Monthly Archive for February, 2008

BOTM vol 05

Happy Leap Day to the world. I hope you’re enjoying this arbitrary addition to the calendar. I also hope that you’ll enjoy this collection of songs and gems I’ve found during the past month or so. Some of them percolated down to me through the blogowebs {way cooler sounding than blogosphere - or should we use interblogs?}, some came to me through email, and some I found on albums that have been sitting in my giant pile of discs to listen to {and don’t even get me started on the thirty or so albums sitting as almost forgotten mp3’s - this is hard work}. Anyway, if you missed my post yesterday about Cloud Cult go read it now, their new album will change the way you think about music and what constitutes good music. Cheerio, and on with the show!

All the tracks in one zip file : here {zshare = left click}

mp3 : Benjamin Gibbard - Indian Summer
I honestly don’t know how it took me this long to discover and/or listen to this song. It hails from the soundtrack to the Kurt Cobain movie which Ben Gibbard lent his considerable talent toward creating the orchestration for.

mp3 : The Dodos - Fools
This is the song that got me hooked on what might be my favorite new artist of the year. And by new artist I don’t necessarily mean new to the world, but new to me. I love their music, their simplicity, and the way this dynamic duo creates so much out of so little.

mp3 : John Doe - Golden State
This is the type of song that Bruce Springsteen should be making whole albums out of. It’s a great duet with great lyrics. The melody is slow and moody enough to leave your heart stricken without actually causing you to disintegrate into the pathos of melancholy.

mp3 : Jon Sebastian - I Get Wet (Andrew W.K. Cover)
This is hands down the best cover {other than Wakey!Wakey!} since Ted Leo covered and mashed together Since U Been Gone with Maps. Jon captures all of the intensity of the original while changing it enough to make it something new, something to party with, something to get wet about.

mp3 : Jose Gonzalez - Love Will Tear Us Apart (Joy Division Cover)
I love it when songs are remade with a flair for the brooding emotionally wrought state of life {see Gary Jules classic remake of Mad World as a reference}, and this cover by Jose Gonzalez {with whom I already have a long love affair} is a great example of what a cover song should be. Myspace musicians should take note.

mp3 : Lily Allen - Everybody’s Changing (Keane Cover)
I guess this month was either good for covers or there was something in the loads of snow that dumped on my abode this past few weeks that just put me in the mood. Luckily Lily Allen, although not quite a class act, does indeed make excellent musical choices. And this is one of her better efforts {although I do appreciate in her studio work how much she disses other Brit MC’s}.

mp3 : Plastic Operator - Peppermint
Yes, this is Plastic Operator, aka the Postal Service of France. And by that I mean their tracks, all of them, could easily fit onto the forthcoming album by the dynamic pair of Gibbard and Tamborello. {although I would probably substitute the crystal clear vocals of Ben in that case}. Regardless of vocal preferences Plastic Operator is solid, and shall remain.

mp3 : Talbot Tagora - Connection (Elastica Cover)
I have literally no idea where I found this cover song, but I can tell you why it made the BOTM series. Just listen to it, the entire track, don’t let the initial twenty five seconds fool you. This is not a minimalist Burialesque style of cover song. This is the real deal.

mp3 : The Black Hollies - Paisley Pattern Ground
Everything about this song reminds me of The White Stripes. Or maybe Jack and Meg smashed up with everything I loved about the early work of the Beatles or the Kinks {who are still, easily, one of the most underrated bands of all time}. It’s just a classic sound on this track, one that must be heard.

mp3 : The Hysterics - Untitled
Yet another song that reminds me of the Beatles. I’m sensing a trend this month. There’s a lot of cover songs and a lot of music that in some way reminds me of the great sixties {some would say the greatest decade ever - not me though}. I guess I feel that this track sounds like what the Beatles would’ve been as a pure indie band {or maybe the Monkey’s on a rare day}.

mp3 : Two Hours Traffic - Stuck for the Summer
It’s almost guaranteed that if you can play a decent guitar melody {no matter how repetitive} over a driving drum line with a pleasant voice and decent lyrics you’ve already won my heart. This song reminds me a lot of California style rock ala early Rooney or Phantom Planet. Loved it five years ago and still love it now {especially the ending}.

mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - Cokehead
It is official, Mike Grubbs can do no wrong. Ever. He’s the OJ of the indie music scene {not to confuse him with some who may or may not have killed someone at some point}. What I mean is that by this point I’m so caught up in the Wakey!Wakey! effect {phenomenon} that I’d be willing to forgive him almost anything {except for stealing someone’s honey like you would a bike}. His vocals are excellent.

mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - Fallin’ Apart (Live)
I first heard this song about nine months ago on a mixtape and it was essentially got me interested in Wakey!Wakey! Well, it was sent to me yet again and I must say that it still serves to impress upon me the depth and talent that Mike possesses. Here’s to hoping he has a long and successful career because I’d love to hear some more of his particular brand of genius.

If you like the music here, and want to share it, please do not post links to download the files directly. Instead direct your readers, friends, lovers, etc., to this blog post. Thanks. To see all other Best of the Month compilations just click the link below titled twf.

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Cloud Cult

The anticipation for the new album by Cloud Cult is killing me. Although it’s not hitting the checkout lines until April 8th there can be found two songs off of the forthcoming album entitled Feel Good Ghosts (Tea-Partying Through Tornadoes). If their past genius, as well as the two songs that have been released thus far, are any indication this will easily slide once again to year ending best of lists. I’ve already reserved a spot in the top three on my list {as last year they were hands down the best album of 2007}.

If you’ve never taken a second and listened through the talent that is Craig Minowa and the rest of the Cult then take a second and let them change your mind on just what music can sound like. Their albums are as eclectic as their live shows {incorporating painting into their sets is just brilliant} and if one song doesn’t tickle your particular fancy you can rest assured something else on the album will. Take a listen for yourself to these first two teasers of what is sure to be a phenomenal album. Also, in an email earlier this week, they mentioned something to do with a presale event taking place on their website in the near future.

mp3 : Cloud Cult - Everyone Here is a Cloud
mp3 : Cloud Cult - When Water Comes to Life

The first track is one they have been playing in concert for awhile and when I heard it live a few months back it was quite amazing. To really get a sense of their sound turn your speakers up loud and just revel in the beauty of it all. Also, if you’re a Cloud Cult fan and live anywhere close to the Twin Cities {Minneapolis and St. Paul for the out o’ midwesters} they could use your help this Sunday, March 2, to film a video. For information on that just click here {they’re promising free memories and quite possibly your face, closeup, on MTV}. Also, as good as their studio efforts are, they are quite brilliant in concert.

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Pacific UV

Pacific UV had a new album released on February 19 of this year and it’s a shame I missed the launch. Granted this disc will not be for everyone. It will appeal to people who love Sigur Ros but wish Jonsi sang in English. Fans of minimalism, simple melodies combined with sweeping soundscapes, or songs that seem destined to be the soundtrack to your life, they will all instantly fall in love with this album. From the opening note of Alarmist to the final farewell of Ljiv there is not a moment wasted on the aptly named Pacific UV album, Longplay 2 (iTunes).

On a side note you should take a second and check out Pacific UV’s website. It’s a minimalistic site that accurately depicts their music with a web page and the scrolling text at the bottom is priceless. You can find them here.

mp3 : Pacific UV - Alarmist
mp3 : Pacific UV - Something Told Us

The album is solid from start to end, as I stated before, and it seems perfectly suited for both sunny afternoon reminiscing or long drives taken on the way to make memories. There’s something about this album that reminds me of all the good I’ve accomplished in my life and helps me to forget all that I probably should have forgotten about years ago. Some of their songs on this album sound like a mash up of Cloud Cult, The Album Leaf, and the always solid Sigur Ros. What I mean to say is that almost every song is a sprawling landscape of sound that will leave you wanting more after each and every listen. {there’s no easy way to describe the emotion that builds and builds throughout this album, you just have to hear it}

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Lior

Lior is a singer songwriter out of Australia that I had never heard of until a reader here on TWF emailed me. And that’s a shame. His debut independent release smoked through Australia three years ago and Autumn Flow (iTunes) garnered him a total of three Aria Award nominations. Just to put that in perspective it would be similar to someone like Josh Ritter or Joseph Arthur being nominated in three different categories at the Grammys {akin to, say, how the Foo Fighters are typically nominated}.

