Archive for the 'sufjan stevens' Category

Seven Days of Sufjan : part 5

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NYMnEP7f6GI

Everything this man plays is golden. Here’s a clip of him playing Chicago; a simple and yet stunningly beautiful song.

I’m not sitting at my own computer right now so I cannot honor the comments I received yesterday with extra Sufjan songs right now. But fear ye not, I am a man of my word and tomorrow I will upload some extra rare tracks from the man who once called Michigan his home. For today I am posting a track that I’m not sure anyone else has put online yet. Probably because it’s an instrumental track that’s rather short and rather simple. But it’s precisely these musical interludes that make Sufjan who he is. These musical leftovers are what flesh out his albums and give us all a reason to actually buy full albums instead of settling for single song downloads.

mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - O Come O Come Emmanual

[note, the spelling of the song is not a typo]

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[the next post will contain some bonus tracks, thanks for the comments]

Seven Days of Sufjan : part 4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d4tkiGvV_ek

This is a video of Sufjan playing an impromptu version of “For the Widows in Paradise, For the Fatherless in Ypsilanti” at SXSW in 2004. And yes, he was famous then too. Watch the video, it’s simply wonderful.

Another day has come and another Sufjan song is posted. This puts us just over half way through Seven Days of Sufjan and I must say it has been an enjoyable run. As I stated in the first post, if there are comments left during this time I’ll post more than one song per day. On top of the Christmas music I also have some rare and largely uncirculated Sufjan songs that I think you all would enjoy. If I don’t get any comments I’ll just keep posting one song a day. Enjoy it while it lasts.

mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - Only at Christmas Time

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Seven Days of Sufjan : part 3

Today we look into the grab bag and we find a track from Mr. Stevens that is quite honestly the best Christmas or winter themed song I’ve heard. I know I’m prone to exaggerations, but this is one time when you must take me seriously. Download this track immediately, put it on one song repeat, and let your mind escape into the type of song that put Sufjan on the map.

mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - Sister Winter

Easily the best winter song ever recorded. I challenge you to find anything as poignant and as lyrically beautiful as this. I dare you.

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Seven Days of Sufjan : part 2

Let us be honest for a moment. Sufjan Stevens was the single driving force that brought music blogging to the prominent position that it now holds. He was the indie darling we all loved and craved and he’s the only reason you might be skimming this skimpy post.

He’s one of the most prolific songwriters of this millennium and his Christmas tunes are simply amazing. And so I bring to you the second installment of Seven Days of Sufjan. Enjoy the music and check back tomorrow for another song.

mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - We Three Kings of Orient Are

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Seven Days of Sufjan

As I try to sort out why Hype doesn’t recognize mp3’s stored over at gigasize I’ve decided to begin my Seven Days of Sufjan a couple of days early. For the next seven days, beginning now, I’ll be posting a Christmas song by Sufjan once a day. If I get requests or I get enough comments I might even up it to two or three songs a day, depending on the traffic this gets.

Here’s the first track, keep coming back for more.

mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - What Child Is This Anyway?

Oh, and please make sure to take the files from the previous two posts about Bing Crosby and Andy Williams. Everyone needs a little classic Christmas music in their lives and those two guys are essential to anyone’s holiday collection.

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Everything Reminds Me of Her


I might have the coolest younger brother on the face of the earth. He has great taste in music and occasionally he makes a mix for some various or sundry reason and ships it out via the internet to me. Granted, he is a younger brother, so some of his musical choices are a little sketch, but for the most part he puts together solid music. This mix of his is a little skewed because he made it for his girlfriend and every song in this selection apparently reminds him of her in some way. I figure the kid must be in love because I cannot fathom any other reason he would be listening to Fergie.

