Deerhunter Side-Project, Atlas Sound, Releasing Logos LP in October
Tuesday July 14, 2009

When I
interviewed Bradford Cox of Deerhunter recently, he told me that he had "an Atlas Sound album done." Turns out he wasn't lying.
Logos, the second longplayer for Cox's side-project, will be released October 20 on Kranky Records in North America, and on 4AD in the rest of the world.
Cox's follow-up to 2008's
Let the Blind Lead Those Who Can See but Cannot Feel finds him losing the introspection that has thus far characterized Atlas Sound. As he's been doing in Deerhunter, here Cox is playing with more of a 'pop' approach, in his own weird way. And the literal isolation of the project has given way to celebrity collaboration;
Logos finding contributions from Noah Lennox (AKA
Panda Bear of
Animal Collective) on "Walkabout," and Laetitia Sadier (the iconic vocalist of Stereolab) on "Quick Canal."
An early, demo-version form of
Logos was accidentally 'leaked' by Cox himself, last year, making for much online soap-opera amongst the indie cognoscenti. Cox claimed he considered abandoning the record once its early sketches were outed, but eventually persevered. For he, and us, this finished, fully-polished
Logos is the final reward for sticking with it.
Logos Track List:
1. "The Light That Failed"
2. "An Orchid"
3. "Walkabout"
4. "Criminals"
5. "Attic Lights"
6. "Shelia"
7. "Quick Canal"
8. "My Halo"
9. "Kid Klimax"
10. "Washington School"
11. "Logos"
Introducing: Silk Flowers
Monday July 13, 2009
Name: Silk Flowers
From: New York, New York
Story: No Age bros know weird
Sound: Fuzzy, muffled, proto-electro gloom
When Dean Spunt from
No Age says, of Silk Flowers, "they're probably the weirdest band I know," it's not hyperbole out to hype a record he's putting out on his own Post Present Medium label. Because Silk Flowers are a weird band.
It starts with Aviram Cohen's weird singing; an affected, self-parodying baritone moan that sounds like a stand-up comedian doing a mocking impersonation of Scott Walker. Drawing from the proto-electro dissonance of '70s pioneers Suicide or nasty early-'80s provocateurs Throbbing Gristle, the music matching Cohen's comic crooning is full of clunky, lumpen drum-machine think and eerie synthesizer sound.
Recorded by Fred Thomas —the longtime frontman of indie-pop outfit Saturday Looks Good to Me who, this year, reinvented himself as experimentalist with his City Center project— the album has a fuzzy, muffled, no-fidelity sound. In fact, it sounds a lot like Ariel Pink's warped, wobbly take on archaic analogue sound.
Since forming in New York last year, Silk Flowers have opened up shows for
Animal Collective, Crystal Stilts, Blank Dogs, Grouper and High Places, and have toured with their label-bosses, No Age, themselves. Post Present Medium has just released Silk Flowers' debut, self-titled LP, and the band will be taking their weird music onto the road in support of such. Dates, and single "Flash of Light," below.
Silk Stalkings
July 18: New York, NY - Cake Shop
July 29: New York, NY - Home Sweet Home
August 1: Long Island City Queens, NY - Sculpture Center
August 15: Chicago, IL - Golden Age Records
August 15: Chicago, IL - Empty Bottle
August 16: Los Angeles, CA - The Echo
August 17: San Francisco, CA - The Knockout
August 20: Portland, OR - Backspace
From The Vaults Friday: Elliott Smith, Either/Or (1997)
Friday July 10, 2009
The Year: 1997
The Album:
Elliott Smith,
Either/Or
Who It Influenced: Bright Eyes,
Death Cab for Cutie,
The Decemberists,
Grizzly Bear, José González, Jeff Hanson
12 years after
Either/Or was released —and six years after
Elliott Smith died young and left a scarred, abused, beaten-down corpse— and the magnum opus for Portland's most famous songwriting son has a definite ghostly tinge. To discover it now, either anew or all over again, is to hear an album whispered as if from beyond the grave.
Yet, as someone old enough to have bought
Either/Or upon its 1997 release, I remember it when the album was not a veritable death-poem, but a record fresh and alive, filled with tender, melodic, romantic songs that made their author's misery seem inspiring.
Death Cab for Cutie beefcake Ben Gibbard told me, in 2001: “I remember the summer of '97 as the summer of Either/Or, because that's all that anyone I knew was listening to.”
It's hard, a dozen years, one Oscars telecast, one (possible) suicide, and two posthumous albums later, to divorce the art from the artist. But, doing so reveals a near-perfect pop-record merely made by someone with problems.
Smith's hushed lullabies may be riddled with heartache and depression, abuse and self-loathing, addiction and optimism, but they're also pure, simple, defiant, and weirdly beautiful. Smith's knack for hooks and gift for melody would come to bold fruition on later albums, but here he's so low-key it somehow gets overlooked. More than some cry-for-help,
Either/Or is an album of timeless simplicity, one bound to strike a chord with lovelorned loners for years to come.
Photo © Autumn DeWilde
2009 Polaris Music Prize Shortlist Nominees Announced
Thursday July 9, 2009

When turgid corporate-rock embarrassments Nickelback started cleaning up Canada's Grammy-equivalent, the Juno Awards, in the '00s, something needed to be done. Taking inspiration from the UK's long-running Mercury Music Prize, in 2006, a crew of enterprising Canadians established the Polaris Music Prize; an award given to the best Canadian album based on artistic merit alone.
Putting their money with their mouths were, the Polaris peeps handed over their first-ever oversize-novelty-cheque ($20,000 cash!) to Final Fantasy's wondrous
He Poos Clouds. With the Prize having grown in size and scope since then, the 2009 'Shortlist' nominees have been revealed, setting a field of 10 to be in the running for that fat wad of filthy lucre.
2009's field is headlined by Metric's shiny radio-pop pleaser
Fantasies, Chad VanGaalen's junkyard death poem
Soft Airplane, Great Lake Swimmers' alt-country oil painting
Lost Channels, F**ked Up's noxious hardcore mess
The Chemistry of Common Life, the Jeff Buckley-ish balladry of '07 winner Patrick Watson's
Wooden Arms, and Somali ex-pat rapper K'Naan's major-label debut,
Troubadour.
Arcade Fire-wannabes Hey Rosetta! already won the fan-voted fake Polaris, the 'Verge,' last year for
Into Your Lungs (and around in your heart and on through your blood), and they're definite contenders to add more cash to their band coffers. There's also albums by people named Elliott Brood, Joel Haskett, and Malajube, who you probably have to be Canadian to have heard of.
Taking a look at the
40-strong 'Long List' that the Short List was whittled down from reveals that voters, for reasons known only to themselves ignored albums by Japandroids, Land of Talk, Women, and
Wolf Parade. Not to mention Handsome Furs' secretly great and wildly-underrated
Face Control, the work of Wolf Parade co-songsmith, Dan Boeckner.
The winner will be unveiled at a gala ceremony on September 21. Let's hope the winner's name is VanGaalen.