Listening to 2015: A Collaborative Music Project for ILM in 2016

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2015 Listening List Now - Spotify Playlist

2015 Complete Listening Spotify Playlist

2015 Listening List Keepers - Spotify Playlist

2015 Listening List Cream - Spotify Playlist

Here’s a pre-emptive tl; dr for you before I post a manifesto: I am listening to an insane amount of music from 2015 over the course of 2016 (and maybe beyond!) and I’d love for YOU to join me and talk about it as we listen. You’re welcome to come and go as often or as rarely as you’d like; I’ve tried to make it easy for dilettantes to hop in and out whenever the urge strikes.

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 21 January 2016 18:11 (eight years ago) link

dilettante here, these playlists should come in handy when i need to drown out the noise made by dummies in my office, ty Mr tofu

art, Thursday, 21 January 2016 18:15 (eight years ago) link

Okay, so here’s the longer (multi post because of too many links) explanation: I had an ulterior motive in doing all my work in compiling tracks discussed in the individual 2015 ILX genre threads (more info here: Listening to ILX Listen - 2015 Spotify Genre Playlists ).

The goal was to crowdsource a 2015 everything bagel playlist, an as-close-as-circumstances-allow comprehensive listening experience to sample all the varied songs that a curious population of music lovers encountered in one year. To that end, I’ve amassed all of those genre playlists and supplemented them with numerous additional playlists that both reflect my confirmation bias interests and strain the walls of what I want to know.

Here’s what the above linked master playlist consists of:

First there’s all the key ILX genre lists:

ILX Rolling Pop 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling K-Pop 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Hip Hop 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling R&B 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Dancehall / Reggae 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Global & Outernational 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Latin & Afro-Latin 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Jazz 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Afrobeats & Afropop 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Techno & House 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Country 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Grime 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Emo & Pop Punk 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Indie 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Eastern European Pop 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Goth 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Punk 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Non-US Rap 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Folk & Singer Songwriter 2015 Spotify Playlist

Then there are the less genre-specific, more personal taste ILX playlists that would make no sense to non-ILX0rs but are probably very familiar to all of you:

ILX Rolling Favorite Tracks 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Shambhala 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Time Travel 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling I Heard This in 2015 And I Liked It Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Worst Song 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Summer Jams 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling One Track Per Week 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX Rolling Post Fahey Folk2015 Spotify Playlist

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 21 January 2016 18:19 (eight years ago) link

Then we’ve got the MASSIVE track and album nomination lists from our year end best-of poll:
ILX 's Best Tracks of 2015 Spotify Playlist
ILX's Best Album Sampler 2015 Spotify Playlist

Next up is some secret sauce playlists, music that I feel I should have already under my belt but don't just yet:

’Missed Earlier’ Spotify Playlist: A collection of albums that I personally never quite got around to in 2015 and that I intend to finally try in ‘16
Singles Jukebox 2015 Spotify Playlist: Basically everything that showed up on http://www.thesinglesjukebox.com/ last year.
Summer Jams 2015 Consensus Spotify Playlist: An appendix for our own Summer Jam list, this includes that prior list of songs, plus most everything any major publication I saw considered a “song of the summer”.

Then a bunch of playlists that speak to my interest in hip hop:

Passion of the Weiss Best of 2015 Spotify Playlist
Spottie’s Monster “2015 HH+” Spotify Playlist
Billboard’s R&B and Hip Hop Top Placers for 2015 Spotify Playlist
XXL 2015 Freshman Playlist for NY and NJ - Spotify Playlist
XXL 2015 Freshman Playlist for Atlanta - Spotify Playlist
XXL 2015 Freshman Playlist for California - Spotify Playlist
XXL 2015 Freshman Playlist for Chicago - Spotify Playlist
XXL 2015 Freshman Playlist for Mid-America -Spotify Playlist

And, finally, these collection of some random best-ofs that I want to supplement in directions I feel I’m short on exploration. “Mixed bag” playlists come from sources that I listened to and learned from over the course of the past year:

Billboard Hot 100 December 31 2015 Spotify Playlist
Mixed Bag Top Country 2015 Spotify Playlist
Quietus’ Top 100 Albums 2015 Sampler Spotify Playlist
Textura’s Top 100 Albums 2015 Spotify Playlist
Metacritic’s Best Reviewed Albums 2015 Spotify Playlist
Mixed Bag Top Global 2015 Spotify Playlist
Mixed Bag Top House 2015 Spotify Playlist
Pitchfork’s Best Reviewed Albums 2015 Sampler Spotify Playlist
Spin’s Top 101 Songs 2015 Spotify Playlist
Glenn’s Metal Year 2015 Spotify Playlist
Eurovision Finalists 2015 Spotify Playlist

All that music adds up to a lot of all-killer, no-filler listening; a first compilation (before copious doubles have been removed... there's got to be nine copies of "Cool for the Summer" in there...) puts the total playlist number at over 7750 songs.

That complete playlist is accessible by clicking here.

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 21 January 2016 18:31 (eight years ago) link

The plan is to get through about twenty songs a day, but that plan is completely impossible given my overly rigorous personal guidelines:
- I try to listen to every song at least three times.
- If I like every song by an artist, I dip into the album the music comes from and try listening to more until I hit a dud.

Based on past attempts at similar projects, I’ve chosen to organize the listening order alphabetically by artist name; that way I get a healthy taste of everything an artist has to offer from the past year and the diversity of songs still varies wildly from hour to hour. In some cases, this means I have a dozen songs by an artist who I learn I don't like after the first track. Under those circumstances, I may opt for a single listen and then round-file appropriately... unless someone tells me on thread that I'm missing the best representative track! That's meant to be part of the fun!

I’ll be treasure troving my favorites of these into a “Keeper” playlist and the best of the best in a “Cream” playlist. Those are available in the links above and in the opening post, so if for some reason) you’d just like to see a list of my recommendations both general and top of the tops, you’re welcome to give those playlists a shot too.

I would LOVE to have some folks play this game with me but I totally get that a project of this unnecessary complexity and arbitrary length may not be everyone’s cuppa tea. So here’s some suggested approaches for personal takes on this project:

- Build your own personal playlist by hunting and pecking through the above lists; supplement and spice to your own taste with things you’d like to try and jump into a pond of your own creation. Post here as you find new songs! I'll get to them sooner or later!
- Stop by and give a quick listen to what I’m immediately listening to in the Listening List Now Playlist linked above and here. I’ll keep that stocked with my current twenty or fifty or so songs on deck.
- I’d love to get a few people a week who are willing to commit to the insanity of knocking out a hundred songs in a week and we can use this thread to talk about what we like, what we don't and how the glutton’s ear approach is working for us.
- Throw a beer can at me from across the thread while screaming “HEY MALKOVICH"

A few other postscripts:

- I am acutely aware that even this goliath of a listening list is not genuinely comprehensive and that I'm missing any number of vital genres and artists here due to both rights issues and my own ignorance. But you gotta draw the line somewhere! "More than I can conceivably even get to this year" is where I'm choosing to stop.
- For various reasons, both professional and personal, this is NOT going to be the only music I listen to this year and the project may occasionally need to be set aside so that I can do work related or palate cleansing listening in other directions. Proof is in the pudding, but I do plan to post here more or less daily. Sorry if that clutters your "site new answers" routine... maybe join in?
- For clarification on my non-affiliation with Spotify and to reiterate my earlier rationale for limiting this to one freemium/paid service:

Spotify is hardly the be-all-end-all of music indices and it is often notably less au courant than say, YouTube or soundcloud, which makes finding immediate hip hop or electronic dicey, but it has the added benefit of being very easy to search and manage, free and/or cheap, available in multiple countries and it just happens to be the service I lean on for at least 75% of my listening. It is also a service that makes subscription to playlists (and auto-updating/downloading tracks to a mobile playlist) easy.

