museum-line

museum-line

Saturday, April 23, 2016

2016 pt. 4

Basic Rhythm - Raw Trax
Raw Trax in that they each clutch tautology like a crutch and can't be bothered to explore much outside of whatever vocal-sample-snippet and twitch-beat was there at the kickoff, and if you're looking for melodies plz look elsewhere. But for how stubborn and protracted these not-quite-Basic stop-n-go Rhythms are, they also never fail to keep things fun, groovy, alive and well; each one drilling its distinct and vaguely hip-hop-flavored concept into your psyche as you helplessly jerk around all the while. Both the ecstatic thrill of weekend rushes and the moody stillness of twilight hushes are channeled, and though the voice-clips dip heavily into the generic, they undoubtedly help anchor the Trax and even form a semi-hook at times. They really are Basic, though. The voice-clips, that is. 7/10


Brood Ma - DAZE 
*******HIGHEST RECS*******
An avant-electronic-noise whirlwind so dizzying it may actually induce motion sickness, so absurdly garbled and flat-out strange at times it could be misconstrued for an hour-long album that was condensed-to-fuck until out shat a non-stop topsy-turvy ~27-minute thrill ride. But given the near-total plastering of hair-raising intensity and how much complex-n-booming dread-fun exudes on through, consider those compliments. The whizzes-n-whirls of fiery toying often invade every passage in your perimeter, and even lil lull-dips never quit squirmin' on the low, and are usually rectified by all-out reemergence-blasts with keyb-guns a-blazin'. Opens with pleasant jungle descent and orphically forewarning countdown, ends with 5-minute industrial crusha that also somehow manages to claim the omg-weirdness-crown, in between is your guess is as good as mine. 8/10


The Dirty Nil - Higher Power
Insubordinate with their arrant amp-shrieks and dual throat-shredders and disregard for the man of a gal he's tusslin' in the reeds to Husker Du with, but these loud-n-earnest rock-n-rollers bring some munchable melodies and a high-spirit ruckus that's palpably sweaty and generally welcoming -- for the first half, at least. A peak is attained at "Friends in the Sky", which suitably reaches near-celestial levels of catchy emotional squall; but barring the prolonged rodeo-entombment-request ender it's decidedly downhill from there, opting moreso for the so-so and inevitable sub-minute thrasher. Timespan of 'prolonged' ender: 3:29. Thoughts on that aforementioned man-of-a-gal: "Oh yeah / fuck him." 6.5/10


Freakwater - Scheherazade
Vet-status ragged-n-sensitive female alt-country-but-quite-country duo that's been active beside a varying cast of fellas since '89 or so -- and though it's their first album in over a decade, it conveys what vet-country damn well should, that is to say they're casually earnest, genuine, down-n-out-n-proud of it, prone to provocative diction and pilfering nursery rhymes for addiction metaphors. Their voice-weave is an uber-gripping and seemingly-sporadic force of beautiful disparity on its own, and the partaking ensemble dispenses just the right amount of schooled swagger-accompaniment for their slurrin' and croonin', whether it be fury-infused rock that wouldn't dare blow its top or the prevailing broken-ache dismay and eerie intimacy. Effortlessly exudes elegance, but never without some tinge of rusty suffering. Usually a solid go-to elegance-buffer, if you ask me. 7/10


Kendrick Lamar - untitled unmastered. 
*******HIGHEST RECS*******
///BRAV-FUCKING-O\\\
Rocks half the tracks/less than half the length/barely a wisp of the pampering dispatched on last year's unassailable do-I-even-have-to-say-it hip-hop smash, but I'll be damned if this isn't nearly as indispensable. The creepin' slow-burn jazz-hop understatements are fresh in their reserve, particularly showcasing Thundercat's uber-resonant bass-work and encouraging flows to come gleam on through the demo-ish dust; the xtra-doses of fervor and clarity accentuated without any abandonment of lexical density. Of course there's also the prolonged+hissy passage of behind-the-scenes badinage/tune-planning, perhaps superfluously consummating the whole 'unmastered' slant. But it makes for some pretty warm waste, I gotta say. Whereas the rest is more like world-class waste. 8/10


