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Tracklist: 01 Origin of Love 02 Lola 03 Stardust 04 Make You Happy (French Version) 05 Underwater 06 Overrated 07 Kids 08 Love You When I'm Drunk 09 Step With Me 10 Popular Song 11 Emily 12 Heroes 13 Celebrate (feat. Pharrell William) 14 Elle Me Dit 15 Karen (French Version) 16 L'amour dans le mauvais temps (French Version) 17 Comme un soleil (Revision) 18 Make You Happy (Cherokee Remix) 19 Celebrate (feat. Pharrell William) 20 Elle me dit (BeatauCue Remix) 21 Make You Happy (Miami Edit) 22 Tah Dah Digital Booklet - The Origin Of Love.
There’s a contentment riding your bicycle up the Short North on High Street in the summer. It’s hot, but in the Midwestern city summer way. With Columbus birthed in the Midwest during the rise of the auto industry, the lanes are wide enough so the cars driving by don’t stare you down. As you pass 5th Avenue, old dirt red brick buildings of years past turn into the boxed development of today. A breeze passes where Surly Gurl’s and Betty’s lived, the new apartments built under local officials’ bearish deals with big money, and watering holes like St. James Tavern with your memories pouring out of them.
Living may not be easy, but at this moment life may not be hard. The Sidekicks’ Happiness Hours are the moments found in these thoughts.
Happiness Hours is the fifth full-length from the four piece hailing from Columbus, Ohio. It’s their most poignantly light album to date. Produced by John Agnello of The Hold Steady and Kurt Vile fame, The Sidekicks intersperse their carefree roots while exploring new sonic territory falling somewhere between Weight Of Air and Runners In A Nerved World. The album opens up with a double time kick and snare combo leading to a minute and half bouncer that finds them driving past a stadium attending to the needs of a friend’s pet. It’s genuinely both present and nostalgic, a state explored throughout Happiness Hours. A connectedness exists throughout the album with singer Steve Ciolek referencing happiness hours several times during the 39-minute duration.
It provides images of both simple moments and boozy early evenings. The lively guitars of Toby Reif and Ciolek have an easiness about them recalling early Built To Spill. The interplay is bouncy and light with drummer Matt Climer and bassist Ryan Starinsky shining through in subtle moments, particularly when they hit the midrange. The occasional tempered trumpet is also added into the mix. Agenllo’s production captures the mood exceptionally well. There’s a straightforwardness in the lyrics not seen since Weight Of Air.
References to Columbus, Ohio abound, whether it’s the aforementioned Ohio State University stadium, Summit Avenue, or heart-shaped state tattoos. These specifics are varied through a universality of scenes from early adulthood. Lead single “Don’t Feel Like Dancing” recites a litany of reasons for not joining a partner on the dance floor. Album standout “Medium In The Middle” has Ciolek “feeling like a rock stuck skipping on a great lake” passing on poppers at a party while Drake plays in the background. Closer “Happiness Hours” contains drifting thoughts at happy hours recalling giant white crosses found on highways. The chorus states “happiness comes in hours / distraction is a daze / lovers deserve flowers / love is just a phrase” while the verses give glancing nods to both career and a future with kids.
The 90s was a time of reckoning for a lot of classic 80s metal and punk bands. Usually said bands jumped onto a trend and lost any of their identity, stuck to their guns only to fall flat, or ended up producing a magnum opus. Napalm Death were odd in that they not only managed to jump onto a trend (avantgarde / experimental) but then actually made a true classic with 'fear, emptiness, despair'. This time the band repeated more or less the same idea, this mix of avantgarde, experimental and industrial, which can to remind bands as. I like their experimental stuff from this period and these three albums. The vocals and music don't seem to quite gel, but kudos to them for trying. I also like the engineering - more space, more cosmic ambient, more bass, than the solid wall of white noise that is their Russell - engineered albums today. 'Inside the torn part' mark the finish of those three albums where Napalm Death abandoned their typical grindcore style to approach to music styles closer to avantgarde, experimental and industrial.
Mika The Origin Of Love Lyrics
Understood, underrated and almost forgot albums then, mid 90s, which with the pass of the years became in a really original Napalm Death albums (.Review by ), Pass: Arquivo(.rar). Lagu midi dangdut untuk organ tunggal. It’s hard to believe but there was once a time when the oft convoluted and meteorically misunderstood sub-genre of post-rock was just about finding its feet. With the likes of latter-day Talk Talk and Louisville quartet Slint having laid the transatlantic groundwork of sorts, Chicago instrumental outfit Tortoise all but personified its modus operandi in the mid-Nineties, not least on their second full-length effort, Millions Now Living Will Never Die, a six-track masterstroke boldly melding jazz, dub, rock and every conceivable sub-genre in between. Almost twenty years on from its initial release, a new vinyl re-issue of the record grants us an ideal opportunity to re-assess its legacy. Bowing out via the supremely cinematic, knowingly Morricone-inspired ‘Along The Banks of Rivers’ (see also: McComb’s solo work as Brokeback and Vincent Gallo’s Recordings Of Music For Film) Tortoise offer up a rather melancholic refrain to balance out the almost corporeal optimism that runs parallel with the band’s innate confidence throughout.
