TOTW: Oneohtrix Point Never_Sticky Drama

It has been just over a week since the release of the new Onohtrix Point Never album entitled Garden Of Delete and I have listened to it a lot. Yet again OPN aka Daniel Lopatin has both defied and expanded expectations with music that seems to come from somewhere truly unique. Music that continues to develop through years of listening as his previous albums have proved. A musician that is pushing the edges of taste, genre and even music itself.

Sticky Drama is the most recent single from Garden Of Delete and is a perfect summary of the album as a whole. Old Chiptune vocal synthesis, hard tearing synths and heavy midi manipulation are used to create music that seems to be both referential and truly unique.

On the first few listens it may be hard to get your head around what is happening within his sound design and compositional structures but I urge you to stick with it. Ignore what you usually expect from music and focus on the raw guttural emotions you get from listening to Sticky Drama. The track manages to blend elements of beauty and harshness. It’s an anthem for both total anarchy or a violent dictatorship:

TOTW: Deafhaven_ Baby Blue

I’m really enjoying the new Deafhaven album and have been listening to it more than anything else the past few weeks. Their blend of Metal and Shoegaze really works for me on many levels.

Baby Blue is the track on the album that separates these genres a bit more than the others which mash them together in closer intervals or even at the same time. The first three minutes of the track focus very much on the shoegaze elements before we then soar into a progressive metal of almost operatic grandeur. After it’s peak the track then subdues to an ambient pad of music with a field recording of transport information from the George Washington Bridge. It really is something special:

TOTW: The Flaming Lips_ Sound of Failure

I have been doing this blog now for over 3 years and looking back on It’s history there is one band that I haven’t covered as much as I should have, It’s time to rectify this.

I first heard The Flaming Lips on the UK release of Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots so I would have been around the age of 15 and I instantly fell in love with the album. In time this love grew to their entire back catalogue, from their early drug fuelled punk/grunge through to their development In more progressive, psychedelic and experimental rock. They have been a soundtrack for nearly half my life. The highs and lows have all been accompanied by their music and on one amazing occasion, my life and the band collided when I got to go on stage with them at the Manchester Apollo and dance like a nutter dressed as Santa. A memory that will be with me for the rest of my life.

It was in this brief few hours that my thoughts towards making music changed. I had always loved music and used to enjoy playing instruments, this was crushed by bad experiences in education but I remember vividly thinking on stage as I jumped up and down that, although this was a surreal experience it was also real. That performing in front of thousands of people was possible and making music was for everyone. This is one of the key events, which turned me back from just a lover of music to a creator. To put it quite simply, without The Flaming Lips there wouldn’t be this website.

But without this experience I would still be a fan of The Flaming Lips because of their music. If you haven’t given them the time of day you should. This is a band that have never restrained their creative freedom or let what other people think get in the way of what they make. They have often attempted to make projects that are hugely ambitious both technically and creatively and amazingly most of the time achieve them successfully without over-stretching.

As someone who is into production of music The Flaming Lips and their producer Dave Fridmann have offered it in spades with interesting, creative and often fresh methods of sound design and mixing. This works well with a band whose lyrics vary into some really alternative and strange territories but are always rooted in lead singer Wayne Coynes profound understanding of the human condition.

This leads us to my TOTW “Sound Of Failure” although it’s not one of their most well-known tracks it is one of my favourites and manages to summarise what I love most about the band in its runtime. We get a large verity of orchestration and textures throughout, from synthesised elements of the orchestra, both electric and organic drums, guitars, and many layers of vocal overdubbing with unique processing techniques.

These vocals tell a story of a girl who is introspectively contemplating the death of a friend but Wayne Coyne looks at the situation in a more complicated way than most song writers with maturity that can only stem from experience. Instead of a one-sided view that we usually hear which will be aimed towards one emotion or feeling such as Hate, Anger or Love we get a mix of complex emotions. The sense of loss of a friend but also the power of resolve and growing through acceptance and self-reflection. It also references music that doesn’t handle these feelings with the lyrics “go tell Britney and go tell Gwen. She’s not trying to go against all them” which exemplifies how a lot of pop music simplifies human emotions which are always more complicated.

It’s this empathy in humanity that has always attracted me to Wayne Coynes lyrics and the music of the flaming lips. Under all the grand external stories of priest driven ambulances, wars with giant pink robots, time travellers, magicians, psychedelic monsters etc. There is always, incredibly well thought out internal struggles with the characters involved which anyone will be able to relate to.

