Showing posts with label post-hardcore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label post-hardcore. Show all posts

9.4.16

i have begun to fall

the absolute constant motion i have found in certain musical forms has given me wings with which i have begun to fly.

it is an incredible discovery, one that i hope to share successfully with you; it will give you a newfound energy you didn't know you possessed. the music, in a word, is -


S H E L L A C


"My Black Ass" (At Action Park, 199fucking4)




first introduced to me when i was 15, now 7 or so years ago, Shellac... well let's see... i initially must have written them off as cheesy stoner rock or something, just not anything revolutionary or important to me, because i never gave them their due listening. i can't believe this stupid shortsightedness of mine!

beyond words is this band. the descendants of earlier punk and hardcore acts such as Rapeman and Big Black, both bands including Shellac's main vocalist and guitarist Steve Albini, Shellac is a band that fucks with your head in the most pleasurable way. the following evaluation of their effects on the human mind is that of a young girl who has heard the following albums of theirs: At Action Park of 1994 and 1000 Hurts of 2000. the latter was her favorite album before she heard, for the first time in 7 years after hearing it only once before, the former - her new masterpiece in the world of art. at least for the time being (subject to change: often).

At Action Park's opening track, "My Black Ass" offers a nonchalant attack on the senses. i would classify most of Shellac's music that i have heard just like that - an attack. the lyrics by no mean betray their style - it is all brutal, forceful, quite a session of wonderful and sometimes not so consensual intercourse of the internal world and that which penetrates it.

in their album notes, under "Personnel," they classify themselves as mass, velocity, and time.



need i say more about their awesomeness? and when you watch them play live,

holy

shit



i can't even believe my ears, especially at witnessing just how tightly wound and together the bassist and drummer are at all times. they coexist so beautifully, and of course Steve Albini was just the most ecstatic performer and guitarist. the vocals come and go in this set because it's all about the energy, that pure unadulterated momentum.

this music does nothing but caress your most violent sentiments with a similar reverie. it sweeps one away in rapture, inducing a yearning for expansion in all directions. i find it to be just... intelligently-handled anger, seductive almost. am i going too crazy here?

"Watch Song" (1000 Hurts, 2000)




i posted earlier my obsession with bands such as Unwound and their doppelgangers but this thing with Shellac, it is... different. so much more raw and mangry (a new word i just made up, deal with it). i think i'm so attracted to this sound because, much like Tyler Durden from Fight Club, i have become fed up with being a complacent sleepwaker.

they call themselves a "minimalist rock trio" and i would have to agree with this assessment. minimalist to the point where it isn't minimal in substance but minimal in redundancies. basically, everything about their sound is real, true, reaching you from heart to heart. the heart of one heavily-breathing beast to another - to you.

"Crow" (At Action Park, 1994)



the bass and the drums work together in unbelievable contortions, and Albini's guitar is a conglomerate of uncomfortably perfect sound convulsions and pitch modulations. they create sounds you didn't even imagine could be created.

the end of this song - "Crow" - is a sound of constancy, of repetitive endless fluctuations of the mind's fancies. i don't fucking know man. i am out of words to describe how i feel.

time flies as a crow flies
in a straight line
through you not around you
your life is only that with which
time
has its way with you

-

currently i am experiencing the first initial pangs of falling deeply in love with something. someone. it stings in the most beautiful way. the desires are almost completely one-sided, it seems, and the struggle lies in conveying these desires in a way that will alert the other to your state of being, without startling them. to be desirable in your desire.

i have never felt so sensual in my entire life. it is like the color red has suddenly washed all over me after years of being merely pink.

