This one's for Lamar I love Muscles. I fucking love Muscles. For those of you who don't know, he's this dude from Australia who I image just hangs out on the beach all day, drinks and parties. Muscles doesn't care what you think, singing off key and just making this sick electro jams about fun in the sun. Who doesn't love an album called Guns Babes Lemonade with songs about Ice Cream. Ice Cream was by far my favorite song last year I don't even know what else to say. I just wish Mr. Muscles would come throw a party somewhere in the North East.
Muscles - The Lake There's something about Lemonade, maybe its the fact that its in Muscles's album title, or their slightly cheesey synth jams, or maybe its just the remix, but these guys sing a little off key and are just having a pantload of fun. I can also imagine muscles drinking lemonade on the beach. So far I'm liking this track and I'm having flashbacks to Muscles. Just listen.
I'm tired so I'm going to keep it short. Nomo hails from somewhere in the midwest and make some legit afrobeat electro funk jazz madness. So many instruments! Check out the first track from their excellent new album Ghost Rock. I am listening to this album a lot, my hips don't lie.
DLZ is my favorite track off the new TV on the Radio album. What can I say, it just kills me when he breaks in with the professor. Just a whirlwind of sound, don't fight it. Oh yeah and we're going to see them in October, NDB. DLZ is like the Paul Pierce of the album, it might not get all the credit it deserves, but in the end it is always baller.
TV on the Radio - DLZ Last but certainly not least is the new remix of Radiohead's Reckoner by my mancrush of the past few months -- Flying Lotus. With the grainyness in the background, Thom Yorke's ethereal mewing and the syncopation, its like the score for an old film noir on acid. love it
Passion Pit EP release party 9.18.08 @ Great Scott, Allston MA
It was a dark and stormy night, actually not really, but Chris, devoted fan X and myself journeyed to Great Scott to see Passion Pit rock some hipsters. Wow, so many skinny jeans and bangs. Hipster Mecca! The show starts with some DJ stuff and another dude, but before Passion Pit come on, we are first introduced to Big Digits, a local electro karaoke outfit. One of the two lead singers/rappers/yellers comes on stage wearing tight white jean cutoff shorts, a white mickey mouse sweatshirt, a handlebar mustache and a crazy weird sequined face covering thing. I wish I had a picture, actually sort of freightening, especially when we jumps into the crowd. But despite our initial skepticism, Big Digits were actually really fun and a great warmup for the big ticket. So finally its Passion Pit. They walk on stage with a huge group of guys, some of whom look painfully young. But thats neither here nor there. After a few early technical difficulties, they just start to fucking jam. They played all six of their songs off Chunk of Change. While all the songs really got the crowd into it, Sleepyhead was one of the best live songs I have ever heard. Everyone was going wild and just moving. The breakdowns in the song were just these walls of electro. One thing that should be said is that Passion Pit's lead singer's falsetto is accompanied by the most ridiculous facial expressions I have ever seen. The songs had heart, the effort they all put in was endearing adn in short it was a great night. I can't wait to see what they do next and I'm looking forward to seeing them again. Go buy Chunk of Change from their myspace, its perfect for driving fyi. Do it do it do it do it.
a standout: Passion Pit - Smile Upon Me One of the after effects of the concert is that we all suffered permanent hearing loss. So usually I think of my hearing as a pizza with pepperonis. Usually after a concert the pepperonis have been eaten off my pizza, but after a little effort they can get put back on. But after this concert, a whole slice has been eaten and that cannot get put back on. At least it was worth it.
PS. I shed a tear for the Pats yesterday. ugly ugly ugly
First off, I love Burial. I find myself missing dreary ole London and Burial brings me right back to those evenings walking along Euston or through Regents Park. Burial helps me just sit and be. Great stuff. Banjo and Freakout has covered Burial's Archangel to smashing success. The track starts off slow like a slow dark wave coming to shore and just as its about to break his ethereal vocals start. Mr. Banjo takes Archangel from the realm of earthly comtemplation and blasts the listener into outer weightless outerspace where nothing at all matters. This is a great song for a train ride, bedtime or anytime you just want to take a little time off. I will be listening to it a lot in the coming days. I hope we hear more from this guy.
