Friday, January 13, 2012

Playlist : January 16th - 20th, 2012

Hello and welcome to Work Tunes.

Usually about this time every year, I tend to check out some albums I slept on the year before or just didn't get around to hearing. If you can believe it, this year that means I have picked Adele - 21. I know, right?! But too many people whose opinion I trust told me this girl can really sing. 


Fear not, it also means I'll check out Yuck, Kurt Vile and Wild Flag and finally get around to Shabazz Palaces - Black Up. I've got some Cream in there, Tom McRae, a compilation or two (including NPRs best artists of 2011 which you can download free from the link) and Boy and Bear's great Moonfire LP from last year. That should just about do me.

  1. R.E.M.
  2. Camera Obscura
  3. The Beatles
  4. The Dø
  5. The Avett Brothers


Musically this week, I have been on somewhat of a Camera Obscura bender. So, sticking with the spirit of SOTW, I thought it was only fair I chose a song of theirs. If you don’t know them, they are a 5, sometimes 6 piece “twee folk” outfit from Glasgow. Lead by Tracyanne Campbell, the band makes sentimental sounding pop tracks which I really like.


This track Forests and Sands is a slow shuffling, sweetly breathed song about a road trip. I think Campbell’s accent adds to the sweetness of the song. I especially dig the way she phrases the refrain. Phonetically it’s almost:


“But if the blood pumpin through ma veins cud freeze like a reever in Tauraunto then I’d be pleased…”


Scottish accents aside, I really like the melody of the song and the overblown sentimentality of the lyrics. Not sure why I’ve been stuck on the band all week, but I have enjoyed listening to all four of their albums. Hope you enjoy this track off their last release from 2009.

Toodle-oo
There you have it. Wish me luck on the whole Adele thing (takes off cynical music snob hat). Hopefully you'll find something worth listening to.

Play safe out there kids. Until next week - be excellent to each other. Hasala malakim.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Playlist : January 9th - 13th, 2012

Hello and welcome to a new year of Work Tunes.

So the world ends this year apparently. At least if you're an ancient Mayan it does. Did anyone ever think maybe some Mayan calendar maker just got jack of adding year after year after year? 
"Hey Bob, I got to December 2012 and I can't be stuffed!"
"Yeah, I don't blame you. Just finish there, no big deal. Who's going to care?"
Regardless, this year we're going to party like it's 1999... again.  And to start my working year right, I've got a few choice cuts. 


Listening to an 8 tracks mix the other night, I first heard the title song from I And Love And You, so I checked it out. I've also got the final release from The Beatles; the latest R.E.M. retrospective; new albums from Common, Weinland and The Do; a Smiths tribute;  the soundtrack to Downtown 81 (a film released in 2000 but shot in 1981 starring Jean-Michel Basquiat); Spin's 2011 mix and finally, some Australian Hip Hop from Vents. 


Check it out:
That's it for now. No song of the week until next week, and no Top 5 Artists because I haven't been scrobbling. I can tell you I've been listening to a lot of Camera Obscura as well as a bit of the Beach Boys and other surf themed tunes thanks to the weather and some timely trips to the beach. 


Hopefully your holidays were a great big bunch of fun and your new year is the best one yet. Be good to each other. Hasala malakim.


PS Support Hunter the Documentary and help get a film about Hunter made.

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Song of the Week December 16th, 2011


Elizabeth Cook - El Camino

My song this week is just something a little fun from a free set I got via Noisetrade, The Best of American Songwriter Sessions The compilation features a few bands I know and love like Vetiver and some artists I’d never heard, like Elizabeth Cook.

This song El Camino can best be described as Redneck Rockabilly Country Blues. It’s a very Americana sound  but it doesn’t take itself very seriously. The lyrics highlight the fun of it all with every single redneck cliché there is, including the car from the title, mullet hairdos, fishing, booze, roller derby and Friday night fights. It’s got me interested in hearing more of what Elizabeth Cook has to offer, just to see if this a novelty song for her or it’s her regular sound.



Yeeehaw!

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Playlist : Top 10 Albums of 2011


Hello and welcome to Work Tunes.

Well it's the last week of work for me before holidays, so it's that time again where I try to pick the best albums of the year for my final playlist.

It might just be me, but 2011 seemed to have a large number of high quality releases. It was certainly a lot harder to get my list down to just 10 albums. For that reason, as well as my Top 10, I'll list my next 10 and all.

Like last year, this is not the best albums of the year but rather my favourites. These are the records that have stuck with me, made me smile, made me think. And like last year, there's a mixtape of the best song from each of my 10 favourites. You'll find a link at the bottom of the post.
  • Gillian Welch - The Harrow and the Harvest : It was a long wait for Gillian Welch after 2003's Soul Journey. The reason it seems is Welch and partner David Rawlings just weren't feeling the songs they were writing in between. When the music did come, it came in a massive feast of ancient harmonies and the haunting bells of mountain guitar picking. This is an exceptional LP. The empty space around the sounds of Welch's sweet voice and Rawlings' resounding strings is filled with the ghosts of the Appalachians. It sounds like it's immaculately captured music from 100 years ago, but the lyrics are firmly grounded in the modern day. This is undeniably my favourite album of this year and probably the last couple of years as well.*****
  • The Roots - Undun : Last year, The Roots produced my very favourite album of 2010 with their  John Legend collaboration, Wake Up! for it's old time soul aesthetic. This time around, The Roots have released an album that harkens back to better days in Hip Hop, as well as points a new way forward for the music. Undun is a concept album about a young man, Redford Stephens and his demise from gang violence and drug culture. Songs such as I Remember and  the Sufjan Stevens composed Redford bring an exciting level of musicianship and soul to Hip Hop's ailing musical arm.  *****
  • Dolorean - The Unfazed : I'm an unashamed Dolorean advocate after discovering them a couple of years ago. This year's release The Unfazed is another superb set of folky alt country songs with a lot of heart. Stand out tracks for me are Fools Gold Ring and the bittersweet kiss off of Country Clutter.  If you don't know Dolorean, The Unfazed is as good a place as any to start, then work your way backwards to their sensational 2003 debut Not Exotic. ****
  • Blind Pilot - We Are The Tide : Blind Pilot's debut 3 Rounds and a Sound is a desert island disc of mine. The latest release from the bike riding Portland band will have to slip right in next to it. We Are The Tide is stylistically not too different from 3 Rounds, but that's just perfect for me. Sweetly crooned melodies like Keep You Right and the upbeat pop of Always make for another great set from Blind Pilot that I can't ever seem to get sick of. ****
  • Vetiver - The Errant Charm : Vetiver rounds out the holy trinity of great folky Americana bands I've kept going back to all this year (with Dolorean and Blind Pilot). I first heard of Vetiver from The Family Jams documentary and have since stocked up on their back catalogue. This release is a beautifully instrumented set of reflective and poetic songs. Stand outs for me are Worse For Wear and the sadness of Faint Praise. ****
  • Ryan Adams - Ashes & Fire : After the last Cardinals release, Cardinology, archival releases III/IV and the kooky space metal Orion dropped, it was good to have a new Ryan Adams solo set. Ashes & Fire was somewhat a return to finest form. From the honkytonk keys of the very Dylanesque title track, to the sweet pop ballad sensibilities of Lucky Now, Ashes & Fire is a solid and coherent output from the man who has been creatively all over the place since his previous studio release of new material. Adams' solo set at the Perth Concert Hall in February is one of the thing I'm most looking forward to in 2012. ****
  • The Rural Alberta Advantage - Departing : The crackled shine of Nils Edenloff's voice in the opening track, Two Lovers, instantly pulls me in to every story the band weaves from thereon in. There's something about the production of Departing that makes it sound like a bunch of your closest friends are playing in your loungeroom on songs they wrote for you. That fantastic opening track is among my favourite songs all year. Add to that the jaunty stomp of North Star and the homecrafted feel of Coldest Days, I just can't resist this album or this band. *****
  • The Decemberists - The King Is Dead : There's a heap of great music coming out of Portland these days, like it's the Seattle of the 21st century. The Decemberists' sixth LP was recorded in a barn on a farm in Portland and it sounds every bit as lush as the rural surrounds would suggest. There's something completely timeless about the memorable melody of June Hymn and the beautiful Rise To Me. It took a guest spot by Gillian Welch to have me pay attention to this band and I'm grateful I did.   *****
  • Radiohead - The King of Limbs : This inclusion is most likely going to be a bit contentious with a few people. Each to their own, but I found TKOL to be incredibly nuanced as far as arrangement and instrumentation goes. There are so many levels of sound and subtle atmospherics on the band's eighth album. I've read that they used vinyl simulators and DJ techniques to sample a whole heap of their own sounds and create loops and ambient sound. It sounds incredible on vinyl and that's likely why. Though it holds no obvious classics, as a whole I love the way it sounds and it's economical running time makes for an enjoyable listen over and again. *****
  • AA Bondy - Believers : Auguste Arthur Bondy was once the lead singer in a band I've never heard called Verbena. His solo debut American Hearts still rates among my most treasured albums. The same can be said for its follow-up, When The Devil's Loose. Imagine my surprise when the difficult third album came up trumps too. Releasing a killer album every two years is no mean feat. My hat's off to Bondy for another solid set of haunting and visceral Americana tunes. Immediate standout tracks are Skull & Bones, Drmz and the sprawling RTE. 28/Believers. ****
And there you have it. 10 albums that made a big difference to my year. I hope there's something among them that you might try for the first time, or even some you know well and have given you the same joy as they have me.