It varies based on genre and label of course, but I would say Spotify averaged access to a bit more than 80% of all the tracks mentioned on the ILX genre threads this year. YouTube is likely closer to 98% but good luck downloading a 7500 track YouTube playlist. I'm under no illusions that Spotify may well not exist in five years but something similar will almost certainly fill the vacuum. Export your playlists! Back up your hard drive! Brush and floss!
- I may well not finish this mega-playlist by year’s end and don’t know if I’ll soldier through it into 2017 or not. I’m really less concerned with arbitrary timelines and more with the spirit and elation of discovery. Let's see if this takes off!
- Thought the vast majority are, not every track on this playlist is from 2015. I’m okay with that, especially if it helps me find something new.

I started this project on my own quietly in late December here and am about 250 tracks in as of now. I’ll double back and post some thoughts on that first quarter’s worth of music over the next few days, starting likely tonight. I don't claim to be the best critic but hopefully I can at least dig up some truffles of note for you.

So how 'bout it? Who's in?

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 21 January 2016 18:51 (eight years ago) link

*crickets, punctuated by muted steps shuffling backwards*

its subtle brume (DJP), Thursday, 21 January 2016 19:34 (eight years ago) link

lol, that's the obvious answer i suppose.
you were specifically invited I'll point out!

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 21 January 2016 19:37 (eight years ago) link

lol DJP

good luck, forks ;-)

flopson, Thursday, 21 January 2016 20:21 (eight years ago) link

thanks! stop by occasionally and join in if you feel inclined!

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 21 January 2016 20:22 (eight years ago) link

spotify doesn't work at my work for some reason, sadly :-/

flopson, Thursday, 21 January 2016 20:24 (eight years ago) link

maybe listen off your phone while you charge it? #workhack

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 21 January 2016 20:34 (eight years ago) link

I have just created a spotify account so maybe I'll be able to listen to some of these. I was just looking at the Post-Fahey playlist and correct me if I'm wrong but there seems to be almost no music from 2015 in it? (I counted one after a quick glance)

moans and feedback (Dinsdale), Thursday, 21 January 2016 20:46 (eight years ago) link

yeah, they skew MUCH older and wider but it's not a huge amount of music and it's been so consistently rewarding that i definitely wanted it to be part of this project!

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 21 January 2016 20:48 (eight years ago) link

Ooh thanks for doing the Singles Jukebox playlist, forks.

Jeff W, Thursday, 21 January 2016 20:54 (eight years ago) link

No probs; I'm looking forward to digging into it further myself! I listened to most of it but had month long periods of dropping out so now I'm gonna get thoroughly caught up.

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:00 (eight years ago) link

yeah, they skew MUCH older and wider but it's not a huge amount of music and it's been so consistently rewarding that i definitely wanted it to be part of this project!

what I meant was, you're not going to include all the 2015 stuff mentioned in that thread during the past year? (if it's collaborative I can help adding them if that's too much work for you)

moans and feedback (Dinsdale), Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:07 (eight years ago) link

ah, i got you. That thread got too complicated for me to keep up with past a certain point so i had to let it go.
I don't really want to add much more of anything else but if you have a specific song or three; sure, let's do it! Otherwise, i'm gonna cite the above thread note:

I am acutely aware that even this goliath of a listening list is not genuinely comprehensive and that I'm missing any number of vital genres and artists here due to both rights issues and my own ignorance. But you gotta draw the line somewhere!

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:09 (eight years ago) link

Well there's a whole year missing so adding a couple tracks wouldn't quite cut it, but it's your project so I'll let you decide: I can try to add all the 2015 releases mentioned in the thread or we leave it like that and it's fine too because there's plenty of stuff to listen already (so far the Kaki King and Daniel Higgs are really doing it for me).

moans and feedback (Dinsdale), Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:18 (eight years ago) link

Add em if you want! I wouldn't mind! Could you put them in a new list?

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:19 (eight years ago) link

Sure, I'll do that.

moans and feedback (Dinsdale), Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:26 (eight years ago) link

spotify blows, will spend 2016 giving money to artists i care about

trigger warning: your mom (mattresslessness), Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:27 (eight years ago) link

in exchange for something that won't disappear overnight in a merger.

trigger warning: your mom (mattresslessness), Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:30 (eight years ago) link

i'm gonna do both but i'm crazy like that

lute bro (brimstead), Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:33 (eight years ago) link

me too!
also as noted above:

Spotify is hardly the be-all-end-all of music indices ... but it has the added benefit of being very easy to search and manage, free and/or cheap, available in multiple countries and it just happens to be the service I lean on for at least 75% of my listening. It is also a service that makes subscription to playlists (and auto-updating/downloading tracks to a mobile playlist) easy. I'm under no illusions that Spotify may well not exist in five years but something similar will almost certainly fill the vacuum.

ulysses, Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:44 (eight years ago) link

oh and hey, it's forks. I got tired of having eight gazillion thread bookmarks so in honor of primarily holing up in this little corner of ILX and to slim down and focus on just listening, I'm trying on a new login.

The reference, if it's not obvious, is to the arduousness of the quest ahead as we ride into the Sirens' path.

ulysses, Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:47 (eight years ago) link

have fun in your video game

trigger warning: your mom (mattresslessness), Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:49 (eight years ago) link

i plan to! feel free to stop by if you want to play!

ulysses, Thursday, 21 January 2016 21:49 (eight years ago) link

Here's the playlist for the 2015 part of the Post-Fahey thread:

https://play.spotify.com/user/moans%2Bfeedback/playlist/2jWJ8MVZJFVvdgLqR2rVAm

moans and feedback (Dinsdale), Thursday, 21 January 2016 22:33 (eight years ago) link

Thanks, good cream for my coffee!

ulysses, Thursday, 21 January 2016 22:34 (eight years ago) link

i don't entirely know what I'm doing here so I'm going to make it up as I go along and then likely change my mind a half dozen times.

I think i'm obliged to backtrack a bit and address the first songs I listened to... so here's some time travel back to December with commentary.

I wish I was able to give voice as to why The 1975 piss me off. Like the 80's dance punk pastiche isn't inherently repellant; I have a fair nostalgia investment in that bank but there's a complete faking of the funk that feels so obvious and blunt about them... like everything was done with numbers and contracts and without anything so spontaneous as a fart without proper mic placement. I said this about "1975" on Singles Jukebox sometime back, I guess it stands: "In some alternate reality, there must be a world where “starts out Talking Heads, ends up Huey Lewis and The News” is a compliment. Not here, though; the wonky opening twenty seconds bought a lot of goodwill from me that was fast undone by Healy’s vocals."

