Saturday, December 14, 2013

Listen: Dead Wax – Dec. 13, 2013

The final episode of Dead Wax in 2013, and the last before a long hiatus. I take a look back over the past year of music and play a set of songs that I just really like.



"Birth in Reverse" – St. Vincent
"The Rifle's Spiral" – The Shins
"3/4 Angel" – Buoy Larue
"Laid Back" – The Sheepdogs
"You Already Know" – Arcade Fire
"Pretty Hurts" – Beyoncé
"Earth: The Oldest Computer (The Last Night)" – Childish Gambino
"Third Stone From The Sun/If You Love Me Like You Say" – Gary Clark Jr.
"Johnson Boulevard" – Amos Lee
"Homeward Bound" – Simon and Garfunkel

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Listen: Dead Wax – Dec. 5, 2013

In the penultimate installation of Dead Wax, I play and discuss eleven big and small new songs. Most of them are small.


Playlist

“Full Circle” – Half Moon Run
“South” – Racing Glaciers
“Roving Gambler” – Billie Joe and Norah
“Me and You” – Jake Bugg
“here comes the sweater weather” – Lullatone
“Take Me To Church” – Hozier
“Boogeyman” – Black Casino and the Ghost
“Heart of Gold” – Demarest
“Medusa” – GEMS
“Weird Circle” – Tera Melos
“Storms All The Time” – Some Gifts
“Sweatpants” – Childish Gambino

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Listen: Dead Wax – Nov. 23, 2013 (rescheduled from Nov. 21)

This week Dead Wax returns with a list of underground, small-time, and independent artists that have released new music this year and that deserve bigger audiences. Check it out.


Playlist:

“March Over To Me” – Little Scout
“Kingdom on Fire” (feat. Elevator Jay) – Jocelyn Ellis
“Dog Physics” – Ings
“Better Man or Ghost” – Logan Vath
“Paia” – Wild Ones
“Sun Babies” (Eric Wright Remix) – Deja Me
“Days Like This” – Paul Ruske
“Down Not Out” – The Hollow Legs
“Quit Pulling Me Down” – Secret Someones
“Elliptic” (radio edit) – Vessels
“Money” – Mystery Skulls

Friday, November 8, 2013

Listen: Dead Wax – Nov. 7, 2013

Dead Wax returns with a survey of some of the momentous releases of the last fourteen days.



Playlist:

“Provider” – Midlake
“Holding On For Life” – Broken Bells
“We Exist” – Arcade Fire
“Shut You Down” – Caveman
“Home Again” – Elton John
“Ethel” – Russian Circles
“Bring The Noize” – M.I.A.
“We Are Explorers” – Cut Copy
“North” – Blackie and the Rodeo Kings
“Plunge” – The Melodic

Bonus Birthday Song: "Carey" – Joni Mitchell

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Listen: Dead Wax – Oct. 24, 2013

The music in this episode comes from many different places around the world, but all of it is new, interesting, exciting, and very unique. One of my favorite playlists to date.



Playlist:

“Closer” (with Kurt Hugo Schneider) (Acoustic) – Tegan and Sara
“Long Time Coming” (Live) – Saints of Valory
“I’m Not Myself” – Boardwalk
“Speak a Little Louder” – Diane Birch
“Tiff” (feat. Justin Vernon) – Poliça
“Easy” – Son Lux
“3005” – Childish Gambino
“Long Time Gone” – Billie Joe and Norah
“Wenu Wenu” – Omar Souleyman

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Listen: Dead Wax – Oct. 17, 2013

This episode, the "interesting" part of the show description is in full swing, as we survey an eclectic mix of new, and often strange, songs. Some familiar artists, some brand new, but high-quality music all around.



Playlist:

“Swallowed Whole” – Pearl Jam
“South” – Racing Glaciers
“New” – Paul McCartney
“Cuckoo” – Dr. Dog
“Scar” – Cloud Control
“The Seeds” – The Men
“Apart From Me” – Avett Brothers
“Crescent” – Children & Lions
“Brighton” – swelo
“Houdini Crush” – Buke and Gase

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Listen: Dead Wax – Oct. 10, 2013

"Americana" is the name of the game in this episode, as I discover a bunch of great new music, (almost) all of which seems oddly to fit into this narrow-yet-dynamic genre. We hear a lot of various takes on the classic American traditions of roots, rock, folk, country, and blues. We also hear a couple of songs that have absolutely nothing to do with those traditions. Overall, we have fun.


Playlist:

“The Shoals of Herring” – Oscar Isaac with Punch Brothers (Inside Llewyn Davis OST)
“The Auld Triangle” – Chris Thile, Chris Eldridge, Marcus Mumford, Justin Timberlake, Gabe Witcher (Inside Llewyn Davis OST)
“Indonesia” – Amos Lee
“Don’t Be A Stranger” – Blitzen Trapper
“Not Dead Yet”The Blow
“Midnight Moon Pt. 1”Kan Wakan
“Shake”The Head And The Heart
“Part Of Me” – Tedeschi Trucks Band
“Fake Arms”Foreign Fields
“The Road I Take”Fletcher

Monday, October 7, 2013

Listen: Dead Wax – Oct. 7, 2013

Last Thursday, due to unforeseen circumstances, I missed the show. So I performed it today. A great variety of mostly newish music from a great variety of artists.



Playlist:

“Take Back The Night” – Justin Timberlake
“The Wire” – Haim
“Buzzcut Season” – Lorde 
“Becoming The Gunship” – Islands
“Rudimentary Tool” – Metric
“Oh I Know” – Monroe
“Come A Little Closer” – Cage The Elephant
“Heart On Fire” – Spectator
“Bloom” – Boreal Sons
“Dear Dad” – Turin Brakes

Sunday, September 29, 2013

M.I.A., the NFL, and How to make a Social Justice Post on a Music Blog

Ooh. It feels good to get back to blogging.

Remember two years ago when Madonna played the Super Bowl Halftime Show, and everyone was pretty meh about it, except then M.I.A. went all rogue and flipped off the camera like this?


Remember that? That was bananas. At the time, I was wholly unimpressed by her little sideshow. In my post that was generally about something else, I had this little aside to say:
I want artists that will deliver an awesome, accessible, non-offensive (AHEM: M.I.A.) performance.
Well, to put it bluntly, I have changed my mind entirely on the subject. I want that on the record because this incident pertains to a number of very important issues both within the music and entertainment spheres, and more generally in society. On Monday, M.I.A. put out this video statement about the lawsuit that has been brought against her, and why she thinks it's misguided and irrational:


I think that she is 100% in the right here. The NFL has used the rhetoric of "wholesomeness" and "family values" and the like to attempt to bring shame upon M.I.A., a rhetoric which, in the moment, I was happily caught-up in. There's something about watching professional American football that immediately turns me into a curmudgeony conservative who is very concerned about "wholesomeness" and "family values" and "not being offensive." It's probably the jovial and refined spirit of friendship and camaraderie which envelops football stadiums across America. Regardless, I can say that I was not thinking fully about the context of M.I.A.'s one-fingered salute to the bigwigs of networked American entertainment.

The biggest problem with the whole "we are wholesome hear us roar" argument, as she quickly points out, is that it stands in stark contrast with the NFL's presentation of underage (girl) cheerleaders in (girly) cheerleading uniforms performing (submissive and girly) sexually provocative dance moves. Now already we need to pause, because I am not one to deny women or girls or anyone their sexuality or agency, and the issue is not "girls with sexuality are not wholesome." The issue is more nuanced than that. The issue is real. The issue does not like to be spoken to. Do not address the issue. Do not look the issue in the eyes. The issue will find you.

No, the sexual objectification of young black cheerleaders is an issue with some history, and that history is the key to understanding what M.I.A. is saying in this video. What is the point of having cheerleaders at a football game? Where did that tradition come from? 

It comes from a culture where women stand by to "support" men while the men do [whatever thing they find themselves to be good at]. It comes from a culture that values women based on appearance, utilizing an entirely arbitrary rubric for determining that value. And it comes from a culture in which women have often been, quite literally, trophies (the classic tale of the football player who "gets" the cheerleader comes readily to mind in this instance, but there are any number of other examples). All of these things put together make for some pretty impossibly strong structural forces that create cheerleaders as we know them today.