-

editing this 4 days later

-

now i have heard shellac's album Terraform (1997) and can say with confidence it has given me another dose of acceptance that Shellac as a singleminded unit is now one of my favorite artists in the history of the world.



it opens with a 12 minute track, the majority of which is just four notes repeated consistently without hardly any variation.

it's called, "Didn't We Deserve a Look At You the Way You Really Are?"

a brilliant track, an interesting concept, another installment of beautiful repetition that grinds away at you but does not bore through you quite yet, because of how much it moves you. the next track, however, is my absolute favorite! you can even hear it on that live album video i linked up there, at the 4:08 marker. the song is called, "This is a Picture."



a perfect example of exactly what i look for in music. the instantaneous change from the harsh-edged angularity of the beginning repetitious riff to the harsh yet resounding seconds/sevenths, intervals that call to me with beautiful dissonance and continue to pop up in my musical journeys. when Albini begins to speak-sing with his midwestern-sounding accent, his drawl if you will, i go weak at the knees... it is definitely one of my favorite Shellac songs of all time.

of course, the bassist and the drummer in this sync are so painfully, intricately intertwined in a way not matched anywhere else. at least not to my knowledge.

-

R. STEVIE MOORE

hold this guitar, be careful
can't you see i've got my hair full
of heartbreak, girl


this man embodies "the idea of creating and living in your own delusion/fantasy world, outside of what everyone else expects you to be, committing to creativity above all else" - words from the greatest thinker and musician alive today regarding another fantastic musician.

my favorite RSM song is and has always been and probably will always be this one, "Showing Shadows" off of his arguably most popular or at least most accessible or if not either of these it's the first one i heard - 1976's Phonography.



what i love about RSM are his chords... he is in touch with the greatest sounds, and although the textures and structures are primarily of a pop sound (which isn't necessarily a bad thing, it's just something i don't experiment with as much when i personally make music) he makes wholly unique and seemingly unending worlds out of these songs, of which he has made over 2,000... a never ever ever ending artist until the end of life.

it is quite incredibly, really. how can someone not give up to this extent? in the face of all kinds of obstacles - time, time, time always one of them...

fuck time

12.2.16

REPETITION

i believe that the most important job of musicians is to make something beautiful out of ugliness. to make something ugly, and to call it beautiful. to find it beautiful anyway. to find it gratifyingly wholesome, to find yourself being drawn to it inexplicably, to eat it up like it was the only food that will ever exist again.

i feel whole when i listen to ugly, beautiful music. why? because of REPETITION

my most favorite music is repetitious to an almost inane amount... repetitious riffs, repetitive loops, small building blocks that create larger wholes. patterns. structures. fragile, tenuous connectors build and build... until your mind projects new reasons for the structures to exist, new creations out of the same parts.

i am so, so, so very in love with this album ~

Unwound - Repetition (1996)



a relatively later album of theirs, this album strikes me as more consonant than their earliest releases. to me, it is the most repetitious yet scrumptious, ugly yet beautiful piece of music ever. ever that i have heard, at least. i call it repetitious but it is nothing new for bands to be repetitious in the age of musical genres such as rock and roll, pop, and jazz.

phrases that repeat - small sections comprised of four chords or less - are the very backbone of modern music, and it could perhaps even extend further into history as far back as early Western classical music. of course, Western music is by far not the most all-encompassing exploration of what sound can be - i would much rather look to the East, or, at least to not further develop a paralyzing dichotomoy between both hemispheres, the other musical cultures of the world that are not contained in "the West," in order to find explorations of sound that most closely align with my own.

Unwound's brand of sharp, harsh sound that sounds like it could brutishly bulldoze over entire countries actually makes me swoon. it doesn't happen to be because of the abrasiveness but because of the softer, more melodious moments that peek through, as sunlight does through a curtain. i live for these multifarious framings of what feels like pure, unadulterated bliss. beauty is bliss, or maybe ugliness is bliss, or maybe this sound just resonates with something in me and i feel so very much like it is what i was meant to listen to...

and now i listen, for the first time, to an earlier album of theirs ~

Unwound - New Plastic Ideas (1994)




here we are with an earlier album. upon this first listen i am noticing the rawness that comes with the purity of beginnings, along with hints at what was to come - their culminating effort and i think ultimate magnum opus is their 2001 album Leaves Turn Inside You. mmm... words can't describe THAT album! but, alas, that is for another time.

please recommed me some more post-hardcore melodic yet noisey bands!? i already love Lowercase, and of course Unwound, and then Polvo and people like Kolya and of course Slint, but what else is there? i love bands that have screaming vocalists but i think a trend in my favorites i just listed actually contain not exclusively screaming vocalists, but rather heartfelt and confident voices that speak of abstract things, absurd things, meaningless yet the most meaningful things.

does everything/anything have to make sense?

