June 12, 2012

North of Northwest: Japandroids – Celebration Rock

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When Japandroids burst noisily forth into the cultural consciousness with their 2009 album Post-Nothing, it was the bittersweet ode to self-annihlation “Young Hearts Spark Fire” that best exemplified their appeal. Raucous and heartfelt, “Fire” is about celebrating your youth, but even more about clutching at it desperately as you feel the beginnings of its inevitable retreat: “We used to dream / Now we worry about dying.” For thousands of rock n roll kids perched awkwardly on the edge of thirty, Japandroids articulated the secret fears their hearts hadn’t even admitted to, and spoke of them in the familiar staccato language of fist pumps and bass drum.

Post-Nothing was followed by No Singles, a collection of earlier but somehow more mature recordings. The tracks on Singles are heavy with noise and portent, painting world-weary visions of a dystopian Vancouver that only seems to exist under William Gibson dead-TV skies. “Tell her / That I can see the future / Tell her / That the future is bleak,” vocalist Brian King summarizes on opening track “Darkness on the Edge of Gastown.” “The future used to be so bright / We used to only sleep at night” King and drummer David Prowse sing/shout between fire-alarm choruses of “Hey! Hey! Hey!” in “Coma Complacency.”

After the darkness and emotional complexity of these two albums, listening to Celebration Rock raises one repeated and unfortunate question: have Japandroids regressed?

Somewhere between Post-Nothing and Celebration Rock, Prowse and King seem to have flung introspection and regret out the window of their tour van and simply welcomed hedonism with a wholehearted, drunken embrace. Japandroids have simplified their lives. And it doesn’t suit them.

If, as they declared in “Young Hearts Spark Fire,” Japandroids “just wanna worry about sunshine girls,” they seem to have succeeded. Celebration Rock‘s eight breezy tracks mostly address the timeless jock rock topics of partying and fucking; unfortunately, they have little interesting to say about either one. In fact, some of King’s lyrics descend into the downright embarrassing: “So come and find me in this moment / And expose a passionate man for what he is,” he requests in “Evil’s Sway.” The chorus of “The Nights Of Wine And Roses” – “We all want to know what nobody knows / What the nights of wine and roses hold / For the wine and roses of our souls” – is undeniably catchy, but unfortunately insipid.

The one fleeting moment of old-Japandroids glory comes on “Younger Us,” a song already familiar from its release as a 7″ last summer. “Remember saying things like we’ll sleep when we’re dead / And thinking this feeling was never going to end… Give me younger us.” It’s the bittersweet nostalgia that the band does best, for three and a half minutes caught perfectly in a song instead of unfortunately pursued as a life philosophy.

Celebration Rock retains most of the musical elements that have always made Japandroids so viscerally appealing: the powerful drumbeats, the “Woah-oh-oh-oh” scream-along choruses. But what’s missing is what lies beneath: the pounding, still-sweating [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4JA3OKJW1aY] heart. The edges are blunted, the corners rounded.

Japandroids used to offer the unusual experience of consciously cathartic mindlessness, escapism that was constantly aware of what it was escaping from. Now they seem on track to become simply an oversimplified parody version of themselves, a so-so Japandroids tribute band that doesn’t really get it. We’ll all still raise our plastic beer cups and, echoing Celebration Rock‘s closing lines, sing out loud “Yeah yeah yeah” like continuous thunder. But underneath the floorboards where that telltale heart used to lie, it sounds a little hollow.

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Celebration Rock is out now on Polyvinyl Records.

December 30, 2011

North of Northwest: 12 Things To Look Forward to in 2012

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1. The same new Japandroids album I talked about last year.

2. A full-length from Victoria’s Hawk & Steel. No release date yet, but frontman Peter Gardner reports they’re recording fifteen songs in January.

3. Provincial, the debut solo full-length from Weakerthans vocalist John K. Samson, out January 24. (Pre-order here.) And in February Samson will release a book called Lyrics and Poems, 1997-2012.

4. Meanwhile, The Weakerthans are also forming plans for a new album.

5. Great Canadian artists coming to the Tractor: The Pack A.D. (with local favorites Hobosexual) January 21, Matthew Good February 10, hip-hop artist Buck 65 February 17, and John K. Samson April 1.

6. …And to the Crocodile: Elliott Brood February 28 and Plants & Animals March 22.

7. …And to Neumos: they host terrific Ontarian rapper Shad January 20.

