April 27, 2008

It will give you a new perspective...

It might not be useful, but it'll give you a new perspective.

Lately I've begun to put more and more of my music back onto my iPod, and have been listening to a lot of shuffle. And along the way I found a good number of gems that I either forgot that I had, or even never realized that I had (I do have a lot of music). And this all got me thinking about my most under-appreciated albums I own.

So after much deliberation I have narrowed it down to my Top 10 in no particular order (other than alphabetically) I was going to go with 11, but that would have just been forcing the issue just to make it prime.

1 - Bran Van 300 - Discosis
Their first album was such a fantastically eclectic collection of music (they even managed to merge rap and country in the same song, with positive results) that I quite often forget about their second album. And after a couple more listens, I feel ashamed about that. Discosis has the same eclectic sound, but with a more polished feel to it. All the tracks flow smoothly from one to the next, weaving between genres. They even managed to loop it around as the last track leads back into the first. This might not be the best CD I own, but it has something for every mood, and has even more for when I don't know what mood I am in.

2 - DJ Spooky - Under the Influence
I don't know where you label this disc. Some say hip-hop, turn-table-ism, some say it's a mix CD... Personally I just label it trip-hop (so I know where to find it). But no matter how you label it, I skipped it for too long. Maybe it was because many of the tracks just don't feel like they stand up on their own, so when they appeared on shuffle mode I quickly skipped them. But then I hit a couple of the main tracks that I kept listening to over and over again. And finally I decided to give the whole album another listen, and I was surprised. All those "throw-away" tracks I had found before were perfect set-up to the main set pieces I had found. And now DJ Spooky has managed to find his way into my regular car trip rotation.

3 - Fatboy Slim - Better Living Through Chemistry
Lost for ages behind You've Come A Long Way Baby, Chemistry never got the play it deserved in my rotation. But after I realized how many great tracks there are on here... now it gets more play than You've Come.

4 - Lincoln - Lincoln
Not too many people are familiar with Lincoln, but they still remain one of the best opening acts I have ever seen (they opened for a while for They Might Be Giants). Unfortunately they only managed one CD before splitting up, but damn is it a catchy one. With all this praise it may seem that Lincoln doesn't quite fit here, but what I didn't appreciate was the lyrical stylings. I had always noted some of the quirky lines I loved ("You think you're so funny, but looks aren't everything"), but when I popped it into the CD player the other day for a listen I really noticed how deep some of the songs actually turn out to be. True they aren't all like that, but the lead does have a way of making even depressing songs sounds happy (much the way Guster's songs are all depressing as hell if you ever actually listen to them, yet the band puts on one of the happiest liveliest shows).

5 - Nightmares on Wax - Mind Elevation
Like Zero7 (see number 10), this was a long time background album for me. However, it almost doesn't belong on this list since I rediscovered it almost a year ago, and have worked it into regular rotation ever since, but I get to choose, so I'm putting it up here (mainly so that everyone who hasn't heard of it can get a chance to listen to it). It is one of the best chill-out albums that I own. Even when it gets more up-tempo it still has that relaxed (yet not sleep-inducing) vibe.

6 - Nirvana - Incesticide
Now I know Nirvana seems like a weird choice to have on here, but there is a major case for this album. And not just under-appreciated by me, under-appreciated by the public at large. Incesticide is like the forgotten middle child of the Nirvana family. Wedged right between Nevermind and In Utero, it is so often forgotten. Hell, when I searched for Nirvana on Amazon Incesticide came up #9, after the Smells Like Teen Spirit single even. Talk about unloved. True it wasn't a standard studio album, but who cares. It is strong and powerful and Nirvana at their best. I'm almost glad that I forgot about it, because now it gives me a chance to re-experience the Nirvana sound, but not with the songs I've heard a thousand times already.

7 - Sigur Ros - Agaetis Byrjun
You think Iceland and you think Bjork (well if you're thinking wacked out music at least). What you should really think is Sigur Ros. This was one of the iffy inclusions here, because it is such a great album and I always knew that. But somehow I keep losing touch with it only to come back and rediscover how much I love it.

8 - Weezer - Weezer
I know that this one really shouldn't go up here. I mean who honestly argues that this isn't one of the best CDs? The thing is for the longest time I placed it behind Pinkerton. I don't really know why. I guess it was because Pinkerton had some of those tracks that I just couldn't get out of my head, and because I very quickly lost interest in Buddy Holly. But then I thought long and hard about it all and realized that every single track on this disc is fantastic. When they biggest complaint I can come up with is that I got a little tired of Buddy Holly (which is still a great song with an awesome video), then I really have to reconsider my Weezer rankings.

9 - Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Fever To Tell
This is another case of an album I did not give the proper amount of credit to. I know that everyone else did, but I got into the Yeah Yeahs all at once, and the three song trio of Honeybear, Cheated Hearts, and Dudley towards the end of Show Your Bones kept me on that album and away from
Fever for too long. But overall I do have to give Fever it's props. It fills a niche I've been lacking for so long in my music with such force and power that I can't help but include it in any list of my CDs now.

10 - Zero 7 - Simple Things
This was my background music for so long that I forgot how good it can be as the focal point as well. It is so mellow and soothing that I can do in depth thinking without getting too distracted, yet its not so dull that I would never think of just listening to it on it's own. I always make sure that I keep it handy for any occasion.