British: Allo. It's loik, me mate Moik Skinnah's got a new bit of wuerk, an' it's loik reely reely fun to take a listen to.
American: Mike Sinner, otherwise known as The Streets, dropped his newest album, "Everything is Borrowed" in the UK yesterday. It's fly.
British: No, seeriouslee, it's loik reely sumfin ewlse. Loik he quits the rappin' bit and does loik a whole load of singin'.
American: On the album, Skinner gradually moves away from rapping towards more melodic compositions that feature choruses and sung lyrics.
British: Aftah that last dodgy bit wiv the Easy Livin' business, I was a touch worried, but this is loik reely top notch. I mean, it's probubly not up there wiv A Grand Don't Come For Free or loik Original Poirate Materiew, but it's loik pri-eey feckin' good.
American: Rebounding from a sub-par third album, Skinner captures the energy of Original Pirate Material and A Grand Don't Come For Free, but in a new and upbeat way. Well played, and a pleasant surprise after a mediocre first single.
A couple weeks ago I saw an awesome documentary, Gonzo, at this cool movie joint in Providence called Cable Car Cinema, a Cool Combo Coffee Cafe and Couch Cinema. It was all about Hunter S. Thompson, author of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, political journalist, Godfather of Gonzo, and all-around total badass. Seriously, he was one freakin' cool dude. He sat down at a bar, ordered 2 margaritas and 6 beers, and followed it up with "and find out what my friends are having". Ball-er.
Anyway, stumbled across this sick picture with one of his most famous quotes and decided to post some HST-inspired tunes. I should probably be drunk while writing this, but alas I fall short on the note at the moment. Enjoy.
These are all pretty money tracks. We start off with a relaxed but funky Chemical Brothers track. I've never been able to get into the Chemical Brothers the way I think I should, but this is awesomely soulfull electronica that is complete money in the bank. The more I listen to this track, the more I want to listen to this track. Good sign.
The next track is a mixtape mainstay that will never cease to remind me of Montreal. For no reason at all. This track is straight up awesome. I mean, with lyrics like "Red wine with every meal and Absinthe after dinner," how can you go wrong? Minus the Bear have kind of fallen off the radar (if they were ever on it), but the classics off of Highly Refined Pirates just never get old.
The Faint come next with an oft overlooked track off of Danse Macabre. Sure Glass Danse, Your Retro Career Melted, and Agenda Suicide are awesome. But Violent really captures the essence of The Faint at their best - stuttering beats, detached vocals, sick synthesized strings, and a sweet breakbeat. Gotta love the way this track grows until it's right in the center of your skull.
Finally, let's close up with Atmosphere's Smart Went Crazy. A fun retro beat anchored by blistering guitar sets a perfect backdrop for Ant's up-tempo flow and hard hits. God I love the Rhymesayers. More people should make hip hop like Atmosphere, Brother Ali, MF Doom, et al. Listening to Atmosphere makes me want to bump some Sage Francis. More on that later, perhaps.
Like Vanilla and Chocolate. Sonny and Cher. Peanut Butter and Bacon. Triscuits and Barbeque Sauce. Some partnerships were just meant to be.
I finally got around to checking out the Brian Eno/David Byrne collaboration "Everything That Happens Will Happen Today". It's awesome. Pretty different from their first album together, which came out in approximately 1932, this album combines their individual personalities into a very digestible, accessible album. Some songs sound very Talking Heads-ish, while others push the edge of the mainstream a little harder. Much like Eno's career, these tracks could very easily tip toward the very weird or toward the very pop.
I dig. Here are a couple of my favorite tracks - I definitely recommend you check it out if you've ever liked Simon and Garfunkel or much American Folk Pop stuff. Or, you know, if you've ever liked Brian Eno, David Byrne, or Talking Heads.
Also, CHECK IT. New way to post tracks that doesn't involve zshare and bouncing ads of girls in bikinis. Ballin'.
Also, I was reminded by a visit this weekend to my sister's apartment in New York City (as well as a post today on My Old Kentucky Blog) about Pogo's really cool Alice In Wonderland tracks. Prefuse 73/Books-ish, these tracks be fly. Peep them at now.