8. Speaking of Plants & Animals, their third full-length The End of That hits stores February 28.

9. Sharing that release date is the long-awaited new LP from Toronto Americana group The Wooden Sky, titled Every Child a Daughter, Every Moon a Sun. They’ll hit the road to promote the release, stopping at the Bunk Bar in Portland April 9 and Lucky Bar in Victoria April 10.

10. Bahamas – the subject of the very first North of Northwest column – has just announced his second LP, Barchords, scheduled for a February 7 release.

11. A remastered and possibly expanded “box set” version of The Weeknd’s mixtape trilogy. Whether this will be a physical or commercial release (unlike the free, self-released original albums) remains to be seen.

12. A new album from singer-songwriter Julie Doiron. If she can ever stop giggling.

February 14, 2011

North of Northwest: Valentine’s Day Mix-Tape

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Though most famous for being my lovely husband’s birthday, the fourteenth of February is also the day we celebrate / vilify romantic love and all its glories / unfortunate consequences. As every good makeout session / sob fest needs a good soundtrack, I’ve created a 14-track* Canadian** mixtape for all Valentine occasions. Simply choose your side and go / stay. You can download the mix here.

Side 1: I’M NOT TRYING TO BE ROMANTIC Julie Doiron – Consolation Prize Joel Plaskett Emergency – All The Pretty Faces Bahamas – You’re Bored, I’m Old Elliott Brood – Miss You Now Timber Timbre – No Bold Villain Zeus – The River By The Garden Japandroids – I Quit Girls

Side 2: BUT I MADE YOU THIS MIXTAPE

Constantines – Shower of Stones Bahamas – Hockey Teeth Weakerthans – My Favorite Chords Diamond Rings – All Yr Songs PS I Love You – Subtle and Majestic Japandroids – Crazy / Forever Forest City Lovers – Don’t Go Please

*Of course. **Of course.

December 31, 2010

North of Northwest: 11 Things to Look Forward to in 2011

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Dan Mangan ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

The New Year is possibly my favorite holiday. For a few hours every year, everyone in the world reserves the right to turn to his neighbor, share a high-five, and say “Fuck yeah! We did it! One more year survived.” It’s a fine sense of accomplishment, and a great excuse to drink champagne.

The flip side of the new year is also great: the delicious sense of possibility that develops as you gaze wide-eyed ahead into the unknown expanse of the next twelve months. For a few brief moments as the clock turns over, you stare down nothing but untouched hope and joy. We have everything abstract to look forward too; here are eleven concrete things, too.

1. Native Speaker, the debut album of shimmery electro from Montreal band Braids. Listen to preview track “Lemonade” here.

2. The Rural Alberta Advantage’s sophomore release, Departing. It drops March 1, but you can download the lead single, “Stamp,” right now for free.

3. A second album from The D’Urbervilles , the synth-rock band fronted by John O’Regan, now better known as Diamond Rings. Recording is said to be finished, though no release date has been set. (The band is also said to be changing its name.)

4. A new project from Forestry guitarist Peter Gardner, which he says will lean “a little more towards the country side of things.”

5. Japandroids taking a pause from their constant touring to recorded a much-anticipated second album.

6. A new Dan Mangan album, already at least partially recorded. No release date is set, but Mangan says that he’s “thinking Fall 2011.”

7. Wolf Parade offering a temporary reprieve from their hiatus by playing Sasquatch in May.

8. Additionally, a “late Spring / early Summer” release from Wolf Parade singer Dan Boeckner’s side project, Handsome Furs.

9. A new album from Ontario folk talent Basia Bulat. Though no date has been offered, Bulat says she “has nearly all of it written.”

10. The eternal hope and possibility that the Constantines’ Bry Webb will offer the world something, anything from his solo project, the Harbour Coats. We’ve been subsisting on a Vimeo video and an infuriatingly dead-end webpage for far too long.

11. Justin Bieber in 3D.

December 30, 2010

North of Northwest: Brittney’s Not-Entirely-Canadian Top 10 Songs of 2010

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I won’t pretend this is a comprehensive list of the great songs of 2010; I could spend a month re-listening to and evaluating all of this year’s tracks. However, these are definitely /some/ of the great songs from the past twelve months, ten tracks that have impressed and stuck with me. Consider it one volume of a possible multi-disc set.

1. “Brutal Hearts” – Bedouin Soundclash ft. Coeur de Pirate

The song I love so much I wrote an entire column about it.

 

2. “You Wouldn’t Have To Ask” – Bad Books

Catchy, melodic pop at its very, very finest, featuring some of the year’s most beautiful vocal harmonies.

