Friday, October 19, 2012

New Music Review: Ben Draiman - "The Past Is Not Far Behind (EP)"


Ben Draiman, "The Past Is Not Far Behind". 4.5/ 5 Stars

Ben Draiman’s new release, “The Past Is Not Far Behind”, is a fantastic example of what can happen when you do modern “piano rock” the right way. The album features a nice mix of soft to mid-range rock, with more traditional instruments blended in, creating a beautiful collaboration of sounds. This is especially evident to me on the track “Overcome”, which uses a deeper violin than prior tracks, complimenting Ben’s slightly deeper vocals.

Admittedly, for those who have kept up with Ben’s music or read my reviews in the past, you may notice that a couple of the tracks are the same. Don’t let this turn you off from the album however, as those were also earlier versions of the current tracks. I did enjoy the original “demos”, but the new versions are preferable to me and show his growth. As with all EP’s I review, I just wish there were more songs, but that’s something I’ll have to get over, since it IS an “EP”. My only concern then, is from a technical standpoint. Specifically, the mixing on “Avalanche” feels a bit muddy. There’s just a too much reverb for me, and it overwhelms the instrumental some on the chorus. The issue seems restricted to that track though, so it could be intentional to fit the idea of the song, in which case it does work, but I’m not certain.  This alone is why the release gets a 4.5 from me, rather than a full 5 stars, but it’s not enough to ruin the overall package.

The writing is intelligent and clear, very often pointing out the title’s message and the idea that much of what we lose or gain, is dependent on us paying attention to our past failures and successes. At the end of the day, we really are in control of where our journey takes us. I find myself drawn more to the softer tracks on the album. I’m not sure if “ballad” is the right term for them, but Ben certainly thrives in the more piano driven tracks in a way that feels less apparent on his heavier songs. Ironically the heavy tracks were what attracted me to his music to begin with, but they’re the places he visits, not where he lives, and his home is beautiful. 


Tracklist:

1. Soon Enough.
2. Avalanche
3. 21 Seconds
4. Would You Know Love
5. Overcome
6. Taken For Granted

Official Website: http://www.bendraiman.com


Wednesday, September 26, 2012

New Music Review: Wiz Khalifa - "Remember You (Feat. The Weeknd)"


Wiz Khalifa "Remember You (Feat. The Weeknd)" - 2/5 Stars


Wiz Khalifa is making a career of stereotypes in the rap industry. His content isn't exactly unique, sex, drugs, etc., it's the same thing that the majority of the hip-hop/ rap industry has been pushing for years. That said, he pushes it well enough to stay relevant to the mainstream. This was evident enough when he released "Black and Yellow" and it became a theme for a lot of Steelers fans around the Super Bowl, so much so that Lil Wayne decided to take it on with a freestyle over the B&Y instrumental, called "Green and Yellow" in favor of the Packers. Content aside, it seems to have  cemented him in a place of interest for the industry, something that will benefit him with his second release coming within only a year of the first.

With this week's release of his new single "Remember You", which features The Weeknd (yes, that's the right spelling), he sadly goes back to the same pattern lyrically. The song is another sex and drug filled track with Wiz bragging about himself constantly in a setting that could have potentially given him an opportunity to explore something new lyrically. The Weeknd's verses on the chorus aren't the world's next great love song as they slip into rap stereotypes occasionally, but they still feel far more romantic in nature than Wiz's, and as far as I'm concerned the song is his since it fits his style better. You can tell he's singing to a woman, whereas Wiz is just interested in himself. I'm struck with the same feeling I had with Maroon 5's "Payphone", everyone else knows what the song is about except for Wiz. He's off in his own world for the most part, probably because of the "papers" he's so fond of reminding us every few seconds that he's using. The song takes almost 3 and 1/2 minutes out of a nearly 5 minute track, before Wiz even seems to mention anything relevant to the chorus, but it doesn't take long to figure out he's actually just talking about himself again. 

I don't dislike the song so much as I dislike the lack of connection coming from Khalifa. I rather like his sound against The Weekend, I just wish he would expand more on his repertoire, since he clearly has the talent to do more but he won't as long as he keeps using drugs as a physical and lyrical crutch. Until then, as enjoyable as the underlying track and idea may be, this repeated pattern of narcissism and weed smoke is holding him back from releasing his full potential, and leaves me giving the new release only 2 of 5 stars. 

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

In Defense of Music Videos


I’ve done a few music reviews now, and I frequently refer to the music video presentations in addition to just the music.  Indeed, in my review of Delta Rae’s album, I pointed out the serious distinctions between the two experiences.  A friend asked me why I included the video element in a music review.  His question got me to thinking and what follows is the result. 

The short answer is that, because I’m a professor, I have a keen interest in how people learn.  Learning can be defined as taking in and processing information, making patterns with data already present, and trying to find meaning or patterns as you extrapolate toward the future.  All of that starts with taking in the basic information about the world around us.  That can’t always be done with simple text because the regular version of literacy, the ability to read words on a page, is historically unimportant.  Up to 1950, in our own United States, as much as half the adult population was functionally illiterate.  This means that a great deal of information was transferred visually and orally.  Historically speaking, these have always been and continue to be the main routes of data transfer. 

