We Love You...Digitally Hello and welcome to the interactive version of Filter Good Music Guide. We’re best viewed in full-screen mode, so if you can still see the top of the window, please click on the Window menu and select Full Screen View (or press Ctrl+L). There you go—that’s much better isn’t it? [Guide stretches, yawns, scratches something.] Right. If you know the drill, go ahead and left-click to go forward a page; if you forget, you can always right-click to go back one. And if all else fails, intrepid traveler, press the Esc key to exit full-screen and return to a life more humble. Keep an eye on your cursor. While reading the Guide online, you will notice that there are links on every page that allow you to discover more about the artists we write about. Scroll over each page to find the hotlinks, click ’em, and find yourself at the websites of the artists we cover, the sponsors who help make this happen, and all of the fine places to go to purchase the records you read about here. Thank you for your support of this thing we call Filter. Good music, as they say, will prevail. — Pat McGuire, Editor-in-Chief Letters, inquiries, randomness: [email protected] Advertising and such: [email protected] COACHELLA APRIL-may-june '12 $2.99 US $3.99 CAN 23 0 74470 26604 4 DISPLAY through june '12 #39 • april-MAY-june ’12 the black keys santigold jimmy cliff 10 filter good music guide good music guide filter 11 A SINGLE NIGHT. A MILLION POSSIBILITIES. ONE CONNECTION. IN THEATRES IN NEW YORK and LOS ANGELES MAY 11 www.tonightyouremine.com 12 filter good music guide © Sigma Films Limited/ BBC 2011 good music guide filter 13 CSS (BRAZIL) CULTURE COLLIDE 2011 14 filter good music guide good music guide filter 15 AT THE STANDS Publishers Alan Miller & Alan Sartirana Out now: FILTER Issue 47 “The Simpsons: And It Was All Yellow” Editor-in-Chief Pat McGuire Starting out as a series of shorts, Matt Groening’s yellow creation is now America’s longest-running sitcom. After 23 seasons and countless gags, jokes and characters, The Simpsons finally reaches the Managing Editor Breanna Murphy landmark achievement of 500 episodes and we are here to celebrate it. In this issue, FILTER speaks Art Director Melissa Simonian to Simpsons creator Matt Groening, among others involved in the animated series, on everything from the show’s musical guests, original compositions and his own personal music tastes. Also: We talk with Wet Hot American Editorial Interns Bailey Pennick, Alejandro Rubio Summer director David Wain about his new camp comedy Wanderlust; get thrown into the DIY destruction of FIDLAR; and catch Nothings, Sugar’s Copper Blue and an EndNote featuring the Simpsons-inspired art of Adventure Time creator Pendleton Ward. IN THE GUIDE You can download the FILTER Good Music Guide at FILTERmagazine.com. While you’re there, be 4 DISPLAY THROUGH APRIL '12 BC_FC-CSS.indd 3 OF UE DES NEW IS LU S 22 74470 26604 INC REALITY BITES MARCH-APRIL '12 $2.99 US $3.99 CAN 0 OF UE INC sure to check out our back issues, the latest of which features Miike Snow, Strange Boys, Doug Martsch DES NEW IS S LU Design Intern Rachael Morello Scribes A.D. Amorosi, Jeffrey Brown, Kendah El-Ali, Jon Falcone, Marty Sartini Garner, Mike Hilleary, Daniel Kohn, Kyle Lemmon, Clare R. Lopez, Kyle MacKinnel, Marissa R. Moss, Kurt Orzeck, Bailey Pennick, Loren Poin, Ryan Reed, Zach Rosenberg, Alejandro Rubio, Ken Scrudato, Laura Studarus Marketing Corey Anderson, Samantha Barnes, Mike Bell, Sarah Chavey, Andrew Courtien, Tim Dove, Paul Familetti, Samantha Feld Samuelson, Monique Gilbert, Ian Hendrickson, Alyssa Jones, Wes Martin, Andrea Narvaez, William Overby, Kyle Rogers, Connie Tsang, Jose Vargas, Daniel Wheatley of Built to Spill, The Big Pink, and more. And if you happen to be feeling a triple-digit heat wave while AUSTIN #38 • MARCH-APRIL ’12 Built To Spill The Big Pink•Strange Boys 2/28/12 4:06 PM hearing awesome live music, you’re probably suffering from a heatstroke…and at Coachella. Make sure to keep your eye out for us, we’ll be there to cool you down. ON THE WEB Visit FILTERmagazine.com for music news, MP3s, magazine features, extended interviews, contests, staff picks and album reviews. To stay abreast of news and events in your town, sign up for the FILTER Newsletter, delivered weekly to your email inbox. Cities served: Los Angeles, New York, Seattle, Philadelphia, Dallas, Chicago, San Francisco, Denver, Boston, Portland, Austin, Washington D.C., London and more. THE FILTER MAILBAG We get a lot of mail here at the FILTER offices—some good, some bad, some…well, completely unclassifiable. Send us something strange and you might see it here. We know what you’re thinking: “FILTER, how can I bring the warmth of vinyl with me on those long, boring car rides?” Until now, we would’ve told you to put a gasoline generator in your trunk, plug in your turntable and flip the album side at red lights. But that was before Behringer mailed us their new U-PHONO UFO202, a USB/audio interface that allows you to transfer vinyl and even cassettes onto iPad 2’s GarageBand app. So Advertising Inquiries [email protected] West Coast Sales: 323.464.4718 East Coast Sales: 646.202.1683 Filter Good Music Guide is published by Filter Magazine LLC 5908 Barton Ave., Los Angeles CA 90038. Vol. 1, No. 39, April-May-June 2012. Filter Good Music Guide is not responsible for anything, including the return or loss of submissions, or for any damage or other injury to unsolicited manuscripts or artwork. Any submission of a manuscript or artwork should include a self-addressed envelope or package of appropriate size, bearing adequate return postage. © 2012 by Filter Magazine LLC. all rights reserved filter is printed in the usa FILTERmagazine.com good music guide filter 6 ® ® McGuire family, Bagavagabonds, Bonnie Pietila, Wendy, Sebastian and Lucia Sartirana, Momma Sartirana, the Ragsdales, SC/PR Sartiranas, the Masons, Pete-O, Rey, the Paikos family, Chelsea & the Rifkins, Shaynee, Wig/Tamo and the SF crew, Shappsy, Pipe, Dana Dynamite, Lisa O’Hara, Susana Loy Rodriguez, Shari Doherty, Robb Nansel, Pam Ribbeck, Asher Miller, Autumn Rose Miller, Rachel Weissman, The Simonians, the Murphy and Stafford families instead of worrying about whether or not that cop saw you flipping discs in your backseat, go out and get the U-PHONO UFO202 and start deciding which records to digitize first. “F— tha Police,” anyone? johnny marr jaguar signature model Thank You Photo: Carl Lyttle in Mexico City, Sharon Van Etten, Jason Sudeikis, a tribute to John Cale, The Asteroids Galaxy Tour, Yuna, Electric Guest, Cloud COVER Photo by Martin Klimek up with James Mercer about the rocky past and hopeful future of The Shins. Plus: the art of Dirty Three’s Mick Turner, Morrissey fender.com/johnnymarrjaguar © 2012 FMIC. Fender®, Jaguar® and the distinctive headstock designs commonly found on these guitars are registered trademarks of Fender Musical Instruments Corporation. All rights reserved. 10 years of THURSDAY 4/16 8PM-1AM DJ set by Flosstradamus & Special guest Dj’s and performances 21+ RSVP to [email protected] Gifting Suite with Products from Lucky Brand, Ernie Ball, Jansport, Brixton, and more 10 filter good music guide good music guide filter 11 SXSW 2012 is in the books and FILTER represented with talent-packed stages at five—count ‘em, five!—different Austin venues. From Grimes to Dinosaur Jr., Miike Snow to Built To Spill, Keane to FIDLAR and many, many more, this year’s SX was our best ever. Here are some visual highlights. ABOVE: KAISER CHIEFS; OPPOSITE: GRIMES. PHOTOS BY MARC LEMOINE. 10 filter good music guide good music guide filter 11 ABOVE: KEANE BY JULIE HOVSEPIAN. OPPOSITE: YACHT BY MARC LEMOINE. 