Hi there. Sorry I haven't posted in a while, I've been really busy at work. Yesterday I had that stereotypical moment of running to a Fedex store to mail a really important document before tropical storm Hanna drenched Boston. Regardless, I felt pretty cool and now the gallery is going to be a lot more relaxed for a while. phew.
So I'm just going to throw a lot of new music that I've found recently at you. So here we go. Benoit Pioulard makes this dreamy shoegaze folk that is the prefect music for a lazy humid night. Just as it was last night in Boston. What a coincidence huh?
Benoit Pioulard - Idyll Krautrock gets a bad rap in my opinion. I really like sauerkraut. But yeah, so while Tussle isn't for everyone, I just really feel that absolutely savage beat that underlies the entire song. And just remember Of Montreal loves krautrock too, especially on perhaps my favorite song from last year, the Past is a Grotesque Animal.
Tussle - Night of the Hunter This one's for Chris. Remember Hail Social, that decent, generic band from Philly? Well one of their members has released this free EP under the moniker Weird Tapes and its crazy! Check it out for free at their myspace or blog hailsocial.blogspot.com. Imagine disco funk flying through space. Insane.
Weird Tapes - The Heavens Some new rap from Kid Cudi, the perfect song to walk down a street at night to.
This MGMT hype is getting out of control. Even their buddies from Wesleyan Boy Crisis are getting talked about. This song's ok, sort of catchy, but its pretty much the same schtick.
I'd like to take a minute to just address an awesomely hilarious trend in hip hop - presidential endorsements. And while I've yet to hear a hip hop track backing John McCain and Sarah Palin (maybe Jamie Lynn Spears will come out in support? too soon?), the vibes are flowing for Barack Obama.
I don't want to belittle anyone's personally held opinion. But seriously, who cares who Lil Wayne thinks would make the best Leader of the Free World? Reminds me of this:
AWESOME.
So here are a few politically-oriented tracks, all of them good, in addition to funny.
First up comes Young Jeezy and Nas. He didn't write this, just so you know. He tells you that, right off the bat. Next up, describing his Lambo, which I'm guessing is short for Lamborghini. I can't believe I know how to spell Lamborghini...i didn't even spell check that, pinky promise.
Highlights of this track: Jeezy promising, "I will e-mail Jesus, tell him forward to Moses and CC Allah". What?? Then, Nas proposes that Barack Obama (as of now, unelected) have his face put on the $5,000 bill. Then, Jeezy tells us that it's June 3rd, at 2:08 am. How many songs do you know that have a time stamp on them? It's like the weather report in the middle of "We Built This City". So random, so awesome.
Highlights of this cut, which is off of Da Drought 3 and uses the beat from Nas and JayZ's "Black Republican": Despite the title, the first line of the song is "I feel like a Black Republican nah I can't call it, more like a Black Democrat. Then Juelz calls Obama "Baracka". Then proceeding to state that the Rock of Gibralter has somehow fallen on him. He can't feel his face. For real, though, Weezy kills it on this track.
Finally, a change of pace with the Cold War Kids covering Radiohead's Electioneering from Stereogum's OKX Compilation. As usual, Nathan Willet sounds like someone is killing a cat and stretching its vocal chords at the same time. Much like the cover CWK did of Sam Cooke's awesome "A Change Is Gonna Come". But somehow it works. Anyway, this cover slows down the original big time, and really lays the sparse Cold War Kids style on Thom Yorke's brilliant, barely-make-sense lyrics.
These songs are posted for evaluation and sampling purposes only. The contributors to The Stu Reid Experiment support artists we enjoy by purchasing their albums and merchandise and by attending their shows. We encourage you to do likewise. Through this site, we want to share the love of good music with people across the interwebs, motivating them to support these artists. If you own the copyright to one of these songs and would like a song removed, please let us know. We do not keep an archive of our songs, and we will remove any file immediately upon request.
Please feel free to hit us up at thestureidexperiment@gmail.com with questions, comments, advertisement inquiries, or music you think we'd like to hear.