Showing posts with label ulver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ulver. Show all posts

Top "Other" Albums

Friday, December 13, 2013

Okay, readers. It's the end of a year and it's time for me to force my personal opinions on you guys, regardless of what promo emails I received or which things I need to mention to earn credibility in the lo-eyes of my fellow music bloggers. Since I primarily focus on extreme sounds, it may seem that my appreciation of other music is limited. However, this is far from the truth. While I seldom have free time to check out new releases outside of the extreme metal and noise communities, I'm constantly on the search for good sounds to cleanse my sonic palate between HNW tapes and shrieking black metal LPs. With that in mind, I present eleven albums that were released in 2013 that I feel are worthy of my readers' attention yet are not necessarily metal. Many of these are "rock" albums, as it's a genre I know well. There are a few other surprises here, and I hope you'll see this as a list of good albums, not necessarily the best albums. Feel free to use the comment box to open a dialogue with me and share your thoughts. Without further rambling, I present ten albums that filled my free time this year.


HONORABLE MENTION: Melvins- "Everybody Loves Sausages"
This is an album full of covers, so even though it might be one of the best damn things I heard all year, I don't feel I should allow it to compete with albums consisting exclusively of original content. That said, not everybody loves sausages, but everybody should love listening to righteous jams from Buzzo and friends, even if they're other people's songs. Instead of just producing half-assed renditions of easy and familiar songs, Melvins have produced honest and compelling tributes to tunes they love (or maybe hate?). Whether it's the playful and childlike take on Queen, the seemingly endless stoner metal take on David Bowie, or the standout cover of Roxy Music with a very special guest on vocals, this album is a blast from start to finish.



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10. Queens of the Stone Age- "...Like Clockwork"
Smooth, sexy (yes, I went there), and catchy as all hell, Queens of the Stone Age have done a fine job with their newest release. While I will state that earlier works may be preferable, in my opinion, these guys are one of the few good rock groups receiving regular radio play. At least I think they still get radio play. If these addictive jams aren't on the radio, then radio is truly dead. The feelgood nature of QOTSA's music is infectious and this album is certainly another hit in a career of consistent quality.


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9. El-P & Killer Mike- "Run the Jewels"
I'm not remotely convinced I understand or know rap, hip-hop, or any related genres. Folks close to me probably know I've got an undying love of the late Ol' Dirty Bastard and a few other big name acts, but I'm really not that savvy to rap and often find myself disappointed with it. For me, it's not uncommon that a great producer contributes to the work of a rapper who doesn't do the instrumental any justice. With this fantastic collaboration, skilled rhyming and clever yet easily digested beats are paired masterfully. In other words, this is a complete and brilliantly executed album that I'll be playing for years to come. If you aren't into purchasing it, you can stream it below or download the whole album for free at the label's site.



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8. William Onyeabor- "Who is William Onyeabor?"
Another one that might be a surprise to readers expecting this to be purely "rock" oriented in nature, but possibly no surprise to friends of mine. Luaka Bop is a record label founded by David Byrne, singer of the band Talking Heads, who are easily one of my favorite groups of all time. I've loved and followed him as he's delved into the broad spectrum of music from all places and eras of modern music history, and his label continually digs up gems like this. While technically a reissue of some sort, this brilliant album of charmingly left of center Nigerian funk reminds us that a musical worldview based around white men with guitars will inherently leave out most of the quality around us. I know my website is about black metal, but my appreciation for extreme sounds is only strengthened by my awareness of other beautiful forms of music. If you are wary of "world music" but love any electronic or psychedelic music, please do yourself a favor and peruse this gem.


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7. David Bowie- "The Next Day"
When I was a little boy, my mother would regularly play David Bowie's legendary album "Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars." Bowie's music has been one of the only constants in my life, and it's not always been easy to be a Bowie fan. While he's never put out an entirely bad album, in my opinion, he has had some that are more difficult to love than others, especially as he's tried to age with his audience. I pretty much expected this album to be a sad farewell song from an old friend who just doesn't have it anymore. The emotional depth and sheer passion of this album proved me wrong in so many ways. From truly energetic playful rock tunes to all too believable melancholy, this is Bowie on top of his game in a way I haven't seen in quite some time. I can only hope that this creative flash isn't just a single spark and that we get to hear more from him soon.