12 filter good music guide good music guide filter 13 ATLANTA MINNEAPOLIS Midtown Art Cinema Lagoon Cinema BALTIMORE Uptown Theatre Landmark Theatres Harbor East Edina Cinema BERKELEY Shattuck Cinemas* California Theatre* Albany Twin* Piedmont Theatre* BOSTON Kendall Square Cinema Embassy Cinema CHICAGO Landmark’s Century Centre Cinema Renaissance Place Cinema DALLAS The Magnolia Inwood Theatre DENVER The Landmark Theatre Greenwood Village Mayan Theatre Esquire Theatre Chez Artiste Theatre Olde Town Stadium 14 NEW YORK DISCOVERTHE BESTINFILM Sign up for our weekly Film Club email to get advance info about weekly show times, invitations to free screenings, contests, giveaways, free music downloads and the latest up-to-date information about special events and filmmaker appearances! Rewards available at participating theatres.* filmclub.landmarktheatres.com Maple Art Theatre* HOUSTON River Oaks Theatre INDIANAPOLIS Keystone Art Cinema* GIVETHEGIFTOFFILM Gift Cards Available at the Box Office or Online store.landmarktheatres.com Guild Theatre* PHILADELPHIA Ritz Five Ritz East Ritz at the Bourse SAN DIEGO Hillcrest Cinemas Ken Cinema La Jolla Village Cinemas SAN FRANCISCO Bridge Theatre* Clay Theatre* Embarcadero Center Cinema* Lumiere Theatre* Opera Plaza Cinema* Egyptian Theatre Guild 45th Theatre Harvard Exit Theatre Varsity Theatre Seven Gables Theatre Metro Cinemas Glendale 12* Crest Cinema Center LOS ANGELES ST. LOUIS The Landmark Tivoli Theatre Nuart Theatre Plaza Frontenac Cinema Regent Theatre WASHINGTON D.C. MILWAUKEE E Street Cinema Downer Theatre Oriental Theatre Aquarius Theatre* SEATTLE DETROIT Main Art Theatre* Sunshine Cinema* PALO ALTO Tickets Facebook Bethesda Row Cinema AvAILABLE AT THE BURTON FLAGSHIP STORE LOS ANGELES 8175 Melrose Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90046 (323) 370-1777 Facebook.com/BurtonLA n February 13, 2011, Akron, Ohio’s The Black Keys were not in a basement recording fuzzed-out blues riffs, or in a beat-up van swerving across the countryside on tour. Rather, they were onstage, presumably in suits and ties, at the 53rd Grammy Awards, collecting two gramophones (out of four nominations), for Best Rock Performance and Best Alternative Music Album. The accolades were won for their sixth album, 2010’s Brothers. (The duo’s Attack and Release producer, Danger Mouse [Brian Burton], also accepted a trophy that night for Producer of Year, in part for his work on Brothers’ “Tighten Up.”) Less than a month later, Dan Auerbach and Pat Carney were back in the studio with Danger Mouse— “Obviously our only choice was Brian”—now in their new home base of Nashville, preparing for their next album, which would materialize at the end of the year as El Camino. That record debuted at Number Two on the Billboard 200 and, at the time of this writing, has been certified Gold. The guys sold out Madison Square Garden in 15 minutes. Now, in 2012, they’re headlining North America’s largest, hottest and most extravagant music festival. Across a decade, the band has transitioned from have-nots to haves, from home recordings to high-quality production, from grunge to Grammy. As David Byrne once eloquently mused, “Well, how did I get here?” The Keys, who ambitiously titled their 2002 debut “The Big Come Up,” might respond in kind: “Same as it ever was.” SAME AS IT EVER WAS BY BREANNA MURPHY PHOTO BY DANNY CLINCH 16 filter good music guide Some people probably raised their eyebrows at the length of time between Brothers and El Camino. A lot has happened in a short amount of time. Dan Auerbach: I don’t know what I like better, playing shows or making records. If we had more free time, we’d probably make two records a year. The Rolling Stones, Creedence Clearwater… Fuck, you know…The Stooges. They’d make two records a year and have, like, classic songs on every record. I don’t know when it got shifted into making a record every three or four years. It’s stupid, to me. How have you incorporated studio-polish recording into The Black Keys’ trademark grunge-reverb-blues stew? Auerbach: We are who we are. That’s going to come out no matter what format or how we record it. We’ve come to the conclusion that when Pat and I play together, we have a certain sound—and that’s what we sound like. The Black Keys have made seven records in 10 years, and there’s been a dramatic transition in your recording methods during that time— you began in DIY spaces (basements, a rubber factory) and now you have your own studios. Pat Carney: The evolution of the band, I guess, is that I had been acquiring recording equipment with each record, like slightly better stuff. I just had mass destruction of crap, basically. None of it really worked, it was frustrating. We went to a real studio to do [2008’s] Attack & Release because we were excited to work with Brian, and excited to get out of our comfort zone and go somewhere where we could focus on performing, rather than worrying about whether something was working or not. Dan started acquiring really nice recording equipment that I just don’t have the balls to because it’s so expensive. He built a studio down here [in Nashville] and we recorded El Camino there. It’s What is the band’s working style in the studio? How complete or bare bones are your songs and ideas? Carney: Truthfully, 90 percent of the time when we make music, there’s no structure. There’s nothing. Auerbach: With Brothers, I had pretty much every song written. I had all the chords, we just had to work it out into a groove for each song. With this record, we did it completely differently. We started every day from scratch. Carney: I think it benefited [El Camino] because we made a lot more interesting melodies. It feels a little bit different. But, the basis of all the songs started with Dan playing guitar and me playing drums, and just coming up with the bare essentials and working forwards from there, building a foundation. Auerbach: It’s just a different process. It took a lot longer. It took three times as long to make this record than it did to make our last record. like the first time we’ve recorded in a studio that had instruments and functioning microphones and everything works. Carney: We spent 38 days in the studio. That said, this is the first time that we made a record at a studio that wasn’t “out of town” or in a basement. When you’re working in a basement, you want to get the fuck out of the basement as soon as possible, so I think you tend to get more done quickly. There was more comfort here because it’s down the street from our houses, and it’s Dan’s place. There were a lot more breaks involved, I guess. More hanging out than we usually do during recording. Recording at “home” sounds so much better. Carney: It was needed because we were traveling so much the previous year. I prefer to work fast. I’m the opposite of a procrastinator; I’d rather have something done right, know it’s finished and not worry about it, than to have something looming. It was a little bit difficult for me because the pace was so relaxed, but that resulted in the songs having a quicker pace. There’s a quicker feel to the album. Auerbach: We were influenced by what we were listening to at the time, which just happened to be The Cramps, The Clash and rockabilly. More of that up-tempo thing happening. Expanding on that, were there any specific aims to separate the sound of El Camino from Brothers? Auerbach: No, we didn’t think about it too much. We never do. We never rehearse, we never practice. We make a record, and it’ll be what it’s going to be. We’ve always done that. We feel that it’s really important to get the first or second take, and not try to perfect it, which can ruin the soul of the song or the original intent. You can beat a horse to death when you’re in the studio. We try to avoid that. When you’re too comfortable with a song, it’s going to feel like that on the record. Like you’re not taking your risks and flying by the seat of your pants. [In writing,] sometimes the feeling of a song will dictate where the lyrics go. Somehow, instinctually, your brain will blurt out words on top of music. It’s almost like the music can direct you. I think I like the idea of the music dictating the story more than the story dictating the music. Auerbach: Yeah. I like it all. F good music guide filter 17 STAND DELIVER Long before there was Santigold, Santogold, and the prickly roar of cluster-fuck funk that fills her longawaited new album, Master of My Make-Believe, there was Santi White, a nice girl from the Philadelphia suburbs of Mount Airy who made ska-punk pop that would turn No Doubt green with envy. That wide-eyed woman from the band Stiffed is still present in Santigold’s music today. There is an innocent, soulful awe that fills Master, her first album to be released Stateside for Atlantic (though still listed as Downtown Records, Master is an Atlantic recording). Yet there’s some cranky cynicism to be found in the face of faux celebrity and the ferocity of Earth’s foibles that riddles Master along with its lyrical overlay of positivism. “It’s rough out there,” Santigold laughs. While several of her old producing pals—Switch, Diplo—are as much a part of this noisy new project as they were 2008’s Santogold, those cats (like Santi) have become part of dance pop’s bigger machine, working as they have with the likes of Beyoncé, Christina Aguilera, and Usher. (Santigold has had an entire career of songwriting credits since her start.) Keeping things weird and fresh was as crucial an aspect of Master of My Make-Believe as was recruiting new friends from Yeah Yeah Yeahs and TV on the Radio. That said, with all its collaborators, Master is a cohesive, fleshy, genre-jumping hip-pop album that stirs the loins and the cerebral cortex. It had to be: Santigold was on her own as its executive producer and central overseer. Here, we see how she held up during the process. 18 filter good music guide good music guide filter 19 You’ve come so far from Stiffed and the Sex Sells EP. Is there anything left in you of the young woman from Mount Airy now? Of course. It’s however many years later, but it’s however many years more experience behind me. I wouldn’t distance myself from that, ever. Could you have been happy as primarily a songwriter who occasionally performs, like a Linda Perry? At your career’s start, you mentioned not being comfortable onstage… I don’t think so. I don’t stick around when I’m not happy. I thought I would be uncomfortable on stage until I got there. Then I realized there’s a whole separate way of communicating an idea. Going into the second album, do you feel that your label, Atlantic, underestimated you in any way? I know that at first they sought to top-load you with hit-making collaborators and writers. yourself.” I experiment a lot. You can’t know what’s going to happen. The faith becomes blind. It’s cool. The downside is, it’s lonely and there is that room for doubt. Having somebody there means sharing vision, ideas, banter. I didn’t have that this time out—challenging, yes. I had to shoulder all the responsibility…but all the worry, eh. I had to navigate all the different producers and all their languages. Logix. Pro Tools. It was a lot of work. I didn’t even have an A&R person around, because they were in London. I really was left to my own devices. I know you’d been best friends with Diplo and Switch since before the last album. They’ve both blown up considerably. Was there a challenge to get them to focus on you for this next album? The more intimately you know somebody, the more you can get in on every aspect of their lives. You get the unfiltered version of their lives rather than working with a producer who clocks in and clocks out. I think the same thing is true of the art. I get the best of those guys. Everybody’s lives have changed since that last record. There are real growing pains to be had. “I’m imploring people to talk their own talk and walk their own walk—i made the world i want to live in. ” Well, that was during the transition between when I was on Downtown and the time when Atlantic was considering up-streaming me. They were wondering about how they would market me. I can’t be easy to market [laughs]. That was before anybody at Atlantic sat with me or my first record. They hadn’t yet thought of what they could do with what they had in front of them. Now that they got me, they have been great. I think they’re looking at the unique ways they can market me rather than fit me into a marketing idea. No one can or should try to sweep me into some box. But we hung out and the communication between us as people is what we brought to the new thing. Diplo and Switch really had to figure how to balance being in such demand with being themselves. On another level, yeah, it was hard to get them into the studio [laughs]. They have to learn how to manage that. On the last album, you had John Hill, your partner/collaborator, as a sounding board. On this new one, you are pushing all your own buttons. What’s the upside and downside of your new situation? Certainly not, because of the bar set by the last album. I wanted to raise that bar for myself, but it wasn’t something where I had to top it for public consumption. The pressure was to better it for myself. As soon as I’ve done something, it’s never good enough. To tell you the truth, I had been on the road for two years before leaping into the new album; I think there should be some time to process what you’ve done and what you’ve learned. I could’ve used more time to internalize. That said, I did get to climb Mt. Kilimanjaro Well, on the upside, it forced me to build up my own levels of confidence as a producer, to have a trust in my own self that I didn’t need to have before. “Is this gonna work?” “Ah, just do it—[laughs]—stop questioning 20 filter good music guide Did you go through a writer’s block going into work on Master of My Make-Believe? after the tour but flew straight from Africa to L.A. to start the album. The melodies came fast. The lyrics took a minute. They needed to stew. I got frustrated, but realizing immediately that frustration would only make things worse, I started to meditate. Suddenly, the words just started to flow. There is a spiritual center to “This Isn’t Our Parade” and “God from the Machine.” Beyond the meditation, is there a god for you? You can call it what you like. I’m not a religious person per se, but there is something, a spirit within myself, a higher being. You know, I went to a Quaker high school in Philly. There wasn’t much religion going on in there except for once a week, rather than worship, you’d sit in silence and think. If you were moved to say something you’d stand up, say your peace, and sit back down. It was about reflection. If there was anything to be taught, it was that there is God in everyone, that everyone has potential. For all the meditation and light, there are some real stormyweather blue moments going on here—“The Keepers” talks about a house burning down, “Disparate Youth” starts off in a rage of people coming apart. What was the mindset? I’m living in the world. It’s rough out there no matter how much meditation there was. There’s some deep rumbling going on—look at the weather. Oil spills, nuclear proliferation. Then you’ve