Music Wire #5

Photo/Video by Steve Banning. A bunch of great albums dropped this week. Some I’ve been waiting on all year. Some that came as a complete, beautiful, surprise. I shouldn’t be surprised by the volume since the end of the year draws near. It’s also sound business strategy to release an album in the fourth quarter of a year to tour the following fiscal year. The bands I’m going to write about likely had this in mind which I don’t mind. I get to hopefully see them live.

Clairvoyant by The Contortionist finally came out. I’ve felt disappointed in the first few singles. It feels like everyone but me digs it. I plan on giving it a full shot but expectations are low. Veil of Maya’s False Idols however hasn’t yet disappointed me. It’s perfect for pillaging the gym! “Fracture” breaks out as a great show opener. “Doublespeak” continues Matriarch‘s wonderful formula of methed out grooves and sweet clean choruses. “Pool Spray” has cavalcade of flavors. Meshuggahish slow hammering Nothing era grooves perfectly transitioning to an Acacia Strain hardcore two-step into Periphery choruses. I need to hear the album a few more times but presently False Idols delivered satisfaction. Let’s see how it holds up at the gym next week.

I’m adding The Black Dahlia Murder’s Nightbringers to the gym mix next week. I had very little interest in their last record but this one sounds like Everblack. I’ve tried getting into August Burns Red’s Phantom Anthem with no success. To me they haven’t had the same ferocity musically since Constellations. That’s almost a decade ago. Their prime seems well behind them. I include Trivium in that camp. I sample a bit of The Sin and the Sentence and wonder who it’s for. They fell off to me after In Waves. They lost some kind of element in their music I know many would like to have back. Maybe I’ll try it in full at the gym next week along with TBDM and We Came As Romans’ Cold Like War.

Yeah I know, WCAR, why would I even bother with washed up metalcore right? They pretty much lost me after Understanding What We’ve Grown to Be when they tried abandoning what made them a great live act: energy. These guys aren’t the most talented musicians ever but that’s not what their point. WCAR has timely breakdowns, fast riffs, all which lead into super catchy and dramatic choruses. They’re still prime for my gym workouts and getting up for a show. Cold Like War embraces a foundation their fans always approved of. I look forward to getting fully in depth next week.

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Photo by Ed Magdziak. As I mentioned earlier, a few albums came as a total surprise. Primarily Hodera’s sophomore album First Things First, an all assault on my top ten list. I found them through “Baltimore” instantly buying into their sound. The level of refined song writing and fully formed musicianship is uncanny. First Things First isn’t just an album of songs like most those these days. It’s a full experience, as I’ve blogged many times this year, that’s a rare and fortunate occurrence. “The Saddest Sentence” might as well be about me. Go read these lyrics for yourself. Easily one of my favorite songs of the past couple of years and there’s more to please everyone else.

Hodera made an opus in “Just for Today” perfect for show stopping anthemic moments in their performances. “Holding Pattern” may never get live play but it’ll give you the feels. Ambient post-rock build up with spoken word anecdotes makes for a emotive finisher. It’s weird. The album gets progressively better. Normally all the best songs on an album are front loaded these days. The first half of Hodera’s album alone sets them apart from those “normal” albums but from “Baltimore” on they separate themselves all the saturated noise. It’s rare to find complete albums these days. Only Hodera along with Kendrick Lamar and a few others can take pride in offering a full production.

Young Dolph and Tracy Bryant both released albums I didn’t know were imminent. Apple Music has banners in both new music and hip hop pages pushing promotion for Dolph. Thinking Out Loud has his most refined verses and tightest production. I expect him to continue raising fast. I found Bryant and his band Corners at the legendary Roomrunner show back in 2012. Not sure if they still play together but at least there’s solo material. A Place For Nothing And Everything In Its Place steps up production quality, no more four-tracks, moving the acid trip towards pop focus. I’ll always have fondness for Bryant and Corner’s desperado rock but enjoy this maturation, rather than going deeper into Wonderland.

