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January 25, 2009

Odawas Release Track From Upcoming Junior LP

Filed under: Music — indy1 @ 6:30 am

Odawas Raven and the White Night After the release of their 2007 second full-length album Raven and the White Night on Jagjaguwar Records, Bloomington, Indiana indie psychedelic band Odawas, are set to release a new album, The Blue Depths, on February 17.

Odawas is Michael Tapscott and Isaac Edwards and a somewhat revolving door of a group of other musicians, including at least one they clearly don’t like according to a photo caption on the Odawas’ MySpace page.

“Harmless Lover’s Discourse” from The Blue Depths

In 2006, Tapscott released a home produced solo LP under the moniker More Animals of the Artic. The band will be performing a show during San Francisco’s Noise Pop Festival on February 27, 2009 at the famous Cafe DuNord.

Best ‘Ad Songs’ of 2008: The Kinks ‘Everybody’s A Star’

Filed under: Music — indy1 @ 6:27 am

Kinks bandEveryone has their picks for the best songs of 2008, even if the songs were not released in 2008. For example, the established advertising publication, Ad Age, has released a list of the top ad songs of 2008.

Interestingly, the selection includes a long-forgotten Kinks’ song - “Everybody’s A Star” - that is now a rock classic thanks to its being featured in a popular Converse ad series by the same name.
Whenever I have a chance to write about The Kinks, I try to do it. For those of you who know ALL of the spectacular music they made - not just “You Really Got Me” and “Lola” and “Come Dancing” - you know just how vastly under appreciated The Kinks were.

The past decade has seen a long review of The Kinks’ legacy by the press, fellow rockers and music historians. Pretty much, the conclusion is always the same: The Kinks were one of the most important and influential rock bands ever. Rocker and music mogul Bob Geldof, a long-time Kinks’ fan, once said the band’s song “Waterloo Sunset”, an unquestionable classic, is one of the best pop songs ever written.

The Kinks were my first real personal favorite band partly because not everyone knew who they were like they did The Beatles (even though almost everyone has heard at least one Kinks’ song). After buying and listening to something like 30 of their albums, I was hooked, and never got unhooked.

No wonder they were among the first group of rock bands inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. While their place in rock history is now well established, it never ceases to amaze how vastly under-rated The Kinks were for so long. And, I am still in awe time and again by the brilliance of so much of their music that most people have never heard. It’s like belonging to an exclusive, honored kult. Kool!

the kinks village-green-preservation societyMP3: “Wicked Annabella” by The Kinks from The Village Green Preservation Society

Yet I do have a bit of a thorn in my ass by the commercialization of The Kinks’ music in recent years. Yet at the same time, I am happy that they are getting the attention because it has opened up their music to an entire new generation that may have only known them for one or two songs.

Unquestionably, a good part of The Kinks resurgence in popularity in recent years has been driven by the commercialization of their music. It really started during the past decade when “Nothing in This World is Gonna Stop Me Worrying About That Girl” from the soundtrack of the movie Rushmore and “Dedicated Follower of Fashion” from the blockbuster In The Name Of The Father.

Then, back in 2003-04, the wildly popular HP ad series in which people held up frames that magically caught their images and froze them to the danceable and memorable song “Picture Book” hit the airwaves. You could actually hear people humming it or singing to it at the time. It was a huge hit and drove sales for their now considered classic LP, The Village Green Preservation Society (1968) on which “Picture Book” debuted.

One of the more recent Kinks’ songs to be used in a TV commercial was released originally in 1976 on the album Soap Opera, which was widely considered a flop in the music press and at the cash register.

“Waterloo Sunset” - The Kinks. Widely considered one of the best songs ever written.
“Days” - The Kinks. One of the band’s best songs ever, but known to only a few.

Other Kinks’ songs featured in TV advertising campaigns and in movies include:

IBM - “I’m Not Like Everybody Else”
Cingular - “Strange Effect”
Tide - “All Day and All Night”
The Sopranos - “Living On A Thin Line”
The Parent Trap - “Victoria”
Click (movie) - “Do It Again”
Juno (movie) - “Well Respected Man”

And, “You Really Got Me” everywhere else.

Philly’s East Hundred Releases Album ‘Passengers’

Filed under: Music — indy1 @ 6:22 am

Philadelphia’s East Hundred formed in 2004 as a ‘basement recording project’, toured relentlessly, built a following and have just released their debut LP, Passengers.

Comprised of brothers Brooke and Will Blair, and Beril Guceri on vocals, the band creates synthesized pop with low beat tracks, reminiscent somewhat of The Sundays.

“Slow Burning Crimes” - East Hundred from Passengers

Stream East Hundred at MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/easthundred

Kanye West Skips Over Obama’s Historic Moment to Sympathize with Bush?

Filed under: Music — indy1 @ 6:20 am

kayne west obama historicThis is probably the only time you’ll read about Kanye West in this blog, but you gotta read this.