got the silliness of reality shows and singing shows. Things are a wreck. I was trying to put a period on all that at once. You’re still a kid at 35, but on “Disparate Youth” you’re talking about teens creating their own universe without relying on what’s come before them. In “Big Mouth” you’re telling kids to forge their own esthetic values. Don’t you want them on your side? I do, but kids coming up have to make their own way, bring about their own changes. They have to not follow in anyone’s shadow. In “Big Mouth” I’m imploring people to talk their own talk and walk their own walk. In both cases, that’s what I did—made the world I want to live in. Back yourself up, don’t worry about the false reality you can make through Facebook and Twitter. Be able to deliver on what you claim. F good music guide filter 21 By Daniel Kohn Photo by Martin Klimek 22 filter good music guide good music guide filter 23 When you recorded Lungs, did you ever expect it to become as successful as it has? How has working with producer Paul Epworth helped you shape your sound? Florence Welch: No, not at all! It’s a strange record since it’s sort of like a diary of a teenager. There are so many different parts of my life that are reflected there that it felt like a scrapbook, and that so many people could relate to it was incredible. I never expected it to become very well known and as widely received as it was. He really pushes you in the studio with what to do and where to go. I have a tendency to throw everything at it and am spent, but he says to keep at it and not to just rest on a phrase or word. He’ll constantly have beats or chord sequences. He’s very prolific and tenacious as well because I can be quite dreamy and unfocused. With that album enjoying such widespread success, did you have a harder time on Ceremonials, writing material you hadn’t worked on for as long? Having attended art college before you became a musician, do you draw on that experience to help shape some of your lyrics? I wasn’t clear what album I wanted to make, but I was looking forward to it being a complete, linear body of work. Recording at the same place [Abbey Road Studios in London] gave us a cohesive sound that we didn’t quite get to do with the first record. In that sense, it made it easier. Definitely. I get that a lot from my mother as well. She’s an art historian and her work comes with describing things. Music to me is a very visual thing and it’s like creating a portrait in someone’s head. I like to think I’m a better singer than I was a painter. 24 filter good music guide TOM BEARD The past three years have been a whirlwind ride for Florence + The Machine. Over that time, Florence Welch and her band’s infectious brand of indie pop has spread like wildfire. She has released two records that have conquered multiple album charts; she has toured across the globe; she has won the coveted BRIT Award for Best Album and NME’s Best Solo Artist award. Not a bad start for the red-maned gal from South London. Breaking through with the smash “Dog Days Are Over” from its debut, Lungs, the band has become a staple on alt-rock radio. When that song broke on airwaves and became featured on mainstream TV shows like Glee, Gossip Girl, Community, Grey’s Anatomy and a host of others, Welch was introduced to a larger-scale audience, resulting in huge expectations for the sophomore release. Last fall’s Ceremonials has proven that the group is far from a flash in the pan and here to stay for the foreseeable future. Recording the album at the famed Abbey Road Studios in London, Ceremonials is a more cohesive studio effort, at least in Welch’s opinion. “At first, I wasn’t clear what album I wanted to make, but I was looking forward to it being a complete, linear body of work,” she explains over the phone from Newcastle just before her final UK show of a recent tour. Parlaying the success of her recorded music to the stage, Florence + The Machine’s mesmerizing live performances have become some of the industry’s most talked about shows. Welch’s intensity and legendary energy level have wowed audiences and successfully catapulted the band in all spheres. Furthering her growing live legacy, Florence + The Machine recently performed for an episode of MTV Unplugged, which featured Welch and three band members along with a 10-piece gospel choir. Recorded late last year, the Unplugged session features stripped-down version of her well-known songs, along with covers of Otis Redding’s “Try a Little Tenderness” and a duet with Queens of the Stone Age’s Josh Homme on the Johnny Cash classic “Jackson.” Before she headed to North America for a string of tour dates and a huge Coachella performance, the Guide spoke to Welch about how she approaches playing to the ever-propagating number of people at her shows and whether or not the former art student has time to sketch more than just songs these days. Are you able to find time to draw or paint anymore? Yes. I keep sketchbooks with me and other things like that. I like to doodle now and again. It’s funny; I tend to [sketch] when I have really bad jetlag. I took this book of 15th-century paintings with me on tour and I’ve been making really bad copies of them every morning when I’m not able to sleep [laughs]. At least I turn that time into something productive. Fighting jetlag is a good problem to have because it means you’re working. Yes, it’s a high-class problem [laughs]. How’s the tour been so far? It’s gone well. The crowds have been really amazing, especially since British crowds can be quite reserved. There’s been a festival-type atmosphere at the gigs. I’ve noticed how festive and how into the performance people are. You want people to lose themselves in what you’re doing. What is it about Coachella that brings you back? Coachella is really beautiful. I remember performing and looking out and seeing palm trees and blue skies. It felt so far removed from the English experience of festivals, which is like the apocalypse. They’re really fun, but they’re an endurance test as well. Have you started writing any new material for a future album? I haven’t managed to get into the studio yet, but I would like to. We like to bring a traveling studio, so hopefully we’ll get to do something while we’re on the road, like lay down some early demos. That’s how “No Light, No Light” got written—it was a demo we did on the road. it being iconic. I was just trying to perform for the people there. It was a beautiful space and that made it exciting. What made you decide to cover “Jackson” with Josh Homme singing Johnny Cash’s parts? It may sound funny, but it was one of the first songs I ever recorded, years, years back in South London in a tiny studio when I was just knocking around school. I was going out with a guy in a band and wasn’t doing anything music-y at the time, and I walked into his studio and covered a few Johnny Cash songs. I’ve always been a huge Cash fan. We did this really random cover of “Folsom Prison Blues” that’s floating around somewhere. But I’m also a big Queens of the Stone Age fan as well. We wanted something that would suit both of our voices and we’re both huge Cash fans and we both knew the song well. It seemed like something that would fit. We both have really [distinct] individual voices but since they ended up working with each other, it made it such a pleasure to do it. That, and the fact that Josh is such a great guy. He’s really lovely. He took us out to dinner in New York the night before. He’s exactly how you’d expect him to be: a big character who is warm and friendly. What is your favorite Unplugged performance of all time? Nirvana. For me, that’s pretty much the most iconic. I’m really looking forward to seeing Kanye’s. He came to my show and was talking about his Unplugged and said, “Nah, I have to change it, mine’s gonna be Plugged!” So, whatever he does, I’m sure it’s going to be exciting. A few other musicians were also in the audience that night. What does it mean to you to have the respect of so many of your contemporaries? Insane! Walking out and seeing Kanye in the front row and being so involved in it, really moving throughout the whole show—it was a real honor for me to have him there. He’s one of my heroes and he’s so genius. Can we expect to see a potential collaboration between the two of you in the future? You try to not think about it and make yourself crazy by worrying about I would love to. He’s a busy guy, so we’ll have to see. F TOM BEARD Taking into account the incredible artists who have played MTV Unplugged, what was it like going onstage that night for that show? good music guide filter 27 LENAY DUNN is American Rag’s girl on the scene FIND HER RAGGEDMAG.COM FOLLOW HER FACEBOOK.COM/AMERICANRAG TWITTER.COM/RAGGEDMAG AVAILABLE ONLY AT MACY’S AND MACYS.COM By Ken Scrudato 30 filter good music guide GREG WATERMANN When the film The Harder They Come was released in 1972, Jamaica was but a decade removed from its reality as a colony of the crumbling British Empire. The film catapulted its star, a 24-year-old musical phenomenon named Jimmy Cliff, to international recognition. Cliff had been signed to Chris Blackwell’s Island Records and arrived on English soil in 1964. A generation of postwar kids there, electrified by rock and roll and keen to shake off the prim and ossifying culture (not to mention lingering racism) of the old guard, took to the new reggae sounds with an unbridled fervor. Forty years later, Cliff is a legend the world over, and one of the few reggae artists in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. His influence pervades an incalculable swath of modern music, politics and spirituality, while his songs have been covered by the likes of Keith Richards, Paul Simon, New Order, Madness, Bruce Springsteen and Rancid. The latter’s Tim Armstrong has just brought Cliff out of recording hibernation after seven years, and the result is the exuberant, edifyingly titled new album Re.Birth. With Armstrong as producer, Re.Birth is a veritable document of Cliff’s long musical journey, a retro-modern meta creation on which he covers The Clash’s “The Guns of Brixton,” a song which he surely inspired, while also proffering a version of Rancid’s “Ruby Soho,” which, in a sense, brings Cliff and his influence full circle, returning the tribute to his acolytes. Elsewhere, his poignant observations on this world of crooked justice (“Children’s Bread” castigates Wall Street greed) are balanced with joyous messages of hope, like the magnificently uplifting “Blessed Love.” Armstrong’s crisp production brilliantly harkens back to Cliff’s earliest work, without ever coming off as cloyingly retro. Re.Birth? As Cliff himself would surely say, you can get it if you really want. good music guide filter 31 When you first moved to London, were you aware that the British kids were embracing reggae? Reggae was often about pointing out injustice but also spreading positivity. So it was like putting an imperative piece in the Jimmy Cliff puzzle? Jimmy Cliff: When I went to England I was playing a lot of clubs, and I discovered that there were a lot of people who were into reggae, yes. Absolutely. If you’re pointing a finger at something that is not just, you have to have something to replace it. You have to point the way to something positive, to put a positive message across. There we are! Yeah, yeah, just that. And at the same time introducing something that will be new to another generation. Oh yes! It influenced a lot of punk bands like The Clash. One of the last songs that Joe Strummer recorded was with me, on my last album. You were the last person to work with Joe, yes. Was he a real kindred spirit? Well, we had not really had the opportunity to sit and talk before. We were just crossing each other’s paths. How did you come to hook up with Tim Armstrong? He first came to my attention via Joe Strummer. And somebody from my management suggested him. We spoke on the phone and it was good energy. We went into the studio and it just flowed. The riots in London last year happened around the time you were recording this record. You wrote “World Upside Down” as a reaction to that? Of course it was something that touched me a lot, having lived there. I’m very sensitive to those kinds of things. But it wasn’t just that particular incident that inspired the song. I write with myself in the center, and echo the echoes of the people, what’s happening globally. So that was just one of the incidents. Your cover of The Clash’s “The Guns of Brixton,” a song about the 1981 race riots, also seems very timely. Do you see parallels between then and now? “Our Ship Is Sailing” is about your artistic revitalization? What was it like working with Tim Armstrong as producer? Absolutely, yes. And the album is about my rebirth as an artist and as a man, and also about the rebirth of the world—because I see that we are coming into a new era of energy. There was a song [from the 1967 musical Hair] called “Aquarius,” and that was the dawning. Now we’re actually coming to the living of it. I don’t go by the Mayan calendar; I go by the calendar of the Ancient Egyptians, who gave it to the Mayans. But we’re going to come into a new time now, a new energy. It was inspiring working with Tim, because even the sound of the album feels like we went back to the ’60s and ’70s. I had forgotten about a lot of the sounds and the instruments we used then, and we brought that all back. How do you feel about the idea of Zion now? It seemed like a real hue and cry at one time in reggae, but now you don’t hear it so much, specifically. What does that mean to you now? Yeah, there seems to be a sort of “classic Jimmy Cliff” sound on this record. You shunned using a lot of the modern technology? Well, Zion is a place of peace and tranquility. I don’t know if we’ve ever really experienced that in this life. But peace and tranquility is a place that we can go to in our minds, it’s something we can achieve. And when we spoke about Zion in those songs, it was about Africa, which is the birthplace of humanity. Yes, there was a time of peace and tranquility that existed, and we do think that it’s coming again. So even if we don’t use the word “Zion,” we imply it with the positive feeling and the positive message. F Yeah, even what we were just talking about, the riots and all. And not only in London…you know, “Guns of Brixton” could be “Guns of Miami” now. So, yeah, that’s the reason for re-recording these kinds of songs. Right. When I made my mark on the international scene, there were many expectations placed on me, especially in England. I kind of just left and went to Muscle Shoals to record a completely different kind of album. So there was a chapter of my career that was incomplete. This album represents the completion of that chapter. That’s why I went back. BONITA PIETILA And, later, the punk bands enthusiastically cited you as an influence. TIM ARMSTRONG WITH JIMMY CLIFF DURING THE RECORDING OF RE.BIRTH 32 filter good music guide good music guide filter 33 Here are a few other highlights of FILTER Magazine’s iPad app: The FILTER Magazine App for iPad is available for free download in the iTunes store. Now you can get good music and good music news in print as well as in digital form, all over the world. • Full magazine content and