If the likes of Slint and Rodan were the shrugging, quietly calculating twentysomethings of early post-rock, Tortoise were, for the most part, propagators of a playfulness and intelligence that, perhaps most impressive of all, never seemed to contradict each other on Millions Now Living That Will Never Die. More than anything, though, whilst not exactly flawless – and despite having release four superb albums since – it remains Tortoise’s most crucial statement to date; a gallant and ground-breaking second album in which fearlessness and variance fortifies what continues to be its resolutely singular legacy (.Review by )., 'TNT' Year: 1998 Label: Thrill jockey Format: CD, 2 x LP Tracks: 12 Time: 64 min. Genre: rock Style: Post Rock, 'standars' Year: 2000 Label: Thrill jockey Format: CD, LP Tracks: 10 Time: 44 min. Genre: rock Style: Post Rock. Revered for their ineffably clean, precise playing, Tortoise couldn't help but mess with the formula slightly on their fourth album, Standards.
And from the beginning of the first track it sounds like a major overhaul, with heavily over-miced drums and distorted guitars framing a pummeling groove from bassist Doug McCombs. On the second track 'Eros,' the phlegmatic synthesizer lines and clipped drums are more reminiscent of experimental electronica outfit Mouse on Mars than any fellow post-rock luminaries. When the band finally hits its stride, though, midway through the third track, 'Benway,' it's with a quintessential Tortoise groove, driven by repetitive bass figures and a vibraphone melody (plus a hilarious nod to prog-rock at the end, with several seconds of stop-start playing).
Standards does return the group to the green fields of their last record, but only occasionally; John McEntire and company appear too restless to consider making the same album twice. Ironically, despite the range of sounds, Tortoise is still doing what they've been doing for nearly a decade: playing some of the most empathic, group-minded rock of their era, then indulging in much recomposition courtesy of the mixing desk and various effects. 'Monica' is one of the least Tortoise-sounding tracks the group has ever recorded; it sounds like an early-'80s pop/R&B track (complete with talkbox guitar) filtered through the lens of British IDM, but then mutates into an intriguing stereo-separation drum workout. Overall, Standards has a few detours for fans conscious of any band's 'progression,' but plenty of interesting songs and great musicianship for less vested listeners.
Though it doesn't develop the evocative or impressionistic side of Tortoise (as heard on TNT), the band is certainly as inventive as ever (.Review by ). Passionately political Oakland Mod and skinhead outfit Hard Left release a new fourteen tracks album in 2015, so big fan Glenn Airey fired a few friendly enquiries across the pond. Hard Left exist at a gloriously rowdy collision point for Oi!
Music, class politics, pop art and skinhead stylings. Their debut album 'we are hard left' was packed with insurrectionary Oi! Anthems, and snatches of bootboy terrace chants of the kind last heard echoing around England’s long-crumbled post-war football grounds. Perhaps the least predictable aspect of this socialist street rock package, however, is that they’re doing it all out of Oakland, California: a pocket of resistance in this ever-more gentrified region at the heart of late tech-capitalism. The band’s terrific new 4-track single 'strike' is also available now, so it seemed a good time to ask them about the possibilities and contradictions posed by their paradoxically populist yet confrontational approach. Rude voice, short songs, few distorted guitars and mid-tempo street rock which can to remind, or even at the same time. Veteran musicians with mature and intelligent lyrics too.
Highly recommended.,. Jonathan Julian 'Jon' Hopkins (born 15 August 1979) is an English producer and musician who writes and performs electronic music. He began his career playing keyboard for Imogen Heap, and has produced or contributed to albums by Brian Eno, Coldplay, David Holmes and others. Hopkins composed the soundtrack for the 2010 film Monsters, which was nominated for an Ivor Novello Award for Best Original Score. His third solo album, Insides, reached no. 15 on the Dance/Electronic Album Chart in 2009.
His collaborations on Small Craft on a Milk Sea with Brian Eno and Leo Abrahams and Diamond Mine with King Creosote both reached no. 82 on the UK Albums Chart. In 2011 Diamond Mine was nominated for a Mercury Prize, which is annually awarded for best album from the United Kingdom and Ireland.
Immunity was also nominated for the 2013 Mercury Prize. Jon Hopkins was born in 1979 in Kingston upon Thames, Surrey and grew up in nearby Wimbledon. He first became aware of electronic music after hearing early house music on the radio at the age of seven or eight, and also became a fan of Depeche Mode and the Pet Shop Boys. These records inspired an early fascination with synths. At the age of 12 Hopkins began studying piano at the Junior Department of the Royal College of Music in London, where he continued until age 17. The composers that were greatly influential to him whilst studying were Ravel and Stravinsky, and he eventually won a competition to perform a concert of Ravel's Piano Concerto in G with an orchestra. For a time Hopkins considered becoming a professional pianist, only to decide classical performance was too formal and unnerving to pursue full-time.
