
Stereolab Chemical Chords

Stereolab Chemical Chords

“The Tears of Music and Love” kicks off Deerhoof’s latest full-length Offend Maggie like the Rolling Stones being force-fed into a blender. When the sedate vocals of Satomi Matsuzaki pipe up you know your in Deerhoof territory. Equally characteristic is Greg Saunier’s frantic powerhouse drumming. Relying on a drumset that contains only a kick drum, a snare and a handful of cymbals Saunier coaxes infinite nuance and patterns out of minimal ingredients. This coupled with the outstanding production of Ian and Joe Pellicci at Tiny Telephone Studios in San Francisco makes for a listen that is at once jarring and beautiful.
None of this would come as a surprise to a seasoned Deerhoof fan. The band has been combining Who-like guitar assaults with mathematical drumming and Dadaist lyrics for over ten years, typically knocking out a record a year. What makes Offend Maggie special is just how beautiful they made their post-modern blend this time around. The title track is easily the most gorgeous tune the group has written to date. The acoustic guitar overlaps arpeggios with the electric, sounding like rock music from the far East.
Heart-on-the-sleeve lyrics would be an easy fit to such emotive sounds. But, that just wouldn’t be Deerhoof. Matsuzaki colors Offend…with her playful surrealism; “Do you know me, calling your number? Do I know you? Don’t call this number.” There is an obvious interest in human connection there, but songs like “Basketball Get Your Groove Back” don’t offer a whole lot of signposts. Instead Matsuzaki just irritatingly repeats “Basketball, basketball, bounce. Bunny jump, bunny jump.” You might think it comes from an outsider’s grasp on the English language (Matsuzaki moved over from Japan in the mid 90’s). But then again, Deerhoof has never appeared to be weird on accident. These guys are smart.
****

The picture on the cover of Sigur Ros’ latest effort must be a sign post. The Icelandic group reached notoriety with an untitled album typically called () which featured prominently in the Tom Cruise film Vanilla Sky. Ever since the band has become associated with dramatic, ambient songs that are far too often compared with Iceland’s glacial landscape. The photograph of those pale-skinned young men streaking across a sunny highway could wipe away the threat of most things ‘glacial’.
From the opening track “Gobbledigook” it is clear that the band has used the sidesteps on their last album Takk as a springboard for a much more joyous sound. ”Gobbledigook” eludes genre description with its double-time drum bombast, coupled with staccato acoustic guitar playing. It flows seamlessly into “Inni…” which takes the playfulness of the opening track and expands it to orchestral heights.
The shorter tracks (3:00-4:00) are another departure from the group’s past. Replacing their typical approach of: start at a moody hush and slowly crescendo into melodramatic explosion- with a welcome sense of economy. Still, it wouldn’t be a Sigur Ros record without a nine minute epic and “Festival” fills in that role. By no means a mediocre track, it only feels weak as a retread into methods they may have exhausted.
The majority of the record is sung in Icelandic, which forces most listeners to absorb the emotional weight of the vocals with delivery and instrumentation being the only tools available to decipher the song’s meaning. While this tends to file the songs into two columns: an introspective sense of need, or an irrepressible feeling of glee, one can easily supply their own topics. For example, as a non-Icelandic speaking listener I can only assume that “Ara Batur” details singer Jon Birgisson’s flight from Reykjavik to Frankfurt, the impressive cloud formations out the window and the flight attendant’s timely delivery of an excellent wine. Heartbreak might be a more popular interpretation, but that’s up to you..
Med sud… is a stunning listen. In spite of a couple navel-gazing duds the album is full of artfully wrought melodies and textures. With a little more sunshine inspired streaking Sigur Ros can only keep giving us impressive sounds to make up stories for.
****