After opening with what was largely reviewed as a stunning critical, as well as popular, success Lior took almost three years in crafting his follow up LP, Corner of An Endless Road, which was just released last week in Australia {again to considerable praise}. And I must agree with those who have heard Lior’s music. He crafts songs that really makes sense. It’s as if the only thing in the world that matters is the art he puts into making songs; there is no pressure, no hurriedness, no sense that his craft was rushed, edited, or tampered with. What you find on this album is pure and absolute Lior, and that’s all a music fan could ever hope for.

mp3 : Lior - This Old Love
mp3 : Lior - Bedouin Song
mp3 : Lior - Heal Me
mp3 : Lior (feat Sia) - Forget You

The first two tracks here are from his 2005 debut album. The second two, including the track featuring the notable talent of another singer songwriter, Sia, hail from Lior’s recently released LP. Sometimes I wonder if there’s any breakthrough talent left in the United States; it seems as if all the fresh new singer songwriters {and usually bands} originate over oceans.

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The Big Sleep

I’ll admit it, I’m a sucker for wall of sound guitar driven rock. I have been ever since the word Weezer was introduced to me in the mid nineties. There’s something about the way this beautiful cacophony of noise is swept tumbling together that makes the most fuzzed out and blasted chords sound like perfection. And while this album by The Big Sleep, Sleep Forever (iTunes), isn’t quite perfect, there are moments on this album when you realize this might be as close as we mere humans come.

mp3 : The Big Sleep - Pinkies
mp3 : The Big Sleep - Bad Blood

I like this three piece ensemble from Brooklyn more when they’re not featuring Sonya on the vocals, but that’s like comparing orange juice to apple juice. Both juices I love, just orange is a little better for my palate. This is their second effort at an LP and I must say that although they list The Cure, Led Zeppelin, and Nick McCabe as some influences I hear a lot of references to modern artists such as Band of Horses, Built to Spill, or TV on the Radio.

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BOTR vol 03

Enough time has passed through these pages that I again bring you the ever popular Best of the Remix series. This is volume 03. If you’d like to see the entire series displayed on one page just click here. I hope you enjoy the remixes, I’ll be out of town seeing a friend play a concert and catching up with old university mates of mine for the weekend. Anyway, I thought you all could enjoy some awesome remixes over the weekend and maybe throw a little dance party while you’re at it {although would this type of music really work at a house/flat party?}. I guess the only way to know is to throw a party, invite all the gorgeous ladies, and play some remixes nice and loud. Enjoy the music.

All the tracks in one zip file : here {zshare = left click}

mp3 : Jens Lekman - I’m Leaving You Because I Don’t Love You (Spoolwork Remix)
mp3 : Klaxons - Gravity’s Rainbow (Guns ‘N Bombs Freakout Remix)
mp3 : Kylie Minogue - 2 Hearts (DirtyHands ‘Freemassons RTA’ Radio Edit)
mp3 : Maroon 5 - This Love (Kanye West Remix)
mp3 : Michael Jackson - Billie Jean (Mathematikal Rerub)
mp3 : Milli Vanilli - Girl U Know It’s True (Tittsworth Remix)
mp3 : Moby - Porcelain - (ATOM’s Blue Underglaze Remix)
mp3 : Nirvana - Lounge Act (Z-Trip Remix)
mp3 : One Republic vs Bronski - Apology (Team9 Smalltown Remix)
mp3 : Rihanna - Umbrella (Seamus Haji & Paul Emanual Club Remix)
mp3 : Robyn - Be Mine (Ocelot Mthrfckrs Remix)
mp3 : Timbaland - Miscommunication (The Bloody Beetroots Remix)
mp3 : Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Gold Lion (Diplo’s Optimo Remix)

The tracks by Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Michael Jackson, Moby, and One Republic vs Bronski are all quality. To be honest I didn’t think Timbaland’s remix of the One Republic song could be improved upon, but Team9 has proven otherwise. If you haven’t heard this remix that’s the first one you should download. The track by Robyn is also really fun to listen to, it just builds and builds and I could imagine it being a great song to hear at a rave or new moon party.

