Video: Stromae, Papaoutai

This is the video for Papaoutai, from by Stromae. It’s from his latest record, √ (Racine Carrée, or “square root”), and it’s about growing up without his father, who was killed in the Rwandan genocide in 1994 – Stromae, born in Brussels, is of mixed Belgian and Rwandan heritage – and I really don’t think I’ve seen more expressive and evocative dancing in a video this year or possibly ever. The song is awesome too.

He’s playing two shows in New York this year, one in June and one in September, and they are both already sold out. Everyone else: see if he’s coming near you, and get out and see him.

Stromae - Papaoutai

The Wind-up Birds, Poor Music

Poor Music by the Wind-up Birds

 

When I retired from NTSIB, I threatened to return with the release of the next album from the Wind-up Birds, the Leeds four-piece whose first full-length album, The Land, was dropped into my lap in 2012 and reminded me of why I started this blog in the first place. Well, Poor Music, which comes out on May 27th, gives me 17 tracks worth of fantastic reasons to make good on my threat.

 

They killed off all our favourite TV characters
So we became TV characters
We started off subtly by giving stupid answers on quiz shows
But then, we just took the whole thing over

 

And the musicians tried to keep selling us their past
So we trapped them and beamed them up
Into an infinite loop of knowing references
And made them perform their best album, in order, for ever

 

Opening with the power drill riff of “There Will Be No Departures from This Stand”, Poor Music asserts that, no, the Wind-up Birds are not going to start taking it easy on you now. Like The Land‘s opener, “Good Shop Shuts”, “There Will Be No Departures […]” calls us all to examine ourselves and our actions, and we can only nod in resignation as Kroyd points out all-too-astutely that “…we agreed that compassion was just one of life’s luxuries.”

But Poor Music reads less like a lesson book and more like a short story collection full of uncomfortable, and sometimes disturbingly familiar, situations, ranging in scope from global to personal – stories populated with characters, wandering in and out of scenes, who are sometimes allegorical, sometimes representational, sometimes biographical, and the lines blur between them. In “Addis Ababa”, the story of a young child’s sartorial mishap on a school field trip calls into question not only the real aim of the sometimes bizarre practices of educators but also the act of conforming that we seem to be called on to do from birth until death.

 

 

Like in the best books, the ones that stay with you, some of the characters of Poor Music will tear your heart right out, like the “non-gender-specified teen” of the three-part “Glue Factory” suite that is interspersed throughout the album, whose affecting story plays out against a sparse arrangement of organ chords as you watch the teen being torn down by growing up. Then there is the narrator of “A Song or Two” whose candid, raw chronicling of his madness spiral left me, for one, reeling from the too-close-for-comfort familiarity. (A personal thanks to the band for following up “A Song or Two” with the relief of “The Wind-up Birds Songwriting Workshop” dance party – which you can hear as a part of this month’s Feel Bad For You mix.)

But even the best book lacks Poor Music‘s biggest delight: the compelling, sometimes surprising, music. The sounds of Poor Music are bigger, brighter, more varied, and often more aggressive than those of The Land. I’ve already talked about the music of “Glue Factory” and “The Wind-up Birds Songwriting Workshop”, and songs like “The Gristle” and “Guy Ritchie” (both personal favorites) grab you by the neck and gleefully shake you around. The band continue to hone their chops to the point where individual moments will stick with you just as much as overall songs – Kroyd’s startling rage on “A Song or Two”, Oli Jefferson’s loose and funky drumming on the title track, Ben Dawson’s carousel-like (up, down, and around) bassline on “Two Ambulance Day”, the insistence of Mat Forrest’s sharp-edged guitar (with help from Ben Dawson on additional guitar) that grows near-transcendent through the last half of “Guy Ritchie”. (There are a ridiculous number of great guitar riffs on this album, really.)

 

 

I could go on about this album, but then I’d be writing a book myself. So why don’t you just tuck in yourself and discover the joys that I haven’t even been able to touch on in this post? You can download the single of “The Gristle” (with special non-album B-side “The Fun Never Starts”) right now and pay what you want, and you can pre-order the full album.

Additionally, the album is so good that it requires two launch shows, the first in London on release day, May 27th, and the second in Leeds on May 29th.

