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Expert Witness: February 2012
Listen . . . Oka!/Oneohtrix Point Never
Post-Everythingism Meets Nature
Friday, February 3, 2012
Listen . . . Oka! (Oka Productions)
This beguiling piece of post-rock is neither a proper soundtrack nor a
field recording--not with the African musicians offered the chance to
hear their own inventions on headphones and add overdubs. It's a
soundtrack-based Bayaka Pygmy audio collage, very much doctored by
producer and frequent co-composer Chris Berry, a Californian adept of
Zimbabwean thumb piano. With their dream songs, 54-bar structures, and
propensity to turn anything from a babbling brook to a scrap of
plastic pipe into an instrument, these culturally threatened Central
African Republic hunter-gatherers seem to live music even more than
most Africans. Women are the chief creators, which has major
consequences as regards both prevailing pitch and how much the music
hunts and how much it gathers. But either way, it pervades their
lives. By manipulating recorded sounds and songs and inviting the
Bayaka to do the same, Berry translates that pervasiveness into a form
comprehensible in a culture differently pervaded by
music--ours. A
Oneohtrix Point Never: Replica (Software)
Daniel Lopatin may be a deconstructionist, but he's no ascetic. Unlike
too many post-rockers, he has a taste for content as well as form and
for creation as well as contrarianism, harvesting a healthy plateful
of diverse sounds and textured note sequences from his beloved analog
keyboards and then arraying them in songlike tracks that stay in the
four-minute range until the quietly celebratory seven-minute
finale. Chugging, grinding, crackling, swelling, bubbling, babbling,
these tracks don't sound like part of the natural world, but they
certainly sound cognizant of the natural world. And although I may be
missing some of their formal interrelationships, I swear they behave
as one thing. A MINUS
Thomas Anderson/Craig Finn
Heartland Tales
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Thomas Anderson: The Moon in Transit (Four-Track Demos, 1996-2009) (Out There)
By electing to expend his Dutch East India advance on a fancy tape
recorder instead of the Velvet Underground reunion, this Austin
singer-songwriter acquired the means to preserve his songs in analog
form, and here's the fruit. There were two good albums and then three
marginal ones over two decades, so who'd expect a grab bag to be his
best? Yet it is. With all four tracks laid down DIY, it's even squarer
rhythmically than his norm, and his calm drawl verges on the
spectral. But it also verges on the hypnotic, and the guy can write
stories and work up tunes. After a brief fanfare, there's an opener
about the Donner Party so gruesome and precise I sometimes skip to the
merely spooky "Heckling Houdini." Also featured are a 33-year-old
groupie-turned-granny, a cross-dressing uncle, Ubangi-stomping Warren
Smith, a painfully slow lunch with Nefertiti a few years or millennia
too late, driving till you're dizzy in a dumbshit town, and the one
about lost love and "Antihistamines": "Chlorpheniramine,
Diphenhydramine,/Doxylamine, Phenindamine,/Tripolidine and
Pheniramine,/I can't cure my pain with antihistamines."
A MINUS
Craig Finn: Clear Heart Full Eyes (Vagrant)
On a wittingly laid-back solo debut where the declamatory Hold Steady
frontman knows he can't bring off the country vocals his best songs
deserve, he nails three flat-out anyway: "Terrified Eyes" (couple
destroyed by their hospital bills), "When No One's Watching" (snazzy
scuzzball seeks needy women), and "Balcony" (she does with her new man
what she did with her old man back when he was new). The rest tend
more, how to say it, evocative. But at least they evoke
specifics--Middle American dramatis personae as marginal as
Wussy's. B PLUS
Omar Souleyman/Original Sound of Cumbia
Standing Out and Having Fun
Friday, February 10, 2012
Omar Souleyman: Haflat Gharbia: The Western Concerts (Sublime Frequencies)
I don't know how I missed this guy, but though maybe his three earlier
compilation-style albums on Sublime Frequencies render this one
redundant, I doubt it--played blind, it grabbed me by the what-the?