Matmos - Ultimate Care II
All spin-cycle and AWOL-sock jokes aside, this makes quite the mercurially labyrinthine romp out of exclusively washer-derived sounds; transmitting a sort of exorbitant cut-up reconstruction of what the super-DUPER-wash setting might be like. Thus its format as a single 38-minute composition, in all of its cumbersome delight -- of course one consistently fluctuating with ups+downs, vigor+lulls, pure meandering, alien+domestic. The alien being that many-a-sound could be construed as just about anything other than a washing machine, having been mutated into whatever-the-fuck fits; the domestic being the reality-reminders of knob-cranks and soapy aqua-shuffles that seemingly cleanse the mind. And when they just flat-out rhythmically beat the shit out of the thing, that's cool too. Always nice to see object-technicians that acknowledge both mad manipulation and plain ol plainness. Is it just me or does that buzzer-click closure absolutely epitomize a domestic reality-reminder? 6/10


Ritual Chamber - Obscurations (To Feast on the Seraphim)
Opens with a bestirred beast and ominous drum-march+bell-tolls, ends with ambiguous chanting and an approximation of being swallowed by Satan complete with a slimy slide through his gullet-n-guts -- and though what's in between is fittingly chock full of substantial low-end grime-riffs and exclusively-low-growl vox to match, this is quite the protracted and dispiriting trudge on the whole. Which may be par for the course perhaps, but when coupled with a lack of memorability and range, it makes for a rather tolling and eventually exhaustive listen. Further fusion of the freakishness found in the bookends throughout woulda been just dandy. 5.5/10


Santigold - 99¢
She bursts out her curio-crammed airtight chamber and promptly gets you bobbin' head and yelpin' incoherence with a one-two punch of sunny-island busy-n-bubbly pop greatness; laying on thick+cheeky the exotica cocksure jauntiness that triumphantly emanates throughout and rhyming 'sycophant' with 'elephant' while she's at it. And sure, just about every arrangement here churns out concordance, but it's ol Santi's invincible chorus-belting and forever-pleasing potpourri of enunciations that keep on keepin' on -- even during dives into the dramaturgy of circle-strolls/ran races/pre-fires and a bumbling-per-ushe ILoveMakonnen feature, she always makes singing along a wildly obligatory hoot. For my money however, it's the straight-n-steady joyride finale of "Who I Thought You Were" that takes the elation-cake, while also showcasing her punk-fronter roots. Barely comprehensible message for the man who's been modified by money: "I like you more when you poorer / Your new ID is a borer." 7/10


Secret Boyfriend - Memory Care Unit
Skulks things off with an immovable 7-minute simmer-slab that indeed could be likened to warbling umbrage, and each act of patience-testing crust-dream hypnosis that follows seems to be progressively more evocative, enigmatic, and dammit, downright despondent -- the kind of electro-moan VHS-scum melancholia that gradually sucks you into its turtles-pace vortex and instills an unabated state of cogitative concern. Its version of sweetening is the aptly-titled "Little Jammy Centre", which actually rocks a beat (albeit the world's most archaic) and vox (albeit the world's most unintelligible) alongside beatific twinkle-keys/low-key sparkler bursts/glitchy rumblings; and stabs at ultimate bittersweet ascendancy are the terminal twosome of "Stripping at the Nail" and "Memorize Them Well" -- the former an arguably fully-formed and legit stunner, the latter able to pass for a steadily-beating heart sluggishly soaring towards a sketchy-n-staticky heaven. Never underestimate the power of an uber-rudimentary keyb-note pattern. 7/10


Skee Mask - Shred
Eloquently shifts between/skillfully marries floaty atmospherics and zippy microcosmic beat-work, consistently hits a junctional sweet-spot of driving+elaborate+reflective while remaining sufficiently subdued -- the expanse and expertise of it is admirable, and though I dig some tossed-in hand-drum+spoon-clack percussion and possible skateboard references and complicated-chill-beats as much as the next guy, the whole of it feels so drawn-out; and ultimately i.e. maybe halfway through, rooted predictability settles in. Driving as it may be at times, scarcely do I get through a track-or-two without gettin' at least a lil snoozy. Not a bad thing obviously, especially when it's imaginably somehow beneficial to the brain and momentarily wondrous -- would like a bit more moxie in its tatterin' is all. 6.5/10