I should make another note here: cheerleaders, contrary to what their position on your TV screen might have you believe, are great athletes. I don't write this post to say that cheerleaders are weak in body or in will, just the opposite actually. Cheerleading takes a lot of energy, hard work, time, and everything else that a sport like football takes. Given this, it does seem a little silly that they should be made out to be so one-dimensionally subordinate.

The other thing that makes this issue an issue is that these girls were black, which means that in addition to all the weird gender politics going on around their cheerleading performance, there was also a racial component that can't be overlooked. The long history of black people serving as entertainment for white people is another weighty factor playing into those structural forces.

So, back to M.I.A. When she observes that there's an apparent contradiction in the NFL's outrage over her middle finger, and its promotion of the display of young black girls in cheerleading uniforms thrusting their hips into the air, she doesn't aim to simply say "but what these girls did was much more offensive than what I did!" She isn't trying to escape the blame by directing our shaming fingers elsewhere. She's pointing out the really offensive thing about the NFL's Super Bowl Halftime show: that the NFL, and American television audiences, are completely content to forget all the social history behind what we see and hear, not just in those fifteen minutes, but during every day of our lives as we consume media and goods and services. The offensive thing is that nobody finds it offensive when such transparently exploitative forces are allowed to play themselves out against a bunch of teenagers on international television. Was M.I.A.'s middle finger a rude shock to the majority of the viewing public? Yes. Was that the most distressing thing we saw during that electrified circus of an event? Not even close.

M.I.A. chose not to comply with the sexual exploitation of the girls, and instead to "display female empowerment through being punk rock." And finally, we return to the music part of this music blog. I write all of this because it is important, but also to say that we need more artists who are willing to champion empowerment, especially when they are given a stage as visible as the Super Bowl. We need artists like M.I.A. who are willing to sacrifice an opportunity at widespread, mainstream adoration for the sake of battling a culture of oppression. At the same time, we need more artists who already have widespread, mainstream adoration to be willing to take what is, in fact, a terribly small risk, and show support for and understanding of the social issues that continue to plague the entertainment industry. In the moment, I considered M.I.A.'s stunt to be a rash, irresponsible, and thoughtless grasp at attention, but now that I think about it in a more unencumbered way, I realize that there could not be a more textbook-perfect example of "sticking it to the man." To M.I.A., and to whoever happens to be killing time in my little niche of the entertainment world, I apologize for failing to see what was really going on, and what continues to go on. I'll do better next time.

Friday, September 27, 2013

Listen: Dead Wax – Sep. 26, 2013

The second episode of Dead Wax, in which we survey great new music from artists big and small. Click on each artist to find more of their material, I strongly recommend all of them.



Playlist:

"Sirens" – Pearl Jam
"Summertime In October" – Criminal Hygiene
"Human Tribe" – Bent Jetty
"Antiphon" – Midlake
"Cruel City" – Augustines
"All In" – Name The Band
"Ghost" – RÁJ
"Purge" – Cloudeater
"Scar" – Cloud Control
"Rejoice" – Heatwarmer


Bonus round: here's a wonderful review from Antiquiet of "Sirens."

Friday, September 20, 2013

Listen: Dead Wax – Sep. 19, 2013

"The End Groove" is no more, long live Dead Wax! In this first episode, I dive right into the musical madness of the past few weeks, and also of the past few months.



Playlist:

"Reflektor" – Arcade Fire
"Walk Us Uptown" – Elvis Costello and the Roots
"Fireside" – Arctic Monkeys
"Givin Em What They Love" (feat. Prince) – Janelle Monae
"Tennis Court" – Lorde
"Ways to Go" – Grouplove
"Modern Jesus" – Portugal. The Man
"New Slaves" – Kanye West
"Holy Grail" (feat. Justin Timberlake) – Jay-Z

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Dead Wax, Etc.

So it's September, and as nice as it has been to have a Summer off, I'm ready to get back into this business.

Wait, what's that? Up there? Something seems different, right?

Yes indeed, "The End Groove" has been rebranded. Welcome to "Dead Wax." It's the exact same thing (it even refers to the same part of a record) as "The End Groove," but it's catchier and more hip. And I am nothing if not catchy and hip. So, get ready to tune back in to Dead Wax, which will be hitting the airwaves on KOXY this coming Thursday at the shiny new time of eight p.m.

It's going to be rad. Get ready. Tune in. Etc.

