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Squarepusher

Blog

12…62Próximo
  • Headphone Commute's 20 EPs and Singles of 2009

    Dez 6 2009, 16h54 por liftmuziek



    As the year draws to a close, and I start thinking about the upcoming Best of 2009 list, I realize that I haven’t properly covered some 12″ singles, EPs and mini albums. These tend to fall off my reviewing queue, mostly because in some cases it’s difficult to do a proper writeup for only a few tracks. However, they tend to haunt me, refusing to go away until I share with you these words.

    Read the two part article only on Headphone Commute:
    ( PART 1) (PART 2)

    This writeup features works by the following artists:
    Benn Jordan, Bluetech, BOP, Burial + Four Tet, Clark, Hauschka, iTAL tEK, Jóhann Jóhannsson, KiloWatts, Loscil, Lusine, Mark Pritchard, Monolake, Ólafur Arnalds, Poordream, Reso, The Sight Below, Squarepusher, Stray Ghost, Taylor Deupree, Venetian Snares
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  • Best of 2009 - 500 artists list

    Dez 3 2009, 14h39 por mr_maxis

    IZIA, Wu-Tang Clan, Suprême NTM, Assassin, Nirvana, IAM, Bob Marley & The Wailers, La Spirale, Django Reinhardt, Squarepusher, The Prodigy, Necro, Ill Bill, Cypress Hill, Craig Armstrong, Heather Nova, La Coka Nostra, Scala & Kolacny Brothers, Keny Arkana, Bérurier Noir, Birdy Nam Nam, System of a Down, dead prez, Le Peuple de l'Herbe, Beastie Boys, Busta Rhymes, Alpha & Omega, House of Pain, Seth Gueko, Aphex Twin, Profecy, DJ Krush, Prefuse 73, R.A. the Rugged Man, Rage Against the Machine, Laurent Garnier, Dead Can Dance, Kool Keith, High Tone, Hildur Guðnadóttir, Erik Truffaz, Portishead, Wax Poetic, Johnny Cash, Foreign Beggars, Lady Sovereign, Sinéad O'Connor, Vitalic, Radikal Dub Kolektiv, Lee "Scratch" Perry, Jan Garbarek, Svinkels, Love Spirals Downwards, KRS-One, Dave Clarke, DJ Cam, The Doors, Clint Mansell, Lisa Gerrard, Fat Jon, Les Gourmets, The Beatles, Johannes Heil, KoЯn, Sleater-Kinney, Wax Tailor, B-Real, J Dilla, Filastine, Two Fingers, Asian Dub Foundation, Eminem, Jefferson Airplane, Autumn's Grey Solace, Gym Class Heroes, Shpongle, Herbie Hancock, Radiohead, Rockin' Squat, Mike Patton, Björk, Esbjörn Svensson Trio, Waldeck, Millencolin, Massive Attack, This Ascension, Lordz of Brooklyn, Ensemble Badila, Snoop Dogg, The Problemaddicts, Dub Syndicate, Groundation, Wolf Myer Orchestra, Beth Orton, Oh No, Edward "Kid" Ory, The Offspring, Venetian Snares, Alexander Kowalski, Rageous Gratoons, Noir Désir, Ben Harper, Nas, Ideal J, Verbose, Micropoint, The Black Seeds, Metallica, General Elektriks, Buraka Som Sistema, The Chemical Brothers, Thom Yorke, Lisa Gerrard & Pieter Bourke, Ayọ, EZ3kiel, Amon Tobin, Mano Negra, King of Conspiracy, Bob Marley, Moondog, 25G, Jimi Hendrix, Bauchklang, Moderat, Sigur Rós, DJ Muggs & Planet Asia, Louis Armstrong, Son Doobie, Tryo, Kronos Quartet, Iration Steppas, Looptroop, Mysa, Nine Inch Nails, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Olympic Gramofon, Leftfield, Fairy, Joy Division, 2Pac, Peace Orchestra, Eek-A-Mouse, Snowgoons, Heiko Laux, The Temptations, Le Trio Joubran, Omar Faruk Tekbilek, Guru, Flunk, Earl Hines, Erykah Badu, Burning Spear, Mary Lou Williams, Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers, Oi Va Voi, 80kidz, Infected Mushroom, Animal Collective, The Quantic Soul Orchestra, NOMAK, Year of No Light, Horace Andy, The Cinematic Orchestra, Red Snapper, Nneka, Leila, NOFX, Lucky Thompson, Cal Tjader, Le Klub des 7, Jeff Buckley, Manu Chao, Wagon Christ, Drummers of the Societe Absolument Guinin, Barney Wilen, Ol' Dirty Bastard, UNKLE, Erik Truffaz & Sly Johnson, The Blue Stars, Underworld, Shurik'N, Arsonists, Madeleine Peyroux, The Kilimanjaro Darkjazz Ensemble, Nostalgia 77, Terry Callier, Medine, Fingathing, Big Daddy Kane, Macka B, Keith Jarrett Trio, Iration Steppas Meet D. Rootical, De La Soul, Chali 2na, Lee "Scratch" Perry & The Upsetters, John Coltrane, DJ Food, Sergent Garcia, Rockamovya, Antonio Vivaldi, Notorious B.I.G., Sidney Bechet et Claude Luter, Tracy Chapman, Angélique Kidjo, EPMD, Ben Harper & The Innocent Criminals, St. Germain, Daft Punk, Fat Freddy's Drop, Fatboy Slim, Johnny Clarke, RJD2, René Thomas, Soul Assassins, Deftones, Kaophonic Tribu, Linkin Park, The Skatalites, Muse, Belleruche, Sunflower Caravan, Les Reines Prochaines, DJ Shadow, Mass Hysteria, múm, Кочани Оркестар, Israel Vibration, Jurassic 5, Gelka, Lionel Hampton, Lost in Hildurness, Hilight Tribe, Shadow Dancer, Elek Bacsik, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Tânia Ârab, Troublemakers, William Orbit, Plastikman, The Specials, CunninLynguists, dead prez & DJ Green Lantern, Mansfield.TYA, Thievery Corporation, Raphael Saadiq, Smooth, Kery James, DJ Muggs vs. GZA/Genius, Love Is Colder Than Death, Miss Kittin & The Hacker, YAS, Chet Baker, Pendulum, Claude Bolling, Hubert Rostaing, Georges Brassens, Refractory, Scarface, Bill Coleman, Funkdoobiest, Telefon Tel Aviv, Lightning Bolt, Morcheeba, DJ Mitsu The Beats, Tricky, Hafdís Huld, Sidsel Endresen & Christian Wallumrød & Helge Sten, Danger Mouse & Sparklehorse, Akhenaton, Alif Tree, Tiken Jah Fakoly, Maurice Meunier, TAT, Carl Craig & Moritz von Oswald, Stéphane Grappelli, Black Uhuru, Kid Loco, Common, Ellen Allien, Roots Manuva, Joris Voorn, Method Man, Jah'licious, Hux Flux, Toots Thielemans, Blockhead, Rokia Traoré, Max Romeo, Cœur de Pirate, Method Man & Redman, RND, Volta & FX909, Venetian Snares & Speedranch, The Rolling Stones, BHASS Project, Orchestre National de Jazz, Pink Floyd, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Michel Legrand, Sayag Jazz Machine, Emilie Simon, Late Night Fruit, Buddy Banks, Pan•American, Booba, DJ Muggs vs. Planet Asia, The Kumba Mela Experiment, Jeff Mills, Ulytau, ZAMAN 8 & Hafez Modir, Ematom, Harmonic 313, Freestylers, The Gladiators, Control Machete, The Bush Chemists, Twista, Orange Street, The Roots, Michael Jackson, Los Hermanos, Dub Incorporation, RZA, The Ananda Shankar Experience and State of Bengal, Da Taz, Thelonious Monk, Limp Bizkit, Mr. Oizo, 雅-miyavi-, Ella Fitzgerald, Sex Pistols, AC/DC, Minty Fresh Beats, Gus Gus, Gideon, Themselves, Parabellum, K2R Riddim, Easy Star All-Stars, Rhythm & Sound, The Toraia Orchestra Of Algiers, Lee "Scratch" Perry & King Tubby, Keziah Jones, Ataraxia, TTC, Immortal Technique, Coldcut, A Tribe Called Quest, Lali Puna, Rhoda Scott & Kenny Clarke, Iron Maiden, Dizzy Gillespie, Pierre Michelot, Umek, Miles Davis, Gang Starr, DJ Muggs, Orbital, OutKast, Anthony Rother, Donald Byrd Quintet, Diego, Igorrr, Raekwon, Pharoahe Monch, Dream Theater, Anoushka Shankar, Sonny Criss, The Smashing Pumpkins, K's Choice, Massive Attack vs. Mad Professor, The Herbaliser, Blakroc, Lenny Kravitz, Cujo, Cosma, Killarmy, Big Punisher, Jamiroquai, Charles Mingus, Missak, Burial, Bernard Peiffer and his Saint-Germain-des-Prés Orchestra, Albert Nicholas, Édith Piaf, Mix Master Mike, Maceo Parker, Rae & Christian, Steel Pulse, Hocus Pocus, Opeth, Dee Nasty, Tom Waits, DJ Fresh, Manu le Malin, Khoiba, Animaltek, Peter Tosh, Steppenwolf, Alter Ego, DJ Jazzy Jeff, Boards of Canada, Red Hot Chili Peppers9, Bernard Zacharias et ses solistes, Ill Bill & Necro, Sublime, Crystal Distortion, The Dave Brubeck Quartet, GZA/Genius, Salmonella Dub, Harold Nicholas et son Orchestre, Grems, Missy Elliott, Sammy Price & Lucky Thompson, The Herbaliser Band, Ghostface Killah, Cranes, Slaine, Necro & Ill Bill, Lars Klein, Outlines, Saïan Supa Crew, John Dahlbäck, Junior Murvin, Delinquent Habits, Dubians, Arom & Gourmets Beatclub, Afu-Ra, Slide Hampton, Agoria, 2Pac & The Outlawz, Archive, The Alchemist, Somogo, Toots and The Maytals, Philip Glass, Ray Charles, Sia, Marcel et son Orchestre, Trust, Aretha Franklin, Sinsemilia, Public Enemy, Buck Clayton, James Brown, Zenzile & High Tone, The Streets, Adam F, Oscar Peterson, The Abyssinians, Improvisators Dub, Yuksek, Alanis Morissette, Alici, Cake, Up, Bustle and Out, Art Blakey, Scan X, DMX, Etikal Lab, Lady B, Keith Jarrett, David Carretta, Cocteau Twins, Lhasa de Sela, Jacques Brel, Charlie Singleton, Dimitri from Paris, Bonobo, Emmanuel Top, CéU, Kosheen, Jungle Brothers, Del tha Funkee Homosapien, Nada Surf, Cercle Rouge, Monolake, Marilyn Manson, Rachid Taha, Alain Goraguer, Dub Pistols, Jimmy Archey, Pat Metheny, Ravi Shankar and Philip Glass, Jimmy Riley, Wailing Souls, Taigaz, Air, Triston Palmer, Donald Byrd, Promoe, Ice Cube, Gang Gang Dance, Barbara Morgenstern, Technasia, Dubmood, Josh Wink, Eddy Louiss, Africa Combo & Bugge Wesseltoft.
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  • Listening data (11.23.09 chart reset)

