Hot Chip is definitely one of my favorite bands going right now. And though I have yet to catch them live and in person (one of the great sadnesses in my life at present), I was very excited to see them do this track from their new album “One Life Stand” with the wonderful Roots in a web exclusive for the Jimmy Fallon show.
Go check out Ryan’s Smashing Life to download a new track that they recorded at The Grinding Tapes House in November. It’s a fantastic cover of Bob Dylan’s “Girl from the North Country”.
Also, you may know that The Points North are currently touring Australia. Check out this video from their first night Down Under!
Seer Group blends sun-warped nostalgia for cassette tapes and analog synthesizers with the sugary-sweet melodies of early video game soundtracks (think Mega Man III vs. Boards of Canada). These guys are new to Grinding Tapes and are currently finishing up their contribution to a split cassette single with Sylphid. This will be our first ever electronic release. Needless to say, we are very excited!
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Posted January 19, 2010 by Matt at 3:57 pm ·
Filed under Film, General
Albums of the Year:
1. Thee Oh Sees - Help:
Two things are magical about this release. Well, honestly, way more than two things are magical about this release. I wrote a blog post about it earlier this year that you should read if you want to hear the album described (or read it described, I’m sure you understand my meaning). But let me sum up it’s position at number one on my list by saying this: 1. I guess this just taught me that I could follow my own beat, without anyone’s recommendation I could pinpoint what I like and pull it off the shelf and throw it in my player and be satisfied for months. Musical enjoyment independence and freedom you could say. 2. This firmed up the fact in my mind that albums like Jay Reatard’s Blood Visions had started. An album doesn’t need to be by Radiohead or TV on the Radio to be solid gold.
I know that all sounds gushing and the like, but the point is, not only was this my favorite album of the year, it changed the way I see the music enjoying experience. It’s not for everyone, but it’s certainly my favorite.
2. Converge - Axe to Fall
I think this is my favorite Converge record. I didn’t spend much time with No Heroes and Jane Doe will forever be their defining moment, but this absolutely gorgeous. The best heavy metal release not only of the year, but of my recent memory, good start to finish, time and time again. A thinking man’s grind album.
3. Kurt Vile - God is Saying This to You…/Violators EP/Childish Prodigy
Kurt is my most listened to new artist this year for sure. Ever since Dusted magazine turned me on to Constant Hitmaker at the end of last year. This guy totally slayed 2009, and I don’t care what any major publication says, all three of these releases are worthy of an album of the year nod. I went by myself and waited 6 hours to see the guy earlier this year, and I still have no ounce of anger for him. (Not that that was his fault. He and the Violators were amazing once they went on, and he was a very nice dude to talk to afterward). Any other year this guy would have been #1. Totally owning bedroom folk with God is Saying This to You? and then hitting the major indie circuit with a well developed trippy/bluesy rock one two punch on Childish Prodigy. Totally awesome year, and I’m looking forward to many more.
4. DOOM- Born Like This
What can I say. DOOM is amazing. Best rapper going for sure. A wealth of clever and intelligent word play. And then there’s the guest spots (rock solid) and the production (right up there with Madvillainy). I’ll wait another 5 years if it means something this good.
5. Animal Collective - Merriwether Post Pavillion
This is everyone else’s number one. I know why. Insane amounts of continuously progressing originality, a record that even your girlfriend could like. I love it too guys. They haven’t made a misstep yet. So what, it’s still my number five.
And this isn’t just because I work here. (You don’t see any other amazingly solid Grinding Tapes albums listed here. Although you can and should find them listed HERE.) This album was the soundtrack to my home life this year. Chris, Regina, and Dylan made the album that defines what I think of when I’m in Boston, and well, I’m loving being in Boston. They have earned every accolade coming to them, and many more.
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7. Avett Brothers - I and Love and You
I love these guys. The introduction of the piano, solid. The production nod from Rick “the mad monk of major label music” Rubin certainly didn’t hurt either. Tuneful. Undeniable.
8. The Black Crowes - Before The Frost…
It’s the Black Crowes, I’m a sucker.