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Josh Garrels

I thought it was only fair to post about a rather obscure artist I referenced during yesterday’s post about Alexi Murdoch. I first met Josh Garrels back when I was trundling through school on my way to a degree in architecture. Back then {in the early 2000’s} Josh was known for his intensely personal live shows that seemed to have a warmth that transcended mere musical performance. He played shows all around the Mid West and found a passionate following wherever he went, with some fans logging hours and miles in the car just to catch another concert. What I remember most about those shows is how unassuming Josh’s stage presence was. He was the epitome of the everyman; that is until he opened his mouth to sing and took to plucking his guitar. It was then that you realized you were truly witnessing something special, something that would keep you warm on many cold nights to come. His live performance felt less like we were watching someone perform and more like you were witnessing a sacred celebration of music.

Josh Garrels never signed a record deal, although he was rumoured to have been offered a few, choosing instead to take his time and release albums when he wanted. Taking a few years between studio sets to refine his live shows, start a family, and generally be best friends with everyone he met. {The most delicious rumour I’ve heard yet is that he’s working on a new disc}. In 2002 he self released Stone Tree, and it is a solid album that rambles from pure acoustic folk to an eclectic blend of hip hop based soundscapes. He later recorded a live album, Underquiet, and in 2006 he released his second proper full length with Over Oceans (iTunes). What I remember most, though, were the easy smiles, friendly hugs, and gregarious attitude that permeated the before and after of each of his songs. I truly hope he gets the music bug again, Josh Garrels really is something special.

mp3 : Josh Garrels - Fire by Night
mp3 : Josh Garrels - Going Home
mp3 : Josh Garrels - Restless Ones

Fire by Night hails from his most recent LP, Over Oceans, while the other two tracks are taken from his debut full length Stone Tree. I must note that it was largely Josh’s live shows {I must’ve seen him play at least a dozen times during my college days} that led me to pick up the guitar and begin playing myself {well, that and my endless pursuit of the ladies}.

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Alexi Murdoch

Proving once and for all that putting your music in a commercial or film soundtrack does not mean you’re selling out is the Alexi Murdoch track that stands tall atop the closing credits of Gone Baby Gone. Although that track, Through The Dark, is still unreleased there are plenty of other gems to be found. This largely unassuming artist sounds a lot like Damien Rice crossed with Josh Garrels. In fact the parallels with Garrels are almost uncanny at times. But I mean that in a totally brilliant way.

Alexi crafts songs in a way that is at once sprawling and yet filled with enough emotional minutiae to keep each track interesting on repeat listening. If you’re very careful you can even hear what appears to be Radiohead’s influence on the track called Home below. And speaking of these two tracks, one appeared on his debut EP, Four Songs (iTunes), and the other hails from his first proper full length entitled Time Without Consequence (iTunes). It’s obvious that Alexi has a gift for crafting music, but he purportedly turned down a record deal because he didn’t agree with the commercial nature of the big labels. Rumour has it that one studio exec that he met with popped his sampler into a computer and proceeded to time exactly how long it took for the song to reach the refrain. If that doesn’t kill artistic license then I don’t know what would.

mp3 : Alexi Murdoch - Home
mp3 : Alexi Murdoch - Orange Sky

Eventually Alexi found his place on his own and it’s a good thing he did. On his debut full length, which is where the track Home appears, the ingredients of his music sense seem to tease the palate with each new listen. I hear references to Kings of Convenience, Joseph Arthur, or David Gray and it all adds up to me loving every second of every song. Gone Baby Gone (iTunes) is a superb movie by the way. You should see it.