Saturday, April 9, 2016

2016 pt. 3

2 Chainz - Felt Like Cappin' [EP]
Lax-n-stripped shorty-discharge embodied by the final track's title: "This Me, Fuck It." The carefreewheelin' disposition bears stylish persona aplenty and a refreshing sense of ataraxia, flows and particularly the beats seize quite the clarity-bolster -- but his usually-cunning braggadocio is rendered into shuffling about in the ho-hum as are the monotonous choruses, and the whole of it emits an aura of inessential lenience. Worth it for shining production via Zaytoven/Timbaland/etc., a winning+Shinobi-referencing Lil Wayne verse, and the semi-charm of offhand oeuvre from a guy pushing 40 who apparently just Felt Like Rappin'. 5.5/10


Aluk Todolo - Voix 
*******HIGHEST RECS*******
A presumably single-session and perpetually-careening instrumental that's generously chopped into six time-stamped sections, this is a hypnotic and riotous exercise in all-out steadfast propulsion that scarcely isn't cramming the skull full-a mesmerizing cacophony. Stabile and subtly-chugged dual-note bass repetitions and nimble-yet-constant drumming maintain a well-trudged path while guitars are usually used to twist and shriek, but now and then pluck out a clarion riff for good measure. And though every so often it builds up to peak-like intensifications and wanders into restless tear-downs, the tautological persistence can feel a bit superabundant on the whole. Eh, small price-2-pay for a grime-groove so bewitching-n-jittery that the final calm-down halfway through "9:29" feels like a warranted post-orgasmic release. 7.5/10


Animal Collective - Painting With
Could be conclusive confirmation that these animals have collectively ceased to keep giving a shit following the long-time-coming and merited 2009 breakthrough of Merriweather Post Pavilion -- while lotsa peepz bemoaned the exorbitant clutter of 2012's successor Centipede Hz, at least that felt refulgent, agitated, bustling; hell, kinda filthy. Here we see arrangements similarly thronged but muffled and flattened, an enunciated simpler approach that often comes off as a hasty rush-job, vexatious bouncy-ball harmonies that manage to be both vertiginous and lifeless, and John Cale+Colin Stetson drone+sax guest spots left nearly illegible. Not that its without ear-worms that beckon and standout/bearable moments and a boatload of wonder-sounds, but never before have they come across as clocked in. Eliminating that aura of indifference at least woulda been nice. 5.5/10


Black Tusk - Pillars of Ash
Even-split hardcore-metal trio whose stylistic conventionality would be a straight-up shortcoming if it weren't so-oft played with such plain-hearted vim and power -- a far stretch from breaking new ground and siked on it, complacent but surefire where it counts. So it's a fairly catchy, heavy riffin', devoted kind of shortcoming; not wasting time and shouter swap-outs are certainly pluses too. 6.5/10


Cross Record - Wabi-Sabi 
*******HIGHEST RECS*******
Occupying terrain somewhere between phantasmal and lovely, this hubby+wife+Swans percussionist+part-time femme-choir crawl and soar towards a sort of ramshackle basement bliss, fuzzy tape-tronics and mantric stomp-n-pierce riffs and dusty-crusty acoustics anchored by the forever breathy and clarion dreamghost-vox of Emily Cross i.e. 'wife'. The ramifications of which being somewhat reminiscent of a Phil Elverum project: a prevailing sense of tenderness and soundscapes that can convey psych-laced desolation and toweringly epic majesty with persuasion and character, scrappy as they may be. But for my money, this kinda has the upper hand -- it's concise, for one thing. 8/10


KING - We Are KING
Invariably wafting in a subdued dream-in-the-sky electro-r&b euphoria -- which is intoxicating and intricate as it is fragile and subtle, but does become rather snoozy and rather redundant rather quickly. Bound to happen when all-sounds-concerned are routinely lighter than air and melt before you, I suppose. But their mellow ethereality never isn't pleasant as hell (er or heaven), 6+minute extended mixes allow for structure-play and the chance to get even driftier, and though the capacity for could-be easy hooky hit-making is evident, this self-made trio is duly diligent 'bout bestowing priority to silky-steady trance above all. Refresher in both attitude and execution. 6/10