    Nov 29 2009, 6h19 por Omega_Switch22B

    So I decided to reset my charts... again (after about 23,000 scrobbles). Here are my top artists and albums from early January up until late November. It seems I can't go more than 25k scrobbles without resetting... I would probably have over 100,000 scrobbles if I never reset my charts (combined with my scrobbles from my old account).


    1. Steve Roach- 504
    2. Boards of Canada- 490
    3. Agalloch- 377
    4. maudlin of the Well- 343
    5. Autechre- 324

    6. Mayhem- 273
    7. Bethlehem- 269
    8. The Prodigy- 259
    9. Organized Konfusion- 256
    9. Tiesto- 256
    9. Aphex Twin- 256
    12. Stars of the Lid- 233
    13. OutKast- 227
    14. Enslaved- 202
    15. Slowdive- 198
    16. Global Communication- 183
    17. Stendeck- 181
    18. Gorguts- 179
    18. Drudkh- 179
    20. Sun Kil Moon- 177

    21. Bjork- 174
    22. Burzum- 168
    23. Hypocrisy- 167
    24. Emperor- 166
    25. Biosphere- 163
    26. J-Live- 160
    27. Cannibal Ox- 157
    28. Harold Budd- 156
    29. Warning- 155
    30. Have a Nice Life- 152
    31. Bathory- 147
    31. Isis- 147
    33. Robert Rich- 145
    34. Deepspace- 143
    35. Tool- 142
    36. Low-140
    37. The Cure- 136
    38. Darkthrone- 134
    39. Venerean- 127
    40. Katatonia- 124
    40. Air Liquide- 124
    42. Cryptopsy- 122
    43. The Future Sound of London- 120
    43. The Smashing Pumpkins- 120
    45. dälek- 119
    46. Wolves in the Throne Room- 117
    47. Death- 115
    47. Squarepusher- 115
    49. diSEMBOWELMENT- 114
    50. Red House Painters- 112

    51. Thomas Köner-107
    52. Jesu- 106
    52. Atheist- 106
    54. Nine Inch Nails- 105
    55. Above & Beyond- 104
    56. Ulrich Schnauss- 101
    57. Devin Townsend- 100
    58. Tenhi- 97
    58. CunninLynguists- 97
    60. Edge of Sanity- 96
    61. Eluvium- 94
    61. Jóhann Jóhannsson- 94
    61. Tiamat- 94
    61. Amorphis- 94
    61. Lykathea Aflame- 94
    61. The Orb- 94
    67. Walknut- 93
    68. Opeth- 92
    68. DJ Shadow- 92
    68. Pestilence- 92
    68. Negură Bunget- 92
    72. Jeru the Damaja- 91
    72. Nas- 91
    72. Shining- 91
    72. Aesop Rock- 91
    76. In the Woods...- 90
    77. Harold Budd/Brian Eno- 88
    78. Smif-N-Wessun- 86
    79. Natural Snow Buildings- 81
    80. Arcticology- 80
    80. Proem- 80
    82. Deep Puddle Dynamics- 79
    83. Jedi Mind Tricks- 76
    83. Ulver- 76
    85. Neurosis- 75
    86. Dereleech- 74
    86. Lifelover- 74
    86. Boris- 74
    89. Morbid Angel- 73
    90. In Flames- 71
    90. Radiohead- 71
    92. Antonio Vivaldi- 70
    93. M83- 69
    93. Carbon Based Lifeforms- 69
    95. The Flaming Lips- 68
    95. Depeche Mode- 68
    95. Satyricon- 68
    98. Weakling- 66
    98. Wu-Tang Clan- 66
    100. The Marcia Blaine School for Girls- 65
    101. Genelec & Memphis Reigns- 64
    102. Fen- 63
    102. Blut aus Nord- 63
    104. Dolorian 62
    104. Elliot Smith- 62
    104. Nadja- 62

    Albums
    1. Boards of Canada- Geogaddi- 283
    2. The Prodigy- Music for the Jilted Generation- 251
    3. Bethlehem- Sardonischer Untergang Im Zeichen Irrelioser- 249
    4. Agalloch- The Mantle- 246
    5. Steve Roach- Mystic Chords & Sacred Spaces- 243
    6. Organized Konfusion- Stress: The Extinction Agenda- 240
    7. maudlin of the Well- Leaving Your Body Map- 227
    8. Slowdive- Souvlaki- 192
    9. Global Communication- 76:14- 166
    10. Stendeck- Faces- 162

    11. Stars of the Lid- The Tired Sounds of...- 159
    12. Sun Kil Moon- April- 157
    12. Cannibal Ox- The Cold Vein- 157
    14. Warning- Watching From a Distance- 149
    15. Bjork- Vespertine- 139
    16. Mayhem- De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas- 136
    17. OutKast- ATLiens- 120
    18. Gorguts- The Erosion of Sanity- 118
    19. diSEMBOWELMENT- Transcendence Into the Peripheral- 111
    19. Mayhem- Wolf's Lair Abyss- 111
    19. Autechre- Amber- 111
    22. The Future Sound of London- Lifeforms Disk 1- 109
    23. Steve Roach- Dreamtime Return- 107
    24. Biosphere- Substrata- 103
    25. Harold Budd- The White Arcades- 101

    26. Red House Painters- Red House Painters [Rollercoaster]- 100
    27. J-Live- The Best Part- 97
    27. Tool- Lateralus- 97
    29. Air Liquide- The Increased Difficulty of Concentration- 96
    30. Ulrich Schnauss- Far Away Trains Passing By- 95
    30. Low- I Could Live in Hope- 95
    32. Lykathea Aflame- Elvenefris- 94
    32. Eluvium- Copia- 94
    34. Walknut- Graveforests And Their Shadows- 93
    34. dälek- Absence- 93
    36. Tiamat- Wildhoney- 92
    36. DJ Shadow- Endtroducing...- 92
    38. Hypocrisy- The Final Chapter- 91
    38. Boards of Canada- Music Has the Right to Children- 91
    40. Emperor- Anthems to the Welkin at Dusk- 89
    40. Jeru the Damaja- The Sun Rises in the East- 89
    42. Enslaved- Below the Lights- 88
    42. Nas- Illmatic- 88
    44. Tiesto- Magik, Vol. 7: Live in Los Angeles- 87
    45. Bathory- Under the Sign of the Black Mark- 84
    46. maudlin of the Well- Bath- 83
    47. Negură Bunget- Om- 82
    48. In the Woods...- HEart of the Ages- 81
    49. Deep Puddle Dynamics- The Taste of Rain... Why Kneel- 79
    49. Aphex Twin- Drukqs Disk 1- 79