The Flaming Lips manage to be both one of the most creative experimental pop rock bands out there whilst also creating music that deals with subjects that are both surreal and insightful. They will continue to be the soundtrack to my life as I get older and are one of the few acts I will listen to everything they create because even when it doesn’t work it is always full of great ideas and when it does work their tracks can be about as perfect as music can be:

TOTW: Joey Bada$$_ Hazeus View

The Joey Bada$$ album B4.DA.$$ is very much from the East Coast. Continuing the traditions of East Coast Hip hop that are still as exiting and refreshing today. Namely Great Beats accompanying more complex lyrics.
I first heard Hazus View on the fantastic Song Exploder Podcast_Joey Bada$$ where Joey Bada$$ and producer Kirk Knight deconstructed the track before playing it in full. By that point I was hooked on its short looping samples and great lyrics that I had to make it my Track of the Week:

TOTW: Vince Staples_Summertime

Vince Staples solo rap album entitles Summertime ’06 is am impressive debut, with its own distinctive sound and a collection of some really fantastic tracks. The highlight for me is the stripped down sample heavy track entitled Summertime.

It’s a lot sparser than many of the other tracks on the Album with less lyrics and musical accompaniment. But it’s this minimalism that really allows the track to breathe. The Looping Nature of the samples with the monotone vocals manages to emote a collection of feelings that drift between happy and sad throughout its runtime, powerfully and with subtle purpose. A really fantastic piece of work:

TOTW: Oneohtrix Point Never_ I Bite Through It

I know there has been a lot of Oneohtrix Point Never love on my site for a the past few months but I have to say his upcoming album Garden Of Delete is my most look forward to this year.

I Bite Through It is the first track released in full from it and we’re treated to something new and allot harsher than we have experienced in his past two albums. Synthetic sounds are chopped and warped in his usual unworldly fair. Yet his work never goes in a direction you would expect it to and this track makes no exceptions. Going from full synths wrapped in heavy distortion to acoustic solo guitar. This sudden change between heavy and light tones really keeps you guessing untill it all the elements crash in on each other and fall apart.

I can’t work out if it’s brilliant or insane but I can’t stop listening to it especially on headphones where the stereo design really shines through:

TOTW: Thundercat_’Them Changes’

This Year seems to have been a tour de force for LA musicians collaborating with each other. Thundercats mini EP is a perfect example of this. You can tell Thundercat is a bass player as multiple tracks of the instrument take centre stage on this piece which is then blended with some great piano work and a sax accompaniment from Kamasi Washington.

This fusion of genre has been a mainstay of several works over the year including Kamasi Washingtons own triple album The Epic and the Kendrick Lamar album To Pimp A Butterfly and it’s created some of the highlights of the year for me. This track being one of them:

TOTW: Tame Impala_Let It Happen

It’s taken me a few months to catch up with the new Tame Impala album but I’m glad i finally did. Let It Happen is a Perfect example of this album. The single version of this track sounds like there hasn’t been much of an advancement from his previous album Lonerism and although I enjoyed the track it did feel like treading over old ground. However on the Album this track breaks down into a fantastic looping breakdown that made me perk up and listen.

Kevin Parker has managed to develop his sound further with the use of sampling and audio editing to create a fresh take on his already fantastic sound design and production. Listen to the album version below:

 

TOTW: The Rapture_ Come Back To Me

The Rapture are one of those bands that really didn’t get the credit that they deserved.

They were one of the first bands to develop the Post-Punk revival sound which clashed electronic and dance music with punk. A sound that is still popular and prevalent in many bands to this day.

On Come Back To Me we’re treated with a looping sample that sounds close to an accordion. Then halfway through the track the instrumentation is stripped away to a darker deeper bass synth sound that really hits home on a sound sytem with a decent sub.

They may not be arround anymore but fans of artists like LCD Soundsytem and Hot Chip should go back and give The Rapture a decent listen:

TOTW: BadBadNotGood_ Can’t Leave The Night

BadBadNotGood were the highlight of Parlkife festival when i saw them a few months ago. Listening to the way the filter different genre through the medium of a Three Piece jazz act is exiting and fresh.

On Can’t Leve The Night we’re treated to a track that’s heavily influenced by post rock mixed with their usual Jazz Influences.

The track builds to an all out heavy hitting chorus reminiscent of more hard edged Hiphop with a powerful driving bass like that manages to provide enormous weight without overpowering the mix: