puritans – Orion – I’ve had the upcoming album, Hidden, on a healthy repeat loop for the better part of the week, letting it soak in pretty deep.  The sophomore effort drops March 2nd via Domino Records and is primed for some interesting critical acclaim. Their debut sparked a pretty intense and loyal fan base and folks are geeked for this newest foray into unique sound.  Initially attached to the post-punk arena, the new material promises largeness and a conglomeration of a host of instrumentation and variety.  You can take our word on it that “Orion” is simply a taste of the depth and pinching sound assault that’s coming in just a little over a month.

These New Puritans – Orion