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Le Blogotheque’s Album of the Year: Forest Fire - “Survival”

I’m sure I’m also speaking for the band when I give a huge thanks to La Blogotheque for choosing Forest Fire’s Survival as the Top Album of 2008 (above even Fleet Foxes, woohoo!)

Here’s my loose (i.e. poor) translation of Le Blogotheque’s Ă©loge en français:

[Survival is] [a] rare album, released on a blog label, available only on the internet, that can be downloaded for free or for just a few dollars. An album that you can not find in a store, that hasn’t been criticized by Pitchfork, Mojo, or Inrocks, and that has had no advertising or publicity. An album that was intended to be forgotten at the end of the year. All the more reason to place this album at the top of the top.

It is an excellent album, and the one I listened to most this year. Raw, powerful songs, alternately nervous and hypnotic, like a drug-hazy stroll through the history of song.

I repeat today what I said 6 months ago: download Survival and you’ve made the best acquisition of the year.

Yes, the limited-edition CD (both “Giant-Size” and regular) is long sold-out, but as mentioned, you can still download the entire album, and I strongly urge you to do so.

::: Forest Fire - “Slow Motion” :::
::: Forest Fire - “Fortune Teller” :::
::: Forest Fire - “I Make Windows” :::

New Robert Pollard, “Imaginary Queen Anne”

From the forthcoming Crawling Distance (out 1/20 on GBV, Inc.), here’s a new song from Uncle Bob:

::: Robert Pollard - “Imaginary Queen Anne” :::

New Swan Lake (Dan Bejar, Spencer Krug, Carey Mercer), “Enemy Mine,” Coming 3/24 from Jagjaguwar

Oh yes. 2009 is already shaping up rather nicely: Swan Lake’s follow-up to 2006’s Beast Moans is now officially on the docket from Jagjaguwar. Messrs Bejar, Krug, and Mercer will lay out Enemy Mine for the world on 3/24.

Tracklist:

  • Spanish Gold, 2044
  • Paper Lace
  • Heartswarm
  • Settle on Your Skin
  • Ballad of a Swan Lake, Or, Daniel’s Song
  • Peace
  • Spider
  • A Hand at Dusk
  • Warlock Psychologist

No MP3, so here are some tracks from Beast Moans:

::: Swan Lake - “All Fires” :::
::: Swan Lake - “The Freedom” :::

Some Mixes

Our friends at Oregon’s Bend Bulletin sent over a link to their 2-part “Best of 2008″ Mix. Titled Near/Far 2008, it’s 1 “disc” of Oregonian bands, and 1 “disc” of national bands, including No Age, Jamie Lidell, Blitzen Trapper, and Pitchfork’s favorite, Fleet Foxes. Go on over and download the whole shebang, or heck, just cherry-pick the tracks you want– it’s all free and legal.

and while we’re on the subject, Matthew has just finished his 3-part “Favorites of 2008″ Fluxcast– be sure and check those out too.

The Clean “Compilation” Limited Edition Vinyl Reissue

All of you people that like good things, listen up: One of the hands-down classics of ’80s kiwi rock, The Clean’s Compilation, has just been reissued in an insanely-limited vinyl edition by Little Axe/Mississippi Records. There are only 300 copies, and they are apparently flying off the shelves very quickly– I don’t even know which store to send you to, so I’ll just tell you to Google it.

I can’t guarantee you the same intense happiness that I get from listening to the Clean, but I urge you to give it a shot and see:

::: The Clean - “Twist Top” :::

The Lord Dog Bird

I did a number of posts this year on an unassuming record by Colin McCann, guitarist for Wilderness. The Lord Dog Bird is a solo effort, done by McCann on his home four-track while Wilderness was on extended hiatus. It’s a slightly drony, atmospheric record, and one that J. Catbird nailed pretty accurately when she walked into the room and observed, “this sounds a bit like Peter Gabriel singing with Wolf Parade.”

I wasn’t originally planning to do yet another post on this record, but after seeing this note in a recent Jagjaguwar Year-End Wrap-Up email:

The Lord Dog Bird "The Lord Dog Bird" (8/5/08) SUGGESTED LIST: Best Album You Never Heard

…and then this, in Sean’s “Best 50 Songs of 2008″ post:

#32- The Lord Dog Bird: The same way that a lantern reminds me of a campfire, this reminds me of early Wolf Parade... and a woefully ignored album!