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Vampire Weekend

It was only a matter of time before this band found its way onto literally every single blog in the nation {world}. You can’t help but find something to like on their debut album, Vampire Weekend (iTunes), because they easily slide from ska and swing influenced tracks to melodies reminiscent of The Kinks or Paul Simon. To be honest, because that’s what we all should be anyway, the first time I listened through this album my opinion was simply “I liked this band better the first time I heard them, with a horn section, when they were called the Mighty Mighty Bosstones.” Luckily I have a three listen policy in this little brain of mine and on second and third listens there is a lot more depth and quality to be found on this album. Influences seem to range from the Walkmen {with whom they’re playing a few shows with coming up}, to Sublime, to traditional reggae, to every favorite and trendy independent band of the last eighteen months. If you like indie rock, especially progressive indie sounds, you’ll love Vampire Weekend {and if not you can be the one kid in your circle of friends who passionately disagrees with the rest of them}.

mp3 : Vampire Weekend - Boston
mp3 : Vampire Weekend - Walcott

These are two of my favorite tracks off of their debut album. The rest of the disc is quality and it comes highly recommended here at TWF. I also just found out that I’ll be scoring a pass to the Langerado Festival {it really is all who you know} and Vampire Weekend will be playing there on March 7. That’s right, Langerado just went from totally awesome to best music festival east of SXSW.

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The Dodos

At first blush The Dodos sound like everything you’ve ever loved in an indie folk pop outfit. On the second time around you realize that the quality of music they’ve created has forever raised the bar on just what a dynamic duo can produce. With Meric Long plucking his way through clever guitar arrangements and Logan Kroeber driving home every line with some great drum work this is easily the most exciting duo since Jack and Meg. And I mean that in a good way. The thing is that they’re not tied to a simple guitar and drum set. There is a depth and maturity here that defies the standard trappings of a two man band.

The first two tracks here hail from their upcoming album, Visiter (preorder), which will be released on my birthday, March 18. The third track is taken from their previous effort, Beware of the Maniacs (iTunes), and is just as good as any song I’ve ever heard. I personally can’t wait for their new album to drop.

mp3 : The Dodos - Jody
mp3 : The Dodos - Red and Purple
mp3 : The Dodos - Trades and Tariffs

If you want they’ll be travelling around some major markets in the US over the upcoming months. So get out and support this fine band.

on tour
Feb 28 - San Franscisco - Cafe du Nord
March 8 - Los Angeles - The Smell
March 9 - San Diego - The Elephant Bar
March 12-16 2008 - SXSW
March 19 - Ft. Worth - Lola’s
March 22 - Marfa - The Ballroom
March 22 - Houston - Mink
April 5 - New Haven - Cafe 9
April 10 - Bard College
April 19 - Indiana - Culture Shock Festival
April 20 - Lawrence - Replay Lounge
April 21 - Denver - Hi Dive

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Spitzer does Kylie Minogue

Awhile back I reported that Spitzer, aka Damien and Matthieu Spitzer from Lyon, France, were cooking up a little remix for the beautiful Kylie Minogue. I feel it should also be noted that it appears they were asked by Kylie’s people to undertake this remix, not any other way around. Now simply being talked to by one of the reigning dance pop diva’s of the past decade {not to mention her brilliant portrayal of a gorgeous scientist in Bio-Dome} is a good sign you’re doing the right then, but then there’s also the fact that this remix is hot. And yes, I’m talking Kylie Minogue hot.

mp3 : Kylie Minogue - In My Arms (Spitzer Remix)

This also came in the personal email from the boys. A little bit of news. “We’ve been contacted by record companies but the definitive choice is not already made.” I reckon, making music like this, that they have a license to wait for a better deal. And they should. To stay up to date on all things Spitzer make sure you check out their myspace page as that’s where most of their updates happen.

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Two Hours Traffic

There’s not much I can say about this little band other than that they are good. They have a solid sound, catchy hooks, a pleasant lead, and melodies that really are damn infectious. It’s impossible for me to sit here and not bounce around to this three song live set that I was graciously emailed the other day. These three songs were preformed live at The Horseshoe Tavern and they do a great job of capturing the infectious indie pop qualities that I love about Two Hours Traffic. They were recorded by Canada’s CBC Radio 3 and have thusly been passed along the interwebs until they wound up here on TWF.

mp3 : Two Hours Traffic - Backseat Sweetheart (Live at The Horseshoe Tavern)
mp3 : Two Hours Traffic - Better Sorry Than Safe (Live at The Horseshoe Tavern)
mp3 : Two Hours Traffic - Heat Seeker (Live at The Horseshoe Tavern)

Backseat Sweetheart and Heat Seeker can also be found on the studio album Little Jabs (iTunes) while Better Sorry Than Safe hails from their self titled album, Two Hours Traffic, which was released in April of 2005.

