Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Stereophonics - Language. Sex. Violence. Other? review

StereophonicsLanguage. Sex. Violence. Other? (2005, V2 Records)


My love for Stereophonics lasted for about the length of one song… and that song was “Have a Nice Day,” the single from their 2001 album Just Enough Education to Perform. I bought the album and, ehh, sorta liked the rest of it. Bought an earlier album and pretty much didn’t like any of it… and now I’m listening to their new album Language. Sex. Violence. Other? and, umm, nope. Nothing to turn me on here. Rock songs with refrains like “suck my banana, suck it with cream” and tired songs like “Rewind” which is just a retread of Filter’s “Take My Picture” without moderately catchy chorus. The attempt to sound cool on rock tracks is too much now for frontman Kelly Jones after about ten years of recording. This is just tired, uninspired music that, well, isn’t so bad but isn’t worth paying for. Have a nice day!

Monday, June 27, 2005

A stupid argument about the new Hip Whips album

Hip Whips - Hip Whips (2005, Brass Button/Dubious)









Jdamen: When are you posting a new review you slack ass mot-

TheKeenGuy: Tonight, probably.

TheKeenGuy: I like the new Hip Whips, but not as much as the first one.

Jdamen: New hip whips is rad. As good? Not sure, haven't listened enough yet.

TheKeenGuy: But "Time Is On Its Way" hedges too close to the Rolling Stones "Time Is On My Side," I keep thinking that's what he's gonna sing.

Jdamen: Eh... lyrically similar but the actual tune is quite different.

Jdamen: I don't think they sound alike at all.

TheKeenGuy: Hmm..."tiiiiiiiiime is on my side....""tiiiiiiiiiime is on its way..."...no, not similar at all.

TheKeenGuy: Just talking about the chorus.

Jdamen: And I listen to the Stones way more than you. I have all their albums, you don't have any. Other than the time part, it's not similar.

TheKeenGuy: And Hip Whips dude has always had kind of a Jaggery voice.

TheKeenGuy: Dude, I'm not saying the songwriting is the same.

Jdamen: Eh... Their voices aren't similar at all. The Hip Whips are dead ringers for Procol Harum who sang “A Whiter Shade of Pale.”

TheKeenGuy: But play that song for a hundred people and after the chorus ask them what song it reminds them of...

Jdamen: Now their music I would compare and not argue.

TheKeenGuy: Meh, there's Jagger influence on the singing too. "Pick Up Your Pain" is like a dead ringer.

Jdamen: I just listened to the chorus of each songs and they don't sound alike at all.

Jdamen: Other than that they stretch out the word "time."

TheKeenGuy: Really, you didn't notice, say, any similar words?

Jdamen: And "Pick Up Your Pain" is way more Van Morrison than Stones.

TheKeenGuy: But there's Stones there!

Jdamen: You think his voice sounds like Jagger? I think you're a bit off the mark. Chorus of “Time Is On Its Way” is only similar to the Stones in that the titles of the songs have similar wording and include the word time but the songs don't sound alike except "TIIIIIMMMEEE..."

TheKeenGuy: BUT THAT PART DOES!

Jdamen: So?

Jdamen: Hahaha

Jdamen: Who cares?

TheKeenGuy: So... I dunno, that's my whole point.

TheKeenGuy: That's all I'm saying.

Jdamen: That's not really a criticism though. I'm listening to it now against the Stones song and they're not alike other than they chose the same word "TIME."

Jdamen: And "IS."

Jdamen: Did the Stones have copyright on "TIME IS ON?"

Jdamen: Those words?

TheKeenGuy: It just bugs with me, because I keep expecting the dude to finish it with "on my side."

TheKeenGuy: That's all I'm saying!

Jdamen: But he doesn't. That should make you happy. You'd be a lot more pissed if he did .

Jdamen: If he was just like "TIIIIIIIMMMMEEE IS ON MY SIDE!"

TheKeenGuy: Well, I'd be confused then, sure.

Jdamen: And he was like: "I MADE THAT!"

TheKeenGuy: And if they covered "Ruby Tuesday," I'd be really pissed off.

Despite Patrick's bratty point of view, everyone here on Cut the Chord loves both of the self-titled Hip Whips releases and recommends that you run over to www.parasol.com to order them!

Friday, June 24, 2005

Summer Mix

I can hear the Atlantic echo back
roller coaster screams from summers past.
-Ben Gibbard

Summer. Never so beautiful and full of promise as it is in your memories. This mix is for those who long for summers past.

Side A

1) The Beach Boys - Let's Go Away For Awhile (Instrumental)
2) Stereophonics - Dakota (You Made Me Feel Like The One)
("Thinking back, thinking of you/Summertime, think it was June/Yeah, I think it was June...")
3) Bill Ricchini - Like An X-Ray
("We make love on the fresh cut Astroturf...")
5) Don Henley - The Boys of Summer
("Those days are gone forever/I should just let 'em go but/I can see you/Your brown skin shining in the sun...")
5) Broken Social Scene - Looks Just Like the Sun
("You better check your watch/I think it's time we left...")
6) Belle & Sebastian - Piazza, New York Catcher
("I know it wouldn't come to love/My heroine pretend...")
7) Moonbabies - Summer Kids Go
("You smell my fear through the telephone...")
8) Iron & Wine - Bird Stealing Bread
("How I've missed you lately...")
9) Ed Harcourt - Black Dress
("You will come back...")
10) Kristofer Astrom - Loupita #3 (Instrumental)

Side B

11) Gin Blossoms - Found Out About You
("I write your name, drive past your house...")
12) Death Cab For Cutie - Photobooth
("And as the summer's ending, the cool air will push your hard heart away...")
13) The Elected - Greetings In Braille
("Some things are worth getting in trouble for...")
14) Doleful Lions - Surfside Motel
("Don't you know it was the government who stopped the Beach Boys from releasing Smile?")
15) Love - Bummer in the Summer
("We used to ride around all over town but they're puttin' you down for bein' around with me...")
16) Joseph Arthur - September Baby
("Summertime is over, I don't owe you nothing...")
17) Luke Temple - Painted Blue
("I walked on your lawn, I painted it blue...")
18) The Sleepy Jackson - Miniskirt
("If I was a girl, I'd wear a miniskirt into town...")
19) The Doors - Indian Summer
("I love you the best/Better than all the rest...)
20) Ryan Adams - Friends
("And when you get old/I bet you'll miss your friends")

Saturday, June 18, 2005

Wolf Parade - Wolf Parade EP review

Wolf ParadeWolf Parade EP (2005, Sub Pop Records)


Warning: You may already be a Wolf Parade fan and not even know it.

Your album collection has probably already been invaded by Canadians in the last year, from the Arcade Fire to the Dears and some Broken Social Scene for good measure. Well, it’s time to make some more room in that collection not only for the Wolf Parade EP but for the band’s forthcoming full-length Apologies to the Queen Mary.

The EP is less than fourteen minutes long, featuring two songs produced by the band themselves and two produced by Modest Mouse’s Isaac Brock, who discovered the band as Sub Pop’s resident celebrity A&R guy. Quite a synergistic relationship, isn’t it? Brock gets to promote any little old band he likes, and Sub Pop gets the opportunity to namedrop Modest Mouse in the promotions. “Hey! You like Modest Mouse! Modest Mouse like Wolf Parade! Therefore… buy Wolf Parade!”

That strategy might just work. The music is close enough in kinship to the music of Brock’s band to gain some of those fans, and at the same time, Wolf Parade is no imitator of that band. There’s a lot of influence to be felt in the music, especially in the vocals which drip of David Bowie on tracks like “Disco Sheets.”

Wolf Parade is gaining notoriety already among hipsters and it’s time to jump on the ship before it’s too late to claim that you’re still among the trendsetters. This EP comes out on July 12th, so make sure you’re already a fan before the time that happens! Be that cool indie rock person who’s able to talk all about the band to the record store clerk while picking up the EP the very day it is released. You can be like, “aww man, the full length is gonna be fuckin’ rad. Have you heard that song Dear Sons and Daughters of Hungry Ghosts?! This band’s gonna blow up, yo!”

Thursday, June 16, 2005

Doleful Lions - Shaded Lodge and Mausoleum review

Doleful Lions - Shaded Lodge and Mausoleum (2005, Parasol Records)


I had a vision while listening to this album. No shit. The very first time I took the new Doleful Lions out for a test drive, I had an honest to God vision. While listening to the second track, "Watch the Skies/A Boy's Life," I had a clear picture of a young woman standing in front of a stove in an apartment. She turned on all the burners and the oven, not intending to cook anything, but for the purpose of filling the apartment with gas. She then left the apartment, passing by the open door to the bedroom where her boyfriend was still asleep. End of vision. I have no idea what that means or why the hell that girl wanted to off her boyfriend. Needless to say, I was a bit shook up after that.

On a musical level, Shaded Lodge and Mausoleum is a beautiful piece of work recalling the warm acoustic psychedelia of the 60s. Fans of Nick Drake, Love, and the Beach Boys will find a lot to appreciate here. It's a gentle listening experience and I don't think I'd be too far off the mark to call it hypnotic. That's right, you'll find yourself hypnotized, floating on a cloud, in a peaceful musical cocoon... Until you realize what Jonathan Scott is singing about.

"Satanic blood/The wonders of love have gone away/Wake up to Lucifer's new day/Bringer of light/Champion night/Kiss the exalted Baphomet..."

What the fuck?

That's right. There's some sinister shit going on beneath all that beautiful music. Satanism, human sacrifice, and black magic all wrapped up in poetic romanticism. I wouldn't be surprised to find the complete works of Aleister Crowley on Scott's bookshelf along with a bootleg of Kenneth Anger's underground experimental occult films in his VHS player.

In the press release that accompanies the album Scott talks about his love for Bay area black metal band Von and their underground demo Satanic Blood, which was recorded in the late 80s and has since gained a cult following with Satanists and black metal devotees. Real black metal, where the band is creating the music as an act of worship, is truly frightening. The whole genre is nasty, violent, and revels in acts of brutality I can't support on any level. For some fascinating reading, check out Lords of Chaos: The Bloody Rise of the Satanic Music Underground. The book tells the tragic and twisted tale of how some Norwegian bands took part in acts of church burning, suicide, and murder.

Anyway, Scott seems to be suggesting that this is his homage to Von. Now musically, Von and the Doleful Lions have zero in common. When it comes right down to it, black metal fans would probably consider the music of the Doleful Lions to be the epitome of pussy. In fact, they would probably kick Scott's ass and sacrifice him to their horned god if he showed up at one of their shows. On a musical level, black metal bands are simplistic and monotonous. Lyrically, aside from referencing Lucifer multiple times, these two bands also share nothing in common. Black metal bands have the lyrical prowess of cavemen. Jonathan Scott, on the other hand, is extremely well spoken, writing lyrics that Robert Plant wishes he could have written when Led Zeppelin's interest in the occult was at its peak.

It's been rumored that Von was a joke band. Give any black metal album a listen and you'll find it very hard to take seriously. This Doleful Lions album, on the other hand, is very difficult not to take at face value. No one would spend their time putting together such an accomplished piece of work if they didn't mean every word of it.

Shaded Lodge and Mausoleum is the best kind of album you can be sent as a reviewer. I can't even begin to tell you how many albums we receive on a weekly basis that evoke nothing more than a shrug. Who cares? I've heard a million other albums just like this one. Well, you haven't heard a million albums like a Doleful Lions album. It demands an opinion. I still prefer their last one, Out Like A Lamb, which is more varied both musically and thematically. But Satan or no Satan, I can't in good conscience not recommend Shaded Lodge. There's something extremely unsettling about singing love songs to Lucifer that sound like something Simon and Garfunkel would have put together. It's so much more insidious than Von and any other black metal band could ever have hoped to be.

Shaded Lodge makes me uncomfortable and it freaks me out. And you know what? That's a good thing.

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

Brendan Benson - The Alternative to Love review

Brendan BensonThe Alternative to Love (2005, V2 Records/Startime International)


Brendan Benson had six years to work on 2002’s Lapalco after getting screwed over by a major label (as is commonly the case, isn’t it?). Writing and recording much of the album with power-pop guru Jason Falkner, Benson produced a sunny pop rock masterpiece that’s continuing its countrywide creep into the album collections of girls for whom I’ve made mix CDs.

