6.30.2011

The Sky Above the Port Was the Color of Television, Tuned to a Dead Channel


I've been loving the mixes being posted, so I've decided to throw one into the lot. Here is a dreampop/shoegaze mix, mainly focused on Cocteau Twins, Wild Nothing, Asobi Seksu, and The Pains of Being Pure at Heart. Other gems are included as well.

The title and picture for the post (first line of Neuromancer and artwork from Akira) are in line with the glossy, technological sheen of the mix while also pointing to some of its melancholy overtones. You can download the mix here, which includes the .m3u playlist. Enjoy.

Tracklist:

Slowdive - Alison
Wild Nothing - Golden Haze
A Sunny Day In Glasgow - The white witch
California Wives - Tokyo
Best Coast - Wish He Was You
My Bloody Valentine - Sometimes -
The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart – Contender
Memory Cassette - Asleep At a Party
Cocteau Twins - Cherry-Colored Funk
Wild Nothing - Chinatown
Asobi Seksu - New Years
Sun Airway - Infinity
The Pains of Being Pure At Heart - Belong
California Wives - Purple
Lush - Etheriel
A Sunny Day In Glasgow - Failure
Cocteau Twins - Bluebeard
The Radio Dept. - Heaven’s on Fire
The Jesus and Mary Chain - Some Candy Talking
Asobi Seksu - Transparence
Cocteau Twins - Heaven or Las Vegas
Wild Nothing - Vultures Like Lovers
Memory Tapes - Swimming Field
The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart - Gentle Sons
Asobi Seksu - Exotic Animal Parade

6.05.2011

A Good Man Is Hard To Find


not to post over bens' latest mix, but i've beed inspired.

for your listening pleasure: a good man is hard to find. it started out with some slower songs that i really liked and morphed into basically a list of a lot of music that shuffles through my most played list.

also, i'm not really good at saying 'no'--consider this a two-disc set.

but again, similar to ben--this mix is probably more for myself. i hope you enjoy.

you can download the tracks here, with cover art and the .m3u list as well.

track list
.....................................................................................................
  1. The Antlers - Kettering
  2. The War On Drugs - Baby Missiles
  3. Tom Waits - A Good Man Is Hard To Find
  4. Okkervil River - Piratess
  5. Bright Eyes - At The Bottom Of Everything (jj edit)
  6. The Arcade Fire - Half Light II (No Celebration)
  7. LCD Soundsystem - All I Want
  8. Roky Erickson With Okkervil River - For You
  9. Destroyer - Savage Night At The Opera
  10. Handsome Furs - All We Want, Baby, Is Everything
  11. Future Islands - An Apology
  12. Danger Mouse, Sparklehorse - Star Eyes / I Can’t Catch It
  13. Local Natives - Airplanes
  14. The Mountain Goats - Never Quite Free
  15. Titus Andronicus - To Old Friends And New
  16. Neko Case - This Tornado Loves You
  17. Okkervil River - No Key, No Plan
  18. Future Islands - Long Flight
  19. The War On Drugs - Brothers
  20. The National - Ada
  21. Beach House - 10 Mile Stereo
  22. Lcd Soundsystem - Someone Great
  23. Handsome Furs - Radio Kalininbrad
  24. Radiohead - Codex
  25. Tom Waits - Hold On
  26. The Arcade Fire - Neon Bible
  27. The War On Drugs - Taking The Farm
  28. TV On The Radio - Killer Crane
  29. The National - Geese Of Beverly Road, The
  30. Dolorean - 33-53.9 Degrees N/118-38.8 Degrees W
  31. The Mountain Goats - High Hawk Season
  32. Tom Waits - Come On Up To The House
  33. Roky Erickson With Okkervil River - True Love Cast Out All Evil
  34. Titus Andronicus - Albert Camus
  35. Beach House - Real Love
  36. Radiohead - Separator
  37. The Antlers - Epilogue
  38. Tom Waits - Picture In A Frame

6.04.2011

wild ox moan: a beat-the-heat mix

I promise, I'm not trying to take over this blog! I make these things for myself anyway, and I'll just keep copying them here as long as you guys don't care. I just hope they are up someone's alley...