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Counting Crows

My first reaction to hearing the new song 1492 from Counting Crows was “WHAT!, who do these guys think they are? Phantom Planet?” And by Phantom Planet I’m referencing a band who started with a largely melodic and acoustic beginning only to throw their entire, and largely successful, formula out the window in favor of a more modern and edgy sound. Well that and this song 1492 sounds like it belongs on PP’s self titled third full length. But honestly, this is no Long December. This is no Autumn and Everything After. This isn’t even anything after. Needless to say I was worried. It’s a solid song, with a good hook and decent lyrics, but this is not the Adam Duritz that the world loves.

Praises be that they decided to include another song on their first single for their upcoming album, Saturday Nights and Sunday Mornings, which is set to hit shelves in just a few weeks. The second song, When I Dream of Michaelangelo, did much to put my troubled heart at peace. This is where the Counting Crows shine. Where other acts would get lost in the apparent simplicity and straightforward nature of this track, it is precisely these qualities that allow Adam’s voice and lyrics to shine through {and that’s what we’ve always loved about the Crows anyway}.

mp3 : Counting Crows - 1492
mp3 : Counting Crows - When I Dream of Michaelangelo

Why they decided to experiment with the sound of 1492 will likely baffle critics and fans for ages to come. Maybe it was to lend some edge to their live performance, but I don’t think they needed it. The last time I saw them play they brought enough intensity {and three encores} to satisfy any crowd. I can only hope the rest of their album takes after When I Dream of Michaelangelo.

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Wakey!Wakey!

We all have our own personal version of every song. Whether it’s because you don’t really know the lyrics or the fact that you love to belt out alternate harmonies in your car, there is something inside of each of us that makes each song we hear unique to us. Maybe you play drums on your steering wheel, identify with certain idiosyncrasies or turns of a phrase, or maybe you just close your eyes and let the music overwhelm your senses. Whether or not you admit it, we all somehow make music our own.

Luckily for the entire world Mike Grubbs isn’t afraid to take a song, make it his own slice of heaven, and release it to the masses for free. For the past few months Grubbs, aka Wakey!Wakey!, has been putting out an incredible array of cover songs under the album name Wakey!Wakey! Wednesdays. Ranging from The Decemberists to Alicia Keys, from Cyndi Lauper to the Beach Boys, no stone has been left unturned in this exploration of just what a cover song can really be. And what he has come home with is ten songs that the test of time will prove stand proudly next to their original recordings, and in some cases eclipse them altogether. Now that the compilation is complete, with his brilliant rendition of Everlong by the Foo Fighters, I can safely say that this is the best cover album I have ever heard.

All the tracks in one zip file : here {zshare = left click}

mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - Apology Song (The Decemberists Cover)
mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - Two Headed Boy Part 1 (Neutral Milk Hotel Cover)
mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - Say It Ain’t So (Weezer Cover)
mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - Maps (Yeah Yeah Yeahs Cover)
mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - California Girls (Beach Boys Cover)
mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - New Partner (Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billie Cover)
mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - Girls Just Wanna Have Fun (Live Cyndi Lauper Cover)
mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - No One (Alicia Keys Cover)
mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - Letters Home (Joie DBG Cover)
mp3 : Wakey!Wakey! - Everlong (Foo Fighters Cover)

The tracks here are posted in the order that they appeared over at Wakey!Wakey!’s myspace page. My hat is off to you Mike Grubbs, you have made a wonderful work of art for all of us to hear.

