February, 2012 Archives
Feb
Damien Jurado’s Fantastic New Album, “Mariqopa,” Streaming on A.V. Club
by Lefort in Music
As reported here back in November, one of our most anticipated albums of 2012 is Damien Jurado’s Mariqopa, which will finally be released next week on Secretly Canadian. Jurado’s 2010 album, Saint Bartlett, made our Top Albums list for 2010 and his album, Rehearsals for Departure, is one of our all-time favorites.
As can be immediately heard on the opening track, Nothing Is the News, Jurado’s recent comrade on Saint Bartlett, the ascendant producer Richard Swift (Mynabirds, Gardens & Villa, etc.), has taken Jurado’s usual highwater songwriting and expanded his sound palette in fittingly ambitious ways to lift his songs even higher. Jurado has never hidden his appreciation for Neil Young and has subconsciously (at a minimum; just listen to that falsetto) paid homage to Young over the years in his songs. So it’s not a great surprise that at times on Mariqopa, Swift seems to be to Jurado as Jack Nitzsche was to Neil Young on Young’s seminal Harvest album. Nitzsche reached high on the Harvest songs he produced, and the rest is beautifully bombastic musical history. On Mariqopa we hear Nitszchean strings, waves of guitar, children’s choirs, keyboards, flutes, horns and most of the rest of the kitchen sink. The Swift one also brings Phil Spector and Dave Fridmann production elements to the mix, though at the right times rightfully defers to Jurado’s vocals.
Highlights off the album (so far): Reel to Reel (with its Flaming Lips feel), Working Titles (with its pointed lyrics and Motown-ish backup vocals), the very Young-ian Mountains Still Asleep and Everyone a Star, the poignant So On, Nevada, and Museum of Flight (with its propulsive rhythms and fab falsetto vocals). That’s right, we didn’t leave many songs off the highlights list. That’s because it’s a tour de force from stem to stern. He’s one of our best. Check it out.
Go stream Mariqopa over at the A.V. Club HERE. And then pick up the album when it comes out next week.
Feb
The Head and the Heart–Official Video for “Down in the Valley”
by Lefort in Music
So good to be back from the Grammys. Nice vacation backstage with the kids and geezers. Nicki…we’ll talk.
For something completely different, check out The Head and the Heart’s new video for their song Down in the Valley, which in a scant five minutes captures well the life of an American indie band. Check it out.
Feb
The Shins Unplugged in San Diego
by Lefort in Music
James Mercer showed up on San Diego’s 91X Radio Station (of all places) recently and did a brief unplugged Shins set opening with Young Pilgrims, then playing new songs Simple Song and It’s Only Life, and then finishing with New Slang. Check it out below and prepare for Port of Morrow’s imminent release. Thanks to our San Diego friends for forwarding.
Feb
Waters Perform “Take Me Out to the Coast” on Tiny Telephone
by Lefort in Music
Former Port O’Brien frontman, Van Pierszalowski, graced 2011 with his new band, WATERS, resulting in a welcome new album (Out in the Light) and one of the Best Songs of 2011 (Oh Holy Break of Day). We caught them live at Muddy Waters last Fall and highly recommend you dive in and check ’em out. Now for something slightly different, check out this Tiny Telephone session below, and the group singalong on Waters’ song, Take Me Out to the Coast. When in doubt get thee to the coast, where the Waters will wash over you. And if you can do it at the holy break of day, everything will be all right.
Feb
John K. Samson (Weakerthans) Performs New Song(s) for Exclaim! TV–Expanded
by Lefort in Music
As mentioned earlier, John K. Samson, leader of one of our all-time faves–The Weakerthans, just released a phenomenal new solo album, Provincial, on Epitaph-Anti Records. Samson showed up recently at Exclaim! TV to perform one of the most affecting songs off the album, Letter in Icelandic from the Ninette San. Though nearly indecipherable without Master’s degrees in Icelandic and Canadian history, Epitaph tells us that the song “is set in a tuberculosis sanatorium which existed in the small town of Ninette, Manitoba from 1915 to 1973. The…lyrics are sung as a letter written by a fictional Icelandic immigrant patient residing in the San[atorium], to his brother back home in Riverton, Manitoba, sometime in the 1940s.” Huh. All we hear is desolation and shatterdom. On the plus side, Samson’s perfect, world-weary vocals and delivery leave us comparing plights and counting blessings. Samson never fails to move us. Check it out below.
Update: Exclaim! TV has now released the companion song to Ninette San, When I Write My Masters Thesis. Check it out after.
Feb
Preview of Wilco at the Arlington Theater This Friday–Wilco on Austin City Limits
by Lefort in Music
Wilco was the featured band on Austin City Limits last weekend. For a sneak peak of what you’re in for at the Arlington Theater this Friday in Santa Barbara, check out the entire Austin City Limits episode below (with Nick Lowe on one song).
Watch Wilco on PBS. See more from Austin City Limits.
Feb
New Shins Song “September”
by Lefort in Music
The Shins have released another song, September, off of their impending new album, Port of Morrow, this time via website Record Store Day. September is a lovely month and song, evidently written for James Mercer’s wife (Marisa Kula) and scheduled for release as a B-Side on, you guessed it, Valentines Day. Chocolate and roses weren’t enough, eh James? One-upped again.
The Shins: “September” (b-side of “Simple Song” 7”) from Record Store Day on Vimeo.
Feb
St. Vincent Performs “Cheerleader” on 4AD
by Lefort in Music
We’re still making the effort to find a pulse behind the Replicant mannerisms of St. Vincent. This new 4AD Session video doesn’t necessarily help her cause, but it has helped drill her song Cheerleader further into our crania. And there’s no doubt: it can play guitar. Check Cheerleader out below along with the remainder of the full 4AD Session after.
Feb
OK Go–That’s Video Entertainment
by Lefort in Music
OK Go has been delivering supremely entertaining videos over the last few years (we won’t comment on the music other than to say: “we don’t hate it”). Comes now a brand new video (for their song Needing/Getting) for your post-Super Bowl, post-Madonna-gets-sucked-to-hell-at-the-end blues this Monday. We’re not sure about the truth and veracity of the recorded “sounds” versus the depicted sound-making, but there’s no doubt it is entertaining. Check it.
Feb
Bon Iver on SNL
by Lefort in Music
The bonny Bon Iver showed up on Saturday Night Live last night to perform one of the best songs of 2011, Holocene, and one of the worst-produced songs by an otherwise great artist, Beth/Rest. Check ’em out below and let us know what you think.
Holocene:
Beth/Rest: