Saturday, October 28, 2006
Tuesday, May 09, 2006
now Doom

Here's those two MF Doom tracks I promised.
And here's the article where I learned that he always wears the mask. . . always.
[mp3]MF Doom- Monosodium Glutamate
[mp3]MF Doom- Eucalyptus
Friday, May 05, 2006
4-20 gone bad

So the CU police closed a field on April 20 and posted signs that the area would be under surveillance. Then a lot of kids went on the field and smoked a bunch of pot. They had their pictures take, just like the signs said and now the police are paying anyone to identify the pictures. Check it out for yourself.
Tuesday, May 02, 2006
MF(in) Doom

I was planning on posting a great tune by MF Doom that is way too hot, but my file host is not working.
Instead you should read the new news items on the left and this interview with DJ Shadow.
Sunday, April 30, 2006
mexico

The potential legalization of certain small quanities of narcotics in Mexico is going unreported in many places and has not been published on any front page in a Mexico City newspaper. Here's an article from the San Diego Union Tribune on the issue.
A must read.
And one from the NYT.
Friday, April 28, 2006
2 new

Here's two tracks from a rather well know Seattle band, Minus the Bear. They've toured with the Appleseedcast a number of times.
Think indie/math rock with lots of clean guitar.
Enjoy.
[mp3]Minus the Bear- Pachuca Sunrise
[mp3]Minus the Bear- This Ain't a Surfin' Movie
Saturday, April 22, 2006
climate
Check out the trailer for Al Gore's new film right here. And then ride your bike.
An Inconveinent Truth
Friday, April 21, 2006
2 for friday

I haven't had much music to post recently. Here are a few dance/reggae electronic tracks. I hope you like them.
[mp3]Nightmares on Wax- Flip Ya Lid
[mp3]DJ Rupture- Leech Wisdom
Friday, April 14, 2006
better than me

There are some kids out there who are just way better at this music blog thing than I am, althought I am getting pretty good.
Today though I'm bowing out to them and telling you to go right here (for great Birdmonster tracks) and right here (for great unheard Sufjan tracks regarding Micigan locales).
Hopefully that makes your Friday a little better.
Thursday, April 13, 2006
remixed

here's few tracks from the newer DFA records remix album. enjoy.
[mp3] The Chemical Brothers- The Boxer
[mp3] Soulwax- Another Excuse
check back soon for the famous Lying in States from Chicago and some music.
Monday, April 10, 2006
from the NW

After a long delay, the music returns.
I just spent some time in Portland, OR and had the chance the see Talkdemonic play live at the famous Music Millenium. The show was a free in-store preformance and while it was a touch underwhelming, the music is really good. Imagine a instrumental mix of hip-hop beats and loops begin washed over with live drums and violin.
They were named best new band of 2005 by the Williamette Week. Give these two tracks a listen and look for more frequent updates to be certain.
[mp3] Talkdemonic- Cascade Locks
[mp3] Talkdemonic- Junesong
Read a snobby pitchfork review of the album.
As a side note, don't miss The Appleseed Cast Monday nite at Mac's Bar in Lansing, MI (if you're anywhere near there).
Friday, March 31, 2006
Thursday, March 30, 2006
luke warm english beer + Japan

I owe half of this post to gorillavsbear. He's got a great track by the German singer/songwriter Sibylle Baier. Her voice is perfectly soothing and I could easily listen to the song over and over. Check out her album here.
[mp3] Sibylle Baier- Forget About
She reminds me somewhat of Jens Lenkman's English song stylings.
[mp3] Jens Lenkman- I Saw Her at the Anti-War Demonstration
Leave me some comments.
beach eclipse

So there was an eclipse yesterday. I just found out.
As the beach boys say: I can see so much in your smile.
[mp3]-The Beach Boys: Don't Talk (put your head on my shoulder)
Tuesday, March 28, 2006
haircut + hip hop

There have been a number of protests regarding the immigration legislation. NPR does a pretty nice job of outlining things here.
Music for today. . .
Jason Forrest (see previous post) is on the Cock Rock Disco label. On their site you can download a sampler album as well as check out a bunch of crazy photos from the 70s. Here is my favorite, well one of them, from the sampler.
It seems that Food for Animals does not have anything in the way of an album out yet, but if this track is any indication of what it will be, I'll wait for it. They create hip-hop backed by beats that sound as though they have gone through a paper shredder and lost and top of bottom end. Just listen to it.
[mp3] Food for Animals- Elephants
Monday, March 27, 2006
new animal + monday music