 

3. “Rose Garden” – Shad

Most of Shad’s songs offer great beats and great puns, but accompanying vocals by Broken Social Scene’s Lisa Lobsinger push this track over the edge.

 

4. “Paris (Ooh La La)” – Grace Potter & The Nocturnals

There’s really nothing not to love here. Potter has pipes. Potter has legs. And this song has a hook big enough to catch a whale.

 

5. “Darkness on the Edge of Gastown” – Japandroids

This song has all the elements of Japandroids’ finest work: brutal guitars, screamy vocals, and a refrain sudden and sweet like the center of a chocolate covered cherry.

 

See the rest of Brittney’s not entirely Canadian favorite songs of 2010 after the jump (more…)

December 17, 2010

North of Northwest: The Top 10 Canadian Albums of 2010

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The world needs Japandroids right now.

These two young men from Vancouver take all of the fear and joy of twenty-something life, everything we stare down as we move from youth to real adulthood, take it and grapple with it, think about it, right about it, and express it through the one language we all speak, rock ‘n’ roll. Loud but also sweet, melodic but above all cathartic, Japandroids bring us together in the church of rock, screaming our sweaty hearts out in a crowd, beautiful and ecstatic and secretly terrified.

My Top 10 Canadian Albums of 2010

1. Japandroids, No Singles 2. Wolf Parade, Expo 86 3. Baby Eagle, Dog Weather 4. Frog Eyes, Paul’s Tomb: A Triumph 5. Diamond Rings, Special Affections 6. Plants And Animals, La La Land 7. Besnard Lakes, The Besnard Lakes Are The Roaring Night 8. PS I Love You, Meet Me At The Muster Station 9. Forestry, s/t 10. Shad, TSOL

A note: Many of you will be surprised not to see Dan Mangan’s Nice, Nice, Very Nice among the ranks. In evaluating albums’ eligibility for this list, I used their Canadian release dates; Nice was released in Canada in 2009.

September 10, 2010

Bumbershooting – Day Three

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Anvil ::: Photo by Abbey Simmons

To keep weary festival goers attention on its final day, Bumbershoot stacked its line-up with the most theatrical performers of the festival. From classic heavy metal to the hip hop super heroes, Monday was a feast for the eyes and the ears.

Brent Amaker and the Rodeo ::: Photo by Abbey Simmons

Victor Shade ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Victor Shade ::: Photo by

People Eating People ::: Photo by Abbey Simmons

See more photos from Day Three of Bumbershoot (more…)

September 6, 2010

Bumbershoot 2010: Day Three Preview

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Japandroids ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

Alright. Let us take a second to catch our collective breath. Hopefully some of you kind folks have decided to indulge in Bumbershoot festivities over the past couple of days. Maybe it was you that was walking slow as shit in front of me when I was competitive speed walking between performer’s sets? Was that you I saw chugging Four Loco on the fine lawn of the State Farm Stage? Maybe we shared a laugh when Courtney Love kept on repeating the word “surreal” during Hole’s set? To my knowledge Mrs. Love has never been labeled clairvoyant (I don’t follow her on Twitter, has she?), but I don’t think she had any idea how insanely surreal it was seeing her in-person rather than on television. So far this whole festival has been like that, seeing acts I never in a million years thought I would. The review will come later, the day three preview is now.

For the Day Two preview I started off with a generic quote that pertained to movies. For the Day Three preview, I’m going to use various quotes to describe those who will be performing at Bumbershoot. In order to keep one of my journalism teachers from googling me and ending my life, I tried to go through the necessary steps to make sure these quotes are somewhat legit. One can only do so much when they put an ounce of faith in the internet. Gentle reader, at this point I’m just throwing darts and keeping my fingers crossed. I’m hoping something sticks, or at the very least nobody loses an eye in this ordeal. Enjoy.