from the moment track two speeded things up and didn't quit till the
end of track nine an hour and change later. A Syrian not to be
confused with the Egyptian placeholder president of approximately the
same name, Souleyman is a local wedding singer turned world-music
attraction playing a supposedly dumbed-down, synthed-up, hickoid-metal
variant of a major Levantine pop style called, how loosely or
precisely I know not, dabke. Recorded in such exotic locales as
Berlin, Melbourne, Philadelphia, and Kortrijk, Belgium, this delivers
the kind of intensity Lester Bangs craved and almost got when he tore
the shrink-wrap off the Count Five's Cartesian Jetstream. And don't
nitpick--Lester couldn't understand the lyrics
either. A MINUS
The Original Sound of Cumbia (Soundway)
Subtitled "The History of Colombian Cumbia & Porro: As Told by the
Phonograph 1948-1979," this is a crate dig rather than a hits
collection: two CDs culled from five years of rooting around among 78s
by the prolific U.K. beatmaster-bandleader Bill "Quantic" Holland, who
also provides 5000 words of fact-filled notes. There's not much of the
surface sparkle of the Disco Fuentes cumbia comps here, but boy, are
these guys determined to stand out and have fun. Few of the 55
three-minute dance tracks by 50-plus artists are catchy in the pop
sense, but most boast a mark of difference--intro or small arranging
trick, yodel or spoken byplay or Donald Duck voice or comic
call-and-response or lead tuba or humorous squeezebox
trickery. Accordions and a panoply of local percussion dominate the
Afro-mestizo groove, so that the larger horn sections that materialize
toward the end are almost buzz killers sometimes. Not the kind of
album you put on craving greatness--the kind of album you put on
craving company. A MINUS
Skrillex/Clams Casino
Electronical Vistas
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Skrillex: Bangarang (Owsla/Big Beat/Atlantic)
"The most hated man in dubstep" therefore isn't "in" dubstep at all,
which allowing for a few wannabes is fine by the rest of us who aren't
in dubstep, meaning 99 percent if not 99.99 percent of music
consumers. If you're too smart or knowledgeable for this young goof
and his damn Grammys that Robyn wouldn't have won anyway, by all means
enjoy your cool. I'm not. But I know this much. This is a pop record
because its shamelessly hedonistic barrage of proven dancefloor tricks
will obviously be more fun at home than in a club, where it would
blare forth at quadruple volume to young jerks who'd get just as
excited about LMFAO. A MINUS
Clams Casino: Instrumental Mixtape (free download)
Reconstructed from tracks created for such real-life rappers as Lil B
and Soulja Boy, New Jersey beatmaker Mike Volpe's comfortably
disquieting illbient glitchbeat chillwave whatsis will grow on you if
you give it a chance. And because it's designed to back into your
space, providing the chance won't feel all that time-consuming,
preoccupied as you'll be with something more engrossing while said
time passes. The opening "Motivation" powers home enough hummed 'n'
moaned gravitas to remind you it's there, and the closing "Cold War"
caps the 40-minute album with a vocal sample that utters the title for
once. In between you'll first pick up on "What You Doin'" and "Illest
Alive," better known to you as the one in the middle and the one
toward the end. Then slowly the rest will ooze into place via
capillary action. A MINUS
Etta James
Great Voices Get Even More Precious When You Know They're Gone
Friday, February 17, 2012
Etta James: The Dreamer (Verve Forecast)
A hard liver, she's sounded old for a while. This is different--weary,
diminished. Yet the physical and even mental diminution enriches the
music. It was cool for her long-passed youngblood homeboy Johnny
Watson to claim he was "Too Tired," but it's cooler for James to
remember that song half a century later and sing it against tempo as
if she may not get all the way to 2:34. The "Surely someone will
understand me" of Bobby Bland's failed crossover title tune resonates
differently from a dying woman. It's also different for a ghetto woman
born and raised to seize "Welcome to the Jungle" and tell Axl, "If you
got the money we got your disease." And having eased right into Otis
Redding's blissful "Champagne and Wine," she then transforms his
bone-tired, just-off-the-road marriage proposal "Cigarettes and
Coffee" into an evocation of old love so calm you believe she achieved
some bliss of her own, and domestic bliss at
that. A MINUS
Etta James: Matriarch of the Blues (Private Music '00)
Produced by the well-bred rhythm section of drummer Donto James and
bassist Sametto James, this is half riskily irreverent rock and roll
and half perilously imperious blues. Beyond an inconclusive Creedence
cover, she co-owns every non-blues--"Miss You"! "Gotta Serve
Somebody"! "Try a Little Tenderness"! Otis's chortling "Hawg for Ya"!