1wayFrank is a young rapper out of Florida with a penchant for dancehall production and heavily altered/"autotuned" vocals. "Juggman" felt mostly disposable but "Make It Happen" has a real air of youth in the throes of aspiration and the lean and hungry look of the would-be dangerous man. He shares the track with an 18 year old rapper named Kodak Black who sounds a bit like baby Jeezy; he's not bad himself.

2:54 fall somewhere between gothpunk and dream pop or whatever; I dunno because it's all kind of dozy and nondescript to me. Never really gets out of second gear to burst. "Orion" is the single and I guess I see the appeal from a distance if one really doesn't like shit and doesn't wanna go outside but I imagine you could get the same effect by filling a kiddie pool with kleenex and crawling through it in a beekeeper uniform. If that sounds like a good time to you, I've got a band with your name on it!

I think this 2011 2Face Idibia / R. Kelly recreation of the earlier Shaggy collaboration from 2009 came up on the Afrobeat thread as a predecessor to Kelly's more recent duet with Wiz Kid as proof of Kell's long term interest in African pop. 2Face improves on the original in my opinion but this is a pretty minor song in any number of ways.

I may not have mentioned it, but the impetus for doing this slightly overblown and poptimistic take on Aristotle's 'last man to know everything there was' schtick was that I did a less far-reaching version of the same thing last year with a 2k+ list and that was so easy that I set my sights impossibly higher. I bring all that up because one of the first real discoveries on that 2014 playlist was 2NE1's CRUSH album; it was an early intro to modern k-pop, a genre I was (and am) sorely lacking broad exposure to. CRUSH is a dope (if front loaded) LP so I had high hopes that were only somewhat disappointed with "I Am The Best", which is a tetch too little soaring balloons and a bit too much farting deflation while we wait for one of the onomatopoetic marching sequences punctuated with a sonically diagonal "BEEEESST" that comes awful close to "BIIIITCH"... still worth a few listens and hanging onto though.

Urgh, this 2NYO track is sloppy and remarkable only in how discordant and underproduced it is. There's some solid diva voices under all that rancid icing maybe? Hard to tell.

3BallMTY are Mexico's unrelated triplet answer to Disclosure but, instead of mugging Detroit or Chicago, their tastes run closer to home and to the moment. "Quireo Bailar" has Becky G doing more English than Spanglish and 9 1/2 million views on YouTube and not much more under the hood than a four on the floor beat and that fucking cut and paste bari sax sound that has been pretty much everywhere since Macklemore and Flo Rida turned it into INSTANT HOOK! I saw these kids live a few years ago and the crowd ate them up with a spoon; they're pretty phenomenally popular.

To my shame, I think I had some vague appreciation of 3OH!3's SPRANG BREAK FO'EVAHHHH bullshit back when they ran with Ke$ha but to be fair, my main exposure to DON'TTRUST ME was Molly Pope's Ethel Merman-channelling cover. "MY D!CK" made the cut via the worst songs list and my god does it ever fit the bill. Dare you to get all the way through it even once. I'm not sure I ever did.

ulysses, Friday, 22 January 2016 07:51 (eight years ago) link

man, this is insane. in a good way, i think? best of luck, sir.

also, i'm anti-spotify, too, but mattresslessness, you're a dick.

alpine static, Friday, 22 January 2016 07:59 (eight years ago) link

this makes Fastnbulbous look like a disorganized layabout

alpine static, Friday, 22 January 2016 08:04 (eight years ago) link

b-b-b-b-but what about 2016???

human and working on getting beer (longneck), Friday, 22 January 2016 08:21 (eight years ago) link

ha, don't worry about me not maintaining the genre threads. My plan is to set aside a weekend afternoon once a month to update those in toto. How else can I keep up with what's recent?

BTW, the chorus to the 3OH!3 song is as follows: "Every time I look at my dick / I'm like / Holy Shit / That's a big dick / Every time I look at your dick / I'm like / Holy Shit / That's a small dick".

Seriously!

ulysses, Friday, 22 January 2016 15:59 (eight years ago) link

do you have to listen to that song 3 times too?

Will v. Maim (Will M.), Friday, 22 January 2016 16:00 (eight years ago) link

i know i STARTED it more than three times. You never know what you find if you pan for gold hard enough (get it, i said "hard") but a wise man knows when to cut his losses.

ulysses, Friday, 22 January 2016 16:04 (eight years ago) link

Louie Vega's Dance Ritual Mix of 3 Winans Bros and The Clark Sisters' song "Dance" is such a vibrant hymn for those who sit in the front pews at the Church of Our Saviour Larry Levan (and come to think of it, this would be a great counterpart for L.L.'s version of the Joubert's "Stand on the Word"). I was raised something of a southern quartet purist and spent a great deal of time as a child in Bessemer and Memphis and Nashville churches in the 80's watching senior citizens just DEMOLISH the place by channelling the holy ghost. if you'd like a taste of that stuff, try hitting play on the following youtube with the Four Eagle Gospel Singers, but imagine these guys thirty years younger.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DcOLNNjeJo#t=20m20s

Those folks were second and third generation beneficiaries of the late nineteenth century/early twentieth push for classical-spliced-with-folk vocal instruction within the black american community; anyone interested in the history there is directed to this book co-written by my pops. I'm generally much more suspicious and unengaged by modern pop gospel with its focus on solo artists, downright disgraceful disowning of a spectacularly rich history and its heavy grounding within the black entrepreneurialism movement (all three of those are pretty easily linked with a bit of thought and I'd be happy to run with that conversation if anyone wants to have it). Mix pop gospel with house and I will likely cross the street to get away but somehow here all the dominoes fall just right and the uplift is truly uplifting, the vibrato's burr is like a cat purring, the falsettos soar and the build the build the build of it all is just in perfect balance. I don't know of a faster nine and a half minutes. Ultimately, this might be my favorite song of the year. I should probably listen to it again just to make sure.

credit where it's due: i heard about this track on (of all places) the 2015 Summer Jams thread and no less than our good friend mattresslessness from upthread called it his "track of the year"! Music breaks all boundaries; it's a beautiful thing mannnnnn...

ulysses, Friday, 22 January 2016 20:24 (eight years ago) link

I respect your insane level of planning and dedication to this project, sir. I have my own insane music listening projects keeping me occupied (currently working my way through every charting Billboard single from '65 through '77, having already done so for '60-'64 and '78-'93) or I might join in. But there's also the thing where I'm also hopelessly behind the times and don't even recognize most of the names of current music artists.

Meat Sheet (Old Lunch), Friday, 22 January 2016 20:36 (eight years ago) link

I hadn't heard any 3BallMTY for about five years but Quireo Bailar is really fun!

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Friday, 22 January 2016 20:39 (eight years ago) link

I don't recognize a lot of these artists either! I get to know them post listen, so I'll certainly appreciate input from anyone better learned in a specific artist who wants to jump in and further enlighten us.
Godspeed on your own insane project, feel free to just listen to a track or three whenever the urge hits you and put in your two cents.

"Quiero Bailar" IS really fun but it wears out surprisingly quickly IMO.

ulysses, Friday, 22 January 2016 20:43 (eight years ago) link

oh my god this 3OH!3 song

its subtle brume (DJP), Friday, 22 January 2016 20:46 (eight years ago) link

your dick's growing mold
my dick shines like gold
your dick's like the Pope
my dick don't get old

what the hell is happening here

its subtle brume (DJP), Friday, 22 January 2016 20:48 (eight years ago) link

What a disquietingly brilliant project. I can definitely get on board with this kind of crazy maximalist cataloguing. My own Spotify playlists are a labyrinth of horror so I'll be thrilled to work my way through at least a few of these, though I'm not sure I could hope to comply with peak rigour. I'll keep you posted on exactly when and with what and how successfully I begin.

tangenttangent, Friday, 22 January 2016 20:57 (eight years ago) link

4Minute are an all-girl K-Pop quintet who have been around for about six years and are almost certainly more popular than your favorite band. Their EP release for last year was called Crazy and the highlights I worked through are the title cut, which is a bit too all-over-the-place for me; "Cold Rain", a melancholy ballad that would be a good fit for a video game character's breakup mix tape; and "Is It Poppin?" which is all wacky phone sound effects, plinky keys, Quad City DJ's bounce'n'percussion and G-G-GOING CRAZY. That last one is definitely a hit or miss track and there are times when I need it to shut the fuck up immediately but if the mood's right, it's excellent with a bowl of Fruity Pebbles as part of your complete breakfast. The band's next album is due in February and it's gonna have a track with Skrillex that'll likely get US play. Give it a listen so you can say you knew them before your kids did.

5 Seconds of Summer are frat boy dipshittery given corporeal form. At one point last month I was taking apart a desk to get ready to move and I almost broke my foot because after painfully suffering through "She's Kinda Hot", I simply could not take the Hungry Like the Wolf nods from "Hey Everybody!" and right around the time these assholes started singing "WE CAN ALL GET SOME / WE CAN ALL GET PAID / OH OH OH OH / OH AH OH OH OH", I just dropped what I was doing so that I could turn them the fuck off and the desk collapsed on me. So I guess what I'm saying is don't listen to this while you deliver a baby because you might well (and understandably) drop the poor thing when your patience with this nonsense flags.

ulysses, Friday, 22 January 2016 21:07 (eight years ago) link

i would support a grassroots movement to make MY DICK the Donald Trump campaign theme.

Welcome in tangent squared! start wherever you like and chime in. I'm listening much further along than what I'm currently writing about; just want to give everything due attention. Hopefully I can knock out all the older stuff in a week or two.

ulysses, Friday, 22 January 2016 21:09 (eight years ago) link

I have no clue what the chronological schematic of your brain looks like with regards to this, but I am starting in the month of 'Goth' and will purge various impressions here at some stage. Good luck on your quest!

tangenttangent, Friday, 22 January 2016 21:17 (eight years ago) link

lol, yeah i think my plan is the craziest one: i'm gonna throw all the above lists into one and listen through alphabetically. Listening by genre feels like it would wear me out too fast. But I'm curious to hear what your experience is if you're gonna try that!

ulysses, Friday, 22 January 2016 21:24 (eight years ago) link

Let Me Find Out Pt. 2 with 5th Ward Weebie, Snoop Dogg and Juvenile is a polished sequel to a 2013 New Orleans booty clap hit with some much more famous guys on the track. It's not much more than the gazillionth retake on Triggaman and punchline snap raps but Juvy's bars are excellent: "lemme find out that big ol pussy is a beast / said it killed your baby daddy rest in peace to the deceased". Snoop seems a bit out of place and out of pace on something this fast.

6:33 are inscrutably hipster progrock that occasionally creeps into metal, leans into chiptune and just as often leaps with both feet into Pink Floyd territory. At its best it brings to mind Mr. Bungle for me and, though that's a zone I don't _always_ want to be in, it requires a deft touch. The album cuts that I ended up gravitating to are "The Walking Fed" (very Mike Patton-y), "Last bullet for a gold rattle" i(almost J-pop) and I'm A Nerd (which goes all over the goddamn place, including a faux hurdy-gurdy breakdown). Highly recommended for anybody who likes the idea of getting their banana split mixed up with their salmon salad.

Oh hey it's 8Ball, 25 years into his drastically underrated recording career and still dropping occasional gems. The definite standout on the album cuts I sampled was the regrettably titled Fuck Niggas; the steel drum hook is so shimmery and astonishingly good. "It's Music," (an old school, bass-guitar heavy duet with MJG) is more positive and laid back both in title and in tone. 8Ball and MJG and 3-6 were in heavy rotation in my hometown when i was growing up and I still love my Tennessee Titans.

ulysses, Friday, 22 January 2016 23:15 (eight years ago) link

I think tiptoeing through these playlists genre by genre is going to be okay when (like the Goth playlist) they're only 30 tracks long. We'll see if I regret this approach by the time I reach Jazz…

I'm all set up with folders and sub-folders. I have a 'That Sounds Cool' playlist for intriguing suggestions on this thread.

Goth finished. It was excellent! Will post loves/loaves tomorrow when I've given the seemingly decent ones a fuller listen. Pretty excited about this/taking it incredibly seriously.

tangenttangent, Saturday, 23 January 2016 01:34 (eight years ago) link

Er…yes, loaves. Dark, atmospheric loaves...

tangenttangent, Saturday, 23 January 2016 01:35 (eight years ago) link

YOW! I gotta get better with my linking! Try that again:

6:33 - 'I'm a Nerd'

Nmesh - 'A Face Without Eyes'

Nmesh - 'EAT THE EGGS'

ulysses, Saturday, 23 January 2016 22:06 (eight years ago) link

(btw, as far as i can tell, it was balls who first mentioned that Louis Vega Dance Ritual track on ILX... but one of the tenets I generally subscribe to here is that credit belongs to the artist, not the discoverer)

ulysses, Saturday, 23 January 2016 22:07 (eight years ago) link

1. links still didn't work- gave me some weird message about youtube thinking i'm a bot or something?

2. "i'm a nerd" is the one i listened to!

3. honestly i think i like nmesh even less than 2 8 1 4. it's the ballard thing again. yes, i know media culture is artificial and creepy. orville redenbacher is uncanny valley. it's not an observation i find aesthetically compelling.

4. i wish there were records i could find by clicking three times. unfortunately i have hit the point where there are records too obscure for me to find on the internet, but i don't feel like this is the thread to namedrop (again!) private press '70s lps by power pop cult figures.

diana krallice (rushomancy), Saturday, 23 January 2016 23:27 (eight years ago) link

Thanks for the feedback ulysses (is this your accepted new monicker of address?) and emil.y! Great that you're checking out those artists!

I likewise queued up things to listen to based on those write-ups - 6:33 and 4Minute - both promising! I'll keep them in rotation. I like them as two bookends of a 90s phonecall with the dialtone and dial-up sounds. 6:33 is unapologetically ridiculous - I have no problem with cheese as long as it's self-referential (metaphorically speaking...). It doesn't sound to me like they're stepping on Mr. Bungle's toes so much as doing their own mad, disjointed and yes, utterly nerdy thing.

That 2814 and Ballard might tesselate makes me wary. If I have anything to thank The Atrocity Exhibition for, it's for making me way less invested in postmodern discourses.

Can't wait to see this project expand into something like a cross between an encyclopaedia and a text adventure. I'll certainly be playing it that way anyway.

tangenttangent, Saturday, 23 January 2016 23:43 (eight years ago) link

Oh and I'm done listening to the Punk playlist. Impressions to follow tomorrow.

tangenttangent, Saturday, 23 January 2016 23:45 (eight years ago) link

lol, I like Ballard *and* vaporwave. I am a corny postmodern fux0r.

emil.y, Saturday, 23 January 2016 23:45 (eight years ago) link

xp to rush:
1. yeah, i'm getting some youtube pushback too... apparently they think i'm evil. I will avoid utilizing them to link to.

2. sounds like 6:33 isn't for you and I can't really get too seriously behind trying to change your mind there... it registers as a bit trashy but i like that!

3. i dig you on the "orville redenbacher uncanny valley"; there's something about the MST3K taper / youtube poop aesthetic of vaporwave that connects squarely with my child of the 80's reptile brain. it's not especially defensible but I find it fascinating that consumer nostalgia is so nefarious and octopus cunning as to get into my heart even though I unreservedly hate the system and the products! I guess I enjoy confronting my brainwashing protocols

4. I wish you WOULD namedrop private press '70s lps by power pop cult figures! How else will we learn!
btw, in addition to being an independent ethnomusicologist (which, SURPRISE, doesn't pay that well), my father was and is a rare record dealer so i am intently aware that not only is spotify not a true celestial jukebox, neither is the internet. And yeah it's unlikely that we'll see all of human endeavor digitized and pressbutton and i appreciate your distrust of the suggestion that it even SHOULD be... I guess my thinking is that the wheel keeps turning and there's just so much new and exciting out there even if it's NOT so hard to find. My fave Vonnegut misquote is "genius is as common as daisies", which is to say it's not everywhere or even most of the wheres but it's not that hard to find if you care to look. So rare genius or common genius, my evolving catholic tastes find room for whatever you got.

ulysses, Saturday, 23 January 2016 23:48 (eight years ago) link

xpost

I'm good with vaporwave! Ballard not so much...

Also, I am still overly invested in postmodernism. DFW ftw… It's 2006 again. I'll just listen to this band shall I?

tangenttangent, Saturday, 23 January 2016 23:50 (eight years ago) link

tangentx2: yeah, i'll answer to ulysses; why not!

my copy of atrocity exhibition is the RE/SEARCH version with the Phoebe Gloeckner illustrations. I'm not sure I see a direct line from something as inconsequential as 2 8 1 4... but different strokes! I never really got into ballard; last i remember trying was in college in the middle of a full blown burroughs gorging. I too am corny postmodern fux0r.

I look forward to getting punk feedback and to the ongoing choosing of our own adventure. You might want to link or repost your thoughts in the appropriate genre threads too if you're gonna dice the onions that way.

ulysses, Saturday, 23 January 2016 23:54 (eight years ago) link

9 Muses is a K-pop band with 8 members, because, okay look it was nine members and then it wasn't but i dunno, just look at this chart and wonder at the complexity of the Korean multi-member studio built girl band phenomenon:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/timeline/072a1745b89b5875b91a8d1797edb469.png
9 Muses dropped 15 songs over three EPs in the past year and the K-Pop thread hit on the singles from all of them. Everything I tried was very nourishing and they’re good at a variety of styles. “DRAMA” would be right at home in a Parappa sequel, both ”Secret" and “Sleepless Night” (minus some of the bouncier guitar elements) would pass believably as the matrix for future Tinashe tracks, “TO.MINE” is solid pop-country and "HURT LOCKER always makes me think of The Cranberries “Zombie” when they get to the chorus for the strangest reasons. If you’re open to experimenting with K-pop, you are fairly likely to find something you like in their discog; it's all high-quality.

Speaking as we're still talkin' 'bout vaporwave detritus, here’s a hearty vote for 18 Carat Affair’s album ‘Pleasure Control’. It’s like being stuck in a mall elevator in 1981… in a good way! Sure the presentation is a little same-y but the whole album isn’t much more than 20 minutes, so you're done before you know it. Three minutes is enough to see if it grabs you; try the 40 second "Feature Presentation" and let it slide into ”Foundation Application" for the full effecct.

45 ACP was a find on the Techno/Bobbins thread and, though I suppose “IDM” is a much reviled term (i never saw it as promoting a polarity against “stupid dance music”, it just provided a good catch-all basket for the abstract narrative electronic stuff i like… you would prefer maybe “input jazz”? Or “pousse-cafe”? or “electronika” BLEURGH), it’s what I think when I listen here. I liked the sample track, ”Ground to Ground” enough to listen to the whole ‘Change of Tone’ album; other standouts were ”Double Cross" (would be right at home in Sony's wipE'out) and ”Playing for Keeps" (like living inside a very chill Pachinko machine). Recommended if you prefer your ambient to get a little intrusive.

The 1978ers is yU on raps and SlimKat78 on beats, both out of the Washington DC area. They scratch that boom bap jazz rap spot that I tend to forget I really like and that I’m never sure is in style or not. Remember Pharcyde? Remember Black Sheep? Remember Arrested Development? Remember Digable Planets? Remember The Goats? Remember Ultramagnetic MC’s? Remember Pete Rock and CL Smooth? Remember 1992? These guys certainly do. The high points on a quick scan of the debut album ‘People of Today’ are "One Nine 7 T 8", “In the Way”, “FAR” and their excellent and highly recommended single ”Without a Clue".
Here’s a bonus non-spotify track to try for the non-opted in:
The 1978ers - 'A People’s Intro Act I'

I gave that 2 8 1 4 track a listen and I realized that I think that i _DID_ already give this one a shot… but it was so ethereal and barely there that it slipped off the playlist, out of my mind and into the ether. I’m okay leaving it there.

ulysses, Sunday, 24 January 2016 00:01 (eight years ago) link

but do you answer to "hello sailor"

ok, top of my wishlist is "me... for the first time" by tommy marolda, who later went on to form (well, be) the toms. there's other stuff i'd like to hear, such as the second rosebud album, expo 80's "viva brazil", ahh! folly jet's "abandoned songs from the limbo", dave day's solo single, herb jeffries' and eden ahbez's "the singing prophet", (a record that i actually found just now because i was spelling it wrong all this time), the b-sides of patti jo's two singles, and Ciociaria. a land of ancient silences by ettore de carolis, but mostly i really want to hear that tommy marolda record.

diana krallice (rushomancy), Sunday, 24 January 2016 00:11 (eight years ago) link

xxp

Hooray for Burroughs!