10.6.12

Part Chimp - Thriller


 
2009; 9 tracks
 
Thriller was the third album by the fairly new London noise rock band Part Chimp. Think Hey Colossus, Boris - Heavy Friends, Karp. Maybe even Electric Wizard. Think heavy, colossal, and drenched in space.
 
download / buy

23.5.12

Kolya - Kolya




2001; 10 tracks


That cover reminds me of a certain Slowdive cover... forgetting the name at the moment.

Kolya were a midwest band who created this full-length and two EPs in the late 90s/early 00s. As stated elsewhere (just, elsewhere), it's a Slint-inspired band in terms of instrumentation and delivery, for sure. To me, however, there is another undefinable quality to Kolya I don't really find in Slint. There are the same narrative-type vocals but there is also passion, rage, urgency. Think La Dispute - truly moving delivery of lyrics. "Astronaut" is pretty, reminds me a lot of Polvo, and the last two tracks are absolute perfection.

Edit: "Horizon," the final track, is the epitome of post-hardcore perfection
.

uncertainty is not too easily shaken

18.12.11

Rye Coalition - The Lipstick Game


 
1999; 10 track
 
This is the second full-length by New Jersey post-hardcore/math rock band Rye Coalition. Founded in the early 90s, they have produced to date four full-lengths and various EPs and singles and splits, but a friend of mine told me that their earliest stuff is the best. The Lipstick Game is a chaotic blend of aggressive and discordant post-hardcore, with math rock influences. It is said that, two years in the making, the album was seen by many of their early fans as the band's pinnacle, and "documents some of Rye Coalition's most powerful and experimental songwriting." I haven't really heard anything like it, so I'm out of comparisons, but I think The Lipstick Game is a gorgeous album.


Download.

9.11.11

Dead Elephant - Lowest Shared Descent


2008; 8 tracks


It is slightly difficult for me to describe this, but I will try. Dead Elephant is an Italian group specializing in vicious noise rock-infused post-hardcore. You might like them if you like Cherubs, or Neurosis, but I have never before heard something quite like it.

Psychedelic and sludgy, sometimes incorporating elements of noise rock, black metal, post-hardcore, doom jazz ("Post Crucifixion"), and even industrial, Lowest Shared Descent really does stand apart from the rest. "Black Coffee Breakfast" is a highlight, the melodic lines particularly captivating (and preeetttyy).

Download.

29.10.11

Making - EP


2011; 6 tracks


This Australian trio's debut release is a mix of noise and math rock, I guess, but honestly I just really like the way it sounds. Repetitive. Instrumental (for the most part). Pretty.

download / bandcamp

21.9.11

Rival Schools - United by Fate


 
2001; 13 tracks


Holy fucking shit. Really. From the very first seconds of the very first track, "Travel by Telephone," (which just so happen to be the greatest part of this entire album), United by Fate is non-stop incredible post-hardcore. I don't really think there's even one "slow" song on here. Intense, powerful, melodically sound. May induce the urge to play 100 times. A day. For weeks.

Download.

6.8.11

Engine Kid - Bear Catching Fish


 
1993; 8 tracks
 
Bear Catching Fish is the first album of Seattle-based math rock band Engine Kid, whose prominent inspiration was the memorable math rock / post-hardcore band from Kentucky, Slint. The likenesses between the two bands, especially on this release and Slint's Spiderland, are striking. Some might go as far as to say that this album is "pure Slint worship." In my eyes (or ears), Engine Kid's affinity for the music of Slint is portrayed respectfully, and elements of jazz and doom even come into play at times. Engine Kid has released a small number of other EPs and splits, as well as a second full-length, Angel Wings.

As I listen to this I feel a sense of desperation build up in my chest, as if I were stuck inside a cabin on some lost and lonely mountainside far away from any human contact. The intense loneliness and pure weirdness of Engine Kid's musical/vocal atmosphere is beautiful and frightening. If any of you remember Spiderland's specific ambience, there is an incredible holiness, or warmth, about the feeling. It isn't something you connect with on contact, as most are averse to feelings of despair and loneliness, but I just... wonder, sometimes, if maybe that is a prospect much preferable to the fruitless seeking of happiness. I guess I'm just trying to say that Engine Kid encapsulates quite magnificently that -lost- feeling.