My Morning Jacket has enjoyed that rare arc of musical success; the gradual kind. Over five years the band released three records, each building on their distinctive blend of classic rock guitar work outs, fireside ballads, reverb psychedelia, and Jim James inimitable voice. Likewise, their following grew steadily and they really broke through to greater fandom with It Still Moves their opus recorded on a Kentucky farm.
When almost half the band (guitarist Johnny Quaid, and keyboardist Danny Cash) resigned in 2004, it seemed the bands steady rise may have finally stuttered. My Morning Jacket responded with Z, an album that managed to retain their hard earned identity while stepping in to new electronic, reggae and R&B territory. Jim James stepped out from his curtain of reverb and revealed a still delightful voice.
Fans can only assume Evil Urges will only be another step in a meteoric career. Unfortunately, it is the bands first misstep and a clumsy one.
Opening with the title track the record holds a newfound sense of glossy sheen. A funky drum beat locks in with restrained guitar chiming and Jim James starts his melody in the rafters. It’s not a complete shocker, Z had a sexual falsetto on its opening track, but this is a full on display of un-ironic booty shaking. James consoles us not to be ashamed of our more sinful compulsions like a bearded Prince (or artist formerly known as). One can tell the band is biting off a lot, and god damn if they don’t almost completely own it. But, its all down hill from here.
“Highly Suspicious” is the biggest glutton for punishment on the entire album. No doubt a shot at a summertime fun anthem, it hits like a day-glow piece of eighties funk-rock. James squeaks away “so high” (so terribly high) and the band retorts in a demonic bark “highly suspicious of you.” This breed of goofiness might look okay on Ween or Mr. Bungle, but the laughs seem a little embarrassing for MMJ.
Tracks like “I’m Amazed” are an assurance that rocking is still on the agenda, but feel more like REO Speedwagon recycles than guitar-riff fireworks. The band’s accomplished hush on ballads is of little use here either. ”Librarian” is an outright fantasy of cliched bookworm sexuality crooned over serious acoustic moodiness. Jim James gentle dose of Nashville Skyline era Dylan/Kermit the Frog, gets pumped up to the level of self parody on the high-fructose yacht rocker “Sec Walkin.” The stylistic explorations are welcome, but they often feel empty.
The standout tracks “Aluminum Park” and “Remnants” should keep the bands live standard of barn burners going. But, it is disappointing that their most typical tracks are the finest, in an album that seems like a well-produced pastiche of meager, stylized impressions.
Credit must be given to the band as their arrangements are for the most part, as nuanced and graceful as any of their better work. Patrick Hallahan confidently drums out whatever funk button James wants to push and guitarist Carl Broemel can add dimension to some pretty thin concepts. It seems the source material- if not James himself- is where Evil Urges feels awkward and contrived.
The band ties it up with a reprise of one of the albums better tracks “Touch Me I’m Going to Scream”. The track opens with synths in a moment that sounds like Kraftwerk worship and keeps building with a promising tension. It then launches into a faux Depeche Mode disco drum beat that falls flat. Maybe all of these awkward strokes are the band’s real evil urges (disco beats, Prince worship, yacht rock). Still, the boys are an ostensibly talented bunch that have already proven their longevity. Better things may be on the horizon.
**

John “Speedo” Reis has been in hiding for a while. This makes some people anxious. The man has become something of a rock and roll guru. Picture the turbaned Swami Records logo and the Reis aesthetic comes instantly to mind. Lending his sleek garage riff skills to both the exploratory Drive Like Jehu, and the more minimalist Hot Snakes, as well as his characteristic hoarse vocals to the nearly legendary Rocket From the Crypt, Reis has become something of an icon. Coupled with his creation of Swami Records (home to Hot Snakes, Dan Sartain, The Marked Men) he has created a distinctive taste; that is all things analog, sweaty, vaguely-vintage and decidedly unpretentious.
In comes the Night Marchers, his first appearance since the Hot Snakes tragically disbanded in 2005. At this point it would be impossible to judge the Night Marchers with impartiality to their members past. Featuring the original Hot Snakes rhythm section, the band reignites the Snakes scratchy sense of presicion. Likewise, Reis brings his same blaring sense of melody to the mic that created so many ready-made singalongs in the Rocket days.
At times like “I Wanna Dead Beat You” it’s not hard to imagine what the Rocket horn section would do with it. The shuffle beat on “Branded” seems like a left over from the Hot Snakes-Audit In Progress, the only thing that is missing is Rick Froberg’s subdued shouts. Like both groups the songs are air-tight compositions with a minimum of wankery. In fact, at first glance the record seems nothing more than par-for-the-course, which isn’t a shame considering the band’s pedigree.
On second listen a bit more stands out. “You’ve Got Nerve” has a much more subdued R&B feeling than anything in Reis’s contribution to the Swami catalog. The intro riff to “Jump Into the Fire” is pure sixties jangle and when the tune takes off the melodic drone of the guitars is shockingly reminiscent of Sonic Youth.
On songs like “Open Your Legs” Reis experiments lyrically with a depraved sense of sexuality. The results are a little unnerving. Whereas much of his word-smithing is 1950’s style romance gone-wrong, or fist pumping abstractions (an achievement in itself), “Open Your Legs” has a unique quality of preventing the sing-along. When the chorus comes up it gets stuck in your throat. Just a little too creepy. If anything, its nice that he can still create a sense of danger at nearly 40, but the lyrical cocks are best left to Nick Cave.
Overall See You In Magic is solid and promising. Like anything else these guys do it will only get better.
***1/2
Live the band’s tunes are just as precise only a bit sweatier and more visceral. Drummer Jason Kourkounis earned stares for his effortless power and accuracy as the band pumps some of its frenzy up to break-neck pace. Reis navigated through banter with a funny sense of sarcasm. Often toasting his whisky glass and satirically demanding more applause for the band who is “working so hard up here.” He tosses off frontman cliches with a knowing grin. The music however, was all business and the crowd couldn’t help but engage.

