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Man I've also gotten a bit more impatient and curmudgeonly about music as I've gotten older but I sure am glad I'm not at the point where I'm deciding if I like a song after less than 10 seconds
Generally I agree with this, and I've eaten crow on a lot of music. But I do think sometimes you just know. We have this radio station in town that bills itself as a kind of eclectic, anything-goes station, but what it really means is that is plays a lot of run-of-the-mill white singer-songwriters that aren't overbearingly popular but aren't remarkable in any way. It's a lot of stuff like this:
This type of thing is easily 10-seconds-and-done for me. But only because I've heard a lot of other music like this and I've had the same kind of reaction to all of it.
Joined: Tue September 24, 2013 5:56 pm Posts: 47166 Location: In the oatmeal aisle wearing a Shellac shirt
Kevin Davis wrote:
Jorge wrote:
Man I've also gotten a bit more impatient and curmudgeonly about music as I've gotten older but I sure am glad I'm not at the point where I'm deciding if I like a song after less than 10 seconds
Generally I agree with this, and I've eaten crow on a lot of music. But I do think sometimes you just know. We have this radio station in town that bills itself as a kind of eclectic, anything-goes station, but what it really means is that is plays a lot of run-of-the-mill white singer-songwriters that aren't overbearingly popular but aren't remarkable in any way. It's a lot of stuff like this:
This type of thing is easily 10-seconds-and-done for me. But only because I've heard a lot of other music like this and I've had the same kind of reaction to all of it.
Bingo. I feel like my life is hurtling towards expiration at an alarming rate. I'm not necessarily interested in hearing another coffee shop style singer-songwriter.
Joined: Thu February 02, 2017 10:39 am Posts: 5624 Location: Most likely at the office...
tragabigzanda wrote:
Kevin Davis wrote:
Jorge wrote:
Man I've also gotten a bit more impatient and curmudgeonly about music as I've gotten older but I sure am glad I'm not at the point where I'm deciding if I like a song after less than 10 seconds
Generally I agree with this, and I've eaten crow on a lot of music. But I do think sometimes you just know. We have this radio station in town that bills itself as a kind of eclectic, anything-goes station, but what it really means is that is plays a lot of run-of-the-mill white singer-songwriters that aren't overbearingly popular but aren't remarkable in any way. It's a lot of stuff like this:
This type of thing is easily 10-seconds-and-done for me. But only because I've heard a lot of other music like this and I've had the same kind of reaction to all of it.
Bingo. I feel like my life is hurtling towards expiration at an alarming rate. I'm not necessarily interested in hearing another coffee shop style singer-songwriter.
Yep, I clicked that to see what KD was exampling and I lasted pretty much exactly 10 seconds.
I'm not often like that though, but sometimes you just know. I appreciate that I risk missing some stuff that I may actually end up quite liking. But I'm willing to take that gamble if the desire to press stop kicks in strong enough.
Oops, I fell behind on updating this last week, but the fourth track from Constellation's Corona Borealis series is "Gates of Heaven" by Jason Sharp, an 18 minute layered improvisation on solo bass saxophone recorded in a synagogue in Madison, Wisconsin that bears the same name as the track.
This week's fifth track is "Emerald Teeth" by T. Gowdy. It's in much the same vein as his album from this year, Therapy with Colour, which I've found kinda boring, so this is one that might end up my least favorite of the Corona Borealis tracks, but it's got some things going for it when I'm in the mood for this particular brand of stuttering minimal techno.
Constellation's sixth Corona Borealis single is "Mirror Cracks Seeking Interiority" by Fly Pan Am. Lockdown put the kibosh on FPA's triumphant return to touring this year (they had been on hiatus for 15 years), as well as prematurely ended their run as the live soundtrack for the Animals of Distinction dance project, Frontera. Instead the band has spent the year experimenting on new ways of making music, including remixing some of their Frontera material. This new piece is the first result of those experiments, essentially solo material from each of the band's four members all collaboratively remixed and stitched together into a coherent whole.
Last year, Joni Void released his second full-length under that moniker, Mise En Abyme which included on one song a collaboration with vocalist N Nao. This blossomed into a greater collaboration that saw the two begin performing as a duo in Montreal and has now resulted in their first album together, Nature Morte, now out on the French label Laaps. It's a lovely surrealist montage of electronic production and ambient vocalizations. Bandcamp:
TSU! is the moniker for solo work released by Turkish musician James Hakan Dedeoglu, who I know of as a collaborator with the Montreal band Esmerine. Dedeoglu has been releasing TSU! music since 2012 and his fifth album, Maritime is out now. It's an album of psych-influenced Anatolian instrumental folk, primarily featuring Dedeoglu on various guitars and sounds as well as contributions from some other Turkish musicians (producer/bassist Mert Aslan Uçer, percussionist Berke Can Özcan, and keyboardist Ekin Sanaç) as well as Esmerine co-founder Bruce Cawdron. Bandcamp:
if you dont know Vennart or his work with Oceansize (one of my fav bands ever), give this a shot:
I am unfamiliar. But super interested. I'll start with the new Vennart record and if I dig that I'll listen to some Oceanside.
What's the best Oceansize to start with?
Not sure what 'bain would say, but my recommendation would be Everyone into Position since I think it's got the best songs or Self-Preserved While the Bodies Float Up since it covers the most stylistic ground and is closest to what Vennart's doing on his own.
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