…I felt compelled to write this up. This record deserves to be heard, and you may just be pleasantly surprised. I’m not saying it’s a life-changer or anything; it’s really a very modest, unpretentious record… but it’s got that little spark of magic in it that I find so sorely lacking from so much of the music I hear today. So although I don’t do the “Top 10 Albums List” thing anymore, I will say this: The Lord Dog Bird is one of my favorite records I heard this year.

::: The Lord Dog Bird - The Shedding Path :::
::: The Lord Dog Bird - The Gift Of Song In The Lion’s Den :::

New Releases This Week (Or, “Twitter Remains Utterly Useless”)

In a hopeless attempt at finding, well, actual use for Twitter, a few weeks ago, I decided to start posting my recommendations from the new releases that week. But I realized today that by doing that, I’m basically spamming everyone’s feed, by filling it in one fell swoop with a long unbroken sequence of, ahem, “tweets.”

So I’m retiring that Twitter experiment, but in case you may find some value in my list of this week’s “picks,” I re-present them here:

I know there’s a whole lot of vinyl in that list, but that’s not entirely because of my preference; it also has to do with the fact that new album releases for the year pretty much cease in December. Matter of fact, this week is probably the last real week of releases for the year.

Swirlies Are Back

Preeminent Boston shoegaze/sneakyflute band Swirlies are back on active duty, and playing 3 East Coast shows in early 2009.

2/26 - Philadelphia, PA - Johnny Brenda’s
2/27 - NYC - Mercury Lounge
2/28 - Cambridge, MA - Middle East

I discovered them all those years ago only because there was a time when I bought almost anything that came out on Taang (Slapshot, anyone?).

These days, it looks like you can download pretty much all Swirlies albums for free, like They Spent Their Wild Youthful Days in the Glittering World of the Salons, which is here and What To Do About Them, which is here. It’s all kosher, I’m not sending you to Megaupload links there– the band themselves are the ones givin’ it all away.

One last thing: there’s also a Swirlies tribute album due at Archive.Org any day now. That one, too, is free.

Listless

Sheesh, “Year-End List” season has really stirred up some heated emotions this year. Idolator pondered, “What Use Are ‘Best Of’ Lists, Anyhow?” And today, Scott over at PGWP posted a long, detailed diatribe about the aspect (or rather absence) of trust with regard to the lists. He points out,

I’m detecting an odd, if fascinating tone to the usual kvetching this time around. It’s not the same old sux/rulz dichotomy: rather, there seems to be a distinct lack of trust, a suspicion of the listmakers’ motives.

Scott also points out this post from BG’s Tumblr (who wonders just how often you listen to those albums you called “Best” last year) and the inevitable ILM thread which I’m certain you don’t want to get involved in.

Ultimately, I came to Raptoravatar’s response to Scott’s post, in which he proffered this:

I know that No Age’s Nouns is going to be in my top five and that I can make a case for it being a good record.  However, I know that when I’m talking about that record I’m also talking about this whole past summer where I listened to it almost every day.  My case for that record is as much about drunken late night bike rides where every speck of grime takes on a secret life, hitting taco trucks at 1 am, poetic graffitti in weird industrial areas, and giddy mosh pits as it is the hermeneutic of “Epic Punk” as understood through the influence of Husker Du.

And what struck me about that is that it rings of exactly what I think a Top/Best/Favorite list should be. It should be the music that, for whatever reason, just really resonated with the listmaker. The music that became part of their lives, instead of part of their “collection.” I realize that makes the lists WHOLLY idiosyncratic and subjective… but I feel like that’s the whole point. Music ain’t science, it ain’t statistics. It’s lust, and heartbreak, and anxiety, and confusion. It’s Elvis’ hips, and Joe Strummer’s guitar. It’s the too-short life of Ian Curtis.

It seems like at some point in the past few years, we decided that it was more important to value music against some nebulous set of criteria that we can apply numerical values to. Let’s keep it up and maybe one day, we can finally squeeze ALL the fun out of this.

Morrissey’s New Album

I don’t get what all the hubbub was today about Morrissey’s new album cover. Seems pretty dull if you ask me.