Just a few minutes ago, a CNN reporter was interviewing Kanye West right after performing at one of the dozen or so inaugural balls for Obama tonight. When asked what he thought about Obama and the historic moment, he muttered something about Obama connecting to “humanity”.

But what followed was perplexing. Rather then using his nationally broadcasted spotlight to say something profound about the first black president, Kanye West quickly diverted from one of the most historical days in history to talk about Bush.

Yup, you heard it right. West skipped right over the magnitude of the day to express dismay that former president George W. Bush didn’t do more to “save his legacy”. He also suggested that Bush’s ‘legacy’ was ‘overshadowed’ by events not in Bush’s control.

Huh? That suggests that there was something redeeming of Bush’s legacy. Perhaps West meant that Bush screwed up, but he sounded rather sympathetic.

Seriously, he did. “Save” his legacy? Mr. West, are you the same guy that blamed Bush for the deaths of hundreds of people in New Orleans following Katrina? Wow.

But the main point is you had a golden opportunity to say something, anything, of substance about Obama. How could you miss that dude? Earth to Kanye: It’s Obama’s night man!

So, Judge Roberts (who messed up twice administering the freaky 35-word oath of office today to Obama - see video below), you’ve got company baby!

Here’s a witty CNN report about the so-called “Oops Oath”

Tupac Alluded to Obama’s Inaugural As ‘Heaven Sent’

Filed under: Music — Tags: , , , — indy1 @ 6:18 am

tupac obamaOn this special day, it seems fitting to pay tribute to a man who raised awareness of the modern-day injustices of racism and bigotry. While he definitely was not a saint by any means, his impact was enormous.

Tupac Shakur was not simply one of the best rappers of his time, but a spokesman and a participating member of an oppressed, angry and disaffected youth. Much of his music was rejected by critics as ‘gangsta rap’, and rightfully so, but a good chunk of his music, in songs like “Letter to the President” and “Changes,” brought the plight of the black community to a new generation in a format they could relate to. And, he made people think.

“Changes” - Tupac Shakur

Moreover, part of Tupac’s genius was that he made his music, and more importantly his words, accessible to a much larger audience that included millions of white youth. He rapped about the struggles of blacks in America in modern times, from police brutality and institutional racism to the explosion of gangs, guns and drugs on the streets of the nation’s cities.

Tupac did not only speak out against racism by whites, but he also called on blacks to make change because ‘the old way wasn’t working.’

We gotta make a change
it’s time for us as a people to start making some changes
let’s change the way we eat let’s change the way we live
and let’s change the way we treat each other
you see the old way wasn’t working
so it’s on us to do what we gotta do to survive

Tupac was very much an activist rapper and he received plenty of push back, ridicule and dismissal from many young black men and fellow rappers at the time. And Tupac seemed to play a line between the philosophies of Malcolm X and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. This may have broadened his appeal to a larger audience, but either way, people listened to Tupac, and people did make changes because of his influence, that lasts to this day. If Tupac Shakur were still alive, he would have been 37 years old. He was shot in Las Vegas in 1996 by a drive-by shooter and died six days later.

For the most part, Tupac never would have believed there would be a black president in his lifetime, had he lived. But that is what is so great about today. It plays right into the amazing progress we have made in a short time. For all the problems, there are triumphs happening all of the time. Yet for still too many black youth, these triumphs, even the triumph of a black president, are still faraway things in their daily lives.

Also in the song “Changes”, Tupac saw the reality of a black president as “heaven sent” because it did not seem possible then, or in many ways, even two years ago when Obama set out on what many thought was an impossible dream.

and although it seems heaven sent
we ain’t ready to see a black president
it ain’t a secret don’t conceal the fact
the penitentiary’s packed and it’s filled with blacks

Tupac, in his own legendary way, deserves some of the credit for helping make this day, January 20, 2009 happen because he was such an influential voice with a powerful message of social change. He helped further the discussion in a way that brought many whites and blacks together in mind, at least, and helped inch us all a little bit closer to the fulfillment of the American ideal - that all men are created equal and born with the unalienable right to the pursuit of life, liberty and happiness.

Today, we are a lot closer to fulfilling that promise - there’s still a way to go - and it feels damn good.

And let us not forget that while we celebrate a historic leap forward in American experiment, we face troubled, if not dire, times. President Barack Obama did not win the presidency so America could ‘feel good’ about itself for its crimes and other injustices against blacks, he won because he is remarkably skilled in all of the ways that have the potential to reveal a great leader.

He won because he is the embodiment of the American Dream, the idea that no matter how different we may be we have common values that are consistent with the hopes of our forefathers. He won because he made his case about a new era for America, one in which most of us crave, in which we will get back on the right course and charter a new path into the future that could truly fulfill the promise of America, and to a larger extent, the world. And at the same time we need to save a planet in peril, save an entire economy from collapse and figure out a new agenda for two wars.

“Letter to the President” - Tupac Shakur (this song has a whole new meaning today)
After at least six years of misery, mischief, mismanagement and ‘mistakes’ that have put America in a fragile situation, most people are ready to do away with old formulas and ideas that do not work and do things different. That is part of the equation that fueled Obama’s amazing journey to the presidency.