This animal was found in Borneo. No one knew it existed. Someone then drew a picture of it.
Here's a single Kings of Convenience remix for your Monday enjoyment.
[mp3] Kings of Convenience- Drop (remix)
(originally by Cornelius)
Saturday, March 25, 2006
destroyed laptops

Jason Forrest is playing at the UICA in Grand Rapids tonight. You should go see him for sure. I'll be tending bar but you should be head nodding to his gorgeous sample drive laptop-tech-classic rock.
Check out this incredible video for his song War Photographer.
I think he has a viking/warlord/wizard obsession.
Friday, March 24, 2006
apples and others

If you haven't hear the most recent release from The Appleseed Cast, I'm really sorry, but for your enjoyment I've posted my favorite from the album.
[mp3] The Appleseed Cast- The Clock and The Storm
Here's one of my personal favorites from the Low Level Owl two disc series. If you do not yet own these two albums now would be a good time to get them.
If you're in the Holland area call The Full Circle @ 616-392-9899
If you're anywhere else click.
[mp3] The Appleseed Cast- View of a Burning City
"It's time to herald The Appleseed Cast for what they are now, and what they're about to become: ground breaking." - Pitchfork
Thursday, March 23, 2006
Indulgent

Say Anything is true emo/pop punk and it's indulgent when you claim to love "good" music. It's like anything else, when you get into it, you just want more. (By more, I mean air guitar and lip syncing.)
Just give it a try and move on if you hate it.
[mp3] Say Anything- Belt
[mp3] Say Anything- Wow, I Can Get Sexual Too (not so much emoish, but catchy as hell)
Tuesday, March 21, 2006
finally some music

I know it's been over a week and for those of you who actually check this, I'm sorry. Hey, but at least you're getting free tracks. . .right?
Most recently, I've been enjoying an obscure 2004 release by Grizzly Bear titled Horn of Plenty. If you dig a little you can get the record re-release from 2005 with the remix disc included for only a few more bucks.
[mp3] Grizzly Bear- This Song
[mp3] Grizzly Bear- Eavesdropping (Simon Bookish remix)
Monday, March 13, 2006
your new favorite dance track

Sample the danceable, rock-twinged house of The Juan McLean courtesy of the Astralwerks sampler disc.
[mp3]-The Juan McLean- Give Me Every Little Thing
Saturday, March 11, 2006
2 tracks
Indie rock with a guitar riff heavy classic rock feel and ruff-edged drumming
[mp3]Tapes n' Tapes- crazy eights
Smooth, drifting alt-country with female vocals full of melody and lush feeling
[mp3] Neko Case- at last
Wednesday, March 08, 2006
the future
watch in quicktime here.
Guillemots

After Destroyer, Guillemots is likely the best I've heard recently. They've got great Flaming Lipsesque base lines with poppy almost Coldplay vocals. They remind of The Verve, but really fun to listen to.
2 tracks here.
Friday, March 03, 2006
Thursday, March 02, 2006
Wednesday, March 01, 2006
what now?
listen to Manitoba.
take the indie test (or don't because taking it wouldn't be indie).
Tuesday, February 28, 2006
worth buying

1. Tapes 'n tapes- gorillavsbear has been touting this great band for a while and their most recent release, the loon has recieved a Best New Music Distinction from pitchforkmedia, that's a pretty big deal. Samples available on their homepage.
2. The Research- this UK-based three piece play some really nice synth-based almost new wave pop. The two girls and one guy all take turns singing. These songs are just basic, easy going pop for everyday listening. You'll like it. I found them on saidthegrammaphone, but the band has an incredible site with a nice music player. listen to "Lonley hearts still beat the same" first.

3. Grizzly Bear- Although this album came out in 2004, it's still great. This Brookly group can be filed under almost freak-folk with a twinge of electronic. The 2004 release "Horn of Plenty" is full of flute, heavy drums, far away singing, experiemental sounds and antique guitar chords. I love this record. There is even a full remix disc. It's the disc everyone should be listening to, but I'd be so mad if they were. . .
4 tracks at their myspace page.
not so good

The band Lovedrug has been getting a bunch of press lately. Iguessi'mfloating has some free tracks today from them. They sound like Radiohead before they knew what they were doing, which I guess if a compliment, or like the Doves if they had only half the talent. They play the kind of songs, over-sung quasi emo ballads about the healing process and people being angels that I don't think are cool anymore, I did when I was 19 or 20. I can understand why Lovedrug is popular, but they aren't doing anything interesting. If you like Copeland, Mae (whom Lovedrug is touring a number of Christian colleges with . . .hmmmmmm?)then you'll like Love drug. At least check out the free songs and judge them for yourself.
Friday, February 24, 2006
free and nice
If you haven't heard Mylo yet, you're really late to catch on and have been missing out. He's making what might be the best electronic music out right now-and it's Scottish, not French. . hard to believe, I know.
The song by The Joggers is really nice as well. It's sound like The Strokes forgot about melody and are a little drunk.
local talent