    51. Atheist- Unquestionable Presence- 77
    51. Deepspace- World Ocean Atlas- 77
    51. Smif-N-Wessun- Dah Shinin'- 77
    54. Jedi Mind Tricks- Violent By Design- 76
    55. Tenhi- Kauan- 75
    56. Johann Johannsson- Fordlandia- 74
    57. Have a Nice Life- Deathconsciousness- 73
    57. Agalloch- Ashes Against the Grain- 73
    59. CunninLynguists- Strange Journey Volume One- 70
    60. Death- Human- 68
    60. Natural Snow Buildings- The Dance of the Moon and the Sun- 68
    62. Pestilence- Testimony of the Ancients- 67
    63. Wu-Tang Clan- Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)- 66
    63. Weakling- Dead as Dreams- 66
    65. Amorphis- Tales From the Thousand Lakes- 65
    65. Thomas Koner- Nuuk- 65
    65. M83- Saturdays=Youth- 65
    65. Drudkh- Autumn Aurora- 64
    69. Genelec & Memphis Reigns – Scorpion Circles- 64
    69. Devin Townsend- Ocean Machine- 64
    71. Fen- The Malediction Fields- 63
    71. The Orb- The Orb's Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld Disk 1- 63
    73. Have a Nice Life- Voids- 62
    74. Burzum- Filosofem- 61
    75. Drudkh- Forgotten Legends- 60
    75. Arcticology- Eternal Now- 60
    75. J-Live- All Of The Above- 60
    79. Cryptopsy- Blasphemy Made Flesh- 59
    79. The Marcia Blaine School for Girls – Halfway Into The Woods- 59
    81. Sodom- Persecution Mania- 58
    82. GZA/Genius- Liquid Swords- 57
    82. The Higher Intelligence Agency & Biosphere- Polar Sequences- 57
    82. Isis- Wavering Radiant- 57
    82. Lifelover- Konkurs- 57
    86. Stars of the Lid- Avec Laudenum- 56
    87. Proem- Socially Inept- 55
    87. Burzum- Det Som Engang Var- 55
    87. OutKast- Aquemini- 55
    87. Edge of Sanity- Purgatory Afterglow- 55
    87. Elliot Smith- Either/Or- 55
    93. Isis- Oceanic- 54
    93. Jesu- Jesu- 54
    95. The Cure- Pornography- 53
    95. ColdWorld- Melancholie- 53
    95. Terrorizer- World Downfall- 53
    98. Enslaved- Blodhemn- 52
    98. Massive Attack- Mezzanine- 52
    98. Aphex Twin- 52
    101. October Tide- Rain Without End- 51
    101. Carbon Based Lifeforms- Hydroponic Garden- 51
    103. Depeche Mode- Black Celebration- 51
    103. Wolves in the Throne Room- 51
    103. Robert Rich- Calling Down the Sky- 51
    103. Darkthrone- A Blaze in the Northern Sky- 51
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  • The Soundtrack of My Life (ennui2)

    Nov 27 2009, 14h39 por azaseptine

    So here's how you do it:
    - Open your library (iTunes, Winamp, Media Player, iPod, etc)
    - Put it on shuffle
    - Press play
    - For every question, type the song that's playing
    - When you go to a new question, press the next button
    - No cheating!

    Opening Credits
    Darkland - The Jesus and Mary Chain

    Waking Up
    Happy Contact - Instant Cytron

    First Day At School
    Journey - 椿屋四重奏

    Falling In Love
    haru no shirosa ni boku, maketa. - グルグル映畫館

    Losing Virginity
    Je vais a Rio - chelucy

    Fight Song
    It's So Obvious - Wire

    Breaking Up
    Rotate Electrolyte - Squarepusher

    Prom
    Betty Blue - CASCADE

    Life
    Bourbon - ホタル

    Mental Breakdown
    Game - MUCC

    Driving
    Slumber - Bad Religion

    Depression
    Up in her Eyes - Flying Saucer Attack

    Partying
    The swim - Pizzicato Five

    Happy dance
    Police State in the USA - Anti-Flag

    Betrayal
    Feeling Called Love - Wire

    Regretting
    Goodbye Tuesday - Naivepop or Petitfool

    Long night alone
    The Breakfast Club - honeydip

    Flashback
    Little Kitty - copter4016882

    Getting Back Together
    DEAD WORLD - ギルガメッシュ

    Wedding
    Wallpaper + Updike - カジヒデキ

    Birth of Child
    Midlife Crisis - Faith No More

    Final Battle
    New World - boogieman

    Death Scene
    Blue - 太平洋ベルト

    Funeral Song
    Baby turns blue - Virgin Prunes

    End Credits
    hi to kage - aiko

    --------

    Bon ben pendant les périodes tristes y'a de la musique joyeuse et pendant les moments joyeux y'a de la musique triste. Super.

    Qu'est ce qu'on se fait chier parfois =_=
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  • 2009_09_19 Playlist @ Brain Decay

    Nov 22 2009, 18h55 por punk_bubu

    Brain Decay @ Medika

    dubstep / breakcore / hardcore / drum&bass

    1 One Eye Milanese
    2 Killing Floor Vex'd
    3 Cymrojunk Somatic Responses
    4 Physics Impulse Headhunter
    5 Badman Near Dark (Stormfield Remix) King Cannibal
    6 C*nt 1 Unknown Artist
    7 Eastern Jam (High Rankin Remix) Chase & Status
    8 Soundboy Bar 9
    9 Bombardment of Saturn Vex'd
    10 Murder Us feat. Jahcoozi King Cannibal
    11 Black Barbie (remixed by Modeselektor) Jahcoozi
    12 Aragami Style King Cannibal
    13 Dancehall Devastation Rotator
    14 Fuck The Underground Droon
    15 Come on My Selector Squarepusher
    16 Botan Ricecore (Aaron Spectre Mix) Mochipet
    17 More Fire Shitmat
    18 Tell Dem Say Meanstreak
    19 alien vs rodigan Aaron Spectre
    20 Drop It I:gor
    21 Unfuckwithable Promo
    22 Hard Attack D&F
    23 Pump That Pussy (Technohead Mix) Original Gabber
    24 Riot In N.Y. Rob Gee & Repete-Charly Lownoise & Mental Theo
    25 Hoo The Teknoist & Scheme Boy
    26 Madness Revisited Search & Destroy
    27 Acid Rain Wedlock
    28 I Am A Star! Chrissy Murderbot
    29 Aequeosalinocalcalinoceraceoaluminosocupreovitriolic Shitmat
    30 Pass The Dub Plate Chrissy Murderbot
    31 Pump This Party DJ Paul Elstak
    32 Jesus Spastic Egg
    33 The Bhang ( No Respect Mix ) Synergist
    34 4 x Funk (Bass in ya face) Evil Maniax
    35 Silke Ilsa Gold
    36 The Feeling FFF
    37 Duuure Cooh
    38 One Of Them (Current Value Remix) Limewax
    39 Hubble Raiden
    40 Denied SPL
    41 Norilsk Proket
    42 Locomotive Proket
    43 cripplefight Droon
    44 run the place red (AFX remix) The Bug
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  • Alternative Judder Playlist - December 2004 - Christmas Eve