Enjoy the mix my brother made. I’ll have some more tunes up in a couple of days. As per usual the mix is available as a single download as well as individual songs.

download : Everything Reminds Me of Her

01 : Doveman - Dancing
02 : Architecture in Helsinki - What’s In Store
03 : Elliot Smith - In the Lost and Found (honky bach)
04 : Sufjan Stevens - To Be Alone With You
05 : Daft Punk - Something About Us
06 : Fergie - Fergalicious
07 : The Postal Service - Nothing Better
08 : Billy Talent - Pins and Needles
09 : Weezer - My Best Friend
10 : Phantom Planet - On My Mind
11 : Ben Folds - The Luckiest

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Mr. Stevens is All The Rage


Every so often I conform to the adage “give the people what they want.” In other words I sell out for page loads. After all, if I average 600 hits a day for the rest of my life I’ll make almost 20 dollars a year in ad revenue. And that’s worth it to me. If I wasn’t Dutch I wouldn’t be much.

Ok, enough of that. I really just wanted to post some rare Sufjan Stevens Tracks. That’s really all I’m doing these days. And if it keeps the hyperactive indie kids happy [and leaving comments] then it really is worth my time. Enjoy the music and have a happy Christmas.

mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - God’ll Ne’er Let You Down
mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - All Delighted People

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Making a Map


I had this grand idea to make a musical map of my life. I got the idea right after I met my girlfriend in Thailand last year. It was an idea to help her to get to know me. It would be full of songs that all had stories. Each song would be from a different era of my life. And I am working on it. I am still working on it almost a year later. It’s a pretty huge undertaking to take your life and pare it down to two discs of music. But it will be glorious when it is finished. Ok, maybe that’s a bit of an overstatement. I guess I’m merely aiming for informative at this point. And I hope it’ll be completed before next summer.

I need to stop being a perfectionist.

And I do need to give you some music to satisfy the lonely people out there.

mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - What Goes On
mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - I Can’t Even Lift My Head

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Random News

I’m basically posting to say that The Hype Machine has finally sorted out whatever issue they were having with my blog. Well, allegedly they’ve sorted it out. So that’s good news.

In other randomness the next installment of the EA Mixes is ready to go, expect thirteen songs of yummy goodness to appear up here before this weekend. I’ve been working on that a lot lately so I haven’t really had a chance to write small articles. Check below this post for some great stuff by Forgather, Zach Williams, and a weird Jay Z / Chris Martin collaboration.

Oh, and so as not to leave you high and dry, here’s a little bit of music to hold you over.

mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - Woman at the Well

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Sufjan and Songs Forgotten


So I was looking through my list of single songs the other day and I came across this little story by Sufjan Stevens. Most of his songs are stories, but this one is especially so. He wrote this song, The Lord God Bird, in response to a challenge thrown down by witty NPR dj’s who didn’t think he was all that amazing. And he handedly proved them wrong by walking into this small bayou town with only a few interviews and a guitar and emerging two weeks later with a ridiculously great song.

And I know this song is old news, it’s probably even been blogged about over a hundred times. But with something this good it never hurts to bring it up and host it again. The first mp3 is the actual song Sufjan wrote and the second song is the twelve minute segment about the song that originally aired on NPR.

mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - The Lord God Bird
mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - The Lord God Bird Story

Oh, and I like this rare track by Sufjan as well.

mp3 : Sufjan Stevens - Woman at the Well

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Sufjan’s Christmas


So while I wait to get my file host woes sorted out [currently working on a couple of fixes] I thought I would at least post something new. This is old news, but maybe old is the new new. I’m not sure, and yes I am confused.

Anyway, you all deserve to get in the holiday mood and listen to the magic that is Sufjan Stevens’ Songs for Christmas.

And it’s all free and streamable.

http://www.asthmatickitty.com/suf_xmas/suf_xmas.php

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EA Mix vol 7 - Oh, Where Have We Gone


01 : Joseph Arthur - Can’t Exist (Live) : Joseph Arthur is one of the best ten artists who will never be famous. He’s smooth, many of his songs are instant classics, and the man creates some of the weirdest paintings I’ve ever seen in my life. This is a gorgeous track and to hear it stripped down and live is amazing. I would love to see one of his shows.

02 : Akron/Family - Gone Beyond : I’m still not sure what to think of this band. Are they nu-folk? Are the easy listening? Do their songs even make sense to the band? I’m not sure if this one track can answer these question, but it’s a great start to the Akron/Family sound.

