I haven't heard Poses or the Wants in their entirety in a while, but listening to Release The Stars (especially the first time) I can't help but feel that it may be his best work to date.
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Stylus will be missed, but that's a decent list to leave with.
Good to see The Besnard Lakes getting a little love. I'm fine with their #1 choice.
There is a new Twin Peaks soundtrack out. It's music from the second season and more. It is very good.
Tickets to The Magnetic Fields in February... purchased!
Tickets to Puffy AmiYumi this Sunday...won through Vancouver's multicultural channel!
At least the fact that it's at a bar should cut down on the amount of 12 yr old Teen Titans fans in attendance.
I recently got my tix to Built to Spill, The Black Lips, SY playing Daydream Nation and Low playing Things We Lost in the Fire. :)
Music genres are dead but music will never be dead. For instance Jazz is dead. There's no way to be inventive in Jazz anymore.
As for top albums of the year, though I haven't yet gone through the lists yet to make my own, currently my favorite album of the year is
Nine Inch Nails -- Year Zero
another which will easily be in my top five will be
Galactic -- From The Corner to the Block
If any of you want to listen to Hip Hop artists with a new orleans style band behind them, that cd is for you.
The other day I attended a Damon and Naomi show. Something I was meaning to do for a long time, since I'm a mangorrinic Galaxie500 fan and had never seen any of its members live. They played in a quiet, intimate theater, which fit perfectly their brutally fragile and kinda cathartic music, and afterwards I got to talk to them (and also Michio Kurihara, whose coolness I shall not remind you of) and they gave me a setlist... yay.
That was great. But even better was experimenting Ornette Coleman and his excellent band play one hour and a half of fresh, mindblowing jazz (which is far off from being dead). Beautiful is the word. How can this man give off these blasts of youth and innovation, these days, it's just so wonderful. Before leaving, he thanked us all for being there, and commented on how he hoped eternity would become "human", forever. I'll never forget that. That night.
Events coming up: Julie Doiron, High on Fire (+ Pelican), Library Tapes, Explosions in the Sky.
By the by, Polvo will be playing at ATP next year. Drooling, I am.
As much as I love G500, I could never get into Damon & Naomi. I guess they're so somber and slow that they pretty much put me to sleep.
I think they have many wonderful compositions, but you need to really be in the mood in order to get inside their world. That said, their albums post-Ghost collaboration (that one included) are most consistent, and achieve moments of pure beauty - specially with Kurihara on guitar duties, I'm sometimes reminded of a darker, more visceral, drumless G500. Their last record, Within these Walls, is rather wonderful.
Bought tickets to Ace of Base. :twisted:
:eek:
There are millions of ways to be inventive in any genre of music, so long as the audience doesn't compartmentalize genre into strictly defined genreboxes (thus becoming afraid to experience new things), and so long as the artist doesn't adhere to the "definitions" of genre. Just recently I was turned on to a compilation of new jazz artists called, Money Will Ruin Everything, and trust me, there is plenty of room to innovate within the "jazz" genre.
Anyone like Bat for Lashes?