    Nov 18 2009, 14h19 por syknyk



    Lee Chaos
    ---------------
    Amboss - Crashed
    Jackson 5 - Santa Claus Is Coming To Town
    Kid606 - Now I'm Completely Fucked
    Elton John - Step Into Christmas
    Stuntrock - Girls Don't Like Me
    [Artist Unknown] - Abba Gabba
    Lab 4 - Evil Knevil
    Velvet Acid Christ - The Dark Inside Me
    Larry Tee - Supermodel Incoporated
    Aphex Twin - Milkman
    Wayne G - Amphetamine Angels
    Pendulum - Spiral
    Ultraviolence - Airbreak
    ThouShaltNot - Headhunter
    Front 242 - Headhunter
    Crystal Method - Mortal Kombat Theme
    Mindless Self Indulgence - Bitches
    Pop Will Eat Itself- Ich Bein Ein Auslander (Die Krupps Mix)
    C J Bolland - Sugar Is Sweeter
    Scooter - Sex Dwarf
    Bloodhound Gang - The Bad Touch (KMFDM Remix)
    Mushroomhead - Thirteen
    Dope Stars Inc. - Infection 13
    Nine Inch Nails - Heresy
    Rob Zombie - Dragula
    Rammstein - Links 234
    Pitchshifter - Genius
    -------------
    DJ Jesus
    -------------
    G205 - Lord Of The Dance
    Chemical Brothers - Block Rocking Beats
    The Redeemer - Sound Killah
    Panacea - Found A Lover
    Shitmat - Amen Babylon
    Venetian Snares - Skelechairs
    Hellfish + Producer - Rude Attitude
    Bong-Ra - 666MPH
    ---------------
    Lee Chaos
    ---------------
    Atari Teenage Riot - Deutschland (Has Gotta Die!)
    Mindless Self Indulgence - Faggot
    ----------------
    DJ Hailkohl
    ----------------
    Organ Donors - Looking For Drugs
    Culture Beat - Mr Vain
    [Artist Unknown] - Tetris Theme (Hardcore Mix)
    ----------------
    Lee Chaos
    ---------------
    Panacea - State Of Extacy
    Chemical Brothers - Hey Girl, Hey Boy
    Snake River Conspiracy - Lovesong
    Squarepusher Vs Queen - We Will Select You
    Ultraviolence - Hardcore Motherfucker
    The Prodigy - No Good
    Curve - Chinese Burn
    Rico - Psycho Killer
    Ministry - Just One Fix
    Laibach - Final Countdown
    KMFDM - A Drug Against War
    Marilyn Manson - Disposable Teens
    Nine Inch Nails - Closer (Super Mario Mix)
    Ultraviolence - Paranoid
    Exitboy Vs Aled Jones - Stomping In The Air
    Alec Empire - The Ride
    The Prodigy Vs Tag Team - Whoomp My Bitch Up
    OutKast - Hey Ya
    O-Zone - Dragostea Din Tei
    Tom Jones Vs Exitboy - Unusual
    Scissor Sisters - Filthy / Gorgeous
    Britney Spears - Toxic
    Felix da Housecat Vs Pop Tarts - Money, Success, Fame, Glamour

    For the alternative Playlists tracklisting visit my dedicated blog

    And here's the Alternative Spotify Playlist
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  • Recebtly Added

    Nov 13 2009, 11h51 por Prettin

    Deadmau5
    • Full Circle
    • At Play
    • Random Album Title
    • It Sounds Like

    16Volt
    • American Porn Songs

    50 Cent
    • Before I Self Destruct

    ATB
    • Future Memories

    Basement Jaxx
    • Scars

    Chemical Brothers
    • We Are the Night
    • Brotherhood

    Calvin Harris
    • Ready For The Weekend
    • I Created Disco

    Tiësto
    • Kaleidoscope

    The Offspring
    • Rise and Fall Rage and Grace

    The Prodigy
    • Invaders Must Die
    • Remixers Must Die

    The Pussycat Dolls
    • Doll Domination 3.0

    Ugress
    • Reminiscience

    Veronicas
    • Hook Me Up

    Tangerine Dream
    • Flame

    Sub Focus
    • Sub Focus

    Sterophonics
    • Decade In The Sun

    Squarepusher
    • Hello Everything
    • Numbers Lucent

    Simian Mobile Disco
    • Attack Decay Sustain Release
    • Temporary Pleasure

    Sean Kingston
    • Tomorrow

    Sean Paul
    • Imperial Blaze

    Scooter
    • Under the Radar Over the Top

    Robbie Rivera
    • Closer The The Sun

    Rihanna
    • hotness

    Placebo
    • Meds
    • Battle For The Sun

    Peter Bjorn and John
    • Writer's Block

    Pearl Jam
    • Backspacer

    ORIANTHI
    • Believe

    One Republic
    • Dreaming Out Loud
    • [

    Muse
    • The Resistance

    Method Man & Redman
    • Blackout 2

    Marco V
    • Propaganda

    Madcon
    • So Dark The Con Of Man

    Leona Lewis
    • Echo

    Lasgo
    • Smile

    Kings of Leon
    • Only by the Night
    • Notion

    Kate Ryan
    • French Connection

    Just Jack
    • All Night Cinema

    Infected Mushroom
    • LEGEND OF THE BLACK SHAWARMA

    Imogen Heap
    • Ellipse

    Hercules Love Affair
    • Sidetracked

    Jay-Z
    • The Blueprint 3

    Freemasons
    • Unmixed
    • Shakedown 2

    Dúné
    • Enter Metropolis

    Dragonette
    • Fixin To Thrill

    Dash Berlin
    • The New Daylight

    David Guetta
    • One Love

    Birdman
    • Family Over Everything

    Passion Pit
    • Manners

    Linkin Park
    • Dead By Sunrise

    Artic Monkeys
    • Humburg

    Detritus
    • Things Gone Wrong

    Air
    • Love 2

    Beatport :
    • David Guetta Beatport Top 10 August 2009
    • Drumm and Bass Top 10 (28.10.2009)
    • Beatport Top 10 Electro House (22.08.2009)

    Overige:
    • Global Underground 2010
    • New! Autumn 2009
    • Trance Files Volume 01 (2009)
    • Lakedance, The Summer Is Magic
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  • Dibder's New Music Series: Entry 10

    Out 29 2009, 13h15 por CvaldaVessalis

    I could go into a lot of blather about how much shit has gone down this month, but I think there's a certain YouTube clip that pretty much sums it all up:

    And with that, here's my October journal...

    Love 2 by Air
    Billed as a return to the lo-fi swoonisms of their debut full-length release, 1998’s Moon Safari, Air’s sixth studio album is also the first to have been recorded and produced at their self-built recording facility; and unfortunately that would appear to be where the only vestiges of novelty lie on this release. For ambient, loungified Europop, it ticks all of the boxes, even if most of the tracks here err on the slightly more boring and pedestrian side of elegant levity (hear TocarBe A Bee, which manages to sound like an Air track with none of the warmth or humour prevalent in their earlier work). There are times when the album passes for something more interesting, most arguably on seven-minute centrepiece TocarTropical Disease which features some nice arpeggios, jazzy horns and chirpy woodwinds, and you can argue that Godin and Dunckel have matured in their sound in their attempt to deliver something a little more understated. On the flip-side of the same coin though, it would appear there is a distinct lack of imagination present, and the album unfortunately does suffer from a lack of guest vocalists such as Beth Hirsch and Jarvis Cocker from previous albums. At its best, Love 2 is a lighter-than-air trifle, but too often, it fades into easygoing non-distinction.

    Sing Along To Songs You Don't Know by múm
    Arriving amidst the post-millennial rush of Icelandic alt-pop wonderments led by Sigur Rós, múm have held fast on to their international cult following via a charmingly left-of-centre mixture of glitch-infused post-rock that has slowly but surely moved further into the realms of folktronica. With this, their fifth studio album, it would appear they have reached this target head on, eschewing the more overt electronic elements for their most straight-sounding folk outing yet. This means that, fans of their minimal electro beats and warm bass synths are to be a little dismayed, in their place being plenty of lovely acoustic interludes and wistfully sung tunes backed with plaintively arranged string sections and sweet percussive elements, which is never less than lovely, but certainly inhabits a soundscape much more twee and less resonant than previous releases. There are moments where the eight-strong band hit something vaguely akin in quality to their past works with this more streamlined sound, such as the percussive Pong noises found The Smell Of Today Is Sweet Like Breastmilk In The Wind electronically whipping the traditional instrumentation into something almost-frantically cute, but missteps such as The Last Shapes of Never and the glockenspiel-led Prophecies and Reversed Memories stray the wrong side of disarming to almost disappear completely from the memory.

    Beauty Killer by Jeffree Star
    Self-styled genderfuck drag artist Jeffree Star’s debut studio album has been in the offing for two years, finally seeing release after finding Internet fame via MySpace and two self-released EP’s, having started out as a makeup artist to the stars in his mid-teens. As you can imagine, with an inbuilt obsession with vanity and fashion already dominating his persona, Killer doesn’t go for anything less than acidic, trendy electroclash, Star’s voice electronically altered in almost every instance to wallow in his accusatory diatribes of sexual submission and confrontation, at times coming across as Blackout-era Britney Spears crossed with John Waters’ muse, Divine. Sometimes, as on opening one-two Get Away With Murder and Prisoner, Star strikes his target with some style, even if it is mired in noticeably less substance that what would most likely be coursing through most L.A. clubkids’ veins; but often, some fatal missteps kill the party dead in its tracks, key offender being Love Rhymes With Fuck You, which appears to confuse controversial cool with rampant obnoxiousness. However, the major grind against the album is that Star himself never appears less than rabidly sex-hungry and fame-obsessed, which means he doesn’t come across as the most appealing electro-diva to hit the airwaves; however, you can bet he doesn’t really give a fuck about issues like that.