03 : Ben Folds - Still : Ben Folds will always be a musical genius in my book. I mean let’s be honest, the man takes even Elton John and improves upon it. About a year ago Ben set down to do something, musically, he had not attempted before. And that was to make the soundtrack for the film Over the Hedge. There are a couple of great songs off of that soundtrack but this one stands out with the classic Ben Folds sound.

04 : Tori Amos - A Sorta Fairytale : In the past I haven’t been the biggest fan of Tori. And I’m not really sure why. There are just some artists that always get associated with a sound that you don’t like. And for too long I think I was lumping Tori Amos in with Fiona Apple, whom I rather dislike. But all those years of ignorance are now washed away with this gorgeous and melancholic ballad. Kudos to my friend Cole for introducing me to this song.

05 : Bishop Allen - Like Castanets : There is a certain quality about this song that is inescapable. Something inside of me craves more music like this. Music that is light, fun, interesting, and ultimately builds upon itself with harmonies, layered instruments, and clever lyrical twists. If I had to quantify Bishop Allen I would place him halfway between Sufjan and Beirut with a light Mediterranean quality to his sound.

06 : Now It’s Overhead - Let Up : Years ago I came up with a classification of people that could best be described as “brooding romantics.” They weren’t hopeless, they weren’t carried away, they believed in true love yet they realized that the odds were stacked against them ever finding it. And now I have found the iconic group to sing their emotions to the world. Simply gorgeous music.

07 : The Hidden Cameras - The Waning Moon : It seems like one ‘out-there’ band somehow makes it onto every mix I make. In the past it’s been bands like Applejack or Wolf Mother and on this slice of nirvana it’s The Hidden Cameras. Maybe I lump all of these bands together because of their excessive use of layered vocals or toy instruments, but whatever. It’s a good song, and it’s nice to take a lighter turn, in both sound and lyrics, after the broodiness of Now It’s Overhead.

08 : Old 97’s - Question : I love this song. It’s a wonderful little story and they explain so much with so few words. It’s really what’s left unsaid in this song that makes you think. And I enjoy that quality of the Old 97’s. [crap, now i'm back to hopelessly romanticising everything]

09 : Alela Diane - Pieces of String : At one point in this song the lyrics read “I’d have a choir of little children sing along.” And during that line there is literally a choir of little children backing up Ms. Diane. And as amazing as that is, mind boggling really, the rest of the song is heartbreaking and thought provoking. It’s subdued and sets the perfect mood for a looking out your window into the rain.

10 : The Decembersists - The Crane Wife 3 : Alright, I’m finally giving in to the hype surrounding this album. Apparently it’s the bee’s knees my friends. And I’ll admit that it is good. But I will not go ahead and give it best album of 2006 just yet. What about Josh Ritter, the Killers, Robyn Hitchcock, or Ray LaMontague? Yeah, I can’t just go handing out best of the year before this year is finally come to an end. All that being said, this is a superb song.

11 : Zach Williams - Maybes : Zach continues to amaze me. And he’s been amazing some of my friends out in NYC lately as well. Apparently the man puts on an incredible and personable show. If anyone has the chance to catch him live please please please make an effort to get out and see him. He continues to impress with the offerings on his myspace page and mark my words, Zach will be huge.

12 : The Blind Boys of Alabama - I Shall Not Walk Alone : I’m not Catholic, nor will I ever be, but there’s something about the imagery of Mother Mary that is so righteously comforting. Whether it’s the Beatles or the Blind Boys singing about her, songs with Mary in them always seem to bring comfort and hope to my heart. I needed this song during the past two weeks and I’m glad to be able to share it with you now.

13 : Sufjan Stevens - Sister Winter : Sufjan is going to dominate Christmas on his way to taking over each and every one of the fifty states. It’s hard to believe that music this poetic and this wonderful [written largely with Christmas and winter in mind] has sprung from the heart of someone who used to hate Christmas music, especially carols. This November watch for Sufjan to drop a 5 EP box set with around 50 selections, some originals like ’sister winter’ here and some reworkings of old classics. This man is brilliant. [and this song proves it]

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EA Mix vol 6 - A Fresh Start

First of all I’ve switched the format in which I construct my mixes. Before they were always 17 songs. A nice big prime number. And that number was chosen because, when burned to a cd, 17 songs usually maxes out the available space. I’m Dutch, hence I like to use everything you can.