 

The Wind-up Birds Official Website

The Wind-up Birds @ Bandcamp

The Wind-up Birds @ Twitter

The Wind-up Birds @ Facebook

 

Video: Terminal Gods, The Wheels of Love

Okay, now for some actual new music that I think is super great: The Wheels of Love, by Terminal Gods, from the Machine Beat Messiah EP:

Terminal Gods - The Wheels Of Love (Official Music Video)

And if you’d like to experience their awesomeness live and in person, here are their upcoming dates:

May 2nd, Le Klub, Paris

May 3rd, Le Bar’hic, Rennes

May 15th, The Garage, London, supporting The Chameleons

Video: Pet Shop Boys, Axis

This is less about the song (though it is good) or the video (though it is also good) than it is to tell all of you that the Pet Shop Boys put out a new record, called Electric, in 2013, and are in the process of touring on it.

I caught the last show of the most recent leg here in New York. I didn’t take any pictures because we were on the second balcony at T5 and all I could really see was the parts of the lazer show and some bright lights amid the smoke machine fog.

I could hear them just fine, though, and they sounded great.

But better than just hearing them was being part of the dance parties that broke out during Opportunities (Let’s Make Lots of Money) and It’s a Sin, and sing-shouting along to West End Girls with strangers while realizing it’s one of those songs written on all of our bones.

On the whole, it was a fabulous evening.

Pet Shop Boys - Axis [Official Music Video]

Dolly Parton, Blue Smoke

Blue_Smoke_CoverNEW

Blue Smoke, due out May 20, 2014, is Dolly Parton‘s 42nd studio album.

Sit back and let that sink in, y’all.

It’s vintage Dolly Parton, in the sense that it might not break any new ground, sonically, but yet contains multitudes. No matter which Dolly Parton you like – sassy, sexy, silly, sweet, or bent on saving you – there is something here for you.

My Favorites: Unlikely Angel and From Here to the Moon and Back (with Willie Nelson)

On the other side of the I Will Always Love You coin is this song about a love that arrives late and unexpectedly, after all hope had been thought lost. The chorus has wormed it’s way into my brain and refused to leave. I suspect it will become the go-to wedding song for people who never expected to be able to be married either at all or ever again.

From Here To the Moon and Back, which she shares with Willie Nelson (and originally appeared on To All The Girls . . . (2013), wherein he sang duets with some of the finest ladies in country music today) is probably also destined to be a popular wedding song. This is partially because if you wanted to, you could recite the lyrics as vows with only a little bit of tweaking, and partially because they sound so beautiful together. A little weathered, a little worn; their years are in their voices now, but that doesn’t dim the shine. I realize some of you just can’t think of Willie Nelson as anything other than a sweet old man, but there was a time when he was a handsome blue-eyed menace with a rebel glint in his eye – arguably that time was this morning – and this song summons that man back.

Unexpected Covers: Don’t Think Twice (Bob Dylan) and Lay Your Hands On Me (Bon Jovi)

It is my suspicion that one thing Miss Dolly loves is causing people to pull out their music listening devices and mutter “Is that . . . is she . . . what the hell?” On Backwoods Barbie (2008), she dragged You Drive Me Crazy by the Fine Young Cannibals out of mothballs, added some fiddle and country swing, and it was glorious. This time around her choices and the results are a little more uneven.

Don’t Think Twice actually works pretty well; she retains the snappy kiss-off spirit while infusing it with country soul and a wry weariness that gives it all new life.

Lay Your Hands On Me, on the other hand, has been – very minorly – rewritten and made into a praise song. Your feelings about this will depend entirely on how attached you are to the decidedly sexier original. I myself experience a mixture of déjà vu (Bon Jovi was subverting a common religious theme, after all) and cognitive dissonance (for me, the double subversion leads to Very Sexy Jesus, which, no) every time it comes on and so I tend to skip it.

Weepers: You Can’t Make Old Friends (with Kenny Rogers) and Miss You, Miss Me

You Can’t Make Old Friends originally appeared on Rogers’ 2013 album of the same name. In it, they contemplate their own mortality and the end of their lifetime of friendship and duets. It is unbearably sad and as much as I love them individually and together I refuse to let it get much of a toehold in my reality. As far as I’m concerned they’ll be alive and well and singing Islands in the Stream forever.

That said, here is the video. Grab the tissues, you’ll need them:

Kenny Rogers - You Can't Make Old Friends (duet with Dolly Parton) [Official Video]

 

Miss You, Miss Me is basically a coda to Tammy Wynette’s D-I-V-O-R-C-E from POV of the child in the middle and I have nothing nice to say about it.

Get’em Girl: Blue Smoke and Lover du Jour

The songs where Dolly Parton tells some man to shove it are my very favorite Dolly Parton songs.