With The Alternative to Love, Benson’s follow-up to Lapalco, he took little more than a third of the time to complete and release this new album as he did the last one. So you can imagine that it’s not going to have quite the same impact and level of intensity that went into the comeback record. The simple fact is that if anyone owns all three of Brendan Benson’s albums (for which they’d get a handshake from me), this new isn’t going to be their favorite.

Yet, The Alternative to Love is still a terrific record with some of the most addictive rock songs of the year.

The first four songs are the standouts, the songs that without question make whatever price you pay for the CD worth it, from the “what’s on your miii-iii-iii-iii-iiind now” chorus of “Spit It Out” to the catchy synth melodies that start out “Cold Hands (Warm Heart)” and “Feel Like Myself,” not to mention Benson’s razor-sharp lyrics for those songs. Then there’s “Alternative to Love” with its party time drum beats that will be familiar to anyone who picked up a copy of Franz Ferdinand’s self-titled album last year. This song is the pop centerpiece of the album, and I’m probably wrong, but I swear I detect Benson’s old friend Jason Falkner signing back-up near the end of the song.

It seems like many critics have expressed their disappointment in the second half of the album, which I think really comes down to only one or two weak tracks and perhaps a track order that could have been arranged better. After the stirring “The Pledge,” we’ve had five great rock songs in a row that are suddenly followed by three slower, pensive and similar-sounding songs. The result is like starting off a road trip speeding down the freeway and suddenly getting caught in gridlocked traffic. The tracks aren’t that bad, but the track order makes this part of the album feel sluggish. Perhaps if a more upbeat, slightly less turgid song had been put in place of “Biggest Fan,” this wouldn’t have been a problem.

Then, we are speeding along again as the soaring guitar hook that starts out “Get It Together” which interrupts the end of “Flesh & Bone.” It seems the album is back to its former pace, except that next comes “Gold Into Straw,” a rock song lacking in Benson’s usual knack for melody, and which pretty much leaves me wanting to listen to “Get It Together” a second time instead. “Gold Into Straw” is a song that I feel just doesn’t quite fit in tonally with the rest of the album either, with its dark and sober lyrics lacking in the wit and insight that most of the other songs boast… especially the next track, “What I’m Looking For,” which manages to be a song that’s both bouncy and poignant at once, with Benson’s wonderful rhyming couplets and dynamic of warring ego and introspection that makes for a fascinating personality profile, especially in a song like this.

“Between Us” finishes out the album with more of an ellipses than a period, as opposed to the pulse-pounding coda of “Jet Lag” that he used to finish out Lapalco. “Between Us” gives more of a sense of continuation beyond this album, the hope that another one is coming… and here’s hoping that it is and soon.

From Brendan Benson's official homepage:
Brendan Benson - What I'm Looking For.mp3
(to download, Right-Click and "Save Target As...")

Monday, June 13, 2005

The 20 Best Albums of the Decade Thus Far (2000-2005)

So here's my picks for the 20 best albums released since 2000. Listed alphabetically by artist. Feel free to post your favorite albums from 2000-2005 in the Comments section!

Adams, Ryan - Cold Roses (2005, Lost Highway)
Animal Collective - Sung Tongs (2004, Fat Cat)
The Arcade Fire - Funeral (2004, Merge)
Badly Drawn Boy - The Hour of Bewilderbeast (2000, Twisted Nerve/XL)
Benson, Brendan - Lapalco (2002, StarTime)
Bright Eyes - I'm Wide Awake It's Morning (2005, Saddle Creek)
Broken Social Scene - You Forgot It In People (2002, Arts & Crafts)
The Comas - Conductor (2004, Yep Roc)
The Decemberists - Castaways & Cutouts (2003, Kill Rock Stars)
Interpol - Turn on the Bright Lights (2002, Matador)
Iron & Wine - The Creek Drank the Cradle (2002, Sub Pop)
Modest Mouse - The Moon and Antartica (2000, Epic)
Moonbabies - The Orange Billboard (2004, A Hidden Agenda Record)
Radiohead - Kid A (2000, Capitol)
Ricchini, Bill - Ordinary Time (2002, Megaforce Records)
The Shins - Chutes Too Narrow (2003, Sub Pop)
Smith, Elliott - From A Basement On The Hill (2004, Anti)
The Strokes - Is This It? (2001, RCA)
The White Stripes - White Blood Cells (2001, Sympathy for the Record Industry)
The Wrens - The Meadowlands (2003, Absolutely Kosher)

Saturday, June 11, 2005

The Next Snow Patrol Album Is Going to Suck



So I recently saw Snow Patrol live for the second time. They have come to town twice in support of their sorta-breakthrough album Final Straw. I have to say that I really wish I could have seen them live before the release of that album.