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6. Nine Inch Nails- "Hesitation Marks"
Trent Reznor resurrected Nine Inch Nails. No real surprise. It never really felt like the band went away, given that it's not uncommon for an artist to take a few years between albums these days. Anyway, "Hesitation Marks" surprised me by being a mellower affair than I initially expected. While not necessarily a soothing or easy listen, this release actually sees Nine Inch Nails attempting to tread new ground rather than simply trying to appease fans. After spending the past five years or so doing anything he's felt like, it's evident that Trent's need to experiment has finally lead to some hook-heavy gems. Glad to have him back, even if I never really noticed his absence.


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5. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds- "Push the Sky Away"
Nick Cave has gone from tortured creep to, well, tortured balladeer over the course of his career. To say I've had the fortune to take in every single thing he's done would be a lie, but watching his progression toward slightly more subdued sounds has been interesting. Unlike many folks whose music "ages" with them, Nick Cave actually feels like a genuine artist creating things he believes in. This isn't to say that Cave or his band have suddenly lost their edge in favor of a mellow sound. Indeed, tracks like "Water's Edge" carry a not-so-subtle intensity that is both chilling and captivating. This album isn't going to burn down your house, but it may well loiter outside smoking cigarettes until you decide to move to a safer neighborhood.


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4. Boards of Canada- "Tomorrow's Harvest"
Like a handful of albums featured here, waiting for this one was both torturous and worth it. Boards of Canada have revisited some of the beautiful nostalgic fuzz that made previous albums so inviting yet also are looking to the future with their newest album. I've always felt that Boards of Canada's music was something like the musical equivalent of looking at faded photography from decades past, seeing my parents as children in the stereotypical "American dream" type suburbs that seem to have been so common from the fifties through the early seventies. This blurred characteristic remains on this release, yet there is a consistent and encouraging modernity here that makes this both fresh and timeless. I can't state strongly enough how much I enjoy this album and I hope I don't have to wait nearly as long for the next one.


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3. Ghost- "Infestissumam"
I can practically feel the blood boiling in the veins of purist readers. That's right, Ghost. These guys almost made my "metal" list but I realize that this is more of a hooky arena rock album than it is anything else. Do I buy the "gimmick" that so many of my peers accuse Ghost of using as their sole calling card? Not really. Ghost's chants about the glory of Satan are no different from Alice Cooper's electric shock scare tactics in the seventies or Marilyn Manson's apocalyptic theatrics in the nineties. What appeals to me about Ghost is their capacity to make some of the most memorable rock music of the past decade and still piss off even people who would have otherwise enjoyed it. I love rock and roll, and this album is a great rock and roll album that really does expand upon the traditional heavy metal influences that drove their first record.


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2. Tomahawk- "Oddfellows"
This must have been the year of the "comeback" album from artists who usually take their sweet time anyway. I think I waited four years for "Anonymous" to come out, so the six year gap for "Oddfellows" felt typical of anything related to Mike Patton. His notorious multitasking gives fans a broad variety of music to enjoy, but it's paired with the cost of waiting way too long for a favorite project to turn out something new. "Oddfellows" is every bit the deranged desert rock album I'd have expected it to be. With songs that creep and crawl in all the right ways, it's just as easy to feel uncomfortable while listening as it is to be lured in by a pop-friendly hook. With a staff of veteran musicians, it's easy to simply write it off as a bunch of dudes who know all the tricks, but there really is a tense chemistry at work here and it's a delight to listen again and again. I've been listening heavily since this album was released and I'm still not slowing down. Seriously infectious and great for any fan of rock music, whether focused on seedy underbelly or radio anthems--it's all here.