But, in today’s modern age [where the single song download is rapidly watering down the effect of a solid album], everyone seems to have digital music players. Taking this all into consideration the mixes to follow will use 13 tracks and will only be offered in the form of single song downloads. If you want one archive file containing all of the tracks [for easy downloading] let me know in the comments and I’ll make it available. For now, enjoy the songs.


01 : Joshua Radin - Star Mile : It wasn’t just breathy boy/girl harmonies, catchy lyrics, and superb instrumentation that got Joshua recognized. As is true in so many fields it’s all who you know. And Mr. Radin knows Zach Braff, actually went to school with him. They first hooked up to put some of Josh’s songs on Scrubs, then Josh got a record deal, and now two of his songs are featured on The Last Kiss.

02 : Josh Ritter - Good Man : I love this song. I really cannot get enough of it. And it comes from one of the best albums of 2006. This man has a future in the new folk scene alongside such other acts as Page France and Zach Williams. If this is the future of “indie” pop then it is a bright future indeed.

03 : Fields - If You Fall We All Fail : It seems as if any band that sneaks out of Britain these days is spectacular. Add to this the fact that at least one of their band members hails from Iceland [homeland of Sigur Ros, an easily identifiable reference in their music] and you have a recipe for beautiful music. They will be huge, maybe not on the level of Coldplay or U2, but I expect them to rival The Arcade Fire for underground credibility.

04 : The Killers - When You Were Young : I like the lyrics, I love the band, I’m excited to hear their new album. I still don’t always understand what they’re talking about, what reference or point they’re trying to make, but it doesn’t really matter when you’re the new glam kids on the scene. Let’s hope that all the hype they’ve been getting doesn’t lead to a giant letdown.

05 : Envy Corps - Rhinemaidens : At the beginning of the track it sounds hauntingly like something I’ve heard, and loved, before. I can’t quite place what their sound reminds me of, but it feels comfortable and good. I really feel like once the guitar kicks in it sounds like something that Men at Work should have recorded.

06 : Thunderbirds Are Now! - We Win (Ha Ha) : I have no idea how I first heard of this band. They sound a little rough around the edges, almost like the Yeah Yeah Yeahs with a male lead. One thing is that their sound is frantic and at the same controlled. It has a certain driving energy, quick drums, sonic stops, and a hook that pulls you through the just over three minutes track before you know it.

07 : Gavin Mikhail - Fight the Sky : Yeah, I did include a basic pop song on my mix. Get over it. The first thirty seconds sound like standard, run of the mill piano pop. Then the song gets pushed to the point of almost being over-produced. And it sounds great. Like a better Jason Mraz with a real purpose and talent [and no trucker cap].

08 : The Triangles - Applejack : My little brother made me listen to this song while I was home this summer. At first listen I didn’t really like it. It took me awhile to really get into their sound, and to be honest it’s still not my favorite. It comes across as a poor man’s Polyphonic Spree. But in this weird mix of preschool sounding lyrics and hooks there resides a type of youthful energy which deserves at least two, maybe three, listens.

09 : Imogen Heap - Hallelujah : Originally a Leonard Cohen song, first famously covered by Jeff Buckley, then again by Rufus Wainwright, and now finally the brit voice behind Frou Frou. Buckley’s version is still the best on the planet, but Imogen brings her own twist to the song. Namely she drops the instrumentation and uses her voice, and breathing, in layers to make an old classic new again.

10 : Ben Kweller - Thirteen : BK himself said that this was the most personal, and best, song he’s ever written. It appears on his newest self-titled album and he has said that it’s difficult for him to perform live because he gets very emotional. The bottom line is that it’s another great song from the one time musical kid genius.