Quote: “I don’t know. My mom would say it’s because they are jealous.” Who said it: Brandon Flowers, lead singer of The Killers The artist I’m referring to: Drake

I think that Brandon Flowers quote sounds like something Drake would say in one of his rhymes. I think that’s one of the reasons I’m not down with Drake. He might have a line or two that sounds like something serious, but let’s get real here, Drake was on Degrassi: The Next Generation. There is nothing hip-hop about that. I didn’t watch that show but I don’t think he played an “edgy” charachter (think Sean on Boy Meets World). If Sean (Rider Strong) came out with an album, I know that those tracks would consist of “real talk.” I back Curren$y and some of Lil “Weezy F. Baby, Please Say The Baby” Wayne’s other apprentices with no apprehension. I don’t see that happening in this case, unless I turn into a lonely 15-year-old girl who needs a handsome infatuation within the next 24 hours. I’m not sure how likely Drake is to win me over. (7:30pm on the Bumbershoot MainStage)

People Eating People ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Quote:“No performer should attempt to bite off red-hot iron unless he has a good set of teeth.” Who said it: Harry Houdini The artist I’m referring to: People Eating People

I didn’t mean for there to be a connection between Houdini talking about teeth and the performer being People Eating People. I’d like to think I’m a little more clever than that. To me, the Houdini quote symbolizes the “I’m drawing a line in the sand, who’s coming with me?” vibe Nouela Johnsto’s songs give off. There are times I can see the carnival barker yelling and there are fire dancers all around. Nouela sits in all her glory, a red-hot iron is clapsed in her shit eating grin. (12:30pm at the EMP Sky Church)

(more…)

January 7, 2010

Sound on the Sound’s Top 25 Northwest Albums of 2009

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This list represents the strongest 25 albums we heard in 2009 from bands based in the Northwest. We approximated the Northwest as Vancouver to the North, Eugene to the South, Boise to the East, and the Olympic Peninsula West. Even though we snuck in a few Portland bands and a Vancouver band, this is largely a list of Seattle releases. We did our best to feature the vast array of the Seattle Sound in 2009, though there’s no denying some genres fared better than others–genres that you might be surprised by, genres we were surprised by. If there was any doubt left, 2009 proved Seattle isn’t just a rock town.

2009 was an incredible year for local music in Seattle. There’ve been some unnecessary put-downs of Seattle’s musical output in 2009, because the scene didn’t spawn a new Fleet Foxes, Band of Horses, or Death Cab for Cutie, and the biggest local record label didn’t sign a single Seattle band. That’s “the industry” and Sub Pop’s loss, not ours. Just because the rest of the world isn’t blasting The Maldives or Macklemore yet (or even if they never do) it doesn’t reflect poorly on the scene or the talented folks who call Seattle home. From our front row vantage point, Seattle had an embarrassment of riches in the local music department.

The local hip hop scene bubbled with excitement and slowly-but-surely burgeoned into a topic on everyone’s lips, thanks to the energy of head-turning acts like They Live!, Champagne Champagne, Fresh Espresso, Macklemore, as well as the notorious antics of Mad Rad. Across town from Pike St., Ballard Avenue continued to cultivate a tight-knit community of Americana and rockin’ country bands where pedal steel and fiddle were the instruments du jour. The Maldives, The Moondoggies, Sera Cahoone, Zoe Muth and so many others inhabited both the stages and the bars at the Conor Byrne, the Sunset Tavern, Hatties Hat, and the now 15-year-old environs of the Tractor Tavern, feeding a spirit of collaboration and verve. King Cobra, a rock club which opened up in 2008 in the wake of the Crocodile Cafe’s closing, shut its doors after barely a year of rough business–just in time for a newly revamped Crocodile (without the Cafe in the name) to reclaim its place in March as one of the premier venues in Seattle to see live local music.

While Seattle didn’t spawn a new Fleet Foxes sized success in 2009, we certainly won’t be surprised if a few of the many bands on this list find national attention come 2010. No matter what, we’ll look back on 2009 with warm nostalgia as a vibrant year of local music, when we saw these bands play in living rooms and local bars: the year Seattle knew the words before everyone else could sing along.


25. Zebra by Karl Blau (K Records)

Psychedelic shape-shifter Karl Blau creates an utterly Northwest soundscape that identifies strongly with the output of the Haight-Ashbury facilitated psych movement, as well as the more modern creative likes of Grizzly Bear. “Waiting for the Wind” reminds me of Esquivel’s avant, arty piano, while “Welcome in NW” sounds like it was banged out of an actual sixties basement, fueled by homegrown psilocybins. “‘Tha Ole Moon Smile” makes me do a “Is this a Sixto Rodriguez cut I haven’t heard?” double-take every time. Each new song turns in a completely different direction. By the end you’re left dazed, trying to decipher where you started and what just happened. What happened was Blau presented a reverent journey into musical history through a warped and hazy Technicolor filter. [Josh]