I became a fan of Snow Patrol back in 2001 with When It’s All Over We Still Have to Clear Up, an eclectic album that can alternately recall Belle & Sebastian, the Beta Band, My Bloody Valentine and Lou Barlow. There are pulse-pounding rocks songs like “Last Ever Lone Gunman” and wonderful quiet songs like “Batten Down the Hatch,” along with quirky songs like “Chased by… I Don’t Know What” that recall their even-wilier debut album Songs for Polar Bears. When It’s All Over also has some great lyrics about relationships gone bad, from the contrite “On/Off” to the inebriated fury of the devastating title track. I absolutely loved this album and no one else I knew had even heard of it.

Cut to last year when I saw them live and I was surrounded by teenage girls and jockish boys shouting “fuck yeah!” as Snow Patrol launches into their radio single, the anthemic “Run.” Could these people really be catching on to the same indie rock that I’ve been a fan of for several years? Mmm, no, probably not.

“YouguyssoundlikeColdplay!” was the cheer of one enthused audience member.

The truth is, when I listened to Final Straw for the first time, the Snow Patrol I knew and loved was there, but at the same time there seemed to be an attempt to create WB Channel-ready pop songs that are neither too weird nor too profound. It was interesting to me, though, since this pop rock was infused with an indie sensibility that I enjoyed, like the Loveless-ish wailing guitars of songs like “Gleaming Auction.” But all in all, I could sense a strain in the songwriting that felt like an attempt at broadening the band’s popularity that, oh!, just happened to coincide with their signing to A&M Records.

So there I was, watching Snow Patrol do their best to entertain an audience that wouldn’t have given a shit about them merely one album ago. Case in point, they were barely able to pull out any of their older songs except for those that most closely resembled the new album. The only time they really seemed to enjoy themselves on stage was during the performance of the rock song “Post Punk Progression,” a recent b-side more loopy and exciting than anything on Final Straw.

During this most recent show, they played even fewer of their old songs. They did break out “Batten Down the Hatch,” but had done their best to reconstruct it as a pop rock song, since there was surely no one in the audience that was going to sit through a song that’d be right at home on Belle & Sebastian’s The Boy With the Arab Strap.

Now for the worst part… at this show, frontman Gary Lightbody announced that they were going to play several songs that they were writing for the new album and launched into one of them, a flaccid and forgettable Coldplay imitation with astoundingly facile lyrics. This was a band that I liked much more than I ever have Coldplay (who I haven’t bothered to follow since Parachutes… which I didn’t even buy until I could find it for under ten bucks) who I now felt was producing inferior imitations of that multi-platinum band.

Perhaps it’s unfair to suggest that this is why Snow Patrol’s bassist recently quit the band, so I won’t do that (snicker, snicker). But I’ve gone from being a tried and true fan of a band to no longer being sure that I’m even going to purchase their next album. Is this a problem?

No, it probably isn’t.

First of all, I’m glad that Snow Patrol, who carved out two great albums while probably also working shitty day jobs back in Scotland, have gained enough success now that they can most likely actually rely on their music as their main source of income. Good for them.

Furthermore, even though I’ve lost a great indie rock band after two albums, I do feel that as far as popular music goes, Snow Patrol is one of the best bands getting mainstream radio airtime… although I’m not certain how much, since I do not own a radio (and proudly so!). Plus, I wouldn’t be surprised if Gary Lightbody’s super-group side project the Reindeer Section becomes the bastion for the kind of songwriting he was doing before, so there’s still hope that everyone can go home happy.

So when it comes down to it, there’s no real tragedy here, even if the next Snow Patrol album is, by my prediction, going to be like the last album minus all the good things that had carried over from the previous albums. Even if I don’t purchase it, there are twenty frat guys and their high school girlfriends waiting to snap it up. So I suppose that Snow Patrol has nothing to worry about.