Subject can be the most burdensome aspect of any writer’s work. In college I worked a lot with reading and writing poetry. My professor brought in a guest lecturer the excellent Major Jackson. Major shared some of his poetry and lectured on what it is to write. He said a poet typically falls into the category of ’subject poet’ or ‘language poet’. A subject poet finds one topical centerpiece for their focus and plugs away at it, often for a lifetime. A language poet is more interested in attaining certain linguistic goals, grammatical permutations, structural experiments or investigations of what a set palette of vocabulary can achieve. These categories are not mutually exclusive but a way to understand a writer’s dominant interest.
Being a young and uncertain writer I was not sure which category I fell into, but I suspected that I aspired to be a subject poet. I was very interested when Major brought to our attention that most current and successful (meaning published, a poet never makes much money) subject poets focus on their ethnic experience. Major Jackson writes vivid poems considering his experience of being a black man from Philadelphia.
I felt a bit nonplussed, considering the ethnic experience I have to offer is suburban, caucasian, U.S. citizen. Not an impossible starting place but I certainly couldn’t motivate myself to deconstruct the suburbs, or the modern American family. There were many angles at which to attack a prevalent existential crisis amongst affluent agnostics, but I was already starting to exhaust the subject in my song-writing, and it would be even more difficult to construct a solid series of poems on the matter. Writing good song lyrics is far easier than a good poem.
At this point I felt quite stifled in what was available to me as an aspiring poet. I had limited interest in post-modern experimentation (more language poetry), and felt my own ethnic experience to be of little interest as a subject matter. This is when I joyfully discovered the work of Elizabeth Bishop .
Bishop’s poetry focuses heavily on place, geography and setting. She often picks a scene or place for contemplation, describes it visually until the details ultimately review something human. The poems turn usually arrives when visual aspects of the place reveal something about the people who live/work there, humanity in general, or the viewer’s own psychology. One short example in the second stanza in Bishop’s “The Map”:
The shadow of Newfoundland lies flat and still.
Labrador’s yellow, where the moony Eskimo has oiled it. We can stroke these lovely bays, under a glass as if they were expected to blossom, or as if to provide a clean cage for invisible fish. The names of seashore towns run out to sea,
the name of cities cross the neighboring mountains -the printer here experiencing the same excitement
as when emotion too far exceed its cause. These peninsulas take the water between thumb and finger like women feeling for the smoothness of yard-goods.
“The Map” is unusual because instead of looking at a real place, it considers a map of them. Effortlessly it weaves in details that take a potentially mundane map and inhabits it with characters, while exploring the emotion of its creator. Bishop’s ethnicity is completely irrelevant, yet the poem is well grounded in a sense of subject.
I found more threads for this technique in the prose of Virginia Woolf. In her novel To the Lighthouse an entire section of the book considers the Victorian house where it is set with no one in it. The absence of the characters and the appearance of their summerhouse says much of who they are, and what their effect on the place is atmospherically. While the section is difficult, it is also very effective.
Later I found variations on this technique of centering focus on place in some of Wallace Stevens’ poetry. He came up with a tricky way of showing multiple permutations on how to view one place or thing as a way to create epistemological uncertainty, like in “Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird”. While the poem is definitely not centered on landscape, or subject alone, it still showed me how contemplation of a place, or thing can yield fascinating output.
Years later I have set my poet’s pen aside. While at best I may have written a few good poems, I never created anything great. I also did not show the motivations or work habits of what it takes to become a true poet. Something I now respect as an unusual and herculean task. I have continued to write songs and much of what studying poetry taught me fuels my lyrics.
After a dozen or so songs that have been centered on autobiographical anecdote, as well as biographical songs (characters borrowed from history and made up), I have arrived again at place. It is a helpful approach being an avid traveler and a kind of pseudo-Anthropologist making willy nilly observations about a region’s people based on the decorations on their walls, the size and color of their buildings, or the amount of sunlight or rain that graces their skin from day to day.
I am thankful that brilliant writers like Bishop and Woolf have nudged me towards a mental space where a moped ride can create a meditation on the concept of home, or the appearance of an institution’s waiting room begs questions about concepts of freedom and fulfillment. I could never pretend to harness these writers skills, but often times a good song requires only strong visual language and a catchy melody. Poetry is another case all together.
![]()
Over the past several years Bob Dylan has earned his place in the pantheon of American mythology. The recent, and excellent documentary by Martin Scorsese explores Dylan’s rise from Minnesota obscurity into folk icon, and his greatly controversial move to a new electrified folk-rock sound. Dylan himself has dug in to share his twentieth century adventures with his scattered, autobiographical Chronicles book. With new box-sets and biographies hitting the shelves every month it seems America still can’t get enough of the mysterious lyricist, or his chameleon like ability to morph into different figures.
Dylan’s staying power in American culture seems to have much to do with the existential bravery of his work. He has been the heir to Woody Guthrie’s throne, the mouthpiece of the civil rights movement, the mystical poet, the western story teller and even the praise singer. He’s notoriously dodged all of these titles in interviews claiming to be nothing at all, turning his back on politics and the very idea of a ‘folk revival’.
So, it seems fitting that Todd Haynes want to explore the many faces of Bob Dylan using a variety of actors playing a variety of characters in a kind of avant-homage to the shape shifter. The weight of Haynes task falls on a number of people interpreting, impersonating and enhancing a real person; and the film cracks under the weight.
The film makes no claims of linearity and so it can’t be judged on those terms. Nonetheless, the outstanding performances of Cate Blanchett as the “Don’t Look Back” era Dylan, and Ben Whishaw who’s comments fit in like a Greek chorus, can’t help the film find its own logic. The hardworking Christian Bale is tragically miscast, and his performances fall flat as an awkward parody of Dylan being torn apart for refusing a civil rights award. Both Richard Gere as the cowboy/outlaw Dylan, er Billy the Kid, and Heath Ledger as the womanizer seem like disconnected mini-dramas that make you eager to return to Blanchett’s Oscar-worthy performance. Top it off with Marcus Franklin (yet another talented actor who can’t save the picture) as the little black boy claiming to be Woody Guthrie himself, and you have what looks like an attempt at a fractured meditation on personality and the sixties, but is nothing more than a pool of post-modern muck.
Further complicating things is Haynes interest in paying film homage. Black and white captions accompanied by bullet sounds tip a hat to Godard. At one point Blanchett finds herself in a elegant garden populated by an absurd entourage of press people and a very cracked-out Beatles. The garden is decorated with stone fixtures and confusion taken directly from Fellini’s “8 1/2″. This is an irony all too rich to go unnoticed as “8 1/2″ is a movie about a director with all the funding, attention and actors and no idea what he’s shooting. Did Haynes come up for air and realize that he was Fellini’s lead, a director with no vision and so much commotion?
Luckily, Dylan’s cryptic biography and rich lyricism can survive such misguided tributes. Better still the movie has a double-disc soundtrack full of great singers (Cat Power, Jim James, Jeff Tweedy, Sonic Youth, Richie Havens and more) doing outstanding covers of his songs.
**