news features on an easy-to-navigate, clean and clear app interface • High-quality browser display of the full magazine issues without compromising storage space on your iPad • Live updates of FILTER Magazine readers' favorites, including Daily News items, Week in Reviews, Contests, First Looks, Q&A’s, Premieres and more from FILTERmagazine.com • Live stream of FILTER Magazine’s Slacker Radio Station All upcoming issues of FILTER Magazine will be available for free download One-Liners: a miniature take on selected Filter Magazine reviews ........................................................................................................................................ (Go to FILTERmagazine.com or pick up Filter Magazine’s Winter Issue for full reviews of these albums) MARK LANEGAN BAND Blues Funeral 4AD 92% 85% BAHAMAS Barchords BRUSHFIRE 79% To call The Wall a brilliant record is an understatement so large that it dwarfs even Roger Waters’ massive ego. Lanegan’s graveled bellows, along with Gun Club–esque self-deprecating rock and roll, fill this album with every awful memory that nostalgia seems to forget. Its jangly chords and hushed vocals make this album the musical equivalent to that arcade game with the moving wall and teetering quarters—it always comes this close. ANDREW BIRD Break It Yourself MOM + POP SCHOOL OF SEVEN BELLS Ghostory VAGRANT LA SERA Sees the Light HARDLY ART 90% On first listen, there’s a thematic consistency— water and death—but the album isn’t macabre or melancholic, it’s actually rather joyful, and that’s exactly where the beauty is. SLEIGH BELLS Reign of Terror MOM + POP 87% MIIKE SNOW Happy To You DOWNTOWN/UNIVERSAL 86% 36 filter good music guide An album that’s self-assured, stunningly produced and loaded with hooks, like the blistering first track that sounds like a more pop-oriented, melodically focused Ladytron. Katy Goodman makes music that plays like punk’s answer to Beach Blanket Bingo: sundrunk melodies, easily sing-able choruses and limited replayability. NITE JEWEL One Second of Love SECRETLY CANADIAN BOWERBIRDS The Clearing DEAD OCEANS 82% 76% The album’s lazy disco backbeat and Gonzalez’s immense vocals take the insomniatic electro-pop out of the bedroom and stick it on the corner of Sunset and Vine. The most emotionally invested and musically satisfying tracks aren’t about love and loss, but rather, nature and animals—double rainbow, anyone? PLANTS AND ANIMALS The End of That SECRET CITY LINDSTRØM Six Cups of Rebel SMALLTOWN SUPERSOUND 80% It’s a punchier and less cocaine-driven (bad thing?) approach to the maple-flavored country rock that made The Band and Neil Young so good. FILTER ALBUM RATINGS The beautifully textured harmonies and aquatic aura guide you across a melodic landscape that distracts you from the sudden drop into synthetic psychedelic bliss. 78% 91-100% 81-90% 71-80% 61-70% below 60% 8 8 8 8 8 a great album above par, below genius respectable, but flawed not in my CD player please God, tell us why ing Night Open 2 Extremely loud, snarling and excited, it takes the duo’s signature mash-up of ’80s metal and ’50s girl-group and ’70s arena-rock sensibilities and cranks it up to Adderalloverdose levels. 83% L PINK FLOYD The Wall [Immersion box set] EMI 01 2C ANNE T S F ILM F ES 72% The electro-pop overkill in this album puts it somewhere between the Hackers soundtrack and the Mortal Kombat theme song. Starts Friday, May 25 in Select Theatres A IV Music, etc. ....................................................................................................................................................................................................... Jack White Blunderbuss THIRD MAN/COLUMBIA 90% There are many schools of thought on this Jack White person. Some had waited for him to ditch Meg since day one, some prefer The Raconteurs, others think he’s better producing and most bemoaned the death of The White Stripes. Everyone’s going to be happy with Blunderbuss. For one, it’s extremely personal. “Missing Pieces,” the album opener, is a melancholy ride about the dissolution of a relationship, the experience so visceral he feels like he’s disappearing. It sets the tone for a rumination on love and loss from all angles of White’s musical deck of cards: Detroit, Nashville, Memphis, thumping riffs, scorching fiddles, spiraling guitars. But it’s fun and fast, too: “Sixteen Saltines” is an acid-laced Stripes recollection; “I’m Shakin’,” a naughty Rudy Toombs cover. Each song is a surprise, all stamped with White’s impossibly characteristic fingerprint. So whatever it was you thought you’d miss, you won’t. Familiar yet thrilling, Blunderbuss is a masterful introduction to a man we’ve known all along. MARISSA R. MOSS Sun Kil Moon Among The Leaves CALDO VERDE 87% On Among The Leaves, Sun Kil Moon’s Mark Kozelek revels in the succulent melancholy of sad autumn evenings in the backseat, garlanded with the shadow words of life’s heaviness, clearly woven by a master of spiritual spelunking. Listen to the deep, goosebumpinducing desolation of “Elaine,” or the oil-painted generosity of emotional detail in “Song for Richard Collopy,” and try not to feel the grit sticking sweetly to your eyelids…or are those tears? LOREN AUDA POIN Norah Jones Little Broken Hearts BLUE NOTE/EMI 82% Produced by Danger Mouse following their collaboration on Rome last year, Norah Jones’ Little Broken Hearts could serve as Pt. 2, as we are treated 38 filter good music guide to vintage sounds and Jones’ trite, ever pleasant crooning again. Some songs only contain moments of magic from the vocals, though (“She’s Only 22”); others are knock-out wonderful, and untouchable by the lesser likes of Lana Del Rey, et al. (“Miriam”). With Jones these days, you may not know exactly what you’re getting, but you know it’s going to be great. JON FALCONE OFF! OFF! VICE 84% It seems unfair to expect variance from the 16 minutes of OFF!’s first LP. But former Black Flagger Keith Morris pushes his L.A. hardcore allstars through tempos that turn on a hairpin and beats his exclamations into something like melody all over OFF! (the caps, presumably, are for further emphasis). There are precisely two guitar solos—one at the beginning, one at the end—and the whole shebang ends with a cackle, a feedback squeal and a scream. Old age should be so much fun. MARTY SARTINI GARNER Beach House Bloom SUB POP 88% If Beach House’s last record was a teen dream, this is an adult version: Bloom is a matured, ethereal journey. It’s full of Victoria Legrand’s echoing vocals, twinges of The Cure and songs where the mellow haze never thwarts sophisticated hooks. Somehow, it all manages to evoke both David Bowie’s Labyrinth soundtrack and ’80s riffs way prettier than ones actually produced by the decade (but just as familiar). Legrand and bandmate Alex Scally have said Bloom was built as a complete album in a world of singles, and it feels so; the whole thing unfolds like a continual story, each song playing off the next. At times, a bit too much—they can bleed into each other indistinctly—but maybe that’s the point. Stellar tracks like “Lazuli,” “Other People” and “Myth” will have you both hypnotized and dizzy while singing along—your poor neighbors: Legrand’s voice is a one and only. MARISSA R. MOSS video game Kinect Star Wars XBOX 360 MICROSOFT GAME STUDIOS 71% If you’re looking for a hardcore Star Wars experience, look elsewhere. But if you’re looking for an intro to Star Wars for friends, kids or house party-goers, Kinect Star Wars provides an apt enough experience. Whether on-rails fighting, having an—ahem—intergalactic dance-off or pod-racing with motion controls, casual