Thursday, June 09, 2005

Fizzle Like a Flood - Fizzle Like a Flood EP review

Fizzle Like a FloodFizzle Like a Flood EP (2004, Ernest Jenning Record Co.)


“I love the fuck out of you!” goes the chorus of one-man band Fizzle Like a Flood’s song “Love the Fuck,” an interesting, busy song full of perplexing lines such as “I would love you even if I wasn’t married.” Doug Kabourek’s voice gets buried in the music as if it’s one of the instruments being played in the mix of things. The voice treads close to the emo-barrier on songs like “Rides to Get High,” but the music is bound to appeal to any who found Elliott Smith’s “King’s Crossing” to be an interesting recording. There are the same swirling flourishes in the playful keyboards and echoing drums of this EP. It makes me curious what Kabourek has been up to on Fizzle Like a Flood’s other records, like the new full-length Golden Sand and the Grandstand.

Tuesday, June 07, 2005

Ryan Adams - Cold Roses review

Ryan Adams & the Cardinals - Cold Roses (2005, Lost Highway Records)


I’m a sucker for double albums. While I admire the tight rock masterpieces delivered in roughly thirty minutes by bands like the Strokes and Hot Hot Heat, there’s something equally exciting about the prospect of exploring an album that wasn’t satisfied with its station in life and longed to be more than just a typical single disc release.

I feel the same way about movies. My favorite film is the two hundred and twenty nine minute director’s cut of Sergio Leone’s Once Upon A Time In America. I have refrained from buying the separate DVD releases of both Kill Bill films because of Tarantino’s promise to eventually release his opus as it was originally intended to be seen as a single film. I also have a soft spot for Paul Thomas Anderson’s sprawling Magnolia. As long as the quality is high, I say the longer the better. Tell me a story that holds my attention and I’ll stay in my seat until you’ve said all you had to say.

Double albums are like the kids back in kindergarten who refused to color inside the lines. A large majority of music journalists take the stance that a teacher or principal would take with the offending student. They automatically assume that since the album doesn't conform to the standards set by... Other artists? Record labels? Critics? ...that it's probably bloated, pretentious, filled with extraneous tracks, unnecessary, full of itself, etc. In truth, double albums just require a little more time to digest.

Some of the greatest albums ever recorded in the history of rock and roll have been doubles. Blonde on Blonde, The White Album, Exile on Main Street, London Calling, Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, Songs in the Key of Life, Bitches Brew, Zen Arcade, The Wall, Tommy, Electric Ladyland, and Physical Graffiti are just a few that come to mind.

The general rule of thumb is to give an album time to become a classic. Time will tell if it's really as great as you think it is. Blah, blah, blah. Fuck that. That's pussy talk. And for the most part, rock critics are pussies. The last thing they want is to make a bad call and have other music snobs balk at their impassioned claims of an album's greatness. It's like high school, really. No one wants to be laughed at.

In life, we're at our most vulnerable when we confess our love for something to someone else. It's like being naked or telling someone you're in love with them. The fear factor is there and it's unavoidable. Well, it's too late at night for me to give a shit what other people think so I'm just going to come right out and say this.

Cold Roses is not only the best album Ryan Adams has ever made but it's also one of the best double albums ever recorded. That's right. Right up there with those other classics I listed above. From start to finish it is an absolute joy to listen to. It's sad, heartbroken, and alive emotionally in ways that much of today's music is afraid to be. Producer Tom Schick and the Cardinals have brought out the absolute best in Adams. He has never sounded more relaxed or at peace with who he is as an artist as he does here. All eighteen tracks are gorgeous and shimmering testaments to his talent as a songwriter.

To call Adams prolific would be an understatement. Since his critically acclaimed debut Heartbreaker appeared in 2000, Adams has released Gold, Demolition, Love is Hell, and Rock N Roll. And those are just official releases. If you search around on the web you're likely to find unreleased albums like Destroyer, 48 Hours, and The Suicide Handbook as well. His sheer output, genre bouncing, and often cocky and standoffish public persona have gotten him in hot water with a lot of critics over the last few years, culminating in a near public flogging with the simultaneous release of both Rock N Roll and Love Is Hell.