Finding a lovely tune in a stack of all-too-easily forgotten old records is something fantastic. It is also overwhelming when you realize that you could probably spend the rest of your life completely ignoring new musical output, and use all of your free time mining the past for hidden gems. Even then, there will always be some out-of-print vinyl tucked away in a thrift store in Milwaukee that you won't ever hear.

And since I don't spend much of my free time scouring record stores for these rarities, I rely on people like Wes Anderson, Andy Cabic, Robin Pecknold, Matt Morelock, Amanda Petrusich, and the wonderfully eclectic Justin Gage over at Aquarium Drunkard to do some of the scouring for me.

For this mix, I stuck with tunes from 1975 or before. Most of them fit the bill of the rare obscurity or obscure rarity - some more than others. And a few just fit that sound of a hot afternoon full of kamikaze cicadas turning into an evening full of fireflies as you daydream of an old European countryside. I can already hear the vinyl crackle... Cheers!
_________________________________

1. Sally Goodin (Long Version) / Heron [1970]
2. Katie Cruel / Karen Dalton [1971]
3. Sunlight Shadow / Linda Rich [1969]
4. The Hills Of Isle Au Haut / Gordon Bok [1970]
5. Iris's Song For Us / Vashti Bunyan [1970]
6. The Tall Tall Grass / John Hartford [1967]
7. Buckeye Jim / Burl Ives [1944]
8. Kings And Queens / Loudon Wainwright III [1975]
9. Take It From A Friend / Janey & Dennis [1970]
10. Cast The First Stone / Tom Fogerty [1972]
11. Play With Fire / The Rolling Stones [1965]
12. Don't Forget Me / Harry Nilsson [1974]
13. So Long, Marianne / Leonard Cohen [1967]
14. The Way I Feel Inside / The Zombies [1965]
15. I Don't Want To Set The World On Fire / The Ink Spots [1941]
16. You Always Hurt The One You Love / The Mills Brothers [1944]
17. Love / Nancy Adams [1972]
18. As We Go Along / The Monkees [1968]
19. Wild Ox Moan / Taj Mahal [1969]
20. Houses / Elyse Weinberg [1968]
21. Where Is My Wild Rose? / Chris Thompson [1972]
22. I've Been My Own Worst Friend / Sandy Denny & The Strawbs [1967]
23. Lopin' Along Thru The Cosmos / Judee Sill [1971]
24. The Lady With The Braid / Dory Previn [1971]
25. If I Knew You Were The One / Richard Twice [1970]
26. Lon Chaney / Garland Jeffreys [1973]
27. The Good Book / Melanie [1971]

Download the full mix HERE.

6.03.2011

yankee hotel foxtrot demos

This post is aimed at Wade, but is definitely worth looking at even if your name is something other than Wade!

Yankee Hotel Foxtrot is my favorite 52 minutes of sound ever recorded to tape. And after watching I Am Trying To Break Your Heart 1,000 times during my freshman year of college, I began looking for ways to get my hands on some of the demos and other recordings that didn't make the record. A few years ago, these files circulated the interwebs and my itch was scratched. One is a collection called the Yankee Hotel Foxtrot Demos, and the other is called the Engineer Demos.

So, if you haven't heard them and you are a fan of Wilco, then you definitely need to download them by clicking below.
--YHF DEMOS
--ENGINEER DEMOS

5.09.2011

I Swear I Can Hear The Sea: a spring/summer mix



This mix tells a story. Indulge me, if you will, by imagining that this story is true...
________________________

The sun rises out of the void once again. The morning rays slide down over the glass and concrete and land on tar and gasoline. All the people walk out of their homes and climb into cars. They converge on the highways and sit together in traffic. You wonder how it all happens - the fellowship of the commuters, the coffee-fueled consciousness, the voices on the radio, even your final destination - none of it feels like a decision you made.

Suddenly, but subtly, you feel a pull in your stomach. You notice how striking the sun is in the early eastern sky. Images of the distant places where the sun is directly overhead flood your mind. The sound of waves rushing through piles of rocks and sand begin to echo inside your little sedan.