Friday, May 3, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – May 2, 2013

Here it is, the last podcast until September. One more huge thank you to anyone who has read, listened to, "liked," or even thought about The End Groove. It's been a great first year of broadcasting. Can't wait to get back into it. Until the fall, I'll just be blogging (hopefully regularly, but let's be honest, who really knows?). Keep checking back for potentially cool bloggy things. You'll hear my again in a few months!

*The extra-special-podcast-thing starts one hour into the recording, so if you heard the rest of the broadcast, you can skip to there if you want.



Here is the playlist (songs after the divide are podcast extras):

"The End" – Pearl Jam
"The Last Resort" – Eagles
"Gold Dust Woman" – Fleetwood Mac
"Rock and Roll Ain't Noise Pollution" – AC/DC
"Whatsername" – Green Day
"Vital Signs" – Rush
"A Day In The Life" – The Beatles
"Warrant" – Foster The People
"Wheel" – John Mayer
"Dear Avery" – Decemberists

"The Last Time I Saw Richard" – Joni Mitchell
"I Found A Boy" – Adele
"Next Door Neighbor Blues" – Gary Clark Jr.
"Toad" – Cream
"Armistice" – Phoenix

Until next time,

AV
<3

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Two Forthcoming Albums to Get Stoked For

Of course, there are far more than two upcoming albums that are very exciting. Daft Punk, Portugal. The Man, Kanye West (apparently), John Mayer (apparently), etc. Those are just this things I've read about this morning. But here are two records that are both newsworthy and super exciting.

First: Fitz And The Tantrums. This is not a new announcement, I've been talking about this since March. The album comes out next week (May 7). It's called More Than Just A Dream. It's back in my "newsworthy" column because, as of the other day, it is streaming in-full via Hype Machine. And oh, sweet lord. It is so much better than I hoped (I had pretty high hopes). Get into it.



Second: The Civil Wars have just announced that they will be releasing their sophomore, self-titled studio album soon. No official date or info yet, other than a couple of fun notes and some cover artwork (below) on their website's landing page, but the information available seems to imply that the album is finished, so hopefully that will be out soon. If you don't know The Civil Wars, familiarize yourself. They are beautiful and talented and adorable and amazing. You really can't not like them.

The announcement arrives as the band remains in a fairly ambiguous state of turmoil. They canceled a tour last fall because of internal discord, and there's uncertainty as to whether this album will make for a reconciliation or a postmortem. While that's all still hanging over our heads, we have a lot to look forward to in this album. They're great writers and musicians, and I expect a really beautiful, if somewhat somber, group of tunes.


Sunday, April 28, 2013

Daughter Covers Daft Punk's New Song "Get Lucky," Humans of Earth Question Why This Band Isn't Headlining Festivals Already

Daft Punk recently released the first single, "Get Lucky," from their highly-anticipated new album Random Access Memories. Featuring Pharrell Williams on vocals, it's a rip-romping good time. If you haven't heard it, have a listen. Actually listen even if you have heard it because, let's be real, this song will put you in a great mood:




Yesterday, the UK indie-post-folk-pop band Daughter went to BBC Radio One to record (live, in studio) a cover of that song. If you don't know about Daughter, they're really good. They got some attention with their song "Youth," and are releasing their debut full-length album in the US on Tuesday (it's out in the UK, Europe, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand as of March 19). The first single from that album, "Still," is beautiful, and I'm very excited to hear the rest of this release.

Their Daft Punk cover is surreal. It opens fairly drily, but blooms into a deep and haunting landscape of sound. There's really no way to describe it, you just have to hear it. And remember as you listen that this was recorded live. Unbelievable.




That's really something. Daughter is a band on the verge, and I can't wait to watch them explode over the next few years. Expect to see them occupying important festival slots in the coming seasons.

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – Apr. 25, 2013

Mostly new music. Mary Kemp arrives halfway through as a special guest co-host, and we goof around. Super fun times.




