Tuesday, August 28, 2012

New(ish) Music Review: B.o.B - "Strange Clouds"


B.o.B - "Strange Clouds". 5/5 Stars

What do Morgan Freeman, Taylor Swift, and Lil' Wayne have in common? B.o.B. apparently. I was fairly amused by his first mainstream release, "B.o.B. Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray", but only recently got around to checking out his more recent release, "Strange Clouds". One of my favorite things about B.o.B. is the same thing he seems to get criticized for the most: he leans towards pop more than stereotypical rap. With a few exceptions music isn't particularly dark and shows more hope than anything, and he isn't afraid to reach outside of rap for his collaborations, which has made for more than a few interesting tracks. This is smart marketing at its finest because he can easily pull fans from any genre as he adds more and more unique collaborations, in addition to the new fans he'll grab on his own. He often reminds me of Kanye West without the auto-tune obsession, and before his ego took over. Plus, there's the fact that he's actually capable of singing, which he displays quite nicely on several of the tracks on "Strange Couds".

"As the war between light and darkness continues, heroes and villains become harder to identify. Kindred spirits separated at birth, fighting for their place in time to be solidified. The clock ticks faster and faster while tome runs a marathon in this Babylon. But see, the end is only the beginning, the beginning of the calm before the storm." - Morgan Freeman, from "Bombs Away" (Now read the rest of this review in his voice)

So begins the first track on "Strange Clouds", setting an almost fantasy tone for the album, which works since it seems to float along in the same mindset. The album has a few harder tracks on it, but feels relaxing overall, and the tracks that do feel a bit more depressing are still uplifting from the perspective of not being alone in a struggle,other people are feeling the same stress as you. Despite the wide range of collaborations, the flow is surprisingly well carried off and makes for a varied, yet cohesive story of sorts from one track to the next. I've tried to come up with a sufficient explanation for "why" you should listen to the album. It's actually taken me several listens and about a week's worth of stopping and coming back to the review to see if I could come up with a better reason, but the best endorsement I can give this album is fairly simple: It's good. I don't think you have to be a rap fan to like the album. It feels smooth and relaxing, and I could easily listen to this while gaming, reading, playing a sport, anything. I've gotten several new favorite songs out of this, and I believe you will too. 

Tracklist:

1. Bombs Away (Feat. Morgan Freeman)
2. Ray Bands
3. So Hard To Breathe
4. Both Of Us (Feat. Taylor Swift)
5. Strange Clouds (Feat. Lil Wayne)
6. So Good
7. Play For Keeps
8. Arena (Feat. Chris Brown & T.I.)
9. Out Of My Mind (Feat. Nicki Minaj)
10. Never Let You Go (Feat. Ryan Tedder)
11. Chandelier (Feat. Laurina Mae)
12. Circles
13. Just A Sign (Feat. Playboy Tre)
14. Castles (Feat. Trey Songz)
15. Where Are You (B.o.B vs. Bobby Ray)

Target Version:

16. MJ (Feat. Nelly)
17. Back It Up For Bobby
18. What Are We Doing
19. Guest List (Feat. Roscoe Dash)
20. Ms. Professional

Music Review: Fun. - "Aim and Ignite"


Fun. - "Aim and Ignite" 4.5/5 Stars

Like many of you out there, I only recently became aware of the band Fun. and thoroughly enjoyed their album Some Nights.  I was delighted to learn that this was actually their second title and quickly bought a copy of their first one, Aim and Ignite.  I trust my gentle readers will forgive me if this review is thus somewhat out of order. 

True to the group’s name, this one is just as much “fun” as the second one.  It has many innovative features as in their more recent work, but differs in several important ways.  The most notable is the lack of autotuning, a feature toyed with repeatedly in the second album but blissfully absent in this one.  Lead singer Nate Ruess repeatedly demonstrates that he just doesn’t need it.  This album, as a whole, is also more innovative than their later work and as such is not as accessible to the average listener.  Forget about that.  Focus on the fact that this is genuinely good music and ignore the pablum that passes for pop music.  Fun. knows what they’re doing.  Another fantastic feature is the variety of instrumentation, ranging from electric guitars to violins and from accordions to full brass ensembles.  Most groups would synthesize these sounds today but Fun. insists on authenticity and tradition, a position I can only approve of.

The first track, “Be Calm,” lives up to its name even in the more energetic sections.  Its initially mellow presentation is one of simple violin harmonies undergirding a complex dialogue, partly external and partly internal, between an emotionally unbalanced young man and his attempts to deal with human relationships in a new setting.  “Be Calm” is his mantra for trying to cope with the distancing of modern society, requiring ever more forceful emphasis as things spiral out of control.

“Benson Hedges” opens as a sort of gospel song as much about faith as about modern life and evolves into a more customary rock piece in a fashion not unlike a retrograde Elvis.  The overall tone is a critique of the trivialization of culture from both MTV and Bill O’Reilly, the Fox News commentator.  The breakdown is as much about his old car as it is about his reaction to trying to cope with the world and human relationships.  He crosses literal and metaphoric borders as he heads out into the world away from the urban “canyons” of the city.

The next piece, “All the Pretty Girls (On a Saturday Night)” reminds one of a simpler time and informal performance, indeed including at the beginning seeming chatter which would normally be excluded from a recording.  This song continues the theme of being dumped only here it is self-affirming, acknowledging that he’s been used and is trying to move on despite painful reminders from mutual friends.  He alternates between longing for a return to the former relationship and dissolution among “all the pretty girls,” literally anyone but his former partner.  The song highlights the codependency so common in young relationships that end up damaging as much as defining masculine youth.  But, in the end, the independent self wins out against temptation.

The fourth track is a sort of walking song, similar to what one might find in a 70s montage scene of young romance.  “I Wanna Be the One” is easily Fun.’s answer to “Your Song” while being far less self-conscious about it.  A far more descriptive title thus might be “My Song.”  Unlike most love songs, he’s actually talking to and about himself.  He’s finally over the former relationship from the previous tracks and is comfortable and self-confident. 

The next track is playfully self-indulgent, even including an antiphon using the chord progression from “Ring around the Rosie.”  He acknowledges the absurdity of his position, being an indie artist making it big in mainstream music fandom and pointedly makes fun of those fans who questioned his departure from his old band, The Format, as if it were some grand tragedy.  “At Least I’m Not as Sad (As I Used to Be)” is a bit of a jest and shouldn’t be taken seriously.  That said, this sort of self-referential meta-narrative can be read as the consequences of a complex and evolving relationship between a musician and his fans, not unlike those between a young man and woman in a tempestuous pairing.

“Light a Roman Candle with Me” is a mellow piece which belies its central importance to the theme of the album.  The singer is asking a girl to take a chance on him, much as he’s taking a chance by approaching her at all.  He’s not looking for “Miss Right” or “Miss Right Now.”  He’s looking for someone to share a moment with, even a mundane one like sharing a cup of tea or setting off a fire cracker.  The intimacy and particularity of shared moments, haecceity, the here-ness and now-ness of a particular moment or experience, are what he’s focusing on and he wants to share that temporal specificity with someone he cares about.  Life is, after all, a succession of moments, each entirely unlike any other.  Small joys are best had in company.

“Walking the Dog” is another piece which focuses on the breakup theme.  The “dog” here is his continued obsession with his ex-partner though the verb tense use is confusing and conflates past and present. He is mentally castigating her not only for cheating on him and dumping him, but for doing so with one of the “boys of summer” who physically abuses her.  The light tone of the song can be misleading but the story is clear on that point.  He is still angry but doesn’t believe she deserves this sort of mistreatment.

The eighth track, “Barlights,” is a story of walking home after the bars close.  He’s had good night out with friends, playing Bo Peep to their sheep as they amble along, and he feels his confidence renewed with equal parts self-reliance and camaraderie with his friends.  Such is the tone of this album overall that suddenly shifts from self-doubt to self-confidence make sense within the total context and makes for a well-blended narrative theme across multiple tracks.

The next piece opens with a piano trill that reminds of a medium-difficulty finger warm-up exercise, and for all that reminds one of chamber music.  Instead of being an immediate story, this song is an entire life’s love story, ranging across fifty years of joyful sharing.  This song is simultaneously the most joyous and melancholy on the entire album.  The singer is in the person of an old man looking back at a long and happy life as his wife is peacefully dying before him.

The final track, though of a very different tone, in many ways continues the last song’s theme to its natural conclusion while integrating it with the rest of the album.  “Take Your Time (Coming Home)” mixes the old man with the singer in his own person, each looking back on a life and juxtaposing a life-long love with the tempestuous career of a young musician and fully incorporates the theme only hinted at in track five.  Unlike the dumping the singer suffered, the woman’s death is thus a natural progression and result of a life well lived.  For both, the message is “If you love somebody, you’d better let them know.” 

Aim and Ignite is thus an integrated whole, each song a variation on a single narrative theme.  Twice makes a custom, as the saying goes, and Fun. carried over their innovative story-telling techniques, if in somewhat watered down form, from this first album to their second one, Some Nights.  If you have yet to listen to Fun.’s first album, do so.

– J. Holder Bennett, KMA Music Historian

New(ish) Music Review: Krizz Kaliko - "Kickin' & Screamin'"


Krizz Kaliko - Kickin' & Screamin'. 4/5 Stars

STRAAAANGE... MUSIC. This album isn't for kids, but if you're not a kid, boost the volume. (Yes, this review is far too delayed)

Krizz gets better with each successive album, and manages to pull off a fantastic mix that's harder to qualify as strictly rap because he's also a talented singer, in some ways not far off from Cee Lo Green, and in others so far beyond, because he actually does rock along with his rap. Before you start asking how I can compare the two, most of Krizz's vocals are deeper than what Cee Lo normally does, but he does have an impressive upper range as well. While the main sections of the album are good "party" rap, they aren't what make the album. There are several songs that dig a lot deeper into "Kali's" psyche, continuing his pattern from the previous albums of discussing his health concerns, mental and physical, while not giving up hope, and in fact embracing how they've made him who he is (Specifically "Created A Monster"). This provides a lot of insight into why his music goes the way it does and helps even the darker portions of the album make a lot more sense emotionally than the majority of rappers who choose to go "dark" just because they can. While he does unfortunately fall into a couple rap stereotypes language-wise, it rarely detracts from the message he's trying to get across (There are also times he uses the language strictly to make a point). He occasionally samples from his other albums and collaborations, which makes for a good reminder of his previous works and makes sure his music connects well from one album to the next without being overdone. Also, like most of the albums on Strange Music, there are a lot of collaborations from within the label, a smart choice since it not only sounds good, but sells the other artists just as well. This album fits the Strange label perfectly, so obviously SM fans will love it, but I'd also recommend it to fans of Cee Lo Green, Korn, Eminem, and even dubstep.


Tracklist:


1. Intro (Feat. Scenario)
2. Dancin' With Myself
3. Kali Baby [explicit]
4. Kill S**t (Feat. Tech N9ne & Twista) [Explicit]
5. Mayday (Feat. Chamillionaire & Rittz) [Explicit]
6. Dumb For You (Feat. T-Pain) [Explicit]
7. Spaz (Feat. Tech N9ne) [Explicit]
8. Dixie Cup (Feat. Big Scoob & Twiztid) [Explicit]
9. Abu Dhabi (Feat. 816 Boyz) [Explicit]
10. Species [Explicit]
11. Can't Be The Only One (Feat. Tech N9ne)
12. Created A Monster
13. Hello Walls (Feat. Tech N9ne)
14. Wannabe (Feat. Twiztid) [Explicit]
15. Unstable
16. Dream Of A King (Feat. ¡Mayday! & Prozak) [Explicit]
17. Stay Alive (Feat. Big Scoob) [Explicit]


iTunes Version:


18. Layin' Down (Feat. Liz Suwandi)
19. So Hard


Pre-Order Version:


18. Bad Man (Feat. Oobergeek) [Explicit]

Monday, August 13, 2012

New Music Review: Deadmau5 - "Professional Griefers (Feat. Gerard Way)"


deadmau5 "Professional Griefers". 4/5 Stars

If you're a Deadmau5 fan like I am, you've probably been rocking out to "The Veldt", and the preview of "Professional Griefers", while waiting for the new album to release. Today the "Professional Griefers" single released, so let's take a more detailed look at it. 

First off, the most notable change between the original and the single are the addition of vocals by Gerard Way of "My Chemical Romance. I like some of the work MCR has done over the years, but let's face it, he likes to whine at times, and while that has it's place it isn't needed in EVERY song he does. Because of this I find his voice a bit grating at times. On the flip side of that statement, he does seem to be maturing some vocally, and his style is actually perfect for this collaboration. The main verses have pretty good energy and works great for a club track, but what really makes the song for me is the chorus which is the only time Gerard genuinely sings.

The instrumental bits overall, but especially in those sections, feel like something that should be running in Tron, and actually sound a little like Daft Punk to me. Not necessarily enough to mistake one for the other, but the comparison remains and that can be an issue in some settings as you do want your music to stand out from the competition. Regardless, I still enjoy the track a lot and it feels like a good direction for both artists, again making me look forward to the eventual release of ">Album Title Goes Here

Speaking of which, YOU can hear it this coming Friday on the next episode of the Knightengale Music Podcast on our YouTube channel... http://www.youtube.com/user/KnightengaleKMA?feature=mhee

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

New Music Review: Signum A.D. - "Veto The Vultures, Vol. 1"


5/5 Stars


Well, I'm hooked. I just got my copy of Signum A.D.'s new E.P. "Veto The Vultures: Volume 1", and I never expected to say this, but for once an E.P. doesn't feel too short. That isn't to say I'm against them releasing Volume 2, because lord knows I'd be s.a.d. (poorly thought out pun intended) if they didn't, but as far as this one goes they managed to pull off a very full sounding and well produced E.P., something that is rare these days when it comes to partial releases. 