9. Dawes- North Hills
Rock Solid Country Rock.
10. Ganglians- Monster Head Room
Very Underrated. Solid group of influences. Definitely a promising debut.
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Most Impressive on Just One Listen: Tune-Yards - Bird Brains
Should have gotten more spins: Mos Def - The Ecstatic, Pissed Jeans - King of Jeans, Maxwell - Blacksummersnight
Movies of The Year:
1. Fantastic Mr. Fox
Oh boy, do I love Roald Dahl. Oh boy, do I love Stop Motion Animation. Oh Boy, do I love Wes Anderson. Oh Boy, Oh Boy do I love it when everything goes right.
2. Coraline
I have been watching a lot of kids movies lately I feel. this one was the most rock-solid. An enormous triumph for 3-D animation AND storytelling.
3. A Serious Man
The Coen Brothers best since No Country for Old Men. That’s not saying much I guess. But I would put this in their Top 5 ever. So dry, hilarious, interesting and moving. Their second best comedy effort. Second only to The Big Lebowski.
4. District 9
Awesome action. Stomach turning plot and effects. But most importantly, amazingly relevant Sci-Fi storytelling.
5. Watchmen
This is based on the best graphic Novel I’m aware of. It gets a million points just for not disgracing its namesake. But on top of that, man does this film got style.
6. I Love You, Man
Interesting twist on the romantic comedy formula. Surprisingly well executed. Amazing improv from Paul Rudd and Jason Segal. Better than you ever thought it was going to be.
7. Drag Me To Hell
I love scary movies. But only if I can laugh on the way out of the theater. Thanks Sam Raimi. R.I.P. Spiderman 4.
8. Moon
Only this low on the list because I hyped myself out of my mind and only would have been satisfied with Alien meets 2001 meets Blade Runner. Duncan Jones and Sam Rockwell made an amazingly simple, subtle and mind-blowing movie. Not bad for a start. His next one will probably fulfill my every heart’s desire.
9. Star Trek/Up
Star Trek was the best reboot summer blockbuster since Batman Begins. Totally fun. Maybe a little bit of a guilty pleasure. But damn if that wasn’t the most clever way to reboot one of the best series ever.
Up, on the other hand, continued the legacy of Pixar after Wall-E changed it forever last year. Incredibly interesting general direction, but a few things were hauntingly Disney.
10. Zombieland
Just amazing comedy, with Zombies. This, not Adventureland, is the best Michael Cera movie that he wasn’t in. Totally fun and gratifying.
(note- these last three bored me at times, or fell short of my high expectations, but still that certain “I don’t know what” that makes them worth mentioning)
11. Where the Wild Things Are
Again, my hopes were to high. The only way I would have been satisfied is if this was Charlie in The Chocolate Factory meets Adaptation meets well, exactly what the visuals were.
12. Inglorious Bastards
Lots of good performances. Amazing dialogue. Totally gratifying ending. I could have done with a little more Brad Pitt and a little more Inglorious Bastards.
13. Limits of Control
Art house. I won’t get this fully until there is a text book written about it.
Honorable Mentions:
Most Game Changing Movie of the Year- Avatar (and not half bad either)
Most Amusing- Step aside Hangover, I choose G-Force.
(To be fair: Movies I have yet to see: The Messenger, The Informant, Bad Lieutenant, In the Loop, Hurt Locker)
Comic Book Series of the Year:
1. Daredevil
Issue 500 carried the best series of Superhero comics into the next decade for sure.
2. Secret Warriors
Best new comic last year, interesting team of good guys, menacing bad guys, tons of fun that is sure to keep on giving.
3. X-Factor
I’m not even caught up, I’m just loving it.
4. Batman and Robin
Grant Morrison almost makes up for Batman R.I.P.
5. X-force
Despite a few stupid cross overs, this potentially mindless slash-fest was the best X-book this year. Awesome art. Consistently good writing.
