Our new album is out now in pre-release! The 12-track album will be officially released on Friday, August 5th for $9 on Bandcamp, iTunes, and many other online services.
https://microfilm.bandcamp.com/album/houndstooth-harmonics
Rude: a Cultural Takedown
Tuesday, July 5, 2016
Monday, July 6, 2015
MUSIC: Summer of "Neon"
It looks like my last post was waaaaaaaay back in March and it was for another music release that's near and dear to my heart, my man Matthew Mercer's second full-length solo album, 'Supernatant,' an album of winter beauty, ambient, droney, and melancholic. It was an album for that season and a beauty you should check out here.
Winter gave way to spring gave way to the hottest summer on record in Portland, Ore. (so far; we did break the June record for heat.) Summer gives way to partying and dancing and fun and shaking off those rainy blues. We, as a band, welcomed the chance to bring out something shiny and new. It had been two years since our last album release, 2013's AggroPastels. We'd been making tracks since the Christmas holidays and perfecting a ten-song release that moves away from the more complex, lush, and sometimes downbeat, sometimes broken beats of the last album. Less pastel, more neon.
For this new album, '1,000,000 Neon Hz' we decided to make the songs more streamlined, less noisy and full, and more sleek, slick, and glossy. Hence the title's operative word: neon.
We wanted to make a ten-track (our shortest album since our debut) piece that really concentrates on the dancefloor. No ballads or midtempo songs. Even the haunting sounds of the closing track 'Unreliable Narrator' has a 4/4 beat underneath. The whole album has that cold, bright glow of neon. That was the goal. Mission accomplished.
You can buy the album on Bandcamp for $9; on iTunes for $9.99. If streaming is your thing, take a listen at Soundcloud.
We appreciate you listening and purchasing if you can. We're a DIY, word-of-mouth band and this is how we keep going. Please support if you can. Thanks! xo MK
Labels:
000,
000 Neon Hz,
1,
AggroPastels,
Bandcamp,
electronic music,
electronic pop,
house,
iTunes,
Matthew Mercer,
Microfilm,
Neon,
pop,
Supernatant,
synthpop,
techno
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
MUSIC: 'Supernatant' is Supernatural
Matthew Mercer releases his second full-length album 'Supernatant' today. Where his last full-length, Pianissimo Possibile was a collection of beautiful pieces based around cut up piano recordings and stuttering electronic beats, Supernatant is an even starker collection. Waves of ambient drones and tones, beatless and haunting, flow through 11 tracks.
This giant mood piece definitely shifts in subtle ways. Headphones and patience are a must to really immerse yourself in all the detailing that Mercer has put into each track. The press release asks the listener to "play loud" and I agree.
If the audio only atmospherics aren't enough for some of you visually needy out there, Mercer has filmed a video piece for each track. Yes, that is 11 separate video pieces that satisfy the filmmaker in Mercer and the idea of soundtracking such an immersive headphone trip. Natural snow coated forests, urban transportation tunnels, stormy intense skies, desolate ocean shores, twinkly city lights, menacing stark woods, every one of these makes appearances in the video album. The full video playlist can be viewed here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yNJQIqf8idY&list=PLvV_NsZF_UopVJKLfXTYElY66g24KdgQN
As winter fades into spring (or fades back to winter for the East Coasters), Supernatant plays a perfect soundtrack.
Listen/buy the album here: https://matthewmercer.bandcamp.com/
If you enjoy it, please repost about the release. Word-of-mouth makes these musical adventures work.
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
MUSIC: Bjork's Bjroken Heart and Vulnerable 'Vulnicura'
Due to this modern world of thieves and impatient peoples (sometimes two-in-one), we have a lot of superstars' music and albums being leaked early. First it was Madonna and Rebel Heart (but c'mon, you wanted to hear the quality before you put money down on her songs, hoping for some return to form and not Hard Candy + MDNA.)
Now, Bjork, just days after announcing her new album Vulnicura is to be released in March, saw it leaked all over the internet, spreading faster than a speeding volta.
Like Madonna and her last album, this is apparently Bjork's "breakup album" with her partner/husband(?), former fashion model turned performance/video/installation artist Matthew Barney.
Just nine tracks, albeit many of them lengthy, I strapped on my iPod to get lost in her universe again, and with trepidation. Her last album, 2011's Biophilia left me cold. It wasn't her first album to be difficult listening or challenging (that was 2004's Medulla for me) but the whole construction of the enterprise (the apps, the educational elements, the instruments being built) put the music in second place to the "project" at large. It was the first Bjork album where I felt she seemed lost in the murky depths and noise and bluster swirling around her.
From Vulnicura's opening track "Stone Milker" I was hooked. The voice, up front and center, the wall of lush strings pulling her along and the warmth building with each minute. She was singing about her heart, feelings, emotions and not about rocks and viruses and moon particles. The excitement and hurt is palpable.
Buzzed about producer Arca handles most of the tracks co-production but his very distinct sound (present on last year's Xen album) only bubbles up on the excellent track "History of Touches." Gloomy British electronic soundscaper The Haxan Cloak handles production on only one track "Family," a statement of intent about her current situation. "The death of my family...the mother and the child...the father and the child." No doubt about her daughter with Barney.
The Antony-assisted song "Atom Dance" is a return to their Volta duet but beamed from the moon, all cut-up vocals and skittery strings and beats, where "The Dull Flame of Desire" sounds like a well-oiled showtune in comparison.
The centerpiece of the album is "Black Lake," a ten-minute epic that starts with chamber strings and halfway through leads to 4/4 beats before splintering again and slowing down, the strings (on this song and the album) always omnipresent with the force of waves.
Bjork seems to have finally dropped her love of shrieking horn sections for a return to a string-based world that envelops every song on Vulnicura, much to my mutual surprise and pleasure. "Mutual Core" no more.
Bjork seems to be heartbroken on this album and that couldn't make us more pleased, horrible audience that we are. This is a true return to form we've been waiting for for ages.
Now, Bjork, just days after announcing her new album Vulnicura is to be released in March, saw it leaked all over the internet, spreading faster than a speeding volta.
Like Madonna and her last album, this is apparently Bjork's "breakup album" with her partner/husband(?), former fashion model turned performance/video/installation artist Matthew Barney.
Just nine tracks, albeit many of them lengthy, I strapped on my iPod to get lost in her universe again, and with trepidation. Her last album, 2011's Biophilia left me cold. It wasn't her first album to be difficult listening or challenging (that was 2004's Medulla for me) but the whole construction of the enterprise (the apps, the educational elements, the instruments being built) put the music in second place to the "project" at large. It was the first Bjork album where I felt she seemed lost in the murky depths and noise and bluster swirling around her.
From Vulnicura's opening track "Stone Milker" I was hooked. The voice, up front and center, the wall of lush strings pulling her along and the warmth building with each minute. She was singing about her heart, feelings, emotions and not about rocks and viruses and moon particles. The excitement and hurt is palpable.
Buzzed about producer Arca handles most of the tracks co-production but his very distinct sound (present on last year's Xen album) only bubbles up on the excellent track "History of Touches." Gloomy British electronic soundscaper The Haxan Cloak handles production on only one track "Family," a statement of intent about her current situation. "The death of my family...the mother and the child...the father and the child." No doubt about her daughter with Barney.
The Antony-assisted song "Atom Dance" is a return to their Volta duet but beamed from the moon, all cut-up vocals and skittery strings and beats, where "The Dull Flame of Desire" sounds like a well-oiled showtune in comparison.
The centerpiece of the album is "Black Lake," a ten-minute epic that starts with chamber strings and halfway through leads to 4/4 beats before splintering again and slowing down, the strings (on this song and the album) always omnipresent with the force of waves.
Bjork seems to have finally dropped her love of shrieking horn sections for a return to a string-based world that envelops every song on Vulnicura, much to my mutual surprise and pleasure. "Mutual Core" no more.
Bjork seems to be heartbroken on this album and that couldn't make us more pleased, horrible audience that we are. This is a true return to form we've been waiting for for ages.
Labels:
Antony,
Arca,
Biophilia,
Bjork,
Haxan Cloak,
Matthew Barney,
Vulnicura
Friday, December 12, 2014
MUSIC: The Best in Music for 2014
1. CARIBOU Our Love
I've been aware of Dan Snaith's Caribou project for years and occassionally would grab tracks or hear snippets and find it all pleasing, pretty, but a bit dull. So the announcement of another Caribou album left me with a case of the shrugs. I was wrong. This grabbed me from the first second I heard it and held me. Warm, sunny, shimmery, dancey, poppy, soft, mysterious, quiet and loud, romantic, brilliant. Love it.