In Blue Smoke she’s delivering the kiss-off from the first train out of town; here’s the lyric video:

Dolly Parton - Blue Smoke (Lyric Video)

 

And on Lover Du Jour she tells him she won’t be his trifle, in French, no less. Somewhat mangled-for-the-sake-of-a-rhyme French, admittedly, but the sentiment is strong even if the execution is wobbly.

Traditional Tunes (all departments): Banks of the Ohio, If I Had Wings, Home, Try

Banks of the Ohio is a traditional tune in the standard sense of the phrase: it’s a murder ballad about a young man who kills the woman who rejects his proposal, written in the late ’20s. Miss Dolly’s voice shines like a mountain diamond, and she really sells the story. (Also, true confession, I’ve listened to it several times now and each time her back up singer comes in I think Who is that, I know that voice so either it’s a vocal doppleganger OR a famous voice flying under the radar.)

If I Had Wings, on the other hand, is a new song, but sounds like it’s a hundred years old. It is mostly about regret and making the best of bad decisions when what you’d rather do is run away from the mess you made.

Home is traditional in the same way Chattahoochie by Alan Jackson is traditional, in the sense that they are both celebrations of rural Southern life that play out on ageless pastoral vistas.

And then, finally, Try, which is a traditional Dolly Parton song-as-pep-talk tune. Best deployed on that day you drop your coffee on your last clean work shirt and leave your lunch at home and need a little bit of friendly encouragement.

Finally, not only is she still releasing records, she’s still taking her show on the road. Tour starts in May in Oklahoma and then jumps overseas.

Daily Video: The Used, Cry

Cry, from Imaginary Enemy by The Used: Because Bert McCracken writes the best break-up songs and then performs them looking like he just left a pint of Haagen-Daz melting in his Blanket Nest of Pain.

Also because I am seeing them tonight, along with Taking Back Sunday, Sleepwave and tonightalive., and it’s the last real pit I’ll be in for a while. If not forever.

The Used - Cry (Official Music Video)

Daily Video: The Gentlemen Thieves, Don’t Worry

The Gentlemen Thieves are: Ken Taylor (Vocals/Guitar), David Huzyk (Guitar/Vocals), Dylan Ramstead (Bass/Vocals) and Thomas Lesnick (Drums) and they are from Toronto, Canada.

This is the video for Don’t Worry, from their upcoming record Uncertainties and it is a one-take home movie lyric video. What it lacks in polish it makes up for in creativity and weird basement-dwelling aliens who seem to be having a rave. NB: Persons with delicate sensibilities, brace yourselves/glance away for a second when the camera starts to move away from the bathroom sink.

The Gentlemen Thieves - Don't Worry (Lyric Video)

Daily Video: Oldtwig, Twigs

This week’s Friday Night Jam is Twigs, by Oldtwig, a beatmaker, composer, and landscape architect (!) from Paris. It is from Through Hills, which is his first record.

It’s a mellow, soothing number, and the video is a visual celebration of spring triumphing over winter.

I picked it to share today because a) it’s lovely, b) I feel like this week, not even to mention this winter, has been hard for everyone and we could all use a reminder that the trees will grow new branches and flowers will bloom again some day and c) the combination of animation and live action, especially Rachel Brooker‘s joyful, encouraging dancing, is both surprising and awesome.

Oldtwig – Twigs from Phonosaurus on Vimeo.

Daily Video: FAIRCHILD, Burning Feet

It is not every day you see a music video which successfully makes pointed, sly commentary on what constitutes a “sexy” (or, arguably, “shocking”) video and the gross and ridiculous ways women’s bodies are used in music videos by utilizing a potpourri of visual touchstones that encompass Titanic, Star Wars, Ghost and the videos for George Michael’s Faith, Robin Thicke’s Blurred Lines and Jennifer Lopez’s I Luh Ya Papi. And those are just the super obvious ones that I caught in the two times I watched it.

But FAIRCHILD, from the Gold Coast, Australia, have pulled it off. Plus the song at the heart of it all, Burning Feet, from the EP of the same name, is a charming pop confection.

http://youtu.be/XDXhKGIS3-w

Here are some of their upcoming shows, if you’d like to go and appreciate them in person:

April 12th – Metricon Stadium, Gold Coast (Gold Coast Suns AFL Match)

April 26th – The Loft, Gold Coast (Oneway Street Unofficial AFTER Party)

May 6th – Baltic Avenue, Toronto (Canadian Music Week)

May 10th – Horseshoe Tavern, Toronto (Canadian Music Week)

May 12th – Cake Shop, New York

May 14th – Rendezvous, Seattle

May 16th – Silverlake Lounge, Los Angeles

Hard Rock Cafe, Singapore – May 22nd