Emma Niblett, stage name ‘Scout’ is one of a kind. Residing in Portland by way of Nottingham, Scout likes to keep her live shows spicy by wearing wigs, reflective safety vests and at points using only her rudimentary drumming as instrumentation for her eccentric songs. She waves her freak flag high, but is thoughtful and endearing enough to keep it from feeling contrived.
This Fool Can Die Now oddly balances the tender and the terrifying. Opening with one of several duets with Will Oldham (often known as Bonnie Prince Billy) Scout’s voice sounds shockingly sweet as her and Oldham span the opening two tracks contemplating (gasp!) love. Their inimitable voices sound so disarming together on ballads like “The River of No Return” and “Kiss” one can almost suspend their disbelief and buy it. Niblett and Oldham are like a weirder Dylan and Baez wandering through cities dropping songs out of their pockets and making love in front of typewriters and ashtrays. The ever-presence of death is the only thematic bitterness in all of their odd, love-lorn crooning. But let’s face it, Oldham and Niblett are probably just singing and Scout still wants to rock.
“Let Thine Heart Be Warned” has all of the minimalistic power she discovered on Kidnapped By Neptune. Matching brittle rhythm guitar that would make Kurt Cobain proud with Steve Albini’s up front production, Scout really digs her nails in and climaxes in a mammoth heap of distortion and wailing. It’s all the more suprising after the album’s graceful opening.
This Fool Can Die Now has an unsettled kind of idiosyncrasy. Affecting strings on “Elizabeth (Black Hearted Queen)” and “River of No Return” are enough to make a fan out of your mom, but the drums and vocals only “Moon Lake” might weird her out. It’s hard to tell where she’s really going, but the results are always mesmerizing. “Dinosaur Egg” seems to sum it up the best “I’d much rather be a golden ball of light, but still have sex.” Maybe she can have it both ways; yearning meditations on love/mortality and kinetic explosions of monochromatic grunginess.
****