2. FKA TWIGS LP1
Although she had released two under-the radar EP releases, this debut album seemingly comes out of nowhere...to slay. Modernized trip-hop, R'n'B put through the slow/churning/shadowy filter is on display here and it sounds fresh. Although the new genre of quiet, slow, "Blog-Hop/Blog'n'B" (look, I created a shitty music media genre name) has a reigning queen. You don't need to scream, oversing, and melisma to out-queen Snoreyonce. Twigs has more interesting ideas in her fingertip than most American divas do in their fame-hungry clutches.
3. DAMON ALBARN Everyday Robots
Even though his career has spanned nearly 25 years of releasing music, Blur/Gorillaz/etc. frontman Albarn had never released a solo album before. What a wonderfully subtle, quiet but steady LP. Acoustic guitar strums, plaintive piano chords, sputtering drum programming; it's like all of Blur's best ballads on one album. It's "Tender" meets "No Distance Left to Run" warm melancholic ache that Damon does best with his wounded vocals.
4. ROBYN & ROYKSOPP Do It Again / ROYKSOPP The Inevitable End
Not one but two Royksopp releases greet us this year, along with the news that the band, although not splitting, will not release "albums" anymore; the new paradigm? Robyn is back in equal force on the EP and "Monument" may be one of her best tracks. After a teaser of an EP, Royksopp also unleashed what amounts to a double album of new material; the highlights feature The Irrepressibles' Jamie on a lion's share of vocal duties with his delicate croon.
5. APHEX TWIN Syro
It was one of those Bowie-esque returns after a decade off, Richard D. James is back and it's like the '90s never disappeared. Not to say that all of these tracks were sitting on a shelf during a drum n' bass flurry of work; there is still plenty of dateless electronic squelching, squirming and slithering from James' master hands.
BIGGEST "SURPRISED THAT I LIKED IT" OF THE YEAR
PERFUME GENIUS Too Bright - Neither of his previous albums did anything for me; quite the opposite, I found them grating. So I was pleasantly surprised to find that I really dug his third album. He's embraced a fuller band sound, electronics, and not too many fluttery, breathy, gaspy piano and vocal ballads.
TOP FIVE HOUSEY/POP MOMENTS
1. HERCULES AND LOVE AFFAIR The Feast of the Broken Heart - A great return after the lackluster 2nd LP. Fun, sexy and pure '90s house. John Grant oddly makes a great house vocalist
2. THE 2 BEARS The Night is Young - Needs trimming and not as good as their debut, but the good songs are actually great songs
3. MICROFILM Chemical Robotics EP - Yeah, it's us but it's good; download for free here: https://microfilm.bandcamp.com/album/chemical-robotics and Is This It? https://soundcloud.com/microfilmmusic/is-this-it-full-version
4. JESSIE WARE Tough Love (Cyril Hahn remix) - Best track on the pretty good new LP; hoping the album would have a few house bangers like "Imagine It Was Us"
5. AZALEIA BANKS Broke With Expensive Taste - Apart from being a turd of a person, the housey tracks on here are fun
TOP FIVE UNDER THE RADAR RELEASES
1. ARCA Xen - Happy to know that this South American gay electronic adventurer will be working with Bjork on her new LP; Xen is a sprawling spiky but pretty journey of an album
2. LEON VYNHALL Music for the Uninvited - melancholic art house music; house music for headphone listening; lovely
3. THROWING SNOW Mosaic - I always new trip-hop would come back in vogue, albeit modernized for this century
4. EAST INDIA YOUTH Total Strife Forever - An odd mix of instrumental synthscapes, techno, dark synth(not)pop
5. GAZELLE TWIN Unflesh - Don't be worried The Knife has called it quits this year, you have Gazelle Twin, a one-woman electro stark and dark soundscape
HONORABLE MENTION: OVERDUE WELCOME RETURNS
1. MORRISSEY World Peace is None of Your Business - So happy he still had something left in him; arguably his best work in 20 years
2. VASHTI BUNYAN Heartleap - This is the year I really discovered her; suppposedly her last album, so what a way to go
3. SOFT PINK TRUTH Why Do the Heathens Rage? - Bizarre high concept album that oddly and noisily works. Funny and scary and cool
4. NENEH CHERRY The Blank Project - Not your '80s Neneh. Stripped down and loose and darkly pop. Cool
5. CIBO MATTO Hotel Valentine - The lovely sense of fun and inventiveness is back
FIVE RELEASES THAT ARE GOOD, BUT TREADING WATER; I NEED MORE FROM THEM
1.WILD BEASTS Present Tense - A slight improvement over Smother, but more of the edges are being sanded off
2. THE HORRORS Luminous - A poppier, slicker version of 'Skying'; pretty and spot-the-references fun, but I want a bit of the angularity back
3. LANA DEL RAY Ultraviolence - A nice twist to not repeat the trip-hop influence, I just wonder how much gas she has left in her
4. THOM YORKE Tomorrow's Modern Boxes - A pleasant listen but evaporates right after.The Eraser-lite
5. ZOLA JESUS Taiga - She wanted this to be her big "pop" album, but it was too dark, grand, and same-same to make it
DISAPPOINTMENTS
1. ERLEND OYE Legao - I don't know where to begin with my disappointment; reggae-lite? Snoozy, boring, bland, and aimless. His first solo studio album in...11 years is this? And he currently thinks electronic music is "boring"? Try this instead: https://microfilm.bandcamp.com/track/johnny-x-lost-his-girl-to-erlend-oye-the-world
2. LA ROUX Trouble in Paradise - Tinnier than the debut, even though it has slicker production. A long wait to be unimpressed.
3. LYKKE LI I Never Learn - Her last LP was one of my faves of that year so a bit disappointed how blah this all sounds as a whole.
4. JJ V - I forgot I was listening to it as I went on. I wonder if the magic has faded with these guys?
5. SINEAD O'CONNOR I'm Not Bossy... - The lead single "Take Me to Church" was amazing, the best song's she's done in decades easily, but I was not as thrilled by the rest, sadly.
Labels:
Aphex Twin,
Arca,
Best Music of 2014,
caribou,
East India Youth,
FKA Twigs,
Gazelle Twin,
Leon Vynhall,
Microfilm,
Perfume Genius,
Royksopp,
Soft Pink Truth,
Throwing Snow,
top 10 lists,
Vashti Bunyan
Thursday, November 13, 2014
Sorry for the delay; life happens.
"Where do you get this stuff from...T-shirts?" - Showgirls, 1995.
I'll be posting a year-end Top 10 movies and Top 10 albums list soon, but in the meantime, enjoy:
I'll be posting a year-end Top 10 movies and Top 10 albums list soon, but in the meantime, enjoy:
Wednesday, August 6, 2014
FILM: 'Lucy' in the Sky with LOTS of Blue Diamonds
Summer movies are a time for big-budget, popcorn-level ridiculousness. But is it too much to ask us to use our brain? OK, how about 1.4% of our brain.
Brain power is the topic at hand in French director Luc Besson's new film Lucy. Besson is a man not known for subtlety, realism, or depth, but they all can't be Bergman can they?
The conceit of Lucy (let me keep it brief as not to offer too many spoilers) is that humans normally only use 10% of our cerebral power (a widely spread cliche), so what if by chemical means, humans could use more: 20, 30, 40, up to 100%? The means? Obviously, it is having massive amounts of synthetic hormones surgically inserted into your body as a drug mule (in a very unsafe looking thin plastic sack).
Scarlett Johansson is one such (albeit unwitting) drug mule. The fun of the "get to the chase" set-up of the movie is palpable. There is barely an intro to her character before she is thrust into a world of killer Taiwanese mobsters, locked briefcases, assassins, chases, guns blazing, and mysterious surgeries.
The Run Lola Run fast-paced flight of the film is a gas. Taiwan to Berlin to Paris, it all whizzes by. No matter how this party girl student becomes knowledgeable in heavy firearm use, acrobatic fight choreography, learning foreign languages, massive amounts of cash to buy designer heels and same-day international, first-class flights from Asia to Europe (she's a student, right?), it can all be explained away.
Bright blue crystal superdrugs.
You should expect no less from the creator of The Professional, The Fifth Element, and a Joan of Arc reboot. Besson is ridiculous and if you shut off your brain, you can learn to love him too.
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