2 8 1 4 is admittedly lovely, but it's so glacially chilled-out that I feel guilty for remaining chaotic in its presence. I'll save one though for moments of unusual quietude.

I'll be sure to venture into the as yet unknown world of the rolling threads once I locate them. I'm very slow at dicing onions. It takes me about two hours to make a stir fry. To your North is a knife, to your South is a portal of music...

tangenttangent, Sunday, 24 January 2016 00:13 (eight years ago) link

but do you answer to "hello sailor"

i c what u did there

Rush, are you on any private trackers? Dunno if that's part of your search span. I had never heard of Marolda (i have a big blind spot with 70's/80's pop) but I like the autoload on his website!

I HAVE BEEN KILLED BY A GRUE

ulysses, Sunday, 24 January 2016 00:50 (eight years ago) link

i'm on the best-known private tracker, but i personally find it disappointing. doesn't have the breadth of the old blogs, like the much-missed mutant sounds. doesn't even have the breadth of youtube, which is probably the best place to find music right now. also, private trackers tend to have too much scenester jive for my tastes. i did the bbs thing when i was a teenager, but that was a long, long time ago.

diana krallice (rushomancy), Sunday, 24 January 2016 01:03 (eight years ago) link

i miss the tofu hut, that was a REAL music blog...
yeah, whatever the old musicblog world lacked in completeness it certainly did obscurity well.

ulysses, Sunday, 24 January 2016 01:29 (eight years ago) link

> Nicole Sabouné's album Must Exist was quite good at first listen iirc.

Miman is better, and as I've said elsewhere, is a stronger album than Chelsea Wolfe's latest (which I like, too).

Flesh emoji (Sanpaku), Sunday, 24 January 2016 08:27 (eight years ago) link

Hey, ulysses, I'm kind of in the midst of my own massive listening project rn, and so I can't fully accept your invitation. If you wouldn't mind, I thought it might be cool to pipe up with my own two cents whenever yours ends up brushing against mine, as it did recently with 2 8 1 4 ...

I wasn't planning on listening to that album for a few more weeks, as most of the albums I am checking out atm are either goth or sludge metal (that Nicole Saboune album might be in order soon), but I bumped it ahead so I could post a hot take here, and...I like it. A lot. I don't really know anything about the Night Bus micro-genre at all, but if it is even remotely related to the Burial track of the same name, then this album prob lands directly in the middle between that and, say, Peaking Lights' 936. It's way more chill than other albums like Alameda 5 and Suuns & Jerusalem in my Heart, but it is evety bit as oneiric, and tbh I hope it makes the albums poll, even though I didnt give it any points

Peaking Lights covers One More Time (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 24 January 2016 13:32 (eight years ago) link

Also, I listened to Boy Harsher on soundcloud, that's pretty rad as well; some of the songer's exhortations towards the middle of the song verge on Alan Vega territory, which is always positive

Peaking Lights covers One More Time (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 24 January 2016 13:46 (eight years ago) link

maybe i need to go back to 2 8 1 4 later, given that everyone's very much into it... it kinda went over (or under) my head.

ulysses, Sunday, 24 January 2016 17:42 (eight years ago) link

Emo - done! Aided somewhat by the microscopic song lengths. Yes, I unashamedly love emo. I'll post in defence of that at some point along with many thoughts. My afternoon's listening is now clear for the albums rollout...

tangenttangent, Monday, 25 January 2016 12:37 (eight years ago) link

boy harsher rule! they played in my basement last year:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Th_rEonmDM

scott seward, Monday, 25 January 2016 12:54 (eight years ago) link

Punk

This collection didn't really live up to my expectations after the strength of the entire goth playlist. I found myself wincing through some of the more watery depictions of what should be a hugely expressive music. I guess the accessibility of the form makes it easy prey to lazier, more derivative songwriting, which is such a shame given the wild extremes the genre should idealistically catalyse.

Anyway, the worst of these included Protomartyr, who I tried repeatedly to get into last year on the insistence of trustworthy sources claiming it was inspired, only to find what to my ears sounds like a dingier Mission of Burma album.

Worst song award goes to Tenement's 'Sitcom Moms'. "You guys wanna hear some cool bullshit?", it spoken-word-begins. God no. Actually just listened again…it's sort of sweet. I couldn't say why. I think my mind got melted today with all the emo heightening my dopamine and weakening my standards.

No more complaining. There were a sprinkling of highlights, like those of Dilly Dally, who are 1 part Pixies to 1 part Hole, but with their own genuinely inventive melodies. She has some powerful voice too.

PC Worship - Woooo! This made my ballot (just). Or rather, the album did. 'Social Fiction', represented here, was actually my least favourite track (though still blinding). Lots of discordant, piling on of extra extra guitars and rhythm. The title track is the clear winner for me - it sounds like a Bioy Casaresian creation being cranked up to full ambiguous potential.

No Negative - This was cool. Like an early, lo-fi Sonic Youth. And just as you suspect they could use something extra, lots of nice spaceship landing sounds are introduced and it all gets very interesting indeed at the end. I like that Spotify barely recognises them as a band too.

New Fries - Spikey, no-wavey female punk. It manages to fit a lot of tonal shifts into the space of 2 minutes 18, in which 40 seconds comprise white noise. I always find myself laughing through that last bit.

I Hate Sex - Lovely screamo! The vocal was so unexpected when I heard this in the tracks poll. It's like Kathy Acker fed through Straylight Run's smoothie blender. She'd hate that…but this is excellent.

Hagar the Womb - Favourite find! Yes! Her weird, dissonant, half-spoken vocals are incredible. Those and some slightly unusual chord progressions really make this. Can't fully make out what she's saying, but I'm going to assume her politics are amazing and thus enable her to sing about 'bullshit babies' all she wants.

KEN Mode - Steve Albini is all over this. I liked it a lot before now, but didn't really get it until this weekend, listening on headphones as I entered a football stadium (as spectator) to certain defeat. As a spectator, I was defeated. As a listener, I was triumphant.

tangenttangent, Monday, 25 January 2016 23:50 (eight years ago) link

it wasn't even a defeat in the end. maybe the players had been listening to KEN Mode too

I remember you was vote-splitted (imago), Monday, 25 January 2016 23:52 (eight years ago) link

Oh, forgot to keep bolding.

Emo tomorrow. How is your exploration unfolding forks/ulysses?

tangenttangent, Monday, 25 January 2016 23:52 (eight years ago) link

xpost

Reza had.

tangenttangent, Monday, 25 January 2016 23:53 (eight years ago) link

Some of those sound great. I know you played them to me earlier and they kind of merged into a pleasant punky mist but I will certainly check a few of them individually

I remember you was vote-splitted (imago), Monday, 25 January 2016 23:55 (eight years ago) link

(Obviously PC Worship is the best, we knew this)

I remember you was vote-splitted (imago), Monday, 25 January 2016 23:55 (eight years ago) link

it's going okay on the listening front but i need more time to devote to typing! Will try to post a few reactions tonight.

ulysses, Tuesday, 26 January 2016 00:09 (eight years ago) link

new fries and hagar the womb are making it into regular rotation for me, though from my research it looks like hagar the womb are an '80s band?

diana krallice (rushomancy), Tuesday, 26 January 2016 00:55 (eight years ago) link

Thanks for the hot takes on the punk stuff; will refocus as I get there alphabetically! Listening wise, I'm at Angel Haze, so I have lots of ground to catch up on. Doing those polls is distracting!

It occurs to me I never mentioned it, but I'm making an effort (though I sometimes forget) to bold the artists and songs that stand out the most to me. Consider bolding a strong recommendation on my part... and if you wanna do the same, I like that shortcut!

47 Soul's album Shamstep was a major exciting early find in this project and something I find myself returning to fairly often. "Sham" is a reference to the historical name for the united Middle East, encompassing Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria, which speaks to the multinational nature of the band and of the influences on display. There's a lot going on: dabke, hip hop, dancehall, gospel... and if that sounds like a mess, it would to me too but they pull it off! Lyrics are sung and rapped in Arabic and English; the mood is resolutely positive and upbeat and inclusive. Highly recommended if you like Omar Souleyman (more modern sounding) or EEK (less manic). I fell hard for the whole album but if you're only gonna try one track, maybe start with "Don't Care Where You From", which sounds like the MENA version of "We're All in the Same Gang".

16-Bit Lolitas' "Not the Only One" and 33Hz's "What I Can Do" are both solid house tracks but where 33hz overpowers the Lolitas with bass and immediacy and mixability, the former has greater depth and staying power. Both deserve a spin.

Along the same lines, I strongly recommend 1127's industrial prog-house track "It Never Drops", the intriguing opener on a compilation of indie pop and dance from the African diaspora on NON Records. No, it never drops; it vibrates and ominously hums and pops shots and hurks and jerks and hisses GETMONEYGETMONEYGETMONEYGETMONEYGETMONEY and generally sounds terrifying and awesome
Here's a soundcloud link for the non spotified
https://soundcloud.com/non-records-1/1127-it-never-drops

Che Chen and Rick Brown are 75 Dollar Bill and 75 Dollar Bill's "Cuttin' Out" is 15 minutes of neatly structured but near-abstract electric guitar gutbucket blues dominated by a single bass note that nails the thing to the floor and trance inducing Eastern percussion that levitates it to the ceiling. This is one of those cases where three listens was what did the trick for me: I was convinced the first time that this was some too-long gimmicky lo-fi nonsense, the second time it got under my skin and by the third play I was surprised it was over so soon. Hell, playing it again now, I just realized I really need to listen to the rest of this album; every other track on it combined is about as long as "Cuttin' Out"! Into the hopper it goes.
For the non-spotifying - https://75dollarbill.bandcamp.com/

And that's the numbers! Let's try the A's.

ulysses, Wednesday, 27 January 2016 06:20 (eight years ago) link

Congratulations on finishing the numbers! I'll definitely be searching your impressions as I go. I don't know how you've managed to take on so much as it is. I assumed you had eschewed sleep in favour of some meditative waking-sleep-music-listening operation.

Will bold from here on out! I've been veering off course a bit, but hearing new things on the album rollout probably counts too, right? Just preparing for mountainous eulogy on emo.

tangenttangent, Wednesday, 27 January 2016 18:16 (eight years ago) link

whatever path gets you up the mountain is good by me!
Yeah, i don't sleep a lot these days and i try doing this to be "productive" when i can't.

ulysses, Wednesday, 27 January 2016 19:14 (eight years ago) link

I assumed you had eschewed sleep in favour of some meditative waking-sleep-music-listening operation.

misread this

jaggered little poll (wins), Wednesday, 27 January 2016 21:34 (eight years ago) link

I can't say that I'm surprised that people care about modern music but I never knew to what extant until I just now clicked on this and the eoy list threads.

I heard a 2015 song I liked today. Not surprisingly it was from an old dude and I've never delved into ELO before. I also like the new Bowie
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dfH8EJA-hg0

The Once-ler, Thursday, 28 January 2016 00:46 (eight years ago) link

so maybe I can slowly work on an ILX Rolling Old People 2015 Spotify Playlist and add it here

The Once-ler, Thursday, 28 January 2016 01:00 (eight years ago) link

i had no idea there was an elo album last year! Added to the pile

ulysses, Thursday, 28 January 2016 02:20 (eight years ago) link

I was trying to remember where I heard about that Amara Touré anthology, and I'm pretty sure now it came from one of your playlists. Cheers for that!

moans and feedback (Dinsdale), Thursday, 28 January 2016 13:58 (eight years ago) link

you're welcome. it's SO good.

ulysses, Thursday, 28 January 2016 14:51 (eight years ago) link

Hello!

thank you, based basics (Drugs A. Money), Monday, 1 February 2016 22:55 (eight years ago) link

work is making it where I haven't had a chance to talk up anything but the listening is continuing apace. I just knocked out the Angie Stone album and am chewing on Anna Caragnano (with Donato Dozzy) and Anna von Hausswolff. I may type a lot while I watch the superbowl over the weekend.

I am taking a lil breather for the rest of the night with this playlist collection of early polyphony. It's part of one of my OTHER OTHER projects: transferring my old high school era cassette tapes into playlists for quick reference and listening because my tape player has long since up and died and how else can I access this stuff in the sequencing I've become accustomed to in the core of my soul? The polyphony dubbed double c-90 set was a gift from a visiting scholar to my dad decades ago and it had no impact on him but it blew my mind and I used to play it to vibe out and fall asleep to through much of my early teens. Discovering that it was all on spotify makes me very glad; bless that obsessive cassette dubber for including titles and composers.

ulysses, Tuesday, 2 February 2016 04:15 (eight years ago) link

tangent, i look forward to you tackling the emo when you get 'round to it.

ulysses, Tuesday, 2 February 2016 04:16 (eight years ago) link

I'm still here btw (sort of). I've not had opportunity to post in depth recently (I habitually disappear, unfortunately) but I am keeping up to date with my listening. Almost finished time travel! I'll post more once atmospheric tectonics have reassembled a bit. I'll be catching up on all your recommendations too. Are people allowed sabbaticals for 'cultural engagement'?

tangenttangent, Thursday, 4 February 2016 01:16 (eight years ago) link

Sure, the whole point of this is to do it on your own terms!

ulysses, Thursday, 4 February 2016 02:41 (eight years ago) link

As it came recommended from a number of different sources and since I found a few solid tracks on his first album, I felt compelled to slog through more or less the entirety of A$AP Rocky's prog-pop rap album AT.LONG.LAST.A$AP and my takeaway is that the future of glossy-magazine cover rap is no longer speaking to me. Duets with Lil Wayne ("M'$"), Schoolboy Q ("Electric Body"), UGK and Juicy J ("Wavybone"), Kanye ("Jukebox Joints") and the unlikely duo of Rod Stewart and Miguel ("Everyday") do little more than highlight Rocky's lack of charisma and star power. His very few solo tracks lean to somnambulance. I respect the desire to push the envelope and leap from concept to concept, but it doesn't bear fruit here. I have some grudging appreciation for the breathy pseudo-psychedelica of "L$D" (imagine Zappa-by-way-of-Blind Melon), but I don't think I found a real keeper beside the RIP YAMS elegy and Yasiin Bey duet "Back Home". All in all, a lot of work for not much fun.

No such problem with the Nigerian R&B/hip hop trio A'won Boyz light and lovely ballad "Forever"; this is nothing but pleasure from the first listen. Autotuned guest vocals from another West African star, Tekno (who, at this rate, I'll get to in early 2017) round the song out nicely.
Also HIGHLY recommended is the A'won Boyz take on Future's "Fuck Up Some Commas", which proves that tricksy little piano hook was missing just one or two more drum presets for maximum adrenaline density.
Get it: https://soundcloud.com/awonboyz/commas-come-and-go

Londoner A-Minor's "Be Mine" is perfectly serviceable, unremarkable club anthem sugar water with somebody named Kelli-Leigh on diva duty. I think the brits call this "bog standard"?

A-Villa's Carry On Tradition album is nostalgia packed with "rapper's rappers" lyricists, including Cormega, NORE, Big KRIT, Kool G Rap, Freddie Gibbs, Vic Spencer, Elzhi, Roc Marciano, Guilty Simpson, Freeway, Sean Price, Joell Ortiz, Killer Mike, Action Bronson, Ras Kass... and that's not half of them. There's also a penchant for wallowing in boom bap beats, lengthy transitions and skits that ramble on; "A Hustler's Soliloquy" ends with a minute and a half of the Omar and Brother Mouzone standoff. I'm almost disappointed in myself that this didn't grab me; there's something more cypher than song in the production, a certain leaden monotone to the beats that carries over from track to track. I appreciate the aesthetic at play here more than it moves me; by album's end I was hard pressed to remember any individual song. "Sucker Free" with Saigon, Joe Budden and BJ the Chicago Kid was my keeper by the third spin and, on listening to it now, it feels entirely worth fighting for but damned if I could remember what it sounded like before I hit play again.

A-Wax's Everlasting Money is admittedly frontloaded but those first seven tracks are as good as any hip hop that reached my ears in 2015. Dude's nimble, nasal voice reminds me of Ice-T; he's blunted and laconic even when he's lacing a track with autotuned interior rhymes. A-Wax has a declamatory confidence to his style that reads as world-weary, learned and burned. There's dull rage on "Been A Long Time", murder ballad self history on "Tried As An Adult", vindictive loneliness on "Smoke Alone" and nauseous desperation on "Never Saw It". He's deeply sad and deeply defiant; Beckett's cadence lurks just beneath the surface of every song: I must go on, I can't go on, I'll go on. Great music for bad times.

ulysses, Tuesday, 9 February 2016 01:31 (eight years ago) link

one month passes...

Believe it or don't, I haven't fallen off on the listening portion of this project... just the typing.

Gotten through about 700 tracks for the year and up alphabetically to Benjamin Clementine. The chances of getting even to "J" this year are highly unlikely. The experience continues to be highly rewarding though! I suppose I should double back and write about a few things in the A's though, see if I can get caught up so that writing echoes the current listening before the summer gets here.

ulysses, Monday, 21 March 2016 03:56 (eight years ago) link

The PC Music Vol. 1 compilation sweats saccharine to the point of nausea but I will admit an affinity for A.G. Cook's "Beautiful", spastic bleating thing that it is. On the other hand, "Keri Baby" spackled with Hannah Diamond's Speak-N-Spell rapping makes me want to break neon lightbulb tubes with a crowbar. Just line 'em up and let the celery crunch pops drown out the atrocity nattering in my ear. Not a fan.

A.KOR's "Always" is not especially memorable late 80's AC nostalgia rock put through the K-Pop mill.

I've seen Aaron Diehl play live several times at Dizzy's and at the mainstage at Jazz at Lincoln Center on his own or with Cecile McLorin Salvant; he's a top notch jazz pianist but I hadn't heard any of his personal compositions on tape. His 2015 album, Space, Time, Continuum trapped me for a few days. From the slinky title track (featuring vocals from the striking vocalist Charenée Wade), the assured virtuosity of "Broadway Boogie Woogie", the silky soft "Flux Capacitor" and the likely-to-be-a-standard swing of "Uranus", it's excellent top to bottom. If you're only going to try one song, make it "Kat's Dance", a secretive call and response duet with Stephen Riley on sax. Diehl isn't much of an experimentalist but if you have any love for post-bop, you won't be disappointed.

Aaron Watson is a Christian warrior and honky tonk lifer of the variety that dodges major label support but still lassos a few top 50 country radio filler tracks every other year. The Underdog is his thirteenth album and his first Country (and Indie!) #1. The breakout hit is "That Look", a cockeyed cowgirl-on-a-pedestal love song that celebrates without minimizing. "Getaway Truck" is worth a listen or two as Eric Church lite. I gotta admit the 'everybody dies' glurge of "Bluebonnets (Julia's Song)" got under my skin, mostly on the strength of Watson's painfully honest delivery. Wikipedia informs me Watson is a Ted Cruz supporter which is a bummer.

Abra's breakout album, Rose, is chillwave alt&B or quiet storm electropop or whatever the hell I have to call it to get you to listen to it; it's warm milk and kahlua is what it is. The lead vocalist/composer/namesake has a gorgeous voice and good taste.
Discussed a bit here: Abra - Rose
The album's great but front loaded; I would've been happier with an EP. Even so, don't miss the Aaliyah influenced "U Kno", the Pet Shop Boys pastiche of "Roses" or the one-two punch of Fruit and No Chill. I'd be surprised if Abra doesn't blow up in the next few years; this feels distinctly marketable in a way that, say, Kelela does not.

Absofacto's "Dissolve" is craftsmanlike fizzy pop with Scandi touches that made me think of Komeda. That's high praise from me. Be warned though: if, after a few listens, there's no aftertaste tempting you to return, well he did tell you as much in the title...

ulysses, Monday, 21 March 2016 05:02 (eight years ago) link

five months pass...

Still doing this believe it or not.
this colin stetson and sarah neufield album omg

thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Friday, 26 August 2016 22:18 (seven years ago) link

Are you alphabetising by first name or last name?

ArchCarrier, Saturday, 27 August 2016 11:11 (seven years ago) link

first name as that's how it's organized on spotify.
I've gotten through about 1600 songs from the 1975 to Colin Stetson at the moment. Almost nine months! At this rate, I should be done by 2015 in 2018 which would bother me more if a) this was all I was listening to (it's not) or b) i wasn't finding great gems on an almost daily basis.
I've said it before and I'll say it again: taken as an aggregate, ilx's taste in music has about a 70% hit rate with me, which is pretty fantastic!

thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Saturday, 27 August 2016 14:44 (seven years ago) link

three months pass...

November threw me out of whack (along with everybody else); at this rate, I should be about 2k songs and 130 hours of music down by the end of the year with another 6300 and 468 hours to go.
No reason to stop there as far as I can see tho'! Still finding great music on the regular so 2015 may last to 2019.

A big shout out goes to the lamb chops, thos lamb chops (ulysses), Monday, 5 December 2016 05:03 (seven years ago) link


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