players have various options for fun. Core fans of the Star Wars universe should, however, play something else in a galaxy far, far away. ZACH ROSENBERG Light Asylum Light Asylum MEXICAN SUMMER 84% In a sea of hipster twee, NYC’s Light Asylum (along with Toronto’s Trust) seem intent on bringing the muscle. Their self-titled debut opens with the steamrolling deesko-industrial of “Hour Fortress” and the deliciously titled “Pope Will Roll,” recalling both the cold brutality of Front 242 and the anarchic debauchery of Virgin Prunes. Shannon Funchess and Bruno Coviello trade banshee vocals like mongeese in heat. Occasional sonic-melodic nods to Kraftwerk and Ultravox provide elegant respite from the relentless stomp. A masterpiece of feral futurism. KEN SCRUDATO Nick Waterhouse Time’s All Gone INNOVATIVE LEISURE 84% Outfitted with booming brass, vibrant backing vocals and more, Nick Waterhouse’s debut sounds as if it was spinning at 45 revolutions per minute. While his voice gets overpowered by the sheer energy of this ’60s soul revival at times, Waterhouse lets loose a heldout note or a fervent wail to let you know he’s got the chops. Time’s All Gone takes you back in the day and pulls you into the moment all at once. CLARE R. LOPEZ 39 filter good music guide Diamond Rugs Diamond Rugs PARTISAN 89% From the first hit of the drum on “Hightail,” it is instantly clear that John McCauley’s indie-rock supergroup experiment is a success. Pulling from his own band Deer Tick as well as Black Lips, Los Lobos, Dead Confederate and Six Finger Satellite, McCauley’s ragtag sextet strips rock down to the basics: raw voices, vulgar lyrics, heavy guitars, loud drums and one essential organ. This ain’t no Chickenfoot; this is the really really real deal. BAILEY PENNICK Here We Go Magic A Different Ship SECRETLY CANADIAN 83% Here We Go Magic’s third LP feels like a call to creative arms, with songwriter Luke Temple steering by example. As in the case of its predecessors, A Different Ship is keen to stow multiple genres, ebbing along with schools of flying Phish (“Make Up Your Mind”) and flowing over crests smooth enough to make out radio static (“Over the Ocean”)—everything from turquoise to cadet blue. The thesis rears up on “I Believe in Action,” with its show-don’ttell demand: “Don’t imagine anything at all.” KYLE MacKINNEL Simian Mobile Disco Unpatterns WICHITA 77% Grand expectations often lead to disappointment. But with Simian Mobile Disco, having high hopes isn’t exactly out of order. As a followup to 2010’s sinister compilation Delicacies, Unpatterns stands decidedly in a shadow. The repulsive glory that was the video to “Sweetbread” may never again be attained, but that’s not an excuse for the pallid “Seraphim” as this album’s single. It sounds less like an electronic order of angels, and more like Layo & Bushwacka!, surprisingly. KENDAH EL-ALI Ramona Falls Prophet BARSUK 80% Brent Knopf is mad as hell and—wait, that’s not right. On Knopf’s second album as Ramona Falls, the ex-Menomena member wipes away much of his previous outfit’s underlying angst for an outing that’s a surprisingly optimistic take on his trademark jazz-fueled rock. There are still hints of ennui bubbling to the surface. “Sqworm” includes one of his most furious guitar pieces to date, where Knopf proves he doesn’t have to shout to get us to feel his pain. LAURA STUDARUS PLIN! PLAN! CLING! You hear that? No, that’s not your drunk neighbor tumbling down the staircase−that’s bebop! At least that’s how Javier Mariscal and Fernando Trueba imagine it in their print adaptation of Chico & Rita. I’ve never seen the film and although I nearly bought the DVD from some guy in a flower shop, I thought to myself: A, that’s illegal and B, why not see if this book can hold its own? Unfortunately, folks, it does not. Without a CD or flexi-disc of bebop accompaniment, this book is simply a Disney fairytale with dark nipples and Cuban cigars. ALEJANDRO RUBIO 40 filter good music guide Bright Eyes Fevers and Mirrors [reissue] SADDLE CREEK 85% Unlike anything else you’ll hear in metal’s sludge subgenre, Torche songs are unabashedly merry—and mercifully succinct. Forget headtrips: With the Miami foursome, it’s all about immediacy over introspection and boogying over brooding. Fans will forgive them for taking four years to craft their third stab of slabs, given its potency. Cheers to Torche for proving a heavy-rock band can be optimistic and sincere—without sacrificing any of the edge. KURT ORZECK video game graphic novel Chico & Rita Javier Mariscal and Fernando Trueba 73% SELFMADEHERO Torche Harmonicraft VOLCOM Diablo III PC BLIZZARD 90% One of the most anticipated PC games in history, Diablo III differs from its predecessors in many ways, including a new skill system and an in-game auction house that operates on realworld cash. The isometric-view hack-n-slash gameplay, however, is still intact and raging. Developers promise each run-through will be unique thanks to randomized dungeons and loot, and more content will be patched on later to create the most ultimate action-RPG experience. ZACH ROSENBERG 77% Hooray to Saddle Creek for re-releasing a series of early Bright Eyes records this year, with 2000’s Fevers and Mirrors as its angsty cherry on top. But even though it’s now in a two-LP package, there aren’t really any extra bells and whistles to speak of. What it does offer is a chance to listen to a boy on the verge: well before Conor Oberst became a monster of folk, he was suffering monster demons that came through in the quivers and screams of Fevers, particularly on songs like the nowclassic “Haligh, Haligh, A Lie, Haligh,” and “Something Vague.” We bet Oberst doesn’t like reliving his torment, but we sure do sometimes...although it’d have been nice to get something extra for our troubles. All this angst ain’t cheap. MARISSA R. MOSS Father John Misty Fear Fun SUB POP 83% Fear Fun is Josh Tillman’s first record as a former Fleet Fox, and while the hallmarks of his old group punctuate some songs (“O I Long to Feel Your Arms Around Me”), the L.A. transplant is clearly in his own water. Though his vocal melodies sometimes plod into singsongy melancholia, Tillman breathes into his arrangements, transforming the terse opening of “Nancy From Now On” into a neo-soul wonderland, and distinguishing himself as more than a back-row howler. MARTY SARTINI GARNER Lower Dens Nootropics RIBBON 82% Jana Hunter’s vocal aura and musical vision continue to grow before our ears. The icy majesty of opener “Alphabet Song” delivers an instant gravitas that brings Victoria Legrand to mind (appropriately, Teen Dream producer Chris Coady has recorded Hunter multiple times). Largely favoring grayscale tones and sedated sentiment, Lower Dens’ highs achieve with an understated ability to evoke emotion; “Brains” oozes a hook instead of pushing one, and “Lamb” floats out of the ashes. All is proof that there’s much to be discovered in darkness. KYLE MacKINNEL Marissa Nadler The Sister BOX OF CEDAR 78% The Sister is Marissa Nadler’s sixth fulllength album. It’s the companion to her 2011 eponymous LP, which was funded through Kickstarter. Here, the Boston songwriter reaches far beyond the precincts of Americana grassroots. The electronic experiments introduced on Little Hells continue to bloom and her character building is peerless. Nadler’s songs don’t just center on cowed waifs or the paralysis of grief anymore; she wears her poise like a lustrous badge. KYLE LEMMON George Sarah Who Sleep the Sleep of Peace PUSAN 77% Blending together synthesizers and string arrangements is no simple task. But as an experienced electronic composer and multi- instrumentalist, George Sarah knows how to pull the unlikely pairing of these sonic spheres off. Although this combination is organic on Who Sleep the Sleep of Peace, the album as a whole is unbalanced. Certain songs are at odds with the overall tone (“I Know Trees”) and sparse vocal contributions feel out of place on this largely instrumental effort. CLARE R. LOPEZ dvd Shame FOX SEARCHLIGHT 85% Director Steve McQueen’s latest film is an eye-opening story of addiction and trauma, plain and simple. While drug and alcohol addiction films are a dime a dozen, Shame delves deep into the inner workings of a full-blown sex addict. Michael Fassbender goes all out in his brilliant portrayal of Brandon, an addict trying desperately to hold it together while satisfying his craving for anything sexual. With the addition of his uninvited sister (Carey Mulligan), who is as emotionally damaged as he is, Brandon goes on a destructive bender that rivals anything from a needle. Shame earned its NC-17 rating proudly, by having none. BAILEY PENNICK Horse Feathers Cynic’s New Year KILL ROCK STARS 82% The moniker “Horse Feathers” seems to fit the music of Justin Ringle and Nathan Crockett’s latest album pretty well: wispy ornamentation disguising the uneasy power beneath. Lighthearted melodies and delicate instrumentations mask Cynic’s New Year’s darker lyrics, adding a layer of complexity that requires multiple listens. Following the fear that comes with the realization you are powerless against your own aging, the album allows us to approach the terrifying ideas of the uncontrollable with the gentle hand-holding of Americana. BAILEY PENNICK Zambri House of Baasa KANINE 79% As Teutonic etherea goes, many have searched for the elusive midpoint between the mystical menace of Siouxsie and the recondite romance of Cocteau Twins. New York’s Zambri do quite well in this endeavor, their enigmatically titled House of Baasa coming on like something from the deepest vaults of 4AD. Gorgeous tracks are as eerie as they are sonically cosseting, all weirdly effected electronics and gossamer vocals (“Hundred Hearts,” “From An Angle”). This is music for staring at Venetian Gothic architecture. KEN SCRUDATO Teen Daze All Of Us, Together LEFSE 82% The image on the cover of All of Us, Together, the first full-length from Teen Daze, depicts two swimsuited young men diving eagerly through the hazy atmosphere of a purple-blue M-Class planet. The expansive, electronic tracks here gathered are just such a jump—a floating-through of glassy, strange-colored airs. This record is not out to shatter you; its aim, rather, is to fuel your night drive through the dusky electronic corridors of sun-warmed youth. LOREN AUDA POIN ALL WE HAVE IS NOW the fling x ezekiel W W W. E Z E K I E L U S A . C O M / W W W. T H E F L I N G. U S 42 filter good music guide good music guide filter 43 book The Littlest Birds Sing the Prettiest Songs Jennie Smith 84% CHRONICLE Every once in a while, we want to turn the pages of a book just to see something pleasant to look at. This urge doesn’t die with the end of childhood; it just gets buried. Jennie Smith’s illustrations of classic and contemporary folk music songs are a perfect compromise between worthwhile content and lovely drawings to please all the senses. The inclusion of the lyrics with the guitar chords is a wonderful bonus. BAILEY PENNICK Young Man Vol. 1 FRENCHKISS 74% For reasons only he can explain, singersongwriter Colin Caulfield has fully embraced the narrative associations of his last name, going so far as to perform under the moniker Young Man and devote himself to a trilogy of LPs exploring the last days of youth and the prospect of oncoming adulthood. On Vol. 1, part two of the proposed cycle, Caulfield continues to showcase some seriously well-crafted shifts between proggy meandering movements and pop hooks. He’s clearly no phony. MIKE HILLEARY Like Pioneers Oh, Magic ABANDONED LOVE 80% On their first album, Like Pioneers presented a decent selection of Chicago indie rock, despite getting together and recording in just a few days. On their sophomore effort, that initial chemistry has evolved into a fuller, more realized sound as well as more focused songwriting. Hooks abound from start to finish, and it’s a band whose love of music carries through thusly, giving Oh, Magic an exuberance that’s pretty infectious. JEFFREY BROWN Choir of Young Believers Rhine Gold GHOSTLY INTERNATIONAL 81% “Melancholy” is a good word to begin a discussion of Choir of Young Believers’ sophomore album Rhine Gold…but it doesn’t tell the whole story. Expanding on the theatrical tendencies of its reverb-drenched debut This Is For the White in Your Eyes, the darks are darker, but there are also lighter lights. “Paint New Horrors” breaks from the album’s orchestral pop tendencies for a swinging 1970s-flavored refrain where leadman Jannis Noya Makrigiannis’ mournful voice doesn’t just resonate—it soars. LAURA STUDARUS CFCF Exercises PAPER BAG 76% CFCF is the stage name for Montreal DJ/ producer Mike Silver. He took his moniker from the call sign of the city’s CFCF-TV. As such, his promising debut, 2009’s Continent, resembled a delightful channel surfing between assorted genres. His latest release, Exercises, is a downcast and reflective paean for the ’70s underground. The chamber-piano infused into these eight experiments is sometimes utterly heartrending—those pulsating synthesizers sound like they could pump blood and breathe oxygen. Break glass in case of emergency. KYLE LEMMON blu-ray Being John Malkovich CRITERION 88% Malkovich! Malkovich! Malkovich! It’s time to once again go behind the filing cabinet and get your own 15 minutes of…well… Malkovich. The mesmerizing dark fantasycomedy from Spike Jonze and Charlie Kaufman is finally where it belongs: in the Criterion Collection. Failed puppeteer Craig Schwartz (Cusack), stuck in a loveless marriage to Lotte (Cameron Diaz), develops a crush on a coworker (Catherine Keener). This seemingly mundane plot takes a turn when Schwartz uncovers a hidden door in which he can briefly experience the mind of actor John Malkovich and subsequently becomes mad with envy and power. Describing it as sick and brilliant doesn’t do the film justice enough, but the special features will! Highlights include a conversation between Malkovich and John Hodgman, and (most excitingly) from within the film: “American Arts & Culture Presents: John Horatio Malkovich, Dance of Dispair and Disillusionment.” You won’t mind getting dropped onto the New Jersey Turnpike for this. BAILEY PENNICK Sarah Jaffe The Body Wins KIRTLAND 84% Who the sweet fuck is Sarah Jaffe? On her mesmerizing third album, The Body Wins, she doesn’t seem too concerned with easy answers—only with dizzying studio finesse and bitch-slapping eclecticism. “Paul” is a slow-burning quiet storm of orchestral flourishes; the title track layers fragments of tribal rhythms, jazz piano, funky brass stabs and gurgling electronics. She outdoes herself with the spooky, sultry “Hooray for Love,” which sounds like Norah Jones during a sonic hangover. RYAN REED free exclusive downloads check out a fender guitar® HARD ROCK HOTELS THE SOUND OF YOUR STAY ™ a unique music experience. explore soundofyourstay.com ©2012 Hard Rock International (USA), Inc. All rights reserved. SeeTheShow® bali . biloxi . chicago . hollywood, fl . macau . orlando . pattaya . penang . punta cana . san diego . singapore . tampa 44 filter good music guide opening 2012 cancun . panama megapolis . vallarta . riviera maya FB.TIF TWITTER.TIF EXCLUSIVELY OURS! MADE TO BE SEEN. MADE TO DANCE. 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