Al's unremembered "Rhymes"! "Hound Dog," which counts aab or
not! But neither the horns nor the B.B. homages will inspire the
dutiful bluesboy to return to his long-abandoned O.V. Wright and
Little Milton studies. From Big Mama Thornton to Shemekia Copeland, no
woman has sung such material with more power. So maybe power isn't
what it needs. Maybe it needs more irreverence. B PLUS
Odds and Ends 006
R&B in the Broadest Sense Except That I Stuck Drake Somewhere Else
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Bootsy Collins: Tha Funk Capital of the World (Mascot)
Five historic P-Funk tracks fronted by Cornel West, Samuel L. Jackson,
Jimi Hendrix, Al Sharpton, and a panoply of old A-game rappers
followed by 11 well-meaning Bootsy tracks distinguished by cameos from
Buckethead and, wouldn't you know it, George Clinton ("After These
Messages," "Hip Hop @ Funk U") ***
Bruno Mars: Doo-Wops & Hooligans (Elektra)
Nice guy finishes first ("Grenade," "Lazy Song") ***
John Legend & the Roots: Wake Up! (Good Music/Columbia)
A myth of conscious soul neither the singer nor his attendant rappers
can quite put across ("Compared to What," "I Can't Write Left Handed")
***
Terius Nash: 1977 (free Radio Killa download)
Living for sex gets less dreamy all the time ("Wedding Crasher," "Used
to Be") ***
Betty Wright & the Roots: Betty Wright: The Movie (Ms. B/S-Curve)
It wasn't "Old Songs," it was good songs, and they were usually
shorter than these ("Real Woman," "Grapes on a Vine," "You and Me,
Leroy") **
The-Dream: Love King (Def Jam/Radio Killa)
We know this trickster is "the last romantic" because, in the very
same song, he tells his babydoll to present "panties to the side"
("Florida University," "Sex Intelligent") **
Ray Charles: Rare Genius: The Undiscovered Masters (Concord)
Genius is rare even when it misfires, as with Ray it oft did, but the
taste to make it glow a little is always for sale ("Why Me, Lord?" "It
Hurts to Be in Love") **
The Original 7ven: Condensate (SRR)
"The band formerly known as the Time" are shocked that you should
believe time is real--but of course, it is ("Condensate," "One Step")
*
Al Green/D'Angelo
The Roots of Songless Soul
Friday, February 24, 2012
Al Green: Al Green Is Love (Hi/The Right Stuff '75)
I never got with this album, which in the wake of the late-'74
grits-and-suicide incident kicked off Green's quick commercial decline
with its only pop hit, the catchy, slight "L-O-V-E (Love)." That one
sounds like it was waiting in the can for just such a disaster, and
though eventually the post-paranoid "Rhymes" and the Afro-percussive
"Love Ritual" caught my ear on compilations, the two other
conventional songs here did not. Then I spun David Toop's
midnight-soul concoction Sugar and Poison late this Valentine's
Day and finally registered a genius piece I'd played 20 times before:
the fluttering, vocalese "I Didn't Know," which makes eight minutes of
impossible poetry from lines like "I didn't know that you feel like
you do/Feel like you feel when you feel like you feel." Along with
Sly's "Just Like a Baby," "I Didn't Know" is the linchpin of Sugar
and Poison, and also the Rosetta stone of this album, which
explores four or five other versions of the same idea. "Love Ritual."
"The Love Sermon." It's all L-O-V-E. You got a problem with that?
A
D'Angelo: Brown Sugar (EMI '95)
After getting religion about a precursor of songless r&b, I
thought I'd revisit its modern wellspring, and wasn't surprised to
have warmed to it--D'Angelo's concentration is formidable, his groove
complex yet primal. But because it's bass-driven rather than
voice-led, Brown Sugar is less subtle than Al Green Is Love,
and less sociable too: D'Angelo, who was leading a great band through
these songs by 2000, laid down all the instruments on four tracks and
on two others brought in only co-producer Bob Power's guitar, which
loosens things up nicely, though not like the string section on
"Cruisin'"--a tune that originated with a pretty darn good songwriter
named Smokey. A MINUS
Homeboy Sandman
In It for Love
Tuesday, Febvruary 28, 2012
Homeboy Sandman: The Good Sun (High Water Music '10)
He's a believer--once withdrew from a freestyling contest rather than
rhyme to a gunshot beat. He's a vegan who forswears cursewords and
caffeine although not reefer, brags about how poor he is, and is
avowedly "not pop." But he's no ascetic. His songs come equipped with
brief melodic hooks, his rapid rhymes brim with delight, and from
gravelly to singsong his flow is always ready for whatever comes
next. Sandman has heard the insult knuckleheads aim at every rapper
who makes them feel guilty: "Maybe you think I'm whinin' like BeBe and
CeCe." But he knows he rhymes for love and for the fun of it, and so
will you. A MINUS
Homeboy Sandman: Subject: Matter (Stones Throw download)
He says this EP's subjects matter because no other hip-hopper has
touched them, and except for the opener about his creative process,
he's got a right, as in the one about his material possessions that
includes his sock drawer. His beats stick, and even when he's merely
rhyming there's a musicality there: "Carpe diem/As a.m. turn to the
p.m./The zone I be in/Muy bien." From the grounded erotic obsession of
"Unforgettable" to the down-in-the-flood nightmares of "Soap," he's
got a vision. And nowhere is his subject matter more
materialistic--philosophically, and maybe even dialectically--than in
"Canned Goods": "Other food spoils much quicker/The spoils go to the
victors." A MINUS
MSN Music, February 2012
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