Tuesday, January 17, 2017

What I am Currently Listening To

Just some thoughts on what I have been listening to lately. And by listening to, I mean almost daily/cannot get enough of:

Bookends Simon & Garfunkel
 Via the means of an original pressing on vinyl (complete with the fold-up poster inside) I have been playing this 1968 release from Queens' finest songwriting duo almost daily. In the best sense, it is compact and self-contained. I would argue that the concept explored on Side A is easily identified and enjoyed. It about two friends growing old, growing apart, and looking back. Possibly a self-fulfilling prophecy. There is "America" which found new life last year after its infusion into a Bernie Sanders ad. I guess we are still in search of that America.  Either way, their unique craft and mastery is on full display. Side B sans a theme still shines and contains the staple "Mrs. Robinson". I have enjoyed hearing old favorites and discovering new ones.
One thing in particular I have enjoyed is the way Simon & Garfunkel made music that was nostalgic for just five years earlier. They froze the early 60's harmonies of The Beatles and Beach Boys in Dylan's pre-electric folk. They made music for people in 1968 for who longed for 1963. Johnson wasn't working out like Kennedy could have. Today, it sounds both classic and timeless. Their genius has not been matched and possibly best captured on this album

Surf Rock is Dead
I discovered this indie outfit via bandcamp. To their credit and to my benefit, everything they have up there is name your own price. I applaud them for simply wanting their music to get out there, get people listening, and in my case, listening often in anticipation of any new music or news. They are scrappy, filled with ambition, and have more than enough talent to make ambient indie that doesn't stray as far as space, but instead hangs in the clouds and feels good. Like swimming in the ocean in the summer.
I think they show as much knowledge and ability as anyone going at these days and I think it is a matter of when not if they get discovered, play late-night, and find themselves at a festival or two. Still no true album from them but two singles and an EP to hold us over.

Made to Love Magic Nick Drake
Posthumous compilations of Drake's work now double the actual album output he was able to achieve in his brief life and career. This 2004 release brings together outtakes and remixes, some of which involve the inclusion of instruments not originally on the track. It plays like a love letter to the possibility that was Nick Drake. Could he have been Dylan? Cohen? He has both of them in his approach and his mood.
The tracks span the arc of his career, ending "Tow the Line" possibly the last song he ever recorded. I recommend it to anyone who is already obsessed with Pink Moon and just craves more. I recommend it to anyone who heard "One of These Things First" in Garden State and wants more contemplative music that is well crafted. Overall, there is a feeling and cohesiveness amongst the songs. Perfect for a twilight drive when each night there is a little more light.
A documentary on Drake: A Stranger Among Us Nick Drake


"Gypsy" Gardens & Villa 
This Fleetwood Mac cover is from 2012 and the tribute album Just Tell Me That You Want Me: A Tribute to Fleetwood Mac, a release that brought in the likes of Best Coast, J. Mascis, and MGMT to pay homage. I am impressed by the indie reworking of a radio staple from a time where its production was lost on most. Now, countless bands are going back over that 80's style and time in music. This group, of which I know nothing else, is beautifully spooky in keyboard and synth playing.
It really does sound like a celebration in how much the chorus was left to still be a sing-along. I feel like I am transported to another world, over the garden wall if it were. The song fits in as much with any indie from the past 10 years and shows the diamonds that can come from random tribute albums.
A trailer about the album
 

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