I'm going to start with my complaint because I want it understood that while it bothers me a little, I don't feel it damages the album, and in fact adds to it in some cases: I could admittedly do with a bit less shouting as a lot of rock artists in the last decade feel like that's the only way to express emotion, sort of in the same way that so many rap and pop artists have started resorting to Auto-tune for everything. It carries itself through just fine, but it does wear on the senses a little if there isn't some sort of interval (general comment, not saying this occurs  for me on the E.P. as they were smart enough to provide said intervals with their singing). I wouldn't mind so much under other circumstances, but as stated a lot of bands choose to do it now so the market is over saturated, meaning even good uses make me a bit uneasy. 

Now the good: The first single off the album, "Chemical Lifeline" makes for a strong starting track with some fantastic guitar riffs and sets the tone for the majority of the songs. Style-wise, think of a mix of Shinedown, Hinder, Rev Theory, and Black Stone Cherry. It still felt very much like a different band, it wasn't like I was sitting there going "oh, this is the same thing as _______", but there were still elements that felt inspired by them. My favorite song right now is "Pray For Me", which is probably one of the most unique tracks on the album as it incorporates a lot of modern rock feel in the main sections, while the chorus lyrically and instrumentally made me think more of 80's rock. There are what sound like a few synth effects used throughout the E.P., mainly as background pieces, but this song showcases the best uses. As crazy as it may seem, this in ways came across to me as a combination of Journey, Genesis, Three Days Grace, and Shinedown, in all the right ways. Feel free to argue the merit of my comparisons when the E.P. drops on August 21st, until then though, just trust that this is one of the best modern rock releases of the year and well worth a listen, or 50. Well done Signum A.D.. 

Tracklist:

1. Chemical Lifeline
2. Let It All Out
3. Blame Me
4. Pray For Me
5. Like An Animal

Thursday, August 2, 2012

New Music Review: Mercedes - The Wavelength E.P.


Mercedes: "The Wavelength E.P." 5/5 Stars

Truth be told, I am having a difficult time getting excited when I'm looking at pre-orders on iTunes lately. It isn't always even that the music coming out is bad, but too much of it has already been done. The market understandably leans toward specific styles that are popular, but it also means that once the current fad takes hold the market becomes over saturated until the public gets tired and moves on. This is natural progression, and also how supply and demand can get flipped on its head because there is no shortage of the item. I went out looking to see what was new the other night and based the search on what had the most orders. It took no time at all for me to find that a lot of the list was populated by rap and dance music primarily, and that despite the countless number of band names the majority all sounded like they were done by the same person. "Well this is no good", I thought. If I can review several pages worth of music in a single paragraph due to similarity, there is a problem here. So my solution? I reversed the list in an attempt to actually find something different that may have slipped under the public radar, and thanks to that, I found it.

"The Wavelength EP", by Mercedes (Not the rapper, no matter what iTunes claims) is one of those rare gems I find that could have released any time in the last 40 years or so and found success in any of the decades. The album feels refreshingly "old-school" while still having a sound that can translate well now. Not full on rock but not really pop or jazz either, the best description I can give of genre is actually "Coffee Shop". Not  the whole over commercialized Starbucks on every corner, but the genuine mom and pop style shops or local pubs. You can go in there and you're family. Sit down on the couch and enjoy your drink while the local talent (Mercedes), enhance the atmosphere. I found myself put in a really pleasant mood by the band's overall tone and "live" sound. There is just something incredibly relaxing about the album, where I could easily go to sleep listening to it if I wanted, which is not to say that the music puts me to sleep. Rather, it just has that kind of blissfully peaceful quality that so much of today's music is sorely lacking. As with many EP's my major issue is just that I'd like to hear more, but I can get by for now by just looping it. I look forward to hearing more from this band, although I've had an incredibly difficult time finding out anything about the band themselves, other than the fact that they are located somewhere around Hartlepool in the United Kingdom. If anyone has more information than that I'd be interested to hear it. Well done Mercedes, I look forward to your future works (and past if I ever locate them).

iTunes link: http://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/the-wavelength-ep/id543409259

Tracklist:

1. Here Comes The Day
2. Not Enough
3. Wake Up Call
4. Saccarin