LNS - Maligne Range [EP]
6-track/sub-half hour techno-house-ambient concoction that soothes and ensnares with its clean refinement and calm complexity -- mood is oft-ominous but never onerous, it's insistent but stays outta your face, preferring to remain unfussy and understated. The studious no-frills no-filler disposition here is nifty, no doubt -- but those particularly-crispy cymbal-hits, vibrant surface-scrapes, and subterranean goo-gurgles make for some pretty gratifying perks as well. 7/10


Pinegrove - Cardinal
*******HIGHEST RECS*******
With their half-hour of emo-ish yearnin' and woes wrapped up in ragged-n-laggard countrified aesthetics, they pull off a nonchalant just-rolled-outta-bed feel that is amiable and intimate -- Evan Hall's erratic and downtrodden whimper-wails serve as a catalyst for instability, and much like his fellow bandmates, doesn't think twice about shrouding brilliance with laxity. Hopefully he takes comfort in the fact that somewhere between the loss of old friends through fuck-ups and resolving to make some new ones, he's got quite the supportive troupe in the meantime. 8/10


Porches - Pool
Sure, I too initially scoffed at the unshakable aching, the scant and mild electro, the near-stagnation via wounded-falsetto uniformity -- but then each-n-every piece-of-cake hook revealed itself to be distinctive and enduring, and soon after emerged the certitude that porticos-pacemaker Aaron Maine uses these attributes to rightfully bolster his aura of affection. The tunes are cushy-smooth and clear-cut enough to make a quick sax-spew and willful keyb-flub protrude like cute lil' anomalies; and for this security-seeking clean-shaven approval-addict who spends his loner/stoner hours in a twin bed floatin'+wonderin' about "her" and admires cars cuz they can get him the hell outta dodge, they leave plenty of room for rudimentary words and aboveboard alienation. Femme-harmony backups for xtra-tender support, occasional auto-tune inflections because why not? 7/10


Two Inch Astronaut - Personal Life
Straddling the line between wacky-tinged 90's-alt-angst and gawky math-rock inclinations with variable prosperity/tolerability; where sex-n-school grumblin' seems inevitable and cello is employed for sleepy time. 5/10

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Future - Purple Reign 5.5/10
Future - EVOL 6.5/10
Obscura - Akroasis 6.5/10

Sunday, April 3, 2016

leet trax 2016 1/4

18+ - "Love Was Like (Party W Pauses)"
Abbath - "Ashes of the Damned"
Anderson .Paak - "The Season/Carry Me"
Basic Rhythm - "Prototype"
Betonkust & Palmbomen II - "Aqua Mundo"
Black Tusk - "Born of Strife"
Cavern of Anti-Matter - "Insect Fear"
Charli XCX - "Vroom Vroom"
Cross Record - "Steady Waves"
The Dirty Nil - "Friends in the Sky"
DUST - "Alien Prey"
Freakwater - "Velveteen Matador"
Future - "Lie to Me"
Kevin Gates - "Ain't Too Hard"
Benji Hughes - "Magic Summertime"
Immune - "Las Vegas"
KING - "The Greatest"
Krallice - "The Guilt of Time"
Kendrick Lamar - "Untitled 03"
Luxury Elite - "High-Rise"
Anna Meredith - "Dowager"
French Montana - "Lock Jaw" (ft. Kodack Black)
Obscura - "Ten Sepiroth"
OG Maco - "Ape Shit"
Pinegrove - "Size of the Moon"
Pop. 1280 - "In Silico"
Porches - "Even the Shadow"
Rihanna - "Kiss It Better"
Roly Porter - "Mass"
Santigold - "Who I Thought You Were"
Secret Boyfriend - "Stripping at the Nail"
Sia - "Cheap Thrills"
Skee Mask - "Melczop 2"
Esperanza Spalding - "Rest in Pleasure"
Two Inch Astronaut - "Woodstock '99"
Kanye West - "Real Friends" (ft. Ty Dolla Sign)