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Giveaway: Sonic Youth “Corporate Ghost” DVD + Thurston’s NO WAVE Book

You’re likely to see a number of Insound giveaways across a bunch of sites this week– we’ve got one here at Catbirdseat too. Carefully selected from Insound’s extensive Holiday Gift Guide, we’ve got a drawing for Sonic Youth’s Corporate Ghost DVD collection AND a copy of Thurston Moore and Byron Coley’s fantastic NO WAVE book.

Which reminds me, you should go rent/download/Netflix Scott Crary’s 2004 No Wave documentary, Kill Your Idols. It’s great, and will remind you that there was a time when bands didn’t set out to hustle up Myspace friends, land songs on Grey’s Anatomy, and jockey for, uh, well, blog coverage.

Adron

Hopefully, you heard last month’s mix and caught the track I put in there from NYC songstress Adron. It just popped back into my head this morning– probably because it’s just a really good song. She reminds me a lot of Juana Molina. I’m talking strictly sonically here, but it’s probably reinforced by the fact that Adron also often sings not in English, but rather in Portuguese.

Adron - “Bicicleta”

(Adron’s s/t debut is available at Amazon)

Oh Yeah…

Almost forgot, there’s this:

Catbirdseat December Mix


Wha??? The new Mix / Podcast is up a day early? How often does that happen? Never, that’s how often. What’s more, I also brought the Archive of Old Mixes Which You Can No Longer Listen To up-to-date. Anyway, here’s the mix for those of you too lazy to click on the mix link over there:

Or just grab the podcast.

Constantines, Gentleman Reg

Constantines - “Our Age”

Constantines‘ new 7-inch, “Our Age” b/w “Fuckin’ Up” (Neil Young), is out tomorrow. You can grab the single from the AC Shop, or better yet, get it from the band when they kick off their super short US tour next week:

12/4 - Big Orbit’s Soundlab, Buffalo, NY
12/5 - T.T. The Bear’s, Cambridge, MA
12/6 - Heirloom Arts Theatre, Danbury, CT
12/7 - Music Hall Of Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY
12/9 - Bedrock, Baltimore, MD
12/12 - The Summit, Columbus, OH
12/13 - Empty Bottle, Chicago, IL
12/14 - The Crofoot, Pontiac, MI

You may also be interested in checking out the unique CON | LADY book by photographer Jeremy Jansen, which documents the 9-day Cons/Ladyhawk (not Ladyhawke) tour from June of this year.

And while you’re over there sniffing around the Arts & Crafts site, don’t forget to note that Gentleman Reg Vermue is back on the scene these days, with a new single, “You Can’t Get It Back” b/w “City of Eros,” just out, along with a modest “Greatest Hits” disc, Little Buildings, as well. Reg’s brand-new full length, Jet Black, is due later in ‘09.

Gentleman Reg - “You Can’t Get It Back”

Song of the Day: Benjy Ferree, “Fear”

The swelling, souled out, retro quasi-retro pop croon of Benjy Ferree’s “Fear,” from the forthcoming album, Come Back to the Five and Dime, Bobby Dee, Bobby Dee. The reason there’s no mp3 here is because Domino asks that you go here and submit your email address first. So go do that, like, immediately.

FYI: François Virot

I am VERY much enjoying the François Virot tracks that Sean posted over at Said the Gramophone today.

Francois Virot - “Cascade Kisses”

New Chad VanGaalen, “City Of Electric Light” (and stuff)

Chad VanGaalen’s Soft Airplane came out back in September, but I haven’t seen much online action for it, which is a shame, since it’s just as good as his previous efforts, Skelliconnection and Infiniheart.

::: Chad VanGaalen - “City Of Electric Light” :::

Sally Crewe, recipient of my fawning praise for 2003’s Drive It Like You Stole It has a new record coming out in January, called Your Nearest Exit May Be Behind You (check out some tracks at Myspace). Oh, and also? Crewe has recruited Tommy Keene to handle bass duites when she and the Sudden Moves play a string of dates opening for The Wedding Present in the UK next month.

Attention music nerds old like me: I’m reminding you that Merge’s reissue of Polvo’s Celebrate the New Dark Age is now out (on 180g vinyl, no less). Those memories of ‘94 are flooding back.

I know you’re skeptical, but ace stroker Fab Moretti’s new Little Joy project is not half-bad. Check out the vid just posted over at Pissfork: