Tag Archives: sonic youth

Episode 92: Wake that Sleepyhead in You

Anticipating Ian’s arrival in a few weeks (if he’s punctual), one of the things I’ve been considering is responding to and teaching discernment with coarse language.  And because I’ve been on a Sonic Youth kick recently, I’ve specifically thought about cussing in music.

I’ll spare you most of my thoughts and conversation with my wife, but I can say that I am convinced parents must model for children a healthy respect of language.  I don’t think this involves overreacting to my son when he inevitably drops a minor curse word…and on the other end of the spectrum, it obviously doesn’t mean I should mean that I should cuss like a sailor.  I guess I have some time to figure things out before he gets old enough that it matters.  You know, maybe I have enough time before then to write a book…

Enjoy the show.

  1. “No Room” – Two-Pound Planet (No Sense of History | Alternative/Stunt | 1992)
  2. “(I Got A) Catholic Block” – Sonic Youth (Sister | SST | 1987)
  3. “Surgeon” – St. Vincent (Strange Mercy | 4AD | 2011)
  4. “Natural Frost” – Welcome (Sirs | FatCat | 2007)
  5. “Salad of Speech” – 100 Flowers (100 Years of Pulchritude | EMI | 1990)
  6. “Okay, I’ll Admit That I really Don’t Understand” – The Flaming Lips (Zaireeka | Warner | 1997)
  7. “Listen, It’s Gone” – The Ocean Blue (Beneath the Rhythm and Sound | Sire | 1993)
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Episode 69: Rockin’ the Morse Code

Sonic Youth's Kim Gordon from the band's show at The Uptown Theater (7/18/09)

I get a lot of weird feedback from friends when they discover I like Christian bands.  Or perhaps I should say I get weird feedback when friends discover some of my favorite bands are Christians.  It’s as if they (both Christians and non-believers alike) don’t think Christians are capable of making good music.  They know I am passionate about music, so it’s like they believe I must be selling myself short by listening to subpar bands.

Perhaps it boils down to exposure.  When all you know of christian rock is Stryper and Amy Grant, I can sympathize.  I hate that stuff, too.  But since I had the good fortune of discovering bands like Starflyer 59, Soul-Junk and Danielson in high school, my experience with Christian rock differs greatly from most.  I would confidently put many of these bands’ albums up there with the best that indie rock had to offer in the 1990s.

This is not a treatise on the issue, nor do I set out to write about the theology of Christians and creativity.  I just want folks to understand there is amazing music being made by (some) Christians, and it’s not just limited to Sufjan Stevens or Midlake.  (And perhaps more importantly, there has been a lot of good Christian music made in the past thirty years.  While most in the christian industry were content creating safe music for the evangelical churchgoers, bands like Daniel Amos and Lifesavers Underground actually challenged our ideas about Christian art in the 1980s.)

All that said, I start this week’s show* with Sonic Youth before getting to a super-obscure Christian band, Soul-Junk.  It just kinda made sense for me that way.  Enjoy.

  1. “Unmade Bed” – Sonic Youth (Sonic Nurse /Geffen / 2004)
  2. “Screaming Lobster” – Soul-Junk (1960 / Sounds Familyre / 2009)
  3. “Ill-M-I” – Soul-Junk (1956 / SaraBellum / 2000)
  4. “Cichli” – Autechre (Chiastic Slide / Warp / 1997)
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/1415312/69radiofreeraytown.mp3″

Radio Free Raytown – Episode #69 (1/26/11)

*Remember that I’m taking next week off, preparing the next show, as I’m soliciting ideas for a theme.  (Something I do every tenth episode.)

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2009: A Listening Journal

Now that I have this website, I feel the pressure to discuss the best albums of the past year. Unfortunately, that’s not this list. Here, I have compiled thoughts about albums I listened to the most in 2009. While some should be in some best-of list (like Untitled 23), are others (like 1960 and The Hazards of Love) are almost too concept-heavy and unique to be compared to typical albums.

So here goes…

VeckatimestGrizzly Bear – Veckatimest (Warp)

I have to admit that I feel a little trendy talking about Grizzly Bear, as I have seen them mentioned just about everywhere for the past year.   But keep in mind that I loved their last album, Yellow House, when even when my most trendy and informed friends found it lackluster. (“I know why you like it,” on friend quipped. “They sound like a boring version of Namelessnumberheadman.”)

This album feels so nitpicked, yet inspired and light years ahead of Yellow House. It reminds me of something Terry Taylor would concoct if he were in his early 30s and had been absorbing albums by Radiohead and The Animal Collective alongside The Beach Boys and The Beatles. It’s an album of exquisite chamber pop.

Oh yeah, we bought this on vinyl at Hot Topic at Oak Park Mall. Good times.

Sonic Youth – The Eternal (Matador)

I still don’t know what I really feel about this album, apart from the fact that I listened to it a lot, especially around the time we went to see the band play at The Uptown in July.  There are certainly some great tunes (“Sacred Trickster” is super-hott), but there are places where the album just doesn’t seem to go anywhere.  Before you criticize, I know this is Sonic Youth and their songs don’t always  conform to conventional song structures.  Apart from the standout tracks, it’s just a really difficult album to get into for me.  It still sounds like the band’s trying, unlike some of its albums from about ten years ago, but I haven’t got my head around the record.

The Sexy AccidentMantoloking (independent)

My fascination with Jesse Kates’ music started innocently enough with seeing his set solo set of guitar loop music at The Grenada a long time ago.  He knew the Namelessnumberheadman guys, so that’s all it took for me.

Shortly thereafter, I heard Jesse was starting a pop/rock group, Jesse Kates and The Sexy Accident.  I saw the band play at Davey’s Uptown and loved it.  It sounded like so much music I adore: The Wedding Present, XTC and maybe Pinkerton-era Weezer.  I followed the band and slowly got to that place with Jesse where you can chat and e-mail but are still kinda just acquaintances.  Just before the band recorded Mantoloking, he sent me a zip file with demos, and my interest in the upcoming album snowballed. I was not let down, in the least, when I finally got the record.

Then, sometime in the fall, Jesse posted this on Craigslist:

Our bass player is moving to Florida, and we need a new master of the grooves. What we’re looking for:

– A dedicated and professional attitude (practices outside of practice)
– Somebody who writes bass parts to serve the song
– Ability to play in odd times and syncopated rhythms
– Willingness to rehearse once weekly and play out 2-3 times per month
– Open to travel for the odd out of town show
– Somebody who can conjure a little Motown if necessary

The ad was clearly written with me in mind (or so I thought).  Now I’m a member of the band, so I’ve listened to Mantoloking a lot, probably inflating the numbers on Last FM.  It’s a fairly solid record, with incredible, minimal drumming that doesn’t catch you off-guard when the band navigates odd time signatures.

Pet Shop Boys – Yes (EMI)

There’s no way I can overstate what Yes has meant to me this year.  I have listened to it a couple hundred times since I received the import, two-disc version as graduation present.

Calling it an album of “Home and Dry” (the standout track from 2002’s Release and, in my opinion, one of their all-time best songs) eleven times in a row may be a bit of a stretch, but it’s darn close. Tenant and Lowe are back at the top of their game, crafting smart songs with huge hooks and biting sarcasm. The band holds unswervingly to its tried-and-true disco formula, instead of doing that Brazil beat thing they floundered with in the mid-90s.

The Church – Untitled 23 (Unorthodox Records)

The Church doesn’t make the same album twice, but everything since the band’s monumental 2002 After Everything Now This has found it honing, instead of reinventing, its nuanced, affected-guitar interplay. It’s certainly a recipe the band shouldn’t mess with! We don’t need a foray into most bands’ typical late-era experimental or nostalgic return-to-form albums.

I may be wrong, but much of Untitled 23 sounds like it was tracked live, much like 2003’s exquisite album, Forget Yourself.  As always the lyrics are weird, and the sound is super-dense (while relying on few overdubs).  I can’t stop gushing.