Playlist:

"The City" (Original Mix) - Madeon
"L.U.C.K.Y." - Flipboitamidles
"The Real Thing" - Phoenix
"Staying Up" - The Neighbourhood
"Giving Me A Chance" - Gotye
Beyonce Snippets: "Grown Woman" and "Standing On The Sun"
"Blow Me (One Last Kiss)" - P!nk
"Blow" (Deconstructed) - Ke$ha
"Purple Yellow Red and Blue" - Portugal. The Man
"Into The Faceless Night" (Acoustic) - The Little Unsaid
"Coming Up Short" - You, Me, And Everyone We Know
"Next To Me" - Emeli Sandé

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Listen: Hodge-Podge – Apr. 23, 2013

Hodge-Podge from April 23, in which the theme is "Bossists" (i.e. bass players who are bosses) (i.e. bass players who front their bands). Classic rock of many different shades is played and discussed. Much fun is had.




Playlist (with bossist name in parentheses):

“Tom Sawyer” – Rush (Geddy Lee)
“Got To Get You Into My Life” – The Beatles (Paul McCartney)
“Roxanne” – The Police (Sting)
“I Can’t Tell You Why” – Eagles (Timothy B. Schmidt)
“Politician” – Cream (Jack Bruce)
“The Boys Are Back In Town” – Thin Lizzy (Phil Lynott)
“Gigantic” – Pixies (Kim Deal)
“Voices Carry” – ‘Til Tuesday (Aimee Mann)
“Jerry Was A Race Car Driver” – Primus (Les Claypool)
“Brain Damage” – Pink Floyd (Roger Waters)
“Twenty-first Century Schizoid Man” – King Crimson (Greg Lake)

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Review: Mosquito by Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Mosquito – Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Interscope: April 16, 2013

8/10


Yeah Yeah Yeahs. I can safely, comfortably, and confidently say that I missed the memo on this one. A band I have given pitifully little attention to until now, Yeah Yeah Yeahs have just dropped their fourth album, their first since 2009's It's Blitz. It's called Mosquito and it rocks. A lot.

There was speculation among fans and critics in the lead-up to the album's release about the sound and direction the album would take, which is remarkable only because, in this case, it was completely and utterly wrong. Listeners expected a return to the band's raw, gut-busting, big-city rock origins, but instead received a contemplative emotional explication, anchored in layers of rumbling guitars, shimmering synthesizers, and heavily processed vocals. These elements aren't new in and of themselves; the band has always used them as decoration, but now they are foundation. They represent cornerstones upon which Karen O can layer her visceral and unrepentant vocals in ways that feel in turns warmly familiar and chillingly foreign to the well-versed listener. Five minutes into the album, it is clear that Mosquito is not simply a collection of dance-rock songs, nor is it an adventurous narrative, nor is it a social critique; Mosquito is a detailed work of emotional cartography, a hand-drawn map which may be considered at once a navigational asset and a brilliant work of art.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – Apr. 18, 2013

Ten shiny new songs from shiny new albums! Check it out! Next week I will have actually new Phoenix to play and, in the event that the Daft Punk song was not the real thing, I will have the correct version of that.



Playlist:

"The Sword By My Side" - The Thermals
"Spark" - Fitz And The Tantrums
"Let It Go" - The Neighbourhood
"Under The Earth" - Yeah Yeah Yeahs
"Look… The Sun Is Rising" - The Flaming Lips
"Entertainment" - Phoenix
"Over The Love" - Florence + The Machine
"When The Moment Comes" - Mia Dyson
"Get Lucky" (hopefully) - Daft Punk
"Think Of Me" - Childish Gambino (Funkmaster Flex)

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

New Music!

Today must be an important day, I guess. A bunch of cool new music videos and songs are dropping this morning. I've gathered a few of them here, check it out.

First is Florence + The Machine's original contribution to The Great Gatsby's soundtrack, "Over The Love." It's great. Cinematic and bold as Florence always is, but refreshingly delicate and pensive. It's a beautiful track, and an incredible addition to the action-packed soundtrack. Let's hope the film lives up to it's music! Listen to Flo's song below, and look at the tracklist here via GQ.com.



Second, a new album that is on its way to shelves next week. LA alt-rockers The Neighbourhood are dropping their debut album I Love You. on Columbia (April 23), and it's incredible. Their EP I'm Sorry…  has been turning heads for a few months, and this band is on the verge of becoming the next big thing. The remarkable part is that they are doing it without buying into the system of "manufactured music" that produces fad after fad. This band has guts, originality, and purpose. The album is very good. Get into it here, and buy it next week.