After concealing themselves for ages in rural English recording studios with old producer favorite Nigel Goodrich, after posting cryptic messages on their popular blog using a cypher devised of characteristically clever graphic art, after releasing the album on the internet in what some call a revolutionary ‘pay what you want’ scale Radiohead In Rainbows is here. But what have those endearingly earnest British fellows come up with?
It’s clear from the opener ‘15 Steps’ that much like its predecessor Hail to the Thief, Radiohead has grown to a point where they are not preoccupied with completely redefining their sound every album. The song opens with a very familiar Aphex Twin/Plaid influenced techno beat and Thom Yorke questioning “How come I end up where I started?”. It’s fitting for an artist who has never concealed his ambivalence about his own abilities. Once again Radiohead faces an empty canvas which has always been a terrifying step for Yorke. Maybe trying to make the sixth solid album in a row is a little scary; most bands haven’t been able to make it that far. As the syncopated jazz guitar comes in its clear the answer is to use everything they’ve learned so far.
“Bodysnatchers” opens with a suprisingly playful fuzz-bass riff and only gets more kinetic as it grows. Kid A style synths slide in for atmosphere as they use Thief ‘back to the guitar’ aesthetic to an even greater end. Oft-bootlegged “Nude” plays out like a Jeff Buckley number minus the indulgent vocal histrionics plus the best rhythm section in the British isles. As Yorke hits the vocal crescendo it’s clear he has even more control of his voice than before.
The ten tracks never stumble as they weave through the Radiohead pallet of arpeggiated guitars, elliptical harmonic progressions, sweeping string arrangements and sparse, funky drumbeats. Even the pointlessly syncopated hi hat at the end of the album closer “Videotape” inspires repeat listens, if anything but to figure out its logic.
In Rainbows might very well trump its predecessor for all of its depth and diversity. The band has matured to a point where a Kid A era sound collage, or drum loop may have once been an experiment that warranted an entire song, it now is merely another texture to weave into an arrangement. The record is rich with subtle hooks that reward repeat listens.
****1/2

After months of patience I am going to be a proud owner of one of these babies. I told myself I would cease the purchasing of additional guitar effects, as it is a humerously dorky addiction that usually results in loss of income, pimples, and hilariousy prog rock guitar tones. Nonetheless, I could not resist this New Zealand made overdrive that adds odd harmonics on top of your original signal. It makes guitars sound frantic and as much as I try I can’t get over agitated guitar rock.
Characteristically, I can’t merely purchase a new toy and enjoy it. Instead I see it as part of the frame work of my cultural heritage for better and worse. Do I need this piece of gadgetry? Obviously not, but I feel prompted to buy it with the sudden presence of income after a summer of poverty. Nonetheless, buying things I don’t need feels like it is essentially wasteful, and if unchecked can become a frivilous and shallow habit that coincidentally 85% of the world can’t participate in. USA!/Materialism……
Here is where it gets interesting. If materialism means an intense preoccupation with objects, America’s recent model for consumerism is anything but. Rapidly evolving fashion and technology, coupled with an almost Tokyo-like ominpresence of product placement seems to have left our cultural reflex in a state that can’t buy new things and get rid of old ones fast enough.
A true materialist would be saddened by this state of affairs. You can find them still, but most of them are a bit older. Like the guy that lovingly polishes his Firebird every weekend and drives it with one ear cocked to monitor every idiocincracy in its timing. Or, a wine enthusiast who instists you will taste the oak if you try hard enough. A Japanese tea ceremony is far more attentive to the presence of physical things then I am in any trip to Target.
So where does that leave a gear head? I suppose, when it arrives I better engage my senses to every nuance of my odd little fuzz pedal and use it attentively to agitate for many years.