11 : Sufjan Stevens - Pittsfield : Sufjan Stevens has a disease, and the only cure is making more and more [and more] music. So he writes hundreds of songs every year and records most of them. This song hails from his b-sides album The Avalanche and it’s easily into my top ten favorite Sufjan songs. It builds and builds upon itself, even if it is simple in the way it’s constructed, and eventually reaches a peak that you wish would last forever.

12 : Zach Williams and the Ramparts - James : Mark my words, Zach Williams will be huge. All in due time he will play every indie festival from Bonnaroo to Pitchfork. And he will dominate. But for any of this to happen he needs to drop the “and the Ramparts” from his name. All that being said this is a wonderful song.

13 : DeVotchKa - How It Ends : I can’t quite classify the sound of this band. It’s good yes, it’s weird yes, and it somehow works [accordion and all]. When the music drops out and he wails “and you already know how this will end” I get goosebumps, I get a little crazy, I want him to keep singing forever. But alas, this is how it ends.

SS Mix vol. 1 - Just Say Words

And so begins the Summer Sounds series of mixes. Previously I’ve posted a slew of EA mix albums for download, and those will continue again this autumn when I return to my studies in East Asia. For now, it is summer, and here we go.

To download the entire mix in one sweet little package get it
here - at yousendit
here - at megaupload

for individual song downloads click below

01 : Dashboard Confessional - Don’t Wait : Yes, this song is on every list over the past few weeks. Yes the album is out and waiting for you to own it [overstock.com has it for 7.99]. But, it serves as a great kickoff to the summer. This is what summer music has always been for me, and in this mix you’ll find more of the same. Breezy, light, lovely, made to spin on the beach, it’s all here.

02 : Guster - New Underground : Everyone has said that the new Guster album is a departure for their original sound, but let us all face it, every band out there grows up and matures. In fact, the best bands are the ones that change over time. Trust me, turn to any band that has staying power [at least 10 years] and compare track one of their first album to track one of their recent album and you’ll see that this is just the standard of growing up.

03 : Phoneix - Long Distance Call : Sounding like the fresh new mashup of The Strokes and Maroon 5, this French group has a clean, crisp sound that in one way or another grabs your attention. Earlier in the year I recommended their latest album, and I say again, it will not disappoint you. This is my favorite track of the disc, but the rest is really solid.

04 : The Magic Numbers - Love Me Like You : I got their album almost seven months ago, listened to it twice and almost threw it away. Instead I filed it away and let it collect dust. And then a few weeks ago I saw them play this song live on Conan and they blew me away. Since then their disc has been getting heavy rotation and here I go promoting them again.

05 : The Weakerthans - (Hospital Vespers) : One of the most underrated bands since the year 2000. I don’t know if it’s due to marketing or bad word of mouth. Maybe they play horrible live shows. I just don’t understand why this band isn’t up there alongside Death Cab or Dashboard as undergound breakout artists. They’re talented, they play superbly, and their lyrics tell stories that you care about in the end.

06 : Zach Williams and the Ramparts - Hospital Bed : Zach Williams is on the same level as Asher Lev. Great folk revival that pulls a lot of its morals and lessons from their Christian roots. Much akin to Page France or Sufjan Stevens. I am a firm supporter of Zach Williams and am even considering a myspace petition to get them to change their ridiculous band name. But, I will allow them to call themselves whatever they want as long as they keep making songs like this.

07 : Band of Horses - The Funeral - I just realized that on this mix there are two songs with the word hospital in their titles followed by a song called The Funeral. Maybe I should quick throw something by The Arcade Fire on here. Maybe that would be a bit cliched. Maybe it’s all a subconscious reflection on the fact that while I was making this mix my father passed away. I’ll never know. But I do know that if I die, I want this song played at my viewing, preferably as a live show by the Band of Horses.

08 : Thom Yorke - Like Spinning Plates : Radiohead will always and forever be at the top of my list of favorite bands. They are far and away the best live show I have ever seen, and I have been around the block. This little rendition comes from when Thom Yorke played a solo show where it is basically Thom and a piano. I love how this song captures the idea of total heart and head confusion. How it captures what it feels like to be lost, and to know that you are gone.

09 : American Dollar - Everyone Gets Shot : In almost every single one of my mixes I’ve found a way to include an instrumental piece, and here it takes a prominent position. The mix takes a definite left turn after this piece, assuming before this slice of heaven from American Dollar was going in a straight line of melancholic and mostly new music. The next five tracks focus mainly on the voice of lead singer, and so this track serves as a little musical sorbet to reset your palate.

10 : The Strokes - I’ll Try Anything Once : Originally a demo take for what would later become You Only Live Once, my first band to hit the obsession mark in my collection, The Strokes, gave this song away for free on their website as well as including it as a b-side on their second single from the album First Impressions of Earth. Although it’s obviously a rough cut with some fuzzed keyboards and Julian’s scratchy vocals I think I like this version more than the jazzed up, full band version that’s on their third album.

11 : Regina Spektor - Samson - I can never decide if she uses Biblical imagery because she believes it or because it tells compelling stories. But in the case of this song I don’t care what her motives are. Now, true to Spektor’s past, this is one of two or three great songs off of the album it’s found on, where the rest are mediocre at best. And I would say that she benefits from the age of digital downloads, where kids buy one song at a time. Anyway, this song is great.

12 : Snow Patrol - Set the Fire to the Third Bar : I don’t know why bloggers and critics have trashed on the latest effort by these lovely Brits. This is exactly the type of music they’ve always made. Strong anthemic ballads. Songs that soar and reach peaks reminiscent of Coldplay or earlier Radiohead. And on this track there’s a nice duet vocal with Martha Wainwright, quite a fine catch for such a song.

13 : Feist - Mushaboom (Postal Service Remix) : The original version of this song was included on an earlier mix, one of the EA mixes, and it was good enough to make a second go round. This time Jimmy Tamborello and Ben Gibbard have put their own twist and some of their own vocals on it. They don’t change the chemistry too much, but they easily give the song a little bit of an upper, a nice beat, and the pure genius of Ben Gibbards voice.

14 : The Long Winters - Ultimatum (Live at WOXY) : What do you get when you combine one of my favorite bands with one of the best radio stations out there? You get sheer genius. Where the album rendition shines with it’s production, sometimes, almost to the point of being overproduced, this live version illustrates how the song is brilliant regardless of how it’s reworked. And, if you read this blog enough, you’ll find that I’m almost always a sucker for the stripped down version of anything.

15 : The Beta Band - Al Sharp : This song is truly a blast from the past. Very rarely do I find a friend who actually has a Beta Band album on their shelf. And also, just as rarely, do people not fall in love with this quirky little band after the give them a chance. They’ll probably always be a fringe band, but I’m not sure that will ever phase the Beta Band at all.

16 : Sufjan Stevens - The Perpetual Self : Everything is lost, oh oh, but I know that you can take it to the Lord. Everything you want, oh oh, is it all that you can gather for yourself? I love Sufjan not simply because his music sounds great. Although a huge part of his allure is the fact that he is a master when it comes to arrangements, the bigger draw for me is that his lyrics are intensely intelligent. He writes brilliant songs, and I guess he would after basically going to school to be a creative writer.

17 : The Walkmen - Another One Goes By : What a perfect ending to this mix. I probably should have saved this song for the ending track to the summer, but it found it’s way into my heart and thereby onto this site. I can see this song being played on season finale’s from The O.C. to North Shore to the end credits to any big romantic comedy over the next five years. I would even go so far to request this as the last dance at prom, if I was ever to go back in time to attend that wickedly weird even we call prom. It fits great as an ending.

Sufjan Stevens - The Avalanche

Ok, so I know that the venerable Sufjan has been blogged to death. Literally. blogged. to. death. But this blog is in desperate need of an update and, well, Sufjan just happens to have something up for all of us to enjoy.

That’s right, on his website [of the asthmatic kitty variety] you can now stream the entire new album. How this helps his album sales I’ll never know. I’m sure at least thirty of you have already ripped the stream and are sharing individual files. But I can’t be bothered to repeat the dirty work that has already been done.