Up next, two new music videos, both for songs released on albums last year. The first is Sara Watkins's "You and Me," which appears on her sophomore album Sun Midnight Sun (Nonesuch). The song is great, and it seems to hit much closer to home than her first solo album (self-titled, 2009), which took some liberties in exploring the edges of country and folk music. That album was certainly a success, but I think that this one takes the lessons learned during all that adventuring and brings them back to Nashville. I'll be spending some time with this album after listening to "You and Me." Check out the beautiful video, directed by Russ Kendall:




The second video is for "Can't Hold Us" by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, which appears on their debut full-length album The Heist (Independent, 2012). Forgetting about "Thrift Shop" for a minute, this is the song to bring the house down. "Can't Hold Us" is enormous, and it's one of my favorites from the dynamic duo. The video is everything you expect it to be: loud, outrageous, overblown, and absolutely awesome. The alternate intro/outro to the track is also really incredible. It's hard to put words to this, so just watch it knowing that whatever your opinion of Macklemore and Ryan Lewis happens to be, this video will probably uphold it:




A note on the "Can't Hold Us" video: it is officially posted to Ryan Lewis's YouTube channel, and if you visit the video page and click "Show More" below the video, you'll find a really worthwhile message from Ryan about how this video was made, who deserves credit, and why it's hard to designate specific roles for people involved in this kind of project. It's a nice reminder that this, like  more or less everything, is a work created by devoted individuals, and can't be reduced to anything less.

That's it for now. Yesterday was US release day for Mosquito by Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Terror by The Flaming Lips, and Desperate Ground by The Thermals. Stay tuned for posts on some/all of those albums in the coming days and weeks. Keep rocking.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – Apr. 11, 2013

A handful of cool new alternative songs, followed by a handful of cool older alternative songs. Discussion of new releases from Phoenix, The Flaming Lips, James Blake, and Justin Timberlake.

Apologies for the abrupt beginning, I failed to start the recording at the right time, so my first couple of sentences were cut off. Basically I said that I came across the Phoenix song last week and was planning to play it to close last week's show, but then Roger Ebert died and I decided to play a snippet from the Vertigo score in his honor. This performance of "Entertainment" is form this great video.



Playlist:

“Entertainment” (Acoustic) – Phoenix
“Try To Explain” – The Flaming Lips
“Myth” – Beach House
“Overgrown” – James Blake
“Blue Ocean Floor” – Justin Timberlake
“Periphery” – Fiona Apple
“Now I’m All Messed Up” – Tegan and Sara
“Phantom Limb” – The Shins
“Inkless” – The Smashing Pumpkins
“Out Of My League” – Fitz And The Tantrums


Thursday, April 4, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – Apr. 4, 2013

The End Groove from April 4, 2013. Some great new low-key indie electronic/acoustic songs, as well as cool world/blues and hip-hop tracks. In memory of Roger Ebert, we close the show with a portion of the score from Alfred Hitchcock's classic film Vertigo.



Playlist:

"South Dakota" – Magic Man
"Dismantle and Rebuild" – The Ramona Flowers
"Still" – Daughter
"Breathing Underwater" – Metric
"Lions In Cages" – Wolf Gang
"Amidinine" – Bombino
"The Baddest Man Alive" – The Black Keys & RZA
"Toy Soldier" – Katie Hampton
"Falling" – Haim
Theme from Vertigo – Composed by Bernard Herrmann (in memory of Roger Ebert)

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – Mar. 28, 2013

Another blend of new and less-new music. Good times are had. Et cetera.



The Playlist:

“Sacrilege” – The Yeah Yeah Yeahs
“One Way Trigger” – The Strokes
“Robot Rock” – Daft Punk
“Crazy In Love” – Beyoncé
“Crazytown” – Aimee Mann
“Where Are We Now” – David Bowie
“All of Me” – Eric Clapton
“Diane Young” – Vampire Weekend
“The Rifle’s Spiral” – The Shins
“(If You’re Wondering If I Want You To) I Want You To” – Weezer
“Elephant” – Tame Impala

Sunday, March 24, 2013

The Hard-To-See Feminism in Beyoncé's Newest Song

So about two weeks ago, Beyoncé Queen Of Mortals released a new single entitled "Bow Down / I Been On" on her Soundcloud. If you haven't heard it, it's worth checking out:



It's a really interesting song, and it has been the target of much criticism both for its style and its substance. Old-guard Queen Bey fans have struggled to connect to a song that falls, in a musical sense, well outside the scope of what we've come to expect Beyoncé's recorded music to sound like. Lyrically it is a self-promotional, anti-hater anthem that subordinates her female audience with one simple command: "bow down, bitches." Feminists, fellow musicians, and even Rush Limbaugh (although for entirely different, and entirely offensive reasons) have come down hard upon this track and its purveyor for publishing a song that so directly and bluntly counteracts Beyoncé's canon of pro-woman, pro-feminist music. And on the surface these critiques hold up: saying "bow down, bitches" to your female audience seems to work against a movement of empowerment and independence for women. But the song is more complex than that. Much more complex.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – Mar. 21, 2013

The End Groove returns after a two-week break with several brand-new tunes, and few few less-new tunes. Good times are had.




The playlist:

“Feeling Good” – The Sheepdogs
“All the Time” – The Strokes
“By The Way” – Red Hot Chili Peppers
“Moral of the Story” – Watsky
“Freaks and Geeks” – Childish Gambino
“Bow Down/I Been On” – Beyoncé
“Vile Inafaa” (feat. Octopizzo) – Muthoni The Drummer Queen
“Gotta Get Over” – Eric Clapton
“Let The Groove Get In” – Justin Timberlake
“I’ll Be Alright” – Passion Pit
“Entertainment” – Phoenix

Friday, March 1, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – Feb. 28, 2013: Small Artists!

This episode, I played and talked about some of my favorite music that has been submitted to KOXY via the mail in my two years there as Music/Programming Director. If you're looking for some new, little, mostly independent acts to get into, here's a great place to start. Podcast and playlist, plus links and a few bonus songs/artists that I didn't get to play on the air, but that are fun!

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Listen: Hodge-Podge – Feb. 26, 2013

For this episode of KOXY's Hodge-Podge, Michael was gone, but Mary helped out. We played songs by women who play the guitar in rock/blues music. It was all kinds of fun! Here it is, playlist below the player:



"Bad Reputation" - Joan Jett
"Romance" - Wild Flag
"I Wanna Go Home" - The Ettes
"Well, Well" - Beth Hart and Joe Bonamassa
"Be Mine" - Alabama Shakes
"Come See About Me" - Tedeschi Trucks Band
"Let's Give Them Something To Talk About" - Bonnie Raitt
"Crazytown" - Aimee Mann
"Angels Would Fall" - Melissa Etheridge
"Spaces" - The NowhereNauts
"Medicine" - Grace Potter & The Nocturnals
"Honey" - Torres

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – Feb. 21, 2013

The End Groove Radio Hour from February 21, 2013, in which I play and talk about eight songs that have been released in the last ten days.



Playlist:

"Entertainment" – Phoenix
"Mirrors" – Justin Timberlake
"All The Time" – The Strokes
"Always Alright" – Alabama Shakes
"Out Of My League" – Fitz & the Tantrums
"Sun and Moon" – Johnny Marr
"Falling" – Haim
"Slyd" – !!!

Monday, February 18, 2013

New Phoenix Song and Album Info!

What a lovely way to wake up on Monday morning, to the news of a new Phoenix song! The band's website, after months of displaying only cryptic names and sounds, now features a short animation of cursive text, which says that the album Bankrupt! will be released the week of April 22nd (the 22nd in the UK, 23rd in the US), and then links to a brand new homepage featuring the album artwork and track list, as well as links to the band's various social media.

Check out the new single "Entertainment" and the unofficial lyric video on Pitchfork. I love the song. It's fun and summery and pop-y, but underlaid by classic Phoenix styling. It gives me great hope for the album (as if I needed a reason to have great hope). What do you think?



Here is the track list for Bankrupt! :


01 Entertainment
02 The Real Thing
03 SOS in Bel Air
04 Trying to Be Cool
05 Bankrupt!
06 Drakkar Noir
07 Chloroform
08 Don't
09 Bourgeois
10 Oblique City

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – Feb. 14, 2013

I talk about the Grammys and play some of my favorite artists who both won and didn't win awards. Also it is Valentine's Day.