24. From Slaveships to Spaceships by Khingz (self-released)

Much like D. Black’s record this year, Khingz’ From Slaveships to Spaceships finds an MC ignoring hip-hop’s self-imposed strictures about toughness and content, and succeeding through sheer force of purpose and humor. Even though MC Khalil Equiano left town for a while and now lives in British Columbia with his significant other, he obviously loves his hometown scene and returned to the Northwest with this new album in tow, showcasing a rapid-fire rhyming style and spitting dense, wordy verses filled with references to science fiction and his former life on Seattle’s Southside. This is another record distinguished by its brazen autobiographical nature and the surety of the conclusions that follow. “Intellect is a weapon,” he says in “Escape Society.” “You’re at war, please respect it, your struggle is a blessing, embrace, don’t deflect it.” Hip-hop was once widely known as a vehicle for imparting social understanding, and Khingz’ latest is his contribution toward seeing it return once more to that primary function. [Josh]

23. Life On Earth by Tiny Vipers (Sub Pop Records)

Each time I listen to this record I’m reminded that I should probably mentally prepare myself before taking in a whole Tiny Vipers record, unsure if the tears that will inevitably form in my eyes are due to the inherent sadness being communicated, or if I can attribute it to the effect of the one-of-a-kind voice of Jesy Fortino. Four songs in, “Dreamer” hits the headphones; as she coos, “I’m dying for a way out,” I feel as though I’m vibrating on an inter-dimensional frequency, able to sense every haunting ghost, able to see each person’s natural aura of sadness in hues of deep blue. Even though I know this record isn’t for everyone, and though I can’t guarantee you’ll like this record as much as I did, I can guarantee it will change your perspective. If you let it, Life On Earth will overwhelm you. Whether you like it or not, the remainder of your day after a listen is liable to be heightened emotionally because of it. [Josh]

22. The Way We Live by Erik Blood (self-released)

It’s very possible that Erik Blood went around to every hot studio in London ,yoinked every good idea he heard and used it for himself. If he didn’t, maybe they should be coming to him, because he clearly has lots of good ideas. Early on, the title track, “To Leave America,” and “Home & Walk” all synthesize the best of the expansive guitar and organ Brit-rock sound (think Doves), while later in “Broken Glass” and “Too Early & Too Late” we’re notified Blood also has a handle on turning uncomplicated rhythms into sonically interesting pop songs that also sound modern. My one criticism of the record would be that the material is all over the place, and maybe he should have stuck to a rock record instead of including the final two R&B inspired cuts. But then again, “Better Days” is one of the stronger tracks on the record, fusing soul-ish singing with very rock backing to unexpectedly great results. There is something to be said for being able to do experiment with anything and make it sound not just good, but as good as those who do it best. [Josh]

21. Ali’Yah by D. Black (Sportin’ Life Records)

Though much of the recent focus on Seattle hip-hop has been tied to the so-called “3rd-wave” of party rap, one can’t ignore the continued influence of the second wave and its socially conscious approach to concept and performance. In his second album, Ali’Yah, D. Black does a 180 from his previous effort–a stereotypical rap record where he thought he had to be hard–instead opting to be completely REAL about his choices, his identity, and his mistakes. The record is an indictment of his former gangsta self, and by dropping in “The Return,” “I can’t associate with them fake ones/to add to their fake bullets coming out of fake guns,” he’s no doubt turning his back on old friends and the possibility of success by usual means. Yet one can only come away from this record with the conclusion that D. Black is not only confident in his conviction, but righteous. As I said earlier this year, “the force of his example on this record serves to quash any weak retorts that it’s not so easy to turn your back on the game. Not simply inflammatory words, he’s genuinely attempting to engage a nuanced conversation from the inside.” [Josh]

20. Shouting At A Silent Sky by Shane Tutmarc (self-released)

For almost the entirety of his musical career, Shane Tutmarc has been on a journey through history, beginning with an intense interest in classic pop lyricists before more recently being entranced by the gospel recordings of Elvis and the songs of the South. Billed as his first solo effort as Shane Tutmarc, Shouting At A Silent Skyis also probably the most complete, and therefore satisfying, of his recent records–though the Traveling Mercies records are notable themselves for their raw pre-rock quality. By recruiting a few ringers to form his studio support (local producer Johnny Sangster among them), Shane was able to focus on just being Shane at the mic, and the practiced performer really showed through. If Shane’s music occasionally seems styled from another era, just remember that when they came up with the term ‘Rock n’ Roll’, this is what they were talking about: dirtied up blues and church numbers warning about “Crimes of Passion” and the dangers of “Idle Hands.” [Josh]

Read the rest of Sound on the Sound’s Top 25 Northwest Albums of 2009 after the jump

(more…)

December 28, 2009

Josh’s Favorite Songs of 2009

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“Eet” by Regina Spektor

Here is my list of thirty songs that dominated my iTunes, the songs that moved me to learn them on guitar, and the songs I will identify with 2009 forever. In no particular order. Though I suppose the top five could be my top five.

“Walkabout” by Atlas Sound + guest Noah Lennox from Logos (Kranky/4AD) Listen: Get mp3 via FADER

“Technicolor” by Nurses from Apple’s Acre (Dead Oceans) Listen: Download mp3 courtesy of Dead Oceans

“Lisztomania” by Phoenix from Wolfgang Amadaeus Phoenix (Glassnote) Listen: Stream at Myspace

“World News” by the Local Natives from Gorilla Manor (Rough Trade/Frenchkiss) Listen: Download a live version via a Daytrotter Session

“Come Monday Morning” by Widower from Widower (self-released) Listen: Stream at Myspace

“At the Cut” by the Cave Singers from Welcome Joy (Matador) Listen: Download mp3 courtesy of Matador Records

“Comets” by Fanfarlo from Fanfarlo (Canvasback Music) Listen: Stream at Fanfarlo.com

“Alamagordo” by the Ironclads from The Space Between the Maps (self-released) Listen: Download MP3 courtesy of the Ironclads

“Young Heart Sparks Fire” by Japandroids from Post-Nothing (Polyvinyl Records) Listen: Download MP3 courtesy of Polyvinyl Records

“Eet” by Regina Spektor from Far (Sire Records) Listen: Watch the Video above, Stream at Myspace

“Walk Away” by The Maldives from Listen to the Thunder (Mt. Fuji Records) Listen: Stream a Video from a KEXP In-Studio

“Just Ain’t Gonna Work Out” by Mayer Hawthorne from A Strange Arrangement (Stones Throw Records) Listen: Stream the Video at Vimeo

“Ready, Able” by Grizzly Bear from Vecktamist (Warp Records) Listen: Stream the Video at Youtube

“For Now” by People Eating People from People Eating People (The Control Group) Listen: Stream at Myspace

“Lust for Life” by Girls from Lust for Life (True Panther Sounds/Matador Records) Listen: Download MP3 courtesy of True Panther Sounds/Matador Records | Watch the Video Below

 

“Lust for Life” by Girls (Safe Version)

“Lazerbeams” by Fresh Espresso from Glamour (Out for Stardom) Listen: Stream the Video at Youtube

“The Town” by Macklemore from The Unplanned Mixtape (self-released) Listen: Stream the Video at Youtube

“Otherside” by Macklemore and Ryan Lewis from VS. (Sound Records) Listen: Download VS. EP courtesy of Ryan Lewis Productions

“You Only Believe Me When I’m Lying” by Zoe Muth & The Lost High Rollers from Zoe Muth & The Lost High Rollers (self-released) Listen: Download MP3 via KEXP Song of the Day

“Stillness is the Move” by the Dirty Projectors from Bitte Orca (Domino Records) Listen: Stream Track via Domino Records

“Magic Mtn” by Arthur & Yu from Don’t Piss into the Fire Sub Pop Singles Club Record Store Day Release and Hardly Art Label Sampler (Sub Pop/Hardly Art) Listen: Download Track at Amazon via Hardly Art

“Let Me Fall” by the Final Spins from THIS IS THEN/THAT WAS NOW (self-released) Listen: Download MP3 via KEXP Song of the Day

“Ed Jackson” by See Me River from The Great Unwashed EP (Aviation Records) Listen: Download MP3 via KEXP Song of the Day

“Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh” by Say Hi from Oohs and Aahs (Barsuk Records) Listen: Download MP3 courtesy of Barsuk Records

“Please Baby Please” by David Bazan from Curse Your Branches (Barsuk Records) Listen: Stream a solo version at youtube

“The Perfect Space” by the Avett Brothers from I and Love and You (Columbia) Listen: Stream via theavettbrothers.com

“What Took So Long” by the Moondoggies (unreleased) Listen: Download a live session version via Luxury Wafers

“Summer of Hate” by Crocodiles from Summer of Hate (Fat Possum Records) Listen: Download MP3 courtesy of Fat Possum Records

“Isabella” by Lands & Peoples from Lands & Peoples EP (self-released) Listen: Stream via Bandcamp

“Norway” by Beach House from Teen Dream (Sub Pop) Listen: Download MP3 courtesy of Sub Pop