The Avalanche is the much anticipated followup to Sufjan’s latest outing, Illinoise. I guess to call it a followup would be a bit pretentious as in all reality it’s really b-sides, outtakes, and material that was originally scrapped from the Illinoise project. Rumor has it that Sufjan originally wrote around 50 songs in the first working over of his second state themed project and if he keeps it up he might surpass Rivers Cuomo as the king of writing too many songs for each album. [at last count Rivers wrote over 150 songs for the latest Weezer disc. ahh, perfectionists abound in the world of not so famous music.]

Anyway, make sure you take a look over on Asthmatic Kitty Records and while you’re there check out the stream of Sufjan’s latest.

or just click here to go right to the stream

EA Mix vol. 4 - The End Draws Near

EA Mix vol. 4 - The End Draws Near

See the previous post for more info as well as the option to download all tracks in a .zip file. Here they are all made available as single mp3 downloads. Enjoy at your own risk.

01 : Sufjan Stevens - Chicago (Live at KCRW)
02 : Big Japan - Rise and Fall of Bill
03 : Brendan Losch - Hear Me Out
04 : Final Fantasy - Peach Plum Pear (Joanna Newsom Cover)
05 : Andrew Bird - Tables and Chairs
06 : Ken Michaels : The Sun Gets In Your Eyes
07 : Kunek - Good Day
08 : Peter Walker - What Do I Know
09 : Josh Garrels - Joyful Boy
10 : Nanoo Nanoo - 14
11 : The Polyphonic Spree - Move Away and Shine
12 : Malcolm Middleton - A Happy Medium
13 : Tally Hall - Good Day
14 : The Legends - He Knows the Sun
15 : Venice is Sinking - Pulaski Heights
16 : Radiohead - Fog (again) (live)
17 : Sunset Rubdown - Shut Up I am Dreaming of a Place Where Lovers Have Wings

Oh there is so much more to come.

EA Mix vol. 4 - The End Draws Near

EA Mix vol. 4 - The End Draws Near

download it here, or here

sorry about the lack of individual song downloads, i’ll try to have those up and working soon, but it’s too much work for right now. sorry.

01 : Sufjan Stevens - Chicago (Live at KCRW) : kcrw has some amazing music online. let me just put it out there that this radio station somehow gets amazingly talented artists to come in and record their songs in a brand new way. this version of chicago will make you want to stop listening to anything but christian indie folk music, and in a good way. oh sufjan, you are a master.

02 : Big Japan - Rise and Fall of Bill : few, if any of you, know that big japan is a band that is linked to my favorite high school drama [the o.c.] in it’s own special way. adam brody, who plays character seth cohen as well as making appearances in mr. and mrs. smith and the recent thank you for smoking, is the drummer in this little slice of somewhat awkward indie goodness. but c’mon, you’d have to expect that from adam.

03 : Brendan Losch - Hear Me Out : granted, about half way through i don’t like the break from the acoustic folk that, in my opinion, transitions awkwardly into and out of a little drum driven bridge. but it’s not my job to find a bunch of music that’s all the same drivel you can find at pitchfork or some other pretentious indie publication. no, i bring you good music with a focus on the music being good. hence, brendan losch has made the cut.

04 : Final Fantasy - Peach Plum Pear (Joanna Newsom Cover) : every so often there is a band you discover that you don’t really like [ok, so more often than not this happens]. but, then again, occasionally there’s a band that you realize you don’t like all that much that totally redeems it with a nice little cover. which is the brilliance that is found here. final fantasy on their own kinda drift about, but on their covers they seem to lock it down and find their groove [albeit stolen groove].

05 : Andrew Bird - Tables and Chairs : andrew bird is another of those indie artists that seems to benefit largely from single song downloads. he just cannot seem to but an accessible full length album together. for every lp he puts out at least 1/3 is kind experimental noise driven rubbish. lucky for you, with this mix, you get the cream of his crop.