Posted December 31, 2009 by Jason at 11:59 pm ·
Filed under General
Best Album: Bruce Peninsula’s A Mountain is a Mouth
Albums released early in the year often fade out of memory and miss out on well-deserved slots on end-of-year lists. Bruce Peninsula’s A Mountain is a Mouth, however, was just too remarkable to forget about. Here is what we said about it back in March:
Bruce Peninsula is one of my new favorite artists. I heard their song, “Steamroller” on WERS at like 1:00 in the morning last week and immediately went to their website to buy their debut album, A Mountain Is A Mouth.
Bruce Peninsula is folk that isn’t afraid to get loud and noisy. Singer Neil Haverty’s voice isn’t necessarily pretty, but it’s unmistakably earnest and entirely unignorable. The most immediately noticeable element, however, is the gospel choir that instantly gives each song an epic quality.
I know that 2009 is still very young, but I honestly believe A Mountain Is A Mouth is a solid contender for album of the year.
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Wes Anderson’s The Royal Tenenbaums and The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou are two of my very favorite movies, but 2007’s The Darjeeling Limited left me wondering if Anderson had peaked with Tenenbaums. Fantastic Mr. Fox, based on the children’s book by Roald Dahl, is Anderson’s first stop-motion film, and the visual presentation is simply gorgeous. This, combined with Dahl’s endearing writing-style (not just for kids) and Anderson’s hilarious retro quirkiness makes this my favorite movie of 2009 and one of the best moves I’ve seen in a very long time.
Best TV Show: It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia (season 5)
Anyone still mourning Arrested Development’s untimely demise should find solace in It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia’s dysfunctional family. Dennis, Mac, Charlie, Dee, and Frank (played by Danny DeVito) are all varying degrees of manipulative, incompetent, pathetic, and vain and manage to find new and hilarious ways to engineer their own downfall each episode.
Honorable Mention: 30 Rock (season 4)
Best Video Game: New Super Mario Bros. Wii
I always get a little nervous when someone tries to remake any kind of classic with a modern twist, but Nintendo has pulled it off beautifully with New Super Mario Bros. Wii. The key update was not to graphics or level design—frankly, they could have just as well left those the same as the NES or SNES Mario games. Rather, the most important inclusion is the 2 to 4-player simultaneous cooperative gameplay, which is both super-fun and relentlessly addictive.
Honorable Mention: Smash Bros. 64 (rereleased on Wii Virtual Console)
Posted December 30, 2009 by Matt at 12:50 pm ·
Filed under General
Celebrate with us by checking out this traditional New Year’s song that The Points North just recorded at the Grinding Tapes House!
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Posted December 9, 2009 by Matt at 12:44 pm ·
Filed under Lost Classics
The other day I opened my very overpriced Issue of Spin Magazine, the issue with naked pictures of Wayne Coyne, really. Anyway, in the middle of the page titled “hot right now” or something, there was an old familiar face.
That face was Jonathan Pierce.
You see, on one magical evening in the fall of 2003, Eastern University, the school I was attending at the time, hosted a concert in the first floor lounge of my dorm. The headlining band was Cool Hand Luke, but the openers, playing under the light of my desk lamp, were a young Sony signed band yet unknown to me:
That band was Elkland, and they became the rage of indie set at Eastern that year after their brand of new wave pop got the whole party dancing that evening. Two years later, in Chicago, I happened across their full length album in a Virgin megastore. The same day I bought the Wilco classic Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, the thing I couldn’t keep out of my stereo was this sentimental, emotionally open, hook-laced, synth driven pop record. Right around this same time, The Killers and The Bravery were all over rock radio, but somehow this total gem missed the pop charts. Hindered by a program which wouldn’t allow it to be played in standard audio players, and prevented file saving or sharing, this album was heard by few. But speaking for myself and a few others, we couldn’t shut it off.
Shortly there after, the newsfeed on the band’s Myspace informed me that Elkland would be no more. Crushing my hopes for a sequel to this closet classic. But two weeks ago, all that changed, from the pages of my overpriced music rag, I discovered that Jonathan has formed a new (and extremely hyped) band called the Drums. Very exciting!
But still, nothing will match the magic of the 2003 dance party, and this gem of a record that just won’t quit.
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