Soul-Junk – 1960 (Sounds Familyre)

I first heard Soul-Junk with 1998’s 1955, a seriously effed-up mix of rap, glam, noise rock and electronica that, many times, used entire passages from the Bible for lyrics. Glen Galaxy has forged ahead with his intriguing slop, confusing everyone but the brave with his not-exactly-chronological album titles.

Needless to say, when he released 1960 (produced by genius dude, Daniel Smith) this year, I was excited. It’s a return to rock, with flourishes of violin and Phil Spector-inspired piano.  Glen pulls all of his lyrics from Psalm 119, which, in the Hebrew language, is an acrostic poem.  There are 22 letters in their alphabet, and there are 22 stanzas, each starting with successive letters. As a result, there are 22 tracks on 1960. It’s nerdy, I know, but it has inspired me to read my Bible some more.

HushAsobi Seksu – Hush (Polyvinyl)

If Citrus was an 11 on Spinal Tap’s Marshall stack, Hush is probably an 8 or 9. Citrus was an all-out shoegaze assault on the senses. But since the songwriting is even more solid and memorable this time, I found myself falling all over this album. (I don’t want to give the false impression that there are no rockers on Hush; it just seems the band takes more time between its peaks.)

I’m a sucker for noise pop and shoegaze-influenced stuff, so maybe I can’t be trusted. But we need more bands like Asobi Seksu.


Map – Speechless (Velvet Blue)

No one has influenced my guitar playing more than Josh Dooley from the band Map (and his protegé, Jason Martin, from Starflyer 59). There, I said it. My wife and I are not objective listeners, but maybe you don’t have to be. Maybe the rest of the world should try to make beautiful, jangly music that’s part surf and part 1980s Manchester, England. Maybe the world needs to rediscover major seventh chords.

I know that most of Dooley’s songs are written around guitar riffs, so it just makes sense that he’s released a mostly-instrumental album. He has just left off vocals that would ordinarily follow the guitar lines. Sure, there are many layers to peel back here, but it’s, in no way, self-indulgent. He clearly adores Chris Isaak’s “Wicked Game” and The Smith’s “Half A Person.” It’s heavenly.

Bruce Springsteen – Working On a Dream (Columbia)

What happened to The Boss? What clicked in his head and made him suddenly start making great music a couple years ago with Magic? While I love Nebraska and The Ghost of Tom Joad, I can’t say I care much for the rest of his catalog.

Sure, there are some rockers, like “My Lucky Day,” that could easily take a big dumb stadium rock turn, but Springsteen doesn’t linger there long.  Most of the album wanders around between poppy Bruce Cockburn-territory and a Phil Spector/Brian Wilson wall of sound.

There are not many politically-charged lyrics here. And he sings! What a beautiful voice he has. Maybe it is his age or maybe he has just written his best collection of melodic songs ever, but I love his deep baritone, tinged with a gorgeous vibrato.

The Decemberists – The Hazards of Love (Capitol)

It’s with the same trepidation with which I discussed Veckatimest that I approach the latest Decemberists’ record. Katy and I love the band, and I immediately snatched this up on vinyl. I know it is huge and found its way into many lists for 2010, but I still have not got my head around the record.

While lyrics are not necessarily a prerequisite for me to like an album, the story seems to be the focus here. It is so epic, making it difficult to fully digested the entire narrative. I can admit that I do love the music, though. It rocks much more, in places, than I had expected, and the guest singers seem to add a lot to the album.

Colin Meloy has thrown down the gauntlet and written an album the listener cannot feel neutral about. Concept albums are tricky things, and the band will never be viewed the same after this. It also comes at a peculiar time when albums are antiquated, and an iTunes/MTV/Clear Channel-nurtured public has no frame of reference for a song longer than three minutes. In that sense, it is probably the most punk album of 2009.

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Flickr.

I have started a Flickr account for Radio Free Raytown and posted pictures from this past week.

One set is from the Sonic Youth concert on Saturday. I didn’t have room in my concert review to post all the pictures we took, so they’re all up on Flickr for your perusal. And yes, we were really that close. (Apparently people would rather skip the opening band they know nothing about, show up late and end up sitting toward the back.)

Another set features pictures of Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts, currently under construction in downtown Kansas City. Although I hate the idea of building something new when we already have a few places in downtown for an orchestra to play, the new performing arts center will actually give room to performers room backstage. My sister used to sing in the Kansas City Symphony Chorus, and she would always complain about how cramped the space was. (Of course, none of us could have known that from our seats.) Speaking of seats, I also anticipate better seating–you know rows that would allow a person over 4’8″ to have legroom.

The third set is a collection of pictures that feature my friend’s artwork. Brandon Briscoe is currently showing work at Benetti’s Coffee Experience, and I sought to capture bits of his work in a somewhat creative fashion.

On another note, since I moved my USB turntable, I’ve been doing a lot more transferring LPs to MP3s recently. I thought I’d post this song for a limited time (until I get busted). It’s the B-sides to Sonic Youth’s 10-inch EP, 100%. They are the two songs back-to-back, “Genetic” and “Hendrix Necro.” Dig them while you can.

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“She’s still feisty.”

Kim Gordon and Steve Shelley

Kim and Steve

Katy and I went with my step-brother, Dan, and our friend, Brandon Briscoe, to see a Sonic Youth concert Saturday night (7/18/09) at The Uptown Theater. Although they certainly did not disappoint with their musical performance (especially in song choices that eschewed many predictable fan favorites), I was impressed with other aspects that added almost as much enjoyment to my experience as the loud rock and roll itself.

I have to confess that it was my first Sonic Youth show. I’m no slacker; I have done the research. I know that Kim Gordon has historically dressed like a provocative, punk-informed girl attending Warhol’s parties with The Velvet Underground. (Which, come to think of it, is pretty much how Sonic Youth sounds.) When the band took the stage, she sported a short, silver dress. Brandon, who had also seen the old concert pictures and films, immediately commented, “She’s still feisty.”

That she was.

Lee and the cool lights.

Lee and the cool lights.

In watching and listening to the old bootlegs, it’s clear that the sound at their concerts was not always as impressive as on studio recordings. Resembling a combination of a washing machine and a dentist drill with frantic drumming, bootlegs like Gila Monster Jamboree are only for the most hardcore fans. I know it’s not fair to compare the band in 2009 to where it was at 24 years ago, but it is the same group of people. Moderate success and a consistent live show have enabled it to hire excellent sound men. The guitars were cleanly separated, and the drums sounded beautiful. (In fact, the most impressive aspect of their live sound was the drums. They were not dominating, but they drove the band’s sound. The overhead mic’s even picked up nuances like Steve’s shaker sticks.) And because because Steve doesn’t lay into the ride and crash cymbals all night, Thurston and Lee can listen better and play with or off of each other.

Thurston!

Thurston!

I was also impressed by the light show. I really know nothing about lighting, except that I know when it works well. I know they’re run by computer programs nowadays, but the programs allowed for improvisation, as necessitated by a band like Sonic Youth that thrives on extended jams. There were long, improvised sections, like in the bridge to “Silver Rocket” when lights died down but the director snapped them back on to cue as the band brought the song back up. There were strobe lights and multicolored lights used judiciously that further justified the ticket prices (which were actually fairly reasonable, unlike the additional Ticketmaster fees).

Kim, dressed as a baked potato.

Kim, dressed as a baked potato.

I think what has always intrigued me and attracted me to Sonic Youth is the band’s image. It, especially Kim, projects a disinterested, almost pouty feeling that contributes to the artistic statement it has made for almost thirty years. The band seems to have held onto what Lou Reed only managed to grasp for a few years–an austere, off-putting, New York art student aesthetic. It is what the band has always done, and that is why I liked the concert so much. It was like meeting an old friend and realizing he hasn’t really changed that much in the ten years since you saw him last.

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