Archive for the 'of montreal' Category

BOTR vol 06

As I sat at my computer during the last month I had but one thought on my mind; how can I make this volume of Best of the Remix the most absolutely epic post of all time. And I got to wondering, pondering even, how this could be done. I’ve had some pretty wicked BOTR posts in the past six months {for a full list click here}, but I wanted to see if I could take this one post to never before achieved levels here on TWF. The thing is I’ve noticed a trend lately whereby bands, or other entities, are choosing to spell their name entirely with capital letters sans vowels. Whether this is because of lawsuits or becuase they simply think their online only record label now has a trendy name is up for debate. Regardless of the reason it’s quickly becoming a trend that threatens to be as popular as putting the quite ubiquitous “the” in front of your band name.

All that explanation aside I was still looking for the most epic BOTR volume I’ve posted yet. To do so I settled on two bands and two bands only. If their name didn’t appear in the song title then the remix didn’t make the track. In the end I found sixteen tracks {up from my standard thirteen} that are all excellent remixes as well as involving either MGMT or the masterful MSTRKRFT. Enjoy these remixes, this has been the most fun I’ve had on the BOTR series. Let’s hope this is epic.

Please do not provide links directly to music files hosted here. Instead, if you’d like, provide a link to this post or a direct link to the zip file hosted on zshare. Thanks.

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

mp3 : Acid Jacks - Awake Since ‘78 (MSTRKRFT Remix David Wolf Edit)
I’m already in love wish this song even with though it comes across as slightly obsessive with the repeated phrase “disco” drilled into the speakers.

mp3 : Ayumi Hamasaki - Beautiful Fighters (MSTRKRFT Remix)
I’m not sure another remix in this series {world} will ever come close to matching the combination of power and grace embodied in this remix. It almost makes me want to go back to my J-Pop and K-Pop days. This is what I mean when I use the word epic.

mp3 : Juliette Lewis & The Licks - Got Love To Kill (MSTRKRFT Remix)
If the previous Ayumi Hamasaki track was light and angel filled then this track featuring Juliette Lewis is the devil that sits on your other shoulder that encourages you to get out there and slam dance at prom.

mp3 : Kylie Minogue - Wow (MSTRKRFT Remix)
As gorgeous, and talented, as Kylie is sometimes her tracks fall a bit flat when they stand on their own. Luckily for us all there’s always a dash of MSTRKRFT to pick up the pieces and make it shiny again.

mp3 : Usher - Love In This Club (MSTRKRFT Remix)
Usher has fallen a bit in the lyrics department lately. I feel as if he’s still making music, and selling records, based on the fact that he incorporates a dance break into all his music videos. If he hired MSTRKRFT to produce the beats for his next disc it would be massive.

mp3 : Wolfmother - Woman (MSTRKRFT Remix)
The most surprisingly likable remix hails from a band I wouldn’t give a second chance any other day of the week. Is there anything MSTRKRFT can’t turn into gold?

mp3 : MSTRKRFT - Street Justice (MSTRKRFT Remix)
What could possibly be better, more epic, than taking your own track and remixing it into something more ferocious than before? This is the longest track in this BOTR volume and it’s worth every second.

mp3 : Syria vs MSTRKRFT - Neon Knights (Roccanova Remix Odio Remix)
I’m really starting to love the new direction the mashup world has taken {that being one spearheaded by acts such as Immuzikation and Girl Talk} where tracks are mixed in such a way that they’re almost entirely new songs, not simple over dubs.

mp3 : Chairlift - Evident Utensil (MGMT Remix)
Not exactly the standard beat heavy remix I feel this edited track would be more fit in a Wes Anderson film than in a dance hall. I love it, but then again I own all of Wes’ films.

mp3 : Leif - Electric Feel My Cool (MGMT Remix)
This easily puts MGMT into the elite realm of remixers occupied most frequently by duos such as MSTRKRFT or Daft Punk. This is by far the best remix I’ve heard from these pop heads. And the flute is brilliantly displayed in this mix. {Although I’m not entirely sure if this mix can be entirely credited to MGMT}.

mp3 : MGMT - Electric Feel (Justice Remix)
What would an epic volume of BOTR be if somehow, some way, Justice didn’t sneak into the list {regardless of their blatant inclusion of vowels in their name}? Maybe they should change their name to JSTC and they’d get their own volume of BOTR.

mp3 : MGMT - The Youth (MMMathias Remix)
There are parts of this remix that remind of sounds filtered through a passing train. They come at you in bursts, in glimpses, and yet your mind somehow puts them all back together and creates something beautiful and coherent again.

mp3 : MGMT - Time To Pretend (Jorge Elbrecht Remix)
I’m not sure if there’s a darker edge to any other remix in this list. I feel like this is what MGMT would sound like if they somehow became a mysterious mall goth act {who still loved synthesizers}.

mp3 : MGMT vs Daft Punk- One More Time To Pretend (Immuzikation Remix)
Easily one of the best mashups I have ever heard. I know I’ve posted this track before, but I felt that it was good enough to get yet another spin here on Best of the Remix.

mp3 : MGMT vs Of Montreal - Future Faberge (Amplive Remix)
I would listen to this track over and over again just to hear the computerized voice say MGMT over and over again in the first thirty seconds. By the end I feel like I should be watching a macabre clown parade at a circus in some barely understood anime.

mp3 : Talib Kweli vs MGMT - Time To Listen (DJ Topcat Remix)
I love this mashup, honestly, maybe more than I love the Immuzikation effort. I’m not sure. Mixing spitfire rap over the top of MGMT’s synth almost seems too perfect to not have been realized before. I feel like Nas would be another perfect candidate for this treatment.

There you have it folks, the most epic post I could imagine for volume six of the Best of the Remix series. I think the only thing that could possibly be more epic is if I could get a bootleg recording of a live MGMT set where MSTRKRFT is mixing all the beats for each song {but that’ll most likely never happen. If it does, I better get comp tickets}. And for those of you who missed the link up top, if you’d like to view all six of the BOTR volumes on one page click here.

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Memoirs of a Blogger : Langerado Day 4

“Don’t take too many mushrooms” was the soundbyte afforded me by the middle aged security guard as he patted me down on the last day of Langerado. It was a freezing cold morning, but the biting ants {see picture above} didn’t seem to mind one bit as they scavenged for pieces of foot on and around my flip flops. It’s no small wonder I didn’t contract a rare and incurable disease from the combination of soaking rain, freezing cold nights, and vicious ankle-biting attack ants. And although at times I felt like calling it quits and packing my life back home to the frozen north I knew in my heart of hearts that Langerado wouldn’t be complete without one last day of great music.

First for the day was Josh Ritter and he and his compatriots took the stage dressed as if they had just stepped off the set of a Hollywood spaghetti Western. Throughout his set, which included fan favorites from both Animal Years and The Historical Conquests of Josh Ritter, Josh had a peculiar stage presence that reminded me hauntingly of Ben Folds. Simply put they both genuinely appear to love preforming. Josh was all smiles, jokes, and laughter and he easily held me captivated for the full hour.

mp3 : Josh Ritter - To The Dogs or Whoever

I put this song up for two reasons. First of all he played it live and didn’t miss a word in the rapid fire lyrics. Secondly it serves to illustrate the point that he sounds more like Dylan than Dylan’s own son. I know everyone looks for the next Dylan like we look for the next Jordan, but there are eerie similarities betwixt these two singer/songwriter fellows. Also during their set Josh and band stopped a song before the final verse, let out a scream, and ran around the stage akin to a chinese fire drill, whereupon they randomly picked up other instruments and finished the song.

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After Josh was done I hustled over to catch the last half of Shout Out Louds. They’re just a classic foreign band. They look like they’re European, they play music which sounds like it could have originated in California or New York, but for some reason you can just tell that it comes from some nether region of this earth. At once familiar and yet somehow fresh, new, and invigorating, Shout Out Louds tooled through a playful set and kept hearts happy, feet tapping, and heads bobbing.

mp3 : Shout Out Louds - Tonight I Have to Leave It

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After both of these fun shows I was forced to sit through Grace Potter and then Government Mule. Both are easily passable in a live setting {unless maybe you’re on strong hallucinogenics, but in which case I reckon watching the latest Keanu Reeves movie would be great}. After these two abysmal sets it was on to see Minus the Bear whom I first wrote off as simply minus the talent. It’s possible I was bitter due to the lack of fun I’d had for the previous hour or so, but it was hard to listen to a set where it wasn’t possible to tell the end of one track from the beginning of the next. I must confess that over time they began to grow on me a bit and I would say they sound far better when they slow life down and let the vocals shine through the wall of fuzz and allow their bass and guitar to duel through dance rock riffs.

Next up was Ani DiFranco and I’ll admit I was going to her show full of skepticism and dread. I’ve never been a huge fan of her style of music which probably has something to do with being force fed some of her discs during my college years. However cautious I was she stripped me immidately of all my tension and took the stage full of positive energy, a wildly infectious laugh, and an easy manner of relating to the crowd that had us all agreeing with her no matter what she said.

mp3 : Ani DiFranco - As Is

She played a lot of classic DiFranco songs as well as peppering her set a bit with new songs she’s been working on in her new town, New Orleans, with her new baby. She claims she’s trying to escape the white person songwriting dillema of always whining about life, but try as she might to write happy songs there’s still a twinge of melancholy that runs through her work. One of her newer songs contained a lot of imagery about toxic mold, flooding, and the devastation of New Orleans as well as reference to a man with a monkey for a face circling above in his air conditioned helicopter whistling Dixie and pretending everything was ok {I’ll let you decipher who she was referencing}.

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After DiFranco’s encore I had just enough time to get to the Of Montreal show for the last twenty minutes or so and I’m slightly disappointed I missed seeing their entire set. I caught the last few minutes of some random buzzing guitar work before the band launched into a massive rendition of the etheral soundscape that is The Past is a Grotesque Animal. They began to play as Kevin Barnes disappeared off the stage only to emerge a full six minutes later inside of a shaving cream filled coffin. I had always heard a show by Of Montreal was a spectacle, but this went beyond even my wildest dreams. After emerging from the white goo he proceeded to sing his way through the remainder of the song before thrashing around on the stage, spraying the immediate area like a splash from Shamu, before jumping off the stage and hugging his die hard fans in the front row.

mp3 : Of Montreal - The Past is a Grotesque Animal

Although the studio version of this song is almost a full beefy twelve minutes in the live setting the took this song to epic proportions letting it romp out a lengthy sixteen distortion and fuzz filled dance/pop/rock minutes.

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Last up for my festival tour was The National on the Chickee Hut stage. Although a festival often allows people to discover new bands and catch a slice of their live set there are times when the strict hour long performance time can feel like it’s limiting a band a bit too much. This was especially true of The National. Even though they were the last band to preform on that particular stage they weren’t even afforded an encore. An encore I must say they were well due. The ripped through favorites from both Alligator as well as The Boxer and they proved beyond a doubt that Paste Magazine was justified in choosing these boys as having created the best album of 2007.

mp3 : The National - Fake Empire
mp3 : The National - Mistaken for Strangers

Although they played on a smaller stage to a smaller audience than some of the more seasoned acts at the festival I would put the performance by The National on par with veterans such as Ben Folds or R.E.M. There was a sense of passion on the stage that night that isn’t always found in the midst of a hectic touring schedule. I would definitely see them play again live and would recommend it to anyone reading this little blog. Their studio albums are solid from start to end, but their live set takes their talent and passion to a different level entirely; it is simply a show that must be seen.

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Langerado was a wonderful festival filled with chance encounters, stranger than life occurrences, and some solid music from day one to the closing acts. It is a great festival that I would be more than willing to attend again and would recommend whole heartedly to anyone who can catch it next year. Maybe I’ll see you there. In other news I met some folks down there that I thought I would mention. First of all I hung out with some bloggers/workers from a new online music retailer called Grooveshark. Secondly I met a blogger who was there with her husband {who made his bachelor party buddies go with him to SXSW last year to catch Arcade Fire instead of going to Vegas for stippers like they wanted} who works for a blog called Melody Makers {which might be found here, but I’m not entirely sure where the blog actually is located}. And finally I had a chance to talk to a Paste Magazine intern and I thought I would mention, again, that they are still the best music magazine currently in publication.

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