But these images are different from the ones that you have set as your desktop wallpaper on your work computer. Those are just crappy pictures from your last vacation. They are Corona commercials. But this pull in your stomach is something else. It is the feeling that life is passing away and all the things you fill your time with are worthless. The work you do is so that you will have money, but what does money get you? Instead, there are boulders to climb, trails to hike, oceans to swim, food to eat, and roads to drive. Roads that aren't filled with exhaust and screeching tires, but ones that are open and filled with wind.

So you keep driving. Past your exit. Past your office. Out of the city. Toward that ocean that you crave.

You drive for hours and each passing mile brings fleeting feelings of freedom. Your white button-down is thrown in the passenger seat, the starched collar is finally starting to wiggle in the wind. The seat belt is irritating your bare shoulder, but you ignore it. Midday and afternoon pass by as you drink in the freedom. You don't have to answer to anybody. You are your own man.

The white lines whiz by like a constant echo for hours until you reach the end of the road. And there it is. The ocean sits ahead like eternity. You think the blue is the most beautiful color you've ever seen.

Once you've parked the car and taken off your shoes, you make your way toward the tide. You think you must be in a good place now. You dive in the water and feel all the sweat wash off. Surely this is what Tennyson meant when he said he would drink life to the lees. Surely this is what Thoreau had in mind when he commanded you to suck out all the marrow of life.

But just as quickly as the sweat washed off, a hesitation creeps in. You realize that you are alone. You realize the green in her eyes is the most beautiful color, not the blue of the water. You miss your dog. And who will water your tomato plants at home?

So you make your way back to your car. You brush the sand off your feet and turn back toward the rolling hills. You decide to let your dreams be your escape. At least for a while. And you hope that she lets you come home.
________________________

1. Go Outside / Cults
2. Legal Man / Belle & Sebastian
3. Grown Ocean / Fleet Foxes
4. Sweet Thing / Van Morrison
5. Golden / My Morning Jacket
6. Louisiana / The Walkmen
7. Sometimes / James
8. Paint The Silence / South
9. Gentle, Polite / Eric & Magill
10. Victoria's Secret / Quiet Village
11. Feel It All Around / Washed Out
12. Zadie Bobo / Ernesto Djédjé
13. Round And Round / Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti
14. Sun Hands / Local Natives
15. Modern Girl / Sleater-Kinney
16. Kanske Ar Jag Kar I Dig / Jens Lekman
17. The Swimming Song / Loudon Wainwright III
18. California Sunrise / Dirty Gold
19. I Must Be In A Good Place Now / Bobby Charles
20. Let Me Come Home / Wilco

Download the full mix here.

1.05.2011

Best Albums of 2009!


Well, now that 2011 is upon us, and the memories of 2010 are already melting into the ether, I figure it's a good time for me to share my "Best Albums of 2009." Please be aware that I can barely remember one thing that happened to me in 2009. I mean, I can remember lots of things from the past decade of my life, but I couldn't tell you what year they happened in. That's what being over 30 is like, I guess. So this list may be a little off. Here goes. . . .

11. Coldplay - LeftRightLeftRightLeft [live]
This is the free album that they gave out at their concerts, and eventually made available on their web site. I can be picky about the sound of live albums, and this one gets it right. It's a good mix, a good selection of material and performances, and a nice representation of what their live show feels & sounds like. I had a great time seeing them at the Bridgestone (was it Sommet then?), it was the best I'd ever heard them sound (I admit I missed that supposedly legendary show at Starwood back in '05). I'm particularly a fan of "42," Fix You," and "Death And All His Friends" on this live collection.

10. The Dead Weather - Horehound
I have been in love with The Dead Weather ever since being rollicked by Alison Mosshart and wooed by Jack White's drumming at ACL Fest in 2009. I bought the album afterwards and while I don't feel like it's as good as they are on stage, it still captures something deep, dark, swampy, and with a punch that will rattle your gut.

9. Monsters of Folk - Monsters of Folk
This is a satisfying amalgamation of Jim James, Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis, and M Ward. As their name describes, it's folksy in song style and instrumentation. James, Oberst, and Ward each bring songs to the table, and while the entire album is nice to listen to, it's Jim James' songs that stand out the most. His lovely "Magic Marker" is the gem of the bunch, but I also give a nod to Ward's "Say Please," which is the albums most energetic moment.