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1. Ulver- "Messe I.X-VI.X"
I can't even put into words how much I've enjoyed following Ulver's career over the past decade. Unlike many black metal obsessives, I was not introduced to the band through their classic early releases which still held onto something resembling metal, but instead began my journey into Ulver obsession with the sparse and haunting "Silencing the Singing" EP. I worked in a record store and found this nondescript CD in the "miscellaneous U" bin and, since it was used and available for play, popped it in and played it over the store speakers. What I experienced that day was nothing like metal, but it sent chills down my spine in a way that no metal album ever could. By the day's end I had purchased the album and spent the next number of months listening to the EP multiple times a day. Since then, I have watched Ulver evolve ever further into a sound that truly defies simple genre tags, and it brings me great joy. "Messe I.X-VI.X" sees Ulver working in conjunction with Tromso Chamber Orchestra, a group with whom I've not yet acquainted myself, but the collaboration works splendidly. Feeling more like the soundtrack to a dark and personal film than a traditional album by a group with roots in rock music of any sort, the massive emotional quality of Ulver's music continues to delight me. Vocals are sparse here, and it's the lack of singing that really allows the music to tell its own story. When Garm chooses to grace a track with his voice, it tends to bring things into territory akin to 2007's "Shadows of the Sun," which is perhaps the only album in their career that could remotely be likened to this. "Messe I.X-VI.X" will continue to disappoint listeners looking for new black metal and will continue to delight open-minded fans of challenging progressive and experimental music. Listen to this when you have time to focus on it; it's truly deserving of your complete attention.




So, there you have it. Those are the albums I heard this year that really sat nicely with me. I'll be sharing my lists of great noise and metal albums in the very near future. In the meantime, get acquainted with these eleven beauties and let me know which albums you feel I should have included or should be hanged for featuring. Cheers!

Year End Extravaganza: Non-Metal Albums I Loved in 2012

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Today is a day on which I share some tunes I don't normally get to share. While I do spend about 85% of my time listening to ugly, misanthropic, and otherwise dissonant music, I also appreciate songs and artists of most genres. I've compiled a few of the albums that were released this year that I felt were worth listening to more than once or twice. I'm sure I'm forgetting some obvious and awesome albums, and I'm sure I'm not nearly as well equipped to write about this kind of music, but you're going to check out this small handful of albums. You might even enjoy some of it. Don't worry. Nobody will judge you.


Clams Casino- "Instrumental Mixtape 2"
Clams Casino is a producer from New Jersey. I'm not normally a hip-hop connoisseur, but I'm a big fan of electronic music in most of its forms. As an instrumental mixtape, this album collects some of his finest beats and removes the vocal lines that may distract listeners like myself. If you're curious about hip-hop and rap but aren't always fond of the lyrical delivery, this album's a perfect place to start.



Comfort Woman- "Summer Demo"
Comfort Woman is a group I can't really describe that well. The songs are catchy and off-kilter. The vocals are just really raw, but not in the whole harsh black metal way. It's more of a punkish apathy, or just a very open-hearted sort of delivery. This album's just really emotive and addictive for me. I've listened to it a good handful of times since I stumbled across it. Check it out on their bandcamp and download it if you like it.



Endangered Blood- "Live @ Squidco Bootleg"
This band's entry is basically stolen from a BMAB favorite blog, The Static Fanatic. Endangered Blood are a jazz-like quartet featuring Jim Black, Oscar Noriega, Chris Speed, and Trevor Dunn. I don't have quite the vocabulary for what they do, but it's pretty stellar and I can't stop listening to it. I initially grabbed this as a fan of pretty much anything Dunn-related, but this transcends even what I had expected. It's as chaotic as it is soothing. This is everything I wanted it to be and more. Check it out over at The Static Fanatic.



Igorrr- "Hallelujah"
If you aren't yet familiar with Igorrr's schizophrenic brand of breakcore, this album is as good a starting point as any. Focusing heavily on baroque-era sounds, Igorrr also throws in everything from snippets of death metal to choral chants to flamenco style guitar. There's pretty much nowhere this album doesn't go, which would be catastrophic in the hands of a lesser musician, but Igorrr keeps things just focused enough to remain wholly enjoyable from start to finish. This is almost "extreme" enough to put with the metal albums, but is just too left of center to really include with the metal releases.