06 : Ken Michaels : The Sun Gets In Your Eyes : if you haven’t figured it out yet, i was trying to branch out a bit on this mix album. most of the time i get into the rut of singer/songwriter indie kid with a jones for folk tunes music and run it until it’s dead. but on this mix i was looking for a bit more. a bit of eclectic oomph. welcome to ken michaels, a never-quite-gonna-make it indie act. it just sounds too much like other bands, sorry ken.

07 : Kunek - Good Day : “today, it’s gonna be, such a good day. such a good day” these lyrics reads happy, but in the song they sound depressing. ahh, my bread and butter. music that for all intents and purposes should make you feel better, but at the end they still leave you drifting in the melancholy of life. thanks kunek.

08 : Peter Walker - What Do I Know : i met peter on myspace. man i love that little slice of e-music heaven. it’s such a great site to network and discover new talent. and peter walker is definitely on the upswing of acoustic driven power pop. he’ll make it big soon, in fact i wouldn’t be surprised if you heard this song on the radio soon. “oh you couldn’t wait, oh you had to go, oh darling what do i know.”

09 : Josh Garrels - Joyful Boy : if you’ve ever been around me you know that east central indiana native j.g. is a must see, must hear. and this little rendition of joyful boy is a rare b-side only available from his website. josh is a great guy who gives great hugs. and his music is like that too. it reaches out from some warm, loop driven, folk-hop roots and gives your life a nice long lingering hug.

10 : Nanoo Nanoo - 14 : every mix album deserves at least one instrumental piece and it’s even doubly warranted when that band [one member] references mork and mindy with his name, is from relatively close to your parents house, and puts out delicious tracks on myspace regularly. on top of that he’s a nice guy who likes to talk music, make recommendations, and has a lot of honest opinions.

11 : The Polyphonic Spree - Move Away and Shine : i first heard of this band about three years ago when their single appeared in a volkswagen ad. that thirty second slice of a song inspired me enough to buy two of their albums and also go see them live when they came through louisville. and. they. are. awesome. live. anyway, they recently recorded two versions of this song for internet release, and this is by far the better of the two.

12 : Malcolm Middleton - A Happy Medium : ok, this track is truly random. filled with extraneous noise, syncopation, and the line repeated again again of “woke up again today, realized i hate myself, my face is a disease.” it reads about as depressing as an lyric you could write. but true to my musical taste this song sounds incredibly upbeat and happy. a lot of vocal echoing, multiple voice tracks, and distortion. it’s gorgeous when it’s all put together.

13 : Tally Hall - Good Day : discordant harmony, piano, clapping, words spoke-sung too fast. what more do you want? and rumor has it my roomie scotty knows people in this band. the song is about as random as they come. moving from acapella to pop driven piano rock, even ending in this kind yellow-submarine era beatles like mash up of sounds, voices, and guitar.

14 : The Legends - He Knows the Sun : smooth is the best word to describe their sound. if you took a bassline and stretched all the notes together, dripped a nice electric melody over the top, and then poured your voice through a standard early ’80s distortion machine you’d have this sound. not that it’s formulaic, but that’s what it boils down to. and it’s chill, and laid back, and beautiful. overall smooth pop.

15 : Venice is Sinking - Pulaski Heights : they might have the greatest indie name i’ve heard in quite awhile. and on top of choosing a great name they make some solid tunes. a bit like the wallflowers early material, a bit like a symphony layered with fuzzy indie tracks, a bit like soaring melodies trapped like lightning bugs and made to dance for our enjoyment.

16 : Radiohead - Fog (again) (live) : i put this song up on my music blog awhile back, but it’s so brilliant that it deserves more attention than that site generates. radiohead is one of my favorite bands. ever. and seeing them live blew me away. hands down the best show i’ve ever seen. ever. and this song as recorded in the studio is ok. but here, stripped down to just thom on a piano, blows me away with every listen. “some things will never wash away. did you go bad?”

17 : Sunset Rubdown - Shut Up I am Dreaming of a Place Where Lovers Have Wings : when your song clocks in at over seven full minutes then you’re allowed to have any length of song title that you want. even if it is a full sentence. and here, with sunset rubdown [a great little band name], they’ve created a great song that stretches your ears and your mind and takes you to a place where you actually begin to believe that lovers really do have wings.