Collection Update 6.3

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I’ve been feeling like crap this week. I’m not gonna explain it in depth right now, or ever, but I’ll just say I’ve had some professional and personal frustrations. After this week I march to my bed and lay down to decompress myself. Thankfully today was just an average day and some co-workers invited me to see the premiere of IT tonight. Nice to get the invitation and do something social. Normally scary movies aren’t my thing but this one looks too good. I watched IT YouTube videos all of yesterday evening. I thought I’d wait a bit before seeing it but a great opportunity presented itself.

Patience, a practice I need to continue embrace and commit even more. I talk and think about it but I need to just fucking do it. Patience with work and achieving the goals I want. Patience in making friends. Finding a companion. Wait for the opportunities and seize them. Have faith they’ll present themselves. Perhaps that’s why I really enjoy this vinyl crusade I’ve been on. When you walk into a store and see something you didn’t expect I get that wonderful feeling of wanting to take that record home. Tonight I grabbed some great records for a great deal. Got a reissue of The Stone Roses debut and Turnover’s new album Good Nature, hot pink vinyl too.

I wasn’t planning on spending any money really at the store tonight, but I say that with every post I make updating my collection. Normal almost always has something I just have to have in that moment. I feels good to have something nice when I’m not feeling a 100%. Treating yourself feels good.

You can check out my vinyl collection here.

All The Songs Were About You

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I’ve intentionally waited since Brand New returned. A lot happened during a few hours and days when new music leaked online. Five hundred limited edition vinyl pre-orders for an untitled Brand New album put the music community on its backside. Those lucky enough to make the purchase received a CD in the mail folded in brown paper with a black and white image of the band. Could’ve easily been mistaken for a Godspeed! album or a deranged manifesto with anthrax sealed within. The music was promptly ripped and put online to manifest plagues of theories and discoveries. Science Fiction came to be by the fanatic curiosity of fans and the band’s own admission. Let’s cut the conspiracies though. Brand New intentionally waited for this moment, for years.

This was an organized coup to grasp the attention of the world for a brief moment. They’ve watched others do it over the last few years. Beyoncé in late 2013 ambushed everyone after quietly working her self-titled album for a year. She hit everyone with her best work to date. I can say the same for Brand New. It’s their best work since 2006’s The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me. I’m sure same disagree but Daisy might as well not exist to me. Perhaps it’s a sign to retry it again. Then again I’ve said that since it’s release. Some opinions are set in stone, but I wanted to make sure I gave Science Fiction time to solidify rather than ejaculating with first impressions.

Self-revival, wise, reinvention, and “debatably the band’s greatest album” will take life on the internet forever. Science Fiction exists as a great sequel, think Clerks 2, about who Brand New was last decade, influencing alternative rock forever, and who they are now. Rather than just make another record during the height of their financial success they’ve constructed a great album that pays homage to the past but still offers well written and diverse songs that can easily hold you for an hour.

The opening dialog on “Lit Me Up” between a therapist and patient sets the leitmotif for the entire album. The whole experience sounds like therapy sessions mixed in with some reverence of the past. “Can’t Get It Out” takes you back to Deja Entendu. “Waste” and “Could Never Be Heaven” sound like they came from The Devil and God sessions. Many of these songs refer nostalgically to The Devil and God. Obviously that’s a good sonance to possess however I’m critical of emulating an album from over ten years ago, no matter how fantastic it was then and influencial it remains now.

At the same time I have to praise their sentimentality not simply because we’re fortunate to have new music but it’s simply enjoyable. It’s a full canvas, not just a single or two with some filler tracks. This era of musicians focus on building one incredible song rather than a rich experience of pressing play and letting go for a while.

“Out of Mana” counters my critique earlier with the best moments of Science Fiction. It has elements of Deja, Devil and God, and Daisy while presenting a new unheard edge from the band. More rock than reservation. There’s optimism rather than gloom. In this period of my life, and perhaps their’s too, I’m looking for a positive outlook rather than the nihilism of my youth. Most of these bands I came to love in my teens aged appropriately with me. Reminds me of Japandroid’s album this year.

From “In The Water” through spectacular anthem “Batter Up” finishes the record stronger from where it started. Immediately I wouldn’t call it Brand New’s best work; however, I expect it to age just as well as the rest of their catalog. Many bands fail to make respectable music after a long hiatus. I hope Science Fiction bridges us from their last incarnation to the next one.