Showing posts with label art pop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art pop. Show all posts

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot (2001)

It’s a cold Chicago night. You’re freezing and struggling to keep warm even under your heavy coat. You light another cigarette as you enter your car to keep warm. Turning on the radio, you switch to some weirdly wonderful pop station, punctuated by static and the sonic bleed of competing signals. The music is distorted and jarring, but strangely beautiful.

Named in honor of the three-word codes used by short-wave radio operators, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot can often evoke such an image in a listener’s mind. Perhaps one of the most brilliantly-crafted pop albums of all time, the Chicago alt-country rockers’ fourth album takes listeners on an existentialist trip, creating a loose sonic meditation on distance and love, using random radio signals as a metaphor.

These songs are not ordinary pop songs by any means. Utilizing blips, radio pops and starts, and all forms of odd sounds and fillers pushed through filters, the band creates a sonic palette that ends up sounding like nothing else before it. Songs like “Ashes of American Flags” and “Poor Places” end in a chaotic catharsis of distortion. “I’m The Man That Loves You”, probably one of the catchiest songs I’ve ever heard, is utterly destroyed by short bursts of ear-splitting, finger-bleeding guitar soloing. The closing track, “Reservations” could not have ended the album more gorgeously and elegantly, leaving the listener lost in a world of ambient sounds.

As lyrically sophisticated and provocative as it is noisy and serene, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot is often a dark and melancholy affair. The piano-led “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart” is a portrayal of drunken lovesickness, delicately laced with a cacophony of noise, whistles and percussive clutter. The acoustic “Radio Cure” is glum, moody, intriguing and emotional. “Ashes of American Flags” is a cold, chilling poem that is not so much cynical as it is a longing for the days of honest patriotism.

That’s not to say there’s not enough radio-friendly pop to go around, with the anthemic country psychedelia of “War on War” or the nostalgic yearning for a time of youth, innocence, and Kiss covers in “Heavy Metal Drummer”. The song “Pot Kettle Black” in particular makes you wonder just what Reprise was thinking when they dropped Wilco from their label because the album, in their opinion, wouldn’t sell.

You continue to listen to radio station with all of its static and cluttered noise. It is a sound that is sad, celestial, and lovely. You suddenly begin to feel much warmer as a cathartic sense of comfort washes over you. The music makes you feel relieved; you are at peace.

FLAC

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Sunday, October 17, 2010

Sufjan Stevens - The Age of Adz (2010)


When I read that this album was going to be mostly electronic, it really took away any anticipation I previously had. All the Sufjan I love is all organic with acoustic guitars and banjos n shit, synths are for the young'ns and eventually our robot overlords, right? Well, actually, it's a nice change of pace and really shows Sufjan's evolution as an artist. The melodies are still there. Sufjan as a singer hasn't gotten any worse. Different, sure. Alright, so what do we have here song-wise, because I'm out of anything of worth to say about the album as a whole in the opening sentences? Well, Futile Devices and Vesuvius are probably the closest to traditional Sufjan you're going to get here. The former's a brief, great opener, which I feel lame comparing to Concerning the UFO Sighting, but will do anyway, while the latter always has me belting out the choir parts by the end. There's Too Much, which reminds me of Toro y Moi for some reason (minus the ending). Age of Adz and I Walked back to back is great. I Want to Be Well is the last highlight until...

Impossible Soul feels like it takes up 1/4th of the album. Mostly because it does. Covering 25 minutes and five movements, it may be my favorite song on the album. The first two movements are all fine and dandy, Sufjan sings about his women issues and we learn the plights of being afaid, respectively. Then we get to the third, which is largely based on autotune. I'd love to be able to talk about how 'Oh, just because it's autotune doesn't mean it's bad, Sufjan's someone who knows how to use it to actually benefit the song, he really showed you guys hardy har har' but, well, I wouldn't say it's bad, but it didn't seem at all necessary either. I can't say for certain whether it would have been better without it, but I can only imagine it would. But no worries, 'cause soon you'll hear 1, 2, 3, 4. Cue me singing like an idiot and getting half the words wrong despite how much I love this movement. And then some robots serenade you and I wish I still had something to be an idiot over before it fades out and you get that ORGANIC Sufjan you've been wanting. And it's pretty good. But that IT'S NOT SO IMPOSSIBLE stuff, whoo boy, I'll tell you.

So yeah. Album of the year. Sufjan's not fucking around.

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