Nate Boylan, aka DJ Freddy Boylan, has been putting some serious work into his production and his mixes are really beginning to take shape. He's truly a breakbeat, trance, hardhouse addict. I really like to spastic and heavy nature of his mixes. Check out a whole bunch of his stuff here.
He also loves donkeys and donkey basketball.
Thursday, February 23, 2006
mainstream credit
must read
Wednesday, February 22, 2006
J Dilla/Jay Dee (updated)

listen to more samples here at NRP.org and listen to a podcast remembering him there as well.
I'm late to catch on here, but at least I did finally. The late producer/artist James Yancey created some of the most original and smoothest hip-hop to come out of not just Detroit, but anywhere. This post is much too short for the credit he is due and I'll add more later but for now check out his myspace page for 4 tracks and buy his last release "Donuts". The second track "Workinonit" is truly a work of musical art.
-His page on the great Stones Throw Records site.
-Pop Matters article
-massive free mp3 tribute on hiphopmusic.com
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
hot chip

Now that I've decided to focus the music section of Silverwagon on electronic and its many forms, the London-based, new wave, dance rock group Hot Chip seems like a good start. (As well as the fact that they're the top post on a bunch of other music blogs recently.)
Let's start with the name. As soon as I read it I thought of chip beef on toast. When I think of chip beef on toast and then think of British electronic music, I laugh. So then I checked them out on itunes and I laughed at them again, this time because the album cover art work made me think of a person with a emotionally devestating IQ attempting to build a keyboard and then I thought of chip beef on toast and kept laughing. So I played some samples. . .
Hot Chip makes really authentic electronic music. They don't make any really memorable music, it's just fun to listen to. As I'm listening to No Fit State, hearing one singer repeat "I'm in no fit state," while the other lists reasons why he's in no fit state in a sort of call and response thing, I keep thinking: I hope this song keep going for around an hour. This is all sung over a droaning synth-pop keyboard and drooping base line, but it makes sense. Hot Chips songs would make the perfect soundtrack to a dream about playing video games at a friend's house afterschool in fifth grade. Sitting there on the couch with a bag of doritos open, shoes off in dim light. The clicks and gliding pops of Hot Chip's songs and their joking lyrics are the right sounds for listening alone or with a few friends-this isn't really dance floor fare.
Joe Goddard and Alexis Taylor write this on their myspace page in an effort to explain their music. . .
"we started making music because we were bored with alot of other music. We loved the idea of 'pop' music but not the people who make 'pop' music now. We loved Phil Spector and the Beach Boys, Kraftwerk and Robert Wyatt, timbaland and Madlib, Brian Eno and Devo, Anti-Pop Consortium and Aphex Twin, Will Oldham and Royal Trux. We decided to make our band different from most electronic music by playing everything live- no backing tracks, no computers. We decided to make our music different from most indie music- 4 keyboards and a drum machine, not all guitars. We decided to write folk songs and record them on old synthesizers. We decided to sing honest words about food and love, and try to make people laugh the way you laugh at richard pryor in the same song too. We made one album in Joe's bedroom for Moshi Moshi records, then we made another album for EMI still in Joe's bedroom (this one is coming out next spring). We used a computer to make them but almost everything on them was played by us with a keyboard on our lap whilst sitting on the bed."
On their most promising song, Over and Over, Hot Chip sings "Over and over. . .like a monkey with a minature cymbal, the joy of repetition really is in you." That sums it up, but the repetition is infectious.
-4 tracks available on Hot Chip's myspace page
-2 more at Palmsout blog
"Hot chip will break your legs, snap off your head."
Friday, February 17, 2006
Tuesday, February 14, 2006
live Jim White+Handsome Family

Jim White's music is simple. Basic 3/4 or 4/4 country drum beats back his very simple guitar lines and chords often affected with tremolo and deep reverb. He sings his past really. White grew up in the Pentecostal community of

Well you see, it's a deeper culture for those viewing it on the outside, but to the people participating in it, it's simply living. That's different. You don't notice the gems as much I think when you're caught up in the midst of it. You can't notice how pretty a river is... if you're 6 feet under the water drifting along. If you’re flying in an airplane over it and you look down, you say 'what a magnificent river.' Well I never got a chance to say 'what a magnificent river' until I left home and traveled all over the world and then, from a great distance, looked at my home and thought
"God what a beautiful place, let me go back there." And now that I'm back there, I appreciate it. But I don't know that the people who are here really think about it much.
His live performance was an equal mix of music and storytelling. While watching White on stage I couldn't help but think of the VH1 program storytellers how the rather intimate concert would have made a perfect episode. Between songs White would drift into stories ranging from where he was when he wrote the last song or why other folk musicians might look down on him for using a "Japanese orchestra" to loop guitar lines and vocals instead of using a full band. Whenever a story would make its way into a song, the room would take on the feel of an abandoned car on a dusty southern highway with the radio still on and the driver's door open. As I have seen few folk musicians play, White's performance was a rich experience, leaving me with a sense that I'd visited his home for a short walk down a path he knew well, walking along behind him with everyone else in the room.

