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TV on the TV


TV on the Radio will be making a couple actual television in the next couple weeks. They will be on SNL tomorrow (Feb. 7) night, adding to the extremely good and extremely bad choices they have made lately. 
On monday, rumor has it that they will be making an appearance on the Colbert Report. In addition to playing a song, they will be doing an interview with Colbert, so maybe they will get the McCartney treatment or even better, do a remix together!
Either way, its bound to be good. 

TV on the Radio - Halfway Home - Dear, Science - 2008

Also check out a track from Tunde Adebimpe's side project Fake Male Voice over at P4K

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Review: Marissa Nadler :: Little Hells (2009)

8.1/10
I will go out on a limb here and say that Marissa Nadler has the most hauntingly beautiful voice in contemporary folk music. In her early discography, it was this voice that carried the songs; like a female Leonard Cohen, her melodies swooped and dropped atop a 12-string acoustic, and little else was needed. On her new album, Little Hells, Nadler's atmospheric vocals now float above a charming alt-country band, and it works.
The album opens with the dreary but wonderful "Heartpaper Lover". Any fan will notice immediately the lack of guitar; A Rhodes piano mimics Nadler's guitar style, providing a repetitive wave above which her voice floats. This melancholy sound continues in "Rosary" where sparse instrumentation and a lazy waltz perfectly compliment Nadler's haunting catholic-ish lyrics.
While the first three tracks illustrate Nadler's new direction, the strongest song on the album, "Little Hells", returns to the folk songstress timbre: voice and guitar. Though short, the title track features a simple and beautiful melody that is actually (gasp!) somewhat uplifting.
Not to fear though, Nadler returns to her old gothic self on "Ghosts & Lovers". "Ghosts and Lovers, they will haunt you for a while," she sings.

http://www.threeimaginarygirls.com/recordreview/2009mar/littlehells
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The Love Language

There is a great post over at i guess i'm floating about the debut album from The Love Language. I've never heard of them before, but this song Lalita is incredible. The best I could describe is Sunset Rubdown meets the Shins. Yeah, I thought it was a good idea too. Their debut is out in March, when I'm sure we'll all be hearing more about them.

The Love Language:: Lalita from s/t debut.

plus check out more songs on their myspace
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Of Montreal - Beware Our Nubile Miscreants

I have always been back and forth on of Montreal. And I have to confess, I haven't even listened all the way through Skeletal Lamping. But I found this acoustic take of the song "Beware Our Nubile Miscreants" pretty rad. It almost strange to watch Kevin Barnes without a pony and larger than life limbs floating in the background. Without all the glitter, of the live show though, I think the song reveal a lot more of its melancholy character. I feel like it almost turns into a doo-wop sing along during the chorus.



Barnes' structural shifts are still abrasive, but I think the ambient psychedelic build strangely works well to close out the song.

A good interview with Barnes and some relationship advice.

of Montreal - Beware Our Nubile Miscreants - Skeletal Lamping
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New Fleet Foxes Video:: Mykonos

From Pitchfork comes the premiere of Fleet Foxes' new video. This one is pretty crazy, lots of origami and creepy castles and stuff.
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Review: Lily Allen - It's Not Me, It's You

Lily Allen
It's Not Me, It's You
[Capitol Records - 2009]
Rating: 7.5/10

The Good: Lily Allen's new album, It's Not Me, It's You, seems like the same loud, witty, and infinitely catchy Lily (Ah, how I wish I was on a first name basis). This, people, is in no way, a bad thing. On her second LP, Allen continues to produce the same vocal driven, upbeat pop songs that got her famous in the first place, while tweaking things just enough to make it sound new.
The album's sound is predominately keyboard lead, but she seems to have toned down some of the ska/reggae influences, excluding the European sounding (accordion!?) "Never Gonna Happen."  On this album, Allen occasionally ventures in to the wide world of electronics, using samples to build ambience on songs like "I Could Stay" "Back to the Start" and "Chinese" (the intro to “Back to the Start” sounds like something The Knife could have written). “The Fear” is an obvious single, though darker than the ones from her first album. “22” is also single material and features a Mark Mothersbaugh sounding harpsichord. Overall, she generally stays with the same foundation of pop/rock chord progressions, melodies and commanding hooks that made Alright, Still such a great vehicle for her infecting voice and pointed lyrics.