8. Phoenix - Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
Here is another album that won me over live, before I'd ever heard it on record. Okay okay since you asked, it was 10th row center at the Greek Theater in LA (Jason Schwartzman was in the row behind me) with Metric as the opening act. I cannot brag enough on how good Phoenix is live - I would not have predicted it, based on the composed, precise and mannered style of their studio albums. But their sound comes out and over you with a force that lifts and carries your spirit on a 2 hour high. This is a great summer album, so I am annoyed that I purchased it in late September, but I think I got some mileage out of it all through the following summer months. It glows from start to finish, but standouts are the exuberant "Fences" and the shimmering "Rome."

7. Various Artists - Dark Was The Night
A four album set on vinyl, each song here is wonderful, by artists ranging from David Byrne to Arcade Fire to Cat Power to Grizzly Bear. It was produced and overseen by The National's Dessner brothers. You get a lot of variety but a cohesive atmosphere throughout. My favorite track, and one of my favorite recordings of the entire year, is Sufjan Stevens' "You Are The Blood" - 10+ minutes of whacked out, electronica'd up, folk-tinged, melodic wunder-pop like only Soof can provide. It provided the first clue of what his 2010 output would sound like, and perhaps because it came first, it strikes me as more breathtaking than this past year's records (which I love).

6. The Flaming Lips - Embryonic
Now, I have to be in a very specific mood for this album (I guess that would be the mood to go sunbathing off the southern coast of St. Bart's to trip with the spider monkeys). But I am a huge fan of it. I think it was a wonderful directional shift after their last few (great) albums. Like a palette cleanser after several delicious courses of food. I see the Flaming Lips as a band who have taken and honed a free-spirited psychedelic sound, and used those tools and aesthetics to craft, not psychedelic music, but wonderfully constructed pop masterpieces. Now they have taken those psych-pop aesthetics of their own creation, and used them as tools to create a truly psychedelic record. And that's how I see Embryonic. The soundscape is enthralling! If the mood strikes you in the near future, start it spinning from the beginning, buckle up, and enjoy the tasty ride.

5. Yo La Tengo - Popular Songs
This was probably my biggest surprise of the year. Not that it should have been; apparently Yo La Tengo have been making solidly fantastic albums consistently since the mid-80s. On two vinyl discs, this first disc is filled on both sides with catchy, well-tempered creative pop songs (hence the title) played with the understated tastefulness of veteran indie rockers. There is mellow synth, textured guitar licks, elegant beats both real and electronic, and subdued orchestration adding to the album's rich palette. Disc 2 contains two long shoegazey compositions on side 1, and an even longer Krautrock burner on side 2. Each are full of lush sounds and hypnotic atmospheres. My favorite song is the wistful "When It's Dark," with its warm acoustic guitar and wispy harmonies.

4. Wilco - Wilco (the album)
Biased because they're just about my favorite band? Perhaps. But while it's certainly not my favorite Wilco album, I think this is another beautiful piece in a career of remarkable albums. I know some have fretted that this band, which found its feet in early days with bold experimentalism and genre bending, is making what could be described more and more as "dad rock." I, too, am not a fan of this directional veering, should it continue much further. But as Tweedy said himself of previous album Sky Blue Sky, he wanted to make music that his wife would enjoy listening to - something that people with less adventurous tastes in music could appreciate. That album was a success in its restrained beauty. And I think the band was still operating somewhat in that headspace when making Wilco (the album). Though this is a different album for sure - louder, less somber in tone, and yet safer in some respects. Here you don't find anything like the wild guitar solo explorations of "Impossible Germany" from the last record. To me this album is, more than ever, about how all of Wilco sound as a whole... the meshing of each instrument and part rather than the individuality of its members. Like the album title suggests, this is Wilco, nameless & faceless, more than it is Tweedy, Stirratt, Kotche, Cline, Jorgensen & Sansone. To some, this might sound a little less colorful than previous material, and I might agree. But they can achieve moments of thrilling power with seemingly little effort. Like the sudden crescendo in the final 20 seconds of "One Wing;" or the joyous chorus of "You Never Know," with its "ooohaaah" harmonies and subtle ride cymbal "bell" hits in the gaps (listen close!); or the lead-in to the bridge in "Wilco (the song)" at 1:40 that ever so slightly kicks it up a notch for that part of the song. I am hoping for a turn back towards the daring for their next release. But this still remains one of my favorite albums of 2009. Wilco will love you baby.