Indie review sites like Pitchfork, who gave such glowing reviews to Heartbreaker, were suddenly only interested in trashing Adams and taking a very public piss on his new albums. That didn't stop Rolling Stone, Spin, and Mojo from giving Rock N Roll, Adams' stylistic ode to guitar rock acts like T. Rex, the Stooges, Paul Westerberg, U2, and even pals the Strokes, unanimous praise.

Never shy about his affection for the Smiths, even discussing a Morrissey song in the studio banter on Heartbreaker's first track, it came as no surprise when Adams hired Smiths producer John Porter to oversee the recording of Love Is Hell. Unlike the glossy, candy coated rock of Roll, Hell finds Adams under dark skies recording brooding ballads, folksy Dylan inspired kiss offs, and 80s Brit pop.

Both Rock N Roll and Love Is Hell seem to be Adams as a chameleon, trying on the outfits worn by his musical loves both past and present, turning them inside out and making them his own. My appreciation for those albums has grown with each listen. And you know what? I don't think Ryan Adams could ever have recorded an album as powerful as Cold Roses without making Rock N Roll and Love Is Hell first. He's come full circle. Working creatively with a band for the first time since Whiskeytown, he returns to a similar terrain as Heartbreaker but surpasses that album in every way imaginable.

Did I mention that Adams has two more albums scheduled to be released this year? Some might cringe. I welcome them both. Face it. That's just who he is. One of the best and most ambitious musicians working today. And I'll be happy to follow him wherever his musical journeys may lead.

Monday, June 06, 2005

Sleater-Kinney - The Woods review

Sleater-KinneyThe Woods (2005, Sub Pop Records)


I never thought I’d say that Sleater-Kinney sounds like Phantom Planet, but as I was listening to the first few tracks on The Woods, I was reminded of the same blown-out rock sound of the revelation that was Phantom Planet’s self-titled second album. It started to make sense when I looked at the credits for The Woods and noticed that the producer was indeed David Fridmann, who had also produced that Phatom Planet album. He’s probably better known for his work on the flourish-heavy orchestral albums that he’s produced for the Flaming Lips, Mercury Rev and the Delgados, though he seems to be more interested in this big rock sound he’s now cultivating that sounds like it’s being played on stereo turned up much louder than the speakers can handle. Thus, he continues with the honor of being the Brian DePalma of indie rock, given his easily identifiable idiosyncrasies… and I mean that in the nicest of ways.

As for Sleater-Kinney, everything’s in place; Corin’s shredding vocals, Janet’s fierce drumming, Corin and Carrie’s dueling guitars. The album starts with “The Fox” which has an absolutely addictive drum beat. There’s the sweet, fuzzed-out “Modern Girl” and the usual grrl rock fun of “Entertain,” and then there’s the 11-minute “Let’s Call It Love” which has everyone on the internet screaming Led Zeppelin comparisons (even the promotional booklet that came with the CD name-drops Led Zep practically every other paragraph). All in all, it’s nice to hear that high level of ambition that SK still brings to each album.

Sunday, June 05, 2005

Of Montreal - Satanic Panic in the Attic review

In their usual prolific ways, Of Montreal has already released yet another album, The Sunlandic Twins, since I wrote the review for this one just a few months ago...

Of MontrealSatanic Panic in the Attic (2004, Polyvinyl Records)


Of Montreal has come a long way from their more infantile, chaotic (but still amusing) early records, branching out on this record into more of a vaguely British-sounding psychedelic sound. There are still the ridiculous anecdotes like “Chrissie Kiss the Corpse” and simple childlike laments like on “Eros' Entropic Tundra” that frontman Kevin Barnes is well known for. But the maturity and complexity of the music itself has been ratcheted way up to give a very interesting dynamic. In a way, Barnes’ lyrics have often been very touching because they feel like what a kid too young to know how to be insincere or ironic would talk about love. But finally, the band has come together as a cohesive unit, able to pump out some great rock songs, especially on the last three tracks.

Friday, June 03, 2005

Bill Ricchini To Release New Album


Bill Ricchini, one of Cut The Chord's favorite artists, is set to release his follow up to 2002's acclaimed Ordinary Time on August 23rd. The album, entitled Tonight I Burn Brightly, will include eleven new songs including "Angela" and "Eugene Hill." You can be the first to hear one of the album's new tracks here http://www.transdreamer.com/. Keep up to date with what's going on with Bill at www.billricchini.com