Again on this album, like her first, she draws her lyrics from a wide range of subject matter. From vulnerable introspection ("22,"), to relationships ("Chinese"), politics ("Everyone's At it," "Fuck You,") and even theological ruminations ("Him"), its clear Lily Allen has a lot to say. On several tracks, she seems particularly frustrated with the degenerate aspects of society and social pressures, singing on “Everyones At It,” “I’m not trying to say that I’m smelling of roses/ but when will we tire of putting shit up our noses?” continuing, “it’s meant to be fun/ and this just doesn’t feel right.” This marks a stark emotional contrast with “Alfie” from her first album, which is a bouncy, almost comical plea for her brother to stop smoking weed. She goes on to deplore the increasing reliance on anti-depressants, prozac, illegal and medical marijuana and general level of despair and dependency. She continues her bitingly sarcastic and critical narrative through the next track, “The Fear.” In the first verse, she sings “I am a weapon of massive consumption/ And it’s not my fault, its how I’m programmed to function” invoking the word play that would seem witty if it wasn’t so scathingly delivered. Ironically, the verses, in which Allen assumes a dispassionate and mechanistic persona, are initially founded on a sparse, organic picked guitar line. This ultimately gives way to the blatantly contrasting and expansive chorus, which finds Allen sincerely, almost desperately declaring “I don’t know what’s right and what's real.” The synthetic, electronic backing noises in the chorus provide a stark contrast to her sincerity, invoking a sense of conflict that pervades the rest song. Whether you agree with her or not, you can't deny the force of her sarcastic wit and passionately conveyed opinions.

The Bad: While most of the time, the effectiveness of her delivery and the bitter sincerity of her narration redeem the redundancy of the songs’ insistent pop structures, the repetition does occasionally detract from the flow of the album, making it sound a bit like a collection of well crafted, but independent tracks. The album is weakest on slower songs like "I Could Say" and "Chinese" which never really go anywhere, drowning in a pool of over produced synth ambience. "Who'd have known" which plays like a sentimental anthem for the lonely, seeming somewhat tame and thereby rather unconvincing.  “Never Gonna Happen,” despite fantastic instrumentation in the verses (I want to do that Russian/Jewish leg kicking dance!), relies too heavily on its heavy beat to carry what is otherwise a chaotic and lackluster chorus, and later becomes half-filled with da da da’s. With Allen’s lyrical prowess, what would be for other bands a joyous and celebratory moment, turns into a musical cop out.

The Verdict: To some, the lack of the summery, ska backing music completely kills the album, finding Allen's admonishing tone hard to deal with. To those, I would ask why it is that we can be excited for Grizzly Bear to completely change seasonal moods, and not her. 
Ultimately, the fact remains that Lily Allen is the only pop artist who could sweetly sing "fuck you" in multipart harmony after a key change, using helium-like vocal effects and carnival-esque noises in the background and still somehow make it sound sincere.

Elsewhere: Over at (my favorite) Stereogum, there is a great live video of a song from the new album that they label "Never Gonna Happen" but which I am pretty sure is "The Fear." Regardless, I found the performance convincing and shockingly chilling. 

Although it's not set to release until February 10th (via Capitol Records), You can listen to It's Not Me, It's You in its entirety on Allen's myspace page.
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New Fleet Foxes: "False Knight On the Road"

From Fleet Foxes' Mykonos 7'' comes this traditional folk song played by Robin Pecknold. He sounds uncannily like Art Garfunkel. That is all.

You can find the song at Pecknold's solo project's myspace.
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Max Richter- Waltz With Bashir

One of our favorite contemporary composers, Max Richter, was quite the busy man in 2008. He released his fourth studio album, 24 Postcards in Full Colour, and also scored the absolutely incredible animated documentary, Waltz With Bashir. Richter's studio work is emotional, haunting, and very German. His score for the film is in much of the same mold: Requiem style piano, heartbreaking violin, subtle European electronic flourishes... it's all here. 
As for the film, it follows filmmaker and former Israeli soldier Ari Folman as he attempts to regain his memory of the Lebanon War in 1982. Combining actual interviews (though still animated) with surreal scenes of war and dreams, Waltz With Bashir is an utterly unique and moving experience. I highly recommend the film, and of course the soundtrack

Max Richter- Andante - Reflection (End Title) from Waltz With Bashir OST (2008)
Max Richter- Cascade NW By W from 24 Postcards in Full Colour (2008)
Max Richter- On The Nature of Daylight from The Blue Notebooks (2004)