As I've said, it was hard to pick just 10, so #11 - #20 are listed here. There really wasn't much that kept these out.
As for the mixtape, here is the track list for the 10 songs, one from each of the top 10. 

Ryan Adams - Ashes & Fire
Blind Pilot - Keep You Right
The Rural Alberta Advantage - Two Lovers
Vetiver - Worse For Wear
Radiohead - Morning Mr Magpie
AA Bondy - Skull & Bones
The Roots - Sleep
Dolorean - Country Clutter
The Decemberists - June Hymn
Gillian Welch - Tennessee 

And that, my friends, is me for the year. I'm on leave from the 23rd, and I'll be back on the 9th, so no Work Tunes until work resumes. In the meantime, you'll probably catch me over at Make Films Not Movies.

I hope your break is amazing and all the untold little hassles of 2010 don't follow you into 2011. As always and forever - hasala malakim brothers and sisters. 


Peace (on Earth) man - Right on (to all men). 

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Playlist : December 12th - 16th, 2011

Hello and welcome to Work Tunes.

Not a great deal to report this week. Still wishing I was on holiday down south with the wife. I could easily have stayed there, bought the record store and started a new life on the beach away from the city. But then there were tourists to consider. They ruin everything. I should know, being one and all.

This week's list features the next installment of the Tracks box, another set from The Deep Dark Woods, The Roots' fantastic new album, some old favourites and two compilations - including Australian Hip Hop Supports Canteen, MC Hunter's final project before he left us. RIP brother.

  1. New York Dolls
  2. Honeyhoney
  3. Bruce Springsteen
  4. The Black Keys
  5. Terra Firma



On the music, I feel I ripped off The Roots last week (as good as that HH track is), because all I really listened to was Undun. I finally found a track I could send you and this is it.

What I like about The Roots in general is their musical ability and their melodic hooks. As you probably know, they are the house band on Jimmy Fallon’s show. That musicality shows through on things like the ridiculously juicy bass rolls in this track Make My. Then you have a vocal crooning chorus that goes with the deep smooth bass of the verse rap.

This album is thematic and it all holds together nicely as an expression of both inner-city violence for subject matter and a blueprint of more melodic, mature and important hip hop music. I don’t know how much you guys hear of people like Drake or Odd Future, but there’s no substance to it all and it sounds plastic and manufactured to go with the misogyny and homophobia. The Roots is how it should be done.

Ciao Bambinos
Tah tah for now kids. Have a terrific weekend and remember not to get hung up; be cool.

Hasala malakim.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Playlist : December 5th - 9th, 2011

Hello and welcome to Work Tunes.

Just a really super quick one this week because I've been away all weekend down South. I chose these albums hurriedly before I left.

Disc two of Springsteen's Tracks was an easy choice. After a Velvets kick last month I felt like some New York Dolls. The new Hilltop Hoods song made me get all mooshy for Skip Hop, so there's some Cross Bred Mongrels (featuring now DJ for the Hoods, Dj Debris) and Terra Firma. Honeyhoney I discovered last week, so I'm giving them a go along with Summer Camp who I also recently found. New Black Keys, old Joanna Newsom, The Low Anthem and the always excellent Gil-Scott Heron and we're done.