3. U2 - No Line On The Horizon
What can I say - I think U2 have made yet another truly great album. Again a slightly different sound than other albums. At first I was not sure about it, but quickly over repeated listens I fell in love. I like the enchanting atmospherics created by Eno & Lanios. I like the way this sounds in some ways like classic 80s U2, and yet in some ways like a U2 we haven't heard yet at all. I think Bono does a fantastic job with melody on this record. (I guess he always does doesn't he?) I like the synth used throughout the album. For me the standout on the album is "Moment of Surrender" with its gospel-like chorus and trance bassline.

2. Animal Collective - Merriweather Post Pavilion
I guess everyone had this on their list and I too fell powerless before the fun, creative mix of sounds that pour out of this record from beginning to end. My first favorite moment is the opening track, as it gently teases you with soft washes of vocals and colorful synth strokes before crashing like a wave at 2:30... "if I can just leave my body for the night" -- and the rest of the song hits with an urgency that sets the stage for the rest of the record. My other highlight is the strange and pulsating "Bluish," which channels the ghosts of Cocteau Twins.

1. Grizzly Bear - Veckatimest
This is my number one, because it surprised & delighted me the most! I am perfectly satisfied by the aesthetic of this album, from the imaginative song structures, the unusual instrumentation, the ear-candy harmonies, the wonderfully clear and open and echoey recording technique, and not least the most infectious song of the year, the sumptuous "Two Weeks." Other songs that stand out to me are - well, none of them. This isn't one of those albums with a bunch of highlights for me. Other than the one already mentioned, I don't know songs by name. I just get lost in one after another perfectly executed chamber-pop gem. Perhaps it's all the more unexpected for me because while I liked their last album, Yellow House, it never really stood out to me. (Maybe I need to go back and listen to that again.) But I love when bands sort of hit a peak, or hit their stride, out of nowhere - like when Genesis lost Peter Gabriel, moved Phil Collins to lead vocals and unleashed Invisible Touch. I guess that's what I'm trying to say: Veckatimest is this generation's Invisible Touch. Happy New Year!

Honorable Mentions:

The Walkmen - Live Session (iTunes exclusive) - Best iTunes Release
Deerhunter - Rainwater Cassette Exchange - Best EP
Thom Yorke - "Hearing Damage" - Best Single Release
Super Furry Animals - "Helium Hearts" - Best Album Track
Radiohead - "15 Step w/ USC Trojan Marching Band @ Grammys" - Best Live TV Musical Moment

Here's looking forward to another great musical year. Stay tuned for my top albums of 2010 - coming in January 2012.

Clay Headden
Bus Salesman

12.25.2010

Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun: a melt-the-snow mix

Winter is officially upon us - the snow is dusting my front lawn as I type, and my heart is constantly threatening to cease blood-flow to my toes. I figure there's nothing better than a bit of music to heat up the atmosphere and bring some life back into the frozen corners of our homes and automobiles.

Here is a mix that might aid that effort. Merry Christmas!


1. Ce Matin-La / Air
2. D.A.N.C.E. / Justice
3. Seasun / Delorean
4. New Theory / Washed Out
5. In The Morning (featuring Andi Toma) / Junior Boys
6. As Serious As Your Life / Four Tet
7. Ready 2 Wear / Felix Da Housecat
8. Transformers (Ghosthustler Remix) / Futurecop!
9. All My Friends / LCD Soundsystem
10. Hello Jenn, I'm A Mess / Evangelicals
11. Fragile / God Is An Astronaut
12. No Comply / Studio
13. Baptism / Crystal Castles
14. Up, Up, Down, Down, L, R, L, R / Truckasauras
15. Windowdipper / Jib Kidder
16. A Paw In My Face / The Field
17. Don't Save Us From The Flames / M83
18. Flim / Aphex Twin

Download the full mix here.