Download.

14.4.11

Kittens - Tiger Comet


1995; 12 tracks


Kittens was a three-piece noise rock group from Canada that produced some very high quality output from 1992-1998. Tiger Comet is the band's sixth album, and I absolutely fell in love with it upon the first listen. It one of the most satisfactory noise rock albums I have ever heard - the vocals, every riff, and the non-stop energy are all purposeful and completely amazing-sounding. It reminds me a lot of Cherubs, The Melvins (but maybe 100% more psychotic), and Slint (vocal-wise). Just PLEASE give this a try, it is a noisy, upbeat gift from above.

Download.

12.4.11

Zeni Geva - Total Castration


1991; 8 tracks


Just another enjoyable noise rock album? Perhaps... but with the blistering first track, "I Want You," I was admittedly hooked. Zeni Geva is a Japanese noise/post-hardcore band, led by singer and guitarist KK Null.

"Zeni Geva [has an] ability to mangle a metal riff into submission, and choke out their listeners with a claustrophobic vitriol rarely seen this side of Osaka. You got all that right?
So, there's no point in mentioning that this was recorded in Chicago with Steve Albini? You got that too huh?
And, I would be repeating myself to mention that K.K. Null's lyrics seem destined to hurt your feelings, wouldn't I?
And far be it from me to remind you of the scathing death/hardcore/industrial scraping you're about to embark on. That'd be a waste of time right?
Enjoy."

Download.

24.3.11

Lungfish - Love is Love




2003; 10 tracks


lungfish is a band whose extensive (very appropriately so) array of releases never ceases to mystify me. love is love is the band's second to last album, and one of the most assuredly consistent of them all. tracks like "fearfully and wonderfully," which is tied only with "wailing like dragons" as my favorite piece of lungfish godliness, opens with the most glowing of chords that unfailingly lift my spirits up high. this album holds a luminescence not matched by many other albums. here are a few lyrics that i simply adore, especially when sung by daniel higgs:

holy holy christ beast
christ beast bear your message
about a godform that’s formless
and forming in your baby, in your mind
with wings like rainbow oars of fire
inscribing signs across the water
gently, gently upon the water
signs becoming what they signify


i'm reading john irving's the world according to garp right now, and have been listening to love is love along the way. one sentence in the absurdly enjoyable novel that truly arrested me was this: "garp's throat ached at her trust, and at his love for her." i know exactly how that feels, for my throat to just swell up and feel overflowed with tears, or some indiscernable substance that is only associated with the most painful of emotions. that is how this album makes me feel - overwhelmed with pity, with grief, and.... maybe even with love.


download / purchase

13.3.11

Tesa - HeartBeatsFromTheSky


2008; 6 tracks


I'm often surprised at how few people (that I talk to, anyway) know about Tesa. They are a Latvian post-metal band who create really atmospheric music. This is an incredibly emotional album full of passionate moments, like Ef, but with a malevolent undercurrent, and intimate guitar passages woven in. Those are something you should never take for granted.

Download.

9.12.10

Lungfish Live + 10 East 7"



Lungfish is a progressive/post-hardcore band from Baltimore, Maryland, fronted by the infamous Daniel Higgs and equipped with such outstanding musicians as Asa Osbourne, Sean Meadows, and Mitchell Feldstein. Their discography is fairly vast, each album changing in color slightly, building and building until the bitter end of their legacy...

Thank you to tsintskaro for these.


Lungfish Live in Poznań, Poland, 11.03.93
 
 
1993; 12 tracks

This is an amazing collection of live tracks from the 92 and 93 albums of Lungfish - Talking Songs for Walking and Rainbows from Atoms. A raw look into the early sounds of Lungfish, which you may find to be a bit heavier (but still great).