  1. The Rolling Stones
  2. Pixies
  3. Bob Dylan
  4. Bruce Springsteen
  5. James Brown
    Song of the Week : Hilltop Hoods - I Love It (featuring Sia)



    In all likelihood, if I could get hold of a copy, this week's SOTW would be off The Roots' forthcoming album Undun. I've been streaming it once a day all week from NPR. But, no leaks and no release yet means I have to go with something else. This something else is pretty damn great too. And speaking of no release, the Hilltop Hoods album that I Love It is from doesn't drop until February. Right around the time that I'm off to see my very first Hilltop show and also to see Radams with two of you lovely people. Jamie if it isn't too soon post-baby, grab a ticket for the show ($40.80) at Capitol on Feb 3 and I'll meet you there. I wasn't going to go, feeling as I am too old for a packed crowd full of homeboys, but damn it I love these guys.

    And that's why I chose this song in lieu of The Roots. Hilltop are without a doubt the pinnacle of Oz rap. These guys dragged the mainstream in without losing their original fanbase and everything they've done since The Calling has been untouchable. Record sales, first oz hip hop #1, highest placing rap song ever on JJJ, Arias galore. This song doesn't seem to have fallen off the pace either. That fantastic Sia hook and the usual larrikin lines from the lads has already made the song the #1 iTunes release last week. I don't listen to broadcast radio any more, but I'm guessing JJJ is killing this already. So I apologise if you've heard it on air a million times. I can only hear it when I play it - which is a lot!

    Gotta Go
    Thanks for stopping by. Hope you're weekend was a good one. I need to go sleep mine off.

    Hasala malakim.

    Friday, November 25, 2011

    Playlist : November 28th - December 2nd, 2011

    Hello and welcome to the Work Tunes that almost never was.

    I recently had to let go of my 160Gb iPod Classic after a few good years of service. It actually still works, but it wouldn't connect to iTunes, so it made playlists a very hard thing to make during my lunch breaks as I'm used to. I'vbe got a new one now and I'm beginning the arduous task of filling it up again. But I have a list now, even though it was a little rushed.

    Classic albums and artists are over represented, probably because they're the best thing to reach for when you don't know what you want. Luckily Spin came through with the December issue so I have some brand new tunes too. Thanks to a viewing of Rock The Bells, I grabbed Wu-Tang's classic 36 Chambers. I threw in some Iggy Pop to go with my recent obsession with Velvet Underground. I got so excited about the new The Roots LP coming soon that I hooked up an old one and that's about it.

    1. Mr Bungle
    2. The Doors
    3. KRS One & Marley Marl
    4. Kathleen Edwards
    5. The Deep Dark Woods



    Musically speaking, there has been a strangely coincidental Velvet Underground theme following me around. I happen to have chosen Beck's Record Club tribute to the Velvet Underground & Nico album for this week's list, but more than that I watched a doco on Sunday about Lillian Roxon who photographed and wrote about VU and also Bowie and Iggy Pop in the early days at Max's. I've also seen a bunch of people bagging out the Lou Reed / Metallica collaboration (and so I won't listen to it and sully my high opinion of Lou Reed). This all lead me to listening to lots of VU and checking out Nico's solo album Chelsea Girl on Songl. On it, she covers Bob Dylan - I'll Keep It With Mine.

    There are only two versions of Dylan's original that I have heard. One is solo piano and it's called Bank Account Blues. The other is with a band on the Bootleg Series. Hearing Nico sing it in a slow droning monotone, reminded me how good Bob's Bootleg version was. It's a pretty catchy pop melody without the throw away lyrics. What's most enjoyable about this version though is that Dylan is playing it with the band during the Blonde On Blonde sessions for the first time. They haven't rehearsed it, they're throwing together the backing as they play. You hear the producer reassure Al Kooper on the organ to play what he was playing earlier and then Al starts up. Bob at the end of a verse asks the band, "Right?"

    I find it a fascinating insight into how great songs are recorded. It's also frustrating that the song wasn't ever recorded properly. There are far too many songs that have been thrown away by great musicians that never made their own releases. I'm thinking about Springsteen never doing Because The Night, Paul Kelly giving Cake and the Candle to Kate Ceberano and Nico strangling the life out of this song.

    This YouTube video is not the version from Bootleg Series Vol. 2, but it is an instrumental version with footage from Wim Wenders' Paris, Texas. But the song title link is the real deal. Enjoy!

    Ya'll Come Back Now
    To my American friends, I hope your Thanksgiving and Black Friday were exceptional. To those of here in Perth, how about this heat hey? To everybody else, thanks for stopping by.

    Hasala malakim.