Five Songs, 9/6/2022

ALL, “Honey Peeps”

You know, I never really gave this album a real shot. The previous album seemed so sour and included some really bad lyrics, so after buying this one due to inertia, I never really engaged with it. This is a decent tune, though. I wonder what I’d think if I went back and gave it a whirl at this point. It doesn’t make the lyrics go away, though.

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Five Songs, 5/17/2021

Boris, “Spoon”

2011 was an insanely productive year for Boris, with four albums showing up that year, all of them being unusual in some way from their standard. To the extent that Boris has a standard. Anyway, this is from New Album, which continues in the grand tradition of Boris albums being named things that are a pain in the ass (one of the other 2011 albums was called Heavy Rocks, which is the second time they’ve named an album that). At any rate, New Album is sort of a remix, with much of the material here being reworked songs from Heavy Rocks (2011) and Attention Please (another of the 2011 releases). If this is all confusing, welcome to the Boris discography!

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Five Songs, 5/16/2021

Can-i-bus, “Get Retarded”

Hoo boy.

Steroid Maximus, “Quilombo”

Love that upright bass! We’ve had Steroid Maximus before, but this is one of J.G. Thirlwell’s (Foetus, Wiseblood, Manorexia, Clint Ruin, etc) many aliases. Steroid Maximus is all instrumental, tending towards jazz and cinematic stuff. It’s excellent, and this track gives a great sense for what you’d be in for.

The Slackers, “Don’t Forget The Streets”

From the excellent 2008 album Self Medication, this is as good a self-summary of the band as they’re likely to serve up. By the time they hit this album, it was clear that the Slackers were survivors. They started during the boom years of the third wave, and then endured the collapse of their first label, the implosion of the scene, and the derision of music fans. And through it all, they kept cranking out great tunes.

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Five Songs, 4/8/2021

Hella, “Women of the 90’s”

I was chatting with my friend the other day about some of the absolutely bonkers drum videos you can watch these days, stuff that just seems totally impossible. And this makes me think I should go watch some videos of Zach Hill doing his thing.

Khemmis, “Torn Asunder”

Just some good ol’ heavy metal going on here. All fuzzed out guitar solos and shit. This should ideally be listened to in a custom van.

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Five Songs, 3/20/2021

Shadowy Men on a Shadowy Planet, “You Spin Me Round ‘86”

The rare Shadowy Men track with a voice on it! Very little, mind you, but judged on a curve, it’s a ton.

Pond, “Magnifier”

Great stuff so far today! I’ve sung the praises of Pond repeatedly in this space, but seriously: this album (The Practice Of Joy Before Death) totally rules. If you want to listen to more, you can hit up the tag, but just fire up the album.

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Five Songs, 11/3/2020

Rockabye Baby!, “Beautiful Day”

This is ostensibly a cover of the Green Day song. This was a gift to us, I think, a while back. And I suppose you can see the intended joke here - it’s lulliby music! But also Green Day! Har! But overall, this is so far from anything resembling the original that you’d probably have to explain it to anybody to attempt to convey the levity. Please try to slip it in-between the giggle-snorts.

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Five Songs, 10/14/2020

Muddy Waters, “You Can’t Lose What You Ain’t Never Had”

For as much as I joke about not knowing shit about jazz (and I do not), I know even less about blues. I’m clueless! So, I’ll just say that this comes from his 1978 album I’m Ready and get out of the way.

Noisem, “Voices in the Morgue”

Well, that’s jarring. Noisem, a death/thrash act from Baltimore, got some positive press a while back, so I picked up this album. But I don’t know, I think I’m pickier about this end of metal, and this doesn’t do a whole lot for me.

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Five Songs, 11/14/2019

Aden, “New Fast”

During the early 90s, parallel to grunge, there was a growing movement of indie pop bands that didn’t make a lot of headway, but were a recognizable subculture. As the 90s went on, a billion of these pillowy soft indie bands popped up. The pressure from all these bands ensured that, eventually, one or more of them would break through (it was Death Cab for Cutie, mostly).

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Five Songs, 8/6/2017

Your music is over here!

John Oswald, “Way”

John Oswald, a composer, coined the term “plunderphonics” to describe the process of composing a new song using recognizable parts of existing songs. The “recognizable” portion was something he considered key. It involves the composer making using of existing associations in order to raise emotions in the listener that might otherwise not be possible. This can distinguish it from some of the sampling used in hip hop and the like, which might be considered plunderphonics or not, depending on how much the source is widely known.

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