On March 6, 2018, Hopkins announced that his 5th studio album 'Singularity' would be released on May 4, 2018 via Domino Recordings. Speaking about the album, Hopkins told Exclaim!, 'Now that Singularity is done, I can look back on it, and it's almost like some sort of living thing that's purifying itself over the course of that hour. By the time it gets to the end, it's in the exact opposite place, and yet it ends with the same sound — the infinite simplicity of that one note. I like that idea.' , 'singularity' Year: 2018 Label: Domino Format: CD, 2 x LP Tracks: 9 Time: 60 min.
Genre: electronic Style: Ambient Techno. Jon Hopkins is playing perfect. That much is clear as soon as “Singularity,” the lead and title song on his first album since 2013’s Mercury Prize-nominated Immunity, shivers into being. A ferrous wasteland of synthesizer overhung by evaporated strings and guitar merge into a remarkably complete sonic landscape — the land and sky of a new world, with its own alien physics, its own genesis and apocalypse. Hopkins keeps hanging these strange planets in wobbly orbits throughout Singularity, forming a universe that pulses with deep consciousness and a sense of endless discovery. Hopkins was known as a hired hand for Coldplay, Brian Eno, and Imogen Heap, with a sideline in tasteful IDM records until Immunity promoted him to noted techno auteur.
Like that breakthrough, Singularity is a beat-music odyssey pitched between acid house and introspective ambient bliss, constant change and eternal return, sublunary and sublime. It also combines many other opposites into thrillingly unstable wholes. The producer’s distinctive techno is coarse and granular, as if electricity were a solid you could grind in a mill, yet it flows in a graceful stream.
It squelches like muck and shines like crystal. It beats like a body, but it moves like a mind. Singularity begins with a three-song voyage through a realm that’s recognizable from Immunity epic “Open Eye Signal,” one where much of the rhythm occurs in negative space. For a techno producer, Hopkins has a counterintuitive way of treating sound as something huge and immobile, then scything crop circles into those heavy frequencies to create a sense of motion. His beats are blanks, and his tracks feel unbound from the metronome. “Emerald Rush” climbs a ladder of Laraaji-like arpeggios and mountainous chord changes to some hidden summit of consciousness.
The track features additional drum programming by Clark, another tailor of the fabric of spacetime—something Hopkins turns inside out at the drop on “Neon Pattern Drum' (.Review by ). Mating Surfaces is the second full length release, and first for Kill Rock Stars, as well as a couple of EPs from Portland, OR band Lithics. The band like to keep a little bit of a mystery to themselves as they have very little online presence outside of some local independent articles, and that carries over to the music as well. There are many shifts and turns that can happen at the drop of a hat and every once in while vocalist/guitarist Aubrey Hornor’s usually detached vocals are sprinkled with emotions.
There are some touches of some classic post-punk influencers like early Fall and Sonic Youth, but more-so in the sense of some fearless and wild abandonment in the name of experimentation. The record starts off firing on all cylinders with “Excuse Generator” with stuttering rhythm guitar and slicing staccato leads piercing through a strong and danceable rhythm section.
Hornor’s slight sneer in the vocal performance is quite forceful as she repeatedly asks “Can I be myself?” rhetorically. “When Will I Die” is propelled by a bouncing bassline that is right up front pushing the tempo along only to occasionally be pierced by sharp trebly guitar slicing through until imploding towards the end of the song.
“Specs” is all angular and jutting in it’s approach and playful time signatures and Hornor's vocals do a great job of furthering the tension that is taking place between all the instruments and outside forces. “Glass of Water” is full of wildly brittle guitar leads and some strong and forceful drum-fills that are a little reminiscent of fellow West Coast garage art punk band The Intelligence.
“Home” is a track filled with some quite intense anxiety exemplified by it’s fast tempo and trebly leads as Hornor somewhat frantically intones “Home is anywhere you are”. 'Home' is definitely a standout on this release due to its claustrophobic soundscape fueled intensity and its exploration of the feeling of never really belonging and the isolation that goes hand in hand. “Dancing Guy” bookends the record in appropriate fashion with it’s unusually danceable discordance that eventually collapses into itself. Mating Surfaces is a record that is filled with tension and walks on the border of full on breakdown that it never really succumbs to until it’s fitting ending.
For a record that plays on jittery soundscapes and emotions it can be a quite intense listening experience as there isn’t much of a let up track to track. Hornor and company have made a record that is also full of contrasts between its sparse staccato guitar attacks and some interesting interplay between the rhythm section throughout its 28 minutes.
Mika The Origin Of Love
Even though the tone of the record is one of intensity and anxiety, it is very compelling throughout and it is a record that deserves repeated listens and the ears of anyone looking for something new and exciting. It would be in a lot of people’s self-interest to seek Lithics out for themselves and indulge in the experience. (.Review by ).,.
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