Imagine any bar south of the
The Handsome Family's talent shines in their lyrics, written mainly by Rennie, a former fiction writer. Most of the songs revolve around the common themes of death, murder, drug overdose, excessive drinking and dead animals. These off themes, when set to basic country western music create such a strange feeling that I couldn't help but stare at the musicians as they played and sang thinking, "they travel around the country singing this stuff and what the hell does their house look like?" I have a feeling I was not the only wondering these things. It's as though being drunk and evicted at the same time would be a perfect few hours spent prior to seeing The Handsome Family play live-and I guess that's why I enjoyed it as much as I did. Looking over the tops of ten or so beer bottles in a cold dark room in February next to some good company watching a grown man sing, "I had nothing to say on Christmas day when you threw all your clothes in the snow. When you burnt your hair, knocked over chairs, I just tried to stay out of your way. But when you fell asleep with blood on your teeth, I got in my car and drove away," was truly a good cap to a winter weekend. Yeah, their jokes got old and I could play songs just as well, but dog-gone-it, they're just such interesting people.
I haven't posted any free samples because you should really buy music from these two truly original artists.
Monday, February 06, 2006
In These Times

Some of the loudest, most proudly ignorant guessing in the world is going on in Washington today. Our leaders are sick of all the solid information that has been dumped on humanity by research and scholarship and investigative reporting. They think that the whole country is sick of it, and they could be right. It isn’t the gold standard that they want to put us back on. They want something even more basic. They want to put us back on the snake-oil standard.
-Blues For America
A larger excerpt from the Sunday Herald.
Saturday, February 04, 2006
The Knife

Give Heartbeats a listen and see what I mean. A link to the Jose Gonzalez cover of the track is here.
Then head over to the Rabid Records site and check out a bunch of samples from other albums including the already sold out Silent Shout record.
Friday, February 03, 2006
Monday, January 30, 2006
Free Ted Leo + the Pharmacists

Pitchfork's Robert Mitchum had this to say regarding the band's 2003 Hearts of Oak album. . .
"Eschewing pretentious unpretentiousness for unguarded passion, strict '77-'82 influences for the classic rock stop on the FM dial, calculated instrumental inadequacy for guitar solos that are less technical flaunting (looking at you, Malkmus) than skillful, noisy exorcisms, Ted Leo makes a sound filled with so much authentic abandon that the British mags probably can't handle it."
check out a bunch of free mp3s here and and the current tour stops here.
Thursday, January 26, 2006
Live

I've stumbled across Bradley's Almanac and his great collection of live mp3s. He records everything right in the crowd with a Sony minidisc recorder-he even takes some pretty nice pictures.
I highly reccomend the Explosions in the Sky set and the American Analog Set set.
click on the names to go right to the download page.
Each set is only available for short time though. . .
Friday, January 20, 2006
No mowers
Thursday, January 19, 2006
The wait begins

The Appleseed Cast (myspace page) is set to release their newest album in March, but thanks to I Guess I'm Floating we've got a preview and it sounds great. Head over to the blog to hear two new tracks as well as an amazing array of free indie mp3s. .

Also, you've got to watch the preview for this new documentary by Eugene Jarecki title Why We Fight.
It's scheduled for relase tomorrow likely in NY and LA.
It looks incredible.
Read the interview with the film maker on the offical website as well-very insightful.
Monday, January 16, 2006
Friday, January 13, 2006
Koppel and little else

"I have been an unabashed fan of NPR for many years and have stolen untold excellent ideas from its programming. It's time to give something back."
This came from the mouth of Ted Koppel when asked about his decision to join NPR in June as a senior news analyst. I think Neal Conan and Mr. Koppel should have a bare knuckle boxing match in NPR fleece vests with the winner recieving the host spot on Talk of the Nation. . .
Aside from realizing through a friend that the 70s rock group CAN was a decade or two ahead of everyone else, I'd don't have much else.
Check out all the new links (that's where I steal all my ideas).
Wednesday, January 11, 2006
Watch this
watch it here in Windows media.
watch it here in Real player.
oh, and read the real post for today below.
Not indie. . .but pretty damn good
Although We Are Scientists newest release Love and Squalor has been available overseas for months now, it's U.S. release yesterday caught the attention of not just this blogger, but most of the music blog community.
Love and Squalor is sure one of the next "it" albums with its almost perfect straddling of the line between furiously catchy pop-punk and that wildly popular greasy hair garage band sound. And even though the album is a Virgin release and the band has appeared on Letterman, it's indie rock. While comparisons to The Strokes and The Killers will inevitably be made over the coming months as "everybody else" becomes aware of the New York-based threesome, We are Scientists have something unique. (Or it could just be bassist Chris Cain's really thin moustache.)
While listening to the Inaction mp3 for close to a week now, thanks to gorillavsbear, the high octave guitar lines and Beatlesesque backing vocals on the chorus had me wondering what else these guys might have already released. It seems the two EPs which the band has released are still import only from the UK and one is available from iTunes.
Upon a full listen of the record, Nobody Move, Nobody Get Hurt will likely be the U.S. favorite, but certainly not the best track. The chours here beomes a little repetitive, fortunatly the music keep the song interesting. Can't Lose, the record's fifth track, begins with a poppy bouncing bass and drum mix as lead singer Keith Murray sings, "The party's alright, I might wanna stop drinking, what we're we talking about?" It's one of those songs, as most of the albums tracks are, one can find themself singing along with by the time the third or fourth chorus comes around. . . on first listen. That classic disco loose off-beat high hat snare combo is smattered all over the record and specifically The Great Escape and Worth the Wait. Both tracks immeditatly draw comparisons to the genres already-famous bands, We Are Scientists never lets that sound carry the song thugh, but instead refreshes the sound at the chorus with bigger guitars and drawn out singing.
While a lot can be said for the ultra-catchy hooks on the this records and the fact that almost everytrack could potentially be a favorite, We Are Scientists are not the next greatest thing in indie rock. Love and Squalor is great record with twelve well-written songs-and that's a perfect answer for a rainy January.
Read the Pitchfork review here.
listen and watch videos here.
Monday, January 09, 2006
Let it be known

Mylo will be big.
If you haven't heard of him or heard his tunes, let it be known that you read it here first. Mylo is creating what is some of the best electronic music available.
Check out a great review and some samples here and check Silverwagon again for more on this Scottish electronic pioneer.
Friday, January 06, 2006
Good for a Friday
you were expecting an ipod, oh well how about some pink, raw-ass meat instead?
The emotions, I imagine, a 14-year-old girl would be going through upon finding meat when expecting an ipod.
1. Anger
2. Confusion
3. Lack of appetite
4. Confusion (due to odor)
5. Sadness
6. Denial
7. Compelling desire to contact local news and show them the meat.
Tuesday, January 03, 2006
No one else

I've been checking out a lot of year-end "best of" lists. Many of them overlap which is proof of the music's quality. Bands such as Deerhoof, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Bloc Party and Wolf Parade have all been written up and read up over the past three weeks-and they're great groups. You've probably already checked out many of those lists yourself and heard much of the music, so I've got a reccomendation that I have not found on anyone's "best of 2005" list.
Hird is the name the Swedish Christoffer Berg has given to his musical creation. On his 2005 debut release Moving On, the 22-year-old Berg is the mastermind behind every sound on the disc. Not only is the record the first full lenght release for Hird, it's the first album distributed DMN Dealers of Nordic Music. For only having released a few albums so far the site is a great introduction to the Scandinavian electronic scene.
The word nu-jazz appears all over the place in descriptions of Berg's nordic electronic creations. And really that's what you'll hear. While many of the tracks have a club feel to them, you won't find anything near a house anthem here. Jazz is hiding behind every syncopated note here and the female vocals suggest a deep appreciation for Ella Fitzgerald. Nine tracks of silky traveling chillout with a souful jazz backdrop is what you'll enjoy on first listen. On repeated plays the layers will peel themselves back revealing what is just really good mid-tempo electronic jazz. Every cut is outlined with a mellow yet soulful organ creating a warm nest for the deep bass high hat combos. Even though the vocals come across at first listen as repetitive, it's as though they are more part of the music than actually words. The words here continue, they travel, they don't merely repeat.
The album's jewel, Moving On, is the perfect soundtrack to a early winter drive through Sweden, I'd imagine, or an October run along a Michigan coast. Christoffer Berg has made a truly pleasing electronic album and certainly will again.
Check out Hird samples and many of the other DNM artists at the DNM Loft.