September, 2011 Archives

3
Sep

New Wilco Album Streaming For 24 Hours

by Lefort in Music

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Today starting at 10 am Pacific time Wilco’s entire new album, “The Whole Love,” will be streaming for 24 hours at their website, Wilcoworld.net.  The album will be released on September 27th on their own, brand new label dBpm.  According to the band’s email, today’s streaming is “a reward for your labors, our labors, and those of our forefathers/mothers.”   Let’s see if it can labor off this flippin’ fog while it’s at it.

2
Sep

Come Get Stuck In Unbridled Positivity With Elbow At The Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival

by Lefort in Music

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The Telegraph has a sweet interview with Guy Garvey of the great British band, Elbow, which ends with Garvey calling for “unbridled positivity” at their shows.  Amen brother!  We can’t wait to pass along all the positivity we can muster when the band plays the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival in San Francisco some time (schedule yet to be finalized) between September 3oth and October 2nd (Friday to Sunday).

Here’s an excellent excerpt from The Telegraph interview (emphasis added):

“This may be Elbow’s area of speciality: the equivocal anthem. The uplifting singalong coda and glass-half-full sentiments of their most celebrated song, One Day Like This, have made it a staple of ads and soundtracks…. In a BBC poll to find the public’s favourite Desert Island Discs, it was the highest-rated song of the past 10 years. “I’m dead proud of that. It feels as if we’ve added to the canon. That’s the goal. It’s like something [Elbow guitarist] Mark Potter said – ‘That’ll last longer than our gravestones.’ ” In a live setting, Elbow’s poetic ambiguity is transformed into something else. “You hear bands saying, ‘We’re gonna blow people away.’ I’ve never really liked that kind of confrontational thing. Its not, ‘We’ll show them what we’ve got.’ It’s, ‘Look what we can do together.’ That’s the great thing about singalongs. It might not be very cool, but what the f— is cool? I spent years trying to be cool, and I’m not very good at it. So let’s just get stuck in with the unbridled positivity.””

In the meantime, to get you in the mood, check out the videos of Grounds for Divorce and One Day Like This from Festival V in 2009, followed by a BBC broadcast from this year’s Glastonbury Music Festival of the entire Elbow set (after the blather finishes at :46).  You can also go over to Absolute Radio and check out Elbow’s live session at St. Paul’s Cathedral that is streaming only until September 8th.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sGqoB6oB4Ic

1
Sep

My Morning Jacket Benefit Show For KCRW

by Lefort in Music

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Before they played at the Santa Barbara Bowl, My Morning Jacket played a benefit concert for KCRW in front of a scant 250 people (including an enterprising friend of ours) at Village Studios in Santa Monica.  The whole concert is now available to watch below, courtesy of NPR.  Check out the setlist over at NPR.

1
Sep

Destroyer–Official Video for “Savage Night at the Opera”

by Lefort in Music

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One of our favorites of this or any other year, Destroyer, has delivered a new official video for their song, Savage Night at the Opera (from their Tops of 2011 album, “Kaputt”).  Check it out.  Makes us want to head to Vancouver and hang for a bit in Gastown and environs.

Destroyer – Savage Night at the Opera from Merge Records on Vimeo.

1
Sep

Malkmus & The Jicks on Jimmy Fallon

by Lefort in Music

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Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks performed the previously unheard song, Surreal Teenagers, on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon” Tuesday night.  The song is so obscure you can’t even find it on the new album released last week,  “Mirror Traffic.” Given the less poppy, more proggy, sound, we’re sure Beck gave it the boot from the album.  We can’t say we blame him (for once).  Different strokes, though.  Surreal Teenagers may be your Pumped Up Kicks, if you will.

We prefer the other song they did on Fallon before they played Surreal Teenagers, the “clean” (slow, snow job indeed) version of their prickly song, Senator.

Check ’em out.