Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Best New Releases for March 24, 2009

**The original post was deleted by the IFPI and Blogger. Here it is reposted without mp3s and just Hype Machine links (3/24/09 2:59 pm).

Dan Deacon - "Bromst" (Carpark)
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*MP3: Dan Deacon - "Pink Batman"

Decemberists - "The Hazards of Love" (Capitol)
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Full Album Stream

Dirty Projectors - "Byond Uquafina" (Domino)
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*MP3: Dirty Projectors - "Knotty Pine"

Fever Ray - "Fever Ray" (Mute)
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*MP3: Fever Ray - "When I Grow Up"

Royksopp - "Junior"
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Full Album Stream

(Ian Anderson)

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Thursday, March 19, 2009

The Decemberists - "The Hazards of Love"



*MP3: The Decemberists - "The Queen's Rebuke / The Crossing"
*MP3: The Decemberists - "The Rake's Song"

The Decemberists' new album, "The Hazards of Love" (Capitol), plays like a rock opera rather than a string of hits like I've grown accustomed to when it comes them. "The Rake's Song" is the easy standout that I expected, however, the album's intention is clear to be that it must be taken in as a whole; start-to-finish, beginning-middle-and-end. With multiple refrains and steady themes throughout the album, the album has a life of its own. In fact, Colin Meloy stays true to his story-line so strictly that he has specific parts for specific singers as the story develops. "The Queen's Rebuke/The Crossing" is deep into the story (the 12th track) and is exactly what the title suggests. However, context is everything when it comes to this album, so be sure to pick up the whole thing.

I couldn't stop listening to "The Hazards of Love" for the same reason I can never put down a good book: I need to know how the story ends.

This seventeen-track epic album is going to find its way onto the top of many top ten lists for 2009.

Buy "The Hazards of Love" on iTunes HERE.

(MySpace)

(Ian Anderson)

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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

New Decemberists - "The Hazards of Love 1"


The Decemberists just posted a new song, "The Hazards of Love 1," on their MySpace page. Check it out.

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Friday, February 06, 2009

The Decemberists - "The Rake's Song"


*MP3: The Decemberists - "The Rake's Song"

I've never been a big fan of The Decemberists, but man, this new song is awesome. A-plus times two.

The Decemberists on MySpace

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Thursday, July 26, 2007

Live Review: The Decemberists with the Grant Park Orchestra, 7/18/07




Download: The Decemberists - "I'll Come Running" (Brian Eno Cover, Live On Sound Opinions)

If there were a list of all the modern groups whose music lends itself well to orchestration, The Decemberists would be at the top of the list. The epic, literary, storytelling inherent in Colin Meloy's lyrics (especially with last year's triumphant The Crane Wife) and the ambitious prog-folk of The Decemberists should have proved to be a distinctly keen match of sensibilities. But due to a lack of imagination behind the orchestral arrangements, what could have been an incredibly special show turned out to be just ordinary.

My companion and I arrived at Grant Park around 5:45, about 45 minutes before the show was due to begin. The pavilion was completely full and the lawn areas around it were just starting to become cramped. Check out the picture below for an idea of how crowded it was:



(Photo By Autumn Notter)



We ended up finding a space near the outskirts of the pavlion, but others who showed up at 6:00 or 6:15 ended up walking around the home of the Grant Park Orchestra like Kane from "Kung Fu" or one of Romero's Dawn Of The Dead zombies.



(Photo by Autumn Notter)

By the time 6:30 rolled around, The Decemberists took the stage and opened with "The Crane Wife Part 2." The orchestration fitted the song perfectly, with the woodwind section complementing the main melody exceptionally well. The whole thing felt like an modern update to an epic score from Hollywood's 50s era heyday. If the melody to "The Crane Wife 2" wasn't soaring enough, the Grant Park Orchestra would have certainly have given it quite the boost. Instead, the song sounded like one great music body giving another great musical body an assist. It was an incredible start to what could have been a revelatory night of song.

Problem is that all of the orchestrations eventually started to sound like the same patois of Aaron Copeland and Old Hollywood Film Score. The set was varied, at least - each of The Decemberists albums got their due. But, as is the problem with a lot of rock band/orchestra collaborations, the orchestra got buried with the louder songs ("The Perfect Crime"). Still, "We Both Go Down Together" was one of the night's other successes. The REM-esque, minor-key chord progression providing ample opportunity for the orchestra to milk tension and resolution out of the dynamics in the song.

But after a while, repetition sunk in and most of the songs began to unfortunately blend together. So while The Decemeberists collaboration with the Grant Park Orchestra wasn't a disaster along the lines of Kiss performing with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, it wasn't quite enough to redeem the gimmicky premise of a rock group performing with classical musicians.