Kudos to everyone who stuck around for the whole Lamb of God song, I didn't expect so many of you to listen through that. Rock on. Here's what I played:

The Black Keys - “Lonely Boy”
Gotye - “I Feel Better”
Esperanza Spalding - “City of Roses”
Florence + The Machine - “Lover to Lover”
Fiona Apple - “Valentine”
Alabama Shakes - “Hold On”
Muse - “Madness”
Bruce Springsteen - “We Take Care of Our Own”
Ed Sheeran - “The A Team”
Lamb of God - “Ghost Walking”

What did you think of the Grammys?

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Listen: Jeremy Murphy Interview

I interviewed Newfoundland/Portland singer/songwriter Jeremy Murphy on the phone for KOXY Radio. It was a blast! Here's that interview! Hit up his Bandcamp page to download his album Wherever You Are for free!





Friday, February 8, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – Feb. 7, 2013

The End Groove from Feb. 7, 2013. I take a tour of the music to come in 2013. Apologies for the abrupt start, I had an issue with the podcasting software right at the beginning and the first couple sentences I said got cut off.


Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Listen: Hodge-Podge – Feb. 5, 2013


KOXY's Hodge-Podge from Tuesday, February 5, 2013. The theme: Music in languages other than English. This was one of the most fun shows we've done! Check it!





Here are the songs in languages that aren't English we played:

“Chan Chan” - Buena Vista Social Club [Spanish]
“Nå’t För Dom Som Väntar” - Miss Li [Swedish]
“Stivalli e Colbacco” - Gogol Bordello [Italian]
“Bukra Wba’do” - Pink Martini [Arabic]
“Lulepielli” - Gillespie [Albanian]
“Blackbird” - Julie Fowlis [Gaelic]
“La Résistance” - Akhenton [French]
“Vile Inafaa” (feat. Octopizzo) - Muthoni the Drummer Queen [Swahili]
“Ce Jeu” - Yelle [French]
“ハイブリッドレインボウ” - the pillows [Japanese]
“Swing för Hyresgästföreningen” - Movits! [Swedish]

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Spring Festival Lineups

Last night the Sasquatch '13 lineup was announced, and with Coachella announcing their lineup last week, we now have some fun opportunities to compare!

Friday, February 1, 2013

Listen: The End Groove – Feb. 1, 2013

The End Groove Radio Hour from Feb. 1, 2013.

I talk about and play my favorite songs from the new(ish) year.




Here's what I played:

"White on White" - FIDLAR
"Hideaway" - The NowhereNauts
"Closer" - Tegan and Sara
"Jealousy and I" - Torres
"Sun Blows Up Today" - The Flaming Lips
"Still" - Daughter
"Arrow" - The Rescues
"Just A Little Rain" - Janet LaBelle

Podcasts!

Podcasts are now available through the blog as well as the KOXY website! Check the new "Podcasts" page in the menu bar above. You can listen to them right here on the blog, or you can right click on them and choose "Download Document" to get The End Groove to go!

Wooooo!

Listen: Hip Hatchet In-Studio Performance and Interview

Hip Hatchet came to the KOXY studio to hang out/play and we stayed there for an hour. Listen to it because it's great.


Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Tune In for the Music of 2013

UPDATE: Because of technical malfunction, the show will air sometime this week that is TBD. Stay tuned for the latest.

2013 is already up and running with several awesome releases. Look for some posts here in the next couple of weeks, but tune in to the radio show Thursday at 9 to hear some of my favorite tracks of 2013 so far. I'll also be talking about some of the very exciting album releases coming later this year. Don't miss it!

-AV

Friday, January 25, 2013

The End Groove Radio Hour Returns Next Week!

We've made it through the cold, hard winter (sort of), and now it's time for The End Groove to hit the radio waves once again. I'm delighted to be back on KOXY radio at the same time as before, Thursday nights at 9:00 Pacific Time. Tune yourselves in online starting next week, January 31! Woohoo!

Bonus round: just can't wait a whole week? Tune in to KOXY tomorrow (!!! Saturday Jan 26) at 1:00 p.m. PST, for my interview and in-studio performance with Janet LaBelle! I'm super excited! Also, you can sate yourself by listening to podcasts of old shows on the KOXY website.

A Tale of Two Singles

In the past couple of weeks there have been a handful of notable singles released, but two seemed particularly interesting to me.