If anyone can manage these multiple crisis’, many people obviously feel President Obama can, of course with our help. Getting through adversity seems to be a common thread in his life, so it looks like we’ve got a good shot at getting it right - hopefully sooner than later.

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Vetiver Set to Release Fourth Album "Tight Knit" on SubPop

Filed under: Music — indy1 @ 6:12 am

It’s that time again. A band I didn’t know about before, but should have known. Vetiver, the brainchild of San Francisco singer/songwriter Andy Cabic, creates dream-like folk pop full of sweeping moods and introspective lyrics.

Tight Knit is the fourth LP from Vetiver. If the following single is representative of the rest of the album, then we expect Vetiver to make a splash in 09.

“Everyday” - Vetiver from Tight Knit

Tight Knit will be released on February 17, 2009 on SubPop Records.

Recorded in Sacramento at The Hangar and in Los Angeles at Melva, Tight Knit was produced by longtime Vetiver collaborator Thom Monahan. Accompanying Cabic were Sanders Trippe on guitar, Kevin Barker on guitar, Otto Hauser on drums, Brent Dunn on bass and guest musicians including The Shins‘ Eric Johnson (also of Fruit Bats) Jonathan Wilson, “Farmer” Dave Scher, and Adam Peters.

Putting the “in” in to Indie. Stop by Indie Rock Cafe for the best
bands, MP3s, videos, news, concert listings, festival updates, playlists and more.

Animal Collective Releases Stunning New Video for "My Girls"

Filed under: Music — indy1 @ 6:11 am

The wild popularity of Animal Collective’s newest release, Merriweather Post Pavilion, has fans and music critics already calling it one of the best albums of the year. Hello? It’s only January.

Under usual circumstances, this would be enough to hold off for a while before making such a proclamation. But after listening to Merriweather over and again, it’s hard to believe that it will fizzle out or lose its appeal coming later this year. It’s just amazing!

Right now the band has an awesome Flash-created music video unlike anything we’ve ever seen. Yet best of all it’s for the amazing, sweeping and sparkly song, “My Girls”. Click the photo above to start the video, sit back and soak it up. Chances are you’ll watch it more than once, especially if you are an Animal Collective fan. :)

Even if you’re not an Animal Collective fan, there’s something magical about Merriweather, and if you’re new to their work, check out Merriweather first. Animal Collective kicked off an extensive 2009 world tour last evening at New York’s Grand Ballroom.

“My Girls” - Animal Collective

Stream Merriweather Post Pavilionuninterrupted in its entirety.

Animal Collective’s
Animal Collective official website
Animal Collective label website

Putting the “in” in to Indie. Stop by Indie Rock Cafe for the best
bands, MP3s, videos, news, concert listings, festival updates, playlists and more.

Bands to Watch in 2009: Blind Man’s Colour

Filed under: Music — indy1 @ 6:08 am

Blind Man’s Colour, a duo of college students from St. Petersburg, Florida is officially on the indie radar for 2009 and we hope you’ll agree.

Currently unsigned, and looking for a label to call home, Kyle Wyss and Orha Chettri have a new album, Season Dreaming, which they are hoping to release soon.

Wyss and Chettri have been making and mixing music together since childhood.

“We’ve been playing together since 8th grade,” Wyss told Indie Rock Cafe. We’ve always loved electronic music as well as really out there rock since we’ve met. We’re looking for a record label to release our first album.”

Over the years, the duo have released a number of self-produced mixes of music they’ve recorded, but nothing serious enough that they are comfortable with as an official release. These tracks are available as downloads from their blog.

The guys also have a great taste for music as witnessed in this mix for Olo Radio featuring songs from Evangelics, Of Montreal, Yo La Tengo and The Microphones.

We think the guys have got something good going.

“Jimmy Dove” - Blind Man’s Colour from the album Season Dreaming

“Taste” (Animal Collective cover) - Blind Man’s Colour

Blind Man’s Colour MySpace page: http://www.myspace.com/weareblindmanscolour

You can download full zip files and MP3s from Blind Man’s Colour and Chromatic Flights at their blog, http://blindmanscolour.blogspot.com

Putting the “in” in to Indie. Stop by Indie Rock Cafe for the best
bands, MP3s, videos, news, concert listings, festival updates, playlists and more.

Blackalicious - I Declare

Filed under: Music — indy1 @ 6:01 am

MP3I Declare
Artist Blackalicious

Here’s a Blackalicious remix track which is part of a fighter video game soundtrack for PS2’s  “>The Con.”  There’s also remixes from Dan The Automator, The Alchemist and others.

Bloc Party - Helicopter (Whitey Remix)

Filed under: Music — indy1 @ 5:59 am

MP3
Helicopter (Whitey Remix)
Artist Bloc Party
Album Silent Alarm
Buy Now

Label Vice Records

Genre Indie

Here’s a remix of a song off Bloc Party’s Silent Alarm album.

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