    Rokstarr by Taio Cruz
    Not letting slightly-disappointing sales of his debut last year get him down, Mr Cruz has done well to make sure he gets on top this year. Constantly popping up in Internet news with regards to the likes of Tinchy Stryder (with whom he shared a Top 3 UK single earlier in the year), Sugababes (he’s on Keisha’s side, by the by!) and Cheryl Cole (who passed on the single that became his first chart topper, Break Your Heart), Cruz’s profile as the UK’s multi-hyphenate pop star of the moment is more than assured, in time to give his follow-up album a better shot at the charts. However, the fact that he re-named his sophomore effort after his own range of sunglasses probably suggests what kind of a glossy, shiny and ultimately shallow record Rokstarr is. Last time around, Cruz was accused of being a little too schmaltzy on his debut Departure (whose opener I'll Never Love Again bafflingly features here midway through the action), and possibly as a result, there’s a bit more of a shade of the lothario about him here, highlighted by Break and its follow-up Dirty Picture, the latter featuring up-and-coming Lady GaGa clone Ke$ha. However, it’s soon dispelled by efforts such as Best Girl and Falling In Love, and it isn’t helped that Cruz and co-producer Fraser T. Smith are fond of the same production gimmicks throughout. Another notch on the disposable pop belt then...

    Overcome by Alexandra Burke
    Though it provided an important stepping stone in launching Leona Lewis as an international pop star, success proved elusive for the rest of the winners of UK TV’s ultimate Reality show crown. True, Shayne Ward continues to sell admirably well in the UK, but Lewis’ success across the pond helped transform the show from a national talent show to an important pitching tool for the American market. However, whether last year’s worthy winner Alexandra Burke can crack America remains to be seen because, in spite of proving her mettle as quite an endearingly physical performer on the show, the material with which she has been foisted for her debut album is dispiritingly low on character and soul. They’ve done well to differentiate Burke from Lewis by giving her a more uptempo modus operandi for her wannabe divahood (working best on Broken Heels and standout track Dumb, both RedOne cuts) and her voice shows a more relatable grit on the ballads than her fellow winner’s galvanising trills, but even with the amount of star-heavy assignments from the likes of Brian Kennedy, Stargate and Ne-Yo filling up the credits, Burke never rises further than as a notably capable young singer rather than a star in her own right. The second album better show some growth, girlie, I didn’t finally vote for a winner to see her become an autonomous would-be star.

    Straight No Chaser by Mr Hudson
    With regards to current trends in popular culture, it would appear that we really ought to be proud to be British. The latest success story to emerge from our humble isles is that of Mr Hudson and the Library, who’ve been snapped up by none other than Kanye West himself in a bid to reinvent their lead singer as a siècle nouveau pop star for the masses after picking up a copy of their humble debut a tale of two cities. Identity confusion aside (according to the albums liner notes, The Library members are still present in their playing on most tracks), what remains is a confusingly odd affair with its share of bombastic moments (second single TocarSupernova and Everything is Broken in particular) with Hudson coming across often times as an immensely Autotune-altered Sting, which is as wary as it sounds! The production, co-administered by West and Hudson themselves, often throws up some nice touches (such as the delicate glitches found on premiere single There Will Be Tears), but its all held together by a leading man suffering from a rather acute case of a personality vacuum; between this and Malik Yusef’s lamentable double-disc behemoth released earlier this year, West’s stock on talentspotting is certainly on the wane.

    Do You Want The Truth Or Something Beautiful? by Paloma Faith
    Sometime actress and full time warbler Paloma Faith is the latest in a longline to court the Winehouse Comparison, with her husky soulful voice at odds with the frankly less-than-disarming daffiness displayed in interviews. Even though she arrives at least two years late to the party (in fact just in time to get a little spotlight space ahead of Amy’s own replacement relative, who features much later in this entry), Faith’s emphasis on theatricality and histrionics is a welcome break from the overrated likes of Duffy and Adele, taking full advantage of a full orchestra to add some galvanising swoon to the proceedings (particularly on previous single TocarNew York and the Bond theme-esque drama of the title track). Often times though, it can get the better of Faith’s songs, content to sweep themselves off in whatever superficiality they create, much like Faith’s own skills as a singer. There’s no doubt that hers is a voice that can technically soar past many of her contemporaries and given the right collaborator she can indeed be very good (her track on Basement Jaxx’s recent album is one of its highlights), but here she is prone to too many moments where her performance becomes too much of an act to take her seriously. She certainly can’t be accused of being bland and using cyncial retro arrangements to grab our attention though, which means she remains someone to watch in the future.

    Where the Wild Things Are Motion Picture Soundtrack: Original Songs By Karen O And The Kids by Karen O and the Kids
    Anyone who knows me personally and has seen the trailer for Spike Jonze’s upcoming adaptation of Maurice Setzler’s classics children’s book Where The Wild Things Are will know how excited I’ve been since first seeing it in the summer months (if you haven’t, find it here). Opening at number one at the American box office with a decent gross for what has been billed as more of a director’s vision than a bona fide blockbuster, distributor Warner Bros. wisely advertised the film towards a more adult audience who would appreciate its earthy charms rather than to tweenyboppers weaned onto plastic paradises of the ilk of Disney and DreamWorks. This has followed through to the musical soundtrack, composed by Jonze’s then-girlfriend Karen O of Yeah Yeah Yeahs (but you knew that!), which works more as a retracing of childhood “rumpuses” and traumas than a straight-up kiddie tie-in. At times brash, unwieldy, whimsical and more than a little noisy (and even committing a cardinal soundtrack sin of featuring dialogue from the film itself throughout), it certainly sounds like the perfect compliment to such an intimately epic visual piece. As a stand alone album, it has its moments (the best being the quieter ones such as TocarHideaway and the soothing howls found on TocarCliffs) but may need the film itself to inspire magic within the listener to fully work.

    Break Up by Pete Yorn & Scarlett Johansson
    Though the sessions predate those for her divisive, Dave Sitek-helmed debut Anywhere I Lay My Head, Johansson’s collaboration with singer-songwriter Yorn has now been released little more than three years later; whether this is due to Johansson’s hectic filming schedules or the success (re: failure?) of her debut album is unclear, but the result is rather innocuous and charming enough in its own right to see the light of day. Critics of Johansson’s Tom Waits project will be relieved to find her in a more wistful and sweeter voice here first of all, hers a perfect complement to Yorn’s guileless melodies and strumming, charting with winsome earnestness the twilight of a once loving relationship, a standout being the confused yearning of I Don't Know What To Do. However, one tidbit of trivia about the disc does reveal something about the collaboration itself in that Scarlett’s vocals were recorded in all of two afternoon sessions, which may help to explain the genuinely inconsequential nature of the music itself (and, at 29 minutes, an EP-shaped running time!). Granted, it’s textured and sweet, with Yorn and Johansson providing a likeable foil for each other throughout, but even as a gossamer-light acoustic delight, it falls just shy of being truly memorable, never mind remarkable.

    Sub Focus by Sub Focus
    Having enjoyed decent airplay on Radio 1 as well as remix duties for the likes of The Prodigy and Empire of the Sun previously, drum’n’bass artist Nick Douwma makes his debut as a solo artist in his own right with his self-titled LP. Now admittedly things get off to a bad start on opening track Let the story begin, where a formidable brass section is reduced to a single, ear-splitting screech from which it cannot recover. Thankfully, the rest of the album takes a more subtle cue with which to blast the listener with resonant bass lines and samples, particularly on the dubstep flirting found on Last Jungle and on Deep Space, a fine piece of dirty retro d’n’b which has the added bonus of being one of the better TV show themes never composed. Another encouraging feature of Douwma’s music is that he’s more than happy to switch up his genres more than once, often, as on the electro-house number Could This Be Real with its oldschool piano line; however, this doesn’t mean that Dowma evades the risk of his sounds appearing more than a little dated as opposed to paying homage whilst pressing his ear toward future dance movements, most tracks here sounding like Liam Howlett cuts before Maxim and Keith Flynt could yell any sort of chant on top of them.

    100% by Beverley Knight
    Keeping your head above water for over fifteen years in the world of UK soul and R&B is no small feat, but Ms Knight’s success has been hard-fought, bewitching her fans with that hella-wonderful voice of hers. The first album out of the gate of her own record label after eleven years with Parlophone (who most likely wanted to push her towards more classic R&B standards after her last cover album), 100% sees Knight take on more contemporary-flavoured jams than her last two albums and its testament to her musical smarts that, even when she falls on so rare an instance such as the ill-advised Autotune interlude on In Your Shoes, she still dusts off enough charisma and full-throated delivery to let it slide past. Enlisting old friends Guy Chambers and DJ Munro from Affirmation as well as some impressively-established outsiders (Amanda Ghost, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, Chaka Khan herself), it’s as solidly entertaining as any of her previous work, if not groundbreaking enough to breakout past her loyal fanbase. Highlights here include Bee Gees cover Too Much Heaven and Gold Chain.

    Wordshaker by The Saturdays
    Despite having a platinum-selling debut album under their belt, it still doesn’t quite feel as though the Great British Public have taken this hardworking girl group into their hearts quite as much as they should have. Perhaps suffering from the sheer amount of female-fronted power pop that has cropped up on the radio throughout the year (made ironic by the fact that their biggest competition from last year, labelmates Girls Aloud, have been strangely absent for most of it), even the customary glut of superstar producers (The Runaways, Steve Mac, Per Magnusson and David Kreuger) haven’t allowed the girls to make the same impact that the likes of Kelly Clarkson and Jordin Sparks have had this year. Which is a shame, because they’re backed up with better tunes than most popstrels of their profile and know how to sell them better too; it’s testament to The Runaways’ production skills and the girls themselves that lead single Forever Is Over belies its credentials as a James 'Busted' Bourne composition, whilst tracks such as Ego and Open Up are unabashedly uplifting in their sassiness and sold through with enough panache as to not seem gimmicky. They deserve better from their press team, and for a fledgling girlgroup that’s no faint praise!

