Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Review: LA Vampires and Maria Minerva The Integration LP

Here is a review of The Integration LP I wrote last winter.

A dark thread runs throughout the discography of Amanda Brown’s LA Vampires project. With each release, Brown returns again and again to churning, industrial beats and moody synths, hypnotically chewing a piece of gum that refuses to lose its taste. And her fascination with sinister sound is justified- some of the most fertile artistic material often hides in the shadows. But darkness eventually begins to wear on even the gloomiest among us. Spending all of one’s time plumbing the depths can eventually lead to blindness and insanity. That is, unless you enlist the help of a friend, a hand-holder who makes sure you don’t get lost.

Brown has had plenty of collaborators in the past –she hardly puts out any material without one- but her pairing with Maria Minerva is the most interesting duo she’s put together yet. On The Integration LP, Minerva applies her demonstrated penchant for bubble gum lyricism (think Madonna’s “Don’t You Know” and No Doubt’s “Underneath It All”) to Brown’s disorienting but catchy house beats. Punctuated by extraterrestrial horns and keys, her gliding, reverb-laden vocals thread their way through doleful synthesizer ecosystems. The record is a strange mixture of dance-appeal and intrigue, a vibey freight train that burrows its way into your subconscious.

On the album’s second track, “The End Of The World”, Maria ponders impending doom while Martian synths and rolling drums converse in the background. And at the beginning of “Seasons Change”, the sixth track, she laments with ominous echo, “the silence around me is driving me insane”. This kind of apocalyptic, existential reflection is scattered all over the disc. It establishes Integration, packed to the brim with fear and neurosis, firmly in line with the rest of the LA Vamps catalog. But where Nika Danilova chose to directly confront the abyss of Brown’s meditative darkness (tracks like “Vous” off of LA Vampires Meets Zola Jesus), and where Bethany Cosentino chose to run away (she found herself so deeply maimed by Brown’s enigmatic, shifty approach in Pocahaunted that she turned her next project, Best Coast, into an overcompensating California sunlight fetish), Minerva takes a different tact.

The Integration, under the Estonian artist’s auspices, exists in defiance to the very darkness that surrounds it. Minerva’s vocals –though dripping with reverb- are prominent in the mix. Her tone wobbles perfectly between weariness and insouciance- you never do get to find out how she feels about the end of the world. This kind of lack of resolution would be disheartening, but music like this reminds you that a lot of value can be found in the intangibles, that you can mock death even when you uncontrollably dance toward it.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Winter 2012 Mixtape

Image Credit: Matt Leines

Tracklist:

(Mixed with cameos from Mickey Mouse, Howard Dean, Miranda July, Andre, and others)

John Maus- Quantum Leap
Shabazz Palaces- Blastit
Meg Baird- All I Ever Wanted
Blues Control- Boiled Peanuts
Cloud Nothings- Not Important
Big L- You Know What I'm About
Youth Lagoon- Cannons
Josephine Foster- Where There Are Trees
Little Dragon- Runabout
Miles Davis- Blue in Green
Gauntlet Hair- Top Bunk
Seven Fields of Aphelion- Starlight Aquatic

Dowload the Winter 2012 Mixtape here

Thursday, September 9, 2010

New Post!



Been a while, waiting for rain among other things out here.

Enjoy Linda Perhacs: http://www.megaupload.com/?d=2HXFE1TE

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Belong- October Language


Image cred. Alex Lukas


Belong is the ambient/drone project of Turk Dietrich and Michael Jones. Their debut lp, October Language, was released in February of 2006.

It is widely assumed that October Language is the response of New Orleans residents Jones and Dietrich to the devastation that was Hurricane Katrina. This is certainly a nice thought. The sonic waves that comprise October Language do wash over the listener, as if in an attempt to salve wounds that were created by water in the first place. And part of what makes this heart-wrenching record so special is that it somehow manages to be poignant and sublime and harsh and destructive as a hurricane at the same time. But this album was recorded in 2004, before Katrina formed in the tropics and certainly before it gushed over New Orleans. Nevertheless, this album has the power to heal our ears and our hearts as we try to survive in this world where death and destruction constantly loom.

Download October Language

Friday, March 26, 2010

Stained Glass- Some Dubstep Favorites



Ever since dubstep rose from the ashes of rave culture and the dark, wet crevices of East London in the late 90s, the genre has grown a considerable following, as the internet continues to expose its wonky tunes to the world. Meanwhile, venerable producers like Starkey, Flying Lotus, and Samiyam (USA) are cropping up outside of dubstep's UK homebase.

And it seems more and more like summer every day here on the east coast, so conditions are not exactly prime for listening to the dark cousin of two-step and grime, but every now and then the wind blows chilly against your bedroom window late at night, and you curl up with that familiar friend that is dubstep. And the fear should leave you cold and dark, but the music knows your pain, and it takes you away to the light.

Burial- Untrue (2007)

Flying Lotus- Los Angeles (2008)

King Midas Sound (same guy from the Bug) - Cool Out EP (2008)

5: Five Years of Hyperdub (2009) PART1 PART 2
Kode9's Hyperdub label celebrated their 5 year anniversary last year and to celebrate released this compilation that serves as a perfect crash course in Dubology.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

King Tuff- Was Dead



Listening to the fuzzy, revivalist pop of King Tuff, you kind of get the sense that the Vermont band has no intentions other than to rock the fuck out. Which is perfectly fine as far as I'm concerned. Complete with zany, sun-dried lyrics, "Was Dead" clocks in as one of the best releases of 2008. Play this one loud.

LINK: http://www.megaupload.com/?d=VHDLM9P1

image cred. Jeffrey Meyer

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Mixtape #2- Seven Years of Bad Luck



01 Hey Tiger- Dear Nora
02 Rainydayz (from the in rainbows remixes)-Amplive
03 C.R.E.A.M - El Michels Affair
04 Hell (ft. Canibus)-Pharoahe Monch
05 The Burning Spear-Sonic Youth
06 Help Me, Rhonda-Beach Boys
07 I Lost Something in the Hills-Sibylle Baier
08 Bluebird-Bukowski
09 Interview with the Chain Gang- Chain and the Gang
10 Wizard of Oz sample
11 Country Man-Digital Mystikz
12 It Covers the Hillsides-Midlake
13 Clan in Da Front- Wu Tang
14 "Rap Music"-Chris Rock
15 Bjork Remix of Stressed Out-Tribe Called Quest
16 Headless Horseman-Microphones

LINK: http://www.megaupload.com/?d=WCE8MV9M