01 Kissing (Talking Songs For Walking, 1992)
02 My Fool Heart (Talking Songs For Walking, 1992)
03 Descender (Talking Songs For Walking, 1992)
04 Broadcast (Talking Songs For Walking, 1992)
05 Animal Man (Rainbows From Atoms, 1993)
06 Reveal Me (Talking Songs For Walking, 1992)
07 Abraham Lincoln (Rainbows From Atoms, 1993)
08 8.14.2116 (Rainbows From Atoms, 1993)
09 Put Your Hand in my Hand (Talking Songs For Walking, 1992)
10 Open House (Rainbows From Atoms, 1993)
11 Non Dual Bliss (Talking Songs For Walking, 1992)
12 Mother Made Me (Rainbows From Atoms, 1993)



are you afraid of liberation?
 
 
10 East 7"
 
1995; 3 tracks
 

A highly meditative release... The track "Go Simple" makes my life a little better. It is a gem among Lungfish records.
To scrape the chattering lungs
Away from my skin
The beast and all it's hornets
Collapse in the popping air
01 10 East
02 Go Simple
03 Savings
Download.
 
 
Lungfish Live at Upstairs at Nick's, Philadelphia, 3.5.98
 


0:46 Black Helicopters (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
3:54 Amnesiac (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
6:32 Oppress Yourself (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
11:47 You Did Not Exist (Indivisible, 1997)
18:15 Tick Tock (Indivisible, 1997)
23:13 Free State (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
25:32 Truth Cult (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
28:22 [I cannot tell what song this is :( help?]
31:26 Yellow Sun (Indivisible, 1997)
33:35 Ann the Word (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
39:33 Pray for the Living (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
42:20 [I cannot tell what song. I was thinking maybe X-Ray Pharaoh off of Sound in Time, but can anyone verify this?]
54:09 Light For All (Artificial Horizon, 1997)


Lungfish Live at Teamster's Hall in Baltimore, MD, 5.12.98
 


0:08 Black Helicopters (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
3:31 Oppress Yourself (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
8:22 You Did Not Exist (Indivisible, 1997)
15:06 Tick Tock (Indivisible, 1997)
18:56 Free State (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
26:28 Yellow Sun (Indivisible, 1997) ((Most amazing song ever))
29:06 Pray for the Living (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
31:53 Ann the Word (Artificial Horizon, 1997)
37:06 [I cannot tell what song. I was thinking maybe X-Ray Pharaoh off of Sound in Time, but can anyone verify this?]
47:19 Searchlight (The Unanimous Hour, 1999)


 
Lungfish Live at Brownies, NY, 12.11.99
 
 
1999; 14 tracks


01 Searchlight
02 Ecology of the Gut
03 Symbioses
04 Screams of Joy
05 Sex War
06 Between You
07 Vulgar Theories
08 You Did Not Exist
09 Yellow Sun
10 Mated
11 Love Will Ruin Your Mind
12 Shapes in Space
13 Hallucinatorium
14 Armageddon
Download.
 
 
Lungfish Live at the Empty Bottle, Chicago, 12.05.03
 
 
2003; 16 tracks
01 Spheres Of Influence
02 Indivisible
03 Child of Chaos
04 Love is Love
05 This World
06 Vulgar Theories
07 Signpost
08 Unfold the Leg
09 Jonah
10 Lay Yourself Aside
11 Fearfully and Wonderfully
12 Well... All Right
13 Yellow Sun
14 No False Suns
15 Armageddon
16 You Did Not Exist

Download.
 
 
Lungfsh Live at the Knitting Factory, NYC, 1.24.04
 
 
2004; 15 tracks
01 Indivisible
02 Love is Love/Sphere of Influence
03 Vulgar Theorems
04 This World/Jonah
05 Well...All Right
06 Signpost
07 Faithful Steward
08 Fearfully and Wonderfully
09 Yellow Sun
10 Lay Yourself Aside
11 Unfold the Leg
12 No False Suns
13 You Did Not Exist
14 Child of Chaos
15 Armageddon

Download.
 
 
Lungfish Live at North Six, NYC, 09.18.04
 
 
2004; 15 tracks
01 All Creation Bows
02 Sex War
03 This World/Love is Love
04 Time is a Weapon of Time
05 Wailing Like Dragons
06 Faithful Steward
07 Fearfully and Wonderfully
08 Unfold the Leg
09 You Are the War
10 Lay Yourself Aside
11 No False Suns
12 Child of Chaos
13 Way-Out is the Way Out
14 Sphere of Influence
15 Well...All Right/Vulgar Theorems
Download.
 
 
Lungfish Live at the Knitting Factory, NYC, 06.03.05
 
 
2005; 16 tracks
01 Vulgar Theorems
02 Love Is Love
03 This World
04 Urania
05 Lay Yourself Aside
06 Wailing Like Dragons
07 Fearfully and Wonderfully
08 Well...All Right
09 Way-Out is the Way Out
10 Constellations
11 Sing
12 Time Is A Weapon
13 X-Ray the Pharaoh
14 Yellow Sun
15 Unfold the Leg
16 Jonah
Download.

18.11.10

Lungfish - Artificial Horizon


1998; 11 tracks


Lungfish presents another chapter in the thinking man's modern rock. On this album, Lungfish continues a pattern of isolating crypto-philosophical songs with minimalist free-rock instrumentals. The resultant mood is somber and cathartic, focused and pointed, intellectual and freeing. Lungfish suggests simplicity as a gateway to melody, and poetry as a vehicle for intelligent observation. Single-mindedly, Lungfish combats obsession ("If love is all you hope to find / Love will ruin your mind") and chaotically they call for greater control ("Bridges crossing, bridges crossing land / Subterranean rivers seeping through the sand: Oppress yourself") over a deconstructed and unornamented rock groove. In essence, this is most likely my favorite Lungfish album aside from Feral Hymns :')

Push and pull, open and close
Ears and mouth and eyes and nose
Big and small, short and tall
Light and dark, rise and fall
(Tick Tock, Tick Tock)


Download.

Lungfish - Sound in Time



1996; 10 tracks




Although each Lungfish album speaks volumes of dark, powerful poetry on its own, this very album, Sound in Time, their fifth, might be the most diverse and enjoyable album I've yet heard. It is an extension of the sounds heard on their earlier albums, but it also seems like a transition into the deeper waters of their discography... i.e. Indivisible, Necrophones, and Love is Love. I wish there was more I could say.



"Solid State" is such an epic track. I am using that word correctly and appropriately.



Download.

1.11.10

Lungfish - Indivisible


1997; 11 tracks


"Eleven tracks are present on Indivisible, and five of them are instrumentals. In artwork and mood, this is very much Lungfish's 'black' album. An emotional release is frozen in the active grieving anger that is Indivisible. Sonic Youth-like, distorted but trebly guitar sounds united with a rock-and-brooding rhythm section. Lungfish's art-rock catharsis is marked by dissonance or simplicity for a melody and sparseness or heavy hurtling from drums and warm bass." - Insound

This album is indeed brooding. Someone once told me that, in the case of Lungfish, Feral Hymns was the only album I'd ever have to listen to and I'd be set. I love love love that album, but I only recently realized how foolish it was for me to not try any other albums. I've been listening to this album for the past few days and can say it is quickly becoming almost level with Feral Hymns. I included that description (^) in order to describe the sound, for it is very true, but there is something even -more- to Indivisible. It is very brooding and dark, rhythmic though not unmelodic, slow and plodding at times, and even at the faster parts it is never more than walking-pace. These 11 tracks are highly meditative, as I have come to realize is quite common in all of Lungfish. They are energetic but at the same time laid-back. Repetitive but never old, it is custom for them to play one riff throughout the duration of a track. There is something liberating about this technique of Lungfish's that is unprecedented in the world of indie rock (or whatever you'd like to call this). This album was fantastic and I am never again going to listen to one album from a band and assume the rest isn't as good... and even if it's true, why not try >.>

download

purchase

30.4.10

Lungfish - Feral Hymns


 
2005; 10 tracks


This is Sam's favorite band :) I didn't like this album all that much when I first gave it a listen, but I came to really appreciate the intensity of the album. There is one riff per song, and when I learned this I was like uhhh..... cool? But then I realized that the limitations that aspect brings don't necessarily have to be a bad thing. The riffs even sounded a bit like Slint's off of "Spiderland." Anyways, this is a cool album and I don't have anything against it. More info here.

Download.