Kirk Fogg- "2049"
With his new album of intergalactic trance, Kirk Fogg takes us far into the future and on a serious journey. I definitely don't have the vocabulary or experience with the genre to fully explain why this album appeals to me, but there's a sense of true exploration here. The music constantly builds and surges in an empty space that Kirk Fogg has crafted for the listener to live within for the 70-ish minutes of this album. The music's pace is definitely upbeat, but this album feels entirely mellow. The speed of the music feels more like it's pulsing around the listener rather than rushing the listener along. Perhaps my words show how little I understand this music, so it's best to just link you to the free download.



Tollund Men- "Door"
Tollund Men are the kind of group that don't really fit into just one category in my mind. For a project named after one of the most famous bog bodies, this EP is very appropriate. This is dark, fuzzy, distant post-punk or new wave inspired music at its finest. Each of the three tracks excites me from start to finish, leaving me eager to flip the record over and start again. This was purchased as a gift for my partner, but there's no doubt in my mind that we are both equally obsessed with this talented group. Definitely looking forward to more in the year to come.



Trust- "TRST"
In severe contrast with the last album mentioned, Trust appeared out of nowhere this year with a dense, full and slick album of stellar darkwave and electropop perfection. This is probably the most commercially viable album on any list I'll ever make, and I'm completely happy with that. Trust are one of those groups who are so brilliant that I don't mind sharing them with hordes of club kids and bubblegum pop fans. In fact, I hope these guys take over the world. The slightly spooky tones and warm synth flourishes that are scattered throughout this album would definitely be an improvement on most popular music these days. This one will be stuck in your head for weeks, and you won't mind a bit.



Ulver- "Childhood's End"
Yes, this is a cover album. Yes, I'm pretty sure that Ulver is my favorite band ever. Yes, I love them enough to be sure to call them out if this was a complete waste of time. This isn't a complete waste of time. Instead, this album serves as a stellar piece of psychedelic space pop and a shopping list for me to catch up on great music from the 60s and 70s that I hadn't yet heard. While this may not be the best representation for a brand new listener, this is absolutely worthwhile for anybody with an interest in psychedelic music of any nature, or anybody who has listened to and enjoyed any of Ulver's output from the past decade.

Beer Review: Zywiec Porter

Monday, October 1, 2012


This one's a tongue-twister even before you've caught its surprisingly strong buzz. Pronounced "je-vi-ets" according to a quick Google search, this is probably the single most frequently consumed beer in my house. If I'm to believe the bottle, this recipe has been unchanged since 1881 when presumably some awesome guy in Poland decided to make a better porter than all the craft beer nerds would make 130+ years later. One of the best parts of drinking this beer is imagining men with excellent mustaches drinking this back in the old country. In order to get a proper sensation of a time gone by, I'm listening to Ulver's legendary "Kveldssanger." It's not Polish, but much like this beer, it's an archaic recipe in a modern context and the two go perfectly together.


As I said before, I drink this beer more often than I drink any other beer. It isn't my absolute favorite beer on earth, but it's incredibly delicious and drinkable, as well as retailing for a measly $2.99 at my local market. This beer is so dark it's almost a stout, but it's got the malty sweet aftertaste of a strong porter. Upon pouring this beer, you'll notice a dense coffee color and a thin head. There are almost no bubbles and the scent is rich and earthy in the best of ways. This beer is surprisingly smooth for such a dark, thick beer, and if I weren't careful I'd drink it like water. The thing that prevents me from destroying cases of this liquid at a time is the fact that this beer has an alcohol content of 9.5% hidden somewhere in all that delicious flavor. There's none of the bitterness or strong alcohol flavor of most beers this potent. I usually share a bottle with my partner and we're both quite content with the portioning that way.

I know this beer doesn't have all the exciting packaging or clever marketing that most modern craft beers have. Honestly, it doesn't need it. I'm usually a sucker for a well-marketed beer, but I'm glad this one made its way into my hands. My brother in beer, Derek, shared the word of Zywiec porter with me months ago and since then I've rarely been without it in my fridge. I'm pretty sure it's distributed by Heineken in the US, so it should be relatively easy to obtain. If not, talk to the manager of your local beer purchasing establishment and inquire. It's worth the extra effort.
 

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