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The Long Winters

Just where have I been this last week or so? Well I’ll tell you the truth. I’ve largely been in bed, sweating through a wicked fever, and generally ignoring all things related to the interwebs. It has been atrocious, terrible, and tragic. Well maybe not quite any of those three melodramatic terms, but it was bad. But I’m feeling better now, or at least I’ve convinced myself I’m well enough to blog again, and that’s really half the battle. And for my first post back from the brink of sure death I thought I would post my all time favorite song by one of my favorite bands.

This version of The Commander Thinks Aloud can only be found over at WOXY as it was preformed live in their Lounge. I guess the argument could be made that it could now be found here, but I’m not healthy enough for arguing. The song is a sort of narrative taken from the point of view of the commander aboard the ill-fated Space Shuttle Columbia as they orbit the Earth and prepare to come home. A journey that they were never to successfully complete. It’s a blissfully simple song but there is a depth of emotion that I hear in this song that goes well beyond it’s simple composition and chord structure. By the time the repeated phrase of “the crew compartment is breaking up” is sung at the end of the song I feel as my heart has made the same journey.

mp3 : The Long Winters - The Commander Thinks Aloud (Live in the WOXY Lounge)

Although I do love the version of this song that appears on their Ultimatum EP (iTunes) I feel as if this version from WOXY says so much more without the distortion and electronica that was prevalent on that album. As I said before this is my favorite version of my favorite song by one of my favorite bands. Enjoy it for the first time if you’ve never heard it; listen to it again and remember how great The Long Winters are if this is your second time at the dance.

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Wyclef Jean

Let’s be frank for a moment. Clef is brilliant. He is easily one of the most talented MC’s, producers, players in the hip-hop stage over the last two decades. Everything he touches simply turns into musical gold {even if the critics oft be hatin}. From the Fugees, to the impressive list of musical acts he’s discovered and/or produced hit songs for, to his rich and vibrant solo career, Clef never fails to impress. And his latest effort, Carnival Vol. II Memoirs of an Immigrant (iTunes), is another fine addition to the Wyclef Jean musical legacy. Pulling in such varied guests as Serj Tankian, Shakira, Paul Simon, Norah Jones and stalwart collaborator {whose career he literally helped get back on track} Mary J. Blige, Clef uses this album to show his depth as a composer as well as a talent schooled in various forms of hip hop, soul, r&b, and other more eclectic sounds.

Although I wouldn’t place this new album at the top of the Wyclef heap it easily dominates most of the drivel which is currently being pawned off as modern hip hop. Music fans and aspiriing MC’s alike would be wise to give this amazing album a listen from start to end.

mp3 : Wyclef Jean (feat Akon, Lil Wayne and Niia) - Sweetest Girl (Dollar Bill)
mp3 : Wyclef Jean (feat Norah Jones) - Any Other Day
mp3 : Wyclef Jean (feat Paul Simon) - Fast Car

My only regret with Clef is that I wasn’t there at Woodstock 99 when, in tribute to the great Jimi Hendrix, he played The Star Spangled Banner and ended by lighting his guitar on fire. Regardless of your opinion of his musical style there is no doubt that Clef has more talent than some entire record labels.

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Broadcast 2000

I woke up this morning full of life, and with all intentions of posting some tracks off of Wyclef’s latest effort. After checking my email I quickly realized that this would not be the case for today. In fact, before hearing this remixed track, I’m not sure if I ever was full of life. Ever. Broadcast 2000 is the creative effort of Joe Steer and after posting about him a couple of weeks ago he has rapidly climbed the popularity chart here at TWF to become one of the most requested artists I’ve ever had the privilege of listening to.

So here you go my minions. As your musical demagogue I am proud to present you with the spoils of my inbox today. As far as I know this is the first taste the public will get of this track, so enjoy. This little remix will appear as a B Side on the forthcoming Broadcast 2000 single from Groenland Records. It’s brilliant and I’m so glad to see Joe is getting some recognition. Here’s to all the great music to come {and hopefully more excellent emails}.

mp3 : Broadcast 2000 - Don’t Weigh Me Down (James Yuill Remix)

Simply and utterly fantastic. This song reminds me a lot of the more popular remixes of Kings of Convenience tracks. Three cheers to Joe Steer {and James Yuill}, keep the great music coming.

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