August 11, 2005

Human After All

So this isn't so much a review of the new Daft Punk album as much as it is my own little rant (positive) about Daft Punk as a whole. I've always had a special place for Daft Punk in my heart, going way back to Homework even, and it continues to this day. But it's not like their music is all that great. It is, however, extremely entertaining. The other thing that I appreciate about Daft Punk is the constant growth. Many of you have heard my rants about how U2 are overrated reprocessed crap, and that their only real good album was when they actually tried something different (Pop). Well Daft Punk is on the other end of that. Just look at their 3 main albums (I'm not counting Daft Club here, it's just remixs)...

Homework - A fantastic openning album for the group. It's darker, deeper, and has a very bassy feel to it. It's very well put together and probably, in my mind, the best produced and put together of the three.

Discovery - Their second go around is still my favorite. However, this is easily the lowest on the musical quality scale (come on people, it was basically disco!), but it was also the most fun. Maybe I might be slightly biased too since it brings back great memories from Spring break in California, but it's still my favorite.

Human After All - Still haven't gotten fully into this one (I only got it about a week and a half ago) but it's definitely a new turn for the band. It's got much more of an electronic edge to it, with a little bit of that disco-y feel of Discovery underneath. From what I've gotten so far from the album, it's almost like a combination of Homework and Discovery, but with a whole new sound to it. If it wasn't the most modern sounding of the bunch I'd almost say it was the bridge album between the other two.

In the end though, each release from Daft Punk has gone in a completely new direction from where they seemed to be heading. They seem to constantly evolve and change (to the times and to their own personal whims) which makes every new release fresh and new. Not stale and old like everything someone like U2 has put out in the last 20 years. Daft Punk is Radiohead, plus a more electronical feel, minus some of the musical talent, minus some of the rock feel.

PS - In case you couldn't tell I'd reccommend all three Daft Punk albums to anyone, as well as every Radiohead album (I guess you could skip Pablo Honey if you wanted to), and I'd avoid all U2 (except Pop).

July 26, 2004

TMBG & Audio Bullys

So the time has come to give my input on music as well as movies. So here we go...

They Might Be Giants - The Spine
RATING: S
SOLID, SILLY, STALE, SKETCH, SERENDIPITOUS, SAVORY

So 'The Spine' is aabout what you'd expect out of a TMBG Album. It has catchy melodies, weird lyrics, the works. "Jodi Foster held 2-pair, Bach had 3-of-a-kind, Gandhi said with my Full House I'll blow you're mind," need I say more? So while that is good, it's lacking anything all that new. It's almost like an outline of something that was planned for bigger and better things, but just didn't quite get off the ground. But in the end it's just a pleasent, acceptable album, just with nothing new that stands out from all their other stuff. (It's not really all that serendipitous, but I just like that word)


Audio Bullys - Ego War
RATING: F
FRISKY, FRONT-HEAVY, FUNKY, FORMULAIC, FUROR...FIZZLE

So the album starts off great, it really got me going. It had some nice beats with good melodies, and it played to my current taste for Eurpean-English. So like the adjectivization might suggest it starts off with a furor, and then fizzles, hardcore. Some of tracks were a little cookie-cutter-ish. It was almost like they just found a beat (often times the same one), took a melody, plugged it into a formula, and then 'rapped' over it. At about track 9 or 10 it just becomes irritating. I guess that was the breaking point for the formula. All in all though it's a respectable album, good even if you just skip the end.

October 21, 2003

17 Isn't a Very Big Number

So I have just completed one of the hardest tasks in my life. I have
narrowed my CDs down to a Top 17 list. This may not seem like much, but
when you have around 700 CDs this takes some work. I went by a couple
of simple rules in creating the list too. 1: I must own a copy of the
CD (burnt or offical); 2: These would be the CDs I would keep if I were
forced into a life that allowed me only 17 different albums. With that
said and done I am proud to say that I have completed the list! Now it
took me way too long to narrow it down to 17 as it is, so I've decided
to just list them alphabetically and assume that they are all equally
good. The only exception to this is my all-time top CD which holds
tightly to its #1 ranking. Some of the close calls to the list
included:
Daft Punk - Discovery, DJ Qbert - Wave Twisters, DJ Shadow - The Private
Press, Eels - Daisies of the Galaxy, Fatboy Slim - You've Come a Long
Way Baby, Gorillaz - Gorillaz, Keoki - Disco Death Race 2000, Last of
the Mohicans - OST, Mocean Worker - Mixed Emotional Features, Nirvana -
Nevermind, Orbnital - Middle of Nowhere, Prodigy - Experience, Sasha -
AirDrawnDagger, They Might Be Giants - Then: The Earlier Years, and Tool
- Aenima.

And the Official List:

1: Ani Difranco - "Little Plastic Castle"
&
2-17:
Air - Moon Safari
Ben Folds Five - The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Messner
Blur - 13
Cibo Matto - Stereo Type A
Guster - Lost and Gone Forever
Magnetic Fields - 69 Love Songs
Messiah - Messiah
William Orbit - Pieces in Modern Style
Radiohead - OK Computer
REM - New Adventures in Hi-Fi
Rock Instrumental Classics - Vol. 1-5
Serial Experiment Lain - OST
Smashing Pumpkins - Siamese Dream
U2 - Pop
Weezer - Pinkerton


I know there will be many of you out there who will scoff at my list,
but I stand by it. These are the 17 CDs (or sets of CDs) that I would
choose if I were forced to massively cut down my collection. Or
including the ones that almost made it I guess it could be considered my
top 34 List. Either way I am relatively satisfied with what I've come
up with, and am willing to strongly defend it. If, however, you wish to
debate this with me I'm more than open to that. And who knows, maybe
you'll be able to change my mind and get me to change the list (though I
highly doubt this, you're more than welcome to try).

Coming soon...My Top 13 DVDs