What I’m Listening to: February 2024 Edition

Wait, it’s already the end of February? It’s been a busy month at work and I’ve also been working hard with finishing off the latest go-round with Queen Ophelia’s War (and prepping myself for the new version of Theadia), so it’s a miracle that I’ve also been able to keep up with the new releases dropping lately! But I’ve been making an effort to connect with these new releases (and occasionally revisit some old ones). This month has given us some surprises!

Billy Joel, “Turn the Lights Back On” single, 1 February. His first new song in forever, and he hasn’t lost his musical touch at all. A stirring ballad of wondering whether or not you’ve been away from the spotlight for too long, what you’ve missed, and what you remember with older and more mature eyes and heart. A lovely surprise.

Paul McCartney & Wings, Band On the Run Underdubbed Mixes, 2 February. These were the rough mixes created before the orchestra and final overdubs had been added, and it’s a fascinating listen. Some tracks (like “Jet”) reveal only minimal differences, while album closer “Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five” really spotlight Paul’s masterful piano playing and the sheer oddness of the track.

Kula Shaker, Natural Magick, 2 February. After the wild psych-folk (and the welcome return) of their previous album, the band chooses to return to what they’ve always done extremely well: a hybrid of British pop influenced by India grooves. It’s a fun album that doesn’t set out to prove anything other than to have fun and occasionally say what might be on their minds.

Ducks Ltd, Harm’s Way, 9 February. This band follows in the path of twee pop like Belle and Sebastian with a little bit of early Cure as a secondary influence, which makes them sound unique and a little bit unsettled, but it’s a super fun listen.

Brittany Howard, What Now, 9 February. The Alabama Shakes singer has always been fearless in her loud, funky and bluesy style, and this new solo record is full of all of that. Definitely worth checking out.

Omni, Souvenir, 16 February. I mentioned this trio just recently, and yes, I do love that they’ve fully embraced that Wire-influenced ‘angular’ post-punk sound, and they pull it off really well without sounding like copycats. Even their songs embrace that tight late 70s/early 80s style, right down to the lengths, most of which are under three minutes. An intriguing listen.

IDLES, TANGK, 16 February. I’ve been a fan of this punk band for quite a few years now, and I love that they are not afraid to try out different styles, even when they veer perilously towards pop. Nor are they afraid to touch on different subjects and say what’s on their mind. Always a fun band to listen to loud.

Geographer, Got It Wrong, 23 February. We saw this local singer at Outside Lands once and I’ve been a fan ever since. His music tends to be calming and warm, but it can often go in really interesting directions, sometimes dark and sometimes light.

Real Estate, Daniel, 23 February. This Jersey indie band has been around for ages but I’ve only recently gotten around to paying attention to them, and I’m sold on this new one. It reminds me of the meandering laid back college rock I used to listen to back in the day!

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Coming soon in March: new tunes by Yard Act, Liam Gallagher & John Squire, The Jesus & Mary Chain, Elbow, and Ride!

Twenty-five years ago…

I’ve been going through some music from 1999 the last couple of days and finding a bunch of albums and songs I used to listen to quite a bit then that I haven’t listened to in ages, and some I’ve even completely forgotten about. This was during the back half of my tenure at HMV, and by this time I’d been tasked with ordering the imports and, if I could get away with it, some of the obscure indie titles that I figured someone aside from me might like. A lot of these got considerable play down in the Belfry during my writing sessions.

Medal, Drop Your Weapon, 24 May 1999. This Oxford quintet’s music had that sort of epic moodiness that was at odds with a lot of what was big at the time, but their sound was perfect for my writing sessions, especially the slow groove of “Possibility”. Well worth checking out if you can find it.

Arab Strap, Cherubs EP, 1 September 1999. I kind of liked the lead track off this, but it was the slow and sludgy “Pulled” that drew my interest. Sure, it’s seven-plus minutes long and takes its own sweet time getting somewhere (and even then the tempo subtly shifts all over the place), but it’s the two-minute wall of noise coda that makes the entire song. Considering that I’m a huge fan of the quiet/LOUD style, this fit perfectly in my wheelhouse.

Days of the New, Days of the New II, 31 August 1999. Remember this guy, Travis Meeks? Promising musician with a growly semi-acoustic grunge sound? They had a minor hit with “Touch Peel and Stand” from the first album but the second record kind of got passed over. Thing is, this second record was absolutely amazing. Really tight musicianship and songwriting, and definitely more adventurous. Sadly his group imploded (apparently his backing band quit in frustration and started their own group, Tantric, who had a few minor hits in the early 00s. I listened to this one a hell of a lot that summer.

Tin Star, The Thrill Kisser, 9 February 1999. How the heck did I latch onto this…? I think the BMG rep handed a promo to me and thought I’d like it, and yes, like it I did! Not quite electronica, not quite indie, but a hybrid of both with a heaping dollop of British eccentricity added into the mix, it’s cool, funky, and a really great record. This got a ton of play in the Belfry for a good couple of years.

Kill Holiday, Somewhere Between the Wrong Is Right, 23 February 1999. I’d heard “In Closing (Memorial Day)” on The River one night driving home from work and immediately ordered the album on my following shift! Y’all know how much I do love an epic final track with a slow build (and again with the quiet/LOUD thing). One of my favorite indie releases of that year.

Trashmonk, Mona Lisa Overdrive, 25 March 1999. Ever wonder what Nick Laird-Clowes did after The Dream Academy? Well, he dropped this one really weird album named after a William Gibson book that sounded nothing like his former band. Sometimes experimental, sometimes groovy, sometimes hauntingly beautiful, it’s definitely worth checking out if you can find it.

Lamb, Fear of Fours, 17 May 1999. More experimental and much darker than their debut (and nearly all the songs contain quirky time signatures outside of 4/4), it’s the one that captured my attention to the point that they became one of my favorite bands of the late 90s/early 00s.

Rico, Sanctuary Medicines, 16 August 1999. This Glaswegian industrial musician could probably be compared to Nine Inch Nails but without the dire levels of nihilism. I don’t even remember how I came across this one aside from the fact that I really dug the whole industrial metal sound and that it wasn’t trying so damn hard to fit into the goth stereotypes like some other bands.

Handsome Boy Modeling School, So…How’s Your Girl?, 19 October 1999. Only Prince Paul and Dan the Automator could get away with naming their band after an episode-long joke from Chris Elliott’s bonkers TV show Get a Life…and loosely basing AN ENTIRE ALBUM on said episode. But it’s a damn fine record and one of the best of the year on many critics’ lists. It’s a super fun record worth owning.

The All Seeing I, Pickled Eggs & Sherbet, 20 September 1999. Another ‘where the heck did I hear about this’ import and the only album from this electronica collective, though this sounds more like a quirky British indie band instead if you didn’t know their background. It’s extremely eccentric and I have no idea what they were trying to prove with it, but it’s a fascinating listen.

Someone’s been listening to Wire…

[CW: this video, while a hilarious nod to the old Windows maze screen saver, uses multiple lenses and quick cuts.]

Specifically, the early ’77-’79 post-punk era of the band. I’m really digging this album by Omni, an indie band from Atlanta, who I’d almost forgotten about (I also own a previous record from 2017 that I haven’t listened to in awhile). I do love that a lot of indie bands are completely embracing that twitchy post-punk sounds of tight Tom Verlaine guitars, odd chord changes, heightened tension, and crisp production.

The new album Souvenir came out last Friday and it’s worth checking out!

When you hear it enough times…

I used to hate Lou Reed’s “Perfect Day” for years. I always thought it was a terrible song. Terrible lyrics, terrible vocals, and extremely cheesy production. And I never could figure out why so many people loved it, why it was used in Trainspotting, and why Duran Duran did a cover of it!

Well, if you’re someone like me, if you hear it enough times, you eventually come around to it. I know a ton of songs like that, where I actively disliked them at first then slowly started to appreciate them. [The fact that this song is used in the new Wim Wenders movie has nothing to do with this, actually…I’d come around to it a few years ago.]

I mean, take Bakar for instance.

I thought this song was terrible as well. To me he sounded like Seal with a head cold and a sore throat. But for some reason I kept on coming back to it, partly because it had been on Live 105’s heavy rotation for a few months and I couldn’t really escape it. I came to appreciate it. Still not the biggest fan, but I’ve finally heard a few more songs of his and he’s sort of…odd yet intriguing.

Sure, there are still a few extremely popular singers out there that make me twitch (looking at you, Tones & I and Lana Del Rey) but I’ve learned never to say never. Who knows, maybe they’ll have a song or two that works for me!

Happy Valentine’s Day!

So what’s one of my favorite love songs? You’d be surprised. It’s actually not a Beatles song!

The first time I heard Alanis Morissette’s “Head Over Feet” I immediately thought wow, yeah, I would love to have that as a song written about/to/for me. It’s simple and yet so heartfelt and kind. It’s not about sex or having a good time or mind-blowing emotion or anything. It just…is. No strings attached. Just one person saying how awesome their lover — and friend — is.

And to me, that’s one of the best kinds of love songs there is.

What I’m Listening to: January 2024 Edition

Okay, I’m going to return to this theme for a bit to see if it sticks. I’ve been doing a lot more connecting with the music I’ve been acquiring, and so far it’s been working well. I’ve been listening to a lot of stuff from the latter half of 2023 and what’s new this past month, and there’s a lot of good stuff out there. So without further ado…

SPRINTS, Letter to Self, 5 January. I’m digging the old-school punk sound of this band — they remind me a lot of IDLES, another all-caps punk band I love. You don’t always need to play fast to play messy and gritty.

Lemongrass, Mirror of Life, 5 January. This one-man project has been around since the mid-90s playing essentially low-key ambient electronic music, and I stumbled upon them a few years back and find them fascinating. He’s constantly putting out albums (he’ll do like three or four a year like Guided By Voices) and they’re always a pleasure to listen to.

The Fauns, How Lost, 19 January. Echoey downtempo shoegaze? Yes please! This kind of stuff has always been my jam so I’m down with this album big time. It’s the perfect writing session music for me.

Green Day, Saviors, 19 January. Their first work with producer Rob Cavallo in ages, it really does feel like they’ve returned back to their Dookie roots, via the long route of maturity and better songwriting, heh. It’s an album where they’re once again doing what they’ve always done best: short and sharp punk.

The Umbrellas, Fairweather Friend, 26 January. This super-local band (like the Reds, Pinks and Purples, they live in my neighborhood!) once again shows they loves them some Beat Happening with summery poppy grooves and awkward-yet-perfect low-pitched vocals. The critics are eating this one up, and it’s definitely worth all the attention it’s been getting.

Future Islands, People Who Aren’t There Anymore, 26 January. I love how this band can feel both cheerful and downbeat at the same time, often within the same song. This album feels a bit quieter and more bedroom-pop than their previous work, but that’s not a minus here.

Ty Segall, Three Bells, 26 January. He’s definitely one of those musical weirdos that you either love or hate, and KEXP definitely got me hooked on him. This one actually has a lot of songs that make him sound downright normal, to be honest!

The Smile, Wall of Eyes, 26 January. The latest Thom Yorke/Jonny Greenwood/Tom Skinner release feels a bit more like a quiet Radiohead album here, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. I particularly like the moodiness of this album, which fits right in with my usual writing session soundtracks.

Torres, What an enormous room, 26 January. This one’s my favorite of the month! She’s a sort of mix between synthwave and 90s alt-rock but definitely new and unique. “Collect” is one of those songs that’s sort of like Phantogram meets Metric and it gets into your head and stays there for ages.

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More to come!

Two new mixtapes!

Unlike last year, where I was just too preoccupied with Real Life and other things and hadn’t allowed myself to really get to know the new music I was acquiring, I’m making a concerted effort to pay attention to what’s coming out these days, and I’m quite happy to say that I’m finding a lot of really good stuff out there!

These two mixtapes were basically holdovers from late 2023 where I’d started a list of songs but hadn’t gotten around to completing it and arranging the tracklist flow. I’m quite happy with how they came out, however, and I hope you enjoy them as well!

From the Open Skies: In My Blue World 2, created 14 January 2024. No, I have not written the sequel to In My Blue World just yet! I only have a very rough two-page outline of an idea, but I think it’s worth working on as a future project later on in the year! All I’ll say that it involves our heroes facing off a new foe with a much stronger and creepier ability to siphon magic for their own nefarious uses! And what better way to prep for a future novel project than creating a mixtape soundtrack for it? [Note: for those of you playing along, the title here is borrowed from another ELO song, heh.]

Walk in Silence XXVIII, created 30 January 2024. First of all, I can’t believe I’m already up to twenty-eight volumes of this series!! (Then again, I’ve been making them since 1988, so…) This, Listen in Silence and Untitled have pretty much become my own NOW That’s What I Call… compilations that just won’t quit. This one came out surprisingly well and I’m finding myself returning to it more and more.

The Songs that Inspired the Novels

While going through some of my mp3s the other day I was thinking about the music that inspired some of the novels I’d written. They weren’t completely inspired by just one song of course, but there was that one track that was pretty much the stepping stone that got the project started in earnest. It got me thinking about some of my other projects and how they got their (musical) start.

The Phoenix Effect / The Bridgetown Trilogy. Poe’s ‘band version’ of her single “Hello” dropped probably a couple of weeks before I started writing The Phoenix Effect in March 1997. I’d had a vague idea of the story I wanted to write for at least a few months, but it was this song that made me realize I was ready to do it. The song itself is very Johnny Mnemonic in its theme — and I had a soft spot for that enjoyable but extremely flawed film — and I realized that movie had a similar mood I was aiming for with this new project. Darker, edgier, angrier. Those weren’t words you’d use to describe my previous writing, to be honest, but I was willing to give it a go. This single got my creative blood pumping enough that it ended up as the first track on the first Songs from the Eden Cycle mixtape.

Two Thousand. This trunked novel was to be my Gen-X ‘becoming an adult without a direction’ story that never quite panned out, based on several related ideas: a close circle of friends regularly meeting up at a bench in Back Bay; a trio of musicians starting a local indie band; the frustrations of following your dreams versus going into the workplace and which obviously paid the rent. The Wolfgang Press’ cover of Three Dog Night’s “Mama Told Me Not to Come” was on their brilliant album Queer, which got played incessantly in The Shoebox apartment while I worked on this. I felt it was the perfect theme song for the project.

Can’t Find My Way Home. I’d come up with the idea for this time travel idea during my time at HMV, when I’d first heard this phenomenal cover of the Blind Faith tune. That gorgeous intro played by Johnny Marr screamed ‘opening theme song’ in my head. It took a few years for me to come up with a story behind it, and it’s gone through various versions and has been trunked multiple times. I’ve recently had a few ideas on a new approach to the story, however, so perhaps this may surface one last time…

Love Like Blood. My trunked vampire novel (it’s there for a good reason in that it’s terrible despite a lot of really good ideas) had been started back in 2004 when I’d been frustrated by my inability to finish The Balance of Light, and I’d been reading a few vampire novels at the time, so I figured, why the hell not? Let’s give it a try, something to focus on so I can at least keep working? This Killing Joke song wasn’t just the opening theme of the novel (the first chapter has a band playing it live at the Paradise in Boston) but it was to set the mood with its ridiculous take on goth tropes. [I haven’t read it in years, so now I’m curious to see how bad it is and if it’s salvageable. I’m in no rush, however.]

Meet the Lidwells! I’ve mentioned before that a lot of MtL borrows from ideas that I’d used in Two Thousand (hey, I wasn’t going to be using them, so…). One of the biggest moments I’d planned in TT was a pivotal ‘make or break’ scene for the lead character and his band, in which they did a blistering cover of this final track off The La’s self-titled album. Years later when I started MtL, I knew that I’d be using that same idea for a pivotal scene, this time pinpointing The Lidwells’ highest career moment they’d ever achieved. It’s the scene near the end of the novel where Thomas Lidwell describes the band performing a live version of their song “Listening” that becomes his all-time favorite moment in the band’s career.

In My Blue World. This one’s a bit obvious, but yes, it was indeed this song that came to mind when I first started writing the novel. At the time I’d just been on an ELO kick and was playing several of their albums when I was planning out the novel itself, but once I started it, I knew this was going to be the opening theme song. For those playing along, in my head there’s a crossfade right at the end of the first scene where Zuze appears for the first time, and the theme song fades in with the movie credits!

Theadia. My space opera was kicked off by this Fuzzbox deep cut off of their second album Big Bang!, one of my favorites despite its 80s pop cheesiness. I just knew that the story was going to revolve around our two nerdy heroes who are trying to save the universe but would really rather be hanging out with close friends and having a good time. I wanted this novel to not be hard sf or steeped in Doctorow levels of tech geekdom. This was the album — and the song — that I put on when I started writing the novel in the last few days of my stay at the former day job at the bank, to remind me that despite how desperate things might become in the story, these two will always find time to be true to themselves. I’m really looking forward to getting this one out as well!

Queen Ophelia’s War. I’d said before that I wrote this novel with the plan of Dialing It Back, just like I had with Diwa & Kaffi. It has its moments of tension and conflict, sure, but I wanted to write something that could also be seen as pastoral as well. And to do that I realized that I also wanted a mixtape that would be similar in feel to what it felt like when I used to listen to Cocteau Twins when I was a teenager. The mood of both the novel and the mixtape then was about the wonders of the unknown and the willingness to get lost in them for a while. Thus putting “Blue Bell Knoll” as the first track on its mixtape!

First purchase of the year goes to…

Idiosyncrosanct by You Shriek, which dropped right on New Year’s Day. I knew this guy in passing from my college years when he started this music project in his dorm room at Charlesgate — he was a friend of a friend so I didn’t know him too personally, but I remembered the distinctive band name and followed him since. It’s been quite a few years since his last release, but he sounds better than ever. Last year he dropped a teaser single that would be the lead-off track for this album, “Dead Pilots”. Great darkwave stuff worth checking out.