St. John of Damascus (c. 650 – 750 CE) lived in a time when officials, sacred and secular, were destroying religious images.  He vigorously objected by pointing out that the majority of the world was illiterate, up to 95% by some estimates, and that the pictorial representations were the best way to get across to Christian worshippers the stories of the Bible and various saints’ lives.  His position won out and is still the mainstream understanding in Orthodox and Catholic Christianity to this day.  During the Protestant Reformation and later, leaders ranging from Martin Luther (1483 – 1546 CE) to Oliver Cromwell (1599 – 1658 CE) insisted on destroying these images not because they were idols but because they told a different story than the one they wanted their followers to see.  Effectively, they accepted that John was right and feared the consequences.

One might well ask how this relates to music.  Well, music is a means of oral story-telling.  In this medium, the normal techniques of rhetoric and intonation are combined with pitch, rhythm, and other musical nuances.  St. Augustine (354 – 430 CE) held that, again because of general illiteracy in his congregation, the spoken word was itself a textual form that must be preserved intact if accurate information was to be given out and heresy nipped in the bud.  Again, he feared the consequences of the spoken word because it was so powerful in terms of information transfer.  Music is just that much stronger because of its underlying emotional nature.

In a more modern vein, a man named Leopold von Ranke (1795 – 1886) held that history could not exist without reference to primary documents.  For him, a document was any source of information, however conveyed, that came from the original participants or witnesses.  He accepted John’s and Augustine’s positions.  Visual images and oral traditions counted in his eyes.  We now consider even fiction from a given time and place to be a primary source due to its ability to tell us about the hopes, fears, and general society of the author.  Ranke is the father of history in its modern sense and is himself the source of both narrative history and historiography.  Because of him, historians like me remembered that our primary duty was to tell stories using whatever means we have handy.  Sometimes we do that with dry words in long books.  Sometimes we make maps and charts.  Sometimes we reconstruct whole symphonies.  And sometimes we get up in front of students and lecture, sharing what information we can as best we’re able.

The point is that any and every way information can be transferred from one person to another is a valid route and a potential source or record for later investigation.  More broadly, music videos can be analyzed in the same way an art or literature critic would look at their respective professions.  They can include visual puns or references to prior work, sometimes juxtaposing opposite ideas in ways mere words can’t get across.  They can demonstrate social relations between races, sexes, and economic groups.  They can be psychodramas or tales of spiritual redemption.  Even when the video and the lyrics have nothing objectively in common, they can be read individually as complete stories and then interlaced as a metatext to provide a deeper reading and understanding of the creators’ intent.  They can be anything the human mind is capable of creating.

So I would ask you, gentle reader, to take on a small assignment: Watch music videos, paying equal attention to both images and the songs, and “read” them as if they were your favorite stories.  What do they say to you?  Do they show men and women as equals?  Are the characters the sort of people you’d want your son or daughter to spend time with?  Are you disgusted or inspired?  What is the STORY that’s being told?  Please, share your thoughts.

At any rate, that, gentle reader, is why I include comments on music videos in my reviews.

– J. Holder Bennett, KMA Music Historian

Thursday, September 6, 2012

New(ish) Music Review: Delta Rae - "Carry The Fire"


Delta Rae, "Carry The Fire" 4.5/5 Stars


Ladies, gentlemen, and otherwise: I was wrong about Delta Rae.  I was so unbelievably wrong that I honestly don’t know where to begin.  To be fair, the first track I heard was “Morning Comes” in the main music video version, which is done in a traditional college rock style and is thoroughly forgettable, even if the music video is a foray into the delightfully absurd.  The trouble is that it’s actually a good song, but only when divorced from the visual setting.  Eric Hölljes and Elizabeth Hopkins demonstrate their real abilities in a way the video irreparably harms.  But then, at Nick’s suggestion, I went through the rest of their Carry the Fire and fell in love. 

This group of six alternates leading roles seamlessly and plays to their mutual strengths in unique ways.  Particularly, the video for “Bottom of the River” attracts the attention of a social historian (my own background) for its mixture of antebellum slave spiritual musical styles, medieval Japanese kyuubi masks, and modern stomp dance moves.  Unlike the other track, the video here enhances the story-telling.  In this song, Brittany Hölljes demonstrates a roar in her voice fit for a cryogenically preserved white child birthed by Bessie Smith and tutored by Ella Fitzgerald.  She’s that good.  The background chants and keyboard trills add to the mystique she constructs with that primæval growl so rare in today’s music.

They have love songs about hope overcoming pain, the complexities of human relationships, the dichotomies between nostalgia and reality, and the overall cussedness of the world being overcome through hard work.  Throughout, the band’s work is blissfully free from autotuning and other forms of sound manipulation.  Their continually evolving harmonies demonstrate the complexities possible when a talented group of people just want to sing without modern augmentations.  Their style is variable, even between different releases of the same song, so it’s difficult to put them into a category.  Frankly, my initial assessment of “college rock” was unfair.  They deserve better than that.  If I had to put a label on them, one which acknowledges the equal parts creativity, adoption, and adaptation they use in this album, I would have to call it “American Awesome.”  Rating: 4.5/5

– J. Holder Bennett, KMA Music Historian

Tracklist:

1. Holding On To Good
2. Is There Anyone Out There
3. Norning Comes
4. If I Loved You
5. Bottom Of The River
6. Country House
7. Surrounded
8. Dance In The Graveyards
9. Fire
10. Forgive The Children We Once Were
11. Unlike Any Other
12. Hey, Hey, Hey

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]