The Saturday Evening Post-up
Greetings, welcome, etc. to the inaugural edition of the Saturday Evening Post-up. A couple of things might be running through your mind right now, such as “What the hell is this?” or “It’s Tuesday, not Saturday.” I’ll get to the first question shortly, though as for the second, well… I don’t know. I didn’t feel like waiting until Saturday.
The Saturday Evening Post-up is a review of what we’re playing right now on KWUR, and will include new music reviews and charts (if I ever get around to posting them). Reviews are written by our very own, very talented DJs, and will be reprinted here as they are on the CDs laying around the station. There’s not much more to it than that – check back for every week (probably on or around Saturday) for a new edition. Now, without further ado, this week’s reviews:
Ra Ra Riot – “The Rhumb Line”</p>
</span>
Play: 1, 3, 4 (sad), 5 (e.e. cummings reference), 9 (delightful Kate Bush cover)
Dynamite Club – “Fusion Era”
Dynamite Club makes irreverent, bizarre, and at times obscene or disturbing noisy rock. This is along some of the same lines as early Boredoms hardcore with a splash of prog (guitar lines and rhythms are at times pretty complex). The vocalist gives a distinctly ESL edge to the weird-out lyrics.
Interesting: 3 (treatment of the reading of the digits of pi), 6 (a satirical prod at jazz fusion), 9 (longest – Mike Patton style disturbing spaz composition)
Marnie Stern – “This Is It And I Am It And You Are It And So Is That And He Is It And She Is It And It Is It And That Is That”</p>
</span></span>You wouldn’t guess it from the cover, but this album is full of crazy guitar riffs and pulsing beats and Marni Stern’s exciting voice. It’s a decent album – Sleater Kinney and PJ Harvey being a 10 and Michelle Branch and The Donnas a 1, Marnie Stern is something like a 5 or 6. The songs tend to sound the same, though. Very dance-y. Also, I thought the music would redeem the lame album title, but it did not.
Play: 1, 2, 4, 7, 10
XXTeens – “Welcome To Goon Island”
Band name: not great. Album title: not great. Album itself: excellent. Somewhere between spazzy art punk and just about every other genre out there. Lots of primal drumming, the catchiest damn guitar hooks I’ve heard in a long time, and sexy yelping vox. Maybe some room to improve (first time through is breathtaking, but doesn’t hold up well with repeated listens), but this is a solid first album.
Play: 1 (string intro, but don’t be fooled – this song rocks out), 3 (primal fucking shit), 5 (catchy, check the horns), 8 (weird electro, then art punk), 9 (best song, rockin)
of Montreal – “Skeletal Lamping”</p>
</span></span>Collection of instrumental sounds similar to past of Montreal work. Tons of mini songs within songs with abrupt shifts and transitions. Semi-distorted vocals. Less accessible than past CDs and more experimental. More noise focused than lyrical. Electric sounding hooks.
Play: 1, 3, 7, 15
Fucked Up – “The Chemistry of Common Life”
Noisy – and I don’t just mean loud (though these guys do kick up one hell of a racket) – hardcore. Each song is layered with at least… 30 guitar tracks, vocals honed on years of chewing glass, and pummeling drum beats. The effect is dense, LOUD – and melodic and beautiful too, in a way. Definitely merits comparisons to Refused’s Shape of Punk to Come, and hey, 10 years later, maybe this is it. That’d be just fine with me. (features cameos from Vivian Girls, Sebastian formerly of DFA1979)
Play: 1 (dense, kick-you-in-the-face hardcore, a lot of fun), 2 (check the bongo line), 7 (most accessible on record), 11 (kinda like a reprisal of track 1 – is that an acoustic guitar I hear?)
And the charts…
Great use of string instruments (violin and cello), works well with the guitar. Cool driving rhythms, but a bit derivative of their EP (for anyone who’s familiar with it). Not much change from EP to LP. Gets a bit pop sometimes, but the dark undertones in the lyrics make up for it.
Rank
Artist
Recording
Label
User Supplied Version
1
RA RA RIOT
The Rhumb Line
Barsuk
2
WALKMEN
You And Me
Gigantic
3
BRIAN WILSON
That Lucky Old Sun
Capitol
4
OLD CROW MEDICINE SHOW
Tennessee Pusher
Nettwerk
5
LYKKE LI
Youth Novels
LL
6
CHAD VANGAALEN
Soft Airplane
SUB POP
7
MERCURY REV
Snowflake Midnight
Yep Roc
8
PINK SPIDERS
Sweat It Out
Mean Buzz
9
ANTONY AND THE JOHNSONS
Another World [EP]
Secretly Canadian
10
SPINTO BAND
Moonwink
Park The Van
11
RESTIFORM BODIES
TV Loves You Back
Anticon
12
BAND MARINO
The Sea And The Beast
Street Parade
13
SPIRITUALIZED
Songs In A&E
Spaceman-Fontana
14
FOR AGAINST
Shade Side Sunny Side
Words On Music
15
CAW! CAW!
Wait Outside [EP]
Slanty Shanty
16
STARFUCKER
Starfucker
Badman
17
AZEDA BOOTH
In Flesh Tones
Absolutely Kosher
18
SHY CHILD
Noise Won’t Stop
Kill Rock Stars
19
LOW LOWS
Shining Violence
Misra
20
WOMEN
Women
Jagjaguwar
21
BROKEN WEST
Now Or Heaven
Merge
22
WITHERED
Folie Circulaire
Prosthetic
23
PORTUGAL. THE MAN
Censored Colors
Equal Vision-Approaching AIRballoons
24
CLOUDLAND CANYON
Lie In Light
Kranky
25
BOUND STEMS
The Family Afloat
Flameshovel
26
WATSON TWINS
Fire Songs
Vanguard
27
ALL GIRL SUMMER FUN BAND
Looking Into It
AGSFB
28
TV ON THE RADIO
Dear Science
Interscope
29
COLD WAR KIDS
Loyalty To Loyalty
Downtown
30
DEAD CONFEDERATE
Wrecking Ball
The Artists Organization