    Origin:Orphan by The Hidden Cameras
    Headed by singer/songwriter Joel Gibb, The Hidden Cameras have remained elusive with regards to being embraced by the mainstream, in spite of various alumnus finding international recognition in their own works (the most quoted being one-time member Mike Olsen’s Arcade Fire, whom undeniably draw influences from Gibb’s collective). Celebrated for his prior works’ sexual overtones and raucous playfulness dressed up in charmingly subversive folk-pop, it would appear that this fifth album foretells an upcoming period of jadedness for the Cameras, if the high-drama of the opener Ratify The New and the title track are anything to go by. Which isn’t to say that Gibb has lost his playful touch entirely; highlight Underage is as familiar a kinky, lyrical lightning rod as any other in the Cameras back catalogue, whilst Colour Of A Man and closer Silence Can Be A Deadline in particular play as sweetly and elegantly as anything on The Smell of Our Own. Then again, following an album titled Awoo with one that suggests more than a hint of loneliness and trepidation within a new world was always going to bring its share of changes (Gibb has since moved from Canada to Berlin since the previous Cameras album, Awoo, so perhaps that was a factor?), so let’s hope Gibb rediscovers his playful mojo fully in time for the next Cameras album.

    Tongue'n'Cheek by Dizzee Rascal
    For all of Dylan Mills’ detractors who upon the release of his best-selling single of last year, TocarDance Wiv Me, began throwing accusations of the East London MC selling out, the title of his commercial breakthrough record pretty much says it all. Mr Rascal has always shown a degree of humour in his rhymes, but he lets his inner prankster loose full blast here, recounting tales of high-flyer clichés of freaky groupies, fly cars and new money wealth that would sound bizarre if they weren’t filtered through aspirational MTV programming every day (Freaky Freaky has been a lightning rod for its apparent misogyny for those who can’t see through the pastiche). Even a passing listen though reveals that Dizzee’s not lost his edge on social commentary, despite what the critics of his singles say, as found on album highlights Can't Tek Me No More and forthcoming single Dirtee Cash. However, there are wrinkles in Dizzee’s self-effacing suit; there is still a frisson running through the entire album wherein the rapper’s intentions may be misinterpreted by some as condoning all of this vacuousness rather than commenting upon it, and tapping the likes of Armand van Helden, Calvin Harris and Tiësto smacks of cynically utilising the UK dance market for some 24-karat hits. Or, you can just let the guy have a laugh at the height of his career, take your pick...

    3 Words by Cheryl Cole
    And The Award For The Album That I Had No Idea I Was Going To Like Quite As Much As I Ended Up Doing So Far This Year goes to... Seriously though, when I heard that Mrs Cole was going to be the first member of Girls Aloud to dip her toes into the popworld realms as a solo music artist, I was a little confused; Cole has, Aloud aside, always marketed herself as more of a media mogul and a fashion glamourpuss than someone passionate about making music, as her gig as a judge/mentor on TV’s The X Factor has established. But with this solo album, Cole has almost single-handedly raised her game as a pop star in her own right; in spite of there being recorded proof that she isn’t exactly a premier vocalist, she still has enough of an intelligent and classy edge to differentiate herself for the robodivas lying in the wake of GaGa’s all-out pop offensive. Whilst she solidly holds court here and shares a few writing credits, plaudits must also be given to her team at play behind the studio glass; contributions here from Ingrid Michaelson, Taio Cruz and in particular will.i.am, whose 3 Words is quite possibly the most surprisingly great pop moment of the year so far and on. Sure, it’s hard to imagine her crying over anyone like she does in the less-than-convincing Make Me Cry and any album featuring a Bedingfield composition has a strike against it in my book, but Cole may have done the impossible and convinced the music fans she is in fact a star.

    My Way by Ian Brown
    It takes an artist of either grandly justified confidence or vastly questionable ambition to compare their upcoming album to what is largely considered the greatest album ever made in recording history. Therefore, it says something about Northern monkey Ian Brown that, when he began promoting his sixth album whilst alluding to its inspiration, Michael Jackson’s Thriller, a lot of people weren’t immediately incensed to shocked aghastness. Eye-rolling bemusement, certainly, but reminding the press of mastering said album on the day the King Of Pop shifted his mortal coil didn’t do any favours, surely? Well, Thriller it certainly isn’t, but Brown survives grand pitfall of egotism with some assurance on this LP, the allusion to Jackson’s classic obviously referring to the pop-friendly sounds permeating throughout. Opener Stellify was actually written for Rihanna until Brown claimed it for himself, Vanity Kills features beats that wouldn’t go amiss on a Timbaland record and Always Remember Me is so classily cheesy that, if it weren’t for Brown’s unmistakably tuneless voice lending it something palpably moving, it wouldn’t have gone amiss a latter-day Take That album. Though in the long run the record becomes quite creaky, it’s testament to Brown and long-time collaborator Dave McCracken that they get away with something like this with some panache really.

    Monsters of Folk by Monsters of Folk
    Four years in the making accounting for its members’ various day jobs, this latest American supergroup consists of some of the finest folk musicians currently strumming their way through America (Yim Yames, Conor Oberst, M. Ward and producer Mike Mogis) carry with them a reputation more high-profile than most. Now, other than Ward, I’m at a disadvantage reviewing this LP with regards to how it differs from each of the components’ solo works; what I can tell though is that there are few supergroups who have gelled together quite so comfortably and enjoyably as these four troubadours, on fine evidence throughout this first (hopefully of a few more) albums. Completely bereft of ego, grandstanding and creative shoehorning, these four peers have come together to craft one of the finer folk albums of the year thus far; according to their website, it was born out of an immense interest on each of their parts to see how each of the other players worked in the studio with the intention of creating their own beast rather than solo spots with cameo appearances. And the results are often rather lovely, particularly on the harmonies of Dear God (Sincerely M.O.F.) and the rock-leaning brashness of Losin’ Yo’ Head.

    I Told You I Was Freaky by Flight of the Conchords
    Better listened to as a commemorative soundtrack compilation to their Emmy-nominated second series for HBO, Jemaine and Bret’s sophomore studio album rather unfortunately suffers from a bit of a slump when compared to their debut last year precisely because it doesn’t hold as well without the second series of the intrepid Kiwi folk duo’s comedy show as a reference point. Which isn’t to say that there isn’t a shortage of chortlesome pitch-perfect parody to be had; highlights here include We're Both in Love with A Sexy Lady, with its beats and synths playfully licked from R Kelly’s mixing desk as the guys argue over a girl who may or may not be named “Brabara”, and Sting pastiche You Don’t Have To Be a Prostitute (easy targets, but there you go!) However, the record still feels like it comes up a little short with a lack of tunes compared to those featured in the actual series, which included a paean to psycho-fan Mel’s Conchord-featured dreams and a Magnolia-style reprise of Hurt Feelings, and the visual accompaniment is obviously lost and cannot enhance the comedy (particularly on Carol Brown from the episode directed by Michel Gondry). Still, with tunes as delightfully silly as Rambling Through the Avenues of Time and Petrov, Yelyena and Me (the latter one of the duo’s first ever tunes from years before), there’s still plenty of laughter to be had.

    After Robots by BLK JKS
    Forming in 2003 and eventually signed on to Secretly Canadian after a successful limited independent release back in 2007 that found their recordings being sold in the trendier music markets of the world, BLK JKS (a sort-of acronym for Black Jacks) are enjoying quite the fine hum of buzz in the indie/prog rock/world music arena for their heady mix of psychedelic rock, ska punk and traditional African music, having already shared stages with the likes of Santigold and Dirty Projectors and being particularly well-received at 2008’s SXSW festival. Co-produced by Secret Machines’ Brandon Curtis in the US earlier this year, their debut long-player does well to incorporate each of those elements and not only give each of the quartet a chance to shine (be it Tshepang Ramoba’s peerless command of the drum kit or Lindani Buthelezi’s evocative vocals) but also not to overegg certain influences for the sake of sounding ‘authentically’ indigenous to their roots in Soweto, South Africa. The album does close on the rather lovely acoustic number TocarTselane that will play up those cards, but before that we have the explosive charms of TocarSkeleton and TocarKwa Nqingetje, predominantly surging hard rock performances that present a fine meshing of Western rock and Afrobeat but ultimately transcends both genres to provide something for everyone to listen to.

    East Of Eden by Taken By Trees
    Taking in a band of Pakistani players for her second album under her solo moniker, Victoria Bergsman’s knowing wistfulness is on full display on this acoustic delight of an album, relocating wholesale to Pakistan to record with Sufi musicians partly in reverence of two of her favourite singers in particular Abida Parveen and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and also in an effort to avoid the clinical creative drain from the modern studio recording experience. The result is never less than lovely, not just with regards to Bergsman’s sweet vocals (particularly in fine fetter on her Animal Collective cover, My Boys) but also in her utilisation of the Sufi arrangements, famed for their trance-like qualities and put to beguiling effect here, particularly on Day By Day. In direct contrast to the ambient delights found on the disc, Bergsman admittedly suffered some setbacks on this delicate delight of an album (highlighted in this short film here); it says something though that, even at nine songs long and a running time of little over thirty-minutes, the album represents something of a triumph for Bergsman, not just as a fitting tribute to an often-overlooked genre of world music, but also to her own songwriting pluck and talent.

    Declaration Of Dependence by Kings of Convenience
    For those who like their folk-pop light as air and sad-eyed as a defenseless puppy that’s been kicked in the gut (sorry for the offensive imagery, but I’m only describing what you’re in for if you listen to this album), the Norwegian duo strike those heartstrings again with their third studio album of wounded acousticisms. Ornate in its simplicity but direct in its emotional attack, brother troubadours Erlend Øye and Eirik Glambek Bøe take no prisoners with their stripped-bare aesthetic, more often than not eschewing percussiove elements altogether and creating broken fragments of beautifully candid intimacy; this is just two men and their instruments hushedly reminding themselves they are still alive amidst the destruction done unto and by them. At times, the emotionally rich vocals and elegant melodies almost suggest a jazz like quality, further adding to the elegiac effect of the songs on offer here (standouts being TocarRenegade and TocarRiot On An Empty Street, the latter arriving a whole album late, it would appear). For all of the desolation permeating throughout the piece though, as evidenced by the title, these two would appear to have found each other again in time, not only to exchange tales of woe and missed chances, but to ultimately affect a change and start over together.

    Kamaal The Abstract by Q-Tip
    Shelved over seven years ago because of his then-label Arista’s reluctance to release such a non-commercially viable record off the back of his more mainstream-infused debut solo LP Amplified, Q-Tip’s critically lauded sophomore album finally sees the light of day, no doubt due to renewed interest kick-started by The Renaissance from last year. Following a jazz-funk groove deeper and more, for lack of a better word, abstract than most established rap acts would dare to tread, Q’s lack of artistic restraint and evident love of his jazz influences is laid bare for all to hear and still holds a significant thrall even after collecting dust over so many years. Entirely self-produced and on its nine tracks highlighting a lyrical maturity unheard from most urban musicians in their entire careers (Q’s optimism wins out on opener TocarFeelin' and it’s nice to listen to pro-female lyrics as found on TocarEven If It Is So for once), it represents a minor triumph for Q’s back catalogue, precisely because he doesn’t let his mouth run away from him and the laidback nature of the music proves more uplifting and cathartic than any mountain of petty, speed-of-sound cussing can try to emulate.

    Embryonic by The Flaming Lips
    Still flying in the face of their critics after twenty-six years together that includes eleven studio albums, eight extended plays and a film score to their very own sci-fi opus that finally saw release in the US last year after spending seven years in the making, it would appear that the Lips have confounded their listeners once again, their modus operandi on this double-disc behemoth being to cram absolutely everything that they couldn’t on their last few, more mainstram efforts. The result is a disjointed, dark journey through some impenetrably forboding psych-rock that either contains the Lips’ finest work or their most infuriatingly puzzling, depending on the mood that you find yourself in whilst listening to it, unless your mood happens to run the haphazard emotional gamut that the Lips are content to throw the listener into (for every sweetly disturbed ode such as Gemini Syringes, there is a ear-splitting rabble of The Sparrow In The Machine). However, one cannot deny the sheer gravitas of what is certainly one of the only genuine event records to see release this year; one gets the impression that, even if you cannot honestly summise the motives behind the Lips anarchic offerings here (featuring Karen O and MGMT as key special guests also), there is still something beyond the usual hard rock tropes at work here... Approach with caution.

    She Wolf by Shakira
    Given the emergence of electro-pop in its various guises over the last year or so, you can’t really blame Shakira for wanting to take it by the horns and try her hand at it. Now whether its down to her own mercurial likeability (and let’s face it, she’s pretty damned cute!) or her choice of collaborators on this latest effort (which include sort-of past it hitmakers The Neptunes, alongside Santigold’s co-producer John Hill and old friends Wyclef Jean and Jerry Duplessis), she’s hit paydirt with her third English language studio album. Sure, she may be taking cues from prior efforts by Britney Spears (TocarWhy Wait borderline threatens to turn into a TocarGimme More sequel before the maybe-genius Bollywood influence hits), but Shakira’s own influence can be felt here because she isn’t subsumed by the threat of crushing electro beats á la RedOne, rather more content to rely on some exceptional songwriting (The Bravery’s Simon Endicott contributes the two standouts, including the title track and TocarMen In This Town) and imprinting her own sassy Latin roots on the proceedings, heard best here on possible future single TocarGood Stuff. It’s the difference between a good pop star and a great one that can adapt to a new sound without letting it crush them into submission and still sound fresh and interesting; i.e., let’s see if Lady GaGa can pull this off later down the line!

    The BQE by Sufjan Stevens
    Originally written for a one-off performance run at the Brooklyn Academy of Music Opera House in November of 2007, composer Stevens has taken all of two years to put a multi-media package together for those who weren’t able to attend those three sold out nights. Straying further from his established oeuvre of classically-infused folk music, Stevens has delivered what could be described as his TocarRhapsody In Blue, as the spectre of George Gershwin in particular looms especially large over his almost entirely orchestral ode to the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, bar the more electronically inclined Movement IV: Traffic Shock, which provides a quite-awesome break to the otherwise lovely, often beautiful passages illustrated here. Granted, it’s stunted when presented as simply a stand alone disc (the actual package contains an accompanying DVD of the motorway itself as filmed by Stevens, but not of any of the live performances, which featured a full-orchestra and a group of hula-hoop girls choreographed to the pieces), Stevens’ indulgence barrier will have been breached for a few of his less ardent listeners and members of the classical community may turn their noses up at yet another pop artist making an ill-fated stab at contemporary classical arrangements, but even all of that won’t detract from one of the more beauteous curios 2009 will have yet heard.

    Introducing Dionne Bromfield by Dionne Bromfield
    The phrase “hook ‘em when they’re young” feels semi-appropriate when writing about Miss Bromfield, Goddaughter to one Amy Winehouse and now a fledgling bona fide soul singer, cultivated by Ms Winehouse via her homegrown Lioness Records label. One comparison to be made other than her famous relative also is that of Joss Stone, who similarly set the recording world alight at a tender age with her The Soul Sessions album, a roster of carefully chosen covers that helped catapult her star into the stratosphere. However, whilst Stone came to prominence primarily by covering an indie anthem with a vintage Motown edge, Bromfield and her team have done well to transport her straight into the old-soul aesthetic with some carefully chosen classics, primarily because her voice, for a 13 year-old girl especially, is truly something to behold. Taking such sultry and galvanising command of standards such as TocarAin't No Mountain High Enough, TocarMy Boy Lollipop and Until You Come Back To Me, she strikes a prodigiously appealing chord that puts singers three times her age in her place. However, where she can go from here is an intriguing question (following her mentor’s example has its obvious pitfalls, after all), but for now, we can for once enjoy a kiddie cover album that no hip adult music listener should do without.

    Album by Girls
    A certainty to feature most prominently on Pitchfork’s Best Of ‘09 list, given their rapturous reception on the alt-music trendniks’ website along with many others, this indie rock group from San Francisco have ticked all of the boxes with regards to breakout success, with lead man Christopher Owens generating plenty of press via his personal history (being a former member of the Children Of God cult) and his blasé admission that the band’s debut disc was fermented via the method of copious drug-taking. Which, in of itself, doesn’t mean the listener is in for an infuriatingly bizarre audio misadventure nor the closest thing to an audio ascension to nirvana possible (the state of being, not the band!), as the quartet have gone and produced an almost-delicate alt-pop record awash in gorgeous feedback and timeless walls-of-noise. Described by the band themselves as a break-up record, it takes in serene psychedelic tropes as often as it does earthy ska punk, examples of each being gorgeous centrepiece Hellhole Ratrace (already earmarked by the ‘fork as a standout track of the last decade) and the joyous rabble of TocarMorning Light, and as a result definitely cements its reputation as one of the more legitimately esteemed releases of 2009 thus far and, unfortunately for Pitchfork detractors, whilst it doesn’t quite scale the heights of hype prescribed, it comes very close!

    Warp20 (Recreated) by Various Artists
    In order to celebrate releasing some of the best avant-garde electronic/dance/pop/rock/alternative music to have been composed over the last two decades, those fellows at Warp have decided to go all out with a rather delectable deluxe box set in honest, spastic funk celebration. However, for those who can’t afford to purchase said limited edition set, two facets of Warp20 can be purchased individually. The first is a double disc extravaganza of previous releases (disc one by fans on the Warp website, disc deux by co-founding label head Steve Beckett), featuring hits from the likes of Aphex Twin, Boards of Canada, Battles, Plaid and Squarepusher. Up for review here is the second compilation, for those who probably have most of those tunes already in their previous incarnations, which is essentially a covers album from Warp’s current roster performing their personal favourites from the Warp back catalogue. Of the notable successes here are avant-folk outfit Born Ruffians covering Aphex Twin’s Milkman and To Cure A Weakling Child, Tim Exile’s heavily-processed take on Jamie Lidell’s A Little Bit More and Leila’s gorgeous piano work of Twin’s Vordhosbn. Well worth a look and contender for compilation of the year.

    Tarot Sport by Fuck Buttons
    After courting generous indie press plaudits for their debut Street Horrrsing last year (and pretty much alienating most readers who tried to listen to it in the process), Bristolian electronic drone meisters Andrew Hung and Benjamin John Power have done well to reign in their inner noisenik to deliver an album that develops further from the art noise of their debut and yet retain an air of accessibility so as to endear them to a wider audience. Sure, you wouldn’t think upon listening to single Surf Solar’s frankly insane build which leads into Rough Steez’s reverb heavy power-slog that there was anything less commercial on the electro side of things, but the duo appear to have mastered the slow-build almost perfectly, because by the time The Lisbon Maru has segued into standout track olympians with through a mix of distorted guitar and heavy beats shot through with serene synths, you’re more than likely to be sold on this seven-track gem of an LP. Please bear in mind that for those who don’t like their jams at once trance-like in their ambience and positively ear-ringing in their drones, Tarot Sport will be a little too hard to swallow... For the more adventurous listener though, it’s a sonic highlight of the year!

    And that is why Tarot Sport is my Album Of The Month For October...

    Am knacked after that! Didn't check for typos this time so please feel free to make fun of any and everything in this journal! I'm game... ;^)
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  • CD's I've gotten in the last few months

    Out 27 2009, 0h25 por higaimousou

    Bat for Lashes - Two Suns
    Bauhaus - In the Flat Field, Mask Omnibus Edition
    Blackalicious - The Craft
    cali≠gari - 9 -踏-編, 9 スクールゾーン編, 10
    Crown City Rockers - The Day After Forever
    Dub Trio - New Heavy
    The Flaming Lips - The Soft Bulletin
    Incubus - Light Grenades
    The Jesus Lizard - Liar
    Living Colour - Biscuits, Leave It Alone, Dread, The Chair In The Doorway
    Lyrics Born - The Lyrics Born Variety Show: Season Pho (4!)
    Melvins - Stag, Chicken Switch
    The Mothers of Invention - Freak Out!
    The Mighty Underdogs - droppin' science fiction
    Prince - Musicology
    Q-Tip - Kamaal The Abstract
    Omar A. Rodriguez-Lopez - xenophanes
    Omar Rodriguez Lopez Quintet - The Apocalypse Inside of an Orange
    Squarepusher - Music Is Rotted One Note
    Them Crooked Vultures - Them Crooked Vultures
    Tomahawk - Mit Gas
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  • Notable Artists

    Out 24 2009, 19h21 por Riobe

    This is just a compilation of artists I believe are notable.

    Hip-Hop / Rap

    Nujabes : This is probably my favorite hip hop artist of all time. He's made a soundtrack for Samurai Champloo, and he also has like 4 other albums. I highly recommend the following two. Be sure to enjoy them! : )

    1st: Metaphorical Music
    2nd: Hyde Out Productions First Collection
    ----------
    DJ Shadow : One of the best trip hop artists out there, for sure. Check out this particular album, as it's really good (also the only I've heard). I haven't heard any others, but they may be just as good as well.

    Endtroducing......
    ----------
    Lightheaded : I actually downloaded Pure Thoughts (one of their albums that I found on last.fm), and I believe that they seem to be pretty good. Pretty good, not all that amazing though. I recommend these two particular songs:

    TocarBlink of an Eye
    TocarLightheaded Anthem
    ----------
    Cut Chemist : This guy makes some funky tracks for sure. Though I may not enjoy the funky style all the time, he's still a rather good artist in the end. Here's some songs. Listen.

    TocarMetrorail Thru Space
    Addictive : Please note, this is on the Skate 2 soundtrack, but cannot be found in any albums or on last.fm as of right now.
    ----------
    OutKast : One of the best mainstream hip-hop artists / duo's out there. I recommend you check out some of their stuff, as it's pretty awesome for the most part, but still here's a few tracks I particularly like:

    TocarMs. Jackson
    Happy Valentine's Day : Not on last.fm. Video may be available.
    My Favorite Things : Also not on last.fm. Video might be though.
    ----------
    Aesop Rock : I haven't really heard a lot of this guy's music, but he makes some really good stuff as far as what I've checked out goes. I'd recommend him.

    Breakcore

    Istari Lasterfahrer - I've only heard one song by this guy, but damn what a song it be. I'm still looking into him at the moment too.

    Tocarce qui reste de ce qui va
    ----------
    distimia : I've listened to a bit of this guy's stuff, and all I can say is damn what a breakcore artist. Some of his stuff may seem a bit samey samey after a while but he always delivers, and delivers good too.
    ----------
    belladonnakillz : I've actually only heard like, one song from this breakcore group, but it's pretty damned good song. I'd recommend it to anyone. I am still looking into the rest of their stuff at the moment, though.

    TocarLay4pay
    ----------
    µ-Ziq : This guy has made some nice stuff too. Favorite Album (only album I have from him) and favorite song (which is on the album, and also happens to be the name of the album) can be found below. Enjoy!

    Lunatic Harness (Album)
    TocarLunatic Harness (Song)
    ----------
    Rivak : Dude has some good stuff. Haven't heard much, but good stuff. The following song by him is cool, but his other stuff isn't very much like it. Nonetheless, recommended. ^_^

    TocarDestroy Fish People
    ----------
    Nero's Day At Disneyland : Leafff recommends him. Shouldn't that be enough?

    grievances and dead malls

    Rock / Hip-Hop

    Flobots : Man, I really love this group. Ever heard of a song named "Handlebars"? Of course you have. Because it's amazing. Now download the album thanks. :D

    Fight With Tools
    ----------
    Linkin Park : Cool band, man. They have some cool songs and stuff. Check em out when you can.

    Alternative Rock

    Mew : I haven't heard enough from this particular artist, but I love a certain song that this group has made. It can be found below, enjoy.

    TocarHawaii
    ----------
    Kenna : This guy is a BEAST at alternative rock type stuff. I actually found one of his albums by searching "MY FACE" on here. Man have I ever been glad I had done so.

    Make Sure They See My Face

    Punk Rock

    Rise Against : I need to start listening to these guys some more but I can tell you that I like a particular song by them that can be found below. Enjoy!

    TocarLike the Angel
    ----------
    Drum'n'Bass

    Squarepusher : Haven't heard enough of his stuff to even recommend anything, but you know, cool dude.

    IDM

    The Flashbulb : I like a lot of this guy's stuff. He makes a lot IDM and breakcore stuff too, just like Venetian Snares. Goes by the name of Benn Jordan and some others as well. Check him out, you won't be disappointed.
    ----------
    Venetian Snares : Again, like some of the aforesaid artists, I haven't heard enough of his stuff, but you know, check the damn guy out. How bad could he be? :p

    Chiptune

    she : Definitely one of my favorite artists of all time (and I have a lot of artists :D). This guy makes stuff from Chiptune to Electronica to 8bit type stuff. He makes a lot of cool (although short) tracks, you can check out his website at shemusic.org. Not gonna recommend anything on here, because ALL of this guy's stuff is great. Now go, go download some of his albums!

    Electronic

    hEADaCHE : Haven't heard enough of his stuff (I know, I know, how many times have you heard that already). Dude had some cool songs on War I: Destructors of the Mind though.

    Makina

    kors k : Recommended to me by the awesome sidke. Never been happier since. Check him out, bros.

    Breakcore / Metal

    Eraplee Noisewall Orchestra : Hey, I'm not all that much into metal, but this guy has made some cool breakcore type stuff you should take a look at. Be sure to take a look at the following album! (along with some of his metal stuff if you'd like to).

    The Statement
    ----------
    Maruosa - To be honest, I really really dislike this guy. :/ I hate breakcore and screaming into microphones and stuff like that, but you know, if you're into that stuff check him out. I only have him on here for one reason: this song is amazing, and just because of it he's on here. Otherwise...gneuuh.

    We Are Another Table
    ----------


    Thanks Leaff for editing all the tags and stuff, man. :D

    More artists to be added soon.
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