One last shot of the crowd:



(Photo By Autumn Notter)

(Jonathan Graef)

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Monday, June 11, 2007

The Decemberists Cover Brian Eno on Sound Opinions



Download: The Decemberists - "I'll Come Running" (Brian Eno Cover)
Download: The Decemberists - "Oh, Valencia"
Download: The Decemberists - "The Perfect Crime"
Download: The Decemberists - "Summersong"


The Decemberists made an appearance on NPR's Sound Opinions over the weekend and, in addition to performing three songs from last year's The Crane Wife, did a cover of Brian Eno's "I'll Come Running." You'll find that MP3 posted above, along with other MP3's of the band's live renditions of Crane Wife highlights "Oh, Valencia," "The Perfect Crime" and "Summersong."

Click here to download the MP3 of the show itself. It's worth a listen, as the band acts out the entire backstory of The Crane Wife! That alone makes the interview a classic.

(Jonathan Graef)

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Monday, April 23, 2007

Live Review: The Decemberists/My Brightest Diamond: April 19th, Riviera Theatre, Chicago, IL



(Colin Meloy)



(Shara Worden of My Brightest Diamond)



(Shara Worden and bass player)




(Chris Funk)



(Colin Meloy, Nate Query, and Chris Funk)

A seemingly agreeable (but in retrospect, inaccurate) statement was made right before The Decemberists took stage for the second of two shows at Chicago's historic Riviera Theater. The DJ, from Chicago album-alternative radio station WXRT, who introduced the band said the following : that the Decemberists were deserving of praise because they realize that "not every creative idea has to be distilled in 2 minutes and 35 seconds" and that the band's live performance would not be musical "fast food (but rather)...this is the feast."

In essence, the Decemberists played a show that was both a wonderful confirmation of those statements, but were also a stinging rebuttal to those on-stage comments.

The Decemberists are, indeed, an intelligent and ambitious group of gifted musicians and their performance this past Thursday (4/19/07) was a feast for the ears and the eyes. The band opened with an impeccacble version of "The Crane Wife 1 and 2" that started out slowly and steadily. Singer Colin Meloy's guitar sounded crisp and each new instrumental component (guitar, cello, keyboard) was assuredly added to great effect. The song then built to an explosive gallop that was beautiful, cinematic and transcendent. And that was just part one - part two was executed flawlessly as well. The band's harmonies gave me goosebumps and Chris Funk's (he of somewhat accidental "Colbert Report" fame) work on guitars 12-string and pedal was icing on the musical cake.

Or, to put it in a much more direct way... it was fucking awesome!

So, as the DJ correctly predicated, the band gave us fans in the audience a musical feast. Consider my belly full. DJ 1, Haters 0.

But after the next few songs that the Decemberists played (highlights from all three of their albums, but mostly focusing on Picaresque and The Crane Wife), I realized something. The DJ's, whose name I unfortunately cannot remember, statement about The Decemberists being great because they don't distill their ideas into two-minute pop songs, is largely incorrect.

What makes The Decemberists so great, both on record and in concert, is that they combine the chops and instrumentation of prog-rock with the humanity and warmth of folk and alt-rock. The end result is that their music is ambitious, but not pretentious or cold, like the worst of prog-rock. The Decemebrists proved that argument with a immaculately recreated version of "The Island."

But even after all of that, I honestly feel that The Decemberists are at their best when they write and perform 3-and-a-half minute folk-rock songs about sadness, love and loss.

"Summersong" and "O, Valencia" for instance - both are terrific songs, and both are as straightforward, verse-chorus-verse, as you can get. And both songs were definite highlights of Thursday night's show. So I feel it's not so much that The Decemberists are great because they refuse to distill their creativity into two minute pop songs, but rather, the band is great because they know which ideas are best contained to two minutes and which ideas should be expanded to twelve.That's a crucial difference, and one that makes The Decemberists a band that is both accessible and ambitious - sometimes even in the same song.

The band, after roughly six years together, is extremely confident and comfortable with each other, based on singer Colin Meloy's gently audience-bating stage patter (he jokingly accused members sitting in the balcony of being lazy crowd-participates) and good-natured ribbing of his bandmates. This confidence made for a fantasic and charming live performance - the way that Meloy lead the audience in the final refrain of "Sons and Daughters" was particularly noteworthy, along with the encore performance of "The Mariner's Revenge," which was awesome, theatrical, and hugely, hilariously entertaining.

After the show, I felt like I had seen the rare piece of art that was both deeply intelligent and massively engaging on an emotional level as well. The Decemberists may look like bookworms, but they entertain like the best of any of the arena-rockers, all without compromising their artistic ethos for approval of the masses. For any lover of music, it was an absolutely terrific show.

Opening for The Decemberists was My Brightest Diamond. I am probably one of, oh, let's say three, people on this green earth who did not like her massively-praised 2006 album Bring Me The Workhouse. I thought that, as talented a singer as Shara Worden is, her opera training actually worked against her, in that her songs pulled their rock punches when they should have gone all out instead.

Thankfully, her live performance showed no such restraint, as Shara kicked out the jams by emphasizing the more energetic cuts from Workhouse and embracing a more guitar-oriented live sound. Also, she quoted Pearl Jam's "Black," which made this Pearl Jam fan's day. All in all, I was pleasently surprised with the amount of rock Worden brought. I hope she does so more often on her next studio record.

(Jonathan Graef. All Photos by Autumn Notter)

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